@prefix ns0: . @prefix edm: . @prefix dcterms: . @prefix dc: . @prefix skos: . @prefix geo: . ns0:identifierAIP "4526f401-5623-4125-85b3-612643703e41"@en ; edm:dataProvider "CONTENTdm"@en ; dcterms:isPartOf "BC Historical Newspapers"@en ; dcterms:issued "2013-10-04"@en, "1925-10-23"@en ; dcterms:description "All the News of the Creston District"@en, ""@en ; edm:aggregatedCHO "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/xcrestonrev/items/1.0174511/source.json"@en ; dc:format "application/pdf"@en ; skos:note """ his mother; arriving ffrong Corbiti on Friday. Ritchie and M. Huil, who have- been working in Alberta for the past few months, arrived home last week,' and wi?!. probably be remaining for the winter. Mr. McLachitrn, a brother of Mrs. Roy Browell, is here on a visit from Saskatchewan; and .is planning to remain for the winter. . " |~ Pete'Demers, a one-time resident of Canyon, but since 1915 a resident,is* Alberta, is "Che purchaser of the" Martin Nelson place. Pete has been working at Kitchener the past few months, and has Just. added another boy to the family, the newcomer arriving on the Sth. E. Nouguier is claiming To be not only the first- local hunter to get * a deer this season, but also the first ever to bag one at the top of Canyon mountain. .<- Martin Nelson, who recently sold his ranch to Pete Denaers, ' has just purchased ten acres of the Geo. .Leach ranch, being the half nf it which is still standing in bush. Gordon Vance is back from Alberta where the snow and wet weather delayed threshing so badly that it was not worth while waiting - around* *for .work to reopen. "- C. A. Robinson bf Calgary, Alta. who is here looking after sonoe improvements on his ranch, has a new poultry house under construction. It is of cement and is 16 x 40 feet. He is planning an addition to tbe house in the spring. Kuskanook is not the only spot in the Valley tbafenjoys freedom from frost. JS. Nouguier teas us thai, his Senator Dunlap*"strKwberriesare yielding him twelve imps per weeK, pickiiijf half adobes Wednesdays and ^Satur-*. days. "' * _ . ���������* P. Harback, who has charge of tbe United Church, work -here, is making great headway with young peop"e*a* work. He has a boy scout troop meeting weekly and is also developing the boys at football, and will have a_ practice match one "day next week. He-is also handling a dramatic -company of seven who will present the comedy, *-Matrimonial Agency,"' at the Ladies' Aid Thanksgiving entertainment next month. are not In very great _a_-_a;____ K_>_Ufll|c, !_.!_. OT UIVU . '- Potato sacks ^*.������ij������"_.*WiA .4. A taking up about the lightest spud crop ever, some ranchers not getting more than a ton the acre. r mv. and Mrs. \\T_ JDickson^ who have occupied the new house on the former Stace Smith ranch, have this week moved to town, where they will reside for the winter. - Mrs. Leslie .McMurtrie and young son left on Friday for Winnipeg, Manitoba, where they will reside for the present, at least- ~ , " 7 Residents cannot recall a time when coyotes were so numerous and noisy as they are this fall. From the howling that comeg. from around Luke's ford, the animal's must' be making headquarters there in very large numbers. Gordon Smith arrived from "Butte, Montana, on. Thursday, on a visit with Mrs. Smith and the family here. Mrs. Midford has leased her ranch to a family from Blairmore. Alta.-, who gets possession immediately, and she left on Friday for Wsnatchee. Dick Smith is hoping for a cootinu ance of the present Indian summer weather. He "is at work erecting a new barn on tbe ranch. Imperial Bank Up Tuesday _ Fully credit >fpr^Jbeing exciting day in- Creston's __������__.*. -. . -_7; " __* ___-"k.*_;2 -i-_ - ������Sw iiiUov wn V������JH>*&������SUt ll[* (lU> 0-,4-tlU_������__ "cwt-'k ~.mA'm ������.������._- Cuuuc? J=!r._rs ������^aa-, the most history to Tuei Mtfiauj -������U J"!?���������3 j-uteE-Jiootv * _ j, or Gen. Bourne, Who is now employed on the section crew at Moyie, was a weekend visitor here' with Mr, nnd Mrs. Churchill. \\ Birth-���������On October lOfcb, to Mr. and Mrs. Harry Oatendorf, a gon. Will Vanesa is home for a visit with The Association of die L.O?B.A. cordially Invite you to.a : held in their Lodge' room over Mercantile Store, M. Wigen's box factory finished its annual output of boxes on Monday, ������nu is closed for fche winter* R. "E. Corn well, who is on'the staff of the Bluebell mine at Riondel,. was home for the weekend, returning on Tuesday.,^ .- - ' ."���������factor Jonnson,-who has a logging contract at Saltticr, 1B.C. left with his team for tbot point on Tuesday, loading at Kuskanook*. Mrs. J. E. .lohnson took h flying tiip to Spokane a few days, accompanying an A'.ice Siding party, nnd travelling by auto. T. B. Burnett -is here '.at present, making arrangements for the erection of quite a large house on his Wynndel property, adjoining A. Cameron's. John Bathie and H. A. Bathie, jr., are working at the Rodgers'hiill at v-vnyors, on sojijc ������>-.,,c>* r������"pa,r *���������������<. J. Benedetti and son, August, on Tuesday for Nelson, whew hitter has to go into the hospital medical care anil treatment. on which the. Imperial ^Bank staff was held up by; two heavily armed but unmasked t_^_3t@, **$������o made off witb $7500.00 in cash, ab^Ut $2500 of which was recovered Jatij tlje same day when one of th? ^bastdit^- %as captured- on the ranch cf B������ A.f ^Palfreyman, about **���������.**������������������������**- whow *������* v*i������*^<-rva*������wr*jr The holdup was, slaged about &S0. Mr. Neligh.of Kitchener was in the bank at thetihae getting his bank book balanced by Manner C. W. Allan, whilst the cashier Fred Boulfrm ' was at work.at & desk atthe rear ot the cagp. Without looking up from his work Allan had stepped a couple of feet along the desk JU^vui-d the wall, and when he stepped back to complete his work be found hluiself covered by a business like looking automatic revolver in the handt- of one of the gunmen, whilst thb other* similarly" equipped covered him from the other side of the casbief*fe:Jcage. Before the . coxftniand ean&e for ���������-hands wp", Allan grabbed his revolver and opened*: fire^on the robber in f roni of him and the fire was returned by both the* invaders, Allan keeping up the shooting till ihe five, shells in his revolver were: Emptied, when he quite calmly remarked that he was through and put hu?arn|3 up. El"*!'i������o___!_. !������? wiuj^ao hs** ly* *-H-������_r_^������y������ <-r������ get into the cage for his gun with the second highwayman keeping an eye on him and a_a the--fI__*_.t--!_Q.ari _oijo-a^l v.?a way into the office and thence in pursuit, coming in close quarters with the pair just as. they were climbing the Truscott fence.' The- captured man stopped long enough to fire almost half a dozen shots which the officer ff..nt������*-~_ i ��������������� ���������*������.���������_.-��������� .. ���������mm ������. lunuiuu, MJy.lf "nri������,_|UUIa ������*UWl, at McLaren, to replied in like J--K.D ������_" l...mA.f |������v ._aA_a_kl.l_xrl 96.^ _u ^_r.������.������������. Mrs* Markle and two children "** of Bull; River are here at present, on a visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. P. Heric ���������a-. !*B-k^_ %*.\\ C in town had bees and a posse of citizens numbering almost fifty got away in pursuit by- auto, with telephone central notifying all points aaaiiiuci t;������x_ii,tisumt> whilst^-tho polftje '.k'from. Yahk, Klngsgntie And^Cranbw?6k_ also rushed to. the scene liy auto to assleb the local olftcer ivith operations. ^ '> In connection with the affair Innp. Dunwoo4y npchku in high appreciation of the oerv tees rendered " so promptly ���������nr-d thoroughly |wy : so many cktiatens who droppi'd ovdrything in ot-ler to gpab a gun and help with the hunt for ,thVro|*he|P'i. ''���������'",', ���������'������������������!'������������������ ::. -,."'' I the -Hisss*sift'"ecl_iiioi_ ea-liu*. In _ theF I month advised-the trustees _*> xnake preparations for prcviding "a - second room. As present the attendance is up to thirty seven and it* will sotbe long before the scholars are over the- forty _crf~rk^ " Mrs. Blandy of Netehosan, B.C.. .who has been here for a -few weeks visit with Mrs. Lister, left, fbrjfhome on .Monday. The school scholars will have a full holiday on Thursday next the school will be required for polling purposes* Thes-e are 112 names on the^Lister list but due to absences it is no* likeAjc. more tlian 70 votes will be polled*-... John Bird will be in charge - oft***'" voting,jvith John Finlay, probably, poll clerk. -- , Quite a good crowd is expected tonight at the schoolhouse for the~dance that ia being given to provide funds for boy scout work. Mrs.' Lister is responsible-for the music, and the ladies interested are providing the lunch. _-. GRAND THEATRE FRIDAY, Oet. 23 SPEAKERS: L. "f W 1"V , g "Spjk m% fe-'^Wi" l������*armor��������� Labor Candidate. ��������� *>��������� *Uo*islt������r oeVANCOIJVEB Coma and H&arilw Facts about Anti-Dumping j \\ MJata** Co.., XJiirUji* got Iwick at the outB. oJT I ho week from TCiast Kootenay points, where hu hud h������<-n speaking in tho interests of Dr. Butlcdge, the Conservative candidate Sum Ln-eachuk arrived in from Kellogg, Idaho, at the. end of the week, and will -bo remaining on his place Inspector Manning on hla visit to ,..# Stirliiig! Humorua! JDramatsc i Swift! ''':.Ajk'���������- '''.'���������' - ���������"��������� *" ������������������ ���������" .; Eleai.or Eordman in a Story of Thrills and Mystery. " ��������� ''The Silent 7 ' *.',.."-���������. Accuser" Jack Rbylo's stoiy of mystery^ crime and a dog; of it thrilling man hunt through two continents. . A story to make you ting!6 with* c*x- ' cttemesit. REGULAR PRICES -tj_i������,-jWM*___^__j^*(^*Safliiaj^i ,-^tj������jtuJiCTi^i}fci^i'_-*rm-)i^^^^i_h������ji aiiai^^uo i) t MilmMmtM;*nwr���������������' ri tt-yrfr-'-*' ���������T'S -*���������' Ifcr I *, -;-u ���������*-������������������. ^ ^.^������������������iL-^.fe_^_-^^ . ���������' LTJ^_S?^I -*-*-t-*-|-H-->B------OT :a^^;:SEfS|fet ckeston-k-^.' ;. a- *-H_i-K_j_. ������01166 1 here Is JLNo Argument against patety Ganiidt Ask7 Fancy Prices Court in Potsdam Fined Guide For Six dollars! - is too much for any guide to charge for taking tourists' through Sans Souci Castle and atiier sights of Potsdam, in the -opinion ot the court of Appeals. Guides for tourists are* not a luxury, as held by the lower court whose decision was re- ..^...r.^.1 V_������������.- _~ _3_.������7_,. ��������������������� n n n r. f. f-4 ariocsj,. -uut. . c������. daijj necessii therefore cannot command - prices. The case arose out ol* a difference some months ago between a party ot Englishmen" and a Potsdagi guide named Max Schulz. - -The guide had fancy One of the busiest sections of the world today, if. indeed, not tlie busiest, are these rraiih. -provinces of Canada. From early mourning until late at night, men a/id women, too, noi by .tens of thousands alone but hundreds of charged 25 marks for taking the party thousands, will he engatred in harvf sting the great grain crops of the. West. Tens ot thousands o7 helpers from Eastern Canada and the Pacific coast are here to help in the huge task. Thousands of horses and millions of dollais worth of van oh i aery are bting employed.- It is a time of hard work, but it" is alsov-i lihie of satisfaction as the results of a year's toil are garnei-ed. The vory magnitude of ihe task, and the large numbers of people engaged", call for the taking of.precautions against accidents. "Safety First" should around, whereupon "the Englishmen appeale*4^to the courts. The lower court believed "that anybody who can afford a guide - is rich enough to pay whatever the guide may charge. The state's attorney held, however, that Germany, and'' especially Potsdam, be the motto of all. As a writer in-' the American Red Cross Courier says, i have every reason to encourage the there is no argument against safety.7.:No one ever heard of safety tilling hospitals or-graves, or destroying property...or ..resulting in loss of any kind. It is the failure to exercise due caul iov. that causes these iiisasters. Not. a year passes hut the annual Western harvest takes its toll of life, oi" others crippled and maimed for life, of property destroyed. ... ..The' practice ol'''"Safety First" will prevent most o������ these calamities. Millions of acres of ripened "grains and grasses present'untold possibilities of loss if every care is not exercised to prevent flres from starting. Once "started there is no telling to what awful dimensions they may spread, resulting in loss not only of crops bnt of homes and other possessions and possiblj* lil'e itself. It may require a little extra time and labor to take proper precautions, but it is, the cheapest possible form of insurance. Bindeis, mowers, threshing machine outfits are powerful agents not only, for harvest operations, hut for cutting off arms and legs if care is not exercised to keep out' ot: the way of such moving machinery. Wherever possible cogwheels, moving belts, knives and gears should be protected,"not-that they* need protection, but because ihe workers need to be protected from them. It sllould be borne in mind by tlie employing farmer that many of his harvest help-may have had no previous experience about, or in the' handling ofrlna- chinery. . . ***���������" "' . 