{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0405633":{"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":"1931-09-11","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0405633\/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":" *C*Y\n: :\u2014\n\t\nlIL|3\nBert Clark Reaches Finals irf\nTennis Tourney Here\n\u2014 Vc_e Seven\nVOLUME  SO\nCanzoneri Wins Decision Over\nJackie \"Kid\" Ber_\\\n\u2014 Pa&e Seven\nDAILY  NEWS.   NELSON,   B.\nFRIDAY   MORNING.   SEPTEMBER   11,   WSl\n(TV- CENTS A COP-\nNTMBEB  IM\nHow Snowden Plans\nto Save British Cash\nShu ..DEN'S AXE HITS HARD\nLONDON, Sept. 10. (CP cable)\u2014Major savings for the next full\nbudget year announced by Rt. Hon. Philip snowden, ehancellor ot\nthe exchequer. __t he did his \"painful task\" of budget balancing ln\nthe   house  of   commons   this  afternoon:\nReductions in salaries of civil servants, from cabinet ministers\ndown. Total, f22.-870.oofl.\nSavttifs In defence serrlee, In addition to pay and pension\ncute   Of   918,070,000.   Total,   $25,800,000.\nEducation savings, SS1.30O.0O0, Including cuts In teachers' salaries.\nUnemployment Insurance: (1) Reduction of expenditure by\ncutting benefits, $129,000,00\u00ab; <2\u00bb increase of contributions from\nworkers and employers, 954,000,000.\nRoad  fund  savings,  939,325,000.\nThe** and other economies bring the total for the year to a\nUttle over 9350,000.000. In other directions the total Increase in revenue Is brought to 9357,000,000, against an estimated deficit of\n9850,000,000.\nAll pay cuts begin on October 1. Salaries of cabinet ministers\nreceiving 925,000 or more a year will be reduced by 20 per cent.\nThose receiving between 910,000 and 925,000 will be cut 15 per\ntent.   Salaries  under  910,000  will  be  cut   10  per  cent.\nSalaries of ordinary members of the house of commons will be\ncut by 10 per cent, which means they  will  receive 91800 a year.\nDoctors' fees under national health Insurance will be cut by a\nshilling for each Insured person. The bonus of two to four shillings\na week paid In dockyards snd ordnance factories  wtll  be revised.\nSchneider Cup Qoes\nto British Saturday\nWill Be Third Time His-\ntoric Cup Remains in\nEngland\nCALSHOT,  Eng.,  Sept.  10  (By\nAlvln   Hallman,  Associated   Press\nstaff   writer)\u2014   The    Schneider\ncup, world's premier racing trophy,   will   pass    Baturday    Into\npermanent.     British     possession.\nOne or two, perhaps three, British seaplanes, wasp-like machines\nwhich already have flown faster\nthan   man    has   ever   travelled\nbefore,    will     fly    sevon    times\naround the 31-mile .oourse In an\nattempt  to set  on * official new\nworld's speed record.\nThere   will   be   no   International\ncompetition,    however.   Prance   and\nlitely withdrew their entries for the\nrace last  week  when  It was  ascertained that the rules of the- competition would allow no postponement\nand they wrre not \u00bb\u00bbdy to participate at the set date.\nUnder the rules the nation retains\nthe cup permanently which wins\nthree out of five successive contests.\nWith victories in 1938 and 1900 under flier belt, \u25a0 and this year's victory\ncoming by default, the trophy becomes Britain's for all time and\nprobably will not be offered for\ncompetition   again.\nIte plaoe in the airplane raciug\nworld,   however,   probably   will   be\n(CoiHinued   on   Page   Two)\nDISCOUNT RATE\nOF 30 PER CENT\nON RADIOS NOW\nTOLMIE CONFIRMS\nDECISION\nVICTORIA, B. C, Bept. 10.**\nPremier Tolmie confirmed today\ndecision by the provincial government to bear one-quarter of\nthe cost of approved municipal\nrelief construction programs on\na labor only basis. The federal\ngovernment will bear one-half\nof the labor costs of such work,\nand wtll, ln addition, advance\nfunds necessary for tha execution of the programs, as already\nannounced. Provincial registration win close promptly on Saturday wtth safeguards for those\nwho were genuinely within the\nprovince but unable to register\nIn time.\nFIVE INJURED\nJUMPING FROM\nBURNING HOTEL\nLytton Hotel and Main Business Section Suffers to\nthe Extent of $100,000\nGoes Into Effect Immediately; Applies to the Factory  List  Price\nOTTAWA, Bept. 10 -~(OP)~Discount rate of 30 per cent on Importations of radio receiving; sets Into\nCanada under the general tariff will\nbe allowed from today to dealings tn\nthose arttclSB, according to an\norder-ln-councll published this evening. The discount applies to the\nfactory list price, and in this respect places radio receiving sets ln\nthe same category aa automobiles.\nTn the latter ease, however, the discount allowed by the order-ln-councll\non February 19 last waa 20 per cent.\nAccording to the order-ln-councll\npublished today, the discount rate\nof 80 per eent on radio receiving\nsets leaves a value \"to be deemed\nand taken to be the fair market\nvalue of such goods on Importation\ninto Csnada under the general\ntariff.\"\nPROVISION. MADE\nProvision Is made that thla \"fait\nmarket value\" shall not be lees\nthan the prloe actually paid by the\nimporter.\nWith regard to direct Importations\nby radio-users, the document continues: \"The value for duty purposes on importations by consumers\nIs held to be current home market\nlist prloes. Importations from exporters, those Invoices or catalogues\nand sales literature do not show list\nprices are to be held at customs,\npending reference to the department\nand  recelpta   of   lnatructions.\"\nCanada's importation of radio\ntubes, wireless and radio aete (not\notherwise provided for), and complete parte during the fiscal year\nwhich ended March 31, 1931, amounted to 18,082,117. Of this amount,\n7,988-312 wt* Imported from the\nUnited  atates.\n1-\nGoventfnent to Pay\n75,\u00a3er Cent of AB\n.   \/    Vancouver Relief\nJ TANCOUVM, B. C, Sept. 10.\nThf federal government and\nf rovlnclal government will as*\n\"ime 75 per eent of tbe labor\n'Vt of works undertaken by\nVancouver for the relief of un-\n*pnployed men lt was announced\n[odey following a conference bc-\n[ween Hon. H. R. Bruhn, mini\/tier of public works and clvtc\nWfldals.\n\/   The Dominion government will\n\/assume   50   per   cent   ef   labor\nfrost   and   the   provlnclsl   government 25 per cept,\nt\nVANOO-TVEB, Sept. 10 (CP)\u2014\nJumping from second and third\nstory windows of the Lytton hotel to\nescape flames which completely wiped out the hotel and the main business section of Lytton, British Columbia, picturesque mining town of\nthe Cariboo gold rush days, five\nmen lie in hospital, one In a critical   condition.\nTotal damage ls expected to reach\n$100,000.\nStarting supposedly in the power\nhouse attached to the hotel, the\nflames spread rapidly through the\nwooden structure. Twenty guesta\nwere ln the hotel at the time.\nCrowding out of their rooms when\nthe fire signal was given, they\nfound all exits to the first floor\nclosed, and the flumes making\nrapid progress toward the eecond\nand third floors. Rushing to the\nrear of the building tbe trapped\npeopl. Jumped. Only five were Injured,\" the rest escaping with minor\ncute or bruises.\nIN   CRITICAL   CONDITION\nP. J. Englefleld, assistant manager\nof the hotel, who took the 30 fool\ndrop from the third floor, was injured abdominally and ls in a critical condition. Doubts are entertained aa to his recovery. Of the\nother four, who Jumped from the\nsecond floor Fred RI chards, Nelson\nstreet, Vancouver, is probably the\nmost seriously Injure! He received\nInternal Injuries. Lome Penny and\nF. J. Thebod.au, both cf Vancouver,\nand Tueng Oo, hotel cook, were\nbadly burned. Fenby has an Injured\nshoulder and several broken ribs\nwhile Thebodeau has a broken right\nleg.\nWilliam Graham, said to be the\nlast man to leap from the top floor\nof the burning structure, had a\nmiraculous escape. lie lended on the\nelectric light wires along which he\ncrawled  to a pole  and safety.\nNEW BUDGET EMBRACES SACRIFICES FOB BICH AND POOB\nALL ROADWORK; ^'md__^^ CA\u2122YS IN $370,000 000  DEBT\nSTANDARD FOR\nTHIS DISTRICT\nTrafnsprovincial Highway\nOnly One to Be Touch\ned, Present\nCAMPS OF 30 MEN\nWILL BE  SET  UP\nDistrict  Engineer  Ramsay Held up for Camp\nEquipment\nMcGregor to Head\nCanadian Chamber\nRBOHNA. SM-., Sept. 10.\u2014 (By the\nCanadian Pr-_\u00bb~<--l W. L. McGregor ot Walker-Ill-, ont., today wa_\nelected president of the Canadian\nChamber of commerce at the concluding sea-ion of the annual convention, oeorge C. McDanold, Montreal, was elected chairman of the\nexecutive.\nOol. J. H. Woods, who held the\npresidency for the past two years,\nwaa elected chairman of the advisory council. The new vice-chairman\nof the executive are c. L. Burton.\nToronto, and M. W. Wilson, of\nMontreal, Que.\nLIFT BAN\nCALGARY, Alta., Sept. 10\u2014Snow,\nand rain of the past (aw days\ncaused forestry officials here today\nto lift the ban on fishing and\ncamping ln southwestern Alberta\nforests reserves. The ban was Imposed because of fire dangers, but\nwtth these nor at a minimum, the\nreeervsa will be thrown open to the\nmibllr,  Friday.\nSevers' rood camps in this\nImmediate district are getting\nstarted on a program of work\noutlined by District Engineer\nWilliam Ramsay, but numerous\ncamps are still ln process of\nformation, and will be opened\nwithin tbe nexl few days or a\nweek  from  now.\nMr. Ramsay slated jesterday\nthat delays In receiving camp\nequipment were holding up the\nopening of camps. In the majority of cases, camps of :io men\nare being started, but these will\nbe Increased shortl>. The engineer Is at present working more\nor less tn the dark as he has\nnot received definite Instructions as to the amount of money\nthat will be available for this\ndistrict. He Is working solely\nupon Wired Instructions received\nfrom Victoria to get relief ramps\ngoing on the southern highway.\nFurther working orders were to\ncome, bat have not as yet arrived.\nMr. Ramsay's orders cover only\nwork on the southern transprovlnclal highway, as relief work orders\nissued from Victoria cover only work\non this road and the newly designated transcanada highway around\nthe Big Bend. Thus the engineer\ncannot at thla time state just what\nwork on other roads In the district\ncan be done. However, Mr. Ramsay\neipecta that money will in time be\navailable for work throughout the\ndistrict.\nWILL BE  STANDARD\nMr. Ramsay was emphatic that\nwork being done ln this district on\nthe southern transprovlnclal road\nwill be of a permanent nature. Instructions are that width must be\nstandard and all roads properly\nditched. Theae Instructions cover\nboth the southern and transcanada\nroutes. Tho ordered width is 24\nfeet, 6  inches.\nWherever possible, machinery will\nbe used ln conjunction with the\nroad camps, stated Mr. Ramsay. At\npresent he plans on using five or\nsix gasoline shovels, and If more\ncan be obtained he will make an\neffort to get them for the district\nwork. .\nVery little work Is belhg done on\nroad maintenance at present, said\nthe engineer. But, he declared, by\nnext spring road conditions ln the\ndistrict will be much different.\nGOATFELL  CAMP\nArrangemenas are being made for\nbuildings on the west aide of Goat-\n< Continued on Page Ten)\nWILL ATTEMPT\nPROTECT GAME\nBIRDS, ALBERTA\nEDMONTON, Alta., Sept. 10\u2014(By\nthe Canadian press'\u2014In an address\ntoday before a service club, Hon.\nGeo. Hoadley. minister of health\nand agriculture for Alberta, declared\na new game act would be presented at the next sitting of the legislature. He expressed determination to prevent any shortening of\nthe game bird aeason.\nThe minister pointed out that Canadians were not responsible for\nthe great slaughter of ducks. He\nsaid that in Canada where ducks\nwere bred end fed. only 300.000\nwere killed each seaaon while ln\ntbe United states a slaughter of 30.-\n000,000 birds occurred annually. He\nadded that en dor sat ion of all western provinces for the proposed new\ngame   act  will  be  sought.\nCalifornia Girls\nin Tennis Final\nPHILA_DBU>HU, Bept. 10.-(AP> \u2014\nThe national girl's tennis championship will go to California this\nyear. Alice Warble of San Francisco and Ruby Bishop of Pasadena will meet Saturday for the\ntitle.\nMlss Marble, top seeded ln the\nannual tournament, today won the\nright to enter the finals through\na 6-0, 2-8, 8-2 victory over Helda\nBoehm of Melden, Maes,, while\nMlss Bishop, seeded third, created\na mild upset by eliminating Gracyn\nWheeler, of Santa Monica, calif-. 8-4\n8-0.\nMlaa Wheeler, Pacific coast Junior champion, had been ranked\nNO.   3.\nCASTAWAYS IN $370,000,000\nNORTH PICKED is TO BE WIPED OUT\nnOCMAN'IA'S   KING   AND   JUGOSLAVIA'S   QUEEN   ON   PARADE\nKing Carol of Roumania and Queen Maiioara of Jugoslavia take the\nsalute of troopa at a recent Bucharest military review, 'Die queen waa on\na' visit  to   the  Roumanian   capital.\nNELSON BOARD URGES COMPLETION\nSOUTHERN HIGHWAY AT SAME TIME\nAS TRANS-CANADA ROAD FINISHED\nHE SENT TRIO\nOF GUNMEN ON\nWAY MINUS $1\nNANTON, Alta,, Sept. 10\u2014\n(CP.\u2014Held up by three gunmen whit.\" motoring from Calgary to Nanton, W. B. Kester\nmanaged to emerge from the\nmeeting one dollar to the\ngood.\nHopping op the running\nboard o_ the car the bandlts\nordered him to shell out. Ha\nsaid he was In the samp boat\nas they were, having Just\nstolen the car and heading for\nthe states. He said he had no\ngas. The bandits expressed\nsympathy, handed \u00ablm a. dollar   for   lufl   and  disappeared.\nMr. Kester arrived ln Nanton\nwith the bandit-dollar and\nhis 1200  bankroll  Intact. ,\nAsk   Minister   if   Southern\nRoute Maintenance to Be\nStandard\nCOUNCIL PROTEST\nIS TURNED  DOWN\nSensational Gold\nStrike  Attracting:\nAttention in East\nPORT ARTHUR. Ont., Sept. 10\u2014\niCP>\u2014 Report of a sensationally rich\ngold stlke on Little Long like near\nlong Lac which brought to Port,\nArthur today by Stan B. Wateon\nof Sioux Lookout, one of the two\nprospectors who made the find. More\nthan 100 claims have been stake J\nstnrp the discovery was made three\nweeks ago and people are flocking\nto the scene, Mr. Watson aatd.\nIndications are that this find may\nprove as rich as the Red lake field.\nFree gold has been traced on the\n.surface for a dletanc. of half a milt'\nfound. While no assay has been made\nand four distinct veins have been\nof samples as yet, pieces of the ore\nbrought to the lakehead by Mr. Watson indicate that, in some places\nat least, lt Is very rich.\nResolution Calls for Facta of\nTraffic  Census;  Thank\nBruhn\n\"I wish io confirm what I\nhate, stated publlcli; namely,\nthat It Is mill.' Imnwierial which\nof three transprovlnrlnl highways Is c.illc.l the MMHCUItdl\nMfhWH | lhal lit accordance\ni.i'ii- tii\u00ab- department's established policy It la my Intent Ion tn\nsee that every section of the\nprovince receives equal treatment with regard to highway\n.facilities. The southern transprovlnclal h1ghwa> will be In\nevery respect constructed and\nmaintained on a Mumlanl equal\nto that of the tnwHatMil highway.\n\u2022In Ganytni oul lhe work we\nwill natiirall_> use M niurli machinery and phut as ts compatible wll h efficiency and\neconomy, and the plant -we\nhave available.\n\"The selection of (lie tnui-\nci-nad.. highway was not altogether a matter of the provlrr-\n<lal government. We bad lo take\nInto account the fart that already (he Dominion government\nhad made large expenditure* on\nihls route; that lt was the route\nwhich cave direct acres., almost\nlo thc center of the Dominion\n'tovernmentV park area, and It\nwas the route whleh linked up\ndirectly wltpi the western terminus of the route designated by\nMIhtIji as Its section of the\n'ranscannda  hIghway.\n\"You   will   therefore   see   that\n(Continued   on   Page   Two)\nNew York Gunmen Conduct a War on Three\nFronts Taking the Life of Man Sought in\nEach Case; Little Children Escape Death\nNEW  YORK,   Sept.   10.   (AP.\u2014\nGunmen   sprayed   bullets   along\nthree   fronts  In   New   Vork   Ctty\ntoday, each time taking the life\nof the  man  they sought.\nJames  Lepor.  alias  Jamea  Marino,\nslain In a barber shop ln the Bronx,\nwas felled by bullets which whizzed\nln from the street ae he was paying\nthe  barber for cutting  the  hair of\nhis  two  small  children.   Neither  of\ntbe  children   was  hurt.\nSalvatore Maranzano, 47, died In\nwhat pollce said was a bootleggers'\nrendezvous in the New York Central\nbuilding.\nJacob .pviat., who, pollce learned,\nrecently wsa ousted from the Cloth\ning Cutters' union, local No. 4.\nAmalgamated Clothing Workers of\nAmerica, was killed in what was believed to be a workers' Quarrel. He\nwas shot while in a lower East\nSide restaurant by two men who\nescaped ln an automobile. He died\nafter telling police of the clothing\nCutters' Labor union row.\nBoys playing in a vacant lot In\nLong Island City rescued a man\nwho gave his name as Charles McGovern, 36, and who police said\napparently had been left to die In*\na pile of burning rubbish. They\npulled him rrom the fire when they\nsaw his leg protruding beneath the\nflames.\nUP BY VESSEL\nFour Scotsmen Marooned\nfor Months in Baffin\nLand\nTWO OF ORIGINAL\nPARTY ARE DEAD\nMen on Verge of Death\nWhen Eskimos Come\nAlong\nOTTAWA, Sept. 10 <CP> \u2014\nRescue of four Scottish castaways, marooned for many\nmonths on the shores of Forbl-\nsher hay, the deep inlet which\ncuts Into the southeastern portion of Maffln Land, has heen\neffected    by    the    I.    S.    Beothic,\nthe steamer chartered annually\nhy the Canadian government\nto carry supplies to tbe far-\nnorthern outpffrts of Ihe Arctic\ncircle.\nThe names of the castaways and\nof their small motor-ketch which,\na year ago, was dashed to pieces on\nthe coast of the inlet, could not be\nascertained from the brief wireless\nmessages received from the Beothic\ntoday. Such meagre information filtered through from the sub-arctic,\nhowever, conveys that they were\nmen from the little fishing town of\n(Continued  on  Page  Two)\nC. Pi SERVICE\nON MAINLINE IS\nRESTORED AGAIN\nTrains Running on Schedule\nfor   Firat   Time   Since\nSaturday's Trouble\nVANCOUVER, B..C, Sept .10.\u2014\nTraffic on the main line of the\nCanadian Pacific Railway through\nBritiah Columbia was resumed on\nschedule today for thc first time\nsince interruption to service last\nSaturday at tho west portal of Connaught, tunnel and st Twin Butte\ncreek. Torrential rains of several\nday's duration resulted in track\nwashouts   at   both   points,\nFollowinK the tie-up on the\nmain line, all trains were routed\nover the crows est and Kettle Valley lines, maintaining a schedule\nabout, fourteen hours behind main\nline   time.\nC. A. Cotterell. genera! nuperln-\ntendeiit, British Columbia division,\ndirected   track  repair operntlon*.\nRegular schedule waa resumed\nwhen No. 4 train left Vancouver\nat 9 a.m. today. No. 2 train was\ncancelled Wednesday night, and\nwas combined with No. 4 today.\nToday's No. 3 train will leave on\nschedule at  10 p.m.\nCALGARY, Sept. 10 .CP>\u2014 Westbound train No. 1 of lhe Canadian\nPacific railway left here for Vancouver tonight, thc first westbound\ntrain to travel over the main line\n.since the cloudburst caused washouts and damage at Glacier, British\nColumbia, last week end. The first\neastbound tr_ln Is due hern Prlday\nmorntng.\nLADY ASTOR IS\nMOVED BY THE\nBUDGET SPEECH\nLONDON, Hept. 10 (API\u2014Lady\nAstor was enthusiastic over the\nbudget, speed of lit. Hon. Philip\nMimvden   today.\n\"I hnva neier heen more moved In the house of commons,\"\nshe said, \"than when IIMenlnj;\nto Mr. snowden todaj. I have\ngreat, admiration for his murage\nand uprightness. He made an\nnppeal to which the whole country, high und low, rich and poor,\nIs    bound    to    listen.\"\nWITH NEW SAVINGS\nSnowden\nDole   WiD   Be   Reduced\n10 Per Cent in\n\u2022   Benefits\nAFTER    PRESENTING    BUDGET\nPhilip Snowden, British chancellor\nof the exchequer, as he appeared\nupon return to 10 Downing street\nafter presenting his budget speech\nbefore  the house.\nHOPE FOR THE\nPACIFIC PLANE\nGETS SMALLER\nPlane   Winging   Way   Over\nNorthland Thought to Be\nAnother Machine\nVANCOUVER. Sept. 10 <CP>-\nHope thst a plane seen over Car-\nmacks, Y. T\u201e this morning, might\nhave been that of Don Moyle and C.\nA. Allen, unreported transpacific\nflyers, faded tonight as no further\nword of the identity of the ship\nwas   received.\nThe plane, reported from White\nHorse as flying south two hundred\nmiles north of that plaoe, is now believed herc to have been one ot the\nfleet of planes belonging to the\nTrcadwell-Yukon Development company, which ply between White\nHorse snd Mayo, and other Yukon\nriver   points.\nNo reports had been received up\nto  a  late   hour   kotHfbt   indicating\nHMt tlie Ufflf overdue flyers had\nlanded anywhere In British Columbia.\nLUXURIES TAXED\nSALARIES SLASHED\nIncome Tax Raised; AH\nEntertainment* Must.\nPav\nLONDON, Sept, 10. (By George\nHum Melon, Canadian Prase staff\ncorrespondent) \u2014 WKh \u25a0\u00bb and\ntax, Rt. Hon. Philip Snowden,\nchancellor of the exchequer, today balanced the British budget.\nIt was eminently a budget of\nnational sacrifice, with |te widespread net flung over rich snd\npoor alike.\nIt caught the drawer of the dole\nwith a 10 per oent reduction ln\nbenefits. It hit the Insured worker\nwith a demand for increased contributions. It cut school teachers'\nsalaries lfl per cent. It hit polios\nrecruit and defence services, cut the\nsalaries of members of the government and members of parliament,\nand Judges on the bench: It raised\nthe Income tax 12 cents on $5. The\nstandard Income tax rate will now\nbe 11.25 to to. It reduce* income\ntax exemption of both married snd\nsingle. It adds 10 per cent to the\nsupertax. It Imposes higher duties\non beer, tobacco, snuff, petrol. Tt\nbrings even the lowest-priced entertainment within ' its sweep Eve*\nthe nickel show now pays a one?\ncent tax.\nniMOREEABI.E   TASI\n\"This Is one of thr moat disagreeable tasks that hss erer\nfallen on me In my life,\" *ald\nMr. Snowden, as he opened his\nstatement. \"It Is no pleasure to\ncall upon people to make ..aerl-\nflces or bear additional burden*,\nand only the consclousnesH that\nthis sacrifice Is necessary, that '\nthese burdens ere necessary to\navert far greater burdens, makes\nrn? m**k this afternoon tolerable.\" '\nBefore Mr. Snowden roae painfully\nfrom his seat the house had been 1n\na hubbub with raptd-flre questions.\nAa mmister after minister wu\ncalled to answer, the Laborites ironically cheered. It was from the Liberals and Conservatives who packed\nthe government benches behind him\nthat Mr. Snowden received applause\nsuch as few chancellors receive. The\ndefiant challenge of his final sentence, \"Come the world against us,\nEiiKland yet shall stand.\" brought\nthem crowding to the front bench\nto offer congratulations.\nIt was a grave atory he told -the\nestimated deficit this year was $370,-\n000.000, and next year, $880,000,000.\n\"Tlie country must face up to its\nposition.\" Mr. Snowden exclaimed\nas he drummed hla despatch box\nwith nervous fingers, \"and I \u00bbm\ngoing to do it this afternoon.-*\nThere must be no more borrowing for the payment of unemployment    benefits    when    th*    present\nHeartily Endorse\nGrain   Exhibition\nREGINA. Sask., Sept. 10\u2014Amid\napplause aud with delegates registering a unanimous standing vote\nthe Canadian Chamber of Commerce\nwent on record at its closing session this afternoon ss wholeheartedly endorsing the world's grain exhibition and conference to be held\nat Regina next year, calling upon\nthe authorities to see to tt that\nthe undertaking Is held on thc dates\nalready advertised aiffl that there be\nno halt in carrying this all-Canadian   undertaking  to  completion.\nHURRICANE\nWASHINGTON, Sept. 10 fAPl \u2014\nThc navy department was advised\nearly today that a storm of hurricane proport Ions had \u00ab1 ruck and\ndamaged San JUsn, Porto Vlco.\nDemand for C.N.R.\nBonds Is Excessive\nNEW VORK. N.Y., Sept. 10.\u2014\nwidespread demand for the Canadian National Railway company 20-\nyear guaranteed 4'_ per cent bonds\noffered to day, resulted in subscriptions in excess of the Initial\nJ25.COO.000 offering and an addltotn-\nai $25,000,000 of the bonds wheb\nthe banking syndicate had under\noption. Accordingly, thc closing of\nbooks on the entire authorized issue   of   $50,000,000   was   announced.\nThe heavy over subscription of\nthc issues waa attributed to the\nrecent scarcity of high-grade bond\nofferings as well as to the attractiveness of the bonds, which carry\nthe unconditional guarantee of the\ngovernment of tho Dominion ol\nCanada.\nApprove Amendment\nto Criminal Code\nTORONTO, Sept. lo (CPi\u2014 Amendment of the Criminal Code of Canada\nto permit corporal punishment, with\nor without imprisonment, or con-\nviced persons, wsa today approved\nby members of the Ontario Magla-\ntrates's association, m session here\ntoday. The meeting also approved of\ntlie  illgfMtton   making   imposition  of\nMidi, punishment upon often&ri <A*\nligatory   on   the  nan. of  magistrates\nand  trls!  judges\n(Continued   on   Page   10>\nFIRST     GMIM     SHIPMENT   \u2122\"\nOTTAWA. Ont.. Sept. 10. ICP> \u2014\nTh\u00ab steamer Parnworth arrived at\nChurchill tonight, where It will\nload with the ftrst shipment of\nof grain out of Canada's new port,\nthe radio branch of the department\nof marine reports. The Warkworth.\nwhich also will load grain rrom the\nnew term!nal. ia doa to arrive at\nChurchill tomorrow.\nTHE WEATHER\nfcWOPSIV   OF    UKVTHIK\n< OND1TIOMS\nThc    barometer    is    low over   tha\ninterior  and  showers  have extended\nfrom    Vancouver    Isian^ t_    Kootenay.\nPair,    moderately    warm    weather\nis   reported   in   the   prairies.\nVancouver       54 02        .08\nMm Max Rain\nNELSON          42 62 04\nVictoria          52 58\nVancouver          54 62       .08\nKamloops          54 62        .02\nEstevan   Point    ....    50 64        .08\nPrince   Rupert        52       56\nDawson,   Y.T     32 50\nSeattle          66 84\nPortland.  Ore.,   .,..    50 68\nSan   Francisco   ....    86 00\nSpokane         4d &S\nLos   Angeles        88 72\nPenticton          34 56\nVernon         43 54\nOrand   Forks        45 66        .06\nKaslo          47 60\nCranbrook         36 60\nCagarly           40 62\nEdmonton     ..     42 60\nSwift   Current         34 72\nPrlnte   Rupert          62 66\nQuAppelle           36 74\nWinnipeg         54 70\nKOttMAHT\nNelson  snd  virlnlt.     Mott-ly  i-'oud-\nI nd   com! ,   iv it h   shower-.\n PA01  TWO\n\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014tTTlt NIX90N DAD.T NEW-, NEUMJK. B. C nUBAT MOEMJiO, BEF_TMBE_l 11,  H|l\"\nCANADA'S AVE\nMONTH REVENUE\nIS 155 MILLIONS\nExceeds Total Ordinary Kx\npenditure by About 14\nMillion Dollars\nOTTAWA, Ont., Sept. 10. (CP.\u2014\nTotal ordinary revenue for the five\nmonths of the present fiscal year\nended August 31 last exceeded total ordinary expenditure for the\nsimilar period of upward of $14,-\n000,000. The financial statement for\nthe Dominion issued late today by\nthe department ot finance shows\nthat tbe revenue for April, May,\nJune. July and August amounted\nto *1R5,432.274. as flgulnrt. 9141,034,-\n3*8,   expenditure.\nIn   tha   corresponding   period   for\nlut year, revenue wu 1185,137,4(97,\nuid   expenditure,   f 142,366,7..5.\nIn the period under review for\nthin foot, customs duties amount to\n(48,508,700; excise duties, 922.280,-\n303; e>:riw tax 918.141.6fi3; income\ntu 947.704.2JI9, and miscellaneous\ntaxes 9351,408 u compared with\n9367,160.\nUnder ordinary expenditure, pensions for the period under review\ntotalled 916,654,023. Intereat on public debt wu 949.239,606; soldier\nland settlement 9432,006; subsidies\nto provinces 95.066.735, pensions and\nnational health 93,630,607; national\nrevenue 94,377,487; poat office 99,-\n208,256; national defence $4,377,497;\nagriculture $2,763,826; public works\nchargeable to Income 94,703,670; Dominion lands and parks 91.095,076;\ntrade and commerce 92,981,797; civil\ngovernment 95.016,569, snd other expenditures  930,498,114.\nTORONTO. Sept. 10 <CP_\u2014A 92,-\n000,000 action agslnst R. O. Sweeny,\nalleging   fraudulent   conspiracy   over\npower rights, was set down today at\nOegoode hall for hearing at the fall\nassizes.   \u25a0\u00bb\nGuide for Travellers\nNelson, B. C, Hotels\niwwvw^wvvw\n{fume Jfotel\nNELSON, B. C.\nNelson is now on Daylight\nSaving Time.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Prop.\n\"^^^^^\n-fUHS\u2014H. O. J__c.ar._n_, A. M\nOnea-, Cslssrr, O. Moore, H. W.\nWood, J. A. MeN-UI. Crsn'jrook; O.\nH. Boinie, J. 8 Black, B. C. NiMvsrm,\n__ Hotter, M. C. Irvine, Vancouver;\nJ. Stark, Vernon; Mr. and Mrs\nPaul A. Olson, Seattle; J. Crahan,\nstem\u2014. 0. H. Wilson. Victoria;  Mrs.\nW. Scott. Mrs. T. MoNable. _*th-\nbrldje; _.. A. CampboU, Boaalanrl\nR. Brouili, A. Anderaon, Medicine\nHat; Mr. and Mra. H. Brooke. Spo-\nkane; Mrs. Oalllcano, Lardeau; Mr\nand Mrs. Ernest C. Hop., c. Hay__lil'\nVsncouver,\n.Where tine Gueitls King\n(Z5he Savo^f\n_____..N'S NrwEST AND -\"IN.IT HOTZL\nMANV ROOMS WITH PRIVATE\nBATHS OR 6HOWERS\nJ. A. KERR, Prop.\nm\\msm%A\\m\\mmOA\\m\\m\\m\\m\\m\\m\\etm\\\n-^-SmtM.mSmsmtmtmtmtmXmtmt^.MxMMm.-t-tAAM.Mtm.\nWHO IS \"PASSING THE BUCK\"\nASKS FINK OF CRANBROOK, IN\nREGARD TRANSCANADA ROUTE\nCalgary Herald Says Alberta Chose\nRoute Because B. C. Choice Forced\nHer; Bruhn Lays Blame on Alberta\nPulls Editorial Apart\nAn editorial In the Calgary\nDaily Herald of Sf p. ember 5,\nentitled, \"Time to Press for\nOther Route*,\" which declares\nthat Alherta chow its transcanada route because of the decision of British Columbia and\nSaskatchewan, and the statement ot Hon. R. W. Bruhn,\nminister of public worts for\nBritish Columbia, that lint Mi\n4 ummhin look the northern\nroute at the Insistence of Alberta, has aroused J. P. Fink, of\n(he  Cranbrook  board  of  trade.\nMr. Fink hat* challenged the\nCalgary paper's editorial in the\nfollowing letter to J. R. Hunter,\nactinic commissioner of the Associated Boards of Trade of Eastern British Columbia. Following\n1. Mr. Fink's letter, and also\nthe editorial of the Calgary\nHerald;\n\"I am ln reoeipt of your favor of\nthe 5th Inst., to which you attach\ncopiea of letters from Hon. R. W.\nBruhn. minister of public works. In\nhis letter of September 1, ln the\nthird paragraph, a part of which\nreads aa follows: 'And It was the\nroad vhlc.'j linked up directly with\nthe southern terminus of the route\ndesignated by Albtrta as Its section\nof Hie transennada highway.' In addition to this statement, under the\nminister's own si (mature, you had a\nwire  from   Col.   Fred   Lister,  stating\n,_\/there are several large aawmllls;\nunlimited coal area*; tha largest\nzinc-lead mine ln the world; ona\nof the latest concentrators and\nsmelters on tha American continent;\nhundreds of fine fruit and vegetable\nfarms.' How many of these art found\nalong the central route?\n\"In addition to this, the construction and maintenance of a road\nalong the central route la far more\nexpensive than tha southern rouCe.\nThe Herald points out that there\nnre only a few remaining sections\nof the central route to ba completed,\ninferring that along the southern\nroute there are large gapa to complete. Surely tha Herald la aware of\nthe fact that the southern route\nhas been open for a number of\nyears. The Herald ahould be aware\nof the fact that the southern route\nis open 12 months of the year,\nwhile the central route ls open only\nthree. If the Herald will inquire ot\nthe Calgary wholesalers and manufacturers, lt wtll find that the bulk\nof their business cornea from along\nthe southern route, and that their\ntravellers are on the roads with\ncars selling practically 12 months\nof the year.