DEVOTED TO. THE INTERESTS OF SUMMERWAND.l'PEACHLAND ÁNONARAMATA SUMMERLAND, •B:vC.,\Fl IDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1925 VOL: XVII.—No. 18. r $2;50,, payable in advance. HAROLD^HSTE WILL NOT SUMMERLAND PUPILS ARE PUNCTUAL AND REGULAR; BRIGHT NOVEMBER STUDENTS

Pleasing Intelligence Regarding Popular Boy, Victim of Attendance Maintained an Unusually High, Standard Serious Accident in Father's Newspaper Office in During the Past Month, Despite Autumn Colds-^Pro- Kamloops, When Hair and Clothing Became Ignited. ficiency Lists in Order of Merit. The November reports of the Sum• Summerland citizens this week were shocked to; learnof ?a merland public school for'the month regrettable accident which occurred: in Kamloops: on^ Tuesday of September,;have come to hand and . ; . RussellMunn are printed herewith. A feature of to Harold White, sixteen-year-old son of Mr^and^Mrs; Ralph; the report is the 'number whose White,'formerly of Summerland and now of the northern city; names; are included in the lists of Î Harold, it seems, was priming the lamp in a lasting b^ox^ in Made Fast Trip punctuality > and regularity. Iri ' the •' the office of his father's" newspaper, "The Sentinel," when'his fall and winter days, when colds are , - A letter,,recently received from; prevalent, the attendance often has a hair and clothing became ignited with burning oil. i He, fainted Russell Munn reports a: speedy an4 marked falling off and the fact ; that: and was taken toithe-hospital; fear being expressed; that;he safe : return. to Los Angeles. He so many pupils of i the school did not, would lose the sight of both eyes as'well as being permanently made Vancouver in less than two: miss a day - of work in November is ,. scarred. \ days from .'Summerland and made a noteworthy feature. :/ The Review is^glad,;however, to convey the pleasing intel• the: rest. of .,• the,_ journey in five Following are the names: days. • He states that no . grass Division —Entrance class, S. A. ligence that Harold's condition is muchcbetter than was feared/ grew under his' auto, wheels on I. In a telegram from the lad's: father, Ralph E. White, it is Stated the trip. MacDonald." (First 10 in order of - that Harold is doing;weli, although he was badly burned about merit)'. " " Jean Munn, Gene Betuzzi, Jessie ;. the face andhands. The most welcome intimation; however, is Tullett,. Wilfred Neill, Doris Secord, that doctors confidently;statelthat Harold's eyes are safe and Laura iSmith, Arthur Joy, John Ben-. , that he will not be permanently scarred. ' " 1 r NEARLY $7000 more, Lona Williams, Philip Wilson: - 1 This knowledge will be welcomed* Division IL, Grade 7—H. W. Dan• by Summerland residents, • both' iels. young and old, for Harold was very INVESTED FOR ' In order'of merit:; Victor .Wilson, popular in Summerland. A. graduate RudyàrâïÇipliûg George. Mo'ssbp; r James•"••MayV-v^^Màmie : ; ; of the: Summerland. public school and Steinbéch^and,.Edward, JoyiiMorris;^* attendant "at vjthe^ local , highschool Laidlaw, ' Sadie /.'.Puryes; Jack .Morrow, .v1; until his, departrue . for Kamloops a Somewhat Better SINKING FUND"^•-Perfec t Attendance — ;Dorothy,. ; few months ago, following •-.the.sale Barnard,- Diana Barnes, Arietta Bia- . of The Review by his father, he took gonij^MarinO'i-.Biagoni,';';Ch^lie''.:Bleas-r',.',-»:'.^ v.London, Dec. 3.—Rudyard: Kip• a prominent; part in school lif e,' ,be^ ; dale, Bob Butler, Jean Fisher, .Walter >- ing particularly prominent; in debates ling passed a good night. This mor• Heavy , Purchase of Grand Gartrell, Edward Joy, Morris Laid• and, other similar school • activities; ning it was,said his_condition was Trunk Pacific Bonds law,' 'James May, Jack, Morrow, • Theloss of his sight would have been unchanged. The noted writer is ly• George ' Mossop', Emily Mountford, a serious handicap .to a promising ing ill with,double pneumonia in .by Town Donald ' McLachlan, Sadie Purves,' life, -and many Summerland friends his home' hv- the littlevillage ? of Freeman Reid,' Mamie Stienbach, . will be relieved that this tragedy will Burwash. in • Sussex. ""<"" Victor Wilson. not • materialize. Many inquiries COUNCIL HAD have been made of The Review as to BUSY SESSION Division III.—M. H. Harwood. his condition. Proficiency, Gradé VL^—Dick Ben- . How It Happened VERNON MOURNS LOSS more,,Bobby Nelson, Margaret Hogg, The Kamloops Sentinel: report of VANCOUVER NURSE SLASHED Electric Light and Water Annie Denike. • , the accident says: , OF LATE E. F. LLOYD Applications; Numerous Proficiency, Grade V. —-< Dorothy /. M. 1 "Harold W. White, 16-year-old Robinson Is Bowering, Harry Barkwill, Harvey .high,school boy, and son of Ralph E Vernon, Nov. 28.^—Seldom has there —Cemetery Inspected . Mitchell, Kenneth Walters. • , ' been so, general;an expression of sor• BY CRAZED MEXICAN, DIES Going To Coast White, proprietor of The Sentinel, Regularity and" .punctuality'-'— "ri row, among all classes of citizens as 1 met with an unfortunate accident at A considerable amount' of , business Harry Barkwill, Dick Renmore;'Riar when it; was learned on Saturday ^ . I. ^ . " 1 V , ^ \ J j was>'.transacted at the meeting; of the : the plant, yesterday afternoon at morning, Nov.' 21st, that E.': F.' Lloyd : Mrs. Görden Haymon of Boston Betuzzi, Adorno Biagonia, Dorothy ', 4:40Y when'he: was very badly burn municipal', council last;. Friday; after• Bowering, James Clark, Annie Den• had passed away at the.Vernon Jubl Bar arrived in Summerland- on noon,; chief sof: which was the invest• :. ed. He was :priming a casting-box Ann Roedde Succumbed to Injuries.; Received When : ike, Norman Dickenson, George ' lee Hospital sdurihg' the preceding Monday, and syill' accompany her ment of nearly ?7000.;in Grand Trunk .lamp at: the?time,f^vhen his-hair and night: The funeral ; service'' at 'All parents, Mr. and Mrs. J., M. Rob• Dunsdon,' Margaret Dunsdon;: .Lloyd •. ^.clothing.:- became o ignited.In his Throat Slashed hy, Mexican; Who Subsequently Pacific 'Railway bonds, guaranteed; by his l-Saints' Church on Monday afternoon inson, to .the '• Coast,' v.; where :;..Mr. the ' Saskatchewan: Government, '.for Gould; -Charles v Hannah, - 'Margaret' agony;5 with- hands; pressed , to was attended by -a; large number of " - Attempted Suicide. Robinson ! will: undergo : treatment. Hogg, Doreen Howis,, Dean Inglis, ' faceywhe - made for the door. Robert sinking fundV'p'urposes.'-/ v •. , ' ,3'', . people,; among; whom' the Masons, in Mr. Robinson has been ill for 1 Naomi :-Kercher, Harvey r^Mitchell^W' Querns, pressman, rushed.to him and Mr. E. IP. McDermott was present ire- Leonard v Mountford;Bobby">Nelson; theirt regaUa,i,were? conspicuous.- some t'ima and it is hoped that this presenting, Ithej Royal Financial .Cor• beat out the flames on his.head -with (Special to The-Review jugular vein and carotid artery are trip will be of benefit to him. Katherine;- Ramsay, ; Edward Rippinj' A, his hands; and the-boy.'s:brother, Ron- service wa^':choral; and the beautiful Vancouver, iDec. 4^-r-Ann Roedde, 21 severed. poration, • and, waited on ^the council with?;anroffer for-sinking fund invest; Stanley. Sharp, Jack Shields, aid;' dashed out; and ^wrapped a'coat Works of the burial; service;the solemn year old nurse victim of a murderous Doctors say she has a fighting 1 ;t meati'^lt^was v.moved by',' Councillor Division IV., Grade V., T. M. , aroun'dv.the^buriiin^Jclbthe^V'b'At.-'this' °hes of the org|jp|fcdr;the voices of assult at the hands, of a crazed Mexi• chance• for: .life.:: ^Pasquale,' not so 1 point; the victim-, fafpte'd' with' the tne chJ»r in^tlie familiar 'psalm's and can in the.General Hospitat shortly be• dangerously,: wounded,-., will recover ticton.;' He ..didn't, say,-much '.because Ritchie i-ana^'s^ Hobbs.: November standing: of the care^which, Mr., S.^'Hamilton ; agony He had'suffered:' -... s, hynms' .made,.. the occasion most im- fore 8 o'clock; Wednesday evening ex• The Spaniard had Jbeen-a patient at Smith-that; $1,000 G.TJP. Ry. bonds, bo Proficiency: : Pixie; Wilson,; Betty-k < D had-vtaken- to/s^ee that they^ -were filled purchasedsfrom, the- abovetcompany .t. "Immediately taken to the'--Royal -' ras8lve.-..-.Tb.e,- Pall bearers.: were pired at 2:40sithis corning.. 'r **• the - hospital during thetwo^: week* Nelson; Alastair Campbell and .Gretta ; up ;,withisiind'w^che£ ; an(J 'thisM motion was-carried:-From Secord. ; "^ " „ l|| -Inland Hospitin;^i^i^ervices-I '-w--•;- A-BRUTAL ATTACK . - preceding TueVda^pwhen he was te 1 was brief "and, to ^fie^'pofnt^'Summer- Pembekdn^''firsph' and" addif iohar-$2;-, ArchibaldShavihg been^fd™ Vancdurcr, < Dec..', 3;-rr-Crazed 'with'leased ; 'Wednesday^, night he, return• : Regularity and^punctùalft^^Brîan.|® r and brooding over an imaginary Vrong, ed, ostensibly c to visit ' a patient with land'teams^'will be' .entertained.'-in.-Pen. 0do" worth:of the^same/bonds'was,*ak-- : cured, /Harold' White"was] giventhe ' ' Colonel'Fitzmaurice. ticton'at-an earlysdate. < - , - T Atkinson, Gordon,Boothev^Alàn.But-.. most prompt, and J skilful ^attention. Benitio Pasquale, 41, while visiting whom he had become acquaipted l en at a slightly lower figurerthanithat- 1er,; Alastair Campbell'j'Daniele -Gav- 'ir quoted on the first purchase. It was ; He- passed a fairly,.peaceful night, the. General Hospital about. 8 o'clock while convalescent.', ani, Alice Dickenson, Florence,<-Do-&~i ST. BONIFACE TO also decided:to asd&'the BJC."S Bond, and is as well as can jpe, .expected Wednesday...eveni^gi I-:> "•'He^ was ^sitting beside bis friend's Cor!herty,Vèrn a Gale, 'Ruby?,Haddrell, ; poration-for: their-lowest, "figure"'on* an throat of Ann/:Roedde,^21, a nurse, bed when suddenly, as Miss v Roedde today. .Whether':'thesight" of fboth CALEDONIANS exchange of $9,000 "of. 1932 and 1934 Helen , Kercher,' Irene May," Marion with a razor,' and then" slit his own,' was passing; he leaped- to .his feet, Monro, • Howard; Milne;: BobviMcCut-::; eyes will berp'reserv'ed'carihot"yet'^be; f Dominion of Canada, bonds, for i$9,000 - HOLD MEETING •GrettàvSecordJi ArthurSmith^vMar-;;:; from her;body and only the (act that' Then, before other patients in the; The .water connittee"'reported lhat garet Steihbech, Billy Stewart,-Edith sufficiently/.penetrate .theiskin!'as to the;extra lumber for the Trout Creek, leave vp^rmanentiScarsi^sOne : hand;' Policé Campaign Is Inaugur• expert medical attention was immed room realised what was taking place, Verity, • Daphne Walter, 'Billy Laid- Main 'had. ;.been ordered: frem. .0; B'at- ; however; i was severely injured.'' • * - ated in Cathedral lately at--hand'is responsible for. the he had gashed his- own throat with aw. " • ' • . • ' >): preservation-\of her;j, life, i both the the razor. Annual Meet Coupled With tye 'at '$,24 per. thousand broadfeet de• Division V.—R. E.'Graham- , - •* , City Silver Wedding livered; '^including the sales tax. 1$ey Grade IV., Part 1: Rbbini'Agur, ; also recommended that Mr. O. Mann Philip Dunsdon, Phyllis Neill, Maur• DISCUSS PLANS Winnipeg, Dec. .3.—A police cam SUMMERLAND BASKETBALLERS ' Anniversary be given an irrigation connection from ice Welsh. 'i •' 1 , ' ;;v:.;':' the main on the west side of Lot 6A- paign to make St.' Boniface,.. Manl 1 1 Grade IV., Part 2—Fred Bleasdalè, tbba's cathedral city; dry, was launch' The members of the iSummerland 473 ,and axblock irrigation rate 'of 12 St.' Andrew's '.and. Caledonia Society acres,,'/This was, providing that Mr. Axel Amundson, ,Earle Inglis and FOR EXCHANGE ed early today; and as' a result five Gordon Morgan. , men are:' under arrest charged With in;'their,: customary, loyal fashion fit• G. D.'Roberts were willing to do with• tingly commemorated St. Andrew's out. irrigation water' from the muni• Perfect Attendance — Margaret violating, the: Manitoba' Temperance cipal system, in which case no rate Baldwin, Kenneth Boothe, Philip Act., Four, alleged proprietors of Day on the evening of November 80th; in the iParish Hall, 'West Summerland.; would be charged the latter. The muni• Dunsdon, Eva Gale, Jean Gould, Committee Meet at Vernon CUI toml'w^ " Summerland Team Fights Hard but Visiting Teams Too The night's i entertainment was under cipal; .flume running ; through. Mr. Joan Haddrcll, Earle Inglis, Gordon- Co-Operation pf All I *«»>>ers will appear the able presidentship of Mr/ Alex. G. Mann's lot could then bo turned over Morgan, David Munn, Kenneth Mc• Strong — Girls Lose 12-7 in Fast Contest- -Seniors Smith-and a: goodly ..number of the to ;him. This report', was adopted:- i Kay, Colin McKènzie, Phyllis -Neill, Shippers Feasible ' "unco guld"' were present! The ^matter of building a cement Russell Neill, Errier Reid, Billy Stark, tankv on'Trout > Creek.'iat-'1 the ;point of GUN GOES OFF; Go Under 20-12-—Seniors Show Promise.. During the course of the evening Margaret Steven, Rupert Walton, The committee appointed by the the recent' washout vwas': loft in the Division VI.—A. Ruth Dale. Fruit and Vegetable Shippers' Associa• two of the most popular, members of hands' of the water'committee.'.!' On Tuesday evening in the gym• and didn't let up until ten points had the society—Mr. and Mrs. G. D. Mar Proficiency, 'Grade ; III., Part 2 .— tion, Limited, of B.C. met the; manage nasium the Summerland been scored. The ball > passed i from The- (Public Works,; Committee re Gerald Bowering, Margaret Smith, ment of the Associated; Growers; Ver OWNER KILLED shall—who had that evening attained teams, both'' ladles and men" were' player;to player with .bewildering rap• the twenty-fifth, anniversary 'of their, ported the: inspection of .the •: cemetery Lillian Mitchell, Barbara Haddrell non, on December 1st, and discussed downed by the visiting iPenticton ag• idity in the best combination display and; it, Was recommended that, the and Evelyn Sanger. with it the proposals made by the In marriage. (silver, wedding) were : gregations in two' hard-fought, strenu• which has been shown by the iPentic-; widened, also that cars at funerals be dependent Shippers with .regard-to the made the recipients of a handsome Grade III, Part 1: Dulcc Posbery, ous games before' a large crowd of ton team, thiB year. After this,' play- present from the other members in the required to pass through tho cemetery Violet May, Harriet Joy. formation of the Exchange. >; Edward Hew, Prince Rup• : fans.' Of course, the Summerland died down somewhat and the Sum• form of a set of silver knives and and. park on lots 24, 25 and 41 which Regularity and Punctuality: Jes• M/r. HayeB entered, fully into the ert, Dies Instantly From teams had not had as much practice merland team began to show its usual forks with teaspoons to match. He to the east of the cemetery.- In sie Arkell, Bob Barkwill, ' Billy Bor function of the Exchange, explaining as the'visitors and were in doubt until close checking work, Play was. end-to- regard to the prices to be charged for Wound ' An added feature was the tastefully ton, Gerald Bowering, Billy Down ton, how those would work out In practice. near the time of the game; as to who end with the rushes breaking on the digging graves on a motion of Conn Dulco Foshery» Harold Foster, Billy While Mr. Barratt thought that the was going to make up the team, while other team's defence but Summorland decorated wedding cake . that drew forth, much favorable comment, Many cillpra Arkell and Smith it waB • de Gale, Roy. Kennedy, Violet May, Exchange appeared to be a revival of . Prince, Rupert, Dee.. 3.—Shot , in the iPenticton teams appear stronger began to slip In a basket at intervals olded to make a chargo of $5 for adult Agnes Moore,, Mary Powell, Barbara tho Traille and Credit Association the head whan his gun discharged at than the locals,, tho Summerland by playing an open combination game solicitous. remarkB wero expressed graves and $4 for those of infants, tho which had failed, Mr. Hayes pointed eulogizing the popularity of the happy, Purves, Evelyn Sanger, Ralph Sang• he was' lighting It out of the CMS, teams wont down with colors flying. and at half time the score was 12-6. chargo being made through the muni er, Frod Smith, Leslie Smith, Reggie out that in his opinion the Traille and The girls wore losBors by a score; of (Play was much the same in,tho second oouplo, Mr, Marshall fittingly ac Edward Hew, a prominent resident of knowlodgod' the spontaneous honor cipal ofTlco. WilBon, Kathloon Wright,, Mary Credit Association had porformed Prince Rupert, was,'almost instantly 12-7 while the seniors were downed halt, both toamB checking very, olosoly many useful functions and the Ex• thus conferred upon his good wife and The request of Mr. E. Korchor for Young. killed at noon today on Redloy Island 20-12, The play was fast and the, chock• which accounted for numerous fouls, wood off tho lotB,at the'upper part of change now proposed to extend those ing hard but tho only casualty was Siimmorland woro foroed ,to shoot himaolf. A danco followed and tho Division VII.—K. M. Elliott. adjacent to the city, where he had singing of "Auld Lang Syne" which Garaott Valloy' waB referred to the Tho following pupils havo had per• functions for the benefit of the whole gone on a hunting expedition. Miss Frances Gibson of iPenticton who from centre tlmo aftor time and' foil industry. "brochot \anlthor happy nlchot" to Public Works Committee, Messrs. S, fect attendance during Novombor: was knocked down by an accidental down hadly on this long rango work. G, Davis and E. II* Bennett woro grant Considerable discussion took placo collision with Miss Reno Harris. Their forwards were kopt oovorod close, Bobby Boor, Mary Biagoni, Edgar ed permission to out wood on tax sale Brock, Mary Lou Caldwell, Isabel on tho quostlon of the control of ton• under the.baskets by the fast,defense lots at Paradise Flat, 25, cords at $1 nage and other points raised by Mr. MINIMUM WAGE The (Pontleton girls.scored first in work of Konnody and Brown. The play Clnrk, Janot Craig, John Donison, tholr.'túsalo.: but this was .-quickly re: THE PREFERENCES OF per two rick cord on the.lovel portion Bob Gnlo, I-Iaruka Innba, Norma Ing• HayeB but it was. finally ,agreed that of' Forbes was a troat from start to and $1 por threo riclc cord on tho hilly tho Exchange Boomod to provide a duood when Miss Stouart seorod on finish, while Kennedy's dribbling and lis, Anna Killick, Shima Kuroda, Dick a combination play for Summorland, QUEEN ALEXANDRA land, Tho roquost of Mir, A. Golring Miller, Robert McLachlan, Phyllis baBls on which the mutual'interests IS PROPOSED swerving brought many- exclamations for permission to cut wood was also of the industry could bo combined, Again Pontleton wont into tho load from tho crowd, rFolker worked; hard Soon aftor hor marriage, Quoon Nicol, Billy Ramsay, Myrtlo Roid, and hold Summorland to their lone Alexandra wroto in a scrapbook at granted, tho chargo to bo $1 por two Roy Smith, Vora Smith, Florence and Mr. Chambers, on behalf of tlio but was kopt In the background dur• rick cord. Associated, Colt that oven if tho As- basket xintil half timo whilst thoy pil• Bolvolr Castle tho following list of Stark, Irene Tait, Mary Uzawa, Mir• ing tho second half by tho work of hor proforoncos:— ' soolatod was unable to poln the Ex• Major Burde Files Notice ed up six polntB, From tho start of hlB guard who rushod 'hither and yon On motion of Councillors Smith and iam Walmsloy, Noroh Woods, Tom• change, co-oporation between tho two tho second half the Summorland girls around with him, O'Connoll turnod In Her favorito King and Quoon Ritchie It was docldod to send $100 to my Young, bodlos was feasible, 1 1 of Motion in wont put to oven the score up and a real nifty gamo and puts tho can on Queen Dagmar and Richard Coour do tho department on account of arroars Proficiency, Grade II., Part 1. — wore «o suooossful that thoy led 7-0 tho idea that a playor can't oomo back., Lion. of licenso fooB, Tho matter of tho ro Josoph Jamoa, Eloanor Amunsdon, The Management of tho Associated Legislature at ono stage, Tho Pontleton girls thon duotion of license fooB was loft to tho waB roprosontod by Messrs. Chambers, Ho plays an ontlroly dlfforont and far Hor favorite horoj Wolllngton, Anna Killick, Tommy Young, Bob oamo back, to life and 'hooped, tho ball moro offootlvo game than last^yoar, Hor favorite poof. Byron. wator oommltlce. ' Barratt,: and McNalr. Tho eommittflo tbr tho points noconoary to win, For Gale. of tho Independents consisted , of Victoria, Deo. 3.. • —« Major R, J. Taylor Boatty and Davo Craig also Hor favorite artist: Sir Joshua Tho potltlon of Mr. A, J. Boor for Grade I., Part 2.—Victor Jamos, Burde hat filed notice of his proposed iPenticton MIBB Beatty and Miss Par mado tholr appoaranoo for a Bhort Reynolds. an oxtonslon of stroet lights was fur Messrs, Hayos, Jennons, and Duggan, rott woro porhaps tho bright lights Mary Lou Caldwell. Mr, L. W. MakovBkl was present at bill to establish a minimum wage for whllo In tho second half and played Hor favorite author: Charles Dick' thor oonsldorod, Aftor hearing tho el Division VII., Grade 1—F. Muriel men. Ha proposes to amend the pre- with tho guards also Bhowlng up woll, ons. ootrlclan's , ostlmat'o of tho cost tho 1 tho discussion. 1 well; Howie Danlolo was tho mainstay Banks, ent aet providing minimum wages for Miss Moldrum worked hard all of tho Summerland toam whllo the Hor favorlto virtue: Charity, council dooldod that tho roquost could through, hut playod littlo combina Regularity and Punctuality: Jim women and girls to make it a straight two Adams boys|turnod In a nice gamo Hor favorlto color: Bluo not ho granted, A auggostlon was Agnow, Borolyn Atkinson, Antoin- 44 HOUR WEEK FOR minimum wage act without rafarenas) tlon and did not work in Hor favorlto dish: A Fronoh tart. mado .that tho stroot light oxtonslon with Earl Wilson and Alt Johnston r otto Biagonio, Mary Biagoni, Stophon NEW SOUTH WALES In tit* title or any part of the act to with tho rest of the forwards.' Miles lending a very offootlvo hoi ping hand. Her favorlto flowor: Tho rose question bo disotisflod at tho annua Harris was again the Summorland Hor favorlto namo: Mary. ; ratopayors mooting, . , Dunsdon, Edward Haddroll, Eddie SAX of the workers affected. ' WUth moro practlco tho Summorland Hannah, Gordon Mount ford, Sheila Sydney, N.S.WM DM, 3,—-Tho star with Miss Moffatt ably assisting toam will put up somo nifty games, Her favorlto occupation: • Reading Tho oloctrlo light applications of legislature of New South Wales hor, Tho whole team chookod'olosoly aloud, Mrs, Fudge, MrB, Olarko, Mrs, Solly McGown, Goorgo Powell, Lona Rossi, has passed a bill providing for and lookod vory dlfforont from tholr Hor favorlto amusomont: "Driving nnd IT, O.Mollor was grantod provld Konnoth Scurrah, Loonard Shannon, the Introduction òf a 44-hour previous appoaranoo in Pontloton Llno-up: iPontlcton—Folkor (7), my ponlos." Ing that tho municipality could uao Poarl White, Howard Wright. working week throughout the whon thoy woro snowod under by a O'Connoll (4), Oralg, Forhos::(7), Ken• Hor favorlto motto: "Plou ot mbn tho, telephone poloB to string tho wlro Class Loaders: Shoila McGown, state, largo score. Tho iPenticton team woro nedy (2), Brown, Boatty, Droit," • on and that tho brush ho out on Mr, Rogglo Turner. Pat Agur, Margaret JUNIOR CHAMPno t behind In tho chocking olthor for Summorland—-Daniels (8),.G, Adams Hor favorlto locality: Homo, J, W. S, Ijoglo's lot. Tho application Road, Poarl White, thoy kopt tho Summorland shots work• (0), E. Wilson, I, Adams (8), A, John• of Mr, W. J. Tullott waB also grantod, ing from near tho center lino most of LA8T NIQHT'8 HOCKEY Those of Messrs, R. S, Jackson, E WEATHER REPORT ston, V, Por the weak endino Tuesday, tho game, Vancouver Maroons 4; Victoria Walton, E, Sanborn, and P. Mossothpo Irrigation rate to bo paid In pro• furnished by the Dominion Ex• Ballorino's Seconds Throw Ralph Thomas roforood both gamos Couaart 1, was referred hack to tho parties con portion to tho amount of wator used, periments! Station, Llno-up! Pontlcton—E'. Moldrum (4) to tho satisfaction of \ovoryono, Ho Ottawa, 2| Boston, 0. cemod aftor tho report of tho munlc' Tho verbal application of Enoba for 1 in the Second G, iParrott, (0); L. Boatty (2){ T. hold tho players woll in'»hand and his pal olootrlolan had boon received, Irrigation connection was grantod pro• Dato Max. Min Round Naglo, F, Gibson, E, Boatty. doolslons woro • quick and necurato. Wednesday night's hockeyt Tho motion of Oounolllors Smlt' viding that ho was willing to pay tho 81 Summerland—%T; Moffatt, H. Stouart Aftor tho gamos tho players and sup• New York 2, Pittsburg 1. and Rltohlo that tho previous offer of rate on tho wholo aoroago in tho lot. 20 28 Los Angeles, Dae, 3.—-Tod Morgk (2), R. Harris (5) R, Jamos, B. Brls- porters of both teams adjournod to tho Saskatoon 5, Portland 2, $21 mado to Mr, J. Dunsdon In rosjmot Councillors J. C. Arkoll and W. 27 84 20 of Vallejo, Cal., baat Mlk* Ballsrlno low. G.W.V.A. Hall whoro a danco was to his claim for damages In connection Ritchie woro appointed to sit with Roovo R. Johnston on tho Court ot 28 of Bayonne, N.J., for the Junior* light Tho men's game was a thrlllor for held and suppor sorvod, On hohalf of Teaching tho saxophone by mall with thoroplaeomonfc.of the Irrigation 20 weight championship of th* world. tho first fow minutes for tho Pontic* tho Summorland players "Bill", John• should olthor Improvo tho execution flume through his land was Increased Revision of tho Voter's list on Thurs• 81 ton fans for the toam wont on a ncor« ston welcomed tho tPontloton Teams, of playors or haaton it.—Florence to $60 and that Irrigation wator ho de• day, Douombof 10, at 2 p.m, Tho moot Bkllerlno's seoonds threw the towel Ing was thon adjournod. 40 85 in the tenth. Ing rampago from tho first whistle while "Norm" Forbes replied for Pon (Ala,) Rocord. livered for oight acres ot D. L, 8105 / , . .;• . ; . . - • .>..• . THE SUMMERLAND REVIEW, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1925. In fact, they may be of benefit to you by strengthening the heart-muscle.: Marvels of Oriental Thought and Splendour Incubation Period of Typhoid T.M. asks: "After drinking water §£7/mts for the which may contain' typhoid, how long does it take to:get the disease if one is going to geiMt?" Reply: Usually from 8 to 14 days, 10 days on the: average. ouse Pimples: M.M.P; writes:' "I am twenty years : Pour any good oil into a frying pan; bid; arid^ever vsince I was fifteen, I HOUSEHOLD HINTS Method:;''Cream the butter and su• have had soriie" pimples on my face.' gar together; ad'd'eggs, then fruit and have it very hot. Pour in nuts—stirr Winter Window Boxes '; constantly until browned. Have a Spriietimes.ithey .come on" the back of Window boxes are generally .slight• coffee; add flour.and other dry ingred• riiy ;rieck and shoulders. They some• ients. Beat well. Line .'a loaf pan with brown paper spread out on a flat sur• ed at winter time. Of course, nothing face; pour nuts on this, then salt. times} go away/for a week or so, but can replace the beauty of summer brown .'paper and bake 3 hours. By coriie back again. Otherwise, I am flowers and vines, but on the 'other steaming 4 hours it is good'used as a BAKING HINTS healthy and strong. I would surely like hand there is nothing much prettier pudding. , to get.rid of them because they some- than green and white.. And this is Hints for Removing Cake : Remove cake onto a piece of.oiled time's come: pretty .thickiv They, some- ' what I would suggest for winter win• Cranberry and Cocoanut Pie • times turn into blackheadR." . ,' • paper or tissue paper. If cake sticks 1 dow boxes. . - 2 cups cranberries; 1 cup sugar; 1 Reply v \ TL cup water; 1 .tablespoon cornstarch; to this a little warm water will easily, 1 Green in the box against a?white remove paper. Avoid all rich, fat and greasy foods. background of snow. Little Evergreen % cup grated cocoanut. ' > Avoid-such things as" pastry, candy trees are adorable, and any hardy Method: Cook cranberries, 'sugar and cakes. Drink at least two and a greens which are obtainable are al and % cup water together for 5 min• Sour Milk Cornbread half: pints of water a day. In the way ways pretty. utes.'Dissolve cornstarch in remaining 2 eggs; % cup sugar; 1 cup sour of. cUrecti:treatment- of i,the, pimples; English Ivy stays green even in the water, % cup; add to cranberries and milk; 1-3 cup butter; pinch salt; 1 cup try the following:'By'means of a com-: cook all together until it is clear. Add corn meal; 1 cup flour; 1 teaspoon- 1 severest weather. The violet plants edo-extractor.isqueeze • out all of • the:; are a nice addition, as their leaves re grated cocoanut, stir well and take baking soda. blackheads; (Your druggist, can .sup• main green all during the winter from .fire. Line a pie pan with pastry Method: Beat eggs—add sugar arid ply you., with, a jcbmedo-extractor.) months.' Pour'in mixture. Bake in slow oven salt, then corn meal and flour; next Wash the face: at'.night ..with hot about Yz hour. Then top with mer• dissolve soda in milk, add this to water, and soap. Then sponge with hot COOKING HINTS ingue made of 2 egg whites and 2 other ingredients, and, last of ,all .water, and finish' up by - dashing' cold Apple Rings' tablespoons sugar and bake in a slow melted butter. Pour in greased pan water on the face. 1 • ; • Apples; 10 to 15 cents worth of Cin• oven" for another half hour;': and bake. ... , . : The purpose; of this: is not only to namon drops'; Yz cup of sugar; 1 cup secure cleanliness; but also to* tone, of water. Stuffed Dates and Salted'Nuts Rules for Baking Custards up the* circulation /and the oil-glands' Method: Core and peel apples, cut Both are toothsome additions to a .1. Do not beat eggs;too lightly. of the skin; After you have finished , in ^-inch slices. Make a syrup in the Christmas' Candy Box or a Christmas 2. Heat milk and add gradually. this "water: treatment," dry and apply : frying pan of cinnamon drops, sugar dinner. • 3. Custards are .much better when an .ointment, consisting of one part and water. Cook the apples rings in Method for Dates:—1. Make a fond• strained. • , ofprecipitated sulphur in nine parts this syrup; baste them often; cook ant of confectioners' sugar, cream, but• 4. Strain before cooking. ' of benzoinated lard.-Leave ithe oint-; ter and a little vanilla. Remove pit 5. Set in a pan of water while bak• until rings are red and. tender, but not 1 inent' oh;ail night and wash off in the too soft. and fill cavity with this fondant. ing. ' •'.;•.•:'••-.•• : morning. , house, the Great the Blind .Chinaman;. see for them• of the opinion that since the potatoes until thick and creamy;,: if nuts' or Reply: There: is no external prep• living-:rather carelessly. - Osier once expenditure are unequalled in the an• Palmist gave readings - only at the selves thé works ofa past civiliza- ; were not mentioned in the Bible they, cocoanut:are .added, put theih in. just aration that will increase the layer wrote a paper on the advantages of nals of the West; dream edifices of noon hour. Mrs. Mumford related tion in many respects : far : greater. would endanger'their souls by eating •a before turning1 out. on platter. Pour of fat under the skin. This, as well finding a trace of ..albumin and casts sheer white built on the banks of that he: analyzed her character, and than the present; marvel at the deep, th'eiri. There is • a tradition that Sir onb'uttered platter and cut in squares. as the skin itself, receives its nourish-: in the urine of men over fifty years placid lakes. predispositions with, a depthr far far-reaching, philosophy of the Orient Walter Raleigh was -the'first man -in • > ' ment from the blood. old. The idea was that the discovery seeking expression in the symbolic England to eat, potatoes and that he 1 In all the temples' of the Orient, greater than that of any palmist she To Keep Fudge From Boiling Over How much and what you eat, and of the' albumin and casts jolted-the architecture of *fhe homèa of priests received- them fromV his colonists in astrology, was established and recog• had ever encountered. . and princea. Grease top of-kettle'in which fudge your general • manner of living, will patient into a realization that he had nized as the anient, and honorable : In a Cairo museum in Egypt, Mrs. Virginia. This, however, has no, evi- ., is cooked and:.it will not boil over: largely determine whether you are been living carelessly.- He would dence to support it. Many authori• fat or thin, provided you are'suffer• then live more carefully and have compresse^^''to^^'the,.:fihge'rsV''^hiassage',; It never gives me any trouble'and ] ties doubt whether the potato was be done for it?' am;healthy; otherwise. Would .calis• growing' in North:¿America . at that- BAKUNG HINTS . ing from no disease. If you suspect spending. as much time '-.'as possible ; many years of usefulness.- This is Reply: The generally accepted thenics-hurt me?- Is it -all; right- foi timéi V-Onevthing is a matter- of rec-, -• Winter Cake that your general health is the cause outdoors inrthe:sunshine/; and a nour• probably what;has happened to y.ou.= idea is, that- arthritis deformans 4s one; with heart disease,to get mar ord; the -potato was'growing, in the v l^cups of sugarj 1.cup shortening; of any abnormal thinness, consult a ishing, diet are among -:. the • general :i ; s . Arthritis Deformans' ' due to infection,, probably a. form of 1 teaspoon baking powder; 1 teaspoon physician" and follow his advice. remedies for this condition., Going rie'd?"-"-"'-'•'•'-'••• *"'" garden of;thé:;old;herbalist Gerard as-; Has Trace of Albumin - Mrs.- H. H. D. writes: "The'streptococcus." Such infections may , ,.. '. Reply..- • •• •' early; as 1507; íílm 16621 potatoes- were. cinnamon; Ys teaspoonfulallspice: Y. be located m the teeth, tonsils; nasal ori "a* diet,. particularlyV'cutting out teaspoon cloves; 1 teaspoon mace; % W:L.M. writes:. "I am. "forty-six knuckles of my fingers have --, been meat; does no'.good/i ,Be sure to selling for.about'i25-cents a pound in. ^ _ _ inuses) bronchialHdbes;-gall-blad- .The essential thing, for .anyone -who cup coffee. 2 cups flour (sifted); 4 years old arid was recently examined. paining me and are swollen and stiff . |S drink plenty of water.' has heart .disease 'to .know, ; is'-, that the London markets.,.,;;Some;time .in , The fingers are begfoning to look der jder, kidneys, appendix;or pelvic or- the; middle" of itheí>éighteenth century eggs—unbeaten; 2 cups raisins; The doctor . who examined me.'said - they should live in'sùch a manner that formed. By soaking thé hands in hot;gans. A careful search should-be thek^uchesskóf;.:Buccleuchi""wrote *aí'i'j v cup^ dried apricots; %cup candied that I had a little albumin and some •", Heart Disease and Marriage :°no:: exj^ssivestràjn'vis'''thrbwn.;on^tliej l water the fingers become a little morel made for infection .,m~any_oi, these > / bóokVíentitled; :¿"Household Book", in cherries; 1 cup candied pineapple; % casts in.the,urine, and that my blood L.'G.S. writes:'''I have-had what heart.; If your condition ; is - as good as' limber. I have been told that this v ;; which-she i speaks of the potato as "an cup candied citron; 1 cup. currants; pressure was slightly elevated.: :This; organs. -the*doctor/;callsv.;vValvular/i'jheartV:'"dis-' condition is 'callediarthritisVdeform ; you sày:.:itii8;xcàlisthénicsv -withik^'rea-- esculent of:great rarity.". Yi ;Cup candied' orange peel; % cup is all that' he. said was' the matter :: Aside from the removal, of any in- ease' for several years that s I know; of: sdnable. limits; should do you no harm. candied lemon peel: with me, and I certainly do riot feel ans. ; What causes'it? Can, anything ! f ections; that may be ; found; hot

