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Trail Goes Game Up on
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—-Page Two
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Stock Markets Tumble in
Canada and U. S.
—Page Nine
VOLUME 36 FIVE CENT8 PER COPY \/l-V>tltW>\r   ^^IJ-80N' BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA-TUE8DAY MORNINQ, 8EPT. %,, 1537. NUMBER 158
Wilkins, wit in North, May Be Safe
On State Business
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Anthony Eden, British foreign secretary, and one of the leading figures
at the recent Nyon conference, is
shown as he rapped on the prime
minister's door at 10 Downing street
London. Presumably visiting the
premier to discuss matters of state,
Eden carried Great Britain's views
on the Mediterranean crisis to Switzerland and was instrumental in
having the nine-power accord put
into effect.
FIND $1100 GOLD
NUGGET EXPOSED
IN BED OF (REEK
TELEGRAPH CREEK, B.C, Sept.
20 (CP)— A spectacular-appearing
gold nugget, weighing 53 ounces, was
left with the gold commissioner here
today by its finders, Mr. and Mrs.
Vern Shea, to be sent to the Dominion assay office at Vancouver.
At prevailing gold prices the nugget would be worth around $1800.
Tlie big blob of gold is of irregular
shape, peven and one-eighth inches
long, four inches wide and averages
about one and one-half inches thick.
The Sheas said they found the
nugget exposed on the bed of Alice
creek, a tributary of Boulder creek
in the Little Muddy district of northern British Columbia, last year,
but that they kept their find secret
until now.
They showed a second nugget,
weighing ]5 ounces.
Vancouver to Seek
to Bar All Types
Vending Machines
VANCOUVER, Sept. 20 (CP) -
The city council's licence commit'
tee today decided to.recommend a
licence by-law amendment to prohibit all types of vending machines
in Vancouver.
It instructed corporation counsel,
D. E. McTaggart and licence inspector H. Urquhart to prepare a draft
amendment for submission to the
full council next Monday.
The committee's action was taken
after R. Rowe Holland, who said
he represented 400 store owners
and the Vancouver real estate exchange, claimed machine vended
products threatened tlie small profit
of many retailers.
S. SLOCAN MAN
FACES 2 CHARGES
OF ATTEMPTED
MURDER, NELSON
Tony Brdar Is Charged
Also With Unlawful
Wounding
IS SEQUEL TO
KNIFING MELEE
Two charges of attempted murder and one of unlawful wounding
were laid Monday against Tony
Brdar, South Slocan, who has
been held in provincial jail at
Nelson since a knifing melee at
South Slocan Saturday night In
which Mrs. Fannie Hadikin, Louis
Krepan and John Malakoff received wounds.
Mrs. Hadikin, a widow with two
small children, and Krepan, under
treatment In Kootenay Lake General hospital, were reported Monday to be progressing, with no
complications so far. The woman
has a gash in her side and Krepan
a cut on the top of his head. Malakoff suffered a cheek cut. Mrs.
Hadikin was formerly Mrs. Wis-
I off.
CHARGE HEAVY
DRINKING
It is charged that Brdar, after
drinking a large quantity of beer,
went to the home of Alex Hadikin,
father of the woman, and that the
attack against Mrs. Hadikin and
Krepan took place there. The woman
ran to the Malakoff home, screaming, and was admitted.
Brdar, according to information
obtained by police, tried to get into
the Malakoff home, kicking in the
glass in a door. Malakoff received
his wound in going to the door to
prevent Brdar unlocking it through
the broken pane.
Meanwhile Krepan, police learned, had found shelter in the house of
Andy Morgich and Nick Torich, and
was lying there in a weakened condition. Brdar was using an axe on
the door, it was stated, When J. D.
Yeatman arrived and began to talk
to him. He diverted Brdar's attention from the door but was unable
to stop him using the axe on Krep-
an's car, police were told.
Among police exhibits in the case
will be, it is expected, a pearl-handled pen knife with a bent blade,
picked up near the Malakoff home.
Chinese Cafemen's
Application at the
Coast Is Adjourned
VANCOUVER, Sept. 20 (CP) -
An application by Denis Murphy,
barrister, for an injunction to restrain the city from interfering with
tlie business of three Chinese restaurants whose civic licences have
been cancelled was adjourned to
Wednesday in Supreme Court here
today.
