{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0400565":{"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":"1930-08-15","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0400565\/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":" \/\nSeven Tied at Top, Governor\nGeneral's Prize\n\u2014Page Seven\nVOL. 29\n6 <_i\n0Ui\nC. P. R Stock .Crashes on All\nMarket Exchanges\n\u2014Page Nine\nNELSON, B. C.   FRIDAY, AUGUST 15, 1980.\nFIVE CENTS A COPY\nNo 99\nHOPE ABANDONED FOR TRAPPED MEN\n* A * \u2022 \u2022 \u2666 * \u2666 * *       4' * * * + * + * * * .j. * * * r * * a>. * SI * * * * * * * * * * *\nTRAGEDY AT COALMONT CLAIMS 48\nR-100 HALFWAY TO ENGLAND\nAT MIDNIGHT; TRIP SPEEDY\nMIGHT RETURN\nTO\nR-100   May Yet   Carry\nPremier   Bennett   to\nImperial Conference\nB. C. Lumbermen Ask\nThat No Change Be\nMade Aussie Pact\nDIRIGIBLE MAKES\nEXCELLENT TIME\nShould Make Crossing in\n53 Hours if Adheres\nto Present Speed\nOS BOARD THE AIRSHIP\nR-100, Aug. 14\u2014(AT)\u2014 After\nsailing all day over a sea which\nlooked as smooth as a mill-\npond, with a sUght breeze assisting her, the R-100 had covered nearly half the distance\nbetween Bt. Hubert, Que., and\nCardlngton, England, by midnight, (O.M.T).    v\nSafety,    comfort    and    Bptied\nof airship flight are being amply demonstrated on this flight.\n1'arly   In   the   afternoon,   after\n.flying for 15 hours, we passed\nthe  Canadian  Paclflo steamship\nEmpress of Australia, which left\n.Montreal 30 hours ahead of us.\nThe encounter between the airship and the liner was an impressive   contact    between    the\n\"T new and the olfl.\na   According   to   plans   whloli   have\nbeen tentatively discussed, the R-100\nmay return  to Canada  ln September   to   Inaugurate   regular   traua-\nAtlantlc     commercial     air    travel\n<Continued   on   page   two)\nFOREST FIRES\nNO WORSE IN\nTHIS DISTRICT\nFew New Blazes Are Reported  Around  Vernon;   Control Kootenay Blazes\nThe forest fire situation throughout the district, with the exception\nof new fires reported In the vicinity\nof Vernon, wan steady throughout\nthe   district   yesterday.\nThe situation at Pans creek yesterday was suon that men were\nlaid off. The fires on Woodberry\nand Leet creeks on Kootenay lake\nwere under control.\nNo report was received from the\nLardo yesterday.\nVICTORIA, AUK. 14\u2014(AP)\u2014\nAssurance from Premier S. F.\nTolmie that on hla visit to\nOttawa he would Impress upon\nPremier Bennett the neces$lty\nof a public announcement that\nthe Australian treaty as It concerned lumber, paper and canned salmon would remain m\u00bb\ndisturbed was sought by a\ndelegation that called upon him\nhere.\nThe delegation consisted of\nrepresentatives of the lumber\nIndustry, pulp and paper Industry and salmon packers and\nthey stressed the importance of\nthe-lr request to which consideration was promised by Dr.\nTolmie.\nDOUKHOBORS WILL\nBE SUBJECT FOR\nTALK AT OTTAWA\nPESHAWARNOW\nQUIET, TRIBAL\nTHREATS END\nPlane   Bombings   Have\nBeen Effective; Little\nChange Northwest\nGANDHI AND HIS\nCOHORTS GATHER\nBut   No Announcement\nFollowing \"War Coun\ncil\" in Leaders Cell\nMinister of Mines\nLeaves for the\nScene of Tragedy\nVICTORIA, B. C\u201e Aug. 14,\u2014\nHaving mobilized all the mine\nrescue resources of tho provincial government throughout the province to give -aid\nln * the efforts of workers to\nreach the imprisoned miners\nIn the Biakeburn mine at\nCoalmont, Hon. W. A. MacKenzie, minister or min.s, la\nleaving Victoria for the scone'\nof   the   accident.\nAll day long the minister\nkept in touch with his officials and the mine management at Coalmont. He instructed Inspector Strachan\nfrom Fernle to proceed to the\nscene with additional gas helmets, augmenting the epulp-\nment already sent from Mor-\nritt aud Princeton.\nThe minister and Premier\nTolmio early wired to the\nstricken town asking that\ntheir deep sympathy be expressed to the Dereaved families.\nENDURANCE PAIR\nCARRY ON; NEAR\n600-HOUR MARK\nDeadly Qases Threaten to\nOvercome Rescue Workers;\nWives, Kiddies Are Hopeful\nGovernment    Offers    Every'\nAssistance to Aid Coalmont Rescue\n&:\nWILL INVESTIGATE\nTRAGEDY   FULLY\nRescuers Come Out of Diggings Like Doped\nMen; Work Short Shifts; Are\nIn Great Distance\nDoukhobor Occupation of B.\nC. Lands Will Be Discussed by Premiers\nVICTORIA. B. _C\u201e Aug. 14.\u2014Rail\noutlet from the Peace River country to tho Pacific, effective action\nto co-ordinate fall nnd winter work\nin unemployment retlcf, development of the urea. Alaska highway\nproject, and tarirf protection for\nthe up-building or British Columbia\nproducts of field and Industry are\nincluded in representations Premier\nTolmie will make Rt Ottawa on his\npresent mission. Tho Premier left\nto take up these and many other\nVictoria this' afternoon for Ottawa\nssues with  Premier R.  B.  Bennett.\nHon. R. H. Pooley, K. C, attorney-\ngeneraJ, will be acting premier during Dr- Tolmle's aosence.\nThe question of Doukhobor occupation of British Columbia lands\nwill also be under discussion in the\nfederal-provincial conferences.\nLOG OF R-100\n(Time   given   ts   Eastern   Standard)\nWednesday,  Aug.  13:\n8:2.1 p.m.\u2014Departed St. Hubert adrport, Montreal for England.\n!):,V) p.m.\u2014Pnssed over Three\nRivers,   Que.\n10:45  p.m.\u2014Passed   over  Quebec.\n\u2022  Thursday:\n4:15    o.m.\u2014Passed    Antltffitt\nWand.\n6:00 a.m.\u2014Notified air ministry lit London she waa headed\nfor Belle Isle bound for the*\nopen sea.\n8:00 a.m. \u2014 Sighted almost\noverhead hy steamship Montclare.\n13:30 p.m.\u2014-Well out to sea.\nSighted II- miles east of Brllr\nIsle by BS. Empress of Australia.,\nR-100 MAKING SPEED AS SHE\nFLIES HOMEWARD; PASSENGERS\nENJOY  FLIGHT, MEALS IN AIR\nWater Taken  from  Clouds;\nFlies Between\n70-90 Miles\n<By  E.   W.   Orange,   Correspondent\nfor the   Associated   Press  and\nRenters London)\nON    BOARD    THE    AIRSHIP\nB-100, Aug. 14\u2014(AP)\u2014The British dirigible R-100 tonliht wan\n.failing over the tossing Atlantic,\nhomeward bound and giving\nevery promise that she would\nmake a record eastward crossing.\nSo fast waa the speed, between\n15 and 00 miles an hour, that\nthose aboard believed lt was\npossible for the largest airship\nIn the world to reach her home\nport, Coi-tington, England, hy\nmidnight tomorrow, British summer time '.; p.m. b.s.t.)\nIt was felt that the dirigible,\nwhloh left tin mooring mast at\nMontreal at 8:26 p.m. B.B.T.,\nyesterday should reach Cardlh-\nfton by 3:25 a.m. E.S.T. Saturday at least, even If held up\nby winds.  t \u2014\nThose aboard are enjoying the\nflight gretaitly. When the breakfast\nof bam. and eggs with coffee was\nsawed flhts morning qulto In hotel\nfaehlon, hardly a movement of the\nship co nit I  he felt.\nThe passengers expressed amaze-\nme-nit at the steadiness of the airliner as it penetrated huge ranges\nOf clouds. The only featuro preventing absolute romfort was tho\nfeet, th***-no smoklrig was r^rmrtted.\nAr-\nHOT  SOUP  FOR DINNER\nAs darkness fell tonight tho electric lights were switched on and a\nbell summoned the hungry passengers to dinner. Plates of hot soup\nawaited them in the dining room.\nThey fell to it without urging. The\nprinted menu cards, the glittering\nsilverware end spotless linen made\nthe scone like Piccadilly or Fifth\navenue rather than mid-Atlantic up\nln the air.\nThrough the darkness the great\nsilvery ci\/nr rushed, the gloom of\nthe Atlantic atmosphere in nighttime broken only by the great\nmoon outside Che windows.\nWATER   FROM   CLOUDS\nThe experiment of obtaining water from thn clouds proved a great\nsuccess   today.\nThe airship passed over the Straits\nof Belle Isle at midday maintaining\ns steady average speed of 70 miles\nan hour.\nm the first eight hours the ship '\ncovered a distance which took lt 34\nhours  to  traverse on  the westward\nvoyage.\nTho panorama of the Gulf or St.\nLawrence north shore wns seen\nfrom a height of 1,500 feot. The\npassengers could see an occasional\npassing vessel or lonely lighthouse\nkeeper, and hear the solute of sirens\nabove the steady drone of the\nengines.\nTonight the R-100 was enjoying\nIdeal weather conditions. Tho wide\nvista of tho OHlm Atlantic was\nnow tho only remindor to the passengers that they were at sea, for\nthe   airship   was   as   steady   aa   if\nnhr   I'-ni   at HI   st.   nor   m-fyt-rlna   nrnni.\nBOMBAY, India, Aug. 14\u2014(AP)\u2014\u2022\nThe prisoners of Poofta, and the\nprisoners of Allahabad mot again\ntoday in Mahatma Gandhi's quarters in the Yeroda Jaii but terminated their conversation abruptly\nuntil tomorrow after a session or\ntwo hours.\nAll of yesterday's participants, including the Mahatma himself, tlie\ntwo Nehrus and Mrs. Sarc-Jlni Naldu\nwere present, as were sir TeJ\nBahadur Sapru- and Mt'. Jayakar,\nthe delegates of the workers' congress who promoted the conference\nlooking toward a peaceful end of\nthe  civil  disobedience   dlstrubance.s.\nHow today's conversations got\nalong none outside of those engaged\nin them could say but It was remarked again that Sir TeJ and his\ncomrades looked extremely grave as\nthey emerged from the Jail.\nThe \"war council\" of the Bombay\nprovincial congress pnssed a resolution viewing tho present peaco\nparleys with grave concern, declaring that complete independence\nwould be the council's Immediate\nobjective.\nThe situation on the northwest\nfrontier today showed little change,\nin the immediate neighborhood of\nPeshawar conditions obviously wero\nmuch improved but reports continued to arrive of extension of the\nunrest to sections of other tribes\nbesides  the  Afrldls.\nOfficials expressed the view tonight that it probably will take\nEcveral days to clarity the situation\non  the northwest  frontier.\nTlie last few days have been determined efforts on the part of the\nBritish ormed forces, Including the\nRoyal Air force, to stamp out the\naggression ngalnst Peshawar and\nyesterday's reports indicated that\nthe threat ajialnst tho city, which\nIg the seat of thy northwest province,   had   been   broken.\nHOT WAVE IS\nPERSISTING ON\nTHE PRAIRIES\nWINNIPEG. Man., Aug. 14.\u2014(CP)\n\u2014Old Sol turned his glare somewhat eastward today. Severer rays\nthan usual wero directed on Manitoba and Saskatchewan, but Alberta\nwas left out of tlie extra hot weather rone. In southern central\nSaskatchewan, Reglna. and Mooio\n.Taw were rated as tho hottest spots\nln   Canada  at_JJ6   and  07  degrees\nSouthern Manitoba sweltered, At\nWinnipeg thc mercury touched 00\nand it was one degree higher nt\nBrandon. Swift Current, hi southwest Saskatchewan, was no warmer\nthan   oa.\nMedicine Hat. Alt*,., another\nchronic warm spot, recorded only\n88, while Calgary and Edmonton\nshowed  82 and 84 as high points.\nSaskatchewan's hot weather was\nrestricted to tho south, for Saskatoon's warmest \/mark wns 83 and\nBatttoford's 84. Both points ore\nIn  tho northern section.\nFair weather is tne forecast for all\nthe pralrien; about the same temperature in Alberta, and possibly a\nnhado lower in Manitoba arTrl Has-\nl.'itrlifrwan. r><\nDISCRIMINATION IS\nTERMED 'RANK' ON\nPEOPLE OF CANADA\nOITAWA, Aug. 14\u2014\"We havfl had\nrank discrimination in this country\nngalnst t-he people of Canada,\"\nsaid Dr. J, I,, MaoDougall, of Vancouver, British Columbia, national\npresident of the Native Bonn of\nCannda, during a banquet to the\nexecutive officers of the society tonight. The duty of a government,\nhe asserted, waa to protect the Interests    of    people    born   In    the\nJackson    antl    O'Brine    Fly\nSteadily;    Plane   Going\nWell; Up 24 Days\nST. LOUIS, Mo., Aug. 14.\u2014\nThe endurance plane, Greater\nSt. Lo-Is, whirled over l_unbert\nSt. Louis field lowafii the 600-\nliour ml test one of its record\nflight JJjglght.\nPlan- nnd pilot?, Dale (Red)\nJackson and Forest O'Brine, had\nmade their home In the sky\nconltnuomdy for (TJBfi hours,\nmore than 21 day*; at 4.11 p.m.N\n(C.B.T.) They had put the previous record, that of the Hunter\nbrothers, a day and a hair behind  them.\nThe champion sky-rldlng avlatora\ngave no Intimation that they would\ndeter from their expressed determination to remain in the air for\n1000 hours, and tno faithful motor\nof thc ship showed no weakness.\nThe airmen received an invitation\ntoday to demonBttvttn their method\nof refueling at an air show sponsored by the Knight Light Airplane\nclub at Montreal, Quebec, next\nmonth, It was turned over to\nWilliam Pickens, the flyers' manager\nSIR R. BORDEN\nTO REPRESENT\nTHE DOMINION\nMain   Tunnel  Fan  Wow  at\nWork; No Response to\nTapping Signals\nVICTORIA, Aug. 14\u2014 (API-\nInformation received by Hon.\nW. A. McKenzle, mlnflster of\nmines, gives brief details of the\nCoalmont disaster,, notifying him\nthat two bodies have been recovered and forty-six men are\nentombed. No reason is given for\nthe eavcHln. The mine has been\nfree from gas and Is reported\nto be one of the least gaseous\nIn thc province. There will be a\nfull Investigation of the disaster,  the  minister  said.\nHon. Mr. McKenzle sent a\ntelegram of sympathy on behalf\nof himself and colleagues to\nthe depraved families aud offering any support the provincial government was able to\noffer, \u2022\nENCOUNTER     FALLS\nPITHEAD, Biakeburn, B.C., Aug.\n14\u2014Early this evening the main\ntunnel of the Biakeburn mine, where\nforty-six men nre entombed had\nbeen cleared for a distance of\n1600 feet from the portal. Tlie\nrescue gangs hnd encountered cave-\nins all the way and ther. was still\none thousand fcot to go before the\nworking places could be reached.\nThe mine fan, broken by a blast,\nIs again in opefcitlon and the relief\nmen, equipped with gas musks and\nother aids, arc making better headway as the noxious gases aro being\ndriven out of the main tunnel\nroadway.\n\"To get air through is our big\ntask,\" said John Biggs, mines Inspector In charge of the rescue\nwork.\nEfforts by rescuers to received\nresponses of tapping signals on the\nrock of tho shaft failed to get any.\nresponse.\nMen are allowed to work only\nbrief period!\"*, so that fresh men may\nalways bo at the task.\n\"AFTER DAMP\" CAUSE OF THE\nTRAGEDY; MEN ASPHXYIATED?\n18 of Buried Men Married; One Leaves Wife\nand Seven Kiddies; Three Cases\nof Brothers Being Lost\nIt  Miners Living They Are\nin Stagnant Gas Filled\nAir\nRESCUERS WORK\nWITH GREAT HASTS\nRumbling Foretold Disaster!\nAsphyxiation Is the\nGreatest Fear\nWill Go to Geneva; Senator\nChupais and Hon. Alary\nParlby as Well\nOTTAWA, Ont., Aug. 14.\u2014(OP) \u2014\nCanada will bo represented at the\nnext meeting of tho assombly of the\nLeague of Notions by Sir Robert\nBorden, Beoatar Thomas chapats\nand Hon. Mrs. Mary Irene Parlby,\nlt was annotmced here tonight. Tho\nassembly meets In Geneva early in\nSeptember and before that there\nwill be a meeting of the council of\nthe league. Canaan's representative\non the council win bo Sir Robert\nBorden aa leader of the Canadian\ndelegation.\nSir Robert Borden, Canada's wartime premier, has long been a\nstaunch advocate ot thp league. He\nwas one of the original signatories\nof the League. or Nations government ln I01P out of which grew the\nleague assembly  and  the council.\nSenator Chapals who resided In\nQuebec has won distinction by his\nhistoric!! writings, He ls the author\nof a number of books. He was for\nsome time professor of history In\nLaval university. He was a minister without portfolio in the Tall-\nIon government In Quebec and\nleader of the government ln the\nlegislatuve council back in 1893. He\nbecame a senator ln  1910\nHon. Mrs. Mary Irene Parlby li\nminister without portfolio ln the\nAlberta provincial government, She\nrepresents Lacombe ln the legislature. Bhe was provincial president of the United Farm Women\nof Alberta for four years. For two\nyears she was a member of ths\nboard of governors of Albert* University, In the last two provlnoial\ngeneral elections she had been re-\nturnetT'TS a \"\"candidate of the\nUnited Farmers of Alberta.\nPURCHASE    COMPLETE\nTORONTO, Aug. 14\u2014The hydro-\nalectrio power commission of Ontario today completed tha purchase\nof the entire assets Including the\nrnnohlssB and rights, of the Dominion Power and Transmission\nComjhny. Umltsd, and Its subsidiaries, for. tha sum of $31,000,000\nn\u00ab  \"nnmiTvreii  some month* mm.\nEMPRESS JAPAN\nTRYING FOR NEW\nRECORD, PACIFIC\nYOKOHAMA, Aug. 14\u2014(Ap) \u2014\nSeeking to lower the seven year\nold record for the stenmBhlp crossing\nof the Pacific, the Canadian Paclflo\nliner Empress ol Japan nailed at\n6 p.m. today (1 n.m. P-3.T.) for\nVancouver, British Columbia, on her\nfirst voyage between these ports.\nThe Empress of Japan must arrive before 11:33 a,in, (\"Pacific Standard Time) August 23 to shatter\nthe mark made by the Empress of\nCanada, also of tho Canadian Pacific line. In June 1923 the Empress of Canada soiled for Yokohama\nto Vancouver In eight days, 10\nhours and 53 minutes, averaging\n20.8 knots Tor thn 4,814 lands\nmiles comprising the Great Circle\nroute.\nThe new ship w\u201en designed to\nmnko 21 knots but In teats easily\ndid 23. She has n, gross tonnage\nof 26,000. She was built in Glasgow, at a cost of $7,500,000 and\nlaunched lest December. Her maiden voyage was a trip from Southampton to the far east by way of\nthe   Suez   canal.\nBENNETTS POLICY\nON IMMIGRATION\nANNOUNCED TODAY\nOTTAWA, Ont., Aug. 14.\u2014(OP)\u2014\nThe polloy which the government\nwill adoipt with regard to lmmlgra-.\ntlon will be made publto here tomorrow, declared Hon, Wesley A,\nGordon, minister of Immigration,\ntonight. Mr, Gordon would not\ndivulge the nature of the announce-\nmente, but It Is believed here that\nrecent ISfttona of the privy oounoll\nhave reeulted ln the formulation\nof a policy devised to restrict to\ntho barest minimum all immigration\nexcept from the united Kingdom.\nIndications were that th8 railways\nagreement of 1087 would not be renewed on 1U expiration In October\nand that certain other Immigration\nnidn vouM b* dlerowHniied.\nPRINCETON, B. C, Aug. 14\u2014Hope waa practically\nabandoned lonight for the safety of the 46 miners entombed in the Biakeburn mine at Coalmont for more\nthan 24 hours. The rescuers themselves, working\nheroically to reach their comrades, come out of the\nmine portal feeling like drunken or doped men; seml-\npoiscmed with the deadly gas which prevadea the workings.\n*\u25a0 The stark reality of tragedy which has probably\nwiped out 48 lives including the two bodies which have\nalready been recovered; has gathered upon the collier town, and only faint gleams of hope remain in the\nbreasts of wifes, children, parents and sisters of (he\nlost men.\nMAY BE WEEKS\nIt is slated that it may be two days, weeks or\neven longer before the bodies of the men are brought\nout. While work goes on unceasingly, the safety of\nthe rescuers themselves is the object of considerable\nworry. Fast work is being done in the cleaning of\nthe mine and putting in stopings to carry the air to\nthe innermost parts.\nAt a formal inquest held here by Dr. D. McCaffrey, it was stated that thc deaths of the two men\nwhose bodies were recovered was caused by \"after\ndamp,\"  the  deadly  scourge  of coal   mine  disasters.\nThis finding made it\nseem likely that the\nother men had met (he\nsame fate, and only the\ncomfort of sudden painless endings was left\nfor bereaved relatives\nof the victims.\nDOWN  1800  FEET\nThe entombed men\nare believed to lie nearly 1800 feet down a\n20-degree slope which\nstarts 1800 feet from\nthe entrance of the\nhaulage tunnel.\nThe poisoned air was so deadly\nmat vrtien the firs' party of rescuers entered the tunnel three first\naid men fell flat. on. their faces\non the trackB. Some thirty men\nhave been knocked out during\ntheir task.\nEquipped with masks and the\nlatest safety devices. a\u00ab the men\nwork deeper and deeper to thn\nscene of the explosion, the gas\nbecomes worse and they are sont\nout semi-conscious to he rcllevel\nby   fresh   workers.\nOf the burled men eighteen are\nmarried and one, M. Mashall. leaves\na wife and seven children, there\nare three cases of brothers being\nlost. P. and J. Stanlsh, H. and M.\nLubarda,   and   two  Smith   hrothres.\nFLAMES BREAK\nOUT ANEW IN\nSASKATCHEWAN\n60 Men Battle Blazes; Rain\nNeeded to Stop Progress\nof the Fires\nFirst Canadian Air\nPilot Makes Outside\nLoop, Windsor Airport\nWINDSOR. Ont., Aug. 14.\u2014R. R,\nPeterson, pilot instructor at Walker\nairport, haa trained a unlquB die-\ntlctton. He is bo far aa available\nrecords ahow. the -irut Canadian\npilot to do an outside loop, ono of\nthe mjet dtffloult evolutlona ln\naviation.\nIt was tho third outelde loop ever\nperformed orer Canadian territory,\nbut both th\u00bb other two wero done\nby  aAnterloan poltta,\nPeterson did his loop over Walker\nairport. He 6-tLmat-ed that ho reach-\nad a speed of about 330 miles an\nhour In the dive.\nPRINCE AX-3ERT, Baak., Au\u00ab. 14.\n\u2014i CP)\u2014Subdued after cutting a\nswath through 15 square nvilw of\nPrince Albert national pork, wtnd-\ndrlvcn flames of the Lake La, Vallea\nblaz. broke 'loose ag-am today. The\nflrea swept enatW-Jd north of the\npark boundary. Crews of approximately GO men were conoentrated\nalong <i\u00a3 northern limlte of thi\npark In an effort to prevent ths\nroaring blaze from ravaging the\nbpnuttfoi timber rnuroundinir th4\nshore of the park lake.\nUntil the wind ohanjjed to the\nwest, thp fire- wa%-*fco*naidered under\ncontrol Vtbet a stiff battle of a\nweek by combined fire-fighting\nrsqufldrong of the foreotry and park\ndrpartments. Suocess against, the\nflame s-oourge was short-lived for the\nGcorohlng brec_e from the west\nquickly whipped smouldering embers\nInto raging fury which leaped all\nman-mado  barriers.\nAt last reports the fires were\nraging furiously eastward through\nthe ire\u00a9 trope of spruce and Pino.\nToday's weather reports indicate a\nchange for the worse In prevailing\nconditions, Rain is now considered\nessential If th\u00a9 ncore or morn of\noutbreaks in the expansive forest\narea ln northern Saskatchewan are\nto be subdued,\nRad lo weather reports, too.\nbrought unwelcome newa of a rising\nbarometer, clear sky-i, high winds\n*nd a scorching sun, rapidly reducing protecting lush growth to dry\ntinder ea fodder for the flamee,\nSaskatchewan Net\nPlayers Are Defeated\nTC-RKTON, Bask., Aug. 14.\u2014New\nrecord for early threshing ln the\nYorkton district of northsast Saa-\nkmtohewan goes to Henry Tenck-\nlsnburg, who's farm Is 13 mllss\nsouth-eait, Ha oommsnosd threshing his crop of Russian Barley\nWednesday,    Cuttltu_v wu   done   10\nf1*V*    PITO.\nGreat Civic Works\nProgram Toronto's\nPlan Aid Jobless\n-X_^ONTO, Ont., Aug, 14.\u2014Imme-\ndlate aovelopment of the downtown\nolty plan, ereotton of the police administration building, construction\nof the Bathurst street bridge, repairing and renovating of all olvlc\nbuildings and ooiwtructlon of subways under level orosslngt were\nsome of the remedies for unemployment advanced at the unemployment conference called by Mayor\n>Vrf (\u00a7  Wenvn here toHa**,\nCOALMONT,   B.C.,   AUG.   14\u2014\nHoirtewhere In the thousands\nof feet. of workings behind the\ntunnel mouth of the Biakeburn\nmine of the Coalmont Coilerles\nare -in men, either dead or fur- '.\nIng death, trapped by an explosion at 7 o'clock Wednesday\nnight .. Three hundred feet from\n.the iunni'i mouth, squads of\nrescue workers are tolling\nthrough a cave-In, trying to\nreach their comrades before It\nis too laic. They work feverishly, but only the most optimistic of them iii-Mi ,.\u2022 they can\nreach the victims in time.\nTwo bodies have been taken out.\nA Hiini man came out olive.\nThe names of forty-five of the\nentombed men are;\nJ. C. Smith, W Ross, T. filb-\nfion, W. HtUUiitovlrh, 4. Kanop-\nk-t, R. HmltlL, -J, Nesbltt, .? Na-\nfiode, J. Chatflehl, IL Hale, V.\nKreslch, W. Smith, Z. [^lbarfln.\n\u2022J Bradbury, .1. Punss, !M. Marshall, r. Phil, A. hi ui . M. Law-\nley. It. Simpson, J, . Njcgovan,\nII, E Edwards, W. Souprauuk,\nD. Mitch, C. Hupton, D. McDonald, e. callus, 9. stanicb, Pt\nPllosluruui, II. Rucklcdge, j!\nA damson, W. Lawrle, W. Enlng.\nJ Oroffle, 11. Flucrant, 8. Mllllgan, F. Jerovsek, J. Vldosh N.\nStolyk, F. M.'iii'-li. J. Sutlcli,\n\u25a0I. uiiiiti.-ii, M LnbarO-, Ma.\nBabtch,   W.   Sim\".\nNo one knows how tho explosion\noccurred or whero^ It might have\ntaken place in the' main tunnel, extending horizontally into the moun-\nta.ini-ide for 3,000 feat. It might:\nhavo happened In the slope extending downwards from the the\nof this tunnel. It may have broken\ndown the wall of any 15 levefla\nreaching out from the slope for\nhundreds of feet westwards and\neastward. Or lt may have shattered smaller stopee debouchinr\nfrom these levels. A blast anywhere\nln this criss-cross of underground\nwork! ngs could hare produced the\ncave-In a mile or so away toward\nthe mouth of the main tunnel.\n24   M0O1NO   COAL\nNo. 15 level jg tho lowest in the\nmine. It runs 500 leet from the\nchief slope from the main tunnel.\nAt the furthest tnd of No_ 15\nlevel are two moro slips, burrowing\ninto the earth at an angle of 30\ndegrees, and to chambers along these\ntwo slopes 34 men were digging at\nseams of coal The rest of the crew\nof 49 men In the aftemoon shift\nwere working on tho hoisting gear,\non ths trollaiys or elsewhere between these Innermos- depths, and\nthe freeh air at pit-mouth.\nAll the crew at the mouth of the\ntunnel and tho men ln the offices\nof the company know is that a\nn-mbling waa heard in tha mine and\ndobrls began t o tumble from the\ncolling and the walls of the main\ntunnel. Rescuo cretvs were rushed\ninto the shaft They shovelled at\npiles of dirt arid rock, avoiding .further falls as best they could.\nA few hundred feet, in they came\n(Continued   on   page   tsro)\nThe Weather\nSynopsis: The barometer ha* fallen over the interior and tine weather continues Irom the coast, to\nManitoba.\nTemperatures                   Mln. Max,\nNEIfiON           53 B6\nNanaimo     _     85 83\nVictoria            54 7*\nVancouver  64 7a\nKamloops                               . 60 00\nPrince George   40 BS\nEstevan   Point     .50 84\nPrince Rupert .  53 70\nDawson  34 64\nSeattle  60 84\nPortland                            64 93\nSan Francisco  66 89\nBpokane                      88 96\nLos    Angeles  64 78\"\nPenticton  66 85\nVernon               68 70\nGrand Porks               68 98\nKaslo                                      .57 79\nCranbrook  53 87\nCalgary     53 83\nEdmonton  _ 49 84\nBwift Current  60 93\nPrince   Albert    58 83\nQulAp-pelto      78 94\nWinnipeg     49 90\nForeoaat    Nelson    and    vicinity\t\nPine and warm wit* local thuncler-\n Page Two\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS     FRIDAY, AUGUST 15, 1980.\nI R-100 IS HALF\nWAY, ENGLAND\nMIDNIGHT HOUR\n(Ot\u00bbtlnnetl From Fa ?e One)\n; Should this be the case the airship\n, on  her return   voyage  to  England,\nwill   carry  Premier   R.   B.   Bennett\n\u2022ind his colleagues to the Imperial\nconference,\n\"Delegates in this way will save\nvaluable time, enjoy a very comfortable journey and learn at first\nhind the value  of  air travel and\nthe inevitability of its development\nin the very near future.\nIS    SPEEDY   FLIGHT\nNEW YORK, Aug. 14\u2014(CP)\u2014Observers here were at a loss to account for the statement made in\na despatch from aboard the British\ndirigible R-100 early this morning\nto the effeot that the great ship\nhad almost reached the half way\nmark in her flight from 8t. Hubert,\nQue.,   to   Cardtngton,   England.\nAt midnight, (G.M.T.), the position of the ship, aa sent In a wire-\nleas message to at Hubert, indicated that the dirigible had travelled 1,885 mllea of the 3,287 miles\nshe had to cover before reaching\nher home port. This had taken\nher 22 hours and 3\u00b0 minutes and\nindicated that she was making an\naverage speed of 61.3 miles an hour.\nAt this rate she would reach\nCardlngton in a total elapsed tlmo\nof  53   hours   and  30  minutes.\nCAR CLIMBS RAIL\nON CEDAR STREET\nQ.   Horstead   Has   Narrow\nEscape When Car\nLeaves Hoad\nWJjrlle proceeding to nig home \"up\nthe' la__e yesterday afternoon about\n5:16 o'clock, George Horstead had\na narrow escape from Injury when\nhis car, after side--swiping that of\nH. H. Pitts standing on the corner\nof Vernon and -Cedar streets, .jumped the cement guard rail on Cedar\natreet and came to a standstill at\na perilous angle on the embankment.