Mi ,,< Emit .St. . QoMara. driver • of wlnnlnr taam In. Intarnatlonal Dag' 81*4 Darby at Quebec with hie beet dor, Yakon, winner kmim ,-of thc'Balto Trophy. ., •; •mam wmm mmW;'Ä?iS A graceful entrant In the aquatic sports f held recently In the warm (sulphur pool at ' i Banff, Albertn., h wm m

««.Jöll,

Julius Ilans Spiegel is cresting, a sensation In Germany at. prsisnt, with his novel dancing and sitonlililng 'S make-upa. Ha Is deaf and dumb and dances wlthaut music. The Earl and Countees, of Covtntry'rtcently celebrated their diamond wedding at ' Croome Court on the Earl's eatato In Woreeaterahlre, : They were ac• companied by their forty deacon, dantt, their youngeet von, Hon. Thomas Coventry,; a member or tht llrltith Columbia Perlly • Pasvo Nurml, tin "Plying Finn". mint, travelling from Canada motUltd from lift byansw mech»nlc»l for tht celebrations. Photo process of photo sculpture obtained by shows Lord • and Lady Coventry, a four second' sitting before two Viscount Dttrhurtt the heir, cameras iqulpntd with contour lint and tht IJIehop of J Worceiter. itrttni. .

Greet Interest Is being leden tlireiiihent England In tht itrio» of lectures arranged by .the CinsdUn Ptclfle Itsjlwty .deal* Ing with opportunities offered by the Dominion for tht settler, tourist and Investor. Photo, graph shows tht Interior of the Bhowlni the Plemlnf lltnd Prtptlltd Central Hall, Wrmlnghtm with Mfebost, This Hiebest bas leyere fitted an audience of 9.000, to Hit thwirie, the boat lielns >«t under way by. mtvln« the .levers to and fro thereby driving, the icrtw AdvsnUge» are that tljt boit tin .be moved (rem a ship's side Immediately •nd that only ont trained lesmsn need ht In tht host.

tvptrt ealtlt thlppti hf W» Stttk rrodnttro of Canada Ltd» from Bdmtnttn by Canadian Patlflt.

•Julius llana Spiegel Is cresting, a iimtllnn In Germany at present with Tht windows ef the Curt* his navel denting and aMenlthlnt iton Heed Offices of. the makt'Upe, Ile le desf end dumb end Ρanadian ratifie Railway danees without mutlt. aro a never falling starte of Interest to Londentrt. THE SUMMERLAND REVIEW, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1925. FRIOESBFTMTHANMST YEAR, ASSOCIATED STATES

We have genuine Drumheller Coal, double screened Committee of; Control Has Had Stabilizing Effect on the lump, ready for delivery, at $12.00 per ton. Market^-To Go as Far in Centralization of Control as Contract With Growers Will Permit. Fine Lethbridge Coal at $11.00 per ton delivered Coal and Wood, Express and Drayage Vernon, Nov. 28.—At the conclus• satisfactory manner so far this sea• ion of sessions of the Associated son, the chief difficulty being due to Growers which commenced Monday the bad weather during October, and concluded Thursday, at which which greatly hampered distribution SMITH & HENRY the vice-president,; John Kidston, re• in the prairie provinces. Wrapped Phones: Office, 181; A. Smith, S83-, G. Henry, 935 signed, and 0. 'W. jHembling was'ap• apples had moved fairly freely but pointed vice-president, the following there was a surplus of crates in a few statement has been issued by the varieties. Associated Growers:" . , The British market is now in very The Board of Directors of the; As• fair shape although, due to huge sociated Growers of B.C., Limited, shipments from the United States at were in session last week. ' the time B. C. Wealthies were arriv• PCfc--S0M£0NE IS WAITING fOR YOU!