7 -. The straight-thinking man respects safely "he knows its real value. Down through the ages this has been revealed over, and over again. It is the fool who rushes in where angels fear to tread, who forges ahead regardless of consequences to himself or his Cellowmen. Speed is all-right in its place, but. its place is not in attempting a level crossing in front of an approaching express train."- Nor is it in-saving the time necessary to plough a fireguard. The farmer who at great labor and expense ploughed liis fields, sowed seeds,-has seen his crop pass safely through air the vicissitudes of weather, insured it against hail, and "provided the.machinery and help to'harvest it, wiii not now in the final* rush of harvest operations, if he is wise, neglect any pre-: caution-that can he taken to protect it, or the men harvesting it, from disaster. -T...J. i. i ��������� a- -a, a- : _, _~ -���������1-_~ ~-U-.-.-I-l _ Z..X -U ^ r.r1 -a-.-. *���������--.._ -l*-3 ~4-v**1f*-*������ -*-Ti_?="C_ j>Lia. -i������ ifcj iiij-L. Lti������3 i.u. iii^jji" oiv-ii-a^ aa i^\\J SjiJLvi.ti.>a* ^iY.^J jiC.^La ..v?- ^*������a_, -x-a^.-^,a, t...%.mr. a...^-. .j is Ti,o argument against safety. Several thousand elevators are manned and. ready to t:������ke in the grain. They will be worked at high pressure, and Under such conditions there is always the danger of a lessening of vigilance. It iii better to be safe than sorry. \\ ; And as .the grain is marketed the busy time for the railways and their ni"mie&_pf employees-Is reached. Weeks have been spent in putting roadbed, motive .power, rolling stock into first-class shape tp meet the strain. ���������" The number of traink moving day and night will be largelyvSncreased. Railway ��������� managements fully recognize the Importance oE always applyinig Safety First principlor-. So do trainmen. But at no time is it more importhat'that such ���������"principle.-" be rigidly adhere to an.V enforced through the voluntary co-operation of -ach individual than when nil are working at high pressure and carrying a peak load. ~ ~" r An old Chinese proverb says: "To save one man's life is better than to build a seven-storied pagoda." - travelling public, and that overcharges like tliese were calculated to make people shun Potsdam, thereby ruining its tourist business. The-' higher court agreed with the state's attorney, reversed the decision and. assessed a fine of 20 marks. ' ���������^���������A*"rA-yAVAVA-fa,v^^ ! i s I ���������_ -I i i i I i i i i - -:f?'___IJ������ Smoking Tobacco Bun it bn the kk������i&mg������ik DliXlE li������Oxl*Q tqpaccc-j As it is PACKED IN AIRTIGHT TINS this excellent plug tobacco always REACHES YOU in the same PERFECT CONDITION as when - it, left our factory; full of strength and flavour. " _*��������� MANUFACTURED BY IWPERIA1. TOBACCO COMPASV OF CANADA LIMTTCO. "gAVATAv'AvA'-*^^^ Painful Sprains, Bruises, Restored By Nerviline There is soothing power in Nerviline that has made it famous for nearly fifty years past. it sinks in deeply, it penetrates quickly, it takes away the pain from a sprain and brings grateful relief to. bruised, aching muscles. If your joints are stiff and you are* suffering from Rheumatism or'"Lumbago; if Neuralgia bothers you now and again, use"* trusty old "Nerviline." It works wonders, whether the pain is internal, or external. Get a large ,35- cent bottle from your dealer today. Appreciate Programmes Near Home Radio fans over the country are losing something of their'orlgtnal zest for. long distance and are coming to appreciate more fully the excellent programmes of their own nearby: broadcasting stations.' * It"is in this direc- -I J.��������� K������_-iraw������i.<,n 4 (* 7*-'������ 'Wo "M-'J', /!/> flpmnrlr^Kle Fire F.vlininii*trter Trans-Atlantic Air Service Reduced by Asthma, The constant strain of aschma brings the patient to a dreadful state of hopeless exhaustion. Early use should by all means be made of the famous Dr. J. D. Kellogg's ' Asthma Remedy, which more than any other acts quickly and surely on the 'air passages and brings blessed help and O~canifort. No home where asthma is present in the least* degree should be without this great remedy.' ''���������*;��������� *. 7. ' ''" ". Poland Evicting Germans Great Misery ahd Distress Prevails In Refugee Camp' Heartrending scenes are being witnessed in the' great camp established to receive the thousands of Germans Poland has ordered to cross her borders* back into their homeland, because in" the 'Upper Silesiah'- plebiscite of ii.20 tliey favored retention of the territory by Germany. "-*������������������'-' Great misery ; 'prevails among its' repatriated Germans, men, women and children, most of whom are in dire distress and impoverished by reason of the fact that all their possessions have vanished. Added to their misery is the fact + "l*-������#^#- -fl-.*-* i+������\\4'-.t.tTrc%,������T.cm9 n-nirvn *! ca ��������������� 1 t*_CHaU #1v ���������*-������������������**-*���������������* s,-ii^- -. -wiii-o^we. . '^���������������������������s"V ��������� ���������= ������~= es.-Av-s.-i'-arf overcrowded. A second camp "-must be erected somewhere else if Poland should maka^ good her threat of fore-' 1 ible eviction./ ��������� /��������� . - - It will.be almost impossible to provide homes for the repatriated as yiiere already 13 a dearth of dwelling buildings throughout the country. ' Use X-riys To Find Pearls Tiie X-ray is Used iri examining unopened oysters in pearl fisheries. This is a yerjy econohiical proceeding, for oysters whi*;h are found by .the X-ray to-be without pearls .may'be, returned to, their beds unopened;, in.-the. hope that tliey may later produce pearls. BLEMISHES OF THE SKIN .j Home Grass Grows Greener." A mai-ked decline in-migration from Canada to the United Slates is reported. The green fields at a distance frequently assume a blue tint when reached���������Vancouver Frovfnce. Are*Prpof the Blood is in a Weak aAd Watery Gondition One of ..ihe surest signs that the blood is out of order are the pimples and unsightly'eruptions thtfi bre^ak out on the face or body. The same condition is indicated., by an attack oC eczema of scrofula. You cannot get "rid'of these troubles by the use of -_���������^..-j^..^.. . ...ja.a. . _. _��������� ��������� _ ��������� _ ^ ���������: ' -a _. '-��������� ������,i_L_L^cxCAV ������_; l.i.L.-vajldijc;Jb, iiS SO iiiaAuj iacviaiaj- try to do. Purgative.* merely gallop "through the system and .leave it still weaker:."'' What .is .needed when the "Vxt*-���������_**������._r! *o elif-fi*1-?'!*! "!���������***_- ;TH.*fs ' e^m*^-'- _r*t*P ��������� s>"***fli>*- 5-2-'' a tonic whiah will restore its missing elements andileave the- blood rich; arid -red.r: For' this .purpose there is no other tonic can equal. Dr. Winiams' Pink Pills, every dose of which helps enrich the blood, drives out impurities, and bring.** a new feeling of health y and energfr. Mrs. R._E. Bisliop, Haw- . thol'rie Ave., Hamilton. Ont., tells for the benefit of others what these pills did for her. She says-���������"I was suffering terribly from scrofula. I dc>c- toreil with reveral doctors, but without success. M3- complexion was sallow.' I had no strength, feeling very ' weak and languid. My.neck was 1'ull of lumps called, scrofula.' and at times y they were very pairifui. r After try- Indian Race Not Dying Out Forty-three Thousand Live on ^Their Own Farms, , "Lovers of the Indian���������a-nd the number of them increases as we study him dispassionat-dy arid revieyr the history of our dealings with him���������will be glad 1^several' sjj^Wuedr1^d''Medicines, Tanks' Loaded With Carbon-Dioxide Gas Literally Freeze Flames Fire pxtin--riil9U'>rs that will laterally fr*������ete"a ftr** to death, while covering The* burning area with a dense gas, which barn all air and oxygen on which tho- ilames might fend, hav-* bor>n de- * iflfd for fighting switchboard fires, and ult-o for oil tankers and other ships whr-.'.-' 'tln-.s in tho cargo hold *.r������'_"������������n" a s-'riouH problom. Tb-* ex- * ingyi.-"ha-������rf. "c"-hirli nr** ni**roly lanks' loader! with tho carbon-dioxide gas j nine -1**0 horsepower engines each, and (such as is *n.s***ri ai soda fountains to twill provide spacious accommodation oarbonatft ilu? wntorj -���������limlnato the fpr passengers, waif>r damn j;o' whirh forms on** of the' Tho frtrc for a Ringlo trip-will be gco-i.r.'f-t. in**!--*-!* in (vrdinnry firn tight- about 55 pounds sterling per passen- ing. | Ker. , ��������� WMlWIIi-l-M II I IM ������������������������������������l'������^l������^W<������^^������^Wl-ll^>^-M^������^_������l_-_IM<>W_-|W^^ Londo n to New York in ,38 Hou ra ��������� I a -. ''iPlan - _���������������������������������������-- x '-y-.-.yV .'. Plans Cor a trans-Atlstijilc aeroplane service, using double cTehker planes with accoui;nodatibn'"' for 150 passengers and capable of making "the run from London to New York In 35 hours, have been announced hy Joseph Navarro, veteran British aircraft designer. According to the designer, the planes will have a wing spread of 185 i>pit. Thoy will be equipped with .Miller's Worm Powdeyis,.being in demand everywhere, can be got at" any chemist's or drug slibp.at very sinall cost. T.hey are,a reliable remedy foi worm troubles and can be ."fully relied upon to expel worms from the system and abate the suiterl.n&s that worms cause. There are maiiy mothers that rejoice that they found available so effective a remedy for "the relief oT their children. . ��������� -'���������.' ; -. ��������� ������������������-/-_. Grow Toruaitoes- Experimenl.a j .conducted s. hy the' French Govorument have shoVn A Ur CnnmU* -if Fli������v*-j* \\ri������iinr*rinr'-i -������r Mr>n*"-',-*t'������*. i, Idciti-r of *"nllrvl|r������ic'iT (.���������.rclyt ������.Ufyli<< .\\<-\\(\\, ������������������A. tl. A."i VPIil'-" It l������ well knnwit . i , , i , i,- 111 - . -a.,-, a i, * ������ I, fliall .-itf.uitt aaaa-.l/a.-, J������.a.ya'-a iaa.a������iaaa.n ,'.a - . > ���������>' *"> '*' a a.' or Ittiyi-r Ca,ni!������i*itj vvtlt tde Mt������iM|M'd v-lrli ilK-lr ic^icral trmUi in :.i'j, ,(,,..*. .1,. -,*^,,.m,. tlia-y Hajri-r l)r<>������������,' Had Long Run Peculiar Accident A very s trii ago -uccliJehl. " het'ell a moiiftfi In'ir'Niiw la'n|f("i.i\\d',houH<>hol. wail 1rf>, tho tiro of the front wln-td, ovldonlly hop- Iimi ihorohy ioTi'iM-li'Mii1 shell'. Tho wliool sturiod, "did the mouse itainrally ran' toward "Ilu*' highest part of 11. it. **v,ih tihlo tn slay on tho fop | iA' lb,- tiro, hul c'uitld not rfe\\ t-iinugh of a 1'ooHiolil >o Jump in tlio wall. > WIhhi found ihn next, inortilng, it. wnts������> | vory intioli oxliauf'toil, though ('till run- i ulng. Tlw. oyolmitetor iihowed tllUt It hml tnivnlli-d irori- lliun nvoiily-el'-ht \\ inlh',-1, i Minard's Liniment for Burn* With His Hands Tied ' That a yo.mg fellow can swim across Toronto iBay���������two mires more or loss -���������\\yitli7both hands nncl feet tied together, is a stunt that may safely ho loft, to that kind of fellow, or be tried with j'eftftble rescue ^vacort, but*-,, it aliows that It can bq (lone-; and that no one need dro.-vVh 'Hittiply* because ho finds hlnii-elf In dfjep water wltiif hla dollies 0ri.-~'Oweii Sound Sun-Timea. ��������� * *i * - ������������������ -��������� - Tlio U. S. Government him- Bent dentists to Alaska to care I'or tho toe Ih of KriUlmoH nnd indliuiB, While the automobile has .succeeded in diAplardng the. hoi-He, llie night* mnrn Htill rjurrles on-, 9 l^3.,'B ^Ssf >TIGHT6������ Mmi MORNING IVi -KEfi:P; ���������ITO.'UR EYES C LEANT... CLE A*. AND HCAITHV WAIt������ ������Or. ������n������Jl Ut* CAI-.U ������OOK'MUAI1I| CO.tM.CAOOOJSJI ��������� - ��������� ��������������������������� - ��������� "' ��������� ���������..'.'.:.'.��������� ��������� . VV N, , U. i silo TITS REVTEW; CRESTON. B. C. X /& '-."v- .M^King JPaper From Straw "May Ultimately iSeepxne A-ix \\a7 ������������������-... ���������.:;'.���������������;;��������� jLr-. ,-..-. -..-?.-'���������\\-l.::x.xx0jhA'A':AAAxA��������� -:'-:i:^0?x^xXy^Xfrl^~~,^~..~.������*~?* .....���������������������������:��������� -"T- y.^''.; j'.'".'- '.'������������������- rf^'''!'-' _ _ ' '-'.'-������������������' ������������������" "'������������������ ^'i..,^*^'-..'J.