\nThe accident occurred when the\nHorstead car, swinging too wide on\nthe curve stnlok the pitta car on\nthe side. Force of the Impact de-*\nfleeted the car to the embrmkmont\nguard about 20 feet away. In some\nmiraculous manner the oar ollmb-\ned the 15-inch cement ledge and\nlanded right side up on the steep\nembankment, Mr. Horstead waa\nnot hurt.\nNeither oar wae damaged muoh.\nDRAFT GEAR IS\nREPLACED ON\nORE CARS HERE\nAt the present time ore caj*s In\nthe Nelson shops of the C, P, R. are\nbeing stripped of their draft gear\nand being replaced by modern draft\nequipment,\nSome. 35 oars have been changed\nalready, leaving 155 more to be done\nbefore the Job ls completed.\nWHEN  TRAVELLING\nThe Following Offer the Best of Service\nNelson, B. C. Hotels\n{jmttf ijotf 1\nRooms With Running Water\nPrivate Baths Ensulte\nGEO. BE>rWELjU Prop.\nNelson,  B.  C.\n^i$3\u00ab$$$A5_-5S$*5^^\nW. C. Levasseur, St. Paul; J. Cook-\nson. Nelson; G. W. Noe. Ottawa;\nMr. and Mrs. H- O'Hanln, Mrs. J. A.\nHenderson, Procter; C. C Juske.\nSeattle; Mrs. j. Johnson, Wynndel;\nE. Johnson, Mr. and Mrs, E. John-\nion, Walla Walla; Elsie l_-_ia_cs$cott,\nLethbridge; A. G. StrlcKland, T. A.\n'Brady, Victoria; E. Comcrford, Mrs.\nE. Graham, Mrs. p. Millard, Spokane.\nHtME\u2014B. D. Douglas. A. M. Mc-\ncurrach, A. E. Martin, A. L. Cope!-\nIan, B. N. Neil, Mr. und Mrs. P.\nK-stbope, V. Easthope, Mrs. H, A.\nPearson, S. J. Parkinson, J. H.\n' Bregy, D. A. Marshall, Vancouver;\nO. H. Burden, Crawford Bay; H.\nD. Johnson, Rossland; F. Dalburn,\nMrs. D. I> Laudy, Kaslo; C. Butler,\nSpokane; J. Richardson, Edmonton;\nj Where the Guest Is King\nThe Savoy\nNELSON'S NEWEST AND tTNEST  HOTEL\nMAN? ROOMS   WITH PRIVATE\nBATHS    OR    SHOWERS\nJ. A. JXEER, Pi-op.\nVancouver, B\u00bb C, and Island\nBLACKBURN'S SUPER SERVICE\nSTATION\u2014822 Seymour St. The\nKootenay Tourist's Vancouver Garage. Moderate charges for Washing, Polishing, and Greasing, Parking, Storage Accessories, Oasollne\nand Oils, Engine Repair Work,, Free\nCrank Case Service, Tire. Battery\nand Brake Service. Vulcanizing and\nSlmonlzing. Ste us for used cars.\nA large stock at all prices always\ncarried.\nMake your trip to Vancouver a pleasure by having your meals at the\nNEW ORPHEUM CAFE\u2014762 Granville St. Choicest Food at. Moderate\nCharges.    James P. Dwyerf,\nDUFFERIN    HOTKL\u2014BOO   SEYMOUR\nST.\u2014Bright Rooms. Central, Mod-\norate Rates. A. Patterson, late of\nColeman, Crow's Nest, Proprietor.\nLONDON       CAFETERIA,    LTD.\u2014710\nRobson S.\"-. The ever popular dining\nplace to make use of while ln, Vancouver.\nOne New York editor observes\n\"Now that pyjamas have been accepted as swanky bathing beach at-\nAre. will anybody help this department start a fad foc__c]d-if-shioned\nnightshirt, for male bathers?\"\nVictoria and Alberta\nWhen   In\nVICTORIA,   B,   C.\nStay at the\nHOTEL WESTHOLME\n10.0  Booms of  Comfort;   ,3  Rooms\nwith   Bath;    Rates   $1.26   to   41.50;\nWith   Private   Bath.   $3.00   to   $2.50.\nDouble. $1.00 Extra.\n1417   Government   St.\nJ. Magglora,   Proprietor\nHOTEL   BRETTON   HALL\nBANFF,   ALBERTA\n160   Rooms   80  with  bath   and  en\nSuite\nAmerican   and  European  Plan\nModerate Rates.   Special Family\nand Party Rates on Application.\nParking space and Tennis Courts\nFree to our Guests\nExcelient. Dining Room Service\nN.  H.  MURRAY, Manager\nSpokane, Washington\nWOOn WORTH'S CAFE\u2014613 Riverside Ave. \"It's different\". Official    Western    Travel    Club.     Free\nMaps and  Tourist, Information.\nA convenient arrangement for the\nkitchen reduces the time spent In it\nduring thc hot weather.\nBH_VOY\u2014Mrs. R. Orsinger, Mrs. J.\nShanley, Miss F. Shanloy, Mrs, C,\nHolloran, Ft. George Wright W.\nDickson, N. Jone-s. Vancouver; L.\nJ. Bmltts, Mr. and Mrs. A. Chlldr,\nB. Gillie, Victoria: Mr. a n<| Mrs.\nJ. Emerson, Mr. and Mrs. J. Mc-\nMaeter, W. Lee, Lethbridge; Mrs. L.\nMclntyre, Surry Centre; Miss M.\nBtavort, Brlttania; Mr. and Mrs.\nD. Macbson,  Seattle;   J.  Gallo, Mr.\nand Mrs. fi. Byaotrtt, Poplar; Mr,\nand Mrs, C- Walker, Mr. and Mrs,\nStockwp'l, Fernie; G. Grant Marcus;\nJ. Tuleti. Vernon; E). Birch, E. M\nReid, Cnlgary; R. F. San\u00ab, Lethbridge; F. Mcintosh, Cobble Hill;\nMr. and Mrs. Bclonger, A. Glenz-\nman, Cranbrook; Mrs. L. Marrow,\nMrs. D. Marr. Dr. and Mrs, C. .!\u25a0\nKlnkead,  Wilmington.\nQueen's Hotel\nThe Center of Convenience\nHot   and   Cold   Water   in   Every\nRoom\nSteam Heated\nA. Lapointe, Peop.\n'--aJTJEISNS\u2014C. McKlgcn, Ymlr: L.\nSimpson. Trail; F. Ferchlk, A. Shol-\nMr, J. Mason, Kaslo.\nMadden Hotel\nd J.. Mcdonald\nBta_m Heated Booms by the\nDay,   Week   or   Month\nETvery  consideration  fehown\nto  gueste\nCor. BB-ker and  Ward S's.\nNelson\nMADDEN\u2014B. Gerrard, J. Johnson,\nKelson; A. Carlson. Brilliant, .lohu\netoochlnoff,   Thrums.\nStrathcona Hotel\nWhen In Nelson slop at the\nStrathcona. Hot. and \"old\nwater. Halts SI per nlnht,\n\u25a0pedal rates by the week\nor month.\nNew Grand Hotel\nA  Modern  Brick  Building\nfjl6   Vernon   St.,   Nelson,   B.   C.\nHot   and   Cold   Water  and   Telephone   in   all  Rooms.    Steam\nHcatcri Throughout,\nRooms by Weekly Rate\nor  by the Month\nP. L. KAPAK, Prop.\nEuropean  Plan\nNEW GRAND\u2014T. J. Rusted. Sal\nmo; T. Markln. L. Davidson, Shorr-\nacres; G. Nelson\", Kootenay Landing\nB. Sherman, Bosswell; W, G. Procter. Mabel  Lake.\nOccidental Hotel\nThe Home of Plenty\n705  Vernon   .St. Phone   537L\nH.   WASSICK\nlift.  Rooms or Solid Comfort\nHeadquarters for Loggers and\nMiners\n(C)he New\nCoeur d'Alene Hotel\nCanada s Spokane Home\nTune in KHQ Service Hour for\nCOEUR D'ALENE HOTEL talks on\nEarly Days in the Northwest\n4 to 5 Daily\n(Except Saturday and Sunday)\nDavid Thompson' Dr. McLaughlin, and other\nfamous Englishmen played a most important\n- pail in the early settlement of Washington and\nOregon. We will be glad to use the experiences\nof any of our pioneer Canadian friends in these'\ntalks.    Write your story and address to\nHarry F. Goetz\nManager Hotel Coeur d'Alene\nNOTICE\nThe Coeur d'Ale.iw Hotel docs not discount\nCanadian money.\nStyles Almost Grecian in Line\nAinsworf h, B. C.\nEnjoy your week-end and summer vacation\nAINSWORTH\nHot Springs Hotel\nAND SWIMMING POOL\nNature's Health  find .Summer Hesort.\nFurnished nottazPR Excellent Flshinj.\nTrail, B. C.\nNelson, B. C. Cafes\nThe Standard Cate\ni    320 Haker Street, Nelson, B. C.\nOPEN DAY AND NIGHT\n)\\M tn 2:30 Special l.unch .... 35o\n11:30 to 8  p.   m.   Supper  :i;.r\nThe Royal Ca\u00a3e\nCLASSIC RESTAURANT\nRefinement   and   Delicacy   I'revoll\nOPEN   DAY   AND   NIOHI\nSpecial Dinner 11:30 In 2:30 .... 35c\nSimper   5:30   to   8    - '.Mo\nWe   specialize   In   Chop   Sucy   nnd\nNoodleB\nPhone 182\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nGreatest Advertising Medium of\nl^ie Interior ot B. C.\nHotel Arlington\nCentrally Located\nTrail, B. C.\nA, P. LBVESQUE, Prop.\nAlmost. Grecian in line Is the sti-In ovening gown\nworn by Marlon Davles pictured at the left above.\nThin hhowa the trend of the season. Tho gown is\nin.'peach shade, and the only ornament Is a Jeweled\nbuckle at the belted walst-llne. An exceptionally wise\nbeginning tor the evening wardrobe of the sub-de-\nbut-jite is the Vogue (town at the right above. Since\ndull surfaces will make way to luminous ones, this\nautumn white crepe satin is sponsored. The bodice\nla of simple cut with shirring softening the shoulders\nand a low oval docolletago ln back. Shaped circular\naecttons give restrained bouftancy to tlie long, even.\nBkirt. Three PlnJ* carnellaa are added to the waistline, whloh is one of the Smartest pieces to wear\nantique brocade with a small Jewelled clasp. It Is ft\nflowers, both real and\" artificial, this season. An evening bag that will complement many gown, is made of\nsmall opucherl model. Note the opera pump in the\nsketch, which is popular.\u2014Sketch Is by Vogue.\nNervous Dyspepsia\nBadLiver,Headache\nof YearsVanish\nGives Credit for Health'\nto \"FRUIT-A- TIVES\"\n\"Por years xra\u00bb ]\ntroubled with b_d\nheadaches, nervous\ndyspepsia and liver.,\ntroubles. Finally tried'\n'Frult-a-tlves- and am,\nonce more entirely.\nwell.\"\u2014B. A. Bovay. I\nTrenton,  ont.\nYears-old liver trouble, conartlpi-'\ntlon end overnight with \"Prutt-a-;\ntlvra,\" eay thpueanda. raws*?'\nbiliousness, heartburn, gas, sick headaches go like a flash. Nerves quiet..\nsound sleep at onoo. Kidney and j\nbladder ills pain ln back vanish like\nmagto. Hheumatlsm. neuralgia, neuritis decamp Quick. Complexion,\nclears ln no time.-      ... __\u00ab_, I\nTen of nature's greatest remedial\ncombined ln handy little tablet.\nMarvelous discovery of famous Canadian doctor.   Speedy results, ,\nGat' \"Frult-a-tlves\" from drugglst!\ntoday.   Be now person tomorrow.    \\\nMONTREAL AND\nTORONTO STARS\nWIN IN SWIMS\nGeorge Burleigh, 16 Years, |\nand Munro Bourne\nWell Up\nASPHYXIATION IS\nGREATEST FEAR IN\nDISASTER\n(Continued  From  Pago  One)\nfJOUGLAg\n'** HOTEL**\nRooms and Baths\nE. U and  A. OROUTAGE,\nProps,\nSteam Heated\nThroughout\nBox 60S\nHot and Cold\nWater\nPhone 863\nTRAIL, B. C.\nUNION GARAGE-Service station\nand rnachinp shop, Accessories\ngas, oils. Goodyear selected dealer.\nnorland Ave.   Phone 1.\nPALACE   HOTEL,   TRAIL\nFor  eale.   Apply  P.  O.   Drawer   33\nupon two bodies both those of\nhoisting men whose occupations were\nin the main tunnel itself, rather\nthan far below. One was Clifford\nSmith, un old-time miner, and main\nholetman. the other, Albert Cole,\na tad of 19. Thero too they found\nJohn Parchcilo , nnd thoy brought\nhim out. alive.\nReturning, they due away acain\nonly to encounter. :jOO feet from thc\nmouth, a cave-ln which all last\nnight and all day today balked their\nefforts,\nBeyond thia hn.rri_;ide ^cs probably tragedy, where it ih nobfdy\nknows. Deadly gas Ir prevalent on\nthn other side of ttaj) barrier Rescue rrrwa arn working with gar, appliances and w^th x flro hose, line\npushlnc currentft of fresh air into\nthem.\nAsphyxiation is the greatest tear\nbut want of air may have killed\nsome of thn men. Ordinarily the\nventilation for the working's Roes\nthrough the main shaft, down the\nt,hc mi In shaft, through the tunnels\nand into the eaves. Ahove the main\ntunnel is a disused one. but at a\npoint far above  lt.\nThe old tunnel and the upper\npart of thr slope are now used ss\nthe return mute for the air current.\nFears are held that the syne blast\nwhloh choked the main bc>r<> also\nblocked up the xipper ono. so that\nthere i.i no egress from the mlno\nfor the victims. They are living.\"\nif they am living, in stagnant, gas-\nfilled  air\nThe two known dead Ln the blast,\npresumably a gas-explosion, are;\nClifford Alexander Smith, 40, and\nAlbert Cole. IP. Smith, a widower,\nwas main holstman in tho dlgglns.\nHe formerly resided at Nanaimo,\nB.C.,, but had worked the Biakeburn\ncut, for nln*** years. Cole for six\nyears an emplny0 of the mine, was\na single min from FIreshire, Scot\nland. He resided at the mine\nNO    INFORMATION\nNo information as to the cause\nof the blast, could be obtained from\nJohn Pnrchello. who tonight is the\nonly member of the afternoon shjft\nont of danger. Almost a physical\nwreck from his frightful experience.\nParchello was taken from the debris-strewn   shaft  by   rescuers. Near-\nDRESS SOX\nRayon and Lisle\nWonderful Value\n3 for $1.00\nALL SUMMER\nUNDERWEAR\ni  at Reduced Prices\nH_j^l MENS\nW_en In Tr\u20141\nThe Trail Times\nWEAR\nBOYS\nWEAR\n|UST0W^TOEHK\u00abfl_iToismiCS\nGOING TO EUROPE\nNESON DIVISION\nC. P. R. TO HAVE\n50 NEW ORE CARS\nDr. Alex O. Potter or Kitchener.\nOnt.. recently returned from two\nyears., service at central office Rotary International at Chicago, who.\nsails shortly to take over the post\nof European secretary at Zurick,\nSwitzerland.\nby in tho wreckage were the bodies of Smith and Cole, pinned at\ntho outer edge of the cave-in which\ntrapped 47 of their mates.\nMain tunnel of tho mine is being cleared as rapidly as possible,\nW. J. Blake Wilson, president of the\nBiakeburn Mining company, h_s\nstated, mentioning every available\nman is aiding in rescue operations.\nHe pointed out that. It was Impossible- to estimate at what level of\nthe 3.000 foot gradually-sloping tunnel the blast occurred. Traces of\ngas had never before been found\nln thc mine, he said.\nPLACER MINERS\nOPERATE, LARDO\nPole Operations to Close for\nSeason: Truefissure\nGets Power Plant\nThat tho *placer operations in the\nDuncan nnd Lardo districts are\ncausing much Interest was the announcement mado Thursday by\nJames FVmlds, who has spent several\nmonths ln that area working at the\nfish hatchory. Ho oIbo described the\npole activities ln that aroi as very\nquiet. In two weeks all cont-ractfl\nwill have boon completed and operations cloned for tho \u25a0. senson. he\nstated. During the spring months\na large quantity of polca were taken\nout and they wero of the finest\nquality. Ties and logs wore also\ntaken out ln largo quantities.\nIn thn mining activities of the\nTjistrict placer mining has played an\nimportant part. Large- washings have\nbeen mode three miles above Gerrard and splendid values obtained,\nbut the conipany operating the\nwashings did nofhave maohlnery to\ncatch the finer dust and a great\namount wee lost, stated Mr. Foulds.\nAt present mines are operating with\nfair  Buocces  holow  Duncan.\nAt the Trueflssuro mine a power\nand lighting plant is being completed to supply the mine with\npower. A \u25a0rnruUl saw mill has been\nerected and lumber ls being cut at\nGold Crown claim, which Is situated six miles from Trout lake, to\nsupply lumbM for new living quarters, and otljitVmlne workings.\nrAI.,MF.R3    CARRY    ON\nUNITY, Sask., Aug. 14\u2014JMembers\nof the Sasfeatohewan Farmers political association in South Battle-\nlord oonsituency will continu as\nan organii-fttion. It was decided at\na meeting. Tlie step was taken\n\"in, view of the results of the last\nDominion election, pajrWcularly in\nthe  province  of  P-aftk-i.tch-f-v\/nn.\"\nCost    Quarter    of    Million;\nAre Largest of Kind on\nCanadian Lines\nIn the near future somo 50 new\nore cara will arrive for use on the\nNelson division of the C. P. R...\nSuperintend ent J. Ivan McKay\nstates that these cars, which are\nconstructed in New Glasgow, Nova\nScotia, will cost approximately ono\nquarter of a million dollars.\nEach car will have a capacity of\n700 tons and are the largest of their\ntypR to go on any railroad, ln Canada.\nTORONTO. Ont., Aug. 14.--(CP)\n\u2014The speed. _rWnon Munro Bourne,\nof the Montreal A. A. A., and a 16-\nyear-old rising Toronto star, George\nBurleigh, dominated the concluding\nprogram of the Canadian swin_mlng*\nchampionships here tonight, which\nserved the dual purpose of producing national title-holders and the\npersonnel of the equatlc team to\nrepresent Canada, at tbe British\nEmpire games. Both Bourne ___d\nBurleigh were Earned  as members.\nThe Montreal swimmer gave warn*-,\ning that he will r,e a worthy contender for the Empire 200-ward\ncrown. Over this dtirtince tonight\nBourne flashed his greatest speed,\nand it was good enough to es-\ntablisn~a\"new Canadian record\u2014two\nminutes 11 and 4-6 seconds\u2014bettering the old mark by 1 2-6 seconds.\nBut Bourne was forced to extend\nhimself to the limit to offset the\ngallant challenffe of young Burleigh,\nwho finished a close second.\nIn addition to bis 200-yard effort.\nBurleigh added to his laurels by\nwinning the one-mile championship.\nCutting through the\"water with, an\neasy but powerful stroke, the Toronto youth glided into a commanding lead and easily defeated\nbis nearest competitors, Ernest Bennett nnd James Thompson of Toronto. Burleigh captured the 400-\nyard   event  last'night.\nThe 100-yard back stroke race was\nthe most thrilling of tho night. At\nfirst Bourne wiiT'annonncad as the\nwinner, but the judges later declared the event a dead heat, Murray Griffin of Toronto Y.M.C.A,\nsharing honors with tho Montrealer.\nThe championship will be determined in a raco to be held n-t a\nlater date.\nKIMBERLEY WILL\nPLAY FOOTBALL,\nALBERTA SERIES\nLeave for Medicine Hat Today; Kelly in Charge\nof Train\nKIMBERLEY. B.C. AUGUST 1.\u2014\nKlmberley footballers with their\ncoach, J. Kelly, leave Friday for\nMedicine Hat where they will meet\nRcdcllff on Saturday in the Alberta\nChampionship seriefe.\nThe following players will represent Klmberley: Ore, goal; W. Jones,\nR. Lllloy, G. Scott. C Mllllgan and\nW. Faulds, backs; William Paulds,\nJ. McFarlane. A. Jackson. R. Davidson, D Smith, forwards; H. Littler, spare.\nConcentrator   Is\nBeing: Built for\nTulameen  Mine\nPRINCETON. Aug. 14.\u2014A concentrating mill is being constructed\nat the Silver King mine, controlled\nby W. B. Domberg and located at\nSummit camp, some miles from\nTulameen. An office building and\nmachine ahop are also under construction. \"*   !  |\nFavorable j^porto come from the\nnew tunnel, which has now been\ndriven -C^er 200 feet. About 30\nmon are employed.\nHawkin Refutes\nStories in Regard\nto G. T. R; and C_ N.\nOTTAWA. Ont., Aa?. 14.\u2014(CF1 \u2014\nA refutation of Wnsiilnajton news\nItems respecting tho general sltua*\ntlon surrounding the litigation projected tn tho United States courts\nby tho holders of tha first and second perpetual preference atocks of\ntho Grand Trunk railway to attach\nthe lines of tho Canadian National\nIn the United States territory was\nmade tonight by B. C. Hawkin.\ncha Irman of th0 committee organized jj those stockholders to\nreprosc;^%elr intereots.\nGeorge Noble of\n'    Kimberley Leaves\nfor Big Missouri'\nKIMBERLEY,  B.C..  AUGUST  14\u2014 |\nGeorgo   Noble,   of   Chapman   Camp.\nleft on Friday *or tho Big Missouri\nmlno where he will bo in charge of\ntho electrical department.\nWillingdons Hosts\nat Garden Party\nOTTAWA, Aug. 14\u2014 (CP)\u2014 The\ncapital's premier social event of the\nsummer took place today at Rideau\nhail when their excellencies. Lord\nand Lady Willlngdon received at a\ngarden party. Among the 3.000\nguests -who attended this afternoon\nwere some 200 distinguished members of the British, Irish and French\nbare In Canada to attend the annual meeting of tho Canadian Bar\nassociation.\n*$\n4,^   SPECIALTY\n^Cr      UHOPPE\nANNUAL August SALE-Hats\nNew fall hats just ar-\nl-ived. .Very    smartest\nstyles and the new colore,\nat the  remarkable     low\nprice   for     Friday      and\nKay.l.z $2-50\nSWEATER SUITS\nTwo-piece Sweater Suits\nMonarch knit, all wool. A\ngood assortment of shades\nand sizes (C7 Q^\nONLY --....:... ^'\"V0\n: FOX'S \"Where You Always Buy for: Eest**\n\"T\u00bb\n ws\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS     FRIDAY, AUGUST 15, 1930.\nPage Thre*\nGIRL GUIDES' CAMP\nfiy ORETCHEN GIBSON\nSttB-day afternoon ol last v\/e&M\njnycae In tlio vicinity of tho de-\n{ parting Kaslo boat could not but be\nfcwan t-uvt something* out of the or-\ndt-wry was happening. Over the\nKUfltatnooIt'a sldo lenncd a troop of\nteen    asp    girls\u2014tal,    short,    fair,\nrip, tlitrir-all excited nnd all nat-\nuniformed In dark blue dresses,\nblue hats, long black stockings and\nMack shoes. On their sleeves they\nbore th\u00a9 insignia of Nelson Troop.\n; IXXDJ5, QUI duldes, and in their\nhearts they carried tho thrill of\nanticipated advemture. -Had they\nnot that morning packed their mid\ndles and bloomers, rolled, up their\nblankets and home-made Bleeping\nbags and -were they not this very\nmoment waving, goodbye to parents\nand Nelson\u2014off for a twelve days\nouting at Kaslo!\nLast Sunday .entering Kaslo f rop.\nthe highway, we could see on our\ntight, the outline of tents, A signboard pointed the way to Vlmy\npark. The road led us to the very\ncentre of the Girl Guides' camp. It\nwas baout three o'clock, rest or recreation hour, we learned. The\nmany little tents, looked like wee\ntoys against their background of\nImmensities\u2014peaks, lake, trees. In.\nout and around these tents passed\nbloomered, sun-tanned girls, quietly\nGALT COAL\nSUMMER PRICES\nGALT   LUMP    911.00 per ton delivered\nGALT EGG _...$10.00 per ton delivered\nGALT STOVE   89.00 per ton delivered\nNow is the tirne to arrange for your winter supply.\nWEST TRANSFER GO.\nPHONE 13\nJR-ueBibban\nyMaltE-lract\nAmerica's biccest seller\/\ncalling to one another, laughing,\nhumming, talking. Suoh a happy,\nwholesome, self-reliant looking lot!\nI quite believe anyone who watched\nfor half an hour those forty outdoor-loving girls would give up worrying much over the future generation. One girl was tossing a ball\nabout, a few were reading, two were\nswinging, a half-dozen were darting towards the lake in their bathing suits three or four lounged\nunder the trees. V^thbut one exception, so far as. I could see, these\ngirls were feeling extremely fit and\nthoroughly enjoying themselves. The\nexception had eaten too m-uch\nscrambled egg for breakfast. She\nhad brought her pillow out of the\ntent and was lying\" on her fcyick\nand staring with something like\nfascinated horror at a nearby friend\neating a big banana.\nA kindly officer showed us about.\nThe tents each accommodated from\nfour to six girls. They were very\ntrim with blankets folded on hay-\nfilled sleeping bags and clothing\nneatly disposed of. A long dining\ntable was set up In the open. Oilcloth tacked to laths that could be\nspread out over framework or rolled\nup at will, served as a top. Near\nat hand were two camp stoves and\na kitchen tent, and on the kitchen\ntable were\u2014Imagine\u2014two huge well-\ndecorated birthday cakes and the\nremains  of  a  third.\n\"One of the girls haid a birthday\ntoday and there are two birthdays\ntomorrow,\" we were told. I think\nthe cook and everyone concerned\nshould get three rousing cheers for\ntheir trouble ' and thoughf*lness.\nThe meals are excellent, so all say,\nand though they are served most\ngenerously the girls have no difficulty in \"cleaning their plates\" to\navoid waste.\nThe days ar0 full of Interest. The\ncompanies are divided into patrols\nwith detailed duties. Even dishwashing and waiting on table ln\nsome mysterious way drop their\nIndoor drabness and become adventurous parts of the great game of\ncamping. Thero aro expeditions Into\ntown, and hikes\u2014last week to Shut-\nty's Bench\u2014and every night a bonfire with songs and all the trimmings. Sunday morning the girls\nwent ln a body to church and I\nam sure, appreciated the dignity of\nthe ocx.!.Von.\nConcerning the expeditions into\ntown one of tho girls told me they\npass along an avenue lined with\ncherry trees. Cherry Avenue it ts\ncalled. After tho first day the\ngirls were put on their honor as\nguides not to touch one of tho\ncherries. \"And, oh, they're such\nlovely big black cherries, right on\nthe street\u2014and so easy to reach!\"\nshe added rather wistfully. But\n\"Guide's honor\" Is a thing no guide\nbreaks   lightly.\nIt may have been the reaction\nof a fine day after a wet Saturday and fears of a continued rain\ndlsspelled that put everyone in such\nexcellent spirits Sunday. All\nseemed to have surmounted their\nhard-ships in spendid shape, for\nhardahipB are sure to be encountered\nln any oamp. For Instance those\neager excited girls of Monday afternoon's departure must have been a\nweary troop and the officers tired to\nthe breaking point before Monday\nnight had passed. It was after\ntwelve when the boat reached Kaslo,\nafter   one   before   their   beds   wero\nJACK GUEST RETURNS\nThese photographs of Jack Guest, winner of the famous Diamond Sculls, at Henley, England, were taken on\nboard the Cunard line Ascania, as she arrived at Quebec and Montreal recently. Jack' and his mother, who\naccompanied htm back to Canada, were met enthusiastically   by   many   friendB and  offlcals  from  Toronto.\n\"listen to them (PWjckfe**\n99\n3RHTNG and ol<l-\u2014everybody\nEkes the defiexom crispness of\nKellogg's Bice Krispies. These\ntoasted rice babbles actually\neracMe<>n-londinraiIkorrnanv\nAnd vhitfo torpor! WhgMcmpV\ning goodness In every spoonful.\nPine for yon! Boorish ingrice in\nteasjMo-digestform.\nServe Rice Krispies for bronlc-\nfaatj lor hmrli.  Extra del-dons\nfor -misery suppers. Children\nlove milk with Rice Krispies.\nUse Bice Krispies in c_milie_*\nin pfooe of nntmeats* Make\nmacaroons. Sprinkle into soaps.\nXhere:nefverw__8a handier ccrcaL\nOrder from yonr grocer*\nOvent-fireeh in the ved-and-green\npackage with tbe inner-seal -wax-\n.tile wrapper. Served by hotels,\nrestaurants. Made by Kellogg in\n.Ontario.\nfi.-.d and hot cocoa, bread ahd butter served to all hands, and I expect after two before anyone got to\nsleep amid the ,,strange surroundings,\nwith nothing but a hay-filled bag\nbetween the sleepers and their far\nfrom downy Mother Nature, but all\nwere up bright and early next morning,'the enchantment of a new experience adding zest  to everything.\nThen last Saturday was hardly\nan ideal day for tenting and eating\nin the open. Supper time It was\nstill raining. The spirits of the\ncamp stoves wero decidedly dampened, but not the spirit of tho troop.\nThey moved their provisions into the\npavilion (lt ls not done as easily as\nlt Is written by any means), and\nato in comparative comfort, then\nspades ln hand, they dug trenches\naround their tents to drain water\noff or prehaps this was done earlier\n80 they might sleep In comparative\ndryness. Sunday noon -seemed tho\nworse for the weather man's ill nature, but lt must have been a\ntrying experience for everyone, especially those in charge. Nevertheless\na valuable experience, bringing out\nIn many cases an unexpected eenso\nof humor and resourcefulness.\nNext Saturday, when most of us\nare getting our best sleep between\nthree and four o'clock, all will ba(\nactivity at Vlmy Park. Again will\nmiddles and bloomers be packed and\nblankets and sleeping bags rolled.\nCamp will be broken, outing equipment piled high and brightening\ndawn will find excited uniformed\nfigures scurrying once more to the\ndecks ot the Kuskanook\u2014homeward\nbound.\nBut they will be talcing more\nvaluable equipment home with them\nthan that which they brought\u2014\nenriched dispositions, improved physiques, stored memories.\nThis annual outing for Girl Guides\nis sponsored by the Qaughters of the\nEmpire organization, and made possible by donations, as the feo\ncharged each girl covers Ititle more\nthan traveling expenses. All who are\ninterested in- the' girls feel, I air.\nsure, deeply grateful to those who\nshoulder tho h^ivy personal responsibility d the undertaking, the leadership, tho cooking, the nursing, if\nnecessary. Their good citizenship\ncannot be overestimated.\nRomances   in   Nelson\nBusiness\nLeaves  From  Paiges  of  City's  Diary  Back   in   the\nWhen Business Men Arrived and Settled\nin This New Country\n'90s\nSLOCAN CITY GIRL\nHONORED, SHOWER\nr^S^OAJS^\nKICK   KRISPIES\nRICE\nKRISPIES\nIWAOT TO BAT\n~~-*eepwm\\\nSLOCAN CITY, B. C, Aug, 14.\u2014\nThe Misses Dorothy and Mabel Parker wero hostesses ou Monday afternoon at their home when they\nentertained at a surprlso kitchen\nshower tn honor of Ihlas Lily Morley,\nwhoso marriage takes place on Friday morning. The honored guest was\ncompletely surprised\" and, when, on\nher arrival, she was escorted by two\ntiny girls, Catherine Olay and Don\nJohnson, who were dressed as cooks,\nto tho living room where the\ngifts were presented by them. Tlie\nafternoon was pleasantly spent In\ncontests and games. The following\nwere among the Invited gmysts: Miss\nLily Morley, the Misses Alice, Catherine and Peggy Curtis, Mrs. G. Law,\nMrs. George Stewart, Mras .Walter\nBrown, Mrs. D. Ewing, Mrs* William\nRussell, Miss G. L. Reynolds. Miss\nBeth Gage, Mlsa Frances Nye, Miss\nVelma Clough, Mrs. C. Swan, the\nMisses Dorothy and Mabel Parker\nand Mrs, H. Parker.\nMiss Dorothy Parker who was the\nguest of Mr. and Mrs. R ,D. Kennedy at Lemon creek for a few days\nhas arrived home.\nMr. and Mrs,, M. E. Shannon and\nbaby and Mr. and Mrs. W. George\nof New Denver spent Sunday the\nguests of Mr. and Mrs. T. J, Armstrong,\nMrs. Alan Merry and family of\nAnnabell are spondf\/ig a holiday\nhere, the guests of Mr. and Mrs,\nWalter Clough\" and Alderman and\nMrs. William Clough.