\nA   COMPARISON\nIt sounds nice to hear It said\nthat the cential route connects up\ntlie Dominion parks, but what particular benefit will be derived tn\nmaking this connection If the bulk\nof   the  muriate  cannot   get  to  the\nTINE TO PRESS FOR OTHER ROUTES\nSAVOY\u2014It. R. Clublne, Salmo; D.\nH. McDerby. Calgary; J. Griffiths.\nC. Robertson, Vancouver; W, J.\nCrawford, Fernie; W. V. Knowles,\nGrand Forks; Mrs\u00a3 M. D. Snider,\nMlas M. C. Cancelliere. Revelstoke;\nDavid Nairn, Gait, Ont.; R. V.\nWilcox, Salmon Arm; D. Wells, Kas\nlo; Mr. and Mrs. B. Rowles, Victoria ; Charles Day, Winnipeg; M.\nMorton. Spokane; W. Undsay, Portland; E, P. Fry, Marysville; I. Wesley. Brookfleld; Mr. and Mrs. B\nDavltKon and family, \"New Westminster.\nQuesn's\nHotel\nA. Lapointe,\nProp.\nHot and cold water tn every room.\nSteam heated.\nQUltNS T. Ly-nan, OCWi Mnn,\nMr. ahd Mr*. K. A. Bperkcson, Vancouver; P. H- Frieeen, Renata; w.\nMills, vanoouver.\nMADDEN HOTEL\nd. a. Mcdonald\nSteam Heated Rooms by the\nDay, Week or Month.\n__very   consideration   shown\nto gueata.\nCor.   Baker   and   Ward   Streets\nNelson\nNEW GRAND\nHOTEL\nP. L. KAPAK, Prop.\nWeekly   or   Monthly   Rates,   etc\nSingle  75c  up:  Double  gl.75  up\nHeekly   nr  monthly   rates.\nHut and told water in all rooms.\nPhone 503 P. O. Box  1061\n_FBKE B.'S MEETS EVERY TR.H\nThe deelslon of the Alberta\ngovernment to route the trans-\nesaada highway through the\nprovince from Walsh *o Banff\nbv ivay of Medicine Hat and\nCalgary nas unavoidable because,\nnf the declarations of British\n(.'olumbia and Saskatchewan In\nfavor of this route. But apsrt\nfrr\u00bbm the viewpoints of the two\nother governments, the selection\nof the central artery can be Justified on many ground*. Among\nthese are that there are comparatively few links remaining\nto be brought up to rtandard\n..purifications, that the Banff-\nt. olden utretch through the\nmountains is unsnrpassed in\nscenic attractions, and that the\ngreatest population will be\n.\u2022.erved. In the north there Is\ncomparatively little population\nbetween Edmonton and the pro'\n!Kwed connection with the Brit -\nIsh Columbia central lilalnw.\nBetween Medicine Hat and Nelson there are few centers nf\npopulation, and all are small\nwith the exception of Lethbridge. Beyond Nelson and on t\"\nHops there are few even moderately sized towns. The central\nmute wtll pass through Calgary,\nBanff. Lake Lonlw, Oolden, Re\\-\neNtoke, Kamloops, and Ashcroft.\nThere || a Mrst-cla:** highway\ncompleted through from Rerel-\nstoke to the co-aM, and the last\nremaining mountain link be-\ntweSg fii>Men and Revelstoke Is\nwell    under   way.\nThere   Is  no  reason,  however.\nwhy advocates of the Crow's\nNest route and of the northern\nroute via Jasper park should\nabandon efforts to complete\nthoee highways. Owing to the\n\u25a0inrmployment conditions and\nthe predilection In official circles\nin Ottawa for road construction\nas a means of supplying work\nfor unskilled labor, the present\nIs an opportune time to press\nfor federal aid for the addition-\nHi mountain highways. It ls satisfactory that the newspapers in\ni (trunnion and lcthbrldge, while\nagreeing with the government's\n\u25a0Ik-i-i'mi on the transcanada\nhighway routing In the main,\nare pressing for the carrying on\nof  the  other  projecte.\nIt Is only a matter of time\nuntil auto tourists will have al-\nlemafive routes through the\nmountains as well as triangular\nruns of much -scenic beauty,\nand while the federal government (s In the mood to assist\nfinancially I* the time to apply\npressure. The Lethbrtdgw Herald\nll of tbo same opinion. \"It behooves,\" It says, \"that the communities between Medicine Hat,\nAlberta, and Hope, British Columbia, should not throw up\ntheir hands in the efforts which\nthey have been carrying on the\npast 10 years to secure the development of a flrst-rlass highway fur tourist and commercial\niniffic; neiiher should they stop\n:i(lvrilslng the route which la\nalready well known.\"\u2014Calgary\nHerald.\nROAD   FINISHED\nCERTAIN   TIME\n(OontlnuMi rrom _\u25a0__- Ont)\n__\u00a3^^2_S^u\"r\"!\u00a3WANT SOUTHERN\nPtrtm __\u2022_> m_p_, tnd ln lulni\ntbe tl__, 'Tr__.ctna__ Red Route',\n-j* were ___t_r_d _.,\u201e promleed that\nthis wouM be, fur til time, tbe\nmain hlffbwey -crow the province,\nend tt wenld be put ln llret-cltee\ncondition before any other road wu\nattrted.\n\"The Herald further eUtei that\nthere le no reaeon why tbe advocate, of the Crow'a -faat roada\nmould Hmnrion tbeir effort* to have\nthla 110* completed. Is mektni thla\nMust, th* editor of the Herald\nla .mi\u2014lm tbe aame doubts that\nwe. on tbe eoutb.rn nut*, bave bad\nfor aome time\u2014that preeeure would\nbe brought to bear that would be\ndetrimental  to  the southern  route.\n\"I truat that Vancouver and Calgary, both of which places will get\nthe bulk ot tbe tfturlet buaineea no\nmatter which road li eonatructed,\nwill itve due _oo_i_.ra.ion aad ae-\n-lstanoe to the people along the\neouthern route, to whom the road\nmeans   ao   much.\nCrenbrooH, B. C, \"J. P. _\u25a0___.'\u25a0\nSeptember 7,  ItM.\nNEW ORANJJ\u2014_,. Kl.rdasty, Omaha, P. Mycr, Csl.ary; J. Mob-.g, H.\nN.gara. R.no; t. H. Hall.trom\nBoaverd.H;  j. a. Quest, Trail.\nMADDEN -J.   P.   Gulfln,  Trail\nI.  Helms.  Bpokane.\nOccidental Hotel\nS03 Vernon St. Phone\nB. WasBlck\nFiftj  Rooms of  Solid  Comfort,\nHeadquarter! fur Loggers and\nMiners.\nIf your cak\u00ab is coarse grained,\nyou may attribute it to Insufficient\nmixing, too slow baking, too much\nI f hortenfng    or    too    much    baking\nthat British Columbia was forced\nto accept the central route becauae\nAlberta had already decided upon It.\n\"I am enclosing an editorial which\nI clipped from the Calgary Herald,\nunder dat\u00ab of September 5, at the\nbeginning of which is fctated: 'The\ndecision of the Alberta government\nto route the transcanada highway\nthrough the province from Walsh to\nBanff, via Medicine Hat and Calgary,\nwas unavoidable been use of the\ndeclarations of British Columbia and\nSaskatchewan in favor of this route.'\nIt seems to me that somebody ls\npassing the 'buck'. Plrst, British Columbia said she had to do so and\nwi because Alberta said so; and\nthen Alberta said she hntl io do so\nand so because Briti&h Columbia\n.'\u25a0Md bo.\n\u2022-n BANKS ON\nIOVTR ROI'TE\n\"Further on in thc editorial, the\nstatement lit made that there are\nfewer centera of population along\n-the southern route, but the central\n| route will pass through all the\nj large places between Calgary and\n; Vancouver.    If    thia    la    true,    how\nould thc Herald reconcile the following facte? 'Along the central\nroute from the Alberta boundary\nline to Hope there are nine banks,\nAlong the southern route, from\nCrow's Nest to Hope, there arc 20\nbanks.    Along    the    southern    route\nTrail, B. C., Hotels\nOTEL   \/ARLINGTON\nCentrally Located\nTRAIL, B. C.\nA. P. LEV-SQUI, Prop\nflOUGLA\n90 HOTEL\ns\nRooms and Bath\nU. L. and A. GEOIIAGE.\nProp*.\nSteam Heated           Hot and (MM\nThroughout                    Water\nBox 23.6              Phone\n-U\nTRAIL, B. C.\nThe Royal Cafe\nCLASSIC  RESTAURANT\nBrfltieinriit   and   Delicacy   Prevail\nOPEN DAV AND NIGHT\nSpecial Dinner, 11:30 to 8 p-m. 35c\nSpecial   Sunday  Chicken  Dinner  SOc\nspecializing  In Chop Sney and Noodles\nPHONE    1S3\nVANCOUVER\nlUFFFKIN HOTEL\u2014900 HLYMOl'R\n3T.\u2014-Bright Rooma. central, Mod-\narete Ratea. A. Paterson. late of\nColeman,  Crow'a  Nest,  Prop.\nEnlarged Prostate\nAND  ALL URINARY TLL8\nTAKE  OUR  REMEDIES\nPamphlets \"Man Know Thyself\" and \"Diseases of Men.\"\n\"Ills of women.\" alao Skin\nand Blood Diseases wtth Diagnosis Form and advice ln\nplnin rnvelope free bv mall.\nMail order and Tablet remedies  a specialty.\nThe English Herbal\nDispensary, Ltd.\n1339 Daile Ht. Vancouver,B.C.\nl.-.tul.lMu'd   35   .ears\nroad, aa lt in e well-known fact\nthat 76 per cent of the tourists\ncome from the United States? ir we\nexpect to develop this tourist business, lt is absolutely essential that\nthe north and aouth lines should\nbe put in first-class condition. At\nno place along the southern route\nwould these north and south feed-\n(conncctlng with wonderful\nroads in the States, exceed 25\nmiles   In   length.\n\"I believe these parks wltb wonderful roads through them would be\nln about the aame condition as the\nbeautiful Empress hotel at Victoria\nif the Canadian Pacific Railway\ncompany had not provided proner\ntransportation to get over to lt. Aa\nan illustration of this, during the\nlast month. I know of more than a\ndozen cases where tourists, whose\nobjective was Banff, came es fsr as\nYahk or Cranbrook, and then turned\nback, because cf the rotten condition of the roads, although they\nwere told that the roada were better lurther on. But they said they\nhad been told this ever since they\nleft the good roads across the line.\n\"If the people of Calgary and\nVancouver fwho are working ao hard\nfor the construction of the central\nroute) will make Inquiries, they\nwill find that million* of dollars of\nbusiness come from merchants along\nthe southern route. They want this\nbusiness, and are making strenuous\nefforts to get H. but tho people\nalong the southern route are so\ndisgusted with the treatment received for a number of yeara that\nthe merchants are apt to resent\niin,' treatment to auch an extent\nthat they will plBce all their orders\nln the east.\nROAD   MAPS   C6STLT\nIf the editor of the Herald will\nwalk over to the Automobile club\noffice and look over the maps that\nare being distributed, he will find\nthat 75 per cent of them refer to\nthe southern route under the heading of the Transcanada Red Route.\nLarge suma of money have been expended, both by the boards of trade\nMRS. REIMANN\nSCORES AT COAST\nIN FANCY WORK\nExhibit! by Trail Lady Win\nThree Firsts, Several Seconds and a Third\nTRAIL. B. C, Sept. 19.\u2014Competing against 2000 other entries. Mrs.\nA. M. Rslmann of Trail won &\nnumber of prizes at th, Vancouver exhibition held recentlj. Three\nflrat prteee, several seconds snd a\nthird ware carried away br Mrs.\nRelmann.\nBo excellent ware ths exhibits\naent to Vancouver by Mrs. Relmann, that Mra. M. Meade, secretary\nfor women's work of the Intsrpro-\ntf.nclal exhibition of Armstrong,\nwho was a visitor at the coast exhibition, wrote asking ths Trail\ncontestant to \u00abxhlbit st the Armstrong fair. Mn. Meade aald she\nhad been delighted with ths wonderful work of Mra. Relmann and\ncomplimented hsr on carry int away\nso many honors, saying it would\nbe a pleasure to hsve her work exhibited ln Armstrong, where competition was slmoet as keen as at\nth\u00ab coast.\nSENDS    SET\nAmong the first prize exhibits\nsent by Mrs. Relmann were a chair\nsat, gueat towels snd pillow slips.\nThe chair set was crocheted from\nNo. 70 ecru cotton In bird *nd\nfloral design. Ths crocheting wss ao\nbeautifully don# thst the design\nstood out in perfect relief against\nthe   fillet   pattern.\nThe sueit. towels, on whits linen\nwith ross borders, were edged with\na fin\u00ab crochet lace of Intricate and\nopen design, forming a *ci.l)op\nabout two Inches deep. The small\ndesign, a few inches above thc\nborder, was done ln cross atltch of\ndelicate pastel shades,\nOne of the most beautiful exhibits wss the pair of pillow slips\nThe crochet edge, about nine inches\ndeep, had a continuous pattern of\nhawthorn branches snd perfectly\nformed birds. Rose blossoms added\nto ths beauty of the lace. Mrs\nRelmann usually wins firsts wltli\nher  pillowslips.\nKnitted   of   silk,   th\u00ab   baby   bonnet entered by Mrs. Relmann allowed   rare   workmanship   end   flawless\nresults.\nLIKES  TATTING\nTatting, favorite work of Mrs.\nRelmann, won eeoond prize, it waa\nof finest thread and the wheels\nterming the design were beautifully edged. The article submitted\nwas a collar and Jabot, necessitating hours of close and tedious\nwork.\nWhit\u00a9 wooly bootees, shaped at\nthe knee snd having tiny ankle\nbands,  also won second  prize.\nMrs. Relmann submitted an altar\ncloth but as there were no cla3s\nfor such work, it did not receive\na prise. A bedspread, novelty cushion, apron made from flour ssck\nand many other articles were aent.\nOne of the many rules of the Vancouver exhibition was that all work\nmust have been don* within 13\nmonths.\nHaving received the request to\nexhibit; st Armstrong, Mrs Relmann looks forward to about 10\ndays of hard work in preparation\nas ths Armstrong exhibition wtll\nbe held September 12. 22 and 23.\nShe Is adding a number 0f articles\nIncluding handkerchiefs, boudoir\ncap and dainty crepe paper cushions.\nthere was little choice In the\nmatter aa far as we were concerned, snd I msy ssy further,\nI reoognlae that the southern\ntrans prorln rial highway la ef\njust as much importance ta the\nprovince as tor other highway\nwe have.\n\"I feel quite confident that no\none Is going to suffer ln any\nway whatsoever by the fact that\nthe ronte from Vancouver to\nthe Big Bend has bees designates ths transceiisda highway.\nIndeed. If, u we hope, the Dominion government undertakes\n100 per cent of the cost of the\nwork, we will be ln a better\nposition financially to carry out\ntbe improvements to the south-\nem transprovlnclal highway,\nwhich we otherwise would not\nhsve  undertaken.\"\nScheme to Establish British Communityr\nSettlements in Canada Is presented at the\nCanadian Municipalies' Meeting at Vernon\n\u2014*\nSCHNEIDER CUP\nTO GO TO THE\nBRITISH AGAIN\n(Continued From Pige One)\ntaken by a \u2022'Houston troph.\" donated br Lady Houston, wbo In addition bu eet a prize ot .1000\n(M000) (or tbe Individual airman\nwlnnln. an International speed competition wltb seaplanes.\nAlready 10 pilots Identified wltb\ntbe Schneider cup competitions during tbe last few years have lost tbeir\nlives during actual racing practice\nnights, or other nights for tbe sake\nof tbe high speed which hae been\nmade In small fragile airplanes.\nIt le regarded  aa almost certain\n\u201e, that one of  the two new  British\nAbove ls the contents of a letter  .-^ pUne. wffl  btt__ th. w..l<u\nf SCIATICA\nWub the sinful am well\n\u00bb-th warm watte; duo rob la\npltmy ef Miawd't md\nyou'll feel better I\n1\n\u25a0O GET RID OF\nCONSTIPATION\nV- Ot. Carte. \u00ab famous IittU\nLiver PUIs. Entirely VtfttabU.\nGentle but effective. No bad\naftereffects. For 60 \u2014m they\nhave given quick relief from\nBiliousoees, Sick Headechee,\nIndigestion, Acidity, Bad Com-\n|____\nREGARDLESS OF ALL\nELSE GANDHI TO\nKEEP SILENCE\nABOABD g. 8. BAJPL'TANA,\nst sea, Sept, 10 (AP)\u2014Unless\nthe Britiah government changes\nthe date for tbe meeting of the\nfederal structures committee,\nwhich Is set f\u00bbr neit Monday et\nLondon, Mahatma Candhl will\nsit through the session, listening\nattentively, but not speaking.\nMonday Is Gandhi's day of\nalienee and he Intends to observe it. Tuesday tbe mahatma\nwill step forward and present\nhis views.\n.tandhl and Shaukat All, ulth\nthe begum of Bhnpal acting as\nmediator, reached a basis of understanding on the Hindu-Moslem communis! problem today\nalong the lines of the congress\nformula, calling for Joint Hindu-\nMoslem electorates.\nJeilicoes Improving\nMONTRBAL, Sept. 10 - Marked\nImprovement in tbe rendition ot the\nthree memberi of the Jellicoe family\nwaa reported today at the Roes\nMemorial hospital where the adralri,\nOf the fleet, h_ daughter, Ladv\nGwendoline, and his son, the viscount Brocas. are patients.\nKarl jellicoe plane ta sail for\nSngland.\n25. & 75c red\nAfk yew druggist (or\nCarters iselhlls\nKAYE DON WELCOMED\nBY TORONTO\nTORONTO, Sept. 10\u2014 jtir\u00bb-\nDon, noted British speed boat.\ndriver, ti*w from Detroit to Toronto today end wat accorded a\ncivic reception at the city hall\n\u00bbjere he nae welcomed by\nMajor gtewart and thonsands of\ncltlnm.\nHon. W. H. Price, atlorntv-\nteneral, greeted the hero, on be-\nhall ef ontarlo.\nfrom Hon. R. W. Bruhn, minister of\npublic work* for British Columbia,\nwhich was received by J. R. Hunter,\nacting commlaploner for the Associated Boards of Trade ot Sastern\nBritish Columbia, and turned over\nto the Nelson board of trade. Thn\nletter wae read and discussed by\nthe board at Thursday's noon luncheon.\nCOMPLICATIONS   ARISE\nComplications arose in the board\nwhen the letter was presented. In\naddition to the above, which was\ntaken by the board to mean that\nthe minister was doing what he\ncould for the southern route, the\nboard had before It a resolution\nfrom the board's council. It expressed \"extreme disappointment\nand dissatisfaction\" at so little attention having been paid to representations made from the whole of\nthe southern interior with regard to\nthe route of the transcanada highway.\nA. D. McLeod and P. O. White-\nhouse opposed tbe resolution frgm\nthe board In that Mr. Bruhn's letter, arriving after the council had\nframed Its resolution, had clerred\nup the matter. They urged acknowledgement of Mr. Bruhn's letter snd\nthe withdrawal of the council's resolution.\nMr. Cunllffe advanced a motion\nthat the minister's letter be acknowledged, but that the resolution\nbe enclosed with the explanation\nthat it was only for his Information, and that the board had not\nacted upon It. The motion, seconded\nby Alex Lelth. was lost.\nDECIDE  ON  LETTER\nThe resolution from the council\nwa\u00ab  then   put  and  ldkt.\nOn motion of A. D. McLeod snd\nP, C. Whltehouse, the matter was\ncleared up when W. R. Hlnton waa\nInstructed, with the secretary, to\nwrite to the minister acknowledging hie letter, with eer_e.n tnetruc-\ntlons. Following the meeting the\nfollowing letter was sent to Mr.\nBruhn  from the board:\n\"your letter of September 1\n. to the Associated Boards of\nTrade of Eastern BrltUh Columbia waa passed on to the\nNelson hoard of trade and read\nat  their meeting today,\n\"f am Instructed by the board\nin express their appreciation of\nthe prorram you outline and\nthe promises contained In your\nletter.\n\"There are two points which\nyon do not make certain In your\nletter; first, that the southern\ntransprovlnclal highway should\nhe started and completed simultaneously wlt|, the construction\nof the northern ronte; and secondly, that the southern roed\nwill be maintained to the standard of a first-class highway,\n\"It Is on the assumption that\nthese two assurances are understood to be Included tn your\nstatement cf the government's\nIntentions that I am Instrocted\nto convey to you the sincere\nthanks and hearty approval of\nthe Nelson hoard of trade.\"\nTHE   AR-fir.lENT   f*TARTS\nThe fireworks started when C. P.\nMcHardy suggested that copies of\nthe council's resolution should be\nsent to Premier Bennett and Hon.\nH. H. Stevens. Then came the reading  of Mr.  Bruhn's letter.\nDr. to. C. Arthur decared that\nthe province war* blaming the Dominion government when they\nnhould blame themselves. The north\nem route meant construction of\n200 miles with no settlers on lbs\nroute. When It was completed the\nagitation would be to build a road\nfrom Oolden to Revelstoke. The\nsouthern route had Its disadvantages. It had a passable road, but\nsome parts were abominable. He\nurged more maintenance and surfacing.\nR. W. Hlnton declared the northern route oould not now be Ignored.\nAttention muet be r'vetted on the\nsouthern route. There was no tise\nbelittling the road through Revelstoke. He urged completion ot the\nsouthern route. What he suggested\nwas a resolution urging the government, to eay \"when they would complete   ths   southern-   route.\"\nMaintenance wss Important. At\npresent there was four times more\ntravel on the southern route than\non the northern route. Ths board\nshould ask for traffic figures which\nwere in the handa of the government when the transcanada route\nwas chosen. Traffic in the south by\nthis census would be shown aa four-\ntimes as much as on the Big Bend\nroute. Surfaces on the southern\nroads *ere going. Maintenance\nshould be based upon traffic figures. He then moved a resolution\nwhich was seconded by Dr. X. C.\nArthur.\nIt drew attention to the recent\ntraffic census of the number of\ncar\u00ab passing over various highways\nof the province and demanded from\nthe minister a copy of tbe traffic\nfigures\u2014\"as a knowledge of the results will enable us to make a more\ncorrect and intelligent estimate of\nthe com-paraUva coat of maintenance of reads ln the different sections of th* province.\" The motion\ncarried\nDr. Arthur asked who would maintain tha northern route. Ra beltevid\nthe Dominion would maintain those\nportions running through Its parka.\nTha province would have to maintain tba balance. A. to. Menu urged\nthe sanding to Mr. Bruhn of the\ncouncil's resolution. \"Olvo the gov-\nsrnment a taste ef what we have\nbeen  getting,\"  he  urged.\nA motion put by C. P. McHardy\nwhich would send a query to Hon.\nH. H. Stevens, \"asking the Dominion government's attitude as to the\ntranscanada highway and the 100\nJper  cent cost,\"  wu loat,\nrecords of 828 mllea per hour over\nthe 317-mlla course _st in 1B39 by\nthe lata Plying Officer E. R. D\nWaghorn. and of 8fl7 mllea per hour\nset by Squadron-Leader A. H. Orel-\nbar over a three-kilometer course.\nOne ol ths new British machine* already hu flown 40ft miles per hour\nIn practice.\nPllght-Llentenants J. H- Boothman\nand F. W. Long have been selected\nto pilot the two new sjiip*. Flight-\nLieutenant fltaluforth will take one\nof the planes up afterward over a\nthroe-kilometer course, and Hying\nOfficer h. 8. Snaltb will pilot a\nthird Schneider cup machine, one of\nehe old 1020 models.\nSIAMESE ROYAL\nPARH RECEIVES\nB. COFnaALS\nLieutenant - Governor    and\nPremier Tolmie Both Presented In Royal Suite\nIs    Elaborate   and    Differs\nFrom  Former Schemes\nin Many Details\nVICTORIA, Sept. 10\u2014King Prajadhlpok and Queen Rambat-Barnt, of\nSlam, performed their first official\nact since coming back to BrltUh\nColumbia a week ago, here tonight,\nwhen they received Lieutenant- Governor   J.   W.   Fordham   Johnson   In i etock.\nthe palatial  vice-regal  suite  of  the]    Thl*   \u00ab\u00abm   he   eald   would   pot'\nEmpress hotel, where they took up cfeMft   ond   equip   about   60   oom-\nVERNON, B. C. Sept. 10 \u2014\n(By the Canadian Press.\u2014An\nelaborate scheme for establishing British community settlements ln Canada, was laid before the union of Canadian\nMunicipalities convention this\nafternoon by Brig. Oen. M. L.\nHornby, C.B., formerly of the\nBritish Army and at present\na large landowner In Alberta\nand  B.   C.\nIta outlining his schema Oeneral\nHornby spoke of other similar plane\nof British settlement ln Canada.\nThese systems so far u he understood them had one future ln\ncommon in that they propoud to\nteJu up some large tract of raw\nland, and to people Ik with British emigrants who would have te\ndevelop it themselves. To put such\na scheme into operation would require an army of experts and\nv:ould take a long time before it\ncould absorb any appreciably number of BrltUh emigrants, and would\nImpose greaf hardships on the settlers and  discourage them.\nOeneral Honwby's plan le that\nBritish community settlements\nshould be formed In Canada with\nthe help of financial loans to be\nmade by the British government\nby every country and large town,\nIn the old country, and my certain approved societies such u the\nSalvation Anny and the church of\nEngland council of emplr, settlement.\nWOULD AFFIUATC\nAs far aa these British countries\nand towns are concerned. General\nHornby would afffillate them with\nCanadian cities and towns and tbe\ntwo work together.\nOn the question of financing the\nscheme General Hornby said It\nwould be \"Sine Qua Non\" of any\nBritish settlement scheme and\nthat it must make no call or claim\non Canada for financial assistance,\nu Canada hu her own burdens.\nOen. Homsby said, ths scheme\ncould he establlahed on a very satisfactory worWns; basis for $88,000,000\nof which S2.600.00 would be uncov-\nerable money for passage expenses,\nwhile $62,800,000 would be spent on\ncapital account for acquisition of\nland, buildings, equipment and live-\nquarters this afternoon tftcr their\n100-mile drive from Quallcum Beach.\nFollowing the lieutenant-governor's\nformal visit, their majesties received\nPremier 8. F. Tolmie, representing\nthe   British   Columbia   government.\nLater the royal party went to\nGovernment House for dinner as\ngueete of Lieutenant-Governor and\nMrs. Fordham Johnson.\nThe arrival of the king and queen\nat the empress hotel at four o'clock\n;hl\u201e afternoon, after tbeir motor\ntrip over the scenic __.ai_._iat Drive\nfrom QuaJlcum markel an Interesting re-union between the royal pair\nand Prince and Princes* Svastl,\nPrince Svastl is the queen's father,\nand also U uncle to U.e king With\nPrincess Bvuti _.nd bU two sjns.\nArjuna and Bijl, he arrived yesterday from Seattle. Prlnco and\nPrincess Svastl left the mair; y,r_y\nin New York July 25 to make, an\nindependent tour of tlie U- \u00a3-. while\ntheir majesties were enjoying their\ntour of Canada and the Rockies.\nSTILL   THE   TOPIC\nVancouver island fishing U still\nbhe pivotal topic conversations the\nroyal party after their successes\nwtth rod, reel and at Campbell jlver\ndriving the lut few days. Tbe big\n35-pound tyee sslmon caught by\nthe king's adopted son, Prince Chir*-\nsakti which made him eligible' for\nmembership in tbe Sportsmen's society. The tyee was dUpatched trom\nNanaimo to Vancouver today to be\nstuffed and mounted in time to be\ntaken back to Slam with the party\nwhen the sail from here Saturday\non   the   Empress   of   Canada,\nHis majesty, who caught some *U\u00bb\ncohoes but had little luck with the\nbigger tyeea showed himself a keen\nsportsman on various fishing Jaunts\nup the island, rising at flv\u00ab o'clock\nto get in a full day's sport.\nTomorrow the king and queen will\nlunch at \"Benvenuto\" as guests of\nMr. and Mrs. R. p. Butchart ln the\nworld famous gardens when a\ngarden party will be held during the\nafternoon.\nCASTAWAYS IN\nNORTH PICKED\nUP BY VESSEL\n(Continued From Pape One)\nPeterhead, in the north of Scotland.\nLut summer, according to the\nradio despatches, an Intrepid quintette inspired with thi prospect of\nriches t_t be gained in the fur-trade\nof the arctic, left the ScottUh port\nIn . small motor-ketcu. What fortune befell them U not known;\nbut tht- face that the skipper of the\ndiminutive trading vessel died indicates ttiai mis...;;.-: wot* not foreign\nto them.\nONI. TAKES  PLACE\nOne of the four took the place of\nthe deari man and ventured the oo-\ncent of FrobUlier bay. There the\nIntrepid fur- trade re met their crowning misfortune. Their motor failed,\nand Jjelpleesly they were buffeted\nabout among the Ice-floes until finally the vessil wu duhed to pieces\non the rocks. All four werc able to\nreach  land.\nA touch of good fcrtune came to\nthem in their discovering an abandoned -Eskimo camp and. adding the\nnew supplies they had been able to\nsalvage to the walrus meat found\nthere, they eked out a precarious\nexistence.\nLut December, however. their\nplight became desperate. The rigors\nof the arctic winter, combined with\ntheir total lack ot nourishing food,\nbrought the four men to death's\ndoor. But again the gods of chance\nwere with them, for &a tfiey were on\nthe fring i of complete exhaustion\nthey were found by a wandering\nband of Eskimos.\nThe natives fed them, tended them\nand at length conveyed them to the\npost of the Royal Canadian Mounted police at Lake Harbor.\nThere the men were well cared for\nInstalled ln warm comfortable quarters, and provided with sustenance\nthat rebuilt them. When the Beothic put into Lake harbor 10 days\nago, the four cutaways were taken\non board and are now en route to\nNorth Sydney. Ii. S.\nmunity settlements, and establish on\nthem the first batch of 4,000 settler famillu or 25,000 persona. Of\nths *fl3,500,000, General Homsby estimated that (23,500,000 would ba\nreaulred the first year of operation,\nthe mime amount the second year,\nand $17,500,000 In the third year.\nThe 00 settlements, would be 20\nof between 6.000 and 10,000 acres\neach, and forty of Between 3.600\nand 6,000 acres each.\nTlie coat of purchasing and fully\nsqulpplng each 10000 scr* settlement\nand of establish In* settlers, h# estimated at $1,260,000 and half this,\ntor each 8,000 acre settlement.\nAccording to the proposer of the\nscheme, tbe best Interests of the\nold country and Canada would be\nto adopt without delay some Iplan\nfor speeding up and expanding British   settlement  in  Canada.\nAs fsr u the Dominion ls concerned, General Hornby believed\nthat the preeent U a favorable\ntime for putting such a scheme\nInto operation. ,\nAt first sight, he said lt might\nbe ergued against this view, that\nthere is a great agricultural and business depression in Canada at present with large numbers of unemployed and that the present it not\nthe time to put any big scheme\nof Immigration into operation. But\nsueh arguments he maintained\nhardly applied to his plan, which\nInstead of adding to unemployment would actually create wtwk\nand help to clear the depression,\nwhile lt could not add a great deal\nto production in the next two\nyMra.\nHe pointed out there was no\nquestion of bringing over larg*\nnumbers of settlers immediately, as\nout public opinion, and to hav\u00bb a\nlt would take some time to sound\nbill put through the British house\nof   commons.\nIn closing General Hornby emphasised the scheme wu not In any\nway subsided by any government,\nthere were no doles and no charity.\nFor this plan ot community settlement In anada all that the British government ls uked to do Is\nto pledge the country's credit and\nto make advances or money on\nthe security of developed portions'\nr.f the Empire, in the *une way as\nsha has guaranteed millions for\ndevelopment   outside   the   Empire.\nThe proposal will be sent to the\nreeolutlonc commt^f? of the convention and a report presented\nSaturday   rooming.\nTORONTO, Sept. 10\u2014Surplus farm\nproduce may be distributed among\nneedy families throughout Ontario,\nIf plan, under consideration by th>\u00bb\nprovincial government are carried out\nHon. T. L. Kennedy, minister of\nagriculture, today confirmed reports\nthe plan wae under advisement\nClosing\nDance Party\nand Season Wind-Up\nat1\nBALFOUR   BEACH\nSaturday, Sept. 12\nMusic bj\\\n'Hap' Hogan vand\nBalfour Beacil\nOrchestra   *\nSpot  Dances\u2014Mo^i\nlites\u2014Specialties -*\"\nStunts\u2014Midnite ,\nSupper\nAdmission to\nEverything\u2014\nGentlemen \"$1.00\nLadies .\nA Fitting Climax\na   Glorious\n... $1.0P\nmax wl\nSeason l\n n.tj\n1\nWOULD ABOLISH\nINCOME TAX AT\nEARLIEST DATE\nSecretary of Canadian Municipalities Urges Action\nat Convention\nVERNON, B. C , Sept. 10\u2014(C. P.)\n\u2014With Maxima D. Cormier, M. P..\nof Edmunds ton, N. B., president directing its deliberations, the 31st\nannual convention of the Union of\nCanadian Municipalities opened here\nthla morning. Attendance of delegates today wss affected by the\nnon-arrival of many from eastern\npoints owing to washouts of railway lines in the mountains.\nPresenting hla annual financUl\nreport, S. Baiter of London, Ont.,\nsecretary-treasurer, said total re-\ncelpts for the year had been \u00bbMflfl\nand disbursements 92956. The total\nmembership stands at 99.