 Toronto Mining Section
Livens Exchange
—Pa&e Nine
■?*-*#•*» i
Oil^
Pearce Easily Beats Phelps;
Miller Also Wins
—Pa&e Seven
rOLUMI it
NELION, BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA-SATURDAY MORNING, AUGUST 25, 1934
FIVE CENTS A COPY
Nl'MBER 107
NORTH EVERETT IS MENACED RY FIRE
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950 Homes in Path Forest Fire; Winds Fan U.S. Rlazes Anew; Second Relief Camp Isolated
GET READY FOR
WAR IS CAUTION
OF MUSSOLINI
Tell Fascists to
Prepare After
Maneouvres
SAYS IDEA OF
WAR IS IN AIR
Political  Circles
Place Importance
+o Site Chosen
BOLOGNA, Italy, Aug. M (CP)—
Benito Mntsollnl today told Fuels! Italy to get ready for war.
Speaking, approprlttely enough,
(rom   the   turret   of   in   usttult
-ink,   to   torn   cheering   officers
and military attaches, at thl conclusion ol Italian war mtnoeuvm,
the   squsrr-jaaed    prtmltr   laid,
"wir oan break ont (rom one moment to tbe other." I
"No ont  tn  Europe wtnti war,"
A Duct asserted, "but the Idea ot
wu It floating In the air. it Is not
iieceaeiry to be ready for tht wtr
of tomorrow, but for the war of
todiy. wt must become * military
nation,  even   a  militaristic  nation,
own—I  might  sdd—a warlike  nation."
Bt tald war will accompany tht
fortunes of nations throughout tht
centuries', despite International good
will conferences ind treaties.
SIMILAR TO 1914
"At tht tnd of July," hi dselsred.
"an unforaeen situation tthe outbreak of Nul revolt In Auitrla)
developed, which wu similar to
thit which prevailed In 1914."
"If we hid not lent our divisions
to tilt frontier, complications might
bty* ntult«d that could not have
been tettltd tay* by tht voice et
tht cannon."
Political circle! attached gnat wn-
porttnee to th* fsct thlt II Duces
martial utterance* Included oni calling hli offlcen' attention to the
fact -hit th* ground chosen for
tht wtr manoeurers resembled the
Italian eastern frontier.
Quebec Issue Is
Oversubscribed
MONTBBAL, Aug. M (CD-
Heads of the syndicate maifett.nl
th* Quebec government 910,0004)00
bond Issue it three per cent for
fit* yean todiy mnounced the
luue hid been hetvlly oversubscribed ind the books were cloted
ihortly befort noon todiy.
ALBERTA CROPS
HITBYFROSTS
1 Degrees, Camrose;
Garden Plants
Hit Too
Di HAS TRADE
PAcrwrracoBA
Designed  lo  Stimulate  thc
Shrunken Trade Between
Two Countries
Bv  LLOYD   A.  LEHBRAS
(Associated Preu Staff Writer).
WASHINOTON, Aug. 94 (AP).-
Prealdent Roouvelt proclaimed tonight a new Cuban-American trtdt
treaty detlgned to stimulate tbt
Shrunken commerce betwten the
two countries by knocking holes ln
the tariff walls of both.
Cven u the pact wss signed Into
effect, however, critic* of the treaty
began l verbal bombardment againat
lti provltlont. Non-b«ntfltlng tugar
tnd rum producers tnd distributors
wtn tht flrtt to apeak.
Tht reciprocal igreement specifically knocks down the high United
states tariffs to ptnnlt tuler entry
ot Cuban tugir, rum, tobacco and
winter vegetables. On Cuba't pirt
lt llathw duties to facilitate Mil
then of United states lard, wheat
flour ind othtr tgrlculturtl product! In iddltlon to automobiles
and a toon of manufactured articles.
Thi put wu th* flrtt ot as
which tho atate department already
hu under negotiation or plant
to Inlttttt tn an effort to revive
United States foreign tradt, dwindled tlirmtngly tn recent yttn.
Hos Narrow Escape in
Stone Boot Runaway
POBT IT. JOHN, B.C., Aug. 94 (CP)
—Mn. B. Cliyton hid a narrow es*
ctpt from detth ind It In hotpltal
recovering from Injuries suffered
when tht teim of hones sht wis
driving nn away.
Stirtltd hy something, thl team
bolted and Mn. Clayton wu thrown
In front of th* stone bott, which the
wu uilng to haul wtter. She wu
dragged along for neirly htlf i milt
btfon * neighbor mtniged to itop
tht turn and rtleau htr. Mrs. Cliyton received severe lacerations to her
bick hut hoipltal authorities report
tht li now Improving favorably.
BDMONTON, Aug. 94 (CP)—Heavy
damagt wu nportod ln aome dlitrlcti of north ind oentnl Albert!
from frott whloh mtdt lti tint
appearance tarly thll morning. Plvt
degreei of frost wu recorded In
Edmonton, tht thermometer drop*
ping to 99, with i ground retdlng
of T. Tender plant* ln gardens
hen wtn bltckinsd.
Oamroee nported 11 degreei ol
frost, highlit In tht Ult received
hen. IWd Deer rported uven. Cam-
rou nporti heavy damag* to cropt
Three pointi ln North Alberti reported frost. Mirror Landing registered flvt degrees. Light frost visited
Slive Lake. The mercury htd climbed wiU ahoy* tht frost Unt In Bdmonton it 9 a.m.
"It wheit hu reached tht dough
itage. thnt degreei of froit would
not be aufflclent to do much hum,"
atated profeuor junta B. prytr oi
th* depirtmint of fltld husbandry.
University of Albtrta.
CECILLE MAKES
TWO ADVANCES
Quintuplets Enjoy
Sun Bath; 88
Days Old
CAU-ANDSR. Ont., AUg. 94 (CP>-
Plv* little girls squirmed and totted todiy on a kitchen table whs*
raya of tho tun thom on thom
through in ordinary houu window.
Tht health bathera won thi Dlonne
quintuplet!, now 89 dayi old.
cedlie made two advmoe* today.
Sht Joined her heavier tliten,
Yvonne ind Annett*. ln taking
dally sou and water baths ind also
graduated from the Incubator to
thi oot itage. Thli left only Mine
and Imill* In th* "bom." Tilt
bablu tnjoy thtlr hatha ind plunge
about th* tiny tub* whll* theli
nurses watch closely.
Dr. W. A. Dafoe of th* University
of Toronto visited th* farm today
with hi* brother, Dr. A. »■ Dafoe,
Callander phyelclan who hu attended tht bablu since their birth.
Tb* two doctor! examined closely
thi tumor on Marie's left thigh md
noticed marked Improvement. Tb*
amall growth la gradually flattening.
Mra. Elisabeth Lyon, tbl only
living mothtr of quintuplets In thl
United Btates, will be Invited to
the opining of th* Defoe hospital,
expected to Uke pilot between
Sept. 1 ind lt. A requut from th*
junior chamber of Commerce at
Mra. Lyon't homt town, Mayfleld.
Ky.. that tht bi illowed to visit
the Dlonne home, will bt granted.
NRAWILLBE
REORGANIZED
IN TWO WEEKS
Roosevelt Confers
With Johnson,
Richberg
AIDES DIFFER
IN OPINION
Indications   of
Undersurface
Conflicts
By MELBOURNE CHRI8TERSON
Auocllted Pnu Stiff Writer
WASHINOTON, Aug. 24 (AP)
—Reorginlittlon of NRA within
two weeki wu th* goal ttt today by Pruldint Roosevelt.
In  conferences with   Hugh   S.
Johnson and Donald R. Rlchberg,
his recovery aldu, Mr. Rootlvelt
tsked that  regsrdless of dlf'en-
ences of opinion—and torn* differences aputared to remtln—tht
ntw machinery to guide th* blu*
eigle be made ready for adoption
at tha and of that tlmt.
Both General Johnaon, the recovery administrator, and Dr,  Richberg, director of the national emergency council and the executive
council, who have been reported at
odd   over   NRA's   reorganization,
■(read thli could be done.
The two men conferred separately
with Mr. Roosevelt. Upon emerging
(Continued en Pag* Ten)
Minimum Woge Is
Advene for Boys
VANCOUVIR. Aug. 94 (CP)—The
plight ot youtha In Brltlih Columbia
ovtr the age of 1 a who come under
tbt Minimum Wage act, wblch provide* wagea ot 119.79 per wnk, wu
discussed todiy it tbt sitting of thl
Industrial relatione board hen.
Blnot thl wig-., were nt for thtn
boyi, numben of thtm hivt lott thtlr
Jobs because thetr work, a* a rule,
oould bt dont 'by younger boyt for
whom then Is u ytt no minimum
wage, lt wat nported.
Soviet-American
Negotiations in Air
WASHINOTON, Aug. 94 (AP)-Soviet-American negotiation* for a wttlement of approximately 1500,000,-
000 In debti and clalmi wire eo dote
to complete colltpti tonight that tht
atate department declired lt Impossible to be "optimistic thit any agreement would be reached."
OOLD STRIKE AT BEAVER
LODGE GOES $150 TO TON
FORT CHTPEWYAN, Alta., Aug.
J4 (CP)—Reports of a rich gold
itrike at Beaver lodge, on the north
ahore of Lake Athabasca, 140 mllee
eut of here, have resulted in a gold
rush of large proportions from thli
district Asiaya brought in from the
■trike ihow more than $150 worth
of the yellow metal to the ton.
About 100 residents of Fort Chlpe-
wyin are waiting Impatiently for
mining licenses which have been ordered from Fort Smith by raclio-
gTam, permitting them to stake
claim In Utt new field.
Wlille the itrlke has been rumored for a number of dayi, definite
information u to ltl richness was
brought here when Jerry Murphy
and Louis McDougall representing
big mining companies returned with
assays.
Transportation to the field ii proving difficult u ill available boat!
have been spoken for. It li expected
by next ipring a large mining
camp will spring up on the site.
Discovery wu made by a lone
trapper, Gus Ncihman, whole trap
line ii In the Beaver area.
to
Be Boosted in Africa
It Is Proposed to Send Dele*
gston to Sonth
Africa
VICTORIA. Aug. 24 (CP) -A
drive Into the South African msrket
on behalf of British Columbia lumber la now ln the making.
Aided by the empire preference
thown the B.C. product In that
dominion, exports for the flnt half
of the year have reached a new high
figure and plans are being diicuned
to nnd a trade delegation there.
Thli Is part of the lumber trade
extension work carried on jointly
between the lumber exporters and
the provincial government The
vote on this account wu raised tn
$50,000 thlt year, activities in Eng*
land were widened and it ll propoied to lend the delegation to
South Africa.
Abandoned Home Labatt Cine?
When London police received a
mysterious letter trom Now York
signed "R" idvlsing them that John
Labatt, kidnapped London brewer,
could be found in an old abandoned
home near Muncey, Ontario, Indian
reserve, about 12 miles from London,
they ut out to find tb* house. Following directions given la thl tatter, an abandoned house wai locates
It hu been meant for the put 12
yean and the owner who lives not
fir from the frame structure, states
that there hu been some activity
In the vicinity recently. The theory
ii now expressed that Labatt could
have been held In this house for
many houn without detection. Ae
I h«_»1i (town (Top), the one room.
below:   *'   " ■T"
AU Areas WiU Benefit
From $1,000,000 Loan
NEW BUILDING FOR
IMPERIAL BANK
TORONTO, Aug. 34 (OP)—The Imperial Bulk ot Canada today announced lt would erect a ntw building here to eerre as Ite head office.
The new bulldlni, a atft-itorey structure tp be built on Uie intersection
of King and Bay atreeta, will coet
about 01,000,000.
MOTHER-SHIP
AT VANCOUVER
VANCOUVIR, Aug. 24 (OP)—U-W.
Wight, mother-ship of the 12 united
Stitei amphibian flying boati, now
at prince Rupert, B, C, after a
flight to Alaska, anchored her* todty off tht Royal air force seaplane
itstion at Jericho beach.
Two to Fact Charge
of Attempted Murder
CALGARY, Aug. 24 (CP)-CUf-
ford Buckley and John Manning
will face charges of attempted murder armed holdup in connection
with the robbery of a cafe here
June 17 during which a customer,
Alexander Shirra, was itruck ln
the face by a bullet Intended for
Constable Charles Christie who interrupted the holdup.
Police said the men had been
identified by means of a parcel lent
from Vernon, B.C., containing a
revolver and a cap with t Vemon
tab on it, found in a local backyard
after the holdup. Parcels had been
sent thrcigh the malls to Manning
from Vernon.
Guelph Pickett
Doused With Hose
OUELPH. Ont., Aug. 24 (CD-
Pickets in Guelph s garment workers' itrike todiy hurled stones that
struck the automobile ot the chief
of police and injured a special
constable, but the iltuation was
brought under speedy control by
officers who doused a large crowd
with two fire hoses.
NIW WESTMINSTER, B.C., Aug. 24
(CP)—Klyokasu Yamamura, 4-year-
old Jipmese boy, died ln hospital
hire todty after being itruck by a
milk truck on Horel road. Delta.
No New Mileage to Be Built, Declares Mr.
McPherson1 Maintenance Is
Big Problem Alone
VICTORIA, Aug. 24 (CP)-E C. will spend its latest borrowed
million in road work distributed among all areas, to the exclusion* ot
new milage, Hon. F. M. MacPherson laid today on return to hit ottlce from a tour ot the north.
The province already has 19,800 miles of highways and lesser
thoroughfares. The minister ot public works pointed out that maintenance of this huge mileage was an acute problem in itself, without
adding additional milage. The desire of the province is to place permanent surface on the more travelled lections of these roads, when
money is available.
Out of the $1,000,000 to be borrowed from the federal authorities
lt li expected that a certain amount of improvement can be done,
but thii will be split up among existing roads ln nearly all ridings.
Reinforcing the special program is the ordinary road vote for the
year at $1,475,800, a considerable proportion of which has already been
expended.
Mr. MacPherson made an extensive tour of the Peace River and
other mountain ridings, returning today in company with Arthur Dixon deputy minister and chief engineer,
Roada in the north, he said, were fair considering the large mileage concerned, but poor ln iome places and in need of repair. Prolific
requests for new roads and more roads greeted the minister at many
pointi. 	
DR. J. D. WALKER
APPOINTED B.C.
MINERALOGIST
Pearson Announces
Successor to
Galloway
CONFERENCE OF
ENGINEERS, PLAN
Will   Search   for
Better Avenues
of Results
VICTORIA, Aug. 24 (CP)—Appointment of Dr. John Fortune
Walker of the geological inrtey of
Canada, to succeed 3. D. Galloway
as provincial mineralogist, was announced today by Hon. Oeorge 8.
Pearson, minister of mines, coincident with proposals to revtae tht
policy of the British Columbia department of mines.
Dr. Wtlker will take offlct on September 1.
After th* fltld uuon for mining
engineers of tht department it Concluded ln tht fall, a conference of
all tht engineers with the depirtment tieads and tht minister will be
held here to discuss a change In
policy, Ilr. Pearson tald.
BETTER RESULTS
"I am not at all satisfied wt havt
bten following exactly thl right tort
of outlook in our mlnei depirtment
wor' and that li what we want to
talk ovtr," Mr. Pearson tald. "There
may bt tvenue* ln which wt can
secure bitter result* and these will
be canvassed."
Thi quutlon of tht service provided by the department on mining
prospects, and,'bow lt could be Improved wis on* joint. Another, tht
development d. mining trails, ud also
that of ltrge compentte seeking private report* on their properties from
government engineers.
Dr. Wtlker It a native of Ontario.
Son of Rtv. W. P, and Mrs. Walker,
he wt* born it Brlalook in 18*93
and received hit primary and secondary education at Weetmount academy, Montreal. In 1810 ht came to
British Oolumbla to train ii a civil
engineer.
ENGINEERING COURSE
0_ returning from overseas service.
he took a geological engineering
count it University of British Columbti, gnduatlng flnt clut. Ht
continued post-graduate work at
Princeton univenlty u a teaching
fellow In 1922-23 and at a university
fellow ln 1823-24, obtaining hi* Ph.D.,
and hi* practical experience on geological lurveyi in tht summer.
Dr. Walker Joined the geological
survey staff of Oanada ln 1924.
In the mines deptrtment thtrt Is
also a va-ancy among the resident
englneen, but this wtll not bt filled
Juit yet, Mr. Pearson Intimated.
STEALS FROM
A BLIND MAN
Husband Sentenced
on Perjury Charge
TORONTO, Aug. 24 (OP)—Alwynne
Thompson, husband of Toronto's
"lilac bush" murder victim, today
was sentenced to six months determinate and alx months Indeterminate
on a chirge of perjury arising from
his application for a marriage licence
after his wife wss missing and before
htr body wts found under a lilac
bush on a lonely Toronto suburban
road.
Thompson had obtained a licence
to marry Alice Helen Carey who told
the oourt the believed he wss single.
Thompeon represented himself ss a
bachelor at the time he took out the
licence.
Ashes of Montreal
Woman Taken to U.S.
MONTREAL, Aug. 24' (OP).—Officials hen were satisfied today that
the ashes of Mrs. Sarah Smlth-
Scollard were not ln Mount Royal
cemetery ts city records ihow, but
were taken to the United States
In a silver vessel. Following cremation of the wealthy eccentric, who
died ln t Montresl hotel, the original Intention apparently hid been
to effect burial here and record!
were completed on that basis. It
turned out later, however, thst
the ashes hsd been taken across
the border by Reese B. Brown, ber
financial adviser, who hss tlnce
died.
60 Years of Married
Life and Nary a Kiss
Woman From the Mountains
Shocked at "Queer Doin's"
of Today
ATHENS. Tenn., Auiust 24 (AF),
—Mrs. Nancy Mary Anny Trammel!
Wttt, who tays she never kissed
her husband during nearly 60 yetrs
of married life—likes the excitement ot the modern times but she
doesn't tpprove ot the "queer doin's"
of today.
Approaching tha century mark,
Mrs. West saw htr first movie hire.
V
Sht liked the cartoon tnd condemned  the  love  scenes.
"Land sakes," site declared, "Oil
(her deceased husband) and me
never kissed and we were married
nigh onto 00 years I Alnt it a
sight the things folks think up
now-a-dtys—klssln' and huggln' Ilk*
thrt."
Mn. Weat hat lived In the mountains of North Carolina all her life.
She was born and reared near Top-
ton, N_3„ and Is the mother of 14
children, lncludtn) triplets and
twins. She ls visiting a ton ln
Athens.
VANCOUVER, Ang. 24- (CP)—
Pete Collins, blind proprietor of
the Collins "II" Drive ginge, East
Hastings street, ww short 147 today beetust of tht meinness of
i thug who took advantage of
his affliction. As Collins was pnu
tint away the day'i recelpti utt
night, the thug entered, inttched
the money and fled before hli surprised victim could mike m outcry.
WOMANTELLS
ON GANGSTERS
Police Hot After
"Baby Face"
Nelson
ST. PAUL, Aug. 24 (AP).—Words
from the lips of a woman and letten trom th* body of Homer Van
Meter tent pollce on thne tangents
todty for tht kty to deeds ot the
deed felon and to tht whereabouts
of Oeorge "Baby Pace" Nation, in-
other DUllnger henchman.
At to John Hamilton, tint lieutenant of the lit* John DUllnger, police nld thay believed he was
dead even as Van Meter, whoae
body, weighted with machine gun
bullet*, wa* carried from I blind
alley where be made hli lut ttind,
to tht county morgue lut night.
Thl Inadvertent instruments for
putting van Meter on tbt tpot, a
chestnut-haired woman of 21 wich
brown eyu .Identified by pollce as
Opal Mellca, known alao u Opal
Mulligan, St. Paul waitress, wu besieged with questions by tuthorltlts
prilling th* search for hit lut
hideout, the source of bis wealth,
aid the loeatlol of hit two automobile!
On* fact pollc* learned wu thit
Van Utter had mat tht woman
througb Albert "Pat" Reilly, former
St. Paul baseball club mascot, now
under arrested chtrged With harboring Dillinger.
LOSTFLIERS
UNREPORTED
Four Others Unheard
From in Northern
Manitoba
THROW GUARD
AROUND THE
ENTIRE CAMP
F e 11 to Be in Little
Danger; Other B.C.
Fires Quiet
FIRES ACROSS
BORDER SPREAD
Wind Starts Scores
of Spot Fires in
Many Areas
  %
EVERETT. WUh., Aug. 24 t'AP) —
Nine hundred ind fifty hornu ln
tht north tnd of Everett wert
menaced late todty by one of tha
worst bush tint ever to break out
here.
Belongings ln four of tht residences lu the direct path of tht flrt
were removed u the flamu, whipped
by a weat wind, leaped boundaries.
Traffic on tbe Paetfic highway north
of here wu halted as flames leaped
out tt pining motorists.
Firemen ltld more thin 4000
fut of how tnd fire department
workera who were off shift wtn
cilled from their homes to tld ln
combatting tht blue.
B. C. FIRE SITUATION
Thl Second Relief ctmp wu
completely Isolated Friday u forest
flret ln that area twept around the
camp touth to oreen city, a mining towntlte of by-gone dtyt, and
out off tbt road tnd brought down
th* telephone Unt. No danger wu
felt for the ramp, however, a- lt ia
completely surrounded by a fireguard flvt mlllt In ltngth. Pick
horses wert uttd to tike supplies
In and a portable teat telephont
Nt wu taktn up to Oreen alty.
Twenty forest brtnch mm tr* attempting to cut off th* fir* from
(Continued on Pag* Ten)
miS THREE IN
SEARCHING HOUSE
WATCH FOR SHIP
WITH GAS CARGO
WASHINGTON, Aug. 24 (AP)-
As federal and state officials maintained a vigilant watch along the
Pacific coast for the oil Tanker Papoose, Harold Ickes, United States
secretary of the interior, wu advised today by the oil administration
that an effort of the ship's attorneys
to establish legality of her gasoline
cargo had failed.
VANCOUVER, Aug. 24 (CD-
British Columbia oil companies will
not purchase approximately 3.000,000
gallons of gasoline carried by the
United States oil tanker Papoose,
now reported to be headed nortward
from San Francisco with Vancouver reported as her possible destination.
Attempts to Save
Brother Are Futile
A8HCROJT, B.C., Aug. 24 (OP)—
Ken Morgan, 18, hu been drowned
ln the Thompson river while swimming, despite the heroic efforts of
his older brother to uve him.
Reports state that tbe three brothers, Robert, Ken and Geoff, all sons
of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Morgan of
Ashcroft, wero swimming ln the rlvtr
Thunday whtn suddenly Ken got
Into difficulty, called "Bob" and then
sank.
Tht older brother, Robert, tt once
dived and managed to bring Ken to
tht surface but he struggled loose
and tank igaln. Although the older
brother dived tgtln tnd again no
further trice of his brother could
bt found.
Thl younger brother. Oeoff, gave
thl alarm and dragging opentloni
win begun Immediately. So ftr no
tract of the body has been found.
Plan Coordination
of Social Services
VICTORIA, Aug. 24 (CP)-Plani
for co-ordinating the welfare and
social services of British Columbia
will be discussed at a general conference of provincial welfare of-
ticials about the middle of October,
it wu announced today by Hon Q.
M. Weir, provincial secretary.
|
WINNIPEO, Aug. 24 (CP)—Northwett Aero Marine officials tonight
reported the wrecked plane et Pilot
Oeorge Mackle, missing seven days
en a flight over Lake Winnipeg, had
been found near Black River on
Lake Winnipeg, 128 miles northeut
of here.
WINNIPEO, Aug. 24 (CP)—Seven
days ha e passed without word of
Pilot Oeorge Mackle Jr. and hit
mechanic  Len   Blackwell,  lost  In
northeastern Manitoba. Whilt apprehension for their tafety lncreued
search for them widened to take In
fonr othen, unreported since they
left Pine Falls by motor boat to
hunt for the two missing filer-.
Mackle and Blackwell, both ot Winnipeg, left here exactly t week tgo to
tld Pilot Charles Scan* and hla pu-
tengtr  I.  Smith,  foroed  down  at
Sandy Rlvtr, 100 mllei northeut of
hert.
Scan and Smith wert located by
other searchers, were fed for tlx dtyt
by food dropptd from aeroplanes ind
then returned to thtlr hornu Thundty night.
THOUGHT WEATHER-BOUND
No word cam*, however from
Mackle and Blackwell and high winds
over the Manitoba ltkt country arc
thought to havt held them weatherbound somewhere.
BUI Mty, chief pilot ot tht North*
west Aero Marine, and Air Engineer
Wilfred Ftlr, ltft Pint Filli, Man.
by motorboat lut Wedneaday to aid
Scarr. Ht wu accompanied by Dave
Cnwford and L. Derry of Pine Fallt
and no word hu bttn heard from
them tlnct thtlr departure. Oovernment air service planes trt acourlng
tht ana.
Nominate Church in
Toronto Northwest
TORONTO, Aug. 24 (OP)—Thomu
L. Church, K.C former Conservative
member ln the house of common* for
Toronto northwut, tonight received
the nomination ln Toronto Eut for
tht ftdtnl byelection on September 24
Shtrpshootlng Sheriff Rushed as Looks for
Liquor
MORRILTON, Ark, Aug. M
(AP)—(An aged trio, a woman and
two mtn, wtre dud todiy, willed
at they resisted thl efforts of ■
ihtrpshootlng sheriff to mrch
thtir homt for liquor. Th* therlff,
C. T. Atklnton of Conway County
wit exonerated todiy at a coroner's Inquest
Mn. Jane Hay, 59, waa killed u
she rushed him with a knife ln her
hand. Atkinson told a coroner's
Jury. A few moment! before, he
officer said, he was forced to ihoot
Sam May. The latter ii ln a critical condition at a hospital here.
Jim Mayo 65, and Henry May, 90
hearing shots, rushed Into the house.
As Mrs. May fell fatally wounded
the theriff laid the two men chtrged
him and he opened fire. Both were
killed.
Tentative  Settlement
MONTREAL, Aug. 24 (CP), — A
tentltlve wttlement wu retched tonight ln Montreal's dress tndtt
■trig* aid expectations were that
more than 2800 workers would return to their benches tomorrow. An
aireement wu btlng drafted tonight
tnd belief Is It will he signed tomorrow. Strikers hailed It u a victory.
VANCOUVER. Aug. 24 (CP)—Mn.
Phyllli nicabeth Miller, 42, wife of
Sldne W. Miller, pruldent of MUler
Court Ss Co., tnd formtr pruldent >f
tht Vinoouvtr ttock exchtngt, died
it her bom* todty after a lengthy
lUnen.
Markets at
a Glance
Toronto: ihduitrlala higher.
Montreal: industrials lower.
Toronto mines: Irregulirly higher,
New Tork: Stocks higher.
Winnipeg: Wheit lowtr.
London: Bar silver tnd lead unchanged; copper and line hightr;
ttn lower.
New Tork: Bar silver and tin lowtr; copper higher; letd and s-ne
unchanged.
New York: Sugar and cotton hightr; rubber tnd cotfu lowtr.
Naw Tork: Ctntdlin dollar v, lower it 141 s-18.
THE WEATHER
Min Mil
NELSON 4« aa
Victoria , _ 60 81
Nanaimo _  62 tt
Vancouver  — 68 N
Atlin   48 82
Kamloopi      14 tt
Prince Georeg    40 84
Prince Rupert    - 10 N
Estevan Point   82 72
Spokane    88 84
Portland   62 M
SeatUe   60 88
San Franclico  — H 84
Pentlcton  47 —
Orand Torki    48 N
Vernon   48 —
Calgiry    S8 72
Edmonton .....*>.   28 86
Swift Current   M 86
Qu'Appelle  84 96
KailO   47 -
Winnipeg   84 96
Moose Jaw 30 64
Los Angelei 62 78
Dawion , 82 64
Prince Albert 40 94
Cranbrook  38 79
Nelion and vicinity—Continued
fine, warm and very dry.
I i___flhll_---h-it-h-.i        _,    _-Si    f if i __a_^___________u_________i_______
 MOI TWO
Negro Confesses
When Crystal Boll
"Pictures Murder"
NEWARK, N.J.. Aug. 24 (AP).- i
Detective Captain Htller produoed
a crystal ball trom hla desk todsy
and stared Into It. HU prisoner.
Issdor Dunbar, negro, witched nervously,
"I can tee blood on ybur ctr," I
•aid th* captain.
Dunbar's yea widened.
"Tour automobile killed Morris
Welts on Aug.  12."
Overcome ( Dunbtr blurted out.
"Yet ilr, I did It. I did lt. I'm a
hit ud run driver. I killed him.
Oh. Oh. Oh."
THI NILSON DAILY NIWS, NILSON, I.C—IATURDAY.MOI.NINa, AU6U8T 29,11*4-
Tht word electricity wu coined by
Queen KUitbtth't physician, Wlllltm
Ollbert.
Sales
€ w
Service
WHEN WE SAT
TUESDAY
NOON
W* mun Tuesday noon-
Whin wt premlit to hivt •
Job out at a etrtiln tlmt you
can ba mured thit It will
bt finished when promiied
and that the work will be
done In a rttlly first clau
manner.,
Why gambit on your motor
rtpilrt whin you irt assured
absolute satisfaction it our
ihop.,
Kootenay
Motors
(NtlM-i)   Limited
PHONE 117
CONVICTED OF
THEFT RACKET
Coin Collector, and
Antique Dealer
Takes Watch
MANY LINES
OF APPROACH
Will Spend 6 Months
in Nelson
Jail
An tccount of a theft racket by
a coin collector who gained entrance to homes on the pretext
of buying coins and palntlnis,
and who professed knowledge In
pottery and antique-, wu unfolded ln the provincial pollce court
at NeUon Thurtdiy when Hugh
McDonild md Leslie McMurray
..ere convicted ol theft. *t|r|)uiia|H
wu sentenced to ilx monthi tnd
McMurray to the eight dart that
he terved whilt waiting for tht
trial.
They appeared before Stipendiary
Mwlstnte J. Ctrtmel.
McDonald,   who   with   McMurray
was charged  with  the  theft of  a
THERESA HOST
(£ifhto0OunL
IN TODAYS ADS.
Guide for Travellers
Nelson, B. C, Hotels
"Finest in the Interior"
THE HUME HOTEL
PHONE 787
Breakfast 25c to 60c
Luncheon 35c to 50c-Dinner 35c and 65c
Rotary and Gyro Headquarter!
fru But Bervict Mellon, B.O. Oeorgi Benwell, Rap,
HOM>—I. O. Bquire. V. McDoWlU,
L. Flnly, I. W. Brtuiton. F. K. Ivans.
K. McDonild, H. F. Crook, 0. C.
Faulkner, L. F. Parks, vmeouvtr; J.
A. Allan, Idmonton; T. 8, Belwood,
O. E. McCullough, Mr. and Mrs.
Jenkins tnd ion, Ctlgtry; C. D. Mir*
tyn, R. Crawford, Medicine Bit; A.
M. Kenneth, New Dentin: Mr. and
Mn. O. C. Mackay. MlM I. Mackay,
Nelson; J. C. Chlldi, Vereon; H, W.
Smith, N. ThornhlU, Montreal; J. B.
Shaw, Victoria.
The Savoy Hotel
\     "Where the Guest Is Kin_"
Nelson's Newest and Finest Hotel.
Many Rooms With Private
Baths or Showers.
IM BAKER ST.
J. A. KERR, Prop.
PHONE 19
NELSON. B.O.
BAVOY—Mrt. 3. H. Ooodenough,
Ki'lo; V. Lommcl, Nikutp; 3. H.
Short, Mr. and Mrs. Rogers and ton.
Ol,.,..    ....    .....    —._. _—-    	
Vincouver; Miss   Anne Wyllle, J. M. New Westminster.
Jol-nson, Trail; F. Lombardo, Tye;
Mr. and Mra. M. R. Miller, Erie; Dave
B.  Eismnn, Toronto;  E. R, Btwtll,
New Grand Hotel
P.   I.   KAPAK,   Ptop.
Weekly and Monthly Ratei
Hot an« Cold  WiMr
Single 60c up     Double 11.80 up
Rooms $10 • Month and Op
Occidental Hotel
:os Vernon St Phone mil
II.   WASSKK
SPECIAL MONTHLY RATES
Good Comfortable Rooma
Mlnen' Headquarters
Madden Hotel
A Welcome Awaits You
JAS   E.  MADIIEN
Completely   Remodelled
Hot   ind  Cold   Hater
In  the HEAHT ot the Dty
QUEEN'S HOTEL
A.   LAPOINTE,   Prop.
Roomt from 60c to $1.50
Monthly $10 and up.
Steam betted ind hot ind oold
wtttr In tvery  room
60} Bauer St. Phom IK)
wrlit watch trom Mn. fttuMl of
South Slocon, conducted hi* own
cut, Afttr blaring ind orou- examining tit wltnttM b* planned
to can for an adioummtnt but vhen
hit pirtner took the Mend and told
of hla situation! io tb* various
places, bt dropped thtt idea.
Mcdonald did talkino
Mr». Russel, whole wrlit witch
thl two win charted wltb taking,
gavt evidence flnt. Bht recounted
the incident of the villi of tbi two
men, MoDonild gaining entrance on
tht pretext of seeking old pleturu
or print*, ind old gold. Bl did tht
talking for tht two.
During 'tht count of th* con ver.
sation McDonald exprtsed Interett
In a grand father clock and commenced to examine lt. At that tune
Mn. Russel, hearing her hutbind
comt ln from work, lift the room
to meet him. Bhe tnd her husband
returned to the room tnd Mn. Rut-
ttl ihowtd McDonild in old brtce-
let with a Kruger halt pound mount.
He offend a prlot but th* owner
did not with to part with It. Later
he left. Oolng to the pltno to gtt
her watch, in Engllih Halt-hunter
which had been converted Into a
wrist watch, tht found lt gont and
Immediately phoned tht police.
In tbt cron-iumlnttlon McDonald
questioned htr u to tht potltlon ht
occupied ln tht room in relation
to the piano upon wblch tbl watcn
wu resting. Further elimination by
Constable Lock showed that McDonild hid been standing about a
foot tway.
