{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0400572":{"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":"1930-08-19","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0400572\/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":" (OOj,\n. Toxvhsend Wins' the Decision\nOver Click, Toronto\n\u2014Page Seven\nVOL. 29 * v \/'. '\nHatchery Being Prepared for\nCollection Fish Eggs\n\u2014 Page Six\nTEN   MILE   CREEK   IS   ROARING   MASS\nTWO MEN  MISSING;   LOGGERS ESCAPE\nHAVE NARROW BIG DECLINE IS SHOWN IN\nFROM\nHRE\nEARNINGS OF CONSOLIDATED\nGene Nadeau, Tony Bor-\ngeois Skirt Flames,\nTen Mile Creek\nCROSS THROUGH\nFIRE THREE TIMES\n' Abandon      Belongings;\nCover 12 Miles in Over Three Hours\nGene Norlenu, -who, with a companion, Tony Bourgeois, successfully\nfought hits way around and through\nthe forest fire on Ten Mile creels\nyesterday considered himself lucky\nto be a-ve list night. The flight\not the two men through 10 miles of\nrough country that they were forced to traverse ln skirting; the flames,\ntook over threo hoitrs. Even then\nthey haul to cross through tongues\nof flames that vers licking up\nthrough small gullies.\nMr, Nadeau at the time when the\nfirst * warning of the 'fire arrived\nwas at the M. L. Bruco camp No. 3\nwhich ls situated about three miles\nabove the point where tbe fire\nbtolte out. -Packing up their clothes\nhe and Mr. Bourgeois decided not\nto try to return to the lower camp\nby the wagon road but rather skirt\nalong the southern rldgo around\nthe fire.- ,\nABANDON CLOTHES \u25a0....'\u25a0\nStarting out with their clothes\nthey soon found that any excess\nbaggago was an impediment to fast\ntravel1 so they had to abandon all\ntheir beaonglUjs, They finally arrived at the lower camp with nothing but tho clothes that they\nwere wearing.\nBoth men were practically exhausted when they reached the\ncamp and Mr. Bourgeois who had\nbeen sick recently went to the hospital last night suffering from\nnervous strain.\nLIQUORlMES\nOPEN DOORS IN\nCITIES OF N. S.\nHAUFAX, N. 8.. Aug. 18.\u2014(CP) \u2014\nNova Scotia's bootleggers today went\ninto retirement. Pour government\nstores, three In Halifax- and one in\nDartmouth, opened their doors at\n10 o'clock thia morning. They were\ntho advance guard of some two\ndozen similar establishments for the\nvending of beers, wines and spirituous liquors that will shortly be\ndoing business in various parts of\nthe province efl the result of Nova\nScotia's adoption of tho government contnjl system.\nBusiness was brisk. At Halifax\nstores considerable queues had gathered before the zero hour, and the\nstores will still doing a good trade\nat closing tlmo.\nTax Arrears in\nB. C. Are Cut Some\nVICTORIA, Aug. la\u2014Tax arrears\nin British Columbia have been cut\nfrom *0,&64,136 in 1921, to \u00ab3,-\n771,081 \u25a0according to the annual\nreport of Robert BAird, inspector\nof municipalities. With the exception ot four cities the arrears are\nlower now than they were In 1921\nin every olty. Vancouver haB cut\nlte bill from $2,900,903 to $1,260,734.\nINSURANCE   OFFICER   DIES  \u25a0\nWENNIP_\u00bb, Aug. 18-^Hugh 8.\nRoss, 46, an officer of the Great\nWest Life Assurance company here,\ndropped dead In his of floe today.\nHis wife Is at present visiting In\nMrrllr.lno Hat, Alta.\nThe Weather\nnmeast for Tuesday\u2014Nelson and\nVlcmllty\u2014:Fine and warm wltti local\nthu\u2014derstorms.\nMln. Max.\nNELSON       46 86\nVictoria        6a 66\nVancouver   ..._ 63 72\nKamloops      - 63 83\nPrince George  .\u2014..\u201e\u2014 48 70\nEetevan Point    46 66\nPrince nupert _.___-'. - 48 74\nDawson    -. 46 \u2014\nBeattie      66 78\nPortland     _ 68 60\nSan Franclsoo w~ _  66 68\n   63 86\nUse   _....\u201e \u201e 64 80\n._   40 80\n  _.. 60 81\n|la-    _  46 87\n   63 72\n._._ 48 73\nnt  84 '86\nUbert       63 78\n  86 84\n  63 83\nDROP IS DUE\nENTIRELY TO\nMETAL PRICE\nGross   Profits   for   Six\nMonths Reach Figure\nof $3,598,089\nCONTINUE BONUS\nAND DIVIDENDS\nOperations  Satisfactory;\nNo Unsold Stock of\nLead on Hand i\nMONTREAL, . AUB. 18\u2014Sharp\ndecline ts shown in the earnings of Consolidated Mining and\nSmelting Company of Canada,\nfor the six months ended June\n20, as compared with the same \u201e\nperiod of 1929, according to rc-^\nport Issued today. The report\nstated the drop was attributable entirely to the depreciation\n\u25a0 in metal prices.\nFor the six months period\ngross profits amounted to $3,-\n598,089 which contrasts with\ngross profits or $7,433,331 In\nthe corresponding period Inst\nyear. The report stated the company's resources and contingent\nreserves were set up to take\ncare of Jnst Biich an nbnormal\nsituation as the present one\nwhich the directors views as\ntemporary. The directors, therefore, favored thc continuance or\nthc payment or the usual dividends and bonuses, \"unless, of\ncourse, metal prices should he-\ncome demoralized, something not\nlikely to develop.\"\nEXPLORE NEW PROPERTIES\nOf the gross profits of the first\nsix months of this year $470,376\nwas spent in exploration of development of new properties. Depreciation amounted to $1,226,204, depletion, $367,637. and taxes $182,473\nleaving $1,361,397 for the similar\nperiod of last year, after like deductions, thero remained $4,560,943.\nTlie report stated that during\ntho six months of this year the\noperations were quite satisfactory\nand production well maintained.\nThe coats of metal were reduced.\nThere was no unsold stock of lead,\nbut over 17,000 tons, though sold,\nwere carried at cost us sales were\non tho averago market price contracts and not fixed until the\nmonth of delivery. This tonnage\nwould yield a very substantial profit,  the  report said.\nThere waa a large stock of unsold zinc on which there would be\na substantial profit.\n\"There docs not seem to bo much\nhope of appreciation In silver but\nfollowing recent meetings of world\nzinc producers in London and Os-\ntend, an Increase in the price of\nzinc may be expected,\" the report\ncontinued.\nGood progress was mado with the\nconstruction of tho company's fertilizer plants. Production ot triple\nsuper-phosphate would begin early\nin 1931. Excellent results were being obtained this season from thn\nlarge scale cxperlmenta and demonstrations on western prairie farms.\nThe compnny had acquired a substantial interest In Sherrltt Gordon\ncompany and Mr. Archibald, Smelters vice-president In charge of\nmines, was going on the board of\nthat company, 'the report said, Tlie\noopper refining plant of the Ontario Refining company at Sudbury\nhas   begun   operations.\nYOUNG MAN IS\nFOUND HANGING\nCLOVERDAU, B. C., Aug, 18.\u2014\nTho body of Bert Barton, aged 20,\nson of David P. Barton, surroy\npolice commissioner, wait foofind\nhanging In the warohouno of tho\nImperial Oil company ahortly after\nl o'clock this afternoon. Barton\nwas last men alive at 12.90 noon,\nThe discovery was mads by Lloyd\nBartlow, an employee of the Imperial Oil, who entered lte ware*\nhouse to obtain some suppltee. Dr.\nP. D. Sinclair, coroner, who viewed\nthe body, stated that an Inquest\nWflfi   not  necessary,\nFLUME BELIEVED DESTROYED AS\nFLAMES SHIFT; 100 MEN WILL BE\nJOBLESS; TWO WORKERS STILL LOST\nFate of Paul Brossoff and Bill Harrigan, Doukhobor\nemployees at the lumber operations of the Schaefer &\nHitchcock company at Ten Mile creek was unknown at 10\no'clock last night, according to G. V. Cady, superintendent\nof the company who had just returned from the scene\nof the raging forest fire.\nWhile unreported, it is believed, the men are working\ntheir way through the hills in a wide circle to avoid the\nflames. They with some 40 other men trapped by the blaze\nmade their way to Ten Mile lake. The other men l-eached\nthe company's mill camp late yesterday afternoon, coming\nout by way of Shoreacres.\nMr. Catty also reported that three of the company's\nhorses had fallen victims to the fire, smoke and falling\ntimber.\nFlames which yesterday afternoon were burning on\nthe eastern s.ide of the triangular basin of Ten Mile creek\nhad eaten their way around to the western face and were\nraging in thc white pine timber high up on the mountainside.\nThis shift had led to the belief that the large four-\nmile flume constructed in 1925 by the M. L. Bruce company\nhad been destroyed. Piles of logs and poles ready for flunking may also have fallen prey to the flames it is believed.\nThe disastrous fire, cause of which is unknown, will\nmean the loss of employment to over 100 hieii engaged Tn\nlogging operations in the hills and in mill work at the\ncompany's Tarry's headquarters. \t\nTAHITI SINKS\nIN THE SOUTH\nPACIFIC\nMAY BE DAYS\nBEFORE MINERS\nBODIES FOUND\nKcscuers    Take    Lives    in\nHands in Biakeburn; Fire\nSealed Up\nPITHEAD, ULAKEBUIaN, B.C..\nAu\u00bb. 18.\u2014A dozen mlnem, wearing am helmets, worked today\nunder unfatoralilo conditions to\ncomplete the \"seal\" ajulnrt the\n(Ire located yestarrday In number four mine, and which Is de-\nlaylnc progress In the search for\n42 entombed men believed killed\nIn Wednesday's explosion.\nIt  now  looks  as   though   the\ntask   or   finding   the   bodies  o(\ntho victims will b\u00ab a long one,\nrequiring   perhaps   a   fortnight\nor even a monlh.\nOas    has    constantly    threatened\nthe lives of tho rescue\u2122, and yesterday    three   of    tncm.    Including\nMlno  Manager Oeorge  Murray,  had\na   narrow   escape-\nIn  view  of  those  conditions any\nchances   that   the   entombed   men\nmay have survived are regarded as\nnil.\nW. M. Neal, general manager,\nwestern line, Canadian Pacific, railways, arrived hero today. Hon. W.\nA. McKenole. provincial minister of\nmines, is also on tho scene.\nLIGHTNING FIRE\nBURNS IN ONTARIO\nBAULTE STB MARIE. Ont.. Aug.\nIB\u2014Five fire rangers with pumps\nare today fighting a blaai ou thc\nGhost river In the Puk\u2014ihwa Bectlon\non the north shore ot laako Superior . which Is believed to have\nbeen caused by lightning- It la\nstated that the rangers have no\nTecord of any\"6no bolng In the\nregion. Yesterday the flro had\nburned through flvo or six Acres\nof slash but no other report had\nbeen reaahed on 11 up to noon today.\nYoung Englishman\nKilled in Dane\nWINNIPattl, Aug. 18\u2014(OP)\u2014Otto\nBare!, young Englishman visiting\nIn Wlranlpaj,1 waa killed early tonight wheti tbe Moth plane In\nwhloh he was flying crashed on\nthe outsldrte ol tbe city. Barel.\nwho had been In Winnipeg for\nfour months, has a brother ln\nMontreal.\nAND   HE'LL  LIVE\nTHE PAS. Man., Aug. 18^1\/00\nRoye, 14, leaped from a window at\nSt. Anthony's hospital hs-ro within\n34 hours i after he underwont an\noperation for appendicitis, but ls\nexpected to recover. Leo hopped\nfrom a second story window and led\nattendants a 10:m(nute chase before\nlie   was   caught.\nIMMIGRANT DHOWNH\nSCEPTRE, Sask., Aug. 18.\u2014Falling\nInto a deep hole In the Saskatchewan river 13 mllea north of here,\nBernard Schultz, 19-year-old Russian immigrant, but recently arrived ln Canada, drowned Sunday\nafternoon. A friend, with whom he\nwas bathing, managed to get out\nNeither of the lads could swim.\nSohulta' body was recovered about\non  hour after the mishap.\nDISCUSS PAYMENT\nON THE 1930 CROP\nREOINA, Sask., Aug. 18.\u2014Directors\nand officials of the Saskatchewan\nwheat pool were in oonferenco hero\ntoday with A\u201e 3. McPha.ll, president\nof tho Canadian Wheat Producora\nlimited, and president of tho Sas-\nJoatchowan pool. Preliminary payment on the 1930 wheat crop waa\namong the matters discussed, but\nno statement was issued at the\nclose  of  thc  meeting.\nELOPEMENT OF\nYEAR AGO IS\nSUICIDE PACT\nCouple Found in Auto; Disappeared   Last   August\nin Alberta\nMEDICINE HAT, Alta., Aug. 18.\u2014\n(CP)\u2014People up in the Cprcsn hills\ncountry said that winsome Winnie\nSturm. 16. had eloped with married Adam Snyder when the pair\ndisappeared last August. A lone\nrider, though, cantered over a coulee,\non tho mountain crest near fox\npost offico and found tliat tlie gossips  wero  wrong.\nHe found the -couple In each\nother's arms, dead, va a motor car\nlying In the little dell. Horao-\nblanketA hung down thc sides ot\nthe open car, grass had grown up\npast th\u00a9 mired wheels and tho rotting board. The, bodies ware badly\ndecomposed.\nNo inquest will be held, the circumstances clearly Indicated that\nthe death had resulted from poisoning\u2014suicide pact, A note In the\ngirl's handwriting, faded by the\nchanging weather of the foothills,\nread: \"We are happy until the last\nmoment.\"\nThornton Meets\nNew Rail Minister\nOTTAWA, Aug. 18\u2014 Sir Henry\nThornton, president of the Canadian National Railways, conferred\nthis morning with Hon. Dr. B. J.\nManion, minister of railways and\ncanals, for the first time since tho\nletter's appointment. Sir Henry\ndescribed the conference as purely\nroutine In character and had no\nannouncement to make. He leaves\ntonight  for   Montreal.   .\nJOINS   TOH1KS\nOHABLOTTBTOVVN, P. E. I., Aug.\n18\/\u2014Hon. W. Bruoe Butler, member\nwithout portfolio in the government\nof Premier Walter M. Lea, today\nreclamed from the government. _.j\nannounced he would support tho\nConservative op,%osltIr>^ at tho next\nseealon of the \"legislature.\nTOUBS BY PLANE\nWINNIPEG. Aug. la.\u2014Squadron\nLeader T. A. Cowley, superintendent\nof air regulations for the Dominion\ngovernment, reached Winnipeg today\nfrom Ottawa. Ho will (proceed to\nBranMon, Man., next on his western\ntour. ,\nuuinTT\nimtiave\nPassengers   and   Crew\nRescued in Safety by\nSteamer Ventura\nSOME PASSENGERS\nDISEMBARKED\nNative Son of Victoria\nPlays Big Part in\nRescue Operations\nPAGO PAGO, Ttttlula, Aug. 19\n(Tuesday)\u2014(AP) \u2014The Matson\nUner Ventura arrived here at 1\np.m. today (2 p.m. Monday\nr.S.T.) with all passengers and\ncrew of the steamship Tahiti\nwhich was abandoned and sank\nabout 4(10 miles east of Paro-\ntonga,  Cook  islands.\nOne hundred sixty-fire of the\n317 persons rescued by the Ventura will disembark here. The\nremainder wllj contjlnue to San\nFrancisco. Those who will land\nhere are the 14fl members of\nthe crew,. including four stewardesses and 16 passengers,\nTAHITI   SINKS\nWELLINGTON, N. Z., Aug. 18\u2014\n(AP)\u2014The British steamship Tahiti,\nwhich had been In distress three\n.d\u00bbyil,-went down- in tho South pacific today after her 317 occupants\n\u2014passengers and crew\u2014wero . safely\naboard tho American steamer Ventura.\nThe Ventura Immediately headed\nfor Pago Pago, the American naval\nbase ln Samoa, to discharge its\nisland passen\/era. Then it will go\nto San Francisco, to land the\nAmericans nnd Europeans.\nAfter leaving Wellington for San\nFrancisco, due there August 29, the\nTahiti lost its starboard propellor\nand sprang a leak about 460 miles\neast of Rarotonga, Cook islands.\nFREIGHTER   ARRIVES\nThe Penybryn. a Norwegian\nfreighter, was the first to reach the\ndisabled vessel but passengers wero\nnot transferred to it, because of\nthe limited accommodations, while\nno immediate danger threatened.\nToday tbe Ventura, which had\nraced hundreds of miles to aid tho\nTahiti, arrived alongside nt 9:30\na.m. (local time) Just as a bulkhead gave way and passengers he-\ngan taking to lifeboat*.\nB.   C.   MAN   HERO\nVICTORIA, Aug. 18\u2014Native son of\nVictoria, Capt. William R, Meyer,\nyesterday wj-ote his name In the\nannals of heroes of the sea whon\nhe waa instrumental ln saving the\nlives of 317 people aboard the\nsteamer Tahiti in the south seas,\nCapt. Meyer Is master of the liner\nVentura which forged full steam\nahead to tho aid of the Tahiti\nwhen it was learned she was ln\ndistress.\nCapt. Meyer lived in Victoria for\nabout 20 years and after flnishlnc\nschool in Toronto, served on all\nthe earlier Canadian Pacific Empress liners. Ho has been master\nof the Ventura for the last six years.\nTHREE OF FAMILY\nOF FOUR WrPED\nOUT IN ACCIDENT\nASTORIA, Ore., Aug. 18.\u2014(AP.\u2014\nWith the death today of Horry Kaplan, Portland tailor, three of a family of four were wiped out by a\nheavy fire scarred tree which fell\non the family automobile while\nthey were returntng from a weekend at the beaches, Cells, 18. and\nJack Kaplan. 22, Universitiy of\nOregon student, and daughter and\neon of Kaplan, wero killed outright.\nMrs. Kaplan, surviving member of\nthe family, was reported unchanged\nIn   a  hospital  here.\nOfficer Vancouver\nSchool Board Sent\nJail for One Year\nVANCOUVER, B, C., Aug. 18,\nC, C. Wilson, suspended purchasing\nagent of the Vancouver school board,\nwas sentenced to one year with hard\nlabor at Oakalla jail by Magistrate\nH. O. Shaw today. He wns con\nvlcted on two c.nargea of dealing ln\na forged document In connection\nwith thg purchase of ooke delivered\nto hlsbome, but paid by the city\nbecause of alterations made in invoices.\nCorner Turned in\nDrought Situation\nWASHINGTON, D. C, Aug. 18.\u2014\nRecent rains in drought areas today\nled Secretary Hyde to say he believed the \"corner\" had been turned,\nand at the same time word oamn\nfrom tho White House that Presi\ndent Hoover oxpects to make his\nnational organization for relief this\nweek.\nClose to 40 Loggers\nNarrow Escape\nin Huge Forest Fire\nLate News on\nthe Fire\nThree Men Are Still Out;\nFire  Line Is\nBusy\nAt 9:30 la*t night the Nelson Dally News, in touch by\nlong distance with T. W.\nBrewer, forestry official at the\nRen 'Mlin creek fire, learned\n(hat three men were aa yet\nunreported, but were believed\nto bo saf\u00ab[ at Ten Mile lake,\nabove the flames. AU but\ntwo horses had been accounted for, ho believed. Of the\nHTbund, one had been killed\nby a windfall. Two were still\non the mountainside but had\nbeen located and would be\nbrought to safety at daybreak today.\nMr. Brewer estimated tliat\nthere were betwen 120 end\n150 fire fighters on the scene.\nTiiey liad. successfully established two miles of fire June,,\naround the lower extremity of\nthe fire which was an added\nprotection against flames\nreaching tho lumber mill and\ntimber on tho shores of Kootenay river.\nBetween 125 and 150 Fire Fighters Form Fire\nLine to Protect Schaeffer and Hitchcock\n(M. L. Bruce) Mill at Tarrys\nHORSES PERISH IN MAD EFFORTS\nTO GET AWAY FROM THE FLAMES\nEddie Hayes Brings Out Two of Camp Animals; Men Retreat to Lake Then Circle\nFire to Reach Safety; Flames Still Raging\nCARDINAL IS\nINJURED IN\nAUTO CRASH\nCardinal Rouleau Suffers a\nBroken Hip; Last Rites\nAdministered\nQUEBEC, Que., Aug. 18.\u2014Cardinal\nRouleau of Quebec received serious\nInjuries today when thrown from\nhis automobile. An x-ray Bhawed\nthat his shoulder was broken.\nTonight the Cardinal, who Is 65\nyears of age, was reported as resting more comfortably, a slight improvement in his condition being\nnoted.\nAt noon today the last rites of\nthe church were administered although i- was not felt that his\neminence was in Immediate danger.\nThis evening Dr. Charles Vezlna\nfelt t-ia-p the Improvement noted\nwas sufficient to -warrant hope of\nreoovery.\nBOGUS NOVA\nSCOTIA BILLS\nCIRCULATING\nOTTAWA, Ont.. Aug. IB.\u2014OOTO\u2014\nCounterfeit Bank oT* Nova Scotia\n$10 bills are being circulated ln\nCanada, according to a warning Issued by the post offtoe depaartmemt.\nThe spurious money Is described as\nfollows\nThe counterfeit Is a photographic copy of tha front of the\ngenutno note Issue of January 2.\n1020. In appearance It in darker\nand Is slightly blurred. The back\nLs of tho 1024 Issuo but of a\ndeeper blue and Is quite blurred.\nThe numbore. which are crudely\nexecuted, are about the same height\nbut wider and the figures, 20082,\non one counterfeit already presented take up slightly more spaco\nthan on the genuine bill. In size\none of the fictitious notes presented ls about 1-16 Inch smaller\nthan the genuine, while another\nls the correct size. Tho paper Is\nrather greasy and has a shiny finish.\"\nC. P. R. Will Build\nDuval Rail Line\nWINNIPEG, Auj. 18\u2014 Following\nthe granting a charter at the last\nsession of the federal house to the\nO.P.R. for a line from Duval, Bask.,\neasterly, the company has proceeded with the work Recording to T.\nO. MacNftb, engineer of construction,\nInterviewed today. Engineers are\nengaged ln Che field on the task of\ndiscovering tho most economical location for this Important branch\nline. 1\\\nWRITTEN AT 8 P. M.\nWith a roar that could be heard for many a rafle\nthe basin of Ten Mile creek, across from Tarry's, about\n20 miles from Nelson down the Kootenay river, became\na raging inferno at about 12.30 o'clock Monday afternoon. The fire which covered but a few square feet at\nthat time, (had by 5 o'clock spread to an area estimated at between seven and eight square miles, had\nwiped out a logging camp and portion of a huge f lirmo,\nhad caused the death of one horse and hid the secret\nas to the whereabouts of three loggers, who with between 35 and 38-others had been forced to flee for their\nlives to Ten Mile lake as the flames leaped np the\ncreek towards them. At a late hour last night the flw\nwas raging unchecked.\nLast night, Tony Bourgeois, a worker for Utt\nSchaefer & Hitchcock lumber firm, formerly M. t_\nBruce company, who was for some hours trapped hf\nthe flames, was removed to Kootenay Lake General\nhospital. He was reported as resting easily and to\nbe suffering from shock and nervousness.\nORIGIN IS MYSTERY\nOperations on Ten Mile creek have been carrieS on\nfor the past five years, the operators contentrating on\nwhite pine and poles.   In that time an enormous amount of\nslashing has accumulated.\nYesterday's fire, the smoke from which poured high\nover the mountains surrounding Nelson and district, started about one half mile above the mill of the operator*.\nsituated on Kootenay river.\nAccording to Eddie Hayes, foreman of the company,\nthe blaze started in some mysterious way about 200 feet\noff the roadway which leads to the No. 1 camp which is\nsituated some, two and half miles up Ten Mile creek.\nThere was no one working ln the vicinity at the time and\nbut 20 minutes befot^e the fire broke out Gordon Irving,\ntimekeeper, had come down from the upper camp by way\nof the flume, some distance off the site where the fire had\noccurred at first. At that\ntime he saw nothing to indicate a fire. Upon arrival\nat the main camp at Kootenay river he was informed\nof the smoke. Within a few\nminutes the whole crook bed '\nseemed ablaze.\nROSETTE SENDS\nWARNING\nImmediately the blaze was\nnoted Joe Rosette, official at\nthe mill, sent men through\nto warn Foreman Hayes aad\nsome 35 or 40 men who were\nworking in camp Number 3,\nabout five and one half miles\nmen fought a losing battle\nup the creek. Three of the\nwith the flames. They bat.\ntied in order that the first.\nTWO YOUTHS\nBREAK JAIL\nIN CRANBROOK\nWere   Charged   With   Passing Worthless Checks;\nDescription  Given\nCRANBROOK. B. C, At_ir. IS.\u2014\nTwo youths glvtnff names oC FranX\nHagw and JackTHatfWld. \u00bb_7(l ropm-\nsentlng themselves to he students\nof Alberta university, who were on\nFriday arrested for pnsMr\u00bb& worthless\ncheque* and held In the city lockup\nfor trial, In some way broke Jail\nSunday 'venlnn and are now tit\nlarge.\nThe two youttw spent Friday calling at the homes of the city, obtaining subscriptions to vartoiw\nmagazines, purporting to be for tho\nInternational Magazine company.\nLater Friday they took k chtf:k\nwith the nam\u00a9 ol a young lady of\nthe city at the bottom, Into the\nstore of Raworth Brothers. R. Un-\nnel, auspectlng tne genuineness of\nthe signature, made inquiries and\nnotified   the   polloo.\nThe escaped Kagor Is 33 yearn\nof age, six feet and one-half Inches\ntall and of slight build. He lias\nwavy brown hair and was wearing\na blue shirt and a black bow tie,\nHatfield U 18 years of a\u00abe. five root\nseven inches tall and weighs 160\npounds . He has brown hair and\neyes and was wearing a blue pin\nstriped suit. They aro believed by\nthe polloe to be Americans.\nFIRES CONTROLED\nTHE PAS. Man., Aug. 18\u2014Potest\nfires, near the Oree Indian reserve\na t Cedar lake, have been brought\nunder control, It was reported to\ntho local forestry branch today.\nThe fires swept through 3,000\nacres ot Jack pine, to the east of\nOedar take, but the timber w-\u00bbe\nnot of high commercial value.\n(Continued on pe-go two)\nRoyal Babies no\nException to Rale\nWait at (.lamia\nGLAM1S. Bcotlan, Aug. IS\u2014 <AP\u00bb|\n-The good folks of the Britli*\nLsles have concluded that Torsi\nbabies, like their rubicund man*-*\nwhich come to other peapla, tha\nborn when rhey are born, Mid -K*\nbefore.\nFor two weeks they ht\/m vadterf\nbrp\u00abthlessly for the netife that thft\nduohess of York, daughteMn-law\nof King Oeorge and Queen MarjL\nhas presented Britain another hetf\nprwurap-trve  to the  throna. \u00bb\nDespite Um waiting, however, then*\nIs no anxiety for tha duchew--.\nmerely a feeling that a misoaloula*\nHon has been made ln ttrna.. Th*\nbirth U expected any day.\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 18\u2014Th* latest negotiations between the United\nStates and Canada on tho St. Lawrence waterway project will 1\u00bb reviewed by President 'Hoover with\nhla new minister to Canada, Han-\nford MacNider. before the latt#r\ndeparts for hli post, within a few\ndays. i\n P_tre Two\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS '   TUESDAY, AUGUST 19, 1980.v\nTEN MILE CREEK\n[MASS FLAMES, TWO\nMENJIISSING\n(Ooatlntud From Page  Ope)\n' night pe halted, At least momentarily, bo that word could be\nrushed through to the workmen\nabove who could not see the smoke\nor fiwnes and who could not he\nraised   on   the   telephone   line   to\n' the camp. After some little time\nthe   workmen   were -forced   to   give\n. up.   It waa Prank McLeod who we.it\nI through to warn camp three where\n- Foreman Hayes was stationed.\nWith   the    fames   making   rapid\nheadway   and   threatening * all  Bides\nI of   tho   creek   with   a   sullen   roar,\nj Eddie   Hayes   Immediately   got   his\n[ men   together.     Each   was   forced\n|t to take some grub and was equipped\nwith an axe, naw or plclc. Sixteen\nhorses also in the camp were ordered\nreleased and driven up to Ten Mile\nlake, about three miles further up\nthe creek. By thlB time the flames\nwere threatening more and more,\nand the men in many ^cases became\npanicky. Several of them had gone\nthrough the porpuplne cre?k fire of\nBorne years ago and became terrified.\nAfter .tbe men ,hwi clewed camp\nHayes and McLeod made ready to\nfollow Many of the workers were\nattempting to Bave personal belongings but most of them threw\nthese aside and hiked for thetr\nUvea\nBRING   OUT   HORSES\nAt this Juncture just as he\nwqs leaving caitti> the foreman\ndiscovered two horses tied In\nthe barn. Some teamster had\nMed up h(s team, became alarmed at the rapidity in which the\nflames were spreading unrl hud\ncleured out, no doubt terrified\nand all forgetful or his horses.\n\"There was nothing to lt but\nlo try to save our horses,\" said\nEddie Hayes yesterday afternoon\nwhile grabbing a few mlnutei\nrest before hitting back onto\nthe  trail  ot the  fire.\nAs a result he and MoLeod\ndecided to take the an J mala\nlert in camp, through tbe fire.\nThis they successfully accomplished.\nRIDDEN   THROUGH   FIRE\nWithout blinds and with their\nharness on their backs the\nhorses were ridden down the\nroad, through 400 feet of smoke\nand flume, out again into the\ndear, and down to the main\nmill camp at the river's edge.\nSeven of the a nliiwis, however,\nhad got away and were driven\nnorthward . by thc smoke and\nflames onto the board expanse\nnf the mountain which backs\nthe Doukhobor settlement of\nCtlade,\nAt 5 o'clock yesterday afternoon\nseveral men headed by Joe Rob-,\notte had, started on a wild search\nthrough the woods for those animals. Last night about 7:30 Tho\nNelson    Daily    News   learned       by\ntlephone    that,    two    of   tho   animals  had   been  found  doad.    Six\nof the  16  were otui  In  ,-ho  hilL-i,\ntheir   fate   unknown.\nWORRIES ABOUT MEN\nYesterday afternoon alt that concerned Foreman Hayes waa the quas-\ntliui as to the safety of his men\nforced to Ten Mile la|ce by the\nroaring mass of fire. He was fenced to watt at the mill camp until\nthe arrival of O. V. Cady, superlnt-\nent of operations who arrived at\nthe camp about 6 o'clock from the\nboundary from whence he had\nbeen summoned when the fire broke\nout. He was also concerned with\ntha welfare of his 20 men who\nwere sent to tackle the fire at its\nsource. Theee men were normally\nmill hands and were hot ln the\nbush when the fire broke out\n, He calmly organized his resources. Orders were brief and to\nthe point. No man was allowed\nto get into tha woods alone or without an axe or _aw. Then the foreman took to digging up enough\ngrub or \"chuck\" as the woodamen\ncall   lt.     