\nWOULD  ABOLISH  TAX\nAbolition of the Dominion income\ntax as soon a3 posalble. and withdrawal from the field of direct taxation, sre resolutions which the\neecretary calls on tbe convention to\nurge on the federal  government.\nMr. Baker also asked for reaffirmation of a former resolution\nfor establishment of a Joint commission in whleh Dominion, provincial and municipal 'government*\nshould be represented to inquire Into the question of duplicate taxation smonf the different bodies ln\norder  to remove  as  far as possible\nexisting  duplication  at  baaas.\nActivities of tbe TI. C. M. during\ntbe peat year, tbe r*Mrt tbom,\nwere directed to tba following: Advice to municipalities ox proposed\nlegislation In tbe federal house, petitions to tbe federal parliament and\nprovincial legislatures aa directed by\n;be convention, unemployment relief, old age pensions, transcanada\nhighway, while Immigration matters\nwere followed up and brought about\ngovernment action.\nPAPER  IS   BEAD\nA peper on \"Municipal Taxation,\"\nby itayor H. W. Catar, of Brandon,\nwho was unable to attend th* convention, waa reed by Mr. Baker.\nBrandon'- veteran mayor deplored\nthe party attitude of opposition and\nsuspicion so far aa It exists between the governing bodies of Canada,-and would welcome a spirit of\nabsolute canfl4e__c_ and cooperation\nIn  its piece.\n( \"1. i* only under the lnfluance\ni of such friendly spirit that the\nI problems of government can be\n-equitably  adjusted.\" be  said.\n\"Tuxes.\" he declared, \"should not\ni be regarded us a necessary evil-.\n| They were In moderation a distinct\nl advantage to the ratepayer far exceeding the financial contribution\nmade. They bring home to the individual his or her responsibility,\nj \\nd provide the opportunity to be-\ncome a working partner in the development, protection snd happiness\nof the community which far outweighs the value paid in dollar*\nand cents.\"\nVERNON ASSURED\nOF AN AIR MEET\ntip. NtLSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON.  B.  C. HUMY  MO__>INO.  SEPTEMBER  11\nKnight of Open Rood Still Alive\n14  Planes to Be on  Hand;\nSeattle Pilot. Are Anxious  to  Race\nLeckie's\nSchool Shoes\nLECKIE'S\nRED STITCH\nSizes 1 to 5 1-2 .... 93.25\nSizes 11 to 13 1-2      2.75\nSISMAN\nSCHOOL BOOTS\nWith   Panco  Soles\nSizes 1 to 5 1-2 ... $2.45\nWatson Shoe co..ud.\nVERNON. B C. Bept. 10, (CP)\u2014\nVernon is assured of en airport\nmeet on September 30 and October\n1. according to tbe consensus of\nopinion following the meeting of\nthe air pageant committee last\nnight.\nFourteen planes will\"\" come here\nfor the event. Others are hoping to\nattend. Among those assured are\nfive Seattle planes which sre anxious to take part ln any race from\nVancouver to Vernon which may be\nIntroduced aa a feature of tbe pe-\nfttOk Jones Evans, superintendent\nof the Vancouver airport, bee announced his intention  of attending\nThe Vancouver Aero club plans to\nsend three fleet plsnes and Its\nGypsy Moth and two or three wUl\nattend from tbe Jericho Beach base\nCarter Quest is planning to fly\nhere ln a Boeing plane, and a seaplane may alao be coming Major\nTudhope Is another enthusiast at\nthe coast who has written to aay\nthst he will make every effort to\nbe here. The Northwest Air Service\nof Seattle is hopthg to send a taper\nwinged  Waoco.\nThe department of national defence haa agreed to send two planes,\nfollowing a request made by Grote\nSterling. V. P. The De Havlland\nAircraft company is also urging the\nprivate owners of its machines to\nattend.\nKILLED BY  MONOXIDE\nGAS   IN   AUTO\nVANCOUVER.. B. C, Sept. IB\u2014\nKilled by carbon monoxide gas, the\nbody of Harry de Con McDlsrmld.\naged 33, bond salesmen, was found\nabout midnight in an automobile\nbelonging to his brother, N. H. McDiarmld, barrister, at tbe latter's\ngarage on Acadia road, University\narea. Point Grey.\nThe deceased waa aaphr*tated by\nfumee from the car, according to\ninvestigation   by  provincial  pollce.\nHe was a *son of the late A. P.\nMcDiarmld. well -Known Vancouver\nlawyer.\ncoAt: COAL! COAL!\nWe have for quick sale, IS tons of THREE HILLS\nCOAL which is one of the finest coals obtainable.\nIt is slow burning, leaves little ash and gives steady\nheat.\nOnly 15 tons left at a reduced price.\nWEST TRANSFER GO.\nPHONE   33\nMUNICIPALITIES\nMUST BE STRICT\nIN ALL SPENDING\nWarning  of  Depression  Ills\nSounded  at Convention\nat Vernon\nREPORTED    DEAD   KNIGHT    OF   BROAD    HIGHWAY    LARGE    All   LIFE\nLast week' George Graham, 68-year-old wanderer of tha open road\nwaa \"positively\" Identified aa a victim killed in a motor accident near\nBrampton, Ontario\u2014be was picked up aa large as life a week later at\nGrimsby, declaring in substance that \"the report of his death was\ngreatly exaggerated.\" He had been miles away from where ihe accident\nbad occurred. Graham has \u2022 made the open highways and byways of\nCanada hts  home for the past 25  years.\nON THE AIR TONIGHT\nFRIDAY.  SEPT.  II\nStandard  Time\nNBC PROGRAMS\n8 00\u2014Paul White-man's men,\nKHQ. KOMO, KGW, KPI\nMildred    Bailey,    blues\n(See NBC Schedule for NBC Broad-\n4 ceets)\nKGO\nKSL.\nelnger;\nKVI    \u2014    TACOMA    -\n394.5  ro .      channel?..\nfi:00\u2014-Pageant.\n9.00\u2014Don lee\n760   K\n1000   W.\nVERNON. B. C, Sept. 10.\u2014(By\nthe Canadian Press)\u2014\"Tbe coming\nwinter will find city and town\ncouncils confronted with heavier responsibilities of alleviating the distress caused by depression and the\nabnormal unemployment situation.\"\ndeclared M .D. Oarmier. MP, of Brt-\nmundston, N. B, In his presidential\naddress to the delegates of the\nUnion of Canadian municipalities\nwho opened their 31st. annual convention here today .\n\"This year.\" he said, \"we meet\nunder very adverse conditions. The\ndepression Is lasting longer than the\nbeet economist of the world ever\nexpected. Unfortunately the end\n\\* not In ultfht. The drive hy\nJoint a-rtlon of federal. provincial\nand municipal governments in Canada to grapple with tiie monster\nof unemployment wl thout resort -\nIng to the dole, is listing the ingenuity of our governments. TV\ncauses of the depression are many\nbut tlie greatest can?* \\* tbe after\neffects  of   war.\"\nQuoting a well-known writer, Mr.\nCromler said, \"we all want crazy two\nyears ago. Looking back upon it\nnow. some of the things we did or\ntried to do, aeem like a nightmare\nThere was the unbelievable orgy of\nthe stock market, we all thought,\nwithout any dlscernabjf reaaon, we\nwere going to get rich, and It\nspread from private individuals to\ngovernmente and we saw a reign\nof gambling and ert\u00abvagance and\ndicing with hope such a* had not\nbeen paraleiled since the south gee\nbubble.\n\"Nobody stopped to figure out\nanything Instead w* were csrried\naway on s stream of avarice and\nambition, for a time,\" the speaker\nsaid, \"it worked, and money came\nfaat end  eaetly \"\n\"Bren B. W, Beatty \u00bbnd sir Henry Thornton built, palatial ocean\nliner*   and  hotels,  but,\"\nJlelTlpul ton .'\"tenor\"\" the Jesters' !  ? 30-Musical  Barviteera\nMale Trio. I '\" 0B\u2014White   Wizard.\n\u00ab30-Theatre   of   the   Air,    KOO, \u25a0 I\u00bb 30-Orcheatra.\nKOMO, KOW, KFI, KSL  William   ; * 00-Oeorg* P-  Wendt'a  orcheetra,\nHanley,   narrator:   film   vaude-!       BLBS.\nvllle and  radio stars. \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-\n7:00\u2014proram; Amoa \"n* Andy. KHQ      KOMO   \u2014   SEATTLE   \u2014  W0  C\nKGO, KOMO. KGW, KSL, KOA.    S2S.9 m.;     Channel 92;    iooo w.\n7:1ft\u2014pootlltes;  KGO, KHQ, KOMO.MSee   NBC   Schedule   for   Additional\nKOW. KPI. Clarence Hayee, ten- Broadcasts)\nor,   Orchestra  direction,  Mahlon    7:80\u2014Two Plan\u00a9 duets\nMerrick, 1  7:46\u2014Tuneful   Two,\nStichacleanjreshjovdleefragrame^\nNo wonder dainty women all over the\nworld treasure k* refreshing charm \u2014 no\nwonder our Canadian leaders of taste and\nfashion find it indispensable for those\ninformal occasions when heavier scents are\nout ef place.\nYARDLEY LAVEND\nPerfume, Face Powder. Compact, Day a'tJ Night\nGrams, TdictmPeti^,ll--tk Salts, ett. \"Tfcbuxwry\nSoap of the World,\" and Gift Cases.\nAt all Good Drug and Department Stores.\nYARDLEY    3$ Old Bond Street    LONDON\ni Yardley House U.S A.; aj* Fifth Avenue\nirbc-jr st York Stmt, Toronto New York\n1    *\n7:30\u2014The Fearful Seven; KGO. KPT.\nComedy  Sketch.\n7.45\u2014The Coquettes; Annette Hastings, Marlori? Primely, imelda\nMontagne.\n8,00\u2014The Houae of Color, KOO,\nKHQ, KOMO, KGW. KPI, KSL;\nMax Dolln. vlollnst and director;\nEaaton Kent, tenor; Male quartet;   instrumental  ensemble,\n8.30\u2014The Opera Box; KOO; Barbara Blanchard soprano, Red-\nfern Mason. Music Critic; Orchestra direction, Brail polak.\n8 ;30\u2014La Pleata de Los Angeles,\nKPI; (KOO 9:00) Motion picture electrical parade, Olympic\nStadium, Los Angeles; (Trans.\nProm Los Angeles, Calif.)\n9:30\u2014 Week-end hour; KGO KHQ.\nKOMO, KGW. KPI, KSL, KOA;\nGall Taylor, soprano: Male quartet. Orchestra direction, Mahlon\nMerrick.\n10:00\u2014News   Plashes;    KHQ,   KOMO.\nKGW,  KPO.  KPI.\n10:00\u2014Mystery   Serial;    KGO,   KSL.\nKOA. Bpleode one, \"Ultra La-ven-\nder,\" by Pran Striker.\n10 .-30\u2014Musical   Echoes;   KOO.   KOA;\nVocalist; Orchestra direction Joseph   Hornlck\n11 ;00\u2014Yofner-Harrls dance orcheetra,\nKOO.    KOMO,    (KTI    11:30    to\n12:00)\n13:00\u2014Organ   Recital;   KGO.   KOMO\nCNRV \u2014 VANCOUVER \u2014 1090 K\n'.91.1  tn.;     Channel 108;     500 w.\n6:00\u2014Musicale.\n8:30\u2014Dinner  Hour.\n7:30\u2014Pranchon and Marco\n8:00\u2014Alexander   Zanamensky,   baritone.\n8:30\u2014Night  Baseball.\n10:30\u2014Weather  Forecast\nKHQ    \u2014    SPOKANE   -    590    K\n508-3 m.:      Channel 59;      1000 w.\n(See   NBC   schedule   for   Additional\nBroadcasts)\n7:30\u2014Motel Dinner hour.\n8:45\u2014Tom Mitchell: KOO, KOMO.\n9:00\u2014Concert  Quartet.\n10:15\u2014Marlon Boyle, piano.\n11:00\u2014Lacy Ike at the Mike\nKFRC \u2014 SAN  FRANCISCO \u2014 019 K\n491   m.;      Channel   61;      1000  w.\n6:00\u2014Pageant;   CBB\n0:30\u2014Pit Fr&yne's sport talk.\n6:45\u2014Poet's   Oold;   CBB.\n7:00\u2014Blng   Croeby;   CBS.\n7:00\u2014Jack   Denny's  orchestra.   OBS\n7;15\u2014Arthur Pryor's military bend,\nOB.\n7:80\u2014Quarter   Hour.   OBS.\n?:45-Ginger Band.\n8:00\u2014Adventures of Black and Rue\nCOUN\n8.15\u2014Warlng's Pennnylvanlans. CBS.\n8:30\u2014College Daze; ODLBS.\n9:00\u2014 Vignettes: CDLBS\n9:80\u2014Cheffon Jans.\n10:00\u2014Anson       Week's      orchestra;\nCDLBS\n11:00\u2014Dulcetonlane from Roof Garden cafe.\n13.00\u2014Vega\/bond of +be Air,\nKGW   \u2014   PORTLAND   -   880   K\n488.6 m..     Channel 84;     50,000 w\n(See NBC  Scbednle  for Broadcasts.\nKPI \u2014 LOS  ANGELES \u2014 840 K\n468.5 m.:     Channel 64;     59,000 w.\n{*-e*   vbc   Schedule   for   Additional\nBroadcasts)\n7.00\u2014News Release\n7:46\u2014The  Wonder  Twine;   Virgin!*\nPlohri, soprano; Jame* Burroughs\ntenor.\n8:80\u2014Voeal Bns*mble\n9 15\u2014Arthur Lang, baritone.\nKOA   -   SPOKANE   -   MM   K\n704  m ,      channel   147      8000  w.\n6 0O\u2014Tbe  Melody  Musketeer*\n6 30\u2014The Royal Loaf ere;  NWBS.\n700\u2014Casey and Chet;  NWBS.\n7 30\u2014Knights   of  No-tee.\n8 00\u2014Orpheus  Trio;   NWBS\n8 30\u2014Song   Exchange.   NWBS.\n9 00\u2014Knight* of tbe Road.\n9.15\u2014The Scorpion; Mystery drama.\n9 4fr\u2014Vie Meyer's orcheatra.\n>o 30\u2014Moocllgfet, Melodies; Bobn,\nHalnsworth, organ; Male trio;\nNWBS,\n11:00\u2014Vic Meyer a orcbeatra; NWBS\n8,45\u2014Tom Mitchell;  KGW.\n9*0\u2014Two Piano Duet*.\n10:16\u2014Cecil  and  Sally.\n10:30\u2014Vocal Recital,\n10:4*\u2014The   Globe   Trotter,\nReports.\n13:00\u2014Theatre organ.\nKHQ\ntbe speaker, \"tbls la tba morning\nafter, we bad our apree, our orgy\nand now wa have our headache.\nThe process of restoration may be\nslow, may hurt, but what we all\nhave to learn Is. that only toil\nand common sense of spending less\nthan we earn, will get Canada out\not the mesa.\"\nMr. Cormier urged on all muni-\n-ipalitles the most rigid thrift and\nnational unity to escape another\nworld-wide   disaster\n\"Let us look to the future wltb\neyea of vision, let ua with courage\nand determination make of Canada\nthe best country to live In,\" the\nrpeakcr exhorted.\nMayor L. L. Stewart of Vernon\nwelcomed the convention, with Aid.\nto. A- Leplne of Quebec city replying   for   the   visitors.\nNELSON AGAIN\nOFF MAIN LINE\nROUTE C. P. R.\nGEORGE POPOFFTO\n^RVE JAIL TERM\nJR NON-SUPFH RTl\nService Through Tunnel and\nAlbert Canyon Resumed;\nFreight  Still  Moving\nFLIER WINS  V.  C.\nLONDON. Sept. 10,\u2014(By the Canadian Press)\u2014The curious Incident\nof an officer of the sir force winning\n* V. C, u a result of the brilliant\nmanner in which he took advantage\nof his own mistake, ls recalled ln\nthe announcement that Group Captain Lionel Brabaton Rws, V C, and\nA. D. C, to the king I* placed on the\nretired list at his own request.\nCaptaIn Rees won the V. O. on\nJuly 1. 1916. \"WhlUt on bombing\ndutle* In France. Major Pees 'as he\nwae then sighted wbat he thought to\nbe a bombing party of our own men.\nHe went to escort them, but on\ngettnig nearer he dJflf-overed they\nwere a party of en*mv machines.\nThere were about in in all He was\nimmediately attacked by one of the\nmachines and sfter a short en-\ncounter it, disappeared behind UM\nenemy Una*, damaged. Five others\nthen attacked blm at long range,\nbirt th** h* dispersed on coming to\nclose quarters after seriously damaging two of the machines. Seeing\ntwo others going westward hc gave\nchaee to them, but on coming nearer he wae wounded in th* thigh,\n'\u25a0RtjMne him to lose temporary oon-\ntrol of the machine H\u00ab soon righted\nit and immediately closed with the\nen*my. firing at, the cjose range of\nonly a few yards until all -M Ul\nammunition was used up He then\nreturned home safely\"\nMock Auctioneer\u2014\"And, ladles\nand gentlmen, if vou will aval!\nyourselvec of our marvellous offers todav. In years to rome yn.\n\"\u25a0ill  sav to yourselves-\u2014\"'\nCuckoo Clock\u2014\"Cuckoo\u2014 cuckoo\ncontinued  Cuckoo!\"\nNelson Is no longer on the main\nline of thc Canadian Pacific. Passenger service over tbe Crow's Nest\nlines and tbe Kettle Valley railroad\nfrom main line points ended yester-t\nday. The main line, which wa*\nblocked by slides and washouts In\nthe vicinity of Connsught tunnel\naad Albert canyon was opened up\nsufficiently Thuraday to allow resumption  of   traffic.\nWith the departure for the west of\npassenger   train   at   11   a.m.   and\none   for    the    past    at    13 SO    p.m.\nThursday, the final main line coaches\npulled  from  Neleon.\nh*r.t night J. Ivan M*cK.iy, divisional superintendent, Nelson, declared that there still remained\nsome freight to be cleaned up before t he condition* throughout bis\ndh.slon were again normal.\nFirst trains routed through Ohio\ndistrict, arrived on Sunday last and\nhave been running on regular sche-\n<|iiW ever since.\nTwo engines snd pushers were\nused on some of the larger \u00ab..-i\u00abt-\u00bbei\nra*wnger trains est 13 coaches which\npawed through  Nelson\n(Jeorg* Popoff, pleaded guilty la 9\nthe provincial polio* oourt oa Thma-\nday, to a charge of non-*upport andi\nwa* sentenced by Stipendiary Magi**'\ntrat\u00ab John Cartmel to a term of ettof\nyear  hard  labor.\nRadge\u2014Going to turn ln tbe old \u25a0\nhusband  for * new  one  tbt* y-aarf I\nMarge\u2014 Te*, if I can get anything f\non  blm.\u2014Ufa, M^^\nCOMMON DANGER\nDRIVING CHARGE\nIS DISMISSED\nH Fsrenholtc appear* before\nStipendiary Magistrate John Cartmel\nin the provlnclsl police ooxut on\nThursday, charged with driving to\nthe common dinger. The case was\ndtfmleaed\nHVJMANE\n\"A great many people who are\nnow concert, stars,'' ss vs a critic.\n\"took up ringing merely to kill\ntime.\"' They might have adopted\ns    mors    human*    method \u2014Punch.\n910    K\n5000 W.\nKJR    -    SEATTLE    -\n309.1 m..     Channel 07;\n6:00\u2014The Melody  Musketeers.\n6:30\u2014The  Itoya-   Loafers.\n7:00\u2014Cssey and Chet\n7.30\u2014Knights of Notes.\n8:30\u2014The Song Exchange\n9:00\u2014Knights of  the  Road\n9:16\u2014The Scorpion; mystery drams,\n9:4A\u2014Vic Meyer's orchestra.\n10:30\u2014Moonlight Melodies; Bobby\nHalnsworth, organ; Northweat\nMale   trio.\n11:00\u2014Vic  Meyer's  orcheetra,\n13:00\u2014Midnight Revellers,\n' KNX \u2014 HOLLYWOOD \u2014 1080 K\n386.5 m.:     Channel 106;    MM w.\n6:00\u2014Wesley Tourtelotte, the noted\norgsnlst.\n6;1_\u2014Tom and Wash.\n7:00\u2014Prank     Wstansbe     and   the\nHonorable  Archie.\n7:16\u2014Pern   aiH   Cass.\n7:80\u2014H. T.  Whlteet.\n7:4*\u2014KNX Ensemble.\n8:00\u2014Royal order of optlmtatto Do-\nNuts.\n9:00\u2014Ethat    Duncan\n9:1&\u2014Arlaona  Wranglers.\n9:46\u2014Boxing    Events    from    Hollywood   Stadium.\n10:46\u2014Mistah   Bill   and  Jackson   in\ntheir trip around the world.\n11:00\u2014Nsw  Inn\n13:00\u2014Orchestra\nKSL \u2014 SALT LAKE ClTY \u2014 11M K\n265.8 rn-;     Channel 118;     5000 w.\n<See   NBC   Schedule   for   Additional\nBroaden hts)\n7:15\u2014JEnsemble   In   Ton*   Picture*.\n7:30\u2014Music Program.\n8:30\u2014Light  Musical  numbers,\n9:00\u2014 Informal   proram\n10:00\u2014Organ    program;    FVrney    \u00bb1\nthe Console.\nMrs. Penny Honored\nWith Appreciation\nToken by Institute\nKASLO, B. C, Sept. 10-The\nmembers of St, Mark's Women'r\nauxiliary met in the parish rooms\nTuesday afternoon. The meeting was\ncalled for the purpose of honoring\nMrs. Harold Penny of Nelson, who\nIs visiting here, and wbo for some\nvears resided in Ksslo. Mrs Penny\nwas treasurer of l\\.e- society, snd\nhaving recently moved to Nelson,\nhanded tn her resignation, which\nwa* regretfully accepted Mrs, John\nKeen was appointed to fill tbe vacancy for the balance of tbe yesr\nAt the meeting, which ws* more or\na social than business affair, Mrs\nPenny was presented with a handsome vaee as a mark of esteem s_^i\nsupreclstton of ber co-workers in\nthe W. A., who wished her all success and happineri in her new\nbome The president and secretary.\nMrs. F A Chester and Mrs, J. P\nstubbs, served a delightful tea after\nthe meeting. Among those attend -\nIng were Mrs. Chestei. Mrs Stubbs,\nMrs. C. C. Raven, Mrs. John Keen.\nMrs. James Ooodenough, Mrs Cos-\ntello. Mlss Mildred Twlss, Mrs. Mat.\nthews, Mrs. Jack Cadden. Mlss Alice\nHodges. Mrs Thomas Smith, Mlss\n0. M Pe-Kcett, Mrs S H Latham,\nMm. A. W. Anderson, Mrs. Kenneth\nTatlow, ne* Ann-Garnet* Tatlow, and\nof course, the guest of honor, Mrs.\nHarold   Penny\n\u00a7\nDr. F. Rom\nPhysician and Surgeon. Specialist tn\nlectal and Intestinal\ni.'lseasei  onlv\n        ph.es\n( ..it.,   .yithout operation. Constipation successfully  treated. Write  for\nKOO   -   OAKLAND   -   790   K       \u201e._, ,\u201e\u201e \t\nt?9.5 bl;    Channel 79,    10,000 w.    536 Riverside Ave., Bpokane, was!\nShooting\nin the\nRain\nShooting in tbe _a_o _. not so\ngood unless \"nV. shooting\nDOMINION WATERPROOFS.\nWhen yon buy a box of 25 DOMINION\nWATERPROOF SHOT SHELLS you\nare sure of 25 perfect shells . . . There\nis no wastage. We* or dry weather, they\nfire with uniform precision and slip\ninto tbe breech with ease. Those left\nover are as good as erer next year, for\ntbese famous shells sealed in their protective coats of Dnco, retain their factory ballistics indefinitely.\nSuper-Clean, no_t-coiTO__ve priming,\ndouble chilled shot, waterproof cases\n\u2014 these are a few of the basic reasons for the widespread popularity of\nDOMINION Shells. Remember, too,\nthey are made in Canada by Canadians.\nIMPERIA L-CANUCK\u2014METEOR\n\u25a0r-9K*%\ntest to determine their\nwaterproof qualities.\nThe Dominion Dura-\nfini.ke-H shell on tile right\nremained in perfect cotirii-\nUon while the ordinary shell\nwas rendered useless.\nCM? _. tstOOB SpoTlsfwm\nOwing tn tbe scat tit.  of \u00ab___\n______ ire nrge aB sportsmen to\nshoot lea than the bag limit\nthis fear. Do ynur part to ron-\nt\u2014\u2014e C\u00abns<f-_m game.\nMADE  IN CANADA\nDOMINION AMMUNITION\nALWAYS\nC-...ADIAN     INDUSTRIES      LIMITED\nDEPENDABLE\nDOMINION   AMMUNITION   DIVISION\ntree bookie., \u00abt_ floor Zleiler Bl_i.\n--\u2014\u2014________________... \u2014____\n moe rota\nINSTALLMENT   TWO\n(Continued >\nt__ auch a waj\u2014-It only makes ma\nwant to defy  you.    I  have  never\nmet a man quite Ilka you before:\n\"I warned you.\" he reminded h _ I    \"In what way am I different?\"\n1 know you did, but you do It      Julie   hesitated,   biting   her   Up,\nIt is wisest to buy\nfine quality tea\nTellow label Salada 60\u00ab\u00bb a lb\nBrown label Salada 70\u00ab\u00bb a lb\nthe\nworld's most popular com flakes are\nmade by Kellogg in London, Ont. They\nhaye a flavor and crispness no others\nequal. Taste them and you'll know why\nthey are such\nfavorites\n0*0\nCORN\nFLAKES\n* Always oeen-frenh In the inner-\nssal msxdta wrapper\nr\"S a temptation, sometimes, to\nsave a few pennies by accepting\na substitute for Kotex.\nBut what a.costly saving it may\nte! What guarantee have yo\u00bb of\nthe hygienic safety of this sub-\n(titute, if you know nothing of its\nmakers? L it fit for this personal\nuse? How was it nude? Where?\nWhen your choice is Kotex,\nu're backed bymedical approval.\n____ best hospitals use it. They\nappreciate the splendid purity of\nKotex, the exacting care with\nwhich it is made.\nYou ahould never consider sanitary protection of lower standards.\nInsist on Kotex. Genuine Kotex.\nUtmost Comfort\nComfort, too, is assured by Kotex.\nLaminated layers of Cellucottoo\nabsorbent wadding absorb scientifically\u2014away from tha surfaca\u2014.\n\u00a3\nWEAR ON EITHER SIDE\nI   Can he worn on cither tide\na\u00ab with equal u>_nfort.   No embai*\nniiment.   Inconspicuous.\nj   Kotei Is soft... rm. the pure\n-*\u2022 !\u25a0 specially treated to nuke it\nan.a_i_.__y soft.\ni   The Kates  absorbent la the\n\u00b0* Identical material n\u00bb_ by ..,._\nceoni    In\nhnipitala.\nmmt\n4l)lipoiihli, instantly, et.m.\n\u2022 t-ietely.\nthan   she   told  ban.\n-Oaa   mutant   you   pretend   to\nmake leva %_ _t_ai \u00bbn_ #t# next m\nsneer   at  me\u2014\"\n\"A\u00abt whloh do you prefer?\"\nTo   hla  amaanment   he   saw   tears\nspring to her eyes.\n\"Do    you    luuitoe    that    I    n\neither7\" the faltered.\nChlttenham leaned forward aud-\ndenly and kissed the hand nearest\nto him that raeted on the steering\nwheal.\n\"I an conceited enough to think\nthat I oould make you like being\nmade lore to.\" he eald quietly, and\nthan as she did not answer be\nasked. \"Will you dire me to try?\"\n\"No.-\nHa  leaned  feck  in  his seat  resignedly.\n\"Then  ws   may  as   well   to\nIt   took   a   moment   ot   two\nrestart   the   engine.\nThe road was steeper and wider.\nThere was very little vegetation on\nthe bleak sides of tha mountains,\nand what there was was short and\nstunted ooweting away from the\nbleik wind thit swept down upon\nthem.\nAs the- climbed higher out of the\nvalley, the wind gtotr colder and\nmore   cutting.\n\"Tou ought to have brought\ncoat,\" Julie said onoe. She was\nvery cold and there was a aet,\nstrained look round her mouth. She\nhad not expected the road to be\nso bad. and once or twice at a\nparticularly bsd corner ahe caught\nher breath with a little gasping\nsound.\nChittenham heard her and knew\nthat she wag afraid, but he made\nno comment. It Mired her right\nh\u00bb thought, for being so boastful   snd  confident.\n'I won't say another word,\" Chlttenham agreed, but thera wse a\nmalicious   twinkle   in   bis   eyes.\nThe east wind wsa Ilka a cutting knife as Julie brought the\ncar to a difficult standstill and\nla her hands fall from ths wheel.\nI've won eo far,\" she aald, snd\nleaned back, dosing her eyea with\nsudden   weakness.\nChlttenham uncurled his long\n.*\u25a0& and got stiffly out of the car,\nthen he came round to Jul ie's\nBide   and   took   her   hands.\n\"Come along. We'll get something\nhot to drink. By Gad! It's bitterly\ncold.\"\nHe half led, half lifted her into\nthe hotel and put her down on a\nbench   In   the   narrow   hall.\nChlttenham ordered some brandy\nand   made Julie drink  lt.\n\"Very few people  today,  sir.\" tha\nwaiter  told  them.    He   spoke   English  vary  well. \"And   we shsn't get\nsny more by the look of the sky.\"\n\"Wbat do you  mean?\"\n\"Ther'e   snow  coming,   sir.\"\nChlttenham went to the door and\nlooked   out.  \"It's  snowing  already,\"\nha   aald.\nIa It?\" she laughed. \"How funny] when it's summer down ln\nMontereux.\" chittenham got up and\nwent   to   stand   behind   her.\nNow   we  really   are   on   the   top\nof   the  world,\"  he  eald.  \"Just  you\nand I alone, Julie\u2014I am sure even\nyou   have  never  had  an   experience\nIlka this before?\"\nSha shook her head.\n\"No.   And   I'm   not   sure   that   I\nwant  it  again\u2014\"\n\"Why?  you  are  quite  safe.\"\n\" I know but . . .\" aha laughed\nnervously.  \"I  believe  I'm   afraid.\"\n\"I thought you wer\u00ab afraid ot\nnothing.\" chlttenham said. His own\npulses were Jerking unevenly. There\nwas aome thing so romantic and\nstrange In the whole situation. He\nlooked at Julie wtth searching eyes.\nTha woman for wboee sake Rodney had gone to hla death t Chlttenham pulled himself together\nwith an effort and moved away.\nHa tried to open the window\nlittle, but such a gust of *'ind And\nsnow pelted into the room that\nhe   had  to  close   it   again.\n\"Do  you  think   it's  any   better?'\nJulie   asked   anxiously.   Chittenham\nglanced  out at the  flying  blizaard\n\"I    think    It's    worse,\"    he    said\nbriefly.\nShe turned on him angrily with\nflashing eyes. Chlttenham looked at\nher silently, and then suddenly, to\nhis utter amazement, she burst into\ntears.\n\"Julie\u2014\" ha made a quick movement towards her, then stopped,\nshrugging bis shoulders. \"I don't\nknow what you'rs crying for,\" he\ns.id   sharply,\nwith s great effort she con\ntrolled   herself.\n\"I don't know either,\" she said\nbetween little sobs. \"It's Just narves.\nI suppose.   This hateful place\n\"It looks as if we  shall  have  to\nstay   the   night,**   Chlttenham\nswered   uncompromisingly.\nShe turned and looked at him\nher eyas still wat with tears.\n\"I suppose you think  I'm a fool,\n\u25a0ba   submitted    in   a    hard   little\nvoice.\nThe New Mode in Fall Coals\nFACE WRINKLES\nFROM THE SUN\nTWO  VEv? AtlTMN   COAT*  MSB  A   TVB  TRIMMED   MESS\n<1> Autumn ttrnt fashioned on the popular Princess\nline* with new three-button side closing and unusual\nsleeve design. (2) Modtrh co-it . displaying beaver\ncollar and euffa ln sharp contrast to the light helse\nmaterial  of  coat.  Again  the  Prlnoess  lines  give  be\ncoming form. (8) Useful street drete for coo] weather\nIt is of hard blue material with ruffs of blue foi\nfur and ten l\u00aba\u00bbh\u00abr bait tl. Associated Press photo;\n<2, Associated Press photo; (3) Photo from World\nPhotos.\nThe Beauty Box\nby Helen Follett\nNow is the time when the permanent wave of the gentle poring ts a\nbit tha worse for wear. It ha* extended somewhat from the scalp, hut\nthat doesn't matter a\u00bb autumn coiffures, many of them, are Hat-topped,\nsleek snd tidy. Summer sunshine\nhas 'dried out the f>id mop, Changed\nIts color possibly. All In sll the\nbrain thatch is in neo<i of attention\nnd a month's re*t cure will put it\nin form sgain. Every night brush\nthoroughly. Twice a week apply hot\noil. mlnersl or olive oil will do, or\nyou can buy some special preparation\nat your favorite beauty shop- Next\nmorning, a shampoo. Friction the\nscalp whenever there Is a minute to\nspare.\nThick.Ups sometimes result from\nmouth breathing. They can be\ntightened up by exercising the\nmuscles. Simple enough. Just \u00abmlle\nand uaamlla. Orln to the limit, then\npucker. Good plan to make it a\nhabit to hold the lips close to the\nteeth. If their surface., are rough,\nuse camphor ice, or any cream that\nisn't highly perfumed. Bad little\ngirls bite their lips, keeping them in\n-ragged state of \"\\inlovliness. Mustn't!\nFew women recognize their arms\nnowadays. Tan, freckles, sunburn\nhave wrecked them. Give them extra\nheavy scrubbing when taking the\ndaily bath, using a heavy brush tit*\noroualy to skin off dead scales. Give\nmassage with talcum. And, dor\nIng that beautifying hour at night.\nanoint them with & heavy emollient,\nons that will stick on till morning.\nToo much hip spread is as dla-\ntresslng as it ever was, despite the\nEfficient\nHousekeeping\nBy I.ACB*  1. KIM-MAN\n-TOMORROW'S MKMt\nBreakfast\nMelon\ncereal\n('ream*d   \"Oriel   Beef\nR\u00a911(.\nMarmalade\nCoffee\nLuncheon\nVegetable Salad\nCinnamon Toast\nPrune Whip\nCocoa\nDinner\nBroiled Slice of Ham\nMustard  Pickle\nPice    Croquettes\nBean.',\nPeej Salad\nChocolate Baked Custards\nOoffee\nfluffy mixture with the plain jelly\ncut Into cubes. Tills recipe serves\neight and is fine for a bridge\nparty.\nTomorrow\u2014Using  Enamel\nBright summer sunshine has mora\nthan ona way of attacking beauty.\nOna of tha most objectionable ls tha\nappearance of tiny, fine wrinkles between the eyea or across the forehead,\ncaused by eye strain.\nYou hava gaaed off at a beautiful\nsailboat silhouetted across tha water\nwithout thinking that tha Intense\nglare of tha sun is causing you to\nwrinkle your forehead. Or you have\nlounged on tha sand, forgetful of\nsun hat or dark glasses.\nFor these sins against besuty you\nmust pay.\nIf the wrlnklea are vertical lines\nbetween tha eyas try the following\ntreatment:\nDip your three middle fingers Into\nyour favorite cold cream and with\nthe cushioned part, of tha finger-tips\npat the spaoo between your eyes\ngently, but firmly. Continue until\nthe furrows have been lronad out\nand ths patting has stimulated the\ncirculation.\nIf tlie wrlnklea are horiaontal scross\ntha forehead, try the same patting\nmovement, but pat all over the forehead from temple xo temple,\nAnother method of treating wrln-\n1 kies between the eyes ls to hold or\nstretch the skin out smooth and then\n| apply adhesive tape to hold lt this.\n;This treatment is not quite so bene-\nIflctal as the first, because there la\nno stimulation to the circulation.\nAbove all things, when you are\ntrying to counteract that summer\ncrop of wrinkles, be sure to protect\nyour eye* from further strain, if\nyou are doing out in a sharp wind\nor bright sunshine, wear glasses with\ndark tenses.\nThe eyes themselves will need to\nbe rested. Weak aalt water that has\nbeen boiled and cooled makes a good\neye bath. Boracic acid and distilled\nwater Is also beneficial for strained\neyes. Hest the eves by covering\nthem with your hands Ior several\nminutes.\nUse your creams generously about\nyour eyes, applying them with gentle, rhythmic strokes.\nLittle pads of cotton dipped ln\nwitch haul and laid on the eyelids\nfor 10 or 15 minutes at a time will\nhelp ease away tha sighs of strain.\nBANISH THE  TntlNVLEft\nTo take tha wrlnklea out of a\ngarment when a hotel, hank it\nover the rack ln the bathroom, close\nthe door and windows and tuns oa\nthe hot water. Let It run unMl the\nroom Is filled with steam, Leave\nthe garment hanging in thla vapor\nfor two hours, then open the roopi\nand let tha article dry in tha fresh\nair. You will ba more than pleased\nwith the freshened appearance of\nyour clothing.\n.\nTSmltftt\nST.CHAIUESMILK\nis made in B.C.\nBORDEN'S ST. CHARLES MIIX la\nmad* In S.C. from talactsd dairy cowi,\npastured la lit* Isntow Fust. Rb_t VslUy.