AN ANTIQUE DEALER
Edgar Hodge, Trall jeweler, whom
McDonald nld tht witch to, Identified the time pleet tnd the accused. McDonild had approached
him on the morning of tht 16th
and uked him It ht hid old coins
stating thlt bt wu in intlquie
dealer. "During tbt convertatlon ht
uktd mt If I purchued old gold
and whtn 1 tald "rtt", hi told mt
he hid tn is oarrat. gold watch
ctn ht would MU. I purchued
the watch lor tbt cut, thl movement being obsolete." The price
paid wu 18.85. Whin tht witch
wu presented u in exhibit he Identified It, th* cut numbtr btlng
8440. McDonald wu alone ahd after
Hodge had checked ovtr with a
lilt of stolen jewelry finally made
tht deal. At lunch hi hid a call
from Sergeant C. O. Barber, Constable 3. 0. M. Look of the provlnclil pollce, NtUon, md captain Johniton and Chief Uurle.
Returning to (be (ton a ucond
tlm* to show thst he wu not
skipping out, McDonild uked ta
uu tomt tenet to weight gold and
wt* arrested.
Anothtr wltntu wit strmnt Barber wbo prosecuted. He recounted
hiving received phont call* from
Mn. Russel, Mr, renwlck. ind Mn.
Robertson who reported miuing
thtlr watches, and of th* tubtt-
'. quern arrest of tht two men ln frill
| on the ducrlptlon provided. McDonald claimed wbtn accosted that
he had purchased tb* watch from
hit pirtner for ISM.
LOOKING FOR PICTURES
Declaring thlt they hid heard
that ht bid tome pleturu for
ule, McDonild and McMurry, visit-
td tht hom* of C. Fenwlck, he told
tb* court. At in other cues. mc.
Donald did the ipeaklng. Ht wu
thown a number of pletunt and
decided to purchu* thru. No particular prlc* wu mentioned, but
tht would-be buyer ottered to letve
a depotlt, stating that he would
plek up the picturti on hU way
back from Trail.
MI8S   WATCHES
Mr. nnwlck'i watch wu oa the
Uhle and McDonild hid eiamlntd
pletunt both on tb* tibia ind on
tbl wall Mn. Ruuel called tht
Fenwlck horn* a few mlnutu ltttr
•nd told of loilng btr watch tnd
Mr. Fenwlok had tht um* Itory
to till.
Crou examining McDonild uktd
If Fenwlck hid a urlou* Hlnu In
tht put md If hi had not bun Inebriated wben hi calltd upon him
and received t negattvt answer.
McDonald had an tvtn mort enticing approach  whtn  calling at
tht home of Mn. Christine Rob-
ertion on tht North Shore. "They
otmt to my door and tald that
they wen giving away money. I
remarked thtt It wu a very peculiar thing to do, the uld.
They uked Mn. Robertion If tht
hid iny old coins. Tb* householder
told tbim thtt ihe hid nont ol
tny vtlut but Itt thtm ln ud went
to get a few th* did hivt. McDonald picked out ont coin md ttated
that tt had been glided ln an attempt to put It ior a gold coin.
Severn coins wtrt eventually taktn
for   a  tottl  cuh   consideration   of
•1.05. thtn tht coin collector nlaed
the  question  of  pletunt  md  wu
told thit then wert nont for ule,
\VATK,K COLORS
All the pictures In th* houu wen
either the property of her father
or were done by henelf. "He uked
If I did water colon md I uld yu,
ind ltd tht wty Into tht parlor.
Ht examined one above tht mantel
TR/ULMANWINS
CUP AT BANFF
S. Piper Defeats N.
Desbrisay for the
Willingdon Cup
BANKI*. Alta, AUI. M (CP).—
L. S. Pper, Tnll, B.C., won thl
Willingdon * eup hen today after
a urlei of Tlctorlet agiinst golfen from many parts of the continent In a week-long elimination tourney.
Piper defeated N. R. Dubrluy,
Winnipeg, four up and two to go.
Piper yielded hit opponent two
stroku, hiving I handicap of 11
..gainst Dtlbrluy'i  14.
Tht Trall pliyer, polling out long
wood shots continently, finished the
morning round of 11 holu one up
and carried on In tht afternoon to
incriut hit lud againat hla older
adversary to four ind two.
Fred Hoblltul, of Toronto, tnd
Oordon MeWllllaffli, of Calgary will
meet Saturdiy ln the final for tM
Prince of Walu golfing trophy,
Mlu Jean I. McMillan. Of Ctlgtry, won the Auoelated Screen
Newi eup by detesting Mm Mar-
gtnt Levi, New Tork, thru and
two.
In tht ehimpionihlp night uml*
finil of tht Brewing cup oompetl*
tlon. MM. Wlllard Shepherd, Of LO*
Anielta. deftulted to Mlu Wlnnlfred Evans. Vancouver and Mn.
Loulu Kaye. of Louitevllle. Ky.,
detrtted Mrs. R. II. Msddook, of
Edmonton, two up.
TRAIL SENIORS Di
NEISON ON SUNDAY
Local Infield Show* Up Better in Their Friday
Practice
Tht imelter city unlor bauball
nlnt will invade the city Sunday afternoon for the third game ef the Wut
Kootenay title urlu which is • but
thrte-out-oi-flvt-gamt affair. Both
teami htve been going through tomt
extensive workouts and fani un rut
usurtd thlt both clubi will bt In
flnt cltu condition for Sundiy'i
gtmt. Hiving broken tvtn in tht
james already pliyed ln Trail the
local playera an confidant tbat on
their own diamond they will be able
to take tbe meuure of the Trail
team and tnd thi domination that
TnU hu enjoyed ln recent yun.
In tM lut gunt played It wu looee
work of tht local infield that Mat
tht game, but In lut nlght't practice
It wu tht work ot thi infield thit
appeared to bl tbl Itrong point of
tht club. Du* to tb* uncertainty of a
couplt of pltyen who htvt bun mining from tht lineup in rtoent gtmei.
having to tn again out ot th* olty,
lt li lmpoulbli to tute the loul
lineup, but whoever taku tht fltld
tor thl local nlnl will bt out to give
tht loctli tht tdgt on thi urlu.
In all probability Iuacion and Bogstle will bt tht ittrtlng moundsmtn.
with Smith ot Ntlion and Jonu of
TraU Mlh| htld In rutrvt.
SNOW WHITENS
FIELDS IN U.S.
Additional Men
Battle Fires
VICTORIA, Aug. M (CF>-*R**8t
tin* ln widely spirited eeettqu of
the neighboring district ot Victoria
ttnt iddltlonil corpt of men Into
the parched wood* u new outbreak! unt flamu crackling through
timber and underbrush ind pound
out yellowtih tmoke thit floated
for mllu aerou tht. skyline.
DUNCAN SERVES
TERM FOR THEFT
Takes Supplies From Fire
Fighters Camp
,*lJ4	
Strengthen Bonds
in Eastern Canada
French and English Citizenship commemorate
Cartler Discovery
Vancouver, B. C, Hotels
 j^^ *'V5Uft VANCOUVER H6ME"
RENOVATED Dlltf CHll  HOt-Bl
A, Pitirton, lite of Colemtn, Altt., Prop.  900 SeymourSt., Vmeouvtr
PHONES
ELEVATOR
Suites with private baths. Also housekeeping rooms and suites
200 Aw«t»*S««   UhIaI    REASONABLE
ROOMS AUSllIt  HOtel RATr 8
E. A. Greenwood—Mintaer — 1221 Granville St., Vincouvtr, B.C.
TRANSPORTATION-Freight and Passenger
NELSON to KAMLOOPS
KAMLOOPS to NELSON
EITHER WAY IN ONE DAY
ENQUIRE AT THE BUS STATION
Central Canadian Greyhound Lines, Ltd.
PHONE SOO           NELSON DEPOT          205 BAKER ST.
pile* md uked lf lt wu my work,' wu advisea o;
to which I nplled 'no' and uld the to Rouland but liter wu told It
only one ot mln* ww on tb* op- ok. and to check ln at a dlffe
—- —_-♦—* ,«. lh* -_»r
only   .._
potlte wall. He profeiued to Uk* It
and I took him ovtr to tu lt. Then
he nturned to the ont above tht
mantel." A chesterfield table wu
situated betwun snd on the table
in plain light Mrs. Robertson's witch
retted, she stated.
INTERESTED IN CHINA
Coins tnd witer colors hiving exhausted tht conversation, McDonild
turned to chlni and Jewelry and
lound a new channel. Mn. Robertson stated that the knew a little
about china hiving had a sister
who resided ln Stralfordthlre, ang-
lsnd. Bht told McDonald that her
sister lived ln Klmberley tnd bt
becime ttlll mon Interested. Afttr
t thort chit he left. Shortly liter*
wards Mn. Robertion missed her
watch md phoned the police.
McDonald uked her In erou-ex-
munition If it wu not poulble
for someone Mu to hav* Unn the
watch sno ihe itated thtt lt oould
not be don* unobwmd. "could
lt not have bun McMurray?'' "HO"
replied Mn. Robertson, i would have
noticed him." Conttablt Look further crou-eumlnid th* wltneu.
TRIED TO MAKB TRADE
McDonald tried to get rid of a
Mlu watch at th* Grill when ht
"trend to tnd* It wtth Uura nobler, the told th* miglttrtti. Hi
told hit* that hli wu a list watch
and that It had been returned to
him by hit girl friend. Mill BO-
bier did net mike the tnat becauu her watch wu a souvenir.
Th* aeouMd, who did not tike
th* itand.  planned to call lor  tn
adjournment   Dut  whtn  McMumy,
hla "partner,"  had  glvtn  tvldenc*
tnd had corroborated othtr wltneu-
u, he givt up tht ldu.
M-Murriy ttated thlt hi WU
trom Oarditon, Alta. Be a-H McDonald at the OrlU on th* tlghth
or ninth ot tht month ind ltttr
became acquilnttd with him. He waa
uked to go into thi coin Melting*
huslnui, but at tint wu decland
too young. With a promlu thit
111 hl» eipentet would be paid, McMurray oonnnttd to go around with
McDonald.
Thiy oroued th* wut Arm ibout
1.00 p.m.. and going to th* tint
hom* McDonald uked It tht houn-
holdtr htd wy tntlquu. Sh* uld
thit ih* htd in old log book ot •
whaler, but It wu not aootpttd li
McDonald uld thlt hi did not know
the value of It. Thiy wint to uveral homu but made no purchuu.
Thtn they oun* to thi Robertson
pilot. Mrs. Robertson's evidence hsd
bun ttu* ln every respect, ttatad
th* tccused.
"W* win walking back to town
when he ihowed me a witch and
uld lt wu worth gu or ISO md
he gavt me 13.50 aad told ma to
kup quiet about It. coins that
wen not of much valu* had bun
purchued with tbe Idea Of tulng
where the put the watch. I tumbled
thtt lt wu a racket but flgund
thit It wu bitter to keep mum.
Back ln Nelion thty wtnt to tha
Strathcona hotel and took somt coins
trom in old lady. Mr. Ftpaelan later
forced him to return them. The next
dty thty ut out for Bouth Blocan
md wtrt given a lift to the ttort
when they left their belongings.
Several pltcu wtn celled at finally thty retched the Fenwlck homt.
Mr. renwlck wu told thlt thty wen
intlque collectors who win planning
to open up In' Nelton. The accused
uld ht hid noticed the two watches
which wert liter nported miuing.
McDonald, ht uld, hid one witch In
tht bottom ot a package of cigarettes
Leaving South Slocm they took tht
bus for Trail ud on thl trip became
acquaint.n with a young ltdy. McDonild mtdt a dlnntr dtte but finally gavt McMurray gl to takt btr out
whilt ht put tht colnt ln a tale,'
the tccused tald.
BECOMES   NtRVOCS
When Captain Johnstone ctme Into
tht bottl and aaked tor two men McMurray became nervoui md lett. Bt
wu advised by hts pirtner to get up
*ld It wu
  _ different
hotel. Be wu united ln the evening.
In the cross-examination McDonald
uktd McMurray If ht hid bttn ln
court before md he idmltted thit
he hid.
McDonild—-Did you uk mt for a
Job?
McMutray—No.
McDonald—Tou wtn with mt on
two nights thtt tht thru witches
wen stolen, isn't that a coincident?
Didn't you have m opportunity of
taking Mrs. Rusul's watch. Did you
not sell me a witch for W.SB. Tou
tn a Har when you uy no.
MoMurray ttatad thtt he had thown
nervousness in TrtU through his association with McDonald, constable
Lock recalled thi wltneu to uk htm
If ht htd not pawed oft French
Iranca on thl old lady ttaylng it
tht Strathcona for old coins Ht
squired up liter'when accosted by
Ptpulin.
Mid Continent Stokes Turn-
ices and Predicts Early,
Sever* Winter
CHICAOO, Aug. H (AT)— They
stoked thi furngeu In th* mid-con*
tlntnt tonight agalnit what wmt of
thi old uttltn predicted would bt tn
urly and uter* winter.
Unusual cold dnoended tuddtnly
In tectloni which only recently bid
bun besieged by protrtcted hut
wavu. mm wire kindled in many
homu and a tiw oftlot buildings.
Frost whlttntd fltld* ln Minnesota,
North Dakota, Wltcontln and Jowt.
Snow flurrlet. reported at Billings,
Ment., grounded a plmt at Big
Timber.
Tin foncut prtdicttd low temptnturu would bt routed ihortly In
tht north ctntrtl statu but th* pot-
slblllUu ef ovtrnlght Ught frost tx-
isted for lowtr Mlchlgm. Wlteoniln,
north centnl Iowa, Mlnnetota and
thl Dakotas.
Pleading guilty to ■ chirge of taking groceries and vegetable! to the approximate value of 1-5, from tbe
forest brsnch commlstry on tbt north
shon fin camp, Dontld (Blackli)
Duncan wu untenced to two months
hard labor by Stipendiary Mtglitrite
John Cartmel .in provincial police
court Friday.
W. Holmgren of thl forut brtnch
proucuttd and evidence wu given
by Fnd Webber, assistant nngtr,
Doug Randall md Roy Mills.
Mr. Wtbber ttated tbat supplies
had bun miuing from tbt fin crtw't
tupply tent and thit two stckt had
been found In tht buth. Key Mlllt
bad been placed ln charge of them
and liter Duncin ippeired. When
Mills left to notify tht camp, Duncan
took the suppllei to a boat on the
lake and itarttd to row away. Ht
reiuud to itop whtn hailed but wu
finally overtaken.
McGregor car
badlydamaged
Bonnington Family Go Over
Bank, Granite
By JOHN I.EBLANT
Canadian Frees  Staff Writer
CHARLOTTITOWN, MX, Aug, 14
(CP)—Bonds uniting tht two great
brtnehu of canadlm oltlaenthlp—
Fnnch md Engllih—wtrt itrcngthen-
ed anew today u Oanada and France
entered Jointly upon tht round Of
celebrations commemorating Jacques
Cutler's discovery of tht Dominion
tour centuries igo.
Befon tht gny itont province
building ln whleh the tithers of confederation built for a united Canadi
70 yean ago, French md Bngllih
sptaken 'tpokt of thtu bondi, intending down through tht dtcadu,
md tmphulctd thtlr filth In tht
continuance of harmonious relations
between the two rices In Cinidt.
Canada'i sentiments wtn voiced
by Hon. I. N. Rhodes, minuter of
finance, md Bon. Dr. Myrray Mac-
Lattn, minuter ef penilona and nitlonal hulth, u thty extended wtl*
comt to Plerrt rimdln, Fnnch miniiter ot pubUc worki, md hit Usoclitet
ot an offldil delegation arriving
aboard th* French liner ChimplUn
GRAND COULEE DAM
IS SPLENDID SIGHT
Visitors to Wenatchee May
See Apple Harvest in
•    ' Progress
Social Events
of Trail City
TRAU,, B.C., Aug. 24-Mn. H.
Turik and child, tcwmpmlta by
Mln Rom Piihik, hav* retumtd
from a ilx-week holiday ipent at
Vmcouver ind Harrison Hot Spring.
• »  •
Hn. r. M. Barritt tnd dtughter
have (one to Seattle where they
will vltlt relatives.
• •   *
Ur. and Hn. Oordon Redgrave
md children hive returned trom
th* cotst where they visited Hn.
Redgrtve'a pirenti.
Ulu etnne Leveique returned
to Trail lut night from t lix-
wecks trip to Seattle, Victoria,
Vancouver md Revelstoke. Sht WU
accompanied by her couiln, Hlu
Therese Moyneur ct Ottawa, who
hid prevlouily vlilted Banff tnd
Like Louise. Ulu Moyneur leave*
Monday for her home at Otttwt.
• t  •
Mra. C. Ltmle, who hu been ■
pttlent in the Trtll-Ttdtnte hotpltal, hu returned to her homt.
<  e  «
Hlu Mtbel Wilkie li ipendlng
t vicitlon at coast cities.
Formtr Policemen to
Face Burglar Charges
NANAIMO, B. C, Aug. 24 (CP)-
George Hanny, former Nanaimo police officer, wu committed for trial
todiy on a chirge ot burglarizing
the Pearsons Salu Serving Ltd,
Miy lut
Leonard G. Truicott
Panel Examinations
JEALOUS WIFE
TEARS OP $1700
NIW TORK. Aug. 94 (AP)—Some-
whin ln America today thtn It t
hard working Mr. Liku who will bt
depressed, exasperated md probibly
disgusted to read what hli wttt, Xata
hu dont at htr Uttle home in Ptrtoc,
Slovenia.
. Likar emigrated from hii Slovenlm
home to Americi, seeking hit fortune. Btl wlft heird liter thit Llktr
hid found hlmulf mothtr wlft In
tht ntw oountry.
Recently then arrived at her homt,
iccordlng to word received here from
Belgrided, a huvy letter mtrked
"photognphi." Ihe Juloui Mn. Llktr,
believing the litter contained plcturet
of htr hutband'a "ntw wife," ton the
unopened letter Into pieces, ind
hurled th* pieces Into the fin.
Tht foUowing day the received another letter. It wu from her husband.
Re navowed his love for htr md
their children, md he uld that undtr
separate cover—marked "photograph!"
—hi had unt her wool
Oolng ovtr the btnk on Ortnlte
Rotd nur tht Dominion Dairy, tn
automobile conveying the family of
E. J. McGregor ot Bonnlngton, was
badly imtihed Frldty morning. Mr.
McOregor, who wu it tht whttl,
and hit wife tnd child esctped Mr-
iou* Injury.
Tractors Unable to
Cope With Rockies
_______
FORT ST. JOHN, B.C, Aug. «
(CP)—Hli caravan ot five tractori
having failed him thlt yur, Charles
E. Bedtux will comt to Ctntda
again next summer with new types
of mtchlnu md attempt to finish
hli motor expedition through uncharted Rockies, according to word
reaching here.
The Bedtux expedition, which
left Edmonton July J in an attempt to
firove the French tractori could
reverse the 1100 mile to Telegraph
Creek, has abandoned its machines
ud is pushing on now by meant ot
a ptckhclit train, declare! Frtnk
Wagner who hu a place ln the
upper halfway valley 129 miles east
of Redfern lake.
BANDGIVESA
FINE CONCERT
ARMSTRONG WIS
THE ARGYLE CUP
Skip Jamu Armitrong tnd hit
lawn-bowling qutrtettt ctrrled otf
tht Argyll cup, defining tht P.
S. Coulter rink 2-15.
Mimbin of the two tumi win:
P. 8. Coulter, N. B. BradUy, C.
I. Archlbtld tnd J. •Imeni; 3.
Armitrong, J. P. Morgtn, 8. Bttt
and W. Qraham.
Three gamei were played in the
men's club doublu competition on the
Nelson Lawn bowling club greens
Friday. E. Y. Brake md J. Romano
beat S. Bate and . Penwell 20*10,
N. Bradley md J. Weston beat H.
Klngsett and W. Melneczuk 13*11
and J. BaU and J. S. Gouldlng but
A. Lane and C. I. Archibald 18-12.
Flashes From the Wires
VANCOUVER—The New Wutmln*
ster Stlmonbelltes belt St. Helint In
the flnt of three-out-of-flvt gime
fries tor the Brltlih Columbli title,
JO-..
chosen u Conservative candidate for
tht Wut Slgln ftdtnl byelection.
LITHBRIDOK—Threshing machines
In tbli dlitrict in humming to tht
tunt of 10 bushell to the acre.
NELSON - TRAIL - ROSSLAND
FREIGHT LINE
Dally   Truck
Strvici
Phone
Nelson
■ 77
J.C. "SCOTTY" MUIR. PROP.
PROMPT    EFFICIENT    8ERVICE
AT  ALL TIMES
Letvlng Ntlton
tt I t.m.
Phone
Trail    '
13 or 191
VICTORIA —Thi general committee ot tht Weir Khool turvty will
rcuiemble Mondty momlng.
PORTLAND—At lent thru forut
flrea wen burning in Oregon md ont
iddltlonil blut ttettd acrou thl
Columbli rtvtr In Washington.
CAftbin", Walet—A crlils Is thrtat-
ened ln tht South Wtltt coalfield
md thin it i poulblllty ot a itrlke
ln October.
TORONTO— Th* Ontario govtrn*
mint will enter tbl Canidlin monty
mtrktt ihortly for a 126,000,000 do*
mesUc loan with tht right to In*
cress* the luue to 145,000,000.
Three Garnet in
Men's Doubles
Ruffles irt growing mon discreet.
Tht hugt ruches hive disappeared
from the Paris mods, md flitter onu
havi taken thtlr place.
Anothtr fine out-door program
wai given by the Nelaon city band
from tht Vernon itrut stand Friday evening, under the btton ot
S. J. Newell, bind muter.
Numben given by the bind were:
March—"Legion of Honor," Jewell.
Walt*.—"Gold tnd Silver ", Schar.
Selection —■ "Remlniicencu of
Wales," Oodfrey.
Trombone solo—"Just t Cottige
Small", Hanley.
Gallop — "Royil Hlppadrone,"
King.
Serenade—"At Even Time," Jewell.
Serenade—"La Pilomt," Orodlir.
Selection — "Rage in Ireland,"
Reeves.
Mtrch—"Golden Jubllu," Welje.
Spider ond Scorpion
Engage in Death Duel
LONO BEASR. Calif.. Aug. 34 (AP)
—A blick widow tplder tnd i scorpion, eich of which oould dul
potential detth to numeroui ipec-
tatora, ire locked ln a detth battle
In the shadow corner of a garage
hen.
Odds of 30 to 1 wen ottered
todiy thit tht spider would be
victor. The scorpion slresdy wu
numb and listless. The battle itarttd Wednudiy.
W1NATCHM, Wuh., Aug. St—Mo*
torliti in being idviied to view thl
work which li being itirted on tht
Ormd Coulee dam. A view ot thlt
work em be had by motoring ptrtltt
thit tr-.vel wut ovtr thl Sunut hlghwiy from Spokane to Wilbur md Al-
min thm turn north to tha Ormd
Coulee dimsite. After tuing tht dim
turn touth md comt down tht Orand
Ooulu oiled highway to Coulu City,
thin to Wenitchu vli Soap Lake,
Qulncy md th* world ftmoui Reek
Isltnd dam which lt 11 mllu from
Wtnitchu.
The applt harvut li ibout rudy to
•tart In tht orohirdi of the Wenitchu valley.
Tht motor route to tht Meet, via
Blewett pau highway It almott Corn-
pitted with only a very ttw mllu of
alow going on thl Wenitchu tide of
Blewett. Thii part will be ln fin*
Ihipe within th* nut 10 daji. It It
not ln btd shape right new, tha finil
rock out It bilng pliced thll wuk.
Only th* flnlihlng work will be required ifter thl* week-end. Tht balance of tb* route over Snoqualmle
paw ll In grmd shape, paved moit of J
tht way, tha balance ll oiled . . .1
Vlilton from NtUon md othtr parte
of British Columbli cannot gd wrong
by including Wtnitchu valley In
thtlr trip to tho cout.
Mogee Heirs to Get
Equal Distribution
VANCOUVIR, Aug. 24 (CP) -
Hein of the lttt Hugh Mtgee, dls
tinguished British Columbia pioneer, who died In 1009, leaving an
utttt worth gl47,000, trt entitled
to immediate tnd equtl distribution, iccordlng to t Judgement htnded down todty by Mr. Justice A.I.
Fisher.
LADIES' PUY
DOUBLE BOWLS
Leonard Q. Truicott of Nelion wu
among luccessful itudenti ln pining
examinations at the Univenity of
Britiih Columbia summer session.
STEAMER
TRIP
FRI IT SELLEBS FINED
POST HANEV, B.C., Aug. 34 (OP)—
Five fruit farmen, charged with ulllng ttriwberriei underlined md "over-
faced," were fined US and cottt and
three othen 130 and costs by Magistrate W. 3. W, Sparling In Maple
Ridge police oourt hen.
LONDON—The Evening Ntwt, com
minting on tbt move mtdt by tht
United Btt tee treuury to collect
tuu on financial operation! conducted iq Will itreet by Brltlih buil-
ntu houut. Sugguttd iuch ttcurltlu be handled through Cmada.
LONDON—In vltw of thl urlout-
nut of thi dliputa betwun Australia
md Lancashire cotton Industry, owing to Increased Australian cotton
dutlu, md nporti thlt Lancuhlrt
wu rudy to initltute a boycott on
Australian produce, a tuU itatemtnt
Ot tbt Lanouhlrt oau wu made.
DEER LODGE, Mont.—Tht bodlu
of Joe Oulot, gt, rancher of Finn,
4 — • itnd hit wlft wtn found on thtlr
ST. THOMAS—Harry Borbrldgt wu i firm north of here by a neighbor.
II
S OPEN
TODAY
AT 9 A.)
Two games wtrt pltytd ln the
ladlu ltwn bowling double on the
NeUon greens Friday. Mri. F.. E.
Wheeler ud Mn. J. S. Gouldlng
beat Mrs, W. Calbick and Mn.
Wright 18-11 and Mrs. Bill and
Mn. M. Baskln belt Mn. Richards
tnd Miu Laughton 19-13.
on '
Kootenay take
Sunday, Aug. 26
to
Procter-Ainsworth
and Kaslo
Leave Nelson Wharf
10 A.M.
Arrive Back at
9:45 F.M.
Return Farea:
751, fl.00 and f 1.50
CHILDREN HALF FAR!
NO PASSES
ENJOY SUNDAY STEAMER
TRIPS WHILE THEY LAST
Purchtit tlcktti In idvinet it
City Ticket Office— Btktr
tnd Wtrd 8treett
CANADIAN
PACIFIC
Fink's
Store alterations now
completed.   New   Fall
merchandise arriving
daily.
NEW FALL STYLES
Dresses in early Fall styles of satin
and crepe.
$455  and $5.95 g
New Travel Tweed Crepe &C AC
Dresses  %fO*JO
SUITS
Two-piece Knitted Suits in all thi
high shades for Fall. (PO QC
Specially priced at  *Jt)-,»W
SKIRTS
All-Wool Worsteds, Tweeds and
$1.95
BLOUSES
(Poncho) Blouses in all the new
Fall shades. Sizes 14-42. *1 QC
Price  .*. -PIi-W
Flecks. Sizes 14—20.
Price
EVERY PRICE QUOTED IN FRIDAY
MORNING'S DAILY NEWS HOLDS
GOOD FOR TODAY!
Standard Furniture Co.
SHOES
Shoes, pumps and ties,
suede and kid leathers are
the style trend for this
fall. We are showing a
large range of these for
early fall in black and
irown. tr*> AC
Priced at f*«W
FINK'S LTD.
BURNS BLOCK
 —
THI NILION DAILY NIWI, NILION, B.C.-FBIDAY MORNINO, AUGUST 24, 1934-
—n m, , ,.....»- r-'-rs.
"'    ■'•"■W
in
Parents
Consult
This   Page
Fall Re-Opening
EDUCATIONAL
AGENCIES
ASSOCIATED
2749 W. llth Avenue
Vancouver, B. C.
Tha Bttt In Idueatlontl
Itrvleet"—
Private achools in Vancouver
and on Vancouver Is. personally inspected and recommended t. parents.
Backward and delicate children carefully placed.
Expert tuition by correspondence for all examinations.
No   advice   or   consultation
charge.
Write for particular! to—
R. B. WESTMACOTT
Director
FOR
British Columbia
Private Schools
Are of the Highest
Standard
- Schools a*d Colleges
BOYS AND GIRLS
MALVERN
HOUSE SCHOOL
VICTORIA, B.C.
Residential   School  for  Boyt
Eitabllthed  1824
Conducted in the best English
tradition. Romelike surroundings, individual attention given.
All games under competent
supervision
Autumn Term
Commences Sept. 10
For further particulars, write
T. P. IMMER80N,
Hufdmiiter
1024  Richmond   Ave.,
Victoria, B.C.
PITMAN'S
Day and Night
School
INROLL NOW-FALL TERM
Students may enter at any
time
Complete Secretarial and
Bookkeeping Courses, Public
and High School Subjecti
Individual   Attention
NIGHT SCHOOL RATES:
$3.50 Month
Write to
EVELINE A. C. RICHARDS,
Principal
Cor. Granville and Broadway
VANCOUVER, B.C.
VICTORIA, B.C.
St. Michael's School
FOR BOYS
Established 1910 Write for pros
pectus and references from Hea*
master, K. C. Symons, M.A
1231 Victoria Ave., Oak Bay
Victoria, B.C. Enrol now for
September term.
CHESTERFIELD
SCHOOL—North Vancouver B. C.
OLDE8T BOARDING BCHOOL FOR BOYI IN B.C.
Endeavort to bring out and develop each boy's natural abilities ln
every way.  Write for illustrated prospectus to the Principal.
SCHOOL RE-OPENS ON SEPTEMBER 10TH.
ST. GEORGE'S  SCHOOL
VANCOUVER.  B.C.
Private and Boarding School for Boyi
(Klndtrgarttn to Matriculation)
REOPENING SEPTEMBER 10
Wrltt to tha Headmaittr:
3864 Wait 29th  Ave- Vancouvtr,  B.C.
1892    Columbian College    1934
NEW WESTMINSTER, B.C.
A RESIDENTIAL AND DAY ICHOOL FOR GIRL!
Academic Course! to Senior Matriculation
Kindergarten and Junior School
Commercial and Secretarial Courses
Music, Piano and Vocal - Art and Elocution — Home Economics
Highlit honon In Senior Matriculation received by ont of our
Itudenti  at  recent  Provincial   Examination
College Opening Thursday, Sept. 6, 1934.
Calendar
Sent on Application
A. E. ETHERINQTON,
Bursar and Registrar
LEARN
Designing, Pattern-Drafting, Dressmaking, Ladies'
Tailoring, Smocking, etc.
Academy of Useful Arts
offers:
.  A training essential to all women.
A means of earning a living.
Opportunity in an uncrowded field.
Miss F. R. Adams, Principal
Three Gables Hotel—Penticton, B. C.
WRITE FOR SYLLABUS
Branch Ichool of the Vancouver Academy of Uteful AU
VANCOUVER   BOARD   OF   SCHOOL   TRUSTEES
VANCOUVER
SCHOOL OF ART
598  HAMILTON  IT.           r_m
VANCOUVER, B.C.            W
—-     niucToa
B    CHARLES H. SOOTT
**■                                           Bit. O..I.A
mvLouKymkn
COURSES      ^{Mj
DAY AND         ^^v
EVENING               1
CLASSES:                1
DRAWING              *\
PAINTING       wmT*
DIREC
OPENING SEPTEMBER 10
\_JmT   DESIGN
tff^r       POTTERY
F^     MODELLING
1           LETTERING
COMMERCIAL
*                         ART
o the             CRAFTS
TOR
th       Free Prospectus
St. Margaret's
School
'ICTORIA, B. C.
RESIDENTIAL AND  DAY
SCHOOL  FOR  GIRL8
Kindergarten to Senior
Matriculation
Special Courses Arranged
If Desired
Experienced Graduate Stall
Music, Art, Elocution,
Dancing,  Hiding,  Swi-imlng
Transportation for Smtll
Children
AUTUMN TERM STARTS
SEPT. 12TH
Write for Prospectus to
Headmiitreti:
MR8.N.E. DUNCAN, B.A.
SEFTON COLLEGE
885 FOUL BAY ROAD
VICTORIA, B.C.
School for Girls, Beginners to
Matriculation. A limited number of boarders received. Excellent education, with happy,
tisciplincd home life. Tutorial
system of study. Small classes.
Music.   Games.   Art.   Voice
Training. Special attention to
'he Speaking Voice.
Moderate Inclusive fees
Write
MISS I. F. ROBERTS, L.L.A.
Headmiitreti
CRANBROOK LADY
IS TEA HOSTESS
Mra. H. A. McKowan Honors
Sister, Mrs. D. M. Macdonald, Greenwood
■__
St. Michael's
School
VERNON, B.C.
Boarding School
for Girls
In the Sunny Okanagan
Valley
Highly  qualified
staff
Grades 1 to 12 inclusive
Re-opens Sept 6th
Write to the Principal.
St.Ann's Academy
Kamloops, B.C.
SELECT RESIDENTIAL
SCHOOL FOR GIRLS AND
YOUNG LADIES
In thl City of Sunihlnt
Location ideal; climate unexcelled. Primary, Grammar.
Commercial and High School
Departments. Music course
leads to degrees in Royal
Academy and Trinity College
of London, and to Toronto
Conservatory of Music.
Write for Catalogue to
8ISTER SUPERIOR
THE GRAMMAR
SCHOOL
DUNCAN
Vancouvtr Iiland
RESIDENTIAL AND DAY
SCHOOL FOR BOYS
Eitabllihtd 1928
Curriculum at laid down by
tha Department of Education
Term Commences
Sept. 12
Eighteen acres of playing
tields. Healthy surroundings.
Modern equipment. Experienced masters. Rugby football, cricket, gym, boxing etc.
Moderate Feat. For Protpec-
tut, write to tha Htadmaittr
DUFFUS
School
of
Business
Ltd.
_ "The School That Gets Results"
Seymour and Pender, Vancouver, B.C.
—WRITE FOR  PROSPECTUS-
LEARN
A good-paying business that you can use
all your life.
Designing, Pattern-Draftina, Dressmaking
MAKE ARRANGEMENTS TO ENROLL NOW
Write for Further Information.
ACADEMY OF USEFUL ARTS
MISS MARY B. ROGERS, ROSSLAND, B.C.
Branch of tha Vancouver Academy of Uieful Art!
Queen Margaret's
School
Duncan, Vancouver Island, B. C.
Boarding school for girls. Beginners to matriculation.
Beautiful country, healthy situation, large playing
fields, with own chapel and swimming pool. Happy
home atmosphere. Eully qualified staff. Church of
England
Principals:
Mill N. C. Denny, A.R.R.C, — Mlw D. R. Gioghtgin, B.A.