Writs were issued on Saturday
against the city and licence inspector H. A. Urquhart, claiming declarations that the cafe owners hold
good, valid and subsisting licences
and that the by-law under which
the licences were cancelled is ultra
vires and in restraint of trade.
Under the by-law Chinese cafe
operators are liable to cancellation
of  licences if they  employ  white
Former Kelowna
Lady Dies, Coast
VICTORIA, Sept. 20 (CP) —Mrs.
Ada Newby, 70, former resident of
Kelowna, died here today.
Born in Leicestershire, England,
she came to Canada and settled in
the Okanagan, coming here 10 years
ago.
Britain Defies Japanese
Order to Leave Nanking
DRILLER INJURED
IN QUEEN TUNNEL
WHEN A "MISSED
SHOT" EXPLODES
Nick   Cjerninka   in
Desperate Case in
Hospital
EYESIGHT LOST;
SHOCK PROFOUND
Said to have drilled into a "missed
hole"—in which was a charge that
had failed to explode—Nick Cjerninka, a driller at the Queen mine
operated by Sheep Creek Gold
Mines, Ltd., was desperately injured Monday afternoon about 3
o'clock, when the charge exploded.
Cjerninka, who was found and
brought out by Chick Bush, another
minor, was treated by Dr. Edward
Morrison of Salmo, and was later
rushed to Nelson by the Somers
ambulance, that went out to get
him, and placed in Kootenay Lake
General hospital, where he is under
the care of Dr. D. W. McKay.
The injured man, who in addition
to severe injuries to his head and
the upper portion of his chest is
suffering profoundly from shock, is
in a serious condition so far as
chances of recovery are concerned.
He has lost the sight of both eyes.
He is unmarried.
EXPORT COPPER
OFF THIRD CENT
NEW YORK, Sept. 20 (AP)—Export copper dropped more than 1-3
cent a pound today, selling at less
than 13 cents, and more than a, cent
under the 14-cent domestic price.
Late sales were made on the basis
of 12.95 to 13.06 cents a pound.
The sharp drop led some trade
circles to express belief the domestic spot price, maintained for some
time, might be reduced.
Copper futures fell more than %
cent, carrying all contracts under
12 cents a pound, or two cents under
spot metal. Scrap copper fell % of
a cent to around 11 cents, the equivalent of about 12ft cents for refined copper,
Trustees Favor,
an Auto Driving
Education Course
VICTORIA, Sept. 20 (CP)-A resolution proposing introduction into
the high school curriculum of an
auto driving educational course was
adopted by British Columbia school
trustees association in convention
here today.
Submitted by Coldstream school-
board and endorsed by the Okanagan branch of the trustees' association, the resolution originally called for an extensive compulsory
course of instruction in safe driving,
rules of the road and elementary automobile mechanics.
Lion Cubs Meet Photographer
POINT OUT JAPAN
HAS NO RIGHT TO
ORDER BRITONS
QUIT CHINA CITY
Japanese in a Foreign
Land; Warned to Be
Held Responsible
CAPITAL AWAITS
NOON DEADLINE
LONDON, Sept. 20 (CP-Havas)-
The British government was reported irritated tonight over the Japanese request that British warships
be withdrawn from Nanking, and
spokesmen said the foreign office
fully approved Admiral Sir Charles
Little's rejection of the Japanese demand.
The Japanese demand was considered entirely unjustified by British diplomatic observers, who pointed out the Japanese are in foreign
territory and are thus unwarranted
in ordering Britons from Nanking.
Moreover Britons were annoyed
with the "preemptory" Japanese action and insist they are within their
rights in staying in Nanking.
(Sir Charles warned the Japanese
naval commander, Vice-Admiral
Kyoshi Hasegawa, that he would
hold the Japanese fully responsible
for any injuries suffered by British nationals as a result of the air
raids).
Although they made their debut into this vale of tears at the Bronx,
N.Y. zoo this summer, this is the first time the twin babies born to
"Judy", young African lioness, have been placed on the spot by the
camera. At top, the twins, King and Queenie, appear frankly curious about
the strange eye that stares at them so glassily, so (centre), King (or is it
Queenie?) runs to tell mamma all about it; whereupon (lower), mamma
gathers in her babies and snarls defiance at the black box with tho staring
eye and displays such an array of dental menace that the photographer
suddenly remembered an important appointment.