\ntit*) On you twy lit Ipt to i*wori (fill\nSt. Owrie- Evspoiettd Milk It Irv__m_4s\n10 howtwlvtl. Whtn you \u00ab\u00ab H y__ wtll\nInd It will ftastly Inptovt the livow ef\nyen ceevlaf.\n11 fi Ideal for toept, ertta, leeee., wtt-\ndlftit, cikti, peltries, etc., etc., end eddi\na new rtchneu lo the devour of yew coffee.\nThe Borden Ce. UmUed,\nt Hoeur Arcade tifWlm,\nVANCOUVER\nreetom Soetb Stan\ntlvtilcn'i\n(ST.CHAIUES\n..MILK   .\nassuring continued softness. The\ngtuze, too, in Kotex ii treated ta\nmake it amazingly soft.\nK.OT6X\nMATH. IN CANADA\nINSTALMENT THREE\nChlttenham'* too* softened.\n\"I think you're adorable,\" he  *\\\\.\n{swered.\nror a moment they looked at one\n: another silently, then Julie said  In\n\\ queer, breathleea way-\n\"I  can't  make  you  out. . ... .I've\n; never met a man like you bofa-e,\nI. . .1 suppose you're just, smuMnp\nyourself. . . .1    suppose    you    dont\n| -~\\e_\\_\\  a  word   you say\u2014that  you're\nI Just flirting. . . .\"\n\"Is   that   what   you   really   *up-\nIpoaaT-  Chlttenham   asked.   He   took\nheT by the shoulders, turning her to\nblm,   \"In   that   what   you\nsuppose?\" lic asked again.\n!    \"No. . . .yes. . at   leaat. . . .\"   she\n! was  like  a  girl,   confused   and  shy.\n] \"Oh.  did   you really mean  It when\nI you said. . . when\u2014you know what\nyou said. . . about love st flrat\nsight. . . .1 mean\u2014you're so strange.\nand  I \"\nChlttenham* pulses were throbbing in strange fsshlon. Ho woman\nhad ever made him feel at he felt\nnow, and It angered him. Wsa this\nthe strange fascination of her which\nhad conquered Rodney? Was thla\nwhat tha boy meant when he'said:\n\"Walt till you sea her! There's\nsomething different-\u2014quite different\nabout her to any otber womsn\u2014\"\n(To Ba Conintued>\nUNUSUAL  PUDDINGS\nChocolate Baked Custards: Into a\n\u25a0icy-pan put ona ounce (or square)\nof cooking chocolate, grated, and to\nit add one-fourth cup of water; cook\ntill so thick thst a spoon leaves\nits impression in the mixture. Now\nadd one-fourth cup of grsnulatrd\nhugar and one pint of milk and\nstir until it bolls. Remove from fire,\nlet cool slightly, then stir In the\nbeaten yolks of four eggs or two\nwhole eggs. Return to the fire snd\ncook until the custard coats on spoon,\nlike a simple ixuled custard. Have\nready one-hair dozen macaroons previously dried ln the oven, allowed\nto cool and become crisp, and then\nrolled; Mix ttoese fine maenroon\ncrumbs with one-fourth cup of\npecan meats, chopped, and stir this\ndry mixture Into thc euetard. Divide\nbetween individual custard cups,\nstand these in warm water on a\nshallow pan, snd slip cups and\nfact that curves \u00abre being bailybooed Man Into a moderate oven to cook\n\u2014 Mill eet. Serve In the same cup.*,\ncold, topped with canned marsh-\nmallow paste.\nCoffee Marshmallow Fluff: Cut onr\npound of marsh-mallows into small\nbits with a clean pair or scissors,\nthen over these bits pour one cup\nof boiling hot coffee. Stir till marsh-\nmallows are almost dissolved.' and\nwhen oool fold in one half pint\nor stiffly whipped heavy erenm flavored with one-fourth teaspoon or\nvanilla. Taste, and if liked sweeter,\nadd a little powdered sugar. Pile into stemmed cups, and MTTi cold.\n(No cooking necessary ln this dessert).\nOrange   Souffle:   Boak   two  tablespoons   of    granulated    gelatine    in\none-half   cup   of    cold    water   for\nfive minutes, then  add  onr cup of\ngranulated sugar and one and one- j\nhalt cups of boiling wat*- and coo*\ntill sugar U dissolved. Cool, snd soY\none   and   one-ha!f   (tups   Of   cran*?!\nqjulc?    and    three    tablespoons   tfj\nlemon Juice. Pour half o; tills mix-'\nture into a shallow di'li  nnd chill\nLet the :cr,mainder of It s'and -until  it begftH to re!,  then  fold Into\nthis   one   (Up   of   stiffly   whipped\nheavy cream ( measured before whipping). At serving time gamiav this\nFRESH   AND   SWEET\nOna way of insuring a neat bathroom by having all tha washcloths\nhung so they may be dried out and\natay sweet, la to buy aome smsll\nIvory rings and aaw one of these\nfirmly to one corner of each cloth.\nThey woo easy to find and no one\nwin find it a trouble to hang theirs\nup to dry-\nThey can be rolled awsy. Lie down\non the back on tlie floor. Lift\nfoot, extend It scross the body,\nstretch the leg long, and rool over.\nThis pulls hard on msclcs around\nthe center of the body. Good to\nrouse a sluggish colon.\nA healthy woman, in good form,\nshould be able to walk five miles a\nday without sulferlng fatigue. She\nshould do at l<wst three miles an\nhour. How many of the Dollies can\nsnd will?   Dun't ask me.\nCAnswers\nby\/\" (Beatrice\nWants Girl Friend\nDEAR  MI8B   FAIRFAX:\nI   am   19   years   old   and   am\nconsidered   good    lookin|,     How\ncan   I  get,   a   nice  girl?   I   have\nno bod habits, such as smoking\ndrinking , or    chewing,      T    vorl:\n'ghts   an i   maka   a   very   good\nsalary,   and   am   trying   to   save\nsome  of  it.    1   am  a  constant\n\u25a0    reader   of    your   column.     The\nREALLY |' giri j -ront ,nu\u201ei be a girl who\ndoes not smoke or drink.   I like\nto   go   to   parties   and   hava   a\ngood   time,   and   we   have   quite\na few parties at my  house.\nDo you  think  you  could   get\nme  a  girl?    I  play   the   banjo\nand aing a little.    In  the near\nfuture  I   expect   to  go  on   the\nair. READER.\nNo,   alas,   I  can't  get  you   a   girl\nbecause   this   is  not   a   matrimonial\nJournal   and   letters  or   adresses   are\nnever exchanged.    But with all the\nqualifications you have,  you should\nhave no difficulty at all  ln  taking\nyour pick of the type of girl you're\nlooking for.    Ask some of your men\nfriends to'give you an  introduction\nto   their   friends,   or   girl   relatives.\nGet   up  some   kind   of   a   summer\nparty and aak one or two boys  to\nbring their, girl  friend* and one or\ntwo extra.   Tou have all tbe sdvan-\ntagea on  your  side.\n\"Two-Timing\" Them\nDEAR  MISS  FAIRFAX:\nWe are two girl   friends.     We\nboth think  tha young  man in\n..a\nNEW\ntqpe of floor\nin low relief tile\nthe cms is everything that's desirable. 1 have known him five \u2022\nyears. Two year? later \u00bbue, my\ngirl friend, met him. He hr.s\npa id considerable attention to\nua at various times and has\nmade lov* to each of us. Shortly after ha met sue, he called\nher by her first name. He hss\nnever addressed me other than\nMiss    .    He   haa   given   me\nmore of his time, and I believe\nlove, than he has Sue. What is\ntha matter here? W. M. B\nJust a Uttle fickleness on the\npart of a young man who ver.\nprobably is not ln earnest with\neither of yon girls. Dnn't take ihtm\nso seriously. Have other boy friend-,\nand please don't west? rour yout'.-\nand break your heart Q **_ a italic-.\nChildren's Colds\n\\___h       Checked without\n\"doting.\" Rub on\n.$\nTor \u25a0 higher luitre *.\u2022>\u25a0'.\nadded beauty on Err.\nbossed and other Dominion Linoleumi, Do-\ntnoUc, the famous Rfr\nlib, li eaiy to spply.\nOne gallon covert ap-\nprflxlmitelv 75 square\nyardi. Sot. by floor\nicover.r | dealers, In\npint, qatrt, h*if-B\u00abllon.\ngillo'. an. live-gallon\ntiaa\nModerate\nNow, yon cux tit old-world chtrm to your horn,\nwith coloarlul floor, of Made-in-Ctnada em-\nbossed linoleum.\nRich red tiles of Colonial dayi; flat stone effects in a wide rente of colourings; broken tile\nand mosaic patterns . . . beautiful to look at,\neasy to clean, comfortabk to walk on . . are\nnow available at a lower cost than you ever\nimagined possible, far lower than you have been\naccustomed to pay for imported goods.\n1 or entrance halls, passages, sun porches, anS\nall rooms... In homes where the new and unusual are appreciated... as the sole floor or ae\na background for scatter woven coverings.\nYour floor covering dealer will show you thai\nfull range of designs, all with the famous soft-\nlustre Domolac Finish.\nDOMINION\nIE&VG\u00a7\u00a9\u00a7S_1\u00a9\n3nlaJrdr\nLINOLEUM\nDOMINION OILCLOTH  &, U-.OL_.UM   COMPANY LIMITED\nOulf. ihM ft H;\nMM \u2014 ae-tUUt IS\ntb,*r Jiffrrtnl. telem\nicbtmtt, .   .\n)\n ASTORIA\nTHE BEST\nGood Shoes\nfor Men\nIn Oxfords and Boots in\nboth  Black  and  Brown\n$9 T0 $12\nR. Andrew\n& Co,\nLeaders in Footfashion\nMr. and Mrs. Haney of\nWardner Celebrate a\nWedding: Anniversary\nWARDNER, B. C, Bent. 10.\u2014Mlss\nIrene Birch left on Monday for Salmon Arm, where she will spend a\nshort   time   visiting   friends.\nV Lundbon returned from his\nthreat weeks* vacation spent at Man-\nlate*.    Mich,  visiting  friends.\nMr. and Mrs. Haney were at home\nto receive eongratula**or.s for their\ngolden wedding, which they celebrated quietly on Tuesday, several\nmembers of the family being present.\nMra, Walde .'nd baby Margaret\nare spending a few days visiting at\ntlie home of Mr. and Mrs. Haney.\nMr. and Mrs. A. L. Keevil and\nfamily left on Baturday morning\nfor Calgary, where they spent the\nholiday visiting with Mr. Keevlle\nparents, returning to Wardner Tuesday afternoon.\nMre. Lee Rader and daughter Edith\narrived from Vancouver on Friday,\nwhere they have spent a few weeks\nvisiting  friends.\nMr. and Mrs. C. Rader were visitors to cranbroolt for the holiday.\nSociety\nThis column Is conducted by\nMrs M- J- Vigneux. Ml news\nof a social nature, including receptions, private entertainments,\npersonal Items, marriages, etc.,\nwill appesr tn this column. Tolo*\nptione Mrs. Vigneux at ber home,\n619 BUlca street.\nMlss Mollle Green, who has been\nhome on holiday a guest at the\nhome of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nA. H. oreen, Willow Point, left last\nnight to resume her art coura. at\nthe Vancouver Art school.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nRev. J. c. McKenzle haa bad as\nhis house guest Rev. p. Jordan. O.\nM. I. of Vancouver, who has been\nsupplying in Vernon, snd who left\nyesterdsy by motor for hi\u201e home in\nVancouver, where he Is ln charge of\nHi.   Augustine   parish.\nM-ss Alice Houston of TraU U vlaltlng friends in the city.\nA. M- Black, formerly of Nelson,\nsnd now of Vancouver, is a Nelson\nvisitor.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. K. R. Major of Harrop left\nlast evening for a visit to Victoria.\nMr. and Mrs. A. E. Cuthbert, Victoria street, have returned from a\ncouple of weeks' visit to tha coast\ncities.\n\u2022 a     \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. J. H. Graham, Victoria street, and son Edward are\nholidaying  in Spokane.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nThomas W. Dodd of Tarrys spent\nyesterday   ln   the   city.\nCaptain Maitland Harrison, who\nhas been visiting friends at Bonnlngton and Nelson leave this morn,\ning for his home at Howser.\nC. Kosanclc of Crescent Valley\npaid a visit to town yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nVictor Cowen has left to spend\nhis vacation in Spokane and the\ncoast  cities.\nsee\nMrs. J. Galllpeau and her small\nson Jo of Wallace, Idaho, who have\nbeen visiting relatives in Crescent\nValley, are guests at the home on\nCarbonate street, of Mr. and Mrs.\nHenri  Oagnon.\nForbes .\/crntosh has returned from\ni week's visit to his home in Victoris.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nA very pleasant time was spent\nWednesday evening when the members of ths Past Chief Rangers  of\n\u25a0THE  NELSON   DAILY  NEBS,  NELSON,  B.  C.   FRIDAY  MORNING,   SEPTEMBER   11.   Wl**\nHow do you get\nhim to chew\nhis   food?\"\n\"I give him Shredded\nWheat and it's so crisp\nhe has to chew it\u2014the\nmore he chews it the\nbetter he likes it and the\nmore nutriment he gets\nout of it. Many children\nbolt down their food\nwithout chewing\u2014that\nmeans imperfect digestion, poor teeth and unhealthy gums. Shredded\nWheat with milk makes\na perfect food for growing children, and it's\nperfectly delicious with\nbananas or stewed fruit.\"\nTHE CANADIAN SHREDDED WHEAT\nCCMRANY.Un\nSHREDDED\nWHEAT\nWITH ALL THE BRAN OF THE WHOLE WHEAT\nCourt Ellen A. O. P. met at the\nPlaza for dinner. Covers being laid\nfor 14, after which the party attended the theater. Those attending\nwere Mrs. E. P. Jarvis, Mrs. J. T.\nBrown, Wt- Robert Vyse, Mrs. Jamee\nTalt, Mrs. James Joy. Mrs. Wlllhm\nHeasell. Mrs. A. E. Cuthbert, Mra.\nP Plowman, Mrs. L. J. Dunk, Mrs\nBrnest Elliott. Mrs. P. Poster. Mrs\nTTiomss Cookson, Mrs- T. S. Jerome,\nMrs.   Perry  Halliwell   of  Trail.\n\u2022 #   *\nC. Lundstrom of Slocan City paid\na visit to town yesterday.\nMr.    and   Mrs.   W.   M.    Cunllffe.\nObservatory atreet, who have been\nspending a time at the their Crescent Bay home, have returned to\ntown.\nMr*. F. D. Wyatt. Kerr apartment*, left yesterday morning by\nmotor for Hood Rive*. Ore. she was\naccompanied by her mother. Mrs\nlabel, who has been her gueEt since\nFriday   last.\n* \u2022    *\nMrs.    Thomas   Jordon.    Edgewood\navenue, and her two children have\nreturned from a visit to relatives at\nthe coast.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMi's. Robert Thompson, High street,\nhas as her guest her son Malcolm\nThompeon, who arrived Wednesday\nnight   from  Trail.\nCharles F. McHardy lus returned\nfrom a lew days spent ln Spokane\nWhile there he attended the opening of the Spokane and Eastern\nTrust   building.\n* \u2022    \u2022\nMlss  F.   Smlthson,  who  has   been\nthe guest of Mr. and Mrs. William\nStewart. Silica street, for the past\ncouple of weeks, has left for Montreal t-> sail for her home in London,\nEngland.\nMr. snd Mrs. W. M. Cunllffe. Ob-\nservatory street, have as their guest\nfor a few days, Mrs. C. D. Risk of\nVancouver, who has been visiting at\nthe home of Mr. and Mrs. C. R\nHamilton and also of Ven. Archdeacon Fred H. Graham and Mrs.\nGraham.\n, a  a .a\nMlss Kathleen Varseveld, Pair-\nher vacation at rtrt Steele near\nCranbrook. where she wjb the guest\nof the Misses Kathleen Cairns and\nKathleen   Tully.\nMrs. A. D. McLeod. Silica street,\nhas recently visited in Rossland\nwhere she was the guest of Mr. and\nMrs. J. D. MacDonald.\nMrs. Albert Glannmao, who has\nbeen on a four-months' trip to Edmonton and other Alberta cities, returned    home    Wednesday    evening.\nMr. and Mrs. William Heasell,\n304 Gore street, have aa their guest\nMra.   Percy   Halliwell   of   Trail.\nMr and Mra. John Burns, Stanley\nst.ree., spent Wednesday at Ainsworth when they closed the Ainsworth   Hot   Springs   hotel.\nMr. and Mrs. Crelghton Hlgglnbotham and two children, who havc\nbeen guests at the home of Mr. ant]\nMrs. T. E. Hlgglnbotham on the\nnorth shore for the past few weeks,\nleave this morning for their bome\nlp Calgary.\nA. Pratt of Thrums wsa a city\nshopper   yeaterday.\n* *    \u2022\nMlss M. Cameron, High sLreet, Bnd\nher brother John Cameron, left last\nnight for a vacation to be spent on\nthe western eoa_t of Vancouver island.\nMrs. Atkison and her daughter\nand son of Longbeach spent yesterday shopping In the city.\nColonel J.- S. Good* of Bonnlngton\npaid a visit to Nelson yesterday.\nAmong choppers to town yesterd-\nd;y .was Mrs. D. M- Morgan of\nBalfour.\n* \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. Col.man of Argenta. who has\nbeen summering on the north shore,\npaid  a  viatt to Nelson yesterday.\nMrs. E, .. Melander. Fifth atreet,\nFairview, returned last evening from\nSpokane and Clayton, Wash., where\nsh? has been spending the past few\nweeks  visiting  relatives  and   friends.\nGeorge Steel of Appledale p-iid a\nvisit   to   town   yesterday.\nMra. E. Rowling an J her daughter\nleft yesterday morning via the Great\nNorthern  for Spokane.\n* \u2022    \u00bb\nThe monthly luncheon given by\nthe Ladles' auxiliary of the Nelson\nGoir and Country club was held yesterday at the club house with Mrs\nJames O'Shea supervising. Those\npresent included Mrs. G. Spencer\nGodfrey. Mrs. Paul Lincoln, Mrs. A\nT. Stephenson. Mm. R. L. McBride,\nMrs. A. to. Murphv, Mrs. James\nOShe.. Mrs. E. C. Wragge, Mrs. F.\nC. Whltehouse. Mrs. W. H. Gnibbe.\nMrs, W. J. Grove, Mrs. H. Townshend\nMrs. Harold Lakea. Mrs. John Cartmel, Mlss Jean Waldle, Mlss Betty\nCrelghton of Vancouver. Mlss Alleen\nMansfield,   Mtss  Helen   Murphy.\nMrs.   Alex   Campbell   has   returned\nfrom a few days' visit to Spokane\nAlderman Harvey Fife of Slocan\nCity paid a visit to town yesterday\nMrs. Molse Bougeols, who has been\nvisiting in Neleon at the home of\nher son-in-law and daughter. Mr.\nand Mrt. Henri Gagnon, Carbonate\nstreet, has returned to her home ln\nCrescent Valley, She was accompanied by her little granddaughter\nMarietta Bourgeois also of Crescent\nValley.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMra. Berry of Harrop paid a vlalt\nto  town  yesterday.\n.   .   . %\nAmong shoppers to Nelson yesterday were Mr. and Mra. C. Dickey of\nAppledale.\naaa\nR. H. Hedley of Vancouver, a pioneer of Nelson, ta a visitor In town\n\u25a0    a.   \u2022\nMrs.   P.   HoneysHt   of   Appledale\nspent yesterday |n Nelson.\n\u2022 *   *\nMr. and Mrt. W, P. Innes of Robson were visitors Id the city yesterday.\nMr. and Mrs. W. J.' Gerbracht,\nMill street, have as their guest Mrs,\noerbracht't niece. Miss Yvtmne\nThomson   of   Vancouver.\nt.   \u2022   a\nJ. H. Schofleld, M. P. P. of Trait,\nw.s   a   visitor   to   town   Wednesday.\nMr. sud Mrs. Potter have taken\nup residence In the Kerr apartments\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nJohn Jerrard of Winnipeg Is spending a few daya in the city en route\nto  the   coast.\nMlss Marguerit: Gagnon, Carbonate street, has returned from a\nweek's visit to the Misses Rose,\nLillian and Isabelle DuMont at\nHunters   Landing. *\nH. Dimock, mining man or New\nDenver, paid a visit to town yesterday.\n\u2022 *   *    .\n' Mrs. H. Exter has taken up residence In the Medical Arts apartments, Bakar street.\n\u2022 *    *\nD. Cameron of Balfour spent yesterday   ln  Nelson  on   business.\nThe Misses Vera and Gladys Tan-\nsem have returned from a motor\ntrip  to Spokane.\na   *   a\nMrs. S. Meredith and Uttle son\nGilbert, arcompanted by Mrs. W\nJohnson and daughter, Pauline, motored over from Trail to visit at the\nhome of their mother, Mrs. R. Mac-\nAdam,  Observatory street.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nYcstfrday afternoon the bome of\nMra. J. B. Stsllwood. on the north\nshore, was the meeting place of\nCircle No. 3 of the Women's association of Trinity United church\nwhen the hostess was esslsted tn\nserving by Mrs. Eastman. Those\npresent wer? Mrs. Norman C. Stlbbs,\nMra. Robert Eunson, Mrs. J. C.\nGrummett, Mrs. J. A. Irving. Mm.\nCharles R. McHardy. Mrs. W. B.\nSteed, Mrs, H. Cecil Grl7_zellc, Mrs.\nO. A. Gray. Mlss Estella Smith, Mrs.\nStallwood. Mrs. Thomas Brown. Mrs.\nP. Goldsmith, Mrs. K. Fleck, Mrs.\nLalthwaite, Mrs. Behan and Mrs.\nEastman.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nMr. Quance, jr.. of Robson paid a\nvisit   to   town   yesterday.\nR. CAMPBELL'S\nBODY IS FOUND\nVictim of Drowning Accident\nat Bealby's Beach Found\nNear Pole Yards\nThe body of Robert Campbell, the\n18-year-old Nelson boy who was\ndrowned at Bealby's' beach Saturday, July 9, wlirn he was thrown\nfrom C. W. Walton's boat, was tits-\ncovered near the pole yards of the\nSchaefer A; Hitchcock Pole company,\nby one of the c. P. R. linesmen and\nW.  McFaydrn  of  the  Pol* company.\nThe funeral service will be held\ntoday.\nTrail Honeymooners\nVisit Over the Week-\nEnd With Relatives\n.mHmmmihmmmmmmmMAt.\nBurgess\nRadio Batteries\nBurK-M Radio Batteries are the choice ol' Radio\nEngineers.   Why not your choice?   We have just\nreceived a full stock of Burgess Chrome\nBatteries.\n45 Volt Heavy Duty \"B\" Batteries.\n\/    45 Volt Standard \"B-* Batteries.\nI      ny-, Volt \"B\" Batteries.\n!      22V_ Volt \"C\" Batteries.\n. 4i\/- Volt *C\" Batteries.\nIV_ Volt \"A\" Batteries.\nHlpperson Hardware\nCompany, limited\nfyook for the Red Hardware Store\nPhone 497 Box 414\nMr. and Mrs. W- A. Hanrahan have\nreturned Mm Ainsworth where they\nhave brcn managing the Ainsworth\nHot Springs hotel for the past\nseason They will spend a few days\nin Nelson and vicinity en route to\nVancouver.\n. Mlss Leona Bolsjoll, who is attending St. Joseph's academy, has returned from spending the week end\ntt her homc in Rossland.\nMr. and Mrs. Earl Murdin, Pair-\nview, have as their guests Mi's. Mur-\ndln's sister, Mrs. E. Rtnghelm and\ntwo children  of Trail.\n\u2022    *    \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Oeorge M Benwell\nand children Betty snd Billy are\nvlaltlng at the eowt cities.\nHonoring her niece Mlss Betty\nCrelghton of Vancouver, Mrs. J.\nIvan MacKay entertained on Wednesday .tfternoon st an Informal tea\nwhen those assisting were Mrs. S. V\nPickersglU of Winnipeg and Mrs.\nIsbel of Hoo.i River. On*, who poured\nThose acting as ..ervlteurs were Mrs.\nW. J. Gerbracht, Mra. J. Gordon\nDenholm. Mrs. Arthur Poster and\nMra. F- D. Wyatt. Those invited werc\nMlss Jean Waldle, Mlss Helen Murphy, the Misses Jean and Lois Boomer, Miss Louise Peebles, Mlsa Edith\nWilton. Mlss June Qamble, Mlsa\nYvonne Thomson of Vsncouver, Mlss\nEileen Rowley, Ml**. J. Bush, the\nMlsse_ Margaret and Gladys McLeod,\nMl\u00abs Alia Johnstone, Mlss Phyllis\nOray, Mlss Peggy Whltehouse. Mrs\nArthur Poster. Mm. W. j. oerbracht.\nMrs. j. Gordon Denholm, Mrs. P. D.\nWyatt, Mrs. Plrken.glll nnd Mrs,\nIsbel.\nMrs. Alan McLead. Stanley street,\nand family have returned from\nspending the summer month.. In\nVancouver.\nMr. and Mrs. Clark of\nTrail Visit in Ymir\nMOYIE, B. C, Bept. 10. Mr, and\nMm. Harry Oambell of Trail were\nguests at the Cameron parlors on\nTuesday while on their way to\nKimberley   to   visit   with   friends.\nMr. and Mrs. Edgar Montpellier.\nnewlyweds of Trail, were the guests\nof their uncle and aunt. Mr. and\nMrs. P. Qulndon, over the weekend, while on a honeymoon trip to\nBanff, where they will spend several\ndays before returning to their home.\nOscar Burch of Chapman Camp\nvisited with his mother, Mrs. B.\nBurch,   over   the   week-end.\nMiss Mary Andrews left on Sunday's train for Cranbrook. where\nshe will be taking third yesr high\nschool. While there she will make\nher home with Mr. and Mrs. J.\nPlsher.\nMr. and MrK. C. H. Chapman and\nsons of Edmonton. Alta., spent a\nfew days In Moyle while on their\nway to the coast cities.\nMr. and Mrs. Stanley James of\nPernle were th* gueata of their parents, Mr, and Mrs. C, James, over\nLabor  day.\nP, to. Danlelson and sons, Ernest\nand Albln. of Chapman Camp,\nspent the  week-end  in  town.\nMr, and Mrs, t,outs Collins and\nfamily of Long Beach, Calif., were\nthe guests of Mrs. E. Cameron on\nFriday evening, while on their way\nlalt with their daughter and\nson-in-law. Mr. and Mrs. P. MacKay   of   Kimberley.\nEsther Desaulniers returned home\nto spend the week-end with her\nmother.  Mrs.   M.  Desaulniers.\nMr. and Mrs, Stanley James, also\ntheir mother. Mrs. C, James, were\nthe guests of Mr. and Mrs. Algot\nJohnson of Sunny side ranch on\nSunday   afternoon.\nJim Parkins of Fairmont waa the,\nguest of Mrs. E. Cameron over the\nweek-end,\nMrs. Allx Fraser returned^ to her\nhome in Kimberley after spending\na week's visit with her father, Dan\nDupont.\nAlex Berglund of Lumberton, also\nW. Ekskog. and Mtss A. Skribe, of\nKlmberlej. were the guests of Mr\na nd Mrs. Alftot Johnson on Labor\nday.\nPearlle Walker, daughter of Mr\nand Mrs. 1.. 8. Walker, was taken\nto the St. Eugene hospital at Cran\nbrook on Tueaday evening for med\nleal   treatment.\nFAR ABOVE ALL\nOTHERS\nib the position we orenpv In the\nGrocery line. W* hare no competitors in the matter of price,\n<jt.ri.it. . freshness and prompt\n.\u25a0mire. KNOW Ihe economy of\ndealing here and the real satisfaction our good Groceries will\nafford jour family. Step ln tods.'\nELITE GROCERY\nCO., LTD.\nMl BAKER ATREET\nPHONE 1*2 NELSON, B.C.\nYM.P. B. C, Sept, 10.\u2014Mr. and\nMrs, A. B. Clark anrl family of Trail\nwere the guests of Mr, and Mrs. W.\nClark and Mrs. M. Peters on Sunday.\nMr. anrl Mrs. F. Daly had as\ntheir guests on Sunday Mr. and\nMrs. 9. H. Duck and family of\nNelson,\nW. levignr \\o -pr-ndlng a few\ndays   In  Nelson\nE. Daly ir. and Johnny Paly of\nSaJmo spent the week-end in Ymir.\nthe guests of their parent*, Mr and\nMrs.   E.   Daly.\nWaiter Shell!., of Salmo wa* a\nguest at the nnlv home rn Saturday.\nMr and Mrs. A. B. Clark of Trail\nWttO the guests of Mr. Clark's parents. Mr. and Mrt. W. Clark, on\nTuesday. Mr. Clark returned home\nthe same evening. Mrs, Clark will\nremain   here   for   a   few   days.\nWendell Shrum was the guest, of\nhis brother-in-law and sister, Mr,\nand Mrs. Carl W, Llndow. tn Salmo,\non   Tuesday.\nMr. and Mrs. L. Slattery took\ntheir son Thomas to Nelson on\nTuesday   for   medical   attention.\nMrs. J. H. Clarke recently had as\nj her guests Mr. and Mrs. Wendell\nShrum, Mrs. A. B. Clar* of Trail.\nMra. W. B. Mclsaac and Mra, Leslie\nBond,\nMr. and Mrs. Hugh Jones had as\ntheir guests on Tuesday Mr. and\nMrs A Oray and family of Salmo,\nand Mr. and Mrs. Flagel of Sunny-\nview ranch\nMtt. V. Anderson and younc ooh\nreturned home from the Kootenay\nUke Oeneral hospital on Wednesday   .\nJohn Campbell went to Trail for\nmedicii attention on Wednesday.\nRemove Memorials\nObscuring  Beauties\nof Westminster Abbey\nI.ONDON, Sept. 10.-i By Thomni\nT. Champion, Caudlan Press Correspondent)\u2014Westminster Abbey haa\noften been called a poem tn slope\nbut there are many people of discretion who think Hs poetic qualities\nafc greatly marred by the lavish\nIntroduction, in comparatively recent\nyears, of so much ponderous memorial sculpture. Now comes the announcement thnt tb* Clirnewall\nmonument Is to bc remove, from\nthe Nav_ to another position In the\nprecincts of the Abbey* In other\nwords the Cornewall monument la\nto br put Into the Cloisters.\nLike many monuments erected In\nthe eighteenth or early nineteenth\ncentury, the Cornwall monument has\nlittle rxcept Its size nowadays to\nreoemmend H. It was placed in\nth* action of Captain Cornwall off\nthe Abbey In 1774, to commemorate\nToulon. Where lt now stands\ncompletely hides the Wl? Memorial\nchapel which Is near thr unknown\nwarrior's lomb, and thos\" who w\nto enter lhe Chapel must squeeze\nthrough an 18 Inch opening.\nplace of the monument there will\nbe errrtrd a fine screen of wrought\niron, in which will iv Incorporated\nthc bronze sword and shield presented by the City of Verlun tc. th*\nCity of London In   1930.\nThere are many other memorials\nin t*_e Abbey which could bc removed Without out loss lo the\nAbbPi it.<elf. Tlic Wolfe memorial,\ntor instance. Is a ponderous piece of\nmarble of little artistic merit, it re\npresents the dying hero sinking Into\nthe arms or a grenadier, his right\nhand pressing his mortal wound\nThe grenadier Is pointing out the\nGodess of Fame hovering overhead.\nand lo the background U a mourning Highlander. The inscription on\nthe monument __ a very wor.iy on*.\nIn the Oreat war thli BtOQumfni,\nso to spfak, c.me io Ufe. Canadian\nbattalions, on leavinc England for\nFrance, deposited thot* colors there.\nWhen the battalions, or rather what\nwas left of Hum returned from the\nwar, they went again to the Abbey\nsnd reclaimed the colors. To perpetuate this i couple of Canadian\ncolors were presented a few years\nago to hsng for a'1 time over Wolfe's\nm-Tnument.\nPythian Sisters Hold\nShower for Those Who\nLost Homes at Salmo\nMrs.   Shelll   and   Mrs.   Hearn   Recipients; Trail Past thief's flub\nPuts  on   Entertainment\nSALMO, B. c, Sept 10,\u2014Among\nrecent Pythian Sisters' KttrlUM\nwas a concert sponsored by tbe\nPast Chiefs' club of the Trail Temple No. 3- It waa largely attended\nby people from Trail, Ymlr and\nErie. The program was as follows:\nA mock initiation; recitation by\nMrs. A. B. Clark, a mock wedding,\nand an old-timers' partv.\nHOLD   A   SHOWER\nA feature of the Pythian Blsteri'\nregular meeting, held Tueaday evening in the Community hill, was\na miscellaneous shows* for Mrs.\nShelll and a kitchen tf-ower for\nMr? Hearn, whose homes were to-\nMly  destroyed   by  fire  last  week.\nCsMeagher Vc)\n607 Baker St. Phone 200\nSTORE NEWS\nFor Misses and Women\nJust in time for the rainy season and these are\nthe best raincoat values we have ever seen. They\nare here in smart belted styles. Tailored and styled\nlike the smart Fall coats. Made of leatherette, Rubberized tweeds or Gabardine. Flain or plaid lining1,\nAll sizes.\nEACH\nS8.50, |8.75 to 013.75.,\nNew Sweater Coats\nDecidedly lower prices on imported sweater\ncoats. These come in pure Botany wool in plain colors with striped trimming. All wanted colors and in\nall sizes up to 44.\nSPECIALLY PRICED, each |5.00, ?6.50 to $8.50\nTHOMAS SMITH IS      iMri. G. Fair of Salmo\nIN HOSPITAL WITH\nAN  INJURED  LEG\nKASLO. B. C. Sept. 10\u2014Mrs.\nThomas Smith was a delig.i.ful tea\nhostess Saturdsy afternoon when she\nentertainer] n ft* friends honoring;\nher houw guest. Mrs. Tattrie of Sandon, and Mlss Irrne Ma.-OUtlvray\npreeentlng the latter with a dainty\nfarewell gift on the eve of H*r departure for thc to***,\nMtss Ruby King has left for her\nhome In Nelson after spending I >\\v\ndays herc the guest of Mlss Eilae\nCody.\nMr. and Mrs. _f. H   Thompson nnd\nthc latter's nephew. Erwin Seal, .ave\nleft for their heme In Spokane after\n^.ending a few days in tOWO with\nfriends.\nMrs. Clyde White and Mr.s Russell\nThompson of New Denver were the\nguests of Mr. and Mrs. Th u:n.i\nSmith*'Monday.\nMtss Irene MarClillivriy has left\nfor Victoria where she will attend\nnormal school during Uic coming\nwinter,\nThomas Smith i_ ... patient In\nthe Victoria hospital suffering from\na badly twisted and bruised Ie_:.\nhaving been Injured by a f-illhiK\nlog while on duty In the flre-flght-\nIng area up the south fork of\nKaslo  rivet.\nThe community basket picnic,\nwhich was to have beni held in\nVImy park Thursday under the\nauspices of the Kaslo and District\nWomen's Institute, bM been postponed for one week, owl ng to t hc\nwet   weather,\nH. L. Lindsay. 11 former Kasloite,\nwho spent tlie past year In Vancouver and California, is tenewlnf\nacquaintances  in  town\nMr. and Mra, J. N. ftfoUOd of\nEdegwood motored in from Nelson\nTuesday and left Wednesday by wav\nof Sandon to return to their hnmo.\nWhile tn town thry were the guests\nof   Mr    Bnd   Mrs,   D.   A    KcKtIUdt,\nJack Sutcliffe of Rlondel was a\nWednesday visitor lit thf city |0\nvisit. Mrs. Sutclifr** and m<-:r infant\nson. who arc patients 'n tb* Victorian   hospital.\nMlss Tattrie of Sandon, who hns\nbeen a patient in the Victorian\nhospital, was able to travr for hot\nhome Sunday for further ronval-\nesoencp. Mtss1 Tattrie was arrom-\npsnled by her motlvr and hlster,\nwho for the past few tlnvs havc\nbeen thr guests of Mr. and Mrs.\nThomas  Smith\nSpends the Week-end\nWith  Harop Friends\nSALMO. B, C, Sept. If).-Mrs.\nChester Bush is visiting friends in\nNelson.\nMrs. Ci. O. Fair spcni. the weekend and Labor day visiting at the\nhome of Mr. and Mrs. E. Harrop at,\nHarrop.\nMiss Gloria Stephenson spent the\nweek-end in Nelson, thc truest of\nher parents. Staff-Sewnt and Mrs.\nStephenson.\nW. MacLaughlin has returned from\nWynndel, where he spent lhe summer.\nMr. and Mrs. C. Jensen or thc\nReno   mine   are   visiting   in   Nelson\nWilliam Donaldson, who Is attending high school in Nelson, spent\nthe week-end and Labor day the\nguest of his parents, Mr. and Mrs\nM.   C.   Donaldson.\nMrs. Jack Sapples entertained recently at the tea hour, when she\nas assisted In serving by Mrs. O.\nG. Pair and Miss Kathleen Sapples,\nHer guests Included Mrs George\nMatthews, Mrs. C. A. Cawley, Mrs,\nWilliam Gntv. Mrs. W. Grutchfield.