\nBy   O.   ,T,   W.   BHCGG\nYears pass and with each succeeding generation something of tho\nhistory of a city fades from the\nmemory of Its people. So it is In\nNelson. Time has passed, new buildings have been erected and old businesses supplanted by new ones. It\nls regretable that history should\nfade but it is nono the less the case.\nNow tho youth of Nelson hears\nthe remaining old-timers speak of\nsuch and such a man who ran a\ncertain kind of business at a certain stand, For Instance there was\nthe John A. Turner & Co., general\nmerchants, whose business flourished\nin tho '90's. This was one of the\noldest and most, prominent mercantile businesses ln the Kootenays and\nwas situated at the corner of Baker\nand Josephine streets. The ' business was established by J. Fred Hume\nIn 1890 and conducted under the\nname of J. Fred Hume & Co. J, A.\nTurner was manager for Mr. Humo\nfrom '02 till '94, and ln the latter\nyear purchased the whole business.\nHAD STAND ON SITE\nK. W. C BLOCK\nHyde, Tttsworth & Co., commission\nmerchants, grocers and provision\ndealers, will be remembered where\nthe K. W. C. block- now stands.\nThis house was established ln 1895\nby L. M. Hyde for Herrln & Co., of\nSpokane. In February of the same\nyear L. M. Hyde and E. Tltsworth\npurchased, the  business.\nBack in the '90's J. A. Gilker was\ndesignated as \"postmaster, merchant\nand councilman\". Coming to Nel\nson from Revelstoko in 1899. he\nbrought with him hjfi first stock of\ngoods and tho same year was appointed postmaster. The following*\nyear he hand his business nssoclate,\nF. D. Wells put up the fourth frame\nbuilding erected In Nelson,\nTho store containing tho post-\noffice ln those days was always a\npopular one nnd we are told that\nthe business house of Gilker & Wells\nwas Just that. The Gilker store\nin those days was on tho site of\nthe present modern firm.\nWAR   NOTED   HOUSE\nThe Lawrence Hardware company,\nsituated where the Nelson Hardware\nstands today, was a firm of note ln\nthe Kootenays. This store, owned by\nJames Lawrenco, was opened tn 1896\nand, it is recalled, carried tho largest and most complete stock of its\nkind ln the country.\nCharles Hlllyer, contractor and\nbuilder, jrhose building occupied the\nsite of tho Wood-Vallance, Is remembered as one of the first older-\nmen of the city. He came to Nelson ln 1891 and was elected on\n.Nelson's first board of aldermen\nupon the citizen's ticket in April,\n1897.\nMOYIE STORE\nSCENEROBBERT\nThieves   Take   Goods   From\nR.  A.  Smith's   Business House\nMrs. Sampson\nVisits, Boswell\nBOSWELL, B. O.'i Aug. 14.\u2014Mrs.\n-Sampson of Nelson wbs a \/week-end\nvisitor to Boswell. On her return\nshe was accompanied by her daughter, Miss Phyllis Sampson, who has\nbeen picking fruit for Mrs. L.\nHepher.\nMiss Kingston and Miss Hicks of\nWinnipeg aro spending a vacation\nhere.\nCaptain Dalgas, engineer in charge\nof the Boswell-La France link of\nthe now highway, was the weekend guest of Mr, and Mrs. W. L,\nHepher.\nMr. and Mrs. 0. B. Twigg, who\nhave been the guests of Miss E.\nHoliday-Smith for tho past week,\nloft on Monday for their homo In\nCreston.\nMrs. O. Andostead of Wynndel\nspent tho week-end ,the guest of\nMiss Grace Macklo.\nMiss Sylvia Benedettl lias arrived to spend some tlmo in Boswell. Her sister. Miss Lena Benedettl, who waa the week-end guest\nof Mr. and Mrs. F. Kunst, returned\non Monday to her home in Wynndel.\nMm. Hughes and Uttle daughter,\nJanet, are spending a holiday at\nthe coast.\nMiss Kathleen Hughes la visiting\n\u25a0friends   in   Calgary.\nSlipping on the roof of a box\ncar while engaged in switching operations ln the East London 0. N. R.\nyards, William McRoberts of 72\nCurry street, London, Ont., escaped\ndeath by a narrow margin. Mr. McRoberts fell down between two cars\non the moving train but thrust his\nbody outward and fell with or* foot\ntouching the track. It was painfully\ncrushed. He was operated on at\nSt. Joseph's hospital.\nPOPULAR COUPLE\nWED\/ROSSLAND\nMiss Vivien Crowe Becomes\nBritfe  of  E.  Perkins;\nPretty Wedding\nROSSLAND. B. C, Aug. 14\u2014The\nvery spirit of summer Itself seemed\nto have taken possession of St.\nAndrew's United churoh, Tuesday\nafternoon, the occasion being the\nmarriage ot Miss Vivltn Patricia\nCrowe, only daughter of Mrs. Joseph H. Crowe and Edgar E. Perkins. Arches of sweet peas and\nbaby breath outlined the aisles,\nand a large flora] arch stretched\nacross the front of the church,\nfrom which was suspended a white\nwedding bell. To the strains of\nthe wedding march, played by Cecil\nTurner, the bride entered the church\non the arm of her brother, Gordon\nHarper, and w*s met at the altar by\nthe groom, attended by his brother,\nHoward Perkins of Ka_lo. The bride,\nwho is a native daughter of Rossland was a vision of loveliness in\nher wedding gown of white eathi,\nwith coronet of pearls, and veil of\nFrench embroidered not. Her\nstreamer bouquet was of Ophelia\nroses and slmonla. Miss Charlotte\nLowes, of Trail, the maid of honor,\nwore sea spray green georgette and\ncarried roses and sweet peas. Tho\nbridesmaids, Misses Catherine Ur-\nquhart and Grace Freeman, wore\nfowered georgette In a blending of\npale pink and deep blue, with off-\nthe-face hats In beige. Their bouquets were roses and sweet peas.\nLittle Very Petrlo, the flower girl,\nwas a dainty blossom herself in a\nfrilly frock of primrose organdie,\nand the ring was carried by Lawrence Clegg wearing a page suit of\nwhite satin. Rev. 0. H. Daly was\nthe officiating clergyman, and Dr.\nS. J. Daly and Jack Mott of Spokane, cousin of the bride, acted\nas ushers.\nDuring ths signing of the register,\nSt. Andrew's choir sang the \"Bridal\nChorus\" from \"The Rosemniden.*'\nAfter the ceremony, a reception\nwas held at the home of the bride's\nmother on Washington street, south.\nMrs. Crowe received her guests,\nln a frock of lavender and pule\npink flowered georgette, and waa\nassisted by the groom's mother, Mrs.\nlaO-aoiafawbaaM. At\u00abfldr-\u00ab-tf*\ngiwm\nnonctm\nS.  J.\nPerkins   of   Kaslo,   who   wore   sand]\nflat   crepe,   with   black   hat.\nThe homo was beautifully deocs*-*\nated with flowers, the dining tabM\nbeing centered with a silver baskerS\nof sweet peas. Mrs. George W.\nUrquhart and Mrs, R. J. Clegg\"\npresided over the tea urns and th*\nices were cut by Mrs, WlUtam H,\nHeld and Mrs. John G- Urquhait.\nActing as servlteurs were Misses\nGwen Hartford of Trail, M\u00bb Araii--\nshaw, Susie ,i.Vqu.hart. Matvurtit\nChristian, Marlon Reld. France*\nSlmcock  and Etta.  McDonnell.\nThe toast  to the bride  waa giv*\nby Rev. c. H. Daly, and responi\nto   by   the   groom,   while   Dr.\nDaly    proposed    the    toast    to    tun\nbridesmaids.\nLater In the evening, the younfl\ncouple made their escape amid 4\nshower' of rice and confetti, being\nmotored to Castlegar by Mr. A. EX,\nAllison, where they boarded th*\ntrain for the coast, the bride wear*,\ning en ensemble suit of beige. naif\ncream rosomere crepe, with hat,\nshoes and hose to match. On thettf\nreturn they will take up realdenoB\nin Roesland, where Mr. Perkins Ja\nprincipal of the McL-an sdh-ooL\nMrs. Perkins has been until recentd*\nIn   the employ  of  J.  0.  Urq_d_art,\nWomen's chatter. Prof. Frteden*\nthai and Dr. Cohn-Guben ot Berlin\nhavo just solemnly informed tha\nworld, ls due to the fact that theif\nphysiological speech apparatus ls set\nin motion more easily than that of\nmen, whereat one man adds. What\ntaho German scholars are trying tit\nsay ls evidently a highbrow v\u00abr_lct>\nof an old New Ensb-ndism, \"Sha\nhad a tongue hung ln the ntlddBg\nand running at both ends.*\nMOYIE, B. C, Aug. 14\u2014On Tuesday the 12th of Aug., between the\nhours of one o'clock and early\nmorning some burglars entered R. A.\nSmith's general store through a\ntransit over the front door, and\nhelping themselves to money, dry\ngoodn, and groceries and also going\nthrough show-cases taking watches,\nfountain pens, pocket knives, etc.\nThe exact amount of what was\ntaken   will   never   be   known.\nThe thieves made their get away\nthrough a back door, in the rear\nof  the store.\nAfter an investigation It is believed that the intruders had a\ncar in the back alley awaiting\nthem.\nIt. was also reported that on\nMonday night some one helped\nthemselves to gas, oil, and reflect-\ntors, also the wiring from a British\nColumbia government gasoline shovel, that is doing repair work on\nthe  road  west   of  here,\n\u00a311 Watson   Shoe   Co..   Ltd,\n\\h_10  (i,1(,s   beBt   a-nd   qntckett\nUllUC work.    Our new McKay\nBtitcher,  \"the  only  one\nf| \u2022 ln    the    district?\nK-H-QI-'C    *sewa   H0lcs  en  -all\nJUCUaUd    women's     shoe\na Prompt  on\n1\ntown service.\n3\nA bic^ powerful\nSTUDEBAKER.\n70 horsepower\n114 inch wheelbaie\nL. 0. B. A. Official\nAddresses Lodge\nat Slocan City\nSLOCAN OITT, B. C, Aug. 14\u2014\nMiss F. E. Williams of Vancouver\ngrand mistress of the L.O.B.A of\nBritish Columbia paid an official\nvisit to the local lodge here on\nMonday evening at a special meeting. After the business of the\nlodge was dispensed with a social\nevening was held by the members\nln honor of the worthy mistress.\nDuring the courso of tho evening\na miscellaneous shower was given\nMlsa Lily Morley who Is to be\nmarried soon. The following wero\npresent, Miss Lily Morley, Mrs.\nA. S. Morley, Mrs. A. E. Purney,\nMrs. Thomas M^Nelsh, Mrs. C.\nSwan, Mrs. r. g. Warner, Mrs,\nJ. H. Pinchbeck. Mrs. W. E. Graham, George Nlchol and C, B.\nTipping. Dainty refreeiimanta ware\nserved  at   midnight.\nLabor to Investigate Police\nTho International Labor Defence\nannounced lt would organize w 'labor\nJury to conduct an Investigation into the charges of police brutality\nin the Communist anti-war demonstration in Union Square, New\nYork, August l. The Jury, whose\nmeetings will be open to tho public, will consist of representatives\nelected by the unions and other\nlabor organizations.\nA BIG and brimful car, of 70 horsepower, and 114-inch\n. wheclbaw... a car built to Studebaker's 78-year-old\nstandards of quality. Never has so power-ill a car been sold\nfor so low a price. Below #1500, there is no comparable car*\nper-dollar value. Check its quality. Consider such features\nas Thermostatic control of cooling, Donble-drop frame,\nSelf-adjusting spring shackles, Full power muffler, Gasoline\npump, Lanchester vibration damper, Cam-and-lever ttect*\nIng, and Clutch torsional damper.\nBut'see the car, drive it, verify its many fine<ar reatnw*\nbefore you decide.\n4-DOOR REGULAR SEDAN $1155\ntoodfterfor*   .... $10-3 Tourer 41153\nClubSodon 1090 Coqnl Sid-an (6 wln\u00bbw*w'l) WM\nCoupe for 2 1090 Londau6\u00bbdan-|6wfr*wh\u00ab^t>1203\nCoups for 4 1155 Regal Tourer 1*6 wfr. w-S.iiM 1285\nAll priew of Wa\/JrBrv\/ll_. Sputial equipment, frt'tQht onef gov't hum i-tro\nKOOTENAY GARAGE\nJosephine St. Phone 43\nNelson, B. C.\nGuaranteed Relief\nfor Asthma\n\"I want everv Asthma sufferer in\nthis district to try my treatment\nentirely at my risk. Go to your\ndruggist and get a package- of my\nAsthmador and should It rail to\ngive instant relief, the druggist will\ncheerfully refund your money without any question whatever.\" This\nwas the standing offer made by Dr.\nSchiffmann which was Accepted by\nthousands nnd thousands of suffer-\nors\u2014and this generous offer holds\ngood today.\nNo matter how violent tho attack,\nhow obstlnato the case, or what\nelse has failed, Asthmador or As-\nmador Cigarettes will give Instant\nrelief, usually In 10 seconds, but\nalways within 15 minutes. Hundreds\nof unsolicited testimonials abundantly prove what Dr. SchiffmannB\nremedy has done, and we know it\nWill do the same for others. So\ncertain is lt that Asthmador will\nproduce Instant relief and will he\nfound thoroughly dstlsfactory ln\nevery way, that your druggist is\nauthorized to refund your money if\nyou should happen to bo tho one\ncase ln thousands that is not relieved hy the use of Asthmador.\nOther   Branches  at   Winnipeg,   Vorktmi,   Saskatoon,   Edmonton,\nCalajrry, Lethbridge, VancouTcr, Kamloopn, Vernon and Victor!-\nOddments at Clearing Prices\nDuring Alterations\nLADIES' WEAR\nBATHING SUITS. AU reduced, fine\nrib knit, two-piece styles, with\nstriped tops or plain. In shades\nof green, blue, navy and black.\nRegular $4.75 and $3.95.\nTo clear at $3.50 and $2.05\nNIGHT GOWNS. Made of heavy\nrayon. Well made garments . In\npeach, mauve, green amd white.\nSpecial    _ \u2022\u25a0-:...  $1.50\nWOODS VESTS AND BLOOMERS\nIn shades of marie, woodbine,\ncameo,   gooseberry  and   black.\nVests   91.50\nBloomers   $1.05\nHATS. All hats, to clear\nat ..._ \u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u2022 08.-* and $1.95\n\u2014Second Floor\u2014H.B.C\u2014^\nDRY GOODS\nLADIES' SILK SCARVES. REGULAR VALUES $1.25 and $1.95\nCLEARING AT gQp  EACH\nBeautiful Silk Scarves in heavy\nquality silk oddments that are\nleft from our regular stock and\naro being cleared out regardless\nof cost.\nTriangle and oblong shapes in floral\neffects.\nShop early for such  values.\nNOTE OUR CLEARANCE PRICE,\nEACH  - -  680\n\u2014Main   Floor\u2014H. B. C\u2014*\n Page Four\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS      FRIDAY, AUGUST 15, 1980.\nNelson iatlg -foam\nFublicatton every morning except\nSunday by The News publishing\nComoany, Limited, Nelson. B. O.\nBusiness letters should be addressed and checks and money orders made payable to The News\nPublishing Company. Limited, and\nin no case to individual members of\nthe. staff.\nAdvertising rate cards and A. B. C.\n-tatements of circulation mailed on\nrequest, or may be seen at the office of any advertising agency rec-\nogn!2ed by the Canadian Daily\nNewspaper association.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\nBy Mail (country), per month $   .60\nPer year    .     6.0p\nBy mall (city), por year   13.05\nOutside Canada, per month 76\nPer   year       7.50\nDelivered, per week .       .25\nPer year _.     13.00\nPayable in advance\nMember Audit Bureau of Circulation\nAunt Het\nFRIDAY   ATJGDST  18,  1930\nFURTHER  INCREASE\nSEEN IN THE\nDOMINION\nToday's Human Comedy\nrf f rntra\nBy MS. W,\nCURING\nBABTON,   M.D.\nDISEASE\nOUR   GLANDS\nBY\nHEADS PARTY\nIN INDIA\nIn  British  Columbia, tbe\nPowell River  Company  has\nhad  an   extension   in  hand\nfor  some  time,  which  will\ninvolve   an   expenditure   of\nseveral  million  dollars, and\nprovision is being made for\na    further    increase    when\nconditions warrant.    A serious   water shortage interfered with operations in ,1929\nof  the  Pacific   Mills;  and,\nalthough as good a showing\nas 1928 was made, the company   was   able   to   redeem\nbonds   to   the    amount   of\n$209,200.       Moreover     this\ncompany is building a paper\nspecialities   plant   in    Vancouver  at  a  cost  of  about\n$150,000;   and,   during   the\nyear,    expended    $1,386,520\nin    addition    and    improvements to properties at Ocean\nFalls, where the main plant\nof the company is situated.\nThe announcements which\nhave   been   reviewed   above\ncarry forward  a process of\nexpansion   which   has   been\ngoing  on   in   the   Canadian\npulp and paper industry for\nmany years.    The Canadian\nindustry had its origin eai-ly\nin the last century, but operations were on small scale\nuntil the third  quarter.    It\nwas not only until the war\nthat the production of pulp\npassed the million ton mark,\nand  since  then   this   figure\nhas been more than trebled.\nIp 1928, the gross production\nof the industry  was valued\nat $233,077,000,  and it was\nthe  largest   single   industry\nin the Dominion.    Its main\nline of development has been\nin the production of newsprint.    In this product the\nmillion ton mark was passed\nin 1922.    For the last calendar   year   the   production\nof   newsprint   in   Canadian\nmills    was    2,726,000    tons,\ncompared     with     1,387,000\ntons   iu   the   United   States\nmills.   Canada is by far the\nlargest   exporter   of    newsprint in the world.    For the\nfiscal  year ended  in  March\nlast,  the   exports   of  newsprint   from    the    Dominion\nwere   49,703,000   cwt.,   with\nwith a value of $145,401,000\n\"I was kind o' mi6era\u2014e when\never-body else liad on long e_rta,\nbut now I'm glad my knees ls\nthe only ones ln town (hat's 6\u2014U\na mystery.\"\nThe\nLighter Side\nThe inference 1b that Mr.\nTwine, who led the British open\nfor awhile, was just stringing\nthem   along,\nNERVE\nWhat's -this extra charge lor oll?H\ndemanded  the   motorist.\n\"That's lor the oil wo lett on the\nupholstery,\" explained the garage\nman.\nEDUCATION    SOUTHING    FIERCE\n\"Wliy did you leave your last\nplace?\" asked the mistress ot a\nfashionable home ol thB prospective\nNegro maid.\n\"Dey wTfs too highbrow lor me,\"\nshe answered. ''Dey was always\nllghttn' an\" fussin', .and It sho' kept\nme busy runnln' from de keyhole\nto de dictionary, so Ah got mad an'\nquit.\"\n\u2014-o\u2014\nHowever, disappearance of so\nmany blacksmiths Irom Ontario has\nnot lessened the sound of the anvil\nchorus.\nECONOMICS     I\nThe old  experiences came again\nTo all the conscientious lands.\nWith many striving to explain\nWhat no one clearly understands\n\u2014-o\u2014\n\"CAN    YOU    DRIVE    WITH    ONE\nHAND?\"   ASKED   THE   GIRL   IN   A\nGENTLE VOICE\n\"YOU BET I CAN.\" HE ANSWERED   EAGERLY.\n\"THEN HAVE AN APPIJC,\" SHE\nSAID   SWEETLY.\nEDUCATION   COUNTS\n\"Sines you gave your son a car\nhas he kept hn promise to do more\nstudying at college?\"\n\"I'm certain of it, because he\nwrites home much oltener now for\nmoney   lor   books.\"\n\"WHAT   I   SAY   ALWAYS   GOES.\"\n\"WELL.    THEN.    SAY    'FLIVVER,'\nBECAUSE   THIS   ONE  WE'RE  IN  IS\nSURE   STALLED.\"\nHe\u2014\"Did that girl who was so determined to marry George get him?\"\nShe\u2014''No, she did not.\"\nHe\u2014\"Did ho die of accident or\ndisease?\"\nNative\u2014\"Watt, I figger this land out here ain't good fer much.\nBut we sorta reckon it helps the earth to hold together.\"\nEfficient\nHousekeeping\nBy LAUBA  A.  -IB-MAN\nTEN YEARS AGO\nTou have been reading with, interest oi the experiments at University of,-Pittsburgh and at General Electric Laboratories at Scheh-\nectedy, N. Y., whereby certain\nlengths have been shown -b destroy\nharmful organisms in plants and\nanimals.\nThe idea is to create such a heat\nwithin the tissues that the organisms are destroyed with no damage\nto the tissues.\nYou will remember that paralysis,\nthat has defied the skill and know-,\nledge of physicians since the dawn\nol history, has been cured In many\ncases by infecting the individual\nwith the organisms of malaria.\nAlter malaria had run its course\nlor some time, being kept within\nboundB by quinine, the patient waa\nthen cured of his malaria, and ln a\nnumber oi instances his paralysis\nwas cured also,\nIt was the success ol this malaria\ntreatment, which was lelt to be duo\nto%the heat-the body manufactured\nto flight oil the malaria infection\nthat gave the idea ol the value ol\nradio waves against all organisms.\nIt'is likely that lt will bB a .little\nwhile yet before everything ls perfected so that this may be tried on\nhuman beings.\nHowever what I want to talk\nabout ia this heating of the body\nthat takes place when any in\u00bb\nlection enters. The temperature,\nimmediately goes up, because that Is\nNature's method of lighting oil th*\ntrouble. And Nature provides hea.\nin the proportion in which it Ifl\nneeded.\nThis is the reason that lt Is' ft\nmistake when you find you havo a\nrise In temperature to Immediately\nuse drugs or means to reduce that\ntemperature.\nI know that lt seems like a natural or proper thing to do because\nwith a normal temperature you have\na fleeing of safety, a feeling that\nall must be right If your temperature is normal.\nThe proper thing Is to go to bed\nand remain thero until tbe temperature Is normal, using no drugs\nwhatever until your doctor sees you.\nIf he finds the temperature running about 101 degrees F. to 102 degrees F. he may not give you any\ndrug to reduce the temperature, but\ngive you a purgative to free the\nblood of any poisons that are preventing it doing its best work. If\nthe temperature goes real high he\nwill then try to control lt.\nRemember then that heat ls yoxir\nbody's best friend, Its best lighter\nand  best  defender.\nPULP   AND   PAPER\nIN CANADA\nDevelopments in the pulp\nand paper industry are being steadily reported from\nvarious parts of the Dom\ninion. In Eastern Canada\namalgamations are in progress, one of them of large\nproportions, and in British\nColumbia plants are being\nextended. In Eastern Canada, three well-known paper\nmanufacturing companies\nhave just been merged in\nthe St. Lawrence Corpoj-a-\ntion, while British and Canadian interests are concern.\ned in the union of tlie Anglo\n-Canadian Pulp and Paper\nMills with the Canadian\nPower and Paper Corporation. The company formed\nby the latter union, it is\nBtated by Rothermere, will\nbe   the  .largest   newsprint\nmanufacturing   company   in\nthe  British  Empire.\ntlie merger of the British\nand    Canadian    corporations\nis being accomplished by an\nexchange of Canadian Power   aiVJ   Paper   Corporation\nshares for those of the Anglo-Canadian  Pulp and Paper\nMills.    The  combined  corporation will control six large\nmills, besides other propei-t-\nies,  and  the  daily  capacity\nproduction   will   be   approximately 2,500 tons of newsprint,  plus  a large tonnage\nof   pulp,   kraft   and   board\npapers.     The   new   corporation will include, besides the\ncompanies  now  entering   it,\nproperties which were formerly  operated   by  the  Port\nAlfred  Paper, thc Belgo-Ca-\nnadian Paper Company, the\nSt. Maurice Valley Corporation    and    the    Laurentide\nCompany.    Viscount Rothei--\nmere   states   thaft   approximately 90  per cent of the\nstock  of  the   new  corporation' will be held by British\nand Canadian investors.\nThe merger, which is being consummated by the St.\nIjawrence Corporation, will\nhave a daily capacity of\n1,000 tons of newsprint, 100\ntons of kraft and 70 tons of\nbox boa.nl. Freehold and\nleasehold timber lands, water power, real estate and\nequipment of the new corporation, less resources for\ndepreciation and depletion\namount to more than .$49,-\nnew corporation are the St.\nLawrence Paper Wills,\nBrompton Pulp and Paper\nCompany, and the Lake St.\nJohn Power and Paper Company.\nTOMORROW'S MENU .\nBr\u20140\u2014Mt\n\u2014I\u2014a-as\nCereal\nFried   Estgs Bacon\nToast. Coffee\nLuncheon\nVegetable Soup\nPeanut  Butter  Sandwiches\nApple Sauce Cookies\nTea\nDinner\nFruit Cock\u2014a lie\nLamb   Chops\nNoodles Peas\nSiloed Tomatoes\nCottage Pudding Coffee\n(From The Dallv News of AmrttBt\nIS, 1820)\nEdward Raay. Oreat Britain, yesterday won the United States open\ngolf championship at. Inverness. U.\nA., with a score of 395 for 72\nholes, thus carrying the cup to\nEngland for  the second  time.\nA pretty wedding took place- at\ntne home of Mr. and Mrs. W. T.\nWynne, Appledale, yesterday when\ntheir daughter Bessie was married\nto O. Stalnton of Trail.\n...\nThe Canadian dollar was quoted\net 88 centa 'art the New York market yes\u2014rday.\n...\nMr. and Mr6. William Richardson,\nfor 20 years residents of Nelson,\nleft yesterday for the coast where\nthey will reside. A son Norman\nRichardson, who Is a patient at the\nKootenay l_ke General hoapltaj and\ndaughter. Miss Nellie Richardson,\nwill remain here.\nDISCOVERER\nOF IRON MASK\nPASSES AWA1\nGeorge   Breeden,   Kobtenaj\nPioneer, Found Dead at\nKamloops\nMre. OobssI Ben, new leader of\nthe Women'B Nationalist party '\u2022ot\nIndia, from a recent and. interesting photograph.\nAcrobat Crawford Goes to Fen\nGOOD   CHOW  CHOW\nIn many homes Ohow Chow u the\nfavorite pickle. A reader friend, Mrs.\nW. P. li., has asked for these recipes:\nChow Chow, Number One: Two\nquarts of elicc-d green cucumbers,\ntwo quarts of Bmall whole cucumbers, two quarts of small onions,\nthree heads of oaullflower- cut up,\nthree chopped green \/\/;cet peppers\n(seeds discarded), four bunches of\ncelery diced, two cups or brown\nsugar, one and one-half gallons of\nelder, vinegar, 24 tablespoons of\nground mustard, one and one-half\ncups of flour and one ounce of\ntumeric Soak vegetables ln a weak\nbrine cffernlght, each vegetable ln a\nseparate bowl. Next morning cook,\nseparately, In tho same brine, till\ntender, then drain (throwing away\nbrine). Now make a sauce: Combine the flour, mustard, sugar and\ntumeric, then wet with a little of tlie\nvinegar to form a smooth paate hefore adding the rest of the vinegar: boll 15 minutes, stirring constantly ,then add tbe vegetables\nand cook 16 minutes longer before\ncanning, hot, in hot sterilized Jars\nand sealing at once. (It Is safer to\nset the preserving kettle into a large\npan containing boiling water, rather than leave It over direct flame,\nas It may  burn, otherwise.)\nChow Chow, Number Two (for a\nsmaller family): One quart of green\nand yellow beans, mixed, one quart\nof large allced cucumbers, one\nlarge cauliflower chopped, one quart\nof sliced green tomatoes, one quart\nof small whole cucumber.-,, one quart\nof small butter onions and four\ngreen sweet peppera cut up finely\n(seeds discarded). Mix these vegetables together, cover them with\nwater, stir 'In one Pint of salt, and\nlot stand 24 hours. Then heat\nthe entire mixture (in this brine)\nmerely long enough to scald, and\nturn all Into a colander. Throw\naway the brine, Now, In your preserving kettle, make this sauce:\nInto one cup of flour stir one tablespoon of tumeric, six tablespoons of\ndry mustard and enough vinegar to\nform a smooth paste. Add more\nvinegar\u2014enough to make two and\none-half quarts of sauce ln all\u2014and\nboll till smooth, stirring steadily,\nThen add the vegetables and cook\ntill well heated before putting\nInto hot, sterilized glass jars and\nscaling airtight.\nHarry Glbbs, of Sacramento. Gal.,\nIs spending his vacation in the\ncity with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nM. aibbs.\n(Prom The Dill News. Aug. 14,1920)\nAnnouncement was made by Hon.\nDeB. Farrls, attorney-general and\nminister of labor, yesterday of the\nAppointment of Mrs. Eliza McCulloch, Mrs. Annie Edith Rutherford\nand Mrs. Marlon Louise Crease as\nmembers of the advisory board, under the supervision of the Mothers'\nPension   act.\n\u2022   *   \u2022\nJim Brassfleld took first place\nyesterday in the District Rod and\nGun club shoot at the C. P. R.\nflats when he scored 46. E. Klnahan\nwas second wlih 38.\nAt the residence of Mr. and Mrs.\nE. J. Rlgby, Pern Road. Trail. Rev.\nW, Stevenson, pastor of the Baptist\nchurch, united in marriage Roland\nChaplin Crowe, a well-known barrister and sol 1cItor. and Miss Rachel\nDorothy Newman, daughter of the\nlate   Theodore   Newman.\nAt the csdet rifle practise yesterday, Corporal Campbell, Cadets Alex\nStewart, Ted Mason,' Clifford Burns.\nE. Wilde and Carl Jolmosn all\nmade splendid scores.\nWilliam Pitts, Art Bush and ft.\nAndrew left yesterday for a fishing\nvacation on the main lake.\nWhat the\nPressIsSaying\nRADIO'S   All)   TO   AIRMEN\nTihe Australian airman, Major\nCharles Klngsford-amlth, has given\ncredit to the radio service for helping him to find a safe landing at\nHarbor Grace in Newfoundland. It\nlr, doubtful where the Southern\nCross would have landed but for\nthn directions furnished the airmen\nby ship.1, at sea, but also by the\nCanadian radio service of the department   of marine.\nApparently the Southern Cross\ncamo in originally far south of\nNewfoundlaJid. The air navigators\nthought they were near Cape Race\nat the easterly tip of Newfoundland,\nwhen they were more likely about\naoo miles away In the direction of\nSable Island off the coast of Nova\nScotia,\ntinder the strain of battling with\nfog in the darkness over the North\nAtlantic. Klngsford-Smith complained that, at the very time he\nmost urgently needed directions,\nnone seemed to be coming to him.\nActually the Canadian stations at\nBelle Isle. Cape Rarp and points\non the Canadian coast, were receiving the calls of the Southern\nCross. They were \u25a0ending directions\nJn reply, but tho receiving apparatus\non the flying machine failed to pick\nup the signals.