Reports from: the president, vice- ing, that variety did not do very well president/ sales manager and secre• Other markets had taken larger quan• tary-treasurer, covering many phases tities than in recent years, at good of the operations.-of the Associated, prices. When the telephone rings, courtesy and efficiency de• and containing recommendations as Better Pool Prices mand that it be promptly answered. To anyone waiting to future policies, • were before the Comparisons of pools closed so far on the telephone, seconds are long. No person likes to Associated. this year to those of 1924-show that be kept waiting. Why keep others waiting? Any call >••••, More Centralization with the exception of summer apples, 1 may be important. Why neglect any of them? • The question of - the centralization nearly all lines show better prices of the control of'. central and local than were obtained last year. THE SUMMERLAND TELEPHONE CO., LTD. operations was j discussed at some ' The work of the committee of con• klength and it was'decided to go as far trol was shown as having had a stab• jin that direction as the contract with ilizing effect on the market, and its growers permits.It was shown that, continuance was simply recom• under" a centralized organization, mended, laid out on the reclaimed land be• to play at the conclusion of the eve• many savings: would be effected- and A statement, was presented show• tween Adelphi Terrace and the river, ning as has always been the custom, the whole process' of marketing move ing that by the.. end of the season have an interesting relic of the days and we did not ask the audience.to One person hears it in another person's home • • • more smoothly. . , nearly, 90 per cent of the purchase when the grounds of "the Strand pair stand.. We played '0,.Canada' as a price of the buildings and equipment aces stretched down to the edge of ) • v:: Expenses Reduced "- patriotic air; receiving many favor• —-and that is the way Atwater Kent Receiving Sets acquired in 1923 would be paid off; the river.- It is a stone Watergate able comments and some adverse crit• and Radio Speakers are sold Comparison of -operating' expenses these purchases amounting in all to which stood at the,river entrance to icisms, and inasmuch as there seems, of the first: seven' months of the fiscal some $350,000. York House, the great mansion erect• to be some contention as to whether year - with the .•"•, . •.':•;;;• •.;•':•• .•• •' natural circulation seekers. - • There- dian Daughters League, making the Mr. Strachey, who'said he.was always M .1A t ,. > _ . _- _. request that "O, Canada'? be played It is proposed to include in such a New York.—Nov. 21.—"Newspapers willing to be interrupted in a matter £>re *t is in the ohiss of what I call the at the commencement of the theatre building a properly equipped gym• are becoming -trivial. The reason for of,his craft, and then,he went on to. trivialitiestrivialities,-lik, likee the 'Alderman Chohed by Whelk.' entertainments, the same as was then nasium on the lower,floor, with a con• it lies in their search for.circulation. say: „; done by the local band. He .now vention and dance hall above. . To gain circulation you've got to play, "The, difference ' between American "But, all in all, I believe the daily makes the following statement to the to the lowest common denominator. newspapers and those published in press to be better than it was, say fif• press: ' "•' You cannot waste time on the intellec• ty years ago. Where there is a de• Perhaps Mr. King would like to England is that there is more news THE ADELPHI "We complied with the request, be know how Premier Bruce did it.— tual minority." and less comment, in the former and mand there must be a supply, and no doubt those who buy" newspapers get During the Middle Ages many' of $250,000. ieving we were following a precedent Border Cities Star. • Thus John St. Loe Stratchey, the less news and .more comment in the the great British nobles erected pala• Numerous famous men have lived, of other' organizations. "We did not Modernism: Using an inheritance eminent journalist, owner and editor latter. The danger in the present what they want or they wouldn't buy them. Yet I firmly believe that read tial residences along'the Strand, the workod and died in the Adelphi. play it in place of the national an tax to frisk orphans; using the tax of the London Spectator, a clearly in• journalistic situation is that of mix• them (The King).; which we continue money to support orphanages. dividualized and' dlBtinquished publi• ing news and comment.' For instance, ers can' be fed on much- better food riverside highway between the cities When David Garrick first came to cation which is declared by Dr. Nich• a man reads now in -his newspaper a than they are getting now. of London and Westminster, and London he was in business with his olas Murray Butler,1 president 'of Col• telegram from London, iParis, Rome, Usee Novel As a Test among the numerous mansions which brother, as a wine merchant in Dur• umbia University, to be" the greatest anywhere you will; and he gets much "A short time ago I wrote-a novel, formerly stood :on the historic high• ham Yard, a street on the borders of journal of opinion in the English, lan• more comment than he does news. The Madonna of the Barricades,' a way was Durham House. the Adelphi, which was not then guage. qMrades M built, and in later years, when he re• CORPORATION OF THE DISTRICT OF !il?t - new8r is really politico-historlcal novel set in the per The mansion was erected in 1800, Mr. Strachey is the guest of Dr. Trh, > ^ iod of 1847-1840. All my friends told and for two hundred and thirty years tired from tho stage, ho made his home on Adelphi Terrace. It-was SUMMERLAND Butler in the latter's home at" 60 ;What it really is, is the advpeate ™e that I wouldn't get any readers, it was the London residence of the Morningsido Drive in the shadow of getting in tho witness stand. Go back that I would have to write down to Bishops of Durham, from whom it thoro that ho died in 1778, and after Columbia's many halls, and ' there a bit and take the famous Ems tele- the public in order to be popular. Well was taken by Henry VIII. Tho king his death the house was kept by his Goorge Buchanan Fife, of the New gram. Bismarck didn't add'a thing to that's an experiment I'm trying. I am hold a splendid tournament in the Widow. Boswell, in his "Life of York Evening World, had a brief talk it, but he did strike out a sentence soing to see whether it be possible to grounds of Durham House to' cele• Johnson," describes a dinner-party Municipal Voters' List with him in an Interval between let here and there, and when it was read Put out such a book and gain a popu- brate his marriage to Anne of Cloves, which she gave there, on which oc• tors Mr. Strachey was 'dictating to it wa'B an insult,-and all Germany wnB lar circulation. and later tho houso became the homo casion the worthy Doctor, Sir Joshua a secretary. To chronicle, that this afire. Tho advocacy and the news "As for journalism, I'm quite con of several celebrated personages. It Reynolds and Dr. Charles Burnoy young lady was disconcerting pretty mixedi thero's tho trouble. vincod that everything will come out was from there that Lady Jane Gray toasted each other in Lichfield ale 1926 may seem to Mr. Strachey to be a "There's another thing, too. It is right in tho end, that thoro will bo was takon by tho unscrupulous Duke from thoir doad friend's collar. tho proper distinction between nows journalistic triviality, but it was cer• my belief that tho newspapers are to of Northumberland to the Towor, Edward Gibbon, tho historian, tainly a part of the sotting in which day giving their readers a lower kind nnd, comment, and a proper propor whore she was reluctantly compollod odgod in tho Adelphi whon ho arriv• TAKE NOTICE that a Court of Revision the interview occurred, In all prob of food than, thoy can really assimil• tion, though there should never be n to take tho title of quoon, nnd it was mixture of tho two. Just now there is ed in London with the manuscript of ability Mr, Strachey ongrosBod. in ate. They could digest a much high• there that she roturnod after her his great work, "Tho Rise and Fall will sit t)o revise and correct said voters' list on his correspondence and in the inter• er typo-of nourishment it it wore giv• too much boosting in tho form of briof reign of nine days. Tho Prin- ruption of • the intorviow, may never nows. But, as I say; I'm sure all wil of the Roman Empiro," upon which Thursday, 10th of December, 1925, at two en to thorn.' \ COBS Elizabeth rosidod for a short to had laborod for twenty years, and have noted the young lady at all. How "Modorn newspapers In Amorica bo right in tho end." o'clock in the afternoon, at the Municipal office, Thon Mr, Strachey turned back to timo at Durham House during the Thomas Hardy had offices on Adelphi his correspondence, and tho interview reign of hor half-sister, Mary, and Torraco whon ho 'waB practicing as West Summerland. was at ah end. "Just - try to got tho sovornl years Inter, when sho bocame an architect, boforo ho, bocamo fam spirit of what I've said," waB the part quoon, she gavo tho property to tho ous as tho groatOBt of modern novol- F. J. NIXON, COHPOflHION ofteMSIMCT Of PfifflUND ing injunction, illustrious Sir Walter Raloigh, who "sts. Municipal Clerk »•• Mr, Strachey will long bo romom made it his London home until ho was Tho archos beneath tho Adelphi borod by the ccroapon^lonts who cast into prison by James I, woro originally usod as warehouses, West Summerland, B, C, wore in-London during tho war, Ho In 1708 tho sito of Durham Houso and thoro was a wharf along tho 16th Nov., 1925. 16-3-c know that at such a timo the men in was purchased by tho four brothors rivor front. Tho wharf dlsappoarod high places of tho British Govern Adam, who did so much to hoautify In 1804 whon tho Victoria Embank PROPERTY FOR SALE mont wore so ocouplod that thoy Goorgian London, not only by tho mont was constructed on land ' ro would bo difflcult to got at for inter oroction of statoly buildings, but by claimod from tho Rivor Thames, and viows and tho liko so ho arranged a tho designing of infernal docorations tho archos bocamo a resort for tho sorios of teas at his London homo on and furniture, and who acquirod tho homeless and gangs of thiovos and 7iirTirtrffnrfffirrp»rr-rrirffrTfrrfffT-frrTiriTrr-'wstirrrrTrffifffe«Krii>irf»iT, f ntirnnmrgti» Wiodnosdnys, and thoro ho gathorod proporty for tho purpose of building ruffian B. It was to thoso arches that Tendors will bo rocoivod by tho undersigned for the those important mon with tho corros a sorios of uniflod streets with a riv- Qulnton Hogg wont to read tho Blblo following properties: pondonts and lot thorn mlnglo and orsldo torraco, Tho land which was to a couplo of poor crosslng-swoopors Personal Greeting Cards for tnllc, Among thoso thus bidden to formorly covorod by tho boautlfu by tho light of a candlo, nnd thus Lot 5 .....i.....:...... ,.....Block 5 D.L. 490 Plan 44 givo a proolous quarter hour or so gar dons of Durham houso had thon commoncod his life's work, which cul Lot 4 " 5 »' 490 " 125 with tho Amorlcan newspaper men bocomo a muddy -slopo Btrotching minatod in tho foundation of tho Christmas Are Now Ready I Lot 1 .. . " " 0 " 490 " 125 wore iPromior Asquith, Lord Groy down from tho Strand to tho odgo of Rogont Street Polytochnlc in 1880 Moi ....,...... r...... „ 26 „ 400 „ 12B Homo Soerotary MoKonna, Con. Sir tho River Tham'os. and tho Adam This flno Institution haB now over 20, Ian Hamilton, Arthur Balfour and oth• brothors, aftor building an embank 000 mombors, and its aim is to givo For your porsonal Grooting Cards this Christ• Lot 2 " 14 " 1183 792 ers dosorlbed as tho most Jnaccos- mont, covorod tho stoop inclino with ovory young man and woman, irre mas wo offer a wido soloctlon of now and attract• »18 "1188 " 117 slblo mon in England. a sorios of archos, tho top of which spoctivo of crood, class or color, an ive designs, roachod to tho lovol of tho Strand opportunity of developing all thoir »16 " 1188 "117 Upon this foundation thoy built a Thoir unusual character gives to thorn an air M YOUNG MAN CRUSHED four-sldod naturos—-Intolloetual, soc• East parts 17-18 " 19 "1184 126 TO DEATH IN FRUIT torraco of Btatoly houses, facing on ial, physical and spiritual. , of oxcluslvonoss and ofTors you an opportunity »28 " 1184 " 126 PLANT AT tho rivor, and also flvo strootB run• to reflect your Individual tasto. ning at right nngloB and parallol to Whon Charles Dickons, as a boy *» E »1185 " 924 Kolowna, Nov. 28.—In somo unac• it, workod in an adjacent blacking fact• Wo caution all thoso Intending to buy Christ• » 16 " 221 " 177 countable mannor, Anthony. Eugol- ory ho would apond his dlnnor-tlmo mas Cards to mako thoir selection as soon as » 19 " 221 " 177 mann was crushod to death in tho Tho district bocamo known as Tho wandorlng through tho Adolphl possiblo—right at onco proforably—ns tho usual plant of tho Occidental Fruit Com• Adolnhi, derived from tho Greek archos, nnd thoro ho was ablo to study rush just boforo Christmas makes it Impossible » 18 " 2588 " 410 pany horo on Friday, "adolphol," moaninjr brothors, whil at first hand tho characters of tho to give tho quick and satisfactory scrvico wo Northerly part, 7 acros, Lot 2 " G " 449 " 217 Tho dead man, who was only 21 tho names of tho four mon who built undor-world, which in lator yoars ho desire. • yoars old, had brought his brido out it aro porpotuatod in tho names of doscrlbod so vividly in his novols. Tho The hlghost or any tondor not nocoBsarily .accoptod. from Europo in tho summer, and tho flvo streets—John, Jamos, Rob tavorn, "Tho Fox Under tho Hill," Como to tho office and look ovor our samploB. was a valuod omployeo of tho com• ort, William and Adam stroots. Tho which figures in tho story of David WM, M. DRYDEN, pany. brothors lost monoy over tho vonturo Copporflold, stood just outsido tho Municipal Clerk Following an autopsy by Dr. G. L. nnd tho proporty was finally disposed ontranco to tho archos. The Summerland Review Campbell, Coronor Woddoll is hold• of by moans of a lottery, in which Tho beautiful gardens of tho Vic• ing an inquost today, tho prlsos ranged from $20,000 to toria Embankmont, which havo boon THE SUMMERLAND REVIEW, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1925.

Canip Fire Girls, prepared by ladies —1 Agnes Armour;. 2"Grace Armour. vaded'this country by way of,the of Central Church of Christ. Music by Bfest speciman knitting—1 Ella Arm• back door or hinterland, and this, if 1 high school . Derby; Club';Orchestra. our ;. 2 Maggie Smithufs"t. Best dressed once 'admitted, would explain many Songs. Chairman's remarks. Welcome doll—1 Olive George. things. )•• ^The.i^'oy'ages of Columbus speech; P. L. Robert Trumble; Troop were tremendous undertakings at the 2. Presentation of "Key to W.ehatckee^ time, owing to the distance to be trav• to the delegation coming greatest dis• 'WE SELL THE BEST FOR LESS" WRllslffiGIN elled, but the -longest stretch of tance, Mayor C. B. Halbert.'Musical water the Asiatic had to cross was number: Kenneth Warner. Introduc• the width of Bering Strait, 36 miles, tions : Delegations, leaders, etc. Read• and while the lamp of civilization ing: Richard DoGrasse, Troop 8. OF may have been burning with but a "Ideals and Standards of Region Elev• feeble glow on the Pacific coast in en", John H. (Piper. Announcements: 1520, when the Spaniards conquered Committee chairmen. "The Spirit of GR0CERTER1A Mexico, it was infinitely superior to Scouting," Edwh\ Burley, Troop 10. [ anything of the kind found on the L. Morris Gives Paper Be•Atlantic coast. > . Closing Song: "Taps". fore Vernon Historical SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 28 "The word O'Keefe is Irish, pure Conference Headquarters, High School RAISINS Society Irish, and means -of the church,' and 8 :il5 a.m.—Meeting Patrol, Leaders SUET as the churches in Ireland were built of Conference Patrols., Object: Organ• With seeds, per lb. for the celebration of the Christian Chopped, per lb. 20c The following paper was submitted ization and Designation of Patrol head• religion, it, by association, carries us quarters. - '-,;.': • ..'•' •:•:. ; • v...-., 4

; Speech;'Clean Habits and Clean Sport. powder biscuit; 1st graham gerrts; 2nd ;flsewhore he says that Omaha is ,,At the"Slu8Ä^^ by hiB dog. " " ; White & Downton It is being "takért ; up largely through nut loaf; 2nd, apple pie;-Mrs:Lyons, another form of tho same word, and „.„^V of0Oi«« When,he did riot return tho family < tho Bchools and has been meeting with2nd , B. Powder biscuits; 1st cookies', continuing, ho, says: 'Itjs acom'mon, X^^r^^^^ bocamo alarmed' arid a search : was !• success wherever introduced. On this Mirs. Kennedy, 2nd, butter; 2riU, white popular statement .that,tho.languages- SloS So &-tTHiSJ made. HiB faithful dog was noticed occasion Mr. Cox explained the work loaf. Mrs. Hughes, 2nd; broad •buns; of tho Amorican continent are innura- ?^L„!}IHH^ ^ilf waiting patlontly for his maBtor at PHONE 35 >'to the boys and emphasized the groat tho door of tho dooertod houso on tho need throughout the world for boys !tfÄiM?äS^ iSÄÄÄS- SÄiySiSÄ old Malone ranch and on investigation ; to bo cloan of speech, havo good SÄCSÄS fcrSÄÄÄ ÄÜSÄÄ of the building the body was found. ; healthy cloan bodlos and play tho dark layor cake, Needlework-Mrs. shows that tho languages of America ffiose via" ondeavors Thoffileng- 'Provincial Chief Frasor of Pontioton gamo clean, Ho had a supply of cardB Myers, 1st, luncheon cloth; 1st rugs; are essentially ono. Thoir grammat. «¿2 wo^tho eSS and Dr. White, corner, of Penticton, for tho boys to sign who wished to 1st, mitts; 1st, socks., Mrs. Lyons, 1st, ical structuro, while very complex, is JOBO harmony a Sfc visitod tho scono 'of the tragedy. enlist thomsolves In support of the crochet pillow case. Alice Myers, Em- on tho same general principals eioeo^o^ campaign and boforo handing tho broidorod pillow case. Mrs. ICennody, throughout. Now, multitudos' of ontitloSwoff^ TEMPORARY C.N.R. cards around explained that while ho Ug ot ord8,aro 1 ,dontlcnl ln STATION AT KELOWNA ^ inj Ä'Äür 'ffif ^ a r r f a tho'Amor0 - hoped all would sign ho hoped none ,c a an ua ovw «&fl £ "i.f ni^Äl;. 9ni , ",l « B.°8 ™™' * ™ ***** No wondoiM-lt was rosily pain- would sign unloss thoy honestly in socks. Mrs. Cook, 1st, night gown; 2nd f thorn with proclsoly tho same f i tended to carry it out. Quito a p6r 0 u Kolowna, Nov. 28,—Another Btep 1 B nBOS and < hor8 & contago of the boys prosont signed S^! p^mP'^S^tM * / * "Ipi variocs shades Tho closing session on Sunday morn. In advance towards securing direct Give Useful Gifts thon and some took the cards with railway sorvlco with the outsldo -J* world waB made on Monday ovonlng ™ Un80B l l {^^S^^^^t lr^ ,B BS^'ont to shoV thS J Arm in ATA ^armSd by tho arrival of two cars which ^££ lLZtlSS^ l hoy avo c ot d tho ldo THIS CHRISTMAS signing or turning it down. °f mS ^%iMBÄ J Ä ^ ^ .? !: the room, and with bowed heads woro at onco spotted at tho tempor• Product map, ABla, l^Waltor Goorgo, ]ttngungo8 of tho Eastern continont maintained a two mlnuto "Scout Sil- ary platform droctod on tho C.N.R, Bxcitoment rap high around town 2.-Dora Croßs. Africa, 1 Rhoda Garglll; by a ffroat varloty of tho mor0 porm. tho ooSoronco was om" station sito, Ono of thoso cars is $v for a few days whllo tho "Brooks 2 Elloon Horswo 1. Best .Essay, 8th~- «nont root words and with some ovon hxlly ondod, was.omc an entirely up-to-dnto "tourist" car, «31 The| Stoamor" was hero, Sovoral townspoo- Dora Oross; Elloon Horswoll; 7th, ,mntlcnl stracturo.' * On Sunday night tho Okanagan dolo' ln ffrnn which will bo used as a waiting room ~& 99 plo had previously invested money in Rhoda Carglll, John Blbby. Best draw- do not know anything about tho «aS mot at tho for passongors, and tho othor a bag- ^ tho project and they With many others ingwork, 6th mattor myself, but I have always 5Är^5ätfcof™£ "White Cap r gago-oxpro.s car, which has boon fit- woro keenly interested to BOO th s the 2, Marguerite- Nuttall. Bo. ;, color do. th M ron)ttrkftblo that a mm *o{ ;;j{t 0X3Vfl^or-Wrth WalhtagtoS tod up as a temporary office, so that Zfk first of tho output to bo demonstrated sign, 8th--} WaUwGoorg^ Sir William Dawson's standing, in M|j.assistant,Mr^Harlor. ioryaiit "and Washer It Ot tno OUipui 10 UO uumuiiniriiiuu m»ii, ov,. —,. ,„,, _ . tho public can bo accommodatod those parts, Many citizens woro Ewer. Best wator color from nature, t?if irJ^+VJ^'J? -"T-ui" r^""u;';Hl *'.' ,,,B.•»»»«»v»»i.i ponding tho oroctlon of a station, give'onn a rldo in tho car and many 7th and "Bth—1 Rhoda Carglll; 2 Wll- Jf„J*9iLm* P^bably • tho highest Mr, Tlbbots, Wopatohoo Scoutmaster, 'Tho two officials who havo boon ig recognized as Can- ^ favorablwablo common la havo boon hoard tor George, Writing, 5th—1'-Margaret 2?™?P5r',n won mattors in Canada, woro also prosont, and, oonsidorahlo placod in chargo hero, and who also a'da's' most popular 5J ior It on UUI1I1MUIII.all sides.P TheHUTyU tried iMwi..i»t ou.t I Carglll;. 2nd,^ , Stewart MdPhoo. Writing „20,ul? „.,iV ?un^od h,ni»olf ™ rec^« discussion took placo as to posslldo arrlvod on Monday ovonlng, aro Mr. { l washer,' ^hbro'ls'no ^ foonr variouIt on sal grartol sidess . iThen thyo trie communitd it out;|Carglll;.y 7th grado—12nd,l S^warRhodat Carglll; 2 Arthur helioying lhat » rolatlonshlp prob- future actlvltlos of an international G, Wilder, who has boon appointed and it took them vory smoothly and Hook. Writing, 8th grado—1 Dora abiy^ oxlstfl;hO,twoon !. tho American oharaotor botwoen tho scouts of Won-tomporary agent, and Mr. S, W. Bar• mystery.' ;about • i .tho; { w ord 1 otnD AB,ft easily and those who havo oxporloncod Cross; 2 Lillian Ewor. ' : J, °™ J/ *.', ^••• wc word, atchoo and Oltanagan districts, ton, his assistant, supremacy < of tho gear changing on stoop grades say It Junior Room—Writing, grado II— 01 groat ontiquty, but suoh is tho Early Mlonday morning a .tart was "White Cap." It is was quite a treat to bo ablo to slow 1 Wlnnifrod Sammotf 2 Pat Stallard. «n«o. Elsowhora ho I. ovon loss oqulv- madq homeward, and after an unovont- tn0 COAL DEPOSITS TO BE oaBior to oporato, down to any rato of apood, ovon slow* Writing, grado IV—1 Arthur Ooo'rgo; 2Y PftB»ngp just quoted, ful. trip tho hoys arrlvod in Penticton Nor INSPECTED BY EXPERT I washos faster and or than a person's walking gait, and 2 Phyllis Dunn. Writing; grado III— . Mould wo, I think, ho too In- tired but all agroed that thoy had on- 1 increase speed smoothly olthor slowly 1 Rosomary Hardman; 2 Eva Smith- credulous. Amorlca Is, of courso, Joyod a wondorftil timo, and full of Vornon. Nov. 28.—R, R. Earlo, KvC„ lasts longor. Every or quickly without tho chango of any urst, Mat work weaving, grade I—l *h° groat land of tho unwritten past, now plans and IdeaB to put into offoot of Vornon, along with Jamo» II. user is a booster. gearing, Just a slight opening of tho Alma Stallard; 2 Harvey Smlthurst, Wo «now little of its history boforo to make tho Penticton Troop second Christie ot Armstrong, and some Van* throttle. Hand work, grado II—1 Ella Armour; ™o coming of thowhlto man, butthoi.tcommunityo none an. d a forco for good in tho couvor men associated with thorn havo • * • 2 Mary Brown. Best collection art argumonts which may bo advancod in1 oommunitvTho followin. g 1«. a comploto program rocontly taken ovor tho Short's Crook In our last woeks nows budget wo work* grado IV—1 Arthur Goorgo; 2 ««PPort of thp vlow that Asiatics did of tho conforoneo!'' coal .property and havo glvon an op• roportod the doath of Mr. John D. Grace Armour. Best collection art emigrate Jo this country In consldor- PROQRAM tion on it to tho ropre.ontatlvo in MacDonald a. having taken place at work, gflrado III—l iColby Alklns; 2 ablo numbors, and that tho Pacific Fridays—0:^30 p.m, Sixth Annual Vancouvor of some Old Country cap. BUTLER & WALDEN Sonttlo, Wo wish to correct an error Rosemary Hardman. i Bost Spelling coast was always mora closoly In Banquot, S, P. L, Richard F, Jones itallsts. It is oxpoctod that an ongln* are, to oor from Walos will bo sent out In as it was 'Portland, Ore. book, grade m—1, Eva Smithur*st; touch with Asia than tho Atlantic Troop 8, prosldlng, Oraco: Harry L tho spring to inspect tho proporty and 2 Rosomary Hardman. Bout spelling coast ovor was with Europp, ai Bell, chairman Troop 8 committee ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Dinner: Served by ChapJPah-Weo report on it, taAK t^Sh»*5B iSSS Ä^î^t1^^!!^,^ta• from Europe .com to U In- THE SUMMERLAND REVIEW, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1925.