\nMrs. Carl W. Llndow, Mrs. Noel\nHarrop. Mrs, Henry John. Mra, O.\nO, Fair, Mrs. J. Payant. and Miss\nKathleen  Sapples.\nMr. and Mrs Noel Harrop spent\nthe week-end In Nelson, the t-0*t*\nof Mr   and  Mrs.  J.  R.  Riesterer.\nMrs. W. Miller has as her house\nguests  Mr.   and   Mrs. welter  Shelll.\nMrs, W. Gray, whose hotel mi\ntotally destroyed last week, is a\ngueet at thc home cf Mr. and Mrs.\nGecrge  Matthews.\nNO   FLOODLIGHTS\nIN   LONDON\nI-ONDON. Bent to,\u2014(By lhe Canadian Pressi-Compared with many\ncities on the other side of the Atlantic. London knows little or nothing of fiood-iighiinc Hrr education\nin this resjwet, howtver, will be advanced early this month when Mi*>\nInternational Illumination congress\nmeets here. Thr long frontages of\nBarklngh-ii-n Palm-* and the National\nGaller*. win both he Illuminated.\nIncidentally It may barf be said that\nCanada House, vbleb is a near neighbor of the National Gallery, has been\na conspicuous leader in floori-lighting\never slnr* It was opened some few\nrears ago, Th? grares of many n\nrhurch splr# down in the city built\nby Ohrlafopher Wren, will also be revealed by night as well aa by day.\nThe International Illumination congress   will   tuttm   its   deliberation\nin Edinburgh. Here the rsstl* wll!\nalso show fort'i Its rugged grandeur\naft*r sunset The admiralty are assisting in the LcTidon program by\nbeams upon the city from the pool\nbringing a gunboat to throw Its\nbelow London Bridge.\nFollowing this congress wtll be the\nrhlef ferfture of these will be a greit\nFaraday Centenary celebrations. The\nexhibition ln the Albert Hall of personal relics and of Farady'a pioneer\nwork, tn electricity.\nTo eee hla 38 nephews and ntecas\nin Canada, to return tro* vlalt.\nmade him by the Canadian Bishop*\nlast yaar; and to see tbe Cathedral\non Vancouver Wand are the three\nreaeona for tiie two months' visit\nto the Dominion of His Lordshlr-\nthe Bishop of London. Dr A. E\nWinntngton-rngram who arrived le-\ncently aboard the Duchess of York\nHow Can Pressure .\nUpon a Nerve     1\nProduce Disease?\nW* knew that the action of every\npart of thr body depends upon the\nstimulation which tt receive* from\nthf brain and nerve centers. Pressure upon the nerve blocks the condition or the carrying of thes^ Impulses or meeaafeg along the nerve\npath, and aa a result so called dis-\nc_sp makes it* appearance, h*>ad- <\necho. ptcmach trouble. kidney *\ntrouble and many other conditions.\nI locate the pressure with a thermocouple instrument, I adjust the\nvertebra.  Health  is the result.\nJ. R. McMillan\nGraduate   of   tlie  Palmer  School  of\nChiropractic. Nelson. B. C, Phone 212\nEAT\nBritish Columbia\nMilk Fed\nLAMB\nSeptember 7th to 14th\nThis Is B. C. Lamb Week\nNESTLE'S\n\"pjFSTLE'S...4e\n*i\"^ world', standard of\nquality .. .sold in every\ncountry on earth . . .\nrelied on hymorhenand\nhousewives throughout\ntheglobe. Pure, safeand\nhealthful, Nestles Mile\nis especially valuable to\ngrowing children . . .\njust pure row's milk\nfrom selected herds with\nuseless water removed\n.. . then sterilized and\nsealed in airtight tins.\nDelicious in beverages\naod in cooking and\nbating.\nbaby size\nNESTLE'S\u2014 WoricPi targost Producm ami\nSellers of Condensed and Evaporated Milk. Af>\nRICH\u2014CREAMY\u2014HEALTHFUL\n HOB MX\n* U\\)i Jfolarm Bath} Jfoma\nPut>___t_ \u00abr\u00abr. mornln. except Bunday by News Publlshini Corn-\nput., Llmlte-, Nelson, B   C\nMember of Csnsdisn Press leased wire news service.\nAdvertising rete c_rds \u00bbnd A. B. C. sUtwnente ol clrculstlon\nmslled on request, or msj be aeen st tbe ottlce ol eny advertising\nagency recogi-jed by the o___-U__ Dally Newspspers' Asscx-ution.\nSUBSCRIPTION BATES\nBy mall  (country), par month -      .\nPar  yaar   ,  \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014.\nBy mau (city), per year\t\nOutaide Canada, per month\t\nPar year\nDelivered, per week\nPer year \t\nPayable ln advance.\nMember Audit Bureau ot Circulation.\nFRIDAY,  SEPTEMBER 11,  1931\nMafce the Tourist Willi fo Return\nJji the last 10 years British Columbia has spent\n$65,000,000 or so in the construction and maintenance\nof highways, much of the mileage l*.ng designed to\nattract tourists to the province.\nBut good roads, when we finally have them, will\nnot do the trick alone. We must make British Columbia attractive to the tourist when he gets here. We\nmust make it so attractive that he will not only\nwish to return but he will advise his friends to visit\nBritish Columbia. .\nThe dav of visiting British Columbia with the idea\nof finding a wild wooly wilderness is gone. With it\nhas gone the one story building, with the absurd\nfajse second story, that most extraordinary specimen\nof western architecture. And the day has gone also\nwhen the \"dump\" hotel can live. It can't get the\nbusiness. ,\nIn its place has come the day when tourists who\nvisit British Columbia expect to find modern and\ncomfortable accommodation, attractive inns, attractive\nrestaurants.\nThe tourist no longer comes to British Columbia\nexpecting to \"rough it,\" He expects first class accommodation.\nIf he doesn't get it, he won't come back.\nGetting the Child Ready\nfor School tile\nIt is stated by the United States public, .health\nservice that properly to prepare children for school\nlife is one of the most important duties of parents.\nJust as it is the duty of the commuity to provide\nadequate facilities to the end that every boy and girl\nmay be given the opportunity to secure an education,\nso \"it is the duty of the parents to see that, so far as\nlies within their power, their children sshall be in the\nbest mental and physical condition to enter upon\nschool life. Children with strong, clean bodies and\nminds not warped by fear or other unnatural emotions, are happy and more quickly adjust themselves\nto their new surroundings.\nThe provision of the proper food and clothing,\ntraining in good habits of hygiene, and regulation\nof sleep amd rest are all part of the parents' duty\nin preparing their child for school life. The public\nhealth program includes, in addition, the correction\nof such physical defects as are amenable to treatment,\nand the securing for the child immunization against\ndyphtheria and vaccination  against smallpox.\nPreparation for school life does not begin just a\nfew days, few weeks or a few months before the child\nstarts to school; the period of preparation covers\nthe whole time from birth to school age. Training in\nhabits affecting health and development should begin\nearly in life. Regular hours nf sleep and rest, regular\nhabits of eating, proper attention to body cleanliness,\nand care of the bowels are best Ijegim at the earliest -\npossible age. Before a baby is many weeks old the\nmother is aware of the importance of establishment\nfor her baby those habits which make for his health\nand happiness; for a well-regulated and healthy baby\nis invariably a happy and contented child.\nIt is interesting to observe with what ease a child\nmay be taught, to cean his teeth. As a child leantl\nto feed himself by watching others aud trying to use\nhis fork and spoon, in the same manner and just as\nearly in life he may be taught to use a tooth brash.\nIf the first teeth are cleaned regularly and examined\nat frequent intervals for the earliest evidence of decay,\nthey may usually be kept in service for their normal\nperiod. Neglected \"baby teeth.\" not o_1} lead to a\nchronic diseased condition 'of the parts about the tooth\nwhich often persist and are present when the permanent teeth appear, but they are lost before the\nnormal time and the child is deprived of their use,\nAlso the early loss of the first teeth may cauie delayer] eruption of the permanent teeth and increase\nthe tendency of such teeth tn assume a poor pogition\nwhen they do appear. Improper nutritinn and slow\nphysical development are frequently associated with\nbad teeth.\nDuring th\" pre-school or \"toddling age.'' is 'he best\ntime to learn of any physical defect which should be\ncorrected. If examination for such defects is left for\nthe school nurse or physician, the child not only loses\nthe advantage to be gained hy earlier correction, but\nlater, in many instances, must actually lose time from\nschool while such corrections are being made. Therefore a child is not ready for school until these defects have received attention. Minor defects of the\nnose and throat, which often are easily and quickly\ncorrected, when neglected greatly influence the incidence of minor and often serious respiratory infections.\nSeen and Heard\nIn NELSON\n(By S. B. C.)\nMost golfers sre more or 1st*\nprone to spinning many stories shout\ntheir fsvorite game, and tbe Prince\nof Wales is no exception to thf rule.\nOne thst .be was overheard telling\nto a friend on the Coombp Hill golf\ncourse recently concerned a oertain\ncsddte who, although ordinarily his\nspeech wu quite normal, used to\nstammer badly when excited ci\naurprlsed.\nOne dsy he was carrying for a\nwell known player who, on arriving\nat the seventh hole\u2014\u00ab particularly\nd if f icult   one\u2014remark ed:\n\"I did this in three the other\nday\"\n\"What?\" ejaculated the caddie.\n\"Well, sir, all I can say is that you\nare   s   1-1-1-1\u2014\"\n\"Steady, boy, steady!\" interrupted\nthe plsyer  reprovingly.\n\"Tour're a 1-1-lucky man, sir.\"\nconcluded   the   stammering   raddle.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nHeard A. J. Dunnett referring to\nthe Isst spike that wa. driven on\nthe C. P. Bl at Craigellaiche ... It\nwas a gold *oth-_ \u2022 \u25a0 \u25a0 And Alderman\nJ, B. Oray remarking - \u25a0 \u25a0 That he\nremembered ... He had swiped it,\n. . . Noticed Ross Riley tslklng to\na young chap on Baker street\nWho wis carrying * hit wash tub\n, . . Saw Tom Wilson and A. D.\nMcLeod discussing gol( ... F. T,\nGriffiths walking down the street\nwith h. M. Vainer . . . Who was\ncarrying his trusty lunch bucket\n. . . Noticed Earl Hunt and Archie\nFletcher . . . Chatting with William\nRamsay . . . Lou Kerr hoping th*\ndelegation to the Edgewood fair\nwould be a large one . . . Dr. C. E-\nBradshaw walking down Baker street\nand en. eying a Big\u2014Long\u2014Huge\nyawn . . . Frank Stringer walking\nwith a little girl holding his hand\n... H. A. Nicholson talking confidentially with George Benwell . . .\nHoward Bush going bareheaded to a\nboard  of  trade   luncheon  , . .\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nLee McBride end John Kerr having a discussion upon the hotel\nbusiness.\nsss\nThey were speaking of husbands,\nsnd Mrs. Bernice Nobles of Loa\nAngeles, made some broad statements. For instance, she insisted\nthat lt would be no difficult matter\nfor her to \"vamp\" away the husband\nof Mre   Alice Steuck.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs, Steuck smiled to herself, and\ndeclared that the thing was impossible, and announced thit she had\na $1200 ring that said eo. And so\nthe bet was  made.\n\u2022 \u2022   a\nThus far. both Mrs. Steuck and\nMre. Nobles were in agreement when'\nthey appeared before Municipal\nJudge Joseph M. Golden, Mrs\nSteuck, t\\\u00a3 plaintiff, was demanding\nthat Mrs. Nobles return the ring, or\nits value, and Mrs. Nobles, as de\nfendant, was insisting that ehe\ndidn't have tt.\nsee\nThe amazing wager, both women\nagreed, was made In a hush establishment on February 31. as they met\nover a cup or something or other.\nIt came, tbey said, after Mrs. Nobles\nsaid something to the effect that\nhusbands, in general, and Mrs.\nSteuck's in particular, would certainly yield to the proper technique\n\u2014to Mrs, Nobles* in particular\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. Steuck disagreed to the extent of writing out a check for $100\nnnd offering to bet. Mrs. Nobles accepted with a check for a similar\namount. She was delegated as stakeholder. Then Mrs. Steuck thought it\nover, and raised the ant*. The\ncheck* were destroyed and Mrs.\nNobles, as a stake-holder, took Mrs.\nqfeuckV $1200 ring, according to the\ncomplaint.\ni   a   s\nAdmitting thst the Hag entered\ninto the discussion. Mrs. Nobles\ntold the court yesterday that she\ncouldn't remember what happened to\nit\u2014but that she was sure ahe didn't\ntake it  from the establishment.\nNeither woman enlightened the\ncourt as to whether the bet ever was\nderided So Judge Golden took the\ncase   under   advisement.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nLeonard bmith, Santa Pe agent at\nCucamonga. lias a good watch, and\nthe fish of the ocean know it, he\ndeclared.\nWhile out deep-sea fishing with\nfriends off the coast of Oceanside,\nSmith \u00ab'\u00bb\u00ab chagrined to discover his\nI'ni-ed trwtab was missing,\nWhUe the crew bej_-.ni _. search 'of\ntht i>n^t for ihr timepiece. Smith\nand his friends set about to clean\nthe fish  they had  naught.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\n\u2022Smith slit, open a large b.ss, but\nbefore proceeding, he maintained he\nrouid   hear  the  fish's  heart beating.\nThe \"heartbeats,\"  however, proved\ni be  the ticking of v,l_ gold watch\nwhich   was  lodged   in  the  fish's  rtl-\ngcstlva  organs.\ntnltb doesn't know hnw the watch\ngot Inside the fish, but he claims It\nLa bts story, and he refuses to be\niaken   in   his  testimony.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nWell, time will tell   If vou know a\nbettor   rUD   yarn Iet>   hear  It.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nanother   Mir;*.\n\u00bbTM KEUOH BJaltto NIW8, NItfON, B. C FWDAT  NOHOW.  SEPTBMW* 11,  _mmt9m\u00a7m99m3mm\nAuction and\nContract Bridge\nBy the World's Leading Authority,\nMILTON C. WORK\nSM\n\u00bbw\n\u2666 H-IU-.-M\nSJ-i-S\nThat Body of Yours\nB.'   JAMES   W.   BAHXON\nCAUSE Of  MIGRAINE-\nONE SIDla) HEADACHE\n\u25a0periods, during which they are\n1 absolutely free from digest*.-.- dls-\nturbace. If anything were wrong\nwith the stomach or intestine there\nwould be trouble practically all the\ntime.\nDr.   Neil   C.   Stevens   of   Cornell\nMany   people   are   interested   ii\nthe  experiment  in  a  western  uni-\nbeing made to try and find out'CUKlc   believes   that   the   tendency\nversity where a determined effort\nthe cause of migraine that distressing one sided headache which\naril let.;, a great number of people,\nlt hae always been my thought\nthat hard mental work or emotional disturbance so upsets the\nbram that it falls to eend impulses to the digestive tract tc\nkeep things moving; the liver get*\ncongested, the bile in the gall blad\nder thickens and doesn't flow free\nto migraine is inherited and that\nits cause will be found to be a\ndisturbance in the endocrine or\nductless glands of the body. As\nthe first attacks of .migraine usually come on when the girl is developing into a woman, and the boy\ninto a man, this looks leasonable\nenough. 'Hie fact that they do not\nalways at. this time must however\nlie remembered.\nIn  the  meantime  while   research\nly,   and   that   this   combination   of workers   art   endeavoring   to   locate\nmental and sluggish liver caused\nthe _.ym;:toms.\nRr. R. S. Ahrens believes that\nthe cause ot migraine lies essentially In tiie emotion of life of the\nindividual which in turn afreets\nthe stomach. He reminds us that\nattention has always been directed\ntoward the stomach 'as the cause\nof sick headaches and rightly so;\nhowever the cause does not lie in\nfaulty organs, but in the faulty\nuse of normal organs.\nAnd as we think about lt, we\nrealize that sufferers from migraine\ndo not suffer from it all the time,\nbut   have   periods,   sometimes   long\nthe cause of bigralne, sufferes\nshould try and avoid attacks by\nnot overdoing themselves mentally\nor emotionally, not eating when\ntired, trying to get periods of relaxation every day, and 'keep the\nIntestines active by exeroise, or of\nnecessary   by   mild   laxatives.\nLying on the right side for not\nless than 15 minutes before lunch,\nand before the evening meal has\nproven helpful. The body not only\ngets rested, but any food lying tn\nthe stomach from pervious meal\ngets emptied Into the small intea\ntine leaving stomach ready for the\nnext meal\nGoing South on the Minto\n(By   WALTER   OIDDIN06)\n\"noi,   being   here\nUncle Sam is quit, worried becaii.e while lie pro-\nduces only 1 per cent of the tin of thc world he uses\n6 per cent of the total world's production, and tin is\nnot used in brass at that.\nNo wonder the Russian alphabet has 36 letters. It\nhad to do something like that to spell Stalin's name,\nJosph Pissarionvich D.jhugasavilli.\nAnd it's only a few years since thc police closed\na musical show because Pauline Chase put on a\npyjama chorus.\nThe .lump has caused a strong demand for serious\nbooks, says Publisher William Farquar Payson. The\nslump may be opportunity in disguise.\nGandhi is taking his goats to London, but what about\nthe kids?   And Mrs. Gandhi?\nAUNT HET\n\"Now I'm gettin' old I don't\n:nind confeesin' tha1 maybe I\nnever done nothin' bad be-\noause I never had much chance.\"\nMere than 479,000,000 fish eggs,\nfry. ftngerltngs, snd yearling fish\n\u25a0nd a few older fish were distributed '*\u00abt year from the hatchery\nestablishments operated by the fiah\nculture division of the Canadian\ndepartment of fisheries. Largest distribution was from the hatcheries\nin  the  prairie provinces.\nHanlng occasion to visit Castlegar fcone might be excused for not look-\nrecently I went south on the Steamer Mlnto. There was a time, when\ncertain wharf, which some\npeople go as far to say is one of\nthe best landings on the lakes unless\nyou were a craft of peaches or other\nfruit, you would not care to stop\nen the way bouth.\nHowever I flagged the steamer and\nIt being quite O.K. with the purser\nI went aboard.\nAfter calling at Burton It ls always interesting to watch the winding of the river through the swift\nwaters and to see how carefully the\nboat Is handled through the devious\ncourse. It ifi at thin point that one\ncan understand the desire of the\nwaters to be called the Columbia\nriver rather than thc Arrow Lakes,\nI heard a remark some years ago\naboard the Bonnlngton by a man\nwho noticed the protective matting\nwhich had then been recently placed\non the bank. \"Do you see that?\" he\nsaid fo his companion. \"I will tell\nyou what it \\t, It is raised st certain limes, and as many t-almon run\nthis river, thev swim behind\nwhereupon it is lowered and they\ncatch them all.\"\nNow he was'rtRht in knowing that\nthe fishiii* hereabouts is good, and\npossibly t'lsewhere he had aeen some\ncontrivance for etching fish, so he\nnatural)'- thought he waa Justified in putting the two Ideas together and presenting them complete to his pal.\nAt Needles the new lerry was running and ls a great improvement.\nWe should however have liked to\nhave seen logs coming down the\nWaldle chute one? more.\nIt wa* however at Fnrslunds where\nwe    look    aboard    a    lot    of    apples\nthnt   our   interest   in   our   fella* -\npassengtrs was increased. A man\nheld his ettfj din his arms and ina\nwaving tn. those ashore, the child\nstarted    to   cry   heartily.   The   onlv\nway   to   pacify   him   whs   to   turn\nground and show tic child his face\nIn the glass. But by this time  the\nmother  stowed  BifM  of  disconsola-\nt.ion   and   no  did   the   rest   of   the\nchildren. The explanation \u25a0*\u00bb_, that\nthey   had   been   holidaying   on   the\nArrow  lakes  ami  were  now  returning to a city on thc prairie.\nIn   former  years li   always seemed\nthe   corrc:1    thing   to   watt   until\nyou    had    seen    Edgewood    before\ngetting out your ptpe to wile away\nthe   time   until   after   you   reached\nneuata   There seemed to be so much\nWe   at   Edgewood   Mad   so   mum   to\nremind   one   of   ether   tottm   and\nplace*,   Then   ton,  Dr.   Kelso   rime\ndown  and so did the late Co'   Her-\n.-mgton with ills joke and checrlnese.\nToday it seemed different, Th? onitJ\npurser wan not on board so I could\nnot asl: him what thc reason Wos.\nOn   leaving   Edgewood   there   isn't\nmuch to sec UU you grt to Broadwater   and   then   aftr,   travelling   so\nior.g  and  so far you  suddenly  turn\nme corner and there is tb* loveliest\n. .one imaginable. A very am.'!) beach\nindeed, the bow of the steam.)* tbot-\nU.g 'gently upon It, very few people,\n..ud very little of anything else. Oh\n.es.   I   remember,   it  was   just,   here\nthat    a    man    named    Illing worth,\ntoon   BfOi  usfd   to grow  ihe  linest\nrcses   on   the   lakes,   Tf   they   ever\nChang.,    the    nun:   of   Broadwater,\nit  might  be  they  will  call   tt   the\nhaven   under  the  hill\nBut,   I   have   got   to   Broadwater\ntoo  soon,  for  it. was quite   a   long\ntime  after  leaving  Edgewood  before\nwe  got  there, and on the wiv  wc\nfell   to   talking.  Now  as  the   boat.\nrun at present It is daylight all the\nway to Robson whercan in %kt fall It\nused to grow dark no... after > -..\u25a0\u2022 <\nEdgewood   and   what   with   supper\ning out much till he arrived *t\nRenata, where at certain seaeons\nthere came a lot of peaches aboard.\nIt was excusable therefore if remembering thc apples at Forslunds\nand seeing the peaches at Renata\none Imagined he had been in the\ndarkness passing through a veritable scene of apple lands and fruit\nlands. But now we sail in daylight\nand sp if you wish to do so, you\nmay see lt all.\nNow it chanced a little fellow was\nsitting in a chair on one side and\non the other was old Dick Maxwell.\nWe had been parsing rather close to\nthe shore for quite a long way\nwith the ountalns coming down\nright Into the water with no foreshore In some places at all. At last\nthe boy wanted to tell mc something.\nHe said, \"Do you know what all this\nis?''\n\"No.\"  l ssld.\n\"Welt,\"   i   said,\nmountains.\"\nI seemed however destined to be\ndrawn into deeper waters Still when\nit,, Dick, remembering his old ranch\nwhere the mountains stood well\nback from the lake, with a gently-\nsloping field down to the beach\nand now seeing so many miles of\nrough country where no settlement\ncan ever be.  asked I\n\"What do you think was the reas\nOB   it  wns  made   like   this?\"\n\"Well,\" I said, \"not being here\nwhen it was done. I really cannot\nsay, but on thinking lt over since,\nI am inclined to think there is a\nreason for it all, possibly it is that\nmore clearly the Columbia may be\nheard saying, 'Remember, I\nriver and not merely a luke. Will\nvou not accept my services? Por\nwhen I ht>ve Joined the Kootenay if\nyou will only help me. when I'get\nin too much of a hum. I will take\nyou by water to any part of the\nworld to which you may desire\nto go.'\"\ni.THIB ARTICLE IS INTBNDGD FOR\nTHE AUCTION AND CONTRACT\nBRIDGE BBOINNDR )\nThe above hsnd would be played\nby South with a contract of three\nNo Trumps at Contract Bridge, one\nNo Trump at Auction Bridge.\nWest would lead his fourth best\nHeart, Bast winning the first trick\nrflth the Ace and returning the Ten.\nSouth then would be placed in the\nsame position as if he had held Ace\nand two little Hearts originally and\nEast had played the King on tthc\nfirst trick. In that situation South\nundoubtedly would realise the importance or not winning until the\nthird round, so as to exhaust the\nHearts In the East hand, unless East\nhas four Hearts in which case only\ntnres adverse Heart tricks can be\nmade.\nSome players fall to recognize this\nplay when they hold Bhe King at the\nhead of the suit and the Ace ls\nplayed on the first trick; although\nthe situation is exactly the same aa\nwhen the positions of Ace and King\nare reversed. Of couree if East should\nplay the Queen on the first trick,\nSouth would not dare to hold up teic\nKing because in that case West probably haa Ace-Jack ana the hold-up\nof the King would sacrifice it; but\nwith the Ace of Hearts played on\nthe first trick, South should not\nplay the King until the third round,\nWhen South wins the third Heart\nta will start Diamonds without de-\nlav, lea-ding the Queen and finessing\nEast winning with the King would\nlead either a Club or a spade, and\nno mater how tempting the finesse\nmay be South should not yield to\nthe lure of playing for extra tricks.\nHe has nine tricks assured and taking the chance of permitting West\nto win a trick and save the game by\nrunning his two long Hearts would\nbe the acme of folly. Declarer should\ntake home hla game by winning two\nSpades, one Heart, five Diamond:.\nand one Club.\nWhat the Press\nSays\nA GOOD will ship\nThrough th. enWrprtM ol H. H\nSteven, th. Mlnlst*. ol Trade _nci\nCommerce, the Dominion government\nIs sending a good will ship to Aus\ntn-lla carrying a large consignment\nol -_.__. products which Canada\nhopes to sell in the Antipodes as a\nresult ol the lavorable tartUs arranged under the Canadian-Australian Trade Treaty. In lumber and\nother products British Columbia\nstands to be a large gainer ln the\nnew trade that Is expected to be\ndeveloped as a result ol the tresty.\nIn fact, this province Probably will\nreap Urge benelltB, II adequate\nmeasures are taken, than any other\nprovince ln the Dominion.\nThe presumption ls that British\nColumbia will have a very lull representation ol her product* In the\ngood will ship. In the matter ol\nlumber every variety should be on\nexhibition. The manulactured products, too, should have specimens so\nas to make a complete representation ot what this province can oiler\ntc Australia. There is an opportunity also lor the Irult grower ol\nthe Okanagan, for the salmon canners ol the coast lor the llshlng In-;\ndustry as a whole, for all products. (\nIn fact, that come under the terms\nol the treaty with the commonwealth\nWhen the trade treaty was announced there were congratulations\non every hand because ol the good\nresult* which were lorecastea Ior\nthis province. The hopes Inferred\nshould be followed up by every\nmeans within the power of British\nColumbia. One of these mesns ls at\nhand In the good will ship arrange:\nIor by Mr. Stevens. In the consignment aboard. British Columbia should\nhave a thoroughly representative\nshowing. That ts one way of placing our products belore Australian\nInterest. The time ls short, because\nthe vessels sails Ior the Antipodes\nnext montl). and sstl Irom an eastern\nport. The task ol assembling exhibits Irom this province should nov;\nhe well in hand. The better the\ngathering ol exhibits\u2014and nothing\nwhatever tn which trade csn be developed ahould be omitted\u2014 the\ngreater the chance ol British Columbia deriving Immediate advantages\nIrom the operation ol tlie new trade\ntreaty\u2014Victoria Colonist.\nTen Years Ago\n(Fran The Dally Neva, Sept 11,1121)\nRosooe \"Patty\" Arbuckie, screen\nactor, will be formally charged ln\nthe polios court tomorrow with the\nmurder of Mlss Virginia Rappe. It\nwas announoed ln Ban Francisco\nyesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nReturning last night from hla mission to Victoria aa head of the Ymir\nroad delegation. Mayor C. F. McHardy stated that he had nothing\nbut good to aay for the way in\nwhleh the delegates were received by\npremier Oliver and Hon. J. H. King,\nminister of public works.\nThe Mlnto cup, historic piece of\nsilverware emblematic of the world's\nlacrosse championship, went to the\nRoyal city, New Westminster, after a\nsojourn tn Vancouver, yesterday\nwhen the SalmonbeUies defeated the\nVancouver Terminal* by a score\nof   fl-2.\n\u2022 s   e\nDr. and Mrs. W. O. Ross and Mr.\nand Mrs. H. W. smedley motored to\nSouth slocan yesterday where Dr.\nRote and J. H. Shofield, M. P. P.,\nof Trail, Joined ln opening of the\nnew community hall.\nA word to the\noutdoor girl\nTwenty Years Ago\n(From The Dally News. Sept. 11, 1.11)\nFrenche'a Complex Ore Reduction\ncompany, limited, will erect In Nel- j\nson a plant for the treatment of\nzinc ores ol this district on a commercial scale according to a statement of Mr. French who has returned from Vancouver.\n.-or titt consideration of half a\nmillion dollars the Canadian Consolidated Mining St Smelting company has taken an option on the H.\nB. group of six claims at Deer\ncreek.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u00ab\nA local syndicate has bought the\ntelephone  system  at  Quesnel.\nIt wll! take 30.000 men to put\nthrough the various railway undertakings now ln progress or about to\ncommence  ln  British  Columbia.\nHANDS calloused from golf...\nlips chapped by 'the wind...\nneck, tnd noses sunburned tnd\nfreckled ... here's how to repair thia\ndamage.\nLay in a stock of \"Vaseline\" Petroleum\nJelly. At home on the dressing table.\nAt the club in your locker. And\napply it freely. For example: If tha\nhands are calloused or rough and\nchapped, or too dry, or sunburned,\nor the cuticle is inclined to form\nhangnails, massage them with a generous amount of \"Vaseline\" Jelly before retiring, and wear toft gloves\nto bed.\nIf lips are chapped, apply \"Vaseline\"\nJelly every time you think of it. It it\nobtainable everywhere, in tubes and\njars.\nThese are simple, easy things to do.\nOo try them. Your looks will benefit\nenormously. \"Vaseline\" Jelly is a prod-\nJ. O. Trucotte. Canadian exhibition commissioner, who visited Regina recently In connection with\nInterior deooratlon In the magnificent new building which will house\nthe world's grain exhibition and j uc_ 0f the Chesebrough Manufactur-\nconference, states that a start on! __, -.__\u201e r-\u201e-__li,I-\u00bb.,l KS. A\nthis work will be made Immediate-1 ln* Company, Consolidated, 56-0\nly. Decoration win be ln grain | Chabot Avenue, Montreal, Canada,\nseeds, no paint ot any kind being\nused.\n**_*_\nThirty Years Ago\n(Krom TIip Tribune, im-pI. 11.  IMI)\nFred   Burns   hat,   resumed   as   assistant    postmasl .r    which    position\nhe has held for a number of years.\nOver 100 ttMID boats, tugs.\nlaunches, row boat*, and rancew\nwerr counted on the water between\nFive Mile point and  lhe mouth of\nGrnhmai.  creek yesterday.\nCaptalfl (HffOrt or the Silver King\nmine came ln yesterday He ha., the\nnew schon] hOUM at the mine well\nunder  wsy.\nOwing lo the unikliltd hand*, at\nthe Northport ameltai yesterday, the\nentire r.ontents of Ui* 'irnace were\ncmi\/tlt\" on the Toor of the smelter,\nr. u*lng conslden.blp. damage.\n;'fl>:o Ixmiae Icelandic popine*.\non.; rf the Klorie.. cf this part of\nthe -.'__i__.di._n RoW:!.* aro in \u00ab-\nmana in thousand; of giKoeuj. all\nover the world. (\"v..;..,ers %*, the\nchateau r.re r.oi :> .sy gathering\nseeds which vhl later '-:a nuttled\nto guest* of thr -w\u00abtel this season.\ngong  going  and sometimes   B   pi_\u00bbno 1939.\nWith a *r-r_-_ of 268 in the sg*\ndred shots in the Kind's prize st\ngregat* and placed 07th in th'\nKing's Hundred\" as the first hun-\nBlsley are called. Sergeant Csc.l\nWilliam Foam, of Montresl, hae Just\nreturnee, fropi tha famous rifle\n.ihootin. meet with added laurels.\nHe has made his placc in the\nKing's  Hundred\"  *ftTy  year  since\nDOES NORTHERN B. C. EXI8T?\nJudging from aome of the Vancouver newspapers, northern and\ncentr.il British Columbia does not\nexist. There Is no such place. One\nnewspaper tells of thc proposed\ntrans-Canada highways and .suggests\nthree, nil of which lead to Vancouver.\nThe highway from Jasper to Princ.\nRupert ls not mentioned.\nOne of the southern highways already exist* but It is proposed to\nhave tt brought up to hpcedy molar\ntransport standards. The aecond is\nthe official highway with a break\nbetween Revelstoke and Oolden which\nis to he connected by the federal\ngovernment. Th. third route runs\nup the North Thompson- river to\nconnect with Jasper and Edmonton\nWork on this route la to bc puahed\n\u25a0\u2022head.