CITY AWAITS
NOON  DEADLINE
-NANKING, Sept. 21 (Tuesday) —
(CP)-This city of 1,000,000 people
today awaited grimly a terrific
bombardment the Japanese navy announced would take place as soon
as the noon deadline set by Jap-
(Contlnued on Page Two)
WIDOW OF JACK
KIRKUP IS DEAD
NANAIMO, B.C. Sept. 20 (CP)-
Mrs. John Kirkup, widow of a former government agent here, and onetime policeman at Rossland, died
today after a six weeks illness,
Surviving are two sons, Jack, British Columbia police constable of
Kimberley, B.C., and Robert of Kelowna, B.C,
Alta. Liberal Leader
Byelection Candidate
EDMONTON, Sept. 20 (CP)—E.
L. Gray, of Brooks, Alta., Alberta
Liberal leader, was unanimously
chosen as Liberal candidate in the
forthcoming Edmonton provincial
by-election at a Liberal nominating
convention here tonight.
Eden Tells of Big Rearmament
Plan; Rebukes Qermany, Italy
Says Germany's Problem of Raw Materials
Not One of Colonies; Reminds Italy She
Was Not Represented at Nyon
GENEVA, Sept. 20 (CP)—Foreign Secretary Eden today advised
the world Great Britain Is committed Irrevocably to a policy of rearmament unless other nations cease competing for supremacy at arms.
Speaking before a hushed League of Nations assembly Eden struck
a note of mingled hope and pessimism. Despite the dark pfcture he paint-
ed and his implied rebukes of Germany and Italy, he emphasized Britain's determination still to strive for peace.
"One pledge I can give unequivo-<-.> ,—«™^-^_VWs--.	
cably to this assembly," he said, "is
that the government 1 represent will
spare no endeavour to prevent wat
from engulfing Europe."
His pledge of Britain's peaceful
purposes was coupled wilh his statement of willingness to agree to reduction and limitation of armaments.
"DANGER  FOR THE
PEACE OF  EUROPE"
Eden said war results in the "impoverishment of the victor to an
extent only less than that of the
vanquished", and that foreign par-
(:-
licipation in Spain's war "presents
a pregnant danger for the peace of
Europe,"
Of Germany's demands for colonies, he said, "tlie problem of raw
materials is not primarily, even substantially, one of colonics."
Turning to the measures to which
Britain has resorted in the face of
a steadily rearming world, Eden
said:
"The British naval personnel is being expanded at a rate without precedent in our country in time of
peace," he asserted.
"Only  on rare occasions In our
history have comparable naval efforts been made.
EXPANDING AIR FORCE
"At the same time, the program
for expansion and re-equipment of
our air force is going forward, with
the result that a formidable increase
in our offensive as well as defensive
power is being effected, while the
equipment of our land forces has
proceeded with increasing momen-
tum.
"Since I last spoke, the continuous
growth of industry for production
I for all three services has been taking place at vast extent."
Eden infcrcntially held Italy, who
with Germany declined to atte'nd the
nine-power Nyon conference to rid
the Mediterranean of piracy, to
blame for the small areas offered
her to patrol.
Italy has demanded patrol parity
with France and GVeat Britain.
"It was quite impossible to have
attempted an elaborate plan in negotiations with a country not represented at Nyon," Eden observed.
3.M.&S. Fertilizer
Mixing Plant for
New Westminster
NEW WESTMINSTER, B. C,
Sept. 20 (CP)—Consolidated Mining &, Smelting Co, of Canada,
Ltd., is erecting a $30,000 fertilizer
mixing plant In this Fraser river
port. The plant will be equipped
and operated by Buckerfield's
Ltd.
The feed and seed company will
make certain mixtures of phosphates, sulphates and other fertilizers for export.
Burning Cave Found
in Sinking Canyon
Area in Idaho
BUHL, Idaho, Sept. 20 (AP)
—Out of this land of geological
quirks today came a new rival
to Buhl's "sinking canyon" fame.