\nJtiBt so soon as the Southern\nCross swung more to the north, lt\nbegan to receive tne desired directions. Thon the radio operators in\nCanada's efficient stations were able\nto steer the flying men safely to\na landing jilace free from fog.\u2014\nOttawa  Citizen.\nThe tumbling CrawTords, Vogel\nand Ernestine, have done their last\nturn on the big time vaudeville\ncircuit. Haled Into domestic relations court on a charge of non-\nsupport preferred by Ernestine, who\nsaid her husband had found another partner, both domestlo and\nprofessional, when her health gave\nout, Vogel was ordered to contribute\n$7 to her support. When he was\nunable to post the 8600 bond required to assure paynjents, the aero-\nKAMLOOPS,   B.  C,   Aug.   1..\u2014An|\nother old prospector passed over i\ndivide thin week  in the person\nGeorge  Breeden.    The   police, wi\nnotified   that   he   had  -not   beff\nseen, around for a lew days and '\ngoing to hla  shack he was for\ndead in his bed.\nMr. Br\u00a96den had been in\nhealth the vest few months, suffer!\nIng with cancer in the neck, but b\u00a7\nwas about town every day right \"**\nto the end.\n,  The prospector -wye 70 Setts'\n$ge.\nSTAKED    IRON   MASK\nBreeden  came to-this didtrtet\n1894  from   the   Kooteniy,   and\nAugust,   1096,   was   working   on\nclaim   on   Coal   Hill   southwest\ntown, when Bob Lyons, then,a co\nboy, rode up and asked him Whtl\nthe-  stuff    w_\u00a3   he   was   dlggiiH\n\"Copper,\" he replied;   Well, if t&\nwas copper, Bob Lyons knew who\nthere was a whole mountain ol ii\nso the two ot them crossed over thf\nhill and staked what later becam]\nthe Iroij^Jflask mine.   MT. BreedeJ\nthe next \"Hay sold outj hts inter*\nin the claim for a small sum to J\nmining engineer from Toronto.\n\u2022Aftef that he went to Liltooet fd\na few years and then returned u\nthis district to remain Ha r\nprospected all over the Kaanloi\ndistrict and lately had been worktr\nup Tranquil.\u00a9 creek Where lt\nsaid' gold ls to be found somewhe:\nbetween the upper Bonaparte riband Tranquille oreek. At no tir\ndld Mr. Breeden ever make\n\"strike\" that 'brought him af-Hj\nonce. '\u25a0\nThe  old  prospector  h*d- a\nreputation as a cook and during 1\nwar joined  the  172nd R. M. R. ll\nthat  capacity  but could not \u2014**\u25a0\non on account of- sic!_he_s.\nMr. Breeden has a sister, Mrs. '\nV. Barker, of Spokane.       .\nHARD COAL PEACE 8I-WED\nFive  and   a  half 'years  of  lab.\npeace In the anthracite- oool ragw\nwas   guaranteed   at   Scranton,   I\nwhen the tri-dlstrlct convention\nthe  United  Mine  Workers  of  >*\nerica,  ratified  the  wage  agreere\nmade at the New York confer***\nlast month.   The vote was 788 *\nuU...u _u \u00ab\u00ab.-. *\u00ab-\u00bb*-.\u00ab\u00bb, .,.. __._-, and   127   against  ratWcatttm,   wM\nbat was committed to the penlten-   30  of the .898  votes available nd\ntiary.\n\u25a0I\nTWENTY YEARS AGO\n(Prom   The  Daily News  of   August\n15,   1919)\nO.   P.   Wells,   A.   H.   Gracey   and\nH.    E.   Duscheney,    tlie    latter    qf\/\nVancouver,  left  lost night to spend\na few days at the coast.\n\u2022   \u2022    \u2022\nA large shipment of pipe and\ncompressor parts was received at\ntho Joker mine ln the Slocan\nrecently. The mine is installing a\nnew compressor and more machinery.\nDamage to the extent of several\nthousands of dollars was caused a.t\nMoyle yesterday when the Cosmopolitan hotel was completely gutted\nby  fire.\nBorn on August 14, to Mr. and\nMrs. C. A. McArthur, i\/itlmer street,\na   son.\nA Bmall fire at the corner of\nRobaon and Stanley street caused\nthe fire truck to make a run to\nthat .district last night. T, D,\nStark   turned   in   the   alarm.\nBorn August 14. to Mr. and\nMrs, Fred Coomber, Chatham street,\na  daughter.\nBuilding\nMaterial\nLet us figure your bills o_|\nBuilding Material.   Coast\nLumber a specialty.\nJohn Burns & Son\\\nUnder orders of the sea-etarr of\nthc interior. Manuel Delgado, the\nentire Island of Cuba Is to undergo\na drive against Communism. More\nthp.n 20 persons were arrested In\nvarious parts or the country tn Inauguration of the drive.\n(From The Dally News, Aug. 14, 1910)\nE. Dill, fishing at the narrows\nyesterday caught a string of fish\nwhich Include^1 a 4Mi pound char\nand a 3y4 pound rainbow trout.\n* *   *\nA dangerous bush fire raging\nlast night around Salmo re_ultej_\nIn Government Agent Teetzel and\nFirewarden A. McDonald leaving on\na special train with a force of 80\nmen.\n_   \u2022   *\nAt a mooting of the directors of\nthe Street Railway company yes-\nteday, green and cream were chosen\nas the colors for the street cars.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nW. F. Teetzel, government agent\nrecently received Instructions from\nVictoria to commence work Immediately upon the repairs of tbe Molly\nGibson wagon road. Tlie cost ls\nestimated at 86000.\n1    20#\nMrs. Anne Hedley\nVisits, Beaverdell\nSUMMER VELVETS\n^\u2014._,_\u2014-.\nAn Innovation for summer evening wear to the gown of transparent velvet, made in the most delicate tint of pnik, green or blue.\nThis supple fabric adapts itself\nremarkably to the Grecian Influence\nand stately lines of the formal silhouette. The Sunday night type of\nfrock Is sponsored ' ln transparent\nvelvet, cut with long flaring sleeves\nwid trailing hemlines.\nBEAVERDELL, B. C, Auff. 14.-\nMlss Anne, Hedley of Vancouver, who\nhas been visiting her brother nt\nthe Bell mlr^ for the past two\nweeks, left on Monday for her home.\nR. B. Staples was over from Kelowna during the week, looking after hie Interests on Wallace mountain.\nOeorge Love of Vlotorla, is the\nguest of Mr. and Mrs. Ted Clarke.\nGeorge formerly taught in the local\nAihool.\nGeorge Hambley was s flsltor to\ncamp from Greenwood on Tuesday.\nTommy Crowe was a visitor to\nPenticton over the week-ond.\nMm,   Bueler   of   Kelowna   la   tho\nguest of Mm. L. Ferroux at Carmi.\nMiss G. Saunders was the guest of\nher  sister,  Mrs.   S.   E.   Mulhern   in\nPenticton on Saturday and Sunday.\n..\u25a0mm.. \u25a0-' ATTACK FATAL\nSuddenly stricken early one morning with an attack of angina pectoral,\" G. C Parker\u00bb aged -0, of\n1338 Davenport road, Toronto, die-1\nbefore the arrival of medical assistance, Coroner Dr. O. W. Clen-\ndennan, investigating, found an Inquiry unnecessary\n'0 \"\nf\nDISCOUNT on All\nSUMMER GOODS\nScreen    Doors,    Window's,'   Refrigerators,\nHascbtaH Goods, Lawn Mowers, Oil Stoves\nSEE OUR SPECIALS ON\nHigh Grade Aluminium and Graniteware,\nPRICES ALL CASH ON\nTHIS SALE\nIt Will Pay You to Call\nsNelson Hardware Co. g\nWHOLESALE  AND  RETAIL QUALITY S552\nHARDWARE \u00a3\nNELSON, B. C. \u00ab-\u00ab\u00bb\nCLEAR the DECK\nSALE\nSee yesterday's full .page\nadvertisement This is our\nregular Summer Sale. We\nhold two sales only each\nyear, winter and summer.\nEvery article in store reduced\nNEEDLES TO FUR\nCOATS\ni   A table* of  odd  ends,\nVests, Step Ins, etc 9E\u00ab .,\n  Each  *m\nPeter Pan Prints, Voiles, Batists, etc., a hale of\nfactory remnants, some slightly damaged. Regu- O'vp j\nlar SOc to 85c yard. Now \u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u2022   6iOK''\nSEE OUR WINDOWS\nTHEY  TELLTHE  STORY\nSamsden -Iros.\nSmart Shoppe for Smart Women\nQuick Service\nSpeaking of quick service: Some daya ago an\norder was received in our office at 9 A. M. for\nfive thousand printed envelopes. These were delivered at noon of the same day. An excellent\nexample of what our modern equipment enables\nus to do. Let us do your printing. We can give\nyou service, price, and above all, quality.\nThe Nelson Daily News\nJob Department\nPhone 143 and 144\nNelson B. C\n m\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS     FRIDAY, AUGUST 15, 1930,\nPage FaV-\nAugust Footwear Sale\nWOMEN'S OAFORDS.\nSLIPPERS AND\nPUMPS\n$3.85, $4.45,\n$5.35, $6.35,\n\". $7.85 -\nMEN'S OXfORDS\n$3.15, $3.95, $4.35, $5.35, $6.85\n.'    MEN'S WORK BOOTS\n$3.10, $3.95, $4.35, $4.85\nFLORSHEIM BOOTS AND OXFORDS   ..<gQ OK\nMEN'S TENNIS BALMORALS  $1 20\nBOYS' TENNIS BALMORALS gl 1A\nCHILDREN'S WHITE CANVAS BALMORALS\n> 85c\nBARGAINS FOR ALL THE FAMILY\n.   R. ANDREW & CO.\nLEADERS W FOOTFASHION     '\nFor Active Men\neA STRAP\nWATCH\nEssen-ally masculine in style\nand design and sturdy in the\nconstruction of the movement, our\nStrap Watches appeal to the busy\nman.\nThey help keep business appointments, save valuable moments and\nafford comfort and convenience\nfor sport wear.\nPriced from $10 to $60\nX CA. <\u00a3 cjfoxon\nNELSON\nSociety\"\nThis column is 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. '\nThe summer home of Ven. Archdeacon Fred _\u00a3. Graham and Mrs.\nGraham at Wmow Point, presented\na jolly scene last night \u25a0 when ln\noompltment of Miss Gladys Fotherlngham, popuTar bride-elect of August, Miss Dorothea Graham entertained . at a smart supper bridge.\nAn effective color scheme was carried out in green and orange. Those\nplaying were Miss Fothertngharn.\nMiss Helen Murphy, Miss Jean Waldle, Miss Otllll- Wragge, Miss Gate\nTaylor, Miss Ruth Craufurd, Miss\nJean Gilker, Miss Ruth Torbett of\nFort Smith, Arkansas, Miss Rene\nEdmonson, Miss Jean Lambert and\nMiss Beryl Graham.\nJ. J, Strelt of Kaslo was a recent\nvisitor to town.  \u2022\n\u2022   t  '\u2022\nMr, and Mrs. J. C. Robertson of\nNew Denver are  city  visitors.\nThomas Johnstone of Chicago has\narrived to spend a vacation with\nhis mother, Mrs. James Robinson\nof the north shore.\nT. M. Haynes, government official\nof Victoria, who has been in Nelson\nand district for the past couple of\ndays, left for the coast last night.\n.    *   *   *\nLast evening at 7 o'clock the mar-\nrtage of Doris May Yerbury and\nOharles Frederick Neumann of Spokane took place at Trinity United\nchurch. The bride was given in\nmarriage hy her mother, Mrs. H.\nYerbury of Camp Lister. Miss Margaret Mulr acted as bridesmaid,\nwhilo Arthur l^ane supported the\ngroom. Wilfred Webster provided\nthe wedding music. After tho ceremony Mrs, Nicholson acted as hostess at a delightfully arranged wedding supper given at her home on\nKootenay street. Mr. and Mrs.\nNeumann leave this morning for a\nhoneymoon to be spent at Plncher\nGreek. Those invited to the wedding and supper were: Mr, and Mrs\nJ. McCormlca, Miss Field, Mr. and\nMrs. LaPage, Mr. and Mrs. A. D.\nPapazin, Mrs. A Mclnnls, Raymond\nCouch, Mr. and Mrs. I. Wilton, Earl\nHutchison, Mr. and Mrs. W. Anderson, Thomas Yerbury, Mr. and Mrs.\nPatrick Holland of Klmberley, Mr.\nand Mrs. n. Nicholson, Mr. and\nMrs.  L.   Leriger,   Mr.   and  Mrs.  W.\nWorth the Money Sale\nHigh Quality SHEFFIELD STAINLESS STEEL\nTABLE KNIVES, White Xylonite Handles.\nSALE PRICE - \u201e $1.69 per 1-2 doz.\nNickle Silver, Stain Resisting, DESSERT FORKS\n\u2014Latest Windsor Pattern.\nSALE PRICE -  $1.19 per 1-2 doz.\nSee our Windows for Further Bargains\nHippersonHdwreCo.,Ltd\nLook for the. Red Hardware Store\nPhone 497       NELSON, B. C.      Box 414\nMEATS OF QUALITY\nFor Saturday Shoppers\nBoiled Ham, Roast Ham,\nJellied Tongue, Jellied Veal,\nVeal, Ham, and Tongue Loaf\nCorn Beef, Head Cheese, Bologna, Weiners, Pork Pies,\nSausage Roll and Hormel\nChicken.      . ,\nPICNIC    MEATS\nCHICKEN    AND\nFOWL\nFresh Killed Spring\nChicken 35c per lb.\nFresh Killed\nFowl  25c per lb.\nCottage Roll Ave. 4\nand 6 lb 36c per lb.\nPicnic Hams Ave.\n8^0 lbs. ..28c per lb.\nELECTRICAL\n-FIXTURES-\nWhen needing new Electric\nLighting Fixtures for your\nNew Home, or to bring your\npresent residence up-to-date\nwith modern equipment, drop\nInto our store and let us talk\nlt over with yon. You will\nbe surprized how much money we can save for you.\nWe stock a complete\nmodern line of fixtures.\nColumbia Electric\n\u2014   Limited   \u2014\nKIMBERLEY\nBirthday\nQreetings\nIt Is someone's birthday today\n. . lt may your mother's . .\nyour ..sweetheart's . _ your\nsister's . . or maybe a Hear\nfrlend's. To make the occasion memorable a box of Sapp's\nChocolates is the one appropriate gift . . . always fresh\nand dellclously flavored each\npiece will speak the message\nyour heart would conveyt\nObtainable   nt\nPoole    Drug    Co. Nelson\nHunt   Bros. Trull\n11.   Cherrlngton Rossland\nCranbrook Drug\nCo. Cranbrook\nMinton's    Pharmacy       Fernle\nVISITS IN\nCANADA\n!\u25a0-.e__ana, whp &ro holidaying n-\ntown have been guests of Mr, and\nMrs. D. A. McFarland and now are\nvisiting at the hfiQae of Mr. and\nMrs. E. E. L. Dewdney.\nMrs. Ralph Booth, wife of Captain\nRalph Booth, who piloted the giant\ndirigible across the Atlantic to\nMontreal,' Iff now staying ln Toronto, Ontario.\nSquires, Mr. and Mrs. S. Couch,\nMr. and Mrs. A. Lane, Mies E. Un-\ngard, Mr. and Mrs. W. Morgan, Mr.\nand Mrs. G. Atkinson, Mr. and Mrs.\nBagotte, Mr. and Mrs. W Fisher,\nJack McKay of Spokane, Mr, and Mrs\nH. Yerbury, Miss Margaret Mulr,\nMiss Mina Mulr and Miss Jean\nLalonde.\n* \u00bb   *\nMrs. Exter and daughter Rosemary\nof Kaslo were city visitors yesterday.\n* \u2666   \u2022\nAmong   recent  visitors to  Nelson\naro Mr. and Mrs. Dixon of Procter.\n\u00ab ' *   \u2022\nMrs. A. S. Chapman left last\nnight via the Arrow Lakes for Vancouver.\n\u2022 *   *\nMrs. Joseph darter and son\nJoseph, Kerr apartments, have returned from a month's visit to Mra.\nCarter's sister  in  Vancouver.\nOn Wednesday afternoon Mrs. H.\nRosling entertained at bridge at her\nWillow Point homo complimenting\nMrs. S. B. Jarvls of Rossland who is\nvisiting In the city. Those playing\nincluded Mrs. E. E. L Dewdney, Mra.\nPeters, Mrs. W M Walker, Mrs.\nGordon Hallett of Longbeach, Mrs.\nLeslie Craufurd, Mrs. D. A. McFarland, Mrs. F. C. Whltehouse and Mrs\nJarvls,\n' Captain Douglas Brown, superintendent of C. P. R lake and river\nservice, haa returned from a business  trip   to  Penticton.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMrs. S. S. Jarvls of Rossland was\nthe complimented guest Tuesday\nafternoon at a delightful bridge\nwhen Mrs. Leslie Craufurd, Hoover\nstreet, entertained ln her honor.\nThose invited were Mrs. Jarvls, Mrs.\nF. C. Whltehouse, Mrs. H. Rosling,\nMrs. Gordon Hallett of Longbeach.\nMrs. D. A. McFarland, Mrs. Paters.\nMrs. W. M. Walker, Mrs. E E. L.\nDewdney and Mrs. J A. Gibson.\nEdward Stromsread, Mrs. p E.\nStromstead and Mrs. T. German\nhave returned from a visit to Spokane. They were accompanied back\nto Nelson by Mrs. B. F. Gels of\nSpokane, who will visit in Nelson\nfor a WeeTcT at the home of Mrs. T.\nOerman.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMiss Louise Peebles, Latimer street\nhas as her house guest Miss Thelma\nStoodley  of Calgary.\nMr .and Mrs. A. 8. McAuley and\ndaughters, Irene and Mary, of Sllverton, and _ son, J. McAulay, were\namong  visitors  to town  Wednesday.\nOscar B. Burden of Crawford Bay\nWas among those who spent yesterday in the city.\nJ. Slbbald of Gray Creek was a\nvisitor  to  Nelson yesterday.\nMiss Patricia Wall, who has been\nthe guest of her sister, Miss Abbie\nWall, Kerr apartments, has returned\nto hor home at La France Creek,\n* *   *\nCaptain Hlncks of Crawford Bay\nwas among visitors to town yesterday.\nB. T. O'Grady and his son left\nlast night for th_ Arrow Lakes.\nNorman Boss haa left to visit his\nsister,  Mrs.  Earl  Tier  of  Rosebery\nMrs. Telfer Norman of Robson was\na   city   shopper  yesterday.\nH O. Bellinger or New York, vice\npresident of the Chill Copper Co.\nand his son were recent visitors In\nNelson. Mr. Selly of New York\nwas also In the party.\nMr.   and   Mrs.   S.   S.   Jarvls   of\nW. K. Esling, M. P. for Kootenay\nWest, left last night for tho coast.\nMrs. A. C. Bishop of Kaslo was a\nvisitor to town-Srednesday.\n'j.      \u2022   \u2022   *\nColonel C. F. Nichols and Mrs.\nNichols of Kaslo spent yesterday In\nthe city.\n* *   *\nAmong1 shoppers to Nelson yesterday was Mr. Peters of Gray Creek.\nW. F. Trant, post offlce official,\nleft last night for nls home at the\ncoast.\nMr. and Mrs. Thomas McNelsh of\nSlocaiii City were city visitors yesterday.\nWilliam White of Passmore spent\nyesterday shopping m Nelson.\n* *   *\nMiss Dorothea Wallace, Mill street,\nis holidaying at Procter, the guest\nof Miss Mary Jarvls.\nE. S. Rutherford of Mirror Lake\nspent Wednesday In town attending the regatta.\nMr. and Mrs, Alex Carrie-, Silica\nstreet, have as their guests their\nson-in-law and daughter, Mr. and\nMrs. Robert York of Metallne Falls\nwho visited at Sun Hill ranch, nine\nmile,   yesterday.\n* *   *.\nA. McQueen of Kaslo paid a visit\nto town Wednesday to attend the\nregatta.\n* *   *\nCaptain and Mrs. Brown of Vancouver are holidaying in the city\nwith relatives in Falrvlew.\nO. E. Poulin of Ymlr spent yesterday in town.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nAmong visitors to Nelson yesterday were Captain and Mrs. H. L.\nHolmes of Crawford Bay.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Chanter of Longbeach were recent visitors to town.\nA. J. Watson of Kootenay Bay paid\na visit to Nelson yesterday.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Victor Ross and\ndaughter Adelle, motored up from\nSand Point, Idaho, and will spend\na few days visiting Mr. and Mrs.\nG.   V.   Cady  of   Rosemont.      *\nTry a Roast or Steak\nof our Blue Label Graded Beef \u2014It's Good.\nPork\u2014Veal\u2014Lamb.\nCooked\nROASTS\nMeat    For\nBaskets\nPicnic\nBURNS & CO.\nPhone 50\nWest Kootenay Butcher Shop\nPhone 55 Ward St.\nCURTAINS\n2%\n'.I-.'?\"-:.','\"?!\nmm\nCURTAINS,    FRILLED,\nyards long, all'colors.\nP\u00bblr SI.50\nFancy Marqucsottc, coin and\ncheck spots, all the latest de-\nslpis and colorings. With and\nwithout  valances.\n82.00 w $4.50\nSee our SPECIAL KITCHEN\nWINDOW SETS. Including\nsash and side drape and the\nback. Colors: Rose, Blue,\nGold and oreen.   Per set,\n\u25a081.75\nIARGE VARIETIES OP\nENGLISH CRETONNES and\nChintz*, Sunfast and TuMast.\nIn widths 31 Inches to 50\nInches.'  Price  per  yard\n81.00 *-\u00b0 82.50\nWo are agents for MORTON'S SUNDOUR FABRICS.\nLarge range ol samples tn\nchoose   from.\nDOMESTIC     PRINTS.      Per\nyard 35- \u00ab\u2022 65-\nNew range of ECRU SILK\nVETS. 30 Inches to SO Inches\nivlde.   Price per yard\n50t4 to 82.00\ncJMea&her's\nPhone 200\n607 Baker St.\nAUGUST CLEANUP\nCOATS, SUITS, and DRESSES\nSocial Events\nof Trail City\nTRAIL, B. C, Aug. 14\u2014Mrs. A.\nEecles and her niece, Miss C.\nKnowles ol Toronto, who has been\nher guest, leave today for a holiday at Willow Point. Miss Knowles\nwill proceed to her home ln Toronto.\nMr.   and   Mrs.   George   Bumfrey,\naccompanied  by Miss Ruby Harvey\nleave  today  for  coast cities,  where\nthey will spend the next week.\n\u2022   \u2022   .\nMr. and t\/irs, Cecil Merry, of\nBluestem, Wash., and daughters\nMaxlne and Jean arrived ln Trail\nyesterday to visit Mr. Merry's brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and\nMrs. T. H. Ollls. Miss Edith Ollls,\nwho has been their gue6t, accompanied them. They win visit Mr.\nand Mrs. G. Merry at Annable,\nP. Lennon left yesterday for a\ntrip to Spokane, Portland and\nKellogg, where he will visit with\nrelatives.\nTRAIL    HOUSES    AD    LOTS.     IN-\nsurance.     Notary.     J    D.   Ander-\n(1258)\nson. Trail.\nRoy clemenceau, G. Brown and\nE. Collins returned yesterday from\ntwo weeks' vacation spent at Vancouver   and   other   coast   cities.\nMrs. E. Arthur, who has been on\nvacation in Spokane, returned homo\nTuesday.\n\u2022   \u2022   .\nMr. and Mrs. Daniel Davles and\ndaughter Ada and Mies Hellie\nGreen wHo have been holidaying\nlor the last two weeks at Vancouver\nreturned   to  their  homes yesterday.\nMiss Doris Thatcher, who ls a\n\u25a0nurse at Grace hospital, Winnipeg,\narrived Monday to visit her parents,\nMr. and Mrs. ' Trutcher, Third\navenue.\nMiss Annlo Spevelak left last evening for Coleman. Alta.. where\nshe will spend a month visiting her\nmother.\nA packed audience at the First\nMethodist church at L03 Angejes,\nheard Galusha Cole, 104, lead the\n150 voices of the chorus with all the\naplomb .|f a director half his years.\nCole was a noted chorus director\nmore than 83 years ago and has\nbeen active in music work ever\nsince.\nStandard Furniture Co.\nSix upper lake vessel% again tied\nup recently at the Port Colborne\ngovernment elevator. awrtltl!>: canal\ntonnage bo that they may unload\ntheir cargoes, aggregating 1,880,000\nbushels of grain. Canal vessels are\narriving but slowly, and considerable\ndelay faces the six ships. A grain\nblockade therefore looms.\nma\nTHIS IS A MONTH OF TREMENDOUS SAVING. ALL LINES OF SUMMER GOODS MUST BE CLEANED REGARDLESS % OF COST OR\nVALUE.     TAKE ADVANTAGE OF   THE OPPORTUNITY TO SAVE.\nWOMEN'S DRESSES\nat S24.95 Each\nIt is surprising what beautiful dresses you can get\nhere at this price. There is a wonderful assortment\nto choose from and many of these are the smartest\nwe have shown this season. They come in flat crepe\nprinted or plain georgette and tweed silks. Many\nmodels have coat to match. Sizes for misses or\nwomen up to 42. Light or dark shades. Values to\n$49.50 each.\nALL ONE PRICE, EACH .._   ?24.95\nWomen's Travel Coats\nat 25(jfo Less\nA direct saving of $10.00 to $20.00 on these smart\ncoats and there is assortment enough for any one.\nMost of these are suitable for early fall wear. Finest\nclass tailoring throughout. Made of all wool British\ntweeds.   Richly lined and with self or fur collars.\nREGULAR $35.00 FOR  _\t\nREGULAR $50.00 FOR \t\nREGULAR $65.00 FOR\t\nREGULAR $75.00 FOR\t\n ^25.00\n $22.50\n ^48.75\n...- $56.25\nASSESSMENTS ON\nMINERAL CLAIMS\nHIGH FOR MONTH\nOver    $2800     Representing\nYears Work Recorded\nMonth of July\nDuring the month of Julv^ Improvement work wn\u00ab recorded on 80\nmineral claims at the K\u00b0vf\u2122\"\u2122\nrecording office here, indicating that\nsome 93000 haa been spent on\nclaims in the district durlne; th.\nyear This is only a fractional\namount for the month of July as\na complete list of Improvements\nhas not been compiled yet. Im-\nTrrovementa valued at. \u00bb100 are required yearly to keep the claim in\nacod  standing.\n\" A e___ number of claims for\nwhich improvement work was recorded. \u00ab_re situated on Boundan\ncreek. Wild Horse creek, and Goat\nriver Two claims owned by F. a.\nPetera have clearings for three and\nfour years.\nAssessments\u2014Sunset Frac,\nrise, Evening Stsr, North\nBoundary Line No. 1. Boundary Line\nNo. 2. Northern Light, by H. H.\nRhallcnbergcr. all situated on Boundary creek, recorded on  July  14.\nWaterloo. H. a.. Parthcs. B. C. E.\nDi-sroslers. all situated on Wild\nHorse creek: recorded on July B.\nIdaho. Washington. Lucky Boy, by\nK. Brannan, all situated on Midge\nCreek;   recorded   July   2.\nGold Coin, by Godfrey Blrrsch.\nsituated on Rover creek; recorded\nJuly   UL... ,     _   ,\nBelle View, Aurlel, by John Deslr-\neau, situated near wynndel; recorded July  14.\nPrince, Monarch, Victoria. Princess,\nSun-\nStar,\nmm&\n\"Made Its Way by the Way It's Made\"\nEat More fce^Creain\nIt's really too warm to\u00bb indulge in heavy foods\nthis weather. Ice Cream is an ideal warm weather food.  It's  both cooling and  satisfying.\nCurlew Creamery Co.,Ltd.\nICE   CREAM BUTTER MH-K\nALL   PEIRPEICTLY   PASTEURIZED   PRODUCTS\nby E. G. Montgomery, situated on\nGoat river;   recorded July  17,\nUtUvllle, by J. Sapples, situated on\nBear creek;   recorded July  H.\nToby, Hawkeye, High Crowe, by W.\nShrader. situated on Coon creek;\nrecorded  July 9.\nTroy, _ljeather, by W. Arrowsmlth,\nsituated on Sheep Creek; recorded\nJuly aa.\nDenis No. 3, Monaghan Frac. by\nF. 8. Peters, situated on Black\nBluff;   recorded   August   3.\nATTACK ON CHANCELLOR FAILS\nChancellor Helnrlrh Bmenlng\ngained a victory ln an attack on his\n80-day dictatorship, when the permanent commission of the German\nReichstag ruled Itself incompetent to\npass on the dictatorial degrees, The\ncommittee's vote was 16 to 13.\nCanadians are being pestert-.i\ngreatly these days by hlgh-pree-sure\nbook agents of an unusually virulent type. The Financial Post re\nveals ln an expose of the nowesp\nbook \"racket.\" There ls nothing nev\\\nin the methods of salesmanship:\nth0 Ingratiating approach by mail\nand by canvasser; the offer of an\nencyclopaedia freo becauso erf the\nadvertising value of the recipient's\nname; the trial offer of a loose\nleaf extension and the securing of\nthe name of the marked down victim on the dotted line.\nThen cornea the change of tone,\nthreatening letters if payment la not\nmade and possible suit tn the court.\nAll these high pressure methods\nare still in uae today but the collections methods appear to have developed a savagery beyond, previous\nexperience,\nYOU feel truly immaculate, dainty,\nwell dressed, when Kotex is your\nsanirary protection. For one thing, it\ndeodorizes. Then, too, it is shaped so\nas to be inconspicuous under the\ndose-fitting frocks so popular today.\nAnd Kotex is so soft\nThe softness and lasting comfort of\nKotex are so important. Kotex absorbs so completely because of the\nunusual substance of which it is\nmade ... Cellucottdn (not cotton)\nabsorbent wadding. This is a cellulose substance which Canada's leading hospitals now use.\nThen, too, it is easily apd quickly\ndisposed of. Buy a box and tty it\nfor yourself* The Kotex Company\nof Canada, Limited, Toronto, Ont.\nINCONSPICUOUS.\nI\u2014 Kotex is specially shaped to\nfit inconspicuously under\ndainty summer frocks.\n2-Deodorizcs. r..iie)y, thoroughly, by a special process.\n3-Ko\/Mr filler is far lighter\n\u00bbnd cooler than cotton, yet\nabsorbs 5 times as much.\n4-Diiposabh, instantly, com-\npictcly.\nKotex\u201460c. tor 12\u2014atinydrug,\ndry goods or department store.\nKotex Super-Size\u201475c for 12\nMade In Canada\nKOT\u20acX\nThe Now Sinlury Pad which iltoiiorUei\n Page Six\ntKj_ hriifsuri oaS.Y''isisyfS\nPREMIER   IN   PILLOW\nFIGHTS\nDesperate Battle at Mrs.  Moore's Boarding  House Recalled; Mr. Bennett, Weil-Dressed Young\nMan, Ate at a Hotel\nIt Is almost 30 years since we first met Hon, Richard Bedford Ben-\nlord Bennett, P. 0\u201e K.C., M*?., Ll.B., a recent photograph of whom appears on the right, says a writer ln the Toronto Telegram\nOn that occasion the\nfuture Prime Minister of\nCanada was indulging In\na pillow fight at Mrs,\nScore's celebrated boarding house In Calgary\nwnere we had, ao to\nfi. ctk, a meal ticket. In\n.:iat distant day \"R. B.\"\ni *oung brother In the\nT ;ik of Montreal, and a\n: ucual friend ln the\n~ iUJGU's Bay Company,\nv, m hailed from the Bennett's home town ln New\nBrunswick, shared the\nicjge, cold front room\nln that frame pension\nthat liad formerly been\nthe Anglican Bishop's\nPalace. At the risk of\nbeing charged with telling taleB out of school\none may relate that the\n(Bennett brothers occu- '\u25a0\npled a big double bed\nand that the almost\nnightly pillow fights usually found them ln alliance against their friend '\na    stalwart   young   man\nwho   slept   or   tried   to !\nsleep    In    a   single   bed ,\nacross the room.\n\"LET THE  BENNETTS\nL'NITE\"\n\"Let the Bennett's un- j\nits.\" shouted the future I\nPrime Minister of Canada. On this aforesaid\noccasion his efforts to\ndrag his maritime op-\npon-orjt, -from bed had\nbeen greeted by a well-\nalroed boot. Thereat the\nbrothers, rushing to the\ncombat, made such a\nhullabaloo that loud protests were heard from [j\ntbe hallway and a knocking on the bedwom door.\nPresently the door opened\nand the head of Mrs.\nMoore herself appeared.\n\"Mr. Bennett, this noise\nwill really have to atop,\"\nexclaimed tthc landlady.\n\"You are disturbing the\n\u25a0other    boarderB.\"\nMollified    by    promises   gl\nof   better   behavior,   Mrs.   |H\nMoore withdrew. Bur. alns    |'\nthe truce was short-lived.   |*fj|ffL\nThe   battle   wns   renewed   pl\u00a7g\u00a7l\nwith   vigor,   feathers  fill-   Wfflm\ning    the   nlr    nn'3    hard   L>*$i-a<l|!\nmissies    like-    boots    nnd    f ' \u25a0   j- *w\nbrushes     raining     down.\nOnce   more   a   head   popped   in.    But   this   time\nit was the handsome face\n,|!    Larry    Clarke,    clerk\nof the court and general . ...\nfavorite in Calgary, which\ncenfronted the rioters. Young Mr. Bennett stood in some awe of Larry\nClarke, who was the son gt a celebrated Hudson's Bay factor, a graduate\nof the University of Toronto, nnd the-budding statesman's senior at the\nbpr   by   some   ten   years.   \"Bennett, \u2022\u2022 , \t\nWe recall Mr, Bonnett walking * up\nto the Alberta daily, nattily dressed\nAnd unique ln Calgary In thnt he\nsported ft cano. Canes wehe looked\naskance In the cow town Calgary\nof a generation ago when rhoet business and professional men wore\ncowboy lints or cloth chaps.\nCALQARY WAS A COW TOWN\nCalgary was a rather crude little\nplace m 1B97 when R. B. Bennett, a\nbrilliant young lawyer, lately graduated tn Now Brunswick, stepped\noff the train t> Join Senator\nLougheed's law firm. Then and for\nyears later, painted Indians and\ncowboys ln jingling spurs rode their\npontes on the main street*, while\nEnglish remittance men bearing historic names lounged at the corners. DrlnkB were two for a qurater\nwhether beer or cocktails. No smaller coin than a --cent piece was\ncurrent. Town lots, now worth\nthousands, went a-begging at $100\nPrairie chickens could be shot von\nthc very tonwslte, and the 4000\npeople in the little olty mostly knew\neach other, In that era when Paddy\nNolan, K.C., to the rlgch brogue, and\nBob Edwards of the Eye Opener were\"\nto the fore.\nTOOK   TUPPER'S  ABM\nOne day in the early IDO.O'b. Sir\nOharles Tupper paid Calgary a visit.\nWe were one of the crowd on the\nstation platform and recall seeing\nBennett, who was a generation later to succeed to the high post held\nhy the Father of Confederation tt\nOttawa, offer his arm to the venerable statesman aa Sit Charles stepped from the train. Soon after\nthis episode R- B. Bennett was In\nthe thick of a fight to retain the\nseat he had bed in the c|_ Legislature of the North West Territories\nat Reglna ainco 1808. \"Tlie young\norator of the West,\" ns they described the man, remarkable for his torrential flow of language in the law\ncourts and on the hustings, beat\nhis Liberal opponent so badly that\nthe latter lost his deposit, Unkind\nanalogies , were drawn between ihe\nunsuccessful candidate, Charles\nBtuart. and his kingly namesake\nNevertheless Mr. Stuart lived to become Chief Justice of Algeria.\nTHE RANTHMAN'S CLUB\nNever keen on society, R. B. Bennett worked hard at hla law and\nturned to politics for recreation,\nHe didn't dance, and when the Immaculate young lawyer, who never\nwore the same suit of clothes two\ndays running dropped in at the\nRanchman's Club, the exclusive Institution, which admitted, besides\naristocratic cattlemen, a select lot\nof lawyers, doctors, bank managers\nand n few business men, it was\nnot to drink whisky or play poker\nfor high stakes. It is Bald that\nthe C. P. R., whose sollcltorship he\nheld, were annoyed when R. B. Bennett entered federal politics, but\ncould not afford to thwart the plans\nof a legal adviser rapidly rising In\nwealth and reputation. In 1911 R.\nB. Bennett quit the prairie legislature to represent Calgary at Ottawa,\na move which, lending on to important wnrtime pasts, tho attorney-\ngeneralship in 1021 and the mln\nlstry of finance in 1926, now cul-\nminates ln the acme of his ambitions,  the   premiership.\nFIGURE IN ALLEGED POISONING. CASE.\nwhat on earth are you fellows\ndclng here?\" queried Mr. Clarke\ngcod humoredty. \"Can't you let\nn hard working man got a wink of\nsleep?\" This protest was effectual,\nfor a certain visitor to the Bennett boudoir withdrew to his own\nquarters, lights went out and silence\nnnd slumber descended upon Mrs.\nMoore's boarding house.\nATE   AT   THE   HOTEL\nThe Moore pension celebrated in\nits day was patronized by a crowd\nof   lawyers,   bank   clerks,   and   bank\nley was numbered) and by minor\nrailway officials and young business men, was Mr. Bennett's sleeping quarters only . When not hleep-\nlng he used the room for the aforesaid pillow fighting of the practice of stump speaking to small\nand select audiences. 'R. B.\" was\nenvied by less prosperous young men\nJn that he ate his meals at the\nold Alberta Hotel whose 75 cent\nsix course dinners were like nectar\nof   the   gods   to   those   who   existed\nmanagers (among whom C. W. Row- on  boarding  huse   \"Chink\"  cooking\nCRANBROOK SCENE\nP0P0LARJEDD1NG\nMary McKenna Gibson Becomes Bride of D. T.\nBannister. Canal Flats\nINTER-CITY MEET\nOF ROTARY CLUBS\nHELD, CRANBROOK\nTwo Governors Attend; Fernie and Kalispel Clubs\nRepresented\nMrs. S. L. Springer\nVisits at Ymir\nYMIR. B, C, Aug. 14.\u2014Mr. and\nMrs. S. I. Springer of Grand Porks\nare the guests of Mrs W. B. Mclsaac  and  Mrs. B. C.  Mclsaac.\nMiss Jean McKenzle of Carpentaria, California, Mrs. W. Clark, Mrs.\nA. B. Clark and family went to Nelson on Wednesday for the rega>;a.\nB. T. O'Grady of Nelson was a\nYmlr visitor on Wednesday.\nMRS. E. JARRETT\nHAS WHIST DRIVE\nCRANBROOK. B. C, Aug. 14\u2014Owe\nof the most pleasant events enjoyed\nby Rotarlans of the district for\nmany a day was tlie inter-city meet\nheld in Cranbrook on Monday,\nAugust 11. Besides the local members in full force there were 30\nmembers of the Kalispel club and\n2,r) from the city of Fernle. The\nlocal committee was fortunate ln\n.securing for the meet the presence\nof two.district governors: Rotarian\nPrank Venndle, governor of District\nSix, and Governor Al Reynolds\nof Portland, Oregon, head of District\nOne, cf which the convening clubs\nare   members.\nAnother noteworthy visitor was\nRotarian George Spangler of Texas,\nwho holds the unique record of continuous weekly attendance for fourteen years, which Is, ko far ns' ls\nknown, the best attendance record\namong the Rotary (flubs of the\nentire world, Dr. Miles, who holds\nCranbrook's record with never having missed a meeting since the beginning of Rotary here over six\nyears ago. is consldernbly behind\nthis long term perfect attendance\nrecord.\nMr. Spungler, who was on his\nway to Fernle, intending to get in\nhis attendance there, heard of the\ntreat ln store for him in the Intercity doings here and remained over.\nOn Monday n-xernoon at 3 o'clock\nGovernor Reynolds of this district\nheld a meeting with heads of the\nvarious committees of the local\nclub, hearing the reports of their\nvarious activities and discussing\nfuture    plans    with    them.     At   4\nFRUITVALE. B. C, Auf 14.\u2014A\nvery enjoyable evening was spent\nat the home of Mrs. E. Jarrett on\nTuesday night, the occasion being a\nwhist drive and tea ln aid of the\nW. A. of St. John's ohurch. Thc\nrooms were prettily decorated with\nflowers. Mrs. Powne and C, Jones\ncarried Off the first prizes. Miss\nL. Finch and R. Wilcox were the\nconsolation winners. Those present\nwere: Mr. ahd Mrs. Benton, Mr.\nand Mrs. Bond and Mr. and Mrs.\nCastle, Mr. and Mrs. J. Webster,\nMr.  and   Mrs.  Smith,   Mr.  and  Mrs.\nA. Webster, Mr. and Mrs. E. Jarrett, Mrs. J. Halifax. Mrs. Christie,\nMrs. J. T. Woods, Mrs. T. Corls, Mrs.\nGeo. Varseveld, Mrs. J. Watson, Mrs.\nF. Young. Mrs. H. Davis, Mrs. T.\nMoon. Mrs. W. Powne, Mrs. Ross,\nMrs. J. Jones, Mrs. Knowles, Mrs,\nW  .E.  Ortevc.  Mrs.  C.  Jarrett,  Miss\nB, Finch, Miss M. Castle, B. Finch.\nMiss C. Barclay, Miss Webster, Miss\nH. Young, Miss A. Jarrett, Miss L.\nFinch. J. Buccanan, J. Jones, C.\nJones. G. Webster, T. Wilcox. R,\nWilcox. Alex Webster, O. O. Rush-\nton.\nMrs. T. Wilcox and Miss Winnie\nWilcox left for a holiday to Vancouver on Tuesday.\nMrs .Geo. Varseveld of Trail Is\nvisiting in the valley, the guest of\nMrs. W. Grieve.\nA Better,\nBrighter Breakfast\nThe better the breakfast, the brighter\nthe day. Don't fog the brain and clog\nthe body by eating a heavy, indigestible breakf ast. Brighten the day by eating Shredded Wheat with milk and go\nto work with buoyant step and mental\nalertness. Shredded Wheat with milk\nmakes a complete well-balanced meal\ncontaining everything the human\nbody needs for growdi and strength.\nTry it with berries and cream. It's a\nrare treat.\nCRESTON COUNCIL\nTO SUPPORT FAIR\nCity to Pay $500 Instalment\non  Purchase  of  Exhibition  Park\nMRS. ARCHIBALD\nLEAVES CRESTON\nCRESTON, B. Oi, Aug. 14\u2014The\nAugust session of Creston village\ncouncil last evening was largely\nalven over to routine business, tho\nonly new feature to the session was\nthe passing of the electrical inspect Ion bylaw, which was given\nthree readings and declared approved. Reeve P. H. Jackson presided,\nnnd Councillors Edmonton and Dr.\nHenderson   were   in   attendance.\nThe correspondence included a\nletter from M. J. Benlnger asking\nthat some attention be paid Fourth\nstreet In front of the Commercial\nhotel in the way of gravelling\nProperty owners on Wilson avenue\npetitioned -Sor a new sidewalk, removal of loose rock from the street\nand better drainage. Both parties\nare to be advised that these matters will be taken under consideration. Councillors Henderson and\nEclmondson were named to look\nover Albert street, opposite Christ\nchurch, where residents arc asking  for  n  brand   new sidewalk.\nT.   Mawson,   owner  of  Your   Cash\nstore    building   on   Wilson   avenue,\n.Vr.,\u2122.-.    n    m*A,*.A    \u2666-,\u25a0,,\u201e    \u201e--(\u25a0\u201e,.\u201e.     i wrote    a-klnp;    for    $22    reimburse\n\u00b0w_ioclhei K^*8kzrsB\\t& a &n sir frvTr\nmembers and  visitors beln* present, '!n    the    store'    flald    bre-k-  being\nCRESTON,   B.    C,   Aug.    14\u2014Mr.\nand Mrs. E. Archibald of Vancouver,\nwho have spent the past few weeks j\nhere, guests of Mr. and Mrs. H. H.,\nWllks,  have  returned  to the  coast,!\nMiss Margaret Stapleton left on,\nTuesday for s visit with friends \u25a0\nat Vancouver .and coast points, and\nwill be away for the balance of\nthe month.\nMiss Margaret Blinco left on\nMonday for Lethbridge, Alberta,\nwhere she Ib holidaying with Mr.\nand Mrs, R. G. Harris, former resident* of Creston.\nAllan Speers, returned on Sundaly\nfrom Grassy Lake, Alberta, where\nhe has .befn holidaying for the\npast month.\nGrover Kifer of Yahk was a\nvisitor here at the middle of the*\nweek, coming ln for the funeral\nof  the  late  Mrs. A.  Q. Samuelson.\nMiss Vada Manhardt of Edmonton\narrived on Monday for a few weeks'\nst;iy  with  her aunt, Mrs. Little.\nJilss Dolly Moody of New Westminster has arrived to spend the\nbalance of the month with her\nsister. Mrs. R. E. Cribb at the\nUnited church manse.\nGeorge H. Kelly and Dr. Henderson were motor visitors to Cranbrook   on  Tuesday.\nE. S. Bailey and children were\nweek end visitors at Cranbrook,\nreturning  on  Monday.\nMiss Annie Parkin left on Monday ou a visit with her sisters, Mrs.\nTravis ahd Mrs. Halko, at Michel,\nand from there she will go to\nEdmonton,   to  take a position.\ns are shown people who rigura\nln the Sarnla alleged poisoning\ncase, in which Mrs. Mary Richardson, 29-year-old widow of Point\nEdward police chief, is held In.connection with death of Mrs-. Benjamin Rlohardson., her mother-in-\nlaw, who allegedly died from strychnine poisoning' July 19. (1) Mrs.\nMary Richardson and her late bus-\nband, Chief Clarence Richardson of\nPoint Edward, (2) Little Mary Le-\nBoeuf, adopted daughter of Mrs.\nRichardson, and (3) Richardson\nhome at Point Edward. Clarence\nRichardson's body is how being exhumed   for  analyses.\nBLACK TWEED\nCRANBROOK. B. 0., Aug. 14=\u2014A\nwedding, of considerable interest\nln the dlstrlot was solemnized on\nTuesday at eleven o'clock at the;\n\"United church manse, Rev. Bryee'\nWallace officiating, when Mary Ken-\nna Gibson, niece of Mrs. Erakino\nof Yahk and recently from Scotland, became the wife of Dalbert\nTheodore Bannister, CJP.R. camp\nforeman  at Canal Flats.\nThe bride was attired in the tra-\n.dittarial white.with veil and orange'\nblossoms, the dress being fashioned\nof white satin. She carried a sheaf\nof roses. Miss 'Margaret Stewart,\nof tbe St. Eugene nursing staff,\nwho acted es bridesmaid, was attired ln a frock of green georgette\nwith harmonizing hat.. The groom\nwas supported by Norman Beech\nof Canal Hats.\nFollowing ceremony a wedding\nbreakfast was held to the private\ndining room of the Victoria cate,\nonly relatives and immediate friends;\nbeing present. Later In the diay,\nescorted from the town by the cara\nof friends and the hanking of horns,\nthe newly wedded pair left by\nmotor for a honeymoon ln Spokane.\nOn their return they wllj reside\nat Canal Plats.\nCoats and suits alike offer\nnew note ln black tweeds rather\nthan the usual colors, And ordinarily these are trimmed with long\nhaired furs\u2014fox, lynx and wolf. It\nrequired a few seasons after Its introduction for black tweed' to make\nmuch headway. Now it ls pre-eminent for fall in wooden fashions.\nTRANSPORT FOUNDERS\nThe Danish transport, \"Dana\", r*-l\ncently foundered ln Lisbon - harbor, I\nafter a two-year voyage of scientific I\nexplorations beginning- at the Madeira Island and extendJng to the I\nCaribbean Sea, the Cook, Samoa. Fiji J\nand other islands. The expedition |\nwas headed by the noted professors,;\nJohannes  Schmld and Brunn.\nSalada is the best value\namong Orange Pekoe blends\nbiS- ^_JA\nTEA\n'Fresh from the gardens9\nKINGSGATE, B. O, Aug. 14.\u2014Mr,\nnnd Mrs. Lydltt and family of Calgary are visiting at the home of\nMrs. H. R. Grahnm.\nMiss Muriel Ellis returned on\nMonday after spending a few days\nvisiting nt Cranbrook.\nDr. H. L. Case nnd son Paul were\nCranbrook  visitors during  the  week,\nDr. C. D. Paxton was a business\nvisitor at Newgate Sunday and Monday.\nMrs. The*. Drew $nd son Jim of\nCranbroolc, were week-end guests at\nthe home of Mrs. L. W. Campbell.\nBorn, on Thursday, August 7th, to\nMr. and Mrs, Foley of Glenllly, at\nKingsgate. a daughter.\nA general discussion of thc work\nof the clubs wns held. led by two\npenkers from each club represented.\nRotarlans Will Swcatmnn and Jack\nChester were the Kalispel speakers,\nDr. Gee and Harry Douglas those\nof Fernie, while Cranbrook was\nrepresented by Rotarlans Bill Harris\nand  Tom   Flett.\nIn the meantime the Rotary\nAnnes who had accompanied their\nhusbands to- the meet were ably\nlooked after by a committee composed of* Mrs, Little, Mrs. Chism\nand Mrs. McQuald. wives of the\nlocal president, secretary and treasurer. At the luncheon hour the\nvisiting ladles were entertained at\nluncheon at the Hotel Cranbrook,\nlater going to I be home of Mrs.\nLittle for an afternoon of bridge.\nPrizes for the games were awarded\nto Mrs. Korn of Kalispel, Mrs. Dickie\nof Kalispel nnd .Mrs. Jorgcnson of\nKalispel. Ten was served the ladles\npresent at the  close of the playing.\nIn the evening at _:30 a Joint\nbanquet wns held in the K. P. hall,\nthe Pythian Sisters supplying the\nrepast which war, \u2022 highly complimented. Music was supplied\nthroughout the meal by a Crnnbrook\norchestra. President, Little of the\nCranbrook club acted as chairman\nand welcomed tlie visitors in a\nneat address, Rotarian David Morgan led In the community singing.\nThe two district governors preaent\naddressed the gathering, each receiving   an   enthusiastic   hearing.\nInterspersing the address were\namtUlQ| stunts including the newspaper gag embodying . a strike by\nthe orchestra In attendance. A\nviolin solo by Vincent Fink, with\nV. C. Edwards at the piano was\nwell received, as was also n vocal\nsolo by Joe Little accompanied by . %-\nRotarlan   Al%n   Graham. I -j\nThe balance of the evening was '\nspent in a sodlnl way with intermittent dancing. As a momento of\nthe occasion each of the visitors\nwas presented with a flower stand\nof native wood, turned by E. V.\nLewis. The evening broke up With,\nthe hope expresped on nil sides\nthat the next Inter-clty meet would\nnot  be  far   distant.\nmusfld \u00b0y gravel forced off the\nroad by a passing truck, The clerk\nIs to write him stating the village\nassumes no responsibility.\nPayment of the annual instalment of $500 and interest on the\npurchase of Exhibition park was\nauthorized. This makes $1500 tbe\nvillage has Invested in the property,\nand $1000 still to pay. Notice is\nto be published ln the Review\nio speed up the payment of 10_0\npoll   taxes.\nThe electrical inspection bylaw\nwas given due consideration and In\nconsiderable detail provides for inspection of t!hls sort and sets\nforth the schedule of charges to be\nmade by the Inspector, this position\nto be offered J. Q, Farris, super-\nmteiident of Creston Power & Light\ncompany. ,        \u201e\nTlie council agreed to a donation\nof $100 toward the 1030 fall fair,\nnnd thc promised grant of $50 was\nordered paid Creston Baseball club.\nJuly accounts ordered paid totalled\n$2*31\u2014the Baseball club's remembrance bcinrj Included in this.\nTo kcc;> sandwiches fresh, place\nthem in an earthen dish. Set the\ndish In n pan of cold water and\nthe will keep fresh for several hours.\nHREDDE\nHEAT\npfe\nmi\nWITH ALL THE BRAN\nOF THEWHOLE WHEAT\nTH- CANADIAN SHHEDDED WHEAT COMPANY. LTD.\nFLIES-MOSQUITOS\nROACHES-FLEAS-ANTS\nMOTHS\nBED BUOS\nM.UTM MRAVaa,\nON SALE AT MUS\nSROCEBV AND\nHARDWARE\nSTORES\n[CUvat'eptd tt MtKe*1\nl-itih\/tt at Ix-iit-Mil\n .\"\u2022 -V III\nDR.   FRANK   ROSE\nSpecialist\nIn   the   treatment  of\nPILE\nnnd other dlsenses of\nthe rectum. Write\nTor      free      booklet.\nZiegler    Building,    Howard    and\nRiverside,   Spokano,   Wash.\nCALGARY GIRLS\nVISIT, MOYIE\nMOYIE, B. C, Aug, 14\u2014The Misses\nAlma and Emily 1'sauinic.*.- <\u00bb. i .,,-\nKary are vlsitlm*. with their mother,\nMrs. M. Desaulniers,\nEsther Pearson has returned to\nher home here after -pending n week\nvisit with her sister, Mrs. Harry\nHogg, of Chapman camp.\n,0. O. Bryant of Klmberley spent\na' week here, enjoying himself fishing.\nMiss Frances McBroom of Crnnbrook was the house-guo.'.t of Mrs,\nJ. Montpellier during thn we-^k-fnl\nMrs. Thomas C. Christian nnd\nson, Harry, left lor Oranoroolt un\nWednesday where they will make\ntheir future home.\n* Mr. and Mrs. J. Ellis of Klmberley\nvisited over night on Sunday with\nMr. and Mrs. A. Q. Monkhouse,\nwhile on their way to Spokane,\nWash.\nMiss Thora Andrews it visiting\nwith Mrs. J. Fisher of Cranbrook.\nMrs. A. Fraser of Klmberley spent\nthe week-end visiting with her father, D. Dupont nnd nlfio visited\nMiss  M.  Farrell,\nJim Parkins and his bride of Fairmont, were the guests of Mr. and\nMrs.  E  .J.  Blyve8tre  on  Tuesday.\nVERNON\nAND\nPENTICTON\nby long-distance\ntelephone\nfpsk\npehd.nal\n'     \\ !   ii_*)\neconomic\u2122\nThose who know\nand appreciate\ngood Scotch demand   Johnnie\nWalker, an excel-\nlent    whisky,\nwhose high standard  of quality\nnever varies the\nwide world over.\nBottled )y ourselves in\nScotland\nThis advertisement is ndt published- or displayed bj the\nLiquor Control Board or by\ntlie Qowrnmenc of British\nColumbia.\nl\u00a32Q~\n\u00a3CU_r\nGOiNG\nw3$QM\u00a3\n m\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS     FRIDAY, AUGUST 15, 1930.\nPage Seveil\n-~SPORTS~\nISEVEN ARE TRIED AT TOP IN FIRST\nSTAGE IN THE GOVERNOR GENERAL'S\n, PRIZE FOR MARKMAjNSIP, OTTAWA\n|.Venty-Two Will Have to Shoot Off Tie for Last Place\nto Qualify; Man, 37th on List- Is Only\nTwo Points From Top    .\n(BY JACK HAMBLETON. CANADIAN PRESS  STAFF  WRITER)\n...CONNAUGHT RANGES. OTTAWA, AUG. 15.\u2014Alter firing through a\n\u25a0h-ng day of intermittent drizzle, hut with subdued light that made\nwest perfect scoring, 144 of Canada's finest marksmen rose from the tiring point at the Dominion of Canada Rifle Association meeting late\nloday with the first gruelling test of a great match completed.\nIThe  first  stage  of the  governor $ \u2014\nieneral's richest prize In the Canadian marksmanship is -completed.\nIlready more than 250 crack shots\nlave fallbn by the wayside, and 22\nlien, tied with 07 points, will shoot\n|ff the tie for the right to fill\nplaces to make up the 150\nMarksmen who will enter the second\nage of the (match Saturday.\nJ There was no outright winner of\nlie first stage; Firing at 200, 600\njid 600 yards, seven unerring rifle-\nlien sped their bullets into the\nfargots for a total of 103 * out of\npossible 105 points. Fourteen\nfiore scored'- 102. Twenty-five \u25a0 had\none point less, and the 82nd\n1-i.in in the match had 100 even.\nJeldom, if ever before, has there\n\u25a0\u25a0een such a remarkable display of\n|arget sprinkling.\nJ Two men, Major T. Spittal, Mont-\nleal, and Sgt. H. W. Burton, Reglna,\nIcored   possibles   at   500   and   600\nlards, and 33's at 200 to lead the\njflg   parade.     Behind   them   came\nrapt. T. Steele, Guelph, Ont.,  and\nli. M. E. J. Reld, Esquimau, British\n\u25a0Jolumbla, Sgt. W. Davidson, Winnt-\nBerg, Lt, D. Warslck,  of Winnipeg,\nlind Sgt. G. F. Freeborn, Hamiltop,\nli'iit.,   all  with   Aggregate   scores   of\n*T[03.    Lt.   James   Boa,   of   Montreal,\n[\u25a0\/ho has been considered  an  over-\nhelming favorite to eventually win\n[he  big  match,  was  37th   on  the\n'1st, but at that he was only two\n>inta   behind    the    leaders.\nThe governor general's ls certainly\n\u25a0Sanada's greatest rifle match.    The\n|eward   Is   (500,   presented   by   his\nixcellency,    thc    governor    general,\nVith three medals and $1,156 added\n>y the  Dominion  of  Canada  Rifle\ni^soclatlon.   In addition to the ln-\nUvdual   awards,   there   are   several\n'rophies distributed among the high-\n\u25a0st teams in the first and second\ntages.\nI In addition there ls an associate\nInembcrs   pool   in   connection   with\n1'he   match   whereby   the   fortunate\nInember   holding   the   name   of   a\nIMnnlng   marksman   Saturday    will\n1-eceive close to $25,000,\nTHOSE   QUALIFYING\nMarksmen qualifying for the final\nstage   were; -\nMaJ.' T. Splttall, Montreal, Sgt.\nH. W. Burton, Capt. T. S. Steel,\nGuelph, Ont, S., M. E. J. Reid,\nEsquimau; British Columbia, Sgt.\nW. Davidson, Winnipeg, Lt. J. Freeborn,   Hamilton,   Ont.  all  with  103.\nLt. J. N. Dow, St. John, N. B.,\nPte. J. Wilson, ponoka, Alta., Cdt.\nJ- L. McAvlty, Kingston, ont., A. C.\nHale, England, Lt. A. Fincham,\nToronto, Sgt. j. -A. Davidson, Winnipeg,   St.  R.  Btorrar,  Toronto,   Capt.\nF. M. Smith, Bear River, N. 3., Pte.\nA.    O.    Hutchinson, , Guelph,    pte.\nG. .A.., Thompson, Sherbrooke, Lt.\nD. Burke, Ottawa, G. R. King,\nEngland, Sgt. J. Stoddart, Hamilton,\nOnt., Lt. K. R. McGregor, Ottawa,\nall   with   102.'\nWesterners with 101'a were: S.\nG. W. B. McKay, Esquimau, British\nColumbia; Pte. 8. Swamk, Kamloops,\nBritish Columbia; E. K, Bird, Regina; Sgt. j. H. Regan, Victoria,\nBritish Columbia; and MaJ. F.\nRichardson, Victoria, British Columbia.\nEvan 100 scores included: Capt.\nJ. Ma-Neil, Vancouver, British Columbia; S. M., W. H. Ruffell, es-\nquimalt, British Columbia: Capt.\nC* C. Holland, Victoria, British Co-\nlumbiaa; Sgt. A. Parnell, KamloopB,\nBritish Columbia.\nIncluded ln the 99's were: Lt.\nD. Fyvle, Victoria. British Columbia; Qus. J. Kennedy, Esquimau;\nBritish Columbia; Pte. T. A. Jensen,\nPonoka, Alta.; Lt. J. Bowen, Calgary, Alta., and Pte. A. Warrenor,\nCalgary.\nSgt. R. Stevenson, Kamloops; Q.M.\nS.. A. E. Evans, Esquamalt, and S.\nSgt. J. R. Hyde, Moose Jaw, Sask.,\nhad OS's. Six places are to be filled\nwith 22 men tied for last place.\n\"It   Jones   a  responsible   driver?\"\n\"Absolutely,    He's   responsible   to\nhis wife in the back seat for every\nturn  he  makei.\"\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by\nIthe Liquor Control Board or by the Government of Brit-\nlish Columbia.\n\u00ab Phone Your Ads Before 9 O'Clock\n9 O'Clock Is the\n'Dead-Line'\nFor Classified Advertisements\nIf it's important enough to advei-tise, surely\nit is worth while phoning the ad in early!\nWhen you phone after 9 o'clock it is hard\nto give your ad the attention it merits, for\nour entii-e rhechanical force is busy preparing news matter for the paper. Then, too,\nif it is \"Too Late to Classify\" you fail to\nreach many people who are searching for\nyour ad in the classification to which\nit belongs!\nCLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES\n10 Cents a line a day.\n40 Cents a Line a Week\n$1.30 a line a Month\nNelson Daily News\nClassified Advertising Dept,\nPHONE 144 or 143\nTHE   FAN'S   OWN\nON   HIS   GAME\nGolfing history in Longvlew,\nWash., section has been made by W.\nA. (Bert) .Taylor, Country club\ngolfer. Recently he shot his home\ncourse ln 64, six below par, cutting\nfour strokes from hia own record of\n1, established two years ago. He\nscored 88 on the powlltz Country\nclub course at Kelso for a new record the next day and the following day tied the Chehalis Country\nclub   course   record   with   69.\nNOW tOD TELL ONE\nA golf ball, driven by Captain\nW. E. Jones, playing In the\nCaernarvonshire championship at\nCrlecieth, Wales, dropped Into a\nnest ln which a hen pheasant\nwas hatching three eggs. Captain Jones slapped the ball out\nof the nest wtihout Injuring thc\npheasant or her eggs and holed\nout in four.\nNIGHT   BASEBALL\nPresident John Hydler of the National League sums night baseball\nup this way, and he was at a recent\ngame: \"There is no demand In the\nmajor leagues to get away from\nbaseball and get into the show\nbusiness, which, after all is said and\ndone\/ is all tliat night baseball is\nor can be,\"\nCARNERA AGAIN\nPrlmo Camera was scheduled\nto meet Bombo Chevalier tonight at Chicago, in the \"battle\nof vindication\" for that California episode, but for some reason chevalier lias been dropped\nfrom consideration. promoter\nMalloy Is now attempting to\npublicize his show by wiring\nchallenges to Schmellng, Sharkey, Stribling, Campolo and other\nfirst-rank heavies, who either\nare out of the country or out of\ntraining. Camera declares he\nis through with \"-et ups\".\nWiTEHILL SETS\nNEW RECORD FOR\nSEASONJITCPG\nTakes   His   10th   Straight\nVictory for Detroit\nTeam\nFOR MORE FANS\nThe Coliseum, scene of major\nfootball games at Los Angeles, will\nhave a seating capacity of 105,000 for\nImportant grid contests this fall.\nThis was assured when the city\ncouncil passed a reaolutlpn directing\nthe board of public works to contract for completion of the remodeling work which was started this\nsummer.\nTHOSE LIGHTS AQAIN\nToronto ' outfielders declare\ntliat the constant strain of look.\nIng Into the lights ln night\nbaseball ls very trying. That Is\nespecially so of those ln right\nand left. A \"burning\" or other\nkind of feeling will make no\n(difference nt all provided the\nmidnight frolic can draw gates\nlike the 1500 last night.\nFERRY TRAFFIC\nSTILL ON THE\nUPWARD TREND\nBig Increases Duding Month\nof  July  Over   Same\nMonth Year Ago\nMaterial Increases ln the traffic\ncarried on the district government\nferries at Nelson, Castlegar and Harrop have been noted during the\nmonth of July,\nOn the Nelson ferry over 1000\nmore cars were carried ln July, 1930,\nthan ln July 1929. Oars carried\nlast month numbered 10,832 and\nthe passengers 44,046. in July,\n1029, there were 41,027 passengers\ncarried.\nFreight carried last month amout-\ned to 587 tons as compared with\nthe 16 tons oarrled In July, 1929.\nOn the Castlegar ferry 6,498 cars\nwore carried in July 1029, and last\nJuly this total went up to 7780\noars. Passengers figures for this\nferry Jumped considerably from\n21,236 persons ln July of last year\nto 32,772 persons last month.\nNELSON   FERRY\n1929       1930\nAutos        9035     10632\nTrucks, light  ,   626        637\nTrucks,   heavy         778 738\nMotorcycles         J32 74\nRigs           260 136\nPassengers   41072       44*46\nFreight, tons       5B7 16\nCASTLEGAR\n1920       1930\nAutos        6498       7760\nTrucks,  light       434 472\nTrucks,   heavy         539 777\nMotorcyles         149        116\nRigs           196 143\nPassengers  21235     32772\nFreight       345 547\nHARROP  FERRY\nAutos    _    1634        1167\nTrucks, light       153        104\nTrucks,   heavy         316        288\nMotorcyles           36 4\nRigs    _        11 57\nPassengers     ',    4489       3579\nFreight          219'A     10BH\nbaseMll\nINTERNATIONAL LEAGtIE\nMontreal 13, Reading 10.\n' Rochester 9, Newark 4.\nBuffalo 4, Baltimore 7. -\nRochester 9, Newark 4.\nAMERICAN   ASSOCIATION\nMilwaukee 1, Oolumbus 2.\nKansas City 4,  Toledo 6.\nMinneapolis  5,   Louisville   6.\nSt. Paul  1, Indianapolis 5.\nPACIFIC    COAST    LEAGI'E\nLos Angeles 4,  Sacremento  1.\nMissions 8, Oakland  3.\nSeattle'6, Hollywood 13.\nPortland   6,   San   Francisco  3.\nIRISH TEAM ONLY\nONE NOT ON DECK\nHAMILTON GAMES\nHAMILTON, Ont., Aug. 14\u2014(CP)\nWith the arrival this evening, of\nthe English contingent, the athletic\nrepresentation of tho British Empire\nfor the week of competition beginning next Saturday is about complete, Ninety-seven were ln the\nparty from the old country, that\ntook  up  their quarters  tonight.