(Sip ^ttmm0rIaniiiRmi>iii COMMENT FROM Established August,' 1908 .,: (Published at Summerland, B. C.) World of Politics Provincial •-W. S. OJBeirne, Editor, and\ Manager (By1 an Ex-Writer of the Ottawa Press Gallery.) Member of Canada.-,Weekly Newspaper* AssocUtion Member of Selected Weeklies Press >: .While the average citizen of this part of the world SUBSCRIPTION RATES .' .... will;be: more interested just at present in such matters ' OUR NEWSPAPER as, 'the reduction* of; the provincial income tax and the (Okanagan Commoner) $2.60 per year by'mail in Canada; $3.00* by mail outside This expression, "Our Newspaper," of the Dominion—all in advance. amount of money he is going to be called upon to pay before he ;can;travel over; the Praser Canyon Highway is familiar. We hear it from the lips of the town, and country folk on all t .ADVERTISING RATES-,;' <:y ,tp the,-coast, -the really big happening in the field "of poli manner, of. occasions and by all man• Composition Display Advertising from 75'cimts per'inch ties last.week was the decision-of Jthe German Reichstag ner of "people. "Our Newspaper told to ratify the security, pact and arbitration treaties framed to 37 %, cents, according to amount ''contracted' f Or. ; about it." "Our Newspaper would like Changer of^Display--Advertising Copy :,feach tissue ig'peri at .the-Locarno conference. • Germany will enter the < to publish it," and the greatest light mitted. «Display Advertisers desiring special1 positions,are League-, of .^Nations,, which means that;,all-the,' cpuntries that comes over the face o£ "a pilgrim charged ,26%; extra; ;r Legals; Advertisement^^Reading"'in;the* , world 'that count for anything, apart if roih: Russia and a stranger." when he comes across Notices,.Etc., 16 .cents per line•^firat'i!in8'ei*ion;vJ3.2;,-cénÌ', 8 and: the United States, are now members of the League. the old home paper at some news per lineA subsequent "insertions.; VWant' • Àdvedtise'méritsi Germany's action should'ensure peace among the great stand.; Coming, Events, Etc;;vthréè: cents : ffi&ofà^&itóèéì&fà?European nations for all time probably, and that means The our "part" of it strikes me as two cents subsequent insertions. •< Business Locals in much for the - future peace and prosperity of the world. a proprietorship; a patriotism akin to Local Happenings Column^ 50 'cent's,,per'•'•line'. !vAll Want With Europe settling down to a basis of permanent peace 'My Country." Without trying to run Advertisements, ; Locals,;,- Etc;; are .payable in advance • we may look with confidence to a rapid improvement in it, we all enjoy it and speak of the \economic conditions:on the.continent with a resultant in• minimum, 25 cents for any oneadvertisement; -All in• v home paper as "Our Paper." structions for cancellation or alteration of • advertising crease in the demand for the products of North America. Our federated clubs and our church• must be writing, otherwise : no ' responsibility is accepted As;agreat;exporter of the products; of .the soil, 'Canada es, our schools and our lodges would by The Review. - ' ' '. * should .benefit in a large measure \ by. the new order of niiss it almost as much as we would things; 'The increased demands from' Europe for our the absence of a dear relative. The wheat, dairy products, meat and fruit will be such in commercial idea, of'the town would ONTARIO JEALOUS AT SUMMERLAND'S alU probability i as to justify the 'campaign for increased almost be paralized without this me• VICTORY ' £ population upon which it is quite apparent the govern• dium of conveying the home and ment;* aided by the railway ¡companies, is about to em• news; • ••••:•<,'. .. ••:. Last week's issue of The Review chronicled bark. It is -not improbable, that before .this appears in VI have visited a town or two who the fact that the five-box winning exhibit of -print there will be an announcement from Ottawa -of the had lost their paper," writes an ex• details; of the new immigration; agreement entered into pert in: business. "It seemed like a Spies, grown in the orchard of Major Hutton between Great Britain and Canada. -A despatch from cemetery. I was soon out of the town. of Summerland, carried'off the honors ,at ;the the capital states that;the Mother Country is prepared Some, of us study these things, pick •to!.- spend 'millions of pounds; sterling to transfer :a part up your> local paper and .note how the Royal Winter Fair.' Summerland is naturally of her surplus population to the .waste spaces; of this .town backs it up by, display of ads. proud of this achievement and congratulations, c.ountry. The; British government has come to realize We at once get the "number" of that that it will be more profitable for the Empire, in the end town. Many, a town sits down in the ' have been freely expressed to Major;Huttbn. to vspend millions in bringing, about a readjustment- of dumps and.-wonders how other towns . The achievement indeed is all the more the population of the Empire than to keep on paying out get1 this, that and other things while huge'sums in doles to the unemployed. ..Canada's great they, do without. The. lack of "patronage notable when it is recalled that Ontario has need at the present time is more population and greater of the home paper is the reason. Many; previously considered itself supreme in that production of wealth producing commodities, but in re• an investor-to-be passes up a town cent years á doubt has existed in the minds of many as when he notes the. advertising is variety, and, has carried off the'honors'for years to. the desirability; of increasing production with. agricul¿ meager: . • '.:,- •• • — ; past. Major'Hutton's apples are reported to ture languishing. • A prosperous , and contented Europe 'Strange, it always-:seemed to me, will remove that doubtiand'ijustify our going-ahead full to take federated club announcements ;: have been the centre of interest at the Fair, "steam with'-an. aggressive immigration: policy. The past all the.year to 'Our Paper' carrying and Ontario-growers "are still somewhat dazed five years have been about, the worst five-year:period in all school anouncements all •• nine ; I have , become somewhat indifferent at their defeat in the competition. the history' of the agriculturists of Canada; - .There is to unjust criticism knowing that a nub• months—athletics, , literary activities good reason for believing that the next five years will ile - servant has to expect this more lyceum-courses, then send out,to some,v There are indications, indeed, that On• be the best since the" inflation1 in values of agricultural LETTERS TO THE EDITOR commercial printer over in some city: ; or.^less,, but,I dp resent the insinua• tario is-somewhat jealous, if not "peeved" at products caused by 'the war: brought prosperity. • tions cast;;against; the men who work• for the 'annual;' Many- a- merchant ed, faithfully ahd^honestly under very might open his': own eyes and see how; British Columbia's and.Summerland's victory, THE ALBERTA POLITICAL COUP LETTER TO ASSOCIATED of advising you accordingly. •;. adverse conditions for many weeks 'on business forms—and • blanks .could-be Yours truly, this particular vslide which Mr. Jones printed at home or ordered by the, and various "explanations" are being offered In Canada the most interesting political event of To the Editor of The Review: editor.as the 'print merchant.' the past week was the; unhorsing of Premier Greenfield Dear Sir:— , ; LEOPOLD HAYES, describes;. as..- a small one and which to explain the transfer of honors. The wet W. C. DUGGAN, could be removed by a small gang in "After, all «is said and done, and of Alberta by his fellow farmer- members of the House The Fruit. and::;-Yégetablé Shippers experts -have studied long and hard weather in the fall, followed by an early frost, "The; episode must be nearly unique in British constitu A. J. FINCH, - two • or three" days.; In addition to -the-.-..-' 1 on those, things pertaining to: adver-; tional history," says one commentator familiar with Association of B.Ç;. has sent the fol• G. JENNENS. , men on our pay roll we were assisted is one excuse offered to explain the 'poor show• iCommittee. Using,-.':-it.is;the concensus of opinion Alberta politics from the inside, who goes on,#0 remark: lowing letter -toi .the President and by all the, teams and men. that could ing of Ontario fruit, but a despatch reports that The directors of the Associated be spared from the Dominion Expert-, that the .home newspaper is the,best, "The U. P. A. went into: ther,last provincial; election Directors of the Associated Growers :, advertising ;.medium in >•• the world. without,a leader, a parliamentary: leader i at. any rate; met in Vernon on Monday, November mental Farm. As I said before; this' Ontario is unable to;, adequately explain, the Gentlemen:— ' , " . 23rd, and instructed the management slide or washout .continued for some Ere a national firm sends a field, it 'picked^; a man who was not a candidate to be premier, We have been • instructed by the to meet the Fruit and Vegetable Ship^ force out into a new territory,; they wonderful coloring of the apples in the British and,-now it sends him on his ;way - and fchooses .someone weeks, hundreds of cubic yards com• Fruit and Vegetable Shippers Associa• pers committee.-The conference takes ing down every few minutes. I submit, use the local press for six months or Columbia exhibits. else. -The impression seems to .be that Mr:: Greenfield tion to inform you' that it has been place on Tuesday; Dec. 1st, in Vernon. a year—just talking, about 'Soapade' was forced i;out on the ground that he' was not giving the Mr. Editor, instead of criticism; a" cer-, This wonder finds voice in an editorial in resolved to form an open exchange tain measure of praise and credit or something else.. Then as the sales• farmers of Alberta the sort of privilege legislation they for the purpose of disseminating should be given to the local foreman, man 'calls' Mrs. Brown says; 'Oh: the-Toronto Globe which brings forththe novel felt they should, get from their own/ government. It will among buyers and sellers of, B.C. fruit REPLIES TO MR. JONES' SPEECH Mr. Arkell, and his men who labored yes, I have read about it in our news-) be extremely interesting.to see if 'they fare,any better -,:.,:: . .-;,;- ;v*.' and vegetables,'; accurate information To the Editor of The Review:' • so earnestly, often waist-deep in mud paper? - ; theory that."westerni growers use a vegetable under Premier Brownlee. Had the initial move to retire "Mail order houses would • fade 1 regarding available, tonnage, ship• Dear Sir:— ' "' and water; in order /to keep' the road oil and rub the apples with'soft cloths." The Mr.- Greenfield i-been 'taken subsequent' to" October 29 away if more brains, wero mixed up ments, sales and .prices, so that the open, for the; convenience of the pub• v (the date": of the Dominion elecbb'n)iit might have been 1 In your' issue of Nevember ; 26th with local advertising, of local firms; Globe says: , • market might' be; stabilized in accor• last! notice that my friend Mr. Jones, lic. . OHr records. show that this road thought that the desire was to: strengthen the Parmer dance with ordinary; economic laws. was not, closed for two days at any in an enterprising way in 'Our News• member • for South Okanagan,; has ! "British Columbia won first place on party in view . of the forthcoming > elections in the pro• time.;;. ' _;•'-.•: . ,,•;_. ^ .-,.; ;.-..- paper.' " ' :"/'•:- vince;*! '.; ;The vote in.; the : federal campaign; showed f a It was recognized .'.that a large pro• made some very, unkind,' not to say a box of.Spys, tlie remarkably fine coloring of marked slipping on the part of the U. F. A. It may be portion of the expense of distribution untruthful remarks in regard to the In regard to - the larger slide at the fruit and the uniform quality of the pack thatythose in authority saw,,the,;signs of the times and would be eliminated.hy the ' exchange slide-which occurred below the Do• Crescent/.Beach: which Mr. , Jones EIGHT,YEARS AFTER made'their preparations early.-:.Certainly: Mr. Greenfield and that >• if - proper .-^information wereminio n Experimental Farm last Aug• states will not be open this year, I • (Vancouver Sun)" being the deciding factors. The Associated must have many friehdsUn the organization; who will re• given producers regarding daily mar-, ust. Mr. Jones describes this" as a have only -to.jdraW; attention to your.: London courts: are - ini a turmoil over Growers used only two apple' packs > in their sent -the manner of his retirement;; 'Whether they will keting ^transactions; j. production and small slide though,.as a matter of fact, kind editorial of; the 19th of Noveni-i claim in which ho less than: five some 300,000 cubic' yards; were washed boxes, the 3-2 solid and the 2-2 solid. ,The take it out,oh "the organization- remains to.be seen. Un• distribution could be:.better controlled ber in which, you saw your way to prominent; persons demand $1,500,000 less they. do it does, not seem possible, to defeat the through the various:; .packing houses down; in the form of liquified mud. I compliment the Public Works Depart-, as original inventors of the tank. • apples are packed on their sides and show,up UiF^AVin"' its f orthcoming appeal .to the, country; 'j Of the Such an exchange "is;proceeding and can, to a certain,1 extent, forgive Mr. ment on the splendid "work which-was Eight years ago, in the darkest days J/ ;: we have heehvinstruciedi^ Jones;., for., the:careless /.personal; re• done in opening 6ut-the road so much °i the war, people were, laying' their to advantage, so f ar as color is concerned:''; The- seats.in the presentj house 60',tare held by/ the •U.F.A. marks which 'he "made as 'it is 'not so' party,-.'and.; of.the 'balance-twelve aroihel'diby, the. "Liberals^ interested.'viny;:seeipgÎ'the industry, earlier than was expected and'"for; property, their lives'and everything very long' ago. , that; ,'Mr,.ViJones ; was which •!• wishi to -thank'-you on behalf western m'en "also' made a "point of "keeping'a placed upon a better, ibasia, and' to ask they owned on the altar; of victory. four by Lab or, of whom .one is a minister of the, govern• pleased to compliment me; on ;the: con• high polish on their fruit, using, ;it is said, a yegr ment; two Independent, one Conservative and. one: Inde• their- co-operation.' Ini accordance with of those who really, performed, the In Britain it was the• most'self-sacri- •; dition: of the roads in his district and work. •„. - "'• ficing era the world has ever seen. pendent Farmer. Alberta has the transferable =vote,; and these. instructions' we - suggest a meet• furthermore stated;'.that- Mr."Sam El• etable 6\X, which is rubbed'on with soft cloths." with' both ; Liberals and Conservatives . doing ifar better ing, with your association for the pur• - K. W. GW15TER. But men's sentiments; undergo con• liott was the best general 'foreman siderable change in eight years. Like Okanagan growers, generally will, smile, at in;the^Federal,contest than seemed likely; especially the pose of- discussing all details and mak• which they had ever, had,-which would lattery it will be interesting to watch the,:effect; of 'both ing such adjustments as may be- con• A famous violinist has been - "sum• the gentleman who gives away his prove .to me that Mr.' Jones can, - in a moned" to play before Henry Ford. watch, in his cupsi and 'then; calls I; The Globe's explanation of the wonderful color• the Federal campaign and the switch in the premiership. sidered advisable in the - interests of moment, of forgetfulness perhaps give ? What's the*use of being the automo• around to get it back when a sorrow• At any rate;;Alberta has^riot lessened its reputation,for all producers. ; t ing of British Columbia fruit, and will endorse credit where'it;is due.',-' bile kingr if• one, cannot exercise royal being politically a most interesting province."' Premier Understanding .that your board is to In my service with the government ful tomorrow/has dawned, these five the statement by Professor Barss of the Uni• Greenfield'-unwillingly'left his farm four1years ago to meet shortly we take this opportunity authority.—Hamilton Herald. . claimants, have forgotten some of the 1 fervid', patriotism that stirred them versity of British Columbia, that the yarn'is try his novice hand: in the^ game of: politics; His - jump are likely to have, the, unpleasant,experience of having1 imposed. A toll of $5.00 seems too heavy, and probably from the plow,to the premier 1 eight yearrs ago.' Emotionally, they absurd onthe face!-of it, nature alone giving the holes drilled througH ;their: diaphrams. Canadians simply half that sum would more nearly meet the situation ; r seem to have soberedup. E :• ,' fruit its high, coloring. He'rightly points.out ture; ; His easy going nature' suited the farm better than won't stand for that ; kihd of business. Members of the But the toll itself is sound in;,principle and should be ,' War; is a ghastly,' grisly thing. It it did the: intriguing 'game of politics. ' He says he is legislature knowj this perfectly well and they should have willingly agreed to. > 1 stunts thegrowth of civilization. ' that no vegetable oil would, have any ..effect 1 , , : ; ''..,';!.'';,•' "through with politics." It is better by; far to be a good gone on record against;the Klan. , ^ "' •"' • • '•• ' But to some people the war gave on the coloring of the apple, the "theory" hav• farmer than a poor premier, and, if Mr.- Greenfied is wise We have read a good deal of late concerning certain a temporary tone of spirituality', a lit- tle fla he won't allow his failure in;vthe'thanklessditchwater dullness have served to' emphasize the of Canada for the next year or two.. That being so, it far as I have noticed, been^bold.,enough to suggest a lda who wiBito'^^S^inyS,'- truth of the saying that there is nothing more,uncertain b a will be the worst possible kind of political strategy on reasonable explanation, and ,h pointed out that a news- . ^ climate,- together,! with, improved' methqds,;on than -the game of politics. Instead of the 'colorless sos- the part of the Conservatives to drive the men who 0> Btlll we £eel tbat We owe Siph; predicted we have been given'quite a series 'of sur- paper controlled by^'American interests o^f a type widely subscribers and readers to Impress the part of/the .grower,'•are\'resp'onsiDle.^6r^'thG hold the balance of power into the Liberal ranks, It is known to be rabidly anti-Bntish, might naturally be i tance of an- prizesv froni Victoria commoncing with the near-scandal quite possible, that, should (he Liberals be assured of the upon th6m the mpor Okanagan; apple whicb.4 is, -rapidl^' becoming about over-expenditures on the University; buildings and pxpected to have leanings that way. This correspond- proaching real estate transactions steady support of the Progressives and succeed in secur• ent' letter, published two or throe weeks ago. in "The their eyes open. Realizing that ending 'with the'unexpected announcement that there is 8< ? wlth known as the best in, the world. • ing the return of Premier King and some of the defeated Provinco," should be;wido,ly; notjed,.as it' deals with a there is a boom in Florida and that to bo.a reduction;of taxation. It is a, relief to the .long- ; ministers to the HOUBO,' they might decide to carry on for position not sufficiently realized. Assuming the corres- the wealth of the land is flocking suffering taxpayers to feel that at last the time has a couple of years. : Prom the constitutional standpoint come whon ministers.of finance don't have to'sit up nights pondent is correct in his facts, as I have reason to be- there, ©very crook roar estate agent The Summerland band is off to a good a majority 'of seven or. eight is quito as good as ono of lievehe is, we have the nnomalous situation of a suppos- i the country who has been'driven thinking up now' forms of taxation. .Red,uctioh of tho n forty, although a mighty slim one to worry along with edly Canadian paper, owned ,by an American concern, out of his home town will go there start, plans for re^organization having; been income tax will, help the people of moderate income as in a chamber made up of 245 members. When Hon, well as thoBe engaged in big business. The investment and editorially influencing, Canadian policies^ from tho in the hope that he can ply his swihd- developed at a meeting this week.;- The Review H. H. Stevens loft for Ottawa the other day ho predicted viowpoint of a certnin type of Unitod States opinion. It ling game unlmmporqd. It isi going to of foreign capital in tho province .will bo encouraged. that Mr. Meighen would soon bo thehoad of tho govern• has previously referred to the importance of a Tho experience of tho United States has boon that a high is a curious conjunction, and ^ono, which ought not to bo a pretty hard matter for the aver- mont because all tho; Progressives would not "stick." commond itself to Canadian sentiment. And it is woll age individual todocido what Is real good band in developing conimunity^pirit and, income tax facts as a positivo detriment to business enter- Perhaps he is right, but if the Conservativos want to got prize andiior that reason tho' tax was heavily cut.' pur to remombor that our.Pleading British Columbia'' farm yaluo in Florida land with those crook- the Progressive support thoy require to turn the King journal is under the same control. About a dozen yonrs stors on the job. It,is butnatural that upon the 'talent which \exJst& .in;,this ^Wta. The; Dominion income tnx as it stands is very much higher govornmont out, denial of tho right to,pair with Conserv• Vv ago "Colliers'! used to publish nn edition of their weekly, Florida will attempt to wood thorn out, new organization !should haveVan^ than that Imposed in tho United States, and it is to bo ativos is a very poor way of going about it. Surely the hopod that tho Dominion governmont will soo its wny which they issued as the ."Canadian" National Magazine, but a now condition confronts that Ottawa correspondent who sent out the story was but but woro eventually forced to give it up by force of press state, a boom that camo without pro- will receive, the support of the citftsens gener• clear to follow the oxamplo sot by British Columbia and drawing on his imagination or quoting tho opinion of bring about a reduction in the next budgot, The provin• opinion.' The present nnomalyjn this provinco does not paration, and as a result many will ally. It is a move in the right direction. some members of the opposition actuated by partizan look much better than .tho .''Collier" incident, and in cial •! minister of finnnco: complains that in eollocting an feelings rathor than.by common sonso. bo mado vlctlm8 GvoZ nL wlUl Florl(la somo rospocts i8 even worse ' Wo havo for some years "„n"„t; t Of courso wo ca'n'nardly look for much sonso Vancouver, Nov, 27. —• Roports LEGISLATURE DODGES K. K.K. ISSUE way whon hard prossod by tho "myrmi- THE OLD dons of tho law" on his flight to York. : K.K.K. of any kind from porsons who aro willing to gaining strength in tho provincial WHO PAYS FOR ADVERTISING? It will bo n bit difficult for a lot of pooplo in this TOLLGATE can still recall a certain plcturo of thnt dub thomsolvos and, onch othor Imperial Conservative clrclos is that strong do- provlnco to understand why tho provincial Iogislnturo historical ovont, whoroin tho bold high• Kloaglos and aimllnr doliriouB'namos, but it is inooncolv- monds aro boing mado for tho return Th.o question of "who pays for advortis did not give its unanimous support to tho resolution de• wayman was gracofully sailing through tho air on tho ablo that any body of grown, nion who aro presumed to of Hon. W. J. Bowsor as loador. lng?" is one that often arises in tho mind of the claring against tho organization of a branch of tho Ku back of Brown Boss, loavlng tho tollkoopor open- know at lonst tho frnmowork'of curront conditions, Tho rank and fllo of tho party IB Klux Klnn in British Columbia. It is quito true that tho mouthed in nstonishmont. Dick Turpin's rido to York should seriously attempt to establish thoir fool organiza- said to bo dissatisfied with tho Pooloy consumer, and sometimes gives rise to a mis• moro adoption by tho Iogislnturo of such n resolution s may possibly bo n« apocryphal as John GilplnVrldo to tion in this country. And for, this reason, among a few leadership this session. conception, It is Bometimos thought that advor would hot hnvo provontod tho organization being onllod Wnro, but tho tollgatOB of those days woro real, whotovor 'others: Ono of tho main tonotB of tho K.K.K, crood is • • tising is an added, oxpense to the manufacturer Into oxlstonco, but it would havo roprosontod trio view• olso was fiction. And now it looks as though wo aro in direct opposition to tho,Roman Catholic Church, and it .victoria—A largo group of Wash- point of moro than 05 por eont of the pooplo,' and tho lino for ono or two in British Columbia. "Tho Hon. W. would-bo interesting to know how such an attitudo would ington stato legislators, headed by dft»mor(?hant,-b^t thlsja j^rronoous, Iogislnturo is supponod to.roiloct tho views of tho pooplo, II. Sutherland is in .danger of earning tho charnctor be acceptable in a country whoro mombors of that church Lioutonant-Qovornor Johnson, prosld- It is quito true thnt pooplo ennnot bo provontod from cbnstituto