{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0404804":{"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":"2021-11-23","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1931-09-04","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0404804\/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":" \u2014\t\n113\nEntry for Kootenay Tennfs\nTourney a Record\n\u2014Pa_e Seven\nTOLCMI  _.\n\\#tlt&x Uaifo Bfetttf\nBoa \"J of Trade Disappointed\nRoad Imformation\n\u2014Pa_\\e Five\n16.000 DC\n''I r .\"\nTHE  NBLflON  DAILY  NEWS,  NELSON, B.   ... FRIDAY  MORN1NO,  SBPTEMBER  4,  MSI\nnvi CENTS A COPY\nNUMBER 117\n';\nOBORS OFF FOR MEXICO?\nVerigin  Negotiating  for  600,000  Acres  of  Land;  Will  Go From Prairie and B.C.\nStates That by 1936 Great\nBritain Will Be Behind Others\nEXAMPLE SET IS\nNOT FOLLOWED\nBritish Boat to Race for Trophy\nBritish Navy Inadequate Warns Admiral Jellicoe\nOJUMSMNGER\nIN LOPPING OFF\nMANY VESSELS\nNo Nation So Dependent\non the Sea as the\nBritish\nTORONTO, Sept. 8 <CP.\u00ab-\nOreat Britain's cruiser and -fle-\n; atroyer strength Is becoming\n\"totally Inadequate,\" Admiral of\nthe fleet Earl Jellloo. asserted\nhere tonight. Speaking at a\ndinner held by the Nav7 League\nor Canada,. Lord Jellleoe gave\nwarning that the security, provided bf the British fleet haa\nheen sacrificed for tbe Ideal of\ndl sir ma ment,\n\"We have set an example In disarmament which no other nation\nbaa followed.\" he declared. \"We have\nnot only dropped our navy but have\ndone nothing tor our coaat fortification*- The example may be laudable.\nbut It Involved the greatest possible\nrisks. Wc all hope the will to war\nhas gone: But the will to fight has\nnot gone from this world. One has\nonly to look at such things as general strikes to understand that.'1\nDUTY    SAME\nIntroduced by Rt. Hon. Arthur\nMeighen, former prime minister of\nCanada, who aald lhat Canada cannot escape Its responsibility to play\na part ln naval defence, the duty\nbeing the same as It was In war\nyears, Lord Jellicoe carefully traced\nBritish naval policy since tbe great\nwar. In 1930 he had submitted a\nreport on Canada's needs for naval\ndefense, based entirely on conditions obtaining In 1919, when the\nBritish fleet was supreme, in 1931\nhe said, the report had been \"cap-\nslee-d\" at the Washington conference\nwhen Great Britain agreed to naval\nparity  with  the  United States.\n\"At Geneva,\" aald the adaalral of\nthe fleet, \"we thought the total for\ncruiser and destroyer tonnage suggested to us by the United States\nwas   totally   inadequate.   We   con-\nCONTESTS   SPEED   CROWN\nTOP\u2014Mlss England n, Great Britain's queen of speedcraft on ber\nfirst trial run at Detroit ln pre-\naration for tha Harmsworth trophy\nraoe, tha record for which is held\nby Gar Wood. American driver. BOTTOM\u2014Kaye Don, British speed king,\nwho haa high hopes of Mlss England\nII taking home, the trophy.\nDETROIT, Mich., Sept. 8,\u2014Hoping\nto defeat the Jinx that haa pursued\nvirtually every effort of foreign contenders to lift the Harmsworth\nspeedboat trophy since Gar Wood\nwon it more than a decade ago,\nKaye Don, British speed king, la\nwithholding whatever risks be is\ndisposed to take until the first\nheat   of   the   race   Saturday   after-\n^nevertheless has been hailed aa the\nmost formidable pilot Wood haa\never faced.\nDon. however, haa made no ambitions claims for himself or hla\nboat. He realizes that Mlss England\nIT. has been driven faster than\nany power boat ever piloted before\n\u2014at a speed of 110,223 mllea an\nhour\u2014but be realises too that the\nhistory of Hamsworth competition\nsince Wood captured the trophy\nIt was largely because of the has been a atory of misfortune for\nmany hazards hla boat, Mlas Eng- the challenger.\nland II., will face ln the contest At the apeed the boats will turn\nwith Wood that the British chal- Up at the high point of the raoe\nlenger suddenly decided to curtail any one of them could be put out\nhla preliminary trial runs over the of running by striking a floating\noourse. Outnumbered three to one | pop bottle or a piece of driftwood.\nby the defending team and admit-.Such a thing would be almost oer-\ntedly handicapped by Wood's great- tain to tear a hole ln the crafts'\ner familiarity with the course, Don I bottom.\nBRITISH MAKE\nSPEED OP SIX\nMILES MINUTE\nLONDON, Sept. 3. \u2014 The\nRoyal Aero club today informed tbe club of (taly and\nPrance that tbe rules governing the Schneider\ncup race do not permit postponement of the contest as\nboth France and Italy has\nrequested, and that the race\nmust   be   held   September   13.\nIndirectly the request for\npostponement is taken as\nopen confession that after two\nyeara of intensive study and\npractice France and Italy find\nthemselves unable to submit any machine which could\nseriously challenge Britain's\nBupermarine  racers.\nIt waa made known today\nthat two Britiah planes\npowered with Rolls Royce\nengines have actually reached\ntn practice a speed of 406\nmiles an hour, hitherto undreamed of figure. This la a\nrata of more than six miles\na  minute.\nThe record speed for an actual Schneider trophy race\nIs   328.M   miles   an   hour.\nFEAR WILKINS Hailed as the Largest\nColonization Plan of\nKind in the Country\n30 Cents an Hour Is\nRelief Wage on Roads\n(Continued   on  Page  Two)\nFOUR MEN DIE\nIN MINE BLAST\nPitiful   Scenes   Witnessed   as   Bodies\nBrought   to   Surface\nln   Storm\nASTLBY, Warwickshire, England,\nBept. 3\u2014 <C P cable)\u2014Pitiful secenes\nwere witnessed at Newdlgate Pithead\nthis evening when the bodies ot four\nmarried men, killed In an underground explosion tills afternoon were\nbrought  to  the  surface.\nA violent thunderstorm raging at\nthe time illuminated the scene as\nthe bodies were brought to the pit\nentrance, after dark.\nThe victims were: William Hollls,\nthe Square, Attleborough; J. Miles,\nWynfield road, Nuneaton; J. Casey,\nCross Keys, Exhall; J. Morris, Queen\natreet, Aatley; eight others were\nseriously injured.\nThirty men were at work about a\nmile and a half from the mouth of\nthe main shaft when, in the words\nof a survivor, \"there was a vivid\nflash and a deafening explosion.\nGreat lumps of coal and debris\nhurled upon us from the coal face\nand the sides of the pit.\"\nDespite frantic effort* It was two\nhours before rescue workers oould\nreach the first body.\nRAIN A FAR CRY\nIN IDAHO BUSH\nBOISE Idaho, Sept. 3.\u2014(AP)\u2014\nTwo besieging forces, the sun on\none side and the national guard\non the other, held the high hand\nover central Idaho forests today.\nOf the two the most feared was\nthe sun, for It has held sway con-\ntlnuay since in April, choking out\nevery semblance of a storm tn that\ntime, and lt promised to continue\nIts grip. The local weather bureau\nsaid there was no prospect of a\nstorm.\nOnlya rain will relieve the danger\nof continued big forest fires, only\nafter a rain will Oovernpr C. Ben\nRoss call back the nine units of the\nnational guard now quartered in six\ncounties to prevent Incendiaries\nstarting fires that would give them\nwork  fighting   them.\nThe labor forces on the two main\nfire areas of central Idaho havo\nbeen reduced by half, 800 men\nhaving been released as the fires\nthe yfoitght from one to five week*\nwere brought under ctfrtrol.*\nCANDIDATE FOR\nPRESIDENCY IN\nJAIL AN HOUR\nPATERSON, N. J.. Sept. 3\u2014\nNorman Thomas, Socialist\ncandidate for president of the\nUnited States ln 1938, spent\nan hour ln Jail today while\nawaiting arraignment with 47\nothers on charges of unlawful assemblanoe, growing out\nof silk strike picketing. All\nwere released on flfi bail\neach for trial at an unnamed\ndate.\nArrested on the picket line\nwith Thomas before the hand\nmill at Gould avenue and\nRailway avenue were A. J.\nMust*, head of a labor college. Spear Knecel. social secretary of the Episcopal diocese\nof Long Island, and Rev.\nBradford Young of the church\nof Holy Trinity, New York\ncity. With other plcketere\nthey were taken to police\nheadquarters in patrol wagons.\nDriving: to Common\nDanger Charge Is\nAdjourned at Trail\nTRAIL, B. 0., Sept. 3\u2014Charges\nagainst Ernie Marshall of driving to\nthe common danger and on falling\nto report an accident were adjourned for a week ln Trail police oourt\ntoday. Marshall la 111 and unable to\nappear in oourt.\nSchedule Worked Out for\nFour Western Provinces at Regina\nREGINA, Sask., Sept. 9. (CP)\nA scheme for placnlg unemployed men on farms I n the\nfour western provinces, to be\npaid by the provincial government in each case the aam of\n95 per month, was evolved here\ntoday at the interprortnclal conference held at the legislative\nbuildings  In  Regina.\nThe  scheme   provides  for  the\npayment   of   a   cash   grant   to\nthe farmers employing lhe help\nbnt   no   set   amonnt   Is   specified.   The   merits   of   each   case\nwill be given due consideration.\nAnnouncement   of   the   plan   wi\nmade  by  Hon.  J. A.  Merkley, Saskatchewan minister of labor and in\ndustrles   at   the   conclusion  of   the\nconference    today,    and    additional\ninformation   concerning   a   schedule\nof   wages   for   payment   for   relief\nwages   which   was   adopted   by   the\nconference  was   made   public.\nDECISION   REACHED\nThe decision was reached to hpld\nmeetings of the conference monthly\nand Mr. Merkjey was appointed\nchairman of the organization.\nWage schedules adopted for relief work which will apply to each\n(Continued   on  Page  Two)\nPray Rain to Stop\nPARIS, sept, s (AP)-Cardinal\nVerdler, archbishop or Paris, tonight usked all Catholic* tn hla\ndiocese to pray for a cessation\nof rain. Paris had only six rainless days during August and the\ncardinal said a continuation of\ndownpours \"threatened to become a veritable calamity for\nthe whole country.\"\nAUSTRO-QERMAN\nUNION BANISHED\nCommission Called to Improve Relations With\nSoviet\nGENEVA, Sept. 3 (By P. I.\nIpsley, Jr., Associated Press staff\ncorrespondent)\u2014The Austro-Ger-\nman customs union project, one\nof Europe's most vexing political\nproblems, was formally abandoned today at the meeting of the\nEuropean com mission, and Immediately afterward the commission was called upon to banish\nanother menace to world peace\nby improving relations between\nsoviet Russia and capitalistic\nnations.\nBoth Dr. Julius Curtius and Dr.\nJohann Schober, German and Austrian foreign ministers, announced\nto the representatives of 34 nations\nparticipating   In   the   meeting   that\ntheir governments no longer would\npursue   the   custom   union   project.\nThe call to face the Russian problem came from Maxim Lltvinoff,\nSoviet commissar for foreign affairs,\nwho avoided that unfriendly meeting between his country snd the\ncapitalistic powers were the outstanding cause of fear and distrust\nthroughout the world.\nRenunciation, by tbe Germanic\nstates of their plan for intimate\ncommercial union waa warmly received by spokesmen for Prance and\nCzechoslovakia, the two powers most\nalarmed by the project which, they\ndeclared, would pave the way for\nAuatro-German political union.\nDlno Grandl, Italian foreign mln\nister, and Viscount Cecil, Britain's\nspokesman, Joined the other statesmen In congratulating Drs. Curtius\nand Schober and ln predicting the\namelioration of the political, and\nhence the economic, situation of\nEurope and  the world.\n300-YEAR-OLD\nTURTLE MENACE\nTOCANOEISTS\nReigns in Lake in Northern\nOntario; Has Battled\nWith Many\nEXPRESS RATES\nREDUCED, VERNON\nVERNON, B. C, Sept. 3.\u2014\nExpress rates on shipment*\nweighing over 100 pounds have\nbeen reduced on shipment within the district covered by Kam-\nPenticton, for the purpose of\nmeeting   motor   competition.\nRedactions are over four peq\ncent lower than existing rates\n\u25a0m shipments weighing in excess\nof 100 pounds and rate* are still\nlower on shipments weighing\nover 200 pounds-\nRates on such shipments now\ncompare favorably wtth existing\nflirt class freight rates, tt Is\nsaid.\nAmy Johnston Down\nPORT WILLIAM, Ont., Sept. 3.\u2014\nfOP)\u2014A glent turtle, 30o years old,\nwhich terrorizes experienced canoo-\nmen and la revered by Indians like\na god, frequents the waters of Five-\nMile lake, near Chapleau, Ont., it\nwas reported by members of the\nspecial parliamentary fish and game\ncommittee of Ontario in the city\ntoday.\nAccording to trustworthy eye-witnesses,, the turtle is fully three\nfeet in width across the back and\nhas a neck three feet long. It Is\nestimated to be between 200 and\n300 pounds in weight.\nAn aged Indian trapper, Nemegos\nby name, 96 years of age, told members of the commission he had\nseen the turtle frequently when he\nfirst came to Chapleau 50 years\nago and that lt had been a legend\nwith the Indian tribe for many,\nmany   moons.\nCanoeists paddling up the narrow Five-Mile creek which drains\nthe lake vow they have aeen the\nturtle disappear in the distance with\na swirl of water. More than one\ncanoe in recent months has nearly\nbeen upset in an encounter with\nthe fabled monster. One wrathful\ncanoeist struck tbe monster a heavy\nblow with an axe. but the blade\nmerely glanced off the armor-plated\nsurface.\nCHILEAN NAVY\nIS ALL TIED\nUPKVOLT\nCommunist   Agitators   Urge\nSetting Up of Soviet Form\nof Government\nVALPARAISO, Chile, Sept. 3.\u2014\n(AP)\u2014Copyright, 1931. by the Associated Press)\u2014The entire Chilean\nnavy was In revolt tonight. Communist leaders here seized the opportunity offered by chaos In Santiago, Valparaiso and other centers\nto urge establishment ot a Chilean\nsoviet republic.\nThe last of the naval forces which\nhad remained loyal up until today\nJoined the Ooqulmbo forces this\nafternoon. All able vessels steamed out of the Talcuahanr. navy\nyard end a cruiser and several destroyers  left  here  for  Coquimbo.\nAs the battle craft, the number\nof whloh was not immediately ascertainable, sailed, the commanders\nof shore batteries ordered guns to\nfire upon the departing ships, but\nthe   artillery  men  refused.\nCommunist agitators, many o f\nwhom were said to be aliens urged\nseizure of the government tonight,\nconfiscation of foreign business institution* and corporations, division\nof land among the workers and expulsion of  foreigners.\nAs a counter move, the provisional government announced that all\npublic salaries, including those of\nthe army Jteevy and air corps would\nnot  ba   reduced.\nMOSCOW. Sept. 3.\u2014(AP)\u2014\nAmy Johnson, British woman\nflyer, who is flying barb to\nEngland from Toklo, made a\nforced landing this afternoon\nbetween Arsk and Kazan, about\n500 miles east ot here.\nShe had landed at Sverdlovsk\nat noon and left there shortly\nafterward.\nThe last landing was made\nnecessary by fnei shortage. An\nurgent message brought her a\nnew supply and Mlss Johnson\ncontinued  on  her  way.\nMAY BE LOST\nIN THE ARCTIC\nFaint Signals Heard Are\nToo Weak to Be\nRead\nSHIPS ARE ORDERED\nTO BE IN READINESS\nOfficial Wireless Stations\nAre Unable to Get\nReply\nOSLO, Norway, Sept. J.\u2014\n(Ap)\u2014Serious concern was felt\nhere tonight for the safety of\nthe Nautilus, Sir Hubert Wilkins' Arctic submarine, when no\nnews of the ship had been received   for  four  days.\nAuthorities Instructed all amateur radio operators to try to\nestablish communication with\nthe submarine. Ail official wireless stations have been calling\nthe Nautilus without resnlt for\nseveral day*.\nThe captain of the Norwegian\ncoaling steamer ingerto reported\nyesterday that he heard faint signals from the submarine but that\nthese were too weak to be read.\nThe suggestion was made here today\nthat these signals might have come\nfrom the submarine's portable\ntransmitter which may have been\ncarried out on the ice by the\ncrew.\nSHIPS STAND BT\nThe board' of fisheries hss instructed a sealing ship which is\nnow at Longysar City, Spttzbergen,\nto remain there in readiness for\na relief dash If necessary-\nTh eadmiralfcy also considered the\npossibility of sending the sloop\nFrldtjof Nansen. now at Hartstad,\ncounty Nordland, to try to locate\nthe Nautilus but no decision waa\nmade tonight.\nMOSCOW, Sept. 3.\u2014(AP)\u2014The\ngovernment today ordered all Soviet\nships at ports tn northern waters\nto take all possible steps to communicate with Sir Hubert Wilkins\nArctic submarine Nautilus. Amateur\nradio operators also were urged to\nlisten for signals from, the sub\nmarine.\nQandhi Amazes All\non Board Steamer\nTHINK ALBERTA\nLAGGING BEHIND\nB. C. IN RELIEF\nCALGARY. Alta.. Sept. 3.\u2014\n(CP)\u2014Criticisms that Alberta\nwaa lagging behind Britiah\nColumbia in getting road construction underway to aid unemployed were answered here\ntonight by Premier J. I.\nBrownies. Such criticisms ware\nunfounded, said the premier,\nfor the situations tn both\nprovinces were by no meens\nanalagous.\nBrtMah Columbia roada\nwere rocky and conduotlTt to\nhand labor, Alberta's ware\nnot. British Columbls's problem was almost exclusively\nurban. Alberta's was largely\nrural.\nBy putting its unemployed to work on roads. Ur.\nBrownlee said, British Columbia was doing the work at\nan almost nominal expense,\nbut if Alberta mobilised urban unemployed and created\nroad work for them, the expense would be six or seven\ntimes  u  great.\nThe only Alberta roads on\nwhich hand labor oould be\nused to any advantage were\nin the National parka, and\nthis proposal wae being taken\nup wtth prime Miniate; R.\nB. Bennett to provide employment for single and transient   unemployed.\nHe denied his government\nw#s delaying relief projects.\nMATKOFF MOUNTS\nSCAFFOLD THIS\nMORNING, COAST\nCranbrook Killer to Be Executed at Oakalla; Was\nTried in May\nSpurns First Class Travel\nand Sleeps Under Sheet\nthe Deck\non\nABOARD   THE   \u00bb.   \u00bb.   HEJUT-\nANA,   Sept.   3.\u2014(By    James    A.\nMills, Associated Press Staff Correspondent)\u2014  Mahatma  i.andhl.\nleader  of  India's  swarming   Nationalist   million!.,   has   spurned\nthe first-class state room placed\nat   his   disposal   for   his   trip  to\nthe   round   table   conference   in\nLondon, and steeps on a wooden\nbench ln the stern nf the liner.\nCovered    by    a    shimmering\nwhite sheet, he slept unconcernedly   today   while   deck-patrolling passengers  gazed In  amazement.   \"Who Is it?\" they ashed,\nand    an    attendant     answered\ncourteously, \"that Is Mr. Gandhi-\nhut this  Is  his  day  of  silence,\nand   so   he   Is   sleeping.\"\nThere   are   many   strange   things\nfor the uninitiated aboard  the  Be-\nJutana, for  instance, a half ton of\nmud    brought    from    the    sacred\nGanges    by    Pandit   Maiavlya,    Mr.\nGandhi's   companion.     The   Pandit\noonverta   the   piud   into   miniature\ngods for the purposes of worship.\nINSURES  WATER  SI PPI.Y\nA wealthy Indian admirer of tha\nPandit haa contributed $5,000 to\nInsure for him a weekly supply of\nwater from the Ganges for ablution\nand  drinking.\nPor the first time in his 70 years\nthe Pandit, who belongs to the\nhighest priestly caste of Brahmins,\nls dining without bathing or changing his clothea. Permission to bring\nhis oow with him was denied, and\nso, to satisfy the requirement*, of\nhis religion, h\u00ab has 130 quarts of\nritual  pasteurized  milk.\nWhen darkness falls each evening\nthe Mathatma Gandhi rises from\nhis wooden bench *nd summons his\nsmall  flock of followers to  prayer.\n(Continued   on   Page   Two)\nGRAF RETURNING\nPEKNAMBL'CO, Brazil, Sept.\n4. (Friday) (AP) \u2014 The Graf\nzeppelln took off for Fried-\nrlrhshafen, Germany, at 9:40\nam. (12:40 a.m. E.S.T.) today\non her homeward vovage across\nthe  Atlantic.\nKamloops Hotel Burns\nKAMLOOPS, B. ('., Sept. |.\u2014\nFire of unk non n origin this\nafternoon totally -destroyed the\nGrand Pacirlc hotel, landmark\nIn Kamloops for more than 40\njears. Commencing at I p.m.\nthe flames quickly -wept\nthrough the old struct ure but\nthe aid of several Iiunderds\nof townspeople saved a large\npart of the val liable content*.\nPolice arrested a man they alleged was in thc a*\"t of pilfering.\nOTTAWA,  sept.  1   (CP>\u2014Sentence   of   death   will   be   carried\nout In the case of BUI Matkoff\nat  Oakalla  prison  farm,  British\n(olumbla,    tomorrow     morning.\nMatkoff  was  sentenced In  Jane\nlast  (o  die   for  the  murder  of\nTuiin Prosov and John Lendrosky\nhi   the   vicinity   of   Cranbrook,\nBritish   Columbia,  in   November.\nExecution  waa   to   take   place   on\nJulv  17. but a reprieve was granted\nuntil September 4. The case having\nreceived     official    consideration     it\nhas   been   decided   not  to   interfere\nwith the sentence of the court.\nNELSON, B. C, Sept. 3\u2014Bill Matkoff, who wtll hang at Oakalla thla\nmorning, was found guilty of murder\non May 19 last, in Cranbrook court.\nMatkoff had walked Into the Cranbrook hotel, called John Prosov to\nthe door and shot him through the\nneck. He then turned the gun on\nJohn bendroeky, who died of the\nwounds. Matkoff then gave himself\nup to police, in his defense he\nclaimed that the \"two Johns\" earned\na livelihood hy gambling and had\nrelieved him of money from time to\ntime.\nExpect to Use 150 Trains\nto Transport Their\nPossessions\nSHUKIN SAYS\nNOTHING AS YET\nPeter Verigin Not in Vicinity of Brilliant at\nPresent\nE_ PASO,   _.__,, sept. -._(__,,\n\u2014Tbe   \u201e__l_-__rt   hv,   it   __.\nreliable  l_._nn___c  thit   i\u201emn\nm~_b. r_ or Uw _-______,. ___,\nunder ____->__p _r rrt_r vsrl-\n_1n, plan to mUrratp mm mn-\nit\u00abh   rohialM-  ami  tmiUliliin\nan, (an. 4a.  tn Mmlra  I limn m\nEl  Paso  thl.   fall\nTba movement will b, the urgent\n\u25a0Ingle colonization  attempt in tha\nhistory of worth _m\u00abT_e. the news-\npaper   tan   Th,   man   resent   __>\ncomparable  to it wae that ot 8.000\nMennonltee. who more, from -toad*   to   Chihuahua   and   Durengo,\nMexico, its yeara afo.\nISO  TRAINS  Nl._l._rD\nIf preeent piarn, ,r, earned eut.\nabout im train, will be reosMd\nto move the colonists, their cattle,\nImplement,, -nd Smeehold fur-\nnlehlngi at a rr_n,portatlon coat of\nabout II,900X40.\nVerigin ban been examining land\nin Mexico of whloh the __o__n_\npropoef to buj 600,000 aeraa Be Is\nthe son of the late Peter r_ng__.\nwho led the eoionlate from Hassle\nto Canada in 1899. Tr_ elder reel-\ngin was killed In a train explosion\nseven  year,  sgn.\nJ. P. tihukin. second vlos-preal-\ndsnt and general manager of lbs\nChristian Community of __le\u00abr__\nBrotherhood at Brilliant, had nothing to say regarding the above dispatch, when phoned last nlfht by\nthe Nelson Dally News. He \u25a0___..\nhowever, that, at preeent Peter\nVerigin waft In another part of the\ncountry.\nBLUEBERRY SCENE\nOF C. P R. BLAZE\nMACDONALD IN A\nLONE POSITION\nFire Breaks Out Shortly After Freight Passes, Covers 40 Acres\nFallowing the purine of the\nO. P. R. freight train from Rom-\nland bound for Nelson, about 4 p.oo.\nThursday, a forest fir* brake wit.\nat Blueberry creek that spread over\nabout 36 or 40 acres before It\nwa. checked late in the evening\nby a larft number ol met. employed by the c. P. R-, and a torn\npur, od by th\u00ab forestry department.\nAbout 10 o'clock th*\" fire waa* re-\npnuec* -well In  -hack.\nOther Mr*, in sn* distric*. ore all\nquiet with _b\u00ab exotptWft of the\nGold creek fire lout* \u00abf Yah*.\nThero the men are er penancing\nconsiderable difficulty ln fighting\nthp blase whloh > approximately\nIS miles in Jenr-h Situated a* it\nIb, miles from meant ot transportation, the supply emblem is a difficult one. At present pack horses\narP used to transport the food supplies.\nDecision to Ask for Vote\nConfidence Shows His\nAnxiety\nLONDON. Sept. 3 <C P cable)\u2014\nThe cabinet's decision to ask the\nhouse of commons Ior a vote of confidence when it assembles next Tuesday, before disclosing In detail Its\nplans for balancing the budget, reflects the anxiety of Prime Minister\nRamsay MacDonald to know ut the\nearliest possible moment, who ls for\nand who Is against him.\nThe fact the British delegation to\ntbe league assembly at Geneva consists of three Conservative peers,\nthat Junior government offices when\nfilled will be found to be predom\nlnantly Conservative and Liberal\nposts, and that the prime minister's\nown personal secretary has seen his\ncandidature as a Labor man for a\nseat in the next elections cancelled,\nall these are but a few signs of the\nlonely position in which Mr. MacDonald feels he has been left.\nThat the opposition will prove\nfierce and powerful, under the able\nleadernhtp of Rt. Hon. Arthur Hen-\ndersnn, is beyond any doubt. Mr.\nHenderson will be backed by many\nformer Labor est (net ministers yf\nequal force.\nBitter cries of \"traitor\" will quite\nlikely be flung across tbe floor as\nMr. MacDonald takes his seat in the\nhouse next week, flanked by Bt\nHon, Philip Snowden and, Rt. Hon.\nJ. H. Thomas, who, with Lord\nMan Key, alone remain of the old\nLabor cabinet to assist Mr. MacDonald In the national .government.\nMany of the old Labor cabinet ministers who *t* now In opposition feel\nstrongly that two years ci work have\nbeen sacrificed.\nLONDON, Sept. 3 (C P cable)\u2014\nThe cabinet today filled many ministerial poets and a list issued tonight\nshowed that M vacancies had been\nfilled by 31 Conservatives, 11 Liberals and eight Laborites. Included ln\nthe appointments are an under-sec\nretary, that of the dominions, for\nMalcolm MacDonald, son of Prrmler\nRamsay MacDonald. and the selection Is a popular one.\nThe story of how his father almost\nbegged htm to disregard family ties\nand line up with, the bulk of the\nLabor party against the national\ngovernment, hss touched public\nimagination. The son of another\nparliamentary leader Is also reward\ned. He Is Major Gwllym Lloyd\nGeorge, son the \"little Welshman,\"\nsnd he received the post of undersecretary to tbe board of trade.\nTHE WEATHER\nSYNOPSIS    OF    WEATHER\nCONDITIONS\nTlie barometer is falling over this\nprov ince   and   showers   may   become\ngeneral   on   the   Pacific slope.\nPair  warm  weather   __ reported  in\nhe   prairies.\nTKMPFHATI HI      IND\nPRECIPITATION\n-Vim. Max. Rain\nNELSON                 .47 00\nVictoria  68 6\u00ab\nVancouver        66 70        H\nKamloops  63 73\nEstevan   Point     58 62       .33\nPrince    Rupert      62 60       .33\nAtlln     - 44 56\nDawson.   YT.   .   _.  4R M\nSeattle         \u2014 60 78\nPortland,   Ore  66 86\nSan Pranclsco  56 66\nSpokane     - -.     62 90\nPentioton      50 83\nVernon           54 73       .03\nGnmd  Forks   \u2014 47 92\nKaslo       A8 78\nCranbrook     \u201e  46 87\nCalgary - 4r 80\nEdmonton        46 84        01\nSwift  Current  42 64\nPrince  Albert     46 74\nQu'Appelle      -40 64\nWinnipeg       M 74\nIORECAST*\nNelson and vicmify; Partly cloudy\nand cooler with nhovers ?r thun-\ndtrttanu\n____w\n rsot two\n\"IHE  NI-S0_  DAILY  NEWS. NELSON, B.  ft, F-UDAT MORNING.   SEPTEMBER  1,  1M1~\nJOSEPH BUCKNA\nTRAIL, HNED ON\nASSAULT CHARGE\nCharge Against Walter Er.\nwied Dismissed; Woman\nthe Trouble\nTRAIL, B. C\u00bb Sept. 3.\u2014Joseph\nBuckna, charged with assault by\nWalter Brwled, waa found guilty In\nTrail police court today by Police\nMagistrate Noble Blnn_ and fined\n$20 and coats, a charge against Brwled in which Buckna was the Informant waa dismissed.\nBrwled told the court that Buck\nna had punched him In tha noes\non the sidewalk outside tbe Moo*\ntana hotel August 25. Buckna admitted the assault but claimed\njustification,\nBe said there waa trouble over\na woman, a stranger to both.\nKurt Sturiee and Mike Konls gav*\ntestimony for Erwled who waa represented by Frank'Meagher.\nFor tha defence Buckna did his\nown cross examining. Ctrl Butorac\nwas the only defence witness hefcrd,\nHla worship deciding that he did\nnot car\u00ab to hear any more of the\ncase.\nINTERNATIONAL LEAGUE\nMontreal   l,   Toronto  8.\nBaltimore-Jersey   City,   rain.\nNewark-Reading,  day  game,  rain.\nNewark 0, Heading 8, night gams.\nRochester 0-6, Buffalo 1-2, night\ngames.\nGuide for Travellers\nNelson, B. C, Hotels\n^WAAAiWVVVVVVVW\nNELSON, B. C.\nNelson is now on Daylight\nSaving Time.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Prop.\n*e*Wfi<**r?r^\nHOLLAND TO ASK\nGOVERNMENT FOR\nVETERANS' CAMP\nLegion Executive Writes and\nMeets Legislators on\nMatter\nALL IS SET FOR\nSTEAM PICNIC\nDistrict Branches Invited;\nCommittees for the\nBig Event\nHUME\u2014a. Anderson, w. P Dunbar, Trail: Mr. aod M\". A J. Wat-\naon, Kootenay Bay; Mrs. D Fisher\nand eon, Port Crawford, Mr. and\nMra. .. R. Laycoc.. Ok-k.Wn; Mr\naaad Mra. _. S. Wright, Chicago.\nMr. a__ Mra. Thornton and daughter, Oouer _'Alen\u00ab; T. A Marsnck.\nA. Dulmir. T. A. Wallace, O. B. Mc-\n_n\u00aboa_, W. O. T. Ocaman, Cran-\nbraok: Mr. an- Mm, J. 0. Cowan.\nKaalo; \u00ab. r. LeVeve. atom .\nFerguson, w. J. Sweeney, w. C. 8.\nHobkirk, _. Morgan, D. L. A.. Agns-\ntss, Vancouver; J. H. Wllaon. Winnipeg; J. W. Quinney. A. Balrd. Cal-\n.ary; Mr. and Mra. A .Unarln, Mlss\nVera Holmal. G. Pain. Banff; p. c.\nKnapp, Portland; Mr. and Mr,. L.\nA. Parker. Spokane; R,. Crawford,\nMedicine Hat.\nWhere {he Gue&Is King\ncUhe Savoy\"\nNXLbON'8 MTWBST AND FINEST HOTEL\nMANY ROOMS WITH PRIVATE\nBATH8 OR UUOWZBB\nJ. A. KERR. Prop.\nlaassssai\n*______?* ****A-**A*'^-fc-* **_*\u00bb\u25a0*!\u00bb I\"lt'\nThat Prealdent 3o% Holland had\nbeen authorised by the executive to\ngo to Victoria to Interview Hon.\nR. W. Bruhn, minister of public\nworks, on the subject of allotting\none road camp in this district for\nwar veterans, waa reported Thursday night to Nelson Branch of the\nCanadian Legion, the executive's action receiving the approval of the\nbranch. He will leave for the Capital Friday night. O, K. Ashby,\n1st.   vice-president   presided.\nIt wae stated that letters on\nthe subject had already been written to Hon. Mr. Bruhn, Dr. L.B. Bor.\nden, M.P.P., for Nelson, Capt. James\nFltzelmmons, M.P.P., for Kaelo-Slo-\ncan, and Lieut, col. Fred Lister,\nC.M.O.. M.P.P.. lor Creston, and\nthat Capt. Fltsslmmons had met.\nthe executive ln conference and\nwarmly endorsed the suggestion.\nWhile at Victoria President Holland will alao interview the liquor\ncommission regarding administrative\nmatters in connection with th\u00ab club\nUncenss held by tlie branch for\nthe aale of beer to members.\nPICNIC   ARRAM_t.MI-.N_r..\nW. A. Gow reported that arrangement for the Legion's annual picnic to Crawford Bay on Labor Day\nby the steamer Nssookln, were com-\nPlet-*, snd that the advance aale of\ntickets suggested the plenlo crowd\nwould be of record proportions,\nBranches nt Trail, Rossland, Kaslo,\nand Slocan points and lake points\ngenerally. Including of course the\nCrawford Bay branch, have been\ninvited to participate ln ths outing.\nThe Canadian Legion Bugle band\nwill be the duty band, and there\nwill he dancing on the home trip\nThe sports program will Include\nchildren's, men's and ladles' races,\nraces for veterans and for vcteran'a\nwives, novelty races, Jumps, tossing the caber, and tugs-ot-war for\nboth sexes, married vs. single. The\npicnic will bs of the basket variety, with hot watsr furnished. The\nboat will leave Nelson ln advance\nof the first ferry run from Praser's\nLanding, to Gray Creek, and will\nthen continue on to Crawford Bay\nand on tho return trip will leave\nCrawford Bay for Gray Creek for\ntha laat ferry run to Fraser's Landing,  and   then  on   to  Nelaon.