WRITE FOR PROSPECTUS
RE-OPENING
SEPTEMBER llth
Graduation Courses
Day and Evening Classes.
DIRECTORS: Frederick H.
Varley, A.R.C.A.; J.W.G.
Macdonald, D.A. (Edin);
Harry Tauber of Vienna.
REGISTRATION: Septem
Der 1st to September llth
BRITISH COLUMBIA COLLEGE OF ARTS
1233-39 Georgia Street West Vancouver, B. C.
	
Full   particular!   end
Illustrated  pro«p:;tui
by   writing   to    ths
Secretary.
page thre:
Star of Radloland
CRANBROOK, B.C., Aug. 34.—Mrs.
H. A. McKowan wu luncheon hoeteu
In honor of her sister, Mrs. D. M MacDonald of Greenwood. The guests
were Mrs. Macdonald, Miu Woodland,
Miss Blankenbacb, Mrs. C. R. Ward,
Mlu Gladys Ward, Mlu KUnesttver,
Mrs. Root, Mrs. Fergle, Mrs. Roberts.
Mrs. Manning and Mrs. DeWolfe. After luncheon the guesta played
bridge at which the three winners for
high score were Mrs. Manning, Mrs.
Root and Mrs, Macdonald.
Mrs. C. R. Ward, Joe, George ar*d
Miss Phyllli Ward motored to Water-
ton Lakes. They were accompanied
by Mlu Gladys Ward who has been
visiting them here, and left from
Waterton for her home at Champagne, HI.
Mlu Laura Hall came down from
Invermere to spend a few days at her
home ln Cranbrook.
Mrs. Zlznlk and Michel and Mary
Zlznlk of Natal are In Cranbrook the
guests of Mrs. Zlznlk's parents, Mr.
and Mrs. M. Frost.
Rev. F. V. Harrison motored to Boswell for a few days.
On his return he was accompanied
by Mrs. Harrison and Mlu Suzanne
Harrison who have been visiting Mrs,
E. fl. Home at Boswell for the paat
two weeks.
Rev. Mr. and Mrs. Neville Blunt
visited Cranbrook after a holiday
spent at the coast. Mrs. Blunt will remain here a guest of her sister, Miss
Mary Paget, while Mr. Blunt returns
to their home at Innlsfall. He waa
accompanied by Edward Paget,
Mr. and Mrs. Max Bell spent the
weekend ln Calgary returning to their
home here on Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Parks, Mlw
Frances Parks, and Mlu Kitty Haver-
ford spent the weekend and part of
this week In Calgary, travelling by
motor.
Mlu Hester Thompson is a patient
in St. Eugene hospital following an
operation last week for appendicitis.
She ls progressing toward recovery
very favorably.
F. W. Burgeu hu returned to hla
home here after a holiday spent on
Mayte lake.
Mrs. M. A. Beale, who hu been visiting at the cout for the past month
hu returned to her home here.
Mr. and Mrs. V, Z. Manning and
four children have returned to their
home here after six weeks' passed at
Victoria and Vancouver.
Mr. and Mrs. Hinton, Frank and
Arthur Hinton and Mlu Helen
Bridges have returned to their homes
here after a trip to Spokane.
J. Kemball and A. Kemball spent
the put weekend ln Calgary on bust
neu. During tbe trip their car overturned but neither of the men wu
Injured.
F. W. Adolph of Calgary was In
Cranbrook on buslneu for a few days
lut week.
Major J. P. Coatee hu returned to
Cranbrook following a short visit tn
Nelson.
Mr. and Mrs. B. F. South returned
to their home ln Medicine Hat this
week. Mrs. Souch. who lost her hand
ln a motor accident near here recently, was ln Improved health when sha
left, after two Keeks ln St. Eugene
hospital.
Friends of Mlu Wlnnlfred Steward
held a surprise party for her ln the
form of a miscellaneous shower at
her home on Burwell avenue early
this week. The early part of the evening wu devoted to bridge and
games at which the prizewinners were
Mrs. P. W. Willis, Mlu Vivien Kemp
and Mlu Betty Ecclestone. Light re-
freshnenta were served after which
the gifts were presented to the guest
of honor ln a prettily decorated buket. The guesta were: Mrs. Frank
Bridges, Mrs. L. WlUlcombe, Mrs.
Hughes, Mrs, Cathcart, Mrs. Mackln-
rot, Mrs. Benson. Mrs. F. Nelson, Mra.
Knight, Mrs. Willis, Mrs. Steward,
Mlu Betty Ecclestone, Mlu Vivien
Kemp, Mlu Hazel Steward and Mlu
Wlnnlfred Steward. Mlu Steward's
marriage to John Jarenko will take
place Wednesday of next week.
Dr. and Mrs. Keith Wasson and
Keith Jr., of North Battleford have
arrived ln Cranbrook to visit for a
short time with relatives-
Mrs. Hilton of Yahk Is convalescing
In St. Eugene hoepital following an
lllneu.
Jack Hrlloffs and cousin, Cecil
Helloffs of Moose Jaw were in Cranbrook fo* a day lut week visiting Mr.
and Mrs. Orennan on thetr way
through to the coast.
Mrs. Roy Harris and children have
left Cranbrook for Trail where they
will reside ln future with her mother.
Mrs, Alan Oraham entertained at
tea early this week ln honor of Mrs.
H. H. Stevens. The guuts were Mrs.
W. H. Wilson, Mrs. Hogarth, Mrs. G.
H. Thompson, Mrs. M. A. Beale, Mra.
Norgrove, Mrs. John Paton, Mra. F. B.
Miles, Mrs. H. A. McKowan. Mrs. J.
Balrd, Mrs. V. Edwards and Mrs. N.
Blunt of Innlsfall.
Mlu Marlon Miles has returned to
Kelowna where she has the position
of school nurses, following a six
weeks' holiday which she spent at her
home ln Cranbrook.
Mlu Jeule South of Pentlcton Is tn
Cranbrook, the guest of her father,
Mr. T. South.
Mlu Florence Stender hu returned
to her home here after a holiday
spent ln Sukatchewan. On her way
home she visited her sister and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Herb Fylea.
Brentwood
College
(NEAR)  VICTORIA
RESIDENTIAL
SCHOOL FOR BOYS
Agn 12 to 11
Grades VII to XII and
Senior Matriculation
MODERATE FEES
Next term opens oo Sept. 13.
For particulars, write
M. H. ELLIS, B.A. (Oxon.)
H.ldmliter
AT VICTORIA,  B. C.
JOY LYNNE
This dark-haired young blues
singer, Joy Lynne, from Columbus,
O., Is heard frequently on programs
featuring Jack Benny.
"Cleopatra's Bob"
to Meet at Creston
CRESTON, Aug. 34.—It ts mnounced thll wetk that thc Junior Woman'! auxiliary ol the Kootenays la
to hive Its 1934 conference it Or. ston
on Octoher 8, when the local bnnch,
which ll supervised by Mill M. L.
Wade, will be hosts to the visitors.
One of the speakers will he Mrs. Solly
of Summerlsnd.
Mr. mc Mri. H. W. McLiren, with
Lloyd. Hirold md Ethel, are away on
a vacation till September 4. most of
which will be spent at Vancouver,
stopping at Spokane for a few days
stay with relitives.
Mrs. Jaa. Cook left yesterday on i
two week'i vicatlon, wblch ihe will
spend with old frlenda it Medicine
Hat. md Battrum, Sask.
Oeorge FllUnger, who has been one .
of the pitching mainstays of Creston |
Intermediates baaebill team, haa left
for Albemi, where hc has • Job ln
light.
Mn. Jimei Held of Nelson has arrived on a few weeks' vlalt with her
parent!, Mr. end 'in. N. Schade.
Mr. ind Mrs. A. Comfort md their
daughter. Mrs. E. Prldham, ire back
from a five-week auto trip which took
them ia far eist as Mr. Comfort's old
home at Wellmdport, Ontario.
T. J. Cnwford la back from a two
months' trip during which he vlilted
at Port William, and other points In
Ontario.
Miss Edna Collier of Crmbrook ia
a guest of Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Bell, and
will be here for the apple picking seaaon.
According to historians of ancient
modes and manners, this is the way
that Cleopatra wore her hair when
she ruled as queen of Egypt many
centuries ago. Evidently believing
that what was good enough for
Cleo is good enough for them, the
younger society set in Los Angeles,
Calif., have adopted the coiffuer
and called it the Cleopatra bob. Ella
Poros, loclety debutante, is shown
exhibiting the new style of hair-
dressing.
JFirat (Hljurrb uf
(Eljnst Srif ntial
209 BAKER STREET
A branch of the Mother Church
The   First   Church   of   Christ
Scientist in Boston. Mass.
Sunday  School 9:45 a.m.
Sunday Service II a.m.
Subject Leiion Sermon
"MIND"
Wednesday Testimonial Meeting
8  p.m.
FREE REAOlNG ROOM IN
CHURCH   8UILDING-
All Cordially Welcome
To Build Public
School, Huscroft
C. Huscroft (lives Land;
Old Site Given by
W. R. Huscroft
ZOOffiS APPEAR
GOOD LUCK SIGN
VANCOUVER, (CP) — Portuguese
mm-o'-war are off the British Columbia coast.
No International Incident ls threatened, however, and the spirit of Vaa-
c.o da Oama need not worry that bis
descendants are itlrrlng up peril in
far waters.
Canadian naval offlcen won't confer with them off the coast as did
Captain Oeorge Vancouver with the
Spanish Captain Quadra.
Portuguese man-o'-war are harbingers of prosperity — not, In fact,
mm-o'-war at all, but Pbyialla Are-
thuia, zoolda of the Blphonophora
family, enacted air laci with a sail-
like crest, brilliant colon and the
property of stinging human beings.
To the fishermen they promise a
good season. Thc last really big fish-
Ing season was ln 1031 when the vlslton frequented theie t-oaits ln such
vait quantitlei that In places on thc
Queen Charlotte Island/! they lay pll-
ed six md seven feet deep.
Now the floating colors are back
again, acres and acrei of them, bob*
blng along In myaterloui fnhlon,
sometimes sailing gallantly to wlnd-
warf, sometimes with the current. It
Is believed they come when the summer ocean currents ln theie latitudes
are warmer than usual. They die on
reaching cold water, and that li the
reason they pile up ln iuch qumtlt-
les or. thi Queen Charlotte Islands.
The Portuguese man-o'-war is composed mostly of water md color. A
fisherman attempted to bring eome
to Vancouver, but when he arrived
they had perished md he had nothing but • faint blue ameir.
§t. {Juulis and (trinity
Rev. T. J. S. Feruguson, B.A.
Minister
11 a.m.—"The Voice oi the Mountains" solois', Mrs. J. Hells*
cher.
7:30 p.m.—Cod and His Rebel
child.
You are cordially invited to
join us in public Worship,
with its uplift, of high
thought and noble song.
CRESTON, Aug. 24— At a meeting
of the ratepayers of Huscroft tchool
district on Tuesday evening those
present were quite unanimous in the
decision to at once proceed with the
erection of a now one-room public
school at a site about half a mile
south of the present location, which
will more expeditiously serve those
attending. The new school will bo at
the Hurry-Demchuk corner, and the
land will be available due the generosity of Chas. Huscroft in giving the
new site In exchange for tbe old
school building and the land lt occupies. Word has been received from
the department that a contribution
from Victoria of 20 per cent cent of
the cost will be forthcoming. The new
building is to cost not more than
(11200. The school to be abandoned
is one of the oldest ln the valley snd
the land on which lt stands was given
by the late W, R. Huscroft, who with
his family, arrived ln the district ln
1804.
Another educational development
of the week ls tho decision of the
trustees at Canyon to call a meeting
of the ratepayers for Saturday
night at which the residents will be
asked to vote an additional bum with
which to carry on high school work
In at least three grades. Inspector
V. Z. Manning was here conferring
with the board, who are so confident
the move MU bc approved that workmen are already busy rehabilitating
the preaent school basement which
will be uaed, for the present, for the
new high school. Between the students that have Just passed into high
school and those who have been attending at Creston, along with some
who paased Into Orade 9 a year ago,
tbe new high school will have a representative attendance. Canyon will
be quite centrally located to serve any
from Camp Lister and Huscroft.
Institute Opens
Library at Ymir
YMIR, B.C., Aug. 34.—The Tmlr
Women's institute llbnry wis opened
on Tuesday and wai ln charge of Mn.
E. M. Gllle. A number of new books
have been added.
A number of Ymir young folk vlilted Mrs. N. Peterson at the Yankee
Olrl mine camp this week and enjoyed a picnic there.
The Ymir town reservoir ll being
cleaned out.
Mr. md Mrs. Clirtnce Anderson ind
Mr. md Mn. Clarence Mcliuc have
u tbelr guesti Hittie, Belle, Ralph
md Jack Kublskl of Spokane.
SYDNBY, Australia, (CP)—A tabby
eat owned by a dairy firmer li aa
useful with cowi u my cattle dog.
Twice dally, without Instructions,
sbe herdi up tbe milken.
Becauie of the alarming Increase of
profeeaional eoothiiyen In Berlin,
Oermany, the police ire now banning
every brmch of fortuno telling.^
Five  thousand  Upiticki  ire  mid
every week In Englmd.
Kimberley Teams
Down in Series
KIMBERLEY, B.C.. Aug. 24.—Mark
Creek store defeated Safewity 14-12;
Safeway's early lead was wiped out
when Mark Creek scored six times ln
the 8th Inning. Exceptional catching by Lilly and Oarasslno and a fine
aU round performance by McKay featured the game, with Robertson's
homer being the out-standing batting feature. The wilderness of both
pitchers added in piling up a high
score.
Bafeways evened things on Wednesday when they defeated Mark Creek
Store 4-2 ha a fast exhibition.
Bafeways scored three runs in the
first Inning. The game was a pitcher's battle all the way. Oarneau allowed only six .scattered hits while
Jahren allowed four. Safeway played errorless bal) while Mark Creek
made three errors.
Thc deciding game will be played
next week.
LONDON, (CP)—A new Royal Eye
hospital, the biggest ln England and
one of the best equipped ln the world,
la to be erected at St. George's Circus.
London, 8.E., on old Surrey Theater
site acquired for the purpose.
Another of life's little nuisances la
ended by a new liquid compound
which, applied to bottoms of refrigerator ice trays, keeps them from
sticking.
__JMCO«M-UTIO 1ST HAY ttt**
$25,000
Showing ot Beautiful
FUR COATS
and
JACKETS
This is a sample group that will be in
our store for one week only, and now
is your chance to own the coat you
have always wanted, before the prices
advance. These feature select skins
and excellent workmanship,-and not
. only do they boast of comfort but
style, plus quality. You can choose
from Hudson or Electric Seals, Squirrel, Broadtail, Muskrat, Lapin, Lamb,
Kidskin and Caracul.
Mr. Matoff, who is in charge of this
display, will be pleased to give any
desired information regarding these
furs. Terms can be arranged and any
garment selected will be stored until
wanted.
DONT FORGET
The Bay s Fur Display
Monday and Tuesday
at  2:30 p.m.
FORT GARRY TEA or COFFEE served
FREE In Grocery Section!
-j*-
 PAGE  FOUR
MOTHER OF FAMILY NEEDS CONTACTS
OUTSIDE OF HOME, CONFERENCE TOLD
Misa Ellen Melville of New
Zealand Addresses Inter-
natonal Meeting
Social News IToads Worth While
of Rossland !   Say$ Noted Writer
THE NILSON DAILY NIWI, NELSON, B.C-SATURDAY MORNINO, AUGUST 36,1134
Joe Koliman Is in
Cranbrook Hospital
"Diny" Doan'i Fait
Ball
By ELIZABETH BAILSV PRICE
Canadian Preai Corrwpondcnt
HONOLULU, Aug. H (OP)—The
contribution ot children to the world
U not th* only contribution of women but toclety seems to claim the
right to challenge woman's choice of
work because of the accident of work.
Miss Ellen Melville of New Zealand
declared In addressing delegates to
the International meeting of the Pan-
Pacific Women's association here.
Miss Melville has been a practicing
attorney ln the elty of Auckland for
•25 years tnd a'member of the city
council for 31 continuous years.
"Of course, woman's place ln ln
the home, and so ls man's, but not
a" the Ume," she said. "More thtn
ever does the mother of a growing
ftmlly need outside contacts to fit
htr children to make the right kind
of contribution to this world, which
seems so unready to receive them.
HAVE CONTRIBUTION
"There tre hundreds of other women, however, who do not ctre to
marry and who htve t grett contribution of Idets tnd ldetls. There tre
thousands of mtrrltd women who do
not wtnt to be homamtkers ln the
limited sense of the word, especially
does lt devolve upon the women of
the Pacific countries, unhtmpered
by the strife-torn background of Europe, to generate enthusiasm and
menttl electricity."
The present economic depression
has bten used to oust women trom
Industrial tnd professional positions
tnd this should be combatted vigorously everywhere, the delegates opined generally ln the discussion which
followed Miss Melville's speech.
Japan Broke Faith
i Soviet
First Says
MOSCOW, Aug. 34 (CP-Htvaa)—
XirtttU. official organ est tht Sovltt
Onion Frldty replied sharply to at-
cutttlon by Kokl Hlrott, Japanese
foreign minlit.fr, thtt the U.S.BR.
broke confidence by publlihlng flguret on tht Rutto-Jiptnete flntncitl dicker for tht purch.se by
Jtptn of tbt Chinese Eutern nil*
wty.
Jtptn did it flrtt, tht ntwaptper
Hid.
Thtre wtt tn ortl igreement to
tht effect thtt tht tunt Involved
thould not bt published, Ir.vc.tlt
tgrttd. But tt fir btck at Mtrch 7
thtrt vu t mtnlfwt breach of thlt
agreement by publlc.tlon of flguret
ln tht Jtptnttt prew.
1 Tht figures, moreover, wtre not
correct, uyt ItvwtU.
The Soviet then considered ltwlf
tree to Ulk, tnd did to when lt
considered thit Jtptn wu Issuing
mendacious news tending to thow
thtt tht Russians were responsible
tor the brttkdown of thott negotlltloni.
Franco will limit the number of
foreign films thown In the country.
"Dlny" Own throws hit tut btll
with tn tuy motion tnd follows
through with in overhand delivery.
The flrtt tnd wcond fingers, being
the lut to leave tht surface of the
btll, Impart i spin to lt, routing It
backward towird him, Tht rwult It
thtt the bill htt t illght raise to It
tnd tht bitter hlta under the bill.
Hit "drop" curve Is delivered with
tht bill htld ln tht wme position u
tor tht old-fuhloned "round houw"
curve. The bill rolli out ovtr the In*
del finger u In tht out curve. Ult
wrlit Imparting t downwwd snip to
tht routlon, Just u the bill letvea
the hind.
Hit follow through on tht itnlght
or "out drop" tlndt hit hind continuing tlmoit directly to the ground tnd
forward.
ROSSLAND, i.e., Aug. M — Mrt.
Robert Ktnntdy ud Mlw Digit Kennedy of Bonnlngton trt holldiylng
It thi homt of Mrs Ktnntdy'i ptr-
tntl, Mr. tnd Mn. T. White.
'   '   '
Mn. Htrry Whltford et KlmberUy
It tht guwt of Mn. Wlllltm T. Trem*
btth.
f  •  g
Otorgt Blthop It ipendlng thl holl*
diyi with hit parenU tt Udner.
.   •   •
Mn. I. ChMhim ot Klmberley It
vltltlng frltndt btn.
• *   •
Muter William Jewell  underwent
t minor optratlon tt tht MtUr Mis.
treordlu hoeplUl Tuesday    tnd   ll
making favorable progress.
.   *   .
Murdock Htndtnon, MUt Jtnnlt
Henderson, tnd Mn. Oeorgt Brown
tr- holldiylng it Almworth.
• •   •
Mr. tnd Mn. Simuel Irvin, Mln
Bttty Ann Mllw and A. W. Smith
htvt returned from tpendlng i few
dtyi ln Spokine.
• •   e
Mn. M. Rutherford end daughter
Mtry Lou, of Seattle, in holldiylng
it tht homt of Mra. Rutherford's
mothtr, Mn. Supple.
• .   •
Mil Dorothy Irvin It ipendlng i
wwk ln Spokine.
tit
Mr. tnd Mn. F. M. Irak Ine end'
daughter Jetn htvt nturned from
a hoUdty In Spokint.
• »   •
Cltrence Schumikir of Ntlton hu
taken up residence ln thll elty.
• •   •
rguerlU Irvin, who It attend-
achool In Spokine, li ipendlng
Marshall Saunders, Who
Wrote "Beautiful Joe"
40 Yean Ago
FIRE ENDANGERS
OBSERVATORY
VICTORIA, Aug. 34 (CP)— Thi
Dominion utrophytlctl obtervttory,
homing thousinda of dollars worth of
lnitrumtnU end equipment, wu endangered by t forwt blut which
twtpt up tht aouthwe.t tld* ot Llttli
Sttnlch mountain thll evening. It
tcorcht 11 htlf down houae. befort lt
wu checked by volunteer tighten
tnd .oldlers from Esqutmslt.
""Tht fire wu still burning ln thi
underbrush lite tonight and a force
of men wu kept watching It. Thi
observatory wu no longer In danger,
lt wu lUted.
Mil Mil
Ing echo*.
a ftw dayi at htr home hen
•   »   •
Mr- and Mn. Gilbert Bunci of
Bremerton. Wuhlngton trt the guests
ot Mn. Bunce't brother-in-law and
titter, Mr. and Mn. Ernest Olover.
Mr. and Mn. Bunw art on thtlr
way to Spokane, where Mr. Bunce
win tttend tht gathering of thi
American Legion.
MEN TAXE WINGS
' TOTELTPROBS"
Early Morning Aviators to
Ascend 17,000 Feet to
Get Weather Prospects
Always Buy the Best
"sum
TEA
"Fresh (rem the Gardens"
\s£ *> _&.
WASHINGTON, (CH—Tbi wwth-
tr man U going to poke hit head
Into the clouds so ht can advlw tht
public mort e.actly on thlt weighty
problem: "Shall I carry a raincoat or
ihtll I not?"
Starting July 1, a new lyitim ot
"ilr.miaa antlyili" gow Into opentlon. It means a lot of government
tviiton will htvt to go up btfore
breakfast.
Army, navy and marine corps avla*
ton will mlka frequent soundings
of tht upper air with tpeclil Inatru-
mtnU called "meteorographs"
MttetrologltU believe that air
muwi, moving acrow tht turftce of
tht earth, govern weather to t mtrked
degree. lnformitlon on thilr condition, direction, and ipeed It considered vlul to mort tccurate foreeutlng.
Bo etch morning the pilots will
Uki oft at 6:30 aa. with their me-
ttorogrtphi on tht wings and ascend
to 17,000 fwt above Wt level. Tht
daU thty obtain will iupplemtnt tht
reports of ground observers, of tht
wwther bureau, tnd much of tht
guess ln foreeutlng will be eliminated.
Written tor The*Canadian Frew
BY A. I, CBOACH
TORONTO, (CP) — Take It from
Marahall Stunden, 73-y.ar-old hu-
minlttrian tnd author, thi humblt
toid li a nal credit to IU country.
Mlw Saundtri ought to know be*
cauae for yean tht hu been proprietress of Toronto's only "toad hotela."
"Folki don't tppreclatc toad.." Wld
tbe writer of "Beautiful Jot." thc dog-
ttery thtt sold iround tbt world.
"Thty ire w very uwful ln dwtroy-
lng Injurious Insects that wt up
shrubs and damagt cropt. Why, etch
one li worth 120 to IU country for
that alont.
"And they art friendly llttl* cret*
turn, far mort intelligent thtn
they're credited with being. Somt
folki believe you'll gtt wirtt If you
pick up t toad. That'i Jutt old-ftah-
lontd superstition."
When Mlw Saunden built her
tree-girt North Toronto home—lt wu
the only one on tbi itrwt then—the
toadi would come up In tht tvtnlng
trom tht ravine nearby. "Thty uwd
to wtlk up tnd down the path In
front of the houw, but u the district
wu graduauy built up thty were
frightened tway," tht laid. "I had
grown fond of tht little ftllowi, to I
find for them whit X call my toad
hoUli."
Thtre art thrw of tbwe eoty "toad
bottle" and Mlu Saundtri flguret
right now thty houw 10 or M toad..
Sht ctn't bt tun. bectuw thty wl-
dom vtnturt out till after dark. Itch
ll i mound ot rocki, perhaps four
twt In dltmeUr, with space, tor tht
toads to go ln and out, an "arcade"
under thi rooky roof for traffic, and
waUr dishes whtn thty quench thtlr
thirst, "not by drinking but by ab-
torblng wtttr through thtlr porw,"
At ine Ulktd. Mlw Stundtn tought
to oigi i bird etoaped from tbt aviary
adjoining her home. Energy and en-
thuslssn* mirked htr tetlona and con*
vtnttlon, though It it 40 yun line*
thl wrote "Beautiful Joe;' which perhaps hu told a million coplu. sht
It an active member ot several clubi,
•hi lectures, iht antwen a contttnt-
ly-rlnglng telephone and neglecU
none of her hundreds of friends—her
dayi are crammed full.
SAYH OIRLS SHOULD MAKW
Thli charming, white-haired hu
mtnltartan, ttlll young In btr 10't
flndt tlmt to pity nurw to a alck pet
canary, to look titer her pigeons md
htr bawment full of birds and to
Ulk to her dog, a Botton bull. And
the It itlU writing—In longhand, becauw tht hu ntver had time to
muter tht typewriter.
Sh. confessed iht loves to ttlk. and
ln htr oool green garden tht told of
he> childhood ln Nova Scotla and how
the camt to be a literary lady. Whtn
the wu Ins her 'teens, a family friend
advised her parents to let htr try her
hind at writing. Rer fither and
mother went on vicatlon and an
older sister urged her to write a ttory
—"'something thtt smacks of blood
and thunder." At the end of three
weeks the complete a three-cornered
love ttory with "not much thunder
but quite a bit of blood." Sht
chuckled at thc memory of thi girl
thi wu. But thlt flnt ttory told
for MO, t bit of money In thow dtyi.
Mlw Blunders ww Included on thl
Klng'i birthday honor lilt thll yeir
for hir work In connection with tht
Humane loclity. Though ihi hu
ntvtr ventured Into mitrlmony herself. Mlw Stundtn believes tvtry girl
ihould mirry and havi i homt of htr
own. Htr litter, Mlw Onet Stundtn,
who make, a vtry good ipengt ctki,
llvei with htr.
SIRDAR, BC Aug. 34-Joe Roll-
man It t patltnt it Crtnbrook hoi.
plttl whtn hi li hiving hit ton.lls
removed.
D. Dennli Jr., ot Ntlion ls a guwt
of Alfred Bysouth it Kuskanook
The renewal of tht bridge over tht
Slough tt AlbtrU commenced at the
beginning of U>t wwk with a crtw
undtr O. MteLwn. This It quite t
ltrge undertaking tnd will occupy
tomt time.
Marshall MacPherson of Cranbrook
wu a vlaitor at tht home ot Mr. and
Mn. J. S. Wllion. Mr. md Mn. J. E.
Vineckiren and family of Canyon
win ilte vlilton.
Mln Row Pascuzzo li ln Cnnbrook
where the took ber sisters, Misses
Ctmellt md Non to hava thtlr Until! removed.
Stm Lombardo wu I builnew vltlt,
tor to Creiton purchasing hiy miking
equipment.
Frtnk Lombtrdo ipent a ttw dtyt
at Nelton.
John Morey of Nelton waa i vltltor
at tht homt of Mr. tnd Mn. Jttnei s.
Wilton.
J. Otborni of Twin Btyt wu a business vliltor to Creston.
The hay eut on the flats across tin
•lough trom Atbirt hu commenced,
three ferries being employed tor
trmtporutioli. The hi; Is reported
to be somewhat weedy, b :t there will
be ample for local requirements
Mrt. Tucker md MUa MacCullough
were ihopplng vltlton to Cruton
from Kuskanook.
Mln Owen Wllwn hit returned to
her home tfter t short holiday apent
at Okanagan points.
Rev. R. Llngrtm from Nelton wat
a vliltor It Atbara on bli wty through
to Creiton tnd Canyon by car.
3000 Are Slain in Battle Between the
Government Troops and Communists
Kimberley Rallies
to Secure a Draw
Salmo Mon Heme
Frem Spokane
SALMO, Aug. 14-0.0. Filr return*
ed from Spoktnt whtn the went
for medical tttentlon.
Mn. L. Johnitone tnd dtughter
Jacqueline are In Nelton, guests of
Mr. tnd Mrt. O. Johnitone. Jicquellne
htd her tonilli out thli wwk.
Mn. A. Orty tnd childnn, Helm,
Betty tnd Archlt, have returned to
th.l homt here from Nelton where
they have bwn vliitlng Mn. Oray's
mother, Mrs. H. Townwnd.
Mn. M. McCaslln hu returned to
her homi ln Nelion afUr spending a
week here.
Herman Lindow hu returned trom
Kimberley where hi ipent a couple
of day.
Mrt, t. Haulbar md ton Bobby
tnd Mn. J. C. Hanaon ot Shwp Creek
motored to Nelaon Tuesday.
Mn. O. O. Ftlr tnd diughter Ollvt
wen vlilton to Nilion Monday.
J. Oollghtly wu a recent vltltor to
Nelwn.
C. W. Lindow ittended thl Old
Tlmen picnic it Procter Wednudty.
Mr. tnd Mn. M. C. Donaldson tnd
ftmlly were tmong thow who attended the Old Tlmen picnic it Procter
Wednesday.
Mrs. J. Sudden lett Tuesday tor
the prairie whtn sht will visit relatives. She wu tccomptnled to Nelton by Mr. Sudden.
Mn. J. Hearn tnd family havt returned from Colvllle whin they ipent
the week-end guests of Mrt. Hetrn'i
brother md ilster-ln-ltw, Mr. tnd
Hn. S. Orutchfleld.
Salvador'! recent burrlcant destroyed one-fifth of tho coffee trwi.
Government  Commander  at
Nanking States No Further Fear of Trouble
NANKING. Aug. 14 (fP-IIavu)-
A   bloody  victory  of   government
forcei over Communist troops, leaving 3000 Communists dead ln the
field, appeared, to have shattered
an uprising whleh recently threatened an International incident.
The government oommander wired
Nanking trom Ktun Chow, Puklen
province, thit ht hid routed Com*
muntit forcw tfter a battla ln thlt
region and thtt no fear need be felt
henceforth trom thlt quarter.
I Itlth, Fnnch, Jtpmew and United SUUi wtrthlpt wert rushed to
Fuchow, nouriihing port cltjr of Puklen. 10 days igo when a Communist
army, marching througb tht province,
threatened to tttack Fuchow. National govirnment troopi wtre ruibed
from Bhankhtl md othir polnte to
tht dtfence of thi elty. Their pursuit
of the communists tnded with today's
battle.
Meanwhile, IB CommunltU under
arrett ln Fuchow wtrt summarily
executed.
Stevent to Speak
at Kimberley
RIMBERLET. Aug. 34,-Hon. H. H.
Stevent, ftdtnl mlnUter ot tndt and
commerce, with Mn, Bteveni will vis*
It Klmberley Friday. At a noon luncheon tht butlntw men ot the town
will meet the guc.u md ln the after*
noon Mri. Uoyd Crowe will entertain
For Two Days
Saturday and
Monday Only
A imart lot ot Voilt and Print
drewet, Including loU of large
sites, voiles up to 44 ind
prints UP to SO,
lit Quality Pure ■ilk crepe
e, ln the newett shidei the
$1.00
hose, _____
equal ot any $1.-0 bote
telling "   '
at	
All Beach Togt Including valuu to $1.09 for Mlu, also
Ladies   at  $100  and  othen
fr1 $1.00
See our many  dispUyi,  it
out-rtindlng low pricei
Ramsden's
J22 Baker at Stanley
In honor ot Mn. Stevens, whtn ill
tht ladles of Klmberley art Invited.
At 0:80 Mr. Stevent will open tht
Flower Show and at 7:90 wlU ad-
drew a public meeting.
There's Thrills ♦ ♦ ♦
in Pure, Delicious
Curlew ICE CREAM]
Curlew Ice Cream is more
than just a pure, healthful
food, made for your enjoyment. Just try a'dish—you'll
marvel at how each succeed*,
ing spoonful is a new taste
thrill in itself. Nor is that all
. . . you can have it in two
forms—bulk or brick—to suit
your preference or needs!
CURLEW CREAMERY
KIMBERLEY. Aug. 34—Playing it
Ooal Crwk, Klmbtrley wu htld to t
four-goil drew. In thi tint half tht
young local turn wt a hot pace and
run the Klmberley boyt off their feet
for the flnt 30 mlnutu, icoring
through L. Atkinson, I, Atkinson and
Slmpton. Beveril attempt* by Klmberley ware cleared by Sopka the goalie.
Finally a penalty given for handa
agalnit McNay, tht homt lift btck,
enabled Fluids to reduce the lead.
Klmberley wu now betting mort Into
thi picture tnd centers by Dtvldton
and Engllih wtnt begging.
It wu a* good, clttn gamt, and wtll
htndled by Referee J. Riley. Coll
Crwk hu tht mtking of a gntt
team, practically all In tbelr 'teens.
It wu tough luck for Coal Creek
after having iuch • comfortable letd,
but Klmberley played a grett uphill
gtme ln the wcond half tnd no ont
oould begrudge them thtlr share of
tht spoils.
Lineups:
Coal Crwk—Ooal, Sopka: backi,
McNiy, T. Ferguson: H. backs, J.
Milbum, Plrle. R. Perguion; forwards,
L. Atkinson, E. Atktnton, Johnitone,
Slmpton, Smith,
Klmberley—Goal, R. Brown; backi,
Johnes md Oold; half backi, J. McFarlane. Greenland, B. Brown, Engllih.
PRESERVING PEACHES
B.C.  OKANAGAN  ELBERTA
Peaches Are at Their Peak Now
This Season Is the Earliest
on Record
Order Now From Your Qrocer
and Avoid Disappointment
NATIONAL FRUIT CO., LTD.