Additional   supplies   were\nWHEN TRAVELLING\nThe Following Offer the Best of Service\nNelson, B. C. Hotels\n\\\\umt ijlii\nVancouver, B. C, and Island\nBLACKBURN'S SUPER SERVICE\n(STATION\u2014833 Seymour St. The\nKootenay Tourist's Vancouver Garage. Moderate charges for Washing, Polishing, and Greasing. Parking Storage Acceasoric_, Gasoline\nand OUs, Engine Repair Work,, Free\nCrank Case Service. Tire, Battery\nand Brake Service, Vitf<;anlzlng and\nSLmonimng. See us for used cars.\nA large stock at all prices always\ncarried.\nMake your trip to Vancouver a pleasure by having your moals at the\nNEW    ORPirBl'M   CAFE\u2014762   Gran-\n-c i vUle St.    Choicest Food at Moderate\nS! Charges.    James P. Dwyer.\nPUFFERIN   HOTEL\u2014900   SEYMOUR\nST.\u2014Bright Rooms, Central, Moderate Rates. A. Patterson, late of\nColeman. Crow's Nest, Proprietor,\nLONDON       CAFETERIA,    LTD.\u2014710\nRobson EKv The ever popular dining\nplace to make U3Q of whilo ln Vancouver.\nA cocoanut may bo easily opened\nby boring a hole ln an eye and emptying tho milk, then placing the\ncocoanut ln the oven until tha\nshell ls cracked.\ni WJtfc Running Water\nPrivate Baths Ens nit*\nGEO. BENWEL--, Prop.\nNelson, B.  O.\nVictoria and Alberta\nK\u00a3m&&3Q&SsSSi\nm8B--Mr. and Mra. O. Awert,\nKaslo; J. M. Robertson, New Denver;\nA. a Strickland. Balfour; K. K.\nCotton, M, P Cotton, Boswell; W. B.\nHerffler\u2014\u2014n, Mirror Lake; D. A.\nMarshall, O. C_. Thompson, P. O.\nPraser, J. Lucas, Vancouver; Mr.\nand Mrs. Coates, Rosebery; J. James,\nMablo J. James, Mrs. L. Dodd. Spokane, a. O. eege nnd family, Kel-\n\u00abJWS*5S5SSS\u00a3\u00ab5S\nlogg; O. T. Oughtred, E. Q. Montgomery. V7 Burdett, Klmberley; E\nAllan, M. C. Hallen, J. L. Roger*,\na. Couetatt, Creston; P. o. Stop.\nLclhbridEc; O. . Hughes, Penile; F.\nC. Ourren, Trail; W. O. Wallace.\nBrentwood; E. Jones, New Westminster; D. McKenzle, Vancouver,\nMr. and Mrs. C. W. O'Nell, Duncan.\nD    Martin,   Victoria\n.,;...\u00ab,;.\u00bb,;: i i--.i..-ti;:-.,-i'V ^,-it^..^.i^--:^<.^,r:,.\u00ab\u201ei.:,t ,;,),, : ., ; \u00ab,,\niWhere the Guest Is King\nThe Savoy\nNELSON'S NEWEST AND FINEST HOTEL\nMANY ROOMS WITH PRIVATE\nBATHS   OR   SHOWERS\nJ. A. KERB, Prop.\nl\/MfiSti!!\/\nSAVOY\u2014R. Morrison. W. Gibson, J.\nM. fuller, W. Davidson, H. P\u2014-flit,\na. Pord, P W. Francis. M. Ouzncr,\nL. A. Logan, J. W. Armstrong, O.\nTavllamy, J. W Manard. O. Hood, B.\nHood. N. T Loo, T. W. Wnlkev, B.\nBuckle, W. J Wilson, C. Cadwall-\naaaier,   S.   O.   Pcele,  W.   Scott,   T.   W.\nlUwklm W. Lunoy, o. Oreen, J.\nBlra-TO\u2014eh  Temple  shrine  Band,\nVictoria; O. M. Stldel, Nelson; S. S.\nfrank, Bobwell; P. B. Ulrlch, St.\nMaries; C. M. Morgan, Ellesburg;\nE. Smith, Reno; L. R. Ilubrinc,\nSpokane; Mr. and Mrs. C. L, Hue,\nR. Hix, Pullman; S. Grant and\nfamily. Slocan City; S. L. Springer,\nGrand Forks; Dr, C W. Sharpies,\nA. G. Thompson, Seattle; J. dall-\nagher,   Montreal.\nWhen   in\nVICTORIA,  a   c.\nStav at the\nHOTEL WESTHOLME\n100   Fjooms  o(  Comfort;   4S   Rooms\nwith    Bath;    Rates   $155   to   S1.S0;\nWith  Frlvate  Bath.  M.00  to  $2.60.\nDouble, Jl-00 Extra.\n1417   Government  St.\nJ. Maeglora. Proprietor\nHOTEL  BRETTON   HALL\nBANFF,  ALBERTA\n60   Hooms   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\nExcellent Dining Room Service\nN. H. MURRAY, Manager\nSpokane, Washington\nS\u00a3W>.1K,BTS3. %Sfc59 Bnt*,r [ Total population of United State.\nSal western Travel Club*. rVee expected to reach 193,000.00.0, census\nMap: and Tourist. Information. ( bureau at Washington reports\nAinsworth, B. C.\nEnjoy your week-end and summer vacation\nat\nAINSWORTH\nHot Springs Hotel\nAND SWIMMING POOL\nNature's Health and Bummer Resort.\nFurni6heil Cottages Excellent Flshinj.\nTrail, B. C.\nQueen's Hotel\nTbe Center of Convenience\nHot   and   Cold   Water   lu   Every\nRoom\nBteam Heated\nA. Lapointe, Prop.\nQUEENS\u2014E. Turnbull, V. Barber.\nVancouvenM. Wory, Grand Porks;\nJ. JosfiTp, Trail; T. B. Halverston,\nKlmberley; C. W. Waters, (Spokane;\n8. Hlnty, Waneta; E MoLean, Tarrys;\nhii. and Mrs. B Romar, J. Romar,\nCalgary;  C. Gee, Nelson,\nI\nMadden Hotel\nd ,a. Mcdonald\nSteam Heated Rooms by the\nDay,  Week  or  Month\njfcvery consideration shown\nto guests\nCor. Baker and Ward Bis.\nNelson\nMADDEN\u20146. Mauley, O. Manin-\nenanld. O. Dunielil, W. Wagner, B.\nAnderson. R. Guenard, Nelson: G.\nHansen. Kaslo; R, Sapptcs, Salmo.\nStrathcona Hoiel\nWhen in Nelson stop at the\nfitraihoonau Hot and cold\nwater. Rates #1 per night,\n(pedal rates by the week\nor month.\nNew Grand Hotel\nA  Modern  Brick  Building\n616   Vernon   St.,   Nelson,   B.   C.\nHot  and  Cold  Water  and  Telephone in  all Rooms.    Steam\nHeated Throughout,\nRooms by Weekly Rata\nor by  the Month\nP. L. KAFAK, Prop.\nEuropean  Plan\nHotel Arlington\nCentrally Located\nTrail, B. C\nA. P. LEVSISQUE, Prop,\nNEW\nAnk.   A.\nGRAND\u2014W.    King,    M.\nStakoff,  Grand  Forks.\nOccidental Hotel\n: The Home of Plenty\n705   Vernon   Rt. Phone   6871,\nII,   WAESICK\nFifty Rooms uf Solid Comfort\nlii-.ifiuii.uic!-.. for Loggers and\nMiners\nordered and plans laid for a sally\ninto tbe flaming forest ln search\nof t)ie inlawing men. A way must bo\nfound to gtilde then), out \u00bbljve Mid\nsafely. A 8 o'clock last night *U\nwore safe but Tour who wt?\u00bb then\nprobably on. tfceir way ' d-twn ths\nmountain by a wide circle route.\nFIRE   FIGHTERS   ARRIVE\nAt about a o'clock the fir** <to-\u00bb\ntaobment   of   fire   flBUtera   arrived\nfrom Nelson ln chargo of Ranger\njttvjfl. They unloftded axea, ploks,\nsaws,-pumps, hope, water hags, cooking utensils, stqv and were eoon\ntransported to the seene of the\ntire by a truck rhn hy tht logging\nfirm. Within half an bow ft PW-\nond truckload of men arrived under\ncharge of T. W. Brewer of the forest scrvico who took official charge\nof the fire fighting operation^\nBy 6 o'clock a third truckload\narrived and disembarked at the\nTarcy's ferry landing- All were\nsent up the hill with tbe quickest\nof dispatch.\nPlans late yesterday afternoon\nwere to battle the flames at their\nsource with a crew of about 76\nmen. A crew of 60 men wae to be\ndispatched from a site near Bbore-\nacres to reach and battle the blaze\nat the peak and there was talk of\nsending In a crow from tho Brilliant  side  of  the  fire.\nThree of the men from camp\nNo. 3 who got through In safety\nwere \"aboht all In\" y-mterday afternoon. Ono showed signs of\nhaving swallowed a lot of smoke.\nOne had been through the Porcupine fire a few years ago and was\nfearful of loavlng \\ie main camp.\nHowever, after a brief rest, all\ncheerfully shouldered an axe and\nhit for the woods ln search of\nthe drmb animals loot in the\nwlldnerncsa and likely terrified beyond control by the flro menace.\nMONSTER   FLUME\nM. L. Bruce and company first\n.started operations at Ten Mile\ncreek tn 1925 and have beon busily\nengaged ever since in getting out\npoles and white pine. A monster\nflume extends from Kootenay river\nup the creek for a distance of about\nfour miles. It was built ln 1025\nand was used to bring down logs\nand poles. Poles were transported\nacross the river by aerial cables and\ni were cut at the company's\nmill before being transported and\npiled for the market.\nThis flume, portion of which is\nbelieved burned, wws five feet wide\nat the top, a monster piece of\nwork worth thousands of dollars.\nLuckily for the lumber operators the\nflume ls on the opposite side of\nths Ten Mile creek to that on which\ntho fire broke out.. Han this not\nbeen the case it would have gone\nout  first thing.\nAccording to Foreman E. Hayes\nthe slashing of years and years of\noperations extended well up the\ncreek for many miles. In five\nyears the company had taken out\nthousands of feet of Umber. There\nliad accumulated slashings from\nabout 85.000 ties and about 100,000\npoles, not to mention bru.sh from\nwhite pine logging. Presence of this\nslashing accounted for tho rapid\nheadway made by tbe flames. Workers in the woods declared that tha\nflames Jumped two and three hundred feet Into the air and burning embers were carried for over a\nmile at a time.\nTIMBER   IS    SAFE\nLate yesterday afternoon tt waa\nthought that some 6,000 feet of\nlogs and poles piled in readiness\nfor fluming to the mill h*d been\nsaved. They were stored on -the\nside of tho creek opposite the flames\nIf the wind remained In the direction it wae blowing there was\nUttle danger of loss at this source.\nBut   the   company   did   not   fare\nNOW OPEN FOR BUSINESS\nNEW\nCROWN POINT\nHOTEL\nAT\nTRAIL, B. C.\nEvery Modern Convenience\nFor Room Reservations Phone 730\nCOQt Blil'OKF, BEATINO\nMost JroBtingK havo a smoother\nBruin If nllowetl In cool before beating. Thoso In which brown sugar\nand a large amount of butter and\ncream are used may be eaten while\nhot, however, without, apolllng the\ntexture.\nKaslo, B. C.\nKING GEORGE Hotel\nrtrat   class   accommodation.   i:> -\ni_alant  Mean.    Boating  and\nffihlni,\nChicken Dinner era? Sunday\nevening.\nRenter and Latham\nHendvleks' Garage\nFord  Sales ana  Service.  General\nRepair! to  aU   cars.   Fully\nequipped Machine  Shop.\nPHONE 31 NIOHI  i\\\nReadThe Nelson Daily News\nf|0UGLAg\n** HOTEL**\nRooms and Baths\n>;.  L. and  A. OEOUTAOE.\nProps.\nBteam Retted\nThroughout\nBox 008\nHot and Cold\nWater\nPhone 2fl3\nTRAIL, B. C.\nUNION GARAGE\u2014Scrvlce station\nand machine shop: Accessories\ngas. oils. Goodyear selected dealer.\nRo5_land Avo.    Phone  1.\nPALACE   HOTEL,   TRAIL\nFor  sale.   Apply   P.   O,   Drawer\nNelson Daily News\nVacation Guide\nIs thoroughly read and used by\nthe many hundreds of eastern and\nwestern Canadian and American\ntourists who pass through the\nKootenay every year during the\nsummer months, in addition\nmore than 4000 readers who live\nin   the   Kootenay,\nNelson, B. C. Cafes\nII\nEMS\nBUS\nRash Broke Out Face Disfigured. Lost Sleep.\na\t\n\" My eye began to swell \u00abod arataah\nbroke oot After a few da\u2014ab H wooJd\ndry rrp and become eoaly olid my face\nstoned to owdl. The akin itobed end\nburned end I ooold not Bleep nights.\nMy _ce wee ao daefigured that 1 bad\nto leave off work earroal tfanee.\n\"This contkmed for nearly two\nyears. Then I got a tree sample of\nCutJcars Soon and Ointment. The\ninflammation went ao I bought more\nand I need three cskea of Cnticura\nSoap and two boxes of Coticora\nOintment and I was healed.\"\n(Signed) S. Wotale-, 403 Oneen St.,\nSt. James, Winnipeg, BatafL\nDon't forget to shampoo yonr\nhair freqaentay whn Concora Soap.\nso well as far as it* camps wero\nconcerned, It was believed, yesterday afternoon. Camp No. X was\nabsolutely wised out aim tne llamos\nwere at t_a dsora of oamp No. a\nwhen the loggers cleared out for\ntho little lake tor self preservation.\nAt these camps, be\u2014des rigging\nfor the horses, were stored 10\ntons of rwr, 10 tens of oats, SO\nbeds, tents and other supplies. Besides the tented camp wae the\nmain camp of several buildings all\nfully i-umlahed. There was the\n~.\u00abft^ office,' cook house, hlacksmlth\nshop, workshop, lodging bouse and\nseveral other buildings, all of which\nwere believed destroyed,\nOUt   NGABLV   OVUB\nThe M. L. Bruce company waa recently reorganized under the name\nof Schaefer _ filtchcock company\nand the firm bad been concentrating upon a WW* Ptoe cut for loo-\nconsumption and for export. To\ndate the mill has out 1,932,100 feet\nof white pine mm* of which ls for\nexport annua the -no. The company waa Just nearlng the completion of the out for this contract\nwhen tbe flames broke out yesterday.\nWhether or not these will rae any\ntimber left In Ten Mile .after thia\noutbreak of fjw Is problematlool.\nOne logger ytaitwalay afternoon, gaa-\ning at the heavy clouds of smoke\nrolling    skyward    declared:\n\"It   looks   aa   though   Ten   Mils   through.\"\nCADY   IB   INJURED\nG. V. Cady, Buperln\u2014ndent, reached the scene of the lire at about\n6 o'clock In the af-rnnon. He\ncould not proceed to ita source on\naccount of an Injury reoelved at\nQoat creek late last week. Mr. Oady\nwas working on a Jam of\nlogs on the Qoat creek flume\nwhen a seoond lam suddenly\nconfronted him. He Jumped for\nhis life and fell some 15 feet. A leg\nwas wrenched. Consequently he\nhobbled Into the mill office at\nmury'B yetterUay afternoon and\nshook his head ss he viewed the\ndesttruotlon being wrought upon\nthe company's lands-\nTen Mile oreek property was acquired by the M. Ia. Bruce company\nIn loan from J. A. Nowell, the well\nknown Bt. Paul lumber man. It\nwas a portion of the Great Northern\nland    grant.\nWhile a great deal of the timber on the creek watenhed ffl white\npjne   there   ls  also  a   considerable\nportion   of   other  good   timber.\nOJ  SNOW  TIMBEB\nEarly last night lt was eartlri-tea\nthe flames were in the snow timber\nand scrub which, being dry at this\ntime of year, made excellent fodder\nfor the flames, tongues of which\nIn the higher levels, were sweeping\nskyward in darts hundreds of feet\nhigh and which were vomiting forth\nrolling  olouds of  dark  smoke.\nl_te yesterday afternoon some\nfears were felt for the safety of\nEugene Nadeau and Tony Bourgeois, two members of the upper\ncamp orew who had, lt was believed, headed up the mountainside\nfrom tho camp instead ot towards\nTen Mile lake with the other log-\ners. However this pair, tired but\nsafe, turned up at camp. Nadeau\nwaa Buffering only from tiredness\nbut Blurgeols was suffering from\nshock and was ordered Into Net-\nson to tho Kootenay fc*e General hospital.\nSIGNAL   BV   WHISTLE\nYesterday morning the main mill\nof tho company situated on tho\nKootenay river did not work\naccount of tho abaenco of\nedgerman and another sawyer. At\nnoon the mill was put to work.\nNestled ln a shady spot under the\nledge of a mountain the mill workers did not see the flamee until the\nfire was well under way. It was not\nuntil D. St. Denis in chargo of\nthe lumber yard on the opposite\naide of tho river noticed tho fire\nand signalled the mill men by\nmeans of a wh\u2014tlo on a donkey\nengine that efforts were made to\nget up tho hill to warn tho loggers up the creek of the threatening danger.\nForestry off-lal Brewer when ne\narrived at Who mill gave instructions to his rangers for the\nplacing of men reported the situation to the Nelaon office and ordered grub for hla fire flghters.\n\"Sho looks like a tough old\nblaze,\"  he  stated.\nNelaon ott-tms first became aware\nof the fire at about a o'clock when\nheavy smoke clouds rolled up ln\nblack rings. Itutnoro flew thick\nand fast until lt was eetabllshod\nthat thc sceno of tumble was Ten\nMile   creek.\nLast night hundreds of motorists\ndrove out to the fire scene and\nviewed the sweeping flames high\nup on the hill crest, or \u00abjo rolling\nwalls of amoke down In the baslu\not tho creek.\nAir Ministry!\u00bb\nConsidering Airship\nService to Canada\nLONDON, Augi 18\u2014(AP)\u2014Oreat\nBritain's intention of eventually\nestablishing a regular trans-Atlantic\nair servtc* between Cardlngton,\nMontreal and New York was men-\ntioncd '.today ln an air ministry\nmemorawt\u2014*.\nAircraft development, tt states,\nbaa brought trans-Atlantic fllgh-\ntato the realm of raenil&r air route,\nan all year round service ta foreseen.\n\"When suffloiont experiet-o has\nbeon accumulated with the *tr-\nahlpa E-loo and n-101, lt la Intended to organ!Be regular services\nbetween Card!rtgton, Montreal and\nNew   YOatk.\"     r        *\nMINIATURE GOLF\nCOURSE MUST PAY\nCOMMERCIAL RATE\ntfctuicU  Kules  on  Lighting\nCharges; Morgan on\nMorning Golf\nMiniature sol* ooxaimt, iMjdn* operated for -ho pecunii-ry to\u00abieflti\nof the proprietors, rank as commercial propositions, and must pay\ntli* business rat\u00a9 for electric current nma, the city oounclj decided\nlast nlpht.\nWithout giving any 'names, City\nClerk W. E. Waspon Informed the\ncity council he had been, asked to\nobtain a quotation far the electric\ncurrent required for n miniature\ngolf   course.\nIt was at first proposed that\nthe matter be referred to the fire,\nwater and H?ht committee and the\ncity electrical engineer to rtcoldo\nthe rote, but aa lt soon appeared\nthat all ha_ids saw no reapott why\nthe regular business rate should\nnot apply,   tih&t waa adopted.\nAlderman j. P. Morgan, who on\nhis recent visit to Vancouver gained\ngreat familiarity with miniature\ngolf courses, warned against giving\na flat rate ln tho expectation of\nsupplying only an evening's lighting.\nHe said people told him that pat.\nrona played till a and 4 o'docfe in\nthe morning, and he admitted he\nhimself played on one course at\n3   ajn.\nRAINS DAMPEN\nTHE FOREST FIRE\nRIDDEN_ NORTH\nValuable Timber Stands Are\nSaved In Northern\nSaskatchewan\n^RTNCK   ALBERT.   Bank.,   Aug.   18.\nPI-INCE ALBERT, Bask., Aug. IB.\n\u2014(OP)\u2014Long-waited rain* poured\ndown today on the fire-ridden north\ncountry of Saskatchewan. Mfeagre\nradio reports from the flame-threatened sector carried only the newa\nthat hoary downpours had come to\nprotect ths valuable timber stands.\nForestry officials received no report\non patties with fires which in many\narena had threatened to get beyond\ncontrol.\nAccording to weather reporte an\nInch and a quarter of rain, fell \u25a0 in\nthe Ladder Late\" area, and an inch\nat lie la Crosse and vicinity. Traces\nof rnin were reported from Lac la\nBonge and other fire h&rrapsed\nsections.\nTlie tension haa been much J\u00bb-\nllevecl by the change In weather\nand forestry officials in whose\ncharge are northern Saskatchewan's\nforest, areas take assurance from\nweather bulletins that th\u00ab extremely\nhazardous conditions of the past\nweek  have  passed.\nThe Standard Gate\n320 B\u2014ter Street, Nelson, B. C.\nOPEN DAI AND NIOHI\n11:80 to 2:90 Special Lunch .... 35c\n6:30   to   8  p.   m.   Supper   35o\nPhone   i.VI\nKOOTENAY CAFE\nVERNON   HTREBT\nDinner 11.30 to 2,80.. 850\nSupper. A.3Q to 8 p.m flfio\nShort   orders  a   Specialty\nQuick   Service\nN\u00bb*.fc Kootenny Hotel, Nelson\nThe Royal Ga\u00a3e\nCLASSIC RESTAURANT\nRefinement   and   Delicacy   prevail\nOPEN   DAY   AND   NIGHT\n6pedal Dinner 11:30 to 2:30 .... tMe\nSupper   5:80   to  8    36o\nWe   Gpedaltze   In   Chop   fluey   and\nNoodles\nPhone 182\nWmjWlHLAND, N. H., Aug. 18.\n\u2014Pour perooai, including a baby,\ndrowned when a ferry plying the\nConnecticut rivw from Eaet Putney,\nVt. to Westmoreland, upeet and sank\nin midstream tonight, Thetre wen\ntwo automobiles on tha ferry.\nWhy\nGamble\nIn leftover and rejected merchandise, when\nyou can invest in brand\nnew up-to-date clothing\nand   furnishings   at   the\n\"Morris   Popular   Prices\"'\nthere is only one answer\nto that question\nShop Morris and see\nfor yourself.\nMENS\nWEAR\nSteamer Carrying\nLoad of Beer Is\nFreet at Windsor\nwmusoB,   ont,   auj.   i8-m_\neUaunar V\u00abflM, wbloh wm w_eit\nPrlaUy by lntaarnM revenue department ctfflcIalB land ha_ been tied\nup at a dooS here sine* then, left\nport late today. She li bound for\nher orlgll\u20141 destination, Port Arthur.\nThe vetwel carried about 18,000\ncaiee of beer loaded at Montreal and\ncleared for Port Arthur, preeumably\nfor (Tovemtraent liquor storee sales.\nWhen the Vedas \"hove to' near\nEast Sister \u2014land on Prlday, bow-\never, It was apparently expected\nshe wae BO'b\u00bb to split her, cargo\nhere. Preventive officers eelMd her\nbut It was stated today the vessel\nwas free to leave at her captain's\nwill.\nNo official statement was Issued\nregarding the matter and the ship's\nofficers declined to discuss the\nseizure.\nWtf\nBOYS\nWEAR\nWCttflEHiqiSIBCf\nr\nMoney Recovered\nAfter Arrest of\nAlleged Bandit\nTORONTO, Aug. 18\u2014 <OP>\u2014Leas\nthan four hours after two gunman\nheld up the Royal Bank branch at\nBarton and Lotterldge streets Hamilton, police arrested Jack Nevlns\nof Toronto and state they found\n$2,156 In his possession. Polloa\nclaim this smount accounts for\nthe 83,013 which, the b&nlc robbers\nobtained at Hamilton.\nAn hour or so earlier Norman\nHhorratt wu arrested ln Hamilton.\nPoltoe found two loaded revolvers\nln his pockets and 81M ln currency.\nThe pair will be o_u_rged with\nrobbery while  armed.\nFRIENDLY NOD NO\nLONGER PASSPORT\nON STREET CARS\nCity Employees Not Produe- j\nIng Special Ttewts\nMust Pay\nCOUNCIL PBAWS UP\nTHE ELIGIBLE LIST;\nChildren Under Five Yearn j\nA|pe the Only Qn\u00ab to\nRide Free\nClimbing upon \u00bb utreet car and\nHaving \u00bbfrlea<Uy nod to the conductor, or invading the sanctum\nof the motorn-n by the front\nsteps, will not lrt tbe future by a\npcMPort to \u00bb freatfd*. tor city\nimploycea, the efty oounoll *~\u00bbd\u00ab4 -\nlast niiw. slter receiving tjm report It recently Instructed WW >\nOlei. W. B. Wasaon to MPp*\nof all r-reorui receiving free carriage on t*e street own.\nTOfls apeoW tickets IM majaWai\nat treaty-ill for certola olajseo\nat clvio employees whw\u00bb worlj\ncarries them about tbe oltjr, it\ndeveloped that the pmctioe bas\ngrown up with natmeToua employees,\nof not tendering tioliete, \u00bb rajult\nof this being that the aotua! volume of euoh free traffic W.' not\nknown. In 1029 only 768 special\nuoace- came to hand in the fexe-\nSoxea,  and to 1630 to the end of\nJuly only an.       \\         _,   _\n- Olty jaeotrlcal Bnglneer W. D.\npieet ntt m\u00abanbe\u00bb \u00b0f \u201e\u00ab>\u2022 \"r<,\ndepartment frequlely ellmed up\nwith the motormen and thus welded\npassing the conductors, roe Chief\nji. H. Maloney, naked respecting\nthis practice, said so far ae he\nItnew the firemen Paid th\u00bblr w\u00bbT\nthe same as any other patrons.\nLARGE   IWASTS _*''_L.'_\nThe oase of the parente who twe-\nltually claim eiemptlon for chll--\ndren up to 10 years was. discussed\nby Alderman J. %\u2022 Gray. aiJialrmWl\nof the street railway committee.\nMr. Fleet said the co\u2014ductors accounted for their past fs_u\u00bb to\nInsist on older children being paid\nfor, by explaining that the aggrieved\noitlwns always complained to the olty\noouaell. Mayor E. D. Barnes was\nunable to remember any suo}. CM*.\nIt   was   decided   that   Mr.   Plo**\nshoijW  Instruct the a-nduoiojl to\nrigidly collect fane for ell fiDUm\nover five years of age.\nFBEB   UM\nA list of city employees for whom\nspecial ticlwta for free traa\u00abporta\u00bb\ntjon should be available wa\u00bb druwn\nup by the council, the list admitting\nsome olaasses of employees, such as\nsidewalk repair men and other\npublic works employees, that were\nIn the list reported by Mr. Wwspn\nss enjoying the privilege In the\npast. The new list is confined, to\nmembers Qf the police foros, fl\u00bb\nchief, medlcai officer et health,\nmeter readers, water staff, sanitary\nInspector, electrical men en duty,\nand the city electrical engineer.\nIt wee provided that Olty Clerk\nWuson should be empowered to\nprovide this special transportation\nIn emergencies for other otty WM\nployees, this covering for Jngtjawna,\nrequirement* of the public worto\ndepartment for transportation of\nemployees sent on special duty without accompanying trucks.\nIn no case, however, will free conveyance be available for olty employees ewejit through theee  '-\ntickets.\nYOUNG WOMAN\nINJURED IN AUTO\nCRASH, BETTER\n\u25a0VICTORIA, Aug. leV-M-i Bthel\nSmith of Wilkin, Sask, and Miss\naCvelyn cioddard of Todd Jr\u2014it.\nBritish Columbia, who were Injured\nIn a motor accident at Elk lake\non Sunday afternoon were on the\nroad to recovery today. Mlas \u2014\u2014lth\nsustained a broken roller bone and\nbruises while Miss Ooddavrd suffered\nInternal injuries.\nMONTREAL GIVES\nWELCOME TO 200\nVISITING  MEDICALS\nMONTREAL, Que., Aug. IB.\u2014Official welcome to the 200 members of\ntbe British Medical association who\nare stopping off ln Montreal en\nroute to the international convention to be held in Winnipeg, was\ngiven today at the city hall by\nAlderman B. aharbonneau, acting\nmayor, and several m_nbers of the\ncity coniu\u2014I.\nFollowing the civlo recaption the\nphysicians had lunch on the Fort\nof Mount Royal and were later\ntaken on a tour of iiie city,\nAirplane Locates\nLost Adventurers\nSir GeQrge Perley\nWill Act Premier\nWhen Bennett Absent\nlitnh commissioner in London, will' \"\u2022 eLie ** L*lw K\u00bbP**. P\"W \u00b0\u00bb*\nlake, about 150 miles north of Sioux\nLookout.\nOTTAWA,    Aug.    18\u2014(CP)\u2014   ear\nowrge    Perley,    minister    without\nportfolio   and   wsr   time   Oamdlen\nbe acting prime minister in tft\u00bb\nabsence of Premier R- B. Bennett\nfrom the cap\u2014\u2014. Announcement\nto this effect was made tonight by\nthe prime minister prior to bis d\u00ab-\nparture for his western home In\nCalgary. Premier Bennett had no\nfurther statement to make' following a sitting of the cabinet, In all\nprobability, the prime minister will\nbe away for ten days. Jfls visit\nto Calgary will be the first sine*\ntbe general olectoin and his sa\u00bb\nsumritton of the office of\nEtonx lOOKODT, Ont. Aug, 18\n\u2014(CP)\u2014A soaring avlrralai\u2014 of the\nOntario forestry air service lies located Roger and Bruce Manternach,\nyoung Connecticut, adventurers believed lost In the other county.\nA radiogram received here tonight\nstated that the sons of M. 0. Man-\nternanh, Hartford, Oonn, capitalist.\nPAYS FINE IN\nCOURT HERE\nA, Paterson appeared In city polios court yesterday before Magia-\ntrate WUllam Brown and was fined\nt\/lt and coses for being rttoiioatad\nis a public place.\nThs fine wae paid.\n tocft\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS       TUESDAY, AUGUST 19, 1930.\nPage Thre\u00ab\nWhat the\nPress Is Saying\nTUB   DOUKHOBORS\nA gnat deal of unnecessary excite-\nment waa created toward the tail-\nend of the late campaign by the\ni placing of noukhobors, born in Canada on the voters' lists. Both parties, apparently, .disclaim responsibility for the act. Why this' should\nbe ao is not easy, to see. Tho\npoulchobors were brought to Canada\nand placed on the prairies at a\ntlmo when the Canadians would not\nstay on the prairies. To save this\nsection of the country from remaining a bleak wilderness, these people\nwere brought in to colonize It, Thoy\nwere guaranteed immunity from certain Canadian laws; but no such immunity was guaranteed the unborn\ngenerations, that we are aware of,\nahd If you keep these young people\nof! the lists, how are you going to\nmake. good Canadian citizens of\nthem? i There is no other way than\nto allow them to participate in our\npublic life. If ten million people\ncan not make good Canadians out\nof a few thousand Doukhobors, Canada's melting pot is out of repair.\nThe faot that most of Jbhem are\n\u2022supposed to have voted ln he lato\nelection counts for \"^nothing. Next\nelection they may all be good Tories. . The demagogic howl on this\nsubject at the wind-up of the campaign was therefore out of tune.\u2014\nOrand Porks Sun.\nTHE LAWS\nlt\u00bb Nelson Dally News ls to be\ncongratulated upon the service\nwhich it has performed ln calling\npublic attention to the facts of the\nShoe\nWatson Shoe Co., Ltd.\ndoes best and quickest\nWork. Our new McKay\nstitcher, \"the only one\nn \u2022 ln    the    district,\"\nKaQfiQirC B0WS   \u00bb0l\u00abs   \u00bb\"   all\nIICUCUI a> women's     shoes.\ns P r o m p t   out - o(\ntown service.\nTWICE BENEFITED\nWSAMEJEMEDY\ng   Recommends\nLydia E. Pinkham's\n,Vegetable Compound\nG*WHft Ontario\u2014 \"Y care ago when\nI had a eiok father and a nursing baby\n| to care for, 1 got\nall run down and\nI took Lydia E.\nPinkham's Vegetable Compound\nto got strength to\ndo my work. Another [time at\nChange of life, I\nhad severe headaches and felt tired\nall the time. I took\nseven bottles of\nthe Vegetable\nCompound and felt like a new woman.\nI recommend it to any woman who is\nat tho oge when sho needs building op.\"\n\u2014Maa.TJE.fo_WMAW\u00bbR R.4, Cobou^\nOntario.\n\"Good  Goods  at   Gray's\"\nWRIST\nWATCHES\nSee our windlws for a fine\nshowing of all that's best ln\nladies* and men's Watches.\nOruen, Longines, Woltham,\nMars.\nGuaranteed movements. Newest\nsases.\nPriced from S15.00 and UP-\nJ. B. Gray\nWatchmaker Jeweller\nOptometrist\n407 Baker St, Nelson, B. 0.\nEBSOUED\nMiss Helen Gilmour of Brlnston,\nOnt., who waa rescued by the United\nStates customs patrol boat, when th\u00ab\nlittle ten-foot skiff, in which\" she\nwas adrift, was being buffeted by\nthe waves of \"Hell's Half Acre\" on\nthe Niagara river, Ont, Hugh R.\nTaylor, one of the two men who\nwere swimming from the boat was\ndrowned.\nDoukhobor vote at Brilliant in the\nrecent Dominion election.\nThe result of the poll at Brilliant was: Esling. 2; McLean, 248;\nWatts 1.\nIt ls presumed that the two\nvotes polled for Esling and the one\nfor Watts were recorded by scrutineers . voting there under transfer\npapers. Many moro Doukhobors\nwould have voted but the hour for\nclosing the poll arrived before they\ncould do so. it was evident to\nthose at the Poll that these people\nwero voting on Instructions, and\nthe smallness of the vote was due\nto the length of time it took to\nswear the voter.