\nCommittees ln charge of the ar-\nr__.__fem.ente at* as follows:\nJoint chairmen\u2014W. A. Gow, Fred\nHartwig.\nFinance\u2014G. S. Paton. W. A. Gow,\nTicket    Inspection\u20140.    3.    Paton,\nG. to- Massey.\nDry Canteen\u2014W.A. Gow, L. John-\natone, J. Chapman, W. Kennedy, R.\nMoffat.\nAmusemen-a-G. E. Massey, G.\nSutcliffe. J. Drummond, D. Wade,\nJ. Bsatty, W. wood.\nSporta\u2014C. H. Robinson, h. H.\nCreese, L. Plcksrd, G. Walton, A.\nKraft,   W.  Good-let.\nBAVOT\u2014IDs. V. H. Jordan, H. G.\nPanjeuex. 3. A. Miller, Nakusp, W.\nL .Andehaon, Erie; B. A. Robertson.\nW. J. Claudge, to, Hubert, Benton;\nA. Ramaon, Saskatoon; J. M. Wright,\nT. D Bruntoes, Princeton; L.. 3.\n___nlth,    Victoria;    D.    Alntoul,    J-\nJacques, calgary; p. Bwan, Blocan\nCity; B. Goodman, Winnipeg; A. R.\nMcCalum. Vaancouver; Mr. and Mrs.\nA. R. Kay, Trail; to. Nlederman,\nEdgewood; Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Green,\nDee Motne.\nQue\n31t'S\nHotel\nA. Lapointe,\nProp.\nHot and cold water In every room.\nSteam heated.\n_^^.nlas.r^.^t\n__n. .   | J.   B.   Burge.   Oray   Oreek,   J.   __\nNEW GRAND\nHOTEL\nP. L. KAP..K. Prop.\nWeekly   or   Monthly   Rates,  eto\nsingle 75.  up:  Double 11.75 up\nWeekly  or  monthly  ratei.\nDot and cold water in all roomi.\nPhone 503        T. O. Box 1061\nFREE BIS MEETS EVERY TR*H\nOnce Prosecutor, Now Prosecuted\nGRIEF WILL NOT\nHINDER DEMPSEY\nFROMFIGHTING\nDeath of Brother in South\nTempted Him to Throw\nUp Schedue\nMADDEN HOTEL\nD. a. Mcdonald\nBteam Heated  Rooms by the\nDay, Week or Month.\nEvery   consideration   shown\nto guests.\nOor.   Baker   and   Ward   Streets\nNelson\nHill, Edmonton.\nMADDEN\u2014D. Carmlchael, Nelson;\nA. K. Wolfs, J. J. Wilde, H- R-\nPrlesen, P. Koch, Mrs. F. Koch,\nRsnata.\nOccidental Hotel\n705 Vernon St.\nH. Wssstck\nPhone\nFifty Rooms of  Solid Comfort\nHeadquarters for Loggers and\nMiners.\nKENNETH DAROUGH\nSTRUCOY AUTO\nFender of Car Catches His\nHead Throwing Him Clear;\nDoing Nicely\nRunning across Baker street, in\nfront of the 77 Taxi and News\nStand, directly ln the path of an\napproaching automobile driven by\nElvln Kraft, six-year-old Kenneth\nDarough. son of Mr. and Mrs. C. R.\nDarough, of the Kerr apartments,\nwaa knocked down and badly bruised about 6 o'clock Thursday night.\nThe little fellow had either not\nseen the on-coming car or had misjudged Ita speed, the front fender\nhitting him on the head when he\nhad all but cleared it.\nSergeant Alex. Stewart Immediately took him to! Dr. D. W. McKay's\noffice and then later he was removed to the Kootenay Lake General hospital. A careful examination revealed him to be suffering\nfrom a fracture lh the region of th\u00a9\nfrontal and bone of the nose. Apparently he was hit on the head\nonly, where the fender had bruised\nhis head, and thrown him clear.\nHe was badly shaken up, but the\nlatest information reports him resting   comfortably.\nTrail, B. C, Hotels\nHotel Arlington\nCentrally Located\nTRAIL, B.C.\nA  P. l__VI8QUI. Prop.\n*:i:\nDOUGLAC\nHOTEL   9\nRooms and Bath\n\u25a0_ l_  and  A. GROUT Al.-,  Prop-.\nSteam Heated\nThroafhout\nHot and cmn\nWater\nBoi mm) Phone 26J\nTRAIL, B. C.\nThe Royal Cafe\nCLASSIC  RESTAURANT\nR-flnenv.nl    and   Delicacy   Prevail\nOPEN DAY AND NIOHT\nspecial Dinner, 11:30 to 8 p.m.. use\nspecial Sunday Chicken Dinner 60c\nSpecializing In Chop fluey and Noodles\nPHONE    IM\nVANCOUVER\nDl'FFFRIN    HOTEL\u2014900    SEYMOUR\nST.\u2014Bright Rooms. Central. Moderate Rates. A. Paterson, lata At\nColeman, crow's Nest, Prop,\nEnlarged Prostate\nAND ALL URINARY ILLS\nTAKE OUR REMEDIES\nPamphlet* \"Man Know Thyself\" and \"Diseases of Men,\"\n\"Ills ot Women,\" also Skin\nand Blood Diseases with Diagnosis porm and advice in\nplain envelope free by mall.\nMall order and Tablet remedies  a specialty.\nThe English Herbal\nDispensary, Ltd.\n1359 Davie Nt Vancouver, B.C.\nEstablished   US  \\t\nPORTLAND, Ore, Sept. 3\u2014 (AP)\n\u2014Jack Dempsey was being a good\ntrouper here today, grief-stricken\nat ths death ol his brother, tfarney\nin Loa Angeles, he announced that\nhe would go through with all fight\nexhibitions immediate contracts call\nfor.\nAppearances he mentioned were\nat Eugene, Ore., tomorrow night,\nat Reno Labor day and a milk fund\nbenefit at Tacoma later.\n\"My flrat impulse was to call\neverything off,\" Jack said, \"but it\nwou[d not be faalr to the promoters\nwho have gone to sreat exponas,\nnor to the people who have laid\nplans to see the exhibitions.\"\nOne thing that hit Dempsey hardest, his manager, Leonard Sacks,\nsaid, wae that he will be unable to\nattend the funeral when it Is held\nIn Los Angeles, pending litigation\nwith his wife. Estelle Taylor, will\nkeep him away,  Sacks explained.\nDempsey said news of bis brother's death came to him \"as an\nespecial shock,\" though b_ had\nbeen  ailing  for  some  time.\nPORTLAND, Ore., Sept. 3-\u2014(AP>\n\u2014After watching Jack Dempsey\nwork at Aberdeen, wash., last night\nLeo Lomskl has decided to withdraw from the four-round exhibition bout with the ex-champlon at\nReno Monday night.\nLomskl announced here today he\nhad notified th9 Reno promoters\nthat he would be unable to go\nthrough with his contract. The\nAberdeen fighter sponsored last\nnight's   boxing   show.\nSlayer\nST. LOUIS BEATS\nCLEVELAND 11-3;\nTIGERS BEAT SOX\nFORMER PROSECUTOR OJJ TRIAL AS SLAYER\nDavid H Cleric former deputy district attorney ot Loa Angelee, and\none-time candidate for a municipal Judge-hip, la now on trial charged with\nthe murder of Herbert _. Spenoer, magazine editor and newspaperman. He\nle alao alleged to have killed Charlea H. Crawford, prominent Ix\u00bb Angeles\npolitician, both slaying occurring ln Crawford's office. Picture No. 1\nahowa Clark. No. 3 la Jean Riley, a witness, who Is said to have seen the\nslayer fleeing No. 3 Is Lucllla Fisher, Crawford's secretary, who admitted\nthe slayer to the office. No. i la June Taylor, owner of a hotel and also\na witness No. 5 Is Crawford, one ot the murdered men, and No. \u00ab is a\ndiagram Illustrating the manner In which the slsylnge were effected.\nDown the Chicago Aggrega\ntion, 9-3 in Opening Game\nof the Series\nCLAIMS DANGER\nIN LOPPING OFF\nMANY VESSELS\n(Continued From Page One*\nMARIO QUONSSON\nRECEIVES FINE,\nIN TRAIL COURT\n|>\u00a3|^l^*\u00a3\u00a3j<\nsldersd. then sad now that wa cannot ssfefly have less than 70 cruiser.\" Yet It now appeared, he continued, that ln 1038 Great Britain\nwould have leas than 50.\nThe position of Great Britain on\nthe sea is unique, Lord Jellicoe em-\nphaalzwd. \"Japan la not so dependent on sea communications. Neither\n13 the United mate*. Cutting off our\nsea communications,\" he declared.\nln slow deliberate words, \"would\nmean the starvation of our people\nin about a month.\"\nHe had stressed thi* fact in Geneva in 1937, said the admiral. An\nAmerican admiral had then replied\nthat the united States waa In a\nsimilar position. \"I asked him ln\nwhat direction,\" Lord Jellicoe went\non with s smils, \"and he said,\nManganese.' 1 told hlra ths American people had never eaten manganese.\"\nBRITAIN   AGREED\nAt London, Lord Jellicoe continued,\nGreat Britain hsd agreed to accept\na limit of 80 cruisers until 1938.\n'There are many of u_ who regret\nthat decision,\" he declared. Politicians, ha declared, were conalcous of\nthe mistake; Rt. Hon. David Uoyd\nGeorge said 13 years ago, \"The m\u00bb\nIs usl\" The admiral added: \"But\nI'm afraid governments don't always\nlive up to what Is thought necessary.\"\nIt was unwias to use cruisers after\nthey had been ln service 30 years,\nsaid Lord Jellicoe. Ths British government was doing this, although\nmany of the cruisers had been built\nunder wartime stress and seen war\nservice, making their efficiency\nquestionable. He considered 16 years\nths limit.\n\"The real truth la.\" he declared,\n\"that successive governments since\n1938 have not laid down an adequate\nnumber of cruisers. Our cruiser\nstrength In 1938 la going to be Inadequate. \"\nThe same was true of destroyers,\nhe continued. There had been a\nshortage of them during the great\nwar, and limiting the number of 110\nat present was a dangerous policy,\nhe believed. \"To maintain our total\nof 110 ws should lay down 16\nyear,\" hs asserted, \"but now we are\nFIVE 18  ALL! laying   down   only   nine   each   year.\nCornelius O. Pierson, alias Harry _n 1938 we shall bs behind.\"\nP. Powers, Clarksburg, West Vlr- \"French flotilla leaders now being\nginla, mall order Romeo, who is aald put ln service are really light cruls-\nto have confessed to killing of two ers,\" declared Lord Jellicoe, \"for\nwomen and three children. \"Five ls they are twice ss large as British\nall,\" he told investigators digging vessels of the sams type and carry\nfor more suspected victim*. larger guns.\"\nTRAIL, B. O.. Sept. 3\u2014Pleading\nguilty to a charge of permitting\ncows to stray within the fenced area\nof Cambridge creek dam. which ls\nwithin thc Trail watershed and\nhealth district, Mario Quonason,\ngiven the choice of a $30 fine or\n30 days imprisonment, paid the fine.\nMagistrate Noble Btnns warned\nQuona&on a second offence would\nresult In a fine of *100 or more.\nWAGE SCALE FOR\nROADS IS SETTLED\nAT REGINA MEET\n(Conlnued  From  Page  One)\nSIGN NOW!\nFill ln and mall Immediately\nthla form, and learn the truth\naoout thla remarkable Health\nRestoring   Method.\nTo  New   Health   Clinic\nat Central Bldg., Victoria, B.C.\n.lease send me full informs.\n'.Ion about a New Health Method that increases vital energy, strengthens weak constitutions builds up muscular tissues, tones up to tha vital\norgans, restores vision and re-\nmoves glasses, softens hardened arteries, normalizes the circulation Restores youthful _n-\nergy and health to Young and\nOld alike.\nName   _\nAddjja.\nScreen Comedian and Actress Wed\nAMERICAN   LEAGUE\nW L\nPhiladelphia 00 37\nWashington 77 51\nNew York    7\u00ab 53\nCleveland     63 64   _96\nSt.   Louis 65 7\u00ab   .4-0\nDetrolt      58 77   .420\nChicago     51 78   405\nBoston        41 78   .386\nPet.\n.700\n.602\n.580\nST.   LOUIS   11,\nCLEVELAND   3\nST. LOUIS, Sept. 8\u2014Bchulte and\nMelilee led the St. Louis Browns to\na 11 to 3 victory over the Cleveland\nIndians here todsy ln the first of a\nfour game series. Bchulte collected\nthree hlte, Including a home run\nand Mellllo slammed out four, Dick\nCoffman was on tbe mound for the\nBrowns.\nCleveland     I    t   1\nSt. Louis -  H   19   1\nBrown, Jablownoskl and Myatt;\nCoffman   and   Bengough.\nCARNERAMAY   \u25a0'\nLAY CLAIM TO\nHEAVYTHRONE\nSays Will Do So if Schmeling Is Not Back in New\nYork, Sept. 17\nNBW TORK, Sept. 3 (A*.\u2014Unless\nMax Schmellng, world's heavyweight\nchampion, returns from Germany la\ntime to meet Prima earners here on\nSeptembe 17, Leon See, manager of\nthe strapping Italian, will lay cltlm\nto   the   title.\nSss mads known his intention\ntoday in a long telegram to Oen.\nJohn V. Ollnnln. president ol the\nnational boxing commission at Chicago. He asked the commission to\nsupport him m his claim if, snd\nwhen, It Is made.\nSee related the Madison Square\nGarden Corporation of Illinois had\nhad camera and Schmellng under\ncontract to fight since January IB\nlast. The big Venetian, he asserted,\nhu been training faithfully for ths\nfight at Orangeburg, N. Y.\nThere is slight possibility thst\nSchmellng will uphold his and of\nths contract, since German physicians recently advised him to stay\nout of the ring for \"some time,\" the\nresult of an eye injury received in\nthe Strlbllng bout at Cleveland,\nOLD TIMER OF\nROSSLAND DIES\nMrs.  Mathilda  Fors Passes\nAfter 30 Years of Residence There\nROSSLAND, B. C,. Sept. 8.\u2014MTS-\nMathilda Fors, aged 01, passed away\nat her home on Princess street\nWednesday night after an illness\nof   several   months.\nThs deceased who was a native\nof Helslngfors, Finland, had lived\nin Rowland for nearly 30 years.\nShe ls survived by two daughters,\nSlri of Los Angeles and Mlsa Ruby\nof Seattle, and three sons, Allan\nof Loa Angeles, Helge, and Eric of\nRossland. Her husband died several years ago.\nGANDHI AMAZES\nTHOSE ABOARD\nOCEAN VESSEL\nof  the  four  western  provlnoei   follows:\n(1) On public provincial buildings, the rate paid to building\ntradesmen will bo the current rate\nand in accordance wtth their fair\nwage schedules.\n(2) On highway work the rates\nshall be 30 cents per hour for\nmen and 60 cents per hour for a\nman and a team except ln the province of British Columbia, where\nrates shall be 25 cents for single\nmen, and 35 cents per hour for married men.\n(8i The maximum rate for board\nshall  be  35  cents  \u00ab   day.\n(4) In camps which are\ntabllshed for transients and single\nmen for relief purposes, the rates\nshall bs 11.60 per day lass board.\nIn the matter of direct relief it\nlt agreed that two meals a day\nwill be given single men If no\nwork Is available, and that all direct\nrelief shall be given ln kind, with\nthe right given to recipient that\nhe  may  select his  own  store.\nMen who arc given direct relief\nwill he required to work out the\nvalues of the relief given but will\nnot be required to work in excess\nof  the  value  given  out.\nRepresentatives attending the conference were: Hon. R. W. Bruhn,\nminister of public works for British Columbia; Hon. V. W. Smith,\nminister of railways snd telephones\nfor Alberta; Hon. W. R. ClUbb,\nminister of public works for Manitoba; Hon J. A. Merkley, minister\nof railways and labor and industries.\nSaskatchewan; and his deputy T. M.\nMolloy.\nNAMED MANAGER,\nELLISON MILLING\nCOMPANY, NELSON\nThat M. J. Varseveld, manager of\nthe Nelson District Cooperative, has\nbeen appointed manager of Nelson\nbranch of the Ellison Milling &\nElevator Co., limited, was the announcement Thursday of D. Clemls,\nassistant general manager of tha\nlat**r concern who arrived in Nelson\nTues^sy from the head office of\nLethbridge, to negotiate the transfer\nand to make a survey of the district\nconditions.\nMr. Varseveld takes the position\nmade vacant by the appointment of\nR. D. Barnes as manager of the\nKootenay  Breweries,  Ltd.\nMr. Varseveld hss a wide expert\nence ln the business, having held\nthe mansgershlp of ths Nelson Dls\ntrict Cooperative for nine years. He\ncame from Frultvale where he organized the Frultvale Cooperative\nand managed it for four years Prior\nto entering the cooperative business\nhe was Interested lu lumber activities.\n(Conlnued From Page One)\nAll are dressed In white flowing\nrobes, snd all squat budda-Uke on\nthe deck hands clasped, heads bowed, eyes closed, ln meditation.\nBeside ths Mahatma sits the P*\"*\ndlt Malavlya, in whose highly spiritual feat-urea seems to be written\nthouaands of years of Hindu culture and mysticism. On ths othsr\nside is Mlss Madellens Slade, daughter of a British Admiral and Ma-\nhatma's ssslstant.\nGsndhl's voice surges above ths\nlashing wind. \"We humbly aak th*\ngiver of all gifts to glv\u00a9 India her\nfreedom,\" hs prays.\nThere is another side to the Ma-\nhabma. He has made friends wltb\nthe ship's cat, a big black fellow\nto which h feeds goat's milk and\nwith which he shares his bench\nnightly.\nAlso, Gandhi, tried his hsnd at\npiloting. While Captain H. Morton\nJack supervisee!, he took ths wheel\nof the liner tor ten minutes. Throw-\nlg it sharply to port, hs said' \"I\nhope I don't capsize the boat snd\ndrown everybody.\"\nWmV\n_IW_ COLLYEB WBD ST_ABT EltWIN\nStuart Erwln. icreen Comedian and June Ooll.er, _n_en artresa, were\nmarried In Yuma, Arlt, with only the bride's brothers, Richard and\nClajton, as witnesses. Th* wedding wu a surprise to friends. {Ths oouple\nmet on a Hollywood movl- lot, ,\nDr. F. Rota\n\u2022liTslclan and Sur-\nfon. Specialist In\noctal and Intestinal\nIseases  only.\nPILES\nout operation. Constipation .dcrettft-Jly treated. Write for\nfree booklet, 4th floor Zlegler Bldg.,\na.\u00ab Riverside  Ave.,  Bpokane,  Wash.\nLABOR DAY CELEBRATION\nAlpine Inn\u2014Christina Lake\nFrom SATURDAY to MONDAY\nBl; Dinner Dance Chicken and Meek pinner\nDANCE   FREE\nMusic  by  Trail's  Popular  Orchestra\u2014Tommy  Evan's  Commanders\nEveryone Welcome \u2014  Come  on  Folk- \u2014  Saturday  and  Monday\nSUNDAY\u2014Inland Outboard Motor Boat Association Races.\nTwenty Boats from Waablniton oompetlm ta these sporty Races,\nfor the Championship ot B.C., Washington and the Inland Empire.\nAn afternoon fnll of thrills! First race at 1 p.m. sharp.\nYour last outtnc for the aeaaon.     Dont' Mlss Itl\n_REE\nl'REE\nFREE\nFREE\nTHE BEER PLEBISCITE\nBe Sure and Vote NO\nMark Yonr\nBallot With\na Cross as\nShown.\nDo you approve of tho Bala of Beer by the glass ln\nlicensed premises without a bar under Government control\nand regulation?\nYES\nNO\nDon't\nMake\na\nMistake\n II\n\/I\nSIXTH FALL FAIR\nMAKFSBRRUANT\nSTART AT FERNIE\n'THE  NELSON  DAILY  NEWS,  NELSON, B.   C,  FRIDAY   MORNING,   SEPTEMBER   i,   19_U*w\nHuge Lake Freighter Travels Through Wetland Canal\nExhibits Arranged in Curling\nRink io Be I<eft Until\nTuesday\nEXPERIMENTAL\nFARM DISPLAYS\nUse The Nelson Daily\nNews Classified Ads\nFarm  Produce,  Live  Stock,\nHobbies, Handiwork and\nCooking Shown\nKERNIX B. C, Bept. 3-\u2014The eiith\nannual fall [sir sponsored by the\nFfcrnie and District Agricultural association, opened st Pernle on Monday. August 31, with Its usual brilliant showing ol lire-stock, faun\nproduce, hobbles, handiwork and\nhome cooking. The exhibits are\narranged in too curling rink building and will be on dlspla until\nTuesday. As an added attraction a\ntravelling carnival ls set up ln the\nimmediate vicinity.\nOn Monday evening a five-dollar\ngold piece was raffled which was\nwon by Mrs. D. Gray.\nA large exhibit was displayed by\nthe Dominion experimental farm In\neluding model farm buildings. Implements and modem appliances.\nProduce and seet^were among this\ngroup and literature on agricultural\ntopics wss available.\nOREN AMD CONCENTRATES\nThe Consolidated Mining and\nSmelting company placed a number of Interesting ores and concen-\nPetroleum Coke\nIt is Crude Oil with the Gasoline removed\nIt  contains  absolutely  no ash  of other  waste.   It   ls clean\u2014no\nmnoke\u2014no root\u2014no dirt.    It Is easy to fire and ea*y to learn\nhow to fire,   po not compare  Petroleum  Coke with  Coal  Coke,\nwhich  contains ash.\nWest Transfer Co.\nPHONE   33\nSPEND\nLabor Day Holidays\nat\nPROCTER\nAt Procter you can t_pend a most enjoyabie time at\na very reasonable cost.   Good Accommodation-\nBoats and launches for rent.\nOLTI.Ll   HOTEL\nSpecial   week-end,   weekly   anrl\nmonthly   rates.      Bowboats   for\nhire, 92 a day.   Oil and get tor\n\u25a0ale.    Cabins for rent.\nF.  R. BRADLEY\n18-foot launch for rent at reasonable rates for excursions anil\nfishing  parties.\nFAIRBANKS  and   HURRY\nt, & B. Store at Harrop.   close\nto Ferry. Oas and  Oil, General\nStore.\nCOULE  and  EXTON\nJugwork   and   fishing   and   excursion parties a specialty. Gen*\neral towing,\nS.  COCRMAN\n\"1-foot  cabin  cruiser.    A  comfortable   boat   for   fishing   and\nexcursion parties.\nA. 8. RITCHIE\nGeneral Store at Procter.   Supplies, fishing tackle, ice cream.\nsoft drinks, etc. Up-to-date Tea\nRoom In connection-\nTARE   THE   HARROP   FERRY\n\"And don't forget\ntwo packages of\nShredded Wheat\"\n\"There'll be* fuss in our\nfamily if you do! The\nchildren love it; my husband insists on it because\nhe says it's the perfect food\nfor health and strength.\nAnd I like it too. So don't\nforget to send it, please.\"\nTHE CANADIAN SHREDDED WHEAT\n(ptPANY.LTD\nSHREDDED\nWHEAT\nWITH ALL THE BRAN OF THE WHOLE WHEAT\nFAM  THRC1\nLARGE    SELF-UNLOADING    FREIGHTER  MAKES   TRIP   DOWN   I.REAT   LARES\nThe 8. 8. Fitzgerald, largest self-unloading freighter ever to dock in j for Toledo. She carries s beam of 150 feet. The opening of the ato\nToronto harbor, arrived Saturday, July 18, from Detroit, with a cargo of Welland Cansl makes impossible for these large boats to travel from\n3400 tons of coke. The vessel, under Capt. W. S. Mscqueen, clcr.red later I Lake Erie to Lske Ontario,    f\ntratea   from   their   Kimberley   mine\non view.\nAnother interesting mining exhibit\nwas that of the Crows Nest Coal\ncompany which consisted of cool\ntaken from ths various mines at\nCoal Creek and coke produced in the\nlocal coke ovens, all with their\nanalysis plainly shown,\nA very -.fritting appearance was\nmade by a vast collection of wild\nand domestic blossoms in the flowerl\nand potted plants competition.\nPractically all types ol flowers known\nand grown ln Fernle were on display and many specisl groups of\nannuals, cut flowers and wild flowers were to be seen.\nHOBBIES   INTERESTING\nHobbies took up on entertaining\ncorner Jn the fair with examples of\npaper, wax and wicker work, woodcraft, photography, hand painting and\nsketching, and collections of stamps\nand coins. This section also had\ndepartment for children who were\nJudged under a separate com pe tl -\nWon. Some of the painting and\nwax work were adjudged by many\nss  real  works of art,\nThe Fernle public whoo] showed\nexamples of their skill at vrit.ng.\nmanual training, design, water color,\nand mapping\nCULINARY EXHIBITION\n. A whole room was given over to\nthe exhlblUon of smateur culinary\nThree rows of tables held all that\nls best in the art of cooking, Including al] manner of delicious looking plea, cake, bread, cookies, and\ncandy. In the same department,\ncanned fruits and vegetables, along\nwith a profusion of jams, Jellies\nand honey excited the hungry eye.\nA  Junior  section   for  school   grades\n8 and 9 made up part of this\nsection.\nAnother room held the needlework\ncompetition whero houwhol.. Uneon,\nInfants apparel, wearing apparel, and\nknitted and crocheted article., wefe\nKhown. Some very heautir>i! dta-\nplays of hooked rug*, argent*, patchwork quilts and lamps had p., vers\nhere.\nRows and rows nf multicolored\nand healthy looking vegetables facod\nthe observer iu another part nf the\nbuilding All kinds and fhapep they\nwere, each the best in It's own\nparticular class and tagged with\nthe name of the owner, competition\nclass and distinction obtained. Near\nthese the types of grain were Miown\ntied neatly In bundles. Some very\ncomplete groups of vegetables were\ndisplayed by a few growers who hsd\nraised every kind contained themselves.\nChickens, rabbits, pigeons and\nducks formed another major part\nof the fair and wero accompanied\nby one lone crow In a cage by himself   far   from   his  kind.\nSome Feast\nVERNON PREPARES\nFOR CONVENTION\nVERNON, B. C, Sept. 3.\u2014City\nfathera are gradually perfecting arrangements for the entertainment\nof the delegates to the convention\nof the Union of Canadian Municipalities on September io. ll and 12.\nBetween 80 and 100 delegates\nshould be arriving in this city on\nWednesday and Thursday, Business\nsessions will begin at 10 o'clock\nThursday morning in the scout hall.\nThat evening at 7 o'clock, a civic\nbanquet   will   be  held.\nA drive through the orchards on\nrrlday will take the delegates to\nOyama. Immediately afterwards the\ndelegates will be guests at a luncheon at the country club. In the\nevening the delegates will be the\nguests at u ctrtfl dance at. the Scout\nhall\nI don't like these cold, precipe,\nperfect people, who, In order 'not t\u00a9\nspeak wrong, never speak at. _H, and\ntn order not to do wrong, never do\nanything\u2014BeecheT.\nON THE AIR TONIGHT\nYAHK RRE HARD\nON THE HGHTERS\nTwenty Pack Horses Take In\nSupplies; Men Are Caught\nfor a Time\nYAHK, B. 0. Sept. 3\u2014On Tuesday about 30 more men from Creston and Yahk were rushed to the\nscene of the fire about 15 miles\nfrom here. Twenty pack hornet, from\nCreston, led by Young Benny of\nCreston were taken to camp on Saturday. Oa Monday sonic of the\nfighters hud the misfortune of being\ntrapped by the terrific blaze. All\nwere reported sate again on Tuesday\nmorning, but one of the fighters\nwas almost overcome by smoke and\nhad to be carried to safety. It was\nalmost 2 a, m. when the last of\nthe trapped men appeared for lunch.\nWith such a large crew of men it\ni*  proving difficult to take supplies\nSPOON\nHow would you like to take a\nspoonful of medl-ine with this Implement, said to be the largest spoon\nin the world and once used In ceremonial fepst* by the Haldo Indians\nof Alaska. Catherine Ford is seen\nexamining it on arrival Bt the\nUnited States National Museum in\nWashington,\nThe Beauty Box\nby Helen Follett\nGetting the waist, hue down to\ntrim proportions is a part of the activities ot every woman who Is a bit\nhefty Those circular walls of knitted silk rubber which were worn In\nthc past will flatten and they do\naway with tlie quiver of imcorscted\nflesh. But the proper procedure ls\nto grow one's own corsets, get\nrtrong muscles, knock off adipose\ntissue that hn.su't any business .settling at the waiitllnc. Bending,\ntwisting and stretch.ug exercises\nare nelpful. Lazy darling., can toddle to a reducing ia_0__, sit on an\nelectric horse and get their fat\ncells amputated by means of vibration. Too easy!\nLight-headed ptrls. lov ins tbeir\ngolden crowns, find that the beauty\nover-head ia *ome thing terrible.\nFair hair must be ahampooed with\nthe mildest, blandest soaps, ond it\nmust be washed every week if it la\nto stay at color par. Peroxide rinses\nmay help retsin the glitter, but If\n'he hair danker., at the roots. It ls\nbest to seek the help of an experienced specialist. The amateur bleeoh-\ner often over-bleaches, wtth the result that the glory crown t >kes on\na horrid Jute-like quality.\nOxygen ... nature's tonic and the\nvital fire of life. Pull plenty of it\ninto your lungs, little beauty Keeker,\nparticularly If the complexion looKs\n-ilngy and colorless. Fresh air finger*\nly*& the spirits, chases away mental\ndepression, give, zest to appetite,\ndoes wonders for the complexion.\nHousewives, particularly, should get\nnut of doors every duy.\nIt Is time now to start a world\nwar against the over-tanned and sunburned skin Beauty shops have\nbleaches to offer, some In liquid\nform, some incorporated in creams.\nOld friend lemon Juice ^Lasn't leet\npopularity; it helps put the human\nhide in or:er. peroxide whitens the\nskin. Put lt on with pieces ot\ncotton.\nKing George In Scotland\n______ <wi_WLtm\nrtotJmt-.*..' &\naWti\n_^__ j_\\r__\\\n_M_3fwf\u00abRK^v\nmmmOk    m_W^^^e*W\n\\\\w$j *^lly ^\n_W\/     ' y____r*_b-\n*W                 ._-_L__L\nm_\\\\\\_\\^m'               '_*________\ni!\n__L._.*t___jP____ &\nB             _Tv_j\n1 ^\nm\n_____: \u25a0\"\nJHPhi   P\n_M__u   \\-^m\n['.\n^P\nS^>-L** '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0^\n\u2022*mi*-t\nTHE KINO GREETS  TWINS  IN  EDINBCROH\nKing George's love for children is shown as he playfully waves his\nhands to the twin sisters, France* and Merle Scot*, whom his majesty\nmot in the Royal Botanic Gardens. Edinburgh    \u00bb\nlRItiAY.   8EPTKMBER    1 a\n(Standard  Time)\nNBC  PROGRAM*\n6:00\u2014Paul   Whlteman -KGO,   KHQ.,\nKOMO,  KGW,  KFI,   KSL.    Mildred |\nBailey,  blues singer;   Jack   Fulton,\ntenor; the Jesters, macl trio. |\n6:30\u2014Theater    of    the    Alr-KQO, |\nKHQ.    KOMO,    KGW.    KFI.    KBL.)\nWilliam    Hanley,    narrator;     film,\nvaudeville and radio stare.\n7:00\u2014Program\u2014Amos    'a'    And]\nKGO,   KHQ.    KOMO,   KGW.   KSL. j\nKOA\n7:l..-t'.Totllghls. KGO. KHQ, KOMO1\nKGW, KFI. Clarence Have., tenor; '\norchestra direction Muhlon Mcrrirk\n7:30\u2014The Fearful Seven\u2014KGO. KPI\nComedy sketch.\n7:45-The Coquettes\u2014KGO Annette Hastings. Mirjofle Pnnilcy.\ntmelda Montagnc.\n8:00~The House of Color\u2014KGO,\nKHQ, KOMO. KGW. KFI, KSL.\nMax Dolln, violinist, and director;\nEaston Kent, fettyoB. male quartet;\ninstrumental ensemble\n8:30\u20141-18 Opera Box\u2014KGO. KHQ,\nKOMO. Barbara Blanrhsrd. soprano; Pedfern Mason, music\ncritic; ONdMVtN dire'-hon Emil\nPolak.\n900-HI1I Billies - KGO, KOA.\nCharles Marshall, Johnnie O'Brien,\nJohnnie ToffoII, Ace Wright, Charles\nC raver.\n. ;30-Week-Bnd Hour-KGO, KHQ\nKOMO, KGW, KFI. KSL. KOA.\nGall Taylor, soprano; male quartet;\norchestra direction Mahlon Merrick\n10:00\u2014News Flashes\u2014KHQ. KOMO.\nKGW.  KPO,  KFI.\n10:00\u2014Mystery Serial \u2014 KGO, KSL,\nKOA. Episode ten \"Tbe Game\nOalled Murder,\" by Carlton to.\nMorse.\n10:30\u2014Musical Echoes\u2014KGO. KOA.\nRefa Miller, soprano; orchestra direction Roy Shield\n)) :00\u2014Lofner-Harrls dance orchestra\nKGO.   KOMO   (KFI   11:30   to   12i\n< NRV\u2014VANCOUVER\n_ TO\u2014Musi'-slA\n(1:30\u2014Dinner Hour\n7:30\u2014\"Fanchon and  Marco\"\nfl :00\u2014Wlnnifred Tlenworth. pianist\n8:30\u2014Night baseball\n10:30\u2014Weather  forecast\nKHQ\u2014SPOKANE\n(See NBC for additional programs)\n8:4J\u2014\"Tom Mitchell\" KGW\n0:00\u2014Tlie Novelteers\n10:30\u2014Paint Time\n11:00\u2014Lazy Ike at  the Mike\nKFHC\u2014MN   FANCISCO\n<i:00\u2014Pageant\n8:30\u2014Pat Frayur's  sport  talk\n8:45\u2014Novelties\n7:00\u2014Jack Denny's orchestra\n7:15\u2014Arthur Pryor's military  tend\n7:30\u2014Tbe  Quarter   Hour\n7:45\u2014Ginger Band\n8:00\u2014Adventures of Black end Blue\n8:16\u2014Abo Lyman'* orchestra\n8:30\u2014College Daze\nB :00\u2014Vignettes\n10:00\u2014Anaon Week's orchestra\n11:00\u2014Duleetonlans from  Roof Garden cafe\n12:00\u2014Vagabond or  tho Air\nKGW\u2014PORTLAND\n(See NBC  for KOW Broadcasts)\nKFI\u2014LOS AXGEUC1\nif.ee .NBC for additional programs)\n7:00\u2014News Flashes\n7:45\u2014The Wonder Twine; Virginia\nFlohri, soprano and James Burroughs, tenor.\n8:30\u2014Vocal Ensemble\n9:15\u2014Arthur Lang,  baritone\nKPO\u2014MAN  FRANCISCO\niSee NBC for additional program.*\n6:00\u2014Cy Trobbe's  Scrap  Book\n7:00\u2014 Bob Klelr's Syncopators\n7:45\u2014Cecil  and  Sally\n8:00\u2014Joseph   Henry   Jacksott,    Book\nChat\"\n8:15\u2014KPO  Drama   Guild.\n8:45\u20141>)m and Dudd\n9:00\u2014 Edna  Wallace Hopper\n9:15\u2014The Pages of  the  past, with\n\"Scotty\"\nin oo\u2014Dance orchestra\n11:00\u2014Jess Norman's San Franciscans\nKGA\u2014SPOKANE\nti:tj0\u2014The Melody  Musketeers\n6 30\u2014The Roysl  Losiers\n7.00\u2014Casey and chet\n715\u2014Al Sehusp' Sports Review\n7 30\u2014Vacation Land Review\n8 no\u2014Orpheus Trio\n830\u2014Song Exchange\n9 O0-\u2014Bob Monsen. tenoi\n9:18\u2014\"The Soorplon.\" mysterydrutna\n9:45\u2014Vic Meyer's orchestra.\n10:30\u2014Moonlight   Melodies;     Bobby\nHalnsworth. organ;   male trio.\n11:00\u2014Vic Meyer's orchestra\nK VI\u2014TACOMA\n6 00\u2014Pageant\n9:00\u2014 Don Lee\n9 30\u2014Musical  Servlteers\nin 05\u2014White Wisard\n10:20\u2014Orchestra\n11:00\u2014George e.  