The very first 香蕉视频直播 paper was published in August 1930, complete with a hand-drawn front page image.
The earliest edition that can be found online is a digitized copy of the paper published on Wednesday, Aug. 20, 1930. The print is Volume 1: Number 3, suggesting there were two publications before this date.
The front page of the paper includes an article about the oil business, a notice for Saturday night dances with a 50-cent admission fee, and a list of new films available to see in theatres, including Montana Moon and The Sacred Flame.
Regatta celebrations were highlighted in the edition. More than 600 people danced to the Kelownians Orchestra, and an estimated 1,200 people took in the fireworks from the waterfront. Other articles found in the early edition of the paper include a piece on Leckie Hardware and the sale of the business from Mr. Leckie to Mr. W.A. C. Bennett, a reminder to submit entries for the Westbank Fall Fair, and the disappointment of cricket fans that the Vancouver team was unable to travel to Kelowna for a match.
The third publication of 香蕉视频直播 consisted of just six typewritten pages, with the only images being sketches for ads.
Ads included a Kozak auto dry wash for just $1.50 and sales on golf clubs and tennis racquets at Campbell and Lewis, a business on Pandozi Street (now Pandosy). A&B Meat Market, Kelowna Steam, Nippon Bazaar, Poolies Bakery, and Morrison Thompson Hardware also purchased ads in the paper.
A common feature of historical papers that has gone by the wayside today was the general ongoings of significant people in the community. At the time of Aug. 20, 1930, Jean Purves was away in Vancouver for two weeks, Ruth Judge left to spend her holiday with her sister and mother, Mrs. Willits took several young ladies to camp at Joe Rich Canyon, and a former MLA R.W. Bruhn, visited Kelowna with his wife before returning home to Sicamous.