Ed Ulrich, Clover district farmer, and his four sons, discovered a "burning cave" in tha
little Salmon river canyon, six
miles below Salmon dam.
He Thinks Canada's
Problems Are in
Good Hands
TORONTO,  Sept. 20   (CP)-
Canada's problems appear to be
in good hands and contain nothing of an insoluble or insuperable character, Rt. Hon. Lord
Hewart of Bury, lord chief justice of England, told the Canadian club here today.
"As for the minor problems,
you can of course afford to
treat them lightly. None of you,
I imagine, is likely to be kept
awake nights by doubt of whether appeals to the judicial
committee of the privy council
arc really worth the money they
cost. None of you, I imagine, is
disposed to waste much time
upon the question whether Canada might usefully by annexed
or absorbed by the United
States."
Brigadier General/
Accused of Murder,
Is Shot and Killed
SHELBYVILLE, Ky., Sept. 20.
(AP)—Fire Chief W. Amyx said
Brigadier General Henry H. Dc1*-
hardt was shot and killed here
tonight.
Amyx said he understood three
brothers of Mrs. Verna Garr Taylor, whom the genera! is charged
with murdering, surrendered to
police immediately after the shoot-
KASLO (REEK FIRE IS BELIEVED TO
BE ONLY ONE NOT UNDER (ONTROL
Forest fires originating from Friday's electrical storms over the Kootenay district were burning yesterday on the south fork of Kaslo
creek, on Trout creek across the
lake from New Denver, on the
headwaters of Enterprise creek, on
the Slocan river just below Slocan
City, and on Gold creek, southeast
of Cranbrook.
The Kaslo creek fire, on which 20
men were working over the weekend, is believed to be the only one
not yet under control. Sunday it
was a mile wide, but as it is on a
burned-over area, no timber is affected, and the fire is more susceptible of attack. This fire is about 15
miles up from Kaslo, on Long creek,
and is lhe largest of the season.
One hundred acres is the extent
of the Trout creek fire, three miles
up from Slocan lake, on the west
side. Sunday it travelled very fast
up the sleep hillside, but it was expected Monday that by nightfall it
would be under control, by the crew
of 40 men engaged. This fire is in
Second growth crown timber.
A small fire just below Slocan
City, also of lightning origin, was
practically .stamped out, according
to information received by the
forest branch Monday.
No word has been received from
the patrol of five men sent up to
the Enterprise fire, but its high
elevation makes it improbable it
will be much of a problem.
Following a storm in the Cranbrook area Friday afternon, a fire
on Gold creek was detected Friday
night. A crew of three men has it
under control.
14 HURT AS TEAR
GAS BOMBS LET
LOOSE, THEATRES
NEW YORK, Sept. 20 (AP) -
Fourteen persons were injured tonight when tear gas bombs exploded in seven Manhattan and
Bronx motion picture theatres.
The series of bombings was the
worst since the night o£ September
12 when more than 50 theatre patrons were injured as chemical mixtures were exploded in 21 theatres
in what police said was a continuation o£ a dispute between two organizations o£ motion picture operators.
LAST MESSAGE
SAID HE WOULD
LAND AT "FIRST
SUITABLE" LAKE
Searcher   for   Soviet
Airmen Now Object
of Search
HOLLICK-KENYON,
CHEESEMAN LOST
Mattern Reports
FLASH !
FAIRBANKS, Alaska, Sept. 21
(Tuesday). (AP) — Sir George
Hubert Wilkin- unreported tor
several hours after landing in the
big flying boat at a lake near Aklavik, was asleep and not missing,
Soviet flight representatives here
were informed late Monday.
Radio advices received here
from Aklavik said:
"Wilkins was landing and his
signals cut. He didn't go on the
air again from late afternoon yesterday until noon today. He Is in
the delta somewhere. He doesn't
know his position but thinks he
can find Aklavik as soon as
weather clears. Aklavik Is In com.
municatlon with him all the time
now."
Testifies Hatfield
Posed as Crew Man
OTTAWA, Sept. 20 (CP) — A
slender, trim matron, who, among
other things, is a notary public in
tho little town of Marlboro, N. Y,,
today indicated Captain Freeman
Hatfield, former master of the
schooner Gypsum Queen, as the man
who, in May, 1930, came to her office and made an affidavit, signing
the document, "Tony Matthews."