Wendt's orrheatra\nKGO\u2014OAKLAND\n(Pee NBC for KGO Broadcasts)\nKOMO\u2014SEATTLE\niSee NBC for additional programs)\n7:30\u2014Two-piano duets\n7:45\u2014Tuneful Two\n8:45\u2014Tom Mitchell\n9 00\u2014Two piano duets\n10 30\u2014Vocal  recital\n1048\u2014The  Globe   Trotter,   Weather\nRoports\n12:00\u2014Theater organ\nK -IR\u2014 SEATTLE\n6 00\u2014The Melody Musketeers\n6.30\u2014The Royal Loafers\n7.00\u2014Casey and Chet\n7.15\u2014Al Schusa* Sports Review\n7 30\u2014Vacation  Land  Review\n8 30\u2014Orpheus trio\n9 00\u2014Knlghte of the Road\n, 9:15\u2014\"The Scorpion\"\n9:45\u2014 Vie Meyer's orchestra\ni0:30\u2014Moonlight     Melodies.     Bobby\nHalnsworth. organ, Noniiuc.t male\ntrio\n11 :i)0~Vic Meyer's orchestra\ni-'-oo-MidniBht  Revellers\nKNX\u2014HOLLYWOOD\n0:00\u2014 Wesley Tonurtelotte, organist\n8:15\u2014 \"Tom and Wash\"\n7:00\u2014Frank    Watansbe    and    the\nHonorable Archie\n7:15\u2014renn  aud Caw\n7.30-H. T. Whltsett of  (he Metropolitan   Water  District\n\" 45\u2014KNX  Ensemble\n0:00\u2014Royal     Order     of     OptlmUtifl\nDo-nuts\n9:15\u2014 ArijEoiiH  Wranglers\n\":00-EtheI Duncan\nI 45-Bojflng   events    from    Hollywood Legion stadium boxing\nKM5---Mistah   Bni   and  jBckflon-  ]n\n'\u25a0heir trip around  the world\n'1.00-New Inn\n11:09--Orchestra\nKOL\u2014SALT   UJU   . ITY\n'\u00bb!___ ^  5, ^1'tio^J  Program,,\n7 to\u2014Bneemble in Tone Pictures\n7:30-Mij*ir,i program\na^rW**   M\"firs'   Mmnber,\nJ on-Informal   program\nlo.no\u2014organ     program-\n'he  Console\n\"TIIE  WATER'S  FINE:\"\nAmong tho thousands who found\nrelief from the heat was little\nPatricia Oolc, shown bcre after she\nhad enjoyed a \"dip\" in the lake.\nto  th* scene faat enough, and  feed\nfor tb* hone* also h oa  to  be  provided.    The  fir* >\u25a0 advancing aloOff\ntbe border so quickly that Use\ner, are not able to gat oa a rerular\nmeal  schedule and   they  eat\never they feel It is safe to leave tb* ,\nfire.\nSonic of the men had to a\ntown on Tuesday because the smoke\nand long hours proved to be too\nmuch for them The crew under\nsupervision of Charlea Llnd are\nexpected to leave oamp on Saturday\nand  another gang replaced.\nRough epidermis on the elbows\nshows up a grimy appearance, even\nIf well scrubbed; the skin is coarae\nthere. Anointing with oocoanut oil\nevery night will produce a change\nfor  the  better and  whiter.\nA man's own good breeding ia th?\nen\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0' security against other people*.\nin manners.\u2014Lord Chesterfield.\nys Colds       SH0ES\nBest treated without i   \"\" \"\"lr '\u25a0\"\u25a0 \u25a0'\u00ab\u00bb \u00bb'\"' \u2022>\u2022 tut\nHr-HTK. T,\u00bb__ -,.K__.      \u25a0'\"\u2022'h on y\u00b0or leet in smart, set*\ndosing\u2014Just rub on     ,,--__,, _-__,\u201e-\u201e.   s\u201e\u201e, ,,\u201e_,.\na_f a ____\\tt ^0 '    fS;  no tick, ur  n-lli.\n, \u25a0  V ft??-fl--S Watson Shoe Co., Ltd.\n\u2022____________________. \t\npr\u00ab\u00abr.m\u2014F\u00abr\u00ab\u00ab.      ,.\nHow fresh and\nlovely is the\nwistful fragrance of the\nYardleyLavender! Famous\nall over the world as the\nmost exquisite example of\nthis favourite English\nperfume, it is cherished\nalike by gay youth ana\nby thc older generation.\nYARDLEY LAVENDER\ntcrttam. Flee fcamr, De, md N.fh Cramt.B-h\nSeltt.etc.-TheLtixur.SespcftheVerlJ sniGutCsta.\nLONDON\n. _ ell Gees'\nDr,.e _n_ Df\nperl\u2014rnl Stent,\nVARDLEY \u00bb Old Bond Street\nC-u__. , Y_r_ky Hook \u00ab*-\u00bb\u2022 \u00ab' F*J*__\nH\u00abbour it York Street, Toronto       ' new i or.\nBeer Parlors for\nPRIVATE PROFIT\nAre Not the Solution\nMany Citizens arc wondering how be_t to remedy our Liquor Mess.\nWould Beer Parlors\nImprove Local Conditions?\nTHEY HAVE NOT DONE SO\nANYWHERE ELSE!\nThe Moderation Committee content themselves by saying Beer Parlors\nWILL improve conditions, thev DO NOT quote anv places where Beer\nParlors have caused less drinking. THAT IS NOT WHAT BEER PAR-\nLOBS ARE FOR\nmmmmmmmmmmm-mOmi^mmmmmmmimmmmmm-mmmW\nON THE CONTRARY\n' The B.C. Liquor Board says: \"Since the opening of Beer Parlor?, THE\nSALES OF HARD LIQUOR INCREASED 60 PER CENT, and further that\ndrunkennes in Vancouver increased Four Hundred per rent.\"\nHow Can You Dam\na Torrent by Opening\nthe Flood Gates Wider?\nA Man Never Ceases to\nBe a Boy to His Mother\nIt is reported Hard Liquor is procurable\u2014when  you  know how\u2014in\nnearby Beer Parlors.\nAnti-Beer Parlor Committee Room, Tremont Block\nPhone 817\n new rtrxm\n\"TBI NILSOM DAILT m-rt, v\u2014Ltm, \u00bb. ft, TODAY MOMTOt-.\n4,  Ml*\nWOMAN S PAGE\np.i.u.i.11 in m u 111: n i.u.t.u.1. i.i.i i.Mt.i.i i:.::......nj]\nJilted   |\nBy Margaret Widdemer\nftittitttiiniimiiiimimiiiiiniiimittni\nSYNOPSIS\nHelen Heahec. liTing ln ths\nPennsylvania ton of Klngsway,\nbecomes engaged to Tommy Delamater, aon of the president of\ntho bank ln which Helen works.\nTommy takes a Job ln Wisconsin, and unceremoniously breaks\noff the engagement. Helen's\ngrief Is short-lived, ss Ethan\nKlngsway t**Ut In love with her.\nBtbane more stable affection\nmakes her forget the Irresponsible Tommy. Ethan, however.\nhas a strain of Jealousy in his\nnature. Fire is fanned by\nHelen's cousin, Nina Hlgginson,\nan attractive young widow wbo\nwants Bthan for herself. Nina\nintimates that Helen and her\nstepson, Ronny. wero ones in\nlove. Ethan makes Helen promise that she will not se Ronny\nwithout letting blm know. Tommy returns bome just ss Helen\ngoes to visit her married sister,\nJessica, who Is soon to become\na mother. Twins arrive at tbe\ndebt-burdened bome of Jessica.\nHelen leaves for Klngsway. Doris\nMllllken Informs Hslen that she\nand oRnny have been eecretely\nmarried. Ronny has loft her,\nand ssys she must come to him,\nwhleh  shs Is  afraid  to do be-\noauss of parental displeasure.\nHelen agrees to see Ronny. she\nleaves a note for Bthan, tn\nP&trlcis's csie.\nCHAPTER    TWENTY-EIGHT\n(JmdjorX\nRECIPE l\nVBO<r J\nPLL In aSirwiJ coupon,\nand w\u00ab will iand yoa \u2022\nhas copy of on saw cook\nbosk. \"Ths Good Flo-\ni vtdtr.'Ilcontalni evtr too\nVtrltd and tailed laelpat,\nJ which -rn bs nad* with tha\nbta-ltt.Cha.Uj.\nEvwV drst li madt Iron, foil-\nc. ta \u00ab Bilk htm \u2022ritbh Columbia\nC0WTkt Bofden Co. Untied,\nt Honor Amdo B.Ildln,\nVANCOUV.H\nfaeiervt Soo* fctnw\nl3<nrdirfCs\nST.CHARLES MILK\nTtioBordtnCo.Llioltod.\nJ Howtr Arcade Bulldinf,\nVancotfvai\nPUaao \u00bbmd no o cosy ef yon\nboob ontltlad \"Tho Good Pro-\nKslsn was singing to hsrseif as\nshs hurried upstairs to her own\nroom. She wss scarcely Inside before she heard Mrs. Birch's shrill\ncall.\n\"Mr. Klngsways downstairs ln tho\nparlor,\" Mrs.  Birch said.\nHelen ran downstairs and Into\nthe little green plush parlor, a\nsmile on her fact tnd a gay geret-\ning on her Ups.\nEthan rose to meet her; but his\nlook mads her draw back, sobered,\nst onoe.\n\"Why, Bthan, dear\u2014what's the\nmstter? How did you get back so\nsoon?\"\n\"I wss only ln Baltimore. My\nbusiness only took a few hours. I\ndrove bsck through Wsyne,\" he\nssld. That, and his look, told her\nwhat hsd hsppenod.\n\"Well?\" shs said defiantly. Then\nahe softened. After all, sho had\nbroken her word. But she'd tried\nto get hlmshe'd tried to explain\u2014\n\"I'm sorry, Ethan,\" ahe said. \"I\nknow I told you I wouldnt see\nRonny again. But this was a necessity. And I left you a note to explain.\"\n\"I asked if you had left a not*.\nTou hadn't,\" be accused her. h Is\nimperious Jealousy getting the better\nof him Ho towered angrily over\nher. \"Theres no explanation for a\nbroken promise- I suppose I should\nhave been prepared for this. But I\ncould  pass that over . . .\"\n\"Well, what else? What more\ncrimes?\"\n\"Tom Delamater's return.'\n\"Tom\u2014\" ahe stood, as startled as\nsngry, for the moment. Then she\nlaughed scornfully. \"I remember\nNina did tell me he was bsck. Just\nas I left for Jessica's. I'd forgotten\nit. i didn't know it interested\nyou.    It doesn't me.\"\n\"Tou\u2014\" he turned aside for a\nmoment, as If facing her was something hf couldn't stand. \"You're\na good actress. But then I suppose\nmost women are.\"\nShe found nothing to say to this.\nSuddenly he caught her in his\narms.\n\"T don't ears about any o ft,\" he\nsaid furiously, Mating her, \"1 love\nyou, whether you He to me or not.\"\nTbe ley anger deepened. And he\nfelt lt, too, tot his arms slowly\nslackened  their hold about her.\n\"Thats all,\" she said. \"If you\ndon't believe in me, your love is\nthe sort of thing I don't want.\"\nShe slipped off the Blender platinum\ncirclet with its single emerald, and\nheld lt out to him.\n\"Love means trust,\" she -Old. 'Td\ntrust you, no matter what I saw\nyoy doing. And T thought for a\nyear you loved Nina. I've never\nthought of lt alnce, though she's\nevidently been putting In her time\nwell-since I went away . . .\"\nHe held out his hands to her,\nShe shook her, head.\nHe pleaded with hsr for an hour\nlonger, there tn the little garish\nparlor.    But  he   could  not  say   h#\nYou'll appreciate this new\nconvenience in your homo\u2014\nOld Dutch Holders,\nIn Colors!\nOld Dutch Cl.nn.er ho. M many uim around the hem. that\nit'j good practice te keep a can handy in the kitchen, bathroom, laundry and garage. With thli idea in mind, we have\ndesigned an attractive metal holder which comes in a choice\nof three colors... green, blue and ivory. Select the color which\nharmonizes with the room where it is to be used.\nThere's nothing else like Old Dutch; you don't need several\nstyles and kinds of cleaners. Think of this added convenience\nin Old Dutch) Ws all you need for all your cleaning.\nCleans Quicker\u2014quicker than anything else you can use. Help\nyourself to more time with Old Dutch.\nCleans Safely... because it contains no harsh, chunky grit and\ndoesn't scratch. Old Dutch protects the surface. Keeps lovely\nthings lovely. And it's kind to the hands.\nHADE IN CANADA\nH Is easy to obtain one of these holders I\nC&p o.r from three Old Dutch Cleanser label* the windmill pasel opposing above\nlhs directions. Mall these, toeethsr with 10c snd your name and address. Fill eut\nlhe coupos today.\nCudahy Soap Worics, 64 Maeaulay Ave., Toronto. Ontario\nOenttowoni Please find enclosed ,-entt ond labels fcr which send    I\nme Old Dotth Holders. Color wanteds IVORYQ OREENQ HUE [J    j\nNome\n|    \u00ab>*-\nbelieved her biludly. And lhe could\nnot  have  scything lose.\n\"Good-bye,\" aha aald finally. \"I\ncan't corns back to Patricia, yon\nknow\u2014i-i'm son-y.\"\nFinally he went away.   She picked\nup  th\u00ab ring.    Ho  had refused   to |\ntake  lt.    She  could  not  leave  lt\nlying around for Mrs. Birch to see\n\u2014sh9 must mall  it back.\nTher\u00ab was a knock at tbe door,\n\"Here's a letter from- your slater,!'\nsaid Mrs. Birch's, voice. \"I guess\nyou didn't see lt, gain* through\nthe hall.\" She handed her two\nletters. Jtssicu weekly letter, lying\nwaiting for her In the hall, wss a\nfaint comfort.\n\"Dear Helen,\" Jessica wrote. \"The\nworst thing has happened that possibly oould. My Ufe is ruined. And\n1 can't see at all how It waa my\nfault\u2014Lester has gon^ off and left\nme.\"\nHelen sat back- She even laughed\na Uttle, a cynical small laugh. All\nthe Heather girls seemed to be\nhaving men go oft and leave them.\n\"\u2014It was Just because I'd spent\na ll'*-le bit of money on something\nI had to have, the most wonderful\nvalue . . . ana I bought him a\nlovely necktie, too, for a surprise . ...\nAll really. nice babies have them.\nand the rent could have waited, ot\nbe could h*ve got a Uttle salary\nadvanced him If ho was so fussy\nabout rent! . ...\"\nHelen read on, realizing that it\nwss really a crisis In Jessica's life.\nHelen must come down immediately\nand look after her, or she would be\nIn the poorhouse. It was an hysterical cry of anger snd terror pleading, and Helen sat up, furious at\nLester. \u2022\nThen she looked at the other letter, the one Mrs. Birch had hane__*i\nber wtth Jessica's.   Lester's hand.\nLester's letter was typed ss always, in spite of his tragic abandon.,\nmsnt of his wife. Jessica, ln the\nname of tbe twins, had felt that\nmoney was less of an object than\never. Nothing he said had done\nany good\u2014finally he had warned\nJessica thst if she didn't stop, he\nwould take a ..position .Jn another\ntown, leave her where she jtrts with\nan sUowance and forbid, the tradesmen to run bills. Jessica had, of\ncourse, paid no attention to what\nbe said; she had only laughed and\nkissed him and gone en spending,\nsecure ln his adoration. And the\nworm had turned.\nBhe would go next day\u2014No\u2014Not\ntill the day after. When Mrs. Kings-\nway psld her. Thero was a certain\namount of comfort ln going from\nKlngsway, away from Ethan, snd\nhis love that sho couldn't accept\nwithout humUiation. She packed\nfuriously. There was-a train .from\nPhiladelphia thst she could get at\nII next dsy. She and Jessie* would\nsettle down together and live for\nthe twins, and never think about\nmen sny  more,\nSho had not thought she would\nfall asleep lhat night, but she did.\nBhe said a ltttl\u00ab prayer to have\nsome help and comfort, and presently it seemed to oome . . , Enough\nto sleep, at least.\nShe supposed ehe ought to go to\nKingsway, after all, next morning,\nto  settle  her  doparturs.\nShe did not have to decide about\nit, for it was scarcely a o'clock tha.\nMrs. Klngstffcy's own dosed eedsh\ncame to the door.\nHelen ran down, and was Inside\nthe car in a moment, her arms\naround Ada, nearer crying than\nshe  liked.\n\"I want to straighten things out,\"\nMrs. Klngsway said, going to the\npoint without preface. \"What Ir all\nthis between  you  two children?\"\nHelen told her. \u2022\n\"The worst of It is.\" said Ada\nKin^Bwny, \"that Patricia \u25a0 swears\nyou never gave her any note for\nEthan. And up to now the child's\nbeen a monument of truth. T could\nshake Bthan. But It goes with\nKlngsway temperament, that dreadful Jealousy. I did hope your\naunnlneas and gayety would have\nstraightened out that kink in 'Ethan.\nBut Nina was such a cat. Ethan\nsays Nina told blm that Tommy\nwas back, and disengaged, and she\nsupposed Intended to marry you.\nAnd that she told you so end you\nsaid you knew lt.M\n\"Oh, never! I was preoccupied\nabout getting off, to I don't know\nwhat I did say I _Sut never that.\nHonestly, dear Mrs. Klngsway, T had\nforgotten all about Tommy's return.\nAa for the rest\u2014well. I\\> given\nmy word not to-tell why 1 had to\ngo see Ronny. But it really was\nserious and lt wasn't for myself . . .\nYou   believe  me,  don't  you?\"\n\"Of courss, I believe you,.child!\n... If you weren't oo young you'd\nknow thst you osa't pay much attention to what men say. They're\nJust little boys, and you have to\ndeal with them as If they hadn't\nany sense,\" said Mrs. Kingsway\nbriskly.\nMrs. Klngsway kissed her, nnd\ndrove   off   smiling.\nHelsn shivered. She frit at. a\nloo** end. Why hadn't she thought\nof asking to see Patricia' But the\nchild would ern**-quest Ion. with\nthst uncanny shrewdness of hers,\nand it would be unbearable . .\nWhleh wouldn't matter, became\neverything else wss unbearable too.\nShe got threwgh the day somehow, going doggedly through one\nduty sfter another. There would\nbo something to do with the evening, at least. The monthly meeting of the motion -pi cture group waa\nto bo that night In Doris' father's\nballroom.\nHelen dressed hsrseif wearily,\nbrushed mit her dark gold curls,\npulled her hat down on \u2666them\nwithout looking, and wont there.\nThere was no sensation to it. There\ndidn't oeem to be anything.\nNot even when Doris ran up to\nher, bright-eyed, excited, happy, ond\nflung her arms around ber ahd\n\u25a0*hispered to her about Ronny.\n\"Oh, he's been such a darling!\nWe're going *o take a little room\nover In Wayne beginning next Monday,\" she Imparted in a. Joyoua.\nhurrying whisper. \"As soon ss\nRonny's week's up and he ha* hla\nwages. Don't tell y*}1. Oh. It's\ngoing to be wonderful to get away\nfrom Aunt Louisa!\"\n\"Don't telll\" Helen echoed Indlg*\n\u2022mntly.    Her whole  1 If es  happiness\nad been sacrificed te Doris* sense-\n:ms secrecy . . And then she cheefc.\nFd herself. What happened ntw\nmad* no' dlffewnoe: not even when\nWhan learned that he had been In\n'he wrong.\nShe hsd been so df>ep In thought,\nfitting ln s corner of tho rodm\n\"\u2022taring before her, that she wss\n\u25a0\u00bbt>oken to twice before ahe looked up.\nTorts waa near her again. Bedky\nPurdon, a little way from them,\nwas staring with open Interest.\n\"Helen7, Tommy Delamater wants\nto speak to you\u2014wake up I\"\nTommy!     Tommy,    as    self-con\nsciously debonair ts over; Tommy,\nesuently aw\u00bbr* ot all tho watch-\ng eyas, making a, flourish oul of\nhis greeting\n\"Tours looking tine, Helen. You're\nthinner, but X think I Ilk* It. I'd\nforgotten what a beauty you were,\ndarling.\"\nHe threw himself down by hsr\nJuat a* of old, sprawling on hu\nspine, long-logged, in the armchair.\nHan hs always htd that too-shiny\nhsir, that too-fluent, too-loud voice?\nShs llatened, hearing tt all dlnjly.\nHe hadn't made ao awfully good,\nthank heaven, at that fool Wlscon-\naln bank.\nHla laugh somehow wasn't u infectious ss tt had been.'\n\"How Is Kay?\" ahe asked him. He\ndid not seem st all disturbed. He\nlaughed again so he answered.    .\n\"Oh, that busted Itself by mutual\nconsent hundreds of year* ago. Kay\nwaa a nice little kid but she was\nspoiled to death\u2014thought she owned\nthe world.\"\n\"I thought she was tho most\nwonderful sport you'd ever mot,\"\nHelen couldnt help saying.\n\"That's a big order,\" said Tommy,\ngrinning. \"Say, Helen, what about\nun old-fashioned picnic tomorrow?\nThe weather's mlldlng up, and my\ncar's closed. We can find a rock to\nput a rug on. Got a lot to tell\nyou, Helen.\"\nHis voice hsd slipped to the old,\ncoaxing small-boy note.\n6he stared at him, amazed, and a\nUttle shocked . . . Suddenly she remembered that she did not belong\nto Ethan any more . . . There waa\nno reason In the world why sbe\nshouldn't go picnicking with Tommy.\nIt would put s nest. Ironic knot\nIn the threads of happening , . .\n\"All right,\" she eald. hoping it\nsounded casual. And hoping, more\nthan anything else In the world that\nEthan would know about it . . . But\nhe would only think it was what he\nhad expected . . . Thero wu pain\nany way you turned . . .\n\"You'll have to get tho lunch,\" the\ntold him. \"at a delicatessen. I'm\nboarding.\"\n\"You are high-hat, dear love,\" ho\naald plaintively. \"All right, t thousand cant shall be yours. Ill be\nthero  at  10.\"\n(To be continued)\nEfficient\nHousekeeping\nBy I Al RA A. KIRKMAN\nTOMORROW'S MENU\nBreakfast\nOrange   Juic*\nCereal\nCreamed Dried Beef Rolls\nCoffee\nLuncheon\nCorn on the Cob\nFrench   Dressing\nGraham Muffin*\nIced   Tea\nDinner\nBaked   Ham\nBaked Sweet Potatoes\nBrussels Sprouts\nPineapple Salad\nChocolate Bresd Pudding\nCoffee\nLettuce\nJam\n(\u25a0RA1I AM   Nt'T   Ml'rFINS\nI know of no more delicious sort.\nof muffin  than  the  following:\nGraham Nut Mufi'lns: Sift ono cup\nof pastry flour with one cup of\ngraham flour, four teaspoons of baking powder and one-third teaspoon of\nwilt. Beat two unseparated eggs\nwith one cup ot cold sweet milk\nand four tablespoons of brown sugar\nand combine with th* dry mixture.\nNow stir iu two tablespoons ot butter, measured before being melted,\nand also add one cup of wslnut\nmeat* broken small rather than actually chopped. Although tt always\nhelps nuts not to drop lo the bottom of a hot bread If you flour\nthem, neverohelesa when you use\ngraham flour it 1* not as necessary\nas When you use broad or pastry\nflour alone. Somehow the coarser\nflour helps the nuts to hold' their\nplace In ths batter during baking.\nSo I, personally, never bother to\nflour my nut* in thla recipe. Divide\nthe batter between 10 large wells\n(buttered) of a muffin pan (or this\nbatter will fill 13 wells, If smaller)\nand bake 20 minutes, in a hot oven,\nat about 400 degrsea F. These muffins are a* good cold as hot, so li\nyou hsve any of them left over, no*\nthorn for tomorrow morning'a breakfast bread.\nHere ls a reader's recipe for Oraham Nut Bread: \"One cup graham\nflour, three and ons-haltf teaspoons\nof baking powder, one-sixth teaspoon of baking soda, one cup of\ncold 'sweet milk, one cup of white\nflour, one teaspoon of salt, one-half\ntup of.molasses, and one-half cup\nof walnuts, sift graham flour with\nwhite flour and then sift again, adding \u00bboda, baking powder and silt.\nMix liquid lngredisnts and add to\ndry. Add oute last. Bake In a\ngrested bresd pan for one hour in\na moderate oven. Mlss a.\" -\nTomorrow\u20146U verware\nVISITS AT LAWSON\nHOME IN WARDNER\nWARDNER, B. C, Sept. 3.\u2014Mrs.\nMoore' and family, who have been\nspending the P1181 few months visiting ih Warmer, returned to their\nhome at Car-iron*, Alta.\nLar* Larson of WaterviUe, Kansas,\nIs visiting at the home of Mr, and\nMrs. J. Lawson\nAlvln'Storey returned to bis home\non Saturday after spending a few\nweeks  vlaltlng   In  Kamloops.\nRonald Reed, son of Mr. and Mrs.\nR. B. Reed, t returned on Monday\nevening\" from' Vancouver, where he\nha* spent 'th* past year visiting his\ngrandparents, Mr. tnd Mrt. 6- Ford,\nJohn Bull Helping Cupid\nBy BEATRICE FAIRFAX ,  *j*\nAn Authority  on Problems  of  Love snd Merrta*o\nThat young people must see tob^ot   courting   faallltlss   his   fiance's\nother ln an honorable, open, and\nabove-board fashion has been taken\nInto account by tho Hon. Oeorge\nLanabury, first commissioner of\nworks In Premier MscDonsld's cabinet, who 1* regarded by many s* its\nbrightest star.\nThli British statesman bu planned a great, fragrant winter garden\nwhere young people of restricted\nhome life may court one another.\nGirls who live In hall bedrooms, or\nahsrs a room with two or threo\nother glrla\u2014or whose selfish parents\nhsve completely forgotten that once\non s time they wore young and\nliked to do a llttlo hand holding\nand whisper sweet nothings\u2014will\nbleu \"Uncle Oeorge\" u he ls known\nln England.\nAnd msy wo In tht United States\necho the fervent wish thst aome of\nour own public men\u2014now engaged\nln crying their fitness for public office to high Heaven\u2014take \"Uncle\nGeorge's\" good common aenss into\naccount and foUow ln bis footsteps.\nFor while It lo our proud boast\nthat ws hsve more white porcelain\nbath tubs, foundations, automobiles,\ntelephones, and we might add\u2014\nspeakeasies\u2014per capita, than sny\nother nation on earth, we srs decidedly in arrears in providing placet\nwhere young people of restricted\nhome lives oan meet snd do a little\nhonest -to-good nest love-making.\nThe other day I had s letter from\na girl who object* to petting ln an\nautomobile but who ssys there* no\nalternative. She lt engsged, her\nfamily hu a Uttle store, snd the\nonly placft where she csn aee her\nyoung man Is in the dining room\nwhich is large and airy snd opens\non a porch. But father Insists on\nremoving bis boots snd wandering\nback snd forth betwsen both plans.\nSometime, ahe take* tiie boy\nfriend Into the kitchen which Is\nhot and stuffy, and then father decides to give that a trial, too. I\nwish I could give this girl's letter\nin full, but ther* Isn't space to do\nso. And it wouldn't surprise me If\nsbe lost the young man who Is getting pretty well fed up with the lsck\nbouse and family -ttooM\t\nIt's Just such conditions *\u00bb this in\nhundreds of families in England\nthat mak* spinsters, and hu caused\nthis 78-yesr-old cabinet member to\nInspire thst courting gardsn. Foe M\nyours he hu Used in tb* sut tnd of\nLondon, whloh 1* ths city's poorest\nquarter.\nOf this effect of growing up and\nliving among tbe poor, he said the\nother day In sn interview: \"I have\nlearned to know the Infinite courage\nand klndneaf of the poor. It Is they\nand their selfish, namsleu helpers\nof aU creeds who have taught me\nthst beyond all theories, tho key to\nthe world's happiness Is In thf sentence, 'Little children love ono another.' And tbt worship of Ood\nmains selfless service to your fellow\nmen snd women.\"\nJn addition to tht winter garden,\nwhere boya and glrla will find comfortable seats under romantic palm\ntrees, \"Uncle Oeorge\" bu madt of\nLondon a happier place for tho unemployed. For the first time In history he hu allowed both men and\nwomen to bathe in the Serpentine-\nLondon's delightful paddling place.\nAnd ho haa promoted public playgrounds, tennis oourt*. skating rlnka\nand band concerts- \"Unci* Oeorge\"\nIs a teetotaler, but be sett to lt\nthst tht people have their bttr ln\npublic parka.\nRev. Mnd Mn. Addyman\nHonored at Wardner\nWt O- Bept. S.--A\nlarge number of people attended\nin informal *ooial hold ln the church\nin honor of Rev. Mr. and Mrs. Addyman. Early part of th* evening wu\napent ln gamu, foUowed by a short\nprogram made up of tho following\nnumbers: Organ solo, Ht*. P. Storey;\nstring duet, Messrs. Scanland and\nUlgglns; vocal solo, Ut*. W. Banni-\naon; organ solo, Mist Loulu Lawson.\nAfter the program a presentation\naddrtu was read by Mrt. O, Halgh,\nduring wbkfa Mr. and Mrs. Addy\nman wen presented with a besuti*\nful pair of blanket*, a gut of th*\ncommunity. Games wore resumed\nfor a abort time, after which light\nrefruhments   wars   served.\nAppledale Young People\nGet 1170 Gopher Tails\nAPPLEDALE, B. 0., Sept. S.-Tb*\nyoung people have completed tho\ngopher competition. UTO gophers being caught. B-neat Ttoseo won the\nspecial prise with 080 tall*.\nAppleDale Girl\nAttends School\nat Nelson High\nAPPLEDALE, B. C. Sept 9\u2014 Mlaa\nMary Trooso ef Kelson spent the\nweek-ond vlaltlng her parents Mr.\nand Mra. T. Trozso.\nMiss Isobel Day loft on Monday\nfor Nelson where the wUl attend\nhigh school,\nMlu Amelia Troswo, who hu been\nvisiting in Kelson, returned on Saturday.\nNESTLfi'S\nS___22SB1\nMILK\n\"^ESTti'S   Evtpottted\nIN Milk ii twice u rich u\nordinary bottled milk ... \u00bb\npure cow'smilk with alluieleu\nwater removed ... then tteri.\nliied tnd sealed in airtight\ntins. Rich and creamy...\nNlSTli'S Evaporated Milk\nadds tn appetizing\ntichnew to til cooking\ntnd biking tnd to\nbeverages.\nNESTLlf'S\u2014\nWorld's Largest Producers ami Sellers ef\nCondensedandEvafo-\nratsdMiik\nTWICE AS RICH AS\nORDINARY BOTTLED MILK\nOUT OF\none\n_\u2022__\npackage\nOF\nMiss Irvine Leaves\nTarrys for England\nTARRY'S, B, C. Sept. 3.\u2014Mlss\nMollle frvlng left on Saturday on\nan extended visit to England, tailing . on th* S. S Montrose from\nMontreal on September 10.\nBertrtnd O'Nell of Slocan City hu\nreturned to resume the principal-\nship of the Thrums school.\nMlu Marguerite Sandercock hu\narrived from Nelson to again toko\ncharge of th* Junior grade*.\nThe first Knight of the Ordsr of\ntht Garter was Edward UI.\n\u2022*_st\n.    ___N-0.i\u00bb\u00bb,J*\nCORN FLAKES\nTHINK of att you get I Many delicloui treats for break- 1\nfast. And there's lunch\u2014wbat could be better than .\nKellogg's and milk wtth fruits or honey added?\nThen, the children's evening meal\u2014Kellogg's ar*\nwonderfully wholesome and easy to digest. And many\na man knows them h a delicious and healthful bedtime snack.\nAlways ready to serve\u2014no trouble or work. Costing\nonly a few cents a package. Of all the foods you buy,\nKellogg's Corn Flakes are indeed one of the most economical and convenient. No wonder they are thc most\npopular ready-to-cat cereal in the world.\nWise buyers put the name Kellogg on their grocery\nHats. No other corn flakes have ever been able to duplicate the matchless flavor and crispness of genuine\nKellogg's., More than 12,000,000 people prove this every\nday by baying Kellogg's Corn Flakes.\nLook for the famous red-and-green package\u2014\nwith the inner-seal waxtite wrapper that keeps tbe\nflakes crispy-fresh even after opening. Still another\ne.-lusiv. \u2022 Kellogg advantage. Made by Kellogg in\nLondon, Ontario. ____]\nft\/VlS-V\/   eaM o\u2014w wn and au\na's Slumber Musk, broad-\n      \u2014  I associated station, of \u00ab**\n-.._..\u00a3. aeerr fmnda, -\u00bb-_.( at 10.30 E.D.S.T.  Also tit Ut\n'\u25a0     \u25a0 -..-\u2014- rst_d.M.\n '\/7\nLeckie's\nRed Stitch\nSCHOOL BOOTS\nfor BOYS\nSixes 1 to 5\u00bb\/, f3.50\nSites 11 to 13i\/, .... $3.25\nR. Andrew\n& Co.\nLeaders in Footfashion\nSociety\nThlaocdumn la conduct*, by\nMre M. J. Vlfneux. All newa\nof a eoolal nature, including reception*, private entertainment*,\npersonal ltema, marriages, etc.,\nwill appear in thli column. Tele-\nrhona Mra. vlfneux at her bome,\n19  StUoa itreet.\nMERCURY SOARS\nTO REGISTER 90\nOnly Few Degrees Short of\nSummer's Peak; Humidity Is Low\nRegistering 00 degrees the mercury failed by only several degrees\nto reach the summer's peak, Thursday. The previous day's mark of 88\ndegrees was thought to be a high\nfor the month of September and\nwhen the mercury climbed four\nmore point*, Nelsonltei experienced\none of the warmest September days\nIn a lengthy period. A clear day\naccounted for the Midden rise\nand was also responsible for tbe\nextreme temperature of 47 degrees\nrecorded as the minimum for the\n'34 houra.\nAccompanying the warm day, the\nhumidity slipped perceptibly. The\nhigh of tbe day was 80 and two\nother readings taken showed 34 and\n30. five and six point* below the\ndanger  point.\nTRAIL DANCERS TO\nGO TO VERNON\nVKRNON, B C, Sept. 3.\u2014Dancers\nfrom Trail, Revelstoke, Kamloops,\nand from the coast have signified\ntheir Intention of coming to Vernoq\nto compete in the highland dancing\nevents at the Scottish games which\nwill be held here on Labor Day.\nTen are coming from Vancouver.\nA LARGER VIEW\nthan that of mere price should\nbe taken by the purchaser of\ngrocerfes. It Isn't how much one\npays that counts ao much as\nhow much the price actually\nbuys. Quality is the basis of\nTaJue. Some grades of groceries\nwould be dear at a very low\nprice. Others won I d be good\nvalue at a much higher figure.\nWe aim to make this the store\nof good values. Come and Judge\nIf we are successful.\nELITE GROCERY\nCO., LTD.\n622 BAKER  STREET\nPHOM.  122 NELSON, B.C.\n\"THE  NELSON  DAILT  NEWS.  NELSON, B.  C,  FRIDAY  MORNING,   SEPTEMBER  4,   1M1\"\"\u00ab\nPiper to Royalty\nPAOE   mE\nMr. and Mrs. J. Ivan MacKay bare\nas' their gum for tba next few\nveeks Mrs. MacKay's niece, Mlse\nBetty Cretfbton, who arrived laat\nevening from Vancouver. After her\n\u25bctalt In Nelson Miss Crelghton will\nresume her university course ln\nVancouver.\nA. A. O. Williams leave* this morning for Kimberley to relieve the\nmanager of the Bank of Montreal, J.\nD. Bunyeat, wbo Is on holiday.\nWord has been received ln the city\nfrom Vancouver that W. O. Miller,\nwell known ln Nelson, who waa\noperated on Wednesday in Vancouver,   is   progressing   favorably.\nT. Beninger of Perry Siding paid\na visit to town yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. F- Russell fledd, who has been\nholidaying in Vancouver for tha past,\nweeks returned home yesterday. She\nwaa accompanied by her sister, Mrs.\nH. Andlson and also by Mlss Inkster,\nalso  of   Vancouver.\nLittle   Margot   Allen,   daughter   of\nMr.  an_  Mra.  Wilfred  Allen  at  the\nnorth   shore,   is   a   patient   ln   tbe\nKootena? Lake General hospital.\n\u00bb   \u2022   \u2022\nG. B. Matthew, Edgewood avenue,\nexpects to leave tonight for Halcyon\nHot Springs.