^jjA.."j -J'j... gem _c-4" ������_-f?__. o- ' ������nvf,>.-.. a.,. , Ju" "-��������� Federal Officer Comments anxiety tor those closely connected ' es-������_i,..4.,.i,������_ . _. <- ���������..,.,-.., ' - -_,,,...,. I "Saskatchewan Farmers' Witn either, owing to the diminishing' - .- . . supxuy oi paper material from wood. On oi paper materia The United States has become the greatest -consumer of paper in the wo lid, and as its own plies have ne_u*ed exhaustion, the Can adiah fore's .s-" have been more and Saskatchewan farmers have a better knowledge of weeds than their brothers in Minnesota and the Dakota s_ an soft-wood sup- | (lie opinion 0f W. M.'Talbot, Washing- ���������~~ I ton, of the U. S. department of agriculture, who has just concluded an in more drawn upon. Thisjjas created j veatigation of weed problems itt"sas _ ��������� ������ __- ,,������������������->������ - I an immense export trade in pulp and j katchewan and Manitoba paper, which is at present of visal im portance in maintaining Canada's favorable balance ol" trade. The report of the commission which recently investigated the pulpwood situation in Canada showed that the visible supply of wood was in danger of exhaustion within some thirty to fifty years, according io conditions in different provinces. . After that, what? "That was the "question. * Recently The London Morning Fo*st published an issue on paper made from straw, and the. information given in that connection is of the greatest importance. - The paper was-made by 1)������3 Value's i-traw-pulp process, which seems ���������to iuive lifted the question at once from theory to practice. ' The trouble in the past with straw paper has'.been its brittlcness, but ten years ol" experiment have overcome this dif- lioulty. using as chemicals only common salt and lime. This has been J carried out in French factories, and, according to The Post, it is to be continued on a large scale in Canada." It straw becomes the raw material for paper, Canada's position will be entirely satisl-Actory, as if will mean the Use of an enormous Jiy-product of farming whi ;h is now wasted. It is es inaal&d that seven million tons of straw are burned annually-in Canada alone. ln 'Eastern, Canada there is uscv for' s'tffiw in connection -with,."the livestock industry,'.but in 1he west the burning of the straw- after harvest and threshing every autumn, making a trail of tire night by night from the- Ontario boundary .'to the'Rockies,'is a sad feature of unbalanced industry. The"advent ol straw-paper making will bring addi.ional revenue, "ihore employment, preserve a great industry fin;, lhe worid, and'retain *an export trade for Canada of ftrst importance. The Post ;loes not supply comparative figures of cost, nor suggest thai si raw may be a competitor of wood while the latter remains plentiful. The 'paper ���������industry- has" been one of the most progryssiyc in the whole. realn\\ of manufacturing in the post few y.f-iu-s, and il may be assumed that the "hew sourci-s,.*.l" raw material will be used '.villi the keenest i'hfelifgonce.���������- Toronto Globe. / Mr. Talbot said the fai-mers in Min- nestoxa and the Dakolas were becoming worried ..about the menace to tlieir prosperity brought about by the prevalence of weeds, particularly tlie perennial sow thistle, and had asked the govern-nent for assistance. Ia-*- i had come tc Saskatchewan to find out what the government -was doing here _ .' in thh3 mat-er; and to learn how the'y were combatting'" the perennial sow thistle. In has opinion the Saskatchewan Weed .-'Act was a good law, ��������� particular! j* because'it left plenty of room for the various parties interested in the destruction of: -weeds to co-operate and make a real clean-up. Apples Lead Fruits Produced In Canada! Growth En Manitoba Some Facts Concerning Agricultural and Dairy Products of Province In. a recent, address to the St.-Boniface Kiwanis Club,, J. H. Evans, deputy a-'���������._ e"^-i. 14... dgl ivuiiu_ e rvIaiiitL-ba, gave- some facts concerning the agricultural and dairy products of the province during the' past "50 years. '."in^l876 Manitoba made her first export ' of wheat, a matter of 857 bushels,"- said Tvlr. Evans. "Today thev province has 8,000,000 acres under cultivation, rynd in one year has produced 96,000,000 bushels of wheat." "Fifty yen's ago people were trying to work out a programme of farm practice,in the province which would enable them to make a living. Today, Manitoba has a population of 612,- 00$ with .2,200 schools in which are 3,5*57 classrooms. There are today 27,000,. miles of good roads in Manitoba; 3,508 of which are under the Good Roads Act." ' Tracing the, rise of the dairy industry in the province, Mr. Evans pointed- out that in 1912, Manitoba imported' 5*5 carloads of butter valued at $343,960 for home consumption. *��������� In 1913,, 35 carloads were imported, and in 1914, 20 carloads. In 1915 the province not "only supplied its I needs, but exported 50 carloads of butter valued'at $324,800. At present Manitoba is exporting butter in large quantities. Empire Settlement Sclieme ��������� ixnoiign -*w-rJ.J*LJ.)>- Fnrest- ?s Prntoctaairi __u/Z_Cpci iiAiciii._tx w?Ta.gc [ So far as [ can judge, No In Experiment Is Successful Are Large Portion Of B.C, Crop Absorbed By Prajrie Provinces Apples are the outstanding- commercial fruit of Canada, according to a recent report of the Dominion depart- j ment of agriculture. i While, a large portion of the British: Antelope ".In Alberta Reserve Increasing In Number Antelope which were threatened with extermination in Canada have been successfully preserved in Nemis- Icam National-"Park, Alberta. When +&B. preserve was established in 1955 ] there were only 45 in the herd, the last Depletion of German Woodland 700 Years In. the Slack "Forest of Germany there is to be- found one of tbe oldest private logging corporations in the world. This company operates about 10,000 acres of woodland, and annually pays a reasonable dividend for the stockholders, and yet there is just as much timber growing on that land today* as there was 700 years ago. The trees, growing amid underbrush and wild flowers such as we find at home, -are not all of the same age, yet the-forest is maintained by promoting natural regeneration. A permanent system of good roads traversing its length and breadth permits the cutting of a few trees here and there, selected and marked in advance by the chief forester, who spends one day in every three own j solely, in the stud|>- of how to get the maximum of merchandise product and, at the same time the maximum of new- growth-, In this way, the same patch of ground.is revisited for cutting oh.ee every ten years; -The., felling of the trees- has to be very skilfully done, so that the fall-*- ing giants will do as little damage as possible to the young trees beneaih, but a skiful logger can throw a txunk almost-exactly where he wants it, and the logs-are all cut so as to make them easy to move. Even in the hauling of the logs from forest to road expert j crews can accomplish the object with- survivors of the thousands that once !out leaving a trail of Columbia crop is absorbed by the I three'prairie provinces which took 2,225,000 boxes last year, shipments of j had roamed jllie prairies. There are j "i'od. now 235 animals in the herd, a gain of "190. its' is show ! an increase of 55 In 1924 alone. devastation .y be- How- well they breed in captiv- j Testing New T. B. Vaccine hown by the fact that there was-j i British Cattle Breeders Are Convinced apples from - British Columbia to Eur. , . . . .,__-,., nnP ���������������-i__fcflii,-.-������������,-���������-- r.. -.a"-.,, ! Antelope once were prized trophies, Treatment 5s Sound kr* ���������m���������,h/J ���������,-*,*V oTi..������V������;-"������V.,iand s������ff������red such ravages in numbers 1 Attention is drawn by an English | that extinction or the species was in j-paper to the claims which are made i sight. A herd finally was discover- j for the research work on tuberculosis ��������� ed in Southern^AIberta, and the tract which is being carriad. out by a Mr of 5,000 acres on which the animals , Spahlinger at Geneva were feeding was . surrounded by a ' British breeders have fence of wpven wire, and ah the work was done without disturbing the animals. . " o6S carloads of British Columbia ap pies were exported, of.which 267 went to Great* Britain. Apple exports out of Vancouver last year totalled 105,- 5S7 boxes ' compared ^with S4.328 thy ihe Vancouver Province tlie - empire settlement ' | scheme is going to prove a success,. [The plan Is to place three thousand se- f lected British famil.es' on farms in ' Canada in -.hree years. The Canadian Government is- providing the farms, which are for sale on easy terms, ,and will help the newcomers get established. The British Government is advancing -money, not exceeding about JE300 per family for livestock and machinery.- The settlers are being placed in districts that are fairly well settled, and will not have the hardships and loneliness of pioneering to endure. There '.are nei'ghboHs, and arrangements are made for friendly assistance from 1hese. "The plan is promising, but it is helping cnoducted on a very small scale," the Provlnbtj says. '"There are two reasons for this. It is in the experimental stage yet, and the^families who are given assistance are_so carefulls* selected that no great number can measure up to the requirements. If" it is to be expanded, as it shpuld be, once its merits are proven, it will probably be necessary to take iu people who have had no great acquaintance with.-rural life," and to extend the period of probation or adopt some means of training such as was suggested by 3L,ord Buixiham in his address to the ..���������Vancouver "'Canadian Clubs. "Strange as it max* seem, the number of facms available, is at present also limited, for the only land being utilized for empire settlement consists of property taken up under the soldier settlement scheme and abandoned. In a counti*5r like this, with millions of untitled acres within easy reach of railways, lh������re should be no difficulty in getting farms for all who wish them, and if the scheme is to do its besl [or ihe sciusi's ami. for.JL.iiw Dominion, some-means will have-to, be .'found of bringing ibis land under cul- - _ i , vj-i i *i rw������"-. previous y-ear. _. to Great Britain.. T'i'itiah Columbia is Nova Scotia and Ontario growing. Of these 61,024. went * now third in to app] e Canada's Mineral Industry in Various Reported Damage ������������������'���������'"" -*" By .). Billion and Half is Invested Plants A preliminary report prepared in the';miq������crg,y metallurgical and, chemical branch of the Dominion bureau of statistics, shows that Canada's min- ��������� "** eral industries and the manufacturing industries.'__tjendent thereon, numbering 10,719 plants in all iii 1924, represented an actual money investment of 1,550 million dollars' as compared with , a. reported ������������������in.v^istment of 1,531 million Wheat Root Rot j dollars in the preceding year. Included in this sum were the cost ol* lands, builJings and plant equipment, the cost ofymaterials and products on hand and.th'j actual working capital of the companies reporting. These in- dutieg'employed on the average 196,- 883- person1"*, to wliorn' salaries and wages anio mting to $248,297,53-1 were pnid. 'World's.Fastest Locomotive ��������� New"- York Central engine 999, the most famo'1.3 locomotive in America, has been withdrawn from service-after running tliir.ty years. Switzerland to see for themselves the results, and many are' said io have returned, convinced - of the: soundness of Mr. Spahlinger's"vaccine treatment. Recently aecfti-ding^ to this report a party of 'medicaXmen who are members of.the House of Commons, visited Geneva and they, too, seem to have returned convinced. It is now pro mts lame came through the fact thatjp0sed that the Spahlinger treatment one day, about ten ..years ago, when"*] for human tuberculosis should be vest- pulllng theTEmpire.State Express, this engine, niade; the record speed of 1.12 miles -an--hour. This speed has not since been attained anywhere in the world by a locomotive. ed in Great Britain. By Matter Being Investigated Dominion'Plant Pathologist Reports of damtigo to wheat by root rot, a fungus disease which first, bo- <*aiii'j- evident in S.i->katcliewan two .years ago, ,*ii*v being Investigated by the Do mini in plant pathologist. W.'..P. Fraser, ���������-"askafoon. .. While/ suincient data are la-.tl-.ing as yet to fount, con- c IU id mis, it ir. believed to^be confined 1<>. the park country in Northeastern Saskatchewan.. One fai'iuor. nprth of Dlunibolclt. it' reported to lia-re sus- Iained 7,5, per cent, diuiu'go to a crop whieh Imd 'prnmi"-ed 35 to *I0 bushel.