\nOf the U units of the Empire\nthat will carry their distinguished\nflags Into the extensive schedule\ndT competition, 10 have reported in\nHamilton. The Irish team alone,\nhas not arrived, but Is , expected\nprobably   tomorrow   evening.\nNEW YORK, Aug. 14-iEarl W-tlte-\nhlll of Detroit ea.abllsheu a new\nH-asona winning record lor major\n..ague pitchers today as he made\nIt 10 straight by hurling the Tiger_\nto a five to one victory over the\nYankees\nWhitehlll let the Ynnks down\nwith seven hits and struck out 11\nbatsmen. Sam Byra's home run ln\nthe fourth Inning saved New York\nfrom a shutout\nR  H  E\nDetroit      Q00 032 000\u20145   7   1\nNew York    00u ICO 000\u20141   7   2\nWhitehlll . and uesautels; SherW,\nMcVey and Jorgens, Bengh.\nSOX   TAKE   LEAD\nBOSTON, Mass., Aug. 14.\u2014Eddie\nDurham let the St. Louis Brown,\ndown with but fovtr hits today air!\nthe Red Sox shut out the westerner.;\nby a three to nothing score, The\nvictory gave the Sox a two to one\nlead  in  their  four-tfime  series.\nBt,   Louis     000 000 000\u2014O    4    _\nBoston      200 001 OOx\u20143 10    1\nBlaeholder and Ferrell; Durham\nand Connolly.\nBig League\nBASEBALL\n\"Ply Ball\" Catch\nATHLETICS BEATEN 15-0\nPHILADELPHIA. Pa., Aug.' 14.\u2014\nWes Ferrell, star pitcher of the\nCleveland Indians, turned ln his\n20th victory of the season against\nthe Athletics today, the reo\u2014-.Ins\nwinning by a score of 15 to 0 The\ntriumph was also Cleveland's first\nof the year ln 11 games played ln\nPhiladelphia.\nCleveland     300 260 301\u2014,18 20   0\nPhiladelphia     000 000 000\u2014 0   7   4\nL. Sewell and C. Perkins;  Qulnn,\nMahaffey and Schang. Cochrane.\nNATIONALS   MOVE   DP\nWASHINGTON, D. C, Aug. 14.\u2014\nThe Nationals made a clean sweep\nof the three-game series with Chicago by winning today five to four.\nAs Philadelphia lost Washington\ngained a game on the leaders ln\nthe   Amorlcan   league  race.\nghtoago     oio 100 101-4 10   o\nWashington    .... 000 300 20x\u20146 10    0\nCaraway and Tate: Crowder, Llska,\nFischer and  Spencer.\nBOSWELL REGATTA\nHAS AQUATIC\nSPORTSFOR ALL\nMiss Ruth Cummings Again\nWins  Capt.  Seaman\nCup\nBOSWELL, B. C, Aug. 14\u2014The\nannual Boswell regatta was held on\nFriday, under the auspices of the\nFarmers' Institute commute?, consisting of A. Mackle, W. H% Hepher,\nand A. H. Ascott,\nThere was a large attendance of\nlocal residents nnd visitors. Judges\nwere c. B. Twigg, A. Hepher and\nD. G. Brown, with A. Mackle and\nW. L. Hepher as starters and 8, J.\nCummlngs as announcer.   \u25a0\nTea was served ln the memorial\nhall by Mrs. A. Mackle, assisted by\nMrs. w. L. Hepher. Mrs. A. H. Ascott,\nO. Krause and others.\nFollowing the regatta a dance\nwas held ln thp evening in the Memorial hall, when about 80 people\nwere present. K. Walacc carried om\nthe duties of Master of Ceremonies.\nRegatta prize-winners were:\nBoys and girls, uni\/r 12. 25 yards\n\u2014Edgar Home, first; Dan Johnstone\nsecond; Irene Karpowich, third; Bobble Jarvls, fourth.\nBoys 13 to 16, f|l yards-Lloyd\nCummlngs, flrat; Percy Mackle, second.\nGirls, 50 yards\u2014Ruth Cummings,\nflrat; Enid Home, second.\nDiving, under 16\u2014Jim Hughes,\nfirst; Ruth Cummlngs, second.\nSculling, under 16\u2014Lloyd Cummlngs, first;  Percy Mackle. second.\nSingle sculling, men\u2014James Johnstone,  first;   D.  Kunst, second.\nSingle sculling, ladles\u2014Ruth Cummlngs, first; Phyllis Sampson second.\nMixed sculling\u2014Sylvester Spence\nand Ruth Cummlngs, first; Ray.\nmond Cummlngs and Grace Mackle\nsecond.\nTilting\u2014F. Kunst.\n100 yards, men\u2014D. Large, first;\nF. Kunst, second.\n100 yards, ladles\u2014Miss A, McKowan, first; Miss fl. Horstead. second.\nDiving, open\u2014Miss McKowan, first;\nD.  Large,   second.\nUndress race\u2014Ruth Cunmmlngs\nnnd Malcolm Stewm't (tied); greasy\nPolo, Percy Mackle; under water\nplunge, Miss Eleanor Merrlfield1\nlaunch rnce, F. Kunst.\nThe Seaman trophy, a silver cup\nPresented some years ago by Capt\nSeaman, to bo held until the next\nregatta by the winner of the most\npoints, again goes to Miss Ruth\nCummlngs, who won It last yenr.\nCALGARY CADET\nCORPS WINS AT\nOTTAWA SHOOT\nCONNAUGHT RANGES, OTTAWA,\nOnt., Aug. 14,\u2014Calgary High School\nCadet corpa won the United Empire trophy, open to the cadet team\nmaking the highest aggregate score\nIn the Tyro, McDougall. Bankers'\nand Cadet matches here at the Dominion of Canada Rifle association\nmeet. The Calgarlans scored a total\nof 073 points as against 866 for\nHamilton, Ont., Central Collegiate\n\"A\" team, and 1)63 by Winnipeg\nHighland collegiate.\nCoRRecT Way\nto catch\nFly Pall\n^.^A^eV^\/i'ScSe-\nCUBS IMPROVE\nLEAD TO ONE\nWHOLE GAME\nDown Brooklyn by 5-1; St.\nLouis and Boston Split\na Double\nNATIONAL   LEAGUE\nTeam\u2014 W L Pet.\nChicago        67 45 .698\nBrooklyn        67 47 .588\nNew  York   ~    62 47 .669\nSt.   LoulB  59 53 .527\nPlttaburgn        64 55 .405\nBoston        51 62 .451\nCincinnati       46 60 .434\nPhiladelphia       37 74 .333\nlly   AL  I>_,MAREE\n(Former  Pitcher,  New  York  Giants*\nThe correct way to catch a fly\nball ia with, the hands cupped outward and the arms partly extended\nand alightly above the shoulders.\nAlmost all 61 the great fielders of\nthe past and present In the major\nleagues use this method. Besides\nbeing a surer way of catching the\nball it also puts the outfielder in a\nbetter position for a throw after\nthe catch, than if he caught \"the\nball lower with his hands cupped\nupward instead of outward.\nOccasionally a great outfielder or\nlnfielder, noticeably Rabbit Maran-\nvllle of'the Boston Braves, catches\na fly ball at his waist with his\nhands cupped upwards. But these\nplayers are freaks ln the national\ngame and I would not advise the\namateur to try to emulate them.\nThere have even been major\nleague outfielders who caught a ball\nwith what the boys on the lots call\n\"butter fingers\". They were not\nsuccessful because of this practice,\nhowever, but in spite of lt.\nSave this Big league Baseball\naeries, another will appear Tuesday.\nAl Demaree has prepared \"a free\nillustrated leaflet on \"Batting\"\nwhich will Improve any boy's percentage. Send for It. Address Al\nDemaree, In cure of this paper, and\nbe sure to enclose a self-addressed,\nstamped envelope.\nST. LOUIS, Mo., Aug. 14.\u2014The\nBoston Braves and the' St. Louis\nCardinal- split a double-header here\ntoday, the Cards taking the first\ngame with a ninth inning rally,\nfour to three, and the Braves winning the night cap, three to two\nbehind the effective pitching of old\nTim Zachary.\n\u00ab R H E\nBoston       030 000 000\u20143 11    0\nSt.   Louis     020 000 O02\u20144    9    0\nBeibold and Cronln; Hallahan,\nBell and Mancuso.\nR H E\nBoston     ..;..  000 012 00*0\u20143    8    0\nSt.   Louis     000 002 000\u20142    6    2\nZachary an(P Cronln; Grimes,\nGrabowskl    and    Wilson.\nPAUL P1TNER TO\nMANAGE THEATER\nAT ROSSLAND\nBig Six Baseball\n(By Associated Press)\nIn a day of light action, Babe\nHerman furnished most of the interest In the Big Sis batting list m\nho continued his chase after first\nPlace, Herman, gained a point by\nhitting twice in four times, at bat\nto lift his average  to  .405.\nTHE    STANDING\nPlayer\u2014 G   AB   R    H    Pet.\nTerry, Giants 109 447 107 183 .401)\nHerman, Robe 113 457 112 185 .405\nKlein,   Phil.    .. Ill 462 116 1BQ    .400\nGehrig, Yanks 117 438 111 167\nSimmons. Ath 104 410 117 167\nRuth,   Yanks    110 I\nHas Been in Nelson for 15\nYears; Is Succeeded by\nKitsilano Man\nPaul Pltner, well known in Nelson\nand district for the past 16 years\nas the manager of various theaters\nin the city, has Just received word\nthat he will be moved to Rossland\nwhere he will manage the new\nCapitol theater that ls being opened\nthere    next    week.\nMr. Pltner will be succeeded as\nmanager of the theater here by\nHugh Wallace, who has been manager of the Kit-llano theater at\nthe  const.\nDuring the first 13 years ho was\nln Nelson Mr. Pltner managed first,\nthe Gem for nine years and then\nthe Starland for tour years. When\nthe Capitol theater was built here\nln 1928 he went to lt as manager\nwhere he has remained since.'\nBorn in Greencastle. Indiana, Mr.\nPltner while a young man did\nvaudeville and light opera singing\nin and about San Francisco, Later\nstill   he   did   Illustrated   sour   work.\nLeaving tho stage he managed\ntheaters ln Kelowna and Now Westminster before coming to Nelson\nwhere he entered the same business.\nIn August, 1928, he became a naturalized Canadian citizen.\nIS    WELL    EQUIPPED\nSpeaking of the equipment in\nthe new Rossland theater to be\nopened next week Mr. Pltner stated\nthat better could not be found in\nany theater situated in a town the\nsize   of   Rossland.\nThis new theater will hold 750\npersons which is 100 larger than\ntlie theater In Nelson. The decorations are modernistic and the lighting Is indirect.\nThere was only one thing the\nmatter with the new move, stated\nMr. Pltner, and that was thc fact\nthat he had tn leave Nelson, where\n15 years of residence had produced\nso  many  friends.\nBand Gives Many\nFine  Selections\nSweet old Songs, overture by C.\nW. Dalbey, La Paloma, Spanish\nserenade by Yradler and Nights of\nGladness by Charles Ancllffo were\nthe most popular numbers rendered\nby the city band at a concert, given\non   Vernon   street   Wednesday,\nThe band was led by Ross Fleming,   deputy   band muster.\nNumbers were:\nThe Masquerade, march by K. L.\nKing.\nFestival King, overture by Edward\nRussell.\nSweet Old Songs, overture by O.\nW. Dalbey.\nLa Paloma, Spanish serenade by\nYradler.\nNights of Gladness, Valse, by\nCharles  Anoliffe.\nMadame Sherry, selection by\nKarl  Hoschna.\nThe Diadem, overture hy A. Herman.\nThe Doll Dance, Naclo Horb\nBrows,\nThe Show World, march J. J.\nRichards.\nWhat's \"your business?\nServing the I. W. W.    ,\nYeah? o\nSure; the motorist who is scekim?\nInformation, Wind and Water,\u2014\nLos Angeles Record.\nMALONE DOES  IT\nCHICAGO. Aug. 14.\u2014The brawny\nright arm of Percy Malone throttled\nthe Brooklyn Robins to a mere\nchirp today ahd derricked the Cubs\nback into a full game lead in the\nbitter fight 'for the National league\npennant.\nBacked by faultless support and\nhunched hits early in the struggle\nthat carried him over the top, the\nbig fireman from Altoona, Pa., give\nUncle Wilbur Robinson's warriors\nJust eight scattered blows and conquered them five to one.\nR H E\nBrooklyn    000 000 ool\u2014l   8   2\nChicago     212 000 OOx\u20145 12    0\nDudley. Clark and Plctnlch; Malone  and  Hartnett.\nTWO   WASHED   OUT\nPhiladelphia-Pittsburgh,   rain.\nNew    York    at    Cincinnati\u2014Wet\ngrounds.\nHONORS SHARED\nIN PRELIMINARY\nHEATS, REGATTA\nWhelpton      and      Richards\nShare Spotlight in\nSingles\nST. CATHARINES, Ot., Aug. 14.-\n(CP) \u2014Honors were widely distributed at the close of the preliminary\nheats of the 43th annua! regatta of\nthe Canadian Association of Am\nateur Oarsmen, which was launched\nunder Ideal conditions here today\nE. Whelpton of Hamilton and R.\nW, Richards. Winnipeg, share the\n.spotlight in the singles, the latter\nbrewing across the finish line with\na fair margin over his three competitors. Thc winner's time was\nseven minutes 58 4-5 seconds,\nagainst 66 1-5 for Whelpton, who\nfinished nine lengths ahead of J.\nMaranetto, Detroit, his lone opponent. Both qualified for the finals\ntomorrow.\nGibson Shaw or Toronto Argonauts, provided an upset in thc\nfirst heat of the Blngles to Join\nRichards in the aesociatlo nrow-off.\nShaw came from far behind to eliminate V. Wehmelr. Detroit, after the\nlatter had held second place cafe for\nthe greater part of the course. Richards ro-wed a heaay race, tnklng tho\nlead from the stare nnd successfully\nstaving off the belated challenge of\nShaw. Tho Winnlpcgger won by\ntwo  lengths.\nA thrilling flnlim was provided ln\nthe firs(T\"heat of the 140-pound\nJunior eights when Toronto. Argonauts No. l crew spurted heroically\nIn the last lop yards, but failed\nhy six feet to overhaul the Detroit\noarsmen who had assumed a commanding lead early tn the race. St.\nCatharines was three lengths behind the Toronto entry. In winning\nDetroit set the fast time of 8.50 1-5.\nIn the other heat of t.he Junior\neights Buffalo Westsides emerged\nvictors, with Lachlne in second\nplace. The Unites Stahe\u00bb crew set\na pace ton fast for the No. 1 Argonaut entry and Hamilton Loandcrs.\nalthough tho time was 2 1-6 seconds\nslower than registered in the first\nheat.\nBURKE WINS THE\nKING'S MEDAL\n(By Jack Hambleton, Canadian Press\nStaff Writer)\nCONNAUGHT RANGES, Ont., Aug.\n14~Lt. Desmonid Burke, Ottawa,\nwon-, Hla Majesty, the Kink's medal\nat the Dominion Rifle association\nmeeting here today. Lieutenant\nBurke score 143 to defeat Lt. G. A.\nMolccy, Winnipeg, who had 138,\nand Pte. G, B. Brown, Ottawa J28.\nForty-eighth Highlanders, Toronto,\nwon the Coates match *today with\na score of 383. The Coates la a\nbattalion team competition. Headquarters Rifle association, Eaqul-\nmalt, British Columbia, was second\nwith 382, Queens Own \"A\" team,\nToronto, third with 380, Royal Grenadiers, Toronto, fourth with 380,\nand Victoria Rifles, Montrcral, fifth\nwith   379.\nALBERTA BOWLING\nSTAR IS BEATEN\nWINNIPEG,   Man.,   Aug.   14.\u2014-,'CP)\n\u25a0Harry Schofield, Edmonton, who\ncarried Alberta's challenge to the\nManitoba lawn bowling tourney,\nwas defeated today in the Spelrs-\nParnell event by Bob Mitchell, Winnipeg, 13-10. He plays tomorrow In\nthe Yale Shoe Store event. With\nOlsen in the doubles, he lost to\nMorrison-Rhodes, 18-6.\nAfter ousting the Atkin-Cormle\nduo from the doubles, 16-11, the\nMcCulloch Elvin. Fort William, lost\nto McLetchle-Walker, 17-8. McCul-\nlock was eliminated from the Eaton\nVisitors' event by J. Duncan. Brandon, 19-9, as waa Schoefield by\nJohnson, Brandon, 16-13. Wall,\nPort Frances, lost in this test to\nTackaberry. Brandon, 14-12.\nJohnny Erzinger, Winnipeg, hitherto lone undefeated competitor, was\nbeaten in the Dingwall grand challenge by Alex Noble, Winnipeg.\n14-13.\nTILDEN WALKS\nOUT WHEN IS\nOVEN TtAZT\n\"I  Can't   Stand   This   Any\nLonger\" Says Great\nTennis Player\nRYE, N, Y., Aug. 14\u2014Bit: Bill\nTilden took his turbulent personality out of the eastern graso court*\nsingles championship today, when\nhe withdrew from the defense of\nhis title in a match with Clifford\nSutter, intercollegiate champion iron-\nNew  Orleans.\nThe youthful Tulane university\nste* riad won the first set 0-1. and\nwas leading in the second set when\nBig Bill took offense at .the heckling of the' crowd. As the ace ot\nthe American Davis cup team left\nthe court he said, \"I can't stand\nthis   any   longer.\"\nAfter a short rest Tilden took\nthe court with hla doubles partner\nFrancis T. Hunter of New Rochelle\nbut the veteran combination lost\nto Keith Gledhill. Santa Barbara,\nCal., and Elllsworth Vines, Jr.,\nPasadena, Cal., national Junior\ndoubles  champion.\nSaskatchewan Has\nThreshers Working\nWINNIPEG, Man.. Aug. 14.\u2014(CPX\n\u2014Saskatchewan entrants In the\nwestern Canada tennis tourney today met their first serious setbacks. Doug Shaw, Regina, was\neliminated from the men's singles\nby Walter Gyles, 0-2, 0-4, and with\nWalter Martin, snappy Regina net\nstar, he dropped out of the men's\ndoubles after losing to \"Hum\"\nBonnycastle and Morgan Boxall,\nWinnipeg, 3-6. 10-8, 6-0.\nMartin still holds up the Saskatchewan banner In the singles, by\nvirtue of a win over Tom Simpson,\nWinnipeg, 10-8, 6-2. Miss Dorothy\nMcKenzio. Saskatchewan university\nstar, too, Is still in the going. By\na score of 6-3, 2-6, 6-2, she won\nover Mrs. F. Fraser, Winnipeg, In the\nladles' singles. She ls still playtng,\n*s well, ln the mixed doubles, with\nShaw, and In the lsdies' doubles\nwith  Miss  Death.  Winnipeg.\nQUEST MAKES IT\nTWO, CANADA CUP\nROCHESTER. N. T.. Aug. 14\u2014The\nCanadian ohallenger Quest won the\nfourth race for the Canada's cfp\ntoday by the slimmest of margins,\ndefeating lyllllam P. Barrow's Thlabe\n28-avoconds over an IB-mile wnldward\nand leeward course and evening the\nscore at two-all ln the series for\npossession of the historic trophy.\nOne  has  but  to\nsample   our   fountain\nservice  to  realize  why\nwe do such a big business.\nTRY IT TODAY\nTOBACCONISTS\nSAFE\nat ANY speed\nTWO WESTERNERS\nON SWIM TEAM,\nEMPIRE GAMES\nTORONTO, Ont,, Aug. 14.\u2014(CP) \u2014\nAllan Robinson, young nows writer\nof Moose Jaw, 8a3h., and Arthur\nScott of Victoria, British Columbia,\nare the only westerners on the list\nof swimmers named * to represent\nCanada at the British Empire games.\nThe other nomlnoea, announoed\ntonight, are\nMunroe Bourne, Montreal. Que..\nBert Gibson, Bon Gazelle, Jack\nQuln. John Angus, Irwin Halatlner.\nAlfred Phillips, Sammy Walker. Cyril\nKennett. James Thompson Ernest\nKennett. Oeorge Burleigh, Waltor\nKayes, Murray Orlffln, Gordon Law.\nVernon ^je. Winston MoCatty and\nGerald l\u00bb..,.,ty. all of Toronto- and\nT.   Brock,   Hamilton.\nTen Toronto girls moke pp the\nwomen's toam. Thoy are Marjory\nLinton, Peggy Bailey. Betty Edwards, Monica Hardy, Molly Bailey.\nDorothy Prior, Irene Plrte, Doris\nOgllvle. Helen MoCormlck, and Pearl\nStonehftm.\nVICTOR TO BE BEST MAN\nAT LOSER'S  WEDDING\nWINNIPEG. Man., Aug. 14.\u2014(CP)\n\u25a0Dune Walker of Sherrldon. Man.\nia dethroned as champion of the\nFree Press fifth annual golf tourney\nbut. ho doesn't mind . In* fact.\nCharlie Beck Jr. of Yorkton. Sask..\nwho defoatcd him by flvo and (our\nln the final today Is to be Walker's\nbest man when he Is wed on Saturday.\nWith the new Firestone Heavy\nDuty Gum-Dipped Balioon Tires\nyou have a wide margin of safety\nat ANY speed. Built in advance\nof today's car requirements, they\nwithstand rougher usage than any\ncar on any road at any speed,\ncan give them.\nFirestone Heavy Doty Balloons\nare made of Gum-Dipped cord\nconstruction\u2014the strongest and\nsafest method known. They have\na deeper safety tread, extra\nside-wall thickness and two extra\nplies of Gam-Dipped cords just\nbeneath the tread to absorb\nroad shocks. They are the\nstrongest, safest, toughest tires\nthat' Firestone has ever built.\nMake your car safer for travel.\nEquip it with a set of new\nFirestone Heavy Duty Balloons.\nSee your nearest Firestone\nDealer today.\nFIRESTONE TIRE AND RUBBER COMPANY\nOP CANADA. UMITED\nHi.itai.      .      Om.ro\n&keNEW\nfn^Hm\nBALLOO N\nDealers for Nelson and District\nThe Smedley Qarage Co.\nNext Door to Pout Office\nPhone 71\nSold and Serviced by\nW. Desjardins, Dili's Super Service Station\nSOLD IN TRAIL BY\nThe Trail Garage Co. Ltd.\nBay Avenue\nTRAIL, B- C.\nPhone 13_\n Page Bight\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS      FRIDAY, AUGUST 15, 19S0.\nThe World's Delight\nPART  II\nCHAPTER    SIX\n(Continued . .\nBut DoloreB cared nothing for\nMurdoch's disapproval. Bhe was\nlike one -walking on a r>tago that\nwas floored with clouds; half the\ntime she waa unaware that an,\naudience was only a few feet distant; she waa living these few\nhours as one heroic dream, filled\nwith the strange and mystical\nfancies of the poet; she was a part\nof a great miracle of the Imagination, whose climax was soon coming In a storm of fear blowing\nthrough the sleep-walking scene.\nHere, where Lady Macbeth's Illusions of hidden wickedness break\ndown, Dolores planned a complete\ndismissal of tha strict routine that\nMurdoch had given her. What alterations she planned ln the pan-\ntomlne of the same were meant\nto point and peak the emphasis of\nall   she  had   dono   before.\nLamp ln hand, and wearing a\nnightdress so flimsy that lt brought\na gasp from the house, she appeared at the top of a long flight\net narrow stairs, rising to and disappearing Into the ovar-hanglng\ntiles. Her breath came in the deep\nheaving rythm of one who sleeps\nprofoundly; her eyes were wide\nwttb the unseeing glare of the\neomnabul-rt; down the stairs she\ncame, treading the slender, deep\ndescent without a blink of those\nblinded eyas, without ono stolen\nglance to guide her feet. A quiet\nlike a desert midnight brooded\nover all who watched her! not one\nbut trembled for her safety on\nthat periltoufl deeoent Into this\nmoat awful scene.\n\"Banfa tha smell of the blood\n\u25a0kill; all tha perfumes of Arabia\n-will not sweeten this little hand.\"\nWhat was there so dread In her\nmuted voice, tho voice of * woman\nasleep? As they watched her, with\nthat breathl_afln__o never absent\nfrom this soUllQUy. Dolores turned\nand started toward tha stairs.\nMurdoch, lurking in the wings,\ncalled hoarsely:\n\"Dont forget to nlok up your\nb-mpr\nBut Dolores bad no Intention of\ntouching her light again. Let lt\nremain where ahe had cat lt down.\nHere was where she meant most to\nveer from Murdoch's stem instruction. Be had told her to\ninarch up the steps and go off, as\nIf returning to bar bed-chamber.\nTo hts astonishment, and horror\nhe aaw that ahe was doing nothing\nof tha kind. Instead she came\nto the foot of the stairs and there\nsank to her kneee; a moment later\nshe fell prone, har head laid upon\nber hands wearily against the lowest) step as If it were her royal\npillow.\n\"Tb bed, to bed, there's knocking\nat the gate; c-t-nne, come, come,\ncomo, give me your hand; what v.\ndone canot be undone; to bed, to\nbed, to bed.\"\nIf that had been all, If then the\ncurtain had fallen swiftly and\nmercifully, all Nashville ln the\nmorning would have rung clarion\nwith her name. Until that last\nutterance, all was well; had that\nended lt, Murdoch could never\nhave sneered at her in the book\nof his old age.\nDolores had reached out her\nhand a_ If she were covering with\na warm blanket her bedfellow\nMacbeth; upon that daring business the curtain should have fallen\n\u2014but there was a delay whloh ahe\nhad not foreseen. The stage-manager had counted on her mounting the long staircase as Murdoch\nhad taught her: the man was still\nstupidly holding the curtain, expecting her to get uo from the\nfloor and climb the steps, and thus\ngive him his cue; thus there was a\nminutes long, unbreathlng wait\nwhile Dolores, still with open eyee\nand the mad atare, lay with her\nface turned to the audience. It\nwas then and for the first time in\nall the long performance that\nnight she saw the audience; ahe\naaw individual faces in the front\nrows;  she taw\u2014\u2014\nWhat did she see\u2014there ln the\nfront row?\nIt was as If an apparition were\nsitting out there and mocking her\nlike  Banqno's  ghost  at  the  feast.\nIn that long minute before the\ncurtain descended, Dolore8 continued to look upon the apparition while her Ups struggled for\nspeech, for Bcreaming lines not\nwritten in the tragedy. Looking\nup at her, pale and haunted, was\na man with long yellow hair and\na beard of golden brown; a Banquo\nface In truth\u2014but his eyes were a\nchild's blue, and they held a\nhunted   gleam.\nTo Dolores, it was as if the\nopen wall between stage and auditorium were a great, lighted mirror, Agrlppa's huge and magic\nglass In which the loved and lost\narose to view. Straight Into each\nother's eyes they looked; then\nsuddenly Dolores sprang to her feet\nand motioned wildly to the stage\nhand to arrest the curtain that at\nlast had started down.\nBhe heard voices calling to her;\nCrisp's voice and Murdoch's and\nothers, too, but In her madness she\ncould not pay them the slightest\nheed. Instead she faced the audience; her hands were quivering\nwith nervousness, and she could\nnot hold them still; her voice\nquavered when she addressed them.\n\"Ladles and gentlemen; there ls\namong you one who knows why\nI am speaking out of my character.\nTo that one person I speak as If\nln the terms of a blind personal\nnotice In a newspaper column\nIt Is my only way to reach that\nperson\u2014but I must take this\nchance to say that all with me\nas It was before\u2014ln the old, old\ndays, and also that I have the\nmeans and the will to help\u2014that\nthe danger ls great and immediate\n\u2014that we must meet at once \"\nShe paused and drew herself up\nproudly.\n\"At once!\" she repeated earnestly\nand stepped back as If retreating\nfrom a wall of bewildered silence,\nuntil the sighing curtain hid her\nfrom their view.\n(To   Be   continued)\nMrs. D. Stewart\nReturns, Eastport\nBASTPORT, Idaho, Aug. 14.\u2014Mr.\nand Mrs. H. T. Hannah left on\nFriday for a two weeks' holiday to\nbe spent at Calgary and coast points.\nMr. W. E. Miller resumed his duties as agent for the S. I. railway\nhere on Thursday after a three\nmonths' vacation.\nMrs. A. Belling was a Bonners\nPerry visitor during the week.\nMrs. A. E. Predrlckson was accompanied by her aunt, Mrs. Carr,\nof Calgary, and Mr. Johnny Strom-\nberg of Ventura.\nMrs. D. Stewart and son, Malcolm,\nreturned home on ,Prlday after\nspending a month's vacation, at\nPortland and Bend. Mrs. Stewart\nwas accompanied home by her mother-in-law, who will visit here Indefinitely.\nKenneth Corbett returned home\non Thursday from Vancouver where\nhe visited relatives for the past\nmonth.\nC. W. King and family of Bonners\nPerry, were visitors In town on Sunday.\nSpencer Lewis _pent Tuesday visiting at his home here.\nOn Satuday last Misses Delia Lowland Harriet Masecar were hostesses\nto a Tew of their friends at the\nhome of Miss Lewis, The evening\nwas spent ln dancing and later ln\nthe evening a dainty lunch was served after which dancing waa Indulged\nin until one o'clock. The guests were\nMisses Betty Blair, Leah Frederick-\nson, Sally Carter, Anna Sims, Lois\nGraham, Winnlfred Johnson, Mrs, R.\nP. Johnson, Mrs. H. B. Roblson,\nDelia Lewis and Harriet Masecar.\nMessrs. Kenneth Corbett, Bill Miller,\nMaurice Anderson, Ltjuls Hafferman,\nDudley Carter, Barry MacDonald'\nTom Lewie, Harry Ersklne, Jim\nStewart and Bill Pederson.\nWatermelon salad ls a most attractive salad and very simple to\nprepare, Two half pears, some finely chopped ginger, sprinkled over\nthem, then temped with balls of\nwatermelon and served on crisp lettuce with whipped cream dressing\nThis makes  a delicious  salad.\nCLASSIFIED- ADVERTISING SECTIO\":\nCLASSIFIED   ADVERTISING   RATES\nLocal   Reading   Notices\n(Minimum   two   lines)\nTwenty cents a line. Display type\nlarger than nix point, charge at rate\nof 20c a line six point; i.e., one line\n1_ point, charge 40c; one line 14\npoint, charge oOc. Dally for one\nmonth or more deduct 25 per cent\nfrom above rates minimum for\nmonthly advt. $10.40 less discount.\nMinimum charge  40c.\nCLASSIFIED AND WANT ADS\n(Minimum two Lines)\nTen cents a line per Insertion. Six\ninsertions, 40c a line; per month\n$1.30 a line.   Minimum charge, 20c.\nMarriages, deaths and in mem-\norlam notices, 20c a line. Lists\nof flowers at funerals, gifts at weddings,  etc.,   16c  a  line.\nNo   extra   cost   if   charged.\nBOX    NUMBERS\nIf a Dally News Box Number Is\ndesired there Is an extra charge of\n10 cents.\nLEGAL   NOTICES\nSixteen cents a line first Insertion\n12c a line additional insertions.\nPROFESSIONAL   OR   BUSINESS\nCARD'S\n(Minimum two lines)\nYEARLY CONTRACT \u2014 81 a line\nper month.\nSIX MONTHS' CONTRACT \u201441.20\na line per month.\nTRANSIENT -- $1.30 a line per\nmonth,\nGirls From Wardner\nAttend Camp\nWARDNER, B. 0., Aug. 14.\u2014Eight\ngirls from Wardner motored up to\nWasa Lake on Thursday evening to\nattend the girls' camp being held\nthere. Those going to camp were\nMisses Dorothy Scar_land, Georgetta\nRenick, Josephine Roslcky, Charlene\nHarorLn. Grace McKenzle, Kathryn\nScanland. Swea Maberg and Katherlne  Roslcky.\nMiss Muriel Mcintosh who has\nbeen spending her vacation visiting\nfriends In Grand Forks, North Dakota, and St. Paul, Minn., arrived on\nFriday evening from Elko to pay\na short visit at her sisters', Mrs.\nAugust Daye's. Miss Mcintosh left\non Monday morning for Vancouver, via Portland and Seattle,\nwhere she will resume her duties\nas nurse in the Vancouver General hospital.\nMrs. Scanland entertained at tea\non Friday ln honor of her mother's\n77th birthday, Mra. Norrls has been\nvisiting her doughter and family\nfor some months. Thl3 is hor\nsecond visit to Wardner so she is\nwell-known here. Those attending\nthe tea worn Mrs. Hamrln, Mrs. Elmer Thompson, Mrs. \u25a0 Reld, Mra.\nFrank Thomjpson. Mrs. Lawson,\nMisses Elizabeth and i\/oulse Lawson.