The Marlboro notary public was
Mrs. Rotena Dubois. The declaration which she alleged Hatfield
had signed set forth that "Tony Matthews" was a member of the Gypsum Queen's crew on that last voyage, nnd that) the vessel had been
torpedoed by a submarine,
Min. Max.
NELSON       46 73
Victoria     42 60
Vancouver    56 64
Kamloops  62 74
Prince George  » 32 62
Estevan Point  52 CO
Prince Rupert _ 48 58
Langara   44 56
Atlin    -.. 30 54
Dawson, Y. T"  38 44
Seattle     56 62
Portland   ...... 60 68
San Francisco - 58 76
Spokane  58 74
Los Angeles   62 78
Kelowna     55 78
Penticton     48
Grand Forks  46 80
Kaslo  48 -
Cranbrook     41 78
Calgary       50 68
Edmonton      '.  52 64
Swift Current  48 86
Moose Jaw   48 88
Prince Albert  42 82
Qu'Appelle   48 84
Winnipeg    50 78
Forecasts —Okanagan and Kootenay: Moderate winds, mostly westerly: partly cloudy and cooler at
night.
NEW YORK, Sept. 20 (CP)
—A corrected version of a
message flashed from the flying-boat in which Sir Hubert
Wilkins has searched unsuccessfully for the missing Russian transpolar fliers tonight
lessened fears the noted Australian and his companions had
met a mishap.
The Wilkins party has not
been heard from since 4 p.m.
PST Sunday, when they were
attempting to reach Aklavik,
N. W. T., after completing
their fifth aerial hunt,for Sigis-
mund Levaneffsky and his five
fellow airmen, who disappeared Aug. 13 while flying from
Russia to the United States.
However, word that the last message the Royal Canadian corps of
signals picked up from the Wilkins'
plane ended with the information
"weather closing in. Shall land at
first suitable lake," eased anxiety
for their safety.
THROUGH EDMONTON
Vilhjalmur Stefansson, president
of the Explorers club here, which
has been coordinating the international hunt for the Russians, said
the latest message reached him
through the MacKenzie air service
headquarters at Edmonton.
It superseded advices the Wilkins'
plane had taken the air Sunday to
make a short hop to the Aklavik
base in face of adverse flying conditions and that its radio faded 10
minutes later without indicating the
searchers planned to come down.
When the plane failed to reach
Aklavik Stefansson took preliminary steps toward arranging a search
for the searchers.
CANADIANS WITH HIM
Wilkins, a veteran of the polar
regions, has been accompanied on
his operations by two of Canada's
best known fliers,  Air Commodore Herbert Holllck-Kenyon and
Al Cheesman, as well as Gerald
Brown, mechanic, and Ray Booth,
radio operator, both of New York.
Because of the proven ability of
Wilkins, Hollick-Kenyon and Cheesman to cope with conditions in the
north, Stefansson said he was not
unduly worried by lack of word
from them. However, it was clear
he was relieved by the late message
that they had declared their intention to land.
TWO AVIATORS DIE
BROOKVILLE. N.Y., Sept. 20
(AP)—A United States.navy biplane
bound from Squantum, Mass., to
Norfolk, Va., crashed into thick
woods on a Long Island north shore
estate near here today, killing both
occupants.
They were S. A, MacKenzie, a
lieutenant, and R. A. Schmidt, naval
aviation cadet.
Jimmy Mattern, noted American
flier, is shown leaving the Soviet
embassy at Washington after reporting .on his search for six Soviet.
airmen lost in the Arctic. Mattern
searched the polar wastes for 17
days in a vainlttempt to locate the
men, who disappeared on a Moscow-
U.S. flight over the north pole.
ROOSEVELTTO
VISIT VICTORIA
ON OCTOBER 1
HYDE PARK, N.T., Sept. 20 (CP)
—A little more than a year after he
paid an official visit to Canada as
the guest of Baron Tweedsmuir,
President Franklin D. Roosevelt will
again visit the Dominion this month,
this time going to Victoria, B.C.,
while on a speaking tour of the
western United States.
A tentative itinerary of the president's western trip, issued today
from the summer White House here,
showed the president nnd his official party, incuding Mrs, Roosevelt,
would be in the British Columbia
capital October 1.