\nIn every way ln which the life\nof these people touches the national life they show most objec-\ntlonal qualities. They have no love\nof country, they refused to fight\nwhen an enemy which would have\nruthlessly ended their silly non^\nsenBe pounded on our doors; they\nwill not obey our laws, some of\nthe evidence being the refusal to\nsend children to school, the burn\ning of school buildings, the nude\nparades which they indulge In, the\nrefusal of vital statistics. And\nnow thoy attempt to make their\nnumbers felt through exercise of an\nunintelligent and directed vote at\nthe polls. They would use the\nfreedom we permit them to bite the\nhand that gives them a liberty they\nare not worthy to exercise.\nThere are people ln Canada who\non arrival were possibly no more de\nslrable than the Doukhobors. The\nhope was that their deslrnble habits\nof Industry and thrift would make\na worthy contribution and that as\ntime elapsed they or their children and succeeding generations,\nwould become good Canadian cltl\nzens. 'In many Instances this has\nproven to be the case. With the\nDoukhobors lt has signally foiled.\nIt has failed in spite of repeated efforts, because the leaders of these\npeople are subjecting them to, and\nthey are agreeable to, a domination\nwhich as Anglo-Saxons we cannot\nunderstand.\nThe facts are that methods whloh\nbring satisfactory results with almost all peoples completely fall when\ntried on these. This has been\nproven time after time. It wns\nhoped that when young Veregin\ntook control there would be lm\nprovoment, The hope has not been\nfulfilled nnd other and more effective means must be devised either\nto compel obedience, or to make\nconditions so rigorous that they will\nmigrate to some other land.\u2014Vernon\nNews.\nTins DOUKHOBOR VOTE\nSome   rather   foolish   reports   appear to emanate from Vfctoria these\nTHE ARISTOCRAT AMONG FINE GINS\n\/ \t\n\/\n1\/UJ   (tjQViij, J._AiU.':iV.     \u25a0   bub   {\u2022\u25a0.U..JU). ui\n-i;\u00bb*vfu oy\nII'    feKuor Control Board or oy the \u2022* Government of Brit-\n11      \"Columbia.\ndays. Tho latest is to the effeot\nthat the franchise Is to be taken\naway -from the Young Doukhobors,\nborn in Canada. This seems to be\nas foolish as the order reported to\nhave been sent out by the attorney-\ngeneral , on ths morning of the late\nelection to htJve all Doukhobors who\nattempted to vote , arrested. As far\nas the franchise In federal elections\nis concerned the provincial law-mak-\neru have nothing to do with it, and\nit is a disputed question among the\nlegal fraternity if they have the\npower to disfranchise voters ln provincial elections. So much for tbe\npower of provincial government In\nthe matter. The fact that the\nyoung Douks are supposed to have\nvoted Liberal in the recent election\nls a rather bitter dose of medicine\nfor the Conservative party of the\nprovince,to follow. Had they voted\nthe Tory ticket the incident youkt\nhave been regarded as a huge Joke\nby them. Even If these had defeated the member-elect, It would\nhave served him right. It would\nhave been a stand-off for the rotten roorbachs ho has pulled off ln\nthe last two federal elections. We\nhold no brief for the Doukhobors,\nor for any other person, party or\norganization. Where they deserve\ncensure, we censure them, and where\nthey deserve praise, we praise them.\nAs a rule we draw a straight line\nbetween right and wrong and .try to\nfollow It as closely . as we can.\nIn this case we believa that the\nDoukhobors should be made full-\nfledged Canadian citizens as soon\nas they become eligible.\u2014Grand\nForks Sun.\nMORE   OILED  ROADS  WOULD PAY\nDIVIDENDS\nOiling of the state highway from\nSpokano to Laurler will be completed next year. Last year work\nwas done to Chewelah and this year\nthe oiling will be completed to the\nColumbia bridge at Kettle Palls\nwhen about 100 of 130 miles from\nSpokane will  be completed.\nSimilar oiling or the highway on\nVancouver Island has been going on\nfor years and also on the mainland\nup to Harrison Hot Springs. This\nyear oiling of highways in the\nOkanagan has also been proceeding\nand ls being much acclaimed.\nThe oiling of roads is getting past\nbeing an experiment. It ls an investment that pays dividends In the\nway of protection for the highways,\naa well as improving tho motoring\ninfinitely.\nIt is now perhaps too late for this\nyear, but provision should be made\nin the estimates for next year for\nthe oiling of the highway from\nGrand Porks to Laurler. It would\ncomplete the scheme of oiling from\nSpoVwe to Grand Fmrks and would\nbe a great boost for motoring on\nthis side of the line. In faot the\nhighway to Carson should also be\noiled. There Is a great deal of traf-\nflo over both these highways and\non account of the extreme dryness\nthe road simply powdera and blows\naway. The oil would prevent this\nand would be a strong factor ln\nkeeping tho highway always ln con\nditlon..\nNo better investment has ever been\nmade in tho city or Grand Porks than\nthe tarvlalng of Winnipeg avenue\nand Bridge street. There were the\ndoubting ThomaecB when It was\nfirst done, but there are none now.\nThere was a tlmo when a car proceeding up Winnipeg avenue was\nfollowed by a\"cIoud erf dust. Now\none car can follow another without the suggestion of dust.\nGrand Porks should\" Insist on the\nroad to Cascade being oiled. And\nlt will be a paying investment for\nth\u00ab government when done.\u2014Grand\nPorks   Gazette.\nKOOTENAY  EAST   SEAT\nCranbrook, the unique district in\nfederal and provincial politics, ls\nagain occupying the political spotlight. It is evident from Vancouver\nreports, that Hon. H. H. Stevens,\nfirst lieutenant to Hon. It. b. Bennett, will be given a portfolio in\nthe new government and will run\nln this seat, provided the warring\nfactions of both sides cam be\nbrought together. Hostility Is being displayed by somo of Mr. McLean's supporters to giving up the\nseat. Just what the seat is worth\nto Mr. Stevens and Just what the\npeople may expect from him should\nhe bo called upon to represent them\nat Ottawa, Is a matter that should\nbe seriously considered by each\nand   every  faction.\nCranbrook is running true to\npolitical form. This district gove\nthe Conservatives the only gain ln\nthe province, while In the provincial\nelection it waa the only Liberal\ngain recorded. It was tha first\ndistrict to throw the political harpoon Into the Oliver government,\nwhen It elected N. A. Wallinger\nover John Taylor. It swapped\nhorses ln the federal contest of\n1021, when Dr. King assumed the\nfederal portfolio of minister of\npublic works, the late R. E. Beattie\nresigning in his honor. Another\nswap is coming up. Verily Oranbrook Is running true to form.\nTho district must first and foremost consider whether It Is good\nbusiness to have Mr. Stevens represent us. If they decide In his\nfavor he should be glvon an acclamation, allowing him to proceed to\nOttawa and go on with tho country's business.\u2014Cranbrook Herald.\nDOUKHOBOR   PROBLEM\nThe Doukhobor problem Is not a\npolitical one but puroly a question\nof fitness for Canadian citizenship.\nIn their voting at Brilllan* an interpreter was roquired to translate\nthe oath. The first and principal\nqualification, of a foreigner for\ncitizenship );( that he or she shall\nunderstand, rend, write, and speak\nEnglish ln common use. If a_i\nInterpreter was required in voting\nthey aro not qualified and the\ndeputy returning officers should not\nhave Issued ballots to them. They\nhave continuously disobeyed the\nlaw's, burned school houses nnd indulged in nude parades. They object\nto military servloe and aro willing\nto accept tho protection of free\ngovernment, but will not givo adequate return for that protection.\nIf those people will not obey our\nlaws and become real citizens the\nsooner we get rid of them tho\nbetter.\u2014The Leader New Denver,\nDOUKHOBORS    AND\nTHE   FRANCHISE\nTho franchise in British Columbia\nIs governed by British Columbia\nlaw. If the legislature at Victoria\nexcludes cortaln people from tho\nfranchise they are excluded, not\nonly from tho polling places ln provincial elections but also from those\nln   Dominion   elections.\nThe powers of the province in\nthis matter were established nearly\nthirty years ago, when a naturalized Japanese carried the Issue to\nthe privy council. The decision ln\nthis oase, known as the Tomey\nJHoma QB.se, constituted one of the\ngreat   forensic    triumphs   of   Mr.\nNEW MARINE CHIEF SWOKtf IN\nNew chief of the \"Devil Dogs\", the former Brig. .Gen. B. H. Fuller\nof the U. S. A. ls pictured above, left, as he was sworn ln as Major General Commandant of the Marine Corps by General Rufus Lane ln Washington, Successor t6 tho lftto MaJ. Gen. Wendell C. Neville, General Fuller\n\\3. served with th marines in all parts of the world since\nhis  graduation from the Anndpolla  Naval  Academy  ln  1885.\nW. J. Bowser, then attorney-general\nfor the province.\nIf,- therefore, tho legislature at\nits next session says the Doukhobors shall not be registered as\nvoters, the Doukhobors will not be\nable to vote in any election in this\nprovince  thereafter.\nThe Doukhobors havo been in.\nthe province for many years but\nthe question of their right to vote i\nhas not hitherto been raised. This j\nwas because until tho recent federal '\nelections they never registered or j\nwent to the polls. Tho separatism\non which they Insisted, lt wasl\nunderstood, forbade. Moreover, the\noriginal Immigrant Doukhobors had\nnever   become   naturalized   citizens.\nThere haa, howover, grown up a\ngeneration of Doukhobors who are\nCanadian citizens and British subjects by birth. It occurred to\nsomebody in the West Kootenay\nriding to register a number of these\nand seo that they voted. Possibly\nsome of the older people were Included, but The Star is not Informed  as  to  this.\nApparently, however, they voted\nalmost unanimously for one candidate and, as getting them to the\npolls at all was a sort of surprise\ntaotlcs, a strong agitation hias\nsprung up among the supporters of\nthe other candidate to prevent anything of the sort happoning again\nby making the Doukhobors ineligible for the franchise.\nThere is some color of Justification for what might be regarded\nas a rather high-handed proposal\nto prevent people voting because\nthey   chose   to  vote  a  certain   way.\nThe Doukhobors, as a colony,\nhave never admitted that the lawB\nof Canada and British Columbia\nare binding on them except in so\nfar as they are acceptable to them.\nThey, have opposed, and some of\nthem still oppose, compulsory edu>\ncation, and their religious belief\nwould prevent them from baking up\narms in defence of the country\nwere they called upon to do so.\nIt is a reasonable contention that\npeople should not be given the\nfranchise who are not prepared to\naccept al] the responsibilities of\ncitizenship. But that the franchise\nshould be taken away from those\nwho already have lt Is another\nthing altogether.\nSome of thc younger Doukhobors\nmay be willing to become thoroughgoing Canadians, and to cancsl any\nrights these now possess would\nforce them back into the Doukhobor mould and do much to continue and intensify the isolation of\ntbe community.\nThis latter would not be In the\nbest Interests of the province. The\nCanad Ionization of the Doukhobors\nshould be encouraged, not discouraged. The older people, doubtless,\nare set ln their ways, but the more\ncontacts that can bo established\nbetween the outsldo world and the\nseoond and third generations of\nthis Russian sect,, the sooner the\nDoukhobor problem will cease to\nbe a problem at all.\nIf there ls to be disfranchisement\nit should bo made perfectly clear\nthat it is not because tho disfranchised are Doukhobors, but because\nthey refuse to become completely\ncitizens of Canada. In any event,\ntho doors should be left open for\nthose of them who are prepared to\nplace Canadian law above the private law of their community.\u2014Vancouver Star.\nOKANAGAN   OBJECTS   TO\nPOLLING   PLAN\nConditions under which residents\nIn Okanagan Valley cities went to\ntho polls at the Dominion election,\non July 28, were most unsatisfactory. The Idea of having polls at\nwidely scattered points in such\ncities Is a return to a system which,\nhaving been found unsatisfactory,\nwas discarded, and should remain\nin the jimbo of forgotten customs\nand procedure.\nThere Is no postal delivery systems In Valley cities, and each\nhousehold ln the city finds it convenient and almost necessary to\ncall for mail at the post offices\neach day.\nIn Vernon tho practise has been\nto have polling booths In the government building. If this is impossible the system of Centralization\nof the booths could have been\ncarried out by having the voting\nIn. the centrally located Scout hall.\nThe system of compilation of the\nvoters' list Is as ohioletc \u00bbs Is that\nof putting money into the pockets\nof tho loyal supporters ol the party\nin power by permitting them to\nhold a poll tn private homes, possibly in out-of-the-way locations.   ,\nIt might meet thc ideas of tho\npeople who have not enjoyed ths\nsystem of centralis,; i polls, or who\nhad not previously had the privilege of being able to secure a printed copy of the voters' list and from\nIt, at their leisure, to ascertain\nwho Is legally entitled to vote.\nContinuance of the system employed here in 1030 cannot arouse\nresentment against any government\nthat it employs it to secure a poll\nof residents in Okanagan Valley\ncities\u2014Vernon   News.\nmachinery, which will in ah. probability be used in future elections,\nan example should be mado of those\nresponsible for the violation of such\nAct. No one should be deprived\nof their franchise, but crooked\ndealing, of Impersonation tho vouching for those not entitled to vote\nand perjury should and must bo\nseverely dealt with for tho general good. To permit such methods\nto go by thc board will corrupt\nthe entire political machinery. Tlie\nSlaterville case in particular should\nbo forthwith reported to tho returning officer and the necessary\nlegal steps taken. Let the chips\nfall where they may.\n\u2014Cranbrooh  Courier\nEMERGENCY SESSION AT OTTAWA\nSHOULD   HAVE   CLEAN\nELECTIONS\nThe arrest of two men chnrged\nwith violation of the Elections Act\nIs the right courso. With the\nintroduction   of   thc   new   election\nThe emergency session of the\nFederal parliament to be held next\nmonth will, in every probability, be\nof short duration. The government\nof Mr. R. B. Bennett will have a\ndefinite programme for consideration\nand tho session will be restricted to\ngovernmental buslncs.. Those who\noppose tho session, which is to provide for the relief of unemployment,\nbase their opposition on tha cost it\nwill entail. Uninformed persons believe that the- members will be\npaid their full sessional Indemnities\nJust as at an annual session and\nthat they will thus recelvo two\nsessional Indemnities In the course\nof a twelve-month period. That\nis on erroneous conception. At an\nemergency session members are paid\nat the rate of $25 a day according\nto Its duration. If that duration\nexceeds fifty days the full sessional\nindemnity ls paid. The present proposal is that the session, at tho\nutmost, will not Inst more than a\nfortnight.\nThe only business to come up\nfor consideration will bo that to promote employment. The government\nwill nsk for appropriations so ns to\nadvance public works already projected. It will make a start on thc\nnational highway which is a part of\nthe Conservative policy. The Canadian National railways will be\nurged to implement their programme\nof branch' lines and to accelerate\nthe letting of contracts in their\nshops throughout tho Dominion.\nAn appeal will be mado to the\nCanadian Pacific railway to carry\nout a similar policy. The most\ninteresting feature of the session will\nbe tho character of the tariff changes\nthat aro In contemplation. These\nwill be devised with a view to\nstimulating Industry. They will be\nprotective in their character. Tariff\nreduction mode under the Liberal\ngovernment which have led to certain Canadian industries languishing will be remedied and possibly\nIncreased tariffs in other directions\ndevised to afford a stimulus to the\nindustries concerned. The ohjoct\nof the Conservative party ls to build\nup Canadian markets for Canadian\nindustries; in other words, to provide a greater measure of employment,\nTheso legislative measures shonld\nnot take long to enact. Thc aim\nwill be to conclude the session In\ntime to permit Mr. R. B. Bennett\nto make tho trip to 1-onrion to\nattend the Imperial Economic Conference to which he purposes gains\nacooinpft-Ued by two or three of hts\nministers. In view n! the mandate\nof the country, which was so definitely in favor of an emergency\n.session of parliament, being held,\nit Is wholly unlikely thnt tho opposition will develop any pbetrudon-\nist tactics so as to prolong the\nsitting. Tlie Liberals were defeated\nbecause they failed to visualize the\nseriousness of thn unemployment.\nissue. It would be the poorest kind\nof policy now for that party to delay\ntho plans that the Conservatives\nhave in view for relief. It would be\n_ wholly unpopular move, as woll.\nlo put any obstacles in the way of\nfull Canadian representation at thn\nImperial Economic Conference. Such\niprcnentatlon Mr, Mackenzie Kim\nsaid Was an Issue hi the lato campaign.-Victoria Colonist.\nGASOLINE   PRICKS\nTho recent gftsollno war in the\nUnited' States has tfiTned the upot-\nUght of public opinion on gasoline\nprices. Tlie Automobile Club of\nBritish Columbia Is conducting an\nenquiry while the Alberta Motor association has Issued a report following an investigation.\nThe Alberta association suggests\nthat th0 fectefiiT government conduct an enquiry into tho costs of\nproduction of gasoline in Canada.\nIt is contended that in Alberta\nGasoline should sell at 20 cents Instead of 32 whole-ale. and thnt the\nBelling price of gasoline la not based\non a production cost in Canada, but\nupon tho coet of Importation from\nthe United States at Coutts, Alberta,\nWhen the Alberta association held\nIts enquiry, prices loss tax wore\n2H4 conts ln Winnipeg, 2.1 cents in\nVancouver, and 20 cents In Reglna.\nIn Revelstoko and other Interior\npoints the price alt summer has\nbeen 35 cents, 40 cents with the\ntax.\u2014Rovelstoko Review,\nGOOD PROGRESS\nIS BEING MADE\nWATER SYSTEM\nCranbrook Council Hears of\n. Work  Being  Done  at\nGold Creek Diversion\nSEVERAL FIRES\nDURING   MONTH\nPolice Have Busy Month in\nEast Kootenay Center,\nAccording to Report\nCRANBROOK, B. C Aug. IS\u2014A\nfairly light program faced tho city\ncouncil at the regular meeting on\nThursday evening when his worship\nMayor Roberts and Aldermen Scott,\nFlowers, Jackson and Collier were\npresent. Minutes of .wo special\nmeetings, one called, July 18 to con-\nalder various street bylaws and ono\ncalled August 4 to deal with the\ncomplaints of! rcsldsnts on St.\nJoseph's creek below the city that\ntoo much of the Irrigation water\nwas being: wasted with unrestricted\nsprinkling In thn city, and at which\nthe lawn service was restricted to\ntho hours of seven to nine morning\nand   evening,  were   read.\nA letter was read from tho Cranbrook board of trade asking permission to erect welcome arches on\nthe highway at both entrances to\ntho city. The matter was left to\nthe works committee with power\nto act.\nA letter from Miss Dunn ac-\nrnowledging tho council's expressions of sympathy on the death of\nher brother, Frank Dunn, v\/as read.\nWm. Stewart had expressed, in *\na letter which the secretary read,\nhis appreciation of the prompt and\nefficient work of- the fire department in tho fire which started In\nthe ups talus of the Cosmopolitan\nhotel In July. Mr. Stewart made the\nstatement that but for the excellence of the service his building\nmust certainly have been lost.\nROSSLAND'S   DAY\nA letter from the mayor of Rossland. setting forth the preparations\nbeing made by that city for a\nmonster Labor day celebration, asking the council to muke the fact\nknown nmonj the citizens and assuring any who could attend a\nrousing welcome^ was read and ordered filed, aa was also ono from\nthe inspector of municipalities regarding the water system and a re-\nrequest from the Mission to Seamen\nat Vancouver for a grant toward\nthe  proposed  Seaman's  institute.\nTho dairy inspector's report showing that he had visited the city\ndairies belonging to Austin, .staples,\nBargett, Playlc, McCrlndle arid Lancaster and had found that every\nprecaution was beln^ taken in flU\nto Insure the cooling and keeping\nsweet of milk during the hot weather, and stating that, as he had had\nno complaints of sour milk, thc\nmethods used must be efficacious,\nwas submitted hy Dr. Rutledge.\nWater progress\nThe report of the works committee, submitted by City Superintendent Phllpott, told of satisfactory\nprogress in the Gold creek water\ndiversion proect, 24,640 feet of cement pipe having been made, 13,500\nfeet laid and backfilling completed\non 0500 feet. Work was also reported on niters and concrete pipe\nat   the  sewerage   disposal   works.\nCompletlon of cement sidewalks\non Garden and Burwell avenues\nand of Macadam street work on\nLouis. Edwards and Koiiis streets\nwoe   also   reported.\nFour building permits, to the\nvalue of $,150 were issued during\nthe month.\nThe light committee reported the\nusual repairs and renewals, with\nsix services cut off and three reinstalled. Light consumption lor\nJuly was 84,080, as against 75,000\nin June and 77.280 In July of 1029.\nPIKE REPORTS\nThc fire chief reported a grass\nfire In vacant property east of\nFrench avenue on July 4 and again\nln the same block on July 17. Both\nwere extinguished with water with\nno damage. On July 20 the brigade was called to a fire at the\nCosmopolitan hotel which had started above the upstairs ceiling under\ntlie roof and which was reached\nwith* the water with difficulty.\nTho building sustained a damage\nof $650. which wns covered by insurance. There was also damage\ncaused by water to the adjoining\nstores owned by, E. A. Hill and M.\nMindlin to the amount of $6ft0.\nExpense of city csll men to the\ngrass fires v\/as $20 and to the Cosmopolitan  hotel  fire  $40.\nPrior to the council meeting Po-\nMtss Slmonne Blnols first dancer of tho Grand Opera of Parts,\nFrance, who arrived in Montreal recently. Miss Blnols will visit Ottawa, Toronto, Niagara Falls, Washington and New York before returning to France.\nlice Commissioners Mayor Roberts,\nSliankland and Baxter met, the chief\nof police presenting hla report. Arrests for the month number 19,\nsummonses 5. or these eight were\nfor intoxication, three for vagrancy,\none for malicious damage, five driving autos to the common danger,\none for assaulting peace off leers,\nfour for common assault, one for\nforgery and one contrary to health\nlaw. Eleven of these paid fines,\nsix are serving sentences, four wero\nwithdrawn and two committed to\ntrial,\nMeals served to prisoners numbered 54 to indigents 30.\nAn application for a rooml ng\nhouse license made by Mrs. John\nWilliamson was considered and it\nwas decided that the license be\nnot   granted.\nMRS. B. D. SMITH   \u25a0\nRETURNS, flARROPJ 1\nHARROP, B. C, Aug. IB.\u2014Mr, .attft;\nMrs. Kelly and son, of Trail, alt\nspending a few weeks holiday -A\nthe Thomas cottage, \"Lakertew\".\nMrs. B, D. Smith and grandson,\nDick Johnston, returned to Medicine Hat Thursday morning after a,\nvisit with Mrs. Smith's sister and\nbrother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. F. Bf.\\\nSmith.\nMr, and Mrs. H. Livingstone und\nchildren have returned to Lethbridge\nafter a month's holiday at \"Brad-,\nside\".\nMiss Dorothy Raper of Johnson's-\nLanding and Miss Annie S&wasuk,\nof Argenta, have returned td thclx-^\nhomes.\nMiss Jessie Harrop and Mrs. Nocl:\nHa-Top of Nelson left Wednesdays\nmomtng on a motor trip to Spokane, Seattle, Vancouver and Vio-;\ntorla. Miss Muriel Harrop, who-\nhas been attending summer school\nln Victoria, will accompany them\non tho return trip..\nJule Lewis has arrived from Melville, Sask..* -and will attend high\nschool In Proctor this winter. He is\nstopping with his brother and abler -In-law, Mr. and Mrs. I. 1*6*1*.\nMrs. Harvey Robinson and daughters, Thelma and Dorothy, of Melville, Bask., are visiting the former's\nbrother and sister-in-tew, Mr. and\nMrs. Ivan Lewis.\nLengthening  the Belt\nIf the leather belt needs another.\nnotch ln It and you want, lt to hoj.\nneat,  heat  a  steel  knitting  needle.\nred hot mid burn in tha necessary\nholes where needed.    It will make\nquite a professional job.\nDR.   FRANK   ROBB\nSpecialist\nIn  the   treatment  of\nIPILE S\nand other diseases of\ni the rectum. Write\n1 tor free booklet.\nZicg-.er aulldlng, Howard and\nRiverside,  Spokane,  Wash.\nOn Wednesday evening Eugene\nLoveque entertained tho \"Old Men's\nclub\" at bis annual party. Twenty-\neight guests and the host sat down\nto a bountiful supper, after which\nthe evening was epent ln music and\nstory-1 ell Ing,\nANEW\nCOLOUR\nFor Your\nFALL COAT\nWe have it, let us put\nit on for you. Mail orders paid one way.\nH. K. Foot\nHigh Clans Dyer and Cleaner\nFalrvlew He\u2014on, B. C.\n'\u2022rut * sir to-nichv\nGRANTS\nBest Procurable'\n(THE ORIGINAL)\nPure Scotch Whisky\nRICHEST IN FINEST\nHIGHLAND   MALT\nGrant tn Son ..\u25a0.ri.sird. CltniiJdic- aU\nB*lvtMc-0<n.jvct DiftOIeri-i. Dull-\ntown-b-Gl-wi-v. Scatiud.\n_iu.>   ilUVi;u..-i-i!Vnt    ,.,    lu).   Jtu.M....._.*.   Oi    uiopiajcu    Oy\nthe Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nOther Branches nt  Winnipeg,\nCaiBfry, Lethbrittge( Vantottvei\nDEY GOODS\n$7.50 Camp Blankets\ntor $5.50 Pel4 Pair\nA Wonderful all wool blanket, imported from England a. manufacturers surplus stock. Each\nblanket whipped singly and made\nof excellent quality wool. All\nfull sizes. For home or camp\nuse. \u25a0 8 lbs. weight.\nPer Pair for .._- _ $5.50\n\u2014MaJii   Floor\u2014H. B. C\u2014-\nm dompann\n\u00ab... TO aw MAY 107\u00a9       \\a ^\nYin Mon. Rfukatopn, Edmonton.\n, Kamloops  Vernon and Victoria\nLadies' Ready\nio Wear\nNEW DRESSES! A special Una <rf\nladies' print cotton dresses, short\nsleeves in the wry prettiest colors. Suitable for beach wear.\nSizes 36 to 44. Special .fl.&O\nA large range of pretty figured\nBmooks. Sleeveless style, siaea 14\nto '.10 years.   Special  $1.50\nA  hirgo  range  of  children's  and\nladies'    hats.     Summer   styles.\n.Small and large brims.\nEach   ...\u201e _ _.....  \u00bb5*\n\u2014Second   Floor\u2014H. B. C-\n P\u00bbge Four\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS      TOB8PAY, ATOD8T 16, 1980.\nJfoignn lailg Nrwa\n8\nPublication every morning eiaoeut\nBundwr by The Kttma fubludunt\nOomMny, tlnutod, Melton. B. 0.\n\u2014  -   letters   au\u00bbo__   w>   ad-\noheolts and monoy\ni   p.yablo   to   The   Si\n!  Company,   Limited,   mji\ni to ludivlaunl numbeie\n  rate oerds and A, B. 0.\n-ta ot otrculaitlon mailed on\n, or may be eeen r.t t-e of-\n  any aaveruauag avaenoy rcc-\nwnl.__    by    the    Oanaulen    OuUy\nWTO^UBaW_^WON- HATES\nBy Mall (country), per month a   ,80\nI?.nsu w*jra~f'yaaS~:::.'.':; um\n; OuteWe Canada, per month ....     .71\n: per  year      7.80\nDeliver*!, per week ..'     .26\nI tat \u00bb\u00bb\u2022\u00bb\u201e__ _, 13.00\nPayable in advance\n, Member Audit Bureau of circulation\nTUESDAY, AUGUST  10,  1930\nWHAT HERMITS\nMISS\nAunt Het\nThere are some things\nthat are beyond human understanding. How a weal,\nthy, normal man could seclude himself on a tiny island for twenty-two years is\none of them.\nMost of us have an urge\nnow and then, to escape\nfrom our cares to go adven-\nturning, gathering ragtag\nends of romance, and stretching our souls. But we do\nit merely because we need\na tonic lo strengthen our\nexhilaration for the tasks\nand the human contacts\nour lives. Life\nif it does not\nproblem  or two\n\"Waul, If Ben mania- a girl that\napetada all her time Jteepln' thin,\nhe ain't got no kick cumin' lt\ndoctor bills keep his pocket book\nin the same fix.\"\nToday's Human Comedy\nmake\nstale\nus\nthat\ngoes\ngive\nto solve.\nBut now it becomes the\nstory of Charles IIard>n-\nburgh, who is living a hermit's life on a little island\nin Chesapeake bay. He\ngrew tired of the world, so\nhe ran away.\nHe had been a successful\nlawyer, owner of the largest libraries in New Jersey.\nBut he did not take a single\nbook with him. ile seldom\nreads a newspaper. He has\nall   the   time   in   the  world\nlonely games of solitaire. It\nis not fun to beat yourself.\nIt is a queer mind which\nimposes on itself a solitude\nwhich, with almost no other\nexception, would be considered a punishment.\nA happy man does not\nrun away from life. He\nstays on the job. He realizes that he's going to be\nthe same wherever he is.\nTherefore, he tries to cultivate a place of no trespassing in his heart where he\nmay go for relaxation.\nMost of us would bore\nourselves too quickly, anyway, if we withdrew from\nthe world. Hardenburgh\ndoes not seem to be getting\na great deal of enjoyment\nout of his experiment, either. Perhaps that is his\ntrouble.\nTHE WEATHER.