\n\u2022 Th. Vancouver newspapers dl con-\nrlderable business throughout northern and central British Columbia,\nThey are keen \"fter that business\nbut they hardly give the people of\nthat part of ths country a fair\nshow In return. *No slight such as\nthe one mentioned should bo passed\nup without a protest.\u2014Prince Rupert\nDally News.\nRecent test* of the new mammoth Canadian Pacific locomottie\n\"8000\". detained for heavy work I'\nth* Canadian Rookies, have brough'\nresults ln excess of the most sat,\ngulne expectations It pulled a tral:\nweighing 7961 tons, almost \"qua!\nto three normal trains, from Smith\nFallh to Montreal a distance ol\n128 mileB, without a hitch, in 6%\nhours and showed over 30 per cent\nfuel   economy.\nWho\n*0-o\nWants an *\\\nApartment 0\n\u2022\u2022- . , and the NEXT apartment 1\nrent is going to have this *n' that\n'n' that. . . \"How many times have\n\u25a0 on promised yourself a BETTER\napartment lalue?\nHow ;,hoti, it , . now that your\npresent lease is up? There are many\n\u25a0'.ri Ideal apartments to be had . \u2022\n; t you know where to find them.\nTurn to the \"Apartments to Rent'\nMiction of the Want Ad pages.\n\"there you'll find a comprehensive\nlisting of the better renting values.\n!t'\u00bb the modern way to better living!\nIMaott'latiy !taa\nWANT AD DEPARTMENT\nPHONE 143 or 141\nAluminum Ware\nNow is the time to purchase your stock\nof Kitchen Utensils at a Low Price.\nSPECIALS FOR THIS WEEK\nSteamer and Sauce Pan $1.09\nHrility ^ater Kettle   $1.39\n-Quart Water Kettle and Insert   $1.75\nSEE OUR WINDOWS\nNelson Hardware Co.\nWholesale and Retail Quality Hardware\nNelson B. C\n(\ni\n TBE  NZLtON DAILY NEVTt, NXLSOK. B.  C, FBip.1V  MOBNINO,  JIHtMBtS  11,   1SI1 <\n11,^\ntAot uta\nCANZONERI HAMMERS OUT 15-ROUND\nDECISION OVER JACKIE \"KID\" BERG\n\"Big League\"\nBASEBALL\nThird Base Problems\nDecisively  Shows  Superiority; Little Britisher Is\nGame Lad\nPOLO GROUNDS, >ew York,\nSept. 10\u2014Tony ran*onerl, brilliant champion of the lightweight\ndivision, punched Jack (Kid)\nBerg, British challenger, Into\ndefeat again tonight and de*\nclslvely showed his superiority\nover the fame little English\nbattler.\nFor 15 rounds with only an oe-\neaalonal break here and there, Tony\nknocked the thin-faced Briton\naround the ring while 17.000 fans\nwho paid $45,000 to see the duel,\nalternately cheered and hooted.\nTwice, once In the first round and\nagain in thc eighth, the Italian\nfloored Berg for counts of nine, the\naecond time with a blow that was\nao low and palpably foul, that had\nthe contest been fought under the\nrules In effect before the New York\nstate athletic commission outlawed\nthe foul blow, Oantoneri would surely  have  forfeited his title.\nBut through tt all the stout hearted Uttle British fighter came in for\nmore. Half a dozen times the challenger was sent reeling to the royes\nbut by s miracle he kept his feet\nand bored in on the champion.\nOnly in the fifth, sixth and tenth\nrounds did canzoneri experience any\nreal difficulty. In these rounds he\nattempted to slug lt out at close\nQuarters with Berg. The Englishman,\na veritable windmill when at close\nrange shot piston blows Into Tony\neo fast the champion was forced to\nresort to his long range attack\nagain.\nThe Associated Press score card\ngave Canzoneri an edge In 10 .rounds,\nwith four to Berg, and one, the\nfourteenth even.\nBerg weighed 134^ to I3P_ for\nthe  champion.\nFarley Goes Into Semi-\nFina! Golf at Banff\nBANFF, Alta,, Sept. 10. <CPt \u2014\nSteady golf by Phil Parley. Toronto,\namateur champion of Ontario, placed him ln the wml-flnala of the\nPrince of Wales golf tournament today. He downed F. C. Dicklns, the\nchampion of the Alberta Country\nDistrict Oolf association, 6 and fi.\nW. J. Thompson, another Toronto\ngolfer, winner of the tournament\nlast year, also entered the semifinals, overcoming O. L. Havers, of\nSeattle. A third Toronto representative entered the semi-final round\nwhen F. O. Hohlltzcl qualified by\ndefeating C. W. Jackson, or Winnipeg, Jack Matson of Victoria, B. C.,\nis the fourth player, securing a\nplaoe ln the charmed circle by\nbeating J. B Micklea. Montresl\nplayer.\nCHATEAU\nPATRICI\nVINTAGE\nBurke Wins Open\nGLEN FALLS, N. Y., Sept. 10\u2014\n(API\u2014Billy Burke, playing In his\nflrit tournament since he won\nthe national open champion** hip\nat Inverness In July, today won\nthe third annual Glen.. Fall*\nopen as his two rival*, John\nGolden and Macdonald Smith\nfaltered on their laat rounds.\nBurke's  final  round of  M, one\nunder    par,    gave\nfor the 11 holes.\nMm    a    W\nSIMMONS, RUTH\nARE 1AR TIE\nFOR TOP BERTH\nStruggle Going on Is Closer\nThan Ever Before This\nSeason\nATHLETICS BEAT\nTHE BROWNS, 6-3;\nWASHINGTON WINS\nDetroit Takes a _-0 Victory\nFrom Boaton; Alexander\nHits   Homer\nTne struggle among tne Big Six\nbatsmen of tne major leagues for the\ntop ol the two leagues became closer\nthan ever before this Mason yesterday when two men were virtually\ntied for the lead in each circuit\nwith only small fractions of a percentage point separating them. While\nBabe Ruth waa Idle. Al. Simmons\ncame through with two hits in four\ntimes at bat. gaining a little over a\npoint and winding up with a .3801\nmark to Ruth's .3804. Vtrgi! Davis,\nNational league leader, slipped off a\ntrifle while his rival, Chuck Klein,\nwas out of action and his average\nls   .3434  to Klein's   .3430.\nThe   standing:\nQ AB Tl H Pet.\nRuth, Yanks 128 481 135 183 .3804\naUnmotU, A'., US 463 99 1T6 .3801\nMorgan, Indians 1_3 437 85 155 .355\nDavis, Phillies UO 361 28 124 .3434\nKlein, Phillies 138 548 in 118 .3430\nTerry,   Olants    140 588 108 191 .342\nIL      r?SAPY\n-)__________._-___.    FOft\nI\nC\/)TCH\/N(3\n\\ \/?UNH\u00a3R\nOVERRUNNING^\n7n\/\/?\u00a3>    J\/\nBriSEr\nAMAZING UPSET\nDEFEATS BROWN\nThli advertisement i_ not puhllihed or\ndisplayed bv th. Liquor Control Hour.\ner   hy   the   Government   of   British\nColumbia.\nCalifornia Amateur Golf Title\nGoe8 to an Unknown, (.. E.\nHanson of Los Angeles\nPEBBLE BEAOH, Calif., Sept. 10\u2014\n(AP.\u2014Out of complete obscurity to-\nday came a new golfing celebrity to\ncontribute ona of the moot spectacular upsets in the history of the Cali-\nforni,' amateur championship. Guy\nE. Hanson of Los Angeles defeated\nFrancis Brown, of Honolulu, defending tltleholder, 3 and 2, ln the\nquarter final?; of the twentieth renewal of the state classic.\nExcept for the dofeat of Brown,\nthc triumph of young Johnny Rob-\nglus. 20-year-old Portland boy. would\nhave claimed the attention. Robbins\nadvanced to the _emi-flnal_ with a\nsmashing fl-4 win over Captain A.\nBullock- Webster, a former state\nchampion.\nIn his match with Welr-lrr, Robbins haa a 34. three under par, for\nthe first nine. Webster equalled\nstandard figures h\\it his game weakened on the incoming trip, when hit\nball wandered Into traps four times,\nErnest Petper, Jr., of San Jose\nand Davis Martin of Lot, Angeles\nwent into tlie semi-finals, with well-\nearned wins.  Pelper played  fine golf\nBJ  AL DEMAREE\nThe third base position is a sort\n__\u25a0 \"do\" and \"don't\" position. The\nthird Backer must be ready to either\ncome in on a bunt or to be in a\nposition to handle a Una drive. He\nmust be ready for surprise throws\nfrom other lnfielders In an effort\nto catch base runners who have\noverrun   third  base.\n\"Pie\" Traynor, the great third\nbaseman of the Pittsburgh Pirates,\nsays he can tell the intentions of\nthe average batter to bunt or hit\nby watching his eyes as he glance*\ntoward third base.\nAl Dcinmee lm> prepared and\nillustrated leaflet on the \"Art of\nPitching.\" which he will gladly\nsend to any reader requesting\nit. Ad'lrr-. Al Demaree in care of\nfhls paper and be sure to enelo>e\na self addressed stamped envelope.\nAMERICAN   UAGlt\n_____\nW\n_,\nprt.\nPhiladelphia      ...     M\n11\n.;oi\nV._\u00abtttn_ton      83\nM\n.60.\nNf w   York        . M\nN\n..193\nCl. ..land      70\n\u00ab.-.\n.Jl\u00bb\nD.tr-1.       J7\nm\n.lie\na\n.411\nChicago      53\nM\n.313\nm\n.370\n\u2014\u2014_\nDETROIT 3,\nHUSTON   ft\nBOSTON.   Sept.   10. -Detroit\nopen-\ncd   Ita   Ilnal  \u201e..!._   ln   Boston   thli\naeaaon   with   a   3  to  0\nvictory   to-\nday   over  thc  Red  8ox.\nAlexand.r\nhit  s bome  run  ln the\nninth.\nDetroit    \t\n_\nn\n7   0\nBoaton   \t\n\u00ab   0\nBridges   and   Ruel;   Moore,\nLlaen-\nbee   ano   Connolly.\nELIGIBLES ARE\nNAMED FOR THE\nWORLD SERIES\n24 Cardinals and _ 1 Athletics\nSanctioned by  Commissioner of Baseball\nCHICAGO. Sept., 10\u2014lA. r.)\u2014\nTwenty-lour Athletics and _5 cardinals today were named eligible lor\nthe   1031   world   aerlea   by   C'ommis.\nin the q'uart.r-Ilnals to swamp Glenn, {stone.   Keneeaw   M.   I\/sndls   on   the\nLittlellekl   ol   Monterey.   6   and   4-,\u00abumptlon the two clubs will meet\nMartin,  however,  was forcerl  to ex-       the fall classic\ntra  hole,  to  finally turn  back  Ru.-  \" c      ,.   \u201e   k   \u201e  d    ,       aB,\u201etal._.\n\u00abU  Thompson  of  Glendale.   on  th.;E_dle   _.\u201e,\u201e_,   t__   Earlc   -,    \u201e.ck\n| also were named in the list as were\n'Gabby\"    Street    of    the\n21st.\nTomorrow's    ;.6-hole      bemi-flnals.\nwill bring together Robbing and Mar lma\u00bbaSrr\ntin  while   Hanson   will   face   Priper.:C\"f \"* ,hif cof(ch',Clydc  w\"e:\n._-... TV.-       Atli._>...-      _\u25a0! fo-.__.___i       Ural--. \u25a0       \\M\nPerry, Doeg, Lott\nand Vines Go Into\nMACDONALDS\nFine Cut\ntvith ZIG-ZAG papers attached\nThc Athletic eligible* werc; Max\nBit-hop, John Boley, Mickey Cochrane, Roger Cramer, Jimmy Dykes,\n(jcci-gc Earnsliaw, Jimmy Foxx, Robert Grove. George Haa*. John Hev-\n\u25a0 ing. Walte Hoyt, Lewis Krausse.\nthe oemi-JrinalSJHank McDonald. Eric MeNair, Uroy\nWEST SIDE TENNIS CLUB, Forest .Mahatfey. Edmund Miller. Jame_\nHills N Y Sept 10\u2014Pred J 'Moore, Jr., Joseph aPlmlsano, James\nPerTy. Brttoh\" *Ur John H. Doeg.lPet*rson' Ed Romnifl. Al Simmons,\nUnited States champion, Elsworth|Ph11 **!}\u25a0 \u00b0*or\u00abc Walberg and Divines, of Pasadena, Cal., and George!hre11  Williams.\nLott, Jr., of Philadelphia, entered! st ,j0Uls eUgiblcs *\u00ab\u00ab: Earl Ad-\nthe semi-finals- of the nation:., ten-\"im\"' RHV Blade*. Jim Bottomley. Jim\nnt play here today. Tomorrow Pnrry|CoUiM- Pliul Derringer. D'Arcy Flow-\nfaces Vines, while Doeg and Lott, ir\u2122- Frank Frisch, Charles Gelbert.\nwill fight it out. I Mike    Gonzales.    Burleigh    Grimes.\nThe British ace advanced by over- Charle.-. Hafey. Jesse Haines. William\nwhelming Frank Bowden of New'Hallahan, yvnrty High. Sylvester John-\nYork, 6-2, 6-3. 6-4. 'son. Tor. 7 Keufmann, James Lind-\nIn defeating Frank S.ields Doegjaey, Ciy.. Mancuso, John Martin,\ngave intimation that hc had U0 in-! Earnest. Orsatti. Flint Rhem, Walt-\ntentlon of abdicating the tennis \u00abT RoeHger. Allyn 3toi.it, George\nthrone. Thc 6corc was 8-2, 11-9, 4-6 | Watkins und Jimmy Wilson,\n8-6, Aa a precautionary measure, 24\nLott defeated Johnny Ven Ryn,!New Vork Gtante players together\n5-7, 1-6, 8-0, 7-5, 6-1. and Vine, j with Manager McOraw and his\nscored over Berkeley Bell, of Tex..*,,: coaching staff, were named.\n\" 1,   8-1,   8-6.\nFIREARM PERMITS\nISSUED HERE SINCE\nAUGUST 1 TOTAL 78\nFrom the firat of August to Thursdsy afternoon, the number of general firearm licence!. Issued at the\nlocal   government  office   was  78.\nFrom July 1, when the new issue of the ft re Him s licences was\nfirst sold, until September 2, 68 licences were issued.\nBRITISH FOOTBALL\nRESULTS\nLONDON. Sept., 10,\u2014(Canadian\nPress Cable)\u2014The result* of Old\nCountry football game* today follow:\nEKOLItH     I I \\M f\u2014 THlRIt     DIYI-\nQueen's Park Ranger*. 1; Swindon\nTown. 2.\nNORTHfcBN   SECTION\u2014 THIRD   DIV-\nMON\u2014SOUTHERN    SECTION\nmop\u2014\nCarl-ale  United,  2,   Wrexham,  2.\nRI't.HV   UNION\nStroud, a; Gloucester, 9.\nSwanaca,   32,   Portsr   Dame,   3.\nNORTHFRN   IMON\nBarlow, 0.  bt.  Helena B.\n.WsHIMiTON 5,\nCLEVELAND   3\nWASHINGTON, Sept, I0-\u2014 The\nSenators scored a fi to 3 victory\ntoday over tho Cleveland Indians\nIn the first of the week's invasion   by   western   clubs\nCleveland  3   13   3\nWashington              ft    10    I\nHarder. Connally and Seweil;\nBrown, Hadley and spencer.\nPHILADELPHIA  6,\nST.  HU Is  3\nPHILADELPHIA. Sepfc. 10-\u2014 The\nworld's champion Athletics mede\n13 hits off Hebert and cooney and\ndefeated tbe st, Louie Browns 6\nto 8 today. Eamshaw went the distance on the mound and allowed\nthe Browns 9 hits, one of them a\n..omcr by Goslin.\nSt.   Louis     9   B   0\nPhiladelphia    \u00ab 18   1\nHerbert, Cooney and Ferrell:\nEamshaw. and palmlsano.\nBURTON CITY TO\nTANGLE WITH THE\nLOCALBALL TEAM\nClassy      Aggregation     Will\nMake Their Initial  Ap\npearance  in  Nelson\nFull arrangement* we now completed with Burton City to play an\nexhibition baseball game with the\nNelson seniors here on Saturday\nafternoon at ItM. This will be Bur-\nton City's first appearance In Nelson, and will give the fans another\nchange in variety, as well as please\nthose who have heen s*klng for\nmore  games.\nFrom all accounts they have\nstar aggregation of ball players, and\nhave been tearing a wide swath in\nihe Arrow Lakes league, where they\nbave been playing this summer.\nAccording to reports which have\ndrifted in, the brand of ball up\nthnt way Is pretty classy, and the\nfans are assured of a good game\nwhen the teams trot on to the\nfield.\n\u2022Nelson will have the usual lineup.\nwith Kraft and Richardson on the\nexecutive end.\nThe locale are making an effort\nto balance their finances, having\nsuffered somewhat from defaulted\ngames  and   unseasonable  weather.\nPACIFIC  COAST   LEAGUE\nSeattle 8, Los Angeles 3.\nSacramento  11, Hollywood 9\nSan  Francisco 5, Oakland   6.\nMissions  6. Portland  6.\nTRAIL CHAPTER\n1.0. D. E. VOTES TO\nHELP CHILDREN\nTRAIL. B. C. Sept. 3t\u2014Reeun-r\ning regular meetings after'the sunr\nmer holidays, Arthur Chapman\nchapter I.O.D.R. voted a donation to\ncrippled children's hospital at Mill\nBay. Mre. F. E. Dockerill. regent.\nwas ln  the chair.\nAssistance to four high school\nstudents wae also voted by the\nchapter.\nArrangements were made for a\nsale of home cooking to be held\nin the near future\nMrs. G. Rtngwood was elected assistant secretary to fill the vacancy\ncreated hy the absence of Mrs. to.\nM. LeFlufy  who is at Vancouver.\nTea waa served by Mrs. R. R.\nBurns. Mrs. T. Jenkins and Mrs. J.\nMcArthur\nCOLUMBIA RIVER\nTWO FEET HIGHER\nTRAIL. B. C Sept. 10\u2014 FUosnt\nheavy precipitation, particularly In\nth* northern area n the vicinity\nof the O P. R. man line and\nthe Big Bend, has caused the Columbia river to rise noticeably at\nTrail.\nSince Monday, when th\u00ab rise\nstarted here the river has risen\n2.3 feet.\nThe rise of the river level started Monday and in the 2. hours\nto Tuesday morning It. rose .7 foot.\nThe 34 hours to Wednesday morning resulted tn a further rise for\nthe past 34 hours registered or\n8   foot.\nThe safety pin has heen glorified\ntn Parts society. Pinned on blouies\nor on backs of low walata as a\npurely deooratlve gesture, lt has be-\ncoe a sophisticated ornament. It\nis made of geld, silver 0r platinum,\nand is often set with diamonds.\nThe gemaned safety-pin ts huge, be-\ntnjr   about   four   Inches   Ion*.\nFire Threatens Village\n___CT.--l_A_ FIRE  AI  OIL  SPBINGS\nWhen lire broke out In \"___._un_'g Mill\" In the f_n_ou_ old vill-je of\nOil Springs, Ontario, the entire village wu threatened. The blaze could\nbe aeen lor mllea around, and only some fine work by volunteer firemen\nprevented   lt   from   spreading.\nCARDINALS BEAT\nBOSTON BRAVES;\nGIANTSWIN, 6-1\nCincinnati Beats the Brooklyn Robins, 5-1; Chicago\nBeats Nationals\nNATIONAL   LEAGIE\nSt.  Loula     89 68   .650\nNew York     83 56   .597\nBrooklyn   72 67\nChicago      73 M\n. it_bur_h     \u00ab7 7_\nBoaton    60 78\nPhiladelphia    60 78\nCincinnati     51 88\nTORONTO, Ont., Sept 10.\u2014(By\nthe Canadian Press)\u2014Bobby Pearce\nof the Leander rowing club of Hamilton, present holder of the Diamond\nSculls, and Olympic champion, tonight defeated Ken Myers of the\nBachelor Barge club of Philadelphia,\nto win the Philadelphia gold cup\nfor the second successive year. Pearce\nwss never really extended, finishing\nmore thsn two lengths In front of\nthe American. Garrett Gllmore. a\nclubmate of Myers, waa third. The\nwinners tlmea was 5:46.\nMl\n018\n1B<i\n.43,'.\nAN\n;t.l\nST. LOUIS 7,\nBOSTON   3\nST. LOOTS, Sept. 10\u2014 Although\nweakening In the ninth, BUI Hallahan scored hla 16th victory of the\nseason here today aa the Cardinals\nwon the first of a three game series\nfrom Boston, 7 to 3. All the Braves'\ntalllea were scored In the laat frame.\nBoston      3     7   1\nSt. Louis   7   13    1\nSelbold. Sherdel, Hald and Spohrer:\nHallahan  and  Wilson.\nGIANTS   6.\nPIRATES   1\nPITTSBURGH. Sept. lO-JThe New\nYork Giants scored five runs In the\nfirst Inning today to d.feat the\nPirates 6 to  1.\nNew York   \u00ab   11   1\nPittsburgh     1     4   1\nHubbell and Hogan; Kremer. O*.\nborne,  Wood.   Spencer   and   Phillips\nCINCINNATI  5.\nROBINS   1\nCINCINNATI, Bcpl. 10\u2014The Reds\nscored two runs off Da_zy Vance today i\\nd nicked Qulnn and Thurston for three more In the eighth\nand dereat.d Brooklyn 6 to 1. Red\nLuca. went the route although he\ngave  11   hits.\nBrooklyn      1    11    l\nCincinnati   6   10   0\nVance. Qulnn. Thurston snd Pope.;\nLombardl; Lucas and Sukeforth.\nCHICAGO   17.\nPHILADELPHIA  t\nCHICAOO, Sept.  io\u2014Chicago belted   three   Philadelphia   pitcher,   for\n21 hits and defeafd the  ______ n\nto 4 today.\nPhiladelphia     4   Jo   2\nChlcae. 17   21    2\nJ. Elliott, Watt, rallenatoin and\nDavis; Malone and Hartnett. J. Taylor.\nENGLISH CRICKET\nRESULTS\n(0>m_iMi\nLONDON.   Sept.   10.\nPress Cablet\u2014Scores when stump*\nwere pulled ln HngUsh cricket\nmatches today  werc:\nScarborough; New Zealand, 217 and\n44 runs for one wicket; H. D. G.\nLeveaon Goner's XI., 423 for four\nwicketa Jack Hobbs. 153, Sutcliffe,\n136,   Wjatt.   83.\nLondon\u2014rest of England. 295 and\n193 tor six wlckets iWcolley, 75; i\nM. C. C. South Afrlcsn team. 210\n(Parrlmond, 79, Chapman. 81, V\u00bbl-\nthorpe. four wickets for 10 runt.I\nWardner Golfer-\nStart Tournament.\nPEARCE WINS\nCLARK IN FINALS,\nDEFEATS SIMPSON\nAND T. MALAHOFF\nClimbs to Win in Steady Tennis; Will Meet Trail Candidate  for Cup\nBert Clirk cantered out m front\nof th_ men's singles \"A\" tenni*\nevent Thuraday, when he beat\nGeorge blmpecn in straight eet# ot\ntwo, and then treated Tommy Mtlt-\nhotr, preeent cup holder of the\nevent, to similar handling. Ha beat\nSimpson 8-6, 8-6, and after a rest\nreturned to the courts to Inflict a\n10-8. 6-3  win over Malahoff.\nIt was not brilliant tennla, the\nball* were damp and the weather\nwa_ not conducive to good playing.\nIt waa bteady all the way through,\nthough. Longer rallies than have\nbeen aeen in the tournament to\ndate were played ln tbe two matchee.\nVery little net work appeared, the\nplayers contenting themselves with\ndriving.\nClark found his way well disputed\nduring the entire display, Slmpeon\ntaking him to two long sets before\ntaking the count, and Malahoff making him go to a 10 game score before\nallowing him the first. After assuming\n\u25a0 5-2 lead in the flrat aet wltb Malahoff he found himself on tho un-\nd\u00bbrelde of a fl-5 counting at set-\npolnc, but regained his eQullbrtum\nagain to eventually take it. He wtll\nmeet Trail's candidate later to decide   the   championship.\nMalahoff entered the finals when\nM.  Harri_.cn  defaulted   to  him.\nDRAPER'S  BOWLING\nTEAM  IS VICTOR\nIn the only bowling game played\nthis week owing to inclement weath-\nJ. Draper's team defeated A.\nWlgg's teem 18-11 in the City Drug\ncompetition    Thursday    night.\nThe teams were: Mr. Marsden, A.\nElliott, Gedcr and J. Draper; H.\nAllen, A. F. James, f. Penwell and\nA.   Wigg.\nINTERNATIONAL LEAGUE\nRochester 8. Toronto n.\nNewark 8, Baltimore 5.\nMontreal 0, Buffalo 10.\nOnly   three   scheduled.\nWardner Men Spend\nLabor Day Fishing\nWARDNER, B. C., Bept. 10.\u2014Pishing wa* a favorite -pastime for thc\nLabor day holiday. Alec Daye anci\nWalter McKenzie motored to Wigwam, and Theo Thompson. Tony\nThompson and w. Holton went to\nBull River. Both parties returned\nwith   excellent   catchee.\nFOXX GOES TO~\nHOSPITAL\nPHILADELPHIA, Sept. 10 CAP)\u2014\nThe latest addition to lhe Philndcl-\nphla Athletics' hospital list Ls Jimmy\nFoxx. He will be out -of action for\nat least a week with ft sprained\nankle, Connl_ Mack announced today.\nAMERICAN   ASSOCIATION\nLo__.U_t   1,  ToVtdo  I.\nlndi-n_poli- 6,  Ooiuabu. 4.\nMilw-u-e. ia, Bt. f__l 11.\n_____ City 12, Mlnn._p_.l_ 11 (lt\nlnnlngi).\nFOURSOMES TO\nREACH FINALS\nON SATURDAY\nFinals in  Mixed  Play Will\nBe Held at Golf Coarse\nSunday\nSemi-finals and finals ln the mixed\nfoursomes on handicap, conludlng\naeries ln tbt Labor day golf tournament Interrupted here by rain, will\nbe plsyed on Sunday on tbe local\ngolf course.\nClub officials yeaterday urged those\nwho had yet to play ln thla -competition to have their games concluded\nby Saturday afternoon at tbe latest.\nThe following have yet to play off:\nMr and Mrs. John Cartmel vs W. J.\nGrove and Mrs. L. S. Bradley. C. H.\nStark and Mrs. T. D. Stark vs B.\nTownshend and Mrs. W. J, Grove;\nMr. and Mrs. F. C. Whltehouse va\nH. L. Robinson and Mrs. E. to. U\nDewdney; T. R. Wilson and Mrs. L.\nCunllffe vs W. J. Meagher and Mrs.\nF. F. Payne.\nSMOKERS'\nSUPPLIES\nA   Complete   Selection for Your\nChoice\nPipes, Lighters, Cigarette Cases, ABh\nTrays, etc.\nSoda Fountain\nService\nWRIGHT'S\nCIGAR STORE\nDISTILLED\n& BOTTLED\nIN SCOTLAND\nWARDNER, B, C, Stpt. 10.-A\ngolf tournament ha_ been arranged\nby the Wardner Oolf club for o cup\npresented by the Fort Steele Brewing company, and three dozen golf\nballs, presented by F. Parks of Cran-\nbrook. The flrat round was played\non Sunday afternoon, thc winners\nbeing H. Birch, to. Thompeon, P.\nStorey, F. Harris, J. Scanland and\nW, Harris. The next round of the\ntournament will be plcyed on Sunday.\nWITH   THE   HOME\nRUN KINGS\nHome   runa   yeaterday:\nAlexander, Tigers.\nGoslin,  Browns.\nHurst, Phillies,\nHartnett  and  Malone,   Cube.\nBottomley,   Cardinals,   one  each,\nLeaders:\nGehrig, Yankees, \\2.\nRuth, Yankeea, 40.\nKlein, Phillies. 3*\nAverlll, tndUna. 39.\nLeague  totals:\nAmerican, SS4.\nNational, 462.\nBelanger Comes Back\nWINNIPEG, Sept. 10 fCP.\u2014Char-\nley Belanger, Canadian light heavy-\nwelgbt champion, staged a homecoming fistic party here tonight but\ncould get no better than a draw ln\n10 rounds with Fred Lenhart, slugger from Spokane, Wash., neither\nwas able to ccore a knockdown In\nthe   wallontoe   dual.\nHe'll never have to be avoided as a\nbore, who offers you Johnnie Walker\nthe first time you go to his house.\nFor the man who understands good\nwhisky is likely to understand good\ntobacco, good talk and a good game.\nBy the end of an evening with him,\nyou begin to wonder why you haven't\nmet him before, to feel he must be\njust about your game at golf... and\nbefore you know you're suggesting a\nweek-end game.\nNot that you'll ever regret that.\n\"No,\" you'll say later,\" He's all right.\nI knew from the start he was a good\nfellow.\"\nFor -wle at Vendor** or direct Iron.\nLiquor Control Board Mall Order\nJtrpi ,    Vlrlorla,    ...   C.\n4914NNIEW.AbftER\nBORN 1820 STILL GOING STRONG\nTU,   uetnUmiM   _  -\u00ab  rtalttlud er _\u201e.;_._  \u00bby  is, Ueur Cestnt tteri et es th, Omrmm sf *_,'_. &__\u25a0__\n MG.  EIGHT\n-TBI NELION DAILT NEWS. NELSON.  B.  C, TuTDAX MOENINO,  SEPTEMBER  11.  1. .1 I\n^sl^Want M Paie %&.!\u00a3&\nNAVAL OFFICER\nFINDS NOTHING\nWRONG IN NAVY\nCommander   Hing-Hall   Out\napoken in  His Dealing\nWith  Navy  Problem\nLONDON, Sept 10\u2014(By tbe Canadian Press.\u2014 \"What's wren* with\n*ha Wavy!*' Oommand*r Stephen\nXing-Hall haa heen asked by the\nKsw Statesman and Nation to answer\ntbls question In a series of articles\nla publish concerning alleged short-\neomlngB of different professions.\nCommander King-Hall describes th?\nBevy of today as an unsheltered snd\ndepressed Industry. \"If It were not\nfor the Washington conference there\nMight only be one large navy In the\nworld Instead of two-and-a-half, and\nthat expensive abortion, the 10,000-\nton cruiser, would never have cumbered the seae. Personslly, having\nhad my war. I'm a pacifist. Like\nJurgen I believe In trying every\ndrink onoe, but one war was enough.\n\"From the point of view of the\nlower-deck rating, there ls nothing\nwrong with the navy. The sailor is\nadmirably educated, clothed, paid.\nhoused, fed and pensioned sfter 33\nyears' service and If he has made\nreasonable use of his chances of becoming a skilled technician he can\nobtain excellent civil  employment.\n\"Now let us consider whether there\nIs anything wrong with the navy\nfrom the point of view of Its function, which\u2014we might ss well be\nfrank\u20141\u00ab not to police the sees or go\nto the rescue when earthquakes destroy coastal towns, or visit Margate\nduring Civil Week, but Is to destroy\nother navtea in battle should this\naction seam dealrahle to tbe British\nCabinet. The only thing wrong here\nla lack of memwt tot practicing the\naald biMtnese ef destroying enemy\nva-seeb, and lack of money with\nwhich ta pay for sufficient new construction to make it quite certain\nthat we ahould win even if we made\n\u25a0tetsW Nevertheless, tha navy\nsgxrods what It gets to great advantage, and leads the world Ib excellence of submarine warfaiw and In\nnaval atrwork. The Britiah Admiralty haa Ita defects, but is ne ware*\nand a good deal more cunning than\nother government departmenta.\n\"Considering that the navy exists\nfor war and that war has ben renounced hy all pawers, I must honestly aay that I bellve our navy Is\nmore efficient and ready to do something we have all promised not to\ndo then are th_ navies of the other\npowers whose promises we don't he\nlleve   . . .\n\"In a sentence tlie naval officer\ntakes it for granted that the law of\nprogress la co-operstlon rather than\nselfish competition. I say selfish\ncompetition because competition as\na means to the end of co-operation\n_\u25a0 Immensely strong In the navy.\nShips compete at battle-practce In\norder to make a more battle-worth v\nfleet.\n\"I_et the reader now suppose thst\nthla strange outlook on life could be-\neome the outlook on life of the average director, the trade union leader, snd the politician. I submit that\nhalf our social problems would disappears over night.\"\nInvents Apparatus\nto  Raise  Submarine\nMetcalfe, C. P.\nRobertson,   A\t\nRutledge,  M.   H.   ..,\nSchofleld].   A.   W.\nSchofleld,   M.   S,   .\nShsnnan Bros.. .    .\nSmith   Bros\t\nSpence,   J.   W.\t\nWsrd.   Oeorge,   ,_-__\n\\rrr].*~p,    p.   d,   m\nWhiting,  W,  \t\nWilson Bros-,       ,,i\nANCOKDAS\nFullon, P. to., -\t\n1891.9 83356\nX -Leading pen.\nProduction\u201454-87 par cent\nSTOCKHOliM, B. C . Sept. 10.\u2014(By\nthe Canadian Press)\u2014A Swedish civil\nengineer, Ragnar Blomqutst, ha,, pnt-\nened a device for the salvaging of\nsunken submarines snd their crews.\nThe device consists of a number\nof folding pontoons built into the\n\u25a0hulk of tlie submarine snd always\nready for use. Being foldable they\ntake a very small space snd csn be\nmoved -without loss to the\nmechanically filled with sir through\nthe inside of the ship itself.\nWhen completely filled with air\nthey Increase the displacement of\nthe submarine very considerably and\nare claimed to he able to raise It\nto the surface. The pontoons Bre ex\ntremely light In weight and. being\nmany ln number, a few of them\nwill alwaya remain intact and ready\nto be inflated tn case of a collision\nThe invention Includes a special\narrangement calculated to regulate\nautomatically the atmospheric bre*.-\nsure of the surrounding water, while\nthe submarine ts being lifted up to\nthe surface by the aid of the pon\ntoons.\na C. EGG LAYING\n-..lowing   Is  the  year   11   weekly\nreport la the 43rd week or the\nBrltUh Columbia Egg Laying contest\nof the Experimental farm ftt Agasslr,\nB. C.\nOwner                          Pte. Eggs\nRHODE I. I.\\Mi BED\nMaynai.,  W.                         3S_ log.\nPtnger'a Bed Farm -.  Al .3 170*1\nRuaeel.   D.   ..,    30.7 18.9\nSwaatlka P. Farm   30.3 1*17\nWHITE WYANDOTTES\nCant,   A  BO.\" 1883\nMoetoo. John   33.1 197.\nExp.   8ta.   Sidney    41.1 1371\nBARBED BOCKS\nExp. Farm. Brandon  38 7 1683\nLfttnble, Jamea   32.8 182,.\nPennington,   A :.._!.- 2104\nTrafton. C. H - X80.8 1887\nWilliams. Mra. A.   40.2 1982\nBLACK  MINORCA!\nMartina,  B.  8.       38.6 1281\nWHITE   LEGHORN\nAppleby.  F.  W  4... 23(12\nBollyar  P. Farm   62.2 3081\nBoyee   Broa  40.9 1769\nCalder,  C-  D  38.9 1988\nChalmers,  J  67... 2083\nChalmers. R.  W  44_ 1940\nDftrbey, P.  and  emu.   47.9 1938\nDlederlcha, J. C  46.9 1657\nDowd   As   Moran     38.- 1537\nEvana. F.  C  48.- 2MB\nFairweather.   W.   M 35.9 I93C\nForayth,   W  44.1 1666\nOreen.   J  S5.4 1578\nHeady,   C 46.7 1999\nHodgson and Bushby   37.5 2018\nHolland   _i  Soni  31- 1530\nHoman,  M.   L  32,8 1883\nKennedy  Bros  35.3 1668\nLaweon. c. W  61.- 1935\nLucille  P.  Farm,  36.3 1767\n. 41.7 1883\n  34.1 1414\n  61.9 2107\n  36.7 1933\n 35.- 1490\n  46.3 1961\n  59.8 1. 77\n 113 1586\n  464 1786\n_ M_ ao_6\n  513 3__8\n_ 189 1606\nCURING BARN IS\nBIG FEATURE IN\nTOBACCO WORK\nWANT AMD  CLASSIFIED\nADV_J--l-_NO\nOne Insertion 10 cente a line\nSix  Insertions 40 centa ft Un\nOn* month 61-10 a lln*\nMinimum two llnea.\nNo extra  charge  la  charged.\nBirth   notloea   free   of   charge,     _\nDeatns,    marrlagea    and    cards    01\nthanks, 20 centa per line\nFuneral   flowera   15   centa  per  lute\nNews   of   tH,  Day   Item*.   30   cents\nPer line.\nNO EXTRA  COST  IF CHABQED\nit>DLX   TO  ILASSIHED  ADS\nAULMs  WANTED\nAUTOMOBILE.   FOR  HIRE\nAtlOMBOBlLKS WANTED\nAUTOMOBILE.  IOK  -ALE\nBIRTHS\n___f\nBOATS. LAlNLIltS, FOR RIM\nBOATS. LALM'HES,  FOR KALE\nBOATS.  LAUNCHES.   WANTED\nBUSINESS  OlTOK'll Mill.s\nCANARIES  FOR  SALE\nCATS AND  DOOS  FOB SALE\nCATS AND DOOS WANTED\nDEATHS\nIIBESSMAHINU\nFARM  AND DAIKV   PRODUCE\nFARM   I'KOPEKTV   IOR  SALE\nFOR SALE OK EXCHANGE\nFOR SALE  OR  RENT\nFURNISHED KIICIM- FOR KEM\nFURNITURE FOR  SALE\nHELP   WANTED\nHOUSES  FOR  KENT\nHOUSES   WANTED\nIN  MEMORIAM\nINSURANCE\nINVESTMENTS\nLITERARY\nLIVESTOCK  FOR SAUE\nLIVESTOCK  WANTED\nUOST  AND  FOUND\nMACHINERY\nMARRIAGES\nMINING,   TIMBER.   LUMBER\nilSCELLANEOU_\nMISCELLANEOUS  FOR 8ALE\nMISCELLANEOUS   \u00abANTED\nMUSICAL   INSTRUMENTS\nNOTICES\nMHSEHY PRODUCTS\nNURSING\nI'ERSONAL\nPLANTS\nPOULTRY AND EGGS\nPROPERTY   FOB   SALE\nPROPERTY   WANTED\nRABBITS   FOR   SALE\nRANCHES  EOK  KENT\nKOOM  AND  BOARD\nS88SI   VutTTm?\nMTOATION\" WANTED\nSTORM TO RENT\nTEiCBa-- WASTED\t\nBIRTHS\n11)\nBHERMAN\u2014To Mr. and Mre. John\nSherman, of Baifottc. \u00bbt the Koot-\n____* Uke owal ___-ptt-_, Sep-\nt-mbec 9. * dftugMw.        \t\nW. GIFF0RD INJURED\nAT WARDNER\nDistrict Exhibits\nAre Feature of the\nWindermere Fair\nTNVBRMERE. B. C, Bept. 10.