by far tho largost of. all religious bodios. Ono i ofheer of tho sonato, and Spoakor '•'•;•. Turn'ovbr lie tiio,important feature, of mod• which Mr, Samiiol' wollor, Sonior, doclnrod belonged to nB organizing along racial and roligious linos if they want all toll men of his dny, ' "Thoy'ro all on 'om mon nshias could wish that! somo of thoso , haro-brninod persons Danskln, ot tho. assombly, paid n ern businoBs. ' Tho manufacturer or merchant to, but thoro is no nood in a provlnco whoro British jus. mot with somo disaphoiritmont in Hfo," said Mr. Wollor, would start fooling with tho prpvincoof Quoboc —• it friendly visit to tho iogislnturo of Brit- with a large turnover has a' decided advantage tico provnils for n socrot society of tho hooded and hood• Sr., "consonuonco of vichthoy rotiros from tho world, would bo delightful to watch rosults, lnh Columbia on Thursday and Fri« lum kind, oven if thoro may bp.somo oxcuso for it in n and shuts themselves fh'pikes; partly with the view of Looking at (tho mnttor from a moro gonoral point, ,jfty ]ast. Thoy woro received at tho over liis competitor with a smallor turnover and country whoro tho onforoomonfc of tho IttwsJs ft .mnttor bolng solitary, and partly to rovongo thomsolvos on man• wo noto a similar miscalculation throughout. K.K.K, UOat by Spoakor nuckham, Premier the same overhead, A largo turnpvoV with its of such constant criticism ns it 1B in tho Unitod, States, kind by takin' tolls," It is not anticipated that tho Hon, mothods" may or may not, bo bonoflclal in tho Unitod Oliver and Mr. Pooloy, loador of tho Tho wny to deal olToetivoly with tho Klan in Canada is multiplication of profits moro than takes care Ministor of Public Works proposes to personally toko up States, whoro ordinary, procossos of law soom poworloss. opposition. At tho aftornoon session by tho adoption by the Dominion Parliament of nmond- his nbodo in a tollgato dwelling, and collect from tour• •That's a quostion with which wo, as Canadians aro not of tho Houso lending mombors of tho of any extra exponso in the way of advertising montB to tho Criminal Code making it an indlctiblo of ists using tho Frasor Canyon Highway? but his proposal concornod. But wo know that, ns yot, our methods of visiting chambers woro nccomniodnt- utilized to obtain that turnovor. fonce for tho momborfc of any socrot socloty to woar to imposa n toll seems to havo arousod considerable criti• rostrnint of crimo aro in porfoctly good working ordor, od with seats on tho floor and tho masks or hoods outsldo tholr own lodgo rooms, I am cism and bids fair to .make him ns unpopular among mot• and do not nood any outsldo holp whotovor. Thoro is a others in tho gallorlos. Horo thoy had Thus the manufacturer or merchant who inclined to think that tho Dominion House will bo (lis orists ns was tho tollman of old among cofichmon. Tho tondoncy to troat this movement as a joke, and that is nn opportunity of soolng how a Brit- advertises is of ton enabled,to glvfo spocial values gonornl public, howovor, will probably agroo with him right, as far ns it goon, and-while it is conflnod to tho Ish legislature is conducted, tho busI- Swo in any wny, It is quito probâblo, however, that that a costly rond, built largoly for tho bonoflt of holi• land of its birth. But whon it is obtruded on us it is no noss of tho day bolng arranged to lot t6 his customers, while his competitor who does tho Kla^mon will And oui that Canada provide;.but day traffic, mny vory ronsonably domnnd tho financial longer a Joko, but an importinonco, and should bo handled them got a general idon, and in ad• barren n\\ for tho growth of their organization. Apart not mitBt obtain his full profit on his smaller support of thoso who UBO it, and tho only point on which os Bueh. dltion thoy hoard tho budgot Bpoooh from thnt whon the members of tho organization start opinions will differ is.tho amount of tho charge to bo AUTOLYCUS dellvorod. .turnover. ?••*•••," .•;-.---*», ':-.'! . S to Smlntstor "justice" on tholr own account thoy THE SUMMERLAND REVIEW, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1925. OKANAGAN IRRIGATION PROBLEMS The Start çf an Overseas Empire. Health Means Wealth! GIVEN AN AIRING IN CEGISLATURE With the Aid of Our New PATHO-NEURQMETER Hon. T. D. Patrullo Forecasts Legislation pealing With We can assist you to regain it Irrigated Districts—Position of Government in the This instrument locates exactly all nerve impingements Matter is Outlined—-J. W. Jones' Address. and pus pockets. We invite former patients to come for a free reading. Victoria, No\. 28.—Legislation to initiated by the Liberals since they came into power, the minister dealt Patho-neurometer service free to patients ameliorate the conditions in the irri• with the Southern Okanagan land pro• gated portions of the Okanagan Valley, ject, for which, he said, he. took full was foreshadowed in the budget ad• responsibility. The worst that could DRS. J. C. and JEAN M. FISH dress of Hon. T. D. IPattullo, minister be said about the area was that it had CHIROPRACTORS of lands, Friday afternoon. He did not qost too much money. He was con• indicate the nature of the proposed fident, he said, that the time would Office Hours:—10 to 12 a.m.; 2 to S p.m. 7 to 8 p.m. enactment, other than to say that it come when it would be regarded as a PHONE 118 and by appointment. PHONE 118 highly successful undertaking, and to did not contemplate the public trea ensure that he would receive full sury assuming half of the burden of credit for his part in initiating it and irrigation costs as had been suggested THE LATE MRS. PALFRAMAN must shoulder the responsibility and carrying it on in its early stages, he correct society's ills in the home. in representations from that district. was having his name carved in the Right enough, if church and state In referring to the situation in the concrete of the irrigation dam. The Stayner (Ont.) Sun, contains will only give Mom and IPop half a Okanagan the minister said that criti• Mr. Twigg—Is there a law against the following account of the death of chance. cism had been made of the govern• defacing public works (laughter.) Mrs. W. L. !Palf raman, a cousin of There's Mom, for instance. We all ment's irrigation policy, especially by Mrs. H. B. Corsar of Penticton: know what she goes .through to bring the member for South Okanagan (Mir. Mr. Jones' Speech "The' many people of Stayner who a baby into the world. We all know J. W. Jones) Victoria, Nov. 12.—Immediate ac• knew Mlrs. W. L. Palframan when, as that she loves the little stranger with . "The districts," he continued, "em• tion on the part of the government Miss Annie Florence Gillespie, she all her big heart; and her dearest wish ployed their own engineers and the towards assisting farmers of interior lived in this town, heard with sorrow is that her baby may grow up to be districts are managed by trustees on irrigated land; was urged in the Legis• that she passed away on Friday, No• a good woman or a good man. behalf of the water users, while the lature Wednesday by Mr. J. W. Jones, I vember 6th, at her home near Aurora. * She has to do a lot of correcting, government had been acting as bank• Conservative member of South Okan• Born on the fourth line of Nottawasa- of course, for the baby comes into the er to the districts. agan, during .the course: of his ad• ON9HDERING Canada's progress during the past forces eo did. the construction of the Canadian, Pa• ga she came as a child with her par• world a perfect savage. It knows Criticizes Opposition dress in: the debate on the reply to v* forty years there Is no room for pessimism. And cific Railway constitute a historic battle against over- ents to Stayner and lived here al• nothing of the rights of property.) It Every argument and every artifice the King's speech. Mr. Jones made It Canadians face their problems squarely and attack Whelming" odds.; The men who led ta \ its creation most continuously until her marriage doesn't know there is such a thing possible was used to secure advances a brief review of the history of the them with courage • it would be difficult to foresee faced 'ruin often. ' a little over five years ago. For many as morality. It knows neither good from the government for the resusci• irrigation system in British Columbia Today, as a result of the courage, the far-sighted• the limits to Canada's future prosperity," said E. W. 1 years she was chief assistant to her nor evil. ' tation of the systems and now that from the time of its incepton until Beatty, K.C., President of the Canadian Pacific Rail• ness and the' optimism - of the builders of the Can- father, Mr. Duncan Gillespie, when IPart of Mom's job is to teach the some two and a .half million dollars the present time, and compared con• way, on Novemlber 7th, last, on the occasion of the adian Pacific,: the reliability of the: Company has come he kept a general store here and she little savage what society thinks is have been advanced every: possible ditions here with those which existed I fortieth anniversary of the completion of the Can• to ;be an accepted fact the world.over and has been carried on the business for "some right and what it thinks is wrong; and artifice and argument is, being used in irrigation districts of the United | adian Pacific Railway. Mr.- Beatty made known to recognized abroad as the tangible evidence of Canada's years after his death. In the Stayner hence, what it must and what is must• to repudiate part of the obligation. States.^ : _' the world his belief that the present problems were position as a nation. Baptist; Church she worked assidu• n't do. "* My friend the member for South v« Just forty years ago, .November 7, 1885, Mr. In 1923, he said, the interior sections no more difficult -. than those of forty years ago and ously and was a tower of strength There may be an occasional use of Okanagan says that they do not wish Canadians not less able to..< cope with them.' Beatty recalled, the rails met at OralgeUachie in the" to the Sunday School-and to the Bap• force, now and then a spanking. But to repudiate, they simply want a re• had produced an exceptionally good Eagle Pass;. B.C, when a tense group of men watched crop. Last year the harvest had been Forty years ago Canada had a population, of 6,000,- tist Young People's Union. The church whatever correction or punishment is adjustment. His idea of readjustment 000 as compared to: 9,500,000 ait present. It is a re- Donald A. Smith, later Lord Strathcona, drive the last was always first in. her thought. In deemed necessary is inspired by love is tha.t half.,of.the .amount should be only 60 per cent of that of.1923. and spike, home. Others ta the group picture above in• borne iby the province at large." this year the crop would not be more taankable fact that 'the Canadian Pacliflo Raflway 1920 she married Rev. W. L. > Palfra- rather than hate. ' Company spent $70,000,000. of their own money in clude Sir William Van Home, Sir Sandiford Fleming man, who was at that time pastor of Now Mom knows what she learned Mr. Jones—-I submitted three propo• than 80.. per cent., of the volume of : Major Rogers, tinder of Rosera Pass, G»cñfe R. Har-' sitions for the government to consider, last year. While it. was true that the bringing settlers to the Dominion. And just as the the Baptist Church in Creemore. from her parents of right and wrong; building of Canada was a gallant fight against treat rls Md-.James:-ROe^:>-^::.?^^ and also what she learned in church Hon. Mr. Pat'tullo—Am I to.take it government had extended some assist• -Rev. Dr. J. G. Brown of McMaster ance to the interior growers in irri• University, a friend of the family for and Sunday school. that the opposition has no policy on at Oliver ?." asked Mr. Jones. "That But both church and state like to this matter? . gation, it had done nothing to assist many years, conducted the funeral them in the marketing of "their "^pro• money was paid by the taxpayers at service in Toronto. Interment- took experiment -with humanity. So profes• N Mr. R. H. most sections: of and IPop. the province and British Columbia's Haney, Nov. 21.—A -novel adven• Some day we'll learn that dear old to ameliorate the conditions existing^ bia apple-growers were .this year send• . "I want to deal with the Vancouver ing a large consignment of apples to honey crop is estimated at only 638,- do not wiSh to go as far afield as ture was the experience of two broth Mom accomplishes more with mother 319 lbs., which at an average of 22 PREPARE FOR SK1-1NG love and sympathetic correction than situation " Australia.-Not a single case had been Salmon Arm. Differences with? Ender- ers cycling over the Jackson road the sent to Australia or would be" this cents per lb. gives a value of $140,430. AROUND SALMON ARM by are forgotten as. far as Vernon organized society accomplishes with Mr. H. CD. Twigg—To give Vancou• ; other day. They found a fine buck year, said - the speaker. An embargo Ti this must be added the: value of a policeman's club. ver cabinet representation ? . - ' „ , . -XT rtn _,. >i Hockey Club is concerned. deer with his horns entangled in a against Canadian apples existed ni the yield of beeswax, 9500 lbs. at 50 — barbed wire fence. In a laudable Hon Mr. iPatfullo-^Have patience Salmon Arm, Nov. .28. Given an The speaker went'on to say that an Australia and there was no indication cents per lb., i $4750, making, a total abundance of snow this fall, ski-ing "New . York," 'said Mr. Buckner, sportsmanlike desire to extricate the GAME WARDEN'S TIME of $145,180 for the season's crop. attempt had been made to divide the it .would be,lifted. - which Proved/ a great attraction last "used to be as wet "as the Atlantic animal from its dilemma they ap• -According to a report compiled by year, will be a very popular sport'in Ocean!" Now,- of course', it is as dry proached too closely, when the elder TAKEN UP TOO MUCH Liberal party by a clever trick in mov• ing an amendment to the reply to :the hPinnWhe- n the „Australia* ni*"• n : ••-•--•*'•'•••;treaty wa—s the ^Provincial Department of Agri- Salmon;Arm. Two clubs,'the Broadr as the, Pacific.-r^NewYork:Evening brother was laid prostrate by a well — 110 Vernon, Nov. 28: At . a general speech from the throne. He wished h^^Srw^l ?teps had culture there are 2426 apiaries in Brit- view and the Salmon Arm clubs, have Post; directed kick straight from a vigorous Q either pre ier : liver meeting of the Vernon Fish and Game to pay tribute to the manner in'which S^^ fe ^ . ° ish Columbia with a total number of already made arrangements for good hoof in the solar plexus, and the Protective Association, held on.Tues- ?«to^ o^- ^ °T'pr0Vmcial mln_ 15,505 hives,-the capital value being courses, while in the .Valley, along'the other taught discretion by a drive in the attempt was met by the senior day evening, considerable dissatisfac• member for Vancouver, Mr. Woodward ister of agriculture, to protect the in- nlaoed at «387 625 Donnelly Road, enthusiasts have re• BrltiSh Collimbia Mr Joaes ; SYNOPSISOFLAND the forearm from the alternate hoof. tion was expressed at the inadequate who' refused to be taken in by the cnarl/ ' ' sThe Department of Agriculture has cently, cleared - a good ' run on the This treatment disappointed the ben• attention given to - the = protection of move, and-retorted that he would not M£ M. -d TO < gathered some interesting details- re- hillside behind the. house* -of, W evolent twain and firearms were re• game by the Game Warden of this vote the government out to -put the ^l^\r^^lZ^~}\7°\aTe' aot girding the number of apiaries, and Smith. The Broadview'club has ob sorted to and the noble stag was con• district. A resolution' sent to Major opposition B tained a site about a mile from Canoe ini..- "\ "' t*^ H«W«txon taken, to secure fne yie ld per Mve in the various dis- ACT AMENDMENTS verted into venison. Furber, of the Provincial Game .Con• e ba r a aills -Mr. Twigg—-He would not mind vot• n^'i^^nnfj ?n ^ r e^ « t Ca- trict£. The. highest average yield, per station on the mainsroad, where it is servation Board, brought attention to ing yott out. ™?v^ttL£ f™*\raXiZL l?\*rZ hive is reported^ believed a jump of 150, feet can be MINER KILLED AT COPPER MT. the fact that the local Game Warden ?n,w£ ? 0UC WUh thS lruit ^ Central British Columbia-at Mc- made.'. Members spent a busy time a Mr. Pattullo—He is supporting us II PRE-EMPTIONS Princeton, Nov. 28.—Olaf E. An•was so occupied by entirely "police today. "T V • •'i. ' Bride-r-which, from six hives abtained few days ago,. stumpirig"and:clearing derson, aged 34, met with sudden matters that he had not time to give at ti0Q een this, run. The Salmon Arm club last Vancouver Situation f^L?" T;l0 r , ^ the phenonenal yield of 1200 lbs' of U r 9 ret 1 nQ lt thore death yesterday forenoon while en• proper attention to the work for which wee«^vnk. receive4.^v .,^.d permission from' the "Let me say," he continued, 'that SS L«Jf ' f ' \ \ honey. Bee-keepng should thus prove U u v Vacant, unreserved, surveyed gaged' in the Allenby Company's mine he was originally appointed. All those any.-steps taken they have there has - been an agitation on for have been anyi steps taken' they have a„ profitable.«-i«f„v.i„ ; sid»1e linIIe« toth: farmerrnrmprns Iin Soldier. Settlement Board to make Crown lands, may be pre-empted by at. Copper Mountain. Reports re• who spoke on the matter stated that certainly proved very ineffective. The that district. The Lower Fraser Valley some time to make it appear that the use of the land on the Foothill road British subjectst over 18 years of age, ceived would indicate that while they were casting no reflection*upon government was not doing justice to British Columbio Government was ap• is by far, the largest honey producing lately held by J. Pi Thompson. Here and by aliens on declaring intention working in a stope, he missed his the Game Warden personally, but Vancouver, and in connection with parently ; indulging in a Rip Van area, though the average yield per is an - ample space - for'all forms of to,;, become ^British subjects, condi- footing and was dashed to death upon the unsatisfactory state of af• Winkle sleep while the-federal author• hive is exceeded by both the Kootenay matters in my own department an at• ities were bartering. away the rights ski-ing. Three good jumps can be tional upon residence, occupation and ' when he fell down the shafts and in• fairs, whereby he was at the beck mosphere was sought to be created to and Upper Fraser: Valley sections. made, of various stages, and tobog- improvement for agricultural pur- clines through'which the ore passes and call of the local Provincial Chief of British Columbia farmers." East Kootenay reports the highest av• make it appear that I have been per• Hon. Mr. Barrow> made no reply, ganing can easily be taken up on the poses.. on its way to the lower tunnel. of Police. sonally opposed to the .City of Van• erage yield, followed by Mission and 1 Ful1 Fairmera Position slopes. The assistance of Mr. Wal- information concerning regu couver dealing with the water situa• Kent. Considering the large area un• lenstein has been invaluable to both lations , regarding pre-emptions is Reverting again to irrigation, Mr. iven MOM AND POP 80CIETY tion there. I am pleased to say that, der alfalfa in the Okanagan, Shuswap the Broadview and Salmon Arm clubs ff in Bulletin'No. 1, Land-Series, Jones declared that the difficulties districts, it is surprls H w (Trail News) Father won't kick the situation is now cleared up, and d Tnomp80n in suggestions, for the t jumps and " ? to Pre-empt Land," copies of 'Poor old Mon and Pop are going that the stand that I took originally which the farmers were now fac ng m ,th t ^ - leld por hlve ls 80 low, were extreme y serious,, and^ if the ^ Vancouver district alone re- take-offs. The exhibitions last year which can be obtained'free of charge to be the goats. at the price is that stand that has been approved Gr ater on the Old Enderb'y road by Messrs; by addressing - the • Department of They're going to be blamed for government failed to advance the. nee- tl Uer return, by the ratepayers of Vancouver and 1 Hillstrom and Wallenstein was "a Lands, Victoria, B.C., or to any Gov everything the youngsters of this gen• This is an added advantage for Baby's essary assistance, many would be for- " ... . adjacent municipalities to which the great stimulus to this: sport, and a eminent Agent. eration do that church and state don't Own Soap—The sternest father won't 1 question was submitted.. •• ^P ^ largo number of beginners are ex• Records will be granted covering? thing ought to be .done, says an ex• find 10c too dear. In fact it, is - won• "Contrary to wishing to do Van• ^T^^^^tspent a little over $2,000.00 0 WitV*",h immigratio* n ""l"*shu"t offv";' "it "ma—y a ain b e r & pected on all three courses'. only land suitable for agricultural change. derfully little for such an excellent couver City an Injury, I have sought on irrigation, but:;SSa^.oosS» « V fr? ^ t£Z °Z boyfl purposes and which is not timber Learned lawyers meet in solemn soap with so delicate a perfume. One to preserve both its welfare and the ceeding estimates, the rate against the AN°. *? XT AROUNA TNE does feel so freshened up—and carries KELOWNA COUPLE WEDDED land, i.e., carrying over 6000 board conclave to discuss crime; and about welfare of adjacent municipalities, irrigated lands had advanced from $5 nouse.—Port Arthur News. feet per aero west .of the Coast along so exquisite a fragrance, after Why anyone should imagine that this an acre to $15 and $20 an acre. Low _„„ „„ i,„ « FOR HALF A CENTURY all they can suggest is surer, swifter nm w Mr Range, and 8000 feet per acre east, and more severe punishment. a warm bath with government or any member of it could prices obtained by the growerB for .A. ^?ngroB umTaJLu1 SG6 fl«K5 0 nno «nJ. Kelowna, Nov, 28,—Mr, and Mrs, r ad H Douglas Hamilton have just celobrat of that Range, ' And equally learned professors of do,anything to injure the City of Van- their produce had also been a big fac- .! }° -"f^ ^ %f < ' !ro^^ a m ed their golden wedding, having been Applications for pre-emptions are-: morals suggest more laws. Baby's Own Soap couver is beyond my reasoning powers, tor in developing the present serious through 110 countr eB.-Jt- is 8B» °a to be addressed to the Land Com• Then when more laws and more en• as-as If there is any gratitude in a political condition. Many of them last year tlmt by this time ho has eiuaea its married in Brixton, a suburb of Lon owne missioner of the Land Recording Di- forcement, don't work lawyers and sense surely this government is under had boon unable to meet the levy r. Detroit News, don, England, in November, 1875. , , . ., , „ , , ,, , . preachers tell us that Mom and Pop uIt'$ Bai Jot Vio and Babyan obligatio toon to th e City of Vancouver made lagalnst them, and the number They came to Manitoba in 1883, and y^on in which tho .land'applied for for the support which it has given to of dellquents would be increased this WORLD'S BEST SEED to tho Okanagan in 1001, settling situated, and are made on printed first at Poachland, and coming hero forms, copies o£ wheh can bo ob- this government, and for the stalwart year. ' CAN BE GROWN HERE r s representatives which .it has sent to The United States, he said, had thirteen years ago. The couple were tained from the Land Commissioner, THE VICTORIA CAFE tho recipients o£ many good wishes, „ Pre-emptions must bo occupied for this Legislature. Any time I can ho spent a total of $181,000,000 on irrlga- vrow Westminster Nov 27 v of Borvico to the City of Vancouver tion. The average coBt in that country "There Is in British' Columbia the and Mr. Hamilton's firm presented ? o yoars and improvomonts made HOME-MADE BREAD 10 CENTS A LOAF him'with a purse of gold.' to value of SlO-por aero, Includinr thoy suNly can call on mo." had been high, but the results obtained u \n the world for grow- fln0Bt c mato VERNON HOCKEY CLUB' clearing, and cultivating at least flvo' Orders Taken for Cakes, Pies, Etc, In groat detail the minister re- had proved that the big expenditures inff^raffi Mrs. E. HAMPSHIRE Shaughnessy Ave. PHONE 191 viowod the situation of the province, had boon justified in British Columbia orvidSTo I Rohinson well-known FORGETS DIFFERENCES ncros before.a Crown Grant can be a WITH IT8 NEIGHBOR received. going back to the dayB before party had also justified the expenditure "" d ^'owor at Roval Oalt Vancou- government was instituted. Tho con- mado by tho British Columbia Govora- JSfrZnd in ^SaSss at the — For moro dotailed information see. BorvativoB, ho said, had taken offlco ment and more than that,, justified a comnlimontarv banket tSrod him Vernon, Nov. 30,—Vernon Hockoy tho Bulletin "How to Pro-ompt Club at the annual mooting Friday Land." «uiflB facing a serious situation, respecting greater measure of relief being extend- iTSBi^iaTSii and thS GvrS Bim the finances of tho country, and had, od this yoar. Tho. farmers of, the prov- Xh ?o tftaoSl Sowers of S?onro- night was organized and' officers for I URCHASE by disposing of tho natural resources, inoe wore too important a factor in SnlVtho ComE tho season wore named. Vornon sports- Applications ar,o Irccoivod for pur n tno Communlty HftU 11010 on attained a period of affluence for tho th prosperity of British Columbia for S,^:i v men declared themselves in favor of chaso of vacant and unrosorvod