\nWHAT IT\nMEANS\nAND\nhut he never troubles to\nmake a garden. He does\nnot. live.    '     exists.\nAcross the bay the woi'ld\nhas changed since he left\nit; Tall buildings have gone\n(\u2022\u25a0\u25a0kyward. Airships have\nRinged their way close to\nthe stars, and men have\ngone down to thc sea in\nships in more than one\nwar.\nHardenburgh has heard\nthe faint ring of steel, the\necho of martial music, and\nleft them drift past his is.\nland home.\nHardenburgh is bored\nSmall wonder, we would say\nThere is no one to whom he\ncan boast if he catches a\nten-pound fish. Therefore\nhe- does not care what he\npulls in. He is not affected\nby the proposed two and one\nhalf cent postage rate. He\ndoes not care who is up\nand who is down in the Wall\nStreet game of see-saw\nHe has no inducement to\nsee how long ho can sit in\na tree, for nobody would\nknow it, anyway.\nThe light of the stars and\nthe songs of the wind have\nlost their jnagic for him.\nHe has seen them too un-\nbrokenly, without a back,\nground of appreciation. And\nhe has seen them alone.,\nlie needs companionship,\ninlercsls, a challenge to spur\nI him on. Ncai-ly every accomplishment in life has\ncome because someone\nwanted to prove his worth\nto others.\nWe were meant to live in\ngroups and work in groups.\nIn nomadic days, when shepherds took their flocks to\npastures where clear\nstreams were flowing, they\njoined caravans. Human\ncontact worth while . It\nmade the joy of accomplishment sweeter.\nNo wonder the hermit can\nfind  small  pleasure  in  his\nUfa! Inag\nof\nmmm-\"Tibyrm ffrfcw, Albert, -WS'-kfter 11 A. M.r\nSeasick\u2014\"That's it, 11 ante mortem.\"\nBr ia. w. Bat-tow, my    -\nSHOULD YOU CUT DOWN\n.  'ON MEAT   .        .\nTOe fact that aa a people we\nHkvt been eating more meat than\nln abeollutely neeeaeery haa prompted many Individual- to do wltli-\n' out meat entirely. Many out down\nalso on ens which are nice meat\nin that they an rich in protelds\nthe body building food.\nWhat happens _\nThey believe they feel better and\nae a matter of fact they do feel\nbetter. But only for a*hlle. Dr,\nB. Bus-kind of Berlin, studied the\nmeat and effBs, maintaining; this\neffeota on himooir of a diet low in\ndiet for twenty-fllve months.\nDuring the first nine months his\nweight remained stationary, and\ngeneral condition,\nhe noted an Improvement In hlfl\nDuxlng tho net eleven months\nria -weight decreased slightly and\nh felt weak. During the last five\nmonths of tht exeperlment his\nweight decreased still more and his\ngeneral   condition   became   poor,\n''On the basis of his personal\nexperience he believes that a pro-\nand that observations to the contrary are erroneous.\"\nlonered low proteld diet is harmful\n, Now what about this?\nThe fast that this low proteld\ndiet affected one Individual, even\nIf he were a physician, in this\nmanner .\nproteld diet of his own accord, and\nHowever there Is this point to\nremember. He went on this low\nin an endeavor to learn for himself at first hand just What Its effects would be.\nperiod  of over two  years, the  last\nFurther, he maintained lt for\nyear and a half of which he went\ngraduallly   down    hill    physically.\nAnd Btill  further,  he  1_  con vino-\ned   In   his  own   mind   that  a  diet\ntoo Low  In  protelds  Is  unwise  and\nWhat    about    other    eperlments?\nharmful.\nAs a matter of faot it Is difficult to keep tha necessary check\non all undergoing the experiment.\nIn one test, where students were\nafcte diet, it was reported wheth-\nsupposed to be living on a\ner It was true or not, that they\nwent down town late at night and\npartook of steaks, chops, and\na couple of months and see how lt\nworks out.\neating   too   much   meat   that   you\nother  foods *ioh in protelda*\ntBtf ateonatf hi body.\nout lt down about 1ft per oent Air\noftioe workar, and believe you axe\nwhat ia my euggeitkm?\n\u2022Chat  If  you  an an indoor   ox\nW you do continue tbe \u00abspeH-\nSea lt you Jed clearer In .mind\n-fl^-iwt,\nIf  you dont.  then go  back to\nyour meat and an\nTOLD IN RIME\nTW-JOHT    WHBPEBS\nAcmes ths waters net alladorna falling\ngkles an dimming, darker Malta,\nHi tbe woods, the' owls aro calling\nFlowcra   an   drooivlng   with   tho\ntJeay, '  ' \u25a0\nBreezea sis sighing in the branches.\nThe moon's creeping over the hJH\nThBh Just tor a sacred moment\nThe weary, old world ls still,\nInto this misty twilight hour,\nSomething sacred steals its way.\nSomething  that's  poignantly  sweet\nand hushed.\nCod's own silt to the tired day,\nBeyond ths hills the sun ls sleeping,\nLeaving this world in tha rnantol\noi   night,\nBat    the    old,    mellow   moon    is\nr-lthfuny   creeping.\nHis beonia stunlng over the waters\nhdght.\nFor a, moment my soul has lifted\nand gJlmrscd\nThe works oX the great \"Supremo\"\nThat ln one tiny, lading hour\nHe could cjuenoh day's brightest\nWhen you say \"fine day'\n\u25a0morning you don't often\nstop to think what an important part the ' weather\nplays in the affairs of life\nFor instance the 95 degrees\nrecorded just recently regis,\ntered with most folks as a\nbit Of a discomfort. Few\nrealized that the same\nscorching sun was burning\nup the wheat crops in the\nWestern States and raising\nwheat prices in Canada. Or\nthat raised wheat prices in\nCanada mean dollars and\ncents 'to practically every\ndweller in the Dominion.\nThat old-timer, the .weather, is always with us. It\nsuffers from the familiarity\nwhich still breeds contempt.\nIt is taken just as a matter\nof course with an occasional\ncurse for seasoning. But it\nis tlie most important as\nwell as the most talked of\nof all our assets and liabilities, lt means health or\nsickness, prosperity or pov,\nerty, happiness or sorrow.\nThe\nLighter Side\nWhen cheese ls too KOlt to grate\neasily or the pieces are too small,\ntlmo and ringer tips may be saved\nby   rubbing   it  through   a   sieve.\nWRECKED MOTORTST (Opening\nhis eyes I.\u25a0 I HAD THE RIGHT OF\nWAY.  DIDN'T  I?\nBYSTANDER: YBH. BUT THE\nOTHER -FELLOW HAD A TRUCK.\nA Uttle girl wae sent to the. but-\nchKJr'B for a pound of sheep's liver.\nA Few minutes lator she returned,\nsaying: \"Mother, if they haven't\ngot sheep's, ran I bring anybody's?\"\nJudge: How do ynu know yon\nwere not bteaklnc tha MijM IftW(\nyonr Speedometer n-ns stopned-\nMan: t know, -fudge, hut my\nwife wasn't.\nAlice: Are they improving the\nroads out. your  way?\nIrma: Oh, yea, there are lot* more\ngood parking placer, than there used\nto be.\nMrs. Saphead had just arrived\nback from a tour of Europe, aud\nher long-suffering acquaintance* had\nno opportunity to forget the fact.\n\"And Paris,\" ahe gushed. \"Paris la\nJust wondefcful! The people are all\nso well educated-not at all' 1 lite\nthey are ln this crude country,\nmy dear. Why, even the street\ncleaners talk French 1\"\nTRl'B    LOVE\n\"Oh, Mabel, I Just got n letter\nfrom that Freddy Dale we met up\nat the lake. You remember Freddy,\ndon't you?\"\n\"You mean .the one who drove thc\nBuford?''\n\"No, that, wee Walter Ardaley who\ndrove the Buford.\"\n\"The one who drove the Blackard,\nthen?\"\n\"No, that was a Donald somebody.\nThia boy drove a  Bergerac.\"\n\"Th-eb I'm not interested. Now if\n11 had been that boy who drove\nthe Mardyke\u2014\"\n\"Oh. he waa all right, too. hut\nthe one who took   my  eye wa*  the\none who drove the Ptalcnew.    That\nboy   has  class.\"\n\"Oh, I don't know. Not any more\nthan the one who drove the Cross-\nland.\"\n\"Heavens I You liked htm? I\ncouldn't see him nor that bono who\ndrove   tho   Kruppmobile   either.\"\nWell, we should wonr about,\nthose guys. The Llnkabakor'Jl 'how\nup In front of my house tonight.\n'YUJj, and If that old Pontifex\ndoesn't get to my front curb on\ntime tonight the course of true\nlove Just, ain't going to run smooth,\nthat's all.\"\nTWENTY YEARS AGO\n(From The Dally News, Aug. 10,10IO>\nThe vacancies of the high school\nhave been filled and the staff will\nbe romposed of R. Smlllle, A. W.\nSeaman, and Mrs. W. 8. Pearcey.\nW. H. M. May, former principal of\nGrand Forks, has been appointed\nprincipal of public school,\nThe work which Is being done\nby the board nf works department\non the new boat club float ls pro-\nKrcselng rapidly. Hhe now float\nfor civic lu thing place, whloh la to\nbe fiO feet long, tt also ln progreai,\ntWliatBo\nYou Think?\nKootenay Pioneer   ,    >\nRecalls Early Days\nSilver King Hotel\nAnd bo ln a second short and brief\nwhen the pulse of life is leaping,\nCompared with tlie wonderful worjc\nof   His   hands\nThe moon, the stars and tho sea.\nHow   small   and   far. away   I   seem\nBut stiu He keeps watch over me.'\nTwilight   brings   these   thought*   to\nme\nLinking  me  dose with  \"the fer\naway\"\nReveries wafted o'er land and sea.\nGolden   dreams   ax   the   end   of\na   day. \/\nM. L. P.\nTo the Sditar, Nelson I\nSir\u2014-I \u00bbW you paper at _-1\n14th and 15th a: little dlftsmiwi\nin opinions regarding t_\u00bb ds_\u00bb of\nthe Bllvor King hotel Noloon, I,\nleft TJnch. Ont., on tho 20th day\nof April, 1892 and at midntght on\nthe otli of May I arrived ln Se_on.\nby way of Rarclstoate and down\nthe Columbia river to Edbson.\nLanding in Nelson, I went to tbe\nsilver Xing hotel owned and pro-\nprletored by Mark and Vaness. parson and Oraddoek had a hotel\nwhere the Hume hot\u2014 now stsn\u2014a,\nand Doc Hendricks built \u00bb Ms,\nsampler that fall at Pilot Bay.\nI stayed around Nelson far some\ntime then got a Job from Jack\nRobinson to build two log\nIngs at the SUver f\nToad mountain. '.\nwith that I took tho Job of\nIng the west half of Vlotwi\u00bb and\nSulca streets. I logged a_d piled\nup chunks of wood al] _\u00bby t\u2014\u20141\nburned at nig\u2014t.\nYours  truly,\n_.   A.   CAMERON\n(Better knowra to old tuners .u\nHugh Cameron)\nSandon,   B.O.\nAug.  18,   1830.\nSun Shut Out by\nSmoke Pall Here\nWith tlie aun shut out hy a\nlarge tpall of smoke from the 10-mUe\nforest fire, the weather wae not\nQuite as hot bb e-xTvxtcd Monday.\nDuring the morning weather was\nclear end bright. Wit darkened over\ntn the afbe-rnoon. Maximum temperature was 86. Ehinday evening\nand Monday morning the weather\nwas much cooler than has hitherto\nbeen tbe esse at that tlmo of day.\nHumidity readings token at 8 a.m.\n2 p__\\. and 6 P~n_ were 73, 44 and\n53 respectively.\nTO CONSIDER MR\nMAIL ROUTE HERE\nThat Nelson will reoatPs all \u00abjo-\nsldcratlon possible In regnm to\nhaving an air man eervloe \u00abm\nthe reoent annormoement roceirod\nby Fred A. Starkey. rornmlMloner\nof the Associated Boards of trade of\neastern British Columbia, in receipt\nto letters sent to t_i\u00bb \u25a0 pottaMtar-\ngenera_. The route, however, will\ndepend entirely on tho purvey being made by the department of\nnational  de-fenum.\nAt the annual board of trade convention held In Cranbrook. reeolu-\ntlons were sent to tb\u00bb pootmastcr-\ngenerai asking that Nelson be Included In the route. Following up\nthe petition Mr. Sterkny -wrote several letters and recently received\n& reply atsctlng that Nelson woifld\nbe  given  every  coufclerstloiL .\nNoll McColcman and ftltlMOQk Mo-\nIend 1-eft ywterday (or Salrrib to att-\ntend to their mining Interests.\n\u2022    \u2022    *\nMuch excitement la being caused\nat Creston where the surveyors are\nattempting to put tho K. V. railway lino through aev-tiral farms. The\nfarmern are Indignant, and one so\nmuch so that he prevented the surveyors from entering hla property\nby ordering thorn oil with a rfU-\nJ. H. Schofield. M^.P., has been\nsent lor to re-adjust the situation.\nTEN YEAKS AGO\n(From The Daily News, Aug. lfl 1030)\nMiss Edna May, youngest daughter\nof Mr. and Mrs. D. Hlllman of Nelson, became the brlda of Dale Alfred\nFrane of Orange Grove, CalWomla,\nat a very pretty wedding yesterday\nat the home of the brlde'a parents,\nfilfi Carbonate.\n* \u2022   *\nThomas Lane, cemetery florlBt,\nwith 317 vnsos of flowers, had tho\nfinest individual display of flowers\nat the flower show. A display of\nflowers from Lakeside park, arranged hy Aid. Mra. W. O. Foster\nand E. Parker, park florist, was\nsecond.\n* *   *\nRobert Bishop, who for the past 13\nyears haa been chief clerk at the\nlocal c. P. R. offices, wae presented\nwith a club bag and a number of\npleoes ot Bllverwaro. The presentation was made by J. A. McDonald.\nHe waa also presented with a gold\nMhsonlc ring and Mrs. Bishop a\ngold-headed umbrella, at a meeting\nof the employees last ntght. Pre\u00bb-\nentatlon was made by E. R. Redpath.\nMra. R. D. Fletcher of Fairview,\nleft yesterday for Trail to spend a\nfew days with Dr. and Mra. J. Nay.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nA former Nelson girl, Miss Vom.\nPengelly. daughter of Mr. and Mrs.\nH. G. Murhard of Three Forks, has\nrecently reoeived offers from tho\nUnited States film producers to act\nfor  the  screen.\nGandy has reached the hard hall\nstage when tbe syrup brought above\nthe   surface   of   the testing   wwter\ncan   be   shaped  Into a  plaetlo  but\nhard ball.\nI    2W\n0\nDISCOUNT on All\nSUMMER GOODS\nScreen   Doors,   Windows,   Refrigerators,\nBaseball Goods, Lawn Mowers, OU Stoves\nSEE OUR SPECIALS ON\nHigh Grade Aluminium and Granitewaie\nPRICES ALL CASH ON\n- THIS SALE\nIt Will Pay You to Call\nsNelson Hardware Co. J\n:    S   WHOLESALE  AND  RETAIL QUALITY    \u00a3\u00a7\nSS HARDWARE SSS\nSSS NELSON, Ii. C. SSS\nBuilding\nMaterial\nLet us figure your bills on\nBuilding Material.   Coast\nLumber a specialty.\nJoKn Burns & Son\nOPEN AND\nCLOSED MODELS\nPRICES $100 TO $800\nSPECIALS\nCHEVROLET ROADSTER ..$350\nMOTORCYCLE, Harley Davidson\n$175\nSmedley Qarage Co*\nNELSON |,\nNext Door to Post Office Phone 71\nOur Annual Summer Sale\nCooks just once a year. We hold two sales only each year\nNever even mention sale any other time. You may be assured\nat these prices entire summer stock will go.\nLADIES' SILK DRESSES\nFor sport or with sleeves, plain colors,  printed,   ensembles,  etc  Values\nto $22.00.    See one of our windows.\nAll dresses. \u2022 $g$5\nNow\t\nLADI1BS' W1RTHMOR PRINT\nDRESSES\nWith or without sleeves,    fljl OQ\nSizes to 52.   Bach _,  w9\u00b1.Oe7\nLADIES' MISS LOS ANGELES\nDRESSES\nWonderful waah prints       \u00ab*7 OC\nEach\t\nCHILDREN'S DRESSES, PANTIES\nETC.\nGirls to 14 years less 1-Srd.\nDo not miss seeing our ladies' silk\nDresses\nBt\t\n$3.95\nIADIES' HATS\n$1.95\nYour choice of any in\nthe store including models,   children's\nK    89c\nand^\nalso\n$1.95\nLADIES'\nTAMS\n| Jruahed    wool\n' -rayon silk and\nfancy mixtures     RQ\u00ab\nEach TOC\nBROCADED   SILKS\n39CYARD\nAll colors, including white, bright\nsummery shades. This\nlot also includes\nRayon nad Celanese\nFigured dress lengths\nand other figured\ngoods  up to     $1.36\nSJ- -..39c\nLADIES', MEN'S\nGIRLS', BOYS,\nBATHING SUITS\nJantzen, Abe-rley, Universal pure wool\nRegular to    (PI OQ\n?2.S5, now _- 3>-UK'\nRegular to    <g1 QC\n$8.95. now __ al*J,\u00b0\nRegular to    <tO QK\n$5.00, now _ M\"\u2122\nRegular to    C\"J OR\n$7.50, now \u201e 3>A>TO\nCHild's Sun      4Q\u00ab\nBathing Suite __ **'t'\nLADIES'\nPURE    SILK\nHOSE\nAlso  Rayon\nsilk    with\nFrench   heels,\nsubetandards\nAll new shades\nand sues\nPea-\nPair \t\nSemi   service  weight\npure silks . OQa\nfair \u2014a51\"5\nTHE GREATEST SUMMER SALE WE EVER HAD!\nAnd we understand this to mean the largest stock ln the interim- of\nB. C. Our two floors are crommed with  merchandise.\nShoes\nAll   children's\nto go now\n$1.15 to $3.75\nChildren's Running\nShoes QQr\nPair   :.__ 0VL\nRemnants\nPrice.\nmt   sot\nCASH\nSALE\nRAMSDEN BROS,      *b\nSMART SHOPPE FOR SMART WOMEN APPROVALS\nMoney Back If Not Satisfied\nEVERY ARTICLE IN STORE ON SALE,  NEEDLES TO FUR COATS.\n tat\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS       TUESDAY, AUGUST 19, 1980.\nPage Fivo\n(BARGAINS\nfor\nEverybody\nat\n(ANDREW'S\nBIG SHOE\nSALE\n|R. Andrew\n& Co.\n[Leaders in Footfashion\nTO BE WEDDED THIS MONTH\nThe marrlago of Miss .porotriy Marian Chapman, shown above, daughter\nof Mr. and Mrs. George Wright Chapman of North AugUEta,, Ontario, to\nMr. Harold Jarvls Jaffery, of the department of national revenue, and\nson of Mrs\". Jaffery and the late C. V. L.. Jaffery of Toronto, will be a\nsmart event at th^ end of August.\nINSTITUTE HEARS\nSPEAKER AT\nMrs.  W.  Stromquist,  Cher-\nhill, Alta.' Is Speaker\nof the Day\nSALAD GARNISHES\nRed apple peeling may be cut and\n|used as a garnish on salads.\nfCMdtenGyi\nfor\n\u25a0yutdwil-\nCASTORIA\nABA0VREMEDY\nAPPROVED BY DOCTORS .\nI roflCOUC.COf-STIWTIOM.DIARFlHEA \\\nEDGEWOOD, B. 0, Aug. 18,\u2014Friday afternoon Inonoaklln and Edge-\nwood Women's Institute were hosts\nto Institute members frpm Burton.\nEast and West Arrow Park, Needles\nand Fauquier. The Edgewood hall\nhad been tastefully decorated for\ntho occasion and about 125 availed\nthemselves of the Invitation to. a\nsocial and musical gathering. Mrs.\nW. Hi Cowell. president of the local\ninstitute welcomed the delegates and\nthe presidents' of the visiting Institutes were then presented with bouquets' by a number of small children.\nMrs. Cowell announced a program\nof music, commencing with a solo,\n\"Baby\", sung by Miss R. Wilson;\nreqltatlon, \"If\", by J. H. Taylor;\nviolin solo. Otto Niedennan; song,\n'Red Devon by the Sea\", H. Coates.\nDuring the interval, Mrs. W.\nStromquist of Cherhill, Alberta, Institute, delivered the institute address, pointing out the enormous\nscope of the organization in Canada,\nwhich  takes  an  intelligent  Interest\nIn all great problems. A vivid description of the government travelling health clinic followed, and the\nalms of better health and sanitation enlarged upon. It was stated\nthat' 76- per cent of cases needing\nmedical and surgical attention in\nrural districts were neglected, owing\nthe time taken away from home and\nchores. The' guest of honor from\nCherhill, Alberta, commended the\nwork the institutes did for home\nand country and impressed the value\nof giving a helping hand to the\nneedy and the necessity of being\nkid.\nThe musical program was the proceeded with. Miss R. Wilson sang,\n\"Garden Divine\"; Mrs. W. H. Cowell\nrecited \"The Balrnles Cuddle Doon\nat Nlcht\"; H. Coates sang, \"Mell-\nsande\"; Misses B. and M. Oonselaur\nplayed a pianoforte duet; O. Nlcd-\nerman rendered cleverly Beethoven's\n\"Romance in G\", violin solo, Mrs.\nO. Nlcderman accompanying; Miss\nR. Wilson sang, \"I Had a Dream\",\nMrs,  W.  E.   Lewtas  accompanying.\nRefreshments were served and a\nsong contest staged which caused\nmuch amusement. Mrs. Keffer,\npresident of th0 Burton institute;\nMrs. Robins, president of East Arrow\nPark; Mrs. Lee of West Arrow Park\nand Mrs. Claire, president of Needles\nand Fauquier expressed the . appreciation of their institutes for\nthe enjoyable program and good\ntime enjoyed.\nSociety^\nThis column Is conducted hy\nMrs. M. J. Vlgneux. All news\nof a social nature, including W*\nceptions, private entertainments,\npersonal items, nywriagee, etc.\nwill appear ln this column.\nTelephone Mrs. Vlgneux at he-\nhome, 519 Silica street.\nMr. and Mrs. J. H. D. Benson left\nlast nlghFlor Victoria where Mr.\nBenson will relieve the manner of\nthe Imperial Bank of Canada for the\nnext   fow   weeks.\nR. H. Stewart, M. E. of Vancouver,\nand his son,' J. w. Stewart, arrived\nin town Sunday night from Kaslo.\nThey left for Trail yesterday morning accompanied by Mr. and Mrs.\nSchwartz of New Gulf, Texas, who\nformerly resided In Nelson and. Trail.\n* \u2022   #\nMrs. Preel of Procter was In town\nshopping  yesterday.\n\u00bb \u25a0 *   \u2022 *\nMr. and Mrs. R. V. Neilly have returned to the Reno mine after a\nfew days visit with friends in town.\nMiss M. Callahan has returned\nfrom spending her vacation In Vancouver.\n* #   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Dave MacFarlane,\nGore street, accompanied by their\ndaughter. Miss Mae MacFarlane,\nhave left on a two weeks' vacation\nto be spent in Vancouver at tho\nhome of Mr. and Mrs. J. Kinloch.\n* *   \u25a0\nMrs. R. H. Spencer has returned\nfrom Mirror Lake and has taken up\nresidence  on Carbonate street..\n* \u2022   *\nMrs. J. L. Williams left last\nnight for Okanagan.\nMr. and Mrs. J. E. Annable and\nparty motored to Alnsworth Sunday.\n* *   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. T O' Sullivan and\nGeorge O'Sulllvan were week-end\nvisitors ln the city.\nWILL DEVE INTO\nFARMING METHODS\nOF THEJTOOTENAY\nUniversity of  British  Columbia Study Cost and\nReturns\nT H- E' V,'   G^yN;'T;*W~ V E'\nPLEASANT ODOR\nHARMLESS    V\nKIL LS i-'ij e-s , moMjijoeV $,\nmothvpoachl'^ j.le.aI^ pH\nChesterfield\nSuite\nSpecials\n8-PIECE   JACQUARD   CHESTERFIELD   SUITE\nReversible Cushions.\n1 Axminster Rug, 4 ft. 6 in. x 7 ft. 6 in.\nI Walnut Chesterfield Table, size 18 in. x 42 in.\n1 Table Top Silk Runner.\n1 Bridge Lamp and Shade $167 1^\nComplete  -*-\u00bb-\t\n3-PIECE  JACQUARD  CHESTERFIELD   SUITE\nReversible Cushions Q1\/17 KA\nComplete for     WA\/.SJV\n3-PIECE MOHAIR CHESTERFIELD SUITE\nReversible Cushions and Walnut      (\u00a31 \u00a37 KA\nEnd Table. Complete for         tDXUIeOV\n3-PIECE TAPESTRY CHESTERFIELD SUITE\nReversible Cushions *       <C1\/_\u00a3 i\\(\\\nComplete for     \u00bb1*D.UU.\nStandard Furniture Co.\nComplete House Furnishers\nNelson, B. C.\n.   Mr.   and   Mrs.   J.   P...Coates   of\nRosebery are Nelson visitors.\n\u2022   *   \u2022\nJ. G. Bunyan, T. R. Wilson, A. E.\nMurphy, B. Townsend, R. T. Thorburn, end George Shaw spent Sunday golfing ln Trail at tho Trall-\nRossland  golf  course.\nKootenay farming methods ure\nbeing: studied by trained Investigators . from the university of British\nColumbia.\nSOme years ago the college of\nagriculture undertook a detailed\nstudy of certain farms ln the Fraser\nvaUey, the Okanagan valley and on\nVancouver Island. Complete records\nol the cost and returns were obtained and studied. Definite recommendations were offered for Improving the methods followed on the\nparticular farms studied. These have\nln several instance:, turned losses In*\nto  profits.\nA number of Kootenay farms are\nnow under survey. As soon as the\nstudies are completed, results will be\navailable to anyone interested.\nDRIVE CAR INTO\nWATERS OF ELK\nJack   Mason,    Galloway, Is\nDriver of Car; Is Par-\n.    tially Submerged\nFERNIE, B. C, Aug. 18.\u2014About\neleven o'clock Saturday night a car,\ndriven by Jack Mason of Galloway,\nwent off the new road about five\nmiles west of here and nosed Into\nthe Elk river.\nVictor Calwell and Thomas Fltz-\nslmmons, both of Galloway wero the\nother occupants of tbe car.\nThe Elk isn't very deep at this\npoint and only the radiator of the\ncar was covered with water while\n\"the rear of the car remained upon\nthe  bank.\nNo serious Injuries were sustained\nand the occupants climbed out of\nth\" wreckage of their own accord,\nOne of them received a cut on the\nchin and a bruised hip.\nSww^\nVariety\nIf your wife is away on\nvacation dine at the i\nGolden Gate. You are J\nassured of a variety of\nfoods that will always\nplease you, besides\nnot\nthe i\nt washing  dishes  is\nso pleasant during\nhot weather\nGolden Gate\nCafe\n\"Build  B.   C.  Payrolls*\nChildren\nThrive on\nPacific\nMilk      Z\nGiving in detail four infantllo all\nments that distressed her baby, i\nMothor writes that child was restored\nby   Pacific   Mint.\n\"In less than ono month's\ntlmo,\" Hhe writes, \"I foimd\na   wonderful   improvement.\"\nHundreds of children havo got we\"\nand  grown strong on Pacific Milk.\nPacific Milk\nFactory at\nABBOTSFORD, B. C.\nMr. and Mrs. Edward Ferguson,\nSilictiitreet, leave today for Spo-\nkane.Ilvhere they will spend the\nnext few days. They will be accompanied by their grandchildren,\nPat and Bill Ferguson, who have\nbeen in Nelson for the past couple\nof weeks visiting them,\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. W R. Baxendale of Trail,\nwho is summering at her Procter\nhome, spent yesterday shopping In\ntown.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nGerald Recs loft last night on a\nbusiness trip to Penticton.\nJ. Paul Pltner has loft for Rossland where he has gone to manage\nthe new Capital theatre which formally opens on Wedne^ay night.\nMrs. Pltner will leave the end of\nthe month to Join her husband,\nA.   Dalglelsh   of  Trail   spent   the\nweek-end   in   town.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss M. Daly, Strathcona hotel,\nand her sister, Mlas O'Merrle Daly of\nWinnipeg, who has been her guest\nfor the past couple of weeks, left\nlast night for a visit to the coast\ncities.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nOattrtaln J. Fltzslmmons, MJPP,\nof Nakusp, was among city visitors\nover  the   week-end.\nMrs. A. C Virtue and her baby\ndaughter. Dawn, Falrvlew, have returned from a couple of months\nspent in Edmonton, where they\nvisited Mrs. Virtue's parents.\nP. H. Frtesen of Renata paid a\nvisit to town over the week-end.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nH. Lauriente of Trail spent the\nweek-end in Nelson.\nRev. J. 8. Mahood'was in town\nyestrday en route to his home at\nQueens Bay from Kinnard and district where he officiated at Anglican\nservices.\n\u2022 *   *\nMrs. Broughfeon and her children\nwho have been guests In Nelson of\nMr. and Mrs. s. Hayden, Fairview,\nhave   returned   to   their   home   in\nVancouver.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss   Mayme   Currie,  formerly   of\nthe   Nelson   high  school  staff,   has\nreturned from a visit to Victoria.\n\u25a0--\u2022       *   \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. H R Younger and\nMr. and Mrs. J. B. Gray motored to\nNew  Denver  Sunday.\nMr. Chomley of Crawford Bay\npaid  a  visit to town yesterday.\n\u2022 *   *\n8. S. Frank of Boswell spent yesterday shopping ln Nelson.\nMiss Ethel Magee, who has been\nspending a vacation at Gray Creek\nwith her mother, haa returned.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. J. Walker of Cranbrook ls a\ncity   visitor,\n\u00bb   *   *\nHarry Cotton of Ellis-Cotton, contractors at Boswell, ls spending a\ncouple  of  daya  in. town.\nAmong shoppers to Nelson yesterday   was   Mrs.   Benthlen   of   Gray\nOreek.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nGerald Cooper of Rossland spent\nthe week-end tn town.\nMiss Marjory Beck, Kootenay\nstreet, has as her guest Miss Marie\nDonovan   of   Grand  Forks.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMrs. J. Binish of Slocan City paid\na visit to town yesterday.\n.*   *   *\nJ. V. Neil of Procter spent the\nweek-end  ln  town.\nPrior to her marriage to Carleee\nWharton MncBey, Miss Gladys Fotherlngham, was the- guest of honor\nat a kitchen shower given re\ncently by Miss Jean Lambert and\nMiss Irene Edmondson in the form\nof a beach bonfire After refreshments which consisted of welners\nand marshmallows .had been served\nMiss Fotherlngham was presented\nwith th_ gifts In a unique manner.\nAmong the Invited guests were Mrs,\nCharles H. Hamilton. Mrs. R, W.\nDnwson, Mrs. F, Russell Efrdd,\nMrs. A. Morton Richmond, Mrs. Earl\nE. Swanson, Mrs. D. T. Fotherlngham of Calgary, tho Misses Beryl\nand Dorothea Graham, Miss Mollis\nGreen of Vancouver, Miss Helen\nMurphy, Miss Maxlne Chapman of\nSouth Slocan, Miss Mildred Irvine,\nMiss Gale Taylor, Miss Alleen Apple-\nyard,   Mis*   Myra   Humphry.   Miss\nGeorgia Gebbie, Miss Ruth Craufurd,\nMiss Alia Johnstone, Miss Josephine\nWhltehouse of Vancouver, Miss Ruth\nForbett of Fort Smith, Arkansas.\nMiss Jean Glfter, Miss Jean Hunter,\nMiss Peggy Mcleod and Miss Jean\nWaldle,\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMr. and Mrs. Douglas G. Denny\nof Summerland have returned to\nNelson from a holiday spent In\nProcter, Balfour and Alnsworth.\nOver the week end Mr. Denny accompanied by G. Spencer Godfrey\nenjoyed a fishing trip on the main\nlake returning home with a nine\npound trout and also a splendid\nstring of rainbow  trout.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMrs. J. Motherwell of New Denver\nwas   the  week  end   guest  of  Miss\nM.  G.  Smith.  Latimer street.\n*     *   *   *\nDr. W. C. Bradshaw of Trail has\nreturned to his homo after being\nIn Portland, Ore., for the past\nthree weeks where he attended ths\nNorth   Pacific   Dental   clinic.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. Fred Deater of Penticton,\nwho with her small son is holidaying ln New Denver with her parents,\nMr. and Mrs. 6. M. Shannon, returns today to New Denver after\nspending the week end in Nelson\nthe guest of Mr. and Mrs. C. A.\nLarson, Carbonate 6treet.\nMi', and Mrs. Nelson Ball, Houston\nstreet, had as their week end guest\nMrs.  George  Wadds   of   Trail,\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Patrloia Wanvlg of Calgary\nhas been visiting Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. B. Stalwood of the north shore\nfor   the   past  few  days.\n\u2022 * *\nJerry Donovan, who has been receiving medical attention at the\ncoast, was a week end visitor in\ntown en route to his home ln Grand\nForks.