-* to: tliV? nei'e. Tho disease r-auses the straw to yellow and ripen bcl'ort; the heads fill. it --Ia believed, that. It is sit Its wm*Mt two or tliren years'after jTrpund is first., broken. grtuiutiJJy dy- iiig out with continued cultljrniion.' Two field men 'are covering a lsirgi? at prkMen t, In' the investigation. ttt'ru, ntd.s dug ��������� -thirty live nn the lower k*vels, where It live huts and rttivly come to the I'ae*'. Din :-jiHmines of Galiefn, ��������� tun- and groat .������:lmnibei'j_ have been !i*jfRi*e.j;ailng a tot ti 1 length of miles. Many of Ihe miner.** they tuir- Tlie nmhassniliii* of (In* t'nltctl Btnles lo Kranee reeclves n salary ol 517.500 n j onr, < very c-enl of whieh lie pays lo his litndloifl in p.nis im rein. for tlu.' lion *<> ilmr. the i.nihn.'-i'y oeeu- jpl"'-, A Japanese Invention f-*luldj Injected Into Sheep Promo1:es Rapid Growtf. of Wool An invention Avhich miikeH sheep's wool -ftrraw raster was doscrlbed by Professor Murker, of "Leeds University, ut: tlie Inteinational conference oi' sheep breeders tit Ch-ester.Kng. Ho snltl a-Japanese doctor had placed on the miirket, a,.fiu������d -'which; wbfm injecled'in the vtjins of a sheep, say, every two days, promotes a rapid growth nT wool, "So if-apld is the grovvlh maid, l.o be," Professor Marker continued, ''Itwit two" -month-"' injection iiroduces iwf-lve inontltH' growth nl, llv* ordinary rain, Thus ytwo or tltrtjo Bhenrings each yehr.rtru possible," *Citetirr-hfp -",000 Yeart Old The cucumber is on*- nl' the eldo.-. of the Kiildi'it vegi'lables, Some :.,(.II0 yent-.s ago In the Far East, probably Ju rndia'Mi Juul lis origin. A Lesson In Evolution The report' that homesictc buffalo .-re- ! cen tly shipped north are heading for >. . ��������� I the I-praiiies. IlJustrates a lesson in ^ By-Products From Coal j evolution. ., The wood species, among Coal is very common, but from it! which thej- were \\tt-ansplauted, -\\vork- are made 210 by-products: Aspirin, for headaches and colds;. phenol, for laxatives; creosol, for cold medicines; d'ye stuffs, a veritable rainbow of colors; inks, paints, roofing, fuel, explosives, chemicals,' are among the byproducts. A man should not place too much confidence in his companion when lie is beside himself. ed-' north gradually, probably taking centuries to accustom themselves to "the last great west." Tor the monnrch of i.he plains. The exiles from Wain- wright evidently object to evolving into wood buffalo all nt onco.���������-Calgary Al ber tan. " I-, ', tered country, and might, with consid- ^A nuptber of , erable advantage, devote some attest been over to . xion tQ becoming more compact. "Jt is quite possible that families laccustomeo to ferm life might be secured more ���������ja.'-ily on the continent of Europe than in Great Britain. But the settlement bf these would raise problems which the placing of British immigrants,.would not involve. Besides, we* should have lo meet the whole expense ourselves, and would . be doing nothing In bringing in foreign immigrants to help the Motherland settle her problem of surplus population:'. While by no means rejecting promising settlers from the''continent,'. It would seem to be* wisest. Cm- us, dur- .'���������* ing son!**- ye;ii"s so come, to co������������c-*rtrattt more on securing the. best type of immigrant we can get from the Brhisli Isles." " ^ : "������������������������������������' Tf a man i.s bent on committing suicide he can afford to be familiar with a iriule. Ex-President Op ens lourse VV. "N. U. lf.tJM Thlclc i i'-''*trd jiruti-ci rtunc bari-Iu'r.-i on ihi" ������h������'>'.':ii c> travi'lli'i-s frem have hern I* iln-'AliJ.-* to uvuluiKjh----. Large Milk Production Holstein Owned. By B.Ci Government Creates New Record Stafed lo have created a record in milk and b-ttirr fat production* in its class for Utilled Staled nn<[ Canada, Colonel "ijayn** Perfection, a three- y������!ir-otd member of ihe famous h������*rd ot.Colony Farm Iiolsieins-; during the last year, has produced 2S.046 pounds of butter, according to word received at tho fa:*m ar. New Westminster, B.C.. from ;lu- r-������eord of perfornufnee headquurtfrs��������� in Eastern. Canada. j Colony Faras is owned by she "BrisLsh ' Colurijbia Governnient-i. Colony Way no Perfection is ilu* farm's own breeding. ^^ta^Kft������������ji^^ Chief JUHiicn W. H. Tnl't, ex-Pres^tlent (.rf tho United States, ivplylm? -to the speech, of wefcome al the opening ol* th<' m-w 0,000-yard champlon- tvhip golf coui'se ill: the Manoir,Richelieu. Murray .Huy, Quebec, just prior io leelng off wllh n 170-ynrd drive. Mi*, Tal'r eoinplimenled W. IL Covt-r- dn'le, Prjitddenl of lhe Ctimula .-rJluaniHhlp Lines, I.Uiiili'tl, on his Cojtipimy's onlcVitl'Isc In creating, van o-L' lhe llneHl. golfr eourses in Ensii-rn Cunutin, set among, some of the finest nct-in-vy itk that part ol' the pomlniotu Wins Over Prince \\ ��������� ��������� Firth Prize Winner In Calf Club Beats E.P. Ranch Entry I Edwin l������a .-lilson*'* Heri-ford ealf won ��������� lirat tn a -trl-us-; or 3*i hi th<* Loihbrldgi* ���������Call* Club cotmiJ-'UMnn, .ludj-ed hy Prof. \\ Sackvlll-. at tbi-" fiiiii*. A sehsatiomil ] feature of *,h-������ morning's judging wn-i j -he- placing of ih*.*- huh prize winner in jilie 1*1 <,hj.s.i. In Japan -*���������.. ahwavf- -JH->-pl������ee(| bf- wliv-n he Arrives, no l"i|-Maa r>* *lll". k_.w_a_>^.^.tt_..w__.iv_^.������^ ������������E gjf^ffiWKaaatw.'ts'jjmtaj | THE CRESTON BEVEBW I "l,,M" ���������"���������������������������T18 ������������������"I"1" While at tl_je Ck>ast Mr* Mr. Kelly gathered together some choice merchandise and will have, a pleasant display on his return. Greston Drug&B@o^Store GEO. a. KELLY - I ! 1 I Emigration and High Tariff J THE CRESTOft REVIEW Issued every Friday at Creston. B.C. Subscription : $2.50 a year in advance. $3.00 to U.S. points. -������������������ O, F. Ha-stes. Editor and Owner and the routine vote of the man who doesn'tthink. 7 CRESTON. B.C., FKIDAY. OCT. JS Discussing the Issues Farmer, Labor, Higk7*ar������ff On October 5th Mr. Esling. along with creditable; platform support presented the Conservative side of federal election issues. The meet itiR was an orderly one; nob a single interruption and no questions���������the[ Liberals and the Farmer-Liahor supporters took tlieir medicine like r--al Canadians. On Saturday, 24th, the Farmer Labor, side of the story will be told and it is to he hoped there will be the same good turnout and the same good sportsmanship showti by those, who may differ with Mr. Humphrey and. those who will ff.jeak in his interests. These two meetings will be the only occasions people will have to hear the issues of the day discussed and under those circumstances it is. desirable that those who attend, should hear what has to be said without annoyance from the heck Isr, or whstaveV term mav be applied to the man or w<:man who in any "way interrupts a speakey while in action. And with the enlightenment gathered at the two meetings, plus such other useful information that has been accumulated since the campaign opened, the Review can only add, being possessed of common sense use it on the 29th. As one Canadian public man has so well said "In heaven's name let us avoid two things���������the unpolled vote of the man who doesn't care, In the present campaign .it is simply marvellous the tales Conservative speakers and literature tell of the benefits that will accrue ���������J if Mrr Meighen is returned "and his high tariff put into effect. To show that much higher pro' teetton .is what's wanted in this wanted country we are told of the prosper ity of the \\yorkiHjatman (real or imaginary) in the United States, But .what do the industrial reports of Uncle Sam and Canaaa have to to say in the matter. Listen to this: From midsummer 1923 to mid- su raraef 1924 the department of labor's figures show that in Canada six out of 100 of our, normal army of workers were unemployed, whilst in the United States duriiifli" tlie same period, according to the figures of the Federal Reserve Batik, seveii teen out of every 160 were out of "Work. ..._ ��������� A '' Or a showing of almost three to one in favor of Canada's moderate tariff. -; - ' ' Equally strenuous efforts are ^ rrvadei to **haw the benefitsi. acscru- in g to agriculture if high tariff is j adopted, and the alleged .x prosperity of the. U.S. farmer is again held up for inspection. But take a look at the followingdespatch in Saturday's papers: Washington, Oct. 17.���������The ; number of farms in. the United States had-decreased 75,735 since 1920, the department of commerce disclosed in a preliminary announcement of the 1925 farm census, whioh placed the total at 6,372,608. Be careful how you vote. Speaking here oh the 5th in the> Conservative interests F. B. Stacey attempted *to convince that the.l Govern orient's proposed' policy fo**? bringing in immigrants and for reducing "operating-expenses on-the J Canadian National' must not be taken seriously^ arguing that if there was any- _aerit' to such proposals the premier* should have invoked his new* pqlicy swo or three years ago. Now, if there should be - any merit to Mr., Stacey's line of reasoning it' surely is not out of _ order to enquire - if the high tariff policy Mr. Meighen advocates will do all tliat is claimed for it, why did not the Tories give- us high tariff any -time between 1911 and 1921 while *,hey were in office. MK Stacey led his hearers to believe, that the high tariff would stop Canadians going to the United States, and if his view is correct why in common sense did not Mr. Meighen put on the high tariff in 1916 in which year 101,551 Can- adsans "went over i t-o reside with Uncle Sam? Or in 1917 when 105,399 Can If 11 ������11 VtlliG ' linen! MW _H' fl_TH H _��������� _B _ H l_.f&gg������ i X. OOfeS ow-Desioe. FOR adians left this country for the United States; of iu 1918 when the departures were 32,452; or 1919 when the total was 57,782; or 1920 when 90,025 left us, or 1921 when those leaving accounted for a total oj 72,317. -But without "even accusing Mr. Stacey of insincerity let us observe that the high tariff argument is a mighty poor oibe to put forward as a cure for Canada's emigration troubles. Mr. Stacey. told *������with pride how Canada had prospered after the National Policy of high protection had been instituted by the Tories in 1878, and yet between that year aud 1896, when the Laurier regime was ushered- in.' over 1,000 000 Canadians moved out- of Canada. i ito the United States. And by way of demonstrating the utter inefficiency of high -tariff to. keepSpeople in their own country just observe that from 1902 to 1911. wheh Laurier was at the head of Canadian affairs, but 235,516 Canadians entered the Pmted _States,, whilst between 1912 and 1921, whilst Mr. Meighen and his. friends were administering the affairs of this country a total of 757,672 Canadians pulled out tor the United States. "***��������� -..,..- NASH, of Renaia, 'complains tbat owing to U.S. - importations of Peaches he could not compete in Cranbrook. - The imported car com- . plained of was wholesaled at from $1.50 to ._.* .-.* $1.90 per crate. - _ *v ��������� m*" ^ _ *y___*_. Taking asv a basis, an aveiage pries oa $p s.������ s -U LESS freight Renata to Cranbrook of...... ������13 **��������� "*' ' 1 ' LEAVES .....,.....,.* -...'. $.1.57 as^ the price F. W. Nash could have got for FREESTONE Peaehes from his retailer cus- - tomer in Cranbrook. ^ ��������� " -- '" WONDER IF THEY* WERE CLINGSTONES? Even a Meighen Tariff could not sell these. Much has been heard of the alleged LOSS TO FRUIT GROWERS hy importation of American Apples ���������CONSIDER THESE FIGURES: From April 1st to Dec. 31st, 1923 (a full crop year), Apples imported from "U.S. A. to Prairie Provinces���������STRAIGHT CABS which k������*nt snuie of the-people eating apples at a time when B.0. -could not supply. THEY KEPT TH&TASTE AND AS A RESULT B.C. shipped to Prairie Provinces in same period, Straight CARS.:.... \\ Urn. What /tail the JINTi-DlSMP? *ff lAni -'__������������������ " .N - ������������������' __ " _. _ .' _.'_=.- ill J. ZT&M J, (a bigxtt*op year) the Anti-Xlumpmg Act admitted importations: .of ^Apples fea^Lj&eKi. U.S.A. to Canada, to the hum-''.' 1 _ ber of. 1 ;.l: -.