After visiting his son-in-law and
daughter, Mr, and Mrs. John Boet-
tiger, in Seattle, remaining there,
over the night of September 29, the
president will board a United State-
destroyer for the trip to Victoria.
In the British Columbia capital
he and his party will be the luncheon guests of Lieutenant-governor
Erie W. Hamber and will leave by •
destroyer for Port Angeles, Wash.,
in the afternoon.
1
Former Calgary
Woman in Coma
WICHITA, Kas., Sept. 20 (CP)—
Mrs. Anna Kremel, former Calgary
woman, lay in a partial coma tonight
in a Wichita hospital she entered in
June, 1936. Hospital attendants said
they did not know if her ailment
had ever been accurately diagnosed.
, For 15 months, attendants said,
tho woman's condition has remained unchanged. A nurse said Mrs.
Kremel often opens her eyes, gazes
about the room, but is unable to
speak .
BABY  YACK   BEATEN
TORONTO, Sept. 20 (CP)—Henry
Hook of Indianapolis, Ind., a cool,
slugging fighter, tonight won a 10-
round decision over Baby Yack,
Toronto, Canadian bantam champion. Hook weighed UVVi and Yack,
who won a close decision from Hook
a few weeks ago, weighed 117t_.
Calgary Reports Its Third Case ol
Paralysis; Many New Ones in Ont.
(By The Canadian Press)
Postponement of the opening of
Hamilton's McMaster University
until October 6 , was announced
yesterday (Monday) as various
Ontario centres reported additional cases of infantile paralysis. Ontario remained the centre of the
epidemic which began to make
headway throughout Canada In
June.
First University to postpone beginning of the new term, McMaster
followed the lead of numerous high
and public school boards through
the country. Originally scheduled
to open September 1, many schools
in the Dominion, especially in Ontario, have not yet started their 1937-
38 terms.
Cases reported in Ontario yesterday were at Gait where Beverly
township's fifth case since June was
noted, at Windsor where the first
adult was stricken, at Kitchener
where two cases were reported to
the health officer and at Niagara
Falls where St. Patrick's school was
ordered closed on discovery of a
case among the students.
At Scarborough, Toronto suburb,
Dr. C. D. Farquharson reported three
cases in one home. Toronto weekend cases totalled 24 with one death
Sunday.
In Western Canada Calgary
reported Its third case, while at
Sherridon, a northern Manitoba
mining town, three new suspected
cases were under observation.
mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm%
 HUPP
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PAGE TWO •
NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.-TUESDAY MORNING, 8EPT, 21, 1837.	
TRAIL IS GAME UP ON ROSSLAND IN BOXLA FINALS
DOMINION OFFERS PROVINCE ALL
FISH HATCHERY EQUIPMENT BUT
UNABLE MAKE GRANT AT PRESENT
Dominion Points Out
Sport Fishing Is
;:,    a B.C. Matter
GRANTAND POLICY
TO BE DETERMINED
ROSSLAND, B.C., Sept. 20-An-
other chapter in the status of the
fish hatchery was opened today in a
communication received by W, K.
Esling, M.P. for Kootenay West, reviewing correspondence between
the federal department of fisheries
and Hon. Ian Mackenzie, as minister for British Columbia, Hon. Mr,
Mackenzie says:
"Dear Mr. Esling;
"This is with reference to your
wire about tlie Nelson fish hatchery.
"I attach hereto copy of letter
which I have received from the
minister of fisheries, which Indicates, I believe, lhat a satisfactory
adjustment of the matter lias now
been reached by consultation between the minister of fisheries and
■the provincial attorney-general,
"Yours very truly,
-    "IAN MacKENZIE.
"Ottawa, Sept. 15, 1937."
"The Hon. Ian MacKenzie. minister of national defence, Ottawa:
"My dear colleague:
"This is to acknowledge yours of
the 9th instant with reference to
■ the fish hatchery at Nelson, B.C.