country, Tho LiboralB had rostored tho government to slight. Thoy had tv,«''«,„'««. n\>A ^ the formation of a league including Crown lands, not boing tlmborlnnd,

that credit, and tho country was today boon to a groat degree responsible for 'Fn°,lZ°+£^J^H™ maSS Vornon, Armstrong and Iflndorby. They for agricultural purposes {minimum in excellent shape, aBovldoncod by tho tho growth of tho'City of Vancouvor, S«S*Wf2^?«ffi price of firat-class (arable) land is $5 a d or budgot prosentod by Hon, J. D. Mac and thoy wore responsible in largo l i5 iunno2 „11 ^ «^n«„?« MAii crurniTI I? IP ncro, and Bocond-class (grazing) c nto so Loan. ' measures for the prosperity of that ^ i°2 n'/" i M MAIL bLHLUULL |jandr $2.50 per aero. Further infor- "Pooplo are tired of talking of,tho city.' " tho growing pf sood.'V ho contlnuod, matlon' regarding purchase or lease P. G. R Railway and of thp Unl- Thoy paid largo sums Into tho trea- ^S?,1*^^^J^™"1"TI^„^/I o?*if^VS1,0^ r n d 0 f 0 00 For tho convonlonco of our roadors of Crown lands Is givon in Bulletin vorslty." sury of the province in tho way of ° n tft . X, ," "^!.^ W^iJ «S wo glvo below tho tlmo o£ closing of No. 10, Land Sorlos, "Purchase and "THE HOME OF GOOD ATTRACTIONS" Mr. H. G, Porry (Fort George)—Aro taxes, and thoy constituted a homo !&toi3SL^« -S?»7teL0 *uJ ho all mails at tho local postofflcos, for Lcaso of Crown Lands." . FRIDAY and SATLlltDAV, bECEMBMR 4 and u— " you going to build tho P. G. B, to markot that was'an exceedingly valu- ^ . Pjovlnco was well sultod for the Prince Goorgo? able one. Last yoar, ho said, tho fruit "lauswy. . . despatch by boat and train; and also HOMESITE LEASES 8 flnt tiCB of B0 od oro 0 interchange botwoon tho two offlcosi Unsurvoyod areas, not exceeding; Hon, Mr. Pattullo—If my friend will growers usod 20,000,000 foot of lumber J?* ? W i . ^ 'm|l "HER SISTER FROM PARIS" not Interrupt mo I will got along fas- for tho construction of boxes. The anld, already being producod, Tho 20 acros, may bo leased as homosltos, Iter. '• v • South Okanagan mombor offered throo unusually high and tho At SUMMERLAND OFFICE conditional upon a dwolllng being: "Their probloms wore left to us, solutions of tho difficulties which tho vitality the very best. Ho pointed For all points North, East and Wost erected in tho first yoar, titlo being With Constance Tnlmadse and Ronald Colman ut "* Comady, "STEP L!VELY"—TOPICS and FABLES but I think that thore Is nothing to bo farmors now faced, First, tho provinoo P. that ovory yoar a certain quan- —0 p.m,; Sunday, 0 p.m. obtainablei after; rosidonco and im-- galnod by talking of scrapping thoso might assumo one-half of tho $2,000,- W, 2,f B°od ^aB received from tho For Naramata, Penticton, South, provomont conditions aro fulfilled 7>30 and DilS. Usual Prices, Saturday Matlnaa, 2i30 01( services, and any discussion of tho 000 advanced, and thus rollevo tho ! Country for reproduction horo Slmilkameen. Boundary and Koot- and land has boon surveyed, kind Is purely academic, bocauso thoy growers from tho excoaslvo annual nnd thoro was absolutely no comparl enay — Dally, oxcopt Sunday, 0 -LEASES MONDAY and TUESDAY, DECEMBER 7 and 8— aro horo, and horo to stay for all tlmo. levy. Second, tho government might B?n D°tw°on the stuff rocelvod and luvy. ouuiiilUi uiu »u,oiuui«in impili. ., „„„i i,„„i, . _ p.m. ' For grazing and Industrial pur Vlews on P.Q.E* For Vancouver and Victoria—Dally posos, areas not oxcoodlng 040 acres "THE GOLDEN PRINCESS" With regard to tho P.G.13. Railway, assummain ocanalB ownershi, Thirdp o, f threservoiro govornmons andt theSwee £ufft sonpoaHt ,bac hok said toMand., was tho chief cr ow oxcopt Monday, 11 a.m. may bo leased by ono person or a iit ls my personal opinion that It would might robato tho Intorest chargos on °lJ " grown, but. nil sorts of an- For West Summerland — Dally, ox- company, Ibavo boon woll it tho road had boon tho capital InvoBtod, amounting to nunls wore grown with equal success With BETTY BRONSON and ROCKLIFFE FELLOWES copt Monday, 7 ¡80 a,m, and 11 GRAZING flnlshod from Vancouvor to connect $120,000 annually. Continuing, tho spoakor polntod a.m.| dally, oxcopt Sunday, 0 p.m. Tj r tho Grazing Act tho Prov- Comedy, "WHO'S WHICH" and NEWS with the Canadian National, You Quotes Oliver Scheme out that $020,000 worth of garden ndo n d For Rural Route—8 ¡00 a.m. dally, j o- | districts 7i30 and OilB Usual Prices would thon have tho road beginning Hon. Mr. Pnttullo objootod to tho " Hold seed wore imported into nC0 1b dlvidod mt0 m nff somowhero and ending somewhere" quotation credited to him. Ho had Canada from tho Unltod States last oxcopt Sunday, and tho rango admlnlstorod undor a Grazing Commissioner, Annual grnz WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY, DECEMBER 0 and 10— Mombors who would discard tho rail- hold, ho Bald, that It would ho un- yor, • "NEVER THE TWAIN SHALL MEET," < with Anita Stewart way ho declared, had no Idea of tho moral for the govornmont to place "Thoro was no need for anything AT WEST SUMMERLAND OFFICE ing pormlts aro Issuod, based on num. resources of central British Columbia, any part of the Irrigation cost on tho of tho kind," ho added, "Wo enn For Coast Points — Dally, oxcopt bors ranged, priority boing glvon to DECEMBER 17, 18 and 10-"THE LOST WORLD" Ho plctnrod tho rosourcos behind his shouldors of tho taxpayers at largo Rrow all thoso soods horo bottor than Monday, 11:80 a.m. established owners. Stock-owners Reserve Seats on sale MeKeen's Drpg Store, Dae. 10th.—NOTEi own city of CPrinco Rupert and assort- if thoso who benefited repudiated tho thoy can anywhere olso In tho world, For South, North and Eait — Dally may form associations for rango man- no reserve *first night (Thursday). od that any person who had vlsltod debt or any part of It. Ho strongly urged tho necessity of 5 p.m. ngomont. Froo, or partially froo- Special Matinee Saturday 2130. Prices 80c and 20c. Matinee tho torrltory would not advocatq "Was it unmoral for tho minister ft reasonable duty on seeds to encour- For Summerland-Office—Daily, ox- pormlts are availablo for settlors, Tickets at Box Office. throwlng tho railway Into tho discard, of landB to spend nearly four million ago and assist the grower until ho copt Monday, 11 a.m.;, and dally, campers and travollors, up to ton. After praising tho different policies dollars in a land settlement schome was established. 5 p.m. hoad, THB SUMMERLAND EEVUBW, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1925. THE LONG SERMON HABIT . mercury dropping to 30 degrees below THE STEADY SUBSCRIBER : ;JToronto Saturday Night) ! zero at Lake Edward. -The" Archbishop of Canterbury has The ice has formed so solidly on the How dear to our heart is the steady JONES ADVOCATES COMMISSION 1 KIDSTON HAS RESIGNED FROM raised his voice against the tedium St. Lawrence River that skating and subscriber, and triviality of the average sermon. sleighing parties have been held, at Who pays in advance at the birth of His Lordship desires that sermons places where the swift current has each year; . TO STUDY IRRIGATION NEEDS should be pithy, intelligent, well de• ASSOCIATED GROWERS' BOARDprevente d freezing for years. Who lays down the money and does livered, and not too long. He be• it quite gladly, lieves that bad and windy sermons Member for South Okanagan Has Wordy Battle in the depopulate the churches; ; Effort to Bring About Change in Management of Fruit And casts round the office a halo of The late Queen Victoria is credit• cheer. Legislature With Hon. T. D. Pattuito, Minister of ed with having used her prestige to Organization is Defeated — O. W. Hembling Is APPLEPRICESIN He never says: "Stop it. I cannot Lands—Would Do No Good, Declares Catter. end the long sermon habit, though, ac• Appointed in Mr. Kidston's Place. afford it, cording to rumor her views did not I'm getting more papers than now I ; avail her much at Balmoral, when aB WORLD'S MARKET can read," Victoria, Dec. 1.—Strong opposi• a commission.'.The government has a matter, of policy, she used;to allow Vernon, Nov. 28.—At the conclus• A statement issued by - the Asso• But always says: "Send it, our people tion developed from Hon. T. D. Pat• all' the information that" a committee Presbyterian divines ,to, expend their ion of a four-day sessioh/of the board ciated says: all like it— ,. tullo, minister of lands, to the re• could obtain. • powers in her presence. Her*-''senti-1 °^ *^e Associated Grower's^ John Kid- "The question of the centraliza Quotations Received by De• In fact, • we all think it a help and a Mr. Jones—r-The people were: told tion of control of central and local quest of Mr.. J.,,W.. Jones, Conserv• meht^^re, r0Veverrrevealed in the fton, vice-president, resigned from that the cost- of .water would not ex• the directorate, his . position being operations was discussed at some partment from Overseas need." / ative member'for South Okanagan, in fact that when she presented a pulpit f" ceed. $10.50 ah acre. " . glass to the Chapel. Royal in 1867 filled by the appointment of O. W. length and it "was decided to go as and the Prairies How welcome his check when it the committee on .agriculture^ for the 1 Hon. Mr. Pattullo — That is not she:had it measured so that its sands Hembling. far in this. direction as the contract reaches our sanctum; appointment of a commission'to study true.- should;, run. only eighteen minutes. This is significant in view of the with growers permits. It was shown How.it makes our pulse throb; how Mr. Jones —, That is true. The attack on the management launched that, under, a centralized organiza• Apple prices at British, European the conditions in >the: -irrigated sec• Her Majesty, was a very' wise-and hu• and prairie points as reported by the it makes our heart dance; statement was made by Major Mac- man' monarch In more respects than by Kidston at the recent .meeting, of tion, many savings would bé effected tions of the Okanagan Valley. ; and the whole .process of. marketing department.of agriculture yesterday We outwardly thank him; we inward• The minister and Mr. Jones engag.- Donald .to the landowners', and Major one: 'Fifty* years ago in - "Barcheg- the Vernon Fruit Union. D. W. ly bless him — MacDonald is. a man I have a high ; Hembling opposed Mr: Kidston, and move more smoothly." ' on the basis of cables and wires re• ed in wordy warfare .over the. differ-. ter Towers"> Anthony Trollop'e< made ceived, are as follows: The steady subscriber, who pays in :ent aspects of the situation.. . : regard.for. He is an employee of the a sharp protest' against the conditions sought from the growers, approval of The Fruit and Vegetable Shippers', advance. ';, government- arid was. sent "there to his attitude-in resisting attempts to The following quotations have The argument/had not .concluded under which people w^ho really liked Association sent a letter advising the been received by cable from the Can• —Collingwood, Ont., Saturday News. : advise the water municipalities. : bring about a change,in the manage• when the ministerv.wascalled;.from ; church ~for devotional reasons were* Associated that it had been resolved adian Fruit Trade Commissioner in committee to attend a meeting .of the Chairman Dr.. Rqthwell—It would compelled to listen to banal sermons. ment of the Associated. to form an open exchange for the cabinet, but he did. make clear-that only be an estimate, rand .estimates of But the old abuse remains' in every Questions of operation and man• dissemination of information, • and England: - Victoria—On Tuesday next the Pro- he was totally opposed to such a "com• this kind are always exceeded. -, denomination. ' If the Archbishop agement were discussed at this week's asking. a meeting. The Associated Hamburg, Nov. 17.—British Col- vincial Treasury will do son.ething •••\{- ...Only an Estimate of ; Canterbury^ can- do anything to meeting of directors accepted the invitation. ' - - umbia apples, "ex. SS. "Novian," ex- that has not taken place in Canada mission. ' .<•,'. tra.fancy Jonathans, $2.91 to $3.58; for twenty-two years, that is pay off High Charges Hit Farmer:•:•>.• Mr. Jones—Yes it was only an esti• make life more endurable for the mate, but Major McDonald was there church-goers, more' power to him fancy, $2.91 to $3.27; Mcintosh, ex- a portion of the public\debt with the rv, Mr. Jones declared that excessive tra fancy, $2.91. . sinking fund which has'been accumu- water charges, especially about; Kel- representing the government in an advisory capacity.; - There were many Glasgow—British Columbian, ex. lated/for that purpose and thus reduce owna. and in the Vernon district, SS.: "Metagama," Jonathan, extra the gross debt by $3,130,000. The last tended to depopulate the land, and persons in attendance when the state• ment was made. The people cannot fancy, $3.15 to. $3.64; fancy, $2.91 time this occurred in Canada was in that there was no economy in driving GAS-ELECTRIC to $3.40; Delicious, extra fancy; 1903, when IPrince Edward Island re- the farmers from their holdings afford to farm paying $15 to $20 an acre.::'-. V- <•• . • • "••-•".-: A PROPHET IN HIS HOME TOWN $3.64 to $3.88. deemed an issue of debentures. This The minister; said that Summerland me to sleep. ;.':.. ' . . - Calgary-—Alberta potatoes, • white, has been made possible by the policy was carrying its own water costs and Mr. Pattullo—Then they had bet• 'Methinks I ,am a prophet, new Then I woke to the realization that ter get off the 'farms. CAR IN NELSON inspired, and thus inspired, B,cwt., $1.35. to $1.75; Netted Gem, adopted under the late Minister of it wo.uld be unfair" to that-district, as the song had finished and that the B, cwt., $2.00 to $2.25. British Col- Finance; Mr. John. Hart, and being-, Col. Fred Lister—The people have do foretell of things.' audience was applauding. I hurried up to others, to have to bear the cost of - umbia apples, box, Delicious, fancy, continued by his successor, Hon. Dr. any assistance to these' districts which been farming there under such con• • ; • : Shakespeare. the steps of the building in order to : New Type of Gar Given a It seems to me, that the old saying, $2.65. to $2.90; Mcintosh, crate, MacLean, of establishing sinking were appealing for assistance. ditions until their patience' has see who the singer was and entered $1.50; Jonathan, fancy, $2.00; Wag- funds for all the Province's long-term broken. _ "Look-Over" by Citizens "that a. prophet hath no honor in his "ustas she was retiring from the Commission Is Demanded own land," must have been derived ner, extra fancy,, $2.25, fancy $2.15, debts, Hon.' Mr. Pattullo—Why make use stage.. ••••• v; '" '"•"•;•'.•'. •-• .•;.. . '," crates $1.40 to $1.60; Winter Ban• "Our request is that a commission of such extravagant statements? of That Town from'the fact that they generally fore• be tappointed," answered Mr. Jones Never was I so disappointed. I had ana, fancy $2.40;, Spitzenberg, fancy, Col. Lister-^Because they are true; tell unpleasant ithings. imagined that .[it.; was some great The .question in Windsor is as to "If. the commission does not find that . Nelson, Nov. 30.—With about 25 J $2.25 to $2.40; Rome Beauty, extra 1 - Mr. : Jones—And let me tell you Or 'perhaps they are just ordinary singer who had been imported for the whether it would be better to have a things are as we represent, -'then it that two persons have committed sui- passengers the Great Northern gas- looking fellows and nobody would give fancy: $2.40, fancy $2.10; Spy, fancy bridge or a tunnel between that city would so report." electric car hummed into the Moun• occasion." But it was only Mary Green $2.25 to $2.50; Newtown, fancy I cide over worry • about • their farm them credit for knowing more than who. worked in the restaurant. and Detroit/ Some, however, believe, Hon; Mr. Pattullo—We don't need I losses: tain station last night, arriving on $2.75, C $2.50; Baldwin, King, that- what a funnel.— its schedule time at 5:50 p.m., and a their neighbors; •Now s if . it had been me singing, Greening, fancy $1.75 to $2.00. Po• fair sized crowd assembled at the . That . is apparentl, ..... y why;th...... e peopl. . e there would not have been such an tatoes, Ashcroft, B, cwt., $2.75 to | Toronto Star. ' .';•'. by the Queen and other royalties, to nn ou outburst' of applause. Merely a feeble o.o ATW'J'P r> .orn + ¿0 i Hunger makes all animals, savage.' the strains of Chopin's funeral'march .Union depot to "look over" this fast °! / town, do not. seem to aprecíate $3.00; Netted Gem, a, $¿.50 to $3; Feed him a cup of coffee before he lonseomé car. - . the fact that I am a man of extra- clapping of the hands. SNOWMANTLE and after their withdrawal the con• white, B, $2.50; onions, standard. ^ T" *u gregation departed silently, I leaving Keep, Steam Schedule ordinary abilities. I am sure that when I.went down to;the city a month ago cwt., $3 to $3.25. . Car arrivals. All gets up in ^e m0TDms- 8 t c ( ul 1( and a friend asked me.to go. out to the berta, 3 potatoes; British Columbia, the casket on the catafalque alone be• F. G. Baurer, master mechanic of onL?e els. ,°.e an^dÍ.J.! when th¿.e baní?"d was short fore • the ;altar of ;the great•>.church. the Great Northern Railway, of Spo Golf Club. There was a championship 3 apples, 1 vegetables; imported, 1 COVERED BIER of a big drummer, last fall, I belab- match; on - and it seemed that some vegetables, 2 grapes... As;the building was; emptied the" sun (Jane^stated ^ unoffending instrument in a amateur, was making a great hit in W. C. KELLEY, B.A. „„:,„n„,q „,„. suddenly shone forth, its rays stream--ischedule of steam trains Nos. 259 and Imanner „^i.^„_, never befort,„e„Jel equalled in our 260, was maintained without any ef the contest. My. friend could not say KEEP MONEY CIRCULATING v BARRISTER, SOLICITOR. ing through the windows and playing community. • where; this man came from but ,said OF ALEXANDRA over the bier. v . ; /, fort whatever on the part of the gas (Vancouver Sun) NOTARY I electric car, and-the trip was entirely In fact on this latter'occasion it would be worth while to see him "Good times".in Vaucouver or any• !,: Public Pays. Farewell Tribute was quite offended because the leader in action. , At 1 o'clock in the afternoon the satisfactory in fuel.consumption, and, where else is simply - a matter of the WEST. SUMMERLAND B. C. Throngs Ljned Route as the in riding, as he said, the car was of the band told me to go easy and let We arrived rather late but were in circulation of money. And the circula• 10-5-26 doors of the Abbey were again open• the people hear the saxophone section time to see the rivals approaching the ed and a ; long, procession began of practically'noiseless. tion of .money is simply a matter of Funeral Procession Mov• No, I am afraid that-1 wall never last; green. The crowd: made way and people paying, their debts. those of "the general public desirous So silently does the car run that be able to make the local audience soon.we were entranced in .the:sus• ed to Abbey of paying tribute to the dead queen when it approached" the Union depot A, city inhabited by misers with K. M. ELLIOTT thrill with my accoriiplishments, un• pense that awaited the decision of the stores of stagnant gold locked up in for the last time. - all that could be seen was the shining less I go away and come back under tournament. ,,,'.. BARRISTER, SOLICITOR and •'". The c off in, after remaining in the glare of. a swift-moving light,• and their vaults would be the deadest place KING BEHIND CASKET the "disguise of some foreign name A few strokes and the champion• in the world. It would mean-starvation NOTARY PUBLIC Abbey all of tonight, will be carried little more noise was heard than from Then I can hear them all asking the ship was won and lost. With one ac• 4 to any merchant who ventured into WITH BOWED HEAD tomorrow .morning,-to - Windsor, ' for an automobile. The car arrived at manager of the local .theatre, 'Who cord the crowd rushed forward, cheer• 506 Metropolitan Bldg. Vancouver burial in the royal chapel. the depot at great speed and it took it. ° .-. -* :-- ,v~ v -:— is that distinguished;-/^cross-eyed ing the new hero of the hour. We On the other hand, some- of the 15-2-26 Three Other Kings and ••-': So bitter'was the wind that'làshed no time to stop it when the brakes gentieman?" " were unable to get close to him but thé city after the snowstorm .- that were applied livest and most prosperous towns in |- It isn't as if the people here had made up for that by cheering all the the world are places inhabited by.no Many Princes Were in many of those in the mourning crowd The car, all told; is 60 feet. long, GORDON SHAW—OPt; D J any talent. The way they talk about more. one but low-salaried men., - : . Procession collapsed from the cold. .- there being a 16-foot baggage.com- thi ]ad and that gentieman being Those close to the champion hoisted (Successor to Mr. H. S. Timberlake) partment, a 10-man capacity smoker .The secret of prosperity is not the At 1-o'clock a great queue stretch• able to ging or that some fellow here him shoulder ;high and s'tarted for the PRESENCE of money but thé CIR• - Scientific Correction of the Eye London, Nov. 27.—Winter, stretch• ed over a mile from the Abbey, wait• compartment,:; and a 6-foot engine is the finest baseball; pitcher that ever club house. Determined to be one of room, the balance of the car has a CULATION of money, .-".-..Optical. Repairs \;'-.",::4 ing out, an icy hand, laid a tribute on ing for the chance to pass the queen's threw a ball. those to escort the victor, I took ihy v Stagnant, slow-moving money means the .bier of the gentle Alexandra, bier.- ' capacity for 45 passengers, and the It makes me tired stand in the middle of the path and re The "buyer I VERNON B. C. car is modern in everyway. hardship for everybody Britain's Queen Mother, today, - cov• . Out of ' respect for the Queen If they are such experts,;;why don' fused to be thrust aside by the throng neglects to pay the retailer, the re• ering her casket with . , a double end control-arid Pierce snow it, .'for^.the'^snowr.y^s^\faUing»'on'i.that: The song, grasped me : so that I felt ,t Who would have thought it? day \sixty-two "years ago, when she flanges. The total, weight of the car I was once again in the bid home. It He was only Joe Brown from our came from Denmark to be the, bride is 39% tons.; , ,. made mo think of the days when I was town.. - . .- FIRE INSURANCE Crew of Three a boy arid heard' my mother singing of King. Edward VII. R '- . • i ' \ . . MAC ; f. D. COOPER WOULD AMEND Only three men are,: required to Close; behind the casket,;. walking I is cold, as I had said it will be, it will REAL ESTATE BROKER Reliable and Economical alone and with howed head, came-her operate the. car on its runj there be• ing an engineer and a conductor, the be proof that astronomic cycles do son, the King, jmuffled in the; great• exist, arid it will go far toward es• Peach Orchard, Summerland G. J. COULTER WHITE coat, and wearing the plumed hat of baggageman and brakeman being the BRINGS ENGLISH VEHICLE ACT one. individual. tablishing a scientific basis for me- Established 1907 Phone 613 a field marshal, which also received terology. France, Germany and Eng• PHONE 536 a coating of white flakes before the j land will have a big share in the cold procession -had gone far; Alterations, for. Regulating H ( SLEEP FORM OF SETTLERS EREweather. " , ; Three Kings Behind Chief- Mourner Motor Traffic Are , With the advent of cold weather on VERNON GRANITE AND . Abreast, behind this solitary figure, Outlined Sunday, there are not a few persons E.L.MILLER,PLUMBER came the King of the Belgians arid who will believe that Abbe Gabriel's MARBLE COMPANY the Kings of Norway and Denmark, Armstrong Man Brings Four Call at Simpson & Gowan's for : prediction will coriie true • Quarrying ft Cut-Stone Contractors and back of them the Prince of Wales INMjCATION your plumbing and steam heating Among some important ainendments Families There in Past Coldest Since 1891 work, done by the day at contract Monuments, Tombstones and and his' brothers, and the crown in the present law in regard to,motor Montreal, Nov. 30.—Zero temper• princes of Roumania, Sweden, Den• Few Days \ prices to suit each job. Work General Cemetery Work vehicles contemplated by a bill intro• atures on Sunday gave Montreal its done by a first class plumber and PRICE ST. VERNON mark, Norway and .'Belgium',' with duced in the Legislature, is one fix• Changes in Blood Same as Armstrong, Nov. 24.—-Four fami• coldest November, 29 since 1891,- Re• steam fitter; Lord Lascellqs and other notables ing the liability for loss or damage in ports from other parts of Quebec in• who have married into the royal fam• the ease of accident where motor car When Drunk, Say lies from England, numbering 18 ; :; ! ;:: ! :/ dicated even colder temperatures the ily. -' ' '7. " r '"'"' r . has been let to a driver without a lic• Savants in all, have reached' the North Okan• When in Vancouver put up at ; .Under greatcoats these royal fig• ence.. agan during the past few days, ures wore the dress .uniforms of .the The licence is to be carried in a Washington, Nov. 30.—Sleep is a brought over through the instrumen• ; A.F. &A.M. \ ranksthey hold, either'in the army'or reasonably conspicious place on the form of intoxication which follows the tality of George Fuller of Armstrong. Hotel Dunsmuir navy of Groat Britain, but of the uni• motor-vehicle. system's absorption of poisons during Mr. Fuller has for a number of, years Summerland Lodge No. 56 Be Sure and Vancouer's Newest and Most forms only the,gold-braided hats re• , -Where any change, such'as a new wakeful hours. This is the theory dls- past been bringing over small groups Complete Hotel , lieved the sterner' shades, of tho fun- engine, chassis, or body. Is made or pensed by George Washington Univer- of carefully selected emigrants from Meets Third Thursday Keep Warm This 250 Rooms—100 with" oral procession. There was but a one type ;of car Is replaced by' an• sity scientists in papers discussing the England, to settle them oh the land in in the month Private Baths' single other spot of color—Alexan• other, the bill requires written notice sleepless tests conducted by the medi- Canadapbut in this instance all of Europoan Plan, $1.50 dra's own royal standard, with which to bo given to the Superintendent of eal school last spring. Changes In the those who have come are in someway S. A. MacDonald, W. M. Winter! the casket was draped. Provincial Police. ' blood and other secretions of studonts related to himself. It Is tho first E. R. Butler, P.M., Sec. ,a day up Sobs,Hoard in Ranks of Thousands " A> windshield sticker will, in future; who went without sleep for more than time also, he says, that he has availed GET YOUR COAL AND Bus moots all Boats At the boom of a gun marking 11 bo issued by the police, together with sixty hours during the tests were sim- in • the matter, part of the passage WOOD IN NOW and Trains o'clock, the casket was brought from certificate. ilar in every case to the changes ob- himself of any Govornmont assistance Cor. Dunsmuir and Richards tho Chapol Royal and placed' on itho Chauffeur's badge may bo worn on served in various stages of intoxlca- money having hoen advanced by the I.O.O.F. Place your order with White same gun carriage used at the fun the clothing, instead of on tho hat tion. Dominion Immigration Department, & Thornthwaite and you orals of Queen Victoria' and- King or cap, as previously proscribed. In forthcoming tests to substantiate though this will be eventually repaid Edward VII. , Report of motor accidents must bo the intoxication theory, it is pointed Part of the now party is established will receive satisfaction. KETTLE VALLEY RAILWAY Okanagan Lodge No. 58 At tho word of command tho es• mado to. tho police: within forty»eight out, tho question of how long a person on Mr. Fuller's own land - in the hours. • should sleep will bocomo one of how vicinity of the city, part of thorn on We handle the famous TIME TABLE corting companies of Guards fell into Meets Second and Fourth Tuesday • stop, King Goorgo omorgod from tho A now clause in regard to liability fast he should sloop—it being posslblo another farm of his atCanporand DRUMHEELER LUMP for loss or damage is; according to tho paper, that through others at intermediate points Mr. at 7 ¡30 p.m. in Freemasons' Hall EASTBOUND palaco, and tho procession began its habit, ono porson is able to securo Fuller has groat faith in the future ot COAL . moasurod march through tho Mall, "Whoro a motor-vehicle has boon E. Walton W. J. Benttlo DAILY lot for hire without a driver by a per• 100 units of sloop in half the time tho North Okanagan, and Is porsuad- Trafalgar Squnro and Whitehall. noodod by another. cd that if others- who have the mean* Noble Grand Roc. Soc'y which will givo a good hot, No. 12—Lvs. Vaneouvor ..7:15 p.m. ....: Handkerchiefs found the eyes' of son carrying on tho business of lotting motor-vehicle for hire without driv• Just as by a sorlos of conditioned would oxort themselves to fill up the steady fire. West Summerland 0;58 a.m. many and sobs woro hoard in tho ers, and loss or damage is sustained reflexes the salivary glands aro mado northern oncl of the-valley in tho same Nolson 10:55 p.m. ranks'of thousands who had waited by roason of tho motor vehicle on a to work fastor, it may bo possible to way, this would soon be ono^of tho hours in tho cold arid wot, for among highway for which tho person driving causo tho sleeping mochanlsms to no- most prosperous parts' of B.C. Com White & Thornthwaite them woro somo who had seen Alox- or oporatlng the motor vehicle is colato, tho papor assorts, citing in sup- parativoly fow of those whomjio has MATT. G. WILSON WESTBOUND ' nndrn pass up arid down tho samo civilly liable to any other person, the port of the suggestion the fact that previously assisted to como to Canada i- •''' DAILY streets undor cloaror skloB and in person by whom tho motor vehicle tho first two hours of sloop aro known have had previous oxporlonco on the Coal & Wood happier circumstances. Authorized Trustee No. 11—Lvs, Nolaon 0:O5p.nv was lot for hire Bhall also bo liable to bo muchdoopor than tho last two; and, but in only one instanco, ho Bays Taxi & Transfer Service Tho soft, slow music, to tho'cad- for such loss or damage This theory would account very well »ivo thoy fulled to malco good hero, Notary Public Wost Summorland..ll:5