-1093 CMS I In 1924, (a short crop year) the Anti-Dumping Act restored by. HUMPHREY admitted importations of American Apples to - . Canada, to the number of 782 GllfS Check our figures. We like it. K. ^ vl PROTECT HUMPHREY WITH YOUR VOTE AS HE PROTECTED YOU! wm JUST RECEIVED. Call and see it. Ride in it and you will buy no other. You will hardly believe its a Ford. Several conveniences that surpass any car in the market. After looking over a great many makes of RADIO PHONES I have selected one that I fully believe and that lean convince you cannot be surpassed, and it is the THERMODYNE. It costs you nothing to call and hear it. \\f k% BHk B& '^j mm. "_P^ R. S. BEVAN, Prop. Exclusive Ford Dealer Fall Shi ajusajygff Ivloney Gives Confidence Those who^ have money carry, on their work in life "with greater confidence. A Savings Account with thin Bank if added to regularly even with small sums will soon give you the corjud p_&_e__lt0fj. of money can give* There is a Savings Bank Department at every branch of this Bank. 4, 75c. for a Threes-String BROOM Extra fine corn. Other good quality Brooms for 90c. and $1.00. O'CEDAR MOPS���������No. 15* $1.25; No. 3, $2.00. Renovo Dusting Mops, $2.00. FUNITURE POLISH, such well \\nown brands as O'Cedar, Suproma, Liquid Veneer and Re-Nu- All - .' ��������� .' ��������� * "' ..... '. ~" A full range of Remington Shotgun Shells ASS gauges. The long range, hard bitting shell ������&������._. C* W* ALtAN, OF CaA>tAJ0U%.. GR5STON1 H-WANnif. Maoiiiji**. IW2jtiS^*Bfi| Dry Goods Groearles ^^^^MB ^WjfjJj^^J^ffliM^SjHjSSSEH Furniture ������8 *S i ** ���������* ** * ^ S&l^^&&S!^?fsm&fsi ^������9������?^t,'&mHi\\mmmMmwwimmmL������mi \\-.^^^A^lh^l..lAxxJ'r^*,J wiMimiiHiujwimtaMii i._MiijuijiPJ_Bim|jji***������airgj 9BH*H SB THE CRESTON BEVBEfW MflliT ASITB.niByPIMe M....V %.. __ 8j������JaMaij Jr&tmviVmmW* ttlA 'political campaign -about the Anti- J>anspicg GlauseHand its application to the importations of AraeE-ieafrfrnst. It may be well, " therefore to re view J - fche ������!tM__4__������a__ -".'.- ~ - The Anti-Dumping Act wl^'intro- duced by Sir. Wilfrid I>aiirier ir, 1904 on a fair market value basis. In 1921 the act was a mended by the Meighen administration and placed on a'eoat of production pins a fair profit, basis -of which tJie - minister was lo be sole judge. It would appear that, their waa considerable difficulty in. the- application of the act as amended by the Meighen government, by reason of the uncer tainty as to the actual cost of the _���������-;jjootls to the importer until after-conk pletioSE of the 'investigation ������f cost of production by the customs officii Is. ~ jMiijjw. sj������jMj<������ txidies ns'QLested HHTJiinst the act to Mr. Fielding, thp minister of finance in the Mackenzie ELing government which uneceeded to power in 1921. Foremost, perhaps, in urging the repeal of the act -was the Vancouver Board of Trade. - - Mr.' Fielding introduced his budget on May 23rd, 1922, within which was contained a repeal of the AntjJDuuip- ing Act* Surprise and consternation followed amongst the fruit producers of B.C, who had been given to understand by * members representing the' fruit- producing - constituencies and also by delegations- of fruit growers to Ottawa that 'the act would not be disturbed* _ - - The: matter .was- taken up by the representatives' of the fi;uit growers and pressure brdught to.beat to obtain a restoration of the act. Mr. Fielding was opposed.to this form of protection in principle and had openly so stated his views when in- opposition. He, however, was greatly inipiessed with the arguments of Mr. McBride unci Mr. Humphrey, the members for Cariboo and vi/est. Kootenay, -Who w-������re supported by representatives .of the frnit growers both at Ottawa and British Columbia. Amendments to th budget t were introduced both by the Conservatives and by the Progressive bloc, but neither' amendment contained any measure of restaoration of the., anti dumping penalty. The. division on the budget casne on June 13th, and was supported by both Mr. McBride and Mr. 'Humphrey,- and opposed by all the Conservatives. - Mr. Fielding wa*������, however, -so pa-essed by the arguments put - the two members mentioned, who were supported by Mr. Buhuan, the representative of the growers then at, Ottawa, that 1n accordance with his promise on June 24th be brought in an amendment *~ restoringv the Anti- Dumping act. The statement is made that both Mr.y- McBride , and Mr. Humphrey - voted against the Anti Dumping. Act by voting for the budget. * It is only logical and ralr to say that ifa_m**m tier bf the house voted against the measure he, must"* at- the same time have had the' opportunity to vote for - it. -It is patent to anyone of wha tever political per-itiasum that no .such opportunity presented itself either in the budget or the amendments intro duced by the Conservative-! and Pit* gressive pruirie bine. Such an opportunity did not come until June SSrd, when the hont_ gassed^ the restoration Y������f theyAnti- u-uiopiiig act introduced by Mr. fielding as an aim ndment to the budget'at tha instigation of Mr. McBride and The statement is made in the Dun������ can report that the- dumping duty *i ��������� _^*- ^.P.rk-m. Smmi*.. ������������ J ^.S. 2 . ~ " ,ft.w ������..������aa������3*_i mmj^L������M. m. mm. *..mm and that ho case was remission of the duty applied for. ' -~ The records of parliament, however, -show that the Dumping Act was MmMB }Jrur_ri W4 _iriiii#, found in which was refused Cows For SAfcja-rtPurebred Jersey, will freshen in ' December. Also one Shorthorn. Holstein, to freshen in January. Cheap;for "quick sale. EL Nouguier, Canyon." WANTEib���������Apples, tomatoes, crab~ at.pies, and onions, in car lot?"* Don't steep at the switch, write or wire us at once. Iiangetaff Coal Company, Moose Stopa. Baske ��������� - Don?& forget the big Thanksgiving Dinner at the Parish Hall on Thurs* day, November Sth, from 6 to 8 p.m., under tbe auspices of the Presbyterian .Ladies* Aid- W ^^ ��������� ��������� Mm. B__. B applied 2523 times in 1823,' and 2885 timed in 1624, in which years $126,285.00, and $131,960.00 duty was 1 same at a later date it is only fur to ���������"tate that Air. Duncan, while producing evidence showing the application for refunds has nothing to dhow the circumstances under which such applications were made, or that they were granted by the customs department. ' * \\ The records of both Mr. Humphrey and Mr. McBridea and the representatives of the growers who 'assisted them, are unimpeachable with respect to this matter, and the appreciation of nil frnit growers as" such is due - to them in full measure.���������Com. ***- k- .->.���������'������8&y v\\. AM&- Local and PersosiaE Fob Bbnt���������Two room cottage, good location. * Apply F,. *H. Jackson. G. J. Bayle -was a. business visitor in Nelson at the end of the week, return Ing on Sunday. Fog.'Sams���������Sharpies ere ._a capacity, $20. e*-*par*->- Fred ote for ESLIN im or, 500 pounds Smlth^^e-ilon. Wasted���������Position as stenographer* M. Mvi-lon, 914 Twelfth * St. south, L_ethbridg������*, Alta. ForSaxjs���������Onions at $3 suck. Alsn a supply of Carrots and .Cabbage. Fred ie\\vi*>, Creston. Dr. Wilson Herald, ear, nose and throat specialist, will be in Creston on October 26th and 27th. For Sam--An extra good sndnle pony. -Also a young female milch goat. C Blair, Canyon. Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Hay of Nelson were visitoi������s here a few days this week, guests of W.-Fraser. Cider, VinjegAb���������Quantity of high class cider vinegar for. sale, 75 cents gallon. W. S. Truscott, Creston. ESLING enlisted in the lead bounty fight in 1900 and engaged for life in the fight for Kootenay Industries. " * KOQTE^TAY mining interests will he safe irf the hands of the party that 2. Extended the lead bounty ��������� * 2. Enabled copper refining - _ 3. - Granted the Zinc Bounty - * - 4. Placed copper rod duties in its last tariff draft, ~ ESLI-STG has resided in Kootenay West for 30 years and has always been a worker not- only in , the interests of the district bnt of-British Columbia as a whole. ��������� ^ THE CONSERVATIVE PARTY enacted a fruit antidumping clause with teeth in it, making it statutory, and instantly applicable hy any customs officer. The penalties . under it "were not afterward remitted by the Minister of Customs. imposed Offir-ial proclamation has just been THE CONSERVATIVE PARTY-left a draft Australian treaty that gave Australian agricul- . tnral products a preference over American, but left Canadian agricultural' products ^ a fair protection against Australian. -The King government's Australian treaty admits of Kootenay ranches. _ __3_uavra iian products free the product^ HiKXilNG, in the provincial bouse was the opposition's railway critic, and is a trained p' "iarian. " %*- -rli ������-nrt _&���������*-���������-������ 9th, as Canda's Tnanksgiving Dty. For Sails:���������"Young pigs, six weeks r.tji
RjOM-rve Fund $20,000^)00 Creston. Branch I>. T. Scrimgeour, Manager Warmer JJnderweakir for Men mam P. BURNS & CO., Ltd! MEAT MERCHANTS E iJTRY OUR| SHAMROCK PORK SAUSAGE An economical d.nh, easy to Berve. Shamrock Brand HAM, BACON ana\\LARD GLENDALE CREAMERY BUTTER Government graded, highest quality. FRESH and CURED FISH ^ nil varieties. Choicest BEEH PORK, MUTTON, VEAL, LAMB BURNS IDEAL POULTRY FOOD Inci-ou*-'-'- ejflj production nnd produces hotter pou1r-ry. Buy the bent. You will all need warmer Underwear for the coming cooler weather. *. * ��������� ',������������������������������������ ���������*��������� . ��������� . " When buying come in and see our stock which includes the well known and reliable makers such as Watson's, Stan- field's and Penman's. ''-'.. ������ * *-������������������ ��������� ��������� ��������� - . We have the above in shirts, Drawers and Combin-, ations Suits, also a line of finer All Wool Combinations for Men in Jaeger and other English makes. OUR PRICES MARKED IN PLAIN FIGURES. 4L.wm.mu h itwa GUP _ma-?iTOff.g**a IBMaMMm HMMu mmmmm, * - TsLfr*@S O'h'S*' Cti��*rt_*jrap_-I ^^%it,i^mmiP ^mm- ��� ��_ w <��*��� -%^VI�� rs tOVE EPIC OT THE Copyright, 3 017, by IXnibledaj, Page & Co.' "* - - 'BAREE, SON OF KAZAN," a Vitagraph Picture,. With Wolf, Lhe War Dog. . is nn Adaptation oL" Tills .Story -"*��� - ��� ���" SYNOPSiS son oJ' Kazan, {..sank info her breast���-""arid noi until- dog, and ! then did he see Sekoosew. Xlio pi-"' had raised his head from ihe rip at 1he partridge's throat, Baree, son or-.Kazan, a Gray , Wolf, -was nearly three weeks j mine old when first he wandered away from j ��|eIL,-i., home: His first, adventure was a, "7 .*" ' light with an owl, in which both were i an��(��� Peck Says . He !s A!wa**s Making .Breaks -This might be calletl au anecdote of Pi eld-Marsha I Earl Haig-or of Colonel Cyrus Pock, or both. The well- known and bluff Canadian. Victoria Cross hero acted as chairman lor the distinguished soldier,, leader of" the British- forces, in the Great War, when tho field-marshal addressed a crowded theatre of "Victoria war veterans on his plan for amalgamating ex-bervice men throughout the British empire. At the end of his speech Colonel Beck re- ing a crayfish in a creek. Soon he; ^ -m an _.i_^a ��-wi _,.. ��� -. *v_n.�� ^"*1 fn Tr*-. .-_*>. _n. �� l>,-l/��_^ ttl*l _r��1l> \\ came upon Wakayoo, a huge black ' was &ry squeak the Napanao's ermine agent from Montreal passing that way ��� liad once tried-to, huy it. It fell in hear, which puzzled'-him but which j ~vas Bono. Napanao's wings re- ' two ghim-Qg. braids, "each as big as a disappeared at hi-s approach. Wander-- lax od, and lhe throb went out of her j ma��Js wrist, almost to her knoef* ing. througi'i the forest Baiw 'grew body. She was dead.' Baree hung i--von *.rvf,a,_ ������ TWrrti i,.,,i c.,i,i y..ni,i' hungrier. The clog in him wanted to ���. . ,, ,p. , -hf * * ;:?n" M fcl' "'. J ,03icfL luid sa,d' a cold die lbut the -Aolf spark burned strong- ! ��n un��lMw- **as ^le- lh��� h<- began . g)it-tor in hU cycs aH ,���. saw wliat was sixtren, with grcal dartc, wonderfully. . eye,*;, and hair so beautiful 1 hat an ".,,_,-". , .. "And there's one othor thing. 1 {-want you all to be on hand to say adieu | to 13arl Ilaig when he. leaves Victoria ��� tomorrow afternoon. I know that will be a pleasant duty Cor all of you.** er. CHAPTED IV.���Continued. In the forests as well as in the great cities fate plays whimsical hand. its changing and If Baree had drag- his least. . in the agent's face, "It i-- not for for a drink. Tlie world him. now. Alter all, one's capacity for happiness depends largely on how deeply one- has buffered.- One's hard luck and misfortune for the measuring J stick for'future good lucFc and fortune. J So it wa*? with Baree. Forty-eight j hours ago a full stomach would not- sew was. creeping on his prey. I3is i iiavr* made him a tenth part as ha w.ia now. Then his greatest: Baree ale a third of the partridge, : barter." ���** and the remaining two-thirds he cacli-j "yTwp days after Baree had entered ed vary carefully at the foot of "the: his trapping ground Pierrot, came in'* big spruce. the creek ged himself in the timber half an hour ! lookTu very different to later he would have died. He waa too far gone now to hunt for crayfish or.kill tlie weakest bird. But he came just as Sekoosew, ^.ihe ermine���the most bloodthirsty little pirate of all the wild���was making a kill. As Baree lay under his tree, Selcoo- ing under a thicket ot* black currant bushes. Tue ears of no living thing could have heard Sekoosew's movement. He was like a shadow���a gray dot here, a flash there, now hidden behind a stick no larger than a man's wrist, .appearing for a moment, tlie next instant gone as completely us if he had not existed. Thus he approached from"" fifty feet to "within three feet of the spruce-hen. That was his favorite striking distance. Unerringly he launched himself at the drowsy partridge's throat, and his needle-dike teeth sank through feathers into flesh. . Sekoosew was prepared I'or what happened thtn." It always'happened when he .attacked Nspanao, the i wood-par trilge. 