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nC. D. Jirvla of Procter, who has\nbeen town for the past few days\nexpects to leave for his home today.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nH. Clifford Irving has returned\nfrom his vacation spent at the coast\ncities.\n\u2022 \u00ab   \u2022\nThomas Hunter of Valllcan was a\nshopper In town yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u25a0\nAmong visitors to Nelson yesterday\nwaa C. G. Fenwlck of South Slocan.\na   a \u2022\u2022\nW. J. Pratt of Nakusp paid a visit\nto the city yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMr. and Mrs. H. Jenne, Kootenay\navenue, Fairview, and their eon\nLeonard have returned from a 10\ndays' trip to Seattle snd other coast\ncities.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u25a0\nCharlea Madden, who has been In\nTrail for a few days, ls at present in\nNelson and expects to return soon to\nHalcyon Hot Springs where bo la\ntaking medical treatment.\nS. J. Towgood, who ha* been  in\nthe city on business, has returned to\nhis homo In Sandon.\naee\nD. A. Attree of Salmo paid a visit\nto town -yeaterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mra. A. W, Nagle snd\nMiss Ora Beckatesd of Seattle were\nrecent visitors at the Willow Point\nbome \"Beuna Vista\" of Mr. and Mrs.\nA. D. Emory.\n\u2022 t   \u2022\nP. V. Kingston of Grand Forks\nwaa % city visitor yesterday.\nMr. and Mrs. A. T- Horswill have\ntaken up residence at file Carbonate\natreet.\nMlss Peggy Bsrclay left last night\nfor Vancouver where she will visit\nfor a few days before going to Victoria where she will attend normal\nschool.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00ab\nMr. and Mrs. John Burns, Stanley\nstreet,   have   returned   from   a   few\ndays' motor trip to Spokane.\nMlsa Marjorle Brown, Hoover street\nhas left or Queen's Bay where she\nhas taken up her duties as teacher.\n\u2022 \u2022     \u2022\nMr.   and   Mrs.  Frederick   Denlson,\nCarbonate street, have as their gues!\nMrs.    Denlson's   sister.    Mlsa   Delia\nDrummond of Vancouver.\na \u2022 *   \u2022\nMrs. ' K. H. Douglas, Behnsen\nstreet, Fairview, left last night for\nRevelstoke, where sbe will visit at\nthe home of her son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Ramsden\nMiss K. Ethel Gray, matron of\nthe Kootenay Lake General hospital,\nPipe-Major William Campbell, of New Westminster,\ncan boast the distinction of playing thc pipes before\ntwo reigning Slamece kings. He ls at Banff where the\nfifth annual Banff Highland gathering and Scottish\ngames are taking place AugU3t 27-30 and His Majesty\nKing Pradajhlpok, of Slam, who formally opened the\naffair    Thursday    ls    a    cent figure    among    the\nthousands of spectators.    Wi-       Clng Chuldaldngkorn,\nof Slsm. father of the prese- r. visited England In\n1894 Pipe-Major Campbell was piper to Her Majesty\nQueen Victoria and as such accompanied the late\nqueen and her regal Siamese , guests wherever they\nwent in England, In the above picture Pipe-Major\nCapmbell, r*. he appears today, is shown on left. On\nright is a photo reproduced in the London Graphic In\n1894. King CliHldftlongkorn is shown on the right of\nthe group be.ide Queen Victoria while Pipe-Major\nWilliam Campbell. In Highland dress, i_ on Her\nMajesty's .'eft.\nJUST\nARRIVED\nNew Designs and Patterns in Tapestry Chesterfield  Suite* at  Prices  to  Suit  any  Home.\nTERMS ARRANGED\n3-Piece CHESTERFIELD SUITE\u2014Reversiblfi cushions.\nVery latest Tapestry Patterns.   Price   f 167.50\n3-Piece CHESTERFIELD SUITE Pillow Arm Large\nWing Chair and Arm Chair to Match.   Price ? 197.50\n10 Other Suites to Choose From with prices in proportion.   Buy now for fall and winter comfort.\nSTANDARD\nFURNITURE CO.\nComplete House Furnishers\nNelson, B. C.\nleft via the Great Northern yesterday\nmorning for Vanrouver, wbero she\nwill attend a bosnltal conventlou\nand visit various hospitals on the\ncoast.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. D. Kldd of Frultvale\nwere city shoppers yesterday.\nA.  J.  Lewis of  Gray  Creek spent\nyesterdsy In NeUon.\nsee\nVen. Archdeacon Fred H. Graham\nleaves this morning via the C. P. 5..\nfor the east where he wtll spend the\nbetter part 0t a month. While away\nMr. Graham will attend the meeting\nof the various boards of the church,\nand in Toronto will attend the\nTriennial of the Oeneral Synod. Mr.\nGraham will be relieved by Rev c.\nH. Shortt, Warden of the Anglican\nTheological college In Vancouver.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMlss Elsie Gansner has left for\nShoreacres where she is ln charge\nof the Junior room of the Shoreacres\nschool.\nMr. and Mrs. E. Bergeren, Silica\nstreet, have taken up residence in\nthe Medical Arte apartments. Baker\nstreet.\nCircle No. 2 of Trinity Ladles association met yesterday afternoon at\nthe home, 810 Victoria street, of\nMrs. T. H. Wllllts, when those present were Mrs. A. Hall. Mrs. F. E\nHowell, Mrs- H. Saare, Mrs. J. H\nWallace, Mrs. G. E. Sparkes. Mrs. J\nLundle, Mrs. G. F. Hunter and Mrs.\nE.  Rowley.\nMr. and Mrs. Nelson Ball. Houston\nstreet, and son Ray, leave today for\nErlckson to spend the week end at\nthe home of Mr. and Mrs. F. Knott.\n\u00ab    \u2022    \u2022\nMiss Georgina Fortune Motion arrived last evening from Kobe, Japan,\nwhere she has been employed for\nthe past five years. She will be a\nguest at the home of Mrs. George\nMotion,  Baker  street.\nMlss Velma Mclntyre entertained\non Wednesday evening at her home\non Stanley street, at a farewell surprise party for Miss Peggy Barclav,\nwho left Thursday night for Vli\ntorla where she will attend normal\nschool. One of the main features of\nthe evening, which was spent in\ncontests, music and dancing, was the\npresentation by Mlas Tooke Martin,\nof a parting gift from those present,\nto the guest of honor. Refreshments\nwere served by Mlss Mclntyre, as-\nslated by Mrs. A. Barclay and Mrs\nW. Anderson. Invited guests included Miss Peggy Barclay, Mrs. A.\nBarclay, Mrs. W. Anderson, Mlsa\nLoulw Boyd, Mlss Helen Ferguson\nMiss Mickey Conger, Mts_ Leona\nHeaphy, Mlss Tooke Martin, Mlss\nJean Fraser, Mlss Frances Parker,\nMlPS Kate Martin, Mlss Mary Heddle\nMlss Leslie Fraser, MlsB Mary Spur,\nMlsa Marion Mclnnes, and Miss\nDoris  Mclntyre.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMlss J, A. Metneczuk of the Vancouver Oeneral hospital has arrived\nto spend her four weeks' holidays\nwith   her   parents.\n\u2022 e   a\nRight H*verand A. K. Mclntyre\nV.G., of Rossland, and Rev. Leo.\nHobson of Trail, were recent guests\nat the home of Rev. j. c. McKenzle.\nThe School of\nExperience\nExperience Is said to be a hard\nmaster, but those who hav. learned\nfrom experience will admit that they\nhave learned tn a school that ha*\nno equal chiropractic la the maater\nkey to health. With the use of the\nInstrument that will detect where\npressure doe* exist all th\u00ab chiropractor has to do Is remove that\npressure with hla handa alone. That\nla what the term chlfopractlc\nmeans Call and let me show you\nwhere the pressure Is.\nJ. R. McMillan\nGraduate  of  the  rainier   Srhool  of\nChiropractic, Nelson. B. C-. Phone al3\nBOARD, TRADE MOTION EXPRESSES\nDISAPPOINTMENT REGARDING THE\nROAD DECISION; ROADS \"MENACE\"\nAN IMPORTANT MAPLE\nTlie  sugar,   hard,  or   rock   maple.\nt It in variously called. Is the\nmost Important of the 10 maple\nnative  to  Canada,\nROAD CAMPS TO\nTAKE OVER 240\nOF UNEMPLOYED\nWill  Be  Expanded;   Several\nCamps Under Construction;\nRoad Protests Heard\nThat 240 men will be In road\ncamps throughout this Immediate\ndistrict within a few days wai the\nreport of H M Wh(meter, oreri-\ndent, made to the council of the\nNelson board of trade Thursday al.\nnoon. Mr. Whimster stated that he\nhad secured this information from\nWilliam Ramsay, provinrial public\nworks  engineer   for   this   district.\nCamps under construct Ian Include: Sheep creek. Above Rosb'and,\nto accommodate 30 men; China\ncreek, near Blueberry, 30 men;\nFrultvale cutoff to be reopened, 30\nmen; Laird creek, near Fraser's\nLanding, 30 men; Sltkum creek,\nnear Crescent Bay, 30 men; Gray\ncreek, 30 men; Boswell reconstruction of 3300' feet of highway, fiO\nmen. All of these camps were subject   to  expansion.\nAlderman J. B. Gray asked wbat\nwas being done on the road to\nNelway. There w\u00ab* no mention of\ncamps on that portion of rrmd He\natated he had read where 200 men\nwere to be employed on the Lougheed hlghway In the Fraser valley which was a new Job duplicating\nanother road. He could see no reason why the government should\nnot put from 300 to 400 men on\nthe  Nelway  road.\nA. T. HorswUl, Dr. E. C Arthur.\nW. R. Grubbe and Mr. Whimster\nall spoke upon the seriousness of\nthe road situation throughout the\nsouth. It was a crime to ask anyone to drive over them, the speakers   declared\nMotion Declares Roads Unfit\nfor Traffic of Any\nKind\n\"The   me miters   of   I he   board\nof   trade   of    Nelson   desire   to\nexpress    their    extreme    disappointment     and    dissatisfaction\nthat m Uttle attention ii;t- been\npaid   to   the   many   representations  made  from   the  whole of\nlhe   soul hern   Interior   with   regard to the route of the trans-\nrunada   highway;   they   are   extremely   confident   that   natural\ncondition,   ulll   eventually solie\nthe  whole   problem   tn  favor  of\nDie   southern   route;   and   they\nfeel   that,    under   the   circumstances,   thej    are   forced   hark\nupon  their own  resourced lo use\np\\er>   means   at   their   disposal\nto   ithlaln   some   relief  from   Ihe\nIntolerahlf   sit uatIon   w hereby   a\npopulous   territory,   largely   gup.\nportlaj   the  present   goiernmeni,\nand   paying   a   large   proportion\nof   Ihe   provincial   taxes.  Is   permitted, notwithstanding Its contentious   protests,   to  suffer  Indefinitely    from    the    perpetual\ndisadvantage    of    having    nwdW\nthat, are not  only unfit for ant\nsort  of traffic, tourist nT other-\n\u2022fet, hul  are a distinct menu\".\nto   public   safety.\"\nSuch   was   the   motion   made   by\nVen.  Archdeacon  Oraham   and  seconded by A. J. Dunnett and passed\nby the council of the Nelson hoard\nof   trade   Thursday   at   noon.   The\nresolution   will   go   before   thc   full\nboard   meeting   on   Thursday   next\nand   will   be   sent   to   Hon.   R.   W.\nBruhn,   minister   cl   public   works,\nVictoria   The   motion  came  following the reading of a letter received\nuy  the  acting  ccmmlseloner of  twe\nAssociated   Boards  of   Trade,  J.   R\nHunter, from Mr. Bruhn. It was ln\nreply  to a resolution  from the Associated  boards  of  trade  passed  on\nAugust  28   last.   Mr.   Bruhn*  letter\nread.\n\"The route of the transcanada highway has already heen\ndecided upon as running from\nthe boundary of Alberta via the\nBig Bend, Revelstoke, Kamloops\nHope and Vancouver, for reasons which I would be tttt\nglad to explain to you should\nIt he necessary  to do so.\nA New Job for Mayors\nHALIFAX  MAYOR DID  NOT CHOOSE  TO BUN,  APPARENTLY\nThe tnclent cipjtal of Nova Scotia la la _erl__i danger of losing ita\nreputation aa a staid and conservative old city elnoe tnete attractive permanent wave, came ln wit- the tide. Hla Worship Mayor Oeorge E.\nRitchie ls the happy host to a group of charmers of the 8.S. Belgenland\nduring the first \"showboat cruise\" to Nova Scotia. On, or should we aay\n\"In\", his right rand he has Claire Windsor, screen star, while the left arm\n(In Halifax they call It the north\u2122 .f, t arm) is going to 'walet' on Prances\nWhite, vaudeville headllner.\nWinterer emut woma.\nvm will find Shag-\ntooo-__j)e____The___*-\nless ta__oo_ig... the lovely\nfurs ...__. -be _______\neicJnsr. e with Shumoar\n... place tbefn _n _be r_\u2014.\nr___ or copcoac ________\n(Left). \" Smyrna\" tea. Asa-\nvicca-Je topcoat ia the _______\n1 ine _____.. . e_-_or_t_!_ sod\n.\u25a0ora. I39.75\n(T-Wrt). \"SmsrusT (a. With\nm_y__Bar____-0D-_g.Be-\nkit fox and cs-_Kc. cuffs, tin* la\nthe __f.or.i_c.i-_isn__.___.\nTbe\u00bbni.\u00a3ti-__iM___r__nw_kh_l._pm>_r\nTopcoats are ffla_e cannot be had in aay\nother topcoat. Ti:j art ixxluiht with _\"_\u00bb\u2022-\nmeer. Prices thi: season are lower than they\nhave ewer been.\n________ wj_h\nCstyfeagher's^t)\n607 Baker St.        Phone 200\n'As far as bringing the transprovlnclal highway up to the present\nstandard of the transcanada highway, lt Is Impossible for me to\nmake a statement in this connection, aa yet I do not know what\nstandard la required by the Dominion government for thla route,\nand for this reason it would be Impossible for me to make a definite\nstatement that what Improvement\nwas carried out on thc transcanada\nhighway by the Dominion government would at once be followed by\nthe provincial government on the\nsouthern route.\n\"Ah far a* naming th* route\n\"The scenic\"' highway, this Is a\nmatter nhlrh will be derided\nupon a little later on. and I can\nassure .vou that I hare no objection to doing so If It is really\nconsidered, when thin road Is\ncompleted, that It li of more\nscenic value than the transcanada   hlghaav.\n\"R. VV. Brnhn.\"\nSome dlsnipslon ensued following\nreading of the Bruhn letter. Dr. B.\nC. Arthur urged a letter demanding reasons for choice of the Big\nBend   rout*.\nVen. Archdeacon Graham believed the board was Justified In registering disappointment at no explanation for the government's action.\nW. R. Orubbe declared that the\nroute had been chosen and it was\nnow up to the southern ridings to\nget some action through their members of parliament, boards of trade.\netc. He declared that an united demand by members of parliament\nfrom this section would foree the\ngovernment to take some action.\nMr. Dunnett believed the beards\ncould do little good by a strong\nprotest, The highway situation, he\nbelieved would solve itself naturally.\nWEST KOOTENAY\nLOSES ANOTHER\nOF OLD TIMERS\nArchibald    McDonell    Dies\nSuddenly of Heart Failure\nHospital. Trail\nTRAIL, B. C Sept. 3\u2014In the sudden death last night of Archibald D.\nMci>oneii. so. West Kootenasy lost\nanother of Its well known, old time\nresidents. The late Mr. MrDonell\nwas the father of A. J. McDonell.\nsuperintendent of transportation for\nthe Consolidat-M Mining A. Smelting\ncompany, snd had resided In Trail\nfor the past 17 years, during which\ntime he had been tn the employ of\nthe   company   In   various   capacities.\nPrior to coming to Trail Mr. McDonell lived In Nelson for many\nyears. He arrived in Nelson in 1884\nfrom the east and for years was\nprominently identified with the lumbering Industry on Kootenay lake,\nTrout lake and at Gerrard. He erected the first pole line to the Nelson\ncity power plant at Bonnlngton at\nthe time that John Houston, Nelson's first, major was in office,\nHEART   MILS\nDeath cam* suddenly within a few\nhours after Mr. McDonell had been\nHtmltted to Trall-Tadanac hospital,\nheart failure being the cause of\ndeath.\nBorn at Alexandria, County Glengarry, Ont., April 1, 1851, Mr. McDonell apent his youth there. He\nmoved to Michigan and Wisconsin,\nwhere he wu engaged for some\nyears in the lumbering bualneis.\nSince his arrival in Nelson In 1894\nbe htd made hi. h->me In this district.\nHe ls survived by bis wife. Mrs.\nCatherine McDonell, 310 Observatory street, Nelaon, a daughter, Ella,\nNelaon; Mrs. D. R. McDougall. North\nBend. B C, at present tn St Paul's\nhospital, Vancouver, as the rwult of\nan automobile accident; and one aon,\nA. J. McDonell of Trail.\nPLANNED    ANNIVERSARY\nMr. and Mrs. McDonell were married In Alexandria, Ont., September\nfl, 1881, and plana had been completed by the family for the celebration of their golden wedding anniversary Sunday next.\nSocial Events\nof Trail City\nTRAIT., B. C. Sept. ;.-j oraut.\nColumbia avenue, left yesterday for\nMcLeod. Alta., after residing here It\ntwo  years.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMark Berach and J. ... Kavir wore\nvisitors   in   Nelson  yesterday.\nMrs,   W.  H.   Bchterholtz,   who   has\nbeen    vlsiMng   st   |__N____nln.   Satk ,\nfor the past, three mouth.*.,\nhome   last  evening\nMr. and Mrs. A- Shaw ot Reck\nCreek are ln the city for a few days\nMrs. Thomas Penuv, Who  I\nthe guest of Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Bell.\nSecond     avenue,    returned     to    her\nhome   In   Nelson   yesterday.\nMtw J0**tf DOWaK returne . today\nafter a short visit to her home In\nOrand   Porks.\nMlss Anes Hay left, yesterday for\nSpokane.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs, A. E. Jjnes and sons, who\nspent the summer vacation at fftlflOU\nhave returned  homc.\nMrs.   Alex.   McDonnell   and   ftM-lil?\nare   home   again  after  holidaying   at\ntheir  home  at.  Willow Point.\nMrs. Philip Corls and son are\nspending  a  holiday at Procter.\nWilliam Lynes is spending a short\nvacation  at  Grand  Porks.\nMrs. H. Plelder tnd Miw Patty\nFielder of Vancouver were visitors In\nthe city yesterday.\nMiss Mary Qrl and MttM Lttta Orl\nhave   left   for  Nelson   to   attend   St.\nJoseph's   academy\nWilliam Morgan and Jamea fttttt\nleft Saturday for Montreal en route\nto Glasgow, Scotland, for ttUNM\nmonths'    vacation,\nMr. and Mrs, Evan J^ne,, g___ chit*\ndren     have    returned     from     three\nmonths'  holiday at potnti  in\nprovinces\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Gwilym Jones havc\ntaken up residence on Ravine itftel\nTrail News of the Day\nTRAIL HOUSES AND l OTS IN-\nsurance Notary. J. D. Anderson,    Trail. < 7003 >\nBOARD OF TRADE\nARRANGES FOR\nTRIP, EDGEWOOD\nPresident   Urges   Large   Attendance at Fair at Arrow\nLakes  Center\nNH*.n;i    board Ci.pf.-1-\nlrz to i*end a large daltgtttofl \">\nmember, ta Um Kttgewoed \u00bbn. itto*\nnotkUn VaJtoy ' ho*td\nhas be<-n antlci| * Lett for\nae  md  *wt tited    r *ntly a\nletter from   W.   R.  Dowetl,   I\nreminding tiie board  ol  III\n!   \u00bbiaifc.\nThursday   at   the   me. ol   tbe\ncouncil ol the boal I ol ti ide, H M.\nWhimster. chairman, urged nil members who could, to takr in the\nEdgewood   tnp    ihe   <\u25a0\ntnd   thi\nvalley   did   0   1\"'   of   -\nNelson.   Hr   thOUgftl   l<   the   duty  of\nthe  board  t.   pay   this   visit,\nMr   Whimster declared plan| watt\nto leave Nelson  1 \u2022   Mon-\nday   noon,  September   14i  dt\\vi\nlor dinner and a bri*f\nvisit, and then rtrtye on ta Fci^e-\n\u25a0 of the night so U to be\navailable fcr the fair opening on\nTuaaday morning at 10 o'clock.\nAccommodation at   tiif\nhotel   there,  hp  daclared-\nVtn. Archdeacon Qrmham, declared\nthat he had been invited by the\nEdarwcHid people to perform the\nopen 1113 ol the fair, but thtt M\nWOUld QOt he able to iiccept as he\nwould be a way In the east. However, if was Mr. Graham':.' intention\nto suggest that A. Leith act in hla\nplace\nMr, Whimster announced that the\nfollowing    men    would    act   as    the\n\"on-.o-Cd_pw\u00abod\" committee; D. l-\nKerr,   0    D.    Blackwood,   George   P.\ni    r, Payne, hltt i.ciui. o.\nH  pergttfon,\nElectric\nRefrigerators\nim we feel\nwc in {\u25a0\u2022 lead u\n\u25a0n . June tn,. famous NORGE, ul-o\nMX.TlsiK Refrlc-\nemton,  Prices from\ns.t.   up.\nKootenay Music House\n3oi   Baker   m.,   Nehen,   R.   r\nPhone  US\nCASH & CARRY\nSALE\nLONG SPOUT PUMP OIL CAMS\nReach the inaccessible \u00a3^   iq\nplaces, each     *,**%\u2022 a. zw\nSPRING BOTTOM OIL CANS, a\nhandy oil can for home    _\u00a3?C\nand shop, each    \u00ab\u00bb^v\nHlpperson Hardware\nCotnpa-.y, L'.t___tcd\nLook for the Red Hardware Store\nPhone 497 Box 414\n \u25a0\n1\nrics SIX\n\\tl\\t Ktlamt latlg Nema\nPt: hsd eesry morning except Sunday oy Newt Publishing Company,      .u ted,  Nelson,  B   C\nlleoiMt ot Canadian Press  leased  wire  newt service.\nAd erasing rata caida and A. B. c. statements of circulation\nmailed oa request, or may be seen at tbe office of any advertising\nagency recognised by tbe Canadian Dally Newspapers' Association.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\nBt mall (country), per mouth   \t\nPar year     \t\nBy mall (city), per year ,.\t\nOutside Canada, per month\t\nPar yaar\nDelivered, per weeH\nPer year \t\n...\u00bb  .so\n... 6.00\n- 13.00\n_ .76\n_ 1.60\n- -6\n- 13.00\nPayable ln advance.\nMember Audit Bureau ot Circulation.\nFRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1931\nSeen and Heard\nIn NELSON\n(By I. B. C.)\nNelway Road In Need of Repairs\nThe council of the Nelson board of trade yesterday\ndiscussed the matter of unemployed relief camps\nthroughout the district. Several camps are being laid\nout and will be occupied shortly. But for the time\nbeing the camps will average but 30 men apiece.\nCamps are being constucted on the main lake highway, Balfour road, Trail-Castlegar road, Fruitvale\ncutoff and Sheep Creek highway above Rossland. No\nmention has been made of any work done on the\nhighway south, Nelson's main connecting link with\nthe United States.\nAdmitting that the plans of the government are not\nyet complete, nevertheless attention should be drawn\nto the need of a great deal of work on the Nelson-Nel-\nway road.\nDuring the past summer, Nelson has had hundreds\nof visitors come over this highway. There would\nhave been more had the road been in better shape.\nThose who have come over the Nelway road have\nsought other routes by which to return.\nIt is to be hoped that the provincial government\nwill bear the Nelway road in mind when completing\nunemployed camp plans.\nAll Hail to George Young\nCanadians should be handing a few pats on the\nback in the general direction of George Young. The\nCanadian lad who startled the world by riding to California on a motorcycle and winning the Catalina\nchannel swim hands down, has at last won his goal.\nHe has after several unsuccessful attempts, won the\nToronto exhibition swim.\nYoung received much adverse criticism and publicity year after year as he repeatedly failed in the\nToronto contest after getting excellent starts. Young\nbecame known as the swimmer who was good as long\nas he was in the lead.\nBut George Young has accomplished the feat in\nspite of criticism. He has fought an uphill battle\nand has won. And the glory is all the greater because of the fact that Young won when complaints\nwere serious about water temperatures. So cold was\nthe water of Lake Erie that all but three of the 180\ncontestants were forced to quit the race. More power\nto George Young.\nSteam Engine Anniversary\nOne hundred and fifty years ago the harness was\nfirst flung upon steam by James Watt. He was in the\nkitchen and noticed how steam made the kettle lid\ndance. Some think that maybe his wife or mother\ncaught the inspiration first.\nIt happened in 1781 and marked the beginning uf\nthe mechanistic age.\nWhile gas and electricity are stiff contenders with\nsteam for honors of the age, yet the first of these was\nsteam. It started the wheels revolving by something\nelse than man and beast power. It was the great\nemancipator of thc race from drudgery.\nThe locomotive was the natural evolution of the\nsteam engine. Watt, the inventor of the engine, was\nnot sympathetic with Stephenson and his locomotive.\nAnd yet Stephenson helped to make Watt famous and\nspread the use of steam over all lands. Fulton carried\nit to the high sea..\nSteah and Onion Still Good\nThere isn't anything that seems Imposiible in this\nefficient, mechanical age, but the limit is about reached\nin the announcement of a famous Vienna .dentist,\nwho has perfected a method which, he says, relieves\nmankind of the necessity for eating regularly.\nThe professor has devised a highly concentrated\nfood paste, which, rubbed into the skin, is capable of\nsupporting life indefinitely .without oral feeding. A\ndaily massage of a few minutes, using a few ounces of\nthe  paste,  is equal  in   nourishment to three  hearty\nmeals.\nHowever, the restaurants and food shops have little\nto fear. A good fat steak, smothered in onions, will\nbe attractive in spite of all substitutes.\nMr. H. Emerson Fosdick says that \"democracy is\nthe conviction that there are extraordinary possibilities\nin ordinary people.\" That is probably why there should\ngrow out of democracy so many self-created problems\nwith which there is the greatest difficulty in wrestling.\nToo often the men elected to authority by ordinary\npeople arc too ordinary to betray traits of statesmanship.\nlu that type, of publicity in which the ego is outstanding, there is only one serious competitior of\nMahatma Gandhi, and he is Mr. George Bernard Shaw.\nOne is an idealist and the other an iconoclast, but each\nconcentrates on keeping his name as permanently\nas possible in newspaper headlines.\nDogs have been granted the privilege of riding on\nthe cars in Los Angeles by the State Railroad Commission. In many cases owners are dependent on them\nfor guidance through the streets. Dogs at least stand\nup and allow women to sit down\u2014that is to say, the\nfour-footed ones.\n'THE  NELSON  DAILY  -.En., -tlBON. 8.   _, WtDAI  __WKTN6,   -_R~_____.  t.  1H1\" \u25a0- VU \u2014\u2014=\nuuuummmmmmmml AUCtlOn   UtUt\n' '\"    ' Contract Bridge\nBy tbe World's Leading Authority,\nMILTON C. WORK\nWhat Nelsonites think about thee*\ndaya and what some of them want:\naaa\nAlderman J. B. Oray\u2014\u00ab00 men\ndoing roadwork on the Nelaon road\nto  the  boundary.\nModeration committee\u2014Beer par*\nIon in Nelson.\nWilliam Gow\u2014A large crowd at\nCsnadlan Legion picnic on Monday.\nJoseph Carter\u2014A place to dig up\nhundreds of passengers for c. P.\ntrains.\nAntl-baer committee\u2014A dry ver-'\ndiet on Baturday.\nDr. X. C. Arthur\u2014A personal argument with Hon. R. W. Bruhn on\nthe  road  situation.\nH. M. Whimster\u2014Naming of the\nsouthern highway \"the Bruhn\" hlgto-\nwfcy.\nW. R. Jarvis\u2014Lesa confusion In\nthe Jail.\nW. R. Grubbe\u2014Some activity by\nthe Conservative associations regarding  roads   iu   the   district.\nA. T. Horswill\u2014The time, money\nand means of raising a large and\nviolent protest about the highways\nthroughout  the  south.\nR. to- Kirby\u2014To take a good solid\nwallop  at  J.  B.  C.\n\"Qene\" Gillott\u2014Organization  or\nftret  class pipe bam   in  Nelson.\nEtc.,  etc.,  etc.,  etc. . .\nOne ol the most interesting tilings\nI have run into for noma days w.s\nGeorge Fleury. I don't mean George\nis a thing, the occurrence was what\n1 nterested me. It was Mr. Fleury\ntrying without injuring anyone\nfeelings, to Joah two ladies who\nwere canvassing for votes and for\nmoney in support of the anti-beer\ncampaign. And as I got out of hearing distance I heard George remark,\n\"But wouldn't you enjoy a glass of\nbeer wtth me?\"\nLike them or not. term them a\nforward step in feminine dress or\nfantastical garments, beaoh pyjamas\nhave dotted the American landscape\nthese summer months, And whatever\nthc aesthetic verdict concerning\neither style or design, they bring no\nfrown to the brows of cotton textile\nmanufacturers. They are willing to\nlet the populace debate pro ;md con,\nus long bs girls, in the numbers\nnow so adorned, retain an affection\nwhat fashion has originated.\nThere ls a reason, and tb* head of a\ntrade agency founded by the mami-\nf cturers supplies It, says the In-\nttUnspolis. News. He says tn one of\nthose cold, analytical commercial\nreports:\nIt seems to be the consensus of\nopinion that the pyjama vogue has\nmaterially increased the use of cot'\nton yardage by ottering additional\nbusiness rather than by diverting the\nuse ol fabrics from some other lines.\nPractically every selling and converting house designs a line of cotton fabrics for the pyjama trade. On\nthe other hand, there seems to he no\nsold for house dresses. The pyjama\ndecrease lu the amount of fabric\nline is an all-year-round proposition\nand special emphasis haa been put\nou it this summer since we do not\nhave the extensive outlet* for cotton In the fall. This opinion is\n.-bared by some of the leading stylists\nin our primary market.\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nWitticisms crop up even when seri-\ncu\u00bb things are being discussed. At\nyesterday's council meeting of thc\nNelson board of triWo the men present were engulfed in accusations,\nwild sayings, deeply thought-out\narguments and other such things\nthat accompany a refusal on bchall\nof ..ny government to accede to the\nwishes of th\u00a9 people of the south\nand especially this district. Hon. Mr.\nBruhn was catching very \"old Nick\"\nfrom all sides. Conservatives werc\nbecoming insurgents. Liberals were\nsmiling and protesting. The air\nwould have taken ou a dark color\nhad it been possible. The men were\ntrying to solve the road question.\nThey were looking for the \"nigger\nin the woodpile \" the gink who had\nbeen instrumental in the Big Bend\nroad becoming the transcanada highway.\n(Thli article is Intended for ht* Auction  and Contract bridge beflnnen\nom\n\u2666w      *\nTab Photographer:\n\"Hold it, lady, hoid it\u2014I wanna get\nthem tears.\"\nWhat Do You Think!\nWhy Pick on Beer?\nDetests the \"Holier\nThan Thou\" Stand\nThese men sought high and low\nwithout much success. The dihcus-\nslon drifted t0 ropd conditions from\nAlberta through the southern section* or British Columbia. The\nroads tt* terrible, impossible, Impassable and dangerous. Now how\nare we going to get our roads fixed\nup some one asked. Then came the\nbright happy thought. Tbe ray of\nsunshine through the clouds that\nha<i darkened the horizon. With the\nfeeling tense H. M. Whimster calmly\nproposed a motion that the southern\nhighway be named \"The Bruhn\nhigh-way.\" in honor ol the minister\nof public  works.\n\"Perhaps we could get some work\ndone on the roed then. Mr. Bruhn\nwould like to sec his own road In\neood shape nlwsys.\"\nAnd so Lhe discussion went nn.\nthi former Hon. Hr. Sutherland, the\ntori-Mr Hon. Mr. l<ougheed and ths\npresent Hon. Mr. Bruhn must have\nhu i    burning   ears.\n\u2022   \u00bb   o\nTtk! Itt;  Tskt\nTo thc Witor of the Nelson Daily\nNews:\nblr. May I compliment you on your\nlogical stand on the beer parlor\nquestion. In your editorial, recently\nln the Nelson Daily News?\nIn this no-called enlighteed Christian era, wc find society, to a large\nextent wrapped up in hypocracy to\nsuch an extent that if a person ponders, to the whims, and sickly sentiment, (that wc occasionally find\nfloating around) one la looked upon'\nas a respectable member of society.\nOn the other hand, if a person\nhas courage of their convictions\n(based upon logic and fundamentals)\nhe or she is very apt to be frowned\nout, of so-called respectable society.\nIt would be interesting to know\nthe amount of prohibitionists, who\nare protesting against beer parlors lu\nNelson, yet in their basement are\nan assortment of home 'made wines,\nwith enough (authority) tn lt to\nknock a mule over?\nI see no reason why they should\nnot have home made wines, but for\nthe love ol Mike, why the hypocracy\nBefore a hasty innuendo is passed\nupon the writer, I may aay, I've\nnever had a bottle of liquor or beer\nin my home.