001C97FF THE NEST VAN NEAVS September 6, 1929. Smith 's i rocery DUNDARAVE „.:„",;,'„"„HOLLYBURN 24th and hlnrine 1 7 i h nnd hlnr inc Phone: Ivcst 469 I'hone: Ivest 46 Store Closes at 6 P. III., and All Day Sundays. For Friday SIl a ~g Fancy Sxveet Biscuits, lb ........... 39c Vinegar--Malt or White, per botle .......................................... 21c FLOUR--Serv-us, 7 lb. sack............, ...... 39c 24 l b. sack .. .. $ 1.37 49 lb. sack .................... $2.62 Sugar ........................... 10 lbs. 57c Rice, finest quality No. 1 Jap, ................................ 3 lbs. 22c Toilet Paper, large roll.... -I for 25c Finest Italian Prunes, for pre- serving............ 18 lb. hox 85c 27cQuick Quaker Oats ....... IVild Rose Pastry Flour. 10 lb. sack Hedlund's Canned Meats, Qs, per tin 1s. per tin............................. Red Arrow Soda Biscuits...... Nabob Coffee, 1 lb. tin................ Benson's Corn Starch....... 2 for hfurray's Marmalade. sealer...... Domestic Shortening, 1 lb. pkg 46c 22c 36c 19c 56c 25c 49c lsc L'lIII'IRE GOODS TO SHON HERE ROBERTS'ETTER MEATS J. I~. i~Iatheson to Confer IVith lllarketing Bomd in future Canada Pacific ex- liibitions will be featured by ex- hibits arranged by the Empire ~larketing Board with headquar- t.rs i» London, similar to those at the Canadian National exhi- bition in Toronto, and which have attracted a great deal of at tention. J. K. ilIatheson, manager of the Vancouver Exhibition assoc- ii.tion, ivho attended this year' Toronto fair, is now en route to London, where he will complete arrangements for annual exhib- its of British and empire pro- ducts. Phone West 190 FREE DELIVERY to all parts. WHAT KIND OF A CH0P t)o You wAHT 'ToQAY ~ COMQ itd AND SaE. OuR O~it-'ISPLAY Jimmy Thomson' TRANSFER l)nily Trips to nnd from City. Moving Bnggage a Specialty. PHONE WEST 110 FOR Coal and %Pood Prompt Delivery. EIOiVE SOUND FERRY SOUGHT V Hon. N. S. Lougheed Considers 6'hytecliff I.ink Ferry problems are engaging t he at tention of Hon. N. S. Lougheed, minister of public ivorks, in his survey of road re- quirements for the coming year. Strong pressure is bei»g brought to bear for establish- ment of a ferry between Whyte- cliff and Gibson's Landing to connect coast resorts with the city by highway. This would quickly lead to another ferry a- cross the mouth of Jervis inlet, linking up Poivell River, Lang Bay and Lund, with the same road system. Improved ferry facilities be- tween Chilliwack and Agassiz, tlie minister says, must come shortly, and the present ferry at that point may be moved tn Langley to give cross river com- munication at that point. Members of the P.T.A. execu- t&ve met at the Secretary's house on Tuesday evening, August 27, to arrange for the September meeting. DR. H ENRY PREACHES LABOR SERlIIOiV All Meats kept in Refrigerator during hot weather. A full line of Cold Meats always kept--Bacon, Ham, Butter, Lard, Eggs, Fresh and Smoked Fish, Etc. Hollyburn Store gest 3 kinds of LImbleside Store gest 303 cut Meats For a New Building or a Repair Job &Ve can supply everything you need Roofing -- Building paper -- Lamatco -- Fir Veneer -- Gyproc Plaster Board -- Sash -- Doors -- Heaver Board Shingles -- Lath -- Building lIlaterials West Vancouver . umber Co. 15th and lIIat ine LIMITED Phone %Vest 115 Residence Phone: IVest 368L. gaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa ~ a ~ a ~ aaaaaa ~eeeeee ~ ~g Mevee ~) A gi~ole gnmd~gQgtpginp ~reti1+yay-&x a. ~o~~~S ttieetrieal Be~rice Once a customer, always a customer. . EFFERIES'UPERIOR .Y.,EATS Government Inspected Only. Fresh Fruit, Vegetables, Eggs, Bread and Milk daily One Store Only Next to PIGGLY AVIGGLY 1578 MARINE DRIVE CALL WEST 190 For Winter Order your Winter Supply of WOOD Now. SAWDUST HOG FUEL %teston Cartage &VEST 230 hIOVING and TRANSFER Daily Trips to City Didn't Need Them "Beans?" said the husband. "No,,thank you." "But, dear," said the young Boston wife, "you should eat beans. Don't you know they are so healthy?" "Yes," answered the husband, "but I'm not sick." In Boston 'EVaiter!" called the guest who had changed his mind. "KVaiter i" "Yessir?yy replied the waiter, rushing back to the table. "Make that chop a steak, will vou? "Excuse me, sir," answered the waiter, "I am a waiter, not a magician." The Secret Out "How would you explain the inscrutable Mona Lisa smile?" asked a man. "AVell," was the reply, "some one has told a funny story and the poor woman is smiling in the wrong place." NORTH SHORE ELKS iVIN FROiI ORIOLRS North Shore Elks evened the series ivith New )Vestminster Orioles in the intermediate base- ball playoff last night ivhen they won from the Royal City squad 10-7 at 3Iahon Park. Each team has avon one game. The Elks got three runs in the first frame and were never headed. TELEPHONE LINE