7 Her- wings were." . powerlul, and her first instinct v.-heiri lie struck was always that of. flight.' She rose straight up now with a great i thunder of wings. Sekoosew hung j tight, his', teeth buried deep in her'] throat, and his tiny, .sharp claws cling- ! ing to her *ike hands.t Through the; air he whizzed with her ,biting deeper f and deeper, until a hundred yards froin-| where that terrible death thing had! fastened to her throat, Napanao crash- i ed again to earth. �� ' j Where .she Tell was noi. i^n- feei fiom Baree. For a few moments he; looked at th-o struggling mass of/foath-... ers in a da*e, not quite comprehend- ! ing thai ��i. '.am food was .ilniost with- j in his reach. Napanao was dying,! longing was for hi3 mother. Since then a still greater yearning, had come into his life���for food. hr a way it was fortunate for liiiu that he had almost died ��� ol* exhaustion and starva- tiony j'or. his experience had helped to make a man of him���-or a wolf-dog, just, as you are of a mi ml-to put it. He would miss hid "mother for a long tinie. But lie would never miss her again rs' he liad mis.-td her yesterday, and the day before. .'.....'������-. "*"" ���rom ihe ioros.s with a troubled look in his face. -"Something is_" killing off the; young, boavel-j-." ho ixplained to NcpeesoC" speaking to lier in French? "It is a lynx or a wolf. Tomorrow " IT*.*- shrugged liis 1liin shoulders, aud smiled at her. "We will go on the hunt,*' laughed Kepeese lumpily, in hi r sol! Croc. WluSte-^Pierrol .sniHed al her like that.iand began with "Tomorrow," it always "meant that she might go '.with, hi to on the-advehture he was contom- platitig. . 7 7 ^ v- ' Still another day later, at the end of the al'tbiivoohy Karco crossed the 'Gray Loon on a bridge of driftwood that had widged -between two. trees.- This -.vas to the north. .lust beyond the driftwood bridge there .was a small open, and to', .the edge of this Ba ret, ;enemy paused to enjoy the last of the setting;: / sun. "As.he stood motionless and listening, his tail drooping lew, his ears al< rt, his sharp-pointed uose sniiiing I the neAV .'country to the nor thy there I was not a pair ol;" eyes in the Tprest . thai would ..not have taken him. for. a ������young wolf. ' ~" . . * : j From, behiui^ a clump or young ba' 1 sams, si Siuiidred yards. away, Pior- Trot and-Nepeese bad watched him | come over the driftwood bridge.' No*** was the -time,-and PioiTot (, 1 ovelled his riile. It. was not until then th-it Ne- peese touched .his arm softly. Her .-' ������-'���*. breath came a Iii tie excitedly as she Earl Haig was the first to seize the joke and lead the laughter. -"I- am. always making breaks like that," commented the colonel. ""Vou khow, someone telephoned me to ask if 1 would be pallbearer af the funeral j of a friend "he oilier day, and I replied | that I would be delighted.* ' i I _ Strange Instinct Of ���attie Why Cows Arc Panic Stricken Wljeti Attacked By Dogs - - - -% Perhaps you have noticed ^Jiow frightened, cows become if a littlo dpg] begins to snap at their heels. Now just why* do these big creatures become, panic stricken and scatter in -every direction when any one'of! them could easily -put the deg to flight?" .;������ Because at one time all horned cattle*- were wild and oftcp. attacked bj* jferoclous wolves. Although it has been, so many Jiundreds of years, cows still lmve"an iristincti\\*e dTread'of any creature that looks like their ancient I quart green cucumbers, 1* small cabbage, 1 quart onions, 3 red peppers, 1 quart green tomatocs^l large cauliflower, 14 cup salt, Chop all fine and pour oh enough, hot water to cover. Let: stand half an. hour and drain, then mafic a dressing ��� of the following:������ 8 tablespoonfuls Keeh'sD-S .F. Mustard, 3 cups sugar, 1 teaspoonful turmeric. I'CUpflqijr-. 1W1��� ".St-V. _ _:.��.���_ __=���j. .. _.,_,_=." smooth, ddd mixture to 2 quarts vinegar stirring constantly over fire, until thickened, then pour over vegetables. 37SRJ Surgeon's Clever Invention i A young French surgeon of Paris'has invented .an apparatus, called the.epis- cope, that will enable; "medical students in an adjoining "room to observe every detail of an operation without disturbing either the operating surgeon or the ��. patient." The apparatus, which- consists mostly of lights and mirrors ..produces Ian. enlarged picture, of the operation, and a loud, speaker carries the comment s oC- the- surgeon. Japs Like Singing Insects On Crickets and Grasshoppers Sold Streets of Tokio ��� Singing insects are now on sale by 'Street-- venders' alon*** 7t.he Crins*"!- tho gay "Main Street" ; of Tokio. The priitcipal warblers of the insect variety are crickets and long-horned SAVE THE CHILDREN Mother-; who keep, a box of Baby's Own Tablets^-in. the house ] may feel that tlie lives of their little ones are reasonably saf^, during the hot weather. Stoma iii. troubles, cholera infan- of. little one": every summer, in most cases because the niother does^hot have a safe- medicine at hand to give earn e i - s \\ whispered: : ���'Noot-iwc, let me shoot. I can kill him:.'* With a low chuckle Pierrot gave the gun 1o her. He counted the whelp aft already dead. For Nepeese, at that distance, could send a "bullet into an inch s-quai-'o nine times out ol" ten. . . promptly. Baby's..- Own Tablets re'-: grasshoppers. lo the .Taftanese the j ij^ve thqse troubles, or if given :occal- "song" ol* the cricket and the gi-ass- ] sionally " toC the' well child they will hopper I uses -ror- Dr Thomas' '.Eclectric Oil. | \\jse Geysers Vor Heating > Use it for cuts, bruises, burns, scalds,; - . " '...:, f ^^7. Av i" the pains of rheumatism .and sciatica,!, ln Reykjavik, IcelalM,. the;-geysers s ore ": throat and'P- chest. but h!i��" still jitruggli-d eonvulsi vt_-l; with her ,i wings. I.aree rose stealth- I ilj-. and afu r a mom--ni in which he Rathe-red all his remaining sirengthy he made ;< ritj-lu lor her. Mis teeth- FULL OF ACHES *;And Nepsese, aiming carefully at I Baree, pressed steadily with her 1 bro'-^n forefinger upon-, the trigger." For another day and night Barer remained in the vicinity or his cache, When the last hone was picked, he moved on. He now enterefl a country where .subsistence was no longer a perilous prooleni fur him. II. was a lynx country, and where tli~i'o are] been , . a,.K. ���. . . , . Horses are i a mile away from th-err-city have long And Nopoese, aiming carefully at - liable very largely to pimjhtr' ailntSntstjjccah usied for lattndr5; ti-flrpoges by flie Baree, press ed . steadily wit li\\lif*i' \\ and mishaps arS afflici mankind, and ; ice]aru-eis. But now the'enterpris- brown IVjreiinger upon the trigger, 7 CHAPTER V. .. As the Willow pulled the-trigger of her ri lie, 1 hi roe sprung Into the air. He felt the force of the bullet "before he heard 1he n^iorl of the gun. "It liilfed him ofr his feet, and then sent jhini rolling aver and,over as If he had . are equally amenable 1o the healing'. '! .influence of this fine old remedy which/* >n% townspeople are. going farther. hasviAad'" thotisands of _rm dtiring the past fifty years. fri en cts i*lrucl""^j.n Ethics Code For Motorists Washington Association Endeavors to Establish Honor System on-Roads A nalion-wtrte canvass of' aii interests concerned Willi motoring salY-ly for IdeiKs as to the d^volopnient of.a I code of motoring etliies, will be con- Tliey a re pla nning to pipe the Hot water Inlo Jieif houses, and heat the whole 'town in the most approved stj-le nt. nature's-expense. *-..'. Toronto Mother Found Relief by Taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound hideous blow with a lynx, there are also a great many Tab- j club. -For n flai-h he. did>-riof feel biiira. When ilie rabbi 1s I bin oul. the '. paiii. Then II rim through him like lvaix: ��� emig.-nie lo better lumtlngs a Unil'e ol* lire, and wiih ihat pain the ; dm'ted by tho American Automobile grounds. As -a snowshoe rabbit ! dog in him rose above the wolf, and he - Association, Wnshinglon, pi-cparulorv Ihrough, Bareejb'' oul a wild cry of p-ippyl..h yupplnfi j -�� ,ll,; "1'poliitmeht of u nulioni-il comas he rolled and twisted on lhe :|��-��3M^<*i to dr.iw up such h code. " ground. _ breeds nil I ho summer found himseii" in a land ol plen A:iid this was stralfiht into Ihe piiiR country of Pierrot, the breed. I-'li-rroi. unill I wo years jiro y. The iiuroose of such si. code was described by Ihe aH.s_oelnl ion as the l.rnp- hall'- ' P'errol ..nil IS't-peesi* hud slepjied I n.oni behind the liulsuius, lli'e AViiiow*fl"!!"��fci-lnb1lHlinu'nt, of- ait honor system on.j lK'iiuiil'ul eves r-hining wiih pHile at iitlu* vo-uls," whereby .lhe motorist hlm- ihe accuracy of her shot. Instanlly' ':'����-ir can test lhe 'Vxlent lo which he r.*j*ht awny. I soon hetran tf. notice a difference in my f-enej.'il health. 1 waa full nf adhes and pains at the time an��? "-.houKhf. ] had every corni-lalpt goinp:. liiit lean trwlhfully '---ty- your li-s'-diciiie certain Iy did me pfood, f can and will speak hipfhly of it, and 1 know it will do other women -.'Oj-.] v.-Iki .'-.-e --:cU imA ailinp: if th^y v/ill only tfivo it a fair try**. Lydia. K.' fir-klmm':-! fJ\\"r Pilhi .'ire splendid For fonsHprition. You are welcome to ti.-.e **��y letter if yAi think -. r will liaf-ip nny n-"--.." "afri'i. F*.J rrv.Y W v.:rr woov, TA-'! <^uebec :���! treeC. T��-ron \\a>, Ontario. Th** ('���.'[vectant innLher ii- *.viri-_ iT phe <��� i��)si*.es's tMit'.-y'ully l!.v* .-." ;.l i-ir-"-:Vt ����f .".!'r,i, "tVe.-7-1 i/i-il, I, '. ��� '.''ij' i.i."- i-f .< .'.''��� .'7 rr.rinv. nil tellirp- the *.,*irr.r> '.t.'-rv ������ iien'j. iieiiil rortultn. r.yffi.-, I'I, F'inkhaT-i'.1; Ve^r-tribE^- ^orn- -D'ltmd im rf\\r>o.c\\ii\\\\v ndripN-d U*r umo rli��K- Jnpf tiiia period. Thee:rp*.nVn��"e r*f o-thei* tvornen who have found this mndiri.-i^ ,'- Jilet-.-iint,' \\k\\ f4r(H>C of iU j'-*efi,i tncrh. Why not try it now you*~.-,<���). 7 <'' . Wynln, his roy;il- hlijciiied wii"-; !��.. s,v (im proiid ������_' Ills (To be Von1lnued> I la'I U.-J-'"' I'I", ri-fiui ni hni r:eii i).,iHi > "-'I l. ' I.i . pi .'li" iii ;:.'... |���� ej-- ' ,-������if iiil��-r I tn-ol her 4 '.I I lla- iiutllpo:. hilled lie sMIl lived ill ie (i j n y L��a����aj, In". I "I I ul . .te Ih'.i II V. I ill III 11,1 ', e 'Hi-11. I'JI Ni"p��*e-,.e, 111.". ��� hull OJiineil liei v'hp h iii"!in,: I he SVIlhnv. ��� h.ia. (.(ion ii ��i'|ii l.ke ine willow,, ;i i a i'*-'--!, -.-'il h nil her :i v, Ih! |��r.ini.��r. nnd v, it h a IHI le l-'l'l ' I-1 f I | I �������� II .-a, ||. |h Sill- X' ' il ' '_"***1 ,_,_-_ Apjj])' Mlnard'o freely and often J :_.ii1 '.*: >.lc|i Hsi-vn i11:'.v)ip'>nr. Very Ancient Clonic Arehaeolpglsls are of the opinion Hint si woollen clonk, discovered by peat cutters iiv (Jeruin Fen, nenr ,Ml(!irn, Swed,i._ii;_i'iii'-��ia-iia.-,>_1t.i���� mmmmmmmmim mmmmmmm mmm V. ,w rae SEVIB-W, CEESTOtf, b. a ii _^B-l__BI"|-������-lfai'il^Bl iiill ,...,-__,...,.,..,.,,.^d:Rr., .,,-v.,,...,,... HEADACHEvBtUbUSNESSl j^aasaBg j?|>j Ejr|-3KSBl*-il ;_cr&lE^Si;iii!lEii:: WORLD HAPPENINGS BRIEFLY TOLD The' 'British minister to Switzerland, on l"'*half oi". India, has signed the opium convention adopted at Geneva last February. Belgium's first proposal for the re-' lunching "of its $480,000,000 debt to the United Stat.-is was found unacceptable by the United States cornmi-dson. A The Daily Express,. L.orcl Beaver- bropk'a paper, suggests that Burl Beatty, Admiral of the fleet, is qualified "to .be Lord Byng's successor as govtrnor.^geaeral of Canada, It is stated that the Soviet Goveiai- ment placed contracts for cotton valued at ������SO0,0*0d sterling with various Lancashire firms that would keep" the loom.