\nI, at the same time, have no\nright, to interfere with my neighbors'\nliberty in this matter.\nIf a person wishes to drink a glass\nof beer, in a beer parlor, ls it not\nprcferrahle for him to do so, rather\nthan brand him as a criminal for\nhaving gone into a bootlegger for a\nbottle of beer, becsuse he doesn't\nwant to buy a doaen at the liquor\nstore.\nFor my part I prefer to sec a\ncitizen walk into a beer parlor in an\nhonest way.\nA lot ha* been \u00bba._, to the effect\nthat beer parlors will not eliminate\ntlie bootlegger. True, but you will\nminimize it to a very large extent,\nand considerably improve a condition tn Nelson that ts anything to\nbe proud of, by the presence of\nbootleggers.\nIf a person thinks that beer parlors \u00abnd bootleggers are an evil, is\nit not wise and logical to aay \"out\nof the  two evils choose the least\nLet ua be moderate ln thought\n\u25a0ad actions, also tn our vote on\nthis important question ^^^^\nI have read *ome most sickly _en-\ni lment in leaflet form distributed\naround  recently.\nGreat stress has been made on depriving   the   children   of   bread,  been uw   of   patronizing  a  beer  parlor\nThere  are  hundred* of  leaks pos\n*who handle it will all be left in the\n^consumer's hands to deal with or to\navoid. Am I right? Certainly there\nwon't be anyone on the streets soliciting your beer transaction-). It\nmust and will be left entirely to\nthose who may desire lt\u2014and it\nyou don't care for any, no one will\nknow it.\nI am no drunkard because j write\nIn favor of beer by the glass, In fact\nthe amount' I spend on liquor is not\nenough to make anyone happy, or\nsuffer from. Ye t, because I don't\nsmoke la no reason why tobaccos\nshouldn't be sold by the packet. I\nleave It alone. And the same can be\napplied to beer by those who think\nit wrong  to partake of.\nThe least they can do is the most\nthey   can  do.\nLeave it alone, and let htm alone\nwho derives a pleasure st the occasional glass of beer. WILLIE\nSays Beer Parlors\nDoes Not Increase\nDrunkenness in B. C.\nThat Body of Tourt\nBjr JAMES  W. BAETON\nADVICE FROM DISTIN- \u2666S**JLTl,.,2r \u2022+* ltt ***\u2022 *\u00bb\u00ab\u2022\nGUISHED DENTISTS     !\u00ab*_ _\u2022*\u25a0\u2022\u2022 i* **_m **#w\nWith ths above hand south would\nbe a three no trump declarer at\ncontract bridge, and a one so trump\ndeclarer at Auction bridge.\nTbe first lead of west would be\nthe five of hearts, and lt should\nbe apparent to the declarer that his\nouly chance of winning a heart trick\nwltn dummy's king Is by playing it\nimmediately. Ths lead may not have\nbeen from the ace; but If not, east\nsurely will hold the trick with a\nlower honor (west hss not ltd small\nfrom queen-Jack-ten) and the king\nwill fall on the second trick.\nPlaying a no trump declaration\nwith no winning card ln closed\nhand, the king generally is the play\nfrom king and one of the suit led\nln dummy. It would not be the\nplay, however. If closed hsnd held\nJack and two others.\nWhen the king of hearts wins,\nthe declarer should realize that his\ntroubles are only beginning. He\nneeds eight mors tricks, and If the\nking of diamonds and queen of\nspades are both held by east, he can\nmake four diamonds, three spades\nand one club. It Is not probable\nthat east has both, of these cards,\nbut it ts declarer's only chance\nbecause, barring the extraordinary\ndistribution. of five clubs ln one\nadverse hand snd the singleton\nking ln the other, declarer cannot\ntake more than one club trick without letting the adversaries ln.\nTo trick 2 he should lead a diamond aud should manage the suit\nwith care. The queen should be led\nfirst and if east does not cover (and\nwith four diamonds he probably\nwill not) south should play the Jack\nor the ten so ss to be able on thc\nsecond round of diamonds to lead\nthe nine from dummy and duck\nunder it with the eight. Then a\nthird round of diamonds and a third\nfinesse will result in the capture of\neast's king.\nNow with the danger two-thirds\npast, south should lead the ace of\nspades and then put dummy ln with\nthe ace of clubs to take the spade\nfinesse. Playing this hand la skat-\nng on thin ice, but as everything\nworks, the game would be made.\nThe medical profession gives much\nof Its tine In Instructing tthe public\non how to preserve health, and how\nto avoid sickness, thus really doing\nthemselves out of oonsldersbls Income.\nSimilarly tbe dental profession now\ngives much free sdvloe to patient*\nand to the public on tbe best\nmethods of preserving teeth. While\nsome might think thst the advice\n\"see your dentist twice a yaar\" Is\nreally to bring business to their offices, this simple sdvloe saves the\npatient much suffering snd considerable money. A tooth preserved\nis worth a great deal to the patient.\nFormerly, the individual would\nnever think of having the teeth examined until one or more of them\nbegan to ache and then be went to\nthe dentist and asked to hsve them\npulled.\nThis neglect of the teeth in Great\nBritain wss brought forcibly to the\n..uthoritles luring the examination\nof recruits for war service. Since the\nwar instruction on the oar* of the\nteeth haa been given to the public\nin  newspapers  and magacines.\nRecently the dental surgeon to the\nKin?, the' president, British Dental\nassociation, the Desn of the Edinburgh Dental hospital and three or\nfour other outstanding dentists signed their names to a newspaper article part of whioCi was as follows:\n\"We ar\u00a9 impressed by the great\namount of suffering snd IU health,\nwhich Is caused by dental disease.\nBelieving that most of this could\nand should be prevented, we feel lt\neslrable to outline for the benefit\nof the public, the means, which,\nwe consider would lead to thst end.\n\"(a) E.t toast, crusts, and other\nfirm materials requiring chewing,\nln  preference  to soft  sticky  foods\n\"(b) Try to eat some raw fruits,\nnuts, snd rsw vegetables, especially\nvery end of s meal as they\n\u25a0e no wastes on tho teeth to\nferment.\n\"(c> brush the gums snd tooth,\nwithout fall, sfter tbe last meal of\nthe d.y or before going to bed,\nusing a teoepoonful of salt to a\ntumbler   of   water.\n\u25a0iJ, Visit a dentist twice a year\ntor t-Jw :ru_pe_*-lou and, If necessary,\ntreatment of ths gums snd  teeth.\n\" flaui inv-iUgen' &_.'.. steadfast\npractice c< the means Indicated in\nthe*) rules would result In far\nfewer teeth being lost from dental\ndecay  or   pyorrhoea.\"\nWhen i*^ r-member that so much\nconsideration.\nTen Years Ago\n(rrom The Dally News ef Septembef\n4,   19S1)\nBaseball fans snd the players tn\ngood number appeared at the C. P.\nB. station Isst night to give W. to.\nEdwsrds, Nelson's star pitcher a\nroyal sendoff on his return to hit\nhome ln Los Angeles.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nwtlllsm Irvine returned Isst night\nfrom sn extended trip through tba\nsouthern and eastern states.\nMlss Hilda Johnson snd Mis. Ida\nAnderson returned to the city Saturday from spending a holiday st\nthe coast, and left yesterdsy fot\nProcter where they will take charge\noi the school.\nTo the Editor of the Nelson Dally\nNews:\n_Ur; Being a reader of your valuable paper I being interested in\nths various comments of writers\nfor and against the bale of beer by\nthe glass In the city of Nelson- I\nthink that in all fairness to the\nworking man of this city and to\nI title city Itself great discretion\nshould be shown by the voters ou\nthe fifth of September. They should\nvote solid for tho beer parlors. While\nI am not a hard drinking man I\nwill always have my drink of beer\na. long as I can afford lt, and I\nthink I am safe iu saying this goes\nfor most of the working men of\nthis district. I might also say lt ls\nmuch better to bc eble to walk in\nthe front door of a beer parlor snd\ndrink your glass of beer in public,\nYou are at least afforded a good\nclean place to sit down and have\nyour drink which you certainly will\nnot have In a lot of the bootlegging\nwe save every cent some of us will\nhave enough. Those who run the\nbeer parlors. If we get them but\nwhat of the woman, who has two\nthirds of her husband's wages to\nhandle and probably not that, for\nher husbsnd and sons must keep up\ntheir morsle by visiting the parlors\nseveral times a day and the 10 cents\na glass will have to come out of\nthe grocer, clothier, and shoeman\n(Not out of the light or water tax,\nfor  the city will see to that)\nOh, well, they can go to the\nparlor.*, to get something to keep\nup their optimism. Tbe taxpayer\ntoo. can go, for city relief wi!\nmount this winter, but never mind\nsome of us will make something out\nof It.\nThen It can be said of us ss w__,\nsaid of our good high commissioner\nwhen he slipped forward we'll be\ndown  but not out.\nMy advice if it would be any gooa\nis use common sense in the voting\nSaturday. THINKER\nPHONE 181\nWe specialize ln Plumbing and\nHeating Jobs of all sizes and descriptions, by trained experts, and\nare equipped to fulfil all requirements for numbing and Heating\nFixtures and  Supplies.\nB. C. Plumbing\n8 Heating\nNELSON, B. C. \" UU\nWinning Contract\nBridge - and\nAuction, Too\nMILTON C. WORK\nContract's    Greatest    Authority\nhas written a superb Uttle\n48-page book entitled\nCelebrated Contract\nHands\nwith\nThe Forcing Two-Club Bid\nBetween its covers la\nworld of Contract Brdlge Information\u2014Auction, too\u2014more Information snd value than In most\ndollar books. It Is yours upon\nrequest, accompanied by 10 cente\nln stamps or coin, carefully\nwrapped, to pay sctual printing\nand handling costs. Enclose a\nself-addressed, stamped return\nenvelope. The booklet will help\nyou enjoy the thrill of well\nplayed  bridge.\n% Stoumt\nBead Mr. Work's article ltt this\npaper every dsy.\nsibl*\nThirty Years Ago\n(from The Trlbaiie. Kepi. 4, [Ml)\nJ. T. Laidlow, representing seven\not.her parties today bonded to S. A.\nGebo, representing a Helena, Montana, syndicate, 21 iron claims on\nBull river six miles from Wardner,\nfor \u00ab100.000.\n\u2022 s   a\nJ. P. Mauhart left yeaterday with a\ngang of men foe the big trestle on\nlhe Nakusp &, slocan branch, which\nburned  up some time ago.\n* *   * _____________\nWord was received ln Nelson last\nevening to the effect that thc Com-\nmaretal hotel at Eholt, owned by\nFred Kaiser, had been held up and\nthat the robbers had Becured $2300\nDo women realize what they are in for, if they adopt\nthe bustle again, asks Mrs. S. M. Narea. Well, men do\nnot seem to have enough bustle to get out of the dumps,\nso the women may have to use it again.\nSoon thfi season for straws will be over and we will\nbe thrown back on the Literary Digest entirely to\nfind out which way Hie wind is blowing.\nJoints   in   this   town,   ln   regard   to ^^^^^^^^^^^^\ndrunkenness\u2014   some   people   would! Tit.   \\x_ua\\r  Wi+k   ______\nhave us believe beer parlora will In- |lJV  AW\u00bb_f    \"'\"\u00bb   me\ncrease It. I can say from what I\nhave seen of the beer parlor system\nIn the province of British Columbia\nand I have seen a lot of this province, I Mi ink I am right ln saying\nthat in the beer parlor towns the\ndrinking of hard liquor has decreased 60 per cent. Now in regard\nto our friends from the south of us\nnone can deny thst quite a |cr-\ncentage of them like their glass of\nbeer which they approve of if they\ncan get It in a good, cool beer\nparlor. But when they have to buy\nit by the half dozen or the dozen\nand   pay   for   permits   they   would\nthe bread banket, Why pick\non beer? I wonder how many gallons\not gas a> often used, ln preference\nto necessities. I take this only as\none instance.\nI detest this fhotter than thou)\nttitude, by a number of citizens,\nwho are lacking in toleration, ernd\nare more concerned with being\nthought   good   than   doing  good.\nThanking you. sir, for my indulgence on   this  matter-,\n\"HONESTY Op PURP06E\"\nsooner drive a little out of their\nway to where there is a beer parlor.\nThen they do not have to pack It\naround in cars, drinking it on the\nsly, and if caught be liable t_ a\nfine.\nYours for beer by the glass.\nRETURNED MAN\nNelson,   B.   C,   Sept.   3,   1931.\nLet the Man Alone\nWho Derives Some\nPleasure From BeeiJ\nWonders Why Name\nStruck From the\nVoters' List Here\nAUNT HET\nmi\n\"Havln' her teeth out made\nEmmy a lot more popular, She\nhas to !.r?p her iongue (.till to\nkeep her upper plate ln.\"\nTo the Editor of the Nelson Daily\nNews:\nSir: Why is tt so h-arti for some\npeople to get out 9\/ tbe domineer-\nIn?   habil.\nI consider myself a free thinker-\nbroad-minded, and am quit\u00a9 capable of understandlnt. anything that\nis at all reasonable. It la very\ns musing to read the debate* ln\nyour dr-ily 'What do you think\ncolumns'. I do not see why prohibitionists, if they are teetotallers\nwhy do they selfishly want to ban\nthe privilege of obtaining a. glass of\nbeer occaselonaJly to those who desire  such?\nSurely if they do not. like lt they\nhave the option of leaving it alone.\nOr Is it because they are afraid\nthat their will power will corrupt?\nBesides being a boewt for business\nin Nelson it will be s big drawing\n0_r_| for tourist traffic\u2014which spells\nbusiness out loud why should\nTrailites go to Orand porks to spend\na holiday? Haven't we one of the\nprettiest spot* in the country for a\nholiday?\nThen let us promote equally as\npopular an  attraction.\nIt seems ridiculous to mingle\nFuch business or any business with\nreligion. Since religion has Its teachings and does not prohibit tbe use\nof stimulants In moderation. Anything more or less than that, are\nman made ideas, and aro very\ntheoretical.\nAnd to Mrs. J. __. T. of Rossland\nin Bept. ? issive, why, yw. the quality,  ta*  ot  gliw,  aud  the  persons\nTo the Editor of the Nelson Daily\nNews:\nSir: Upon checking over the voters'\nlist in connection with the Saturday\nplebiscite on beer parlors In Nelson\n1 find that my name has been struck\nfrom the list. I have been on the\nprovincial voters' list in Nelson for\nthe pant 30 years ;.nd have paid\ntaxes for that period.\nIn going Into the matter I find\nthat there are between 300 and 400\nmen who are in the same position\n;is myself. We, a great many of\nold timers, are not given the pri\nBootlegger, Urges\nBeer Parlors Here\nTo the Editor of the Nelson Dally\nNews:\nSir: In a recent issue it was remarked that beer retailed by thc\nbootlegger for 35 cents per bottle\nand spent  50 cents per glass,\nIn Trail court s bootlegger wg\u00bb\nfound guilty and its was brought\nto light that he purchases bottled\ngoods to the amount of nearly one\nhundred dollars, purchas*s -spreading\nover a week.\nAre there not some restrictions\non limits of purchases at our government vendors? Is any track kept\nregarding the amount purchased DJ\ncustomers? Or ls it that a turnover\nls sought rather than any attemp*.\nat control? If it is common knowledge that beer and sports aro sold 1\ntn clubs in Nelson and Trail, what!\nare ot\"' police doing about? If they\nare tiring of their Jobs, there are\nplenty good returned men who can\nqualify for their Jobs of polioe,\ngovernment  vendors,  etc.\nLet's have some sction by those\nresponsible, snd beer parlors by all\nmeans, if it means an end to the\npresent conditions- Thanking you,\nsir, 3. to. T.\nRossland, B. C. Sept.  2, 1931,\nTwenty Years Ago\n(From The Dally News of September\n4,   1911>\nDull weather yesterday did not\nprevent Labor day oeletorations in\nvarious parts of the Kootenay. In\nNelson tbe main event of the day\nwas the track and field meet of the\nY. M. C. A., In which Wilbur Pish\n ^^^^^  was  the hero  of  tho sports, while,\nlege   as  British  subsets  to  cast   a! during the morning, the Y. M. C. A\nballot on Saturday ^^^^^^^^\nWhat, I would like to know, is\njust why my name has been struck\nfrom the voters' list? Will some one\ninform me if I am to go scot free\nfrom taxation in the future?\nJOHN ROCHE\nSept.  a,   1081.\nUrges Use of Common\nSense in Casting of\nBallots on Saturday\nfootball team beat ,\naggregation   3-0.\nCrescent Valley\nA WANT-AD WILL\nDO THE TRICK\nThe faster, cheaper, MODERN way to\nprofit! Nelson Daily News Want Ads put\nyour message before a PREFERRED market, a market that's on the alert for opportunity, quick to respond to offered values.\nThere's no delay in getting results with\nNelson Daily News Want Ads, either. It's\nthe USUAL THING for prospects to be\nreached, deal closed the SAME DAY! If\nyou'r selling a radio or a home, looking\nfor a partner or a cook, you'll find that\n\"Want Ads do it better.\"\nMam lath} N*ma\nWant-Ad Department\nPhone 144 or 143\nTo the Editor of the Nelson Dally\nNews: ^^^^^^^^^\nSir: I am thinking ao just a line'\nIf you will permit, on the question\nof the moment or dsy. To be or\nnot to be.\nA similar question presented itself\nJust after the armistice should we\nmourn or should we Jazz, and forget our troubles, we Jazzed and our\nyoung people have reaped what we\nhave sown. Carrying out a fundamental    law.   Now   ths   question    Is\nHugh rietcher left yesterday for\nLethbridge where he will enter ths\nservice of tho traffic cepertrnent of\nthe Canadian Pacific Railway company.\n\u2022 so\nMr. snd Mrs. J. D. Paxton of\nGrand Forks arrived In town last\nnight and are staying st the\nBtrathcona.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nA. J. McDonnell has purchased\nD. L- Kerr's interest in the Kerr\nbilliard hall and La now sole owner.\nMr. to. s. Hartley, editor of the\nGW.E. Magazine, is carrying out a\nseries of experiments to Ascertain\nhow accidents happen to men ln\nthe various grades of the company's service. Mr. Hadley is, at the\nmoment, a plumber's mate, but he\nhaa worked as platelayer, porter,\nlocomotive fireman, shunter and\nether things. The result of the\n^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ dat\\ he has secured will shortly bs\n\u2022ball   we   Just  exist  this   wluter   If put  into  book form.\nAluminum Ware\nNow ig the time to purchase your stock\nof Kitchen Utensils at a Low Price.\nSPECIALS FOR THIS WEEK\nSteamer and Sauce Pan\n E $1.09\nUtility Water Kettle  \u201e  $1.39\n8-Quart Water Kettle and Insert   $1.75\nSEE OUR WINDOWS\nNelson Hardware Co.\nWholesale and Retail Quality Hardware\nNelson B. C.\n nib\n\u2022I-I  NELSON DAttY fTEWS,   NtLSON, B.   ft, FRIDAY  MORNING.   SEPTEMBER   4,   XtSl\u2014-\nPAGE ^^B\nMMilSPORT PAGE\nMANY ENTRANTS LISTED IN THE\nSATURDAY MORNING TENNIS DRAW\nMost Present Holders to Be\nReady to Dispute\nRivals\n146 ENTRIES IN\nTHE FINAL DRAW\nEntries Are Larger in Every\nEvent; Keen Competition\nExpected\nEclipsing last year's entry ot\nlt6 by 11, for the Kootenay\nTennis tournament, the 17th\nannual play Is making a spectacular bid to out-do any former year. Entries are larger in\nevery event and the three days'\nschedule will be crammed to\nthe utmost.\nIn the men's \"A\" singles\nthere sre 28 entries. 21 In the\nmen's doubles, ?.i In the men's\n\"B\" singles and 27 In the mixed doubles. The ladies' -A'* singles claim IS, the doubles ll,\nand the \"B\" singles 18, while\nthe Veteran's singles have four,\nmaking In all a total of 140.\nA cursory glanc* at the schedule\nshows thst there sre many strong\nocmtenderg who have appeared at\nthe annusl tournament during the\nlast few year6 for the glittering\ncrowns,   *a   well   as   a   number   of\nTENNIS\nVISITORS\nYour  wants for  ice  coM\n' drinks and delicious malted milks will be well taken\ncare of at\nWRIGHT'S CIGAR\nSTORE\ndark horses, or comparatively dark\nones.\nPLAYEBS   1'BOM\nTAB   POINTS\nIncludsd in entry list are men\nfrom ss fsr east ss Winnipeg, and\nas far ae Spokane in a southerly\ndirection, waiter Rice, seoond ranking player ln Winnipeg will test his\nmettle for the first time ln these\nparts. Dick Benwlck, Medicine Hat\nchampion and a former local hoy,\nwho held the \"B\" singles a title,\nand Nelson city championship, has\nfiled entry- Spokane is sending two\nplayers and Coleman three. These\ncombined with a few upsets from\nth eldtstrlct should go to make an\nlnterestnlg time all around.\nThe  Nelson  entry  ls the  largest\nyet, and on closer examination one\nIs led to believe that lt is In all\nprobability the best yet,\nTRA1|. HAS   STRONG ENTRY\nTrail ls sending over a strong\naggregation. moet_? players who\nhave crossed swords here before.\nOeorge Hamson, who haa been playing good tennis this yesr, will keep\nhimself busied ln several events.\nFinalists and seml-fluallsts of\nother years, such as, McBean, Williams, and others are intent on disputing rights. The entries ln ladles' events are strong too.\nCHAMPIONS   COMPETING\nOutstanding among the things\nnoted from the entry list was that\nmost of last year's winners In the\nvarious evente will be present to\ndefend their laurels. W. Gllflllan of\nTrail, winner of the men's single\n\"B'' event will not play this year,\nand Mlss Margery Benson, co-partner with Tommy Malahoff ln winning the mixed doubles, will also\nnot be present, having since tsken\nup residence at the coast. Mlss\nDoreen Dunnett, of Nelson, holder\nof the Ladles' \"B\" singles cup, haa\nentered, but automatically moves\ninto the \"A\" class.\nTommy Malahoff, holder of the\nmen's \"A\" singles will be out to\ndefend his title; and has also\nentered the mixed doubles with\nMiss Ottillc wragge to attempt to\nregain the event which he and\nMlss Benson captured last year.\nlln. George Hamson of Trail, formerly Mlss D. Anthony, and winner\nof the ladles singles \"A\"1 class has\nforwarded her entry and will be\npresent to dispute any aspiring opponents.\nA. w. Idlens and M. Harrison\nboth of Nelson, who came through\nto take the men's doubles, and Mlss\nM. Blngay and Mlss K. Blngay, of\nTrail, winners of the ladles' doubles\n\u25a0will take the racquet ln hand again\nin   the   respective   events.   K.   Mc-\nmi Winner\nMargaret Ravlor, of Philadelphia,\nwho won the Toronto exhibition\n10-mile swim recently, thereby winning M0O0 in prise money. She won\nthe same event last year.\nACDONALD\nFine Cut\nwith ZIG-ZAG papers attached\nGENCIES!\nHennessy Brand,\ncannot be obtained\nat a moment's\nnotice, so . \u2022.\nKEEP IT HANDY I\nHENNESSY\nBRANDY\n '   \u2022\u2022TTLED    AT    COGNAC,    FRANCE\nAtlister, the veterans' singles chain-\npom completing the list of winners,\nwtll make the trip from Rossland\nto defend his cause.\nIndividual and challenge cups and\nnumerous prizes donated by courtesy\noi the local merchants ln an effort to promote good tennis, arc on\nexhibit lu the Wood-Vallance hardware show windows. They will remain there until the complstion of\nthe  play.\nThc following te the schedule\ndrawn up by the draw committee,\nL. Simpson. N. Oerman and to.\nSwanson, and will b0 effective Saturday   morning:\nOolf Club courts, Saturday (Nelson time) 8 a.m.: J, 'Bunyan vs\nE. Neff; W. Wait vs F. Clark;\nHarrison vs Lorne Bradley.\n10 a.m.: T. Bird vs Luke Undoe;\nL. Stewart vs O. Shugg; J. C. West\nvs c. McDougall.\n11 a.m. Winner Harrison-Bradley\nplays winner Blrd-Llndoe match;\nwinner Bunyan-Neff match plays\nwinner Stewart-Shugg match; tol-\ndridge vs M. K. Harrison.\n12 a.m,; R, Renwlck vs Rex Taylor\nGeorge Simpson vs A. Thunaes.\n1 p.m.: Mr. and Mrs. Idtons vs\nW. Rice and Mlss Oellnas: Bert\nClark and Mlss Stewart vs Ballock\nand Mrs. Undoe; Mlss R. Craufurd\nand Mollis Oreen vs Emily Hamson\nand   Mrs.  Maurer.\n2 p.m.: Winner of Idiens-Idlens,\nr.tce-Gellnas mstch vs winner of\nClark-Stewart, Balloch-Llndoe match;\nFielding vs H. Hunt; Frank Phillips\nvg   Jack   Toulson.\n3 p.m.: Winner Field-Hunt vs\nwinner Phillips-Toulson match; F.\nWeldon vs A. Ritchie; K. McBean\nand Mlbs Blngay vB Mclnnes and\nMlss   Ritchie.\n4 p.m.: to, Swanson and Miss\nHamson vs R. Hobson and Mrs.\nHart; MacDonnell and MacDonnell vs\nL. Simpson and Mlss J. Waldle:\nHunter and partner vs M. K. Harrison and Mlss Wllkle.\n5 p.m.: Winner of IIamsoi>8wan-\naon, Hobson-Hart vs winner of Mac-\nDonnell-MacDounell, Simpson-Waldle; Ruth Craufurd and Ed Saunders\nvs Mlss Campbell and partner; E.\nE. L. Dewdney and Mrs. A. N.\nTaylor vs Miss Bingay snd F. Weldon.\n6 p.m.: Winner of Hunter and\npartner, Harrison and Wllkie vs\nwinner of Craufurd-Saunders, Campbell and partner; winner of Mc-\nBean-Blngay, Mclnnes-Rltchle vs\nWest and partner.\nDOWNTOWN   COURTS\nDowntown courts, Nelson Lime,\n9 a. m. Saturday, September 5th;\nR. Renwick and Mlss Sander-\nSimpson; A, Eldridge anrl Mrs. Sowerby vs, T. Malahoff and Mlss O.\nWragge;  K. Nlsbet vs Loih  Boomer.\n10 am: Winners of Renwlck-\nSsndercoK, Simpson-Simpson match\nvs winner of Eldridge-Sowerby, Malahoff-Wragge mstch; M. Lutes vs\nMargaret Campbell; Mrs, McTier vs\nMies  S.  Stewart.\n11 a.m.: Mrs. Sowerby vs Nora\nSimpson; Miss P. Gelfuas vs Mrs.\nUndoe; winner ol Nlsbet-Boomer\nmatch  vs  Mlss  Hamson.\n12 noon: Winner of McTter-Stew-\nart match vs winner of GellnBs-\nLindoe match; winner of Campbell-\nLutes match n winner of Sowerby -\nSlmpson   match.\n1 p.m.: IVlnucT of Renwick-\nr\u00abylor vs winner of Simpson-Tim-\nnacg match; J. C. West vs to. to. L.\nDewdney.\n2 .Mil.. _*__>. Hart and Mlss Sand-\nercock vs Misses M, and K. Blngay;\nMrs. G. Simpson and Mrs. A. N.\nTaylor vs Mrs. G. Hamson and Mlse\nRitchie; Mlss MacDonnell vs Mtss D.\nDunnett.\n3 p.m: Ii. Arrowsmith vs W. K.\nGunn; Mlss Freeman and O. Shugg\nvs Mr. and Mrs. O. Hamson; E. P.\nO. Bouchler and Mis* Wright vs\nW. Williams and M. Caldlcott.\n4 p.m.: Winner of Dewdney-Tay-\nlor, Blngay-Weldon vs winner of\nFreeman -Shugg, Hamson \u2022 Hamson\nmatch; West and partner vi B.\nClark -mrt McDougall; K. D. McBean vs W. Ballock.\n5 p.m.: W. Rice and R. Renwick\nvs F. Clark and E. Neff; Oeorge\nSimpson and Rex Taylor \\* U\nSmith and A. Thunaes; George\nWarner  vs J. Flngland,\nThe complete draw will appear tomorrow  morning.\nCRANBROOK AND\nTRAIL BOWLERS\nHEREJSATURDAY\nWill  Take Part in  Opening\nof the New Six Rink\nGreen Here\nC. A. COTTEBELL WILL\nBE GUEST OF CLUB\nBand   to  Attend;   Luncheon\n\u2022Scheduled on Old Greens\nfor 5 p.m.\nRecently completed and tested out\nand declared by lawn bowlers to\nbe one of the beat green, ln thc\ncountry the new aU rink green ol\nthe Nelson Lawn Bowling club will\nbe officially opened on Saturday\nafternoon at _ p.m., Nelaon time.\nAt that hour, J. Ivan MacKay, superintendent, Canadian Pacific railway. Nelson division and Mayor J.\nP. Morgan will bowl the first balls\ndown the new sod.\nSaturday's opening will be auspicious In thst bowlers will be\npresent from Trail snd Cranbrook.\nThe Trail delegation will be header\nby S. O. Blaylock. vice-president\nand general manager of the Consolidated Mining & Smelting company, while Mayor Thomas Robert-\nwill head the Cranbrook bowlers.\nAnother special visitor during Saturday wtll be C. Cotterell' of Vancouver, general superintendent for\nthe Canadian Pacific railway for\nBritish Columbia.\nFinal arrangement- for tive grand\nopening were completed laat night.\nThe program will Include selections\nby the Nelson City band, bawling\nbanquet on the greens at 5 p.m. at\nIntercity bowling competitions at\nwhich Mr. Cotterell and other prominent   visitors will speak.\nUp to last night the personnel\nof the Trail rinks had not been\nreceived but. the cranbrook teams\nwill be composed of the following\nmen In the order of skip third,\nsecond and lead:\nNo. 1 rink\u2014C. E. Hall, c. Staples.\nW.  Hall, J. Bowley.\nNo. 2 rink\u2014O. Anton. D. cath-\ncart. E. O. Dlngley, J, H. Cameron.\nNo. 3 rink\u2014A. Shankland, H. Mc-\nOUI. J. F. budd, J.  L. Martin.\nNo. . rink\u2014W. J. Barber. F.\nWoods. S. Maloolm, J. M. Beggs.\nFollowing ls the schedule for play\nduring  the  day  with  Nelson   rinks\nnamed   first.\n2   P.M.   DRAW\nC. Chapman vs Trsll No. 1 on\nOreen  5.\nW. Chapman v\u00bb C. E. Hal], cranbrook on  Green 3.\nP. Bates vs Trail No. 1. Oreen  t.\nJ.   Ivan   MacKay   vs   O.   Anton,\nCranbrook, Oreen 4.\nE. Y. Brske vs Trail No. 3,\nOreen 3.\nJ. Draper vs A. Shankland, Cranbrook,  Oreen 6.\n3:15   DRAW\nR. A. Aldersmlth vs Trail No. 4.\nOreen 3.\nA. Wlgg vs W. J. Barber, cran-\nbrook, oreen 3.\nC Chspman vs C. B. Hall, Cranbrook   Green 5.\nW. Chapman vs Trail No. 1,\nOreen   1.\nPercy Bates vs G. Anton. Cranbrook .   Oreen  4.\nJ.   Ivan   MacKay  vs  Trail   No.   3,\nOreen  6.\n6   P.M.   DRAW\nE.   Y.   Brake   n   A.   Shankland,\nCranbrook, Green 1.\nJ. Draper vs Trail No. 3. Gieen S.\nR. A. Aldersmlth vs W. J. Barber,\nCranbrook. Oreen 3.\nA. Wlgg vs Trail No. 4, Green 4.\nTrsll   No.   I  \u2014 c. T   Hall. Cranbrook.  Green 3.\nTrail   No.  2  vs 0,  Anton,  cranbrook.   Green   6.\n1:30   DRAW\nTrail No. 3 vs A. Shankland,\nCranbrook, Green 1.\nTrail No. 4 vs W. J. Barber,\nCranbrook. Oreen 2.\n\"Big League\"\nBASEBALL\n\"Hit and Run\" Play\n\/tT_*TY.\nO'&OUL\n\u2022VH\u00a3\/r\n, ^Me>   \u2022\nrilWAyS\nTry r*ND_.\nGST-PIECE.\no\/=7fte\nffALL-\nPIRATES DEFEAT\nTHEORD1NALS\nGame   Goes  6-4;   Cincinnati\nReds Take Third Straight\nFrom Chicago, 3-2\n(By   AL   111. ...REti\nThe \"hit and run\" play Is really a\n\"run snd hit\" play. The batter by a\nprearranged sign with the runner on\nfirst base, signals that hc will bll\ntfce next ball pitched. As the pitcher\nwinds up the base runner ls off for\nsecond. Either thc second baseman\nor the shortstop must cover the bsg\nand the bstter tries to guess who It\nwill be and hit through the vacated\nposition.\nThe main thing to remember when\nst bat ls not to try to knock the ball\nout ot the park, but to hit it on the\nground. Al.ays try to get a \"piece\"\nof the ball, no matter where it ls\nthrown, as In doing this you are\nprotecting the runner, who otherwise\nprobably will be  thrown out.\nAl Demaree haa prepared an Illustrated leaflet on \"Art ot Batting\"\nwhich he will gladly send to any\nreader requesting it. Address Al Demaree in care of this paper sud be\nsure to enclose a self-addressed\nstampe.1 envelope.\nAMERICAN   ASSOCIATION\nSt.   Louis\n.NATIONAL LlAdl I\n\u00bb 1.\n84    16\nSew   York     IS   S4\nChicago\nBrook!* ii\nPittsburgh\n63\n68    (il\nBoston\n oo   :o\n N\nPhiladelphia    73\nCincinnati     48   83\nPit.\n.646\nMS\nJM\n.11..\nIll\n.430\nttt\nPITTSBURGH   6,\nST.   LOUIS   4\nPITTSBURGH, Sept 3\u2014Pountlitig\nBurleigh Grimes for all their runs\nIn the first three Innings, thf\nPirates defeated the champion St.\nLouis Cardinals 8 to 4 today.\nSt.   Louia   _  4   io   1\nPl.toburgh      6   11   1\n' Grimes.  Llndsey,  Rhem  and  Wilson; French. Osborn and Grace.\nCUM 100   :;\nCINCINNATI  3,\nCINCINNATI. Sept. 3\u2014 Roi___\nsiugle in the tenth inning scored\nDouthlt and gave the Reds their\nthird straight victory over the Cubs\nby 3 to 3.\nChicago     2     72\nCincinnati      3    9   1\nMalone and Hartnett; Carroll and\nSukeforth.\nEXCELSIORS MEET\nCALGARY LACROSSE\nTEAM ON FRIDAY\nCALGARY, Alta, Sept. 3 <CP>\u2014\nBrampton Excelsiors, Dominion la-\nrrosse twists, will meet Calgary All-\nbtars here Friday night for the\nright to travel In New Westminster.\nBritish Columbia, to moet the Salmon Bellies for the 1931 Dominion\nchampionship.\nAfter several daya of unoertalnty,\nand with the gam* first being\nbilled aa an exhibition match. H. K.