WHOLESALE FRUITS AND VEGETABLES
Alice Siding to
Talk Irrigation
Creston People Spend Holidays in Windermere
creston. Aug. Jt -The Allot Sid*
Ing dlitrict, which adjolna the village
to the wett, and only wetlon ot the
valley thtt lacks irrigation, win dtl*
cuts thla very prewlng problem at a
m-etlng of the orchardliU. which It
called for Saturday evening. Tht
witer aupply it vtry urgent. For tlmoit five monthi commencing at April tha vtllty hw had len than thrw
Inchei ot rainfall. Fortunately lut
fill md tht hetvy mow of the mild
winter of 1933-34 produced a wonderful moisture tupply md to date the
tree fruits are not yet ihowlng the
effects ot the prolonged dry spell.
Mr. and Mn. W. Defoe of Ntlton
htve been vltltlng with tbt latter's
parenU, Mr. and Mn. W. Ferguion.
Mr. ind Mn. w A. Mlllen and ton,
i,( uis, ire twty on a vltlt it the old
homt it Wetuklwln. A1U.
[** Dr. J. Oliver, In company with D.
Donkln, an ipendlng a ttw dtyi In
Spoktne thlt week, leaving on Wedneidiy.
Joy, Mlu Effle md Mn. John Ar-
rowtmlth, Mn. O. A. M. Toung Md
Mlu Evt Holmu got tway by auto
yetterdty on t ten-day auto visit over
the Banff-Windermere highway, with
a few days' in etmp it Banff-
Robert Cime ot Sunihlnt Bty hit
trrlvtd tnd will be associated wltb
W. V. Jtckion In fruit Inspection
work it Wynndel, Creiton ind Irlckion tgtln this wuon,
While vendor H. W. McLaren li
twty on vicitlon *V government
store it Creiton, It ln charge of Mr.
Guthrie of Crmbrook.
B.C ALONE UP IN
FRUIJ PRODUCTION
OTTAWA. Aug. 34 (CP)—Preliminary .estimates of production tbow
thlt British Columbli li the only
provlnw where tn Increue ln the
fruit crop It Indlotted thla year.
aeoordlnr to t report Issued todiy
by the dtpirtment of agriculture.
Apple cropt ln Ontario tnd Que
bee will be materially reduced, ow.
ing to wlnUr killing and frost it
blouom tlmi, tht nport tUtea Tht
drought alw had an advent tffect
ln Ntw Bruns'"i_" md Nova Scotla,
whlli In prince Edward Mind mtny
apnli md plums tnei wen winter
killed.
Butter
TALM DAIRIES LTD.
Ice Cream
Milk
ROSSLANDERS
HOLD PICNIC
ROSSLAND, Aug. 94—Thi annual
picnic ot St. Andrew'! Unlttd church
wu held at Pittenon, Wtdnuday
tfttrnoon. Mothen tnd childnn
wen ttktn out it noon, ind tbe
men wen conveyed to tht ground!
when thty ctme off shift it four
o'clock.
Following were tht wlnnen in the
virloui events:
Races, 3 to |, glrla—Juni Ptlmtr,
flnt. Marilyn Turner, woond, jetn
McMartin, third,
Boys.- oerry Cleu. flnt, Herbert
Oiln_. wcond, John Bulck, third.
OlrU, S to T—Ruth Lynn, flnt,
Viols Lanon, aecond.
Boys—Irvin palmer flrat, Jack
Melville,  wcond.
Olrlt, T to 0—Jeannette Hutton,
flnt, Olive philllpi, wcond.
Boyt—Ltwrence Cltgg, flrtt, Arthur Dontldson, wcond.
Olrls. 0 to 13—Mtrgmt McKiy,
flnt, Florence Corrsdo. wcond.
Boys—Dcnnlt Beams, flnt, Jtck
Cot. ncond.
Olrli, 13 to 1J—Jetn Bulck, tint,
Doreen Jamleson, wcond,
Boys—Mike Harrlton, flnt, Fred
Erskine, wcond.
Olrla, 15 and over—Alll Hermans,
tint, Winnie Morris, wcond.
Boyi—Ttd Nichols, flnt. Mike Htrrlion ind Fnnk Blackwell, (Uld),
lecond.
Ladlw' mil driving contest—Mrs.
Olovtr, flnt, Mn. Uttley, wcond.
Mrt. Donaldson, third.
Olrlt' sack not—Mirgiret Bulck,
flnt. Jean Bulck, wcond, Doc-*en
Jtmitton, third.   .
Boyi' wck rice—Dennli Beams
•nd John Trtfford (tied) flnt, Jick
Cos, wcond.
Olrlt' ihot net—Slpld Andenon,
flnt, Helen Turner, second, Allot
Larson, third.
Boyt' ahot nee—Jtmw Urquhtrt,
tint, Auitln Bathlt, wcond.
Olrli' thrw legged net — Jttn
Bulck and Alll Hermans, first. Berths
Dupperon md Slgrld Anderson, wcond.
Boys' obtUcli nee- 14 ind under
Dennis Beams, llrst. Jack cox,
wcond: 14 and over—Dtvld Jorgen.
ton, flnt, Mike Hirrlwn, itcond.
Nelsonito Is
ot Silverton
Sweet corn will low 00 per cent of
IU sugar ln 34 houn tfter picking In
wtrm wetther. Peu tell the wme
itory. And If thtw vegetable! trt
htld ln btgt ln ltrgt piles, thty provide thilr own heat to hasten tht decline Jn quality.
SILVERTON, Aug. 34—Elmer Tettrli
of Ntlwn ll a guwt of hit unit, Mn.
E. sunton, for a wwk or to.
Mn. M. Emerson ud wn Land
were visitors to Ntlwn Tuudty.
Mlu R. Johnaon and Mlw H. Matht*
•on wtrt Ntw Denver visitors
Mlw D. WhlU wu t guwt of Mlw
M. McAulay at thl Galena Farm,
Wedneidiy.
K. Popoff of Sloctn City wu a
buslneu visitor Wednetdty.
Mr . M. Melby and daughter Ltla
havt returned from a ftw dayi' vlalt
with friends ln Sandon.
Year in and year out, Kellogg's Corn Flakes
give you the outstanding value in cereals.
Now, during the hot weather, there are
special features on Kellogg's Corn Flakes—*
;cr value than ever.
Nothing tastes quite so good, on a Hot
summer morning, as a howl of crisp, crunchy
Kellogg's Corn Flakes with cool milk or cream.
With fresh fruits or herries they're a breakfast
fit for a king! Delicious for lunch or a bedtime snack. An ideal supper for children.
Light and easy to digest, yet full of energy and
nourishment-
Buy all the Kellogg's Corn Flakes your
family can eat Order several packages from
your grocer today, and take advantage of ths
Season's Biggest Valve. Made by Kellogg
in London, Ontario.
 -THI NILSON DAILY NIWS, NELSON, B.C-SATURDAY MORNINO, AUGUST 25, 1984-
Wf&
^SS^iA.
*v
■i •*•■
FpiuM.W. Locke ifcoe for men wis
licientincallyrJuigne-lbyDr.M.
IW. Loeko o. WiUiamiburi, Canada,
-rhooocem»detheiUtementth«ti(all
toun wm to wear M. W. Locke thorn
|tor all caauSoiu but few would need
(to visit hii clinic (or teet treatments
to correct bodily diaorders.
IGirt tu S chance to demotntrate th*
feature* that have made the M. W.
(Locke ihoe a tucceu—let ui pre
scribe the proper type shoe for yoor
feet—let u tllp on a pair of theae
famous ihow—and then if yon don't
Ldmit that wt know "our feet" we
|giviup.
^SOCIETY
social nature, including receptions.
private enterUlnnitnti, personal
items, marriages, etc.. will ippetr
in thli column. Telephone Mri.
Vlgneux at htr home, 919 Silica
R» Andrew & Co.
Ltadtrt in Footfathion
Hiving bwn official operator of tbt
guillotine In Prince for SS years, Anatoli Jowph Delbltr, now 7* ywn of
age, plant to retire. Hit retirement
meant thi end of a family connection with thi Job Of executioner. Hit
father and grandfather terved in tl.a
ottlce, but Dtlbler letvei no wn,
Word hu bwn notlvtd thit Mr.
and Mn. J. A. Irving ind their
childnn Stewirt ind Mirgtry. who
in on an extended motor trip to
the cout and have bwn at crescent
Beach, vmeouvtr, tor wmi tlmi,
will be returning homi tht latter
8art ot nut wwk, En route homi
My will vlalt In spoktne at tht
homt of their ion-ln-_iw md dtughter, Mr. and Mn. Robert Onen.
.   .   .
Ill*   Mlssei   liawes,   Silver   King
roid, lift yuterdiy to apend a vicitlon   In   Vancouver,   when  their
•later Mlw Mary Hawes resides.
aet
Mn. A. C. Bash tnd tont Bobby
md Jimmy hive returned from
Wenatchee, wash,, where they hive
•pent tbi put coupli ot months
vlaltlng it Mr. Rasch's parents homt.
They were tcoompmleo home by
Mr. Rath, who motored down for
tht-n.
• • •
A mut enjoyable golf tournament wu held Thundty ifternoon
at thi Helton Oolf tnd Country
elub after which tea wu wrved.
The honon of tbe game wen won
by Mlw M. Cameron and Mn. John
Cartmal. Among thow tttending
wen Mn. w. Wtldo Ferguwn, Mlw
Eltli Llndberg, of Idaho: Mlw M.
Cameron, Mn. John cartmel, Mn.
Otorte Ut Wirner, Mn. Ctrl 'A.
Ltnon, Mn. Jamw O'Shtt, Mn. W.
M. Cunllffe, Mn. 0. W. Appleyard,
Mra. A. O. Mickty, Mn. Reginald II.
Dill, Mlw Helen Murphy. Mn. Harold lakes. Mn, J. D. Notman, Mn.
W. V. P. Clery, Mn. Lawnnct McPhall, Mn. Hugh w. Robertion, Mn.
William Ttylor, Mn O. Spencer
Oodfrey. Mlw Jean Wildle, Mn. L.
V. Rogen, Mlw Connie Smltb. Mn.
Ouy w. Dtvli, Mri, P. F. Payne,
Mn. E. A. Murphy and Mra, Roy
Pollard.
let
Mlw Constance V. joy, who hu
bwn tht guwt of htr parentt. Mr.
tnd Mn. B. O. Joy, Mill itrwt,
lift yuttrdiy for hir home in Vincouver.
i  •  •
E. M. Sandllands of Kaslo wu In
Recent vltlton In Ntlwn Included
Mrs. L. F. quince and Mlw Lela
Quince of Robeon.
• •   t
Mn.  D. 0. McKw of Trail and
family havt returned afttr a vlalt
tt tht homt of Mr. tnd Mn. J. M.
Armitrong, Silver King roid.
• t   .
Mn. Stewart of Vancouver, who
bu btan vlaltlng htr ton-ln-liw
ud daughter, Mr. md Mn. 0. I*
undon, ln Orand Forkl hu been
tht guwt of Mr. ud Mn. chirlu
P.   Hunter,   Jowphlne   itrwt.   sht
hu returned to Ortnd Forkt.
• •   •
Mn. Martin Dally of Rowland la
ln th* olty a guwt it thi homt of
her ton-ln-liw ind daughter, Mr,
tnd Mn, R. E. Crerar.
• •   •
Ouy Morty of Tnll It the guwt
of hli parenU, Mr. and Mri. p, a.
Morey, Hoover itrwt.
• •   •
K Nolan of South slocan vliltid
Nelwn ywterdiy.
let
Among ihoppen In tbt city yeiterdiy wu Mn. J. H. Wtmlty of
Crescent Bay who wm accompanied
by her dtughter, Mrs. T. w. Smith.
• a   •
Mr. and Mn. A. T. Ptrk. Richard
atrwt, hive nturned trom t ftw
dayi iptnt In Spoktne, the guwt
of thdr ton, Melvln Ptrk.
• •   •
Mn. innw of vtlUcin vlilted tht
city yesterdiy.
• •   •
Mn, Hendirwn-Cltlind, formerly
of Procter tnd now reildlng ln Toronto, wltb ber daughter, Mlw Rose*
ratrli, who attends school In Montretl, wire In thi dty yesterdiy.
They were accompanied by Mrs. D.
S, Taylor of Sunshine Bay whom
they are visiting.
.   .   .
Mn. L. D. Ctrncrow of Moow Jtw,
w|th her dtughter Mlu Joyce, having
ipent the put. mouth in Nelion,
a guut at tbt borne of hir parent*.
Mr. tnd Mn. A. T. Pirk, left yea*
terdty for tbl coast en route home.
.   .   .
Mlw Bltnche Htrrla, who visited
Mlat Mary potoiky, Kerr apart*
mtnU, ltft ywterdiy for South Slocm when ihi will be tht guwt of
Mr. tnd Mn. Jowph Potoiky, tn
route to her homt ln vmeouvtr.
• • . •
Mn. M. Scaliy, Observatory street,
hu u btr gunt, her nephew, Emll
Plsapla of Tnll,
t   .   .
Mr. md Mra. w. waldo perguion,
High atrwt, bave as their guest,
it their Willow point home, Mrs.
Ferguson's cousin, Mist Elsie Llndberg ot Idaho.
• *   •
Mr. tnd Mn. J. M. Armstrong.
Silver King rotd, hive hid it tbelr
houw guute, Mrs. W. J. Hill of
White Rock, B C*. who hu returned.
• a   •
Mn. Julet corbett of San Franclico, Calif., nturned yuterday trom
Balfour where ihe hu been the
guwt of Mr. md Mn. Frederick P.
Burden tt Btl'our.
• ,e   i
Jick weir who bit iptnt thi paat
couple of wwkt vltltlng hU parents,
Mr. and Mn. Jtmu Weir. 1103 Stan-
Ity itrwt, left ywterdiy by motoi
for hla home in Vincouver. Hi wu
accompanied homi by Mr. and Mn.
Earl Forsyth and aon John of Vucouver, who tpent their vicitlon
•t Bilfour.
• •  •
Thi Honorable Bull Aylmer of
Queens Bty ww ihopplng In Nelton yeiterdiy.
• •  •
Among city visitors yuterday wu
J. Stenaon of Wlnliw.
tat
Mn.   Lewli   Johnstoni   ud   her
Gets $i8,ooo Violin
§AffIW/IY§¥©RI§
't^Vdnu of Quality
Phont 153
Mondoy
2 Lbi. ICING SUGAR:
1 Lb. SWIFTS LARD:
Vt Lb. WALNUTS: Broken
Volu* 55c
SALAD DRESSING: Kraft's
12-oz. jar  21*
CORN FLAKES: Kellogg's; 3 for Sit*
KETCHUP: Aylmer .... 12-oz. ML 17?
PEAS: Aylmer Sieve 5 2 tins 23*
PINEAPPLE: W
Llbbyt tVea. 2 tint  vu
431
CLEANSER: Royal Crown; 2 tins 15?
'MATCHES: Sesqui Pksf. 18?
PURE EXTRACT: Vanilla or Lemon;
Bottle   19?
KRAFT'S CHEESE: ftl.... Each 16?
MAXIMUM TEA: K*4
Flntit Ortngt Piko»-lb  TtW
SARDINES: Brunswick .... 4 tins 28?
ROYAL CROWN SOAP  22?
LAUNDRY STARCH: White Gloss;
Pkf.  10?
LUX SOAP:
4 bin
23<
GRAHAM WAFERS: I.B.C.; Pkg. 19?
MILK: Small  5 tins 23?
BUTTER: Highway, First Gfade;
3 lbs.
67?
COFFEE:
Mtxwallhouie—lb.
39<
TOMATOES Freih Field 5 lbs. 19c
ORANGES:
PEACHES
FRUITS
Sunkist
3 doz. 69?
Basket 25?
Basket 10?
Doz. 29?
CORN:
Doz. .,
PICKL
LETTU
CUCUS
VEGETABLES
Middleton'!-. Bantam;
2!V
PLUMS
BANANAS
LEMONS
NG ONIONS
CE 	
IBER     ...
4 lbs. 25?
2 heads 15?
2 for   5?
Freight Poid on Orders of $10.00 or Over.
•'PRESERVING  No. Is : Crate fl.49
Buy Now!     No. 2s Crate fl.29
PEACHES
Phone 153
Dependable Meats
Prat Delivery
Baby Beef, Round Steak Lb. 15?
Rump Roasts Baby Beef Lb. 15?
Hamburger: Fresh 3 lbs. 25?
Breakfast Sausage   Lb. 10?
Boneless Beef Stew  2 lbs. 19?
Boiling Beef 5 lbs. 25?
Milk Fed Veal
Rump and Leg Roasts Lb. 15?
Veal Steaks: Meaty   2 lbs. 23?
Veal Chops: Choice 2 lbs. 29?
Veal Fillet Roast  Lb. 20?
Veal Stew: Rib 3 lbs. 25?
POT ROASTS-Lb. sc-9c-10c
Genuine Baby Lamb
Lamb Shoulders Lb. 13?
Lamb Chops: Meaty  Lb. 18?
Lamb Stew 3 lb». 25?
Pork, Tenderloin   Lb. 25?
Heavy Milk Fed Fowl: Choice, Fresh
Birds   Lb. 19?
Ayrshire Bacon  Lb. 32?
Swift's Welners Lb. 22?
Cooked Corned Beef   Lb. 18?
Swift's Bologna Lb. 18?
Roast Pork—Dressing   Lb. 45?
Spiced Ham: Swlffa   Lb. 45?
Swift's No. I PicnUs Lb. 20?
JUDITH  P08KA
An $18,000 violin wu Efrem Zim-
baliit't gift to Judith Poikt, shown
here, 22*year-old concert leader at
a radio ttatlon ln Loi Angeles. A
former student of the world famous
virtuoso, she was termed by him a
genius and "the only deserving girl
violinist I know."
Kimberley Young
Couple Married
Christina T. M. Williams I«
Bride of Christopher
P. Nesbltt
KIMBERLEY, B.C., Aug. 24. - On
Mondty it 9:30 tm. tbtrt wti a qulit
wedding tt thi United Church mlnu,
when Chrlitlna Thelma Miy Wil*
Htm-, diughter of Mr. tnd Mri. Arnold Wtlllimi of Crtnbrook, becime
tht brldt of Christopher Petnon Nesbltt, ildttt ion of Mr. tnd Mrt. Ernest Nesbltt of Klmberley. Rtr. R. V.
Crlbb performed the ceremony. T.ie
brldi wu given twty by her brother.
Alex Wlllltmi. and wtt attended by
MIm Nellie Miller of Cranbrook is
brtdeimild. Robert Dlcken, tt. wtt
bett mtn. *
Afttr tbt ceremony tht pirty ut
down to wedding bretkfut it the
bomt of tht groom'i pirtnti. Thi
hippy couplt ltft by ear for a two
week'i honeymoon at Moou Jtw and
eutern pointi when tbty will vlilt
frlendi tnd rilttlvti.
On thilr return thty will mike
thtlr borne In Hippy Villey, Klmberley*
Mr. tnd Mn. R. W. Woody of Spoktnt win wiekend vlilton to Klmbtrley, vliitlng Mr. and Mn. X. W.
Moody Sr., tnd othir frlendi. Thiy
were iccompinled by Mr. Woody'i
•liter, Mn. McBride of Spokane.
MIm D. Hild hu ltft on vacation.
Shi will motor to Spoktnt and Ktl-
ownt. Milt Huel Wlllltmi of tbe
Btnk of Montrul itaff wtnt wltb htr.
Dr. tnd Mrs. ^Rowland nturned on
Tuudty from a week'a holiday at the
oout.
Mlu Dorothy WllUimi who hu
been vliitlng Mlu Corrlm Irlckion.
Morrlion lub-dlvltlon for tht put
week, hu returned to her homt ln
Ythk.
Mlu Agnei Lochrie of Colemtn li
the guut of Mlu Onct Graham.
dtughter, Jacqueline, wbo hat bun
a   pttlent   In   tbo  Kootenty   Ukt
Oenenl hotplttl, left yetterdty foi
their home In Stlmo.
ttt
Mr. tnd Mn. John Cunningham,
Third itreet, Fairview, nturned yet-
terdty morning after a three weeka
vlilt to relatives in Winnipeg.
I .a.' t
Mr. tnd Mrt. M. Cameron of Sloctn City htvt u their guetts, thtlr
ton Arthur Cameron, tleo Mln Miry
Coli of Vancouver.
• •   •
Erneit Andrew of Vmeouvtr hu
bten tbe gueet ot Mr. tnd Mn. J.
M. Armitrong.
ttt
Mr. and Mn. Arthur roeter. Fair-
view, have had as their guute, Mr.
and Mri. Q. L. Ltndon of Orand
Forks, who have left for Klmberley.
• ..   t
Mn. Wllllim Campbell of Robson vletted Nelion yuterdiy,
.   .   .
Mn. Gordon Rlchirdton, a recent bride, wu guut of honor at a
miscellaneous shower given tt thi
home of Mr. ind Mn, William
Htrkneu, Josephine itreet, with the
Mines Annie tnd Jun Htrknest
•nd Ruth tnd Ellen linden at
hostesses. The many gifts were presented ln a novelty designed box
taking the form ot a gaily decorated
houie A gold horu ihoe hanging
over th* door wu tied with ortngt
biottomt and tllver ribbon. An ef
fective decoration icheme wu carried out in green pink and gold.
Pale pink chryunthemumt centered
the ttblt and dainty gold hone
shoes wen uud as attractive pltct
cards. Tbe evening wu tpent In
gtmu contests tnd music Tbt
mutlc wu tupplled by Mlu Mtrgirtt
Orthtm. Prises were won by Mn.
Rlchirdton and Miss Muriel Bten-
ton. Invited guests were Mlu Mtr-
gant orthtm, Mn. Percy 0. Ooggln.
Mn. Fred Stringer. Mn. Walter
Htrkneu, Mlu charlotte, Jtffi, Mlu
Anne Linden, Mlu Muriel stin-
•on. Mlu Lent Llmacher. Mlu Jeule
Croll, Mlu Oltdys Jarrett, Mn. F
Carmichael, Mlu Stella Patterson,
Mrs. H. Ntlton, Mn. H. Bryint, of
Klmberley, Mlu Beatrice Mathews,
Mn. A. I. Stevenson. Mlu Lillian
Bennett, Mlu Freda Letpuek, Mlu
Lotm Rogers and Mrt. O. Sutcliffe,
• «   •
A ptrty ot tig Including Mn. Reginald H. Dill, MUs Jean Waldie, Mrs
J. D. Notman, Mrs. A. E. Murphy,
MIm Elsie Oininer and Mlu Norah
Ellla ot chllllwaek. hive nturned
from a canoe trip to Kokanee.
• •   ■
Shoppen In tht city Thundty In*
eluded Mr. tnd Mri, Mtrwln L.
quanct of Robion.
RANGOON, Indli, (OF)-Cuitomi
authorltlu frulttrited a clever ruu
to smuggle cocaine, whtn they uluc
50 ouncei ot the dope hidden In bun*
boo chairs.
PAGE FIVE
Basement Specials
Our Basement Offers Unbelievable Surprises in Bargains.
Below we have listed some of the great values offered in
our Basement this Saturday morning.
Black Cashmere Hose
All-wool black cashmere hose. Assorted sizes. A real bargain at—-
THE PAIR   28?
18'Inch Embroidery
' 18-inch embroidery. White. Regular
75c the yard.
THE YARD   10?
Flannelette
e
Good heavy striped flannelette. Regular value 40c the yard.
THE YARD   19?
54-Inch Coating
54-inch all-wool coating. Regular
value $4.50 the yard.
THE YARD   19?
Skirts, Dresses and
Children's Coats'
One rack of ladies' skirts, dresses
and children's coats. Wonderful values here at—
THE YARD  J1.95
Ladies' Coats
A good assortment of ladies' coats.
Sizes 14 to 18.
EACH  '.. *5.95
Ladies' Dresses
Ladies' silk dresses. Assorted colors
and styles. Sizes 16 to 20.
EACH  f3.95     (_
MEAGHER & CO.
607 BAKER ST, PHONE 200
WOMAN FLYER
GAINS FRIENDS
Jean nation's Wardrobe Reduced at Bach Stop
on Long Hop
Good	
Housekeeping
By Circle No. 4 of
St Paul'i Ladies' Aid
Nont but twttd niilpei
vlll bt lnwrte-1.     ,    .
RICH   CRISPY WAFFLES
IVi cupi flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
3-8 teaspoon silt.
1 cup mill.
Vt cup melted butter
Mix tnd sift dry ingrdeients beat
egg yolks until thick, add dry ingredient!, then butter that has been
melted and allowed to cool. Fold in
stiffly beaten egg whites and bake
on hot waffle iron. Serve with butter and Maple lyrup or with
creamed chicken.
CHOCOLATZ WAFFLI8 WITH
WHIPPED   CREAM
2 cups flour     	
PURITY
*      PLOUR
MAKES  BETTER  BREAD
8 teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon ult
y_ cup cocoa
1-3 cup melted ihortenlng.
Vi cup sugar
Vi cupi milk
2 eggs
V* teaspoon vanilla
Mix and lift all dry Ingredients*
The egg yolks beaten well. Tht
milk added and then the flour mixture lastly the stiffly beaten egg
whites. Serve with whipped cream
flavored with vanilla.
SOUR MILK OR CREAM WAFFLE
2 eggs
1 cup sour milk or crtam
3 tablespoons butter
1 level teaspoon soda
1 cup flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
Sift the flour add the btking
powder, soda, salt and all dry ingredients. Beat the yolks and whites
seperate add the sour milk or cream
to the beaten yolks, next the melted butter and finally the dry ingredients, last of all fold in the
whites blaten stiff. This makes a
light and very digestible waffle.
Mlu Jetn Batttn't lttt flight to Auitnlli from mglind brought btr
numbtr of flying hourt to 500.
Sht lift Inglind weiring a fur-
Uned tult, a woollen pullover, a tweed
tklrt and a lutbtr Jacket. Tht mt
of htr kit wti picked ln a amall corn-
pirtmtnt. Tht woollen pullover wu
ltft at /them, tht tweed skirt ttayed behind tt Syprui, and tha fur-
lined tult wtt lift at Damascus, to
be tint btck to Englmd. For the rttt
of hit Journey ihe flew ln tropical
kit, with a toltr helmet, which, iht
ttld, prevented lUnitrokt and averted .unburn.
Men tnd womtn wbo mtt MlM Btt-
ttn at tht ttatlon whtn tht itepped
off tht Sydney expreu admired htr
courage during htr flight, but thty
seemed mott of ill to like her vtry
feminine charm. Shi li mail and
allm, wltb dark, wavy hair, and she It
only 23. Sht hu tht polie which ututlly ll teeoclited only with those accustomed to deil wtth crowdi.
Oold crtam and cylinder htadi art
of equtl Importance to bir. With thi
court!' that ctrrled htr through htr
flight on tht third attempt *— the
"third tlmt It lucky," iht tald— the
It feminine enough to admit btlng
pleased btctuit tbt irrlved at Darwin
with a minimum of .unburn. Btfon
iht lift hir mother had filled a tmtll
eaat wltb ill torti of cold crtama tnd
•unburn lottoni, whtch iht found
tlmt, somehow, to utt.
Utt Batton't pltnt an aomewhat
Indefinite, but toon thl will bt mar-
rled to Colontl Edward Walter, an
inthualutlc amiteur aviator, who
lint one of tht wlngt of hli macblnt
to replace a damaged wing for htr
flight to Auttrtlli.
Butcherteria News
T. S. SHORTHOUSE
Phones 527—528 Free Delivery
SATURDAY tm MONbAY SPECKB
No. 1 Steer Beef
CHOICE ROLLED _ft*
ROA8T8-lb. *"*
PRIME   RIB  ROASTS-  JM
CHOICE POT ROASTS- QAA
No. 1 Young Lamb
CHOICE SHOULDERS- JJM
CHOICE LEOS- 22(
LEAN   STEWING-
Uta	
2#
Milk Fed Yeol
choice oven am*
ROASTS— Ib  *-*T
LEO  AND  LOIN fO/t
ROASTS —Ib.     *t-**--*T
LEAN   8TEAK8  AND      IM
CHOPS—Ib. *°*>
Extra Bargain!
BREAKFAST in^
8AU8AGE-lb,  mVT
FRESH   MINCED
STEAK—J  lb	
BOILING    BEEF-Lein
2#
25*
STEWING   VEAL— 2_t
GRADE B. EGOS- «<4
2  dtl.  JJw
Delicatessen
JELLIED VIAL- Mat
JELLIED CORNED  «M
BlrfF-lb.  -MF
POTTED MEAT-
Ib. 	
SPOKANE  COTTAGE     -BM
CHEESE-lb. : •***>>■
20*
LOCAL FRYERS
28C
WOMAN TRAVELS
300,000 MILES
German Journalist Reaches
Montreal in Course of
Globe-Girdling Jaunt
GRANTS PLANTA
WEEK'S REMAND
NANAIMO. Aug. 24 (CF)-Charg*
ed with fraudulent conversion of
the turn of 8200, allegedly received
from Mrs. Maris Cottle, Brechin,
B. C, on Termi requiring him to
pay tht stun to W. H. Jonei, executor of the estate of Henry Crew,
Senator A. I. Planta appeared in
pollce court today and was granted
a week's remand, the case to bc
heard before then if possible.
V. B. Harrison appeared for the
senator and requested a remand
since Mr. Planta i solicitor, J. Edward Bird of Vancouver, could not
be present. Bail of (1000 was set by
Stipendiary Magistrate C. H. Becv-
or-Potti.
Fnnea'i ntwttt lubmtrlnt. thi
Conquerint, wu launched recently
tt St. Nuiln.
Forelgnen trt bund from contracting marrlagu with cltlttnt of
Otrmtny unleta tbty produce regli-
trir'i certificate! from thilr own
countrlei thtt thtn li no ltgil or
other disability to thtlr entering wedlock.
MO.rn.EA.., (OP)—Fiw womin ean
bout of tbt variety of experiences
that hu fallen to tht lot pf Uly S.
King during thl put four yean.
Mn. Krug. t Oermin Journallat and
advertltlng writer, irrlved ln Montreil
recently, having worked htr wty for
mort than 300,000 mllu and vlalted
moat of tha gnat cltltt of tht world.
Afttr tht duth of ber huibtnd, Biln*
rich Wernir Krug, well-known Oerman caricaturist, ahi itarted on htr
trtvtli with llttle but hir courage.
Intelligence tnd pirtontllt; to tie
her through. And the hu managed
•omehow to kup going, though It hu
not alwaya bten tuy.
Versatility. Mn. Krug conildtn. ti
one ot tht emntltli lf ont li to bi
successful. "If I hid Insisted on taking only Journillitle work to do ln
tht places I htvt vlilted," iht uld,
"I ihould ntver have been tble to
gtt along. I havt tlwtyi taken what
work I could get, whether lt wu
work I wat accustomed to do or not,"
In addition to writing advertltlng
copy for a steamship company ln return for htr passage to South Americi, and writing articles for papen In
Buenot Aires, Osaka, and Bombay,
Mra. Krug hu been a governess In
Mexico and a "night-watchman" ln a
homt for working girls ln Niw York.
At her mott horrible experience,
Mn. Krug tald tf tht tlmi when thi
wu lott for a day and a half near the
great wall of China. "It wu the moit
terrible feeling I htvt ever hid," iht
laid. "Everything wai snow md Ice
and desert—not a hut, a person, or
a tlgn of lift anywhere At lut I
ttumbled upon tomt tricks, and atay-
eei In thtm, knowing thty mutt lud
•omewhtn. Afttr a long time I wu
overtaken by a cargo train on lta
way to Paging tnd wu glvm t lift,
but by tbt* tlmt wt retched tbt olty
the gttet wtrt cloud for tht night,
led I bid to lit outelde all night."
In ipltt of icmt hardships, Mri,
Krug enjoyed hir experiences, ind
wu described by a loctl reporter who
Interviewed her u "a vlva*cloui ltdy,
It enthusiastic u a cub reporter on
her flnt assignment." I
SAVINGS
FOR SATURDAY, MONDAY
AND TUESDAY
MILK—Small size 4 for Itt
MILK-Tall size    9*
CHICKEN HADDIB  .._ 19*
HERRINGS IN TOMATO SAUCE 13*
BRUNSWICK SARDINES 4 for 18*
SODAS-Christle's Pkg. 18*
LUX—Large packages .. 3 for 45*
ONIONS-Good size 6 lbs. 25*
PEACHES—Freestone Basket 29*
CANTELOUPES-2 for .... 25*; 8 for .... 25*
LEMONS-While they last   Doz. 20*
KELLOGG'S CORN FLAKES 3 for 25*
Horswill Bros.
Phons 235 Fret Delivery
WE
DELIVER
FREE
PHONES
831
832
VASSAR'S
CASH MEAT MARKET
Good Buying for Saturday and Monday
Choice Steer Beef
Rump Roasts, and Juicy
Round Steak: i_V
Lb  lJ
Rolled Prime Rib OA<?
Roasts: lb  LM
Good Pot Roast: Q*
Lb  0
Boiling Beef: OC*
5 lbs  LO
Boneless Stewing: IA*
Lb  IU '
Veal, Fillet Foasl:
Lb	
Veal Oven Roast: IO*
Vea'l Steaks and IC*
Chops: lb  W
Lamb Lege: OA*
Lb  LV
Lamb Stewing: OC*
3 lbs  L0
Lamb Chops: or*
2 lbs  JJ
18'
Creamery Butler With a
meat order: OO*
55*
Lb. 	
Frying Chicken:
Each  	
Swift's Weiners:      OA*
Breakfast Bacon: Fresh
■r*. 40*
Local Fowl: IC*
Lb.   *l«>
Eggs: Grade C; y|C«*
2 doz.  HtO
Hamburger: Fresh OC*
made; 3 lbs  LO
Frtah Breakfast IA*
Sausage: Ih  IU
Pure Urd: Oft*
2 lbs  LtO
Pork Steak: OA*
Pork Tenderloin:       OC*
Fresh; lb  LO
Jellied Veal: OC*
^       I
._,   _
 PAGi   SIX
Nrlamt  Hailij Ncuifi
Est* oliahed AprU S-   1902
"Interior of Brittsh Cilumbia's Fothj'Jj/ Newspaper"
AIX I*HE NIWS WHILE fl IS NEWS
published everj momma eicept Sunday by
the NIWS PUBLISHING COMPANY. UMITED.
lit    Baker    Street,    Nelson;    Brltlah    Columbia
PHON* 144, Private Exchange Connecting all Departments
Member  of   the   Audit   Bureau   ot   Circulations
and Tba Canadian Press Leaaad Wtre Newa Service
SATURDAY, AUGUST 25,  1934.
F. C. WHITEHOUSE
Nelson on Monday will say farewell to. one of
Kootenay's best known bankers, in the person of F. C.