"You may know that the department of national defence requested
us to vacate the basement of the
armory in which the hatchery was
operated, and the City of Nelson
demanded that the water used in
". the hatchery and for tlie purpose
ASTHMA
Th» wlf. of a prominent Montreal
physician suffered 16 years terribly with Asthma. She has gained 24 Ibs. In weight to almost nor,
mal and her husband Is so delighted that he has put many patients on "DAVIS1 ASTHMA
•REMEDY NO. 7895". 64 doses at
your Druggist $3.60
of tlie hatchery be paid for at meter
rates.
"This necessitated us to close the
hatching operations carried on in
the basement of the armory and lo
vacate the premises on September 1.
Now the City of Nelson is offering
us free water and free site for the
building of a new hatchery. Inasmuch as the fish culture being carried on at Nelson is for sport fish
exclusively, it is a matter of exclusive provincial jurisdiction.
"In this, as in every other respect,
were are respecting provincial autonomy, and the department does
not feel authorized to build a new
hatchery for the purpose of doing
work which should be done by the
province.
"Therefore, in order to prevent
any disruption of sport fisheries in
British Columbia, the department
is willing to transfer to the province free of charge any hatchery, or
hatchery equipment, which has
heretofore been used in the culture
of sport fish Tlie attorney-general
is agreeable lo this, though he suggests that tlie province should be
given a lump sum grant to enable
itself to carry on the work This is
a matter of policy which the department cannot determine, and which
Vill have to receive consideration
later on
"I have wired this morning to the
attorney-general as per copy of
telegram hereto attached.
"Yours truly,
"J. E. MICHAUD, Minister of
Fisheries.
"Ottawa, Sept. 10, 1937.
"The Hon. G. S. Wismer, K.C.,
attorney-general, Victoria, B.C.:
"He sport fisheries Department
had to cease operations at Nelson
on account of the city asking that
the water be measured by meter
and militia department needing
basement of armory. Now the city is
offering free water and site. In
vie wof the fact that sport fishery
is a matter of exclusive provincial
jurisdiction would suggest your
province immediately taking over
hatchery equipment free of charge,
if the province is willing to continue hatchery pending determination of the policy for the future.
"J. E. MICHAUD, Minister of
Fisheries.
"Ottawa, Sept. 10. 1937."
The King and Queen are to visit
Lancashire next May.
Guide for Travellers
NELSON, B.C., HOTELS
Hume Hotel.
.Nelson, B.C.
GEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor.
SAMPLE ROOMS   :   EXCELLENT DINING ROOM
European Plan, $1.50 up
E. Branson, Brilliant; Mr. and Mrs,
J. T. Parder, Phitysbury, Mont.; C,
F. Park, K. S. Cannoh, Washington,
. D.C.; Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Ponniciuk
. G. E. Webb, Vancouver; S. W. Drury
Hunner, Spokane; W. C. Menden-
hall. Chivychase, Md.; W. S. Fleet,
Penticton; J. E. O'Brien, Minneapolis; G. L. Parker, Tacoma; T. A.
lurns, Medicine Hat; M. J. Flanna-
Traii; H. E. Miard, Fernie; R. W.  gan, Montreal.
THE SAVOY HOTEL
"Where the Guest is King"
MODERN  SAMPLE ROOMS
Licensed Premises
124 Baker St.       W. K. Clark, Prop.       Nelson, B. C.
NEW GRAND HOTEL
P. and L. KAPAK, Proprietors
Commercial, Toiir^t and Family Trade Solicited
ROOMS $1.00 AND UP
Phone 234
Free Parking
NELSON, B.C.
Occidental Hotel
Madden Hotel
rot Vernon St.           Phone 897
H. WASSICK, Prop.
SPECIAL MONTHLY RATES
Good Comfortable Rooms
A Weleome Awaits You
JAS.  E.   MADDEN,  Prop.
Completely Remodelled.
Hot a.,d Cold Water.
Licensed Premises
In the HEART ot tho City
EDGEWOOD, B. C, HOTELS
ARROW LAKES HOTEL
E.   NIEDERMAN,      Comfortable  Rooms
DropHetor Good  Meals
EDGEWOOD, P.C.
Logical    Stopping
Place on the
Road to Vernon
VANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS
Memorial Tennis
Season Windup Is
Slated, Week-End
TRAIL, B.C.. Sept. -O-Memorial
Tennis club will windup the season
Friday, Saturday and Sunday with
the annual men's open and handicap singles tournaments.