\nGilchrist, president of the Alberta\nLacrosse association, waa formally\nnotified tonight by w. O. Graham.\nWinnipeg, secretary of the Dominion\nbody, that the game would be recognized ... the \u00abem;-final of Use Canadian championship. It wl. be a\nstHden death fixture.    .\nMedicine Hat lacrosse squad wss\ndefeated by Calgary ln the first of\na two-came series for the provincial\nchampionship, \u2022  ' \"\nBoston at Philadelphia, postponed:\nrain. Double  header Saturday.\nBrooklin at New York, postponed;\nthreatening   weather.\nFew Changes Among\nBig  Six  Batters\nThe four games plaved on yesterday's curtailed major league program\nfailed to disturb the standing oi\nthe Big Six, only tw0 of the leaders\nseeing action Eddie Morgan of Cleveland, third In the standing, lost a\npoint when he connected once in\nfour trips, but still was ahead, ul\nLou Gehrig, Ills closest Amennn\nleague rival Jim Bottomley of St.\nLouis fell into a tie with Chuck\nKlein, of the Phillies, for third place\nln the National when hc hit only\nonce ln  four  aUtmpU.\nThe  leaders:\nO   AB   R   H   Pet\nSimmons,    As    113 452   98 i\nRuth,   Yankees    122 455 127 173 .380\nMorgan. Indians 115 409   77 14G .357\nTerry,    Giants    131 524 104 162 .348\nDavis. Phillies 101 330 23 114 3.8\nKlein. Phillies 127 512 109 174 .340\nBottomley. Cards 85 201   51   99  340\nColumbus I, St. Paul 6.\nToledo 9, Minuesipolls 1 (called\ne:id 5th;  rain).\nLouisville  3.  Milwaukee  4.\nIudlanapolls-Kansaa City, postponed:   wet   grounds.\nWITH THE HOME\nRUN  KINGS\nHome   run*   y*obHd*f'.   Bo\nWhite  Sox,   1.   bchulte,   Browns,   1:\nCrf.bt.-<, _\u25a0_\"(._.  1.\nThe JHtf_M. apliriB, Yankees 40;\nRuth, Yankees. 38; Klein. Phillle*.\n31; Averlll, [ndUm, 29; oti( o.ant .\n26;   Foxx,  Athletics  24.\nLeague totals; American \u25a0__)_, National 445.\nBOWLERS PLAY IN\nFOUR WNK TESTS\nLadies   Play  Two  and  Men\nTwo; Three Are Played\nWednesday\nTw0 ..Kites,' and two men'i lnwn\nbowliny matol\u00bb\u00ab were playtti\nclub1* greens on th\u00ab C. P. R. Plot;\nThursday evenlnp. In the inen'.s\nmtHelieB C. Chapman's rink trounced\nA. Wlsfft> to the tune of 22-6 ami\nR. A. Aldersmlth'* rink beat p. Bate*\n17-14. Mr?, a. Wlgg's rliik tied 11-11\nwith Mrs. 8 Gerbracht's and Mr*. P\nCotUtar'a ladles trimmed Mrs. J.\nlv,.i_   M.tcKay'a 28-4.\nWednesday night in the ladlcrV\ncotttwt Mr*, F. E. Wheeler'* rink\ndrfpated Mrs, fl. V. May's 18-7. E.\nY. Brake\"_ rink defeated R, A. Alder-\ntmith's 12-9 and J. Dra-per'* rtnk\nbe it W Chapman'3 16-11. In tw\nmen',. t&atchc\nTli\" ftnau were:\nWec.ne_chv\u2014Mrs. g. N. May, Mrs.\nA. Elliott. Mrs. J. T. Slndell an.\nMrs.   Ei'sli-fTon.\nMr-     r.   B.   Wheeler.   Mrs.   W.   R\nin, Mrs. C. Beltner and Mrs\nc. wrtfht\nW. Chapman, C. Mansfield, R.\nRenwirk and F, Leno.\nJ, Draper, o. Twist, F Gedder and\nJ. gimondfi.\nR. A. Aldersmlth. A. Elliott, 3.\nRomtllO i'lid  W. Brown.\nE. Y. Brake, J. Armstrong, P.\nCoulter and S. Bates.\nThursday\u2014Mr i. P.* Coulter, Mrs. M.\nMaloney, Mrs. J. Argyle and Mrs. A.\nFoster.\nMrs. J. tvan MacKay, Mtu O\nWlgf, Mr--. C Monroe and Mra. E. Y.\nBrake.\nMrs. S Gerbrarht, Mrt. G. Mill?,\nMrs. F. Bohdu and Mlss G. Laughton\nWn \\ Wigg, Ut*. 3. Draper, Mr*\n1  M;s   R. A. Peebles\ni ObipUtiD. W, ll. .Morgan, to.\nM;irsden, J.  H\nA. Wiff, to. Pen will, H. Allen and\nJ.  Simons.\nP. Bites. Oeorge A. Utttto, E. 0.\nManpfield   and   J.   P.   Mot-rnn.\nR. A. AldJHmith, A. Elliott, J.\nRomano   and  W,   Brown.\nMcCarthy, ouimet\ndominate scores\nIN AMATEUR PLAYl\nBEV\u00a3Ri,Y COUNTRY CLUB. Cfct-\nego, Sept. 3\u2014Francis Ouimet, the\nBoston veteran, and Maurice J. McCart l. _, \u25a0 Jr., stalwart New York\nyouth, dominated the quarter-fnals\nuf the national amateur golf championship today with overwhelming\nvlctorlei. A* a result. Ouimet will\nplay lB-y\u00abar-old Billy Howell of\nRichmond, while McCarthy opposed\nJack Westl_nd, Chicago dlatrlot\nchampion, in the 36-hole aeml-\nf.naig tomorrow.\nOuimet reached the semi-finals for\nthe slkth time In nine years by\ntrouncing 21-year-old Paul Jackson,\nKansas City bantamweight, 7 and 6.\nMcCarthy followed with a itx\nfi.ij five decision over California'*\nJ <K contender, Fay Coleman, of Um\nAngeles. McCurthy* 71, even par,\nIn the mornin?: round, waa the best\nALSO IN IMPERIAL\nCALLON JARS *25\u00a3>PUIS\n30*H\u00bb CC-rAINER (M W*-.'...\nMATURED AND EOTT-ED BY\nviaoMA mktmt#\n(wmsH _.i_M.u)uMn_i> M_n_s_-i__\nnils advcrtl-riK'nt ts noi piitill_liH\nor dlsi\u00bbl_y.d Ity trie Uquor Control\nHoard or !\u00bb lite (.. ,. nioient of\nHilton   r .lombia.\nRains Stops Tennis\nPHIt-M-ELPHIA, Sept. S. UPI-\nWith the prtncipsl honor already\n*-on by England, the three natlon-\nthe Oernuurt-wn Cricket cluh wai\nInterrupted by rain today and rinal\nplay In the series will be held to.\nmorrow.\nBy virtue of takinj all three\nmatches on Tuesday and one yeaterday, England has snored four\npoints and cannot be overtake!'\nFranco has won two points an.i\nthe United States none. The American players csn best. France to-\nmorrow only by taking all three\nmatches, which would jive them\nthree   points.\nExtra\nAdvantages\nYET  YOU   PAY   NO\nPRICE-PREMIUM\n\"This advertisement is not published or displayed by tne\nLiquor Control Bosrd or by the Government of British\nColumbia.\nDEMPSEY'S BROTHER\nDIES IN SOUTH\nLOB ANOfcLES. Sept. 3 (AP)\u2014\nBarney Dempsey, 49. brother of\nJack, former heavyweight boxing\nchampion of the world, died at 8:30\na_n. today following an attack of\n_<ute indigestion.   \/\nConnected with boxing 111 sjulhern\nCalifornia for m.ny yesrs, Barney\nowned and operated the Manhattan\ngymnasium here where fighters\ntrained.\nHe left the gymnasium laat night\nfor his home with the words on hia\nlips that he \"never felt better in\nhia life.\" Barney had been in falling\nhealth for a number of yeara.\nBesides operating the Manhattan\ngymnasium. Barney handled Jack's\nlocal business when he was not in\nsouthern California.\nCLAIMS YOUNG\nOWES $1000 ON\nOLD CONTRACT\n______ .\nTOnONTO, Out, Sept. 3.-\n'By the Canadian Prese)\u2014\nOeorge Young of Toronto, who\nyesterday won the 15 mile\nmarathon swim and .10,000\nat the Canadian National exhibition here, today denied\nthe existence of a contract\nwtth Shier Mendeltohn. Early\ntoday it was announced Mendelsohn, who coached Young\nlut year In his unsuccessful\neffort to win the swim, had\ninstituted suit for $1,000\n_g\u00bblnst lhe swimmer, hla\nmother and the c. N. _.\nclaiming that, tbo money w__\nowing to him.\nJohrtny Walker, who coached the winner, said: \"all f\nknow- la that George had a\ncontract with him and it expired July is:'\nFollowing Issuance ot the\nwrit, Mendelsohn was granted\nan Interim injunction, re-\natralnlng thc c. N. E. from\npaying the 11.000 to Young or\nrestraining Young from making any disposal of the money.\nThe Injunction Is returnable\nMonday.\n0\n0\n0\n0\nANTI-CARBON . . . 99.1% carbon-free\n... Carbon-forming impurities disappear with new refining equipment\ncosting $2,090,000. . . . yet you pay no\npremium for New veedol.\nENDURANCE . . . Long life under searing engine temperatures. New heat-\nresisting qualities give the greatest\neconomy ... longest mileage ... ye. you\npay no premium for New veedol.\nFREE-POURING . . . Lubricates at 29\u00b0\nbelow zero. Always a rich film of oil...\nalways full protection... ye. you pay no\npremium for New veedol.\nPU RIT Y... So clear you can read a newspaper through it... No other Pennsylvania oil approaches this purity . . . yet\nyou pay no premium for New v E E do l.\nTHE\nNEW\nVEED\n^m    OS\n_____MMh\u00a3s'           V\/'^\nW*m                        ?%sS      '\u2022   >t\n\u00a5___       :\u25a0          '..'''   '^L\nhHHHbl                    '    _. ___RH___i ___kr\nWu%,''         Wj: J\nHBH^l^HBK-lk'Tr\u25a0\u25a0\u2022  f.JBM\/mW\" ':____j\\_\\\nmmmmm\u2014*t*i jjf^$     rV& \u25a0 ___tF jl\n_tf__*Jjt >    ______\\\\w^______\n\u2122PvV ',M\nTOO%\n\\w^*$r__M\nPENNSYLVANIA\n1 fl T MOTOR\nMAM\n100%\nULoiL\nBETTER\nMackenzie, White & Dunsmuir, Limited\nVANCOIVF.R  \u2014  VICTORIA   \u2014  NEW   WKMHIXMIB\nDistributors   for . . . TIDE   WATER   OIL  COMPANY  OF  CANADA, LTD.\n______\n PAGE  EIGHT\n\u00abTHE  NELSON  DAILY  NEWS.  NELSON. B.  C, FRIDAY  MORNING,  SEPTEMBER  4,   1981=\nMiss Fowler, Riondel\nto Take ft Position\nat McGill University\nKASLO, R. C, Sept. 3.\u2014Mr. and\nMrs. Stool* of Nelson were Wednesday  vlaltor*  in town\nMtss Dylla Jonea and her brother,\nArthur, who hat* been visiting their\ngrftrtdmother, Mrs. M. Clarke. Yiavc\nleft for their horn* in Rosaland.\nThe Kaalo school* reopened Tuesday with J\u00bbm*a Fraser a* principal\nef   both   public   and   hlfh   schools. \u25a0\nand   H.  Robaon   nad  Mlss  Margar.\nBmlth   as   teachers   ln   the   publ i\nschool, Mr.  Fraser taking  the   hlg\nachool classes  and  Mr.  Robeon   *J-\nv*nu*i   training.\nMr. and Mrs. D. P. Loye. who h.v.\nbeen the guest* ot th* lattor's par-\ntnts, Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Fleenc\ntoft Wednesdsy for their home It\nBeverley Hills, Cal. Mr. and Mrs\nLoye are making the round trip by\nmotor and went from Ksslo by way\nof Nakusp.\nMr. and Mrs. to. Matthews, formerly\nof Rlondel, but now resident m\nBllTerton, were Kaslo visitors on\nMonday '\nMr and Mrs Chart** Brett and\nchildren, who have been holidaying\nIn Kaalo for the past few weeks,\ntoft Monday for their home in\nRoasland.\nMis* Frances Fowler of Riondel\nwas a vlaltor to the city on Monday.\nMlas Fowler expects to leave for the\noast this week wher* she will b* in\nthe research department of McGill\nuniversity.\nRoland Green left Monday for\nVancouver after having spent the\naummer ln town with hla parents.\nMr. and  Mrs. 8. H. Oreen.\nMlsa Queenie McQueen ha* left\nlor Iavermere wher* ah* will re-\ngum* her achool teaching duties.\nMr. and Mrs. H. Robson and children have returned from a vlalt ta\nVa ncouver.    Mr.  Robson   la  on   the\n' Kaslo public school staff.\nPat Fowler has arrived in town\nand will be the gu*st of Mr. sud\nMr*. A. S- Exter -while attending high\ntohool here during the coming\nwinter.\nMlas Kathleen Butler bas left for\nBlocan Park where she will teach\nfor a few weeks, prior to entering\nthe   University of  British   Columbia.\nMrs. Alex But-Virtond was In\ntown Hand* o\\taOtk% up h*r home\nhate a* tbo Intends to spend th*\nwinter __ NOtoon with Mr husband\n\u2022nd ehfldma.\nGrey Residence and\nBarn Destroyed by\nFire, ffert Steele\nFOM- STBULB, B. B.. Sept. S_\u2014\ntha whtonos ud b*xn on Main\n\u2022tract, owned snd occupied by Mr.\nAlbert Ore* waa completely destroyed by fire Wednesday morning, house and content* being a\ntotal loss. A small house adjoining\nthe property occupied by Adam\nWise was saved after a strenuous\nfight by the men and boys of the\nTillage, The origin of t.h* fire Is\nunknown, Tortunatoly there was no\nwind at the time of the fire\nThere were no buildings very near\nto the Ore?, property,\nFAMOUS WIGMAKER\nRETIRES TN LONDON\nIiONDON, Sept. 3\u2014 (CP)~ W1UV\nClarkson. the moat famous maker of\ntheatrical wlga In the world, la to\nclose hla quslnt store in Wardout\n\u2022tr**t and retire. For 60 years or\nmore Clarkson has been a purveyor\nof wig* and other 'properties\" for\ntheaters all o?er the world. He\n1* a Londoner, born in Wellington\n\u2022txwet near the t,yc*um theater,\nwhere his father rarrled on * theat-\ntrical pentquier's business before\n[him. HI* father died when he was\n11 and Willy at one* left school\n\u2022nd began the life's work which ha_\nbrought, him into contact with ev-\n\u2022ry star of  the  Engliah  stage.\nHia shop, with lfs fantastic medley of stage photographs, costumes\n\u2022nd properties, suggests something\nof the range of hla memorfe8 which\n\u2022xtend from tir-e Victorian day*\nwhen he regularly visited Windsor\nBllmoral and Osborne H-mis* to\n\"make up\" the Royal children for\namateur theatricals\nToday he ls under contract to\n\u2022upply the wig* for the production\n\u2022t every London theater except three\nMany people think that thee* wigs\n\u2022re supplied from stock. But in\nfact, every one is made specially for\nth* wearer, and esch usually requires three of tour careful fittings\nHe also acts as regular wig-maker\n\u2022nd costumier for many country\nmanagers, including Francis Laldler\nEvery year Mr. Clarkson buy* vast\nquantities of human hair, most of\nlt from the remoter area* of central\nEurope, where the bobbing a nd\n\u2022hlngllng habit 1* almost unknown\nHe claims to hs\\> attended more\nfirst night* than any man In Eng-\nland. and has been tn th* theater\n\u2022bout three times a week for half\n\u2022 century.\nMISS BETTY WHITE\nRETURNS TO NAKUSP\nNAKUSP, B. 0. Sept. 3.\u2014Mlss\nBetty White, teacher for the Inonoaklin valley school, returned on\nMonday. Sh* was accompanied by\nher mother. Mrs. W. H. White, Mr*.\nG. W Batten-hall and small daughter and R. White, the Nakusp visitors returning by car the same dsy.\nMrs R. W. Herridge returned on\nWednesday, having spent the past\nwe*k tb* guest of Mrs. Levey of New\nDenver.\nMr. and Mrs W, Wagstaff *nd\nhiece. Mlss A. Reno! .a -\u00bb* Trsll, returned to their ho-rrie Monday having spent tbe past two week* a* the\nhouse guests of Mr. Wagstaff* parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Wagstaff,\nBroadway. Nakusp.\nMia* M. Kirk and her cousin. Miss\nOlive Merithew of Calgary and F.\nCrowell returned from Vancouver by\nauto Friday.\nMrs. J. Shelling and children. Allc*\n\u2022nd Brnest, accompanied by her\n\u2022later, Mrs. C. Galtes end brother,\nFred Wensley, returned from a motor\ntrip to Vernon on Thursday.\nYMLR   BRIEFS\nYMIR, B. C, Bept. 3\u2014Mr. ind\nMr*. 6. A. Curwen and Mrs. N\nPeterson were Salmo visitors on\nTuesday ev*oing and were tb* guests\nof Mr. snd Mn. C. A. Cawley.\nMr- end Mrs. J. H. Kublskl returned from Spokane on Tuesday\nwhere they had been visiting with\n. relatives.\nMi*. H. Stevens had a* her bridge\nand tea hour guests on Tuesday Mr.\nand Mr*. H. H Perkins and Mr. and\nMrs. Clarence Mclsase.\nLUDWIG GO__Vir\n-  I  -\nGIGANTIC FORCED SALE\nLudwig Rips the Lid Off and Knock* High Prices\nCuckoo on Entire Stock\nHere's the reason for this mighty slaughter of J. M. Ludwig's superior stock of Boots, Shoes, Baggage, Trunks, Furnishings,\netc., my first and only sale after 30 years of doing business in Nelson and district I am forced to unload my stock Cash is\nthe one pass word in this sale-over stocked-bought too heavy, present financial crisis forced this sale on-featuring values\nof such absolute unparalleled greatness that men and women will attend by thousands. Here the best in quality and the\nlowest In price for the next 15 days-Be Here-1. M. Ludwig.\nSale Opens\u2014Sat urday, Sept. 5 9 a.m Sharp\nLOOK FOR\nSALE SIGNS-\nLUDWIG'S\nstop:\n:read=\nGet Here Quick\nShare in This Mighty Sacrifice\nin Nelson\u2014the Hand of Fate\nWork! Fast, So-Hurryt\nMEN'S WEAR\n$1.75 WORK SHIRTS\nSizes 14\u201418. Full cat. Two pockets.\nDoabk stitdMd.\nfarad Sal* 894!\nCOTTON-JERSEY GLOVES\nForced Sale\u2014Pair   ||W\nOVERALLS\nRegular $2.00.   5 Pockets.    Copper\nrivetted.    8 oz.  Denim  Blue  only.\nForced Sale   $1.49\nUNDERWEAR\nMen's medium weight Knox-V brand\ncombinationi..   Regular $2.25.\nForced Sale     SI .48\nTHE MEN\nWILL RUN\n\"HOT FOOT\"\nHERE   ,\nSee Our Windows for\nSensational   Bargains.\nRemember the Date.\nDRESS SHIRTS\nCollar Attached\nSizes 14 to 18.   Regular $1.75.\nForced Sale  95\u00a3\nSOX\nMen's Fancy Cotton Dress or Work\nSox\u2014NUFF\u2014Sact.\nJ| Pairs for   50\u00a3\nMORE SOX\nHeavy Weight WORK\nSOX\u2014 Saturday Only.\n3 Pairs    50<\nFANCY RAYON DRESS SOX\nRegular 50c.\nForced Sale   2_<J\nGLOVES\nGenuine Horsehide Work Gloves.\nRegular $1.25.\nForced Price   7W\nWORK PANTS\nMen's   Kahki   Denim   Work   Pants.\nRegular .2.25.\nForced Sale   $1.49\nPULLOVER MITTS\nMade of Mule Skin Leather.\nPAIR  431\nTHE\nINDIAN\nSIGN IS ON\n\u2014LUDWIG\nSTOCK\nMUST\nGO\nAlarm Clocks\nWhy be without one?\nGuaranteed lo keep time.\nSouvenir of the Rockies\nON SALE   89\u00a3\nHARNESS,\nSADDLES-\nAH Marked Down\nin Price\nBUY\nNOW!\nJAKE PARTS WITH\nEVERYTHING BUT\nHIS WIFE-BUY\nNOW-Cash Wanted\nWhat a Bull is Supposed to Do In a China Shop Is Harmless Recreation Compared with the Pricesmash Here\nSHOES\nQualify at Low Prices\n1 LOT ONLY\nMEN'S FINE CALF\nDRESS BOOTS\nBlack and brown. Goodyear welts.\nRubber heels.   All sizes.   Widths\nC-D-E.    Value to 17.50.\nFORCED SALE   $3.45\nWORK BOOTS\nHere Men Solid Leather Work\nBoots in Black or Brown.   Guaranteed to wear.    Regular  $4.50.\nFORCED SALE   $2.69\nDRESS SHOES-OXFORDS\nMen's Fine Calf Leather Dress\nOxfords.   Goodyear Welts.   Rub-\nber heels.   Regular $5.00.\nFORCED  SALE     $2.95\nHERE'S-BETTER\nPadmore and Barnes Best English Make (ienuine English Box\nCalf Leather. Hand finished Boots\nand Oxfords. Black and Brown.\nRegular $10.00.\nFORCED SALE   $6_45\nBAGGAGE\nThat Must Go\nTravelling\n5 Only-Suit Case\nSaturday t__ 9Q\nMorning  31.03\n1 Only Ward-Robe\nTrunks\n4  Drawers,  swing  top,   8  coat\nhangers, wood fiber cover, brass\ntrimmings.    Regular  $45.00.\nSED $31.45\nSteamer Trunks\nThese trunks are made of the best\nmaterials.    All brass trimmings.\nBest locks. Four-ply construction\nharwood slats on bottom.   Size 20\nby 40 inches..   Regular $12.50.\nFORCED\nSALE  \t\n$9.85\nATTEND\nTHIS SALE\nBY ALL MEANS\n\u2014CRANK  UP\nLIZZIE-\nCOME\nBOYS' SCHOOL     boys.    Sizes  1  to  5.\nSHOES Regular $4.00.\nAll leather school or SATURDAY   _0 CZ\ndress   boots   for   the ONLY 06.00\nMORE BOYS' SHOES\nSizes 11 to 13y,.\nSATURDAY fl.0 OQ\nONLY  0\u00a3i.m\\V\nA FLYING START\u2014SATURDAY\nTHE STOCK WONT LAST LONG-LUDWIG HAS PRICED EVERY\nARTICLE IN THE HOUSE TO MOVE QUICKLY.\nLADIES'\nPURSES\nSEE THESE\n25% \u00b0\u00ab\nGOLF CLUBS\nALL MUST GO\n25% Wl\nTENNIS\nRACKETS\nBEST MONEY WILL\nBUY1\nMen's\nPullover\nSweaters\nSEE THESE NOW!\n98C\nNOTICE\nfoOff\nALL SALES FINAL\u2014NO CHARGES - NO REFUNDS \u2014 CASH ONLY\nSWEAT PADS\u2014Gold back\nheavy Kelt Sweat Pads.\nON rjfz\nSALE   'JC\nLUNCH BASKETS\u2014Made\nlo last, of heavy metal.\nRegular $1.10. 7<2\u201e\nFORCED SALE        l\u00b0^\nMETAL FLASKS\u2014 Hammered Nickel Hip Pocket\nsize. Reg. $l..fl. QQ_.\nSALE     VVK\/\nA Small Deposit Will Hold\nAny Article\u2014Buy Now!\nLADIES' BAGGAGE\n2 ONLY\nFITTED DRESSING CASES\nOver Our Night Bag\nArt Silk lining.   Brush, Comb, Mir-\nror to Match.   Neat silk lined with\nTray.   Regular $32.50.\nFORCED SALE  _ $24.45\n4 ONLY\nPATENT LEATHER HAT\nBOXES\nCow Hide Bindings.   Lock and two\ncatches.    Cloth  lined.    2   pockets.\nRegular $6.00.\nFORCED SALE   $345\n3 Only\nLADIES' TOURIST  AUTOPACT\nHipo Grain Leather.    With pitted\ncoat hanger and toilet case.   Neat\nall silk lining.   Regular $11.50.\nFORCED SALE  $7,95\nCLUB BAGS\nPriced from:\n'.95 ,0 $35.00\nNO PENCIL CAN\nFIGURE LOSSES!\nWatches \u2014 Clocks Cutlery \u2014\nRazors \u2014 Hand Bags \u2014 Suit\nCases \u2014 Trunks \u2014 Bags \u2014\nSporting Goods \u2014 Entire Stock\non Sale\u2014Hurry!\n$15000      Entire Stock\nMust be raised\nin the next 10\ndays hence this\nSale\u2014Come\nOne! Come\nAll!!\non Sale\u2014No\nReserve-\nBuy Here\nmsmw'\n13MEj\nEVER HELD IN NELSON\nAND DISTRICT\nJ. M. LUDWIG\n312 BAKER STREET\nHARNESS, TRUNKS, BAGS, BOOTS, SHOES - THE\nBIGGEST SALE IN ALL CANADA EAST OR WEST\n w\nREV.  C.  ADDYMAN  AND\nBRIDE HONORED\nAT MOYIE\nMOYIE. B. C, Sent. t~-Ux. and\nUta. J, W. nt-h had aa their\ndimmer tueala on Jrlday evening\nuae. ChtrlM Addyman and bla\nbride and Mr. and Un. John -_lla\nof Obapman Camp. l*ter IB the\nevening aona 80 Invited gueata ar.\nneed lo t_-h Uu __v_.w\u00bb_i happl-\naaee. Tha evening wm apent in\n____. eketchea and refreehmenta\n\u2022ere tansi. Mr. and Mr*. *\"\u00bb_\u2122\u00bb\nware the recipient* of many beautl-\nful and uaefnl Ittte.\nMra. 0. Jamea apent aeveral daya\nin create* durinj tha wee*, tba\ngutet 01 Mr. and Mra, Oeorge\nBourne.\nMn. M. Conrad, with her two\nlittle grand-daughter,. Gertrude and\nBet*-, returned to her home after a\nthree weeU' vlalt with ber eon\u00bb-\nIn-law and daughter,, Mr. and Ura.\nJ. W. McLean and Mr. and Mn. D. A.\nItuark of Ohelan Pall,, Waah.\nMr. and Mra. John mile and Mn.\nT. K. Jonea and children, all of\nchapman Camp, returned to their\nhome oa Sunday evening after\nSpending a week holidaying ln Moyle\nJack Andrew, and Mlaa H. Marun-\nehak motored to Yahk on Saturday evening.\nMr, ahd Mra. Nelaon L. Smith and\nlittle eon, Eddie, Of Cranbrook.\n-lilted Mr. smith, parent,, Mr. and\nMra. R. A. Smith, on Thuraday.\nMile Annie Marunchak of Wyclltfe\nwaa tha gueet of her alitor, Helen,\nover tha week-and. at the home of\nMT. and Mn. R. A. Smith.\nMr. and Mn. J. Kennedy of Cran-\nfarook wen the gueet, of Mr. and\nMn. _*. Oulndon on Sunday evening.\nMr. and Mn. R. S. Walker and\nfamily returned home on Sunday\nafter ependlng their holiday! at\nEholt, B. C.\nMT. and Mn. mtwblitle and\nfamll. of Chapman Camp were tbe\nguesta of Mr. and Mra. W. E.\nAndrew, on Saturday.\nMr. and Mra. Ra; Curran and\nfamily of Chapman Oamp were the\ngueata of Mn. Mary Conrad on\nSunday.\nICre. a. A. Smith returned to\nMoyle on Saturday evening, after\n\u2022ponding a week', -Kit among frlenda\nand relatives In Kimberley and\nChapman Camp.\nJohn Andenon, after two week'a\nholiday, apent at the home of Mr.\nnad Mra. A. Johnion of Sunnyilde\nranch, loft on Monday for EMora,\nAlta... to -lalt with hi, -liter.\nMn. W. E. Andrews and daughter, Loll, were the gueete of Mn.\nJaok nailer of Cranbrook on Thure-\n. day.\nMr. and Mn. Algot Johnson had\naa their gueite over the week-end\nMr. and Mn. Albtn Johnson and\nfamily of Kimberley, Mr. and Mra.\nDevrhnrat of Chapman Oamp, Mr.\nand Mre. O. Beneon and children\nof Kootenay Orchard,, Mr. and Mn.\nCharlea Nelson and children of Cranbrook and Mr. and Mra, A. strand\nof Ryan, B. 0.\nBunny Deeaulnler, accompanied by\nhla ileter. Bather, and W, R. French\nmotored to Cranbrook on Monday\nevening. Mlaa Desaulniers stayed ln\nthat city where she will be attending\nhigh school and ; 1a making her\nMow with Mn. B. Micharloff while\nthat*.\nBoa Serpent\nt-TJ- MMON  DAILY  KIWI, NBMON,  B.   ...  FBTOAT  MOBNTNO,   SEPT-MBE!  4,   I.St\"\nRELIEF CAMP IS\nORGANIZED\nAT ELKO\nPBKN1JB, B. 0. Bttpt. 8,\u2014\nThe public works department of\nth\u00ab provincial government bave organised a camp at Elko for the\npurpoee of finishing the connections\nto tbo new Mott hill grade about a\nmile and a half west of Elko. The\nwork U being done under the unemployment, relief schedule.\nMftS. ANDERSON LEAVES\nSOUTH SLOGAN FOR\nSPOKANE\n\u2022OUTH SLOCAN, B. C, Sept. 3\u2014\nMrs. Brio Anderson has left with\nher eon, Tom, of Trail, for o two\neO,_w' motoring trip to Spokane where\nshe will visit her son and daughter-\nin-law, Ur. and Mrs. John Anderson,\nMr. and Mn. O, w. Humphry are\non a motoring trip to East Kootenay.\nA genial enthusiasm ls to the body\nof an argument what the breath of\ntbe Almighty was to the yet uncivilized Adam.\u2014Magoon,\nCAPTURED IN LAKE  EEII\nZoologist* are trying to Identify\n18-foot \"sea-serpent\" brought ashore\nfrom Lake Erie at Bundusky, Ohio,\nby two Cincinnati, O., cement -pales-\nmen, who said they captured the\nserpent whUe fishing from a rent*-,\nrowboat in Sandusky Bay, believing\nIt waa a python. \"It la a tropical\nserpent,\" said Harold L. Madison,\ncurator of the Cleveland Museum of\nNatural History. Reporting the capture to authorities, Clifford Wilson\nand Francis Bagenstose, the salesmen, said tbey were en route home\nIrom strlner's convention ln Cleveland, and stopped here to fish.\n\"We had Just cast our lines when\nthe serpent raised Its head from tbe\nwater, near the boat,\" Wilson said.\n\"I grabbed an oar and struck lt,\nthinking it meant to attack us. The\nsnake rolled over in the watn and\nlay still. We thought It waa dead,\nand hauled lt aboard.\" The snake\nrevived after H wa\u00a7 placed ln a box,\nhe aald. They took the serpent\nto a Sandusky gsrsge after the manager of their hotel would not permit\nthem to keep lt in their room. The\nabove picture ls of a python similar to the one caught.\nMISS McKIE LEAVES\nTHE FORKS FOR\nCOAST\nORAND FORKS, B. C. Sept. t.\u2014\nMlss Matron McKle left Monday\nmorning for Vancouver where ahe\nwill act as substitute teacher.\nBruc^ Brown, wbo has been spending the holiday wtlh hla parents,\nJudge and Mrs. J .R. Brown, returned Monday to Penticton to resume hia duties on the public school\nstaff  at that dty.\nS. W. Duck of Vancouver arrived\nln Orand Porks on Sunday and will\noccupy the position on the staff of\nthe Canadian Bank of Commerce\nformerly held by Mrs. U. Roes, nee\nMlss Isobel Bowen.\nMlss Helen Talbot, who had been\nvisiting for a few days tn Trail, returned to the city on Sunday.\nMisses Helen and Frances Banders\nof Christina Lake, spent Sunday ln\nthe city,\nUra. w. M. Cowans and family\nreturned Saturday from Christina\nLake, where they have been holidaying for the past two month*.'\nMisses Ruth, Marie and Alio* McMillan returned to Vancouver on\nMonday morning after spending the\nvacation wtth their father, H. McMillan.\nC. Hebbs and J. Sparkes of ttie\nhigh school staff returned Sunday\nftom the coast,.\nMISS WILLEY LEAVE*\nBONNINGTON\nBONNINGTON FALLS, B, 0., Sept.\n8.\u2014Mlss Ruth Willey has left to resume her school studies. ln Vancouver and Alan Willey left on\nMonday to attend college in Spokane.\nMr. and Mrs. R. Greyson, who have\nbeen spending a vacation in Trail\nand  other point*,  have returned.\nThe Anglo-Saxon name for January was \"Wulf-monuth,\" wolves betng then more ln evidence through\nhunger and cold; later it beoame Se\naeftera  gecflo\u2014\"the  After  Yule.\"\nLord Roberts was only one of\nfamous naval and military leaders\nwho had lost the sight of one eye;\nothers were Lord Wolseley and Lora\nNelson.\nFish skin is the latest material to\nbe used in making women'* shoes.\nIt looks like costly silk, feels like\nemery paper, and is said to be very\ntough wearing.\nVice stings us even ln our pleasures, but virtue consoles us'even in\nour  pains.\u2014Colton.\nThe Magic Touch\nPHOTOORAP-TV  WINS  WEST  MUZI.\nThla   tateres-ing   photograph,   made   hy   John   Morris,   Toronto,   was\nrrded ttmt prlee of $100 ln the Ontario child picture contest as part of\nInterl-apanal competition.\nOther Places in BritisK Columbia:\nHave Found\nBeer by the Glass\n* \u25a0   '' * *\nHas Improved Conditions and Not\na Single Place Which Has\nEstablished Beer Parlors\nHas Later Voted Against Them\n.   '____'.\n\u25a0     :\nMany place, in British Columbia have first voted against\nsale of beer by the glass, and then, after experience of increase in bootlegging and its attendant evils have voted Tn\nfavor of beer parlors.\nNot a single town or district in British Columbia which\nhaa voted to establish sale of beer by the glass has later voted\nagainst beer parlors.\n' There is significance in the fact that more and more places\nare voting for beer parlors and yet not a single place which has.\nonce established beer parlors has voted against them.\nThe reason is that sale of beer by the glass has resulted in\nan improvement in conditions.\nMAKE LAW ENFORCEMENT EASIER\nBeer parlors reduce bootlegging to a minimum and make\nenforcement of the law against bootlegging easier, because once\nbeer parlors are established public sentiment against bootlegging\nlines up strongly behind the police in enforcing the law.\nSale of beer by the glass reduces the consumption of hard\nliquors. It is cheaper to get a glass of beer at a beer parlor\nthan to go and buy hard stuff by the bottle.\nVote for Beer-by-the-Glass and Better Conditions in Nelson.\nTOURISTS PREFER BEER\nAmerican tourists enjoy a glass of beer. They usually pn\u00bb\nfer it to hard liquors, because they can get all the hard liquor\nthey want in the United States. But they can't sit down and\nenjoy a glass of beer openly and legally and therefore take a\ngreat deal of pleasure out of doing so in British Columbia,\nNelson is losing business at present because it has no beer\nparlors, while tourists who come here are drinking more potent\nliquors than they would if they could get beer by the glass.\nPROTECTS YOUNG PEOPLE\nNo minor can get a drink in a beer parlor. Proprietors\nhave too much at stake to take chances with the law. This is\nan important point, because there is nothing to prevent minors\nfrom buying from bootleggers.\nSale of beer by the glass has the effect, also, of reducing\nthe \"flask\" habit. Too many young people under present conditions are consuming liquor from flasks and bottles.\nThere are beer parlors throughout the district. Why should\nnot Nelson have them, too?\nImportant\u2014All who are registered on the PROVINCIAL\nVOTERS LIST for the NELSON ELECTORAL DISTRICT\nhave the right to vote. You do not have to be a property\nowner and you do not have to live within the city limits. But\nyou must be on the provincial voters list to be qualified.\nNelson Moderation Committee\nCommittee Rooms Phones 204\u2014841\u2014846\n PAGE  TO.\nel-I MS-SON DAILT NEWS, KXlSOIf. B.   _., FRIDAY  MOBNTNO.\n4, un<\n$\nfe^^Want Ad Pa__e #___, Sfelg\nr_t_>_.\nMRS. L. M. VIPOND TO\nMAKE HER HOME IN\nTRAIL FOR A TIME\nNAKUSP, B. C. Sept. 3.\u2014Among\ntin many visitors to attend the\nWoman's Inatltuta meeting held In\nNakusp Tuesday were Mrs, V. S. McLachlan of Victoria. Mra. H. H. Pitts\nof Nelson. Mrs. Keffer, Mrs. Williams, Mrs. Stones Sr., of Burton,\nMrs. Stones 3r\u201e of Burton. Mrs.\nStevens of Creston. Mn. O. V. Whit*\nof New Denver, Mrs. C. V. Whit* of\nHew Denver, Mrs. P. Kirk of New\nDenver, Mrs. Walter Denholm of Vancouver, Mrs. Hlldred Gardner of\nTtaH, Mrs. H. Turner of Victoria.\nG. Hunter Oardner motored to\nTrail on Sunday, returning on Monday accompanied by his daughter,\nMss Hlldred Gardner of Trail.\nWalter Denholm of Vancouver\nspent the week-end with Mrs. Ven-\nholm's parents, Mr. and Mrs. G.\nHunter Gardner. I\nMr. and Mrs. J. W. Dougan and j\nchildren of Trail, who have been\nvisiting Mrs. Dougsn's parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. G. Hunter Oardner of\nGlenbank, returned to their home\nby motor on Sunday.\nMrs. Stevens of Creston is the\n' house-guest ot Mrs. Ralph Isllp.\nMrs. Walter Denholm of Vancouver\nand two young children are visiting\nwith BIr. and Mrs. O. Hunter Gardner of Glenbank, Nakusp.\nH. W. Herridge and family spent\nthe weak-end in New .Denver, the\nguests of Mr. and Mrs. Levey.*\nMrs. L. M. Vlpond left on Monday for Trail where she will make\nher home for some time.\nWANT  AND   CLASSIFIED\nADVERTISING\nOne Insertion 10 cents a line\nBlx Insertions 40 cents a Una\non* month 91.30 a line\nMinimum two lines.\nSo  extra charge  Is  charged,\nlrth   notices   free   of  charge\nDeaths,    marriages    and    cards    ol\nthanks, 20 cents  per  line\nFuneral   flowers   15. cents  per  line\nNews  of  tb* Day  items,  ao cents\nPer line.