Whitehouse.
Of Mr. Whitehouse "The Caduceus," staff magazine of the Canadian Bank of Commerce says:
"On 19th June, leave of absence prior to retirement on
pension was given to Mr. F. C. Whitehouse, Manager at Nelson,
B.C., whose 'Canadian and Other Poems' is reviewed on the
opposite page.,
"Mr. Whitehouso entered the service of the Bank at Walk-
ervllle, Ont., in 1903, and has held Managerships successively at
Melfort, Sask., (1908), Virden, Man. (1909), Red Deer, Alberta
(1913), and Nelson, B.C. (1920). During these thirty years he
has been known throughout the service as one of the most conscientious of bankers, who would swerve neither to the right
nor the left from what he believed to be the proper course. Not
satisfied to be only a successful banker, and having studious
tastes and a richly-stored mind, he has found in his leisure moments the joy of things which bring returns in currency other
than monetary—the currency of association with thc arts and
sciences."
Keenly interested in the natural science of a
country with virgin fields inviting workers, Mr. White-
house for years gave attention to.western insects and
fishes. A new dragonfly, discovered by him in the
Bighorn range, Alberta, was named after him by Professor E. M. Walker Somatochlora whitehou&ei, and a
like compliment was paid him by Professor J. R. Dy-
mond respecting the mountain trout of the West
Kootenay, which he named Salmo kamloops white* '
hcusei. This fish had been entirely overlooked by
science prior to 1920.
While literature has been a hobby with Mr. White-
house throughout his banking career, his more important work has been written during the fourteen
years residence at Nelson: viz, many essays, including
the Wilkie Scholarship on banking and "English Poetry Forms", now appearing in four parts in The Journal
of the Canadian Bankers' Association; a prairie novel,
"Plain Folks' (long out of print) and the delightful
volume of verse, published just recently, "Canadian and
Other Poems."
The people of this district will regret Mr. White-
hcuse's decision to retire and reside at Vancouver. Not
only has he made many friends during his residence in
Nelson but he has proved an able banker, while his
scientific ancT literary work has attracted widespread
attention to this city and district.
CONTRACT
BRILCE
By L V. Shepard
"TeMket el Teachers"
A DIFFICULT HAND
South did not havo a double-dummy problem to solve, even lt the correct method of play la difficult enough for a double-dummy stud;
South had to solve hla problems at the
table, and he did lt correctly.
Mtl
♦ 864
♦ AJ2
♦ K 10 0 7
3000 FEET BELOW AND THEN WHAT?
I      SILLY IDEAS FOR PLEASING IDIOTS
New York's latest idea for a marathon is an ice-
cake sitting competition for young women in bathing
suits. The first one was held recently in an all night
cafe and proved a moderate success.
. Six young women were chosen from the score or
so of timid applicants who answered an advertisement
for girls. The winner was to get a loving cup and a
?10 bill, the losers cash prizes.
Sharply at midnight the half dozen girls marched
out in their bathing suits. The band played. They sat
down on the ice. Each had under her three blocks of
ice piled one on top of the other and standing about
four feet high.
After the first 10 minutes a reporter walked up
to them and asked how they felt. "Fine," said one.
"Swell," said another.
After an hour and 10 minutes passed two of the
girls got Off the ice voluntarily. They said they were
cold. Five minutes later a customer offered another
$10 if she would get off the ice as a personal favor to
him, and she accepted'with alacrity. That left two
competing for the trophy. At 4:46 a.m. one more
abandoned her perch, leaving Barbara Searle undisputed queen Of the ice-cakes.
The best that can be said for the ice-cake marathon idea is that it is no more foolish than tree-sitting
contests.
♦ A Q 10 8 4 S
♦ 10t
♦ A6J2
Bidding went: South, 1 spade; West,
2 hearts; North, 2 spades, rather than
bid his weak club suit; Eaat. 8 hearts;
Bouth, 4 spades. Both aides were vulnerable. East doubled, aa ls often
done, on a gamble, but neither member of the declaring side ventured to
redouble.
The opening lead waa the K of
hearts. East signalled to come-on,
but West thought his only chance to
defeat the hand was to obtain a club
ruff. He led his 4 of clubs. The declarer Immediately Identified the lead
aa a singleton. There appeared to be
no other reason for stopping heart
leads.
Dummy's K won the trick, for two
reasons. Tha declarer wanted to be
back of the club honors which he calculated East held, and he wanted to
at once lead trumps from dummy. If
West held the missing K of spades,
South would he down. Be had to
loaj a diamond trick and at least ons
club trick. Two major ault tricks
would defeat hla contract. The J of
spades held ths trick. The t ot spades
brought out the K. The ace picked up
the last outstanding trump.
The 10 of diamonds waa led, finessed, and loat to East's Q. East led the
Q of hearta. Declarer ruffed. South
proceeded to strip the hands, ready
for an end play, which he regarded aa
hla only hope of fuUtlUng the doubled
contract.
South led his last diamond. Dum*
my's ace won. The declarer led back
dummy's last diamond and ruffed.
East's last diamond alao fell. This
completed the eighth trick.
A low trump put dummy ln ths
lead with the 9, for which that card
had been reserved. Eaat had. to let
go his lowest heart. Dummy's last
heart was led. On It went East's last
heart. The declarer ruffed with his
last spade. Below are shown ths laat
three cards held by dummy, East and
South, respectively. In clubs.
Dummy—10 9 7
East—Q J 8      ■ i
Declarer—A 6 S
Two trlcka had already been lost.
South gate East' bis last trick, by
leading hla lowest club. Dummy's 9
forced East's J. That player had to
lead up to a tenace, giving the declaring side the last 2 tricks, and doubled
game contract. South played the hand
beautifully.
WHAT THE PRESS
IS SAYING
Notwithstanding tbe great number
of cases where tbe Injection treatment or hemorrhoids (piles) ' haa
proven successful, there are still a
large number of patlenta wbo refuse
even to consult a physician or surgeon regarding this metbot4 of getting rid of hemorrhoids.
One can understand the fear of an
operation, and also the desire to avoid
tbe expense ittd loss of time of an
operatlo. , but there ls really no reason why a patient should not undergo
this Injection method.
Now every caae of hemorrhoids cannot be treated by this new method—
those that are Infected, those that
are outside the body or perhaps be
cause of other conditions. However
the Injection of the ordinary "internal" hemorrhoids with no complications should give as good results as
the usual operation.      *
There ls no cutting; the patient
loses no time from work; there are
no hospital expenses, no general anaesthetic, no after sickness ss wltb an
opelatlon.
As you know a hemorrhoid or pile
ls Just a varicose .vein and can be
Injected Jutt the same as if It were
on the calf or other part of tbe body.
Varloua solutions are being used for
injection purposes, the needle being
pl'inged Into tbe hemorrhoid for Just
two-fifth to three-fifth of an Inch at
most. This solution simply causes the
hemorrhoid to gradually dry up.
There ls really no after care aa a
rule; tbe patient Is Instructed to keep
the waste contents of the bowel moving every day by the use of two or
three doses of paraffin or mineral oil
dally. This Is beat given ln table-
spoonful doses after breakfast and the
evening meal, or on rising and retiring.
and retiring.
Sometimes this amount of oil Is
not sufficient and more may be taken
aa lt ls quite safe. Some physicians
recommend tbe use of castor oil lf
the paraffin oil ls not effective.
Just as with tbe operation for
hemorrhoids so the patient after tbe
Injection method must not strain at
stool or In lifting any heavy object.
Finally, the number of esses tbat
have to return for further treatment
some time later Is not any larger after
tbe Injection method than after the
usual  cutting operation.
THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C-SATURDAY MORNING, AUGUST 26,1934
INJECTION METHOD OF CURING
HEMORRHOIDS OR PILES
BV JAMES W. BARTON, M.D.
KING COBRA
ByMARKCHANNING
Who hu lived for twenty-one yeara ln tht country
that he so graphically describes.
WEEKLY WEATHER BULLETIN
For western and central Canada.
embracing British Columbia, Alberta;
Sask tchewan, Manitoba and Ontario.
Monday, August 37—About 'lis
time a sudden and considerable decline ln temperature, accompanied
by mild storm and rains, especially
along southern border sections.
Tuesday, August 28k—Suddenly cool,
unsettled weather conditions drift to
southeastern sections; tending to
clear ln north and temperatures rising about west and northwest.
Wednesday, August 20—Rather cold
and quite general rains, especially
about southeast sections: temperatures rising and some clearing ln
west.
Thursday, August 30—Rains become
scattering, drift to southeastern sections and temperatures ln west and
northwest suddenly decline.
Friday, August 31—Unsettled conditions continue, but a cool wave comes
in from northwest, where there Is
some clearing.
Saturday, September 7—Expecting a
few showery rains about central and
southeast sections clear and cool
weather generally, though slightly
ristjg temperatures tn west.
Sunday, September _— Somewhat
unsettled weather about most of central regions, but ln general temperatures rapidly rising about tbe west.
Week August 37 to September 3,
ln central provinces begins with a
sudden decline In temperatures and
the commencement of mildly stormy
conditions throughout most ot the
country. This begins tbe cool weather
of autumn ln tbli country, although
around the first of September tern *,
peratures should rise considerably.
The week Is expected to be unusually
unsettled with more than normal
precipitation ln nearly aU sections,
and especially about the southeast.
The cool wave near the 31st may bring
on killing frosts about tbe northern
plateau sections.
North of parallel 53, or on tbe north
side of the Saskatchewan river basin,
August ls the last warm month of
the year. On thll account any considerable decline ln temperatures
such as ls expected about the last
part of this August, ls likely to bring
on very chilly nights and ln the
plateau sections frosts. To the south
there ls very much less danger of
frost, but the low temperature at
this time may at least be expected
to end tbe growing seaaon In nearly
all these regloni and bring to full
maturity all field crops. There will
probably be much cloudy weather and
somewhere near normal moisture,
these tending to render tbe cool spell
less severe at the end ot this month.
ON THE AIR TONIGHT
CANADIAN RADIO
COMMISSION   NETWOBK
6:55 Can. Press news
6:00 Acadian Serenade
6:30 Bert Anstlce's Mountain Boys
7:00 Charles Dornberger's orch.
7:30 Newa and weather forecaat
7:3- Whlteman's orch., N.B.C.N.Y.
8:00 Melody Moods
8:30 Mart Kenny's orch.
FJR
9.0
Night
A traveler ma; go by motor car and
ooat ln a fairly straight line on the
earth's surface for 24.900 mllea and
so return to the starting point, aup-
posln 'that he oould follow the equator all' the way. But lf the traveler
attempts to leave the earth to go upward In a straight Una he ia likely to
rise no more than 72.000-feet: that la
the altitude record, made with fatal
results by three Russian balloonist*
last January. If the traveler attempts
to go Into the sea, he must descend
more than 3,028 feet to beat the record Just mado by Dr. William Beebe.
Beyond that depth, no man has ever
gone alive Into the ocean's darkness.
Dr. Beebe came to the surface with
his colleague, Otis Barton the other
day .to describe a great fish, twenty
feet long, Illuminated with phosphorescent lights. It glided near hla diving bell like a gray shadow and vanished into ths gloom. Thl) will
strengthen the belief that ocean
f> :hs below the half-mile line probably conceal many forms of sea life
unknown to man. Moat specimens of
deepwater flah observed ao far have
been dreadful ln appearance because
of their'enlarged moytha, protruding
eyes or Illuminated bodies, but thsy
have been relatively small compared
with the specimen Dr. Beebe saw this
week.
The dim regions Int. vhlch this ei-
plorar descended seem so near the
surface ot the earth that, even an lm*
sulnatlve persona finds It hard to
think of the ocean bottom only a
mlla down as a segment of the earth
strange to man. It ls Just as though
there were unmapped Jungles within
ten minutes' walk of Times Square.
What makes such a region so fascinating la the possibility that tan may
eventually devise waya of descending
five mllea Into the ocean, and of picturing a small area of that bottom on
motion picture films. It seems more
feasible than reaching the moon. If
the ocean's greatest depth Is 35,400
FREEDOM OF TBE PRESS
Canadians are among nine per cent
of the world's people   who   receive
their dally news without the Inter*
ference of censorship.
The extent of censorship of the
press waa brought out forcibly by
Floyd 8. Chalmers, editor of the Financial Post ln an address which he
delivered to the Canadian Weekly
Newspapers Association, meeting In
Montreal.
In pointing out that Canada Is one
of the few countries ot ths world
where the press ls free, Mr. Chalmcs
expressed the view that this was be-
caus* the Dominion was one of the
few countries where the citizen en-
Joys personal liberty, and where democracy survives.
Rome Interesting facta were brought
out by Mr. Chalmers in the course of
his address. He pointed out that at
th present time, two-thirds of the
population of the world are Uvlng
under rigid and complete censorship,
not only of newspapers but of other
media of public Information and education.
Merely denying (he public the news
of what Is going on at home and
abroad ls the leaat of the crimes committed by the political dictators in
the countries where the press ls controlled by the Oovernment as ln Italy,
Oermany and many other countries.
The dictators go further and require
newspapers to publish misinformation so that the public will believe
exactly what the leaders want them
to believe. Mr. Chalmers points out
that the crime la positive aa well as
negative.
The newspapers of Canada have an
opportunity that la denied thousands
of newspapers in other countries.
This opportunity however implies
responsibility. The freedom must be
uaed unselfishly for the public good,
to promote the bast Interests of society and the atate.—London (Ont.)
Free Press.
N.B.C.-KOO NETWORK
KHQ   KOW   KFI   KOO  KOMO
(530      820     640     790     820
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7:30 Whlteman's    Saturday
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8:15 Carefree Carnival
8:15 Tom Oemn's orch. (KOO)'
9:00 Orchestra
9:00 Doodlebug orch. (KOO)
9:30 Tom Coakley's orch.
10*00 Emll Polak's orch. (KOOi
10:00 Blue Moonlight
10:30 Hal Grayson's orch.
10:<-5 Press-Radio news
11:00 Orchestra (KOO)
11:00 Ous Arnheim's orch.
11:30 Jack Bain's orch., Portland.
6:00 Tha Singing Tower
6:30 Canadian Capers
7:00 Footllght Highlight*
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8:00 Sunset Nocturne
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8:45 Isobel Oartahore, soprano
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9:30 Barbara Custance, pianist
CBJ.-DON LEE NETWORK
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570    610    940    1130    1270
6:30 Rider Mlchaul
7:00 Sylvia Frooa, songs
7:16 Olen Cray's orch.
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7:16-11:30 Orchestras
RADIO— SUNDAY NETS
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6:55 Can. Press News
N.B.C.-KOO
6:00 Hall of Fame
6:30 Canadian Capers
7:00 Wendell Hall, songs
7:15 Mme  Schumann-Heinle
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8:00 The HI-Jinks (Don Lee)
8:30-11:30 Orchestras
11:30 Organ Recital (DL)
WHAT THE  PRESS. IS SAYING
HITLER MAY NEXT REACH FOR A. some lnsances the buds and flowera
IN THE RUMBLE SEAT
Delusions of grandeur crop out ln
queer places.  All sorts of people have
feet, sounded off the Philippines, then -toim-not even  politicians are ex-
 1  _.    «, »._._. ,_ ZS_Z u."_..« 1 «npt.   The shadow of many a great
man has plumbed ln person barely
one twelfth of the distance.
Tbat there may be monsters below
larger than anything ever seen by
mariners ls a thought quite appropriate today, when Interest In sea serpents has been greatly stimulated.
More practical folk than those wbo
dream of the ocean floor may urge Dr.
Beebe to make his next descent into
Loch Ness, where he may find greater th* Ills than Bermudlan waters afford.
PUBLICLY-6WNED POWER
The whole picture of government
operation of power plants appears to
be one of benefit From the Mississippi Valley, where electricity trom
Muscle Shoals already ls flowing,
come stories of great savings to consumers and the blessing of electricity
in hitherto benighted communities.
Exceptions may exlxst where the
rights of private capital should not
be Interfered with, but the utilities
must rest their case on service—Christian Science Monitor.
man conceals his followers— while
they believe they're basking In a reflected limelight, and visible to all
and sundry. They become exhibitionists whom nobody notes. As long
as they feel they're part of the parade
they're content.
A very small child Illustrated this
the other day. Up and down In the
sunshine rode a plump llttle boy
a brand new tricycle—obviously lt
wu his first and he was getting used
to lt. Close behind him trotted s
very small child, fingers Just touch'
tng the saddle, face agleam with sat'
1st action.
"What are you doing?" an onlooker
asked tbe very amall child.
Bald tbe very small child as he trotted on, striving to keep up with the
new machine, "That's his new car he's
running—and Tm Juit sitting In tbe
rumble seat "—Ottawa Journal.
An electrically-run paint freshening device ls something new; lt taken
an old, hardened can of paint In lti
grip and shakes It until the paint
mixes again with tbe oil.
"i
CROWN
Germany bad a farcical election
which elevated Chancellor Hitler to
the presidency in succession to General von Hindenburg.
The Nazi leader bad abolished all
other parties and his name was the
only one on the ballot. His personal
success politically was therefore assured. Hts full ambition may not yet
be realized.
Nothing, lt would appear, stands
ln the way ot Hitler declaring himself
Emperor and seizing the Hobenzollern
throne. Von Hlndenburg's will, bequeathing him the presidency and expressing the view that kalserdom ls
the rock on which Germany should
emerge, would seem to pave tbe way.
There are other reasoip wblch may
encourage Hitler to Jump tor the safe'
ty of the throne. Nazi policies have
undergone a change and are now ln
many ways contrary to thos- which
originally drew hundreds of thousands of supporters. Moreover, German trade ls going trom bad to worse.
In coping with economic conditions
Hitler has failed miserably. He cannot continue Indefinitely to distract
the minds of the German people from
their woes. Serious trouble ls sure
to come as a result of Internal conditions. "Der Fuehrer" may therefore
choose to step aside from responsibility and consequences by placing a
crown upon his head, leaving others
to face the storm. The next few
months ln Germany may witness
events of tremendous Interest and
Importance to the world.— Toronto
Telegram.
RAVAGED BY STOCK
Eighteen months ago tbe city cemetery presented an unsightly scene, so
far as garden beauty was concerned.
The Drumheller Horticultural society
placed a man ln the cemetery to work
through the summer months and a
lot of clean-up work was accomplished and many of the walks received
a coating of shale. „
The early part ot this summer was
confined to cleaning up that which
was executed lut year and tben more
flowering plants were put ln. These
were doing nicely until a number of
stra, cattle and pigs crashed the fenoe
and ruined many of the new plants
by trampling them under toot. In
were eaten, but. ln any    event,
month's work wu destroyed ln one
night.—Drumheller Mall.
FASCISM
This Black Plague la as much an
Infection from abroad u the Bed.
Moreover, tbe vims of the one ls almost Indistinguishable from that of
the other, and the resultant disease
runs for a time a similar course which
Is equally fatal to liberty. Nothing Is
more true than Fascism actually begets Communism which lt ls ostensibly designed to overthrow.--London
Dally Telegraph. ■
DISMISSED HEALTH OFFICERH
The work of these district officers.
while more or lc s unknown to the
public, ls well known to the r anlcl-
pal health officers, many of whom
have shown tbelr appreciation ot this
service by a steadily greater use of
lt. The district men have been at
tbe beck and call of any M.o.H. wbo
needed help ln diagnosing unusual
cases ot communicable diseases and
In organizing the fight against such
outbreaks.—Peterborough    Examiner.
•     A NAZI MISTAKE
The Nazi newspaper Muencbener
Nachrlchten of Munich announces the
accidental death of Its music critic,
WUH Schmidt. Herr Schmidt's "accident" lay ln his being named WUH
Schmidt. During the bloody purge of
"traitors" ln Germany, members of
Hitler's special guard hunted him out
and summarily shot him to death.
Then they discovered they were really
after another Willi Schmidt. The guard
apologized to tbe music critic's family.—New York Post.
BRITISH ROYALTY  FINANCIAL
ASSET
Few business concern! can show
such a favorable balance sbeet u tbat
oresented recently for British Royal
family. The monarchy ls one of he
nation's best financial assets, yielding
a yearly pmflt ot $3,270,000 Income
from lands and properties surrended
by tbe royal family to Parliament by
Wlllam III and George III Is now
ft6,150,000. The civil list, fixed by
Parliament at the beginning of each
monarch's reign, totals $2,880,000.—
Fort Erie Times-Review.
"How shall a man without a tongue
answer thee!" retorted one of the
guards to Gray. "Go forward l"
The flickering red light of the torch
revealed, a yard or two ahead, a heavily
barred window about two feet square.
A cracked and quavering scream.
Behind the bars appeared a face.
Livid, and pitiably emaciated, tt wu
surrounded by a dirty mass of matted
grey hair, trom out ot which stared
dull eyes.
The man wu blind.
Gray stopped. Something—perhaps
the warning horror ot that livid face
behind the bars—made him stand
his ground. The man spoke. Gray's
skin prickled. Thts wretched creature
spoke English I
"Who are you?" Gray uked
hoarsely.
"He ls a fakir, and he ls madl"
broke ln one ot the guards. "Enterl"
"Be silent, thoul"
Such wu Gray's'power over men
tbat the guard fell silent.
The torch sputtered,
"Simla's never written!" quavered
the blind man, and burst Into Insane
laughter.
Gray wu pushed violently Into' a
cell. The door slammed. There wu a
shooting of bolts and a key ground ln
a rusty padlock. The footsteps of the
gaoler and the guards had died away.
Gray clenched his teeth till his
Jaw muscles hurt. He knew now tbat
a few feet away from him wu Captain
George Ian Galbraith, M.C—"Gigs"
Galbraith—late ot the Boyal Kohls-
tan Rifles and the Secret Service. The
eighth man they had sent ln quest of
the Veiled Man.
Brevet-Major Colin Gray, V.C, wu
the ninth.
DI AND HHIREEN SCHEME
For some mlnutu after Jafflr had
gone, Shlreen and Diana aat side by
side ln silence, heedless of Gulbudun,
who, u usual, wu chattering happily.
Shlreen looked at Gulbudun and
pursed red Ups. The young, she reflected, sometimes uy wise things.
Perhaps this child. . • .
The Inglls girl does not wish to
mut my lord." she said suddenly.
Why?" questioned Gulbudun, blue
eyes widening.
"The women of the sahib log do
not eat alone wltb men of our race,"
In spite of herself a touch of hardness
crept Into the Persian's eyes. "Dl
fears my lord will want to marry her.
X think he may.... Supposing a man
uked you, Gulbudun, to eat alone
with htm and you did not wish to go—
what would you do?"
"If The Cobra uked me—I would be
glad!" retorted Gulbudun, contemplating a amall, henna tinted finger
nail.
The certainty which rang so proudly ln the girl's tonu, roused Diana
trom her numbing apathy. Deciiion
came to her.
"Tou must give me the poison you
promised to give to me—now—Shlreen"!
The Persian took the English girl's
cold bands ln both of bers.
Nay, Dl, 'Open not the door Into
the nlgbt, when Hope ti a guesti'
Do you remember that poem? When
there Is no hope, then—"
"Could ahe not bide tn the garden?"
suggested   Gulbudun   hopefully.   "I
know places. . . , **
Shlreen frowned.
"I told that tat Jafflr she wu Ul;
and HI sbe must seem to be." She
clapped her hands, and a stout woman slave entered.
"Go at once and call the herb-
woman who came to see me when I
wu IU, I will give her gold tf she
comes quickly!"
The woman ulamed, and wu gone.
"Light of my Eyes," murmured
Shlreen soothingly, "the woman I
have sent for win give you a potion
which wlU make your body feel, to
the touch, u lf the fires of fever
burnt ln lt; but you will sleep and
know nothing of lt. When my 1 -rd
sends for you, or comes himself to
look for you, he will kpow that you
are 111, and leave you tn peace. By
that time I shall have thought out a
plan for your escape. ..,
Diana looked at her u a hunted
animal might loolc at one giving it
sanctuary; then, drawing her to ber,
she kissed Shlreen's forhead under the
parting ln the silky black bands of
hair.
"The herb-woman ls here, Ladyl"
The mesenger had returned while
they had been speaking.
"Btd her enterl" ordered Shlreen
passing a gentle hand over Diana's
hair. "Will you be afraid to drink
what she will give you?"
Diana shook her head, smiling
faintly. She seemed to have lost aU
desire to speak, Just as some birds
cease to sing when they are caged ...
If old age ts a necessary qualification for the poSsesston ot wisdom,
then the harridan who wu now moving toward them must have been exceedingly wise.
Gazing at her half-pltylngly, Diana put her age at a hundred, even
though she knew that tn the East
women grow old with cruel rapidity.
Her wrinkled lips twitched ceuelesBW,
lf tormented to restlessness*-by the
toothless gums behind them.
Swiftly a battered tin box containing some dried roots and several phials
half full of brown and yellow powders wu produced from the Innermost folds of voluminous garments.
The stream of comentary which accompanied the opening of box and
the selecting trom It of tbe ingredients for the potion sounded to the
harassed Diana Uke the Incessant tolling of a cracked bell.
Actually, the hag wu recounting
the latest news from that wonderfully evil outer world about which the
Inmates of Thl Cobra's harem dreamed often, but were unable to read of,
and were never likely to ue again.
Diana, ln a sudden surge ot anxiety
about her father, wu not listening;
Shlreen seemed  interested.
"His Excelency Khoon the Mongol"
began tbe bag.
" bu returned! I know lt!"
cut tn Shlreen coldly. She had always disliked the dwarf.
Discreetly silent, but determined to
uy what she had to uy, ln her own
time, the old woman held out a cup to
Diana. "IDrink It, before It settles,
Miss sahib!" she uid, wheedlingly.
And then, with th* smooth Insistence,
resumed her gou'p.
"Not many are over-pleased to see
the Lord Khoon. S-mw men are Indeed
strange," she remarked warily.
"Tell me thy news, Babbler," commanded the Persian, even more coldly.
"Ominous!" commented Loquacity,
secretly. "What should a poor old
AUNT HET
wo: .an like me know of the great
ones? The skin of a date atone ls not
thinner than my knowledge of them!"
"Come, Diana," soothed Shlreen.
leading her to the couch which had
now been prepared beside her own.
Tou must drink lt."
Diana glanced distastefully at tbe
muddy-looking contents ot the cup,
and Loquacity, ever watchful, aeelng
the hesitation, addressed her.
'Fear not. Miss sahib! 'To, dwa,
drey'!—and you will be aaleepl" . . .
"How long ahall I be unconscious?"
questioned Diana, *i. she gave back the
empty cup.
"Until the aun sets tomorrow, you
will be dreaming of handsome young
princes and fairy palaces!" chuckled
the crone. "It may be longer; and lt
may be less, X cannot say, to a few
houra." The shrewd old eyes returned
to Shlreen.
"Tea,.., Aa I aald, the Lord Khoon
haa ret* rned — and few are glad;
though he brought with him a strange
prisoner—a sahib dressed aa a Hlllman, who ls bigger than Oog or Magog, and as handsome as Rustuml
His strength Is the strength of six
menl Aa they took him through the
streets he smote a man deadl , , , ,
Thsy say he stands alx and a halt
Inglls feet. (Tou must lie down, Miss
Ub!)
Her last words were addressed to
Diana, who had raised herself eagerly
on one elbow.
'Shlreen!' exclaimed the English
girl. "Please, please find out whether
thl.-. prisoner ls one ot my countrymen 1
If he Is, you will help him, for my
sake—" Her voice trailed away, and
she sank back.
A deep slgb from the couch, and
the sea-green eyes cloaed. . . . The
world aeemed to be floating away.
The herb-woman laid a finger on
a blue-veined WTtst.
"She sleeps!" she croaked. "Who can
mix a potion as well or aa quickly
as I?"
Gratetuly hiding ln her garments
the gold coin Shlreen had given her,
she knelt and kissed the ground at
the Persian's feet, and silently left
her.
"I feel sorry for our preacher.
Think how a dentist would feel lf
folks let him talk about anything
but teeth."
20 YEARS AGO
(From The Dally Newa et
August 25, 1914).
Mayor J. J. Malone, city council
members, public and patriotic bodies have been Invited to attend
the Canadian Club's farewell Tor the
West. Kootenay and Boundary contingent which leavea thts week en
route to England and France,
30 YEARS AGO
(From Nelson Dally News ot Ang. IS,
19(14)
O. B. Matthew left for Stumpvtlle
yesterday to superintend a gang of
men he has engaged ln blasting out
stumps.
CUSHION SOCKET
COMFORT
FOR OLD A NEW LIMBS
Calosrv Artificial Limb Factory
Cslosrv. Alta.
TOMORROW
"It ls my Intention to marry the
Inglls glrlt"
Spiders in India
Trap, Eat Lizards
Trom India comes the story, published In the current Issue of the
Scientific Monthly, of how spiders
enmesh lizards ln their weba and de
vour them.
The first man actually to ue a contest between spider and lizard wu
Gopal Chandra Bhattachayra ot the
Bose Research Institute, Calcutta. The
Uzard-eatlng spider meuured three
Inches acrou Its leg-span. Its web wu
three feet square. Wltb this equipment the comparatively -lightweight
spider wu not at too much of a disadvantage ln trapping a common
house lizard three and three-quarter
inches from head to tall and weighing considerably more than Its captor.
Attracted by a dragon-fly fluttering
In tbe web, perhaps u bait, since the
spider had not bothered to klU It, the
lizard wu soon tangled ln the mesh.
After wrapping Its catch In flossy
silk tmtll It wu completely mummified, the spider hopped up and down
a number of times u lf ln triumph,
and then sank his fangs Into the back
ot the lizard's neck. A short time later the spider had eaten It completely.
Attacks ot spiders on other backboned animals occur occasionally. In
1931, tr. E. W. Gudger of the American
Museum of Natural History, reported
to the scientific magazine, Natural
History, an observation by E. A. Fuchs.
of Atlarta, Ga., wbo found a spider1 ln
the act of dragging a violently relisting minnow onto a floating leaf.
AUEN RULERS
Of course, Hitler hu to be an extremist tn bis Germanism because ho
seeks to cover the doubt he feels
about his own patriotism becauu he
is an Austrian. But the dictators of
Europe are mostly foreign-bon Mussolini and Dollfuss excepted. PUsud-
sk ot Poland, wu born in Lithuania;
Kemai, of Turkey, was found ln Greek
Salonlca; Valera, ot Ireland, uw first
light of day tn New York; Stalin, ot
Russia, wu brought by the stork to
Georgia, Asia; Venlzelos, of Greece,
ls a Turkish Cretan.—Brandon Sun.
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bring on rain. Think of the
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a little matter at all this wonderful climate, water and pasture, but an immense gift of
nature, and this fine Milk rises
right up to It.    •
Pacific Milk
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PLANT AT ABBOTJFORD
(iENEROl*!* GOERINO
Although 30,000.000 Germans or one
third of the population ot the Reich,
are Indigent, Herr Goertng, Premier of
Prussia, has during the paat few
mo tha presented handsome Mercedes
limousines to H actresses. Let the
people eat dust.—Border Cities Star.
■    t
For
MIMING CAMPS
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and other camp buildings It la strong,
waterproof light and
very  easy   to   handle.
District   Distributors
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We are headquarters for •
MINERS' AND CAMPERS' SUPPLIES
TENTS, PACK SACKS, SLEEPING ROBES,
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NELSON, B.C.
 TROTTERS BUSY
Jey Lincoln winning futun not ef trotting prognm it Qoihtn, N.Y.
_______m——*s_~____.^——_au^^i.__—~aa___a_m—__amm_——_——___—mm—__—————**_^
Track and Field - Fishing - Motor Boating - Boxing - Wrestling - Swimming - Football
 , ^BU**^       Jr I'^y
Baseball - Softball - Tennis - Lacrosse - Rowing - Golf - Lawn Bowling - Rugby, Etc.
PAGE SEVEN
THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C-SATURDAY MORNINO, AUGUST 26, 1994
PAGE UVIN
CANADIAN BALL FANS PULL
FOR TIGERS TO COP FLAG
Scoffy Defeats Sandy One Vp
Baseball's Big Sbt
TVtt teUvt members ef tht bll
tlx mtnuficturtd only thru hit.
yesterdiy tnd u t ruult there
wu t genertl downwtrd trend ln
tht ivertfei. Chirl.y Gehrlnger.
who made two of the blowi on five
trip* to tht pltte, held hit mirk
tt .364 for fourth pltce. BUI Terry
hit onct in four tries, dropping
ont point to .it). Heinle Minush
dropped into l tit with idle Paul
Winer for second pltce, losing two
points, whilt Mel Ott dropped three
•points. Eich hid three times it bat
without t hit.
Tht ittndlng:
0. AB. ». H. Pet.
Terry, Olmts 120 489 100 17] .369
P. Winer, PI.   114 470 84 172 .366
Manush, Sen 110 44.   78 162 .266
Oehrlnger, Tl. . 120 467 114 170 .346
Simmons,
White Sox 105 427 76 IM .361
Ott, Oltntt ... 120 460 102 163 J54
Silverton to Play
FAC. on Sunday
Hit fut Sllverton lattrmMlitt
buebtil tetm who htnded tht loctl
New Ortnd Hotel Cubi their third
lou ln 39 stsrte lut Sundiy In Silver-
ton, will invtdt Nelton Sundty afternoon to pity thl Filrvltw A.C. In*
termtdlitu, who won thi elty title
Kith four wins tgllnit one low. Tht
tunt will tttt pilot Immedlitely following the third gime of tht Wnt
Kootenty ehimpionihlp term between the TrtU tnd loctl tenior
tumi.
Thl Sllverton glrlt' teim wu reported to bt ilto eomtng to Nelson
to pity tht Red Soi Sunday morning,
but no definite word hid been received up to UM lut evening.
Plte Keptk, mtnigtr of tht New
Ormd nine, report! the Sllverton aggregation ont of tht itrongut tumi
Id thtu ptn* tnd prtdlcti thtt
thty will glvt tht Filrvltw club ill
tbty un hmdlt. Thi Filrvlew tetm
wtll field thtlr ngulir lineup Indud-
ing thi inttrmtdlttt pltyen now filling In for tht misting unlor players.
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WINDSOR, Ont., Aug. 94—If, and
whtn, thow swashbuckling Detroit
Tlgeri of Oordon B, (Mickey I Coeh*
rtne'i go mtrchlng into the 1934
world urlu thlt fill, you cm mark lt
up on your cuff thst Cinidi will bt
represented It the rlngtlde by tht
largest delegation ln tht history of
the annual butbtll clastic.