Irrication of the Apple Orchard that trees draw by far the : greater "THE GIFT STORE" By R. C. IPALMER, B.S.A. part of their moisture supply from the peal Happening upper three feet of soil. Accordingly, I •'•'':'/" •/}•>• ••!••-:, A';''V-V:'\'? .}' '' '• •': '-!.'•''...• \•:'<• , IDuring the past few years I have shall, with your permission, limit my• If in doubt what to buy for your Christmas presents a visit visited a large number of orchards self to a discussion of the moisture to our store will greatly assist you to solve the problem—it has Contributions to this column will be gladly received. If you have anyin the irrigated sections of British Co• holding capacity of this upper three been our aim in selling our various lines to combine the practical with beauty, for if an article is not useful in this modern age it RATES FOR CLASSIFIED visitors staying at your, home, or know of any friends who are leaving for lumbia, and I have been impressed feet of soil. The term 'inch" of water, a holiday, kindly 'phone or write The Review. with the fact that there is room for as used in this paper,, refers to the is usually stowed away and of no real, value. ADVERTISEMENTS 1 visit. He expects to be away for about a great deal'of improvement In ir• quantity of water which will cover the We would urge you to make .your selections early, as you get Kelowna-Pentictpn,. boat service. soli ' toi the depth of one inch—in other a better chalice,' and .there are, many lines which we cannot First insertion, 8 cents a word. ten days. rigation practice. Three, years ago, : Leaves Summeriand >for Pentlcton 11 . , . your old friend Mr. Helmer, travel- words; the exact equivalent of an duplicate.. •.-:;•'.:'--:,' 'hr-.'. ..\i, ,••:.{<''. -'-• Two cents a word each subsequent 0 Sundays included. ... , tf. Quite a numfber of Summerlanders led u» an,d down this valley giving ir- inch of rainfall. insertion; minimum charge, 50 cents : Moisture Holding Capacity SUGGESTIONS FOR THE LADY OF THE HOUSE per.week. ;/ \. .. ottoTi/i^ fu„ i.„„t„n„i, „ ,„ 0 - rigation demonstrations. If all had fol- : Let us investigate the moisture hold , V Silk Neck Scarfs, Fancy Handkerchiefs in singles or' boxes, Mr. L. Beavis arriyed home Satur• attended the basketball games in Pen- ^ If so desired, advertisers may have lowed hls advlce Q0 not thlnk lt ing capacity of this three feet of soil Collar and Cuff Sets, Kid or Fancy Fabric Gloves, Fancy Wool replies addressed to a box number, day night from Kelowna-where he has ticton last night, and some stayed for would be at all necessary for me to which furnishes our trees with their Neckscarfs, Jabots, Stamped ".Goods, Embroidered Pillow Slips, care of The Review. For, this service been working for.: some' time in the the dance afterwards. AH report an speak to you today. Accordingly, I water, supply. < Soil is made up of In• Silk and Silk and Wool Hose1. 'Sweaters 'and 'Pullovers,:; Felt add 10 cents. j K>iP.R. offices there^> • : i enjoyable time. Among them were Mr. have come here, not,to present any numerable particles of solid material Slippers, Etc., Etc. ' separated;by very small '.'pore" spaces, The Review is fnot responsible for and.Mrs. H. Daniels and Miss R. Har- ™Z™ J**™™* djsc°verifs' FOR THE MAN OF .THE HOUSE j errors in copy taken over the 'phone. Mrs. C. A. Walter is expected back - Mr.' n If we were to take, a column of aver- , , ratheBeforr teo direc-the t orchardisyou attentiot can nto appla fewy orchard soil, 36 inches in depth, Silk and Wool Lined Mocha and Kid Gloves, Fancy Silk tomorrow from Castor, Alta., where the games and • was umpire in the ris. Mr. DanielB refereed in two of welwatel rrecognize intelligentld truthy sh e must know and' compress it so that all the pore Neckscarfs, Silk Hose (fancy and plain), Wolsey Pure Wool Hose, FOR SALE she has been for the past month visit• third. something of the moisture holding ca• spaces were closed up, we should find Big range of Fancy Silk and Silk Knitted Ties, Broadcloth Shirts ing at the home of her daughter, Mrs, pacity of his * soil. We have evidence that.there was about 19 inches of solid ' or Plain and Fancy Striped Designs, Pyjamas,: and a medley of FOR SALE—Light democrat. T. B. material and 17 inches of pore space other useful articles, that must be seen to be appreciated. V. Charles. ' goes off. Young. 'i ' S-tt-c in our three feet of soil. In a olay soil | M'N AIR REPORTS Therefore,; heyond any question there would -likely be a little more, i FOR MISSES, YOUTHS AND CHILDREN Solve your problem at 'A. J. Beer's FOR SALE—One 2-ton Giant;truck in of • a doubt I do not think we will and in /a sandy soil a little less, pore: we have & splendid assortment of. useful gifts to'choose from and - ' 18-1-c good condition. This, truck will be ever succeed until the Associated has space. This pore space may >be filled will promote easy selecting. i sold at a-low. .price to close up the control over the - Local i operations. with air or water. If it is filled to its liquidation. Apply M. G. Wilson, Dr. and Mrs. R.C.Lipsett motored TO A^OCIATED Prosperity of Valley totals moisture: holding , capacity, or OUR PURE FOOD GROCERY Liquidator Spmmerland .Fruit Un up to Peachland on Thursday and "It would not be of Buch great filled entirely with -water, we say that never was in better form. This, department is where quality ion, Summeriand,. B.C. 18-2-c concern were it not for the fact that the soil is saturated. reigns supreme, and from the generous'patronage it is receiving spent the day visiting there. Believes That Body Is Best upon the success of failure of the , In actual practice saturation seldom it i» evident that the good people of this district 'appreciate Associated hinges the prosperity, or occurs in the field.! Even should a soil quality. Following is a partial list of the many good things Mrs. Nesbitt went up to Vernon on FOR RENT Able to Give Just Re• poverty, of the Okanagan Valley. You be saturated with water it seldom waiting for you: ^ I Monday, returning to Summeriand-the should come - to an immediate reali• stays that-way .-for, any length of time, :-: Glace Cherries, MJarachino Cherries, Chr'istmas Crackers, turns to Growers as some of the water is pulled down FOR RENT—Schwartz. Tail?* Shop. l following Thursday. •" " zation that you are 'trustees for-some Christmas Candles, Grape Fruit, Cut Peel and Fancy Capsvin three thousand growers. Your actions by : the i force of gravity. We say that it Lemon, Citron and Orange, McLaren's,: Cream Cheese, Kraft . T. B. Young. y\-'&:y*m drains,or,,seeps away.'Each- soil;;par• Photographs to be sent east for The.following report by D. McNair, determine for these people the possi• Cheese in plain and pimento, Fancy ,- Box Chocolates, .Maple TO LET—Warm modern rooms; ~B Sales Manager, contains; some. intens• bility of their holding theid life-time ticle, however, .attracts .water to-it by 8-tf-c|Xmas must be taken, next week < l : . Syrup; Jap: Oranges- and many other : tablev . delights from; the; what is called ^càpilla!T'y/. attraction;'::A 1 Young. Stock's the Photographer. 48-A-C ely interesting information and; covers investment, and provide for them a pick of the world's markets. Everybody welcome to visit our -:;'i: "- I certain amount of water is held in the 0 a wide range of subjects which might remunerativremunerauvBui;iiujiouuu,e - occupation, ; or, on --thre store and see the nice things—you are under no obligation to buy. TO LET—Furnished house on Beach soil by this capilary force and is,not -T ««,J mnrt, flf A J" Beer's 18-1-c not ordinarily' be looked for in such other hand,; loss; of home, property, avenue for three- months from Be- a B w lost through seepage. The amount of Jaegar goods a-ct— A, • |& surve*™y y "It waf8s prePresentesentedd aatt laslastt disaster and all that follow „s _in th_e oember 1st. Apply G.. F. Brock : aisaster anu LllttL tu water which a soil ; can: hold against LAIDLAW & CO. Miss Lillian Darke : is visiting her weeks directors-meeting^-It, • is the wake of. tne ,failure of any great the pull of, gravity is sometimes called its field capacity. WANTED—Domestic help, pari time home here onsick leave from Jubilee ^tfc^ "Where Good Things Are Many" , i -1«»+^«.' "innvaioofiTiP- from ^f1;, DQe oiaer reporc ueaimg icirgeiy a^iyong h id be cast aside, and The field moisture capacity of .three preferred. Write to Box C. Review TT I licity through these columns during j 8 OU Hospital, Victoria, .convalescing, from th facts which^have been given pub- - e the insignifi- feet of good soil is about eleven inches Office. - ' •-. 16-tf-e W1 ghould ise abov _ season now closing: , a recent operation>for. , appendicitisThe . . licity through these columns during c'anCe: and detestable influence 'of of water. Only a part of this water -fío- "In 1925.ouw P,n,ir priceE: s will equal, if WANTED—Tenders for cordwood, 10 """" ™ " ' jealously and personal enmity, all .of is available for plant:use;Ïfor some of W. S. O'Beirne, editor ..of tne we ^ flUghtly exceed tnose Df 1924, and which so often hamper the ability cord lots, either in the bush or de• 1 1 it is held: so tightly. by the soil parr, , view, received a sudden call to the tQ any fair.minded individua I, am 1 „ which'wgrees. e all posses,-„ s , in varying de- ticles- that plants cannot make use of livered ; 24 inch; and 16 inch (three week, but expects to ucbe it - the reports : now in your.l rick cord). iC: Napier Higgiri, IPraIPrai-i 1 east last week, but expeuis iu |sur i surto ee a-nwwitv nntair-minae tne repoiia muiviuuo now am x-au*' "I am- •• -just as convinced as I was at it. In . three feet, of average orchard 18-2-c wleasrt ,las_ c,t limmweekerland, bu- tvery exneot, shortlys to. Mrbe. hands of the operations to'date, that th d of 1922( that no independent soil there would likely be : about three ;->js. ... . ' ...... * . rie Valley; back in Summeriana-vBi-y,-suuii,»j. ^UUkj back in Summerian: a v y, cannot'help but be convinced or collection'„llppHftn-•' „tof independents, Avilwill Morrison Fish is; relieving him in the you cannot • help but be convinced inches of this unavailable water. In interim. ' that every last dollar has been' ex- ever be able to get out of the Okan- other words, there would be .about eight ; inches , of. .water of which the 1 ' tracted, regardless of, who has con- "rw-yx-™.-.-- -7 o-- --. 0 .what can be secured through , the COMING EVENTS T stituted the a fruit C 0D trees'can make use. It has been found, A HOT BREAKFAST Summeriand branch- of the' BC Art Personnel. In fact, if mediu^ m. of5 th e anytbinAssociateg approachind Growers.g however; that most fruit trees thrive' oumiuerwuu orauca, tne . Art. could get an expression of-the w*a* h secured through .the Summeriand-Women's Institute 01 B.C anyone : A Gooft d Object Lesson best iwheh the soil has 40 to 60 per League will have pottery, basketry, innermost thoughts and convictions , 'A very good• object lesson was.the IN FIVE MINUTES meet,- Friday; Dec. list,' at 3 p.m., in r cent of its total pore spacefilled with photographs , crystalized fruit, , oh sal„„e„ ogrowerf ever, ythe independeny would beat r shippertestimon, yan tod onion' deal of this year. Our tonnage water. This-means: that-the hest grow• Parlor-of Union, Church considerably exceeded the prospective | from now till Christmas in room over ^ fact tnat the, Associated during ing ^conditions are provided when with demand,'but'not'the ultimate demand Public Schcol. concert, Empire Hall, drug store West Summeriand; 18-2-c these three ^ years has paid wonder• v there is ' seven to ten inches of water Thursday, Dec. 17th,'at 8;p.m. Adults . . ^Q^.,- /„. ful prices, considering the conditions which was 'increased by unexpected in three feet of good soil. export business. The division of con• 50 cents, H.S. pupils^25 cents. 18-1-c .of Summeriand Co-opëra- undér^whïcr theV'have;. labored, and Possible to Apply Too: Much Water MemDers trol of that' commodity resulted in ;: From,the' foregoing statements it is Robin Hood Rapid Oats À - chicken suoner will be held in live: Growers* Association are remind- have gotten for the British Columbia values reaching :the lowest point they apparent that it is quite possible to have ever1 been sunken to in the his• 's ed of the general meeting to be held grower an that it was possible to applytoo much : water to- our orchards. iâ^^l\£T^sCstUen 1 Church -'on.^ednesday;.-peceraber^9t-h,. •i -st>Andréw's,'HaR'.on-'«ie--:afternoon .^-.--'-v'^'-'^vvheri'TrOuDlesXbme tory of'Okanagan growers, and there Such a practice results in unnecessary v n -was not the-slightest justification for loss -through seepage. On the other It 6" p.m. Tickets 50c," children • 35c. of Monday, the 7th; inst., at 2:30. Mr. "If you ' delve into the history of Cooks in three to", five minutes ; - s-: ^ it.-.-,.-.,.. •,„;."-;. hand, where insufficient water is ap• E J Chambers, president of Associât- cb^bpërative organizations, it is^ plied the moisture content of the soil : . "Exactly the same -thing will hap• TRY A PACKAGE ed Growers of -BiC. will be present «ar $t$â& th^ft^sually? happens pen: to the fruit deal if control is lost soon drops below the optimum amount, • ." -j,„ vi : ,: ^v,. that just about the time co-operation and, gentlemen, whether you thing it and- the trees are likely to suffer. ;? FOR SALE and .will address- the:.meeting., .The nas satisfied all its obligation^ and or not; you' are the'"ones who will be In order to >maintain ideal .moisture meeting will only 'be open, to members built up • a reserve in equipment to responsible for the final, blow having conditions, it-would be necessary ; to