\nMr. and Mrs .Arbuckle of Canal\nFlats were visitors in town on\nSunday at Mrs. Arbuckle'a sister's,\nMrs. B. Daye's.\nMr. and Mrs. H. Haney of Yahk\nwere visitors in town over the weekend. Mrs. Charles Hamrln, Miss\nRuth   ir.imr.-c   and   Muster   Donald\nI-EGAL NOTICES\nTENDERS WANTED\nTenders are called for the Installation of toilet system in South\nSlocan School. Lowest tender not\nnecessarily accepted. Apply for particulars to the Secretary. (1355)\n\"GOVERNMENT   LIQUOR   ACT'\nNotice of Application for Consent to\nTransfer of Beer Licence\nNotice ls hereby given that on\nthe llth day of September next,\nthe undersigned intends to apply\nto the . Liquor Control Board for\nconsent to transfer Beer License\nNumber 1691 and Issued in respect\nof promises being part of a building\nknown\/ as Salmo Hotel, situated\nupon land described as Lots Ten\n(10). Eleven (11), and Twelve (12).\nBlock Four (4), Map Six hundred\nond twenty-two (622). Kootenay District. Townslte of Salmo, Nelson\nLand Registration District, in the\nProvince of British Columbia. Irom\nCharles Conrad Water-street, licensee, to Ida Gray. Widow, of Salmo,\nIn the Province of British Columbia,\nthe transferee.\nDATED at Salmo, B. C, this 6th\nday   of   August,   AJD\u201e   1930.\nIDA   GRAY\nApplicant and Transferee.\n(1283)\nLAND    ACT\nNOTICE OF INTENTION TO APPLY\nTO   LEASE   LAND\nIn Kootenay Land Recording District of British Columbia, and situate on the North shore of the\nWest Arm of Kootenay Lake, 8.2\nmiles East from the Nelson Ferry,\nfronting on Lots 3 and 4, of Sub-\nlot 6. of Lot 4780, Map 1605. ln\nthe L. R. O. at Nelson, B. C.\nTake notice that James Buchanan\nof Tadnac, B. C, ocupatlon Smelter\nSuperintendent, Intends to apply for\na lease of the following described\nlands:\u2014\nCommencing at a post planted at\nthe Northeast corner of Lot 3, of\nSublot 6, of Lot 4780. Map 1605,\nthence S. 60 degrees 23' E. 125 ft,;\nthence S. 20 degrees 35' E. 109,8 ft.;\nthence S. 21 degrees 64* E. 112.0 ft.;\nthence N. 60 degrees 23' W. 125 ft.;\nthence N. 21 degrees 64' W. 112.0 ft.;\nthence N, 20 degrees 35' W. 109.8 ft.\nand containing 0.408 acres, more or\nJAMES   BUCHANAN.\nName of applicant in full.\nDated June llth, 1030. (678)\nHamrln returned to Yahk with\nthem Sunday evening and will\nspend  a few days  visiting  there.\nA. Stenerson Journeyed to Spokane on Sunday, where h,e is staying for a  few days.\nLars Lawson arrived on tfrlday\nfrom the states, by way of Elko and\nwill spend some time vlsltng his\nbrother, J. Lawson of the Wardner  hotel.\nMrs. Lawson on*oerta.irwd on Friday evening in honor of Mrs. Norrls' 77th birthday. Those present\nwere Mrs. Norrls, Mrs. 3canland,\nMrs. Reed, Mrs .J. Wright, Mrs.\nHalgh, Miss Elizabeth Lawson, Miss\nLouise  Lawson.\nLEGAL NOTICES\n(Continued)\nIN  THE   SCPEEME   COURT  OF\nBRITISH   COLUMBIA\nIN\" PROBATE\nIn   the   Matter   of   the   Estate   ot\nAnna   K.  Panison,  deceased\nTAKE NOTICE that all persons\nhaving claims against the Estate ot\nAnna K. Paulson who died, at Spokane, Washington, on the 24th day\nat November, A. D. 1927 are required to forward such oliatins duly\nverified by statutory declaration to\nthe undersigned on or before the\n21et day of August A. D. 1980 after\nwhich date the administrator will\nproceed to distribute the within eB-\ntate without regard to any clalms\nof whloh he shall not then have\nnotice.\nO-SUEA   _   GARLAND,\n' Houston Block,\nNelson, B. p.\nSolicitors for the Administrator.\n(1959)\nLAND    ACT\nNOTICE OF INTENTION TO APPLY\nTO  LEASE  LAND\nm Kootenay Land Recording District of British Columbia, and situate on the North shore of the\nWest arm of Kootenay Lake, 3.2\nmiles East from the Nelson ferry,\nfronting on Lots 6 and 6 of sublot\n6 of Lot 4780, Map 1506 In the\nLand Registry Office at Nelson,\nB.   O.\nTake notice that Randolph William Diamond of -?adanac. B. O.,\noccupation Metallurgist Intends to\napply for a lease of the following\ndescribed Iande:\u2014\nCommencing at a post planted\nat the Northeast comer ot Lot 6\nof sublot 6 of Lot 4730, Map 1505.\nthence S. 60 degrees 23' E. 125 ft.;\nthence S. 270 degrees 31' W. 91.2 It.;\nthence S. 49 degrees 37\" W. 97 ft.;\nthence N. 80 degrees 23' W. 125 ft.;\nthence No. 49 degrees 37' E. 97 ft.;\nthence N, 27 degrees 31' W. 91.2 ft.\nand containing 0-33 acres more or\nless.\nRANDOLPH   WILLIAM   DIAMOND,\nName of applicant ln full.\nDated llth day of June, 1930.\n(664)\nl-ERSONAL\n(B)\nMOTHER\u2014I   NEED   YOU\u2014WILL  DO\nanything.   Write me.   Guy, (1328)\nHELP WANTED\n-25)\nGOOD CANVASSERS WANTED,\noung man or woman willing to\ntravel. Apply Box 1362 Dally\nNews. (1362)\nWANTED \u2014 MAN,      TWENTY      OR\nover,   for   Dairy,   must   be   good\nmilker   and  able  to  drive truck.\nApply Glenone Dairy, Trail, B. 0.\n(1364)\nWANTED\u2014WOMAN OR GIRL FOR\ngeneral housework, experienced\nonly need apply. Phone 233 or\n289R3 or write Mrs. J. T. Andrews. Box 1116. Nelson.     (1361)\nSITUATIONS WANTED\n(11)\nGIRL   SIXTEEN       DESIRES   Position as help with housework. Apply box 1303 Dally News office.\n(1303)\nSITUATIONS  WANTED\u2014(Cont.)\nGIRL WISHDJO TO ATTEND Business College desires home Ira\nreturn for services. Box 1320,\nDally News.     \u25a0,- I  (1820)\nGIRL WISHING TO ATTEND HIGH\nSohool will assist with housework\nand pay part board. Annie McKean, Wlnlaw. (1321)\nAGENTS  WANTED\n(12)\nSTART NOW\u2014YOU CAN EARN\nmoney quickly, taking orderB for\nthe most beautiful line of Personal Christmas Greeting Cards ever\nshown In Canada. Write for particulars. Regal Art Co., 310 spa-\ndtna Ave, Toronto. (1198)\nROOM   AND   BOARD\n(17)\nCOMFORTABLE BOARD AND ROOM\nclose ln.   Phone 506.L. 11353)\nCOMFORTABLE BEDROOMS FOR\ngentlemen, private home, with or\nwithout board. Central. Apply\nP. O. Box 673. (1335)\nCOMFORTABLE BOARD AND ROOM\nsuitable for Business College or\nHigh Sohool Students. Must bo\nwilling to share room. Close In.\nPhone 814R. or write Box 940,\nNelson. (1S22)\nHOUSES FOR RENT\n(21)\nFIVE-ROOMED HOUSE, PARTLY\nfurnished, \u00bb18, per month. Phone\n3902L3. (1867)\nSEVEN ROOM FURNISHED HOUSE\nfor rent. Oak St. Phone 748 X,\nor Mrs. Oliver, Oak St.       (1341)\n8-ROOMED HOUSE FOR RENT\nacross lake. Apply 924 Edgewood\nAve. or Phone 208L. (1350)\nWELL FURNISHED SEMI-BUNGA-\nlow, seven rooms, In Vancouver,\nfor three or four months\u2014adults.\nWould consider exchanging for a\nhouse In Nelson. Call at 308\nVlotorta St.,  City. (1356)\nLIVESTOCK  FOR   SALE\n(23)\nFOR SALE\u2014PACK SADDLE AND\nwork borse. Go Guise. Midway,\nB. C. (1029)\nFOR SALE\u2014TWO YOUNG TOGGER-\nberg goats, good milkers. Gentle.\nBox  1847  Dally   News. (1347)\nFOR SALE\u2014BAY HORSE, 8 YEARS,\nquiet ln harness; work single or\ndouble,    Ward, Valllcan, B, 0.\n(1344)\nFIRST CLASS YORKSHIRE BOAR\nfor sale cheap, 14 months old.\nB\u2014\u2014pshlre, Elwyn St., Falrvlew.\n(1381)\nAYRSHIRE SHORTHORN COW, 3\nyears, T. B. tested, milking. Jersey heifer 18 months, T. B. Teatd.\nJersey neller, 6 months, ' Fred\nHawea. Silver King Road, Nelson.\n(1326)\nMISCELLANEOUS   FOR   SAT,-     (Z7)\n25 OOO irtaaT   lya-IN.   SLIGHTLY\n' used galvanized pipe, all\nfull lengths, 12 cents per foot;\n20,000 ft. iy,-ln. Black Pipe 714\ncents per foot; also Large Stock of\nother slseB and Pipe fittings.\nSwartz Pipe Yard. 220\u2014First Ave,\nEast.  Vancouver,   8.   C.      (1145)\n>mCELLANEOU8 FOR gALBa-(Con^\nFOR SAl-V-BARRELS, KEGS, BUR-\nlap sacks, white sugar sacks, Mao-\nDonald Jam Co. (1208)\nFOR SALE\u2014SHOW CASE 4 FEET\nlong, 3 ft. 6 ln. high. Also oount-\ner. Apply Nelson Muslo Store,\nStanleT St.  \u25a0     \u2022 *<H\u00ab\")\nAT THE\nLot of slightly used Blankets, retail\nat $7 and \u00bb8. On sale for 82.75 and\n\u00bb4\u20145. Other bargains In lurniture\nand household goods at equally attractive  prices.\nH. ORCHARD\nCorner Josephine and Vernon\n(1360)\nMISCELLANEOUS   WANTED (28)\nWANTED\u2014LAWN     MOWERS,     ANY\ncondition.   Phone 682Y.       (1868)\nMISCELLANEOUS\n(29)\nFOR RENT\u2014GARAGE. PHONE 271R.\n(1316)\nSAWS FILED AND, SET BOo.LAWN\nmowers sharpened $1-5. Hipper-\nsons. (1306)\nPEACHES FOR SALE, ALSO WANT\nto buy cream separator. Mrs. H.\nEllis. R. R. 1. (1327)\nLOST  AND  FOUND\n(31)\nLOST\u2014ON     JULY    9TH    BETWEEN\nCranbrook  and   Yahk,  Two  suitcases  containing wearing  apparel.\nReward.   C. Makln, Coleman, Alta.\n(1858)\nPROPERTY   FOR   SALE\n(34)\nFIVE ROOMED COTTAGE WITHIN\ntwo blocks of three schools, on car\nline. Five minutes from town.\nSplendid home. Apply 612 Latimer St. (1329)\nLake Frontage   *\nProperties on the\nWEST ARM\n7 acres, fine sand beach, largo creek\nnearby.    Price $650.00.\nModern Bungalows with small acro-\nage.\nSummer Homes with small acreage.\nUnimproved Camping sites, ono acre\nup.\nLet   vis   show   you   somo   ot   these\nproperties\nH. E. DILL\nGeneral Insurance Agent\n508 Ward  St. Phone  180\n(1365)\nBOATS,  LAUNCHES\u2014For  sale     CM)\nBARGAIN\u2014LARGE BOAT HOUSE,\nlaunch with Ford engine, 9150.\nPhone   126. (1202)\nBusiness Profession al\nDirectory\nAccounting\n_ -.   OHAS.   F.   HUNTER..\nPublic  Accountant and Audita\nMcDonald Jam Bldg\u201e Nelson     ,\n(13141\n-   Assayers\nE. W. Wlddowson, Box A1108. Nelson]\n  \"*-\"ges. I\n12161\nB. C.   Standard western ohargei\n\"12\nBEAtJTY   PARLORS\nSociety     Beauts     Shop,     Gllkerl\nBlock.   Mrs. B. Halgh, phone 171. I\n(12461\nChiropractors\nDR. MITT_N, X-RAY. ORANBHOOll\n(13161\nDR.  GRAY,   GILKER  avr.ir    Noise\n(12171\nDentists\nDR.  O.  A.   C.   WALLEY  \u2014  Orb\nBlock,   X-ray,   Nelson,   B.   0.     ,\n(11181\nEngineers\nH. D.  DAWSON\u2014LAND SURVEYOR\nMining and Civil Engineer. Kasll\n.    ' (12191\nP.  W.  RACIY,  MINING BNGI1\n616 Ward Sty Nelson, & C.\nA, H. GREEN CO.\u2014CONTRACTOl\nFormerly Green Bros., Burdeia,\nNelson, civil and Mining Englnl\neers B. 0, Alberta a\u2014IDomlnloil\nLand Surveyors, (12211\nFlorists\nGRIZZELLE'S GREENHOUSE. Nell\nson. Cut flowers and floral dol\nsigns. (12221\nWM. S. JOHNSON\u2014\nPhone   342.    Out  flowers.  Pott*\nPlants and Floral Emblems     0228\nInsurance and Real Estate!\nR. W. DAWSON\u2014Real Estate, ml\nsurance. Rentals, Next Hlpperlol\nHardware. Baker St. l_5t_\nPhotographers\nGEORGE A. MEERES \u2014 Artist nni\nPhotographer,   716   Baker   st ^S\n(12261\nTransfer\nWILLIAMaS' TRANSFER\nBAGGAGE, COAL AND WOOD\nPhone   106 (13261\nATKINSON TRANSFER \u2014 Coal anrl\nWood. Long distance hauling I\n  (I337J\nWood Working Factory\"\nLAWSON\u2014Baker St. Carpenter an1\nJoiner.    Sash   and  Hardwood\n(laanl\nSION\nON SALE MAY 15 TO SEPT. 80\nVICTORIA      SEATTLE        VANCOUVER\n$37*30      $41.75        $32.90\nVia Kettle Valley Route In each direction.\nLimit, October 31 for return.\nCircular Tours, Pacific Coast Points:\nVancouver, Victoria, Seattle, Portland.\n$39.45 via Arrow Lakes, Yancouver, .Victoria, Seattle-\nSpokane.\n$37.85 via Kettle Valley, Vancouver, Victoria, Seattle,\nSpokane.\n$44.65 via Kettle Valley, Penticton, Okanagan Lake,\nVernon, Vancouver, Victoria, Seattle, Spokane.\nAt $7.00 additional, the above circular tours can be\nrouted via 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 15 to September SO. Return\ntill October 81. Good for stop-over at pleasure within\nlimit. Fares quoted through Arrow, Okanagan, or\nWindermere Lakes, Calgary, Banff,,Lake Louise. Ask\nany agent for details, or write\nJ. S. CARTER, District Passenger Agent, Nelson, B. C.\nCanadian Pacific\nWe'Wa Gra-utMt Travel System\nTIL\nilE THE TOILER\nIT'S NO SONG OP CHEER TO MAO\nTILL IE    HAS    QONE     OVER-\nTO   TUB   CASINO   WIITH  THAT\nOf-CHE-STKA   LEADEE. \"TOMWHT,-\n,'L_  GO  HOME   AMO  TUB.)- OU\nTHE l-AO-iO   TO\nCH_El_.  ME UP\nI 'VB cTOT A   - ITTLE    -SURPltl <\u00a7E\n*P=0(-   V_._ -   UlSTEM VJWeM   t\nANNOUNCE   My NEVA!  NuM&Efe-\nBy Westovei\nBUD   NELSON   \u25a0SPaSArCIMCi-vJE'laia.\nN_AN aSOIUS TO P-AY A MESA) \"SOW\ni\\ Wa-OTTE BNT\\-n_ED- VOO AMD\n\/VlB ANCy-i-HS MAN IN THE MOOW\nAM*\u00a9   *__0\u00bbCAT_jD Tp MlSr,\n ^\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS     FRIDAY,. AUGUST 15,1930.\nPag\u00bb Nliw\nMarket and Mining News\n[P.R. SLUMPS\nMORE ON WALL\nSTREETMARKET\nlock  Tabes  a  Tumble   at\n|13 3-4 Points to 165 3-4,\nNew Low\nI0OR SHOWING OF\nROAD RESPONSIBLE\nI^Iieve Will Have to Dip In\nto Surplus for Dividends\nfffEW YORK, Ani. 1-4\u2014(By John\n\\ Cooley. Asso-l-ated Press finan-\n|<t writer)\u2014The speculative pulses\nfBterecl freely on the stock market\n\u25a0flay, but ft remained In the\n|nds   of   the   bears.     The   close\ns Irregular. Many qt the lead-\n-j shares were virtually unchanged,\nll cut In the Copper Metal prices\nI 10% centa by some of the\n|_tcra smelters inspired a- flurry\n\u25a0 selling soon after the Irregularly\n\u25a0jher opening*, but lt was felt\nllefly In the steel and copper\nI_TO8 and the market soon turned\n\u25a0ward. Prices continued to ftd-\nIhcs until leaders were one to\nlien points net higher whereupon\nIs shorts, having completed their\nBrtit   taking   for   the   time   being,\nutned selling and tho market\nIvb Its advances.\n\u25a0Shares of tho three companies\nire particularly weak. Canadian\nIclfle, which has been steadily\nId during the past week, tumbled\n'\" points to 165%. another new\nThe liquidation reflects the\nKt>r- showing made by the road's\nBrningB and the prospects that\nIr directors will have to dip Into\nfrplus for the dividend, or re-\n|ce lt.\nIpuhllc Steel was freely offered,\n\u25a0tt Wall street is skeptical about\n|\u00bb $4 annual return to the stock-\nElders in view of the large ex-\nfj_dltures Incident to the reorgan-\nIttlon of the company several\n|>nths ago, and the current low\nIte ot operations.\n|\u00abED WEAK SPOT\nIrhe third weak spot was Inter-\n|,tional Paper, nil of whose shares\nlaohed their lowest figures of\nI o year, In expectation of tho un-\nIrorable earnings statement.\n\u25a0Otherwise, the market seemed\n\u25a0verned by the passing specula-\n\\t expediency. TJ. 8. Steel, which\nllMd at 169 on Wednesday, sold\nI high as 160Vb and as low as 157%\nI_Blng only ',_ net lower. General\nlitors, Radio, General Electric, Gen-\nItl Motors and American. Can\nl-her finished unchanged or\nlade either side of yesterday's\nlials.\n|lCennecott and Amorlcan Metal\nInched  new mlnlmums.\nI Brokers loans dropped $69,000,000\nthe trading week ended Tuesday\n$3,158,000,000, the lowest since\n|^|y 1327. More interest was at-\nlohed to the weekly federal re-\nIrvo statement, which tho Central\n|\u00abk ls easing credit into the mar-\nII to offset the gold exports. This\n|owed that the system's holdings\n| government securities had risen\nfO.000,000 while open market pur-\nl-.se of hills increased $21,000,000\nl-jMOUi-tB  declined   $15,000,000.\nI Merchandizing and rail shares\nlimed considerably. Sears Roebuok,\n| tlon Pacific, New Haven, Rock\nItand, Atchison, and Safeway Stores\nlining a point. * There was Isolated\n|\u00bbvlness in some of the utilities\nIttf specialties, American Telephone\nlit more than a point, while Wool-\nlorth, Hudson Motors, National\nliter and Light sagged to about\nsame extent.\nsales  1,625,485  shares.\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG, Mtan., Aug.' 14\u2014Graln\nquotatlons:\nWheat:\nOpen    High    Low    C-ces\nOct    94   -     OA 83%     04%\nDeo    05%     fl6'\/_   - S3%     95V-\nMay     102%    103       100%   102\nOats:\nOct,\"       41        41%     40%     41%\nDec    40%     41%     39%     41\nMay        43%     44%     43%     44%\nBarley: \u25a0\nOct.   _....   39 39%     37%     39%\nDec    41%     41%     40%     41%\nMay       40%     47 ,      46%     47\nFlax:\nOct.   ..;... 167       168%    167       167\nDec  166%    187       185%    166%\nRye:\nOct    55%     56%     64%     65%\nDec    68%     59 67%     58%\nMay        64%     86%     63%     64%\nCash prices:\nWheat\u2014No. one ham 92%; No.\none nor 92%; No. 2 nor 89%; No.\nthree nor 87%; No. four 84%; No,\nfive 79%; No. six 83%; feed 49%;\ntrack 92%; screenings per ton $4.00.\nNET EARNINGS OF\nNICKEL FOR FIRST\nHALF AT 50 CENTS\nSuch lis Amount Per Share;\nTotal Shows $3,354,301\nDrop\nCANADA BONDS\nSECOND QUARTER\nDOWN BY 10 CENTS\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 14\u2014aJuoUtlons\non Victory bonds for \u00bb1,000 are as\nfollows:\nBonds\u2014War loan:\n1931, 5   psr   cont,   100.40;    100.10.\n1B37,  5  per  cent,   106.00.\nVictory loan: '\n1933, 6!4 per cent, 102.-70.\n1,934, 6>4  per cent, 102.15;\n1937, 814  per cent, 108.00.\nWar loan renewal:\n1932, 8\"4 per cent, lOl.eo.\nRefunding loan:\n1944, 8 per cent, 102.60.\n1944, 414 Per cent, 99.60;\n1940, 414 Per cent,. 99.80.\n1946,  414   per cent, 99.75;   100.50\nOFFICIALS OF     .\nWHEAT POOL IN\nCONFERENCE YET\nDividend  Rate  Barely  Covered During First Two\nQuarters\nC. P.-R. NOW 97\nPOINTS BELOW\nITS 1929 HIGH\nCloses at  168  on  Toronto;\nLoses   17   Points,\nFew Days\nTORONTO, Ont., Aug. 14\u2014Softness\nand decreased volmne marked trading on tho Toronto stock exchange\ntoday with tho feature being the\ndrop in ~TJ. P. R. for the fourth\nsuccessive day. C. P. R. was subjected to selling pressure, dropping\nsix polnta to 168. Since Saturday\nlast this Issue has lost 17 points\nand from Its high of 1929 has lost\n97,    _3J*jtaw stock dropped, % to 43\nCanada \"Steamships preferred came\nout to lose %\" at 42. In the Implement division Cockshutt Plow\nwas off % at 15% and Massey\nHarris was unchanged at 25%.\nInternational Nickel was stronger\nhy % at its close of 21% and the\nrights closed at six without change.\nBrazilian Traction during the day\nvaried only by % from its dose of\n35% where there was no net change\nWith the exception of Internatton-U.\nUtilities \"A\" which took on % other\nutilities were soft, Bell Telephone\nbeing off one and Twin City one.\nBritish Arnerlcah was off % and\nImperiai %, Soperteet preferred lost\nthree at 95 and MtoColl was off %.\nOthers were ftrm,\nTotel sales were 37,692 Shams.\nTORONTO, Aug. 14\u2014Net earnings\nof International Nickel for the first\nhair ot 1930 were officially announced tonight as having .quailed 60\ncenta per share, after allowing for\npreferred dividend, They stood at\n87,883,874.23 as against (11,238,-'\n167.07 for the first half of 1929, a\ndrop of $3,334,301.84.     *\nThe proportion of earnings secured during the second quarter\nof the year was given as 20 cents\nper share, a drop of 10 cents from\nthe period of 1929. First quarter\nearnings were $4,616,144.13 aa against\n$3,267,738.10 for the quarter ending\nJune 30, a drop of $1,348,414.03. Dividend requirements wero thus not\nearned   during   the  second  quarter.\nThe dividend rate was barely\ncovered during the first two quarters. The more stringent days\nthrough the company has passed ore\nreflected In reduced administration\nand genera*] expenses, for the first\nquarter of the year stood at $447,-\n271.38 as against $385,968.20 for\nthe June quarter, a reduction of\n$61,303.10. At the same time there\nwas a slight Increase in the resrves\nset aside for depreciation and depletion.\nInventory valuation shows only ft\nmoderate fhejease. At the end of\nJune this had grown by only *521,-\n059.98 to a total of $17,630,372.16.\nProportion of copper to nickel ln\nthese totals Is not indicated, although a recent unofficial statement\nwas to the effect there had been\nno recent increase in copper In\nstore.\nCurrent assets are down from over\n$42,700,000 to Slightly UndeT $32,-\n000,000 the iaigest single Item\nbeing a drop of over ^10,000,000 ln\ncall and time loans. There has\nbeen a $7,000,000 In property valuation during the six months' total\nassets standing at $179,557,664 as\nagainst W.81,946,699 at the end of\nlast year. Current liabilities have\nalso been reduced from more than\n$10,600,000 at the end of 1929 to\ni over $7,600,000 at the end of June.\n102.80.\n100.50.\nWHEAT UP SOME\nWINNIPEG PIT\nWINNIPEG, Man., Aug. 14\u2014(CP)\nA mld-dliy rally, after heavy Belling\norders had forced values downward,\nfollowed the entry of \"shorts\" into\nthe wheat pit hero today. At\nthe close fractional gains were\nmarked on the hoard. October finishing at 94',i cents a bushel\nbut a fraction below the high for\nthe day; December at 9514 cents\nand   May   at  S1.02.\nRumors of a drought report to\nbe issued by the United States department of agriculture at Washington, Thursday, rushed tho \"shorts\"\nInto the market. Higher Liverpool\ncables also had their influence, but\ncontinuation of dry weathor tn tho\nwestern provinces was Ignored by\nall   traders.\n. Fractional gains were the order\nln the coarse grains, though trading\nwas generally dull and the volume\nchanging   hands   light.\nNEW YORK STOCKS\nVANCOUVER STOCKS\nBig   JvBssourt   _\nBluebird  X   ..:....\nGeorge   Copper\nGeorgia, River \u2014\nGolconda   \u2014.-..\nGrandvlew   \t\nInt. C. - O. ...\nNational   sliver\nNoble   Five\nIV  eaE0\nI Total\nIgDISCOCNT    RATE    UNCHANGED\nI'HEW YORK, Aug. 14\u2014The Federal\n|merve bank of New York today an-\nunccd no change ln its rediscount.\nIte   of   3-   per   cent.\nOregon   Copper\t\nPremier   ._- \t\nPenri   Oreille   \t\nPorter   Idaho\t\nReeves   McDonald   ....\nRuus  Argent-  X  _\u2014^\nSnowflake     IT\nTopley   Richfield   \u2014-\nWhitewater    \t\nStocks marked X are curb stocks.\nBid\n.68\n.0214\nLBO\n.08\n.SS\n.OS\n\u202203H\n.06\n.93\n1.05\nMM,\n.30\n.03\nI .OS',*\n.01\n.06\nAsk\n.SO\n1.5S\n\u2022OS14\n.60\n.OS\n.20\n.07\n.09\n.94\n.1314\n.05\n.08\nMINNEAPOLIS    GRAIN\nMINNEAPOLIS, Minn.. Aug. 14.\u2014\nFlour -unchanged; snlnmenta 32,134.\nBran unchanged.\nWheaT^rso. 1 northern 871* to\n9014; No. 1 rod durum 76V4 to 7614;\nSeptember 8814;  December 933,4.\nCorn\u2014No. 3 yellenv 95 to 06.\nOats\u2014No 3 white 34% to 36%.\nFlax\u2014No.  1  3.07V4  to 2.09V4.\nPut Savings First\nPut thc savings deposit\nfirst on thc budget instead\nof last and all will be well.\nA savings balance is a reliable friend in need. No one\never regretted the saving\nof money.\nOne dollar opens a savings\naccount at any branch of\nthis bank. mt,\nIMPERIAL BANK OF CANADA\nHEAD OFISCe TOROMTO\nCapital and Reswvft $15,000,000\nNELSON        ....        1H.D.IENSON, Manage\nCRESTON     \u2022       -      -      -      J. S. W. CLOWES, Manager\nBranches at Revelstokt, Cranbrook, Fornio\nMontreal Stocks\nHigh\nAllegheny        20',4\nAncles    193\/i\nAm   Ca<n     119?.\nAm   For  Power    65 \\\nAm Loco \u2022\u2022\u2014    40\nAm   Steel   Pfly     37\nAm   Smelt   Ret    66\nAm   Telephone    206%\nAm   Tobacco   .... 2-2%\nAnaconda        47\nAtchison      214\nB   &   O     101%\nBen    Aviation .   30%\nBeth   Steel      77%\n0   P     1653,4\nOerro de Pasco 471,_\nOhesa   &   Ohio\nChrysler    -\t\nDona Oas N Y 88%\nCorn Products B8Vi\nO   WrlBht   pfd    \u2014\nDupont      108%\nEastman  Kodak 203^\nErie     _...-    37tt\nFord English ....   \u2014\nFord  of Canada    \u2014\nFtrstih Nat Stores    \u2014\nFreeport   Texas    41 lA\nGen Foods     63-U\nBank of Comrnerco \t\nDcaulnlon    Bank J  \t\nImperial Bank   '...\u2014.\t\nBank of Montreal .^-.\u2014\u2014\u25a0..\nBank of No-va 6-oTTa \t\nEoyal  Bftpv     \t\nBank  of  Toronto\nClose\n.. 240\n.. 224\n\u2122 233\n.. 166\n.. 320\n.. 290\n.. 240\n23%\n150\n85\n16.00\n27H\n38',_\n20%\n14\n95\n68\n4\n46\n326\nU%\n180\n59\n108\n40\nAbltibl Power  _. Paper\t\nAsbestos c^rpo-taWon ..._.\t\nAtlantlo Sugar  \u2014 \u00bb__.\nBell Telephone  ,\t\nBrazilian T. L. & Power \t\nBritish American Oil \t\nBrampton  Paper   __...._.\nCanada,   Bronze   \t\nCanada Car and Foundry ....\nCanada ^ement   \t\nCanada Cement pfd  M.MJ.\u201e,\nCanada   Converters   \t\nCanada Industrial Alcohol ....\nCanada Cottons . i.\t\nCanada  Gen  Electric  pfd   ....\nCanada Power   \t\nCons Mining & Smelting ....\nDominion   Bridge    _\t\nDominion  Glass  \t\nDom Steel  Corpn pfd  \t\nDominion  Textile  ...      73%\nA.  P.  Grain     _.     10\nHUlcrest Colliers _.       80\nLake of  the  Woods        39%\nMassey Harris .._        25'A\nMontreal   Power   _       85\nMontreal   Telegraph         49\nMontreal   Tramways        173\nNational   Breweries         39%\nNational steel Car  _    490\nOgllvle   Milling       299\nOntario   Steel   Products        189\nOttawa  L.  H.  &  Power       10OR\nPenman.,   Ltd.      et\nPower   Corporation         65%\nPrice   Bros         639\nQuebec   Power    _ _    53\nShawlnlgan     _..\u201e _...     64%\nSherwln   Williams  ..._      30\nSo. Canada Power       26\nSteel   of   Canada         44\nSt. Lawrence Flour Mills       20\nWabesso Cotton     359\nWestern   Grocers    _      18\nWinnipeg   Railway  pfd        100\nWinnipeg Railway       37\nffhe Consolidated  Mining   and\nSmelting Co. o\u00a3 Canada, Ltd,\nOfflon,   Bm\u00abIt_-   -KJ   l__-_l   OWMlJWBl\nTBAIL.   BRITISH   OOHJMBIA\nSMELTERS and REFINERS\nPurchasers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Lead and Zinc Ort\n-.oducers of Cold, Silver. Popper, Pig Lead and ZiM\n\u2022        -tJJM-MC,   X-A-a\n46\n21 Vi\nIjOW\n19%\n116'\/.\n\u00ab3\n89 li\n36%\n83-\n204\n242 \u00bb,i\n45 tt\n1210%\n101 Vi\n30\n76%\n166%\n46%\n44 tt\n26 tt\n56 Va\n88 Vi\n106%\n109%\n36%\nPlan    for   Financing    1930\nCrop Is Still Being\nCarried On\nBANKERS  ATTENDING\nWINNIPEG  GATHERING\nEGG MARKETS\nQtm   Motore\nGt\u2014\u25a0    Electric\nGranby    \t\nG   N   pfd    -\nG W Sugar ....\nHudsora Motors\nInsp Copper ....\nInter Nlckol ...\nInter Tel Tel\nKelly spring ....\nKen Copper ....\nKresge 8 s ....\nKrog and Toll\nMack  Truck   ....\nM\u2014ml    \t\nIVash Motors ....\nNat P at L ....\nN   Y   central\nK P   -\t\nPack  Motors\n44\n63\n23%\n79\n17%\n30%\n14%\n21%\n43%\n3%\n37 Vi\n26\n27%\nst-\nie\n33%\n160%\n69%\n13%\nPenn  Ball       72%\nPhillips Pete\nRadio   Corp   ...\nRad   K   Orp   ....\nRem    Rand    ....\nR   I\t\nSt   L   _   8   P\nSfchulte          5%\nShell Un OU ....   18%\nSin    Oons       23%\nSo  Cal  Edison      66%\nS   P    _\t\nStand DU Cal\nStand OU Ind\nSttind OU N ,T\nStudebaker ....\nTexas Corp ....\nTexas G Sul\nUnited Aircraft\nU  8   Rubber  ....\nU  8  Steel    160%\nWest Electrlo    140%\nWillys   Over   ....     6%\nYellow   Truck       21%\n32\n40%\n29\n26%\n94\n90\n117V\n62%\n70%\n28%\n82\n66%\n20 \u25a01,\n40%\n61%\n43%\n66%\n23\n28%\n13%\n21\n42%\n3\n38%\n27%\n63 Ti,\n15%\n33\n157%\n69%\n13%\n71%\n31%\n38%\n28\n24%\n91\n6%\n17%\n22%\n55\n116%\n62\n28%\n61%\n56%\n19%\n157%\n134%\nClose\n19%\n19%\n117%\n64%\n40\n36%\n63%\n204%\n241\n4514\n210%\n101%\n30%\n79\n165%\n47\n45%\n27%\n57%\n87%\n8%\n108%\n200%\n37\n2%\n30%\n53\n41\n52%\n43%\n88%\n113\n70\n17%\n28%\n13%\n21%\n42%\n3%\n36%\n28\n27%\n54%\n15%\n33\n43\n168%\n69%\n13%\n73%\n31%\n38%\n28%\n25'\/,\n93\n90\n6V4\n17%\n22%\n55%\n116%\n62%\n49 tt\n70\n28%\n61%\n66%\n51%\n19%\n158%\n138%\nRumors About  Pools  Bring\nDenials;  Continue Handle\nCoarse  Grain\nWINNIPEG. Aug. 14\u2014(CP)\u2014Wheat\npool executive officers, representing\nManitoba, Sisk|atchew\u00bbn and Alberta, continued their conference\nwith the officials or the Canadian\nCooperative wheat pool, the central\nselling agency of the prairie cooperatives, discussing plans for financing  the   1930  crop  today.\nIt is understood the conference\nwas attended by representatives of\nthe leading banks today, but another session will be held tomorrow,\nand until this has concluded no\nstatement on the deliberations will\nbe Issued.\nAgreement must be reached on\nthe initial payment to be made on\nthc 1930 crop, and there is said to\nbe a divergence of opinion between\nthe banking and pool executives on\nthe amount to be pa)d out. The\npools, It is reported, are desirous of\npaying 80 cents per bushed on the\n1930 yield of wheat, while the banks\nare said to lavor a payment between 60 and 70 cents a bushel.\nWhile there has been disagreement\non this point, there ls no hesitation on the part of the financial\ninstitutions ln financing the cooperatives.\nMany rumors concerning the activity of the pools were circulated\nln market circles, especially ln the\nUnited States, today, but all these\nwere promptly denied by officials\nhere.\n. One report that gained wide publicity ou market wires deolared\nthe pools had decided not to handle\ncoarse grains this season. This waa\npromptly denied, aa was another\nrumor that the pools had asked\nthe prairie governments to guarantee the 1930 crop payments and\ntheir request had  been refused.