Seldom, lf ever, before In tht record*
etudded pagea of America'a national
pastime, hu Its neighboring coualna
bun ao wrought-up over any aingit
American teim or my tingle abort,
Today there ire ilmost ss many
booatera for the Detroit Tlgera ilong
the stretches Of the Detroit river on
the Canadian shores, ind retching
bick Into Onttrlo is ftr ts Toronto,
tnd probibly farther, it In thl city
thit automobile built.
A dty with the Canidlan residents
opposite Dttrolt ll no mon complete
without k scrub on ths teeth, thu I
union it tht ndlo whilt thl Tlgeri
ut In ictlon. Two Dttrolt ndlo lta*
tiona brotdcut ill homt gamei of
the cltwlng Bengilt. When on thi
roid, tht prognu of the Tlgeri It
furnlihed pliy by pliy by ona of thus
two stitloni. Ty Tyson, tht greatest,
biseball innouneer in the country it
you believe Detroit and Windsor sport
follower*, mans one microphone. At
thi other Is Harry Hellminn, former
slugging outfielder for Detroit Tlgen
and St. Louli Browns snd thret timet
bisshtt king of tht Amerlcin leigue.
40,004 APPLICATION'S
Hundredi ot Cmidlin buebill devotees rush the Internitlonil barritra
dilly while the Tlgen in in Detroit.
Chirlu F. Navln, eecretary of thl
Detroit Baatball club, tht other day
offered the Information that of some
40,000 applications alnady received
for world series tickets, tevtril thouund wert from Cmidlin polntt. Mr.
Ntvln added, udly enough, thtt all
serlee tppiiutlont wen btlng nturned
unfilled. No applications will be accepted until ifter thl dty, lf md
whtn, tht Tigen in officially crowned
American league champions. Thtn,
tnd only thin, win ippltcitlont he
considered ln order received. Consequently thou tleket-euklng Canadian! will be uktd to bldi thalr time
befort niching for precious pasteboards for t world series thlt will
furnish the first retl Internitlonil
ttrriospheri ilnce mos when i Tiger
turn cluhed with Pittsburgh Plratea.
On thlt occaalon hundreda of Windsor fane flocked to the Detroit gamea.
SEVERAL PLAYED IN CANADA
Approxlmlty to Detroit ls only ont
ot uvertl rations for the Interest
mmlfested hy Canadians of the border
nglon ln baseball ln general md ths
Tlgen In pirtlcultr thlt summer.
Thtn lt, for extmple. the ftct thtt
mmy of tht Tlgera got early baseball
schooling with Canadian teama ln tht
International md othar leagues Thne
memben of Detroit's mighty infield,
Bill Bogell. Chirllt Oehrlnger md
Marvin Owen wen onct with Toronto
Leafs. Rogell md Owen only recently
urved with thlt elub. Ray Htyworth,
tteond-atrlng citcher, Frank Doljack.
utility outfielder, Oenld Walker, outfleldir, Lukt Htmlln, Vic Sorrell md
Hon Hogsett, pitcher, did termi with
thl Luft. which wu formerly t firm
tn tht Tlgen. Oehrlnger wu with
London, Out., in tht old Miohlgtn-
Onttrlo leigue md later with Luft.
Dttrolt hit not hid I pennant winner Unu 1909—a ttretch ot 29 yun.
Thru tlmu In i row tht Detroltert
hit tht top ln the dim tnd distent
put—Americm league champions ln
lflOT, 1908 tnd 1809 tn succeuion.
Twice the Chicago Cubs crushed them
iside in world unu gtmu. Plttiburgh conquered them tht other
time. Tht sueons llnu hivt bun
htrren of ptnntatt, despite tht gntt
slugging deads of Tyrui Raymond
Cobb, Bobby Belch. Sim Cnwford,
Hllnll Manush. Hirry Hellminn, Lu
Blut and t hott ot othtr biuhlt
routers.
Tht nttrett tpprotch to t title la
recent yetn wts in 1923 whtn thl
Tlgen flnlihed ucond to New Tork
Ttnkees. In thl lut five years thty
have never bun better thm fifth.
Fashionable debutantea In London
art carrying cigarette holden 14
Inohu long to mitch twetp-tht-floor
tvtnlng gownt.
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Battling tvtry Inch of the way for
36 holes, Albert "Scotty" Campbell,
of Seattle, finally defeated another
Scot, Rom "Sindy" Somerville, Canada's famoua amot'ir, in the final
for the Ctndditn amateur golf title
at Montreal. The game wu not over
until Ctmpbell unk hit last 16-
foot putt to win one up. It was one
of the most specttculir battles in tht
history of Canadian amateur golf.
Campbell ll seen above (left), with
Somerville it the presentation.
Cimpbell, 36 yun of tie tnd til
smiles is ht wlni the title for the
second successive yetr, Is thown in
the Inset
Indians Heap Scarce
*  in Big Leagues
By AL DEMAREE
The preaent diy dearth of atar
Indian baieball pliyen It mystifying
to both btll players ms fms. Thtn
It hardly m Indltn bill pliyer
In either mijon or minors, whlli
twenty yun tgo tht line-ups wert
ttudded with grett rtdtklnt: Chief
Binder with tht Athlitlci, Chief
Meyert, gntt Mugging catcher of
tht Olmts, Soxalsxis, tht gntt outfielder with Cleveland of an earlier
day, Jim Thorpe, Blue Jacket. Btn
Tlncup, Mike Biltntl tnd many
Othtn. Chief Bender md Chief
Meyert wen both highly educated
mm ind ipent thilr mornlnja and
Otf days ln muieums ind irt galleries
It wu In ont ef thtu thit Chief
Meyert pulled hit timout remark
about thl painting of "Custer's Lut
Sttnd". "It's my favorite painting."
he remarked, "because it'i the only
picture thit ever gave an Indian an
even break."
BAR GOLD UP
MONTRIAL, Aug. 94 (CP)— Bar
gold In London up two ctntt to est at
ta ounce in Ctntdlin fundi; lttt M
tn British funds. Tht fixed tto Wuhlngton price tmounted to 138.16 ln
Cmidlin.
MONEY
At Montrul—found IB'*,, VM.
doflir .67 6*16, franc (.SOU.
At Nt* Tork—Pound 8.07, Ctntdlin dolltr 1.03 15-16, franc 6.6tt.
At Ptni—Pound 76.76 frinci, Ctntdlin dollw 1631 frinci, CS. dollir
i»««H frinet.
In gold—Pound 111 Sd, Ctnidltn
dollir 60 67 cents, US. dollu 66.30
untt.
BASSEIN, Indli (CP)— Taking I
ihort cut from hit home to i neuby
doctor's for medlctnt, ud 18-yeir-old
boy wu run over by in eltctrlo trtln
tnd killed.
The Brltlah Empire buya seventy
per cent of Trlnldtd'i export*
MIDDLESEX IN
CRICKET WIN
Kent  and  Gloucestershire
Also Win in County
Matches
LONDON, Aug. 34 (CP ctbls)-
Mlddlesex, Kent md Gloucestershire
won outright victories ln first-cites
county cricket matches concluding
today, while Lancashire won on the
tint lnninga only over Suasu.
Mlddleux defuted Surrey by nine
wlcktta it Lord'i. Kent dtfuted Worcestershire by four wlckett tt Worcester, ind Gloucestershire defeited
Yorkshire by nlnt wlcketi at Scarborough.
Thl scores:
Sumy 166 ind 193 (Smith six for
86: Hearne 6 tor 44): Middlesex 319
and 89 for one (Let 66, Benki 66
not out, Witts Ux for 66) it Lord'i.
Worcestershire 366 md 146 (Pirkl
6S not out, Hull 88, Freeman tlx tor
60 md Marriott four for 64); Xtnt
314 and ltl for tlx (Valentine 76,
Knott 68. Chalk 58. Perks tlvt for (7).
Gloucestershire 848 and 66 tor ont
(Barnett 70, Lyoni 136, Roblnton
four for 41); Yorkshire its tnd following on 363 (Hutton 61 tnd 67, C.
Parker four for 68, Ooddard four for
48 ud five for 101).
Lancuhlre 166 and 831 tor eight,
decland (Hopwood 78, Tyldealay 64
md 53, Iddon 06. Tlte Hi for 60.
Puree tlvt for 61); Sussex 148 ind
136 for two (Poiltrd four tor 43, J.
Psrks 63 not out).
BOSTON TAKES
DOUBLEHEADER
Ditty Dean Shuts Out the
Giants; Dodgers Beat
Chicago Cuba
CINCINNATri. Aug. 34 (CP)-A
home run and a triple already to
hli credit, Ernest Lombtrdi, Cincinniti catcher, grounded out with
the tying and winning runi on the
piths In the ninth today, and Boston
took the second gime of a doublehuder, 10-9 after winning the first,
3*1.
Tint:
Boiton  3   7   1
Cincinnati 1  7  0
Brt. dt tnd Hogsn; Johnion tnd
Minion.
Second:
Boiton  10   17  3
Cincinnati    9  10 0
Rhem, Smith, Betts tnd Spohrer;
Stout, Benton, Kill. Freltu and
Lombardi.
BROOKLYN TAKES
SECOND IN ROW
CHICAGO, Aug. 34 (AP)—Brooklyn Dodgers pounded out thalr ucond straight victory over Chicago
Cubs today, 6*4, with the aid of some
excellent relief pitching by Van
Lingle Mungo.
Brooklyn   t  10.?
Chicago 4  U  3
Benge, Mungo tnd Lopet; Lee,
Boot, Melone, Weiver and Htrtnett.
DIZZY DEAN
BLANKS OIANTI
ST. LOUIS, Aug. 24 (CP)-Jerome
Herman "dizzy" Dun miking hit
fint pitching appearance since he
missed the Train for Detroit Aug*
13, resumed the hero role today as
he shut out the Leigue-leiding
Olanti 5*0.
St. Louil 5  8  3
New York - 0   5   0
Bowmin, Smith tnd Mancuso,
Danning; J. Dean and Delancey.
CANADA'S TEAM
BACK
QUEBEC, Aug. 34 (CP)-The main
body of Canada's turn which took
put Is tht Brltlih Empire gamu tt
London nturned to tht Dominion todty In thl liner Duchut ot Atholl.
Tht Canidlan track, field and iwlmmlng- Itan remained aboard thl vessel, whleh continued to Montreal,
when lt it dut to dock tonight.    '
"Thl youngaten did will, but we
will havt to havt oldtr tthlitu lf we
an to compete igtinst othtr countries with greater success ln the
sprints," said M. M. (Bobby) Robinson of Hamilton, Ont., manager of
the team.
Bobby Roblnion uld hi wu not
impressed by the Cmidlin swimming
teim.
American Association
Toledo 4, Milwaukee  P
Loulivllle 9, St. Ptul 6.
Indlintpollt 6*9; Minneapolis 6*16.
INTERNATIONAL
Montrul 1*4; Rochester 8-7,
Btltlmon 3:: Syracuse 6.
Toronto 3, Bufftlo 8.
Katlo Boatmen
Coming to Ntlton
Ctpt U. S. Qllbirt of thl Kootenty Liunch elub Frldty rt*
otlvtd t litter from Commo.
dirt F. 8. Rouietu of tht Kulo
Ltunch club ttatlng thit Kulo
Hunch owntrt will bt it Nelion
In full font for tht Ubor Dty
regittt. Mr. Reulllu commend
thtt thll will bl carrying eut thi
promiie mtdt to Mr, Gilbert it
thi Kulo rtgtttt en Aug. 1.
DETROIT SWAMPS
WASHINGTON 12-6
Increase Lead to Four and a
Half Gamea; St. Louis
Beats Athletics
o,{°.
GREENBERG SAFE
Greenberg tf thl Tlgen ufe on uoond during New York-Detroit game.
WASHINOTON, Aug. 14 <AP)-
Detroit Tlgeri took some of the
sting out of two successive defeats at the hands ot the Senators
today when they swamped Washington 12*6 In the third gamt ot the
season and lncreued thtir league
lead to 4Vi games.
Detroit ._ li  17  0
Washington    6   16  2
Aukder md Cochrane; Stewart,
McColl and Bolton.
WEST'S HOMER
WINNINO FACTOR
PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 14 (API-
Sam Weit, St. Louis centre fielder,
hit a home run with Cllft on bue
in the eighth Inning todty to give
the Browns their second successive
win over Phllidelphii Athletlci, 2*1.
St. Louil  , 2  I  0
Philadelphia ....  1  5 0
Hadley. Andrewi and Orube; Cain
and Hayes.
HOME RUNS IN
BiG TIME
By the Associated Preu
Roma runa yuterdiy — Berger,
Brsvat, two; Celling!, Cirdlnili; Roth-
rock, Cardinals, F. Herman, Cuba;
Lombardi. Reds; Letlle. Dodgen; Prey,
Dodgers; Witt, Browni, ont etch.
Tht leaden—Oehrlg, Yinkeei, 39:
POM. Athlitlci, 88; Ott. Olmts, 83:
Collins. Cardinals, 80; Johnion, Athlitlci, 39.
Leigue totals— Amerlcsn 670, National 664. Total 1184.
MORENZ NOT TO
BE TRADED
MONTRIAL, Aug. 34 (CP)-Ths n-
ported hookey detl wbenby Howie
Mortnz. tpetdbiil center iter of Montrul Canadlem of the National Hockey
league, would go to Toronto Maplt
Lttfl in exchmge for JM Prlmuu,
allm Letts' center, will aot materialise. Lm Dtndunnd, miniglng dlrtc-
lor of tht Cmtdleni club, ttld today.
Nevtrthelua, Dtndunnd uld tn*
othtr dul bttwitn Cmtdleni md
Lufi wu under dltcuulon, but ht
refused to uy' whit pltyen wen
Involved.
Hiving bun offlcltl operator of thl
guillotine ln Prince for 36 yttn, Anatoli Jouph Delblsr. now 76 pun of
tge, pltnt to retirt. Hu ntlrsmsnt
means tht tnd of a fimlly connection
with thl job of executioner. Bll
ftther md jrtndtatbtr tervtd in the
offlct, but Delber ltivts no ton.
PEARCE AND
MILLER WIN
Former Has 20
Lengths to
Spare
LAKE FRONT, Toronto, Aug. -.1
(Cf-)—Bobby Pearce, world'i champion from Hamilton, Ont. md Btll
Miller, Philadelphia Adonis, will
decide tht world'i Mulling title
htn neit Frldiy night.
Thl glut Austnllin defetted
trie Phelpi, brother of Ted whom
he but lut yur, by 86 length! In
oni hut tonight, md Miuer but
But Blrry, formtr globt title-holder
by thru-quirtrri of a length In
mothw.
Pearce tklmmtd ovtr thi thru-mile
count In 19 mlnutea »a% aeconda,
nurly two mlnutu leu thin MUler,
whou tlmt wit 31 mlnutu 34 1-6
ueondi.
EVERVTHl.NO Hit WAY
Pearce had everything hit wiy.
Away to a tint itert, bl ktpt control
In hit long trmi for tht wholt thru
mllu. Phelpi tried hli but tp glvt
him a btttlt but ht wu no match
tor thi till Auttmitn. When thty
croutd tht flnlih Unt Phelpi wu
exhausted. Buret tetmed hirdly worn
by tht three-milt trip md gripped
Phelpi' hmd strongly it tht finish
Miller but Barry by thru quartan
ot a ltngth but hi might u wtll htvt
mtdt It a lot mort. Hi hid things
under control from the itart md
uud over the flnlih lint ttroking
•lowly.
Miller ud Buret mtdt tun of it
lutt 63600 by thtlr wlni. Thl world
chimplon will gtt 66000 next Prldiy
night ud thl runner-up 63600.
BEATEN AT 6TABT
Petrct it tuned for hii ipurtlng
tttrti but tonight Eric. Phtlpi but
blm to tbi gun. Hi wu tway tint
ud had l lud of a yard at 300 ytrdi
from thi itart. Ptarea't long, ttetdy
ttroku, 38 to thl minute, gtvt him
tht lttd tt 400 yards ud ht wu
never headed ifter thlt.
Bi took t lud of five boat lingtht
In tht tint milt ud added to lt
ttetdily In thi nut two mllu to
flnlih fir Uud of thl Bngllih rower.
Petrct ttldom bit tbovt 80 itroktt
t minute ud mott. of tht tlmt ht
wet dipping hli oan tt 36. Bi htd
tnough powtr thtn to mitoh Phelps'
qulcMr itrokt which rtngtd between
31 ud S3.
SELDOM EXTENDED
Miller sumed to bt uldom extended
ln bit hut with Barry. Ht Mulled
thi flnt mile md m tlghth in tlx
mlnutea md 48 seconds, tlmott it
seconds Uud ot Bury. Hi kipt up i
tttady itroke, 38 to thl minute md
ntvtr bad difficulty kuplng Uud
ot Uu former world'i champion.
Barry'i timt iglinit Miner wu 31
mlnutu 36H uoondt, whin tht defuted Phtipt' tlmt wu 30 mlnutu
md 30 ucondt.
U.S. Men's Net Final
an American Affair
Allison and Van Ryn Turn
Back Last'Foreign
Threat
PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 34 (API.—
Wilmer Allison tnd Johnny Vin
Ryn turned btck the surviving foreign threat In tbt Unlttd statu
doublea tennia chtmplonthipa todty
tnd strode into tht title round.
Coming from behind to smith
out t 4*6, 6-4, 6*1, 6*0 triumph
ovtr tbi glint Cuchotlovtkltn.
Roderick Menu). Ud hli tUght
South African pirtner. Vtrnon Klrby.
the till Tsxin ind tpttdy pnii-
•dtlphltn tained the right to ftce
thl defending crown holder! md
Davla cup tcei. Oeorgt Lott of Chlcigo ud Letter Stotfen of Los
Angeles in tomorrows chimplon-
ship round btttlt at tht Oermsn-
town Cricket club.
Katherine Stammers ud Itsda
.limes of Bnglud won tha women'a
invitation title through defiult or
Mn. John Vin Byn Ind Jcuphlne
crulckshtnk of California, who Buffered a shoulder injury.
Stoettn wu mediocre u ht md
Ellubeth Ryu, former cillforniin
now pliylng our of Inglind. win
stretched to thru utt In winning
6-6, 4*6, 14*13 from Pruk Wilde
tnd Katharine sttamin of tnglud.
INVITE PERRY TO
PUY AT COAST
VANCOUVIR. Aug. 34 (OP)—Pled
Perry, world'i ranking tennli pitytr.
wtll bi invited to play at tht Vuoouvtr Indoor Tennli club probably
September 38, It wu unounoed todty by I. J. H Cardinal!. Vancouver
tennli utcutivt.
Heroic Mother
Rescues Child
ST. JOHN'S, Nfld.. (CP)—uniblt
to iwlm, Mn. J. Hirtery liaked her
lift to uvt hir two-yetr-old ton, Cermet, from drowning ln a swimming
pool. It lt htdn't beu for her nlnl*
yeu-old daughter who helped her
back ovtr thl edge of the pool by
switching out her hud, the young
mother would probtbly htvt drowntd
along with tht child in a vain tttempt
to uvt lt.
Thl mothtr md childnn had been
-sitting at the edge ot the pool urly
ln the evening. No ont elu wu nur.
Suddenly the ton fell ovtr Into the
deepest ptrt of the pool. Without, tha
leut hesitation. Mn. Hirtery Jumped
In itttr him. tnd was it lut tbli to
nturn to the edgi of the pool uftly
with tht boy.
Hon. E. N. Rhodes
Offers New Trophy
KAUPAX, (CP)-ltovi seetlt ten-
nit ittn wiu btvt a niw trophy te
cotipett for, t donation of Bon. I
N. Rhodu, Mlnlater of Plnmca On
mtklng the tnnouncemut et tht new
trophy. Htrry Roper, pruldent of tbt
Novt Scotti Lawn Tennli iitooittlon
ittttd tbtt it would be known u the
"Rhtdu Trophy' tpd would be offered to thl Men's Singlet chimplon.
It wlU bt competed for uhuaUy.
An atblatlo iter in hli youth, thi
number tor Rlchmond.Wut Capt
Bnton wu pirtlculirly fold of Mn-
nil Ud ftr uvertl yttn nrved on tht
utcutivt ef tht Novt Scotla auociitlon.
MELBOURNE, Auatralla (CPI— It
hu been decided tht traditional
detth'i head design ahall not be uaed
on centenary medala dlitrlbuted
among ichool children.
SHELBURNI. N.S.,  (OP)  — B. O.
Johnwn, Halifu radio tnginur, tu-
perlnUnded tht inttillation et tht
mut modem wlrtiut equipment on
the new Royil Cintdltn Mounted
Mt cutter Actdltn. Tbt fut, new
addition to tht pollct flut. recently
liunchtd hert. It now tbout rudy
tor pttrolling Marl tlmt eoutlinu in
utrch of Uquor tmugglen.
Whlli Rutali It without t rultr,
thtn in utea pruldutt npnunt-
Ing tht uven republics whleh form
the Union ot Soclllllt Soviet Republics.
A TASTY
SNACK
After tha show or ear
ride drop in to the Golden Gate and enjoy a
tuty sandwich and a
eup of our famoua coffee
OUR CHEF SUGGESTS
A Bacon and Tomato
Sandwich on Toast OFf-
with Coffee .... £0
<&
OLDEN
ATE CAFE
16 oi. |1.80
.  25 oz. 92.65
HIRAM
WALKER'S(M
T «-»m    -^L\m ***Wmam A ^fe> Au# *^& ^p> wir v i r v Y T _o XT ^k.
WHISKY
This advertisement is not published or displayed by the Litjuor Control Board or by the Government of British ColumbU
___+
 -
--■■--"-—--"—"■--—
ynHiti(fi,.
-THK NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C-SATURDAY MORNINO, AUGUST 25,1(84
^^___^
ffrnnrt'l T..., -*,■>   ifl!   ■tjt-|nH'f>|>-   w4(tf___fSi«fi-u »*w.
CORPORATION
CITY
OF
NELSON
BYLAW NO. 904
i.
A Br-Uw to raise tbe sum ot
Thirty-Five Thouund (W5.000.00i
Dollan to provide for tbe coet of
constructing  *  new Electrlo  power
SrsnamtMlon Line from the City's
ydra-E»ctrlc pUnt at Bonnlngton
to tbe City's Sub-Station In aald
City,, and acquiring and clearing
right of way therefor, and repair-
lug the City's existing transmission
Une. *
WKHREAS the Corporation of the
City o! Nelson has a Hydro-llec
trlo Power Plant and Transmission
Line for the transmission of power
from said plant to tho City's Substation In tald City.
AND WHEREAS it Is necessary end
expedient to construct a new transmission line for said purpose and to
acquire a right or rights of way for
said line, and to repair the existing
t ransm 1 sslon  Une;
AND WHEREAS it Is necessary and
expedient for tbe said Corporation
to borrow a sum not exceeding Thirty-Five Thousand ($35,000.00) Dollars to be .used for that purpof;
AND. WHEREAS the amount of
tb* debt which Tt la intended this
By-Law shall ereate la Thirty-Five
Thousand (186,000.00) Dollars.
AND WHEREAS electric light and
powfr rates or charges of the said
Corporation are enforceable under
the prm-lstons of the Municipal Act
and  Amending  Acts;
AND WHEREAS the estimated
amount of the electric light snd power rates or charges of tne said Corporation chargeable for the year
nineteen hunored and thirty-four
*19M> is One Hundred and Thirty
ThCTjaand  ($130,000.00)  Dollars;
AND WHEREAS lt will be requisite
to raise annually the sum of Three
Thousand and Fifty-three i$3.053)
Dollars for paying the debt, and the
sum of Seventeen Hundred and
Fifty («1750.00> Dollars for paying
the Interest, in respect of the said
debt;
AND   WHEREAS   the   amount   of
Sone-v already charged upon the
ld Electric Light and Power Rates
and payable yearly Is Thirty-Four
Thousand Eight Hundred Forty-Flv*
and-38-100   ($34845*88)   Dollars:
AND WHEREAS the said proposed
dsbtof Thirtv-Five Thousand ($35,-
00000) Dollars ls created upon the
security of the aald Electric Light
and Power rates;
AND WHEREAS the estimated deficiency ln the said electric light
and power rates required to make
up annually the amount of interest aud sinking fund payable yearly
on the said proposed debt is nil;
NOW. THEREFORE the Municipal
Council of the Corporation of the
City of Neison in Council ass«~
bin enacts as followi:
That the Corporation of tha City
of Nelson do construct or add
to its existing power transmission, line an electrlo power transmission line from its power Plant
at Bonnlngton on the Knot-may
River to Its sub-station in said
City snd do acquire sll necessary and proper rights of waj-
tlioreJor. and do also cause sll
Mich repairs to Its existing power
tra nsm lesion Une as shall be
deemed proper and expedient.
It ahull be lawful for the said
Corporation to borrow by way of
debentures upon the security of
the electric power and light rates
chargeable by and payable to
the said Corporation a sum of
money not exceeding Thirty.Five
Thousand ($35,000.00) Dollars,
from sny person or perrons, or
body or bodies corporate, who
mav be -willing to advance the
t*me, and to cause all such sums
so borrowed to be paid to the
said Corporation and to be used
tor the purposes and objects
hereinbefore mentioned.
It shall be lawful for the Mayor
of the aald Corporation to cause
any number of debentures to be
made, executed and issued for
such sum or sums as may be required for the purposes and objects aforesaid, not exceeding,
however, tn the aggregate the
sum of Thirty-Five Thousand
'$33,000 oot Dollars each of aaid
debenture^ being of the denomination of not leas than one
Thousand (81.000) Dollars, and
all such Debentures shall be sealed with the seal of the ssid
corporation and signed by the
Mayor thereof.
The said debentures shall bear
date the first day of September
A.D 1934, ana shall be made
payable in Ten U0) years from
said date ln lawful money of Canada at the office of the BANK
OF MONTREAL in the CltTea of
Nelaon and Vancouver in the province of British Columbia, the
City of Winnipeg ln the Province
of Manitoba, the City ot Toronto in the Province of Ontario,
and the City of Montreal in the
Province of Quebec, which said
places of payment shall be designated by the aald debentures,
and shall have attached to them
coupons for payment of inter-
. est, and toe signature of the
Mayor to the Interest coupons
may be either written, slsmped,
printed or lithographed.
The said debentures shall bear
Interest during tha currency
thereof al the rate ot Five (5W0)
per cent per annum from the
date thereof, which interest ahall
be payable semi-annually at the
office of the Bank of Montreal
In the Cities aforesaid, ln lawful money of Canada ou the
first day of March and the first
day of September, respectively,
in each year during the currency
thereof.
Each of ihe said debentures shall
contain or have endorsed thereon
a provision to tbe following effect ;_
"Thts debenture, as to the principal    aum    secured    thereby,
shall not, after a certificate of
ownership  has   been  endorsed
thereon   by   the   Treasurer   of
thU  Corporation,  be  transferable, except if entrv  by the
Treasurer   or   bia   deputv   in
the Debenture Registry Book of
the Corporation at the otflcee
of the Corporation in the Citv
of  Nelsoo,   British   Columbia"
The  specific  sum   necessary for
the  v»rment of   interest  yearly
during the currency of the said
■^bentjires ill] be One Thousand
Seven Hundred and Fifty ($1,750)
pollari.   snd   the   specific   sum
necewary *o be set uM« annually
for the payment of tha debt incurred   ey   the   ssld   debentures
Mil    be    the    sum    of    Three
Thousand  snd  Fifty-Three Dollars   <$3,058*00>    and   there   11
hereby set aside each year out
of the electric Ught and power
rates or chargea of the City of
Nelwn the sum of One Thousand   Seven   Hundred  and Fifty
1 $1,750.00)   Dollars  for  tlie psy-
meut of the annual interest on
the debt  incurred  by  said  debentures, and the sum of Three
Thousand  and  Flftv-Three   ($3.-
Ufi3.Q0i   Dollars  for  the pavment
of the seto n>ht. sublect to the
payment of tbe aald sum of Thirty-
Pour   Thousand   Eight  Hundred
Nrlann Isilg &mfl
Member of tbe Canadian Daily
Newspapers Association
TELEPHONE 144
Private Exchange connecting to
all Departments
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lie a line
Minimum 2 llnei
2 llnu, om*  I 32
t Unit, once     .33
4 llnei, one* 44
2 llnei, 6 tlmei    -M
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4 line*. 6 time* 1.73
2 llnei, 1 month  tM
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4 llnei, 1 month  9.72
All above len 10% for prompt
piyment
Advertisers who desire may
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made for Oils service, ln this
case add four words (Box	
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LEGAL
USOAL   KOIICE
(jovernroent  Uqoor  Act
Notice  of  Application  for Beer
Licence
NOTICE Is hereby given that on
the 1st 3>y of September next.the
undersigned Intends to applv to thl
Mquor Control Board for a licence
respect to the premises being
part of a building known aa tbe
Alien Hotel situated at Nelson upon
lands described as Lots Two (3).
Three (3) In Block Twelve < 12).
according to the Official Plan of
the City of Nelaon, province of
British Columbia. Nelson Land Registration District, ln tbe Province
of British Columbia, for the sale ot
beer by the glass or by the open
bottle for consumption on ths premises.
DATED this 1st dav of August.
1934.
CATER1SA P1SAPIA,
Applicant.
(34831
Births
POBTMAN—To Mr. and Mra. B, J.
Portman    at    McDougall    hospital,
Klmberley. Aug. 18, a daughter;	
Personal
MABBV—INTBODOCTIONB BY PW*
vita tetters. New system, hundreds
ot lady members. Parmer's daughters, teachers, nurses snd widows
with property Msny wealthy members. Particulars 10c. Canadian
Correspondence Club, Bog 128. Cul-
_gary. Alts.;  (3763)
BEACH'S FORMULA. K1LL8 BAND-
ruff, grows hair rapidly: lars al,
trisl alee 26c. Mall orders postpaid
I*. & B- Beach, scalp specialists.
723 Granville St. Vsncouver.
(3883)
Fortv-Plve and 38-100 (334.848-
3B> Dollars alresdv charged upon
the said electric light snd power
rates or chargea and payable
yearly as hereinbefore recited. .In
each year all electric light ahd
power rates or charges received
hy the Corporation of the City
of Nelson from month to month
'during such year when snd ss
collected shall be placed In a
special account with Use Bank
of Montreal at Nelson aforesaid,
or such other Bank aa the Corp.
oration may from time to time
determine, such account to be
known ,aa the "Electric power
Plant Sinking Fund Account"
until the full amount required
lo he paid that year for payment of the debt has been paid
Into ssld account, and thereafter aald rates or charges shall be
phced In a special account with
s&td Bank, to be known ss the
"Electric Power Plent Interest Account," until the full amount
required to be paid that year
for payment of the annual Interest on the debt incurred hy
said debentures has been paid
Into said account, and subject
aa aforesaid all electric light and
power ratee or chargea received
by the Corporation from month
to month each year shall be
set. aside and withdrawn trom
the annual revenue of the Corporation snd shall he Placed In
said accounta until the full
amount required to be paid Into
each of eaid accounta for such
year has been do paid, snd th*
moneys paid Into said sinking
Fund Account shall be withdrawn only for the purpose of
Investing same to the credit of
said account or for the repayment of the ssld debt, and the
moneys paid Into said Interejt
Account each year shall be withdrawn only for payment of the
Interest on said debt payable for
such year, always provided that
-uv surplus In said Interest Account, heyond the sum annually
required for auch account may
be withdrawn therefrom and refunded to the annual revenue of
the Corporation.
8. The Corporation of tha city of
Nelson unconditionally -guarantees payment of all moneys, both
principal and Interest, secured hy
the debentures proposed to be
Issued under this Bv*lsw. The
debentures ahall contain a guarantee In the following words, or
words to the like effect:—
"And the Municipality at large
guarantees payment of the aald
sum together with Intereet
thereon.'
9, It shall be lawful for the Mayor
of the said Corporation to negotiate and sell the debentures, or
any or them, hut ln no case
shall the debentures, or anv of
them be negotiated or sold for
less than 95 per centum of the
par value thereof. Including the
cost of negotiating, brokerage,
and all other incidental expenses.
In. This By*lsw shsu take effect
upon thc Registration thereof as
provided by Section 178 of the
"Municipal Act."
11. This By-law may be cited for all
purposes a* the "City of Nelson
Power Transmission Line By-Law
1934".
DONE AND PASSED In Council aa*
sembled the 13th dsy of August A.D.
1934
RECEIVED THE ASSENT OF THE
ELECTOR'S the  dsy of —'
  AD.   1934.
RECONSIDERED, finally passed and
adopted the day of	
A.D. 1931.
AN OFFER TO EVERY INVENTOR.
List of wanted Inventions end full
formation sent free. The Ramsay
Company, world Patent Attorneys
373 Bask Street. Ottawa. Canada
(3813)
PRIVATE   HOME   KINDERGARTENS
Say. we etart you. The Canadian
lindergarten  Institute.  Dept.   13,
Winnipeg. * (3637)
Agents Wanted
AQINTS WANTED TO BELL fclLK
neckties for us. We sell you at a
?rlce that allows you to make
OOC/- commission, write today for
free samples and particulars. Ontario Neckwear Company, Dept.
669. Tcmnto_8._ont 13687)
WANTED FOR .INTERIOR TOWNS.
men anxious to earn a good living. "You can do this." Bee for
particulars, or write L. J. Deshar-
neie, Cranbrook. B. C. ,3483)
For Rent-Houses, Etc.
MODERN HOUSES FOR RENT—614
Latimer Bt. 913—333 Kootenay
8t. 120—314 Cedar St. furnlahed
»3}— Willow Point furnished 330.
Crystal Bay 810. H. E. Dili. 608
Ward Bt.   (3769)
FOR   RENT—DESIRABLE   ts   ROOM
bungalow,  nawlv renovated. Close
In. Apply Box 3714, DaUy News.
(3714)
HOUSE PARTLY FURNISHED. 112
month. S. sorensen, 6th and Elwyn
Sta.. Nelson. 137491
COTTAGE. MODERN, NORTH SHORE",
half mile from ferry. Phone 106.
(3764)
7 ROOM HOUSE AND TWO FOUR
room houses close ln. Apply D.
Magllo,   phone   80BL. (3733)
FURNISHED     HOUSEKEEPING
rooma for rent. Annable Block.
13.96)
FURN.    OR    UNFURN.    APTS.    BY
week or month. Medical Arte Bldg.