\nNO  ! X TKA COST IF CHARGED\nDEATHS\nit)\nMACDONELL\u2014Archie D., age 78\nyears, passed away ln Trail. Body\nwill rent at the family home, 310\nObservatory street, Nelaon. until\n8:4s Saturday morning thence to\nthe church of Mary Immaculate\nwhere requiem mass will be celebrated at 0 o'clock. Nelson time,\nRev. Father J. C. McKenzle officiating. Howell Funeral Home In\ncharge. Interment Nelson.    (7HJ2.\nINDEX 10 CLABSIFUD ADtf\nAGENTS  WANTED\nAt   JMOB1LE8  FOB HIM\nAL1UMBOB1LE8 WANTED\nAUTOMOBILES FOB SALE\nBIRTHS\nBEES\nBOATS, LAUNCHES, FOB BENT (431\nBOATS, LAUNCHES, FOB SALE  (44\nBOATS. LAUNCHES. WANTED\nBUSINESS OPPOBTtNlTlES\nCANABIES   FOB  SALE\nCATS AND DOGS FOB SALE\nCATS AND DOGS WANTED\nDEATHS\nDKESSMAKING ._.___,    tii_-\nFABM AND DAIRY PRODUCE    <39)\nFABM  PROPERTY IOR SALE    JM)\nFOB BALE OR EXCHANGE (IO\nFOB SALE  OR RENT mmam ]*_)\nFURNISHED BOOMS FOR BENT (15)\n(12)\nill\n(55)\n181\n.8!\n<50\n12.\n_'>\nt'-HMT.BE FOB SALE\nURE\n.AMI\nHUT   WANTED\nHOL8ES  FOB BUM\nlltll.S\nIN\n.  WAMED\nilOJUAM\nBridesmaid\nNakusp Institute\nHears Mrs. Pitts and\nMrs. V. S. McLachlan\nNAKUSP. B. C. Sept. ..\u2014The September meeting of the Nakusp Women's Institute waa held Tuesday\nAfternoon ln Mr. Leary's hell. Mrs.\nO. Hunter Oardner. president, ln the\nehUr. Mrs. V. 8. McLachlan of\nVictoria, superintendent of Women's\ninstitute, was also preeent snd Mrs.\nH. H. Pitts, president of the Nelson\nInstitute snd many other visiting\nmembf\"''- from Burton and New Dcn-\nTer, al.o Mrs. Stevens of Creston.\nAfter routine business Mra. McLachlan save a powerful address on\nthe work of the Women's Institute\nand Mrs. H. H. Pitts gave an Interesting talk on \"Demonstrations\" and\ntheir value. Mrs. 0. L. Herridge was\nhostess to a delightful afternoon\ntea to between 40 and 50 members\nand visitors and waa assisted In serving by Mlss Florence Dllly. Mlss\nMsrlorle Butlln and Mies Mary Kirk\nBEATS   BKIDE   TO   ALTAR\nKlty Kresge, daughter of the mil\nllonalre five and ten-cent store meg'\nnate, who planned on being only a\nbridesmaid when she sailed with her\nsister. Ruth, for London last month,\nhas nosed out her sslter in the race\nto the altar. It has just been learned\nthat Kitty was secretly married on\nJuly 8 to Carl Cerlssohn WUk, a\nnaturalized Briton of Swedish birth.\nHe ls a cloae friend of Ruth's fiance,\nRufus Clark Caulklns of Detroit, and\nmet the pretty 22-year-old blonde\nwhen the three Americans arrived\nln London the end ot May.\nINSURANCE\nINVESTMENTS\nLITERARY\nLIVESTOCK FOB SALE\nLIVESTOCK WANTED\nLOST  AND FOUND\nMACHINERY\nMARRIAGES \t\nMINING.  TIMBER, LUMBER\n1I8CELLANE0.S\nMISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE\nMISCELLANEOUS   WANTED\nMUSICAL  INSTRUMENTS.\nNOTICES\nNURSERY PRODUCTS\nNUB8INO\nI'KHSONAL\nPLANTS\nPOULTRY  AND EGGS\nPROPERTY   FOR   SALE\nPROPERTY  WANTED\nRABBITS   FOR   SALE\nRANCHES FOB RENT\nROOM   AND  BOARD\nROOMS TO RENT\nROOMS WAMED\nSCHOOLS __\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nSTORES  TO BENT\nTEACHERS WANTED\n(46)\n(10)\n(.1)\n(20)\n_\u2022>\n(33)\n.48)\n_\u2022(\n(.3)\nii!\n(56)\nCl\u00bb\n(29\n(27\n(28;\nm\ni8-\n(\u00ab\n<!_!\n_5(\n(53)\n(26)\n(34)\n(36)\n(25)\ntil'\nI\nif.\nPERSONAL\nJ31\n1 I 1 SONG-WRITERS I I 1\nlongs of commercial valu# published, exploited ,and marketed on\n* Mty-flfty basis. Writs or csll.\nJoe Hearst, 621 Winnipeg piano\nBldg..   Winnipeg. (0934)\nLEGAL NOTICES'\nLIQUOB-CONTBOL    PLEBISCITES\nACT\nProclamation   of   Returning   Officer\nPROVINCE OF BRITISH COLUMBIA\nIn   tne   Nelson   Electoral   District\nTO WIT:\nPUBLIC MOTICB la hereby given to the Electors of Nelson of\nthe Electoral District aforesaid thnt\nI hav\u00ab received HU Majesty's Writ\nto me directed, and bearing date\nthe 19th day of August, commanding me to cause the following question, namely;\u2014\nDo you approve  of  the  sale\nof beer by the glass In licensed\nSremises without a bv under\nlovernment control and regulation?\nto be submitted according to the\n\"Liquor-control Plebiscites Act\" to\nthe said Electors of the Electoral\nDistrict aforesaid; and. further, that\nln obedience to the said Writ a poll\nshall be opened at eight o'clock ln\nth\u00ab forenoon and shall bR closed\nat eight o'clock In the afternoon,\nPacific Standard Time, on the 6th\nday of September for taking and\nreceiving the votes of the \"1,d\nelectors aforesaid at the respective\nplaces  following :\u2014\nPOLLING   DIVISIONS\nNelaon       Eagle  Hall\nFairview .... Hume school Auditorium\nOf which  all  persons  are hereby\nrequired   to   take   notice   and   to\ngovern   themselves   accordingly.\nGIVEN under my hand at Nel\nson B. C., this 36th day of August,\n1081.\nG.  HORSTEAD,\n(6086) Returning Officer.\nSITUATIONS  WANTED\nMH\nGENTLEMAN WILLING TO SHARE\nexpense with motorist leaving for\nCalgary or Edmonton. 18th or\n14th of Sept. Apply Box 7024.\nNelson Daily News. (7024)\nFEMALE DISORDERS AND OBSTET-\nrtcal Specialist. Write to Dr.\nJTomm, S. p., 6162 Arcade Bldg.,\nSeattle. Treatment by mall.\n(7103)\n'IF YOU WANT A RICH WIFE?\"\nor \"Wealthy Husband?\" Write\nBox   100-8A.   Detroit,  Mich.\n(7074)\nSeveral Thousand\nBushels of Grain\nThreshed, Nakusp\nNAKUSP, B. C. Sept. a\u2014Several\nthousand bushels of grain have\nbeen threshed during the past two\nweeks in the Brouse-Glenbank district, harvested in splendid condition. Among the farmers are G.\nHenke. P. Henke, C. Hamblln. L.\nHascarl, Jr, \\w Fellows, E. C. John-\naon, G. W. Battershall. K. Nuebrand,\nB. Parklnaon, J. Railey. W. Rogers,\nW. H. White and M\u00bb. M. Balrd.\nYahk Girls Attend\nSchool  at  Nelson\nYAHK, B. C, Sept. 8.\u2014Mlss __*m-\nalda walker left on Monday to\nattend school In Nelson. Mlss Walker expects to complete thlrdw and\nfourth year ln one.\nMlss Sybil Wllkle, who has spent\nthe summer months at the home\nof her parent* In Vancouver, returned on Monday to be on the\nteaching staff. Miss Wllkle will\nteach Division 3 of the public school.\nMrs. Dan Hamilton and daughter,\nJune, accompanied by Mrs. L. P.\nWilliams and son. \"never, motored to\nCranbrook on Monday. June remained in Cranbrook to attend high\nachool.\nPete Herlc of Creston spent a\ncouple of days with Danny Hamilton, returning to his home on Monday.\nMrs. Younqulst and daughter of\nCranbrook visited for a couple of\ndays this week at the home of Mr.\nand  Mrs.  George Pearson.\nMlss Margaret Grexton left on\nMonday for Plncher Creek. Alta.,\nwhere   se   will   attend   school.\nHarry Cross, who spent the holl-\ndajs ln Kimberley with hla aunt,\nMrs. Taylor, returned to his home\nwith his parente.Mr. and Mrs. Fred\nCross on Monday.\nMiss Hazel MacCartney left on\nTuesday to attend third year high\nichool  m  Cranbrook.\nMiss Edith Nelson went to Nelson\nSunday to attend school. .\nAinsworth's Oldest\nLady Has Birthday\nAINSWORTH, B. C, Sept. 8.\u2014B. T.\nO'Orady of Nelaon and J. Hayes of\nNew York went up to the Buckeye\nmine to make an Inspection of lt\nfor W. Dalgllsh of New York, who\nis the owner. W. Howser acted as\nguide. They made the trip on\nThursday.\nAmong those who registered at the\nhotel were: H. N. Smith of Vancouver, B. T. O'Grady. Nelaon; A. C.\nHayes of Highland Park, New York;\nW. H. Howey of Trail; Mr. and\nMrs. Johnstone of Trail; G. T. Porteous snd family of Nelson; E, A.\nTruscott, Nelson.\nThe oldest resident of Ainsworth,\nMrs. Dumas, celebrated her eighty-\nthird birthday anniversary on Sunday. \"Grandma,\" as she Is known\nby her intimate friends, received\ncongr^fulattone from many and was\nalso the recipient of many bouquets\nof flowers and gifts.\nSchool rwpened on Tuesday with\nMlss Elsie Truscott again in charge.\nJ. B. Fletcher, secretary of the school\nboard, was present at the opening\nand gave a talk, asking the children\nto do their best at school and also\nto help keep the school, which has\nbeen newly decorated, in good condition. The children, after receiving their new readers, were dismissed\nfor the day.\nHelena, mother rt i he Emperor\nConatantlne, is credited with having\nfound, burled, the Cross of Calvary,\nbeing canonized In result.\n\u25a0Hie price of liberty la eternal vlgl\nlance, and the price of wisdom ls\n\u2022ternal  thought.\u2014Birch.\nPOR   PURELY   MUSICAL   PERSONS.\nH.   M.   Angus,   piano   and   organ\ntuner,   Phone   260L   evenings.\n I (7013)\nWANTED   BY   THOROUGHLY   EX\nperlenced stenographer, bookkeeper, etc., whole or part time wort\nAlso publtc stenography. Box 7028\nDaily News. (7038)\nHELP WANTED\njm\nCANADA'S FOREMOST COLLEGE\nOf beauty culture offers special\nInducement* ln th* omg ot ratea\nand terma for summer classes in\nbeauty culture, including hair-ut-\nting, marcelling finger waving,\npermanent waving, hair dyeing,\nmanicuring, massage, hairwork.\netc. Moderate fee, on easy terms.\nPrepare yourself now for a high-\nsalaried position. Tools free. Moler\nBeauty College, 203 W. Hastings\n8t\u201e   Vancouver,  B.  0. (8807)\nPREPARE FOR ABETTER JOB\nEARN MORE MONEY AND BE SURE\nof steady employment, or start\nup for yourself. The barber trade\noffers you these opportunities.\nOur expert teachers will teach\nyou to become a first-class barber.\nFre\u00bb tools, convenient paying for\ntuition, pay While learning. Moler\nBarber Bchooi. sey. 7668, 20 W.\nHastings, Vancouver, B. C. (0006)\nEMPLOYMENT\nFULL AND SPARE TIME WORKERS\nmaking good incomes selling \"Imperial Art\" \"Made In Canada\"\nPersonal Christmas Cards. Write\nnow for particulars while agencies\nstill available. Sample book free\nto responsible people, British\nCanadian publishing Co, 61 West\nWellington,   Toronto. (7136)\nTHE KLEEN-E-ZE BRUSH CO.\nRequires two men with cars, one\nfor Nelson-Trail block one for\nCranbrook block, to demonstrate\ntwisted-in wire brushes, direct to\nthe homes, product British.\nCheapest and finest quality, prefer experienced men In territory.\n23 Commerce Bldg., 640 Bastings\nWest,   Vancouver. (7123)\nWANTED\u2014EXPERIENCED GENERAL\nmaid    accustomed    to    children.\nApply  Box  7030,  Daily  News.\n(7030)\nAGENTS WANTED,.\nJizi\nLADY   CANVASSER-GOOD   MONET\nmaking proposition. Mann Rutherford. (7154)\nBUSINESS    COLLEGE    GIRL   WILL\ngive services,  exchange for room,\nboard.  P.  O.   Box   347,   Nelson.\n(7088)\nEXPERIENCED        GIRL        WANTS\nwork. Box 7056. Nelson  News.\n(7065)\nFURNISHED ROOMS FOR BENT (15)\nFOR RENT\u2014TWO AND THREE\nroom, fully modern, furnished\nsuites. We supply everything.\nPhone 41 or apply Flemings Cablu\nCamp. (7084)\nFURNISHED ROOM, PLEASANT\nsurroundings, Board If desired.\nPhone   158R. i7011)\nMre. Theresa Habeooat, 63 years\nof age, of Gearhart, Or., la the\ndriver of a big wood truck. Part'\nof her wages is paid to __. housemaid who takes care of her  home.\nTERRACE APTS,. FURNISHED OR\nunfurnished suites. Apply P. B.\nPoulln. <667_i.\nFURNISHED    8UTTE\nPhone 300R.\nRENT.\n(7005)\nROOMS  TO  BENT\n-sm\nFOR RENT\u2014TWO ROOM APART-\nment furnished or unfurnished.\nApply Petty Apartments, 210 Fall\nstreet. (7087)\nTERRACE APTS., FURNISHED OR\nunfurnished suites. Apply P. E.\nPoulln. ai35)\nLIVESTOCK    FOB   SALE ,\nJM>.\nTWO NEWLY PRESHENED AYR-\nshire heifers, high quality stock,\ngentle and heavy producers. Choice\nof four, Alex Cheyne, totie. (7120)\nYORKSHIRE   PIGS.  EIGHT  WEEKS\nold. E. W. Slater, Harrop.  (7026)\nPOULTRY   AND   EGOS\n(U>\nPRODUCTION-BRED PULLETS AND\nheeding cockerels for sale at low\nsummer prices. Buy now. White\nLeghorns, Barred Rocks, Rhode\nIsland Reds, White Wyandottes\nBlack Minorca* and other breeds\nR. O. P. Co-op. Assn. of B. C.\nPoultry Breeders, 303 Winch Bldg.\nVancouver, (7053)\nhouses toe Man.\n__a_\n6   ROOM   HOUSE,   1   ______   BED\nrooms, bathroom   .tone basement,\nwarm   and   comfortable,   cloee   to\nSublle   and   bin.   tebooU.   Apply\n18  Robeon  Bt,  Phon.   809R.\n(710B>\nLITTLE -HOUSE, I BED BOOMS,\nbig living room modem bathroom, bright kitchen, stor. basement. Apply 018 Robeon St.,\nPhone  __.fl. (7108)\nFOR   RENT   -   HOUSE.   MODERN,\nthree   bedroom,,   fhon*   O.   E.\n(70BJ)\nM.BC__l__.-OC\u00ab fOB IAU      ____\n50.000  r\u2014n-   l   inch   used\n'black pipe, good oondltlon\n( oente per loot. Large atock ol\nother sizes. Enquiries eollclte-.\nSwarte Pipe Yard, 3.0 East 1st\nAve. Vancouver, B. o.        (7100)\nFOR SALE\u2014SECOND HAND PORT-\nable electrlo slnlger sewing machine. Also drop head Singer.\nAbove machines are both cheap\nand guaranteed. Apply singer\nSewing  Machine   Co. (7066)\nUSED OAR PARTS POR ALL\nmakes. Including Willis Knight\nfour. Grandview Auto Wreckers,\n2086 commercial Drive, Vancouver. (0987)\n1    BLACKSMITH'S    OUTFIT    COM-\nplete with 130 lb. anvil, 1 post\ndrill, blowers, vice and tools, Just\nnew. J. P. Morgan, Nelson. (7009)\nFOR SALE\u2014HEAVY STEEL FUR-\nnace In good condition. Apply to\nCharles Morris store. (7104)\nFOR SALE\u2014BARRELS. ______ BUR-\nlap sacks, white sugar sacks. McDonald   Jam   CO. (7084)\nFOR SALE\u2014DESK. BUFFST, SHOT-\ngun, rifle. Phone 808R.       (7031)\nWEALTHCE APPLES  \u00bb1   SACK.  DE-\nllvered. Phone 584L1. (7183)\nrtl-C-XLANEO-S\nEXTRAORDINARY SPECIAL!\nFOR BALDNESS\nThe greatest offer ln Canada. Hard\nTimes special, 843 value for 18.50.\nThe famous F. A. Franksr home\nt_atments for curing falling hair,\ndandruff and scalp Itch. No electricity required .use It anywhere.\n11 years' successful results. It's\nguaranteed. Free, a S3 box of the\nfamous Franks' wonderful healing\nointment for skin diseases sent\nwtth each order of above scalp\ntreatments for 10 days pnly. Mail\nyour money order today. Act now\nas the supply ls limited. Address\nto F. A. Franks, Scalp specialist,\n320 Montgomery Bldg.. Winnipeg.\n(7188)\nroom _*_ _____\n____\n ,. AHD   BOARD   UT   PRIVATE\nfamily.  Phone   I63R.\n\u00ab\u25a0?_____,:\n\u25a0.\u25a0..\u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0._-_\u25a0,. ,_____.      _\u00bb,\nWANTED TO BUY\u2014PORTABLE\ntyprawrlter with standard keyboard. Mum he cheap for cash.\nStats make, prloe auf where machine can be seen. \u00a3__ 7088.\nDally Hews. (7088)\n\u25a0HOPE-IT.   rog  s.yg\n-*\nMiiiiiinHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiii\nSuburban Property\n_\\ West Arm of Lake, abort die- _\\\ntones from Nelson Ferry.\n\u2014 30  acres\u2014half  acre  cultivated \u2014\ns \u2014ll fruit trees, small bouse, _j\nS water piped under pressure\u2014 _z\nS   Ideal  location for a Home. j[\nPrice\n$1250.00\nH. E. DILL\nE Firs and Automobile Insurance  S\n= 608  Ward  St. \u2014 Phone   180 =\n71111111111111111 _ 111111111111111 s 11 tl...:.: a ]T\nFOR SALE\u2014FRUIT RANCH. FIVE\nacres, ground all clear, five room\nhouse chicken house, water. Two\nmiles out Granite road. Apply Box\n1184.  Nelson. B. 0. (7103)\nFOR SALE\u20148 LEVEL LOTS, CLEAR-\ned unexcelled building site. A.\nW -Berry, 808 Houston St.    (7033)\nA-IOMOBIL-B FOB \u00bb*l| \\'tii\nMUST SELL 1,20 PLYMOUTH 6ED-\nan. cash 8270. terms .300: also\nlight delivery truck, good working\norder, good tires, too. Box 7131\nDally Hews. (7131)\nCHRISTIE TRUCK AND CAR PARTS\n1630 West 1st Ave, Vancouver.\nB. C. Largest reliable wrecking\ncompany. Power plants trailers\nand parts. .   (7099)\nCAT, AND POOS FPU SALE      r._)\nORAZINO FOR FEW\nabundance goodgrass, water and\nshade, fenoed. Three dollars per\nhead, month. Box 7133 Dally\nNews. (7133)\nLOST  AND  FOUND\n_____\nLOST\u2014OREY PERSIAN KnTEH,\nhas four white paws, white spot\non  nose.  Finder  Phone  828L.\n(7189)\nDACHSHUND PUPS. JTtOM IM-\nported parents, from 818 up.\nChinchilla rabblta, unrelated pairs\n3 months 12.00; 4 months 83.00;\nadults 84.00. Whatshan Kennels.   Needles,   B    C. (6968)\nBEARDY SHEEP DOG PUPS OF\nimported stock for sale. Natural\nworkers, easily trained. $6 each\nC.O.D. Write A. Fisher. Oeneral\nDelivery,  Medicine  Hat.  Alta\n(7134)\nMACHINERY\n____\nATTENTION TO FARMERS\nNew farm machinery at big discount. Complete stock of pipe, fit.\ntings, plumbing supplies, used\nfarm machinery, belting pulleys\nand sacks of all kinds. Canadian\nJunk Co., 802 Sixth avenue east,\nCalgary. (7084)\nDRAQ SAW, WADE !_KHN__ 4 HP.\nWhat offers. Mrs. Warden,  '\nBusiness ud\nProfessional Directory\nAccountants\nROGER M. HOTLAHD\nChartered Aocountani\nP.  a  Box   1868 Trail,\nAlft\nMunlor.\nOHAS.  F.  HUNTER\n. jbllc Accountant, Nalsoo\ndp-l   and   0_B______1   Audits.\n^^^^ ens..\nL.   A.   MUD\nPublic Accountant\nSuoosssor  to  w. H.  Faldlns,  OX\nBay Avenue Trail, 4. c.\nAssayerg\nB. W. Wlddowson, Box Allot nelson.\n8-  O. Stands.-  western      \t\nmSS>\nChiropractors\nDR. GRAY, OILKER BLK., HBLSOCT.\nDR. MT-TUN, X-RAY, ORAHBROOK\nDentists\nDR.  a. A.  C.  WALLEY\u2014308  Medleal\nArts  Building.   X-Ray,  Nelaon.\n01*4)\nEngineers\nOHAS. MOORE AHD H. D. DAWSON\nEngineers    and    Land    Surveyors.\nK. W. C. Blk.. Phone MS, Nelson.\nOl**)\nFlorists\nOrlzaelle. Greenhouses, Nelson. Oak\nflowers and floral designs.   (TIM)\nNELSON FLOWER SHOPPE. Fun\nline cut flowers at all time,, floral\ndesigns.   Phone   388. (TUT)\nJOHNSON'S GREENHOUSES. Flume\n342. Cut flowers, Potted Hants\nand Floral  Designs. (7148)\nInsurance and Real Estate\nR. W. DAWSON, Real Estate. Insurance, Rentals. Next Hlpperson\nHardware,  Baker  St. (7140)\nSecond  Hand  Stores\nThe   Ark,  dealers  ln  second   band\ngoods. Phone 684. (7180)\nTransfer\nWILLIAMS' TRANSFER\nIGGAGE. COAL AND WOOD\nPhone   108 (7181)\nATKINSON   TRANSFER.     Ooal   and\nWood.   Long distance hauling.\n(.IBS)\nWood Factory\nLawson's Wood Factory, 817\nSt.   Ws please our\nCorbin Wins Football\nCORBIN, B. C, Sept. 3\u2014 Corbin\nfootballers played Hgalnst Fcrnls on\nthe local field on Sunday afternoon,\nwinning the game from the visiting\nteam with .. score of 3-2.\nThe turtle dove migrates between\nthe British I.les and Africa, stopping |\nfor brief rest ln soutTTcrn Italy.\nScot\nAnger   makes  dull  men  wlty,  but\ntt keeps them  poor.\u2014Bacon.\nToday or Tonight\nTHE NELSON\nDAILT NEWS .\n144 or Hi\nCHAMPION  PIPER  AT  IS\nHarold Sutherland, 13, Canada's\nchampion bagpipe player, is now on\nvacation ln Ne:? York, with Mayor\nOeorge Ritchie of Halifax.\n \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\n\u2014\u2014\u2014*\u2014\u2014-\nmmmmmm\n\u2014\nIll\n*T__ HBUKH.  DAILY K_W\u00ab,  X-XaOV, B.  C, FUDAT  MOININO.   SETTS-BO.   _  l_J_\nmoe curne-\nMarket and Mining News\nMANY WESTERN CANADA MARKETS\nBUYING PEACHES FROM THE U.S.\nDkanagan Crop of Mclntoeh\nReds Lack Color; Kamloops Is Shipping\nVERNON, B. 0. Btpt. 8\u2014Haporta\nindicate that tha larger marlwts\nwhere cArloada can be hand-ad are\nbuying peaches from the United\nStates on Saturday last at Yakima,\nNo. l Bbertas were quoted st 23ft\ncents f.o.b. the cars. Since then\nthe prloe is about 30 cents. Without the protection of the duty\nOkanagan growers would be ln a\nbad way. As it is peaches from\nthe United States are on all tba\nmarkets that can absorb car lots.\nOkanagan peaches being mostly ln\ncenters receiving local shipments.\nThere ls a huge crop in the United\nStates and tbe shipping agencies\nappear to. be moving them regardless of costs. These peaches an said\nto be offering on Canadian markets\nat trifle below the $1.10 aaked for\nOkanagan  Elberta.   No.   l.\nItalian  prunes  are  moving   frtaly\nat 75 cents. The crop was not so\nheavy   as  anticipated   and   the  demand ls good.\nMCINTOSUXS   MOVING\nThe Kamloops district i\u00bb said to\nbs moving some Mcintosh Red apples. So far ths Okanagsn crop\nappears to lack color. It ls gaining\nthis slowly and lt la hoped that\nOkanagan growers will not ba stampeded into picking Macs by ths fact\nthat Kamloops may move ths whole\nof tba crop which only amounts\nto about 13 oars.\nIf ths Macs an to ba movsd\nat a fair pries this season thsy\nmust bav* color snd it m*y be\nbetter to let a few fall to ths\nground for the >*ks of the increase In color which will corns\nwith cooler nlgfils, especially If\nthere ls some rain. Commencement\nof picking Macs about September\n30 will prove beneficial. At least\nthis is tbe view expressed by several  shippers.\nCar movement la exceptionally\ngood and reports to the bureau of\nmarkets information to September\n3, show that 057 cars have gone\nout\nIn contrast to this ths packing\nhouses are doing next to nothing\n''packing apples. Only skeleton crews\nan employed and ths bulk deal\nseems likely to have a vary serious effect co the local labor situation. It is not usual to bave heavy\nstaff packing at this season of ths\nyear but, families dependent on\nthe work are becoming anxious.\nONTARIO DUCHESS\nIN WEST\nOntario Duchess are on the Winnipeg market with some bulk\nWealthies *h*re they are clashing\nwith the B. C.  Wealthies.\nOntario grapes offer a real threat\nto fruits from B. 0. this season.\nThe wineries are refusing to buy\nbecause of the competition by the\nAustralian wines. Concord grapes\nfrom Ontario it is predicted will\nmove west as far as Calgary. The\npirce at shipping point is only 85c\nfor a six quart basket. Okanagan\ngrapes will find their only outlet\non   tha  Pacific   coast.\nThe shippers council Is now composed of the 34 firms that nave\npaid thetr fees and only these will\nreceive the bulletins prepared by\nthe bureau of markets Information.\nVANCOUVER LIST\nMINES\nBid Ask\nBig   Missouri     . .31 _S\nGeorgia River  .0_V_ .OS..\nOoleonda      .31 .33\nMorton Wolleay  .01 .03\nInt 0 & C  .11\nGrand-lew    .03% JO.\nNational  Silver  .01\nNoble    Five  .03 _.\nPremlsr     .4. .80\nF\u00bbnd Oreille  .88 .76\nPorter Idaho   .08\nPioneer Gold  3.30 3.40\nBeeves McDonald   .21\nRuth Hope -   .08\nReno   Gold  -4 .38\nSllvercrsst      _0_\nSnowflake    .01\nOO-\nA  P  Consolidated      .07\nCommonwealth  ._ .30\nDalhousle  .18\nEastcrest  .08\nFabyan   -  ,   .00-\nMercury . _.  .10\nMcDougall Segur Ex   .03\nHome Oil _   .40\nMayland  _._ .18\nRoyalite       8.40\nBterllni!   Pacific   .08\nBROKER'S LOANS\nINCREASE\nWASHINQTON, Sept. 3\u2014 (AP)\u2014\nLoans to brokers and dealers held\nby New York Federal Reserve member banks for the week ending 8ep-\ntmber 3 were announced by ths\nFederal Resrve board today as tl.-\n380.000,000, representing sn incresss\nef J17.ooo.ooo ss compared with ths\npreceding week.\nCANADA BONDS\nW-NNmo, Sept. I\u2014Dominion ol\nCanada bonds were nuoted hers todsy ss follows:\nWar loan:\n1981, 6 psr osnt, w_o.\n1M7, 8 psr cent, 107.00.\nVictory loan:\n1913, 8_ pe;  osnt, 104.38.\nDM, 6_ psr osnt, 104.28.\n1987, 5_ per osnt, 110.40.\nWar loan renewal:\n1933, s_ per cent, 103.38.\nRefunding   loan:\n1943, 8 per osnt, 105.88.        '\n1940, 4_ pir esnt, 103.00.\n1944, 4_ per oent, 103.00.\n1948, 4V_ per cant, 103.00.\nConversion   losn:\n1988, 4V_ per cent, 101.60.\n1987, 4. per cent, 103.36.\n1988, 4_ per cent, 104_0.\n1989, 4V. per cent, 104.40.\nBULK APPLE RATE\nWLL NOT CHANGE\nVernon Board of Trade to\nMeet to Strengthen Com<\ning Application\nV-RNON, B. c, Btpt. 8\u2014Then Is\n(o be no ootnproee adjustment ln regard to the bulk apple rate application. Ths railways have said so.\nIn ths face of so direct a rebuff,\nPresident O. O. Nssbitt Is calling a\nmeeting of the Vernon board of\ntrade to _tf.__.hsn ths oommlttees\nhands so thsy csn prooeed so en.\ndorse Leon Ladner. application to\nthe railway commission for an eight\nclass freight rata on boxed apples.\nThe meeting will bt held on Wednesday night In the board of trad,\nroom.\nIn an enactor to make a settlement, the committee representing\nthe boards of trade on Vernon, Kelowna, penticton end Salmon Arm,\nsuggested that the railway grant s\nfictitious weight of a box of applea\nat 47 pounds Instead ol 50 t_ at\npresent.\nLeon Ladner, counsel for the prov.\nIncs of British Columbia, haa aaked\nthat the privy council bring down\nan unmet-let. decision of the appeal\non freight rates which ls stui before\nlt. If this appeal cannot be adjudicated at once he ls opposing the ap.\nplication by the railways for the wlp.\nIng out of the eight class rate snd\npressing for an order abolishing the\nfifth class rate which ths railways\nhave Imposed on boxed applea.\nTORONTO STOCKS\nLOWHUT CLOSE\nRenewed   Pressure   Against\nCarriers In New York Drops\nC. P. R. Lower\nTORONTO, Ont.. Sept. 3.\u2014Aug'\nmented by a major decline ln New\nYork, prices on the Toronto stock\nexchange today moved fractionally\nlower. Trading involved 11,130\nshares.\nRenewed pressurs against earners\nln New York caused C. P. R. to\ndip to a further new low of 19%.\nIt cloeed at 30. off '.. Other utilities went lower, Bell losing li.,\nsand Brazilian Traction moving\ndown V. to 16% against the Mllrels\nwhich gained 13 points. Montreal\nPower wss off 1V_ to 48. Base metals were lower. Smelters was off 8\nto 88 and Nickel was off V, to\n13 ..\nOils receded fractionally with low\ner prices ln New York, British Am\nerlcsn waa off V. while In.ema.lc-.\nsi petroleum and Imperial each lost\nn.\nMONTREAL STOCKS\nLogan 8 Bryan\nCHAIN.\nSTOCKS, BONDS, COTTON\nMEMBERS:\nNew York, Montreal and Vancouver  Stock   Exchanges,  Chicago Board of Trade, Winnipeg\nOraln   Exchange,  and   other\ntrading exchanges.\nPRIVATE  WIRE\nOFFICES:\nVancouver.  Spoksne,  Seattle\nBank of Montreal  \u2014\t\nBank of Nova Scotia \t\nRoyal   Bank _\nBank of Toronto _\t\nAbitlbi Power at Paper\t\nAsbestos Corporstlon \t\nAtlantic   Sugar _...-\nBell Telephone \u201e \u201e .....\nBrazilian Il_ Power\t\nCanada Bronse  ._\t\nCan. Car ft Foundry  -\nCanadian Cement  ...._...._\t\nCanadian Converters \t\nCsnsdlsn Industrial Alcohol.\nCanadian  Cottons\t\nCan. Oen. Electric  pfd  \t\nCons. Mining 8c Smelting \t\nDominion Bridge \t\nDominion Glaes  _\nDominion Textile\t\nA  P  Oraln\t\nImperial   Oil   \t\nLake of the Woods\t\nMassey  Harris   _\u2014\nMontresl    Power     \t\nMontreal   Telegraph \t\nMontresl Tramways  \t\nNational   Breweries    \t\nOgllvle Milling .....\nOntario Steel Products \t\nPenmans Ltd\t\nPower  Corporation   \t\nPrloe Bros \u2014 -\nQuebec Power _\t\nSo Canada Power .-\t\nSteel of Canada \t\nWsbasBo Cotton _ \t\nWinnipeg  Railway   \t\nWinnipeg Railway pfd - _\n340\n300\n835-\n318-\n3-\n35\n33\n135-\n16_\n33\n10\n0-\n80\n3\n10\n200\n86-\n33 VI\nSO\n68 V.\n4\n13\n5V\u00bb\n3%\n44%\n47\n167\n36 Vi\n188\n13\nM\n42\n.7\n|]\nM\n\u25a0\ntl\n10\nM\nCommon sense Is a phrase employed to denote toe degree of Intelligence, ssgsclty and prudence which\nIs common to all men.\u2014Fleming.\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelt\ning Co., of Canada, Ltd.\nTRAIL\u2014BRITISH COLUMBIA\nMsnufaeturera  of\nELEPHANT\n\u25a0rand\nCHEMICAL   FERTILIZERS\nSOLD BY NATIONAL rRCIT CO.\nProducers  and   Refiners   of\nTADANAC\nBrand\nELECfTROLYTIC\nAmmonium  Phosphite\nSnlphate of Ammonia\nTriple Superphosphate\nNELSON\nLead-Zinc\nCadmium-Bismuth\nMETAL MARKETS\nNBW  YOJUC.  Sept.  I  \u2014  Copper\n?uiet; electrolytic, spot snd future\n!_  to 7%.\nTin assy: spot and nearby 38.83;\nfuture  28.87.\nIron steady, unchanged.\nLead steady; spot Nsw York 4.40;\nEsst St. Louis 433\nZinc quiet: But St. Loula spot\nind  future 3.80.\nAntimony e.60.\nForeign bar silver 37% cents.\nAt London:\n__a_da_d copper, spot est 10s: luture \u00a333 7s 6d; electrolytic, spot US;\nluture \u00a388  10a.\nTin, spot till 3s 8d;  luturs 1110\nne ed.\nLead, spot \u00a311; futurs 111 13s Sd.\nMONTREAL STOCKS\nSKID DOWNWARD\nMontreal Power, the Normal\nLeader Shows Weakness;\nSmelters Down\nMONTREAL, Sept. 3.\u2014Under the\nInfluence of the lower trend ln\nNew York prloes on the Montreal\nstock exchange dropped downward\ntoday ss six lssuss established new\nlow levels for the year.\nMontresl Power, the active leader, showed weakness losing 1%\npoints at 44%. consolldatsd Smelters broke 7V4 points at 87 _ and\nWinnipeg Electric at the new low\nof 60 declined 4. Lata of ths\nWoods lost 3 at 6%. a new low,\nwhile Royal Bank closed with a\nloss of a point at 36. Other new\nlows were established by Canadian\nPacific at 19%, which recovered to\nfinish unchanged at .0. National\nSteel car at 16% down % and\nHoliingsr aawn 60 oents at 86.88.\nHalf point losses were suffered\nby Canadian Oar preferred st 18Vi.\nDominion Bridge at 33v., Howard\nSmith at 6, National Breweries at\n38 . and the preferred at 31V_.\nBrazilian Traction at 18%, Canada Cement at 9%, International\nNickel at 13% and MeColl-Fron-\ntenac at 18V. wart aU oft %.\nDock-butt Plow lost Vi  at 6%.\nTbe three Issues to register gains\nwere Atlantic sugar, up % at 33V.:\nB 0. Power, _ higher at 34.. and\nDominion Steel and Goal \"B\" at\n3%, up '..\nTtoal aales were 11,039 shares\nBonds 810.O00.\nNEW YORK STOCKS\nAllegheny   _  6%       6Vi 8%\nAllied    Chemical 109% 108% 107%\nAmerican Can _ 90% 86V. 88%\nAmer JW power 37V4 38% 38%\nAm Smelt 8s Re 30% 39% 39%\nAmer Ma a. Fdy 39 38% 19\nAmer  Telephone 169% 167% 168%\nAmerlo   Tobacco 109 V. 108% 108%\nAnaconda     34 33% 33%\nAtchison      193 131 133\nBaldwin  1S% 13 12\nBait  *   Ohio   . 43% 41% 41%\nBendlx   Aviation 32'i 11% 31%\nBeth  Bteel     33% 36 . 37\nCanadian    Paclf 30% 19% 30\nOsrro   ds   Pasco 18 14% 14%\nChes   _E  Ohio  .. 88% 34% 84%\nChrysler      31% 10% 30%\nCon   Oaa   N   Y. 93 90% 90%\nCom    at    South 8           7% 7%\nCorn Producta .. 68 68% 84\nc wnght pfd .. 4\nDupont  88% 81% 83%\nEastman    Kodak 139% 136% 137%\nEI   Power. _e   Lt 98% 37% 97%\nErie      16% 16% 16%\nPord  English  .... 9%\nFord  of  Canada 17%\nFirst Nst Stores 68% 88 66\nFreeport    Texas 36 38% 36%\nGeneral   Electric 40% 39% 39%\nOranby  14% 14%\nGeneral Foods .. 49% 49 49\nGold   Dust     37% 36% 38%\nGreat   W   Sugar 9         8 . 8%\nHowe Bound  .... 19 19\nInternet    Nickel 13% 13% 13%\nInter Tel _i Tel 37% 36% 38%\nKelly  Spring  ... 3          1% 1%\nKenn copper ... 16% 16% 16%\nKresge S S   17% 37 37\nKroegg   82   Toll.. 14% 14% 14%\nMack    Truck    .. 36% 37 37\nNaah   Motors   .. 34% 34 34\nMllwsukee    pfd.. 7          8% 6%\nNst   Dairy   Prod 33% 33 33\nN   Power   6c   Lt 21%\nNew York Centr 68 68% 65%\nPackard  Motors. 6%       6% 6%\nPaclf  On  _   SI 46% 45% 45%\nPenn  R R   87% 36% 36%\nPhillips  Pete 9          8% 8%\nRadio    Corpora 19% 18% 18%\nRadio   Keith  Or 15 14% 14'i\nBern   Rand     6% 6%\nRock   Island 33% 33% 33%\n8 Louis  _  8  F 13% UJI\nSafeway   Stores 03% 60% 61%\nShell   Union  Oil 8% 8%\nSinclair Con   _ 10%      9% 9%\nSouth   Calif   Ed 43 43% 43%\nSouth    Paclfl... 71% 70% 70%\nStan  OU  Of  Cal 39% 38% 39%\nStewart   Warner 10% 10 io\nStudebaker         .. 16% 16 16\nTexaa    Corpora 36 24% 24%\nTexas   Gulf   Sul 34 33% 33%\nUnion Carbide .. 49 47% 48.\nUnlon   Oil   Calif 17 16% 16%\nUnion    Pacific 1381. 135'; 136%\nUnited   Aircraft, 36% 33% 38%\nU S Rubber 13% 13 13\nU S Pipe * Fdy 30 16% 19\nU   8   Steel     88% 83% 83%\nWest Electric ... 61% 67% 67%\nWillys   Overland 3% 3%\nYellow Truck .... 7%       6% 6%\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nNEW YORK LIST\nDECLINES IN A\nTRADING^FLURRH\nBasket Trading Session Since\nJuly; Ralls Go Into Slide\nat Noon\nKMW TORK, Sept. 3\u2014(AP)\u2014A\neubetantlal increase ln volume\nmarked the further decline ol\natock prices today. In th\u00ab busiest tradln* alnce July 15 all groups\nfollowed the rails ln a reaction that\nsent moat of the prominent carrier\nIssues to new Iowa and broke\nUnited States Steel through Its\nearly June minimum.