- busy for several weeks. Austin: A. Kelson, a passenger, was killed, and "Worthington 11. Kempt, **. pilot, was seriously injured when Kompi's aeroplane fell 200 feet at Packard Fi^ld, Detroit. Admiral Sah-Cheng-T-ing, veteran commander-in-chief of the Chinese navy, in. his report to the' Peking Government urges it to stand firm in a demand for complete- Chinese "freedom of the seas." A daily air line service, carrying mail and piosftrigers. has been*start- ed between Berlin and Moscow. By "connecting with other air lines, one can go front Moscow to London iu 30 hours. /~ An'hour after Hampton Zeigler,~21, bought an aeroplane rrom W. It. Coe at Los Ang*������les, both-men fell to their death 'inftho machine which went into a tail spin while Coe was teaching Zeigler how to fly. An anarchist attempted to assassinate King Alfonso, of Spain, as he entered the casino -at Saint Sebastian, but he was seized before lie could-fire his plstel, according to a dispatch received at Paris. S . ' Miss Mon.i Bates, Canadian pianist, using the name.."Anoiit Sctab." has won enthusiastic recognition in Vienna and Dresden, Germany, On one occasion'she had the pleasure and honor, cm playing on the old piano used by the groat, master, Franz Li^sst.- Sir Park C,off, one of the most learhedym^inhfirs of lhe British House of Comiiioiis,-has been: selected by the British Vgroup '���������yltlcli-- is to attend the 'ntei-mitfcmal parliamentary cdnfer- ence-*rtt.:. Wa'sl^lngtonIn t he fall, to lecture "for- them oh' t}ie subject of dls- iirniament.. "; *-_7 ''"��������� Gave Two Orations "*" , At ~ 0*i*/3i Funeral -, + - . . Farmer of Davenport, ie-wa',, Made. Phonograph Records Before Death *'*;The voice of the dead delivered two' orations' at the funeral services for Charles W. Lau, wealthy retired farmer and former*member of tlie school board. In order to have a farewell Heart- to-heart talk with his family and ft'iend3, arid that h-e miglit criticize present conditions ia the* churches, Mr. Lau, three mouths ago, went to a Chicago-laboratory, and had two addresses inscribed on phonogra'ph records.' . He died. The two addresses were delivered through the - phonograph, one. at the services at the hdme and the other at the crematorium. Has Model Lifeboat' Dutch Engineer Claims His Invention Cannot Capsize -- J-ieny Schutteven, of Rotterdam, a Dutch naval engineer, has invented a lifeboat which he claims- cannot capsize, and giVes-^lhe occupants the full-; est" protection against exposure to the weather. The first experiments on a" smalL scale were entirely successful. The inventor, with six friends, plans to sail the latest model of his lifeboat from Rotterdam to London, and thence to New York as the final test. The������ model now being ^constructed is 25 fee-t long, deep. - eight feet wideband 4V2 feet CLIPSE". >>Ja*&Z. Proven, best Since BSS7 ^Makes happy, - ��������� ____"* **" - &������*5&Lm !��������������� ly JU?*A_XrJi^_r^-. J FREE BABY BOOKS Write to The Borden Co. Limited, Monti-eat. lo_r two Baby Welfare "Books. - ao-a.4- Goyeraor-Genern! Has Returned From North OUR GRO*|SWGRI> "ITftT "f>jr ryr tt* Jm ,. Was Gue������t of Missionaries, Traders, ��������� - Indians and Eskimos [ After journeying thousands of miles, f which carried him into "-the farther-1 most regions of Canada's northern hinterland, His , Excellency Baron Byng, Governor-General oi" Canada, [ has returned to civilization. [ It was the first time that such a' trip had been" undertaken by any|l3- _ governor-general of the dominion, .35 To and. during encountered experienced the long trip, the party \\ thinner, much of the hardship \\ _fT~-?ro?aun by the scattered popula- Horlzontal I���������Grave. 6���������A case in Lai in grammar, usually in- * dicated. by to. I -A plant from-"which j a bitter cathartic is [ obtained. In bad. Ecstatic exclamation..! make Jevel or [ 11 . Unveil "Scott MUsmoria I A national memorial to the in embers' o I" the. Scott. expedition, who perished while returning from ah unsuccessful diish for the South Pole in nj)13, was unvcilecll near Dovonporti. England, Captain-Scott's birthplace. The memorial '":.>va������ erected by .^national subscription fund."'/���������;';.;-."';> ',.��������� 'kk'A���������"- ��������� -'.-, ;.':-"'^*- " ''TEET Hl^ Thousands of Them Tlio hot "weather is very 1iarlf.K'flfciu'fctu'p to >"it tlioir toetli.' On H-uvflmt i-up-n of any Ioohen.*���������+.. o.f tin- l^oweltt 1.h*. iuotliory should gi'v������ u i'ow hIosoh of *v 4, -j no ' i i *���������" i vi ���������u LS���������An intoxicant..- m , . _, . 20*-Something that gives tion of the north country, obtained a j pleasure. keener appreciation oi the vastness j 21���������A cavity, and possibilities of "the Dominion, and . 22���������Embroidery silk. .-" came into personal contact with na- j 2-t���������Overturned..or sc^t- ,.*'..,., . . ! tered by accident, y- uve Eskimos, Indians and members of j 26 Not fast. missionary and trading outposts. ] 27���������To irritate. At Aklavik, Baron Byng inspected j 29���������Short jpoems. the prlncipai buildings and chatted ! ^?~San+bo divit*ea- . ,., L ,, _, .. x , _. 31���������To transport. { with members 6f the tiny settlement, j 33 jy0 ��������� - ^ \\ He visited the outly-iag regions and I stopped at an Eskimo fishing camp ���������near Kittlgaruit. The govemor-gen- s rancc was a -CGjuiiaj^Le siir- '"4���������God of lov:e. ' 7,1���������Conies together. h*9���������To adjust.- f 40���������A hand propeller. 41���������Subject. 44���������Grassy plain. 45���������Else* 46���������Instants. 48���������North * 1-a 111 u d e (abbr.). 49���������Cutting off a coi-er- - ing. 50���������Digits. 52���������To occur; 53���������Speaker. Vertical Ir���������1> e c o r a live neck ' 1 wear. S���������Sixth tone. S���������Dwarf. .. 4���������Sloughs oft. 5���������Close. 6���������Facts. T���������Aids. 8���������ZVTuch-used Decimal number. , 9���������Contraction" of would. 10���������Builds*. 14���������Husk, 16���������Long magnifying Instrument. 17���������Man. 19���������More moody. 21- to the by Pertaining stars. 23���������Brushed. 25���������Propelled. 2T���������Boute. 28���������A carved _ memorial post. 31���������Even; flat. *��������� . 32���������To understand sound. - / 35���������Not closed. 36���������Not Ifreslier. 38���������Grocery. 39���������Imitator. 42���������Prophetic sign. 43���������Denotes entrance. 46���������Chart. ��������� 47���������Expanse of water. 49���������Pages. . i* -ato .r&i flfo Sn_������|-������-iv a f������"P ??������������������������ >-__-_ .A A ���������****_=!-"'- mm m^iiis. a prise to the natives, but they were! equal to the occasion, and after greeting him.in -.heir peculiar fashion, they entertained their, visitors at-a break fast of fish and tea. Speeches of welcome were delivered, and his excellency was presented with a number of native souvepirs. . On the return journey, stops were. made afc-a-ammber of points. Stone Accepted Valuable Diamond Probably JBoy'B Summer Suit v The Well-Dressed .��������� '* "���������..' ������������������'���������._��������� >, ������������������:��������� -'.. ���������������'��������� .- Age, counts., when you * are dressing the. boy, and there is nothing mora serviceable, nothing neater in.appearance, and foi* summor-coolness than the Vash-suit, which has long been a favorite with the little chaps. .Fast- color-Devonshire cloth fashions the Hult. of. striij.-d material, wlth,.ih" cu-n- tre-front clbs-lpg, under .a 'flat plait trimmed trimmed ,w 1th buttons. The nctek,js -higliyand the collar l.s.com'- I'prtable-fltti'ng. The long "sleeve-fi have,m|(a, turn- back cuff, and "set-In pockets/, trim . tho front of; the ''.jacket, Tii o"-stralghi- kneotrpuaers fit ���������'��������� w
. r,..- .^. Send SOc'cjJa or stikwipa (wrap coIji ������arolqIlsr> m&mimm*. ^������ -m.������-i W."������������������Di;- Ik 151)0 * "���������-"Innrd'tJ '...Ir-Sment for ���������C-c-r.j-ii ��������� Wart-- .-" ��������� ind Given To Prince Is . Worth $10,000 The Prince of Wales has refused a 65 .carat^ diamond in Kimberiey, but has accepted one of 12 carats. "Even the 12r .carat , stone is sso large tl^at there are feyv-, if any, of that size in TorontOiyalthotigli the>--Can be, obtain,;- ed, in the regular way, 'In'Ne-A.,. YpiSt: oiv*Lond* The 65; ������ai^t stone,,;.Q|if the other haiild, is so largfe as .notyitip. be^i comm ercial proposi ti on���������comparing iny.size,' probably, with* a twentS?r Ave cBiftt -piece. A 3 or 3-carat storte Is worih about $600 per carat, "but this value increases-with the size of. the stone, and tho* one accepted by the Prince'would probably be worth ?I0,- 000. It would be diflicult. to value the larger one.-���������The Toronto Star, ;.'.���������'" Process to Harden and Tenri*per Lead Is Discovered"' ^ Au objective ol? scioncc since -cen- i turies before Christ, the hardcniTf-^aiid tempering of lead," has now' beert accomplished, according to an announcement from the Kawthdrae plant*;of the Western-Electric Company,'Chicago.' . R. S.. Dean a*ffl-Ti^.'^E. Hudsonyare- the metallurgical engineers who "have- done what generations of scientists before them could not. The fiew tempered lead, which" is made'witli the use of a "small percentage of'silloy and the treatment of the metal by a special heating process, makes a metal which Is threo times as hard as lead alloyed with the heat treatment, it is said.'-.. ; x -The -7new .alloy's wei-e found ivlicn 7' In one. Ivuadred yenvs the populatioij ol: England has'grown from eight mil- HoivJto ^hir^y-hvo million. This Is a natural IncroaBe, as omigration is greater*, tii^n immlgnitton^in Englnnd. and Burned Badly. ?;HBalecl by Cutlcura, ;.' ���������-������-'-, 1-, ; 1; -������������������ -���������-������"*��������� ������������������'������������������������. '���������-, "My..ffice atnrted to Itch and bUHi" unci then 'broke out with pimples thnt were hurcJ, large and red. After a few d������yn tliey fentetcd and acatled ov*tr/n-rtd were very oore. They itched and burned bo .badly that I uaed to -"crutch which caused them to ivpread all over my face and neck. My face was badljf* diBfiffured. " 1 rend aa advertlocmcnt for C11- Cicura Soa,p uiul Ointmet-it u>nd Hen* for ������ ffee enmple. After utsing It I purclmsed more and. in about two week-i I ,v������ii healed." (Signed^ Mioh Bertha Wlhton, R. R. 2, Foremen* Falln, Out.. Oct. 3, 1924. Dally ufte of Cutlcul-a Soap,Ointment and Talcum helps to prevent "akin troubled. AcLlrraa Canmllbii ikuuuijr. pi Ba-tJ* '**-**������ ������*r#* by M-.ll. *~ '*0sl������iui������ci__M, Ltd, Uaa\\ I*,*������������"-i , 'rk*. Ho*.|������ Culicura Sh-k\\*%i������ Stick 2Kc, 'new '-l'"W..'(������...,i;.!j.:i ...... sampljes of l^ad treiited with heat were '"���������*-"-"- -���������"-������������������������������������ - "'feefore- are le^t,J:6;!{;|^nd1yfpi*--;'Scyeral .d-iys' fbrtlier'v.;:; wbrlting:" .^. ��������� texperirifents.' npwibelri^ cpnducted to reduce the degree of, brlttleness which prevail od: in initlalrexperiments, and to make "the 'tempered'-product.tougher. ~ ��������� ' It will improve, among otiicr things, coating for ..telephone*- cable, and increase the life of the cable. Technical details oILthe ctlscoycry were presented to th'e AtnVrlcan-Chemical Society at Ltfs Angelb������7 ���������'' A Rotor Aeroplane A monoplane flying on the rotor principle and capable ������f a speed of three hundred mile.*- an hoar ig ...the invention. cS-edited to an Austrian en- E"l!ieei\\ " "Tho tnvAnlni. _ral������lrrti_. l\\fc -mn. chine will rUe almost:-'vertically, and will bo able to cross the Atlantic In twelve hours. The British air ministry is -"epbrted to bo Interesting it- sclf.#in the invention and is s*nld to have offered to build an experimental mofl el according to the inventor's specification.*-, k.'x ",.-", ,.':'..' '..-���������"���������>.. Collects Real Canadian Flowers "���������* _______ *'.'"' ;.; Four Hundred Varieties In'" Lady Byna"s English Gardens ��������� Tho secret of Lady Byng*.-^decided pro foreheo for tfi^ygi-eat ottt-pf-doors and tlio beautiful gardens" of Canadian'houses rather, than the formality which mftrks receptions Jndoors.vXvaa revealed'-during the visit to Vlc.cvria' or the governor-general of Csinncla and hip popMlnr lady," ' .. Lady Byng ts an ardent lover of flovfora and -a keen gnvdenery7 Since slio came to Canada she has collected no lonp-'than iOO'.differcnt.vnrlcl.jl^a. foi the beautiful gardens of her EnKlislr hcmVe. . Ayiompanyiag the pWntt"- to iRnglttnd'. have goae'* cnrefljl instrnc- I Ion a thai Ihey h re fo receive thtyhei-t of attention. Ofthe -100, only twolvo have--ftiilc'd to thrive after hid 11 g transported .across the AlhinUe and 'trans- jjSa 11 U-d In l'hiKli.*-h,.soll. After, a peraon Iuij* lieen bdrtytk by light 11 nf* wthcHit Herous ihJtiT-y. rpieer marks re������einblliiK fh������. veins or leaves ofton appear on their bodies-*. Tlu-ije are li'HsioiiN due to the pH.<-������ing of eleclrlcliy through tissues. ONTARIO COLLEGE OF ART * - G������^*TVqaC Pju-Ic - *l*_yrO--"_c. DaAVIMO*P!\\IK|-nNC *modellimcdesic*n iWP*lOMVaCHl*lSE ��������� IUNIOR OXtRSE- TEACHE US (COURSE - CXJMMERCIAL ART ��������� G-A-REIO R.C-A-*Pri������M_lvat 'S������s������l������n -026-2B Opanc Oo������<������b������r Sth ��������� Fat 'Prxuptrtum J/ppiu Tt* TZrgitlrar 3Z WOOL Made Into yarn 35-c lb.r������ Batte 25c lb. Write- for rir*-ulj������r Ar, Miwer.