 (3497)
FUR.    ROOMS.    STEAM    HEATED,
shower, terms mod. Can. UC*.
(3600)
FURNISHED   3   ROOM   PLAT,   616
Victoria St.. afternoons.       (3717)
THftEE    ROOM    SUITE.    PRIVATE
bath, 611 Carb. St., Nelaon. (3760)
FULL  FURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING
rooms. 711 Vernon St.        (3709)
TERRACE   APTS.   Beautiful   Modern
Frlgidalre equipped suites.   (3498)
rWo'^RCOM^^RNISHED    SUITE
for rent Stirling HQtal.        (3499)
Semi ruRNisHED suites, chea!'.
AaUan   Ant..   Baker   St.     .3667)
Eczema itch Piles Ulcers. Try Geo. Lee's
China Remedy at Hudson's Ba; Co
(3603)
Room and Board
FOR. TWO HIOH SCHOOL BOYS,
near school, reasonable rates.
Phone 633R, or Box 986. NeUon.
 (3766)
HIOH SCHOOL GIRLS. NEAR
school. Mod. terms. Box 3784. pallv
News. (3™4)
Mayor
City clerk.
NOTICE
Ttfe notice that the above ls a
true Copy of the proposed By-Law
upon which the vote of the electors
oftho Municipality of the City of
Nelfon will bc taken on Monday the
37th dav of August 1934, between the
hours or 8 o'clock. AM., and s
o'clock, P.M.. ln the Council chamber ot the Olty H"ll. st the corner
of  Front and  WVd  ««*„,,.
City Clerk.
Nelson.   British   Columbia,   August.
»,h' *934' ,3666)
BTUDENT6 OR OTHERS CLOSE IN*
308 Carbonate or P.O. Box 873.
tmt)
Help Wanted
WANTED — YOUNG MALE CLERK-
stenogrspher. Apply ln own writing ststlng age, experience ill any)
and references to city Clerk, Trail.
_B. C„ before August 28th. (3747)
WOMEN WANTED TO SEW FOR US
at home. Sewing machine necessary. No selling. Ontario Neckwear
Company, Dept. 392. Toronto 8.
(3688)
EXPERIENCED  GIRL  FOR  OENER-
al work, write Boi 1769, Trsll,
(3703)
HOW TO GET A GOVERNMENT
lob. Free Booklet. Tha M C C
Ltd..  Winnipeg.     (3638)
For Exchange
iiiir~ESSEX SEDAN. 8PLEi*pro
condition for Ford or Chev light
delivery truck In aame condition.
Hett, syringa Creek. (36961
Lost and Found
Read ltl
EVERYONE
Its full of opportunities
—THRIFTY ones that
make your dollars go a
long way ... read
them and USE them.
Nelson Daily
News
Classified-Ads
Property for Sale
BUILDING LOTS IN ROSEMONT IN
Select residential area. Robertson*
Really Co. Ltd. ,3447)
FOR SALE. FAIRVIEW PART, 3 LOTS
rloee to car line cheap. 1113 Water
Street.  (3713)
800 LOTS IN YMIR TOWNSITE 310
up. Easy terms. Robertaon Realty
Co   Ltd._ _(3448)
SIX  ROOM HOUSE  FOR SALE. 810
Victoria St., Nelion, (3746)
LOST—ONE ROLL OF BLANKETS
.and   bedding   near   Frultvale   on
August 17th. Finder please notify
R.  Wagner  it prultvale and re*
celve rewsrd.      (3698)
ANY PERSON PICKING UP A ROLL
of bedding on Grsplte Road.
Phona 189L4.  (3766)
TO FINDERS
It you find a oat or a dog. a
pocketbook, Jewelry or fur or
anything elsa of value, telephone
The Dally News. A "Pound" Ad
will be Inserted without cost to
you.  Wa will collect from tbe
For Sale
MCCLARY SIMPLEX COMBINATION
gu and coal range, 1 cash register,
cheese cutter. 3 show cases, i
silent salesman, 1 Ice cream fountain complete with dishes, etc.,
account, cabinet, roll top desk. 1
computing scale and numerous
other store articles for Immediate
sale. 9136 cash. Box 3739, Daily
Newa. (3739)
POR    SALE - BARRELS,    KEGS
sugar sacks, liners. McDonald Jam
Co.,  Ltd. (3503)
For Sale or Rent
FOR BALE OR FOR RENT. AT*
tractive new house—Splendid location— reasonable. Apply Mre. J
A. Gibson. Gen. Del., Nelson. B.C.
(3701)
Property Wanted
WANTED TO BUY. ABOUT FIVE
acree of land with house and fair
buildings, on or near highway
preferred. Please send full par*
tlculars as to price, location, taxea,
and any other Information to C
A. Adams. Wlnnlfred, Alta. ,3760)
Livestock for Sale
SNAP FOR QUICK SALE. 43 BREED*
Ing ewes, 1 reg. Suffolk ram. 30
lambs reedy for market. APPly
Mrs. Stuart ovens, Syringa Creek,
B.  C. (3689)
FOR BALE-TEAM OP BAY MARES,
young and sound about 2800.
Price 9235. John Graham, Perry
Siding, (3637)
BILLY OOAT FOR SALE, TOGGEN-
berg, 6 years, Box 1141, Nelson.
(3744)
Motorcycles
MOTORCYCLES
Good Used Buys
1  Indian     3100.00
1 Indian     186.00
I  Indian   (aa new)   original
price M76    396.00
1 HX>. Twin two new tires      75.00
1 H. p. and sidecar complete
overhaul _    300.00
1  H. D.    166.00
1 J-ranels Bsrnet     75.00
Parta for H   D. and Indian
paLmer RITLEUGE
Trail
(3533)
Summer Resorts
THE LODGE, KUSKANOOK B. O-
17 mllea weat ot Creston. La-- and
creek fishing, swimming, duck
hunting ln season. Trallltea apend
oft daya hera. 811-60 week inclusive
(3468)
Automotive
FOR BALE. DODGE BIX BEDAN,
a real car at a low price, p. O. Box
442, Trail. B. C. Phone 317. (3731)
FOR BALE - 1926 SPECIAL NASH
aedau cheap for cash or trade ior
smaller car. ADP'y Room 18 Madden ^oteL . (3766)
Launches and Boats
WALTON'S BOAT FACTORY BUILD-
tng usi Repairing, Launchea row-
boats and canoes for hire. Ress-
onafrle rates. Phone 374X3. (3480)
Poultry and Eggs
WANTED - SEVENTY-FIVE      LEG-
horn  pullets. Carey, Gray  creek.
(3700)
Miscellaneous for Sale
STOCK ON HAND OF COTTON-
wood cores at reduced prlcea. B. C.
yeneer works, Ltd, (3746)
Miscellaneous Wanted
OOOD CLEAN RAGS WANTED-AP-
ply  DallyNews Office. (3368)
Investments
Living
Business and Professional Directory
Accountants
CHAS. F. HUNTER. 8. P. A. --*
Municipal snd Commerctal Audita.
P. O. Box U91. Nelaon, B C.
(3639)
Assayers
E. W. WIDDOWBON. established 1900.
805 Josephine St.. Nelaon. B c.
(3530)
ORENV1LLE    H.    GPlMWOOD.    618
Baker 5v, Nelson, Box 726.  (3531)
KOOTENAY   LABORATORIES
Assayers &  Chemists
Box  1343 Trail. BC
(8683)
C.   HULTGREN.  D.C.  Ph.C,  Palmer]
Graduate. McCulloch Blk. Ph   818 f
(3636)
Boat Livery
BEST PETERBOROUGH OUTBOARD
motor A row boata tor hire by day
—Frank Seal. Balfour, B.C. (35331
During the past four yeara from December 31st, 1929 to December 31st,
1933
INVESTORS SYNDICATE
has paid to Certificate Holders
$32,044,244.90
Has  Total Resources  of
357,609,061.00
ThU ia NOT Life Insurance
but a
Simple, Safe, Sound INVESTMENT.
For further particulars
apply
Jl. W. Dawson
GENERAL INSURANCE
P.O. Box 733, Phone 197
Hipperson Block
(3768)
Whew
Its Hot!
Well we have the ICE.
Large or Small
quantities.
PHONE
106      .
Williams' Transfer
609 Ward St.-NelBon
NELSON. B.C.
PIPE and FITTINGS
Modern plant, fully equipped for supplying pipe
and fittings for steam,
air, water or irrigation.
Your enquiries solicited,
Canadian Junk
Co., Ltd.
250 Prior St.
VANCOUVER, B.C.
(3481)
(jALVajHZED IRON PIPE AHD FIT-
tings Beltings, etc.—New Wire
Nails Hi" Hi'* Is 3',i". 83*60 P«
100 lba Full line ot new and uaed
Galv and Black Pipe and fittings
tt Oalv new fits, 1" Black So,
2" Black sultaele tor Irrigation and
water line 10c. other sizes low
prices new corrugated galv Iron
8500 per 100 square feet Poultry
wire netting 3 and 6 feat Full
ator, ot -tee] split pulleys, potato
and grain sacks Barbed wire Wire
Rope. Canvaa Doors, Windows
Roofing Felt, Garden and Air hose
Doom Chams Merchandise and
Equipment of all descriptions Enquiries  solicited
B.C. JUNK CO.
183    PoweU    St..    Vancouver.    B.C.
(3634)
Chiropodists
W. Mildred simonds Foot SpeeWlet.
405 Fernwell Bldg. Bpokane, wash.
 (oW-IJ
Chiropractor!
E.  It.  WARREN.   D.C.  613   BAKER i
Bt. Office Phone 116. (SMtjF]
Electrical
J. F. OOATES-The Eleejrlo Store.
supplies and inetallatione.
Phon. 766. R * fyfr
Florists
NIGHT OR DAT WE ARE ALWAYS I
at vour aervlce. wedding bou-1
quets Funersl designs at shortl
notice NELSON FLOWER SHOPPE,!
Phone  333  or 389R3. (3538) I
JOHNSON'S GREENHOUSES, Phonal
342 Cut flowers potted planta. f
and floral designs. (__H~*
Hide Dealers
DEALERS IN HIDES. JJ?   MOROAl1.!
Tt., Nt
30f Baker St.. Nelson. B.C  (3640)'|
Insurance and Real Estate j
ROBERTSON REALTY CO.. LTD.I
Real estate, Insurance, rentala!
Aberdeen block, Baker St,  (354»J
T. D. ROSUNG. 3 ROYAL BA*K
Bldg. for Insurance where the
Premiums are lower. (364V
It W DAWSON. Real Estate ln-1
surance Rentala Next Hlppersonf
Hardware,  Baker  street.      (8343)1
C.   D.   BLACKWOOD.   Insurance   Ofi
even description. RealEsl Ph W.L
(3544)1
SALE
Large  stock  electric motors generators welders cheap.
Write to—
ELECTRIC  CONTRACTING
& MACHINERY CO.
Calgary, Alta.
(3661)
100,000 feet good used pipe!
all sires.
LARGE STOCK PIPE
FITTINGS, VALVES, ETC.
Enquiries   Solicited
SWARTZ PIPE YARD
220 E, 1st Ave., Vancouver, B.C,
(3493)
Nelson Daily News
Classified Ads bring
quick results — try
one.
H.  E.  DILL,  AUTO AND FIRE  IN-i,
suraqce. Real Estate, 60S Ward Bt.l
(3848)1
J.    E.   ANNABLE.   REAL   .ESTATE.!
rentals, insurance. Annable hlock.f
LIFE, FIRE li AUTOMOBILE IN8UR-I
ance   p.E. Poulln. Ph. 70.  13647)I
CHAS P. McHARDY. INSURANCE .
Real Estate—Phone 136.      (3648)1
Machinists
BENNETT'S LIMITED __
For aU classes of Metal Work. Lethal
Work. Drilling. Boring and Grinding!
Motor Rewinding Acetylene welding.)
Phone" 533.
824 Vernon sties*
(8843)1
Engineers and Surveyor*
A II   GREEN CO., LTD.  616 WAKD1
St. Phone 364 Nelson, B.C. (38SB)|
P. S.  PETERS
Mining Engineer _
Examination operation and management of mlnea and mineral
properties. Roaaland. B-O.
(3551)
-    If. D. DAWSON-HtUON'
ENGINEER AND SURVEYOR
(3683)1
Boyd  C.  Affleck.  Box 487,  Nelson. I
Lands. Mlnersl Claims. Waterworks!
etc. Surreys, Plans and Estimates, f
13537)|
Sash Factory
LAWSON'S 8ABH PACTORY. HARD-
wood merchant. 317 Baker street.,
_ (8853) j
Second Hand Stores
WE   BUY    SELL   AND   EXCHANGE I
most  anything.  The  Ark.   (3864) "
NICE DINING TABLES. MRS. RAD-1
clUleTs 617 Vernon St.        (3688) I
USE   XHt   ILABSIHED   IDS.
BRINGING UP FATHER
N.OV- THE BEST,
V/A.V TO <SkT A
OOOO eOMPLEVlOM
IS TO Ml* THE
DlP^EncMT
IMGREDIEMT5, ,
A-b WE TOUO „
OUR U-5TEN-.FSJ
l-A-ST Vn/EEK-
By Geo. McManus
I'M G*-*D
I HAVE IT
AVV. RIGHT
AND TO GET THE
3EbT RESULT -
POT THI*b MIXTURE
OW VOUR FACE
A*JD MECK* RUB
IT ALL OVEt-J. - I
TWEM — )
VOU PUT A TOWEL
OVER TOUR FACE
AMD LET IT ORT-
NOW TO GET IT OFF
*.<_> A SECRET
PROCESS- AND-
TO-V-AORROV. NIGHT
AT THIS SAME TIME
•WE WIU.TELL TOU
MOW IT IS DONE-
A huge block of lapis lazuli two
feet long, a foot wide, and eight
In-her thick la one of the rare eihlb-
tta at the Field Museum, obtained
trom the grave of an Inca of Peru.
THE FINEST LONG DISTANCE
aYSTAL RADIO EVER INVENTED
iruto-toBet-r-t-toHm
,Elect_vcrty-toOpt-tii»i-ssV-t
tsam.Mu.ttmm.
tmtamii-i»
MESs.matitwo ,._,_
mmmKwiatus ,n~"a_amr
IRADI0.4!?
Isa-raw
■	
tmatteit-it.
KXKMAIfflAWI.
vANcotwree
t*vmsu
THE GUMPS
THE GLAD TIDINGS
"XTBLi«*W ¥K6ft\
•u/kOT I-.EST-
AN&Y Afcb UNCLE Blr*
-J-RE OH THtlR WAY HOME-
f-V-—^THtY ARRIVE TOMORROW-
7^ l TMCW&MT   "
\\ $»AETHIN6r WAS
1    IN STORE FOR
\     US WHEN I SAW
J) THE NEW MOON
7 OVER* /W LBf T
\    SHOULDER
±ai
\N|U.-tlLDA-- THAt1#AANS TOUR
VACATION IE OVER AU6- ,
l't*  NOYAU. SUN BURHEb AND TAMNtb-
\ MW NOT HAVE BEEN AT SOME '
SPORTSMEN'4 PARADISE ENv.OY.Nb THE. i
COOL LAKE —   — >■
mns
l HAVI NT
LNtB IN
Mr
SUNSHIHE-
e 0/
j&    BUT BOY- OH. BOY—
^\ WHAT PEACE ANb SOUTUOE
I HAVE EN JOYEb LAST MONTH'
VAflTH ANOY AWAY-
M-lVt I HAt.
Atxttrj '
4
 (Uf ALL STREET
ON RECOVERY
ifrnal-Hour Rally Is
Viewed With
Hope
By mDIRICK GARDNER
Associated Press financial Writer
MEW YORK, Aug, 14 (AP)—After
King most ot the day, the stock
Itrket resumed lta recovery movent In the final hour of trading to*
ay and closed with moderate gains.
A rally In United States government
ends, a steady Cnlted States dollar
lid firmness of commodity prloea
Efted hopes thst a turn for the better
I market sentiment would be transited Into more business activity after
Mor day.
halls together with industrial sold
ft' new tops on the recovery from
Wy 30 low polnu.
. Sales totalled 786,700 ahares.
Oalna of fractions to about 3 points
e general for such issues aa American. CS. Steel, American Tele-
*, Oeneral Motors. General Klec-
rtc, Allied Chemical. Du Pont, Mont-
»very Ward. Santa Pe. New York
•antral. J. I. Case and Bethlehem
, Oalna firmed, with wheat up %
t % of a cant a buthel. Cotton ended
rlth advances ot 45 to Ct cent* a
•le.
WAIL JOINS
THEARSENALS
LONDON, Aug. 34 (CP oable)—On
he eve of the opening of the new
lason British soccer fans got a sur*
rise today In the announcement Sir
iTedertck Wall, secretary of the Foot-
i aaaoclatlon for 40 yeara until his
etlrement lut month, haa Joined tbe
Card of directors of the Arsenal Foot-
•11 elub, champions of the past
Wo seasons.
. "It Is a great satisfaction to every-
hi aawclated with t)» Arsenal," said
tanager Allison, "that Sir Frederick
■ continuing active' aaaoclatlon .with
he game.'• Allison thla season auc-
la tbe great Herbert Chapman,
rho died suddenly Just before ths
lose Of tbe lut season.
HALLY SAVES
CHICAGO'S DAY
CHICAOO, Aug. 94 (AP)—A buying
tally Just before the cloelng bell
laved the Wheat market trom a dismal performanca today. Qossip at the
pt attributed the closing spurt tbat
advanced prices for a net gain of »_
to \ oent to a turn for Improvement
tn stocks and Uttle Inflation chatter.
December wheat finished at 11.04';
to ll.os. May at 11.06% to 11.06%
snd September new at 11.03% to
11.04.
Coarse grains gained \ to IH cents.
U. S. DOLLAR
ADVANCES
MONTRIAL, Aug. 34 (CP)— The
pound continued to decline on Montreal currency exchanges today, losing
V. cent at 14.62%. The United States
dollar advanced 9-83 of 1 per cent
tl 3 18*11 per cent dlacount and the
franc waa .03 ot a cent higher at
8.81 oenta.
Vancouver Soles
TANOOOVR, Aug. 34 (CP)—Mining shares aold on tha Vancouver
ftock exchange today:
| Curb—Bradlan US, Bralorne 377,
Bralorne Pract 4-9, B R Con 1500,
BRX 9480, Cariboo 1080, Oold B 800,
Inter O a. O 880, Meridian 800,
Horning 8 8900, Nat 8 6000, Nicola
10,700, Prem B 4000, Pram O 3600,
Reno 3800, Sally 1800, Taylor B 3500,
Vanalta 4000, Wayalde 700.
Curb—Alexandria 4000, B.C. Nickel
1100, Big Mlsa 1000, Congress 3600,
Dalhousle IOOO, Dentonla 3700, Fair-
view 300. Oolconda 1000, Orange 2800,
Orull W 3000, Hedley Amal 1300,
Hercules 31.500, Home 3600, Koot
B 600, Mlnto 10,680. Noble Five 1000,
Horgold 3600, Pavilion 1600, Pend O
100, Porter I 4000, Reward 600. Silver*
oaltb 1000, Snowflake 1000. Waverly
97,600, Whitewater 3000, Olacler Ck
1000, Salmon 300, United Imp 1400,
Viking too, Waterloo 1000.
Calgary Live Stock
CALGARY. Aug. 34 (CP)— Receipts
yesterday 34 cattle, 36 calves, 878
hogs and 339 sheep and lambs. Today
Up to noon 63 cattle 847 hoga and 307
aheep and lambs.
Tlie cattle market waa elow at unchanged prices. Hoga were steady at
yesterday's late advance, selects 88.25,
bacons 87.75 and butchers 17.35 off
trucks.
Cattle, medium to good butcher
steers 13.36 to 13.75, common steers
81-80 to 63. Medium butcher heifers
93. Common veal calvea 6180 to 63.36.
Bologna bulla 11.36. •
Exchange Rates
HlW YORK, Aug. 34 (AP)-Ster-
ling exchange heavy at 88.06 tor 60-
day bills and at 95.07 for demand.
Oanadlan dollars 3 16-16 per cant
premium. ,
Francs 6.991. oente.
Lire 8.711*, cents.
Uruguay 63.10 oenta
Buy Direct, Save Money
and Gold
Straub efficiency and
direct  Belllnli
Elve you
Ighest grade
milling
equipment at
lowest possible ooata.
mi. n.ii    Crushers, con-
HlD-COne  OBII    cen tra tors,
Mills
por table
stampa, wster   wheels,
1 to 360 ton ca- plates,   ste..
paclty   asve   gold (tonal boilers,
aa  wall  aa  time, etc. Send for
power, and wster. Bulletin   N o.
1330 UP. 115.
siM r.   Straub Mfg. Co.
iimi:;         681  Chestnut St.
Oakland., Cal.
. (	
Metal Markets
-THI NILION DAILY NEWS, NIUON, B.C—IATUADAY MORNINO, AUBUIT K. 1184-
.ofiO
NKW YORK. Aug. 34 (API—Copper
quiet; electrolytic, spot and future,
blue eagle, 9.00.
Tin barely steady; spot and nearby
and future 1.75.
Iron quiet; unchanged. '
Lead barely steady; spot, New York
3.70; laat St. Louis 3.60.
Zinc quiet; Bast St. Louis, spot and
future 4.38.
Aluminum, 30.00 to 38.30.
Antimony, spot, 8.76.
Bar allver steady; <:, lower at 49>i.
At London—Copper, standard apot,
(28 8s: future £38 10s: electrolytic
spot (31  8a;   future (81  18a.
Tin, spot and future, (837.
Lead, apot (10 16s; future (10
17s 6d.
Zinc, apot and future, (13 17s 6d,
Bar sliver qulit; unchanged at 31
MM,
MINING SECTION
LIMY IN EAST
Ventures In Eight-Point Advance; Base Metals
quiet
TORONTO, Aug. 34 (CP)— Thl
mining section ot the Toronto ax-
change today livened up with volume
Increasing and price levels irregular.
Ventures, trading 68,000 shares, scored an eight-point advance. Base
metals continued quiet, oils were a
shads lower.
Central Pat closed unchanged at
1.12. Macassa took a five-point lose
at ttl and Slscoe dropped 4 at 3.78.
Nearly 83,000 shares changsd hands
In the buying wave that swept Peterson Cobalt to a new 1984 blgh ot »'',.
It finished ', lower at 6U.
Acme Olla finished off V, point.
Horns Oil wu unchanged at 103 and
Chsmlcal Research shadld off 1 at
1.90.
Noranda loit 48 at 34.00.
RENO REGAINS
AT VANCOUVER
Congress Takes Tumble;
Bralorne Closes
Unchanged
VANOOOVBR, Aug. 34 (OP)—Value* war* firm during the morning
session on the Vancouver atock ax-
change today but a few losaaa appeared ln tha afternoon, tha largeit
being a tall of 6 In Congreu at 44.
Bralorne reached 16.00 but fell back
to 14.76, unchanged. Cariboo gained
4 at 1.88. Reno wu up tVs at 95(4
and Bridge River Exploration at 86
and Nicole at 97 each firmed one cent.
Vanalta gained -/, at 12", and Waverly at 1% waa up v,.
National Sliver at 3V,. B.C. Nickel
at 88 and Big Missouri at 96 all
loat one cent.
Royallte advanced 16 to 19.78 whlli
Home Oil lost 6 at 1.00 and Hlghwood
Sarcee wu oft Vi cent at 19.
MONTREAL LIST
HAS A BAD DAY
MONTRIAL, Aug. 34 (CP)—Prloea
sagged on the Montreal atock exchange today.
BraaUlan Traction closed at 10K,
oft ',.. Canadian Industrial Alcohol
A remained unchanged at SH while
the B atock declined *>. to 7',. Nickel
held steady at 38%.
Bank ot Nova "cotle, wu up four
points at 369 and Canadian Hydro
Electrlo preferred dropped 2% at
83H.
Canadian Celanese appeared at 17%
up %, while tractions were alao
gained by Shawlnlgan Power, B.C.
Power A and Oanada Cement.
Holllnger closed off 10 centa at
19,68. Sales 8166 shares; bonds 64650.
1934 Business
Improved Over 1933
MONTREAL. Aug. 34 (CP)—Business ln Canada ls on a higher general
level than a year ago and all Indices
of trade reveal improvement over
1683, and aome Improvement over
conditions of two years ago, lt la
noted In tha Bank of Montreal monthly business summary Issued here today.
The general scale of production hu
been well maintained, the report continues. Hope of a bountiful harvest la
not to be realized, but taking the
Dominion aa a whole, eropa promise
to equal, perhaps exceed, those of
lut year, though prolonged drought
over large, areu In the western and
central provinces hss retarded growth
and reduced production.
STERLING TAKES
TUMBLE
NEW YORK, Aug. 34 (CP)—Sterling again dropped aharply on the
foreign exchange marketa today. It
wu reported tha British equalization
account had withdrawn support for
the pound. In Nsw York today the
final nt* on sterling wss 85.07,
off IH-
The closing quotation on the Dominion dollar wu 3 16-16 per cent
premium against 3 8-16 yesterday.
Thl French frano held unchanged at
6.69"_ cents.
Lumber Production
Lower
SEATTLB, Aug. 34 (AP)-A production of 96,486-318 tMt of lumbar
wu reported by 688 down and operating mills ln Oregon and Waahlngton
for the week ending Auguat 11. The
Weat Cout Lumbermins aaaoclatlon
said today. Thli wu about 1,600.000
tut under thi prevloui waak.
Minneapolis Grain
MINNEAPOLIS, Aug. 34 (AP) —
Wheat, No. 1 northern 114% to 118%.
No. 1 red durum 112% to U3>/,, Sept.
111%, Dee. 110%. May 110%.
Corn, No. 8 yellow 76 to 76V_.
Oata, N*. 3 white 60% to 51%.
Plax, No. 1 194 to 304,
Plour, 10 centa higher. Carload lots
family patents 7.60 to 7.80 a barrel ln
98-pound cotton sacks. Shipments
33,387. Bran 33.50 to 28.00.
Market and Mining News
Bright Spoti
of the Week
By tha Canadian Preu
NBW   WESTMINSTER—Export    Of
tlr doon shows marked increase.
CALOART—380 married unimploy-
id to be given work on federal highway construction.
SASKATOON— Quaker Oata company mill operating 34 hours a day
tor seven days ot the wick.
WINNIPEO—Work beglni on 40th
dwelling thli yeu, a 910,000 horns.
SAULT STE. MARIE-lncreau Industrial activity uvei city 91838 a
month nllef costs.
MATACHBWAN—Building booming
with a ichool house, hotel. Baker
and Mviray private residences under
construction.
LONDON—Indications aeen of early
construction ot new 11,600,000 federal
building. ,
WEILAND-Canada Foundries and
Porglngs, Ltd., plan rebuilding section of plant destroyed by 180,000
tin.
TORONTO—Bullion production ot
Ontario gold mlnea for tint uven
month! ot 1984 valued at 940.093,769
wu more thug 11.000.000 ahead ot
corresponding period  of  1999.
BELLEVILLE— Railway employees
work gang of 300 men, largest number ever hired ln the district.
THREE RIVERS — Work costing
6400.000 will be done In repairs to old
wharves ot Oanadlan International
Paper company and building new
sheds ln the harbor.
FEAR DOMINATES
JAPAFTCPOUCY
Such Is Statement of Korean
Missionary Alter 32
Years In East
HALIFAX, (CP)—"The malnipring
of Japan's policy In tha Orient it
fear" declared Rev. Dr. A. P. Robb,
for 33 yein a missionary ln Korea,
speaking before a local club. "Japan
ls afraid of China and' what ahe
will become in the futun and her
old fur of Russia la reviving," he
decland. Japan did not take Manchukuo to make an outlet for her
manufactured goodi, thl Korean missionary opined.
"What Japan really did want wu
control of the tood aupply to round
out her empire with possessions on
tbe mainland. Sha would slso like
to possess that part of Siberia Jutting down towarda the Sea of Japan.
For ahe ls afraid ot the air force
that Russia la rumoured to be
building there", ha continued.
"It la only 400 mllea from vladl-
vostock to Japan by air, but aba
cannot afford to fight with Russia,
ao having bluffed har way Into oontrol of Manchuria, she la now trying to bluff her way to gaining a
protectorate of China—in spite of
lt being a violation of tbe Nine Power Treats," Dr. Robb aald.
C. P. R. EARNINGS
INCREASE
MONTREAL, Aug. 34 (CP)—Earnlnga of the Canadian Pacific Railway
company tor the woek ended August
33, 1934, showed an lncreau of 9180,*
000 over ths same period lut year.
Earnings were 63,381,000 compared
to 83,171,000 for the same period ln
1933.
TO REPAIR LINE,
PORTLAND CANAL
VANCOUVER, Aug. 34 (CP)—Under
oontract to do repair work on tha
Portland Canal Bhortllm railway, extending from Stewart, B.C., for 16
mllu to a point opposite thi Red
CUft mining property, Andnw McCul-
lough, construction engineer, and
Angus Nicholson, railway contraction
superintendent, have left for the
north.
The Portland Canal line ls owned
by Consolidated Mining is Smelting
company, Ltd., recently granted an extension ot Its charter. Present main*
tenance work is understood to ba one
of the terms of the charter extension.
The Una wu originally planned to
tap tha anthracite coal tlelda ot
Oroundhog mountain and wu expected ln time to be extended to tbe
Peace River district. It wu built ln
1910 by Sir Donald Mann.
Winnipeg Groin
WINNIPEG. Aug. 34 —Closing futures quotations;
Open   Hlgb   Low Clou
Wheat:
Oct.    .8614     85'J      94% 84<4
Dec.    ..   .   86%     86%      88% 85%
May            89%     89-,     89 89'I
Oats:
Oct    47         47        46% 46%
Dec    46%     46%     46% 46
May    .        47%     47%      46\ 47
Barley:
Oct.    .   ,   61%     61%     60% 61
Dec.    ....   61%     61 ij      60% 60
May           61%     61%    61% MH
Flax:
Oct.    .      166       169       168% 188
BK    ... 168%    166      164% 166%
av    ...    169%    171       169% 170%
Rye:
Oct    70%    'I        09% 70%
BK    73%     73%     70jl 71%
ay       76%     76%     74% 74%
Cash prices;
Wheat: No. 1 hard. 81: No. I nor.
84; No. 3 nor. 80%; No. 9 nor.
79V,: No. 4 nor. 77%; No. 8 70%:
No. 6, 66%: feed. 69%: NO. l durum
93%;  No. _ A. R. W., 79%; track,
83%; screenings, per ton, 67.
WINNIPEO, Aug. 94 (CP)—Export
purchase* of 800,000 bushels of Canadian wheat tailed to offset steady
hedging pressure on the Winnipeg
grain exchange today and wheat futures closed a dull session H tt H
oent lower.
Valuu finished near the day's Iowa,
October at 84%, December 86% to
98% and May 89% to 99% centa.
Operations generally were of a local
nature and tba offerings again' came
largely from elevator companlu hedging against receipts of new-crop
wheat In the country. Oold weather
In western Canada appeared to have
been discounted by traders.
Dow Jones Averages
80 Industrials 95.48 up 1.42
20 rails 88.20 up 1.06
20 utilities  21.60 up   .52
Vancouver Stock Exchange
A P Con 	
Amei  CHI	
Beaver  Silver   	
Bradlan  	
Bralorne   ...	
Bridge River Con ..
BRX  oold  	
Cariboo Gold Q ...
Sand B Corp  
out  Brew	
Gold  felt   	
Home Oil 	
Intl  coal 	
McLeod        .....
Mireury Oil -	
Meridian .
Metallne Metals 	
MOdll   Oil   	
Morning   Star   	
Nat  silver 	
Nicola     _	
Okalta    , -.
Pioneer   Oold   _	
Premier  Oold  	
premier  Border  ......
Quatalno   	
Reno    	
SouthweaV Plti"'!.!"
Spooner  Oil   	
Taylor Bridge 	
Vsn-lta .
Wavslda  -
CURBS
Alexandria   .'-......-	
Baltac	
Bayview  ~	
SC Nickel 
R Mountain 	
Big Missouri	
Oan  Rand   	
Calmont    ~	
Congreu    ..........
Crows Nut  	
Dalhousle        	
Dalhousle  OUI 	
Hlghwood Sarcee ....
Pacilta  ...
Georgia River  -
Grandvlew  -	
itt"
16.00
10.00
106
,16
.37
.00%
.03%
!.'.
Bunshlh*    	
Dtlca   	
Olacler Cnek •••
Sentente    
unwell «...
Palrvlew  Amal  .
Fabyan   on  	
Freehold   	
oolconda   	
ooid Mountain
Orsng*     	
Orull   wlbksne
Halda   	
Hedley Amal 	
Hercules    	
Home Oold 	
Koot Belli	
Koot  Flo   	
Lakavlnw   .*.	
Lowery pet*
Mar Jon ,	
Merland	
Mill  City  	
Mlnto	
Morton   Wolsey
Noble  Five   .....
Nordon   	
Norgold   	
Pavilion   	
Find orellle 	
porter Idaho .....
Riward   	
Royallte	
Rufui   Argenta
8,uth  Hope   
almon Oold ....
Bllvercrest   ........
Silversmith    ........
Snowflake  -.
Standard Gold .
Taylor Wind  	
United Empire .
United Oil 	
Vldette   	
Viking   	
Waterloo _,.	
Waverley Tang  .
White ngll 	
iter 	
7.80
.01
.3
30
i
1
1
.31
.05
OIU
140
.19
.04
i
T
i
1*
.     .19
41
.07%
.07
If
41
.«.
.09
.06
13.75
.01
.03
•     -03
!   m
.16'
At
.0914
i
is
i 1
Whltewfti
n
.08
.10
.01%
-31
.05
m
14.00
.OlVt
.16
T
j»
M*
.35
1.80
.08
.01-2
.06
Toronto Stock Quotations
Alexandria     „—
Algoma   - _.	
Amity —
Ashley   OOld    	
Barry Holllnger ..._	
Bau Metala    _ 	
Bear Bxploration -*.	
I""?..::™
Bradlan    _ —.
Bralorne  .......
Bntt Tntheway ., —
Bridge  R  Exploration  ....
Brownlee    —
But Can Gold   .... - _.
Can Klrfiifld ~Z'.'Z____\
Can Malartic —
cariboo Gold Quarts	
Cutle Tretheway  ___.„,
8antral  Manitoba 
sntrai Patricia  —.
Slerlcy    ...  
oast Copper  _.„..