\nTTiere were two selling movements\nThe first coming Tn the morning\naffected chiefly the rails. An Interval of dullness followed this\nbreak, in tbe final hour offerings\nln other groups increased and the\nmarket closed not far from the\nbottom. The turnover .which on\nTuesday of thla week set a seven-\nyear record for dullness totalled\n2,130.420  shares.\nThe -rails completed most of their\ndecline by noon, leaving Industrials\nand utilities to bear the brunt of\nthe later selling. Cue wu weak all\nday -losing as much ss 1014 points.\nSteel touched S2% against Its old\nlow of 83H on the afternoon dip,\nthe lowest quotation since 1923\nwhen it sold at 83. The last sale wu\nat 83.4. making the net loss 3%.\nAmerican Telephone, Bethlehem,\nConsolidated Ou, Dupont, Eastman.\nAllied Chemical. Chrysler, Lehman\nCorporation and Woolworth weTe\ndown 2 points or thereabouts, while\nnot far behind wer\u00ab General Mo-\nton, Sears-Roebuck. National Biscuit and International Telephone .\nA number of Inactive rails miMe\nspectacular decline* .notably Texas\nand pacific, off 33',., Cotton Belt\npreferred, off 104 and Central of\nNew Jersey, down 32-\nUhion Pacifies net decline wss\nZV_. New Tork Central's 1*4 snd\nBaltimore and Ohio's 2V*.. Reading\nlost 8\"_.\nSterling eased moderately, u did\nother European currencies. Montreal\nwu off to 90 H, but Brazil wu\nfirm. Weakness ln railroad Issues\nsimultaneously with declines In rail\nstocks featured the bond market\ntoday.\nSMALL ISSUES AT\nTORONTO ARE ONES\nTO CARRY TRADE\nHigher   Priced  Issues  Turn\nOver on Small Volume;\nBase Metals Soft\nTORONTO, Ont., Sept. 3.\u2014-The\nlower price list .counted 'or moet\nof todays trsnssctlons on th, Stan-\ndsrd mining exchange. Trsdlnf In\nthe higher-priced Issues wss mostly\nof small volume. Price action wss\n______\nSties toUUed 601.340 shares.\nThe bsse metal list continued soft\nln price snd quiet In tradlnj. inter-\nnational Nickel dropped 40c to\n913.60 and Noranda tell is to ,19.\nLeaders ln the gold group were\nquiet. WrlBht-Kargrea.es sold down\ni point to 83.10 despite tbe dividend\nannouncement ol 3% cente per\nshare.\nMclntsre moved up IS. to 631.60\nand Dome 10 oents to 613. Moffat\nHalt and Acme both unchanged were\nthe most active lower priced Issues.\nChemical Resesrch advanced 33c\nto 64.10 but other issues In the\noil eectlon were soft. British American broke SO cents to 611.60.   -\nTORONTO STOCKS\nWINNIPEO,   Man..   Sept.   3\u2014Closing   '.rain qaotetlone:\nOpen   High    Low Close\nWhest:\nOct.    S3-    S3.    81- 63.\nDec.    53 _    S3 .    531. 6S_\nMtT    87H    57.4    56\u00bb. 67\nMl\nOct    11%   11\\   37 _ 37.\nDec    36 .    37       36'i 37\nMsy        38.4    30       38 . 39\nBarley:\nOct    81-   31H   Sl!4 31-\nDee \u2014   81-   31      IIH al*\nMsy     8414\nPiss:\nOct.        69Vi 100       S9H 99V.\nDsc.        t\u00bb     101       99 99%\nMs,      104     104* 103* 103*\nRye:\nOct.    II      31*   80* 31*\nDec    33*    S3*    31* 33*\nMsy        86*    36*    35* 38\nCssh Cloee:\nWhest:    No. 1 Herd, 61*: No.  1\nNor.. 88*:   No. 3  Nor.,  48*:  No. 3\nNor.,  48*:  No. 4, 39*:  No.  8, 36*;\nNo. 8. U _; Peed, 34%: Track, 81*:\nNo.   1   Dur, 88*\nAbsna      .....\nAte*   _ '.     1\nAmulet    _\t\nAmity\t\nA P consolidated\t\nAssociated\t\nBaltic Oil\t\nB   A  Oil    .':     11\nBidgood\t\nBarry Hollinger\t\nBig Missouri   \t\nCalmont \t\nC and I Lsnds \t\nCentral Manitoba \t\nChemical Research  _     4\nDome     11,\nDslhousle\n_e_t_rest     .....\nPslconbrldge      I\nOoodflsh     _\t\nHome Oil   \t\nHowey   \t\nHollinger      8\nHudson Bey      3\nInternational Nlcltel     13\nKeel ly   \t\nKlr_land  Lake   \t\nLake Shore\t\nMacasea \t\nMandy\t\nManitoba   Baaln   \t\nMalartlc   \t\nMclntyre    \t\nMurphy    \t\nMining Corporation .\nNewbec       \t\nNew Imperial  Oil  ...\nNipissing    \t\nNoranda\nOld Colony  \t\nPeterson   Cobalt  \t\nPend Oreille \t\nPremier Oold\nSherrlt   oordon   ..'. ...\nSudbury Basin\t\nSlscoe    \t\nSen Antonio \t\nSt. Anthony \t\nStadacona \t\nTech   Hughes        6\nVlpond    \t\nVentures\t\nWright   Hargreaves         3\nWalte  Ackerman         1\n04\nMV.\n20\n18\nat*\n,07*\nM\n\u25a0\nH\nJt\n.10',.\ntt!\\\nni\nM\n.10\not\n18\n.16\n.11\n.00\n01\n40\nH\nIt\n73\n50\n.23\n.61\n.45\n.45\n.07\n.61*\n.03\n.30\n.03\n.80\n.03\n.10\n.50\n.10'\n.01\n.01'.\n.70\n.46\n.58\n.45\n.55!4\n.14\nsm\n81*\n.20\n.80'.\n.62\n10\n.n\nFISH PACK THIS\nYEAR FAR BELOW\nLAST SEASON'S\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 3 -(CP) \u2014\nThe tioh pack to date this year Is\nfar below that of last season, and\nlarger only than the 1D27 pack, according to figurrs Issued by the\ndepartment   of   ftanerles.\nMajor J. A. Motherwell, chief\nsupervisor of fisheries, reporta the\npack at 'August 39 was 558.470 rases\naa compared with &79,80f> esses on\nAugust 30, 1930. On August 81.\n1829, the total was 753.840; an September 1, 1928, It was 1.169.531, and\nin 1927 It yas 487,415 cases.\nThis year's \"pack, however, im . a\nRood percentage of high -trade salmon. The sockeye pack ls 259,852,\nabout 140.000 cases below last year,\nbut considerably better than 1928\nand 1927. Spring salmon catch is\n33,139. about 7000 below 1930 and\n10.000 below 1927. but better thau\n1929   and   1928.\nThis year th* pack of pinks and\nchums totals approximately 200,000\ncases. Iu 1930 It was In excess of\n1.055,000 cases; ln 1329* It was 385.-'\n000; 1928 was 884,000. and 1937 was\n130,000   cases.\nLONDON  CLOSE\nLONDON. Sept. 3.\u2014C. P. 20'.:\nBraz. Trac.. lflVi; Brlt. Amn. Tob.,\nft 13s 6d: Distillers. \u00a32 6s 3d;\nDunlop Rubber 17s 6d; Pord \u00a33 ls\n3d; Gramophone n 7s 6d; Hudson\nBay 19s 6d; Hydro Dec. $17'_.\nImpl. Chem. 13s; Impl. Tob. \u00a33 18s\n9d; int. Hold Inv., \u00bb1%; Intl. Nickel\n\u00bb13; Shell T &, T. \u00a31 17s 6d: Vickers 6s lOttd; Brlt. pive Pet. War\nLoan 200 15s; Brlt. _'_ pct. War\nLoan, 08.\nCharacter, good or had, has a tendency   to    perpetuate    itself.-Hodge.\nX\nWINNIPEG WHEAT\nTURNS DOWNWARD\nMarket  Somewhat  Stubborn\nin  Early Stages;  Cash\nWheat in Demand\nWINNIPEO, Man., sept. 3\u2014F_r-\niletent preasure from southen exchanges and an Indifferent export demand discouraged holders\nof wheat here today and valuea\nclosed '_ to '4 lower than Thuraday. October cloeed at 51'.; Dec.\nat  53_   while May sagged  to 67.\nEarly slaees saw thP market somewhat stubborn at frar-tlonslly under\nth\u00a9 previous close Foreign cables\nwere weak but their effect wae\nneutralized by the hedging from\nelevator  interests.\nTop grades of cash wheat were in\ndemand spreads from Nr.. 1 hard\nto No. 3 northern ranged from _\nto a,  _etter.\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nMONTREAL, tept. 3-Butter and\neggs hlKhcr, cheese lower.\nCartot prloes of eggs were mainly\nhigher, extras being unchanged at\n20 cents while imu and seoonda\nboth gained a cent at 23 and 19\ncents a dozen, respectively. British\nColumbia extras. In carlots. were\nquoted at 30 rents a dozen. Quotations to retailers wn. unchanged\nand  receipts  were  756 cases.\nCheese. Quebec, __U  to 11%.\nButter,  No.  1  finest. 20%.\nEggs, fresh specials  ln cartons 35.\nEggs,  fresh  extras  In  enrtons,  32.\nEggs,   fresh   firsts   |_   cartons,   27.\nCanadian Scout* Oo To Europe\nWIU, PARTICIPATE IN SALLY IN IWITZIBLAND\nNine  Canadian   Rover   Sooute   will   participate   Is   the   International\nScout rally, to  be Held  at ______r_te_,  switeerland,  from July M to\nAuguet 6, This picture wu taken at Ottawa, Ont., at rehearsal of\nceremonial which boys wllll preeent at tbe meet. The boya are ln\ncostumes representative of Canadian types. Photo No. 1\u2014 front row,\nleft to right: Habitant. Ray Bryant, 11, Hamilton, Ont.: Indian, L. L.\nJohnson, 'K, St. John, N. B.; Eskimo, Donald M. Burns. 17, Montreal, Que.;\nMiddle row, left to right: Airman, Jack Toombs, IS, Bt. Vital, Man.;\nfisherman. Jhon X. 'Bott. IS, Hamilton. Ont.; cowboy, Tom P. Stark,\n21, Saskatoon. Seek.; Mountle. A. C. Keeseler, 23, Montreal, Que.; miner,\nA. P. Hlron, 18, Edmonton, Alta.\nMONTREAL CURB\nPRICES LOWER\nMONTIU-U-. Que., Sept. 3~-Prlo_e\nturned fractionally lower today on\nthe Montreal curb market. Price\nmovements were confined to very\namall fraotiona while the volume\nof trading waa about the aan. ae\nthat for the previous dy. Small\ngalna Included chemical Reeearch,\nHome Oil and Imperial Tobacco\nwhile British American OU, Dl\u00bb-\ntlllera-Seagram. Dominion Storea.\nImper\u201e_ Oil end Walker all closed allfhtly lower. T__ oils were\nagain dull and mixed while the\nbeveragee were easier and the public  utility  group steady.\nNoranda continued lower In the\nraining division dosing at 18.00 off\n50 cent- while Amulet and Moea\nclosed somewhat higher, th, latter\ncontinuing very active with a total\nturnover of 39.400-\nMINNEAPOLIS GRAIN\nMINNEAPOLIS, Sept. 3\u2014Flour un-\nchanged. Shipment* 8907. Bran UM\nto  12.00.\nWheat: No. 1 nor. 59_ to 6\u00ab._;\nNo. 1 red durum 44% to 4_'.; Sept\n57 .;  Dec. 57%;  May 58.\nCorn:   No.   3   yellow   46   to   48V.\u25a0\nOats: No. 3 white 22'i to _3V,.\nriax: No. 1. 1.3t_   to  1.30'-_.\nCHICAGO WHEAT\nRISES SLIGHTLY\nSome Buying by Commission\nHouses Helps to Sustain\nthe Market\nCHICAGO, HU., Btpt. 3\u2014(BT ou\u00ab\nL P!ndl*y, AMoeltted Tr*** Market\nWriter)\u2014 A fuftitwit.il rally carrtwl\nwheat slightly attova yw.\u00abrday'i\nclose today after pt'lree on all de-\nlfverlea hid bt*n driven to the\nlowest deptha of the year profit-\ntaking by ahorte on the downward\nawing and some buying by commission houses on reetlng orders helped the market rally. Corn and Oats\nalso recovered from early dips. Corn\nwaa stimulated by reporta of a\nbetter cash demand, 430.000 bushels\nbeing sold for shipment, the largest  total In montrifl.\nWheat closed firmer, jfc-tt oent\nhigher than yesterday's final Quotation. Corn strong,, >i-l up. Oata\nmixed, ,fc lower to Vt higher, and\nprovisions 10 cents down to 2\noents advance.\nThe righteous and the wicked are\nseparated by a gulf of fire.\u2014Phelpa.\nPRICES AT THE\nCOASTARE FIRM\nGold Monopolizes Interest of\nthe Traders; Lorne Still\na Feature\nVAKOOtJvt-t, sept. 3\u2014 ton\u2014OS-\n\u2022plte declining quotations IB eastern\ncenters, prlcea were firm and volume\nIncreased at Vancouver atock _i-\nch\u00bbn_e on Thuraday.\nOold monopollMd the lntereet ot\ntraders. Lorne continuing to -\u2022\na feature. Reported to be due to\nre-financing activity. 24.0M share.\nof Georgia River changed hands it\nthree to three and a half cente.\nThis Included on_ block of I0_oo\naharea. Lorne traded around ll\ncents, although e.OOo eharae brought\n11% on buyers' 60-day option.\nPioneer waa quoted at a 30 btd\nand a.40 asked. No aales were reported. Premier had one email transaction at 45 cents. Big Missouri\ntraded at 31 oente.\nHigher-priced Issues traded included C. P. R\u201e tt 820. noraad.\nat lit and International Nickel,\n11175.\nCotton Belt wu easier, closing at\ntt after opening at 13 cente. CTow.\nNest was steady at 4%  eent*.\nSales for the day amounted *\u00bb\n35.280 sharee on the exchange and\n17.800 on the curb.\nOood taste springs more from\njudgment than from Intellect.\u2014I*\nRochefoucauld.\nExperience ta no more transferable\nIn morale than ln art.\u2014proud*.\nThis Is\nYOUR CHANCE\nTo Help The\nJOBLESS\n1UEN AND women out of jobs do not want\n11 charity! They want jobs! And it is in\nyour power lo help give them jobs. You, who\nare employed and whose income is not one jot\nsmaller than it was a year ago, can resum\u00ab\nXormal Buying.\nYou have \"cut down,\" shaved your budget.\nWhy? There is no answer. Bui there is an\nanswer to why you should begin buying normally again. A big one! The Unemployed! By\nholding back from normal, sensible buying, you\nare depriving industry's workers of jobs, depriving yourself, in turn, of unusual buying\nopportunities.\nEvery jobless person eventually reacts to the\ndisadvantage of every job-holder. The joblcsN\nare not consumers; and whatever your trade,\nbusiness or profession, you rely, in the last\nanalysis, on consumers. For thc common good\nyou should resume Normal Buying.\nThe Nelson\nDaily News\n PAGI   TW-XVt\n-\u2022THE WILSON  DAILT NW-S. MELBOIf, B.  C, r__DAY MORNING,\nTEXT BOOKS\nshort  at  school\nopening\nNOW\nARRIVING\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug Co.\nGLASSES\nJ. A. C. Laughton, R. 0.\nOPTOMETRIST   and   OPTICIAN\n.Hlte 205-206, Medical Art! Bid..\nPhon*\nTAXI and\nTRANSFER\n^T^T    Dally   Freight   Schedule\n*     io   Trail   and   Rossland.\nLeaves   Nelson   10   a.m.\nTrail Depot\u2014pomlnton Garage\nRossland   Depot\u2014L.   D.   Cafe\nCON. CUMMINS\nOPTION TAKEN ON\nHILLSIDE MINE BY\nTHE GUGGENHEIMS\nHave   30-Day   Privilege\nPurchases of East Half\nof Ground\nOPTION FOLLOWS\nON EXAMINATIONS\nHillside People Plan Oil Flotation  Mill for Western\nHalf\nExaminations recently made of\nthe Hillside mine, formerly the\nCalifornia, cf Nelaon, have been\nfollowed by the taking of an option of tiie eastern half of tlic\nHillside ground by the American\nSmelting and Refining company, often alluded to as \"The Guggen-\nhelme,\" wftoee smelter for thc\nnorthwestern territory ls located at\nWallace,   Idaho.\nThe f|nal examination was made\nlast week by h. Lee of Vancouver,\nFOB 3 DAYS ONLY WE OFFER\nGENUINE VACUUM BOTTLES\n'   Regular 60c\n45c\nEach\nCall Early and Get Yourg at\nYour Drug Store\nCITY DRUG CO.\n\"NELSON'S DISPENSING CHEMJSTS\"\nPhone 34 Box 1083\nCORRECT WEIGHT FREE\nthe corporation's Canadian representative. Determinations are now\nbeing made ol the results of extensive sampling. The option is for\na period of 30 days, and wm given\nby the Hillside Mining .company,\nwhich haa been developing the well\nknown Nelec_j gold property for a\nyear or ao, under the direction of\ny. T. Harbour, the property having\nbeen bonded from the late William\nMoore of Nelson, who died this\n*u miner.\nTWO   OPERATIONS   DN   Ml.HT\nIf the op^on should be taken\nup by the big American Interest,\nthere would be two extensive operations side by side, aa the Hillside\nMining company has reached the\nstage on the half of the property\nwhich lt is retaining, of requiring\na mill, and lt i\u00bb understood that\nMr. Harbour will leave Monday for\nPortland, to arrange for financing\nof a mill of the latest oil flotation\ntype.\nUnder the name of the California\nunder which the property was located by the late Mr. Moore and\ndeveloped by him. the ..'..side has\nbeen on the map for 30 year*, or\nso, various syndicates mid companies\nhaving operated It. At one btage\nthe adjoining Athabasca mine was\nassociated with It, the Athabasca\nstamp mill having been remodelled\nfor more modem use. None of the\nAthabasca ground Is Included in the\nholdings of  the  Hillside  people,\nThe Hillside property Is within a\ncouple of miles oi Nelson, on\nMorning mountain.\nhuntTnI^eason\nopens for bear\ngoatsand sheep\nMany Licenses Already Purchased; Deer Season Opens\non September 12\nCanadian Flies English Channel\n\\\\\\\\_\\___________________________,_'\n|Hnf&.:\"\"$& *   \u00a7               __3k^?Hl  ____ __\nT^|                ______-_L_    l    a4 <V______R^__________P _____\n'^KzS-^H\ni \\               j       ^Wms^                       ^H\n, *\"   \u25a0     ^*s*t!^^^B___\u00abfc\u00bb__. *' '\n\"'' *'                    ^^^^*Hfflfi\u00a3IB864_____,\n\u2022JSj|j|\n___________dH.il\n4.  IMI _-__-_=______=\nDOMINION LIVESTOCK\nWIJ_____t, Sept. I\u2014 ReoelDte:\nCattle 830; civet 110; hon *\u00bb-'.\ntbeeo  45-.\nSteers, up to 1050 Iba.: Oood and\nchoice \u00bb4.75 to .5.1-.\nSteers, over 1050 Ins.: Oood snd\nchoice .5.00 to t.e.00.\nHellers: Oood snd choice MOO to\nttM.\nMedium:   13__   to  M.75.\nFed calves: Good and choloe $600\nto   \u00bb7.80.\nCows: Oood .-.76 to NU.\nCanners and cutters \u2022\u25a050 to 41.-5.\nBulla:   Oood.   .1.50  to 11.76.\nBlocker and feeder steers: Oood\n63.50  to  14.35.\nStock cows ..nd heifers: Oood $3.50\nto   \u00bb3._5.\nMilker  and  tprlngera: 1st to 685.\nVeal calves: Oood and choice\n65.60 to 47 10.\nHogs: Select bacon .1 per head\npremium; baoon 46.75; butchers 41\nper head discount, lights and feeders  65.00  to 45.25.\nLambs: Oood handywelght 66.75\nto 66.00; good heavies 44.00 to 45.00.\nSheep: oood heavies 43.00 to 42.50;\ngood   handywelght   43.00.\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nClan   McLeary   meets   tonight   at\n8   o'clock   sharp. (7137)\nHarrop   Social   club   dance,   Monday,  sept.  7. Free ferry.        (7132)\nCANADIAN  SINGER  IS  SUCCESSFUL  GLIDER\nLlssant Beardmore, Canadian singer, was in a happy mood after his\nsuccessful glider flight across thc English channel. He ls shown here\nafter he landed in England.\nA CAR LOAD OF\nCOAST SHINGLES\nhas just been purchased at an\nexceptionally low figure.\nWhile they last we are offering\nthem at the following prices.\nNo. 1 xxx Coast Shingles\nper 1000 delivered ., $3.50\nNo. 2 xxx Coast Shingles\nper 1000 delivered M   2.60\nA J... discount is allowed for cash with orders.\nFor   your   information\u20141000   shingles   laid   _V_\ninches to the weather will cover ll_5 square feet.\nA. H. GREEN __?\u00bb.\n(Suocetfcci tu John Burns & Bon)\nPLANT SoSrssw-\nand SALES OFFICE\n\/ VI.117 IP \"PC   MS   WARD   ST.\nOn Tuesday the hunting season\nwas officially opened for the shoot\ning of bear, mountan sheep and\ngoats and on Spptcmber 12 the deer\nseason wll be opened. Grouse hunting commences on the same day\nand three days later the duck\nseason   commences.\nThis year will probably t-ee ss\nmany. If not more, hunters in the\nfield as last year. Last year the\nnumber of hunters was exceedingly\nlarge, since July 1 when the first\n1931 *lre arm licences were Issued,\n68 have been sold ln Nelson. Eleven\nof these licences were resident extras for non-British subject* who\noperate farms, and six were resident generals, for British farmers,\nwhile the remainder were the ordinary fire arm licences.\nKH.   OAME   SEASONS\nThe bear season, which opened on\nSeptember 1, is open until June 30,\n1P32. No White or Kermodie species\nare to be shot.\nCioat wason opens September l\nand will terminate December lf>.\nHunting ln the Grand Porks-Greenwood elcctorinl district NfeAln.\nclosed.\nHunters may shoot and kill moun-\nt.iin sheep, rams only, until November 15. Hunting is open ln Fernle\nCranbrook and Columbia district:.,\nonly.\nSeason for Elk or Wapiti is from\nSeptember 15 to October 15 and is\nopen In part of Columbia district\nand In the Fernle district.\nDeer season for mule, white-tail\nand coast, is open from September\n12 to December 15. White tail deer\ncannot be Killed, however, i:i North\nand South Okanagan aud Similkameen electorlal district* nnd iu thc\nGrand Forks-Greenwood electorial\ndistrict west of the summit., of the\nMidway   mountain.\nPortions of the Columbia, Cranbrook and Pernle districts will bl\nclosed for all species of deer.\nBANK CLEARINGS\nThursday,  Sept.  3.   1931. For cor-\nrespondng  week,   1930.\nHalifax     ....*    3,229,692 * 2,968.427\nSaint  John -      2.212,300 1.995,764\nMoncton              786,257 944,133\nQuebec          5,917,163 6.538,373\nOttawa          6,840.043 6,313,647\nMontreal        99.700,395    116,153,583\nKingston             684,937 766,655\nPeterboro            675,782 821,399\nToronto   .     -   8fi.219.716 90,512,823\nHamilton          4,854.599 4,958,485\nKitchener   ....        894,238 984,740\nBrantford ......        974,285 1.117,010\nLondon            2,987,813 3.093,832\nChatham             397,458 497,747\nWindsor      2,356,358 4,992,622\nSarnla             405,388 629,603\nSudbury             673.822 879,030\nFort  William          743.266 823,581\nWinnipeg        41,009,445 43,058,501\nBrandon            401,027 473,098\nRegina             809,186 4,989.44.0\nMoose Jaw ....         698,360 1,054,577\nSaskatoon   ....      1,776,78.. -.,171,313\nPrince Albert        370,995 516,802\nEdmonton .   ..      5,496,236 6,301,076\nCalRarv                  6.069,881 7.687,184\nMedicine Hat          245,549 358,860\nLethbridge  ....         531,291 637,1\nVancouver  ....    13,600,309 15,139,1\nNew\nWestminster       560,930 764,610\nVictoria          1,600,299 2,223,580\nFORBES TO SPRINT\nfor b. c.\nENGLISH CRICKET\nSCORES\nSPRINKLING\nREGULATIONS\nEffecthe August 22nd.\nCorporation of the City of Nelson\nJL The hours between which water may be usea\nfor any of the purposes following shall be as follows:\n(a) For the sprinkling of lawns and gardens between the hours of 6 o'clock and 8 o'clock, P. M.\n(b) For the sprinkling of streets, alleys and sidewalks between the hours of 7 o'clock and 8 o'clock A.M.\n2. Any person guilty of an infraction or violation\nof the foregoing regulations shall be liable to have\nhis water supply cut off without notice.\nBy order,\nW. E. WASSON,\nCity Clerk\nLONDON. Sept. 3 (0 P cablei\u2014\nClosing scores in English cricket\nmatches  today  wee:\nEastbourne; New Zealand. 377\n(Blunt, 265, not out); Gentlemen\nof England. 22 runs for no wickets.\nFolkestone: Players, 357 for six\nwicketa (Wooley, 83, Hearne, 56,\nSandham 118); Gentlemen, 69 runs\nfor   three   wickets.\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 3\u2014 Vincent.\nForbes, brilliant young South Burnaby, Athletic club sprinter, has been\nplaced on the British Columbia team\nfor the Canadian track and field\nchampionships at Winnipeg, Labor\nday, filling Percy Williams' shoes.\nFrer] Martello of Trail, quarter-mller.\nand 3*o% Melville, South Burnaby,\nthree-mile star, are other Brltisi\nColumbia entries, 'lhe men have\nbeen working out steadily at Brork.\nton Point and will be In first-class\ntrim when they leave tomorrow.\nEXCHANGE  RATES\n26 QUALIFY IN\nTHE LABOR DAY\nGOLFING HERE\nEntries  Total  32   But  Will\nGrow; No Ladies Have\nQualified as Yet\nTomorrow morning golfers will\ntee off ln the annual Labor day\ncompetitions which are open. In the\ncase of the men, play will be continued over the week end for the\nLelth cup at present held by B.\nTownshend. The ladies will play for\nthe Gosnell trophy won last year by\nMrs.  Roy Pollard,\nDuring the past week qualifying\nrounds have been played and a majority oi the men have completed\nthis phase of the competition. None\nof the ladles have as yet qualified.\nIn all 32 entries have been filed In\nthe men's competition but only 28\nhave so far qualified. Several Trail\nplayers have yet to play these\nrounds. Last year there werc 50\nentries ln this competition and lt\nis expected there will be 40 before\nplay   commences   Saturday   morning.\nFollowing is a list of those who\nhave qualified today: William Rutherford, 92; G. W. Davis, 96; John\nFraser, 87; R. Thorburn, 88; P. Lincoln 89; H. L. Robertson 83; G. S.\nGodfrey 95; George Shaw 76; T. R.\nWilson 74; A. to. Murphy 80; H. S.\nWatson 91; j. D. Kerr 86; Bert\nClark 76; J. G. Bunyan 81; A. L.\nMcCulloch 89; W. R. Orubbe 83;\nR. C. Crowe, Trail, 85; J. J. Flngland, Trail, 82; H. Lakes 80; A.\nLambert 92; G. N. Brown 95; B.\nTownshend 75, James O'Shea 102;\nColllngwood Oray 88; V. J. Hdvit\n94;   E. C.  Wragge 98.\nMlss   Louise   Peebles  wll.   resume\nher elocution classes September 4.\n-.7113.'\nWanted\u2014PI urns, Apples and Green\nGages\u2014McDonald jam Co., Ltd., Nelson. (7068)\nIna M. Steed, Teacher of Pianoforte, studio Gllker Block. Tel 643\nor  493L. 1.-160)\nIna M. Steed will resume pianoforte teaching Sept, l. Studio room\n9,  Gllker  block. (6964)\nNew\nFail\nHats\nSnap into the fall season with \u00bb\nnew hat We're sure your fall hat is\nhere because every shade and shape\nthat is stylish this season is here at\nthis modest price.\n$5\nOther Hats to $8.50\nfyP\nClan McLeary military whist drive,\nOdd Fellows' hall. Friday, 8:30 p.m.\nAdmsiston   3_\u00bb  cents. ((7114)\nNelson Business college. New term\ncommences any time. For particular.*,\napply  Box  14- (7069)\nHarrop Longbeach ferry will operate until l p.m. on the night of\nLabor Day. Dept. of Provincial\nPublic Works. (7161)\nBig DancA at Midway pavilion,\nCa_.tlegar, on Labor Day. Come and\nmake whoopee! Also usual Saturday\nnlte  dances. (7158)\nBugle Band Dance at Lakeside\nPavlllnii. Your last chance to dance\ntn this open air dance hall, Saturday    night. (7164)\nTwo large furnished suites for\nrent, well heated with private bath\naccommodation for a family of four.\nAnnable Block. (7089)\nR. E- M. Hoogerwerf, A.L.C.M.,\nTeacher of Piano and Theory. Studio 119 Baker street. Beginners and\nadvanced students prepared for the\nLondon College of Music examinations. i7110>\nThe funeral of the late Archibald\nD. McDonell of Trail, will take\nplac*. Saturday morning at 9 o'clock\ni Nelson time) from the church of\nMary   Immaculate. (7166)\nNBW YORK, Sept. 3\u2014Sterling ex-\nchange ea*y at $4.81 13-16 for 60\nday bills, and at H.85S for demand,\nCanadian   dollars   7-16   cent   disc.\nFrancs   3.92 Vs    cents.\nLire  5.22%   cents.\nUruguay *4-26 cents,\nMarks  23.73  cents.\nKronen  26.75  cents.\nNelson approximate sterling exchange  rate  $4.87%.\nCranbrook\nBeer Parlor\nMurders\n(Two  In   one   dajr)\nThis spring the town of Cranbrook wo* startled by thr news\nof not only one, but two murders committed In a beer parlor\non the same day.\u2014 \\rlvt. by\nAnti-Brer   Parlor   committee.\nTHAMES,  BRETFORD\nPLAY A DRAW\nHARRY F. SINCLAIR\nSELLS STABLE\nSARATOGA SPRINGS. N. T. Sept.\n3 (AP)\u2014Harry F. Sinclair, millionaire oil man and eportman, retired\nfrom the turf today when 25 thoroughbreds, representing the entie\nlot of his Rancocoas stable's horses\ntn training, were sold at auction at\ntlic  Saratoga race  paddock.\nThe 25 horses sold for a total of\n(81,300, a good average of $3252 per\nhead. The top price of $12,600 was\npaid by Frank Serembra for Defler,\n$ son of Bud Lernor, which Is eligible for the hopeful stakes 8aturaa>\nLONDON, Sept. 3 (C P cable)\u2014\nIn an English league, third division,\nsouthern section soccer match today\nThames and Brctford drew, one\ngoal all.\nIn a Scottish second division game\nEast Fife beat Dumbarton by four\ngoals to one.\nPACIFIC COAST LEAGUE\nSeattle   0-4,    Oakland   2-11.\nPortland  2,  Sacramento 4.\nMissions 1. Seals 3.\nLos  Angeles  8, Hollywood 4.\nLabor Day\u2014Sept. 7th.\nCANADIAN   LEGION\nPICNIC\nto Crawford Bay\nLcavlnr   Nelaon   8   a.m.   prompt\nadvanced time.\nBoat   will   rail   at   Willow   Point,\nFrasers Landing and Procter.\nGet   your  tickets  today  at  Dave\nWade's   Shoe  Shop.\nAdults  .1.30\nChildren .1 to 12 years, halt-fare.\nComplete   Business   Course   at   St.\nJoseph's Academy .Nelson. B. C.\nShorthand, Typing, Secretarial\nTraining, Bookkeeping, Commercial\nLaw   Penmanship.\nPupils may start any time. Tuition .15 per month. (7157)\nPHONE MOD-RATION COMMITTEE BOOMS. NO. _04, FOB INFORMATION AS TO WHETHER YOIJ\nARE ON THE VOTERS' LIST FOB\nTIIE PLEBISCITE ON THE SALE\nOF BEER BT THE GLASS, NEXT\nSATURDAY. (.036)\nFOB INFORMATION CONCERN.\nINO TIIE VOTERS' LIST IN CONNECTION WITH TIIE PLEBISCITE\nON SALL OF BEER BV THE GLASS\nIN NELSON NEXT SATURDAY,\nTELEPHONE NO. 104, OB CALL AT\nMODERATION COMMITTEE ROOMS\n524   WABD   STREET. (703.)\nLN THE ANTI-BEER PARLOR\nCOMMITTEE DODGERS DISTRIBUTED REGARDING FERNIE BEER\nPARLORS, TIIE WORD \"CHE.l'E\"\nAPPLIED TO MONEY. CASH OR\nPAY, WHICHEVER TEEM YOU\nPREFER FOR LABOR'S RECOMPENSE. OTHERWI*,, TIIE STATEMENT STANDS. ANTI-BEEB PAR-\nLOB   COMMITTEE. (7156)\nHunter Electric\nand Plumbing\n$2.95\nClectrln   Toaster,\nSpecial \t\nU-Need-A Foot Lotion\nFor   Corns,   Callouses,   Bunions,\nSweating, Aching ana Tired Feet.\nSmythes Pharmacy\nPRESCRIPTION   SPECIALIST\nPHONE   1\nShop with us by null\nB.C. VENEER\nIs the best for Panelling, Lining Walls and Ceilings\nof Homes, Camps, Factories, Stores,\nOffices and Garages.\nCan be stained, painted or kalsomined.   Made\nin Nelson from native Cottonwood.\nLiterature and Prices on request.\nWe Are District Distributors.\nWood Vallance Hardware\nCompany, Limited\nWholesale - NELSON.B.C. - Retail\nSaturday's Plebiscite\nThis is the question on the ballot paper:\nDo you approve of the sale of beer by the glass in licensed premises\nwithout a bar under Government control and regulation?\nMARK YOUR RALLOT THUS\nYES       X\nNO\nSugar Bowl\nGrocery\nWEEK-END SPECIALS\nBACON   (side   sliced)   per\nlb  \u00bb .80\nEGGS   (new  laid extras)\nper   doaen    tt\nCOOKED  HAM   (sliced)\nper    lb      .55\nUNCOOKED HAM  (sliced)\nper    lb      .45\nTEA   (our special Pekoe)\n3   Iba.   for      1-00\nCOFFEE   (finest ground)\nper    lb 50\nSODAS (fl.00 boves) for .. .45\nHONEY   GRAHAMS.   IV.  lb\u00bb     .25\nSOUPS,   6   fans   for    55\nPEAS,  8  urns  for      100\nOUR   SPECIAL   BLTTEB,\n3    lbs    for          .50\nSUGAR   (jranulated)   .0\nlbs -   IM\nFLOLB   SPECIAL\u2014\n98-lb.   sack   for       IM\n40-lb.   sack   for       1.50\nTOMATOES,   5-lb.   basket\nfor    \u00bb5\nPHONE   110\nfor SERVICE and SATISFACTION\nAnd Help Improve Business and Other\nConditions in Nelson\nPHONE TAXI\n77\nFreight Schedule\nDally to Rossland\n;mmI Trail, 10 a.m.\nTrail    Phone   135\nELKS  T.  T.  & T. LTD.\nA. D. PAPAZIAN\nWATCHMAKER,\nJEWELER\nand Graduate Optician\n413  HALL  STREET\nPhone    TAXI\n35\nThe Best of Serrlee\n..Careful,  Courteous\nDrivers\nNelson Ti__f\u00ab Co., Ltd.\nROSE\nHairdressing Parlor\nDownstairs\n_....-.   Block Ward   St.\nPhone 317 for Appointment.\nCITY DRUG CO.\nNelson's  Dispensing  Chemists\nAlways at Your Service\nPHONE 84 BOS  1083\nCall and jet  rour correct\nwelrth   FBEE\nELECTRICAL\nWORK\nCall   uj   tot   an.   ei__trl__i\nwork that ran maj neat In\nyour home.   Reasonable rate*.\nSatisfaction guarantee-.\nPHONE \u00ab\nL. B. Electric\nOK\n015149\n\u00bb*\\lfVfffWf?V\nSHOE\nREPAIRING\noar  work  U   well   dont   wtth  Mm\nbeat of materials. Tbe moat modern\nof equipment and  with the flneat\nof   workmanship.\nHa.e   those   two   tone   sport   shoes\ncleaned   for   tha   weak-end   at  onr\nthine  parlors\nWade's Shoe\nShop\nWard   Street\nHelton\n----\u25a0-_-\u00bb;_---\u00ab;-*--\u25a0\u00ab\u25a0\u00ab\u00bb__.\nPARTS\nWe carry only Genuine \"General Motors\" Part*\nand sell them at General Motors\nStandard Prices.\nWe are here to serve you\n24 Hours a Day.\nGIVE US A TRIAL\nPhone 35\nNelson Transfer \u00a3J\n. \"Service Right Now\"\nLtd.\nTWO   SHOWS   NIGHTLY\n7 and 9 p.m.\nMATINEE 2  O'CLOCK\nNow Showing\nSCREEN'S MERRIEST FUN'\nMAKERS   BOUNCE\nBACK WITH GRAND NEW\nLAUGHS IN A JOYOUS\nCARNIVAL OF COMEDY\nBERT WHEELER\nROBT.WOOLSEY\nIn\n'Cracked Nuts'\nwith\nDOROTHY LEE\nEDNA   MAY    OLIVER\nSTANLEY   FIELDS\nStart   of\n\"Cuckooe\"\n\"Half Shot at\nSun-tie\"\nHook, Line and\n\u2022 Sinker\"\nLAUGHS\nLAUGHS\nLAUGHS\nNOVELTY MUSICAL  ACT\nTalking, Hinting, Dancing\nGEMS OF M. G. M.\nA    Miniature   Musical    Comedy\nCOMEDY\n\"SOME BABIES\"\nwith ,\nAn AH Star Cast\n I\t\nPARAMOUNT\nNEWS\nMONTGO\nMONDAY   \u2014   Tl'ESDAY\nROBERT  MONTGOMERY\nln a Sparkling Comedy\n\"THE   MAN    IN    POSSESSION\"\nwlthj\nCHARLOTTE GREENWOOD\nml\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_1931_09_04","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0404804","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"}]}}