\nA dellghtfu] beach party was\ngiven Saturday afternoon at Lakeside Park in honor of Miss Dorothy\nCorbie, who is home on furlough\nfrom the Jubilee hospital in Victoria. Those invited were Mrs. g.\nCorbie. Mrs. T. Dolphin, Mrs. David\nBall, Mrs. T. 6. Jerome, Miss Marl\nDolphin, Miss Elsie Corbie, Miss\nHelen Wharton, Miss Wilma Campion, Arthur Campion and Ernest\nBall.\nMr. and Mrs. A. 1>. Emory have\nas their house guest at their Willow\nPoint home. Miss Annie Cavers of\nthe staff of the Vancouver General\nhospital, Vancouver.\nDr. E. C. Bradshaw has returned\nfrom a three weeks' vacation spent\nln Spokane.\nBilly Bunyan ot the American\nTrust company, San Francisco, arrived last night to spend three\nweeks' vacation tn Nelson with his\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Bunyan, Terrace apartments,\nG. Roe has J-eft for Penticton.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMlsa Louise Peebles, Latimer\nstreet, and her house guest, Miss\nThelma Stoodley of Calgary, spent\nthe week end at Robson with Miss\nEleanor Squires.\nMiss Christina May has returned\nto Trail after a couple of weeks'\nvacation with her parents, Mr. and\nMrs.  J. May,  Houston   street.\nMlsa Myra Humphry spen t tha\nweek end at Procter the guest of\nMiss    Margaret    Jarvls.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nRev.   J.   c.   McKenzle,   pastor   of\nthe Church of Mary Immaculate,\nhas returned from a week spent\nin Vancouver, where he attended\na retreat. Father McKenzle along\nwith Right Rev. A. K. Mclntyre,\nV, G., of Rossland, and Rev. Leo\nHobson of Trail, who also made\nthe retreat flew from Spokane to\nSeattle by alrplano and very much\nenjoyed tho latest morf of traveling.\nFred Waldlo who has been in\nNelson lor the past week a guest\nat the summer place of his parents,\nMr. and Mrs. William Waldle, left\nyesterday for his homo tn Klmberley.\nMrs. C. V. Gagnon, SlUca street,\nand her son James H. Gagnon,\nspent Sunday ln South Slo.an at\nthe homo cf Mr. and Mra, O. W.\nHumphry.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nCaptain  Douglas  Brown,  superintendent of C. P  R. Lako am River\nservlco Joft last night for Penticton.\nA quiet wedding was solemnized\nrecently at the manse at White\nRock, British Columbia, when Victoria <Sls), daughter of Mr. and\nMrs. Daniel Deane, became the\nbride of William Barkley of Nelson,\nRev. W. C. Frank officiating. Given\nin maiTlage by her father, tho\nbride was attended by Miss Margaret Blackburn, while W. H. Williams supported the groom. Mr.\nand Mrs. Barkley left later for a\nmotor trip to Portland, Ore., where\nthey will spend their honeymoon,\nafter which thoy will take up residence in Ne_ton.\n\u2022 *   *\nMiss Lillian Smith and Miss\nEdna Chapman have returned from\na visit to Vanoouver, Victoria and\nSeattle. ^\nSocial Events\nof Trail City\nTEAIL HOUSES AD LOTS. IN-\nnurance. Notary, J. D. Anderson, TraJJ. uaBB)\nQ.JVlea&her's\nPhone 200 607 Baker St.\nAUGUST CLEANUP\nDRASTIC PRICE REDUCTIONS o\u00bb\nALL SUMMER MERCHANDISE   \u25a0:\nTHIS SALE OFFERS MANY MONEY SAVING OPPORTUNITIES TO\nSAVE qN SUMMER WEARING APPAREL. EVERY ARTICLE IS\nSMART AND UP TO THE MINUTE IN STYLE AND MANY ARE\nSUITABLE FOR EARLY FALL WEAR. WE MUST CLEAR OUR RACKS\nAND CASES WHICH EXPLAINS THE UNUSUALLY LARGE REDUCTION. COME DOWN EARLY THIS MORNING. THE GARMENT YOU\nWANT MAY BE HERE NOW.\nWOMEN'S TRAVEL COATS\n$24.95 Each\n25 Travel coats of all wool\nTweeds or novelty coatings.\nPlain or belted styles with mannish collars. Lined throughout\nwith silk crepe and tailored to\nkeep their shape. They formerly sold at $33.50, $35.00 and\n$39.00 each. Sizes 14 to 38.\nAll One Price, Each _$24.95\nWOMEN'S\nSEPARATE    '\nSKIRTS\nAt 20 Per Cent Less\nCircular or pleated skirts of\nheavy flat crepe, Kasha flannels or wool crepe in a range\nof colors. Sizes 14 to 20. Regular $5.75 to $10.00 each.\nSale Price\nEach  __ $4.60 to $8.00\nWASH  SILK DRESSES\nAt $9.95 Each\nDresses of flat crepe or Rajah silks in white or Pastel shades. Sleeveless\nstyles.   Sizes 14 to 20.   Values to $15.00.\nSale Price, Each ..._  39.95\nEfficient\nHousekeeping\nBy UDIA A.  KIOKMAN\nTOMORROW'S    MENU\nBreakfast\nBerries\nOreal\nFried  Eggs\nBacon\nToast\nCoffee\nLuncheon\nCodfish Cakes\nFruit Salad\nCoffee Cake\nCoffee\nDinner\nRoa*t of Lamb\nMashed Potatoes\nBeans\nSliced Cucumbers\nOrange Ico Cream\nCoffee\nANSWERS    TO    INQUIRIES\nL. W. P.: \"Please print a recipe for\nPrepared  Mustard.\"\nAnawer: Prepared Mustard: Stir\nfour tablespoon*! of dry mustard\npowder into two teaspoons of granulated sugar in a bowl, then add\nenough hot vinegar tn make n thick\npaste. Some housekeepers use hot\nwater instead of the hot vinegar.\nMiss Q- \"How [8 Orange ice Cream\nmade?\"\nAnswer:    ln   two  ways.    Method\nWait! try\nthe Connor First\nCHE Conner Thermo Electric\nWasher ii insulated to keep thc\nwater hot until the end of the\nwash\u20143 M times thicker than the regular\ncopper tub machine. Built stronger to\nlast longer.\n) Has tbe New large \">U water remover\n\u2014safe for buttons\u2014wrings drier and\nquicker\u2014no screw adjusting.\nThe aluminum agitator is polished\nimooth\u2014safe for tha most delicate gar*\nments\u2014washes cleaner and faster.\nNew lifetime oil encased drive inns\nimoothly and quietly.\nYou are protectod for 12 years by the\nConnor guarantee\u2014the Longest, broad-\nnt ever given with an Electric Washer.\nApproved by tbe Hydro Electric\nCommission of Ontario.\nIt is to your Interest to investigati\nilicic latest, exclusive advantages befori\npurchasing.\nSEE IT TODAY!\nHlpperson Hardware Co.. Ltd., Nelson; Modern Electrlo Shop, Trail;\nHendricks' Garage, Kaslo; 8. A.\nSpeers, Creston; F. Parks A Co.,\nCranbrook; West Kootenay Power &\nLight Co., Rossland; Klmherlry\nHardware   Co.,   Ltd.,   Klmberley.\nH. A. TREHERNE,\nFactory Representative\nNumber Or*: Stir one cup of granulated sugar into three cups of orange\nJuloe until well blended, then add\ntwo cups of thin, sweet cream or\nrich milk and ono cup of unwhlpped\nheavy sweet cream. Freeze ln three\nparts loe to one part rock salt, ajrd,\nwhen stiff, take out dasher, cork can\ntop, and repack in four parte ice to\none part rock salt to stand several\nhours, to ripen, before serving. Method Number Two: Use same amount of ingredients mentioned\nabove, but do not add the heavy\nor earn at first; merely add either\nthe thin cream or the rich milk\nto the sugar and orange JulMt, and\nfreeze this mixture to a mush, then\nfold in the heavy cream, which von\nhave stiffly whipped, and continued\nfreezing. This second method makes\nlc\u00bb cream of n richer consistency.\n\"Faithful Reader: Pteaee publish a\nrecipe (or baked beans with a tomato sauce.\"\nAnswer: Baked Beans: Soak one\nquart of dried white beans overnight In cold water. Next day drain\ncover with fresh boiling water, and\nboil till the skins crack when testel\nby taking a few from the water.\nWhen tender, drain and put In a\ncasserole or bean pot. Burr one-half\npound of clear fat sail pork in the\nbeans and cover all wttb. boiling\nwater mixed wtih one-hall oup of\ntomato catsup, two tablesfttooa of\nmolasses, one teaspoon of dry mustard, one teaspoon of salt, and two\ntablespoons of sugar. Bale* cowed,\nfor six to eight hours in a moderate\noven.\nVisit in Nakusp,\nOld Men, Club Meets\nNAKUSP, B. C, Aug. l&s-Mr, and\nMrs. O. Hunter-Gardner, of Shakespeare avenue, Glenbank, have visiting them at present, thetr daughters,\nMrs. J, W. Dougan and Miss HUdr-ed\nGardner, also Mrs. Dougan'a family,\nall of Trail.\nOn Friday afternoot. Mra. Oasdner\nentertained at a delightful tea in\ntheir  honor.\nCAKE    FROSTTNGS\nA perfect fudge frosting is usually\nconsidered as one that 1b Just stiff\nenough to stay where it is spread,\nIs not sticky to handle, and cute\neasily without cracking. The texture\nIs smooth and creamy like the centro\nln & good grade if chocolate cream,\nand the flavor la well blended,\nBOVRIL\nin Tour Dally Diet\ni\nStrength Without Fat\nMusic in the Home Is a, Necessity\nVery Few THINGS\nYou May BUY\n\u2014cause so much Home happiness as MUSIC. Enjoy Home happiness tomorrow by purchasing a\nWILLIS piano. The WILLIS is a high-grade\nCanadian-made piano of unquestioned serviceability. Built to endure. Can be bought as low\nas $475 on terms of $50 down and $15 per month\nKootenay Music House\nThe Piano Store\nNear Bank Montreal\n304 Baker Street Nelson, B. C.\nL'lJUI'l!      I .\u00ab.\n Pug* Six\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS       TUESDAY, AUGUST 19, 1980.\nMTCHERYGETS\nREADY FOR THE\nREDHSH DEAL\nKamloops Trout and Mountain Trout Fry Are All\nDistributed\nWILL COLLECT EGGS\nFROM THREE CREEKS\nAim & to Provide Food for\nthe Larger\nSpecies\nAlter sharing with the Gemini\nhatchery the honors of the largest Kamloops trout distribution on\nrecord for this district, over 1,100,-\n000 eyed eggs and fry and after\nhandling: the annual mountain\ntrout hatch of over 500\/00 fry,\nNelson's year-round Dominion fish\nhatchery ls now being put in readiness by Weldon Reld, superintendent of the Dominion hatcheries ln\n. West Kootenay, for the annual\nKokanee or redfish campaign. The\nlast fry of these other species waa\ndistributed from the hatchery a\ncouple of weeks agp.\n. TJnlike the Kamloops fry, many\nof which will grow to be 20 pound\nsalmon for the Kootenay angler,\nand the mountain trout fry whose\ndestiny is to keep up the trout\nstock in the creeks of this district,\nthe redfish will serye ' in a more\nhumble capacity, their llfe-destlny\nbeing to constitute diet for the\nKamloops trout.\nPVT  IN   PENS\nAlready redfish have been seen\naround the mouths of creeks of the\nWest Arm, and the annual run\nfor .spawning purposes, which usually gets under way about, the last\nweek  in August and  lasts  through\nKeno66\nMAKES TKEM\nBETTER\nEAT the latest in bran flakes.\nA marvelous blend of the\nnourishing elements of the\nwheat with just enough bran\nto be mildly laxative. And\nabove all the famous flavor\nof PEP. Crisps ready-to-eat\nwith milk or cream.\nSold only in the red-and-\ngreen package. Made by\nKellogg in tondon, Ontario.\nmoot of September, will be starting\nshortly.\nLast rear over 300,000 eggs were\ncollected from the adult fish trapped in the pens at the mouths ot\nKokanee creek and Redfish creek,\nthe latter being the creek near\nHarrop. In vlaw of a fair run observed last year at Five-Mile creek\nall three will be egg-collection points\nthis time. The pens will be put\ninto the creeks this week.\nThe Kokanee, redfish or silver\ntrout, often referred tfi as denaturalized salmon, Ls classified as an\nactual salmon 'In structure and\nhabits, its most striking salmon\ncharacteristic from the point of\nview of human observer, being the\nannual run of tbe spawning fish.\nONCE  BIO  SCHOOLS\nPioneers of the Kootenay used\nto be mystified by the annual assembling In the creek mouths in\nmidsummer of numbers of red\nrout-Mike fish, sometimes so numerous as to almost constitute sohools\nwhloh appeared apparently from\nnowhere, and after spawning in\nthe sandy bars of the creeks, expired, this being a characteristic of\nall the species of Pacific salmon. The\nmules all displayed at this time the\ncharacteristic hooked lower Jaw of\nthe entire salmon tribe when spawning. Unseen by human eyes except\nfor the five or six weeks of the\nrun, as the vivid scarlet and crimson hue was not then identified as\nmerely the spawning livery of the\nsilver trout occasionally hooked m\nthe lakes, the redfish for many years\nconstiuted one of the natural wonders ot the region.\nIt wae freely netted during its\nruns tmd sold commercially bafch\nfresh and salted ln barrels, this\npractice being known evon after the\nwar. Finally, when the stock of this\nnative fish was almost at the vanishing point, the department of fisheries a few years ago granted it protection on a J3W of its spawning\ngrounds hore, while the possibility\nof utilizing it was examined, and\nlater this protection was made general.\nBetween being protected and artificially propagated, It is expected\nthat ultimately the Kokanccs will\nbe restored to their former numbers.\nIMMATURE SOCKEYE?\nWhat science will yet do with the\nredfish Is anyone's guess. For some\ntime the biological board of Canada\nhas suspected that thc redfish waa\ni fresh-water phase of the bluelback\nor sockeye salmon, and it is stated\nthat lake-bred redfish have actually\ndeveloped Into sockeyes In salt water,\njn experiments conducted south of\nthc line.\nPEP\nBran\nFlakes\nMr. and Mrs. Stevens\nEntertain at Ymir\nYMIR, B. C, Aug. 18.\u2014Mr. and\nMrs. H. Stevens had as their dinner\nguests on Friday, Mr. and Mrs. 8.\nh. Springer of Grand Forks, Mr.\nand Mrs. B. C. Mclsaac and Mrs. W.\nB.   Mclsaac.\nA surprise party was given at\nthe home of Mr and Mrs. J. H.\nClarke on Friday evenin\/, with\nGeorgc \u00b0reen as the guest of honor. The guests were Mrs. A. B.\nClark. Miss Jean McKenzle of Carpentaria, California, Mr. and Mrs. h.\nP. Bond, Mra. Wendell Shrum, Helen\nVeregin, Jennie Rankin, Eileen Gile,\nBetty Clark, Evelyn Emilson, Shirley\n.Stevens, Lottie Anderf-son, Harry Stevens, Elmer Peterson, Jl'm Grant,\nJack Grant, Woodrow Anderson, Tom\nClarke, Sam Verigin. Walter Clarke\nand George Green. George was presented with a fountain pen by his\nHchoolmates, Refreshments were\nserved by the hostess, assisted by\nMrs. A. B. Clark and Mrs, L. P.\nBond.\nMrs. W .Clark. Mrs. A. B. Clark.\nBetty and Billy Clark arid Miss Jean\nMcKenzie of Carpcnterla, California,\nwere the guest of friends at Willow\nPoint  on   Friday.\n-SOME NEW GOWNS-\nLeft to right: For very formal gowns, Jean Patou\nuses lame which precludes any but the severest of cuts\nIn this instance he deslgnB a draped bock that attendu-\ntites both hip and waistline. Very new is the cowl\nbn.uk   which,  in   this  Patou  pink  satm  evening   gown\ntops a swathed hlpline and drawn-ln waistline most\neffectively. A shimmering green lame evening coat\nwhich is cut from fittings, has a pouched back above\na tight hlpline and a little standing collar with a\nfeminine bow ln tbe back.\nA, few drops of paraffin sprinkled\non all dusters not only removes\ndust  but  helps   to  keep  away   files.\nIo Hyde Park\n\u00a9\/ Gerald S. Rees\nOne of Loudon's many particular\nattractions is at the Marble Arch\nentrance of Hyde Park; this corner\nof London's green and gracious\nheart ls the cockpit of the \"Big\nSmoke,\" the arena ot wordy warfare,\nwherein, especially on Sundays, oratory and rhetoric of a kind reach\nheights unknown to any laws that\ngovern them: everything bolls over\nat thc Marble Arch, It is tho hot\nstove of England, and tho Marble\nArch, I may tejl you. is a busy\nspot, with 73,0o0 vehicles more or\nless,  passing   it   every   12   hours.\nHyde Park was once a stately\nplcasueuce where ono could take\none's ease In an atmosphere of\nrustic serenity, but today, brasa\nbands, splashing swimmers cavorting\nin thc waves of the transfigured\nSerpentine, hooting motorists and\nsummer time pageants soare the\ngrazing sheep, though the birds\ntake no notice\u2014wise  birds.\nThero are crowds of spectators^\ntaking it all In. tho Thousand and\nOne Days entertainment, for which\nno charge Is made, and there is a\ncrowd gathered around the soap\nbox forums set up Just within\nthe iron railings of tho northern\nentrance to Hyde Park,\n\"LADEFS   AND   GENNUM\"\nThere one meets the hard working men nnd women of the metropolis, for no one can tell me\nthat the tub-thumpers, as the Londoner calls them, have an easy\ntask; they bombard the heavens nnd\ntheir hearers with denunciations on\nevery thing nnd everybody, thereby\nIncreasing their own Bense of injustice, which immutably reflects\nitself in their personal circumstances; a few speak with thp voice\nof the Mars' Hill orator, and may\nbe with some of his spirit,\nWhat tnrrific thought vibrations\neddy    around    tho    Marble    Arch,\nGrains of Wheat and Rice\nShot from Huge Guns\nTo make them twice as delicious . . . twice as digestible\nHow exploding 125 million food\ncells makes Puffed Whasat and\nPuffed Rice as nourishing aa\nhot cooked cereals.\nH\nAVH you tasted this utterly different kind of\ncrispese, crunchiest cereal on thc market today?\nPuffed Wheat and Puffed Rice arc different because\nthey're made differently. Choice full-flavored grains of\nwheat and rice are sealed in huge bronze guns. Then\nrevolved in fiery ovens. This expands the natural moisture in the millions of tiny food cells. Then thc guns\narc fired. Causing 125 million explosions in every grain.\nEvery tiny food cell is blasted open. The grains wc\nmade as completely digestible as though they had been\ncooked for hours. Hence Puffed Wheat and Puffed\nRice are virtually as nourishing as hot cooked cereals.\nThese grains \"shot from guns\" become 8 times\nnormal size. They have all thc buttery crispness of\nfresh toast. They taste like sweet new nut-meats.\nNever before was rich grain nourishment made so\ndelectably good to eat. Order Puffed Wheat and\nPuffed Rice from your grocer today. Thc Quaker Oata\nCompany,\nenough to blow off one's bat!!\nNumberless tympanums nr0 assailed\nfrom nil angles with multitudinous\nsounds of wordy which mean something--or   less   than    nothing I\nAtheists defy God, end how they\ndefy hlml Patriots denounco governments, and religious fanatics,\nlank, dark faced, hopelessly mixing\ntheir aspirates and their metaphors,\ndenounce ugnostlcs; a veritable orgy\nof denouncement. Milling In the\ncrowd, which spasmodically ejaculates \"That's wot we'd like ter\nknow,\" one catches brief apasms\nof the verbal torrent. \"Be sur0 your\nsins will find you out.\" \"(true\nenough); \"To 'ell with Capital . . .\"\n(and what will you do, my friends,\nwithout Capltaa?.. \"LlBsen, I'll\nprove tho world was myde ln six\nworking days\" (\"a clay with tho Lord\nls m a thousand years\") ... A red-\neyed socialist with three front teeth\nmlaaing. and a voice heavy as a\nbass drum, calls the Army a bunch\nof King's loafers; two Coldstreamers,\nand a Grenadier corporal nudge\neach other and guffaw; what a huge\nJoke! All these soap-boxers seem to\nrespect the King's Navce; they perhaps sense the limit of forbearance In their audience\u2014The Royal\nNavy is still the pride of the\nBriton; lt is mixed up with his\nsea sense and his Island story, but\nthe average Briton being a somewhat inarticulate creature, except on\nthe soap box, would find It difficult to express tnese innermost\nfeelings.\nPILLAB8   OF   SAET\nThese entertainers of the public\nuse all the tricks of the American\ncircus barker; the audience Is good-\nhumored, and in no hurry, or apparent Wish to be saved, though\nthey are repeatedly assured by a\ngentleman in block without collar\nor tie, or hat, and maybe head,\nthat \"the H'eye of Gawd is upon\nthem\" and \"the wrath of Je'ovah\"\nawaits them around the corner.\nThey never know, these summer listeners, _^hat Gladstone said In\n1876, but merely listen, while the\nunpaid gentry of the soap box levle\nboom happily on about tariffs, and\nthe Apostle Paul, or discuss God,\nimmortality and the Bible freely\nand most familiarly.\n\"YER   DON'T   KNOW   NVTHINK\"\nHecklers vociferate, and provide\nthe low comedy for the show, but\ntheir skill of repartee is generally no\nmatch for their quick-witted opponents, who have been in the game\nfor many  years,\nDamosthenes, in tones of eloquent acorn. a.ske, \"Oo'b this man\nBaldwin?'1- Socrate.<j defies the governing powers with frayed ends of\nBolshevistic theories, weaving his\nstrings Into a faijoaatlc cat's cradle\nto rock his desires, and threatens\nthe Empire with doom hefore dusk.\nHis disappointment must be acute,\nfor Monday follows Sunday, and\nEmpire builder\u201ei with pipe, paper,\nwalking stick (or umbrella) and\nthe Dally Mall journey citywards\non the 8.15 from suburbia, and\nhomewards again on tlie 6.15; busses\nstill run from Paddlngton to Putney\nt.nd Hobbs makes another century\nat the Oval, but the following sun\nday Lenin's dlsciplo will be oi_\nthe samo jolly old spot with dooms\nand his dusks.\nA   SAFETY   VALVE\nMore characters are ripped to\nplecesx jiore philosophies are demobilised, \" and more theology ls\nshredded finer than a Niagara wheat\nbiscuit around the Marble Arch, rain\nor shine, than any other known\nspot in the British Empire, except It\nbe the open air lorum In Hyde Park,\nSydney, New South Wales, where,\non one occasion, a facetious remark\nto a rabid aoap-borrer by tho writer\nmade him a 10 mlnute target for\ntho barbed arrowa of verbal war-\nfar, which elided in the authoritative valedictory Siat \"we don't want\nno b y Engl^.nen ln HorstralliiV'\nAa before noted, the audience\nloiters patiently, placidly teetering\non its collective heels, waiting for\nthe now era to be ushered in before going home for the sacred English  ritual  of afternoon  tea.\nAll these soap-boxers (and they\ndo not all stand on soap boxes;\nsome have very comfortable desks)\npossess an avovTKl familiarity with\nflights of thought that would put\nto a blush the simple claims of a\nXJ. B. O. professor; Schoponhauor,\nSwedenborg and other philosophers\nare glibly summoned from tho refuge\nof the grave to carry the banner\nagainst glaaUln nnd Eddlngton.\nBIO   BOY    BLUE\nRobert the cop, hitches his pants,\nand remarks, \"They're all a lot of\nloonies, so are those that llssen to\n'em\u2014Arrest 'em, not me, let 'em\nblow ott steam\u2014-don't hurt no one,\nParss 'long, pita.\"\nThe Catch Them\nBig, McBaincs Lake\nFERNIE, B. C, Aug. 18,\u2014The\nlargest cut-throat trout registered ln\nSuddaby's fishing contest since 1028,\nwere caught thia year at McBain's\nlake. Ou Friday. BUI Klaucr caught\none I8',d Inches long, which weighed\n2  pounds,  10'._  oz.\nOn June 22, Bill Baddeley pulled\nan oven bigger, one out of McBains\nlake Itself. It weighed 3 lbs., 7%\noz., and was ao3,-* inches in length.\nBride-to-be Is\nFeted at Kaslo\n' KASLO, B. C, Aug. - 18.-^MiSB\nElsie Cadden. an August bride-to-be\nwas the guest of honor at a miscellaneous shower arranged by a\nnumber of her girl friends for\nThursday afternoon. The affair was\nin the pavilion at Vtmy Park, the\ntable which was set on the verandah\nof the pavilion, waa very prettily\narranged with golden glow and\nyellow streamers. After a veryr\ndainty Bupper Miss Eunice Goodenough presented the guest of honor\nwith an umbrella tied with yellow\nribbons and containing the lovely\nand useful gifts of her friends.\nThe party included Mrs, Walter Newton of Trail, Mrs. R. Dawson of\nOkanagan, Wn., Mrs. Dick of Lang-\nley Prairie, MIbs Marjorie Brown of\nNelson and Mrs. R. L. Tinkess, Mrs,\nC. J. White, Miss Margaret MacDonald, Miss Katherlne Gillls, Miss\nMargery McGregor, Miss Eunice\nGoodenough   and   Miss   Cadden.\nMrs. Jack Cadden was a charming\ntea hostess Wednesday afternoon\nwhen she entertained a number of\nfriends, complimenting, her daughter, Miss Elsie Cadden. Tie guests\nIncluded Mrs. Davles of Vancouver,\nMrs, R. Dawson of Okanagan, Wn.,\nMrs, Dick of Langley Prairie, Miss\nMarjorie Brown of Nelson and Mrs.\nC. J. White. Mrs. R. L. Tinkess,\nMIBs Eunice Goodenough, Miss\nVerna Garland', Miss Margaret MacDonald, Miss Betty Goodenough and\nMiss Margery McGregor.\nKASLO HOSPITAL\nLADIES AID DOES\nWELL AT REGATTA\nKASLO, B. C, Aug. 18.\u2014The\nmembers of the ladles hospital aid\nare being congratulated on the success of their two day fete held\nSaturday and Monday of the regatta.\nIn several tents erected on Water\nstreet were to bo found \"hot dogs\",\nfortune telling, \"Aunt Sally\",\n\"housey-housey\", etc. These, together with the sale of baloons and\nother novelties, netted th\/ ladles\nabout $200. The whole *arfalr was\nunder the direct convenor-ship of\npresident, Mrs.  J.  J.  Sklllicorn.\n.So You Will Have Enough\nWhen sewing on a colored material and you are afraid you will\nnot have enough cotton or silk to\nmatch, mako the first sea-cp. of the\nFrench seam with any thread at all.\nIt will not show and will save the\ncolored thread for the outBide seams.\nSUDBURY PASTOR\nFaoing trial at Sudbury on \u25a0 a\ncharge of disturbing a religious assembly MIbs Sophia Llnkovitch is\nallged to have left her child on the\naltar of the Greek orthodox church,\nwhile Rev. Father N. J. Bartman\n(above) wa_ conducting mass,\nFERNIE PEOPLE\nGO ON VACATION!\nFERNIE, B. C, Aug. 18.\u2014Mrs. C.|\nB, Bennett left. Thursday Tor ;~\nmonth's holiday at Vancouver.\n. Mr. and Mrs. D, J. Cody and son!\npt Cereal, Alta., are leaving' Sunday!\nfor their home, having visited Mr. I\nCody's parents, Mr. and Mrs, G. Codyj\nin, this city,\n, Murray Slsaons of the Imperial I\nBank staff spent a short holiday |\nin Calgary.\nI, Jeffries, principal of Coal creek I\nschool, returned from his holidays'!\nspent with his parents in Victoria.\nCAKE BOUGH     .\nCake   dough   is   best   when   Just'l\nthick   enough  to  break   midway   If I\ndropped from a spoon held at arra'B j\nlength.\nHow One Woman Lost\n47 Pounds of Fat\n\"1 have been taking Kruschen\nSuits for nearly 3 months. I have\ncontinued taking one teaspoonful tn\nwarm water every morning. I then\nweighed 217 pounds, was always\nbothered wlJtL pains in my back\nand lower part of abdomen and\nsides.\n\"Now I am glad to say I am a\nwell woman, feel much stronger,\nyears younger and my weight is 170\npounds. I do not only feel better\nbut I look better, so all my friends\nsay,\n\"I shall never be without Kruschen Salts, will never cease taking my\ndally dose and more than glad to\nhighly recommend it for the great\ngood that ls ln it.\"\u2014-Mrs. S. A.\nSolomon.\n(,P.S.\u2014You may think I am exaggerating by writing such a long\nletter but truly I feel ao indebted to\nyou for putting out sueh wonderful\nsalts that I cannot say enough.\"\nDo\nbusiness\nwith\ni\nCRANBROOK\nAND\nFERNIE\nby long-distal\ntelephone\n:os\npersona'\necorioM00^\n1\n>st people buy the tires\nwhich have given them the\ngreatest value- that is why\nMORE PEOPLE HIDE ON\nGOOUYEAR TIRES THAN\nON ANY OTHEB KINO!\nIsn't their experience\nlikely also to be yours?^\n,((\ntr\ni\"\n;\nyj ri\n?~*m\nrrrrr\nin tr\nlit   i\nf> I\ni rr\nr rr\nr\n8\nS7JS\nQUAKER PUFFED WHEAT AND PUFFED RICE\nGOODYEAR\nMEANS\nGOOD WEAR\nWhere you Me e, sign\nlike this yon wilt find\nc reliable, merchant who\ncan demonstrate to you\nthe superiority of the\nSupertwist Cord* used\nexclusively in Goodyear\nTire*.\n\/\u00a3.Y_A-  it a\nvM\nSEA FOAM\nII s\u00aba   loam,  divinity  or   liujjUe\ntails to harden, lt may bo recookod\nover hot water until small amounts\nwill harden   on   oil   paper.\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS       TUESDAY, AUGUST 19, 1930.\n101\/\nPage Seven\nBilly   Townsend,  Vancouver,   Defeats   Qliek,   Toronto\nICROWD DISLIKES\nDECISION; GLICK\nSHOWSGAMENESS\n[JGIick Best  Boxer  of  Two;\nStarts'Bout With\nStrength\nIGLICK FINED FOR\nHITTING LOW BLOW\n(TownsencPs Right Goes Over Big, Eighth; Townsend\nGood in Ninth\n1: \u2014\u2014\nTORONTO, Aug. 18\u2014Billy Towns-\nland, Canadian lightweight cham-\nJblon from Vancouver, defeated ,Joe\nIpilck, the Brooklyn pants presser,\nIm'a torrid 10-round hout that featured the Shamrock Athletic club's\n\u25a0boxing show here tonight. The un-\nKnlmous decision of the three Judges\nl_ri awarding the hard hitting Paclflo\nIfcoast blond the decision did not\nItneet with general approval.\nThe unusually inrgo crowd booed\nJobnslstently. Click's gameness un-\nIjder a terrific barrage of hard rights\nl.and lefts had- won him a host of\nI .admirers.\nI GHck was undoubtedly the better\n\u25a0 boxer of the two, and early in tho\nfibout he opened up a nasty cut over\nl.'the Canadian champions' left eye.\nliHe possessed too much experience\nIfor Townsend to land his haymaking\nBright ln the early rounds and after\nIthe Vancouver boxer had taken the\ntlead in the first three rounds by\nfuse of a jolting straight left to the\nJatomach Click rallied cleverly and\nBtook tho fourth by a wide margin.\nI In the fifth the Brooklyn tailor\nrwas outboxing Billy when he land-\nRed a round arm swing below tho\nKnelt and Referee Lou March, Tor-\nKonto, fined him $100. This pcemed\nKto tako \"considerable effectiveness\nJ; away from Click and Townsend\nYsoon had him In trouble. The\nJJAmerican proved a tough customer,\nI'however, and rallied splendidly following the Canadian's frequent fusillades of smashing rights and lefts\nRto the stomach.\nJ?TOWNSEND   LANDS\nIn the eighth round the Van-\nI c\u00abuver boxer finally landed his dyn-\n1 amlto-laden right to Glick's Jaw\nJ and the Brooklynitc reeled grogglly\nW. about thc ring but managed to\n||hang on.\nTho  start  of  tho   ninth   had   tho\nI orowd cheering lustily  as the Can-\n\u25a0 adlan   swept   In   on   his   opponent\nseeking    to    place    the    knockout\n| punch.     Flailing   Gllck   with   hard\ni. rights to tho head  it  seemed  certain  the   bout  would   terminate   at\nI tHis   stage.     The   Brooklyn    boxer\nj atfain   won   the   admiration   of   the\n\\>' crowd,    however,   by    rallying   and\nI p-itboxlng   Townsend.