Sobalt   contact    - 
olumario ........
Conarlum    	
Cona m & 8 -	
Dominion Bxploration "!~
Eldorado .....
Falconbrldge    _ 	
Granada  .........  	
Holllnger     .___._..
Howey   — _
Hudion Bay —
intTNlcker - „ 	
Klrkland  Lake	
Lake Mann     .	
Little Long Lac .. —,
Lake Shon	
Mejntyn 	
McVlttle Grahamm*  _
Mcwattere Gold _ _.
Macassa „,
Maple Lief 	
Mining Corp 	
Moffatt   HaU    _	
Nlplulng    „.,	
Noranda  	
fcatkhUl -	
Paymaster _.
Pend Oreille  	
Plonur Oold ...
pemler   Oold   .„.._ -.
Reno  Oold   _~	
San  Antonio   „..	
Sherritt Gordon 	
Slscoe     -	
ijj
i>
■36%
P
9.98
16.30
8"
m
LSI
.13
.     113
: ,.««
:   S*
'. 140O0
.   43.00
      3%
. 3.60
. 8.99
.84
. I960
137
. 14.60
.   36.13%
__%
.08
6.90
.   84.10
.   46.00
44
-81
: '35
1.76
■        04%
.     3.57
.   43.00
: 1*
.   13.90
:  I
6.46
.       .66
3.73
8outh Tlblemont 	
Smelters   Gold   	
Stadacona    -	
St Anthony _	
Sudbury Basin 	
Sylvanlte     	
Teok   Hughea	
Towagamee  .....
Venturu    	
Walta Amullt ..........
Wayside    ....-_
White Bagla	
Wright Hargum -
OILB
Acme  —
AJax .	
A p Consolidated
Associated
Brit Amer Oil -	
Baltac Oil   	
Calmont Oil  -——...
O and E Oorp  ....
Chemical Reiearch  -	
Dalhousle  _	
Home OU           —.
Homestead Q and O .........
Imperlil  Oil  	
tntirl Pete - -	
Ujwery   — —	
Merland	
Nordon    	
Oil  Selectloni	
Sga ~	
fcyallta   	
lamia
JJalnwTlght  ~_  -93
1ND1 srRlALS
Beatty Bros A    5}
Beauharnols —  84
Bel) Telephon* .....   111}
Srazlllan     —  10}
raw  ts   Dllt   _
Canada Bread  3'/
Can  Cement     6V
Can Car and Poundry   Ij
Oan Indus Al A -  8V
Canada  Dredge  80V
Can Pacific     14
Cons  Bekerlu    8
Distillers  Seagrama  18}
Dominion Stores    16V
Pord of Canada A    30V
Ooodyear  Tlr* _.  139
Hiram walker -.   38
Siperlal TobseTO  _  11}
blaw A  — -  "I
Massey  Harrla     4)
Standard Paving   14
Bteel of Canada  -  39V
Quotations on Wall Street
Allegheny   	
Al chemical  .
Am Can -	
Am   For   Pow
Am Ma - Fdy
Am Smelt & Re
Am  Telephone
Am Tobacco ....
Anaconda   ..
Atchison   ...
Auburn Mo
galdwln
alt ts Oblo ...
Bendlx  Av	
Beth Stwl
Canada   Dry   ...
Can pacific  ....
Cerro de Pasco
Ches it Ohio ...
Chrysler   -	
Com ti South
Con Ou N T
Corn Prod . ..
C  Wright Pfd
Dupont    	
Eont   Kodak
glee pow A U
Erie    	
Pord English ...,
Ford  of  Can
First Na Stores
Freeport Tex ■...
Oen Elec   	
Oen   Foods   ....
Oen Moton ....
Oold Dust 	
Goodrich  .   ....
Ort North Pfd
Grt West sugar
Howe Sound
Hudson Mo
int   Nickel
Int Tel 4c Tel
3%
198%
100%
1
3?J
m
Jewel   Tea   	
Kenn copper ..
Kresge 8 8..
Kroegger & Toll
Milwaukee Pfd
Mont Ward 	
Nash Motors 	
Bs Dairy Prod
pow 8t Lt ....    a]
N T Central     34
Par. Oaa & Eleo     16'
Pacific Mo       8
Penn, R R     16'
Pure Oil      8!
Radio   Corp        6
Radio Keith Or    31
Rem    Rand   .....     0
Rock island        31
Safeway Stores 49<
8 Louh ft S F 3
Shell union .... 7<
S Cil Edison .. 14
Bouth pacific .. 19i
SUn Oil of Oal 981
Stan Oil of Ind
Stan Oil of R J
Btewart   Warner
Studebaker 	
Tex Corp 	
Tex Gulf Sul
Tlmken Rollers
Under Type .....
Un Carbide  	
Dn Oil of Cal
United Air 	
United TBIl    . .
Un Pacific 	
U 8 Pipe 	
U S Rubber 	
U   S   Steel  .. ..
Van   Steel   	
West   Elec   	
Woolworth   	
Yellow Truck ..
**»'.
Montreal Stock Prices
Bell Telephon   117
Brasllian    10%
8 0 power A     36%
B c powers  -    8
Building   Products   31
Can Cir ft Foundry      iu
Can   cement     6%
Csn Cement Pfd     88
Csn Gen Electric  158%
Csn  Oypsum    .'.     8%
Cin tnd A  A  -     8%
Can ind Al B
Csn Pso Ralli
Can steamers
Cockahut,  Plow
Con M ft «    	
Dominion Bridge .
Dominion Olau ....
Dominion   Textile
Gen Steel waru
Chirles Gurd    	
Eamllton  Bridge ..
it  Nickel	
Masuy Harris
r
Montreal Power ...
Nat   Brewing   .....
lat Steel Oar 	
iwer  corporation
.iu Broa . .
luibec Power
.  awlnlgan
South Can Power
Steel of Canida    98
CURBS
Aw'd   Brewerlu       10%
Prlu Broa    3%
Qu*h*c Powir  if ,
Shawlnlgan _  30%
South Can power ...._  13%
>"ii       ri'iK'H--!      s,.
Ion Tar      3%
'ou""   r: :•    9
Brew ft Dlst        go
Brit Amer Oil    137
Can celineu     14
Csnada  Dredge
Csn vlcken       It
Can  wineries   _     6V
Coscrave Brewing     8V
Distillers   Seagrams       13V
Dominion   Engineer       31
Dominion Tir
Dryden
Home   _
imperlil Oil      14)
imperial Tob Can  ,.   11
Intl Petrol 	
McColl   Frontenac
Noranda 	
Page Hera*y 	
BANKS
Cahadlenn*   	
Commerce _	
Dominion	
Imperial    _..
Montreal    i
Nova Scotla 	
Royal   	
»TOIf,LANEbl'R
Dominion   Stores
Ford Canada A ..
Ooodyear Tire ......
Laura   Secord   ......
Loblaw Groceriu
Wut Can Flour ..
Walker Brewing
Cub grains spreads wen practically English statisticians have Juit de*
unchanged. Coarse gralna duplicated termlned that 16 ls the most dan-
wheat. * gcrous age for cyclists.
WHEAT'S BIG
FOUR MEET
U.S. Threatens a
Five Percent
Increase
By ALBERT W. WILSON
Aswlaied Preu Stall Writer
LONDON. Aug. 34 (AP)—Memben
of wheat's "big four" met today In
confannoa over export and production restrictions that, expert* uld,
were foredoomed to failure.
What slender hopi remained tor
uvlng lomethlng out of thl wnckage
of the latest conference ot tbl world'i
31 moat Important producing eountrlu, that ended hen lut night,
netedMn tha United Statei conferees'
newest bargaining weapon—Washington's move yesterday to Increase wheat
acreage next year 6 ptr mnt.
It Oanada, Argentina, Australia and
th* United States—the "big four"—
failed to agree on export quotu ba*
fore the next world conference at
Budapest thli November, oburven
predicted the 1934 wheat pact would
go definitely to smuh.
Whtot commission memben hen
interpreted the Wuhlngton threat u
"retaliatory measures" for Argentina's
refusal even partially to support
schemes for controlling production
and exports.
Yet few believed Argentina, secure
In the knowledge that prevailing high
pricei are benefitting bar producers,
would abandon her demands for an
•iport quota of 180,000,000 bushels
—exactly one-fouth ot tbe utlmated
100.000,000 bushel quota tor all tbl
world's exporters.
BEHER PRICES,
TORONTO LIST
Goodyear Common Is Feature
With a Spurt of 1Q
Points
PERPETUATE NAME
OF NAVAL LEADER
BORN IN HALIFAX
h
Sir Provo Wallis Became Distinguished Admiral of
British Fleet
HALIFAX. (CP) — Halifax, "the
Warden ot the Honor ot tha North,"
owes a gnat dibt to the Imperial
Navy. The establishment of a naval
station hen In 1769 wu largely responsible tor the era of marine prominence and prosperity that followed.
But Halifax partly repaid that debt ln
providing an Admiral long renowned
u "tha Father of the British Plut."
He wu Sir Prove Parry Wallls, K.O.
B. Fiw Canadlani bave led a mora
brilliant adventurous life than thla
gallant old sea-dog who wu bom
In the Naval Yard ln Halifax. Hla
grandfather came hare when tha
yard wu tint opened. He wu
a master-builder. Hla father who
waa born In Halifax, too, wu
chief clerk. Thla wu the family
tradition whloh, added to lt tha environment ot bla birth and the spirit
ot the tlmu, produced one of Britain's
gnat naval leaden.
Tha Nova Scotla Historical Society
hav* attempted to perpetuate tbe
memory ot the great Canadian by
placing a tablet ln the Naval Yard. It
fears the following Inscription*.
"Near thli ipot ln BM. naval yard
wu born Sir Provo Parry Wgllli, K.C.
B., 1791-1893, who urved with great
distinction tor eighty-eight yean In
the navy; first won fame on board the
Shannon, ln her famoua action with
the Cheupwk* and brought the
prlu to Halifax, 1813, rou to the
rank of Admiral ot the Fleet, and
long bore tha great honor of being
'The Father of the British Fleet' ".
Echoes of war between France and
England and the atory of the American revolt atlrnd th* mind of the
young HaUgonlan. He entered u a
midshipman ln the navy, and ha was
soon engulfed ln the conflict. In 1608,
urvlng on the British frigate Cleopatra, he wu captured by the French,
but that wu hla flnt and only defeat.
He took a prominent part In the
capture of the American frigate
Chesapeake which wai brought home
-to Halifax with a great display ot triumph and a proud citizenry rejoiced.
ONLY <l!VF COMMANDS
Captain Broke, commander of the
victorious Shannon reports: "Having
received a severe ubre wound at the
first outact. while charging on a party ot the enemy who bad rallied on
their forecutle, I wu only capable
of giving oommands UU assured that
our conquest wu complete, and then
directed Second Lieutenant Wallls to
take charge of the Shannon and aecure the prisoners. I beg to recommend this officer most strongly to
the commander-in-chief's patronage,
for the gallantry displayed during the
action, and the skill and Judgment
afterwards evinced ln the anxious
dutlu which envolved on him."
Thui the young Canadian naval officer became a Commander at tha age
of 31. His march upwards wu steady
from then on. He was made a vice
admiral In 1867. Six years later he became Admiral. In 1877 he wu appointed Admiral of the Fleet. During
the years 1847-1861 he wu Atde-de-
Camp to the Quern. He wu created
a K.C B. ln 1860 and a O.CJS. In 1678.
A further honor wai paid him when
by a apeclal Order-ln-Councll he wu
retained on the active list of the navy
for tha remainder ot bla life.
He lived to be 101 yean old and
died In England.
That ls the story et ona of Halifax's
moat distinguished sons, who ranks
with Samuel Cunard, founder of the
Cunard Une, another native HaUgonlan who brought honor to Canada.
FEWER FAILURES
IN BUSINESS
WnmtfEO, Aug. 34 KOP)- Tba
pulu Of Oanadlan builneu continues
steady, lt la shown In tha weekly report ot tbe Canadian Credit Men'a
Trust aaaoclatlon nlaaaed today, with
both wholesale and Mall trade holding up well. Some Improvement ln
several Unn is reported.
Collections continued fair.
A decrease ot thru compared to
tba aame wuk ot lut year ii ahown
ln failures under tbe bankruptcy act.
The figures for the week ara given
aa 14, with 17 lut year.
TORONTO, Aug. 34 (OP)—Thl Industrial section ot th* Toronto exchange cloud today with Increased
volume and bettor prices. Goodyear
common's lut-mlnut* spurt of 10
points to 190 wu a closing futur*.
'Wet" stocks and other luuu dnw
—— PAOI NINI
up will toward tbi cloae.
Walken tlnlihed 1<H points higher
at 38 The preferred, stock added ii
to.14*4. Distlll*rs-8»agrama.dropped
% to 13%. Canada Bud added % to
close   at   10%.
In tha olla Imperial and McColl-
Frontenac scond gains rahging from
% to H polnta. ,
Consumers Gu flnlihid itrong 9
polnta up at • 184. Bill Telephone
c* -ed unchanged at 117%.
To can truit ln Alaika, alternate layers ot fruit and sugar an placed ln
empty buttorkus which ara ut ln
tha entrance hallway and troit-crys-
talltud through tha winter to kup
th* fruit In lta natural atat*.
BONDS
"I
We offer, and recommend, aubject prior salt,
all or any part
$5500 City of Rouland 6% 1951 Bonds
at 96 and accrued interest; yield over 6%
Also new issue Province Saskatchewan 4% Bonds
due 1953 at 85.08 and interest to yield 5.25%.
P. E. POULIN
STOCKS AND BONDS
Nelson, B.C P.O. Box 752
I
J
L STOCKS AND BONDS
Phone 70 Nelson, B.C. P.O. Box 752   |
The Consolidated Mining & Smelting
Company of Canada, Limited
TBAIL, - BRITISH COLUMBIA
Manufacturers of
Lad-Zinc—Cadmium Bismuth
ELEPHANT Brand
Chemical Fertilizers
Ammonium Phosphates—Sulphate of Ammonia
Superphosphates—Complete Fertilizers
Producers and Refiners of
TADANAC Brand
Electrolytic
MINING
COMPANIES
Write Vs for Quotations
on
SPECIAL RULED FORMS
ENVELOPES (oil sizes)
DAILY TIME SHEETS
MILL COST SHEETS
SYNOPTIC FORMS
PAYROLL FORMS
LETTERHEADS
ASSAY FORMS
COST SYSTEMS
MINING CHARTS
LEDGERS (oil sizes)
LOOSE LEAF FORMS
REQUISITION BOOKS
MINE RECORD FORMS
We have the largest commercial printing establishment in the interior of British Columbia,
including ruling and lithograph departments.
WE CAN GIVE YOU
IMMEDIATE SERVICE
(Uornrn? rrial firmiituj Sr.pt.
,    NELSON, B.C.
■
 MOI TIW
-  THI NIUON DAILY NIWS. NIUON, M--4ATUI.DAV MORNINO. AUGUST ft 1M4
to Ht AB Cameras
■I Vmnto Prices
Bitot J-*-* tzptMMl ftlm
to « nr developing and
printing.
Mann-, Rutherford
Drat Co.
J.A.C. Laughton, R.O.
OPTOMETRIST-OPTICIAN
Salt! 209, Medical Art! Bulldlni
•SEE1
VIC GRAVES
Muter Plumber
For Modern Plumbing
AT MODERATE PRICES
Opp. City Hill Phone 815
Allen's Art Shoppe
'A Greeting Card for Even
Occasion"
■■■■MMWHMlHi
ECONOMIC
INDEXOP
Is New High Point
Since Beginning
of 1933
OT-IAWA. Auf. M (OP)—The eoo-
nomlc Index, malrtalned by tbi Do.
minion bureau ot itattitlci, reached
In tbe week ended Auguit 18. a niw
high point for tbi term of complli
tt i trom tbe beginning ot IVU to
tbe .prewnt.
lhe rlilng In tbi Index In tbe liteet
week for whloh lnformitlon li avail
able wai dui to thi adYancei ln bond
prlcei, bank clearings and common
itock prlcu, itated tbe report.
Dominion government bond prion
ihowed considerable giln. Thl bid
quotation for tha 19*3 9 per cent refunding bond wai is high ai 111.5
and tbe UM 4'. per cent bond wu
quoted at 107.50. *
Bank clearln s were about 1303,-
000,000 compared wltb 1379,000,000
ln thl preceding week, the adjusted
roUR ORDER V/E WILL
PROMPTLY FILL- ANO REM
VOU A MODEST BILL !•,
Index advancing from Ml to 100.0.
Thi Indw ot oommon itock prion
wu IU ln tbl wwk ended Auguit I
IS oompared with S7.8 In tbl wwk
ot Auguit ».
Tbi nine facton Indicating the
trend ot the mineral production aver-
agwl lower ln July thin In thi preceding month, th* Index being 117 -1
compared with 137.!, tbi report continued. Oalni wen ihovni ln export
ot copper and nlckil, but tbi ln-
creaiei win leu than normal tor
thi leuon.
Odd Induitrlu participated In thl
lncriue, the ruultlng index Ming
91J, comparid with MD. Wheat flour
and rolled oati wen produoed In
gruter volume, Indicating lncreued
activity ln thi flour milling Induitry.
A moderate decline wu shown In
sugir minufacturlng, the Index dropping from 90 to 75.9.
Two Are Ready for ,
Greenland Flight
OABTWBIOHT, Labrador, Aug. M
(CP cable)—Two Tale univenlty men.
profeuor and itudent, had their fleet,
pontoon-equipped wapline poind on
thl witen of Independent harbor
tonight ready for a takeoff at dawn
for Greenland.
Although thill* plant wen enshrouded In secrecy. Dr. Richard
Light, profmor of lurgery. and Bobert Wllwn, a graduate In electrical
engineering, were believed to be making tbl Omnia d hop u thl tint
In a transatlantic crowing and perhapi would afterward continue eastward to encircle thl globe.
Let ua take care of your lumber order. We will fill it
promptly and charge you for
it correctly. We know a lot
about the lumber buslneu and
will bc pleased to advise every
prospective builder.
LAMBERT
LUMBER, LTD.
PHONE 12
SAVE ON YOUR FUEL BILL
We Have a Surplus on Hand of
COKE
And Are Offering It as a Special for
30 DAYS t1AAAPKRT0N
ONLY AT  iJIU.UU DELIVERED
Cash With Order
Take advantage of this saving to Uy in your Winter
supply of this great heat producing, long burning
fuel, the regular price of which is $11.50 per ton.
PMne 138 or ST—CITY GAS WORKS
CITY OF NELSON
We Call
on tht Dot
You can depend on Nelson Transfer Moving
Modern, Speedy Equipment at the Nelson Transfer
Another reason why you should have all your
moving done by
Nelson Transfer Co., Ltd.
PHONE 35
WE MOVE ANYTHING MOVEABLE
^CARTON
Sola lempi in cheap*
when you bay Mlaa I*
cirton lob.
25, 40 and 60
Watt Sizes
Wood, Vallance
Hardware Company, Lt J.
SATURDAY
SPECIALS
Wondersoft Kotex
48 to the package 890
5 Cakes Jergen's Soap,
Lavender, Jasmin and
Rose for   25«*
$1.00 Eno's Fruit
3alts    88*
75c Saskasall Mineral
Salts    69*
1 pound Hospital
Cotton  39*
1 Scc-tty Pad and Two
Packages of Envelopes
for  25<
$1.00 Gillette Razor
with 5 Blades for 490
50c Colonial Club Shaving Cream, 65c Colonial
Club Shaving Lotion,
25c Colonial Club Shaving Talcum. $1.40 value.
Special    890
15 Modess Economy
Offer for , 250
PJSURY'S
PHARMACY
Phone 26 Box 505
Bring us your films for
developing and printing.
8-hour service.
MORE ABOUT
THE FIRES
(Continued From
Ona)
Irving-
McDonald
COMPANY
Phone 161    Free Delivery
Milk: Small tins;     OC0
Limit 6; 6 tins  LO
Butter: Sunny brook AC*}
Creamery; 2 lbs  *w
Pork & Beans: Aylmer
7'/.-oz.; OC0
5 tins   LO
Empress Jam: OC<
32-oz. jar   »»
Braid's Ideal OC0
Coffee: lb  £3
Blue Ribbon Tea:     7p0
Shredded Wheat:      fjS
Pkt   iM
Vinegar: Finest        *7Q*r
Pickling; per gal. ..I-/
Baking   Powder: -Blue
Ribbon; 000
12-oz. tin  LO
Peas: Royal City 2s, Sieve
No. 5; 100
Tin   IL
Tomato Juice: Libby's Is,
tall; 170
2 tins   il
Corn Flakes: OF?
Kellogg's; 3 pkts. .. L0
Pickling Onions:       OC0
Silverskin; 4 lbs. .... LO
Canteloupe: Okanagan,
Good size; O*T0
3 for ■■■..-  LO
Pears: OC0
6 lbs.  LO
Peaches: OC0
Basket  ..-._  L0
Tomatoes: 1 Ctf
Basket    lw
the wuth and the mini men are
worklnt at thl upper and.
But lor thli iltuitlon and a saw
lira that waa ellegadlj itirted bj
lnoandlailea nur 10 mill, tlm
throdkbout tha louthtrn Interior
were fairly dulit	
Bs dlitrict report:
Eut Kooteni?— Ferali flrea ara
all well Mid.
Flathead—Ho report.
Crinbrook - No niw flrei and
crewi on old tine reduced to pitrol
bull.
Creiton—Cinyon crewi eut down.
Blfhteen mllu °' "r> «uard completed. Moyle fire now coven a hit
territory.
St.  Maryl-Flri out
IDiirmere—No  reporti.
Wwt Kooteniy—Nilwiy ind Salmo leotloni In good ihipe.
Blaylock fire on Mount Nilion
about out. Guard Ilni being extended
up Shannon.
Sproule creek—Flrt ibout under
control.
Orohmin creek—Spreading down
north of Deer creek.
Ten-mile—Second fire luit out-
■ide old fire, itarted on Friday alleged by foreitry ottlclila to have
been Ut. It itarted Juit above another amill fire which wn attributed to Incendiaries.
Cal creek—Fire neu BrUUant being fought b1 *t men*
Forty-Nine—Four men on pitrol.
PAYETTE FIRE K\C,ltt ANEW
BOISE, Idaho, Aug. .4 (API—The
Payette foreit fire on Skull creek
raged on out of control today for
the fourth day and 71 more men
were ordered aent In trom Bolie to
battle lt.
For tbe put lever-l diyi 4B0 mm
hive been combatting thi fire with
little euccei, unabla to item lti
northward march through heary
timber on the middle tork ot the
Payette river.
i On tbe Sage Ren creek fire In
the Payette foreit, 171 men continued on duty to keep It under
control after lt deitroyed 1800 acne.
The 30.000 acre Bolae Buln burn
40 mUea north of thll city remained quiet throughout the night
and day, with about SOO men kept
on duty to oheck outbreak! along
tha 40 mile circumference.
CALM SHORT LIVED
SPOKANE. Wuh.. Aug. 34 'AH—
The calm that hung over blaalng
foreati ol the northwest wai ihort-
lived ln many tectloni and reporti
of disastrous wind came trom the
front today.
Tlu Aran fire an the Si *»
National forut, almoat dormant attar a itrong advance yuterdiy, flared again today and tba tighten
■ant out word that tba flamu again
would roar out at control unleu
the wind abetae. Tba fire conn ap-
proximately 10,000 ecru.
After fanning tba Mammoth Hta
King fire, wltb an are* of amn* BO.-
000 aaw, brlikly forward, thi wind
■uddenly iblfted and itopped tbi
adyanw. Uter the crou wlndi pinned tba tire Into tha Blmerlck cruk
ana, heretofore untouched.
Spot fine emanating from Oa
80*00 acre MdLaadon puk blaw
ware being halted.
The Martin creek Male cn tha
aame foreit waa nported to bt
"bot" and advancing baton iteidy
breew. Backfiring «■ itarted on
the Hock cruk tire ln the ume
ana.
MANY SPOT mis
Wind bore down on tba Flnt cnek
dn In the Superior, Mont., region,
•ending burning emben tbit Ml
numeroui apot flrw in adjoining
timber. *
Tbe iltuation waa nported to be
quiet ln other regloni.
Lowering humidity and the prediction of lower tempenturu, particularly ln weatern Montana and
the eutern part of the north Idaho
region  brought hope to  thousands
01 tighten larllir todiy. Thew facton undoubtedly will ba ot aa-
alatanca It high winds do not con
tinue, forest wrvlce men aald.
Canadian Records
Due for Revamping
HAMILTON, At* J« (CP)-T*ack
and field record! an due for a rare
old revamping wben tbe elite ot Can*
ada'a achoolboydom mingle hen to*
morrow at the trlala to ulect a team
of 13 which will travel to Australia
thli fall to participate In Milbourae'i
centennial celebration-.
The thne aeora or mon of thi Do*
mlnlon'i tlnut teen-agi athletes
should pan marka all down the line
—that la lt preliminary workouta can
be taken u criterion.
When  you aik for Face  Powder
uy Day Dream
Mad* from flnait and pureit Ingredient!—In all ihidu
Smythe*! Pharmacy
Preicrlptiom Our Speciality
PHONE 1
ON SALE
SEPT. 1
QoUen
Harvest
Beer
Delicious and
Refreshing
Aged to perfection
Order Early
Supply Limited
KOOTENAY
6REWEPIE- LTD
Sbxumtaivl
_, S&ottlm.j
_*maimM
Thii advertisement ia not published
or displayed by the Liquor Control
Board or by the Government ot
British Columbia
NEWS OF THE DAK
Band concert Lakeilde park Sunday afternoon, S o'clock. 0774)
WANTED:   PLUMS   AND  BLACK-
BERRIES. MCDONALD HM CO.
tttm
MORE ABOUT
N.R.A.
(Contlnutd Cram Page On*)
each wu amphatlv that no break
bad occurred between them.
"So fu ■■ I un concerned," Oenenl Johnaon said, "I bave never had
any disagreement with Dr. Rlch-
"There are no fundamental difference* of opinion between the
general and myself," Or. Rlchberg
sadl. "Naturally, we are bound to
differ on points, but there certainly has been no rift os reported ln
newspaper*."
NevertheleH, ther* were definite indications of aome undersurface
conflict Some of those close to
the reorganization effort saw the
president u apparently aiding with
Dr. Rlchberg.
General Johnson emphasized at
the reorganization program wu one
originally proposed by him before
the president lett on his recent
Hawaiian cruise. On the other hand,
Rlchberg said the two weeka interim
wu fixed so M to give "the general
tlm* to work out his own ideu.
Brand Cattle With
Names of Cabinet
DUNOARVAN, Irish Free State,
Aug. 34 (XP)-Csttle branded with
the namei of Irish Free State cabinet mlnliten paraded througb the
itreeti here today with • yelling
crowd ot farmen in pursuit. Their
action wu ln protut againat the
•elzure of cattle by the government
for nonpayment of land annuities.
The cattle had been herded Into
* compound for auctioning to the
farmen, who bought them In cheaply, branded them and tben organized thl procession.
Car Loadings Up
OTTAWA, Aug. 34 (CP)—Oar loadings tor thi week ended Auguat 18
amounted to 48,838 ean, u agalnit
40,313 can for tbl prtvloui week and
43,181 can for the corresponding week
last year. Tha Dominion bureau of
statlitlci nporti.
Oraln wu heavier by 1477 cara,
Uve atock by 830 can and coal by
334 can.
Talantlnea  for  best  miction  ol
tobacco, cigarettes and clgan.
MM
Spicltl prlou for itudenti bouu-
kwplng rooms. Stritlicoea Hotel.
(8718)
Seat desired ln car to Vancouver,
Monday morning. Pbone 804R.
(8771)
Bunatrand Adding Machines, phona
107. Kelion Typewriter Agency. H.
Fltzpitrlck.  Prompt  urvice.   (3753)
TONIOHT - TONIOHT -Kinsmen
Club Dance, Crystal HaU, WIUow
point, WW
Papera,   warine-.   confectionery,
aoft brinks. WlUlama Kiwi Stand.
(8483)
BASEBALL
Kootenay ehimpionihlp, Trill n.
Nelion, Sunday, 3:30. (37118)
DANCE
Tonight,   3-13,   Melody  Mikere.
EAOLE   HALL
(SMI)
When you want a Tan ride la a
Bulck, phon* 88, Nelnn muter
CO., Ltd.             ttttt)
PROMPT   COURTEOUS   SERVILE.
FHONE 88 B.B. TAXI * BAOOAOE.
(8478)
NELSON    BUSINESS    COLLEOE
New term commence! Tueiday, September 4th. (87071
I. O. O. F. muta Snd Monday In
Sept., ln pdd Fellows HaU. All vliitlng memben cordially Invited.
(8787)
Nelion Oolf and Country club Libor Diy dance Crystal hill, WIUow
Point, Monday, Sept. 8rd, 11.38
a  couple. (8787)
WHO'LL  WIN  THE  HOPE  CHEST?
Cutne   ind   am  for  yourself   and
enjoy military whlat at the Catholic
haU on Thursday, Aug. SO. Ad. 35c.
(8773)
BAPTIST CHURCH
Morning urvice—D. S. Scott wUl
pruch.
Evening urvloe—Will be ln charge
of Lawrle HamUton. (3770)
CARD OF THANKS
Mr. and Mn. John Zuk and family wlah to thank the m«ny friends
for tbelr kindness and sympathy
ln tbe lou of their beloved nn md
brother, also for the many beautiful
floral trlbutu. Gone, but not forgotten. Requleecat ln Puce.
(3781)
FOB HENT
2 unfurnished suite*. S rooms and
3 rooms; also furnished suites.
These suites are in excellent
cor "tlon. Inspection Invited.
KERB APABTMENTS
HORNER'S
GROCERY
PHONE 121
Opposite Capital Theatre
WEEK-END
SPECIALS
«^====!-=aK==a!*==:
Kellogg's Cornflakes: *)Ct
3 pkgs.    LO
BfaiQ's Best Coffee: OC<
Tin    -W
Hedlunds Baked OCc
Beans: Is; 2 for .... LtO
Borden's Malted OCl
Milk -  ww
Graham Wafers: 1Q-?
1-lb. pkg. „  1-7
Aylmer Peas: 2s, *)t*i
Size 5; 2 for  LO
Canteloupes: Large 1|H'
size; each  1"
Canteloupes: Med. OC<
size; 3 for  LO
Tomatoes: Ct
Lb     0
Apples: Wealthy and OC<*
Gravensteln; 8 lbs... LO
Green Peppers: JCt*
3 lbs  LO
Peaches: Crawford Preserving:
&?i_ $1.49
No. 2s; *1 OC
Case  tflaOO
Dress Specials
A rack of forty dresses in all colors and sizes
including blacks—long sleeved—suitable for Fall
wear—in values to $25.00 to clear at—
$5.95
Fall Coats
The first shipments of Fall Coats for the new
season have arrived — with the smartness in
style, cloth and color essential to the well-
dressed woman of the 1984 Fall Season. Follow-
ing our usual custom a discount of 10% is given
on cash purchases.
4i_'m,whiim__-_\
Phone 151
Look for the Neon Sign
Permatdzed*-hrttnk
Do you blame the laundry when your shirts shrink!
The laundry is not guilty. Even if you buy your
shirts uncomfortably large at first, your laundry
cannot help it if your collar gets tighter and your
sleeves shorter with each washing. Ths cloth waa
not shrunk properly before it was made into a shirt
Buy Forsyth's
Guaranteed •pM0RY,Q
Shirts at   E* Limited  O
While Russia ta without a ruler,
there are uven prealdente repreunt-
Ing thl uven republic! which term
the Union ot SoclaUat Soviet Repub-
11a.
**he new Kottbuur Tor, In Berlin,!
Oermany, la aald to be tba blggeatl
nibway station Ul tha world. It la|
334 tmt long, and hu a platform mori
than 30 fwt wide.
(gjL|Pure Food
^^Market
Phont 50
Free Delivery
EXTRA SPECIALS FOR SATURDAY
Choice Steer
Specials
Good Boiling Beef:     _V
Lb     0
Tender Pot Q 1fl<
Boasts: lb.   3 IU
Choice Boasting        in<*
Veal: lb   IU
Prime Bib Boiled:     OA<*
Fresh Stewing Veal:
Lb.  	
CHOICE CBEAMEBY BUTTEB „. 2 lbs. for
8'
Choice Mutton Stew:
Lb ~	
Lean Shoulder
Mutton: lb	
Lean Loin Mutton:
Lb	
Lean Legs Mutton:
Lb. „„	
(While they last).
Fresh Killed Fowl:
Lb	
Grade C Eggs:
2 doz. for	
7'
ir
15'
18"
16'
25'
45*
Qualty
Cleanliness
Service
BURNS & Co., Ltd.
CITY DRUG CO.
Saturday Specials
w^o^^S™™. -**!
Raw. le HondaetM-Oc TOFFEE- __*£
Travelll-nCoia;dioVV*'PP«<l •**■"*
I Glllnte Bin
49/
35c FICTION
3 for _.....	
m
10c   BERBER
BAR, .cake ....	
75c  KRUSCHEN
SALTS   	
SPABE TIPS
For Flihlng Rodi
Either Bamboo or Stial all
a part of our Large Stock of
FISHING TACKLE
KODAK FILM
For the week-end get fruh
•tock here and return It fer
prlnti. S hour aervlce—ask
ui about
FREE ENLARGEMENT
Y.«r CITY DRUG CO. p^^,..,
Accurate Ne"0n'* DI,D'n,ln» Chaml*      Compounded
Weight -fcJ^gDwgJfc.          i^Hanlad
•*>•» Box 1083  NELSON, B.C  Phona 84   Ofed-WHs
LAST TIMES
TODAY
You'll  rock
with laughter     while
you    thrill I
to the great-
est   picture I
il n c e    "It I
H a p p e n d
One Night"
Feature
2:30, 7:30,
and 9:30
PLUS
HAL LE ROY
Musical Hit
News
I
Fer funnier tnd Mere Thrilling Then the leek ky DathM
HammalK
hurry irTJov mts—
WWELllW
XThimMam'
with MAUREEN O'SULLIVAN
MINNA G0MBELL end oth.ri-
-um_-_-_____w-_mm-m
CONING
MONDAY and
TUESDAY
Sweet
Shirley
Temple
Back to Steal
Your Heart in Her
First Starring Picture
"BABY TAKE A BOW
with James Dunn—Claire Trevor
.