\u2014\nThe 31at ftnnual fair of the Windermere dletrtrt, after a three-day session on the association's grounds,\nwaa brought to e fturceesful 0OH-\nelusion on Thursday last. There\nwere more entries, snd a larger attendance than there has been for\nyears put. A new feature of the\nfair were tbe district exhibits. The\ndisplay of flowers throughout was\ngood. The Dominion government experimental station exhibit occupied\nft special marquee to Itself, and\nformed   a   eplendld   feature.\nWARDNER.   B.   C,   Sept.   10.-W.\nGilford  was  the  victim  of an  accident occurring at. the mill on Tues-\nay  morning, where  he  was slightly\nPerhaps the most Important part laJuredi ___ w-s obliged to go to\nin alr-curlng tobacco 15 a properly:_ . . , _\u2014._. -.\u201e,ii._i \u201e..\nconstructed and ventilated curing I Cranbrook to receive medical St.\nbarn, for without adequate me ns oi tcl.on.\nregulating sir and moisture In the I\nbarn little can be accom.li.hed\nInfluencing  the  color of  leaf.\nCuring, however, ls not simply\ndrying the leaf, because It Involves\nmany chemical o.snges during tlie\ncuring process which Influences, to\na large extent, the Quality and color\nof the finished lent. Assuming that\nthe curing barn la well equip, ed\nwith side and top ventilation, do\nnot overcrowd the plants, leaving\naufflclent room for a good air cur-\nculatlon. When the barn can not bc\nfilled tn one or two daya. better curing will result If one aide of the barn\nIs completely filled lirst rather than '\nhang green tobacco underneath tobacco which Ls partly cured.\nImmedhtely after the curing barn\nhaa been filled the doors and ventilators may be close, for two or |\nthree days, which will allow the tobacco to start yellowing. After thla j\nperiod the barn ahould bc closed at\nnight during cool, feggy or rainy\n.eather and opea during tha day to\nremove excessive moisture. On the\nother hand, the doors and ventilators should be closed during the\nday snd opeDe! _t night during very\ndry weather to prevent too rapid\ncuring.\nThe greatest danger In curing\nusually occurs during warm, fuggy\nand rainy periods when little air la\nstirring During such weather the\nbarn ahould be kept closed. If this\ncondition continues for many daya\nand the barn and tobacco becom.\nfilled or aaturated with moistare.\nmake frequent, examination, for signs\nof she.-burn. If symptoms of shed-\nburn .re found uae charcoal fires\nfor one or two day, and raise the\ntemperature from 6 to 10 degrees\nabove the outside temperature. T-ll\nwill create a draft and remove the\nexoess moisture Some srtlflclal heat\napplied under these conditions will\nserve to ke.p the curing normal\nand   prevent   shed-burn.\nDEATHS\ntn\nCAMPBELL\u2014Robert \u2022_.., age 18 years\npassed away suddenly Aug. 29.\nBody rests at the Howell Funeral\nHome until 1:15 Saturday afternoon thence to the onurcli of\nthe Redeemer where funeral ser-\nlvea will be held at 1:30. Holy\nCommunion at church of the Redeemer at 8 o'clock Saturday\nmorning. Rev. crick officiating.\n(72641\nSMITH\u2014Ernest s-e ao ve-r.. passed away auddenly Monday. Funeral\nservices Friday afternoon at 3 o clock\nat the Howell Funeral Home. Rev.\nW. C. Mawhlnney officiating. Interment nelaon. 172491\nPERSONAL\n_____\nIF YOU WANT A RICH WIFE?'\nor \"Wealthy Husband?\" Write\nBox   100-SA,   Detroit,   Mich.\n17074)\nFOR PURELY MUSICAL PERSONS.\nH. M. Angus, piano and organ\ntuner,   Phone   280L   evenings.\n.70131\nDRIVING TO ONTARIO CAN TAKE\none or two to nelp drive and\nshares expenses. Box 7260 Nelson\nDally News. 17260)\nHELP   WANTED\n(llil\nCANADA'S FOREMOST COLLEGE\nof beauty culture offers special\ninducements ln the way of rates\nand terma for summer classes ln\nbeauty culture, Including halr-ut-\ntlng marcelling, finger waving,\npermanent waving, hair dyeing,\nmanicuring, maaaage, halrworK.\netc. Moderate fee. on easy terms.\nPrepare yourself now for a high-\nsalaried position. Tools free. Moler\nBeauty College, 303 W. Hastings\nSt..   Vancouver,   B.   C. (6997)\nAPPLICATIONS WILL BE RECEIV-\ned by the undersigned for a Clerk\nto the citv Engineer. Applicants\nmust have knowledge of drafting and cost accounting. Salary\nOne Hundred and -Twenty-five\nDollars per month. Apply with\nreferences and full statement of\nqualifications  to\nW. E. Wasson.\ncity clerk\n17248)\nPREPARE FOR A BETTER 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\nvou to become a flrat-class barber.\nFree tools, convenient paying for\nlultlon. Pay while learning. Moler\nBarber School. Bey. 7563, 29 W.\nHastings. Vancouver, B. 0,   (6996)\nEMPLOYMENT\nFULL AND SPARE TIME WORKERS\nmaking good incomes selling \"Imperial Art\" \"Made ln Canada\"\nPersonal Christmas Cards. Write\nnow for particulars while agencies\natlll available. Sample book free\nto responsible people. Britiah\nCanadian publishing Co., 51 West\nWellington.   Toronto. (7136)\nWANTED\u2014EXPERIENCED GENERAL\nmat<1_ accustomed to children.\nApply  Box   7039.   Dally   News.\n(7039)\nAGENTS WANTED\n(12)\nAGENTS WANTED IN EVERY TOWN\ncity and village, sell new. original,\nattractive window poster. Just\nout Every store . prospect. Fast\nsales Good profit. Send 15c for\nsample. Particular* free. Attracto\nPoster Co.. 49 Uruworth avenue.\nToronto,   Ontarl_. (7174)\nCANARIES  FOB SALE _._\nROLLER CANARIES  .1. PHONE 6131,\n615 Carbonate. B. Morrison. (7185:\nSITUATIONS   WANTED (ll|\nOIRL 16 DESIRES WORK AE\nmother's help. Oood with children,   Box   7238   Nelson   News.\n(7238)\nFURNISHED ROOMS TORRENT (15)\nFURNISHED    HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms.    K. W. C. Block.      (7816)\nFURNISHED   SUITE   FOR   RENT-\nPhone 390R. Mrs. Core.        (7224)\nHOUSES FOR BEN]\n__\u00bb:\nrOR RENT REASONABLE FOUR\nruon. house on Granite Road\nfronting Burns Coal and Cartage\nCo.    Phone 53. (7268)\nLAKE   SIDE   COTTAOZ   PO   RENT.\nSartlv   furnished.   W.   Rutherford,\nelaon. i7179)\nHOUSE   FOR   RENT\u2014   MODERN.   3\nBedrooms    phone o. H   Fraser.\n(7226)\nSTRONG YOUTH. 18. SOME OFFICE\nExperience. 6enlor Metric, wishes\nwork any kind. Box 7-5. Dally\nNews. (1260)\nWE   CAN   SAVE   YOU   MONEY   ON\nthat   garage.     Phon,   evenings\n591Y1   for  repairs  and  estimates.\n. (7266)\n\u25a0iOOMs  TO  RENT\n(19:\nFOR RENT- TWO ROOM APART\nment furnished or unfurmshea\nApply Petty Apartmente .210 Fall\nstreet. (7214'\nFOR  RENT-BUNGALOW FOTtNISH-\ned In Fftlrvlew.   Phone 41.    (7.4.)\nMISCELIANEOUS FOR SALL\u2014(Coil)\nUSED CAR PART.' FOR ALL\nmake,, lncludln. wtl'.i.i Knight\nfour. Grandvlew Auto wreckers,\n2086 commercial Drive, Vancouver. (6987)\n, BLACKSMITH'S OUTFIT COM-\npiete with 120 l_. anvil, 1 post\ndrill, blowers, vice and tools juat\nnew. J. P. Morgan. Nelson.  i70()9)\nTERRACE   APTS.,   FURNISHED   OE\nunlurnlshed   suites.   Apply   p.   E.'    .\u201e\nPoulln. (7135) | 'OR.\n-OR   SALE\u2014LARGE  HEATEE.   SEW\ngrate.    Good common (20.    Two\nsmall   heaters.  6.   and  65.   Apply\nam:\nBox   7209   Dally   News.\nTWO    ROOM    FULLY    FURNISHED\nSuites.    Moderate,    phone 41.\n(7245)\nMISCELLANEOUS  FOR SALE      <1_\n12 PAIRS SOX AND SIX NECKTIES.\n.3.95. 12 pairs fine quality men's\nfancy box and 6 beautiful silk\nties, newest designs .colors and\nmaterials, nearly 69.00 value, tor\nonly 63.95. Send no money, lust\nname and address. Pay postman on\narrival 6395 plus a few pennies\npostage. We guarantee thla the\nbiggest and best value or money\nrefunded. Thrift Mills. Dept. Z.\nBox 2914! Montreal. (71931\nllHMIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIimilllllllll.ini\n= GUARANTEED s\nE SANITARY RUBBER GOODS. =\n_ Elastic Hosiery. Suspensories, _\\\n_\\ Enemas, etc, WRITE for our _\\\ncatalogue  NOW. _\\\nDUPONT SPECIALTIES =\nS P. O. Box 177 Vancouver _\\\nS . (7173)   -.\nliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.iiiimiiiiimiiiiiiiii\nTOBACCO \u2014 SHIP ANYWHERE,\nsample package 10 pounda good\nleaf tobacco, mild or strong, with\nFree real brier pipe, 12.50. 20\npounds for .4.00. Quesnel, 2\npounds for 82.00. G. Dubois 18\nHenderson, Ottawa, Ont,      ,7210*\n.. _ALE\u2014SAVAGE '22 KI-POWEr.\nrlflt 830.00. or would exchange\nfoi Shotgun of equal value, H.\nThorpe. Fairview. (7231)\nfaTRONG SEWINO MACHINE FOR\nSale Cheap. Apply Mrs. H. Thorpe,\nPhone Mornings 277L3. (7243)\nLIVESTOCK   FOR   BALE\n-___!\nMINK. FINE DARK QUEBEC STOCK\n\u2014Pen raised and tame.   Females,\n840: males .20.    C. B: Brown. 3286\n21s..  Av4_.,   Vancouver.   B.   (\n  (7203)\nBABY PIGS \u2014 SIX WEEKS OLD.\nYorkshires 86. D. C. Water-field,\nNakuap. B   C. (72S8)\nBusiness and\nProfessional Directory\nPOULTRY   AND  EGOS\nCM.\nPRODUCTION-BRED PULLETfi ANO\nheeding cockerels for sale at low\nsummer prices. Buy now. White\nLeghorns Barred Rocks, Rhode\nIsland Reds. Whit, Wyandottes,\nBlack Mlnorcas and other breeds.\nR O P. Co-op. Assn. of B. C.\nPoultry Breeders, 303 Winch Bldg.\nVancouver (7063)\nMISCELLANEOUS\n(29)\nEXTRAORDINARY SrECIALI\nFOR BALDNESS\nVlie greatest offer In Canada. Hard\nTlmea Special, 842 value for 65.50.\nThe famous F. A. Franks home\ntreatment* for curing falling hair,\ndandruff and scalp Itch. No electricity required .Use lt anywhere.\nII years' successful results. It's\nguaranteed. Free, ft 82 box of the\nfamous Franks' wonderful healing\nointment for akin diseases sent\nwith each order of above scalp\ntreatments for 10 days only. Mall\nvoar money orde. today. Act now\nas thc supply ls limited. Address\nto F. A Franks, scalp specialist.\n223 Montgomery Bldg. Winnipeg.\n(7156)\nliUSINHSS   OPPOI. . PNITI^H       <_.)\nNORJtv.NA CAFE FOR SALE OR\nlease. Apply 707 Victoria St.\nBox   196. (7263)\nFOR SALE\u2014BARRELS, KEGS. BUR-\nlap sacks, white sugar sacks. McDonald  Jam  Co. (7094)\nFOR SALE-FIRST CLASS VIVEN-\natte. Particulars phone 328L3.\nprlc. reasonable. (7254)\nFOR   SALE-LADIES'   BICYCLE   625.\nBox 7239 Nelson Dally News.\n(7239)\nFOR  SALE\u2014DESK.  BUFFET.  SHOT-\ngun. rifle, phone 308R.        (7021)\nWEAI.THIE   APPLES   81   SACK.   DE-\nllvered. Phone 684L1. (7163)\n(ATS  AND DOGS  FOR SALE       (..\nDACHSHUND PUPS FROM Imported parents, from 616 up.\nChinchilla rabbits, unrelated pairs\n2 montha 82.00; 4 months 63.00;\nadults 64.00. Whatshan Kennels.   Needles,  B.  c.\n50,000   FEIT   l   TSCH  USED\nblack pipe, good condition\n5 cents per foot. Large stock of\nother sizes. Enquiries solicited.\nSwartz Pipe Yard. 220 East 1st\nAve..  Vancouver, B. C.        (7100)\nBEARDY SHEEP DOG PUPS OF\nImported stock for sale. Natural\nworkers, easily trained. $5 each\nCOD. Write A. Fisher. General\nDelivery.   Medicine   Hat   Alta\n(7124)\nGERMAN  POLICE  PUPS  FOR  SALE\n85 each.   A. Nelson, Frultvale.\n(7211)\nUSE    THE    NEUSON    DAILY    NEWS\nCLASSIFIED   ADS   FOR   I1LS1 LIS\nPI.OPLHT,    FOR   SALE\n___..\u00bb.\nmiiimMiimmmiMirmimiiiiiiiiiiiii\n1 W-ACRE FARM FOR =\nSALE\nTwo acres cultivated, bai- Sj\n_\\ ance partly cleared\u2014Fenced\u2014 _\\\n5 Creek on property \u2014 Family S\nS Orchard\u2014Small Fruits\u2014Four- z\nC room one-story house-Barn, S\n_\\  Kay Shed\u2014Poultry House.\nPrice 61600. Cash payment, S\n_ 8300. Balance. 8300 a year. _\u2022\nApply  to\n5 *       H. E. DILL\n2 Other   farma   from   6800   to   =\n610,000 (7341) 5\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiuiiiiiiTi\nFOR sale; or exchange\n(37)\nWILL TRADE CHEVROLET l'i-ton\ntruck for Cowe. young cattle or\nsheep. Truck good working condition. Price for truck 8350.00.\nChas. o. Rodgera, Creston, B. c.\n(7253)\nAUTOMOBILES   FOR  SALb (40)\nCHRISTIE TRUCK AND CAR PARTS\n1630 West let Ave., Vancouver.\nB. c Largeat reliable wrecking\ncompany. Power plants trailers\nand parts. (7099)\nAccountants\nCHAS.   F    HUNTER\nPublic  Accountant.  Nelaon\nMunicipal   and   Commercial   Audita.\n(7189)\nROGER M.  HOYLAND\nChartered  Accountant\nP.   O.   Box   136S Trail,\n7138.'\nL.   A.   READ\nPublic Accountant\nSuccessor to  w.  H. Fftldlng, OA.\nBsy Avenue Trail, I. c\n(7140)\nAssayers\nE. W. Wlddowson. Box AUOS Nelson,\nB.   C.   Standard   western   charges.\n(71al)\nChiropractors\nDR. ORAY. GILKER BLK., NELSON.\n(7142)\nDR. MITTUN, X-RAY, CRANBROOK\n(7141.\nDentists\nDR. O. A. C. WALLET\u2014306 Medical\nArts  Building.  X-Ray.  Nelson.\n(7144)\nEngineers\nH. D. DAWSON\u2014MININO and CIVIL\nEngineer.     B.   C.   Land   Surveyor.\nK.   W.   C.   Block.   Nelson,   B    C.\n(72551\nFlorists\nGrlzzelle's Greenhouses. Neleon. Cut\nflowers  and floral designs.   .71*6)\nNELSON FLOWER SHOPPE. Full\nllne cut flowers at all times, floral\ndesigns.   Phone   363. (7147)\nJOHNSON'S GREENHOUSES. Phone\n342. Cut flowers. Potted plants\nand Floral Designs. (7148)\nInsurance and Real Estate\nIt. W. DAWSON. Real Estate. Insurance. Rentals. Next Hlpperson\nHardware,  Baker   St. (7149)\nSecond  Hand  Stores\nThe   Ark.   dealers   ln   second   hand\ngoods. Phone 534. (7150)\nTransfer\nWILLIAMS' TRANSFER\nBAGGAGE. COAL AND WOOD\nPhone   106 (7151)\nATKINSON   TRANSFER.     Coal   and\nWood.   Long distance hulling.\n(7152)\nWood Factory\nLawson's  Wood  Factory.  317  Baker\n8t.    We please our customers.\n(7153)\nMr. and Mrs. A. Rendle\nVisit in Greenood\nGREENWOOD. B. C. Sept. 10.\u2014\nConstable Vickers of Greenwood has\nbeen transferred to Penticton, and\nwill lesve shortly with Mrs. Vickers\nand two daughters to take over his\nnew dutiea there. Constable Lalrel\nof Penticton Is assuming Constable\nVickers'   dutle*   here.\nMr. and Mr,. Arthur Rendle nf\nTrail are spending a week in Green-\nDr. J. M. Burnett of __orft. Ont...\nIs In Greenwood on a few weeks'\nvacation. Dr. Bjrnett practiced here\nabout, a vear  ago.\nMr.   and   Mrs.   E.   ,'.   Bpenoe   of I\nTrail sre the gi.ests or Mr. and Mra.\nL.  A.   Kler.\nMrs.  J.  R.  Inglis of  Beaverdell   Is '\nspending   a   holiday   In   Greenwood,\nthe   guest  of  Mra.   A.  Rater\nTeMfatv or Tonlaht\nTHE NELSON\nIM'CYNEWS\n?U or til\nL\nBOARDS OF TRADE\nPROTEST MAIL CUT\nINVERMKRK. B. C, 8?pt,. 10.\u2014\nOfficial word hu b_**\u00bbn r\u00abc*lv*_| by\nth\u00bb loeal pOBtm\u00bbst*T to t,h*> _ff_ct\nthat the prwent mt.il service from\nCnnbrooli \u00bbn<1 Oolrjen i* to he eut\nIn two. The district botrd of trade\nhae had meetings vigorously protest*\nIng against this action, and Its\nmembers are In correspondence with\nthe offlclali tn tbe hope of baring\nthis catastrophe averted\nOreat Britain wants tourists and\n\u2666\u25a0o aid the campaign the home\noffice has extended to tiiree months\nthe time a visitor may remain ln\nthe Island without registering with\nth\u00ab   pel Ice.\n \u25a0in KIMOH BAIL-  WW*, NELION. \u00bb   C, HUDAT  MOMiQiO.  \u00bbIPIEM\u00bbt*  11.  IMI-\n[14\"]\nS     PAOf MN1\nMarket and Mining News\nTORONTO STOCKS\nRECOVER, BUT GO\nDOWNAT CLOSE\nMarket Has to Contend With\nBad News From Several\nSources; Nickel Down\nTORONTO, Bept. 10^-A atrong\nforenoon recovery wilted In afternoon\ntrading on tbe stock market hare\ntodsy. Prices generally closed with\nmoderate recessions. Total sales ware\n13.867  shares.\nDuring the day the market had to\ncontend with a variety of bad news.\nCopper prices again lowered after\nseveral weeks of firmness. Rock\nIsland passed, Instead of merely\ncutting, Its dividend, oerman bonds\nwere heavy and presentation of\nBritiah  budget  waa  also  depressing.\nInternational Niokei lost V*. C.\n\\*. R. at IV\/t without net change,\nafter selling down to 17 ft Yesterday\nwitnessed revival of tha atory that\nmerger, or at least closer cooperation, between the C P. R. ond the\nC. It. B, li a pOBslblIl-7. Other\nutilities were Irregular. Braslllan\nTraction lost ^ to 14 and Montreal\nPower wsa up ft.\nIn the steel list softness prevailed.\nOeneral steel Wares lost \u2022_ to a new\nlow of 2. and National bteel Car at\n* new low of 15 wu off 1ft. In\nthe motor section Pord lost ft.\nOils were neglected. B. A. 01! was\noff ft, Imperial gained ft, Pete\nwsa unchanged.\nWalker at 4ft  was up  ft.\nMETAL MARKETS\nMINNEAPOLIS GRAIN\nMINNEAPOLIS. Sept. 10\u2014Plour unchanged. Shipments 25,998. Pure\nbran 1160 to 12.00; wheat No. 1\nnorthern 85% to 72ft; Sept. 84.4;\nDec.  60ft;   May  60%.\nCorn: No. 3 yellow 45 to 45ft,\nOats: No. 3 white -J2ft to 23ft.\nFlax: No. 1. l-SS.4 to 158%.\nNfW TOUK. 8ep*. 10\u2014 Copper\neasy; electrolytic, apot and future\n7ft.\nTin, steady; spot and nearby 25JT;\nfuture   96.11.\nIron ateady, unchanged.\nLead quiet; apot New York 4.40;\nHast St. Louis  4 22.\nZinc, steady; last St. Louis apot\nanrl   future   3 JO.\nAntimony 640.\nForeign bar silver 27% oents.\nAt  London:\nStandard oopper, apot \u00a330 15s;\nfuture \u00a331 10s; electrolytic, spot \u00a334\n10s;  future  \u00a35  10a.\nTin, apot \u00a3116 10a; future \u00a3117\n17s  \u00abd.\nLead, spot \u00a310 17s 6d; future Ell.\nZinc, spot \u00a310 16s; future \u00a311  5a.\nMONTREAL STOCKS\nDOWNAFRACTION\nDownward    Trend   in   New\nYork Is Followed; Four\nIssues Hit New Lows\nJ1500\nSQ.75 Monthly\n*r crutM ud deliver, vol\n11500 o,S on iii \u00ab\u00ab_cl detached-led. .1,000 lo..00,000\nfroffl proporHonett!. imi'l pey-\n\u25a0writ. 37 \u2022_.\u00ab r .cord. Fret book-\nlti \"MulHpl.ln. Monty\" _\u00bbpl_ln_\nplan, ptyntnh. maturity data,,\nctrttln rttulti. Un coupon.\n200,001 INVESTORS\n\u00bb\u00bbf*lfHMIMIMfHMM\nSssiboeUK-MULTnYlNQ MONET'\nInvestors\nSyndicate\nMONTREAL, Que., Sept. 10.\u2014Following early steadiness, prloes on\nthe Montreal stock exchange were\nfractionally lower today la sympathy\nwith tha downward trend In New\nYork.\nA certain decree of stability waa\nln evidence among the leaders aa\nsome registered fractional gains,\nnotably Brazilian Traction, the active leader, and Montreal Power.\nShawlnigan Power lost a point at\n37 V*.\nFour Issues established new low\nlevels for the year. Calgary Power,\nat 1S7. down three points; Canada\nCement, at 8ft, off ft; National\nBteel Car at 14*4. ft lower, and\nOeneral Bteel Wares, at 1ft, off ft.\n. Canadian Car preferred at 17 ft\nand International Power preferred\nat 60 both lost two points. Consoli.\ndated Smelters declined ft at 76,\nand Dominion Bridge dropped H at\n30%. Canadian Pacific was ft lower\nat  17ft.\nThe five Issues which advanced\nall gained ft- They were Braatllan\nTraction, at 14ft; Montreal Power,\nat 42ft; McColl-Frontenar. at 12ft,\nand Abitlbi, at *\nTotal .ales, 9858 shares. Bonds,\n$3900.\nVANCOUVER LIST\nNEW YORK LIST\nDROPS LOWER IN\nSLUGGISH TRADE\nOpening  Gives   Promise   of\nImprovement Which Falls\nto M_.teri_.li_.\nNelson   District   Agent  (or\nlnratori' Syndicate:\nWo W.Dawson\n323   Baker   Street\nPhone    197\nDistrict Manager for West Kootenay\nand Okanagan:\nA.A.Milligan\nK. P. Block Phone 376\nTrail, B. C.\nNIW TORK. Bept. 10 (By John X\nCooley, A. P. financial writer)\u2014\nstocks settled a little cloier to the\nJune lows today.\nAlthough net declines wars mostly\nmoderate, the market's failure to\nfollow an early rally plainly Indicated that shorts still felt reasonably\nsecure and wanted to hold out a\nwhile longer.\nThe opening gave promise of a\nfairly respectable Improvement, for\na number of prominent issues made\novernight gains of a point or more.\nHowever, the pace was slow and\nbefore tha session waa very old the\nmarket had run into the Rosk Island\ndividend omlselon, an obstacle at\nwhich  the rails quickly  shied.\nNew lows for tight or  10 carriers\ndemonstrated   the   group   had   not\nbeen Immunised against unfavorable\nnews.\nACTION   UNEXPECTED\nThe action of Rock Island's directors seemed unexpected, for the stock\nbroke 10 points, before reducing its\ndecline to e% net. Frisco. Reading,\nDelaware and Hudson, Baltimore and\nOhio. Northern Pacific and Norfolk\nand Western lost a to s. New York\nCentral was steady and Atchison\noff only & fraction.\nWettinghouse, Oeneral Electric,\nCorn Products, Proctor and Oamble,\na number of other specialties and\nmost of the utilities mads unlm-\npreaaive showings, down 1 to nearly\n3 points. For U- 8. Steel, American\nCan, American Telephone. National\nBiscuit and Bethlehem the aupport\nwaa firmer and their final changes\nwere  unimportant.\nSales fell off to 1,510,250 sharss,\nabout half a million under yesterday's volume.\nThe bond market declined -Tregu-\nlarly as tbt volume Increased.\nThe average price of 00 representatives issues consisting of 30\nbonds each of the public utility,\nrailroad and industrial groups, made\nanother new low record at 81.1 a\nloss of three-tenths of a point for\nthe day.\nForeign loans provided many of\ntho   largest   losses.\nCOPPER EXPORT\nPRICE REDUCED\nHEW TORK. Sept. 10 (AP)\u2014The\nexport prloe of copper was reduced a\nquarter of a cent a pound to 7.75\ncents C I. F. European base ports,\nplacing the metal on a parity with\na domestic price of 7H oents delivered.\nThe reduction follows a period of\nextreme quite ln copper buying operations, during whleh the domestic\nprice *t the metal wss held at 76\nto 7% cents a pound, with only\nlimited amount* of oopper available\nat the lower figure.\nOeneral Cable corporation has reduced wire prloee a quarter of a\ncent a pound to 9V\\ cents.\nCERTIFICATES OF\nWORK ISSUED FOR\n86 CLAIMS HERE\nActivities Increase as Winter\nNears;   Iron  Mountain\nClaims Cleared\nCHICAGO WHEAT\nTURNS IN GAIN\nEnlarged Milling Demand Is\nCause for Bulge in \"September Delivery\nCHICAGO. Sept. 10 (By John P.\nBoughan, Associated Press market\neditor)\u2014Enlarged milling demand reflected by more than four cents\nbulge ln September delivery of\nwheat at Minneapolis gave strength\ntoday to the wheat market here. A\nfurther \u25a0 stimulus for Bullish sentiment waa the fact that contract\ngrades of whest available to be uaed\nat once were commanding good\npremiums tn all domestic centers.\nWheat cloeed unsettled, '\/\u25a0 to \u25a0\u00bb\u2022;\noentg up, corn \\_ to \\_ off, oats\nunchanged to V_ higher and provi-\nalons unchanged to 12 cents advance.\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nPRICES STRONGER\n\u2014o\u2014t\naid   As_\nBig  Missouri    .17     .19\nBluebird          --     .02\nCork  pro-lno.   _  \u2014    .01\nDuthle  9     \u2014     .04\nOeorge   Ent   , .01     \u2014\nGeorgia River \u201e_____.....    \u2014     jost.\nOoloond*         .31     .35\nOrendvlew         .05)4 ___\nKootenl-   __*___-   _   .00 _  --\nInt. 0 * C   .10_ .\u2014\nKootenay King     \u2014     .01\nLorne  OoW  ...      OB'\/,     .10\nLucky Jim            \u2014     .03\nMorton W_H_-y 01     .Sly.\nNoble Plre    .03     .05\npremier _    tt    .56\nPend  Oreille     70     .75\nPioneer ...... 3.35   3.J0\nPorter Idaho  _ _...    \u2014     .05\nReeves Mcdonald  SO      \u2014\nReno Oold       \u2014    .34     \u2014\nRufua Argent*    \u2014    .03\nRuth Hope       \u2014     .05\n_\u201e.er.r_et _   .14      \u2014\nSnowflake        .01 % .03\nons\nA. P. consolidated  _. 07\nCommonwealth    ..__....    .07%\nDelhouale     ___...   .16\nFabyan - __ O0V4\nfreehold      __...   .031.\nHargal      ..   .03\nHome   OH   \u2014...   -40\nMcDougaJl Segur It _._...   .03\nMayland - 13\nRoyalite  600\nSterling Pacific _ 06\nTORONTO, Sept. Io (OP)\u2014Reduced sales volume and firmer prices\nfeatured the Standard Stock and\nMining exchange today. Sales total,\nled  486,283 shares.\nThe base metal list was comparatively quiet. Noranda fell off to\n.H..0 down 35 cents while International Nickel moved up 10 cents\nto  11.85.\nLeaders ln the precious raetsl\ngroup showed minor price changes.\nDome was off 36 \u00abnts to 612.10.\nMclnt.rc dropped 6 cents to 621.80,\nwhile Lake Shore advanced 35 oents\nto 427.25.\nMixed prices with light trading\nheld ln the oil section. Cities Service\nappeared and advanced 85 cents to\n410.10. British American fell 26 cents\nto 410.76 snd Imperial lost 10 cents\nto J12.85.\nEGG MARKETS\nOTTAWA. Sept. 10\u2014 Toronto:\nWholesale prices of eggs to retailers\nare extras, loose, 28. firsts 25 to 36;\nseconds 19 to 30.\nSaint John: Extras 31 to __; firsts\n37 to 39;  seconds 23  to 33.\nHalifax: Extras 24 to 26; firsts, 31\nto 23;  seconds  16 to 18.\nChicago: Spot 21_. Nov. refrigerators 2 Pi.\nAwarded the coveted certificate of purity, merit and\n\u2022quality by the Institute of\nHygiene, London.,\nRhum Negrita\nREP.\nQUART\n$4\n.00\nFamed the world\nover as \"Old Nick\nRum\"\nv__fonu ., ____ Inn Um u_, \u00ab_,\nOrder D-p_rt__~_t, Vtatarte. B. C\n\"This advertisement is not published or displayed by trm\nLiquor Control Board or by the Government of British\nColumbia.\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelt-\ning Co., of Canada, Ltd.\nTRAIL\u2014BRITISH COlt-MBIA\nManufacturers  of\nEIJ-PHANT\nBrand\nCHEMICAL   FERTILIZERS\nSOLD BY NATIONAL FRUIT |CO.\nProducers  and   Refiners  of\nTADANAC\nBrand\nELECTROLYTIC\nAmmonium  Phosphate\nSulphate of Ammonia\nTriple Superphosphate\nNELSON\nLead-Zinc\nadmiurn-BNmn.h\nTORONTO MINES\nPRICKFIRMER\nBase  Metals  List  Comparatively Quiet; Oils Trade\nMixedly\nTORONTO STOCKS\nAbana\t\n__)     \t\nAIM\t\nAmulet   \t\nAmity  \t\nA. P. consolidated\nAssociated    ....\nBaltic Oil  \t\nB. A.  Oil \t\nBidgood   \t\nBase  Metals  \t\nBarry   Hollinger\nBig Missouri   \t\nCentral   Manitoba\nChemical Recearch\nderlcy    _\t\n_S_Bt-iest \t\nDomo    \t\nFoothill,\n...   .05\n\u25a003 V.\n1.15\n\u25a0IT.\n.01\n\u202207 Vi\n.04\n...    .02\n10.75\n.32\n.75\n.10 _\n.18\n.08\n3.30\n02\n.10\n11.90\n.16\nFalcon-ridge       1.00\nGoodflsh 04 _\nHome  Oil    40'\nHowey     33\nHollinger     5.85\nHudson Bay      3.50\nIntemstlonal  Nickel  ....\nKeelly\nKlrkliwiJ ijike\nLake   Shore   ...\nMac__a_.    \t\nMandv    \t\nMalartic\t\nMclntyre\nMtntnj Corp   >\u2022\nMurphv     \t\nNewbe.\t\nNew imperial on _    j-jj\n11.60\n.33\n65\n27.00\n.44\n.08\n.08\n21.35\n1.86\n.02 Vi\n.03\nNlplsslnr;\t\n...      1.40\nNoranda      _\t\n...   18.30\nSherritt oordon ....\n 57\n.40\nSl.coe _\t\n.as\n 03\nSan  Antonio   _\t\n.12\nStadacona\t\n01 _\nTech __.}__ \t\n...      1.30\nThompson  Cadalla.   \t\nA. _\nventures    \t\n 57\nWright Har_rea.es \t\n...      8 Ml\n1.30\nSTOCKS. MWDV, COTTON\n-U.MB_.Bi-\nNew Tortr, Montreal oa* Van-\nconrer   Itock   I_xctian(?\u00ab.   Chi*\ncafo Board of Tradt, Tflnnlpf-t\nGrain   Etc hang*,  and   other\ntrifling exchanges.\nrtrvATB  WIM\nOFFICES:\nYanMtiTti.  hpokan-r,  Seattle\nValues at Cloee are 1-2 Cent\nto 1-4 Cent Higher; Pit\nTrade Is Not Heavy\nWOTNTPEO, Sept. 10\u2014Bearish European crop reports end shortage of\nrontract supplies due to a email\nspring wheat crop to the south gave\nstrength to wheat prlcea here todav\nValues at the cloae were ',$ cent to\nv_ cent higher than Wednesday's\nfinish. October closed at M1*; December at 52% to 83 while May\nended   at   f>8V\nPit trade waa not particularly\nheavy but there were active pprlods\nand a* fair volume of wheat, cbanged\nhands. Export figures totalled 500,000\nbushels.\nCaah wheat and coarse grains\nfollowed the trend of wheat.\nNEW YORK STOCKS\nAllegheny ..     4'i       4Vi       4%\nAllied Chemical ins _oa_ 105\nAm   Can    90(4 87 . 88 .\nAm   For   Power 34 32 23'\nAm Ma _e  Fdy\n28\nAm   Smelt   Itef\n28',\nAm  Telephone\n166'.\nAm  Tobacco   .\n108\nAnaconda \t\nII Vi\nAtchison   \t\n139'.\n12Vi\nB   ft   O   \t\n30 '4\nBendlt Aviation\nai _\nBeth  Steel  \t\n37\u00bb,\nC   p\t\n!T_\nCerro  de   Pasco\n13V.\nC   A   O   \t\n33%\nChrysler\t\n1.'- \u2022 _\nCom   <_   South\n7.\nCon Oss 1\u00bb T ..\n89'.\nCorn  Prod\n82\nC Wright pfd . .\n\u2014\nOupont\n78\",\nEastman  Kodak\n135'.i\nei.c p a. l ...\n36\u00bb,\nBrie     \t\n16\nPord English  .\n\u2014\nPord of Canada\n\u2014\nPlrst Nat.Stores\n56\nPreeport Texje\n24\nOen Motors   ...\n32'.\n3ei. E3ec  \t\n38'.,\n3en  Foods \t\n48 V,\nGold   Dust   \t\n26',\n10'.\n3 N pfd   \t\n31'.\n3 W Sugar \t\n9\nHowe  Sound   .-\nIT,\nIns Copper \t\nSV,\nInter Nickel .\nUU\nInter   Tel   Tel\n35',\nKenn Copper\n16\nKresge 6 9\n30',\nKrocgg   ft   Toll\n13 V,\nMack   Truck\n2SV,\nMilwaukee   pfd\n5_\ntush  Motors\n33',\n__  Dairy   Prod\nll_\nK P ft L \t\n\u2014\n\u00ab T Central\n64\nPac O ft Ilec ...\n43H\nPack   Motors   . .\n6',\n33',,\nPhillips Pete\nIt.\nasdlo  Corp   \t\n17'.\nHadlo K Orp ....\n14',\u00bb\n_em   Ran_   \t\n6_\nIt   I    \t\n31<i\nSafe Stores \t\n61\",\nS Louis ft S F\n12\nShell Union OH\n51,\nSin  Con   \t\n\u00bb .\nSo  Cal   Edison\n41H\n5  P\t\n80',\nStand   Oil   Cal\n37\nStand   OU   Ind\n\u2014\nStand  Oil  N  J\n36'\/,\nStewart   Warner\n9',\nStudebaker   \t\nli\".\nTexas Corp \t\n23\",\nTexas O Sul\n33'\u00bb\nUnion   Carbide\n47.\nUnion Oil  Cal\n16\nU   P\n136\nUnltsd   Aircraft\nM-\nU  8  Pipe   Fdy\n17\nU g Rubber   ...\nlit.\nU  S Steel   \t\n82\nWest   Ilec   \t\n57 li\nWillys   Over   ...\n\u00bbVi\nYellow Truck ....\n6V.\n27\n28\n162,\nn\n28'\n163 .\n106 . 108\n21'. 31 %\n13614 137\",\nll'i      11\n36\",\n20'4\n331,\n31 '4\n17',\n7514\n131' _\n34 .\n231.\n11H\n36',\n47',i\n23',\n30\nMi\n161,\nSVi\n11V,\n22 .\n16<i\n26!,\n12.\n24',.\nIH\n33\nMM.\n\u2022 l's\n41',\n6\n34'i\nV,\n17\n1314\n6\n20\n69\n9',\nI\n9\n40%\n36.\n36\n81,\n221,\n33',\n46',\nui\nmit\n231,\nii\n80\n63\nM.\n30\",\n36 _\n17\n13 V,\n31-1,\n18',\n171\nH.\n4\n75\".\n132\n34'4\n16\n9'|\n16!i\n55'4\n24\nSI'\n36\u00bb,\n48',\n24\n10'i\n30\n9\n16.\n5'\n11.\n'J'!'\nUM\n26',\n12',\n25'.\n5 .\n22\n30'i\n211,\n63'.,\n42\n6\n34>,\n7y,\n17',\n13',\n6',\n._',\nM\".\n9',\nSn,\nI\n41\n67\n36'4\n24'.\n36 Vi\n8 .\n13',4\n32 V.\n33 Vi\n46',\nltH\n13214\n23 .i\n17\nll'i\n80',\n63H\n3V4\nS<_\nIncreased activities are noted In\nthe prospecting circles where a rush\nIs on to complete the aaeessment\nwork before the snow falls. During\nthe past tao months prospectors\nhave recorded assessment work at\nthe local government recorder's office\nclearing 86 claim,. Some of the certificates of work Issued were for\ntwo-year  terms.\nWork on 11 Iron mountain claims\nwere recorded by H. Stevens.\nCottonwood and Anderson creeks,\nwere both the centers for much\nactlTity.\nAssessment work. J. Weber\u2014\"_rle,\"\nat  Erie;   \"Taft\"  Salmon  river.\nGodfrey Blrtscr.-- \"Ooli Coin,\"\nHover  creek.\nft. Ti. Shrum\u2014\"Lucky Dick.\" \"Little\nWallace.\" \"Quaker Ctrl,\" on Wild\nHorse   creek.\nJohn Desn\u2014\"Jean.' three miles\nsouth of Orey creek.\nJ. Sapples\u2014 \"Udl-tlle.\" \"Uttle\nKeen,\"   Bear  creek.\nJoe Bernard\u2014 \"Seoond Chanoe.\"\nJuno.\"    \"Atlanta,\"    Whlekey    creek.\nM. KoshU\u2014\"Oold Hill,\" between\n-horeacres and Qlade.\nTi. W. Hlnton\u2014\"Perrler,\" \"Oolden\nHorseshoe,\" \"Vtsta Frac.\" \"Bluff No.\n2,\" \"Nemo No. 2,\" \"Fairview,\" \"Cottonwood  Lake,\nA. L. P_rdy-.\"A_pen No. 1.\" \"Brok-\nn Hill.\" \"Aspen No. 2,\" \"Aspen No.\n3,\" \"Aspen No. 4.\" Deer creek\nJack Doyle\u2014\"Boundary,\" Monument  No.   191   boundary  line.\nB. M. Wilson\u2014\"HJ-den Oold,\"\nOolden  Park,\"  \"Wolfe   Uke,\"  near\nWolfe like.\nFrank W. Holzhelmer\u2014\"Cariboo.\"\nSunset,\" south fork of Porcupine\ncreek.\nJohn Deslreau\u2014\"Aural.\" 8V4 mllea\nnortheast of Wynndel: \"Belle View.\"\n2\",   miles northeast of Duck creek.\nH. H. Shallenberger\u2014 \"Sunrise,\n\"North Btar,\" \"Sunset Frac,\" \"Evening Star.\" \"Boundary Line No. 2.\"\n\"Boundary Line No. 3,\" \"Northern\nLights.\"  Pend d'Orellle.\nRobert   Qua\u2014   \"Ifummlng   Bird,\n\"Wren.\"    \"White   Skunk.\"    \"Water\nMouse,\"    Five    Mile    and    Roaring\ncreeks;   \"Wedge  Frac.\"   Fawn   <-reek.\nJames Fisher\u2014 \u2022\u25a0Treadwell.\" \"lu^\n-tlnct,\"  Hall elding\nW. Brennan\u2014 \"Idaho,\" \"Washington.\" Midge creek.\nH. Stevens \u2014 \"Bonner Frac\n\"Princess.\" \"Lynx.\" \"Fox.\" \"Cody.\"\n\"Eagle.\" \"Colonial,\" \"Butte,\" \"Dub.\nlln,\" \"Yukon,\" \"Victor.\" \"Rex Frac'\n\"Bruce Frac,\" \"Imperial,\" \"Elk\nFrac.\" Iron mountain.\nArchie Oulfln\u2014 \"Tweed,\" Five\nMile and east fork of Cottona'ood\ncreek: \"Hastings,\" \"Pond.