\n:v Botli men fought furiously in the\n\\ final round with honors about even.\nTho   Canadian   Press   score   sheet\nI gave   Townsend   five   rounds.   Click\nthree,  while two were  even.\nTommy MoBeigh, Vancouver flyweight, and Johnny Moran, Pittsburgh, provided thn best match of\ntho three six rounder preliminaries.\nI The Canadian won the unanimous\ndecision, having a slight margin\nover the game smoky city youngster\nIn every round but thc first. Mc-\nBeigh weighed 115^4 and Moran\n113*4.\nstorage,\nUkeAor>\nEOOTENAY GARAGE, Tom Sargent,\n8tudebnkcr and  Durant  Service\nBig League*\nBASEBALL\n\"Tagging Runner\n,DONrMAKE A SERIES OF SHORT\nffiurowe When You Catch Runner\nBetween pases\u2014chash.\nHlMTM PASEANPMAKe.\nonly one Throw For\nPuTtour\nBy  AL  DEMAREE\n(Former Pitcher,  New York  G|ants)\nWhen a base runner ia trapped\nbetween bases there is usually a lot\nof throwing back and forth by the\nplayers closing in on him as he\ndashes back and forth trying \"-o\nkeep from being tagged. This ls\naU wrong. In the first place every\ntime a throw Is made there Is a\nchanco that it will be dropped or\nhit the runner am; he will be ssle.\nIn the secor ' place, If he Is \u2022 ig^o\nbetween second and third or third\nand the plate lt gives the other\nrunner or runners, if they are on\nbase, a chance to advance a base\nwhile   he   ls .being     -ased.\nTho correct way to make the play\nIs lo chase him at full speed and\nrun him to the base, farthest removed from home plate, and make\none $hort througn to the tliavet covering the bag for the tag-out.\nMany players prefer to toss tho\nball to the man covering the ball aa\nit is very hard to Judgo the spesd\nof a short throw when thrown\noverhand.\nIn running down a bnserunner always remember to run him away\nfrom the plate and not towards It\nand that tho oftener the ball is\nthrown and handled the greater are\nhis chances for escape.\nSave this Big League Baseball\nSeries,  another   win  appear   Friday.\nAl Demaree has prepared a new\nIllustrated leaflet on\u00ab \"Batting\"\nwhich lie will gladly send to \"any\nreader requesting it. Address Al\nDemaree In care of this paper, and\nbe sure to enclose a self-addressed,\nstumped  envelope.\nAUSTRALIA IS\nIN GOOD PLACE\nBEAT ENGLISH\nAre 190 Runs Behind With\nEight Wickets in\nHand\nENGLAND. HAS 405\nAS DRAWS STUMPS\nFairfax  Shines  at  Bowling\nWoodfull, \"Ponsford Star\nat Bat\nMANDELL AND HIS\nMANAGER DECIDE\nNOT TO AGREE\nCHICAGO, Aug. 18\u2014Sammy Mandell, former world lightweight champion, and Eddie Kane, hla manager\nfor nine years, came to thc parting\nof the  ways  today.\nMandell will continue to box hut\nnot under Kane's ' management.\nKane's contract with the Sheik of\nRockford, 111:, does not expire\nuntil July 6, 1931. He says he\nwill enforce It to the extent of\ncollecting his share of Mandell's\nring earnings until the expiration\nof  the contract.\nLONDON, Aug. 18.\u2014(C. P. cable)\n\u2014Australia were ln a happy position\nat the end of today's play in the\ncricket test match with England at\nthe Kennington Oval, with eight\nwickets lu hand they are only 190\nruns behind England's first innings\ntotal. England made 405 and when\nstumps were rawn the cornstalks\nhad put on 215 for the loss of two\nwickets.\nThe antipodeans owed their fine\nposition to the great bowling of A.\nFairfax this morning. He had an\n\u25a0average for today of three wickets\nfor 22 runs and his victims Included Herbert Sutcllffe and R. E. S.\nWyatt, As it was they set up a new\nreoord for an English sixth wicket\ntest matoh partnership with their\n170.\nThe   old   record   had   stood   since\n1905,   being   made  at  the   Oval   by\nR. H Spooner and J. T Tyldesley.\nUREAT START\nW. M. Woodfull and W. H. Pons-\nfcrd gave Australia a great start off,\nhitting up 169 for the first wicket.\nThey were lucky, because G. Duckworth, usually so suro behind the\nstumps, had an off day and thrice\nblundered. Ho missed Woodfull before he had scored half-a-dozen runs\nnnd should have slumped caught\nPonsford when he was 45. None of\nthe chgnTjcs were difficult.\nMaurice Tate was the unlucky\nbowler Tor'two of his errors and his\nbad luck seemed to dishearten\" him,\nIt remained for I. A. R. Peebles\nto redeem the English attack. He\nwas responsible for the dismissal\nof both Ponsford and Woodfull. The\nformer he clean bowled, while Wood-\nfull   Was  caught at the wicket. -\nPonsford1- century came as a surprise after his early escapes.\nPonsford competely overshadowed\nWoodfull, who, nevertheless, played\na correct game under thc circumstances.\nThe success of Peebles held Don\nBradman, Australia's dashing young\nbatsman, in check .and he was actually made to look awkward.\nClarence Grimmett, Australia's\nstar bowler, set up n record of 28\nwlcketa taking during a test match\nseries J-q- England, beating E. A.\nMcDonald's 37  in  1.31.\nStartfnT\"out in brilliant sunshine\nthe game ran into rainy weather\nduring the afternoon and a halt had\nto be called owing to a shower and\nagain owing to bad  light.\nThe attendance figures were estimated to be larger than Saturday's\nwhen over 35,00o packed themselves\nInto the enclosure.\n,     Dry\n26'^   oz 43.60\nOld Tom\naeva w W.B0\nLondon Dry\nPints   91.90\nthis advertisement in not published or displayed by\nthe Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nTWO AMERICANS\nSTATES OUT IN\nBANFF GOLFING\nFraser,    Vancouver    Golfer\nTurns in the Best Card\nof the Day\nBANFF SPRINGS HOTEL, Alta.,\nAug. 18.\u2014The qualifying round for\nthe Prince of Wales golf trophy,\npremier event of thc first annual\nweek of golf at Banff, finds two\nAmerican states eliminated, New\nYork and Pennsylvania. Illinois,\nCalifornia, District of Columbia and\nKentucky representatives mado the\n16. with all Canadian provinces that\nentered having one more to qualify.\nCharles Reid of Banff, last year's\nholder of the Prince of Wales\ntrophy, faltered at tho first tee,\ndriving TTree bolls Into the rough\nand was below his usual form\nthroughout tho game. Jack Fraser\nof Vancouver, got away with a\nbeautiful straight drive of about\n250 yards and at the close turned\nIn tho best card. His score was\n77. Those who qualified and their\nscores were J, Fraser, Vancouver. 77;\nJ. Hargreaves, Vancouver, 78; W. J.\n\"Bill\" Thompson, Toront* 79; Dave\nArnott, Winnipeg, 81; V. W. Hague,\nCalgary, 83; Dan Kennedy, Winnipeg, 84; O. P. Schaeffer, Chicago,\n86; Leon A. Clark, Piedmont, California, 87; h. Wclliver, Red Deer,\nAlta., 87; L. C. Stewart Jr., Washington, D. C-. 88: G. S. Lyon, Toronto,\n89; K. O. Allen, Victoria. 90; P.\nChrlstou; Banff, 90; A. Broblnson.\nLouisville, Ky.. 90; G. H. Steer, Edmonton, 01; G. W. Roenisch, Calgary,  61.\nPlaying conditions were ideal and\ncommencing at 0.30 a.m. all competitors were waya on schedule,\nwith fife minute intervals at the\nfirst   tee.\nYACHT WINS CUP RACES\nThe Canada cup races were held off Charlotte, the port cf Rocheetor,\nin Lako Ontario last week, Between Quest representing the Ro.'&l Canadian^\/\nYacht olub of Toronto as challenger, and Thisbe, representing the ytoche.ter\nYacht club, as defender.   The photo above shows the Thlstao, and Skipper\nBarrows and his victorious crew in the races.\nCUBS CONTINUE\nWINNING GAMES\nTO BETTER LEAD\nPirates   Beat   Brooklyn   4-3\nin Ninth Inning Bally\nin  National\nCHICAGO, Aug. ,18\u2014The Cubs\naccomplished more constructive work\non their Job of building up a\nlead lu the National league pennant\nbattle today, mauling Philadelphia\n17 to 3, for their third straight\nin the series, and giving them a\nthree nnd one half gam? margin\nover Broklyn which lost to Pittsburgh.\nPercy Malone held the Phillies\nto eight hits and accounted for\nhla 15th victory of the season.\nHack Wilson slammed out his 42nd\nhome run, to open a six run tally\nin the eighth.\nR H E\nPhiladelphia 000 020 001\u2014 3 8 2\nChicago     203 303 OGx\u201417    17    3\nHansen, Phillip;; and Rensa; Malone  and  Hartnett.\nPITtATKH    WIN\nPITTSBURGH, Aug. 18\u2014Dick Bar-\ntell's double In the ninth inning\nwith the bases loaded sent Paul\nWaner nnd Adam Comorsky scampering across the plate with the\nruns that gave the Pittsburgh Pirates a 4 to 3 decision over the\nBrooklyn   Robins   today.\nR   H   E\nBrooklyn     000 100 011\u20143 '   8    0\nPittsburgh    ...   000 100 102\u20144      8    1\nClark Luque and Lopez; Brame\n.ind   Hemsley.\n(Only two games scheduled)\nNATIE BROWN\nHARD HITTER\nHE SHOWS FANS\nGoes Through Few Rounds;\nHarlow Works Out;  Both\nLeft Handers\nMarcel Mainville\nWins at Newport\nNEWPORT, R. I\u201e Aug. 18\u2014Marcei\nRnlnvtllfl, Montreal, today defeated\nHoward Vonhell, New York, 12-10,\n0-4, in the second round ol the 14th\nannual casino Invitation tennis\ntournament.\nSPT H....SHR\nBATTALINO WINS\nOVER BUD TAYLOR\nThat Kootenay boxing fans will\nsee a real bout on Saturday night\nIs assured if anything can be Judged\nfrom the workouts witnessed yesterday by local f;ms when Natie\nBrown and George Harlow went\nthrough their paces. They are\nheavyweights.\nStarting at 2 o'clock Brown took\nthe floor. He went a good round\non the heavy bag and demonstrated\nthat he could hit, hard, long unci\noften if necessary. He then donned\nthe gloves and went two rounds\nagainst \"Long Distance\" Roberts\nof Newport. Despite a good application of vaaellne over tee feature\nof Newport boy Brown mussed him\nup pretty neatly and went two\nrounds were over Roberts was about\nready  to Quit.\nThis workout showed Brown to\nbe shifty, quick and ready to land\nwith either fist with accuracy and\nlots  of   beef.\nHe then did a round of shadow\nboxing and then went through some\nstrenuous exercises. That he la in\nshape can be readily Judjed when\nIt is recalled that he did not even\nshow signs of fatigue. He also\nwent one round With his Hollywood\ntrainer, Eddie Burdell, chunky but\nshort writer for the movies, who\nafter about three minutes of mixing\ndecided it was easier using the\nportable  typewriter.\nAfter the workout the pair disappeared in general direction of\nLakeside park for a dip in the\nKootenay waters. Burdell swam\nthe river over and  back on Sunday.\nGeorge Harlow :ilno showed that\nhe was In the pink. Large crowd\nof fans saw him go through his\npaces. Both battlers showed preference of their left, hands ln yesterday's workout any thing can be\nexpected   when   they  ml^  Saturday.\nGAGE PARK, Hamilton, Aug. 18\u2014\nThe lone Scottish entry In the British Empire lawn bowling tournament\ntoday scored s, win on their first\nappearance. In the rinks event,\nScotland defeated New Zealand by\n20 to 11. The Scots counted a\nsix-end at tho 13th to go into a\ncommanding leud that they did\nnot relinquish.\nATHLETICS, THE\nYANKEES AND\nSENATORS WIN\nGehrig   Gets   _i5th   Homer;\nPennock    Wins    Tenth\nGame of Season\nm_LADEI_PHIA, Aug. 18\u2014FoiBT\nrun rally that drove Walter Stewart\nout of the box in the eighth inning, gave the Athletics their cec-\nond straight victory of thc the St.\nLouis Browns today by a score\nof 6 to 4.\nR H E\nSt. Louis ... 200 001 100\u20144 8 0\nPhiladelphia     000 200 04x\u20146    11    1\nStewart. Colllni and Ferrell; Earnshaw and  Cochrane.\nGEHRIG  GETS   85th\nNEW    YORK.   Aug.    18\u2014Aided    by\nhome .timely   hitting   on   the   part\nof    his    teammates,   Herb    Pennock\nwon his tenth game of the season\ntoday as the New York Yankees\nclubbed out a 11 to 4 victory over\ntho   Chicago  White  Sox.\nPennock did not give a base on\nballs. Lou Gehrig drove out his\nBoth homo run,\nR    H    E\nChicago   000 001 300\u2014 4    12    3\nNew York .     040 104 2Gx\u2014-11    16    I\nBraxton, Walsh and Tate; Pennock   and   Bengough.\nSENATORS   WIN\nWASHINGTON. Aug. 18\u2014The Bfn-\nators made it three out of four\nagainst Detroit, today by winning\na fast game G to 4.\nHartley allowed the Tigers noly\n6    hits.\nR H E\nDetroit     .. 000 003 010\u20144      (i    0\nWashington      200 120 OOx\u2014fl    11   3\nHogsett, Wyatt and Hayworth;\nHartley   nnd   Ruel,\nNext year's strawberries depend on\nthe care glveft this year's crop.\n42 WOMEN ARE\nENTERED IN THE\nSWIM  MARATHON\nTORONTO, Aug. IB\u2014 Forty-two\ngirls and women had entered the\nwomen's swimming marathon to\nbe held Friday, thc first day of\nthe Canadian National exhibition,\nwhen entries officially closed Saturday night. Five thousand dollars  will   be   the   first  prize  money.\nMrs. Joseph Wright, the former\nmaratha Norellus, will not defend\nthc honors she won last year.\nGEHRIG LEADER\nOF THE BIG SIX\nPARADE FOR DAY\nSabe Herman Increases Average but Still Trails\nBill Terry\nBoundlat out tnrce hits, including his 35th heme run of the season. Lou Ciehrlu again led thc batting parade c.f baseball's big six\nyenlerda* Th? second successive\nday o[ farrt hitting by thc Yankees'\nfirst basemen boosted his batting\naverage to .301. Two hltfl lour times\nat the plate sent Babe Herman's\naverage up one point to .402. but lt\nwas 13 points short ol the mark ol*\nthe leader. Bill Terry, who was Idle.\nTlie standing\u2014\nO AB R H Pet.\nTerry, (Hants 114 4609 113 104 .414\nHerman. Hobs 118 47., 115 191 .402\nGehrig. Yanks 120 438 114 175 .391\nKlein. Phllls 117 4807 118 191 391\nSimmons. A's 106 410 119 1058 .380\nRuth,   Yanks    113 3903 133 143    .364\nRabbit  dyed   to   look   like   beaver\nwill bo featured  this autumn.\nBETTY NUTALL\nLEADS PARADE\nIN NET PLAY\nLACHINE CLUB\nWATER SPORTS\nWINNES,EAST\nTake  a  Big  Advantage   in\nWater Sports Staged at\nBritish Empire Games -\nCANADA   LEADS   IN\nBOWLING   MATCHES\nScores Win in Both lioubles\nand Singles Events; New\nZealand Down\nTwo of Rivals Win us Hand.\nily as She; Doubles\nPlay Today\nFOREST HILLS, N. Y.. Aug. 18.\u2014\nBetty Nuthall led thc parade ol the\nfavorltea through tbe opening round\nof tho 43rd national w cm-en's tennis\noh-unpion3hlp of the West Side\nstadium   today.\nThe Enfflish challenger turned\nback Loula McFarland of Pasadena,\nCal., by scores of 0-0, 0-1. in a onesided encounter tliat lasted less\nthan  hn\"  an  hour.\nTwo ~uT Miss Nut hall's lending\nUnited States rivals, however, won\nhy scores ns decisive ;is hers. Mrs.\nAnna Harper, thc left-handed Ban\nFrancisco veteran who was seeded\nfirst among the Unltod States players, crushed Dorlne Chase of Boston 6-0, 6-1. and Sarah Palfrey of\nBrookllne^. Mass,, outplayed Lnura\nPlUcnger of Camden, N, .1.. 6-1, S-0.\nIn the draw for the national\nchampionship doubles which will\nstart tomorrow the following four\nteams were seeded mnong those\nthat will compct? 1\u2014Miss Nuthall\nand S-\"\"\"1 Palfrey, 2\u2014Edith Cross\nand \" Stm! Harper, 3\u2014Josephine\nCruckshcnk and Marjorie Qalclman,\n4\u2014Penelope Anderson and Marjorie\nMorrill. This title was won last\n.car by an English team and Miss\nNuthall hopes to take half of it\nback   to  England   again.\nHAMILTON, Ont., Aug. 18\u2014(By\nW. R. Wheatley, Canadian Press\nstaff writer)\u2014Aquatic sports and\nlawn bowling held the spotlight at\nthe second day of the British Empire  games.\nThe Lachlne Racing Canoe club. ,\nof Lachlne, Quebec, held an unbeatable point advantage over all\nrivals when the day's competition\nhad ended. The easterners had\ngathered in 26 points as against nine\nfor Balmy Beach of Toronto and\neight each for Sudbury and Gan-\nanoque. Parkdale of Toronto had\namassed seven, while the rest were\nscattered, with Island Aquatic of\nToronto gaining five, St. Lambert's\nQuebec, five, and Grand Trunk of\nMontreal and Ottawa New Edinburgh\ntwo each. Single blade events\nonly counted in the scoring totals,\nthe events ranking as Canadian\nchampionship affairs.\nCanada held the advantage tonight in the bowling competition,\nhavln-j scored a win in both the\ndoubles and singles, and a vlotory\nIn the full link events. England\nwas a close Becond with a win tn\nthe doubles and singles, while\nScotland, the only other country to\npost Its name on the victory board,\ncame through to win a rink event.\nNew Zealand succumbed to the\nold country In the bowling doubles\nthis morning by 30 to 13. while\nCanada scored a marked win over\nSouth Africa, 24 to 10. The Vancouver pair, A. S. Reld and W. W.\nMoore, were the winners of the Dominion. The morning singles went\nto the mother country when England triumphed over South Africa, 22  to  12.\nThe rinks competition this afternoon saw victories for Scotland\nand Canada, the trundlera from the\nland of the thistle overcoming New\nZealand's quarter by 20 to II,\nwhile the Dominion's representatives,\nthr Hamilton Victorias, skipped by\nHarry j. Allen, won over England\nby 37 fo 19. Reld, of Vancouver\nwas unablo to follow up \" hla\ndoubles victory in the morning, and\nlost in tho arternoon singles to\nThomas of South Africa, by 21 to\n17, the bowling events will he\ncontinued tomorrow, both morning\naud   afternoon.\nJelly glasses having a smooth\nrim make fine drinking glasses far\nthe children, thus saving the better\nones.\nOrgandie again makes Its bid for\nevening popularity ln the Fifth avenue window displays, and plquo,\nfaconne madras, terry cloth and\nlisle mesh claim their share of\nsports wear exploitation.\nFOR YOUR\nLUNCH\nDUHING THE HOT\nWEATHER, TRY ONE\nOF   OUR   DELICIOUS\nCHOCOLATE     MALTED  MILKS\nQELINA^\nTOBACCONISTS\nBASEBALL\nlNTUKNATIONAl.     LBAGDE\nNewark  7,  Rochester 6.\nJersey   City   3,   Toronto   10.\nReading 2,  Buffalo 24.\nAMERICAN    ANNOTATION\nColumbus 7, St. Paul 8.\nIndianapolis   1.   Milwaukee   3.\nToledo    10,   Minneapolis   14.\nLouisville    at;   Kansas   City\u2014rain,\nHARTFORD, Conn., Aug. 18\u2014Bat,\nBattalino of Hartford, featherweight\nchampion of thc world, tonight\nwon a 10-round decision over Bud\nTaylor of Torre Haute, Ind., nt.\nthe urloy stadium here. Battallno's\ntitle   was   not  at  stake.\nStoppers of perfume and other\nbottles ofton work loose In a suitcase, To obviate this, cut a finger\nfrom an old leather glove and, after\npressing the stopper well in, draw\nthe finger down over it. Tie securely\nround   the   neck 'nf  the  bottle,\nFOR PLEASURE\nThe Better Cigarette\nPOKER     HANDS     IN     EVERY     PACKAGE\n Pagre Eight\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS        TUESDAY, AUGUST 19, 1930.\n'he World's Delight\nPAKT II\nCHAPTBK    IX\nBefore noon of be next day, all\nNashville knew that Adah Menken\nhad fled\u2014-where, no one  knew.\nThe gossips were full of astonished and noandaloua conjecture.\nAny story wae listened to, for no\none knew the truth. Without a\nfarewell to tho actors la the company, and with no word written\nhome to New Orleans, Dolores ran\naway again as she had galloped\noff from Draconl's caravan and as\nshe bad flown from the house\nof Isaacs Menken.\nAll through a sleepless night\nshe had lain, fully dressed, across\nher bed and made her resolves.\nShe would drop her entire past\noverboard,- Mother and sister and\nhusband, and most of all Buddy\nshe would blot forever from her\nrecollection. Everyone- had botrayed\nher, and she wanted to forget\nthem all. In some new place,\namong strangers, she could start\nlife over, and she would begin by\nseeking first after her loet self;\nshe would woo and coax back her\nown spirit to desires and hopes\nand valiant dreams; she would\nrevoke all Its once brave aspirations.\nBut months after that arabesque\nnight in Nashville, ehe sat alone\nIn her room ln the old Astor House\nIn New York City, In a chilly\nroom with red wall-paper and a\ngilt clock, and counted a handful\nof silver, which was all the money\nshe had left. Although she had\nbeen In the metropollsonl y a week\nahe had vainly sought engagements\nln every New York theatre. The\nbox-offices were fallen on lean\nmonths. Dolores had entered the\ngreat city at a moment of curious\nhesitation   ln   Its   bustling   affairs.\nThe Ides of March In 1869\u2014It\nwas not ao far off a time as It\nsounds, for not far from where\nDolores lived DeWolf Hopper, tho\nactor who has bo charmed the\nstage of our own time, was already\na baby toddling around his father's\nhouse. President Buchanan's term\nIn the White House was almost at\nits futile end, he who had gone\nInto his office with the optimistic\nprediction that the slavery agitation was over\u2014but that was to\nlaugh, now, and at a sorry Jest.\nA rail-splitter's star' was already\nshining and rising; in the stillness\nof the time the future echoed\nwith the march of armies. In New\nYork City, the panic of 1867 was\nstill a dour memory; the thunders\nof the Lincoln-Douglas debates yet\nresounded, while men openly declared that 15,000 African savages\nhad heen landed in the southern\nstates in the lout twelvemonth\nand that juries refused to convict\nship captains or owners defying\nhe Piracy Act of 1820. People\ntalked politics, and the playhouses\nwere   half  empty.\nYet his coming crisis\u2014which,\nlong before, Dolores had predicted\nto the scornful Menken\u2014interested\nthe lonely girl not at all.   She was\nCanajdianPacifii\n.    Sailinqs\nmEUROPE\nTHt ORIENT\nMU.ViUt.AL.   UU-ubLC\nSept. 2   Empress of  Australia\nTo   Cherbourg-Southampton\nSept. 4   Duchess of Atholl\nTo Liverpool\nSept.  5   - \u2014  Montcalm\nTo   Cherbourg- Soutnampton\nand Hamburg\nSept. 9   Empress of Scotland\nTo   Cherbourg-Southampton\nSept. 10   Lmciiess ox Bedford\nTo Liverpool\nSept.  11    -   Montrose\nTo Havre-London-Antwerp\nSept. 12   Mlnnedosa\nTo   Buliast-Llver pool-Glasgow\nSept. 16   Empress of Prance\nTo   Cherbourg-Southampton\nSept. 17   Duchess or York\nTo Liverpool\nSept. 18   Montclare\nTo Cherbourg-South anxpton\nand  Hamburg\nSept,  10    Duchess of Richmond\nTo   Glasgow-Belfast-Liverpool\nSept. 23  Empress of Australia\nTo   Cherbourg-Southampton\nFROM VANCOUVER TO\nHAW All-_ AP AN - CHIN A-MAN1LA\nAug   31      Empress  of  Russia\nBept. 4   Empress of Japan\nfciept..  IS     iimprcss  of ___ia\nOct. 2   \u201e. Empress of Canada\nOct.  16   Empress of Russia\nASK FOR BAILINGS TO HONOLULU\nPull details with rates and Passport Information from any agent or\nwrite\n..____.     ._   '\u2022  <*\u2022   CARTER\nDistrict Passenger Agent. Nelson, ao,\ntoo utterly aelf-abeorbed; only her\npersonal plans In the lagging world\n<* the theatre and letters occupied\nher mind. She scarcely realized\nthat the united States was soon to\nbe torn ln half and the south\nblood- drenohed, but she did read\nwith ourlous Interest that Gounod's\n\"Faust\" had Just been given its\npremiere in Paris; the legend and\nGoethe's poem had always appealed   to  her  imagination.\nTo get an engagement or to\nwrite for the city journals\u2014these\nwere all the problems she could\nthink abouf. In pursuit of them,\nshe had carried her poems to the\ndoors of editors, from the Tribune\nto Harper's Magazine, but all were\nskeplcal and indifferent. Her\npoems now lay unprlnted on her\nbureau. In the theatres she had\neven appealed to Dan Bryant to\ngive her & chance ln his \"Excelsior\nMinstreal Troupe of the World\"\nthen appearing ln Mechanics Hall\non Broadway abovo Grand street;\nshe went to the Santa Clans Concert hall on Prince street, known\nas the cheapest amusement place\nIn the city\u201413 cents for the\nshow and a refreshment ticket.\nShe followed Sanford's troupe to\nBrooklyn, but they boasted that\ntheir \"mammoth combination of\nstars\" was the oldest company in\nthe world and they had rto use for\nnewcomers. Day after day she had\nsought out new places, till now\nlt seemed there was no more left\nto explore; her cash was almost\ngone, and she must act to some\navail and quickly hefore being\nasked to leave the hotel.\n\"I must sell the diamond necklace, then,\" she told herself disconsolately.\nAt that time Tiffany's was at\n65o Broadway, not far from a theatre  where  soon But  Dolores\nhad no prophetic vtBlon as up\nBroadway with its unbroken line\nof shop awnings she rode In a\nnoisy stage until, with deep discouragement, she saw the store\nfront of  the famous  Jeweler.\nThe haughty clerk fingered her\nnecklace   with   pained   abstraction,\n\"What about this?\" he asked absently.\n\"I would like to sell It for as\nnear Its full  value as I can get.\"\n\"Its full value.    Hmpfl'\nThe exclamation of the clerk was\nan Insult; he pressed the blazing\n\u2022oauble   Into   her   hands-\n\"Its full value Is less than $20\u2014\nJUBt brass and glass,\" he finished\nand turned his glacial gaze upon\nanother   customer.\n\"No one' said they were genuine,\"\nshe bitterly reminded herself as\nonce more she was ln the equally,\ndamp air of the sidewalk. \"I\nJust assumed they were genuine,\nthat was all. What a fool I was\nto think a lot of theatre Btock-\nholders would ever give an actress\nanything  that was  good.\nAnd with a gasp ot. disdain she\nwent into a second-hand Jewelry\nshop, and came away soon alter\nwith $7 In her purse.\nIn her depression, she took little\nnote of where she was wandering.\nShe was too busy trying to think;\nthere must be something she\ncould do. It would be absurd\nto be hungry, or put out In the\nstreet; that was thc sort of thing\nmother and Josephine talked about\nbut lt never really happened to\nnice people. By the docks along\nSouth street she wandered and\nagain on Broadway, post the windy\npark with its shivering trees and\ntramps. So lost in her problem\nwas Dolores that she scarcely heard\nthe thunder of the traffic, the\ncowltnks and the tin cans of the\nJunkmen, the yells of \"Bread!\"\nand \"Milk ho!\" from the curb\nvenders and thc brazen bell of the\nscavenger. Across from the parked\nrecess before a venerable church\nshe stopped and tSsnt four cents\nfor a copy of the New York Clipper\u2014the bible of the show folk\nthen, as was to be the Variety\nof a later but not so much different Broadway.\nReading this newsy weekly paper\na Uttle later In the lobby of the\nAstor House, Dolores decided to\ncall upon its editor and offer him\nsome of her poems. Thus it came\nabout that shortly after lunch sho\ncrossed from the hotel into Ann\nstreet, looking for No. 29.\nThe office was not easy to find,\nand for awhile Dolores felt quite\nloBt In a maze of shouting, rumbling streets, lined with one-story\nbuildings, beer aaloonB. eating\nhouses and tobacco shops each\nguarded   by   its  wooden  Indian.\nfinally, near theatre allpy,\nwhich made her think of New Orleans, she found the shabby little\npublishing office on whoso glass\ndoor appeared thc legend \"Frank\nQueen, proprietor.\" Dolores rapped\non the door, and a heavy bellow\nbade her enter. As she opened the\ndoor, she hesitated before the odd\nspectacle which confronted her.\nOcean Cruises\nTo West Coast\nVancouver Island\nBy the Splendid Steamers\nPRINCESS NORAH or PRINCESS\nMAQUINNA\nRound Trip $39.00, Including Meals\nand Berth\nSix and a Half Days of Pleasure\nSAILINGS      Aug. 1, 6, 11, 16, 21, 26.\nCalls U over forty different ports, Indian Villain,\nCaaHHalaa*, FlshlDg Plants, auld Mining and Logging\nCamps. Time at porta thirty minutes to sr.fral .Hours.\n\u2022tamer arrives Port AHee, Quatslno Bound, terminus\nart   voyage   on   (mirth   day.\nsteamers sail from Victoria, connection Canadian\nputtie steamers from Vancouver 10:80 A. M. or 11:40\nP. M. dally.\nDetails, Berth Reservations, Literature from any\n\u2022gent Can.  Pac.  Ely.,  or write\nJ. S. CARTER. D.P.A, Nelson, B, C\nIt was a small and smoky room,\nstuffy to overflowing. At a cluttered desk, in a huge chair with\nan upright back, squatted the\nBtout figure of the bearded and\nred-faced publisher, over in a\ndim corner sat a little man on\na little chair, smoking a Uttle\npipe whose thick fumes were moro\ndeadly than the memorable pipe\nof Annie Draconi. , Prank Queen\nwas In his shirt-sleeves; he> wore\na black Ascot tie with despondent\nends; his hair was shaggy and\ndork, speckled with flakes of gray;\nhis mustaches dropped like the\nwhiskers of a walrus. At the sight\nof his visitor, he shifted \"loose\nchewing\" from his right cheek\nto his left, and spat expertly\nin   his   porcelain   cUapldor.\n\"Come lnl\" he roared. \"Come\nright lnl   How do you do?\"\nWith one immense foot, minus\nIts shoe, . he slid a chair forward\nfrom beside his desk, and blandly\ninvited the girl to be seated. Then\nshifting his tobacco once again,\nhe  Bhouted.\n\"Sit down, for God's sake 1 the\nchair's free \u2014 everything else Is\ncashl\"\nAt this witty sally the little\nman ln the corner obediently rj>\nmoved his pipe and gave a cackle\nof   appreciative   glee.\n\"Mr. Queen!\" he squealed, \"that\nwas a buster and no mistake. Buy\nme  out  If  that  wasn't  a buBter.\"\nMr. Queen appeared not to\nnotice this salvo of applause, hut\ncontinued to stare with Increasing\ninterest at- his lovely visitor, still\nstanding at hla threshold. The\nbeauty of Dolores took on an\nethereal reticence in the close\nconfinement of that little room all\ndrenched with purple haze.\n\"Sit down,\" he repeated in a\nkindly and \"quieter voice. \"I'll be\nglad to talk to you.