and their families. 18-1-c handle their ' business, that is about been^ dealt -co-operation :in theTOkan; make ' a uniform ( application of not I: Harry J. Sanderson No. 1 Timothy Hay - the time they 'fail.-:Take the .instance agan Valley, if you continue' along the more than three inches'of-water over : linesv youf have during the: past ten our soil every-time-the moisture con• (J. Brent's), ton.;.:...^ia7.50 wiio of thé; O.UJG/, who had over $750,- A ; months; and 'men -in: a similar capaci• " *°" ;^."T".7"„. • • v >,n,t 000 tied iip in realty and buildings. tent :'of'thé: upper three feet dropped, AU Robin Hood Products No. 1 second cutting were' paid for.' Is i-it not pitiful ^when PHONE 422 Albertaand wil,l spencamed ithn e owinten Saturdayr in Summers boat- Théy faile-^-just,aboui tn ty•• during; tHe previous two years. You below seven'inches, or so. Where Alfalfa .l....$30;00 - J tha winter in Summer- you thin-naak fof"-$40,00OT; i^at0 nooft thpitifue growersl ,-when- meet every! two months, and instead laboratory-;-equipmentifor-making : soil land. ^' 1 Ex our ^warehouse, West-Suni- t money ' which was 'dissipated in a of:;devoting'-youri;time to the;ireally moisture : determinations is/ available : canning'factory at Vernon as the re• vital problems you waste hours dis• it may •• be possible to .approach this merland -— Warehouse open Gloves andhoslery .-at- A.' J. Beer's. sult '"of • unbusinesslike management cussing some. detail which -rcould ;be ideal. The commercial: orchardist, how• Wednesdays and Fridays from •-».-- 18-1-c of co-operative ....affair. s ? " The - very settled by any department: head in ever, seldom has this equipment at his Failure to supply the necessary mob* : -~~ii~',':c'^:-'^:'rT,'' 'consultations'with his"General Manag- disposal and must do the best he can 2 to 5, p.m. J same thing will happen to;the Assb- ture at this ' time interferes with the , by making frequent field examinations : M. G,;WIL .\;Mf.^(C.--ii'M^:.;Bender-!left-on;vlueso:ay, Ciatedwhen'we are on the'eye of pay-- of his soil moisture conditions. j ,, normal growth of for ^Vancouver where he expects to b^ ing Of all; encumbrances, and when er,; just as accurately as the decision ,<"<>:• How To Mark Out Furrows 'i ly influences' the set of fruit- . .; PHONE 16 busv for the winter next year we could return in cash to finally arrived at by yourselves. • With this knowledge of. the moisture Some* growers have ; suggested that ' every grower almost a. dime - per "In making , the: following, sugges- requirements ; of our trees and with the application of irrigation^ ''m.n-^i.rmJMilmi.pHM nf the Package more than under existing tions, I want you to first realize that some idea of the relation which exists ing^thé-bipomingrs'èaso'ni'mlg^t' bë like• 1 - The regular joipnthly,meet ng_ ot^tho ^ndltfonSj even if there wa8 no sav. our situation has¡"no - parallel in the between solid material, air and water ly to interfere .with; the setting

Trout Creek Farmers,, Institute,, hela ing effected in. operating,- marketing'•'of- perishables „anywhere in the Boll, we can now turn to the During {the-:past - few yyearsi ^e^hstye v malto " r»f a ;f : Three Forms of Management on the North''American continent, i I practical problems of the, irrigator and caiTied on; ai', e^

social evening. upwaruuuL^.^ D— ' 'during the; three - years,-.dating am tired'vof hearingewhat:wonderful endeavor ; to applythis?information in whether there is']any truth In 'thisfsug- mm from the ? y • . ;Wo n,rmif Pvpov ópiinnl room - inception of our organiza- things are; accomplished by the Cali- the orchard. ::r''''é':,-"•''""y^.^i gestion. We have irrigated trees dur• ere*..ín,^,e .Trou* .V^.e*.B.«n.00i room tion, we have had three forms of fornia'Fruit Growers' Exchange, - the ing all stages of bloom; but so far we FRI.:& SAT'.,'DECJ:4 eV-S—,': Starting with the spring of the year, for The Hotel Sum• and a very pleasant evening;Was spent management. In 1923 a-' General Man- Big 'Y" orgknization, and a hundred the first question which presents uHeitseluf have not observed that the application Douglas MàcLean in, in old time games followed by coffee ager, imported from California, later and one organizations for removed to the apple grower in an irrigated dis- of water during the blooming season and cake. • . n succeede.. d byutiv a eManaging of four :i nDirector contin-, onfroem o rthe me• mOkanagan w ; . There is not — M. «...„„,„0 has interfered in any way with thé set• meriand ' announce• "NEVER SAY DIE" b Pnnt '«'nrt -Mva Wr.Ari nrrlvftii Inwit uouh sa nsession Executiv. Ine 1924of fou, ar Genera in continl Man- one- commodities'" of them wh, tho e hascatteres the numeroud territors y «D ^„,„ 7«°^^ ting of fruit. If the soil 'seems to be You've aeen hit picture before but ! Capt .and ^• ^od - arrived in ^ - nt in daily attendance, and the 'unusual .marketing conditions £ t f„ h«n f?t ft drying out during the blooming period, Q t g ft PreBlde 0 ment which will ap• this one hat" got them all beat... | Summeriand on Saturday ;and are vis- and an Advisory Committee of five that confront the Okanagan. ^Lw^ Iwould'.apply -.water 'at ^once in pref

Nuff ted! For fun'i take' don't lting at the home of Capt and Mrs. at the call of the:chair: In 1925', a Give General Manager a Chance v C y K^Sfan S erence • to waitirig -till ' the bloom is mitt the greatest comedy of the - ' - -- ">—'''-*whn was also General Man- "I am not going to suggest that it " S S M^ f,^„w £1' over. •.".-'-:'.-••• pear next week. aled by the furrow season, The oGo-Getters in "A • . „,Mn *A n0r.„v.0 n nrnn'sr m4n B method.; The How Much Water to Use KICK FOR CINDERELLA'? ir must decide how long his fur- When the grower has his water run nirig, the next question which is likely ,„„„ nri , shall be, how far apart they FRI. & SAT., DEC. 11 Sc 12— d be to occur to him Is,- '.'How much water I in Summeriand. : > ; changes in the directorate, to such an able. What I wish to emphasize is, Bl"an be der or shallow The moat LOOK1 Something speciail The a shashallu li appiyapply?r" Herenero . agaiUBU,UnI nUoU har«»»dU . . . •:..••:-!"-iio^-riv',-.;.vextent that in scanning the present that when you,have decided on the fi„ ;nM°a «f ,1™«,^ Big Shriner Pageant, taken at the 1 Go to 8tocks' Studio for views, Board, one can; scarcely recognize the individual you wish to carry the title th« Srfm of h/ nll On 22 nn and fast rule can be laid down'. The appiy water until about the 1st of Sep- Portland convention—alto Irene R fl nature and condition of tho soil de- teraber. Wlhore water Is available for a Xmas Cards, calendars and artistic face of an individual who.was'on the of General' Manager, for goodness w Rnndv ^ Rich, 'who was Queen of the con• original board. The^jf^^^^ board of twenty men and an execu- whereas with Boils'of more impervious terminoB, in large measure, the length tall irrigation in the latter part of pictures for Xmas presents. '48*0 original board. The sales manager fl^e^do^ot^aol^hlm ton with a J rK3^^^ vention, in -o- , |«? J^-'iS^tf XS^ffe tive of three. nature, such as the clays and silts, of time it Is desirable to run the water October it'seems a good policy to ap- Mr. iCamle McAlpine loft for Vernon ors were dispensed with after the «ve 01 ,wir««. n oYfinn. -«u««„„nature,„ suc,„uihv anUu'moras ... e imtyervlous and the amount of water which should ply water at that time, particularly ip Ea ch ear K a "COMPROMISE" on Monday morning's bdat. f'^rtT' r . m' wo haye had a uVJ^^„^lJf^.: ' V« .• longer furrows may be"us"ed to good bo applied. In light gravelly soils ,a .locations where the soil is likely to brand no W tra(n manaB or u UP rl y l attain dry out before the sotting in of winter. Everyone should tee this—it it a ' y^L- - , K ° , ,' i? r -„lL A0« f l ', % advantage. We have found that even- long continued' flow of water results wonderful thing) and The Go- Fancy goods aTV'J Boor's 18-1-cfl ^rotary.treUsurer, who, had handled •u~"B-/or tte. Associated Growers, under the best conditions there is like- In great loss through seepage, while in Getter in "FIRE WHEN READY" I'ancy gooas at A. J, Deer s. in i-e ,tne WOrk for the first two years, suf- we must have the following: lv to hs a cood deal -'of loss throunh the heavier soils, water can be run for Miss Sinclair,entertained a number fered demotion this season to make '^Complete support and sympathy seepagei whereTfurrows much over 100 a considerable time to good advantage. FRI. & SAT., DECi 18 & 19— of her friends at an afternoon tea at room to satisfy the oyer increasing 'rqm the Directorate as.a body to the yards in length are used Wo havo found that where the soil is DICTATORSHIP IS

• w«,itinBdav afternoon, appetite for a,change, y . ^ , ^^ement.^ Do not go a step with-, wiith regard to the distance apart of The Extra Special e ls in good condition for absorbing-mois• her home on Wednesday afternoon. Contos i With Competitors °%l ^S?A£ ;. • , „ , furrows, the one safe rule to follow is ture, and where a sufficient numbor of "CHARLEY'S AUNT" Those present roport .a very enjoyable | '^Contrast this with pur corapot • , The •appointment of the general that furrows should be close enough furrows are used* three or four Inches TO TERMINATE Prices 2Bc and BOc Matinee Sat• tors, whom we hoar BO much, about. W^who will have absolute eon- together so that after a normal irrlga- of water can bo applied in from 80 to time. The management of. compotitorB has J ol over tho^ontiro operations from tion all the soil between the furrows, urday at 2130, children 15, adults 48 hours,. " / been continuous^ and in many in- the packing througlr to th0i selling, at a depth of a foot or so bolow the The frequency with which water 38c. • bertMra. wherTome Garnot ho wats isassistin homo gfro inm saAlv- stances thOBo firms for several. years and bo called, upon to report at the surface, is moistened, . We have found ! n thol r B0r lc the or f h y r wlmt 10 flB should bo applied and tho total amount King.. Alfonso.. Agrees., to Iborta where ho was assisting in sav- had ttm d crao ,n THURS., FRI. SAT., Dec. 24,25,20 ing the harvest Mrs' Garnott will re- , - , y 1, f ? E " fI?.'?J ,° ? ' . l ^ . ' " ropoatod tests in our own orchards which it is necessary to uso in the sea• ing tiio narvoBt. mrs. uarnott wiu ro previous to the organization stead of having to seek the advise or that, after a 3C-hour irrigation, it is Civil Government for "THE TEN COMMANDMENTS" sonnol son, depend partly, on.tho nature and turn homo at a later date. , ' of the Associated. Does it not strike approval of sovoral individuals' dur- only in exception condition of tho soil, and partly on tho Spain -" ' • • • -,• . 1 1 --^o—-'• you that your organization has done Ing the soason; ' , moisture has spread more than 18 culture mothods in uso in the orchard. It muBt amuse the gods to hoar the lMl'' ftnd Mr0, Jl L' LoB,° of 01uin" vory .well indeed to- exist under the ^ "Centralizatlon so far aa this' is inoh.es sldoways from the contro of the I havo observed that orchards located Madrid, Dee. 3,~King Alfonso hat - arKumont that -the Filipino will bo fit agari Conter sportt the wook-ond in hand cap of so many chanBes, con- POBsiblo under the oxlsting contracts; furrow. This suggests that the furrows on light gravolly Bollrequiro to bo agreed to the abolition of tho mili• irrigated at loaBt onco overy two tary directorate and its succession weeks during tho Bummor months; On W0P by a civil, cabinet undor Captain ™ ^^asTwSTi much ?° ?T ^f "^thorn end o staff.is changed? llfact it is amaz- limit, so that a greater portion of the 'ft Sis connection it might .bo well doep soils which aro retentive of mois• General Primo De Rivera.

Tins country, has twice as mucn tn0 ]a]co WftS no£ B0 g00(J nB that at ingin gtha mat eyet ,ei(tiu,w,iuin .With this-lac1.niwlkiUU »o:f „con. —- fsros....s salo prlc. o will bo paid to the to vupoin t1 Wou t that water travels much ture a good irrigation onco a month 4, Il m liuuiivij - noon i 18 - tinuittlnultyv and oxporioncoxporlonco in the conduct- toroworgrowor II nn cashcash,, .•', / , fastefaster IInn aa VownVar downwardd direction than Is frequently found to ibo sufficient. monoy per capita as it had in ' «" the south ond. ; ! of ur and 7,800 times as many things to o—"'" - 5* y° tM^™-that aftor tho past No Hope Under Existing Conditions if sldoways. This Is'bocauso two forceWhers e clean cultivation is practiced 0 r-..,.i,,„ «...11*1«.. ,» „,^„LLRN„A in .hnCftllBQ tWO fflrCOB Capt, P. s; Rao loft on Tuesday that would . I do foolM, however, that to con -m «ugravity and capillarity, aromuc pullinh lesg lst wator is roqulrod than spend lt for.—Boflton Transcr pt. V? ** tvmWne, BRIAND WINS morning for Wlrtnlnoc'on a buBinoBs "°\ol orated n any prlvato enter- inuo along present linos is futile, and downward, whereas Ion y capillarity Is whoro cover orops aro grown. morning xor Winnipeg on a business priso, tho organization 'ContlnuoB to in Justice to'such a reputation as I pulling it sldoways, Whoro furrows aro , Wo have throo applo orchards at tho function, „ _ may havo ostabllBhod in tho shipping placed a long way apart, and wato^ is station which were all planted at tho FIRSTVICTORY RLACKHCADS Survey of Methods bunlness.^I havo reluctantly conclud- run a long time In tho hope of mols- samo time and to tho samo varlotlos, CORPORATION OF THE DISTRICT "Thon again, lot us mako a Uttlo od that If soma such move as I have toning all tho soil botwoon thorn, thoro Thoso throe orohards havo rocoivod Blackhoads go quickly by a sim• survey of our mothods of operation, suggested Is not made in tlmo to ho 1B certain to bo a groat doal of loss tho same troatmont throughout oxcopt ple method that just dissolves OF 8UMMERUAND that one has boon under clean cultiva• —...i... i,....-' In any other largo businosa thoro is offootlvo In tho handling of tho 1020 through soepago' bolow roach of troo New Cabinet Succeeds in them. Got two ounces of poroxino ono hoad to' the business who has crop, I would bo unfair to mysolf in roots, tion, another undar alfalfa sod,-mulch powder from your druggist, rub this WATER ACT „1914 complete authority from the puroh- continuing'In my prosont position, with roforonco to tho shapo at the and tho third cover croppod with Putting Financial Meas• with a hot, wot cloth briskly over the Hairy Vetch. From tho Btart wo havo - NOTICE in gfinall straighy solt througd andh eollootountil thde forproduc. Int tniTs have'spenpauiomnrt wora numben nunr mtvof yoaru a In furrow,»»., „v, w„o havo_. foun. d that compara- ures Over blackheads •— and you will wonder isB finally sold and eollootodfor. In this partlculnr worlr and havo never vtlvoly doep, narrow furrows aro well moanurod tho irrigation wator. applied whoro thoy havo gone. NOTICE IS HBIWBBY, GIVEN that our caso wo havo a form of dual con- had to take a second place as a ship- adapted to orchard conditions, Wlioro to thoso orchards, Wo havo ondoavor tho Corporation of tho District of trol, You havo hoard it arguod timo per, and I claim today that I can cover crops aro uaod It is ospoolally od to apply only sufficient water to Paris, Deo. 3. — Premier Brland't n/vrh a •w -w-^ a Summorland has appliod to tho Board and time again that tho Locals aro hold my own with any Indonondont important to havo tho furrows doep koop tho trees in good growing condi• new cabinet hat now won its first Hi IK- Nil I j'WTT of Investigation undor tho Water Act supposed to, or that thoy do, work in shipper in the valloy. I cannot aoo onough so that thoy aro not blocked by tion. Tho average amount of wator victory. Aftor an all night and all JL x-rJLw KJiTXIJI J e for an order ompoworing it to ohargo perfect unison with tho Central. This that thoro Is any hopo under exist- tho eovor crops falling Into thorn. Wo which. 1MB boon roqulrod by thoso or afternoon fight, in the chamber of •• • " ' '.,. during tho yoar 1020, tho incroasod in many oases is ' th*" ed 100 per cent. T moan by this, tho a llttlo too long. By actual moasuro- obsorvod that in tho lighter soils Lota of mon say they would ltko to PARSNIPS, per cwt $3.00 ^tow 1 UllB 'rt&SS^&tjI ' °' JJlw^whftJ^M.WicWy, when )\o Is donnrtment of airing nndV givlnK mont wo havo found that fruit troowhicB h prevail in a good many sections havo you ctltlclco tholr faults, but if 10th day of Novombor, 1MB. hired and flrpd by a Local - Board of every prominence to the slightest slip usually mako most of their growth bo- you do thoy aro sure to got angry.— 3Ctor n no 1 ,f 110 mowB tn 1 Jn tho southern ond ot tho Okanagan it -Si V% i ™? * * ^I ! , ! *' or error mado, so that thoro is no use fore, tho middle of Juno. Tho tree ro- Valloy, It is advisable to eontinuo to Chicago Evening News, G. WltSuFs CO. LTD. Municipal Clerk, If ho doos not render sorvico to both talclnnr up any of your time doallng qulros a groat deal of moisture In May M. 16-4-e growor and salesman, that bis hoad with this angle" and ovon in tho lattor part of April. Summeriand ' Phone 16