\" \"Trent,\"\n\"Ontario,\" \"Madoc,\" Anderson creek\nMichael Bg?n\u2014\"Donnybrook Free'\nHidden creek; \"Tremalne Frac.*\nOiveout creek.\nMike Sedlch\u2014\"Luck. Boy,\" \"Prince\nHenry,\"  \"Saturday,\"  \"Sunday,\"  Past\nFred O. Kamblln- \"Chin Chin,'\nDeer  Paik\nThomas Hall\u2014 \"Mat.hl_\u00bbs,\" Lock'\nhart creek: South Sanca Noi.. \"South\n.anca No. 0.\" \"Ireland.\" Qranlve\ncreek.\nMerlon Brown\u2014 \"Oold Crown,\nAlpine   Basin.\nJ. J. O'Donnell- \"Gold Lea.,\nCottonwood   lake,\nS. A. __t_]den--\"8how Down,\nSheep and Coon creeks.\nNEW YORK STOCK .\nEXCHANGE CUTS\nWHOLE PAYROLL\nKEW YORK, Sept. 10 CAP)\u2014The\nNew Tork stock exchange has reduced salaries of all officers and\nrmploywa by  10  per cent.\nWhile cutting beaver hay on the\nfarm of Wellngtpn Ferdu<\u00bb of Somerville township near Fenelon Falls.\nOnt., a hired roan, William Cavan-\nagh. was startled by a huge mother\nbear and   two small   rubs\nMONTREAL STOCKS\nBa.uk  of  Commerce  301\nDominion  Bank     __\u00bb.. 200\nBank of Montreal  237\nBank  of  Nova Scotia   288\nRoyal  Bank _\u2014 238\nBank   of  Toronto  213li\nAbitlbi   Power &  paper    3%\nBell   Telephone      132V.\nBrazilian TX\u00bb. & P-   'UM\nBrit. American OH    1075\nCanada Bron?.t*      _... 30\nCan. Car. <v Foundry   9.4\nCan.   Cement         -.. *\nCan Cement Pf\/  ......  .\u00ab__.. 30\nCan. industrial  Alcohol     2\nenn.  Cottons 10\nCon.   Oen.   Electric. 300\nCons. Mining & Smelting . 78\nDominion  Bridge  30*r_\nDominion    Glass    .           . 00\nDom.   Textile                    ... \u00abH\nA. p. Orain 3\nHillcrent    Colliers                 ... 50\nLake  of  the Woods  :>\nMassey    Harris 3'.\nMontreal   power                   .. *2U\nMont.   Telegraph M\nNational   Be wer Ion        .      . \u201e.. 38\nNational  Steel   Ca>          \u00bb\u2014 14%\nOgllvle   Millinn 18\u00ab\nOntario Steel  Product* .. . 13\nPenmans   Ltd. 3.1\nPower  Corpn 40\nPrice   Bros.                         -^. 28'.\nShawnlnlgan 38\nSherwin   Williams   . 24<\u00ab\nSo.  Can.  Power 27\nSteel  of   Canada 27\nSt.   Lawrence  Flour Mills 18'.\nWestern   Grocers 12\nWinnipeg   Railway 10'.\nWinnipeg  Railway   pfd-   . M)\nMONTREAL CURB\nMARKET SLUMPS\nMONTREAL, Sept, 10-The miscellaneous section of the Montreal\ncurb market slumped Into Its former\nInactivity during today's session and\nprices  closed   somewhat   lower\nInternation-.l utilities \"A\" lost '. <\u25a0\nat 30%. a new low level for the j\nVear while Chemical Research, Im- j\nperlal Oil and International Utilities]\n\"B\" were fractionally lower. Oo- <\nminion Stores and Home Oil were\nslightly higher at the close. Tha oils!\nwere dull and mixed while ihe\nbeverages werp inactive and the\npublic  utility  group  weaker.\nMoaa continued as the active\nleader of the mining division yesterday with a total turnover of 85,875\nshares which swelled the aggregate\nfor the mining section to a new high\nrecord for thc year at 71.960. Mow\nwas strong throughout the entire\nsession and finished at 49'< oents.\nup 1% cents. Abana was unchanged\nst rour cents. Nipissing lost five\ncents at 1.48.\nC.NJL Bonds Offered\nHEW row. ftept. io (CPi\u2014An\noffertor of \u00bbU.OOO,oqp 4H per cent\ngold bonds today was made by a,\nlocal syndicate o* behalf of thc Canadian  National  railways.\nThe issue Is priced at N end at\nMH ln Canadian funds and Interest\nand hss a 20-year maturity. It Is\nguaranteed as to principal and Interest by  the Dominion of  Canada.\nIn addition the same local syndicate hu obtained an option for sn\nadditional 180,000,000 for bonds.\nThe loan Is understood to be for\ngeneral corporative purposes and is\nsaid to bs for use In strengthening\nthe railway financially and physically.\nTbe last financing tor the railway\nwaa the tale lut January of $50,-\n000,000 il- per oent bonds due 1958.\nOKANAGAN APPLE\nPRICES REDUCED\nBulk Apples Down From $30\nto  $25 a Ton;  Onions\nDown  H\nVSRNOK. B. 0,, Sept. 10.-Three\nprice change* wre declared by producers following deliberations here\nlast night. Bulk ipp.ee were reduced\nfrom $30 a ton to W5; onions from\n*26 to MO, and Hyalop crab\u00bb from\n11 a box to 75 cents. There wu also\nan Informal understanding regarding\nthe price of semi-ripe tomatoes.\nKamloops. and possibly other main\nline points, have been offering them\nat 55 cents, while the Okanagan\nprice hu been 85 centa. It was\nagreed that the Kamloops prloe\nshould be met by those desiring to\ndo so. Shippers in Vernon and the\nOkanagan are not keen to do this.\nRains and cool weather slowed down\nthe movement of *omatoes and business at 56 cents hu 'ooem refused\nby several shippers ln the valley.\nONIONf*  MOVING\nCar lot onions are moving fairly\nfreely. The quality ]s excellent and\nths price ts fair. There Is a good\ncrop to move, and a shortage in\nthe United States, If prices reach\nexport levels where payment of the\nUnited States duty Is possible, onions  will   sil   go..\nPeaches are leaning fent Okanagan  offerings are of  good  qu.llty\nFlemish pesrs are nuw on the\nmarket, hut they sre not going\nrapidly.\nPrune* are away short of market\nrequirements, and all that have not\nmoved are contracted for, and will\ngo out on  firm orders.\nAbout one-third of the Wealthy\ncrop hu moved. The big struggle\nlies ahead. However, thf brokers\nend all the trsde are well satisfied\nwith the quality, much preferring\nthem to green Macs. There is more\nhope that they win all be absorbed\nthis yom than for aome time. Hys-\nlop crabs are bf-cklng up some. The\ntotal movement 1_ very aatlsfactor-\nThe bureau of markets information\nreport*  todsy  a  total   of  378  cars,\nRev. Wm. Allen of Petcrboro is to\nhe inducted as putor of Dovercourt\nRoad Presbyterian church. Toronto.\nand Rev. R. B. Ledingham. formerly\nof Harrlaton. la to be Installed at\nWeston Presbyterian church.\nBIG MISSOURI\nSLUMPS ON THE\nVANCOUVER LIST\nGrandview   If   Active   and\nShows Strength Toward\nClow; C. P. R. Steady\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 10 (CP)\u2014A\nthree-point slump In Big Missouri\nfollowed by partial recovery wu\nchief feature of Uftlcu trading at\nVancouver stock exchange today.\nOpening at 20 cents. Big Misouri\nsoon dropped to 17 cents during the\nmorning session. The short afternoon\nperiod, however, uw the stock\nclimbing again, finally cloalng r.t 19\nfor a net low of one point. Several\nblocks of 10O0 shares changed hands\nat reduced pricea.\nOrandvlew was active and showed\nstrength toward the cloee. Several\nthousand shares chsnged hands at\nfive cents, and a final 1000 brought\nfi'i c;nts. Lorne had a turnover of\nmore than 3500 shares at 10 cents.\nA final odd lot brought only eight\ncents.\nC. P. R wu steady at -117.35,\nPioneer Oold ot 13.30 and Brew. Jt\nDlst. gained half a point to close at\n78 cents.\nSales   totalled   20.843   shares.\nCANADA  BONDS\nWINNIPEO, bept. 10\u2014Dominion of\nCanada bonds were quoted here today as follows;\nWar loans:\n1931, 6 per cent, 99.90.\n1937, fi  per  cent,   106.75.\nVictory loans:\n193.. |U per cent, 104.35.\n1934,  5>_  per oent,  10435.\n1937.  5'i   per cent.   110.20.\nWar loan renewal:\n193i2, B._  per cent.  10220.\nRefunding   loans:\n11143,   ft  per  cent.   105.75.\n1940. 4'_   per cent,   101.75.\n1944. 4'._  per  cent,  101.75.\n1946. 4'._  oer cent.  101.75.\nConversion   loans:\n1966,  IV.   per  rent,   [0__W<\n1057. 4._  per cent,  J0_.0o\n1958, 4'_  per oral. 104-00.\n1959. t-'2 pre cent, 10400.\nWIKNmEO, Gipt. 10-Closlttf St*\\w\nquotations:\nOpen    High Low Cloee\nWbut:\nOct \u201e   51*    -J3V_ 11* MM\nDM    53*      8t* 50* A3*\ntf\u00bby      ...   64*     ftTH M* M*\nOata: '\nOct    37* -   37* 37* 17*\nDee _.   \u00abT*     -37* IT* 37*\nMay    ...   39*     M.\u00ab 39* 39*\nBarley.\nOct    -0_     SDK MH MH\nDec    Jl.      91k -1_ HVk\nMiy    __   MH      MH Mtt MH\nflu:\nOct _   M       10-H .1 Mtt\nOk _ 1\u00bb       100H Mtt \u00abM\nMay    104',.     10t lottt IM\nRM:\nOct.        _1H     3-H Utt S-H\nOk    MH     MH MH MH\nMiy    .....   MH    37'. Mtt -Ttt\ncub  clow:\nWh\u00ab\u00bbt: Ifo. 1 hard 5\u00abtt: fo. I nor\n331.;  No. _  nor.  \u2666_\u00ab_; Ko. 1 nor.\n43V No. 4 MH; IW' \u00bb. >7H; Wo. \u2022\nsr,.  .Md 34',,  trie. BH; Nt. 1\nOur. MH.\nRUSH ON FRUIT\nJAR ACCESSORIES\nWholesale Market Has Steady\nSession; Flour Drops a\nLittle\nWholeule business wu steady'during the past week, though little\nchange lo the pries* or movements\nwere noted. Wholesaler! reduced\ntheir flour prices 10 centa a barrel\non a notice received during th*\nweek.\nCar arrivals numbered 11 and cob-\nfisted of one car flour, wheat, corn.\ncorn flakes And groceries and two ef\nsugar  and   two  or  meat.\nThe Australian sultans are now\noff the market for the time, while\ntlie first of the new canned tomato,\nare expected within the next two\nweeks. The sugar movement is stttl\nheavy while \u00ab large lut minute\nmil. on fruit jar* arfd fruit tar accessories  is  being  experienced.\nThe First Step\nTowards Independence\nTHIS Bank is glad to encourage the beginning of savings that mark the way to\nfuture independence. ,_,\nIMPERIAL BANK OF CANADA\nHEAD OPPICE\nNtLSON\nCRESTON\nBranches et Kovefsfeolce,\nTORONTO\nW.R.C___U___.M*___w\nXIW.CLOWC&I\nEXCHANGE RATES\nN_w YOKX. g\u00abpt. 10\u2014St_rlln_\ncxrh-ni. -My at \u00bb4.B1 _ for 80 d_.\nbills tnd at 14.89 13-18 (or d.mand\nMarks 28.78 .  cento.\nCanadian dollara  ',,  _snt dls.\nFranca 3.-2   1-32  cents.\nLire  8.-2%   oente.\nUruguiy 48 cents.\nNelson approximate sterline ex-\nrhun.e   rate   .4 87   1..-1..\nERGENCIESI\nY ou can ra 11 the doctor\nnt t a. m. but vou\ncannot possibly get\nHennessy Threc Star\nBrandy at  that  hour\nftt i i a\nKEEP  IT   HANDY !\nHENNESSY\nBRANDY\nBOTTLED    AT   COGNAC.    FRANCE \u201e,\nThis ariyertisment is not published or\" displayed by tbe Liquor Control Board or by\nthe Government: of  British  Co____b_l\nf 1\n PAGE   TEN\nTHI NBWON DAILY TttoWB, NEtWW, B- C, VWDAY .MtMWWW,\nCOWAN'S\nFAMOUS\nCHOCOLATE\nSpecial at\n35c per pound\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug Co.\nTAXI\nThe Best of Service\n..Careful, Courteous\n__S      Drivers\nNelson Tranfer Co., Ltd.\nPhone\n35\nHunter Electric\nand Plumbing\nWhite Enamel Sink Drain\nDrain Boards, a A pre\nspecial  \t\nELECTRICAL\nWORK\nGill   is   tot   an.    e\nwork that ill maj :     _\n)o_rbome.   Reasonable ratea,\nSitU-actlon gnaraateet\nMOM I\nL. B. Electric\nROSE\nHairdressing Parlor\nDownstairs\nE.W.C.  Block Wai.   St.\nPhone 317 for Appointments\nA D. PAPAZIAN\nWATCHMAKER,\nJEWELER\nand Graduate Optician\n413  HALL  STBEET\nI   Going Great\nThe new \"PURGO\" Radiator or\nCooling System Cleaner. Harm-\nless to the metal, but thorough\nin action. 75c per tin.\nThe new Radiator \"Neverleak\"\nis also thorough In action, and\nis sold under a money back\nguarantee at 75c per tin.\n\"SERVICE RIGHT NOW**\nat\nNelson Transfer \u00b0\u00b0*.\nPhone 35\nBuilding Materials\nLumber PARAGE?    Bungalow? Store?\nJBrick Industrial Plant?   Whatever\nit is you plan to build, you can\nCement re|y on us for an your building\nLime materials.\nFOR SAIJ-\u2014Door and Frame for Vault. A bargain.\nA. H. GREEN _?_\n(Successor.,  to John Burns fr%Scn)\nPLANT i&Bft. ST OFFICES _&_\u00ab_\u25a0*\n^d SALES OFFICE\nCOKE!!\nis an ideal fuel for home and\ncommercial heating. It is clean,\nand produces no smoke or soot.\nis easy to handle; it maintains\nan even and steady heat at all\ntimes.\nproduces more heat for your\nmoney, and it will' reduce your\nfuel bill considerably.\nKILL UP YOUR BINS NOW\nPRICE\n$12.70 PER TON DELIVERED\nPhone Your Orders to 37, Gas Works\n-CITY of NELSON\nDo You Want to\nSave Ten Dollars?\nBy a special arrangement with the manufacturers we\nare enabled to allow $10.00 for any old stove on\nthe purchase of a\nNewMcClary Royalty Range\nSale from Saturday, September 12 to\nSaturday, September 19. (Inclusive)\nWood Vallance Hardware\nCompany, Limited\nWholesale - NELSON, B. C. - Retail\nRUNAWAY CAR ON\nWARD-HITS CAFE\nBREAK GLASS\nCar Was Owned by H. Brock\nof Spokane; Damage Is\nSmall\nWhen Its brakei. slipped from\nplace, an automobile owned by H.\nBrock of Bpokane. parked on the\nEast side of Ward Street Mid about\nso feet from the ami cafe, started\ndown the atreet and crashed Into\nths cafe Thuraday night. As the car\nhad little space In whleh to gain\nmomentum, the damage that resulted from the crash was negligible\nThe bumper of the car broke a\nsmall hole In the glass front of\nthe  cafe.\nDOMINION  LIVESTOCK\nWINNIPEG, Sept 10- Receipts:\nCattle 890; 178 calves; 480 hogs;\n470 sheep.\nSteers, up to 10M lbs.; Good and\nchoice  *4.76   to  15.78.\nSteers, over 1050 lbs.: Oood nnd\nchoice  15.00   to   J6.00-\nHeifers: Oood and choice $4.00 lo\n$5.00. ^^^^\nFed calves: Good and choice 88.00\nto   $7.00.\nCows: Oood  $276  to $3.25.\nBulls:   Oood   $1.50   to   $1.75\nfeeder   steers:\nWoman and Child\nInjured by Auto\nWord wu reoetved in Nelson last\nnight that Mrs. A. H. Hughes and\nll-year-old daughter, Muriel, of Penticton , who were lnj und br an\nautomobile In Vancouver Tuesday,\nhad been discharged from the hospital. H. E. Hugh\u00a3ft ol Kelson received this Information.\nThey were picked up In a semiconscious condition snd conveyed to\nBt. Paul's hospital. Ths Uttle girl\nwas the most seriously Injured. The\nautomobile Is reported to have passed over her body- Shs Huffered\nfrom head Injuries and bruises and\nlacerations. Her _uother suffered\nmostly   from  shock.\nStocker an<i feeder steers; Oood\nS3 50  to $4.26, ^^^^^^^^^^\nStock cows and heifers; Oood\n$2.50   to   $3.25,^^^^^^^^^^^\nVeal calves: Good snd choice $5.50\nto   $7.00. ^^^^^^^^^^\nHogs; Select bacon $1 per head\npremium; bacon $8.\nLambs;    Oood    handywelght    $6\nSheep: Good heavies $2.00 to $2.50.\nLONDON    CLOSE\nLONTJON. Sept. 10\u2014_ \u25a0 P 18'4;\nBr<iz Tr $14^: Distillers \u00a32 7s;\nDunlop 17s; Pord lT%d; Grama-\nphone 13b 6d; Hudson Bay 18s 6d;\nHydro Elec $14*4; Imp] Chem 10s\n\u25a0i'ld; int Hold & Inv l%; Intl Nckl\n$12; Shell T * T 12s 6d; Vickers\n7s 9d; Consols for money \u00a356 fis;\nBrlt five pet war loan 100 fis;\nBrlt 4^   pet  war loan 97  15s.\nFIRE CHIEFS ARE\nVISITORS, NFI SON\nFernie.   Kssondale  and  Trail\nChiefs Visit With Chief\nMaloney\n\"Paddy\" Hughes.c fire chief of\nEssondale, W. J. Crawford, chief of\nthe Pernle fire department and\nPlre Chief A. A. McDonald of Trail\nare In Nel\/ron visiting with Plre\nChief M. H. Malone.\nMr. Hughes accompanied by \"*t.ls\nboys, motored to the city trom\nEssondale Wednesday afternoon and\nMr. Crawford motored from Fernie\nthe day before. They are here on\nmatters pertaining to the departments.\nPLEAD GUILTY AT \/\nTRAE FOR HAVING\n0UTD0ORTOILETS\nAre  Remanded;  Charge  for\nDriving; to Common Dan*\nger   Also  Remanded\nTRAIL, B..C Sept. 10\u2014Israel McDonald and Nell MacKenzle each\npleading guilty to having outdoor\ntoilets on their property within city\nlimits, were remanded for one week\nwhen they appeared before Magistrate Noble Binns In poliea court\ntbls afternoon. Dr. p. B. Eaton,\ncity health officer, laid the charge.\nR. J. Clegg, city solicitor, suggested\nthe cases be remanded for one week\nas both defendants wort having\nmodern plumbing 'n   _.\nCharge of drlvh;.; . the common danger agalnm. _.. Marshall of\nRossland was also remanded for a\nweek the defendant being lti and\nunable to appear at court.\nM, tf*_s^Btt****t**t3**mm\nSNOWDEN'S TAX\nFALLS ON MANY\nBRITISH ITEMS\n(Continued  Prom Pag\u00bb One)\nborrowing powen were exhausted, he\nsaid.\nREDUCES   DEBT\nKINKING   IX*ND\nHe proposed te reduce the\ndebt sinking fund appropriation\nboth this year and next from\n-$250,000,000 to Jl\u00ab,500,000. Deficits he proposed to meet In\nthis wise:\nEconomies In expenditure   .$110,000,000\nSavings on debt redemption       68,500,000\nTaxation,  Inland\nrevenue     145,000,000\nCustoms  and   excise\nIncreases       57,500,000\nthe absolute problbdtlc-n of otrtain\nclasses ot lu-curtaa Aon abroad, as\n'w*e dont in wartime. It wm latar\nannounced ths gorenunont had appointed a committee of three \u00ab-\npert* to examine without delay tbe\npracticability of this proposal.\nTbe house agraed to various tax\nincrease naoluttou tonight without\na vote, and adjourned attar setting\nnext Tuesday for debate on tbe\nbudget. Acceptance of the resolutions on the first night is ln ac-\n(ordanoe with practice, sa It is\ngenerally apcepted tbat the government^ budget proposals, onoe they\nare made, must be given Immediate\neffect. Challenge and debate come\nat a later stage.\nConfederation Life\nInsurance Company\nHandles Old Concern\nTORONTO, Ont.. Sept. 10.\u2014Shareholders wf Confederation Life Insurance company, meeting yesterday, unanimously approved taking\nover the business of ths Commerrlnl\nTravellers' Mutual Insurance society.\nIts membership totals approximately 1260. and Is Insured for 02.-\n250,000, and members are guaranteed by Confederation Life that at\nno future time wtll rates be Increased. Present automatic premium,\nloan coi*lltlons in travellers' policies  will  be continued,\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nMONTREAL, Sept. 10_Butter declined while cheese and egg quotations advanced. Carlot prices of\nprairie or Ontario eggs were mainly\nhigher, extras and firsts gaining a\ncent at 29 to 30 cente and 24 V 85\ncents while seconds were unchanged\nat 18 to 19 cents a down. British\nColumbia extras were quoted at 32\ncents a dozen,\nCheese, Ontario, tllfc to ll._.\nChwse, Quebec. 10% to 11.\nButter, No. 1  finest, 20.\nEggs, fresh >peclals in cartons,\n35  to 38.\nEggs, fresh extras in cartons, 33\nto 34.\nEggs, fresh first* In cartons, 38\nto 29.\nA Week-End Dress Special\n25 Silk Dresses in all colors anci\nin sizes to 44. Price   $_L9__\nSWEATERS\u2014Silk and Wool and\nAll Wool. .Goat style and pullover.\nRegular ?7.50 to ?9.50 for $4.95\nCool weather is here\u2014Pick your\nFall Coat from our large selection\n\u2014Fur trimmed from \u00a729 UP-\nHISTORY REPEATS ITSELF\nMILLINERY. HATS WORN AT\nTHE EMPRESS EUGENIE ANGLE IN THE HENRY VIII.\nAND MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS\nMODELS.    PRICED FROM\n$3.50 l0 $9.50\nJtffJJ-.lr.r.'.q.ii'iAL\nNew Fuel\nDistributors\nHarry Burns, former Manager of The Canadian Pacific Railway Company's Tie and Timber\nBranch at Canal Flats, B. C. and his son Gordon\nK, Burns of Bums, Oregon, havc commenced a\ngeneral fuel, cartage and storage business on the\nC. P. R. flats between the City Gas Plant and\nthe Imperial Oil Company, under the name of\nBurnsCoal&Cartage\nCompany\nPHONE 53\nThey will specialize in Gait Coal from Lethbridge and Crow's Nest Pass Coal from the\nGreenhill and Bellevue mines at Blairmore and\nBellevue, Alberta, and will also handle Cord wood.\nTheir storage building is on C. P. R. trackage\nand is a two story brick warehouse with an iron\nroof and hag a full sized concrete basement. The\nbuilding is spacious, being 75 feet long and 40\nfeet wide with high ceilings. It is clean and dry\nand suitable for any class of storage.\nThe Burns family are well known lo many of\nthe people of Nelson; Harry Burns being a brother of John Burns and the son Gordon, being a\npupil of the Nelson schools.\nManager Overseas\nMirror Edition Is\n\u2022    Visitor to Nelson\nDelight.- with condition. In Canada, and very much Imptwesed by\nthe size of the newspapers and\nthe excellent news service which\nthey publish, even ln the smaller\ncommunities, G. A. Parker, manager\nof the London Dally Mirror Overseas Edition, was ln Nelson yesterday. Mr. Parker, while ln the city\nwas the .guest of Mr. and Mr..\nJ.  T.  Beafby.\nROADWORK WILL\nMEET STANDARD\nIN ALL CASES\n(Continued  Prom Page- One)\nfell, the eastern extremity of Mr\nRamsay'* territory. Here about 30\nmen will start as soon as arrangements are completed. They will be\naided with a gasoline shovel and\ntrucks, and will commence work of\nrelocating and standardising the\nhighway one mile and a half west\nof Ooatfell. ITiis work will resiflt ln\nthe building of a permanent straight\nhighway 34 feet C .Inches In width.\nIt  will  cut out  numwous  curves.\nIn place of a camp in the Duck\nCreek district ths government will\nemploy local men. who will sleep\nat their homes. About 20 men will\nbe working between Duck Creek\nand Alice Siding. This will also be\nstandardization work.\nWASHOUT   CAMP\nWest of Duck Creek tho govern-\nment ls taking over an old building at Washout creek. Proiji here\n20 to 25 men will be put to work\na really bad pleoe of highway.\nThey will construct a road Joining\ntwo new sections completed last\nwinter.\nMr. Ramsay plans another camp\nIn the vicinity of Sirdar, but expect* to do this portion of highway\nas winter work. He plans to widen\nand improve the road from Sird&r\nto the place where It Joins the old\nrailway grade into Kuskanook. With\nthe easing of traffic ln tbe winter.\nmore progress can be made on this\nsection of work.\n40  MEN   AT  WORK\nAt Boewell, Norman McLeod has\n40 men at work on completion of a\nportion of the main lake highway.\nThey are working on 3300 feet of\nhighway, Considerable rock work ls\nattached to this Job. Two shovejs.\nihree trucks and a compressor are\nused   by  ths McLeod  crew.\nIn the vicinity of Oray Creek\nOscar Burden Is supervising completion of one-third of a mile of\nroad, work on which was suspended\non July 3L Work in this camp wtll\nbe under way full blast on Monday.\nThe road is passable at present ln\nthis district. A truck and tractor\nwtll  aid  the workers.\nAt Laird creek, this side of\nPraser's Landing, John McKay will\nhave a crew at work standard lalng\nV-_ miles (rf road. Ho will use\ntractor, grader and trucks. The\ncamp of 25 men will likely be increased to 40 ln a short time.\nWILL IMPROVE\nFROM   MCDONALD'S\nThomas Dronsfield is preparing a\ncamp at Sltkum creek. He will have\ncharge of a crew of men who will\nbe working from McDonald's Landing toward Balfour. The Balfour\nroad foreman will have charge of a\nsimilar crew working toward McDonald's. Mr. Dronsfleld's crew will\nwork from the camp and the Balfour men will sleep at their homes.\nThis portion of work will bring\nup to standard two and one-half\nmiles of winding, narrow road on\nth*   Nelson-Balfour   highway.\nToday a gasoline shovel, recently\noverhauled here, will be unloaded\nfor work on this portion of the\nroad. Two or three trucks will be\nused in hauling, but a great portion\nof* the shovel work will be casting\nover, and widening to bring the\nroad to standard width.\nCHINA   CREEK   CAMP\nEngineer William Talbot is at\npresent supervising thf construction\nof a camp at China creek. A dining room ls being built to accommodate 50 or 60 men. A cook-house\nis alto going up. When this camp\nis completed the men will be put\nto work on the rebuilding of that\nportion of road between the top of\nChina creek hill to the approach to\nthe store at Blueberry. This will\nme___i the rebuilding of about one\nmile of highway.\nAt present the government has a\nfew men engaged In d'tching on the\nTrail and Rossland road. This crew\nwill be added to shortly, and will\nconcentrate on standardization of\nthat section of hlghwiiy leading to\nthe proposed subway under the Canadian Pacific railway tracks on\nthe outskirts of Trail\nROSSLAND  ANO CASCADE\nThe engineer is in hopes of having a few men working shortly\nbflween Roasland and the first\nsummit on the Rngsland-Caacade\nhighway. He also intends putting a\ncrew of from 12 to 15 men on the\nsection of road between the first\nand aecond sum-r^ts. Widening and\nstandardization is the object.\nThe rock crusher at china creek\nis now working fine, and is capable\nof handling 200 yards of three-\nquarter siae dally. 'Pacific Engineers\nare going ahead with paving In thi\u00ab\nsection.\nAt present no bridge work Ih\ncontemplated, but material is being\nassembled for rebuilding of a bridge\nat Appledale. This wfrk will be\ndone during the winter months.\nTotal   Increase   ..... 38l.0O0.O04i\n]     Old   estimated   deficit     :.605,0OO\nThe budget speech did not go\ninto details of the economy plans.\nBut additional white papers indicate\n.weeping changes contemplated In\nunemployment Insurance. In addt*\ntion to reduced benefits and increased contributions _; fharp cv.eck\nwill be placed\u25a0 on the payment of\ntransitional benefits. Transitional\nbenefits are benefits paid after the\nperiod of ordinary benefits covered\nby contributions are exhausted. They\nare borne entirely by the national\nexchequer.\nAfter insurance rights have expired\u2014at the end of 26 weeke-\n| tests are to be impoted before pay-\n! ment of the transitional benefit.\nj Unemployed to obtain the benefit\nwill be required to attend an employment exchange to prove unemployment. The exchange will request\nthe public assistance authority to\nassess their need and determine the\namount payable. Estimated savings\nunder this head is $50,000,000. The\nsaving from reduced benefit ts estimated at $64,000,000.\nEVERY  PERSON   TAXED\nUnder   the   new   assessments,\nevery   pernon   who   pays   Income\ntax at the standard rate will be\nrequtred   to  turn  one-fourth   of\nhis Income  mrr to the government.   The   exemption  limit   for\nmarried   men   will   he   reduced\nfrom   SI 125   to   $180,   and   for\nsingle   men   from   $675   to  $500.\nAllowances   tor children  will  be\neut from  $300  to $250 for  the\nfirst   child,   and   from   $250   to\n$200  for  the  others.\nAs the  budget speech ended,  Mr.\nSnowden   sank   back   into   his   seat\namid   a   wild   ovation.   It   was   hla\nfourth   budget   and   his   last,    for\nwhen the national government's task\nls completed, it is understood he will\nretire from the commons.\nPlanked by Rt. Hon. Stanley Baldwin, lord president of the oouncll,\nSir Herbert Samuel, home secretary,\nand Premier Ramsay MacDonald.\nwho bowed low in tribute, the\nchancellor hunched in relaxation.\nThen ho turned toward the ladles'\ngallery, high above the speaker's\nseat, where his wife sat, His face\nwas wreathed ln smiles.\nIS  ACCLAIMED\nMen who a few weeks ago were\nbitter political enemies now acclaimed blm. Hts former colleagues\nof the Labor party, now the opposition to the national government,\nsat silent and sullen. A few booed\nand taunted  him.\nMr. Snowden** only sally wae\nmatte in announcing the new beer\ntax of two cents a pint was effective tomorrow. \"So you have not\nmuch  tune to lose.\"\nDuring the subsequent debate,\nWalter  Runciman, Liberal,  proposed\nOWENS WINS AT\nFRUITVALE FAIR\nTRAIL.     B      C,     8*pt.     10.\u2014Five\nfirst* and three seconds were won\nby J. B. Owen and his son, Finch\nOwen, of Trail for exhibits at tbe\nFrultvale fair, it wa* reported today,\nFirst prizes were for Delicious\nvpples, squash, citron, leaks and\npickling  onions.\nThe seconds were for canteloupes\ncitron and pumklns.\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nIna M- Steed, Teacher of pianoforte, studio Gllker Block, Tel 643\nor 495L. 17160)\nWanted\u2014Plums, Apples and Oreen\nGages\u2014McDonald jam Co. Ltd., Nelson. (7068>\nSalesman-Collector wanted. Commission basis. 213 Medical Arts\nBldg. (7232)\nft \t\nDaughters of Scotia meets tonight\n8 p.m.    Flower Drill. (7259)\nReserve September 25 for Colleens\ntea   at   home   of   Mrs.   B.   Lowery.\n(7266)\nThere will be a meeting of the\nschool board tn the city hall tonight,   8   o'clock. (7267)\nBASEBALL\u2014BURTON     CITY    VS.\nNELSON.     SUNDAY,   OAME   2:30.\n(7256)\nNOtlCE\nThe Ainsworth hotel is closed for\nthe season. Thc swimming pool Is\nstill  open. (7362)\nBASEBALL\u2014 Sunday, pans we\nneed jour support. Swell the crowd\nand encourage t>ur boys. Game\nat 2:30. (7257)\nNelson Ferry will not. operate between the hours of 6 am. and 9\na.m. Sunday. Sept. 13th. \u2014Provincial   Public   Yorks. (7261)\nTwo large furnished suites for\nrent. Well heated with private bath\naccommodation for a family of four.\nAnnable Block. (7069)\nNOTICE\nCanadian Legion Ladies 'Bowline\nclubC. Ladles wishing to Join our\nclub. Ladies wishing to join our\nget information from Mrs. J. C.\nHooker sec, on or before Octobr\n1.  1981. <726_>\nSugar Bowl\nGrocery\nFRIDAY  and  SATURDAY\nSPECIALS\n14 cakes  P A   (\u2022  Soap and\n1 large  Galvanized   Pail     $1.00\n3 pkt*. Lux             XI\nSunltght    soap,   pkt     M\nPrincess  Soap  Flaken,\n2 lbs     M\nDr. Watson's  Tonic Ale or\nStout,   pkt.    M\nCreamery Butter (Our Special)\n3 lbs.   for    M\nOur   Special   Pekoe  Tea,\n3   lbs.   for    _...   .SO\nBlue Ribbon  or  Malktns\nBest  Coffee   SO\n4 Ih*.  sultanas for  50\n4 lbs.  Raspberry or Strawberry   Jain      J 60\nI   lb.   Braid's   Best   Tea   55\n(Wtth Cup and  saucer)\n4   can*   Sliced   Pineapple    45\n8 cans Peas or Tomatoes   1.00\nSO  lb*.  Granulated  Sugar  \u201e.. 1.00\nPHONE   110\nDeliveries   9   s.   tn.   to  5   p.   m.\nIncluding  Fairview.\nTrail News of the Day\nTRAIL HOUSES AMD LOTS.  IN-\nsuranc..     Notary.     J.   D.   Anderson.    Trail. (709-1\nShoe Repairs\nNow is the time to\nprotect your feet\nfrom dampness and\ncolds by having' them\nwell soled by us \u2014\nWith our modern\nGoodyear machines\nwe offer you the best\nof workmanship.\nYour scuffed light\nshoes will give you a,\nlot of extra wear if\nyou have them dyed\nblack now for fall\nwear.\nWade's Shoe\nShop\nTAXI and\nTRANSFER\nPhon*\n_[_ Dally Freight Schedule\nto Troll and RoMland.\nLeaves Nelaon 10 e,m.\nTrail Depot\u2014Dominion Garage\nRowland   Depot\u2014L.   D.   Cafe\nCON. CUMMINS\nGLASSES\nJ. A. C. Laughton, R. 0.\nOPTOMETRIST   and   OPTICIAN\nSuite 203 .OS, Medical Arts Bldj.\nCITY DRUG CO.\nNelson's Dispensing Chemists\nAlways at Your Service\nPHONE 84 BOX  1083\nCall and get jour correct\nwelrth   FREE\nHeavier\nUnderwear for\nFall\nNow that the days\nare cooler you win\nbe thinking of heavier underwear. Prices\nthis season are very\nmuch lower. Our new\nstock is now complete in Stanfields,\nHatchway aad\nCeetee.\nStanfields Red Label\n$3.50\nStanfields A. C.\n$3.00\nStanfields 8800\n$5.50\nHatchway B. B.\n$4.50\nHatchway F. F.\n$3.50\nHatchway 33\n$2.50\nCeetee All Wool\n$4.25 $7.00 to\n$8.75\ny*\n\u25a0\ni\nPHONE\n77\nPrelght\nDally  ta\naad ma, 1* i\nTraU   nan*   _M\nELKS T. I. \u2022 F. LTD,\nU-Need-A Foot Lotion\nfor   Corns,   callouses.   Bunions,\nsweating, Aching and Tired reat]\nSmythe't Pharmacy!\nPRESCRIPTION   SPECIALIST\nPRONE   1\nShop wtth ns br nail   \u2022\nTWO  SHOWS\nNIOHTLT\n7 AND 0 P.M.\nMATINEE\n2  O'CLOCK\n\\\\s\\\\au\/\/\/\/A\nI \\ \\ IS I u\nTHE AT WE\nTODAY\nand\nSATURDAY\nA GREAT COMEDY OF YOUNG MODERNS\nWHO LOVE, LAUGH AND LIVE\n\"UP POPS THE DEVIL*\nWHAT HAPPENS TO A\n\"DEN-US\" WHEN HE\nTURNS  HOU8EWITE?\n'\u2022UP POPS THE DEVIL\"\nWHAT   HAPPENS   TO\nMARRIAGE   WHIN   A\nWIPE   \"KEEPS\"   HER\nHUSBAND?\n\"UP POPS THE DEVIL\"\nwith\nTODAYS   3TOBY   OP\nTODAY'S  MERRY  MAR.\nRIAOB.. PAST  MOVING\n\u2014WITH   IAUOHS\nGALORE.\nSHEETS GALLAGHER\nSTEWART IRWIN\nCAROL LOMBARD\nLILYAN  TASHMAN\nNORMAN FOSTER\nA BRILLIANT COMEDY ROMANCE\n\"UP POPS THE DEVIL\"\n. COMEDY\nTOM    HOWARD\n\"BV    EXPRESS\"\nSCREEN   BONO\n\"MARIUT.H\n'4*\nNOVELTY   PAJtCE\n\"CRAZY   HOUSE\"\nwith\nBENNY   RI BIN\nr.VRA\nIAMC\nNEW\nP-NT\nWARNER BAXTER,\n\":\ntXT  ATTRACTION\u2014\nOAN BENNETT In \"DOCTORS' WIVES\"\nwith\nNEW SERIAI_---\"THE LONE DEFENDER\"\nwith RIN-TTN-TIN (The Wonder Dog)\nSTARTS TOMORROW AFTERNOON\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_11","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0405633","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"}]}}