\"\nHe iyrned to the little man and\nroared;\n\"John, stop your silly giggling,\nand go out and fetch a pot of\nbeer   and   two   glasses!\"\n\"Two glasses?\" repeated John\nforlornly.\n(To   Be   Continued)\nNAKUSP CREEK\nSCENE SUNDAY  \u2022\nSCHOOL PICNIC\nNAKUSP, B. C, Aug. 18.\u2014The\nannual picnic of Nakusp and Glen-\nBank United Sunday schools was\nheld at Nakusp creek, near Burton\nstation,  on Wednesday  afternoon.\nA largo attendance of both young\nand older folk was present. As the\nday w.'vs hot, the first feature of the\nmorning was a swim, after which\nnoon lunch was sorved. In the\nafternoon races and contests, with\nbaseball, furnished excitement for\nthe crowd. After thc evening-plcnlc\nthe pupils were given free ice-cream.\nSuperintendents Les'.ie Miller and\nE. C. Johnson are being congratulated on the success of the outing.\nBEATING   CANDY\nIt Is necessary to cool candy without beating If a smooth creamy\ntexture Is desired.\nNORTH AND SOUTH\nHIGHWAY TALKED\nOVER AT CRESTON\nIdaho and B. C. Engineers\nDiscuss lit; Ramsay to\nMake Full Report\nCRESTON,    B.    C,    Aug.    18    \u2014\nThrough the persistent efforts of\nCreston board of trade an Important\ninternational highways conferenoe\nwas held here on Friday afternoon,\nwhen executive members of the\nboard and representative citizens\nof Porthlll, Idaho, gathered to talk\nover the North and South highway\nwith engineers representing British\nColumbia and federal and state\nengineers  from  Idaho.\nFrom across the line oame J. s.\nWoods, state highway commissioner\nof Idaho, of Basic, and his assistant\nMr. Hathmlle, as well as L. J. Chaf-\nflns, engineer in charge of highways In northern Idaho, in a wire\nfrom Hon. Nels. Lougheed, minister\nof public works, the minister expressed regret at his inability to\nbe present but wired that he had\ninstructed Engineer Dixon of Cranbrook, who ls In charge of East\nKootenay highways, to represent\nhim. Also present was W. M. Ramsay of Nelson, district engineer for\nWest Kootenay.\nPresident Mallandaine of Creston\nboard of trade presided, and the\ncase for the placing of tbe North\nand South highway route through\nCreston was stated In practical\nterms by the chairman, C, O. Bodg-\ners, acting president of the Associated Boards of Trade of Eastern\nBritish Columbia, as well as C. F.\nHayes, George Johnson, Frank Putnam and 8. A. Speers, also of\nCreston, while tbe Idaho case was\nstated by H. A. Frenoh and J.\nO'Meara of Porthlll.\nThe Idaho situation was explained\nIn considerable detail by Messrs.\nWoods and Chaffln and waa well\nreceived by the Idaho delegation.\nAs the highway ls ln Engineer\nRamsay's district, it was left to him\nto handle the British Columbia\nBide of the case and after hearing\nthe evidence submitted by the\nCreston representatives, particularly\nMr. Ramsay agreed that he would\nreport fully on the session to the\nminister of public works.\nCRESTON'S    ATTITUDE\nThe North and South highway\nsituation has aroused much feeling\nat Creston and vicinity, due to the\nfact that reports will not down\nthat the government Intends to discard what is known as the K.V.\nroute to Rykerts-PorthM, and put\nin a more circuitous road via Canyon, Lister and Huscroft, and if\nthis latter rout* ls adopted as the\nBritish Columbia link ln the highway it means that Creston village\nwill be sidetracked from 60 per\ncent of the tourlBts who now traverse the K.V. route which was\nestablished early In 1928, but which\nhas received very scant attention\nln the way of maintenance in the\npast two years.\nCLASSIFIED ADVERTISING\nCLASSIFIED   ADVERTISING   BATES\nLocal   Reading   Notices\n(Minimum   two   lines).\n' Twenty cents a line. Display type\nlarger than six point, charge at rate\nof 20c a line six point; i.e., one line\n12 point, charge 40c; one line 14\npoint, charge 60c, 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 fine; per month\n$1.30 a line.   Minimum charge, 20c.\nMarriages, deaths and In mom-\noriam notices, 20c a line. Lists\nof flowers at funerals, gifts at wed'\ndings, etc.,  15c a line.\nNo   extra   cost   If   charged.\nBOX   NUMBERS\nIf a Daily 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\nCARDS\n(Minimum two lines)\nYEARLY CONTRACT \u2014 \u00bb1 a line\nper month.   .\nSIX MONTHS' CONTRACT \u2014$1.26\na line per month.\nTRANSIENT \u2014 $1.50 a line per\nmonth.\nLEGAL NOTICES\nIN,THE   SUPREME   COURT   OF\nBRITISH   COLUMBIA\nIN   PROBATE\nIn   the   Matter   or   the   Estate   of\nAnna   K.   Pauison,  deceased\nTAKE NOTICE that all persons\nhaving claims against the Estate of\nAnna K. Paulson who died at Spokane, Washington, on the 24th day\nof November, A. D. 1927 are required to forward Buch claims duly\nverified by statutory declaration to\nthe undersigned on or before the\n21at day of August A. D. 1930 after\nWhich date the administrator will\nproceed to distribute the within estate without regard to any claims\nof which he shall not then have\nnotice.\n013HEA   &.   GARLAND,\nHouston Block,\nNelson   \"R   o-\nSolicitors for the Administrator!\n(1359)\nNEW COMBINES\nARRIVE, CRESTON\nCRESTON, B. C, AU?. IS\u2014Mrs.\nGeorgo A. Hunt, accompanied by\nher daughter, Miss Clara, spent a\nfew days ln town the latter part\nol the week, guests of Mr. and Mrs.\nM. J. Boyd.\nEric and Raymond Martin left on\nThursday for a couple of woeks'\nholiday visit with relatives and\nfrtendH ln Calgary and Golden.\nD. Whitfield, cashier at the Imperial Bank. Is away on the cus-\ntomsary two weeks' vacation, whloh\nhe Is spending at his home ln Nelson and wllj k\"-80 visit at the coast.\nMaster Sidney Fisher of Nelson\nis holidaying  with  creston friends\n(1)\nCORBETT\u2014To Mr. and Mra. E. J.\nCorbett ln Trail, August 12, a\ndaughter.\nHELr WANTED\nJ\u00ae\nWANTED\u2014A KITCHEN GIRL.    AP-\nply Grill. a'1391)\nWANTED-GIRL     FOR     GENERAL\nhousework.   Apply  812 SlUca St.\ni'1400)\nWANTED, .ABOUT SEPTEMBER 16.\nMan for Apple Packing Shed, also\nPackers and Graders. Boswell Fruit\nGrowers, Boswell, B. O.        t'1370)\nAGENTS   WANTED\n(12)\nCHRISTMAS MONEY EASILY\nquickly earned taking orders now\nlor our beautiful line of Personal\nChristmas Greeting Cards. Sell on\nsight. Regal Are Co., 31o Spadina\nAve., Toronto. (1300)\nTEACHERS   WANTED\n(13)\nTEACHER WANTED FOR DIV. n,\nThrums school. Mainly Doukhobor. Apply\u2014Secretary. Thrums.\nB. O. (1387)\nFURNISHED ROOMS Fur Kent  (15)\nLIGHT     HOUSEKEEPING      SUITE,\n1122  Josephine. (1378)\nCOMFORTABLE BEDROOM, PRI-\nvate family\u2014near Central School.\nWrite   P.   O.  Box  573. (1402)\nROOM   AND  BOARD\n(17)\nCOMFORTABLE BOARD AND ROOM\nclose ln.   Phone 50B.L. U353)\nRESIDENCE AND BOARD WITH\nprivate family. Opposite Central\nSchool. P. O. Box 20. Phone\n802.L. (1372)\nROOM AND BOARD IN VERY\nquiet home for lady, or two friends\neither sex, willing to share room;\nnear public schools, car lino passes\ndoor. Apply Box 100 Nelson, B. C.\n(1397)\nROOMS\u2014To Rent\n(18)\nCOMFORTABLE ROOM FOR ONE\nor two men. Teleplione. 302\nVictoria, 8t. (1399)\nHOUSES FOR RENT\n(21)\nSEVEN ROOM FURNISHED HOUSE\nfor rent.. Oak St. Phone 748X.\nor Mrs. Oliver, 03k St.        (1341)\n8-ROOMED HOUSE FOR RENT\nacross lake. Apply 924 Edgewood\nAve. or Fhone 208L. (1380)\nthis week, and before returning will\nvisit with Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Sinclair at Camp Lister.\nMr. and Mrs. F. C. Rodgers are\nspending the week at their summer\ncottage   at   KuBkanook.\nMr.   and   Mrs.  Dennes   and   Mrs.\nArthur North of, Sirdar were renewing   acquaintances   ln   Creston   on\nThursday.\nNEW   COMBINES\nTwo new combines havo arrived\nfor the wheat harvest on the Reclamation farm. The machines same\nin on Wednesday and are being\nerected in the C.P.R. yard.\nLIVESTOCK  FOR  SALE\n(53!\nBOILING     FOWLS     FOR     SALEr-\nPhone  484R1. (^77)\n80 YOUNG PIGS FOB SALE, $6.00\neach, John Egloff, Edgewood,\nB. 0. (1371)\nFOR SALE\u2014TWO YOUNG TOGGER-\nberg goats, good mtlkors. Gentle.\nBox   1847  Dally  News. U347)\nFOR SALE\u2014BAY HORSE, 8 YEARS,\nSulet in harness: work single or\nouble,   Ward, Valllcan, B. O.\n(1344)\nMISCELLANEOUS  FOR  SALE     (27)\nFOR SALE\u2014BARRELS, KEGS, BUR-\nlap sacks, white sugar aacks, MacDonald Jam Co. (1308)\nFOR CHERRY SLUGS\u2014ARSENATE\nof Lead and, \"Black Leaf 40.\" The\nBrackman-Ker MUlg. Oo. Ltd.\n(1401)\n25.000 PEET  Daa-IN.  SLIGHTLY\n' used galvanized pipe, all\nfull lengths. 12 cents per loot;\n20,000 ft. lU-ln. Black Pipe 7i5\ncents per foot; also Large Stock of\n. other sizes and Pipe fittings.\nBwartz Pipo Yard, 220\u2014First Avo.\nEast,   Vancouver, B.  O.      (1143)\nPROPERTY  FOR   SALE\n(34)\n$1700 BUYS ONE ACRE CULTIVAT-\ned. Large Bungalow, Cement\nBasement, city water, etc. Out\nBuildings near sandy beach and\nstreet cars. Write P. O. Box 887\nNelson, B. C. (1306)\nSUMMER CAMP\nWhy pay rent for a summer home when you can buy\nat a very reasonable price\nand on easy terms a very\npretty and well -furnished\ncottage in Procter.\nThe property is only a\nfew minutes walk from the\nlake. There is a good garden\nwith fruit trees, shrubbery\nand lawn.\nPrice and terms on application.\nCfaas. F. McHardy\nMINING,  TIMBER,  LUMBER\nWANTED TO PURCHASE\u2014TIMBER\nTract, ties, pine and poles. Apply\nBox   1398   DaUy  News. (13S8)\nAUTOMOBILES FOR SALE\n(40)\nFOR SALE\u2014FORD COUPE. 1926,\nfive good tires. Ruckstell Axle.\nFinish like new. $200. Terms,\n$75 down. $16 per month balance.\n618 Carbonate St. Phone 276Y.\n(1403)\nFURNITURE   FOR   SALE\n(46)\nBED ROOM FURNITURE, DINING\nroom suite, furnacette, rug. Vic-\ntrola, kitchen table, chairs, tent\n14 x 17 and some utensils. Apply 810 Stanley St. (1882)\nFURNITURE FOR SALE\u2014(Cont.) J\nLLYOD BABY CARRIAGE, AS L\nPhone   793R. (137|\nBusiness Professional\nDirectory   \u2022\u2022\nAccounting\n-..     CHAS. ,F.   HUNTER-     \u201e,.\nPublic Accountant  ana Audit*\nMcDonald Jam Bldg., Nelson   i,\n(121*\nAssayers\nE. W. Wlddowuon, Box A1108. Nelsol\nB. C.   Standard western ohargea. 1\n02161\nBEiAUXi\"    PARLORS\nSociety    Beaut?    shop.    Glutei\nBlock.   Mrs. is. Halgh. Phone 171.1\n(12401\nChiropractors\nDR. MITTUN, X-RAY. CRANBROOJ\n  iHieT\nDR   GRAY,   GILKER  BLK.,   Nelsol\n  (W17|\nDentists\nDR.  O.  A.   0.   WALLEY  _  Grlfljl\nBlock,   X-ray,   Nelson,   B,   CC:\nEngineers\nH. D. DAWSON-^UND SURVEYOR!\nMining and Civil Engineer! Kasll\n(12191\nA. H. GREEN CO.\u2014CONTRACTO.^\nFormerly Green Bros., Burde.,\nNelson, civil and Mining Englnj\neers B. O, Alberta and Jjomlnlotf\nLand Surveyors.\nFlorists\nGltfZZElM'S   GIMENHOUSE,     NelJ\nsTns. ^  fl(wra  ^  flonOel\nWM, S. JOHNSON\u2014 I\nHaPnrinq4aFloril''U'bg-  W\nInsurance and Real Estate\nR. W. DAWSON\u2014Real Estate r\u201e'l\nsurance. Rentals, Next \u00bbDt\u00bbrJ?,i\nHardware, Baker St. (ia24)l\nPhotographers\nGEORGE A. MEERE8  \u2014 Artist \u00ab\u201e,;\u25a0\nPhotographer,   716   Baker   It       I\n(1236)1\nTransfer\nWILLIAMS' TRANSFER\nBAGGAGE, COAL AND WOOn\nPhone 106 (1228,1\nATKINSON TRANSFER \u2014 CoaTaM\nWood.   Long distance hauUng\n(1227)\nWood Working Factory\nLAWSON\u2014Baker St., Carpenter andl\nJoiner.    Sash  and  Hardwoal       I\n(122S)|\n q4\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS      TUESDAY, AUGUST 19, 1980.\nPaga Nlns,\nMarket and Mining News\nJUS TEST THE\nntENGTH NICKEL\nORONTOMARKET\ndictions Made Last Week;\nFalls Off to 20 But\nRecovers Slightly\n|?HTS ABEALM08T\nWIPED OUT, CLOSE\n1001\n03 00%      001,\nmv,    tav.    02%\nDO'A     99K     89.V4\n87!4      87%\n37%     87%\n4iy\u00ab    \u00abV4\n40\n80%\nm\nTraction Closed at\nLaw fop Aw Yew\nof 33 1.2\nIgjKflt-f-Q, AUaf. IS\u2014^fB^JfflHojia\n* Ufa WH* that bears would\nthe strength of runwratj \u00abaq>-\ntor Int>\u00abna\u00bbtlonal Nlckol when lt\nDO OHM triin today.    Tha\n\u00bb, m'*a \u00bb0. failed; to HreaJc\nV that point and dosed on the\ninto stock: egohango at 20%,\n%. Du rights almost were\n94 out. Thay eold at 1. 2 anil\nrats, cloalng \u00bbt .02. off ,08.\nM Toronto marlojt DraaaantiM an\ninoly today In that final mm-\n7 of tratvacttone showed a\nTaNa traallng ratio, lit net trains\n12 loseas, with 24 Issues un-\nagai, while all tha Import-ant\nea worn off.\nrtutajan   Traction   olosed   avt   ito\nIfor the year, 83V4 for a lc|s\nVa. Tho severe weak end break\nOaf Mtlrels J* oredltcd with the\nIn*.\n1J. O. P- R- continued its'\n\u00bb, eommenoed on Saturday, and\nan 3 potnta to close at 170.\nI, now waa unrtunged at 4314.\nhibott Plow was unchsnged at\nS  aad, Massey Harria gained  <\/,\nwv|.\nIt* bnt\u00bb group to ahow consistent\nngth ttocrughont its list Issues\nmae. _ -JJulldlng Products was\nIS. CaraaAa cement }\u00ab, to JK,\njjnlon Tar preferrM gained 4\nclose at 84 and Standard Paving\nj on % at Its dose of 30%.\nPot.    Sfwl,   M\nVne.   IZ,   MH\nMay    100\nOct,   __.   40\nDeo.       30%\n*far$ .--\nOct    38%     U% 38\nDao.   \u201e.,\u201e   41%     41'A 40%\nMay    .,\u201e\u201e. 46%     40%     46%\nTlaxi\nOct.      164 164 166\nDs\u00ab  161% 161% 168\nRye:\nOct.    ....   64%     B4%     S3\nMay\nOaah price*; .^__^__^^__\u201e\nWheat\u2014No.   1   hard   80%:   No.   1\nnor 89; No. a 'run 16%; No. 8 nor.\n\u25a08%;  No. 4 so%: No.S 66%; No.\n6   eo%:   feed   48%;   track   89%;\nsCTssnlngs   par  ton MM.\nTORONTO STOCKS\n\u25a0 am,     _..._...\t\nIF _\nlulat    \u201e^^~\n|\u00bb. Consolidated\"\n\\z.r\n\u2022Bd Jt Lands\n|.\u00bbei Uw*mm\nhrtaip   _\nffiSr.\nllnaw     ___\nS5t&~w\u00ab*\u00bbi\"\n\u00bb 8horo\nst\/saar}   Jtorenco\nSSL'\"\nOowan\n,     .40\n2.06\nM\n.01%\n.     .46\n.     .36\n.     .10\n.13\n.19\n. .68\n, .66\n. .00\n7.60\n- .70\n, 3.05\n, 3.10\n, .43\n. 6.67\n. W>\n. 16.16\n23.25\n.ST\ns\nm.\nCorp .\nr ImperW Ol) __\nilastns   \u2014-\u2014w\ninula ,\t\nid   OrelDe  \t\nrtnier Gold \u2014\t\nW Pete \u2014\t\nmrlt Gordon\t\njfcury Beeln\t\ncpe\t\n**\u00bb~ .\u00b1mr~\u00b0-\nomneon Oadallao ,\nasjtad   _...-\n\u25a0\u25a0jBJBg   '\u2014.\nUM   Hargreaves\n.18\n. .0)\n. .13\n, H.l\u00bb\n._ },10\n.49\nM\n, 10.35\n, 1.36\n. 30.60\n, .66\n. .09\n. .30\n. 1.37\n. 1.00\n. .35\n| .0.1\n. .03\n. 1.32\n.60\n1.76\nt VANCOUVER STOCKS\nBHR_es\u00ab\nWinnipeg Grain\nTOiaat:\nOpen    High    Low    Cloee\n88%\n40%\n49%\n188\n168\n.... 64% B4% 53% 63%\n,\u201e. M 68 69t{ Mi,\n     68%     68)4     63%      63%\nMARKETS ON DOWN\nTREND, MONTREAL;\nNEW YORK CAUSE\nC. P. R. and Smeltera Remain Unchanged; Inter-\nnational Nickel Active\nMONTREAIa, Aug. 18\u201443tocJoj continue to move lower at the ooen-\nIng of tbe now weak on the local\nmarket today with the down awing\nhaving little to explain It other\nthan the fact that Now York\nturned, easier, with most leading\nstocks    declining.\nAmong closing prioes wen: Dominion Bridge, off Mi ft hay,;\nSmelters, unchsnged at aTOs Canadian Pacific 4314, unchanged:\nAlcohol 4%, unchavajed; British Co-\nlumhta Power y, lower at 39%;\nMontreal Power, a, point lower at 56:\nPower Corporation 14 lower at 64%;\npteaj of Canada, a point lower at\n49; Shawlnlgan, a point lower at\n64; Vtau perforred 4 lower et 64;\nNational Breweries oft a point at\n29; MoCall -JProntenao off % at\n19%; Winnipeg Eleotrlo unchanged\nat 39%, and Alberta Grain, un'\nchanged at 10.\nInternational NJekel wae aettve\nleader with sales ln 0,367 ahares,\nand closed at the new law level oi\n20, off %. Brazilian furnished\nsalss ln 0,285 ahares, antl closed at\n33M,, off 1%. Canadian Car came\nthird in activity, with trading\nln 1,140 ahares, and oloeod at\n30%,   unchanged.\nTotal sales were 23,777 Bhares.\nBond   sales   totejled   S.1.H50.\nMontreal Stocks\nREARS FIND NEW\nYORK MARKET IN\nBATTEREDSBAPE\ngel! Off Sharply for Short\nPeriod During Morning Session\nRADIO CORPORATION\nIS ATTACHED FIRST\nWiWNlPlOQ, Aug. 18\u2014aauotatlons\non Vlotory. bonds for (1.000 are\nas   follows:\nBonds\u2014War loann:\ni93i,  5 per pant,   100.60;   100.76.\n1987,   6   P\u00abr   Cant,   105.10.\nVictory loan:\n1933. 6y, per cent, 102.76: 103.90.\n1994, 614 per cent 102.75, 103.00.\n1037, 5Mi  l\u00bbr sent,  108.25.\nWar loan renewal;\n1882, 6\u00ab,  per cent,  101.05;   1O1.00.\nHefundlnj   loans\n1843, 5 per oent, 103.90.\n1044, 414 per cent, 00.76.\n1940, 4M, Per Cent. 99.75.\n1046, 414 P\u00abr cent, 1)0.75.\nUnited   Aircraft   Up  Three\nPoints on Large Turnover; Earnings %Z Share\nNEW ,TORJC AUg- lvWaeeotionary\ncommodity njargete encouraged the\nhear faction, to apply further urea-\nsure to the Btpok market today,\nbut again the market was found\nto have bean hammered down about\nas far ae lt could go.\nstocks se4d off sharply for a, time\nIn tane morning, and a lew Individual issues developed acute weakness, but pivotal stocks were well\nsupported, no general public Uajui-\ndataon could be shaken loose ao\nshare prises rose almost as quickly\nae they fell when shorts trlod to\nbuy back their atoeks. The market\nclceely folowed the pattern of Saturday. Moat of the activity originated   with  floor  traders.\nPowerful bear pressure waa directed\nagainst Radio Corp., common during the morning, and Jt sold off\nabout 8 points, but the stook was\nwall t-iken by broken connected\nwith its market sponsors, and remained all but a point of Its loss.\nCOLUMBIA DOWN\nTHRRE    POINT0\nColumbia Qraphophone wae depressed 3 points to a new low at\n1314, and recovered a Point. The\ncompany Je said to ha receiving Increasing competition abroad, apd\nthe atock haa been leu popular\nsince the merger negotiations with\nRadio Corp's. foreign subsidiary appear to have heen indefinitely postponed. General Theaters Equipment sagged 2 potato to a new low.\nAmerican Telephone, Qeneral mec-\ntrlo, General Motors and V. B.\npteol ojaased about steady.. Suoh\nstocks ae Coca Cola, Eastman, Her-\nshey chocolate, Western Union, Pafe-\nway Stores, and Boars Roebuck\nlost 2 to 3. United Aircraft was\nsent up a points In a largo turnover. Earnings tor the year are\nestimated at little better than 93\na share. Standard dee, Jewel Tea\nand Johns Manvllle rose about 3,\nCurttas Publishing 4, and Ingersoll\nRand Jumped 7 to a small turnover.\nTotal sales  1,418,910 abana.\nNEW yORK STOCKS\n\u25a0 owflako\nIpley Richfield\nlOllrigton\nFOR SALE\n11 Triumph Combination\nGiis ana* Coal\nSTOVE\n1 -Water Tank, Gas,\nHEATER\n1 Gas Fire\nj.. ROTATES\nElectrical Enflww: \u201e\nBox 1161  Nelson, B. C\nPank  of   Ooinnieroe -i \u201e 940\nPoroinion   Baulk    2271,\nImperial    Bank     232\npank of Montreal  ... 399\nBank  of Kova Scotia  ^_ 819\nRoyal  Bank  \u201e. 39114\/\nBank  of  Toronto  ..,...\u2014.___ 289\nAbltibl Power as Paper , ,_   23 %\nAsbestos  Corporation , \u00ab,, .    %\nAtlantic Sugar  -\u2014     6\nBell   Telephone       150\nBraslJIan f. L. all Power    3314\nBrit.   American   OU .   16H\nBrompton    Paper    ..- ,   S714\nCanada   Bronae    _.,.,...\u2014_\u201e   aa\nCan. Oar li Foundry    2014\nOan.   Cement   .'- \u2014>p \u2014   S514\nc\u00abn.  converters  -   es\n\u25a1ana,   Industrial   Alcohol   \u201e_     414\npan.   Cottons   ...-    46\nCan. General Electric, pfd. ._ 826\nOan.   Power    11\nCone. Mining li Smelting .... 178it\nDominion    Bridge     - \u2014.    59\nDominion    Glaus    ___.\u201e 108\nPom.   steel   Corp.,   pfd.   .._,   40\nDom.   Textile   ., \u2014\u201e  7414\nA. P. Oratn .    10\npjoraot OolUwa  ...   90\n{\u25a0flee   Bros  ..._..._  63\nQuebec   Power   \u2014\u2014...   94\nehawlnlg\u00bbn      ~   63i\/4\nSherwln   Williams       39\nbo.  Canada   Power    2614\nSteel of Canada  \u2014   42\nSt. Lawrence Flour Mills    26\nWabasso   Cotton    1 \u2014   36\nWestern  Grocers  - _   18\nWinnipeg Railway, pfd  lOo\nWinnipeg   Rallawy    \u2014   8614\nteke of the Woods  30\n\u2022eaeeey   Harris ,   3914\nMontreal   Power   .,--.\u2014, 54*4\nMontreal Telegraph     48\nMontreal   Tramways    }76\nNational Breweries  - ,   29\nNational   Steel  Car    46\nOgllvle  Milling   295\nOntario   Steel   products       IS\nOttawa  h.  H.  i; Power ....... 100\npenmsms,    Ltd.     _~ 61\npower   Corp.    ,   6414\nMINNEAPOLIS    GRAIN\nMTKNIIAPOMB, Aug. lB-^Ptour\nunchanged. In carload lota Family\npatents 5.00 to 6.00 a barrel ln\noil-lb. cotton sacks.\nBhlpmenta 34,266.\nBran   36.00   to  25.60.\nWheat\u2014No. 1 northern B614 to\n9BK; Ho. 1 red durum 7114 to\n7914: September 8914; Deo. \u00bb%.\nCorn\u2014-No. 8 yellow 93 to 93.\nOats\u2014Mo. 8 white 33% to 84*14.\nH\u00ab\u2014No.   1   1.06M,   to   1.9314.\nEXCHANGE RATES\nMEW TORS, Aug. 19^-SliarllnB; exchange at a*M% for 60 day bills\napd   at   \u00bb4\u00ab<4   tor  do***-\nForeign  bar silver 4tH4 oents.\nMarks 28B714 centa.\nCanadian   dollars  3-64   oent.\nKronen  36.8614   oents.\nFrancs 3*814 cento.\nUre 5.2314  cents.    '\nNelson approximate) sterling exchange rate 94.88 54.\nIffhe ConsoUdateil  Mining  and\nSmelting Go. ol Canada, M,\n>\nSjatut1Bg__au^^|^fpilng_ DaenttttM\nv vaviM  BuraSB COMJMBa'\nSMELTERS and REFINERS\nIForehMen of Ool<J, Silver, Coppw. If\u00bb<J \u00ab\u00bbJ MneO\"\nProducers of Gold, SUver. Copper, PiK Lead and Zinq\nAllied ro-aw-daai\nAllegheny  \t\nAm    Oan '\t\nAm   For   Power\nAm Steel  Fdy\nAm  Smelt   Ref\nAm   Teaephone\nAm   Tobacco  ....\nAnaconda    ,\t\nAtchison , 1. .\nBaldwin \u2014.\u2014..\n9 (t O ...*.....\nBen   Aviation\nBeth (Steal\t\nO  P  , s\t\nChess, li Ohio -\nChrysler    -.,...\nCohB Gas N Y\nCorn Products\nO   Wright   pfd\nDupont    ......\nEastman Kodak\nErje    \t\nFord   Hug   \t\nFord of Canada\nFirst Nat Stores\nFreeport   Tessa\nOen  Foods   ...*_\nOen   Motors   \u2014\nOan   Blectrlo   ...\nOreat W Sugar\nHowe Sonrad ...\nHudson  Motors\nInnn  Copper  ....\nInter  Nickel   ....\nInter   Tel   Tel\nKelly    Spring\nKonne   Copper\nKresge   S   3   ....\nKrosg and Toll\nMack  Truck  ....\nMiami   ..; ....\nNash Motors ....\nNat P 6c L ....\nN Y Central ....\nN P   \t\nPack Motors ..\u201e\nPenn   Railroad\nPhillips Peta, ....\nKadlo Corp\t\nRadio    K    Orp\nRem Rand \t\nShell Cn Oil ....\nBin Cone -\u2014\t\nBo  Cal  Edison\na p  :..:..;\t\nStand Oil Cal\nStand OU Ind\nStand Oil N J\nStow Warner ....\nStudebaker   \t\nTexas Corp  \t\nTexas a Sulph\n0n Aircraft ....\"\nUnion OU  Cal\nU  P   \t\nU S Steel \t\nWest Blectrlo\nWilly.',   Over   \u2014\nYellow Traiok ....\nHigh\nLow\nClose\n225\n_\n225\n3014\n19%\n19%\n13514 .\n122\n195\n7914\n3914\n681,\n79%\n79%\n36%\n64%\n9814\n306%\n206%\n20514\n347%\n347\n347%\n46*4\n43%\n49%\n218 -\n911\n212\n20*4\n99%\n39%\n101*4\n99\n101%\n3114\n81\n31%\n791A\n1W4\n78\n172\n78\n174\n49ft\n46%\n4914\n96\n37%\n33\n106%\n103%\n104%\n8814\n*T\n98%\n9\n111%\n111%\n109%\n209\n-209\n309\n96\n\u2014\n' 38\n~\n\u2014\n31%\n\u25a0\u2014\n\u2014\n80%\n67\n66%\n67\n41%\n6214\n41%\n6314\n83%\n4414\n49%\n43%\n69%\n. 9\u00bb14\n68\n1714\n17\n17%\n28\n_\n28\n30\n26%\n39%\n1534\n14\n18%\n3014\n20%\n90%\n4314\n314\n43%\n3%\nw\n36*,\n36%\n39%\n3614\n38%\n29%\n27 V.\n551,\n37\n27\n\u2014\n55%\n1514\n16\n16\n8814\n33\n99\n\u2014\n\u2014\n44%\n16214\n169%\n198%\n6814\n69%\n60%\n13 %\n13%\n18%\n72%\n72\n72\n3211\n3914\n31%\n33\n36%\n85%\n3914\n36%\n38\n2314\n25%\n96%\n1614\n23%\n1914\n14%\n83%\n231.\n6614\n119%\n65%\n58%\n119\n116%\n69%\n61%\n81%\n\u2014\n49%\n71%\n70%\n71\n34%\n34%\n24%\n29\n\u2014\n29\n6214\n66 li\n52(4\n52%\n59%\n69%\n\u2014\n\t\n57%\n41\n\t\n41\n214%\n213%\n103'*,\n219%\n165%\n196%\n14914\n140%\n149\n8%\n\u2014\nHi\n2314\nJfll%\n22\nGlands Castle Payg\nLast Rites to Old\nCastle Gamekeeper\nGIiAMTB, Scotland\u2014GlemLs castle,\ntn which the birth of a royal\nbaby Is watted, today witnessed the\nlast rites for one of Its aged aervl\nton, William Pelrwosther.\nFor. thirty years Falrwaather was\nhead gamekeeper to the Duehees of\nTank's father, the Earl of Strath-\nmare.\nLOGAN & BRYAN\n<hmh>\npfOCEp,   BONDS.   CM9C49\nNew sorfc, Montreal and Taneeeeet\n%nu i ww^   Jwm*4P\u00bb   ^sav*j^B^eni\nPRIVAW WWJB\newiesii\nCANADA BONDS\nCOOLER WEATHER\nASSISTS FARMERS\nTO STOCK GRAIN\nFruit and Vegetable Market\nShows Little Change at\nAny Point\nC.P1 TRAFFIC\nEARNINGS FOR\nWEEKJEITER\nEcjlpse Same Period as Last\nYear; C. N, B. Earnings\nDown Compared 1928\nMONTKBAIa. Aug. IB\u2014 Trafllo\nearnings of the Canadian Paclflo\nRailway for the week ending August 14 were 93.227,000 aa compared\nwith $3,780,000 tor the corresponding\nperiod of 192D.\nThe grots earnings of the Canadian National Rrailway for the\nweek ending August 14, 1990, were\n94448,683 se compared with 96,-\n197,669 for the corresponding period\nof 1929, a decrease of 9743,987.\nCHICAGO GRAIN\nHAS ^SETBACK\nInfluence of Bain Over Corn\nAreaa Marks Beginning\nof Drop in Prices\nCH3CAQO. Aug. 18\u2014Gwin prices\nunderwent a ehvrp all-arcund eat-\nb#qfc today, iniluenccd largely by\nrains over oqrn fields lu ports of\nIlllnnlB, Iowa., Nebraska- and Kanims.\nBMlHes, big arrlvrtlB ot newly kt-\nvested wheat at Ulnncapolls, 1.230\neejt$ todny, led to increased selling\nat CWcago v;bcal, future deliveries\nand tbe United States wheat visible\nsupply total piled Up 8.618,000\nbushels -additional aa compared with\na week ago. Continued uncertainties relative to flnaiKtng of tbe\n1980 Canadian wheat crop tended\nalao to, pull  values down,\nCloalng QUotatlona on corn were\nunsettled, 2% to 3 >4o a bushel\ntower tban Saturday's tlnlah. Wheat\nolosed heavy ay* to 2% cents down,\noa-te IVi to IH o\u00bbnts off, and provisions, unchanged to 30 oeatci\ndecline\nPOMINiON   LIVESTOCK\nvicrowA\nThe waj-m weather baa lasted long\nenough to allow moat of the farmers to stock all their grain. Today\nthe weather Is much cooler. The\nmarket ls being well supplied with\nlocal vegetables. Also pears and w>-\npleo'from surrounding ordbards. Local corn is now ocxmdng on tbe\nmarltet in greater volunio and pricee\nwill tell ln Una with the supply.\nThe latest news from Calgary tells\nof the oppressive heat prevailing at\nall prairie points. Thejtv has been\nan abundance of moisture to fill\nthe grain to tho ripe state end\nbarvestlng is starting in n\u00bbny plaoen\nThe . heavy hail damage -rc-portwd.\nrepresents only a fractional part of\nthe acreage and ehould not be\npverestimatcd.    ,\nVictoria and lituTounoing district\nbee keepers are Jubilant at. their\npuccess at the Vancouver exhibition.\nThe following awards were rtuwlo\nfor Van-sflyvcr Island honey, jirot\n[ferize awwded T. H. Maynard. Victoria for twelve 12 or 18 ounce\nglaan Jars of light honey and tho\nfirst prize for fifty 12 or 16 ounce\nglass Jans of light honey, Mr.\nMaynard abo carrlod off the Blue\nRibbon priEO of $10 donated hy t.ho\nBritish Columbia Honey Producers\nnw;oo\\at.ton for the best 12 or 16\nounce glass jar of extracted liontry.\nMrs. Tj. BliUteney of Otter Point won\nthe third prlae for twelvo. 12 or 18\nounce glaen Jars of Chunk honey\nand also the third prize for twe^ji\n12 or 18 ounce glass Jars of granulated honey.\nThe following is copy of a wire\ngiving latest marketing news from\nCalgary. \"Absolutely no chanjjc in\nweather conditions. Harvesting under way ln some localities, will be\ngeneral In fow days. l\u00bbabpr more\nthan plentiful. Fruit and vegerhable\nbusiness shows little change. A\nfew crates of raspberries and logans\nkre arriving dally, A decided overload of blackberries on local maricot\nall this week an prices suffered.\nJobbers glad to accept ijil per orate\nfor berries today which wttb market\nin proper condition would command\n|3. Season for cherries both sweet\nand sour is drawing to a close.    A\nWUSNTPWt, Aug. IB\u2014 Receipts:\n1200 cattle; 290 calvea. 1110 hogs\nand 330 ahaeo and lambs.\nSteers up to 1050 lbs\u2014Good and\nchoice 5.50 to n.fln.\nBfcMKB over 1060 1-to,\u2014Good and\nchoice   5.50   to  6.80.\nHeifers\u2014Good and choice &.00 to\n6.00.\nJM caJTCs\u2014Good ana oboioe 8.00\ntQ    9-00.\nCows\u2014Good 4.00 to fi.00; canners\nand cutters 1.60 to 200.\nBulla\u2014Oood 3.00 to fr.B0.\nSttafcer and feeder steera, good\n4.00 to 4.98.\notocfc   cows  and   heifers\u2014^.00   to\n4,00.\nMilkers and sprtagera\u201460D0 to\n73.00.\nVeal calvaft\u2014Good and choice 8.00\nto JO-OQ.\nHogs--Select bacons $1.00 per head\npwnrium-\nBooon\u2014lLfX) ot 11^)0; biitchera\n8o  per bead  discount.\nT-tight* imd feeders\u2014-10.00 to 10.76.\nIi:im*ba-r~Good handyweight 7JJ0 to\n6.00. Qood heavies 7.0Q to 8.00;\nbucks  6.00  to 6.00.\nSheep\u2014Good heavies 3.00 to 4.00.\nGood handyweight 3.60   to  4.S0.\nMETAL   MARKETS\nNKW YORK. Aug. IB\u2014 Copper\nquiet; electrolytic spot and future\n10%  to 11-\nTron\u2014Quiet; No. 2 f.-ab. Eastern\nPennsylvania ltM to 19.00; Buffalo\n16.00:   Alabama   11.50  to   14.00.\nTin\u2014 steady; spot and nearby\n80.00;   future  30.25.\nLiMd\u2014Steady; spot Now York 6.50;\nEast at. Louis 6.85.\nZlnor\u2014Steady East St. Louis spot\nand future 4.40.\nAntimony\u20147.87.\nQuick 6ilve.r~119.00.\nAt,  Tendon:\nStandard copper\u2014Spot \u00a34\/7 7s fid;\nfuture \u00a347 JOs; alectrdytic spot ebo\nIds;   future  ffil   ins.\nTin\u2014Spot \u00a3135;   future  \u00a31,86  16a.\nLead\u2014Spot and future \u00a318 fls fid.\nZinc\u2014Spot \u00a316;  future \u00a316 2s 6d.\nCalgary Oil\nA.  P.  Consolidated    '44\nAssociated     \u00ab ..