-tcr-*, blnnketa. mackhiavy co-its n.nd iKiiils. etc. ' SUDBURY WOOLLE'-fl MtttU^. 'UMiTCa'' SudbiMy, OntJ ���������"*���������', CAROM LIGHT, WATER & POWER PLANTS Caron Brothers INC. I OS 3rd Ava., &.- SftSKATOOH, Baahatohawann Mil io'm Liail imciK iar THE NEW PIIBNDM WEMEDV, THfcRAPBOlMNo. 1 THERAPIONNO.2 THERAPION! No.3 M_>.lf������r Ml*������tdBrC*mrrl������i. No. &r������r Bl������o4 ������ Rbli-i ntt������,������j������������!_, Mo.srorChr������nf"*Waj-JH-.3 CaHJM. *������������, |.*|(..J"_I "a KM.I.kMI,.!*, Jmag^ICJU _H_W4J_ lai-^ ��������� t.4t*.i.t:m i. M-aiaa, -a������a. aa ������a r.ita 4Hm p, ,4..\\. 4..m.i.,*w*,u*. ������r M������1I ���������������, 1 O |M������ H, Vik-v^." !*T H ..Tn*rtH .O, Ow������ i ���������"��������������������������� tivKCWat-M *s������a������������. m������������- yott* city. % 'JTHB CBjSSTCR BEVIE-W Anglican Church Services %J\\������ I "SUatiUPMT, CRESTON 7.30 p.m. a_S*t CHAS. SVIOORE, C.E. ENGINEER .ARCHITECT SURVEYOR [Registered! CRESTQ!V; B.C. Local and Personal itr.l whether it is your first or your tenth, take this advice: Look at- it carefully, inside and out. ��������� See wheter it looks like a clean. workmanlike job. Hear it in ops-ration. Judge it for tone and volume and seletivity as well as distance. Then ask your dealer about the manufacturer. How long has he been in the business ? What is his reputation ? Do his sets need a lot of service after being sold ? On a judgment of that aorfc AT WATEB KENT is willing to stand or fall. We know that every Atwater Kent Radio Re ceiving Set is made to do certain thh.gs consistently and well. We know that it is accurate to a hair's breadth. And we know that ATWATER KENT owners are satisfied. RQ ATE IDfl^ kimM\\* KRJT Ageaeg. GRESTOH A full line of Dominion and Western Rifle Cartridges have jnst arrived -m ( For that next Duck hunt try a box of WESTERN SUPER ,X SHOT SHELLS. V. MAWSON CRESTON -^~ OjGIL VIE Goods are dependable ZIPHO Cleans -and Polishes Pots and Pans without scratching ��������� _ mm* ���������4ml*mgf*> ' ������rin<_r aa inwrnon a the fail assizes jn __, that city which opened on-Tuesday. * At the meetipg of the trustees on Monday night the tender of"_". Ha'sris to supply the school with' four font wood was accepted, and' G-. Nickel's bid to supply the 20 inch wood was also accepted. Mrs. Repsomer, who has been on a visit with friends at Kimberiey^ where Mr Repsomer has been a hospital patient, is now spending.a few days with her daughter, Mrs. E. Thompson, at "Wardner." There wiii be a congregational gathering in the Parish Hall on-Friday, October 80th, at.8 p.m., in connection with children's work. Debate on the need of training for citizenship, cards, music and dancing. Fob Sale���������Separator, only used six months, 350 pounds capacity, will handle from two to seven cows, and is in excellent shape. Also^a two thirds Jersey heifer, aged 13 months. Jas. Batenian, Canyon. Mrs. Burge of Cranbrook, arrived at the end of the week on a visit with her mother, Mrs. Ryckman, who Is now nicely recovering: from quite a severe illness. Mrs. Bidder, - who has been here, has returned to Marysville. R . S. Bevan has ju&t taken, on Sh agency -for the Tliermodyne Xfcidio and has one of these machines installed in his office at the Oarage. He invitee everyone to drop in and hear it, the loud speaker giving excellent results. Movie patrols are reminded that ehis week's show of pictures at the Grand will be tonight, 23rd, in order to permit the Farmer-Labor party to I" have the theatre .for a a rally on the 24th. This *5*eeVs offering Js "The Silent Accuser." The ladies pf the I/.O.B. A. are serving a cho������ee lot of -fowl at their chicken dinner in the Mercantil Hall on Thursday evening-. October 29th. Irom 5 to S o'clock, to which all are invited. Popular prices of 50 and 25 cents -will prevail. . Miss Shannon, vice-principal of the high schooi,-ret.urned from Vancouver on Saturday, to which 'point she was called on October lstv due "to the Unexpected death.,bf her mother. Miss McDonald"of NelscSn, who hat-snbsti tuted fbr her, left for home the same day, " ' Posters are up for the. Farmes* "Lahor rally in the Grand Theatre on, Satiir day night, 24th, at which the speaketfR will be the candid ute, Li. \\V1 Hnsn- phi-ey, assisted, by A. M.; Coulter ; of Vancouver. The, meet ing is dne ,.:to start at 8 o'clock, and the ladies, aire' specially invited. .' R. Walmsley has juafc been-' np- I pointed a pent here for the Conard, Anchor and Anchor-Donaldson ocean steamship lines and is now prepared to.sell transportation to all European points. ' ��������� Special-"*-'*'ChristmaB sailings have been arranged which he will lie) pi eased'to-tell. you. all .about these and all other sailings by steamers of these lines. " . G. Horsley of Nakusp, ^ who has a wrtter ri^ht on the Goat Kivejr canyon, whs here at the flrst of the week, and was in conference with the board of trade's electric light committee, leaving on Tueflday for Elko where, he is looking over some equipment suitable for in stall inf? here to take care of the local power plant. Ijifcht will hardly be available until next yenr, but some definite announcement in the mat tor will he made in a few d.iyo. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. j. Dow arrived ���������here on Monday from Did-.dory, TCripj- litnd. and at present are guCBts of his brother, John W., and Mrs, Dow, the la-lies also being: slatcri*. Old timers are giving Bill a ffreat welcome bank- He wim a familiar Hjruro In Oreston up to early in 1010 at which time he Joined up with the 102nd Battalion for over* '������������������������������"������* *u*-rv1**������ *������*hI early In 1010 wn* married in ISnfttand, where he and M*-**. Dow havo since peaidod, hut, we onderNtanri, th**y aro intending to make B.C. Iheir permanent homo in tat urn. Knox Presbyterian Church, Kisw Wei. tmlriHter, w������m the Relating --m Wed'ncwday evening at 8 o'clock for the "marriage, of Minn KU/.ttlwtU Hhodn ������������������������' 'frhe schedule which ts the mast unjust of Ls___ .whose of the sarin scs_>eduie3 of Uan ada is that relating -to farm products. "The first tariff schedule tbat should be raised in this country is the farm products schedule. .... The farmer in this country today is competing with his fellow farmer in other countries under conditions, of absolute,un- 1 v ���������*��������� * _"*���������_.*��������� *��������� *** "~ _*" B 'I^Dro.rk ^m^.^.^irw *-t%2-4* t\\A ****** A ���������__--j|*%0 ������hv*o������ ������;*acw������Ji in-.*-^ jj^fc-w^v^jM-iw"^. *> ���������_-><^-������H/^ m -brought Into this cousttry under a < relative j ~low tariff.pr none at all. while he1 is forbidden access to other countries save over a tariff .that, he simply -cannot escape."���������r (Right Hon. Aithur Meighen in the House of Commons, June 23rd., 1925)"- , -- So states Hon. Arthur Ivieighen9 and his supporters in West Jioote- pay broadcast the information that higher protection will bring increased returns to theifruit grower for his product;f a doctrine entirely misleading^ in that it disregards Jbhe. facts." - ^ In 1922 the apple grower experienced ' a year, of disasters ���������In lB24r one of c6snparaH&e. prosperity. "* The same tariff' mas in effect both seasons, and had not the slightest bearing on kthe traced io widely 9A*ts"Sr&0*t reSMtur&m Which can in JL vtxen ���������:������������������; _._ the same cause. Zero prices in 1922 were due to low returns^ on Es^port Apples and the fact that the surplus exported was a heavy per eentage of the-total crop. Favorable prices in 1924 were duex to comparativelyTavorabie returns on export fruit, and the fact that a short crop of apples had the effect of reducing the per eentage of the crop that had to be placed competitively on the world market. British Columbia has in the last few years become an exporter ' of fruit and the priee received for aur total crop cannot possibly be influenced by increasing the present tariff9 but will be governed by. the world markets- and the proportion which apples exported bear? to apples sold on the prairie. The fruit grower is vitally interested in increased population for Western Canada and in increased buying power for each individual of that population. '- Mr. Meighen'^s tariff will inevitably decrease both population and buying power. ������ The policy of Mackenzie King is designed to bring prosperity to Canadian farmers by reducing the price of the things the farmer has to buy thus enabling him to meet world competition with his exports. *T-i_._ "!>*_:������..:~u _n������.������i *,:_ e JLJUt; iSiitisuu -ouiuuuuiiib. JUM-uicr inereasiug surpius ui ���������:*.%. v.:~ *.*.*.*. j:i_ WltU JUla-S JStaOUUll^ _ fruit and the prairie farmer with his wheat surplus both looking for favorable foreign markets have an identical and vital interest in supporting the Liberal policy... The Canadian Countryman, one of the most widely circulated non political farm journals- in Canada, ' li&s made a surveyibf both the King and. Meighen policies, as outlined in the speeches of the - leaders,* aud emphatically - give* ita opinion that -Mr. King's policy is the only policy that can help the farmer. Referring to M**. Meighen's policy'of .high protection for farm as . well ���������aft maiuifactured products, it . says: .''So long as Canada remains the *agrioultui--> al exporting country slie, is, the pryje Canadian farmers receive for they: A.pro-. ducts' will be Hxed; liy the world's markets, and not influenced by any tarifF that^may be.imposed." * a .: a ^ An all round inoreasei in tariff, the Countryman says,'can- only increase the price of things the farmer has to buy, while'it can add nothing to his income.^ Such a policy would retard the prosper ' ity now returning. ^ The Countryman points out. that a tariff un farm produots could only raise, price** "to th������ farmer were there" - no exp'ortabte_Hur pi us, ' ���������"��������� * ^The farming interests can beat be served by wideiiing his export markets, which determines the price he receives, ahd not by adding to his biirdeu of taxation under the pretext of proteotihg him in the home market against Competition, which is^ either;, noiii-existent or negligible. >."-. '- i -. * i 7>I /- H i SUPPORT MAt^KEHXlE KING Uy VOTING Hoi' ������������������a"-,*'-"- -y- Scluter, youngest daughter of M������*- at*d Mrs. W. Sclater, Cimiberlithd '.^rcet, nnd Mr. George Harold Kelly t*t Creston, son of Mrs. W. H. Kelly;, 010 Third avenue,Now WeBfci������iin.8teri'"'*,j"lie chance" was beautifully decorated Vi, lth autumn flowers nnd*V')CfV|.09|. '��������� Tlie bridal party stood under an a*foijW������y of flow ore, while the ceremony "was performed by Rov. Alexander Dunn. After a honeymoon trip to -'Victoria, Mr. and Mrs, Kelly will take up real dunco in Crouton,���������Province. JERSEY COW EtSTRAY Btrayod from tha premises 'pt t\\\\*r unciersifi*tied nt Canyon, a purebred JorHoy cow. fawn color with black BJuiiUiiii*"-, hud bull on when lttsl seen, due to frcHherv Immediately. Howard of "B10 to party kIvum Information lcudinK to recovery. A. BOND, Canyon. Straw for Poiillty S^iittGli IVis are expecting a car of Wheat and gobd^SremOat .:, Straw. Yoit save money) bx> taking delivery from the car.. ��������� HT*"~~?ir ai Km ������i i . 'Ti i '������������������ i i i.i, i..i .'^ i ii i i1' ,f~TS^BTi.������i|i.i iii"'i_i'll'l'-|'i m" ii J n ,.|i ���������iin_.'i_i;il, Im,r.lT.i.iil.am.mii.jiV'ii'll.i ��������� >��������� . It ia Qiiality and Feeding Value that' count-B in buying .feed for, Poultry and Stock, and it does not follow that the oheapeat N , id tho beat buy. *~ : ��������� ' ': ���������'������������������*'*'' OGILVIE and PURITY Products combiac Quality with .... lowest possible price. 'x^--';-r'>-^.":". ' ' ' ��������� ' ���������' , ' " .'��������� ," ',;'"*.������������������''.'.,),*.:.?"���������' "��������� ' Royal Household, Purity, Famojo Flouro. Coal Oil and Gasoline 73 AiiifBtHo 5 mm ''fl -/',! 'si t fil "'I ,f'| tf"""@en, "Print Run: 1909-1983

Frequency: Weekly"@en ; edm:hasType "Newspapers"@en ; dcterms:spatial "Creston (B.C.)"@en ; dcterms:identifier "Creston_Review-1925-10-23"@en ; edm:isShownAt "10.14288/1.0174511"@en ; dcterms:language "English"@en ; geo:lat "49.0975"@en ; geo:long "-116.5130560"@en ; edm:provider "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en ; dcterms:publisher "Creston, B.C. : Creston Printing and Publishing Co."@en ; dcterms:rights "Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Digitization Centre: http://digitize.library.ubc.ca/"@en ; dcterms:source "Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives."@en ; dcterms:title "Creston Review"@en ; dcterms:type "Text"@en .