\nThe coarse grains rumors appears\nto have originated In Chicago and\nfrom there lt spread to other\ngrain centers. The wheat pools\nhave always handled the marketing\nof coarse grains, and there ls no\nthought of discontinuing the practice durint. the present year, Headquarters   officers   said   today.\nOTTAWA,. Aug. 14\u2014Cold storage\nholdings of eggs ln Canada on tha\n1st of August, according to report\nIssued by the Dominion bureau of\nstatistics, totalled 15,311,598 dozen\neggs In cold storage on the 1st\nor the month aa compared to 16,-\n367,335  dozen   on   August   1,   1929..\nToronto\u2014 Some brokers report\nBales of graded e2gs at' extras 31.\nfirsts 29, seconds 26, ln used, free\ncases; others are making Bales avt\nextras 30%, firsts 28%, seconds 24,\nMontreal\u2014L. c. L. shipments are\nJobbing on spot here today at\nextras 34 to 36, firsts 29% to 30,\nseconds 35%  to 26.\nSaint John\u2014Wholesale prices to\nretailers are extras 37 to 38, firsts\n36   to   36,   seconds   27   to   28.\nHalifax\u2014Paying prices to country\nshippers fqr ungraded eggs are\nextras 30 to 31, firsts 26 to 26,\nseconds  20   to  21.\nChicago\u2014Spot 24, Nov. 28%.\nNEW STOCK OF\nOF C. P. I IS HIT,\nMONTREAL LIST\nDrops to 41 1-4; Lowest of\nYear; Closes at 41 1-2;\nDown Two    \u2022\nPATTULUO SAYS\nLIQUOR PROFIT\nNOW SET SUM\nNo Matter What the Profit,\nMunicipalities Only\nShare Million\nMONTREAL, Que., Aug. 14\u2014Stool-\nmoved with considerable Irregularity\non the local market today, but further signs of the return of a more\nstable tone were apparent ln the\nnarrowness of the movements, and\nthe sharp drop ln volume of transactions. _   , '1\nNew stock of Canadian Psclflo\ndropped to 41%. the lowest level of\nthe year, and closed two points off\nthe previous close at 41%. The\nselling ln this issuo had lt* origin\nIn New York. Textile acted better,\nas did  Abltibl and Smelters.\nAmong~closlng prices were Canada Power, off Va at 11%; Bridge,\nunchanged at 59; Oookshutt, oft\n1% at 15; Cement off Vs at 14;\nCanadian Car. % higher al, 20%;\nMontreal Power, unchanged at 55.\nShawlnlgan up % at 64%; B. C.\nPower \"A\" Tost 4% to 10% and\nSherwln Williams closed four lower\nat 32%.\nBrazilian closed__ % lower at 35 Vi.\nNickel closed uncnanged at 21 %.\nTotal sales were 15.399 shares.\nBonds sales totalled $14,60,\nCANADIAN MOVE\nHEPS WHEAT DP\nVICTORIA, Aug. 14\u2014Commenting\non the recent distribution of liquor\nprofits, T. D. pattullo, leader of\nthe opposition in the legislature\nsaid   today:\nPublic Announcement ts made that\n$500,000 In liquor profit* have\nbeen distributed among the municipalities, and It ls Intimated that,\nthis is more than the municipalities\nwould have received prior to recent\namendments. The Intention of the\nannouncement obviously Is to create,\nthe Impression tliat the munlca-\npalltles are being treated generously\nand will receive more under the\npresent, act than under the former\nact.\nThe present act limits tflje\namount which may be distributed\nto a percentage of tbe profits but\ntn any efts\u00a9 not to exceed one- million dollars tn any year. If the\nprofit earned is less than on\u00a9\nmillion dollars the government has\nno legal authority to pay over the\nfull amount of one million dollars,\nbut only such amount as ls received from profits, and In no case\nto exceed  one million dollars.\n\"No matter how large a profit\nmay be made In future, even [1 it\nrose to ten million dollars, tho\nmunlcljtUlties would receive no\nlarger amount than one million\ndollars, but I reiterated that tfhe\nstatute as it now stands limits\nthe amount to be distributed to a\npercentage of the profits ,ln no\ncase to exceed one million dollars,\nir a million dollars Is not earned it\ncan not legally be paid over to the\nmunicipalities but only such portion\nof tt as ls earned.\"\nMETAL  MARKETS\nMtBW YORK, Aug. 14.\u2014CojH-*\noaster; spot and future 10%.\niron quiet, unchanged.\nTin quiet; srpt and nearby 29-7;\nfuture 30.12\nLead steady, spot Mew York 6JS0;\nBast at. Louis 6.a8.\nZlno   quiet,  East  St.   Louis   epot\nand future 4.30 to 4.35.\nAntimony  7.87,\nAt   London:\nStandard copper. Bpot \u00a347 7s 6d;\nfuture \u00a347 fis; electrolytic spot \u00a361;\nfuture \u00a352.\nTin, spot \u00a3134 10s; future \u00a3138 6\u00bb.\nLead, spot \u00a318 7s 6d; future \u00a318 5\u00bb\nZlno, spot \u00a315 ISs; future \u00a318 8e.\nCRESTON SHIPS\nFIRST CARLOAD\nOF TREE FRUITS\nCRESTON. B. C., Aug. 14.\u2014Ores-\nton's first 1930 straight carload of\n.tree fruits rolled on Tuesday, and\nwas destined for Lethbridge. Tt was\na mixed car, with about 400 box*s of\nYellow Transparent apples, about\n300 crates of plums, and crab-\napples. The balance to make the\nminimum load was of . cucumbers\nand tomatoes, although the two\nlatter lines are not yet in evidence\nin any great quantity. With water\navailable, through the inauguration\nof the East Creston Irrigation- supply, It Is likely the output of tomatoes and cucumbers, particularly\nIn the Erlckson section, will show a\nconsiderable gain over 1939. The\navailability of water tn that, seo-\ntlon will also make for an Increase over the early estimates on\nthe apple crop and other tree fruits,\nSTOCKS IMPROVE\nON TORONTO LEST\nTORONTO, Aug. if-lnterc-t In\nthe Standard Stock and Mtainf\nexchange trading Hat was pr-actloallr\nfeatureless today, but _ome Improvement was noted in the price range.\nThe Petroi oil held the feature position but profit taking brought th*\nprice down 2 points to close at 84a.\nThe Vacuum Gas experienced a,\ngood run and jumped forward 8-140.\nto close at 7\"ac came .closed unchanged at 72c, and Oriole dropped\n3c to 50c. The four issues were\nresponsible for oi#r half of the total\ntransactions.\nA firmer price tone developed lo\nNlckel and Noranda but trading\ncontinued light. Both issues advanced 25c, with Noranda closing\nat $22,25 and Nickel at. $21.96. while-\nNlcksi rights moved up 3 point*\nto 7c. Hudson bay dropped lOc.qJce-\ntng at $7.50 and Coast Copper\nclosed down poe, at $8.16.\nThe Uridaley group was steady to\nfirmer but price changes wtre comparatively light. Falcon Bridge advanced 10c to $-.15, Sudbury Bull-\nfell 3c. to $1.43, while Sherrit tod\nVentures    closed    unchanged.\nMinor prioes changes held In the\nprecious  metal  group.     .\nLake Shore rose 35c, to $22.60,\nTeck Hughes at $6.30 moved up\nfi  points, Holllnger lost, fie to $8.85.\nCALGARY OILS\n(By   .John   P.   Bough-til,   AMOotated\nPress    Market    Editor)\nCHICAGO, Aug. 14\u2014 Reassurances\nthat banks will finance tho 1930\nmovement ol Canadian wheat and\nthat provincial government guarantees are probable, did much to lift\nwheat prices today, Persistent reports of unseasonable weather ln\nEurope hampering the wheat bar-\nvest there counted also as a stimulus to upturns In wheat values.\nBesides, export business today ln\nNorth American wheat was of more\nliberal volume than of late. 1.000,000\nbushels, mainly .wheat from the\nUnited SUites, with Liverpool quotations 18a abovo Chicago, the widest difference so far this season.\nChicago's closing prices on wheat\nwere firm % to \\V*o a bushel\nhigher than yesterday's linlsh. Corn\nclosed unchanged to %a lower,\noats \u25a0&c a bushel higher than yesterday's finish. Corn closed unchanged to 3\\c lower. Oats ft to\n14c up, and provisions unchanged\nto   5c   down.\nTORONTO  STOCKS\nao%    20-h\nBANK   CLEARINGS\nDOMINION    LIVESTOCK\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 14\u2014 Dominion\nIvestook receipts are as follows:\n210 cattle, 45 calves, 275 hogs, 150\nsheep.\nPrices:\nSteers\u2014Good amd choice 5;60 to\n6.60.\nHeifers\u2014Good and choice 5.Q0 to\n6.00.\nFed calves\u2014Good and choice 8.00\nto  9.00.\nCows\u2014Good 4-00 to 450; canners\nand cutters 1.00 to 3.00.\nBulls--<3ood   3.00   to   3.50.\nStocker and feeder steers\u2014Good\n4-00   to  4.60.\nStock cows and hei_ers~3.00 to\n4,00.\nMilkers and springers\u201440.00 to\n70.00.\nVeai c--vce\u2014Good and choice 8.00\nto   10.00.\nHogs\u2014Select bacon $1.00 per head\npremium; bacon 11.50; butchers 70c\nper head discount; lights and feed-\nLambs\u2014Good hamdyweight 7.50;\ngood heavies 7.00; buoks 5.00 to 6,00.\nSheep\u2014Good heavies 3.00; good\nhandyweight 3.50 to 4.00.\nLOGAN&BRYAN\nCHAIN\nMOCKS,   BONDS,   CO-TON\nMKMBEBS:\nNew Totk, Montreal and Vucoamt\n\u25a0tat- Ejchnnie,, Chioaia Daua at\ntrade,   Winnipeg  Grain  Eiclun\u2014,\nend   other   trading   exchange,\nPWV4TI( WIRE\nOKPICC8S\n&k%me& ?\u00bb!*\u00abiiaj-\u00abng Baatm\nPor weeks ending August 15, 1929,\nand August 16, 1930.\nHalifax          3,154.766       \t\nSaint   John        2,703.433 2,620.065\nOhertorooko           018,552 798,731\nQuebeo           6,903,020 6.057,775\nMontreal     .... 142,876.900 107,637,388\nOttawa           7,297,668 6,061,470\nKingston     ....        806.621 822,601\nPeterboro         861,008      \t\nToronto     124.413,433 101.066,338\nHamilton    ....      6,106,329 5,862,377\nBranttoni    ....     1.230,527 936,123\nLondon          3.239,168 3.969,428\nKitchener   ....      1489,460 1,113.977\nChatham              901,635 836,936\nSirnla           771,771         \u2014\nSudbury    ....       1,081.047\nWindsor          5,596,783 3,643,476\nFort  William      1.001.130 791.264\nWinnipeg    ....    60,654,256 41.392,359\nBrandon        712,295 561,907\nReglna            5,575.611 4,404,374\nMoose Jaw ....     1,216,826 997,076\nSaskavtoon    ....     2,896.079 419,816\nPrince   Albert,       488.217 419,616\nLethbridge   ....      693,201 520,666\nEdmonton   ....    6,415,147 220,557\nMedicine   Hat      436,089 248,828\nNew\nWestminster        1,032.102 827,693\nVancouver         22,430,798 18,783.752\nVictoria            2,808,256 2.808.256\nCalgary       11,7126,564 6,124,141\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nAbana     .\u2014 41\nAjax     \u2022    186\nAmulet     51\nAmity       02\nA. P. Cons 55\nAssociated      - 40\nBaltic   Oil    - 10\nBedford     12\nBarry Holllnger      .15\nBig   Mlsourl 55\nC.  nnd  E.   Lands   60\nCentra)  Manitoba      .09\nDome         7.40\nDalhousle     80\nF'nlconbrldge     ~    2.15\nHome Oil     2.26\nHowey    - 39^\nHolllnger       5.86\nHudson Bay     7.50\nInter.   Nickel   .y  21.36\nLake Shore   22.30\nKlrkland   Lake    58\nKootenay Florence  ol\nMacassa     10 \u2014\nMandy   14\nMalartlc 02\nMcDougal     13\nMclntyre        7.50\nMining  Corp    1.11\nMayland      60\nNewbec 09\nNew Imperial OU   19.10\nNiplsslng    -    1,26\nNoranda  21.50\nPend    Oreille     -    1.01\nPremier  Gold   92\ns  w   Pete 36\nSherrltt   Gordon    \u201e   1.28\nSudbury  Basin*    1.45\nSiscoe     - 25\nVipond         1.27\nVentures : 96\nWright   Hargreaves       174\nEXCHANGE RATES\n-But-\nMONTREAL,  Que.,  Aug.   14.-\nter, eggs and cheesB steady.\nCQiccsp\u2014Finest westerns 16 to\n1(1 !i; finest easterns 15% to 16V4.\nButter\u2014No. 1 Quebec 28% to 20.\nEggs--Fresh specials 42 to 43;\nfresh extras 38 \"to 39; fresh firsts\n33 to 34.\nLOANS   DFCBEASED\nWASHIN-TON, Aug. 14.\u2014(API-\nLoans to brokers and dealers held\nby New York federal reserve member\nDanks for the week ending August\n13 were announced by the federal\nreserve board today at $3,165,000,000,\ni\u00abn>resenttng a decrease of \u00bb6f\u00bb,OO0,000\nas compared to the preceding week.\nThe \u2014~\u2014< for a-e week e\u2014Unit\n,Aug~)tf 14. 19\"~V WW \u00bb5,i-2,0OO,oaa.\nMRS  SANG HOSTESS,\nCRANBROOK\nTO SHIP BUTTER\nTO HONG KONG\nVICTORIA, Aug. 14\u2014Close on the\nheels of a successful trial shipment\nof British C-tumbta fresh milk\nto tho orient comes word of a ape-\nclal order for the shipment of\nprime dairy hutter to Hongkong,\nnow being arr_j_ged through th\u00bb\ndepartment of agrlailuture. On\nSeptember 4 the first test shipment\nof butter within the knowledge of\nthe department will cross the Pacific for the far east, Tf the shipment ..<\u2022> -successful It will be followed by the opening of a considerable market for British Columbia\nbutter. The prospect of landing\nfresh dairy products from this\ncoast has attracted wide attention\nin the orient and wll] be developed\non a most extensive scale If the\nresults  warrant   It.\nThe butter will bo shipped to\nHongkong In care of the Canadian\ntrade   commissioner  at   that   point.\n1930 YIELD OF\nFRUITS WILL BE\nABOVE YEAR 1929\nWASH-KGfTON, Aug. U\u2014Tho 1930\nyield of all fruits was estimated\ntoday by the department of agriculture on the basis of August 1\nreports to be 18 per cent above\nthe 1929 crop but io per cent less\nthan the  10-year average.\n\"The increase over last year Is\nnoticeable ln all crops,\" the department said. \"The greatest percentage\nlncrea.w is in prunes and plums,\nlargely gr\u00bbwn in California. Tho\ngrape and citrus crops are considerably above last year's production.\"\nNEW YORK, Aug. 14\u2014Sterling exchange easy at $4,83\u00bbi fo\u00bb 60 day\nbills   an*4   *4,B6   15-16   for   demand.\nForeign bar silver 35%  cents.\nCanadian  dollars  5-33  cent.\nMarks   33.87'A    cents.\nFrancs    3.93*ji    cents.\nKronen   28.87   cenls,\nLire  5.23%   cents.\nNelson approximate storling exchange   rate   $4.88   16-16.\nPREFER   SILENT   SCREEN\nIn the campaign recently organized by tho mangement of the Cln-\nomatografo Paris of this city to\ndetermine tho preferences of the\npublic to. talking or mute plcturee,\nout of 40,r,46 votes east, 33,155 were\nin favor of the silent screen. Notwithstanding suoh a substantial\nendoraement of the silent drama,\nthe management of. the theatre U\nproceeding -with the Installation of\nspecial apparatus tor the projection\nof the phonetic firm. At an early\ndate talking plctoirea wtll be attempted with, silent pictures, at this\nolranai-^ j     ^   *  \u25a0._.   '\u25a0      __,\nCRANBROOK, B. C, Aug. 1*\nMrs. R. E. Sang was a tea hostestt\non Monday afternoon, the guests\nof honor being Mrs. Sang of Lethbridge, who Is her guest, and Mrs.\nLaurie of Winnipeg. Those present\nwere Mrs. MacPherson, Mrs. 'Scott,\nMrs. Large, Mrs. Barber, Mrs. Varner,\nMrs. Little, Mrs. McQuald, Mrs.\nMartin. Mrs. Marsh, Mrs. Hodgson.\nMrs. DeWotf and  Mrs. McKowan.\nMiss Teresa Chlsholm, who has\nbeen tho guest of Miss Lorna Barber for the past fortnight, left\nfor her home Monday afternoon.\nMrs. Graham and daughter Aunt,\nMrs. Diron, Miss Lots Dixon, Miss\nBeau la h Hill and Mrs. Frances of\nNelson, aro camping at Wasa lake,\noccupying two of the cottages there,\nMrs. A. J. ironside left on Tuso-\nday for a few days visit in Spokane.\nA.   P.   Consolidated   \t\nC   and Iff, Lands, ask .......\nCommonwealth    \t\nDalhouBle      \u2014\u2014\nDevenlsrt,  osk   ,\t\nEasir-crest^. -.. _\nFabyan    ~. -\u2014~~\u2014\u2014\u2014i.\nFreehold     \t\nHarg-J,   ask     \t\nHomo   OU    - \u2014\nMcDougall Segur ex, ask\nMcDougull Segur new, aak\nMercury  \u25a0\nMcLeod     \u2014[\t\nMill   City   ...-  ,\t\nMayland,   ask.   \/.\t\nOkalto    new \t\nRoyallte    -\u2014 \u2022-\u2014\nVulcan     \u25a0\u25a0 \t\nJJ7\n.64\n.17\n.84\n.15\n35%   \u25a0\n.04\n.18\n.13      I\n2.35\n.121*\n.45\n.34\n1.00\n.30\n.65\n.      .45\n20.00\n.      .Ill*\nCHRYSLER PROFITS '\nNEW YORK, Aug. 14^\u2014(AP>\u2014ThB\nChrysler corporation today ropovtwt\nsecond qufetrter net profit Of $3,-\n228,139 against $9,257,066 in th\u00ab\nwtlrae 1929 period. Directors declared the regular quarterly -ttvt-.\ndonri of 7ft conta-; on the co*mr\u00aboa(\nstock.\nOFFER   TO   WARNER\nSHAREHOLDER?*\nNEW YORK, Aug. 14\u2014Tho board\nof directors of Warner Brothers Pictures, Inc., have voted to offer\ncommon stocltholders the right to\npurchase one new share at $2 a\nshar\u00a9 for each four shares of stock\nheld at the close of business Aug. 25.\nIt waa said in Wall street circles\nthe offering would provide more\nthan 814,000,000 additional capital.\nRights would be worth about $2 a\nshare, equivalent to cutting a\nmelon of about $6,500,000.\nCaive & Company\nLTU.\nFOBMBBLr\nThf B. C Assay ,inal Chen_\u2014at\nSupply   Company,   Ltd.\nAssay Supplies\nChemicals\nLaboratory Etruipment\nFOR\nCHEMICAL,   rNDaJSTa_J_>\nEDUCATIONAL    AND\nHOSPITAL   LABORATORIES\nCS7  Hornby  St.\nVancouver, B. C.\nOIL ISSUES ACTIVE\nAT COAST\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 14\u2014Trading\nwas fairly heavy on th\u00a9 Vancouver\nstock exchange today as compared\nwith recent sessions with attention\ndirected mainly on oil issues. Few\nof the leading mining \u25a0shores were\nactive. The erratic course of Home |\nOil was again in evidence, Opening\nat $2.25 ten points higher than the\nprevious close it touched a high\nfor the day of 2.35 and then dropped off to close at **2.25 unchanged.\nCalmont was active, more than\nsix thousand shares turning over at\n74 and 75, while. A. p. Con. closed\nat 615 tn light trading. Amalgamated was active cloeing at 13. In\nthe mining division transactions\nwere confined mainly to the \"penny\nstocks.\"\nPLANT CHERRY\nTREES, BOSWELL\nCRESTON, B. C, Aug. 14\u2014O. B.\nTwigg, local provincial horticulturist,\nreturned at the first of the week\nfrom Boswell, where he spent several\ndays previous making the horticultural survey of that district. Tlie\ntr*e census taken shows bhat the\nBosweli orchardlsts are taking full\nadvanlAge of the preference thetr\ncherries get on the prairie market\ndue to coming ln later than other\ndistricts, and that new orchard\nplanting at Boswell ere heavy to\ncherries, more eapeciali the Lamberts, with Bings also in good favor.\nApple tree Jlantlng has been light,\nand the preference has been for\nCox Orange, which variety has\nfared well on the ola, country\nmarket the past three -ton particularly .        \t\nDo you Look for a\nwBiie inWiiisky ?\nMany cheap and inferior whiBkias are noted for their \"-fc-k\"\nor \"bate.\" A \"bite\" is tbe result of adding raw spirit to tbe\nblend. Actually a whisky with \"bite\" is usually much lees\nmature than a whisky with none.\nOne reason for the world reputation of \"White H_bw\"\nWhisky ia its eoanplate lack of -\"bito.\" The rich, creamy body\nis acquired after many years in the wood. When deep in its\ninattaarity and properly \"married'' White Horse is bottled\u2014\nready for the world's approval. A more mellow, penoroos and\nd<_Bhtfal iplrit than White Horse is not obtainable.\nDlsnUED, BLENDED AND BOTOED IN SCOTIAND\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by\nhe Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia, *. .   ..si.,\n*i_a_a_a_B_i_i_i_B_^-_H_B_H-_Bi-g-_a_H_i_i_HB_r\n Page Ten\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS     FRIDAY, AUGUST 15, 1930.\nm\nwfftmftv.mimaM^m\nwm\nREMINQTON\nPortable Typewriters\nAT REDUCED PRICES\nFOR THIS WEEK ONLY\nREGULAR PRICE $75.00\nNOW $65.00\nMann, Rutherford Co.\nDruggists and Stationers\nGLASSES\nJ. A. C. Laughton R.O.\nOaFK\u00bb_5I_IST    nnd    OPTICIAN\nBoom   3   \u2014   Grltiln   Block\nVE   OLDB\nENGLISH HEALTH SALTS\nCooling  and  IKtfresliInc nnd\nInvigorating Tonic\nSMYXHE'S PHARMACY\nPRESCK1PTION  SPECIALISTS\nPHONE   I\nAUCTION SALE\nHaving received instructions from Mr. P. Germain to offer by Public Auction the afternoon and\nevening of Saturday, August 16 at Nelson Auction\nMart, Silica Street next Club Hotel, the whole o\u00a3\nhis goods comprising Cook Ranges, Heaters, Sewing Machines, Kitchen Cabinets, Consol Tables,\nWicker Chairs, Folding Dropside Couches, Center\nTables, High Chairs, Baby Carriages, Bed Springs\nand Mattresses, Blankets, Trunks, Desks, Clothing, Chinaware, Garden Tools and other goods too\nnumerous to mention.\nGOODS ON VIEW MORNING OF SALE.\nG. HORSTEAD\nAUCTIONEER\nSPECIALS for\nFRIDAY and\nSATURDAY\nChiffon Silk Hose, Full\nFashioned. A complete\nrange of sizes and colors\nit, pair  - $1.25\nSilk Bloomers, Bobettes.\nRegular $1.25 for  95^\nAnother line of bloomers\nlock-stitch. Regular $1.65\nfor   $1.20\nAll our hats, each $1.95\nONCE A YEAR\nWe Put on a Profit Sharing Sale\nBy Which Our Customers Benefit\nSALE NOW ON\nSee our Baker Street Windows\nFor   Startling   Values   in   Graniteware.   Tinware\nGlassware, Cutlery, etc. and even Ranges at Bargain Prices.\nWood, Vallance Hardware\nCompany \u2014O\u2014 Limited\nWHOLESALE \u2014 Nelson, B. C. \u2014 RETAIL\nQILKER'S\u2014\nSAY\nOUT\nThey Qoll\nMEN'S\nSUITS\nIn\u2014a\u2014Big\nOne-Day\nSALE\nSaturday\nMen's Fine Suits.\nTweeds, Worsteds and\nDomeshuns. Assorted\nshades and sizes.\nP ^19.00\nMen's All Wool Navy\nserge suits. Fine tailored garments.\nSee $23.00\nMen's suits. All wool\ntweeds and worsteds.\nColors in browns and\ngreys. Assorted sizes.\nS; $29.00\nMen's fine Suits, All\nwool navy serges and\nWorsteds. Assoi-ted\nsizes and all new   season's styles.\nISe'      $31.50\nMen's Suits, fine worsteds, Scotch Tweeds\nand navy serges, in a\nfull range of this season's models,\nSee. $38.50\nAll Men's\nSport\nPant-\nMust Be\nSold\nIn This\nBIO-ONE\nDAY\nSALE\nMen's Sport Pants.\nAssorted novelty\nTweeds, all full cut,\nand young men's sizes.\nSale\nPrice ....--.\n$3.95\nMen's Sport Pants.\nCornwall makes, Wear-\nolastic backs. Assoi-ted\npatterns of all wool novelty tweeds.\nlie $4.95\nSport Pants for young\nmen, Cornwall makes,\nWearolastic Belt tops.\nAll novelty tweeds. All\nyoung men's styles.\nSale fit 1 R\nPrice   OO.IQ\nSport Pants. Wearolastic bands. Materials\nof fine silk, striped\nflannels. The very newest styles.\nPrice  $^\u00ab95\nTUNE IN\nC.J.O.R.\nVancouver, B. C.\n11 A.M. SUNDAY\nCARE OF THE EYES\nThe care of the eyes has been\nour special work for the past 45\nyears, 38 years of this time in\nNelson.\nOur record history of many\nthousand- cases are of interest\nto our clientele.\nJ. O. PATENAUDE\nOptometrist &,- Optician\nExpert Optical Service\nThe Sugar Bowl\nGrocery\nWEEKEND\nSPECIALS\n2 lbs. our special Pekoe Tea, 85c\n_  lbs, our Special Creamery\nButter          $1.10\n1 lb. Sliced Streaky Bacon     45c\n2 lbs Blue Ribbon Coffee $1.15\n20 lbs Granulated Sugur $1.30\n4fl lbs Hour $2.io\n4 Cans Sliced Pineapple, 2s 46c\n4 Cans Pork and Bvaii- 2s 50o\n1 Large Packet Soda Biscuits, 20o\n1 Larpe Packet All Bran 20c\n(i Cans Corn, Peas or Tomatoes $1.00\n1 Larffe Galvanized Pali\nand IS cakes laundry\nSoap For   $1.00\nIce Cream\nSoft Drinks\nPHONE   110\nFor   the   Best   service\u2014and   We\nDeliver\nBetting Shows a\nDecrease* Races\nWINN-PEG, Man., Aug. 14.-\u2014The\neconomic depression hit the raoe\nfans here as well aa^general business\nThe spring meets at Polo and Whit-\ntier parks had total' betting of\n$2,100,000, a decline of about $350,-\n000 from the 1939 wagers. Fifty-\nthree thousand fane attended, the\ntwo meets and the government collected approximately $105,000 under\nthe amusement tax\nNews of the Day\nNext dance at Hairop August 32.\ni'   1341-\nClan   McLeary   meets   tonight   at\n8  o'clock. (1384)\nDance   at  Procter   pavilion,   Saturday,   August   16, (1339\nLost\u2014-Light sable collie dog, pure\ntared.   A. T. Noxon, owner.       (1366)\nFURNISHED   SUITES\nKERR   APARTMENTS\n(1212)\nThere, will be a meeting of the\nschool board ln the city hall tonight, 8 o'clock. (1369)\nBUGLE   BAND   DANCES\nEvery Wednesday and Saturday\nat    Lakeside   pavilion (1209)\nMoonlight Excursion uuder auspices of the Nelson Shrine Club,\nA A. o. M. S\u201e Tuesday, August 19.\nGet your tickets early as there Is\nonly a limited amount tp be sold\nOn sale at all stores, 41.60.      (1338)\nCARD OF THANKS\nWe desire to thank our many\nfriends for the numerous acts of\nkindness and sympathy shown US\nduring our recent sad bereavement.\nAlso for beautiful floral tributes.\nMrs. Jas. Henderson and family.\nMrs. P. Arcure.\nMrs.   Geo.   Boug   and   family.\n(1363)\nNOTICE\nAnv persons removing or Interfering In any way with cedar poles or\nlogs ln the Kootenay Lake belonging\nto M. L. Bruce Co. will be prosecuted.\nSigned,\nG. V. Cady, Superintendent,\nShaefer-Hltchcock Co.,\nSuccessors to M, L. Bruce, City\n\u25a0   (1334)\nMen's' Sport Pants.\nValues to $9.00. Fancy\ndheck and striped. All\nwool flannels, full cut\nbottoms.\nSale\nPrice\t\n$6.95\nQILKER'S\nWith Dainty Frocks\nTAKE\nCARE\nYour summer chiffons and georgettes and\norgandies are of such fragile loveliness as to require tho delicate and conscientious attention we\ncan give.\nWe have with us now an expert dry cleaner\nfrom the East.\nKootenay No - Odor\nDry Cleaning Co.\nC. A. LARSON, Mgr,\n\"Modern Equipment Makes Flat Rate Possible\"\nBrake adjustments are vitally important. First\nof all, unless your brakes are in good shape you\nare taking chances every time you drive your\ncar. Secondly, if brake adjustments are not\nefficiently and conscientiously made, your brake\nlinings will not wear well.\nWe carry the largest stock of Raybestos Brake\nLining in the interior and can supply any size to\nsuit any car, which is one of the factors in a\nfirst class job.\nElectrical equipment ensures correct adjustment\nand every job is given the personal test, under\nactual running conditions, which wc know to be\nbetter than any purely mechanical test.\nNELSON TRANSFER\nCOMPANY, LIMITED\nPHONE 35\nCITY DRUG CO.\nKelson's   IManensfug   Chemists\nFilms,   Kodaks,   Drugs,\nStationery\nMall  Orders   Promptly\nDispatched\nCome and. get your\nweight free,\nBox   1083' Nelson,   Phone   34\n_*\u00b0_.e TAXI\n35\nThe  Best  of Service\nCareful,   Courteous\nDrivers\nNelson Transfer Co.* Ltd.\nMEN'S SUITS\nMade to Measure\n$30 to $52\nC. TING\nLadles'   and   Gents'   Tailor\n608 Vernon Street\n44 TAXI AND 44\nTRANSFER\nTRAIL   AND   KOSSL\u2014ND\nffBEIUHT   AND   EXPRESS\nSchedule\nDally to Trail. leaves  id a.  m.\nT.4XI8    DAY    AND    NIGHT\nHunter Electric\n& Plumbing\nEvery Description  of\nF-I-X-T-U-R-E-S\nand Material for\nELECTRICAL\nand\nPLUMBING\nWork at Lowest\nPrices\n,'X\u00a3X3cX3cX3cXpcX3-X\u00a3Xs\nSay it With Flowers\nBeautiful ....\nFloral Baskets\nMade   By   Blinded\nCanadian Soldiers\nSuitable for arranging your\ngarden flowers. One ol these\nfilled with flowers are exactly right for sending to\nyour   sick   friend.\nPrices   from   76c   up.\nNelson Flower Shoppe\nA ndrews and Andrews\nMeans Service in\nFloiuers\nPhone 233\nO-K\n%SS-*-a\nCold\u2014Cold\nICE-COLD\nWHAT?\nEverything   at' Kandy-j\nland Fountain\nWe Have Three Fi-igid-\naires for Your Comfort\n1. A Frigidaire Foutain\n2. A Frigidaire refrig-\neraltor  for   Drinks.\n3. A Frigidaire Cabinet\nfor Bricks and Extra\nIce Cream\nIn this way we always\nhave cold     drinks and\nfirm Ice Cream in Bulk\nor' Brick.\nKANDYLAND\nMaple Leaf\nGrocery\nJ.  P. HERRON\nPhone 101\n911 Stanley St.\nWeek-end Specials\nFly-Tox, 75c size GOt-*-\nCorn, Peas, Grean Beans\nWax Beans, Tomatoes 6\ntins for  $1.00\nPure Malt Vinegar,\nCrosse & Blackwell's\nGallon  $1.15\nSoda Biscuits, pkt.,..20t\u00a3\nNabob Coffee 1 lb.\ntin  .55tp\nTomato Ketchup, C.\n& B. bottle 30$\nSealers, Tomatoes, Raspberries, Bananas.\nWhatever Your\nFavorite Sport\u2014\nThe Correct\nClothes Are Here\nTennis, golf, fishing,\nswimming \u2014 -whatever\nyour game \u2014 you'll find\nhere the clothes that\nhelp you to enjoy yourself more and also to\nimprove your game, because they're so comfortable.\nSWEATERS FOR\nGOLF   OR  TENNIS\nS4.00 to ?10.00\nGOLK HOSE\nS1.75 to .?3.__\nGOLF CAPS\n$2.00 to $3.00\nFLANNEL PANTS\n$5.00 to $11.00\nGOLF KNICKERS IN\nLINEN FLANNEL OR\nTWEEDS\n$5.25 to $9.75\nPhone Taxi\nFrdlht    Seated]\nDally to Rossini\nand Trail 10\n77\nT\nO\nN\nI\nG\nH\nT\nYOU'RE INVITED\nTo Hollywood's jolliest frolic. The\nallstar party. Thirty famous film\nfolk entertain, singing, dancing, romancing. There's drama too. Song\nhits galore. Scores of showgirl beauties. Dazzling TECHNICOLOR scenes.\nA gorgeous, glittering, star- studded\nfestival\u2014friendly and intimate as a\nhouse-party.\nJOIN THE FUN\nThe Talking Singing\nDancing Festival\nof the Stars\nTORAMOUNT\nON PAR ANT\nSQUADS OF SWEETIES\nCOMPANIES OP CUTIES\nDIVISIONS OF DANCERS\nPLATOONS OF PIPPINS\nBRIGADES OF BEAUTIES\nARMIES OF ACE-ACTORS\nBarnyard\nConcert\nREGIMENTS OF ROARING COMEDIANS\nJoin in the Whoopee\nwith 30 Famous Stars!\nTONIGHT\nSATURDAY\nEvening 7 ancj 9   Matinee 2P. M.\nMovietone\nNews\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_08_15","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0400565","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"}]}}