-\u00bb\u2022 30\nD and K Lands  - 80\nDalhJQusle         i .72\nEttstcrest     \u2014 23\nHargal      -..\u201e IS\nHorns   Oil    \u2014    2.25\nniinols Alta. - - \u2014 06\nMcDougall  Segur Ex     .10\nMcDougall New 40\nMercury  \u201e\u201e 23\nMoLeod      _       .90\nMill   OJtjr             .18\nOkaJta New   45\nRegemt  \u201e.,  .     .05\nRoyalite       ^ 18.60\nSterling Paclflo   10\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nMON-TP8AL, Aug. J8\u2014Buttair. eggs\nand oheoso steady.\nCheese, finest westerns 16% to 36.\nCheese, fln\u00ab* eastera* 16y4 to\nWH-\nButter. No. 1 Qua-. 39V& to 20*.\nEggs, troth fipeoiala 49 to <fl.\nEggs, fteah  extrflfi 30 to 89.\nEggs,   fresh   firsts   83   to   34.\nttvsn If you dislike wearing rubber gloves for housework, do not fall\nto wear them whan dyeing scone ar-\nSoto of clothing. They will protect\n\\e fingers and nails from discoloring and dy\u00bb Is not an \u00ab*\u00ab? thing\nto looso from the crevices of the\nhands, Haw. a ohaftp pair from the\nfrQJ^lfl Wpt f*pa on hand when\n*'8!H\u00ab1 ' -\u25a0.      a  .Ljjfc*.\nfew of eaoh are arrlvlnf by ex- j\npress dally,. The local plum market\nbadly hit thia week by the arrival\nfrom Lewleton of a car pf Black\nDiamonds ln regulation four-basket\ncrates, These were good he.wy Pfl'-'k\naud with a chipping point price of\n60 cents Jobbers enabled to lay them\ndown in Calgary for $1,10 and, name\nresale price as low aa tl.26. California Elberta and Washington\nRochester peaches both sailing at\n61.60 and have market, to ttumserrefl\nOkanagan Clings offering little\ncompetition. Bartlett pear market\nremains same. Jobbers making football field of tomatoes nnd cucumbers and are imoarently content to\nlose money on u0th. Tomato prices\nranged all tlie way from 91.16 to\n$1.00 wlflT cucumbers B6 to 76 cents.\nOfferings of all kinds of vegetables\nincluding potatoes, from local gardeners at prices much leas than\nthoy can be'ampped in will obviate\nnecessity of any Importation of\nthese commodities.\"\nVANCOUVER\nThe weather oontlnues very warm\nand dry. Be-vn^. mixed cars made\nup of nn-Pleo. plums, tamta-tose and\nfew Bbml7\"iot6 of sweet corn were\nreoetved from Interior pointe since\nlast letter. TTiese ow* were comprised principally oflomatoes and\nearly apples of the Vellow Transparent and Duchess varieties, whloh\niare cniotp^ at $1.26 per box. Tomatoes are quoted at $4.16 por lug;\nplums around $2 to $2.26; swart\ncorn 30e per doesn. A few orates of\nOliver cantelouipea wero received in\none of tho above cars. These cants\nwere of excellent quality. Orayen-\natcln and wealthy apples are expected next week from Interior\npoint.,'!. Canteloupes are reported to\nstart rolling from tho Oliver district next week. Tho lower Mainland Pear crop promises to be above\ntho average yield thia year, but\nowing to tho pre-valence of Pear\nScab this tteeeon, the quality of\ntha P\"ar orop will bo considerably\nlowered. However, If this fruit\nIs picked at the proper time and\nwith a oueful Bottlng, there should\nbe a considerable- quantity available fer local sale as fresh fruit\nor for canning punpeses. With the\nIdea of assisting. If possible, the\nsale of this product an Informal\nmeeting was arranged at Vancouver\nfair grounds by J. B. Munro, deputy minister of agriculture, inviting discussion with W. Wallace\nDuncan, markets dlre-qtor, and man-\nhem of the horticulture and plant\nquarantine branches. Somo of the\nlocal canners have stated, they\ncould handle this product, provided\nsamo was picked at tbe right time\nand ths worst of the scabby and\ncracked fruit eliminated. It was\nrecommended (-hat the canners\nshould be advised of the districts\nwhere quantities of pears would be\navailable and, the suggestion waa.\nmade tliat the cimneni could then\nInstruct ths growers how they wished the fruit packed and what cull-!\ning would be neceaeary. It was'\ntUso pointed out that the Chllllwack\ndistrict \"could, likely supply a con-\nalderable quantTy of peatrs thia eea~\neon and the suggestion made by the\nmarkets director that tbe Chllllwack\nboard of trado be acquainted with\nthe possibility of this avenue of sale,\nThe pioking season should Start,\n(ills fear, about the end of August\nIn tbe Fnasar Valley. Wars that are\nshowing a slight yellow undertone,\nbut arc from general Appearance\ngreen and firm and which separate\nfteely from the fruit spur are ln\ngood condition. . to pick. On no\nacopunt should the fruit remain on\nthe tree until It haa attained a\ndistinctly yellow color, in which case\nIt quickly starts to break down at\nthe vote Ahd la uasl&e for canning\nor commercial requlremente,\nCALOABY\nWeetber continues warm and dry.\nClouds -threatened, hut without remit, hlpmenls of raspberries are\nvary light., and. mostly of poor\nquality. Small shipments of loganberries arriving doby but demand\nvery fickle, itather heavy I.c.l. shipments of blackberries arrlvc,rt on\nTuesday of which 126 crates had to\nbe carried over until Wednesday.\nThis carry oyer with -further arrivals haT flooded tne market and\nquotations to clear, have been as\nlow as $2.26 per crate. A few\nLambert ch-errics still arriving from\nKootenay pointe end. demand fair\nat $8.76. Soma Olivets and Mor-\neUps are noticed on the fruit row\nat $2.50 tot crate. There is very\nUttle Hlability to the pear market\nYakima quoting fancy Bartlette ns\nlow as 00 centa shipping poin&\nwhich gives a delivered. cost of\nlittle over $2. The Jobber's price\non these has been as low as $2.30\non the local market. An unwrapped\nBartlett rrom Yafczma, in tho regulation boxes, was a new arrival on\nthe market thia week. Tboeo <?jt.\nJobbing at $2 per box. A larger\nnumber of culls are Included ln the\nbox. Early aPpSee aro draggy. BemU\nripe tomatoes ana cucumbcro ar;:\nvery effitllo. Washington onions\nstill dominate the market at $2.7fi,\ntbe shipping point price being very\nweak. Local potatoes are coming on\nthe market and will soon be plentiful. British Columbia coast potatoes sold as low at $1.50 par\ncwt. on the market thia week.\nKDMONTOK      *\nBusiness nee shown steady Improvement during tbe last six weeks\nand is about normal p.t the present\ntime. Crop condttlona have greatly\nHpfOtod and In both city and\ncountry tbe general feeling is much\nmore   optimistic   than   it   was   two\nmonths ago. This means greater\nbuying power -V0.& the trade look\nfor better business this fall. British\nColumbia apples an4 crabapples are\nincreasing and are selling readily,\nprices aro within tbe buyer*' reaoh\nand the market ta fairly &o%l*e.\nCherries, raepbetyles and i^raw-\nberries are about over and blaek-\nberry arrivals nr-a increasing. . The\nmarket at present JiufuHy stocked,\nwith American fruifTcalilornia \u25a0-\nberta ipeachps are selling at '$1,00 to\n91.76 per boa. Bfttieb CoiumWa\nfiei tomatoes are Increasing ln Wl-\ntune ttcso, day to day. 7M(l ou-\ncumbers are very plentiful Mid tbe\nmarket la rather overstocked. Cabbage ami celery prices remain tm-\n| ohans;e\"in~a.ltUough meeting incrsas-\nlug cconpptltton from local growers,\nWashington onions ai'e stlU \u00abUP#V-\nIng this market, but prices are anp.\nPlug sligntly,\nSEATTLE\nThe canteloup-a market la\nreoatpta morterato with fatt <-_\nYakima otook selling mostly 0 TTmrr\nto $1.50. Tew small stcea pttater\n$1.70. Market has ruled very \u00ab*\u25a0\ni during past week. First rMUUt\nprunes recelrod today* aualttv -ftM\ndemand fair; price M par mimm,\nPenoh, market Uttle steonam M>\nifornin deal almost over here due to\nincreasing;' receipts from eastern\nWashington. Yakuna Hbartes ssD-\niug at \u00abi to $1.26; Caltforaia* 76s\n|to $1. \"feesvy supply of peats wtta\nmarket weak. 1S:.\"\\i fancy BarHettf\n$1^0 to $1.75; fancy $14)5 to tUMV\nPotato market firmer, recadpts light.\nGems mostly $1.76 to $3 per cut.\nORATES GIVE\nFfflE REPORT ON\njatrk Morris and Gordon Bennett, .\net a meeting of the Gyro in the\nCanadian I^gton building Monday\nevening, gavo frcai report of the \u25a0\nIntematlanal Gyro convention hd-fl\nat Tacoma. Mr. Bennett's report\ndealt me Inly on the social activities\nof the deleg&tes at that city. Be\ngavB a description and appreciations\nof a larpse sawmill rrhJch be m*\nshown tbraugh. Mr. nonactt MP*\ndenoribad a boat trip and a moun-\ntain hike which the delcgErtes en-\nJoyed.\nJack Morris gave a brief outline\non the business tarried on by the\nconvention and the resolutions pouted. H- also passed around a number of pamphlets describing the\ntrip.\n Page Ten\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS        TUESDAY, AUGUST 19, 1980.\nFly Coils,\nFly Poison,\nFly Sprays,\nFly Swatters.\nMann, Rutherford\nCo.\nCITY DRUG CO.\nNelson's   Dispensing   Chemists\nI'llms,  Kodaks,  Drue\nStationery\nKail  Orders  Protniitl;\nDispatched\nCome and set yonr\nweight tree\nllox   1983   Nelson,   Phone   34\ntJO  ajL cJU  aA. C^A-? aAi C-A-5 aA,\n'Say it With Flowers'\nALL\nSeasonable Flowers\nAT\nReasonable Prices\nGOOD ASSORTMENT\nOF BASKETS\nFUNERAL DESIGNS\nWEDDING BOUQUETS\nTABLE DECORATIONS\nSkilfully Executed by Experienced Designers\nNelson Flower Shoppe\nA ndrews and A ndreivs\nPhone 233\nMgr. R. M. Mestres, 66. who\nmarried Mr. and Mrs. Hoover ln\n1899,  ls dead at San Jose, Cal.\n^\ntONIGHt\nDON'T FAIL TO GET YOUR TICKET\nFOR THE PUBLIC\nMOONLIGHT\nEXCURSION\nAuspices of NELSON SHRINE CLUB\nVICTORIA SHRINE RAND\nin Attendance\nYou don't have to be a Shriner to participate\nin this excursion\u2014you are all invited to come\nand get your share of the fun\u2014there will be a\nlot of it.\nTICKETS - $1.50\nBOAT LEAVES CITY WHARF AT 7:30\nDANCE TO WONDERFUL MUSIC\nVhemfifr\nDELIVERY\n\u00bb.JtalnMwSh\/nef\nNOTHING TOO NOTHING TOO\nLARGE SMALL\nWe have a truck suitable for every job\u2014\u2022\nGeneral Cartage, Contract Hauling, Machinery\nPoles. Wood Supplies, Gravel Excavation,\nBuilding Material, Etc.\nReasonable Rate with competent Guarantee for Completion of\nany job.\n1-TON\nTRUCKS\nTO\n5-TON\nTRUCKS\nNelson Transfer Co.\nPHONE 35\nROTARIANS HEAR\nTHEIR DISTRICT\nGOVERNOR HERE\nAl   Reynolds . of   Portland\nTakes Service as Theme\nof Address\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 Bar-\ngain Prices.\nWood, Vallance Hardware\nCompany \u2014o\u2014 Limited\nWHOLESALE - Nelson. B. C. \u2014 RETAIL\n\u25a0Mil. Ill ill II I\nDistrict Governor Al Reynolds of\nPortland, head ol Rotary district\nnumber one, who visited tho local\nclub yesterday at its weekly luncheon, stressed service as the medium\nthrough which all members ol Rotary International should fuse, not\nonly ln their club work, but also\nInto their  Individual businesses.\nIn opening his brief address he\nstated that lie was surprised to find\nbo modern a city situated In the\nheart of the mountain country. The\nNelson Rotarlans were a splendid\ntype and he felt as much at home\namong them as ln his home club at\nPortland.\nAlthough fellowship derived\nthrough tho connections made ln a\nRotary club was an important phase\nof the organization he thought that\nthe slogan of the club, \"he profits\nmost who serves the best,\" was actually the keynote of tho organization.\nService, in his estimation, was the\nbasis of all success. Its practical\napplication should be studied In\nconnection with every Rotarlan'B\npersonal   business   or  -profession.\nCapital and labor, of late years,\nhad found that through human\ncontacts they could understand each\nother and thus avoid the devastait-\nWALLPAPER SALE\nSunworthy wallpapers which\nhave been selling for $1.00, $1.25\nper double roll, now  -<>0^\nNow   ts   the time   to   get   a\nroom   papered with   fiunworthy\npaper,   at   the same   prloe   you\nwould   pay   for cheap  paper.\nTim Player\nOpp.    B.    C.    Telephone\nPainted    and    Paperhanger\nStanley   St.\n. . . WITH\nA LITTLE\nJAM AND BUTTER\nNo high-sounding dish\nthat sets before a king\nembraces more satisfaction than a loaf of\n'SUNRISE'\nBREAD\nIn fact it makes a\nroyal banquet \u2014 you'll\nsay so when you try it.\nKOOTENAY\nbakery\nF. Wendisch, Prop.\ning strikes that racked the country\na few years ago.\nCOULD   MOULD  PUBLIC\nOPINION\nTurning to another phase of servloe ill-. Reynolds Btated that\nthrough the work of Rotary International, and only through, this organization, could ' public opinion\nthroughout the world be moulded\nalong the lines toward a permanent\ninternational peace, Public opinion\nmust be moulded to understand International  problems.\nIn the caw ot all great, union of\nparts for the bettenhent of the\nwhole such as the federation of\nCanadian provinces, the union of\nthe UniYj-H. .States and the fusion of\nthe BrL\\V .Ernplje. there was some\nforce diroftted to acquire tbeae ends.\nA similar movement should be fostered by Rotary international for\nthe establishing of world peace.\nHe regretted that his own country, the United States had been so\nbackward about joining the League\nof  Nations.\nBabson, the great statistician,\nsaid that the churches had done\nmore for business than chambers of\ncommerce. This alone, coming from\na man dealing In cold facts\/showed\nthat the age old principles of .service were still the best means of\nsuocess.\nGREAT DEMANDS\nPLACED ON THE\nHOSPITALHERE\nMatron's Report Shows  162\nPatients   Discharged\nDuring July\nReport for the month of July\nmade recently at the meeting of\nthe hospital board by Matron C.\nTreffry of the hospital illustrated\nthe demands placed upon that Institution.\nWhen the report was made there\nwere 72 patients In the hospital\nwhile during the month 157 patients\nwere admitted for treatment. Patients remaining from June numbered 6fc During July 162 patients\nwere dlsj^yrged  from the  hospital.\nDuring the month seven major\noperations and 63 minor operations\nwere performed.\nSix births and eight deaths were\nrecorded.\nIn a total of 1933 hospital days in\nthe month 46 x-rays were taken,\nSHRINE BAND DIGS\nUP FOR BEREAVED\nC0ALM0NT_ FOLKS\nPlays    on    Arrival    Here;\nHas Big Program\nToday\nWhile en route for Nelson from\nVictoria, members of the Victoria\nShrine party that arrived here last\nnight collected $66 toward tbe. relief funds being raised for the benefit of the bereaved families of the\n46 miners entombed by the Coalmont colliery explosion. This sum\nwas  handed  over  to Prlnoet5n.\nPotentate W. O. Wallace of Olzeh\ntemple, Victoria, headB the party,\nwhich embraces also 25 members of\nthe Glaeh- temple Shrine band,\nwhich Is to be one of the big attractions at the Shrine ceremonial\nat   Cranbrook  Thursday.\nBandmaster James Miller put the\ncrack band through Its paces last\nnight, a number of selections being\nplayed at the corner of Baker and\nKootenay   streets.\nToday's program for the band includes a visit this morning to Bonnington power plants, . playing of\nselections in Nelson, and officiating\n,at  a   moonlight   excursion  tonight.\nBand numbers here Include Bandmaster James Miller, R. Morrison,\nW. Gibson. W. Davidson, H. Parfltt,\nG. Ford, P. W. Prances, M. Guzner,\nL. A. Logan, J. W. Armstrong. G,\nTallamy, J. W. Maynard, G, Hood,\nB. Hood, N. T. Lee, T. W. Walker,\nB, Buckle, W. J. Wilson, C\\ Cad-\n\\7allader, S. G. Peele, W. Scott, T.\nW. Hawkins, W. Luney, G. Green,\nand J. Blrnie.\nCANADA'S LADY\nSWIMMING STARS\nBOW TO ENGLAND\nBut  Men   Swimming   Stars\nAnnex Honors for Dominion at Hamilton\nJ. 0. PATENAUDE\nWILL BE ABSENT FOR\nA FEW DAYS ATTENDING A POST-GRADUATE COURSE IN\nSPOKANE.\nMR. PATENAUDE WILL\nBE BACK IN THE OFFICE ON SATURDAY.\nJ. O. PATENAUDE\nOptometrist & Optician\nExpert Optical Service\nYELLOWSTONE IS\nVISITED BY MR.\nAND MRS. MOTION\nMr. and Mrs, George P, Motion\nand Wcstman -returned Sunday\nevening from an extended, motor\ntrip to Yellowstone park and Salt\nLake City. Travelling over the\nYcllowstono trail and making stops\nWallace, Missoula and Butte,\nthey entered thc park at West Yellowstone where they -spent some\ndays visiting its wonders and many\npoints of interest. They were\nguests at the Old Faithful Inn and\nCanyon \"hotel.\nThe departed at the south entrance and Journeyed to Salt Lake\nCity, returning via the Old Oregon\ntrail and making stops nt Pocatello.\nTwin Falls,  Pendleton  and  Spokane.\nIt was a delightful trip covering\nin all \"STJoTf miles and Mr. Motion\nreports that' while highways ln the\nstate of Montana aro only In the\nmaking, they have launched a tremendous road-making program and\nconstruction work is everywhere in\nevidence.\nTry a Nice\nIce*Cream Srandae\nBUTTERSCOTCH\nPECAN NUT\nBRAZIL NUT\nMARASCHINO\nCHERRY\nWe Have a New Shipment from Moirs\nIncluding\nMORIS  PEPPERMINT\nWAFERS\nat 9K\/\u00bb Box\nand\nMOIRS A. D. MINTS\nKandy Land\nmelons\nTAKE YOUR CHOICE\nLARGE\n75c\nEACH\n*\u2014*\nPhones 10 and ll\nHAMILTON, ont., Aug. 18\u2014(By\nW, E. Wheatley, Canadian Press\nstaff writer)\u2014Swimming competitions tonight topped off a full\nday's program of the British Empire games that included Canadian\ncanoe championships, Empire lawn\nbowling   and   Empire   high   diving,\nCanada's lady swimming stars\nbowed to those from England in\nboth women's events, but the men\nrepresentatives of the Dominion an\nnexed for Canada the other two\nevents on tonight's card. England's\nrelay team opened the evening\nwith a vlotory in the 400 yards\nevent, and Miss Joyce Cooper scored\nthe old country's second vlotory ln\nthe 100 yards back stroke for\nwomen. Munro Bourne, Canada's\nspring star from Montreal, and Jack\nAubin, of Ottawa, placed Canada\non an equal footing with the mother\ncountry by winning respectively,\nthe 100 yards free style and the\n200   yards   breast  stroke.\nGEORGE KELLY\nRETURNS TO THE\nCHICAGO TEAM\n_J5o\nW.R. CAMPION\nGROCERIES\nDONT   WAtK\u2014TALK\nOUR PHONE NUMBER\n-       ,   IS 121\nBananas, --dozen    -.\nFeaohes,  brisket  \t\nCanteloupes, each  15c and 20c\nWatermelon,   lb.       8c\nApples,   lb      5c\nPanoy  Biscuits,  lb   .- 35o\nHomo  Made  OookJes,   Raisin\nand Almond, lb   25o\nHires Root Beer and dinger\nAle,   bottle    _ \u201480o\nBottle   Caps,   gross 86c\nGreen  Vegetables   of  All   Kinds.\nFull   Stock   of   Summer   Drinks.\nDELIVERIES TWICE  DAILY\nUPHILL   AND   FAIRVIEW.\nBRITISH PARTY\nENJOY TRIP IN\nTHE KOOTENAYS\nDelighted   With   Size   and\nFlavor Local Cherries;\nVisit Ainsworth\nGOOD LOOKING\nHOSIERY\nServiceable too, for the reinforced!\nheels and toes give protection -wherel\nthe wear comes, snug fitting!\nankle in silk, silk and wool and lislel\nPlain shades, or new novelty designs]\njust as'yon jrish.\n55c, 75c, $1.00\nWould Send Fire\nChief, Winnipeg\nConvention Soon\nA party of about 50 British tourists passed through Nelson Friday\nevening on its way west. The party\nwas mot at Kootenay Landing by\nseveral Nelson people and its members were presented with cherries\ndonated by the board of trade.\nThe holiday seekers were delighted\nwith the size and flavor of the\ncherries which were grown on the\nranch of Mrs. James Johnstone,\nand when ln Nelson for a few\nhours they attempte to buy some\nbut they were unablo to do so, the\nseason being over.\nThe party stopped off at Kaslo\nand Alnsworth and at the latter\nplace a number of them enjoyed a\ndip in the hot springs. They arrived in Nelson anout 5.20 o'clock\nand were shown around the business\nsection of the city and left shortly\nafter for the coast on a special\ntrain. The party stopped at Bonnington where they were impressed\nby the beauties of the falls and\nby  the large power plants.\nAll expressed themselves highly\ndelighted with the scenery of the\nKootenay and'' the service rendered\nthem.\nThe party included Alderman Edwin Halg, J. P., of Liverpool; the,\nex-mayor of Richmond; Dr. W. R.\nParker, a \"member of the Royal Institute of Scientific Research at\nLondon, juid a prominent newspaperman of South Lincolnshire,\nowner of several weekly newspapers. \"\nA photographer from Vancouver\naccompanied the party, taking various pictures of the district.\nTRAIL, B. 0., Aug. 18.-r^uestion\nof Fire Chief A. A. McDonald attending the convention of International Association, of Fire Chiefs\nat Winnipeg September 9 and 12 waa\nreferred by the city, council tonight\nto the fire, water and Jigbl! committee for  a  report.    \u25a0\nMayor A. A^Mllllgan told of a\nconversation He^hnd with Chief\nStuart at Calgary, when he was\nurged\" to consider the matter seriously. Tlie mayor believed it would\nbe good bMslnesa to send the chief.\nThe   experience   would   be   lnvalu-\nLAST MmtTTE\nADVERTISEMENTS\nnecelved   too   lato  to   to  on\nclassified pate.\nROOM AND BOARD FOR SOHOOL\nteacher In private family. Tw>\nblocks from high schools. Apply\np. o. Box 408. (\u00abW)\nNews of die Day\nLawn mowere sharpened \"***}**\u2022\n$1.25.    Hippersons. (1400)\nNicely   furniahed   front  suite  tor\nrent, Annable  Block, (\u00abW\nOld   lawn   mowers   bought\u2014any\ncondition.    Phone 562Y> (1405)\nCHICAGO, Ills., Aug. 18,\u2014Long\nOeorge\u2014Kelly, former New York\nGiant unci Cincinnati first bsaeman,\nhas returned to the national league\n\u2014as a member of the Chicago Cubs\nPresident William L. Veeck of the\nCubs today said that Kelly, who was\nreleased by Cincinnati more than a\nmonth ago, liad been obtained\nfrom the Minneapolis club of the\nAmerican association, for Malcolm\nMoss, young left-handed pitcher,\nand one other player to be named\nthis  week,\nKelly will report for work tomorrow.\nTENNIS\nPLAYERS\nWE SPECIALIZE IN\nTOURNAMENT STRINGING\nHAVE YOUR RACKET TUNED UP\nNOW BEFORE THE RUSH\nSTARTS\nJ. HOLLAND\n\"Service and Satisfaction Guaranteed\"\nP. O. Box 811 NELSON Phone 194\nTRAIL, B. tt, Aug. 18.\u2014Urging\nthe city council either to clear the\ndobrls from her land or rebuild her\nhouse. Rossland avenue, Mrs, J,\nDesanl.es, in a letter received by the\ncity council tonight, suggested she\nhad lost $6000 and that if she did\nnot receive assistance she would\nstart  an  action.\nInvestigation hnd proved, City\nEngineer s. S McDiarmid said, that\ntho collapse of the y-gji and wrecking of the house waa due entirely\nto excavations carried out by Mr.\nDesantes. The city had offered\nanother lot, it was stated, but the\noffer had been refused. The house\nwaa not worth rebuilding, according\nto aldermen. They did not Tear an\naction. The letter was ordered filed,\nthe council not being prepared to\nt&ke  action.\nCITY COUNCIL\nTRAIL ASKED\n\"TO CLEAR LAND\nGLASSES\nJ. A. C. Laughton 11.0.\nOPTOMITR18T    and    OPTICIAN\nRoom  S  \u2014  Qrlirln  Block\n\"Bottled in Nelson\"\nTWO\nWINNERS\nCHAPMAN'S\nGINGER BEER\nand\nKOOTENAY DRY\nGINGER ALE\nOrder by the Bottle\nor Case\nCHAPMAN'S\nPurity Bottling Works\nPhone 633\u2014We Deliver\nKASLO ATTRACTS\nMANY VISITORS\nKASLO, B. C, Aug. 18.\u2014Mr. and\nMrs. Hubert Perkins of Elko, who\nhavo been the guest of Mr. Perkins'\nmother, Mrs. Alice Perk^is, left\n6*turoWi accomp-anjsd by their\nsmall daughter to visit Mtr. Perkins'\nmother,  Mrs. Mclsaac  of  Ymlr.\nAlex Sutherland waa a visitor to\nNelson Wednesday.\nThe work of re-shlngllng and redecorating the government buildings\nhere has been completed and the\ngeneral improvement is very noticeable.\nMr. and Mrs. A. Carter and children are holidaying 'in Nelson.\nMr. and \u2022 Mrs. Malcolm McLeod\ncome in from their camp at \"Honeymoon ranch\" Thursday and left\nFriday for a short visit in Alnsworth prior to leaving for their\nhome   in   Kimberley.\nMrs. C. Lindsay of Nelson arrived In Kaslo Thursday  veenlng.\nCutler T. Porter, Spokane mining\nman, arrived ln town Thursday and\nleft Saturday for a visit to the\nWagner mine near Gerard.\nMrs, R. B. Dimock and three sons\nof Trail are visitors Jn ^he city,\nthe guests of Mrs. Dimock's parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Murchi-\nson.\nMrs. Richardson of Edmonton, who\nhaa been the guest of Mr. and Mrs.\nW. Heffernan of Mirror Lake, lu\nspending a few days as the guest\nof  Mra.  M. Landry.\nJoe Strelt who has been attending summer school at the coast,\nhas returned to spend the balance\nof the holidays here with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Streit, prior\nto resuming his duties as principal\nof  the  New  Denver  public   school.\nMiss Marjorie Brown of Nelson ls\nthe guest of Miss Margaret MacDonald.\nMiss Elsie Cadden, Leonard Cadden and Hubert Esch left Friday by\nmotor for a short visit in Trail.\nMrs. Robert Watts and son David\nwho have been the house guests of\nMr. and Mrs. Jack Strachan, left\nFriday for their home in Klmber-\n,ey, having been called home by\nthe illness of Mr. Watte.\nDan and Alex Grant of AJSnsworth\nwere Kaslo visltofs Friday.\nAndy Shtlland came in from the\nJackson Basin Thursday and left\nFriday for his home In New Denver.\nMr. and Mm. Bob Sherraden of\nAlnsworth  were   Friday   visitors   in\nKMlO.\nA orew of B. C. Telephone men are\nbusy moving the line poles on the\nMiror Lake road which ls being considerably   widened.\nFor salo \u2014 Gladiola blooms \u2014 60\ncants a dozen. Mrs. H. Ross, Phone\n472R. uloa)\nCherry slugs\u2014Kill them or they\nwill kill your treea. Phone T.\nRoynon   for   efficient   pruning.\nBUGLE   BAND   DANCES\nEvery Wednesday and Saturday\nat   Lakeside   pavilion (1309>\nQueen City Rebekah lodge, No. 16,\nI. O. O. Wh W*ft tonight at 8\no'clock.   Flower drill. (1395)\nable to htm,  and  In addition,\npresence   would   assist  In   build\nup. Canadian wpreoantafciou, ato\nInternational   gathering,\n44 TAXI AND &\n\u25a0TRANSFER\nIRAII.  AND   K088LAND\n.WEIGHT  AND  EXTBESS\nScUcdulo\nDally to Trail, leaves 11 A. L\nTAXIS   DAX    AND   MIGBI\nmen's surre\nMade ta Measure\n$30 to $52\nC.TING\nand   Gents'   TaOoc\n008 Vemon Street\nYE   OLDE\nENGLISH HEALTH SALTS\nCooling and  Retreat, lnl and\nInvlroratliag Tonlo\nSMYXHE'S PHARMAC\n'     PBESCBIPTION SPECIALISTS |\nPHONE  1\nPhone *\u00a3\n35\nThe Best of Servian,\nCareful.   Conrteonil\nDrivers\nNelson Xranstor Co., Ltd.!\nPhone Taxi\n77\ntreat-lit    Bel\nDally to Rosslaj\nand Trail 10 -1\nBUD    STEVENS]\nProp\nTrail   Ph*\nInstitute dance at Ymlr, August\n22nd $1.50 per couple, refreshments\nIncluded. Drawing for quilt will be\nat this dance. Music\u2014Trail Arcadians. (1410)\nMoonlight Excursion under aUB-\npices ot the Nelson Shrine Club.\nA A. O. Mi S.. Tuesday, August 19.\nGet your tickets early as there is\nonly a limited amount to be sold.\nOn boIo at all stores, $1.60.     (1336)\nNELSON   LAWN   BOWLING   CLUB\nA meeting will be held ot the\nSavoy hotel, August 10, at 8 p.m.,\nto draw new schedule and arrange\na tournament for Labor Day. A.\nWlgg.   secretary. U393)\nKeep Labor Day. September 1.\nfor Canadian Legion excursion and\nbosket picnic to Crawford Bay,\nAquatic and field sports, dancing\nand community singing. A complete program ls arranged to moke\nthis  day  an  enjoyable  outing.\n(1409)\nA Cleaner Cellar\nSand sprinkled over the cellar\nfloor before sweeping will settle the\ndust, at the same time scouring\nout particles of dirt that would\notherwise remain ln the tiny crevices\nof the cement.\nExide Batteries\nWhen you instaall an Exide Battery in your car,\nyou are sure that your\nbattery troubles will cease\nBENNETTS\nLtd.\n Eiiide Agents\nGarden party at Mrs. A. Wllley's\nand Mrs. c. Bland's Lawn, Bonnington, Thursday, August 21, 5 to\n10 p.m. Olty Baud ln attendance.\nAdmission 50 and. 25 cento. Badminton, dancing, refreshments. Everybody welcome. Proceeds ln aid\nof W. I. (1408)\nWOMEN'S   LIBERAL   ASSOCIATION\nThe Nelson Women's Association\nwill meet ln the Canadian Legion\non Tuesday. August 19th, nt eight\no'clock. All members and those\nwishing to become members are\ncordially invited to attend this\nmeeting.\nM. G. Oliver, Secretary.\n(1392)\nOf Course You Can\nAfford A Longines\nObservatory Watch\nOf Radio Fame\nSome people do not realize how\nliufck costs to make a life-long\nMrjuaintance with Longines accuracy. #35, \u00a350 or j!l00 will\nbny a Longines watth that will\ngive you correct time matching\nthe Ixmgine3 time signals you\nhear daily over the radio. Let\nna show yon our large assortment of Longines' newest\nmodek\nE. Collinson\nJeweller\nTlie Home for Watches\n.   ALL   EXPERT\nDiet) rJo.ua   Kecoinmcnd\nMalkla's  Best\n..   Pure. Foods  .\nHORSWILL-BROS\nPHONE 235\nVIC. GRAVES\nMaster Plumber\n18 Years Practical Experience\nNELSON,  11,   fr\nP.  a Box 217        Phone 815\nSt, Joseph's\nNelson, B. C.\nFor Residential and\nDay Students\nCOURSES OF STUDY\nPrimary,   Elementary,\nIntermediate,  High\nSchool, Commercial\nPupils    prepared    for\nLondon College of\nMusic Exams\nTO-DAY\nA bit of human flotsam on the current of\nlife and love . . . A'l-qle.\nof unforgetable power\nand appeal for the lovely star ...\nGRETA GARBO\nin\nAnna Christie\nwith\nCHARLES BICKFORD\nGEORGE F. MARION\nMARIE   DRESSLER\n\u2022WEDNESDAY AT\nTHE RITZ'\nA Snappy Comedy\nPlayet\n\u2022THE BARBER SHOP|\nCHORD'\nAn Entertaining\nMusical Song Reel\nTOMORROW,\nTheRogueSongl\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_19","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0400572","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"}]}}