TO CROSS CANADA within two years a trans-Can- ada telephone line will be com- p!eted from Halifax to Vancou- ver and Canadian will be able to talk from coast to coast over an all-Canadian wire, delegates to the ninth annual convention of the Telephone Association of Canada were told during a five- day meeting at Jasper, which ended Tuesday night. The line, it was explained, will cost $10,- 000,000. James Hamilton, general man- ager of the B. C. Telephone Com- pany, Vancouver, was elected president. NORTH SHORE BASEBALL LEAGUE OFFICIAL AVERAGES According to the averages an- nounced by Oliver Brind, statis- tician of the North Shore Base- ball League, for the season just closed, Moses ("Chief" ) Josephs shortstop of the Squamish team, led the league in hitting with the fine average of .408. "Chief" went to the platter 71 times and hit safely 29 times. Dominic Baker, second baseman of the same team, landed in second place with an average .398, and Joe Gallagher, first baseman and pitcher of the champion Squam- ish nine, was three points behind Baker with an average of .395."Tat" Larson, last year's cham- pion batter, finished in fourth piace this year. Dr. E. A. Henley in his sermon i» the United Church last Sun- day stated that today is the day of labor's uplift, that the worker bad come to realize his position as a pillar of national progresse 31an was made to toil, and the xvorld of nature had been so fashioned that she could not be exploited or developed without labor. Toil was good for a man, just as idleness had a deleterious ef- fect on his well-being, quoting from a number of thinkers in support of this. There was glory in labor because Jesus was a car- penter and worked at the bench for 30 years. There was conse- cration in labor, for we must recognize the sacredness of all the secular. There was nothing common unless we made it so. Life was holy, and everybody should seek a true personal wealth. If he did not, he lowered the worth of the society of which he was one of the pillars. To a.complish this we needed some- thing that would glorify earth by putting Heaven into it, and this something was Jesus, who ~vould give us that divine touch which was so necessary to our v, ell-being. iVIN CHADIPIONSHIP Squamish baseball team cap- tured the Senior "B" champion- ship of the 4iIainland of B. C. when they defeated Trapps F~uicks, New westminster cham- pions at Athletic Park, Tuesday »ight in a favell-played game, the final of the two out of three games to dec'de which team should play off with Victoria in the finals for the championship nf the province. The score was 8-3. Tl e pitching of EVillie Gal- lagher, mound ace of the Indi- a»s, backed up by the fine work cf his team mates both in the field an&1 with the hickory, held the game safe throughout and there divas never a doubt after. the first inning but that Squam- ish was the better team. BUY COODSMADE IN CANADA GIVE NORE PEOPLE RK BRING BEfT 'IIM Entrance to the big Horticult- ural Exhibition has been reduced to 15 cents this year. Don't fail to take it in. Dundarave Hall tomorrow -- Saturday -- 2.30 to j0 p. m. CAME the deem~i another Sunday--and ante hours later the family car pulls in at a gas station. Sidestepping the lure of the more «xpensive gaily- colored motor fuels, the head of the family orders the tank filled with ordinary white gasoline. Ten gallons, and a couple of quarts of oil, cost him about $3.90-- paid with a smile. In Vancouver a house of 1,000 square feet of floor- space, using 50 kilowatt hours a month, pays only $ 1.60. Even a big house of 2,500 square feet, using an average amount of current of 100 kilowatt hours a month pays only $310 The actual average bill for electrical service in Van- couver is $1.50 a month. There's only one item on the family budget smaller than electrical service, and that's "postage and stationery." Light is so cheap you can afford to use as much as you need. You can't save much on light, because it costs so little. Do without it altogether, and you save but little. A lcttcr or postcard anil bring yoic oar booklet entitled "Correct Lighting for Every Room in tbc House" Bnrranthraaana: '; itraeratclbuunuCa VANCOUVER VICTORIA Ella'5 Ea ~ E ~ a ~ E ~ E ~ E ~ EEEE ~ a ~ aaa ~ EEEEEI C:ONSULT HERSAI- HEAI-ER Dr. Willard Coates Phone IVest 272 WEST VANCOUVER TENNIS CLUg on FRIDAY Sept. 13th in the Hollyburn Pavilion HARRY TARRELTON'S SENATORS ORCHESTRA Dancing 9 to 1 ADMI S S ION T Bc. Refreshments Specialist in Australian, English and American Herbs. (10 years'ractice in Vancouver and Melbourne, Australia) Will receive patients in the Upper Suite at 1291 MARINE DRIVE, (Corner 13th and Marine), on Monday, AVednesday and Friday evenings from 7 to 9 o'lock, or by telephone appointment. Phone Let Natural Methods restore you to health. West 272