Bert Clark and Ed Haley are the
respective title holders, and they
will be on hand to defend their trophies this season.
Entries must be in to Ned Rhodes
or Ed Haley or posted at the courts
by Friday evening, September 24.
Salmonbellies
Trim Richmond
19-8, First Game
NEW WESTMINSTER, B.C., Sept.
20 (CP)—New Westminster Salmonbellies tonight walked awa^ with
the first of a best-of-five~_eries for
the inter-city box lacrosse championship, defeating Richmond-Homes
19-8.
Salmonbellies took a 4-2 lead in
lhe first, ran it to 9-3 by half-time,
and rounded off the game by scoring
six goals in the final period,
West Kootenay
Has Easement,
New Power Line
TRAIL, B. C, Sept. 20 - Purchase
of an easement through the Doukhobor Community property at Brilliant as a right-of-way for a new
power line, was announced today
by L. A. Campbell, general manager, West Kootenay Power & Light
Co.
The easement about a mile long
runs   east   from   Brilliant.
The new line was necessitated by
the relocation of the highway to
Nelson.
RIFLE RANGE
TRANSFERRED
Notification that the "rifle range"
along Cottonwood creek, familiarly
known as Cottonwood city, had
been transferred from- the control
of the federal department of national defence to the department of
mines and resources was received
by the city council Monday night."
In answer to a request that the
city notify squatters on this land
the council replied it had no control, "Cottonwood city" being outside the city limits.
citywTllurge
promised work
cemetery road
"What progress are we making
with Cemetery road surfacing." Alderman Roy Sharp asked Monday
night at the city Council meeting.
"None other than the promise of
the member"—Frank Putnam, M. L.
A—"and the engineer." Mayor J.
I'. Morgan replied. Mr. Putnam
would be in Nelson Wednesday, he
said, and the council asked that arrangements be made to meet him.
Alderman Sharp stated he had
been given to understand the government had no money for'its share
of the projected surfacing. The government intended to do the work as
soon as the present road program
was completed, the mayor asserted.
DE VAN'S PILLS
Relieves congestion also promotes
comfort and ease. Does not contain
harmful or habit forming drugs.
Used by women for over thirty five
years. Manufactured by Nox Laboratories, Toronto, Ont. On sale at
FLEURY'S PHARMACY.     (Advt.)
"YOUR  VANCOUVER HOME"    Newly Renovated Throughout
Duff erin Hotel aTa"™" .«
900 Seymour St.      Vamouver, B.C.    Coleman. Alta,. Proprietor
TRANSPORTATION - Passenger and Freight
CRESTON Freight Truck
2 ROUND TRIPS WEEKLY
LEAVE  NELSON  7:30 A.M. TUESDAY  AND  FRIDAY
LEAVE CRESTON !):00 A.M. WEDNESDAY AND SATURDAY
Phone 342 Nelson or 16 Creston
ASK THE RED TRUCK FOR SERVICE
GLEN'S TRANSFER
P.vO. Box 539
Nelson, B. C.
SPECIAL
BARGAIN
FARE
TRAIL and
Grand Forks
to
NELSON
and RETURN
GOING SEPT. 24 and 25
return up to sept. 27
coacTTclass
Return Fares to Nelson
From:
Grand Forks  ... $1.90
Cascade      1.65
Fife       1.55
Paulson         1.30
Tunnel        1.05
Coykendahl OO
Robson West ...      .60
Castlegar   ., 55
Brilliant 50
South Slocan ...      .50
Bonnington 50
Kinnaird     60
Birchbank 80
Tadanac     90
Trail     95
Children 5 and under 12
half fare.
No baggage checking
privileges
GbtCditfMt
EARLY (LOSING
ALL STORES IS
COUNCIL'S AIM
Petition   Is   Received
From Hardware and
Food Dealers
Petition of food and hardware
merchants of Nelson for passage of
a bylaw compelling 5 o'clock closing
for those stores throughout the year
was tabled by the city council Monday night pending investigation directed toward obtaining 5 o'clock
closing for all stores in the city,
Since the first of the month some
stores have remained open until 5:30.
While ii was pointed out the council was unable to refuse such a bylaw, provided two-thirds of the business concerns signed the petition,
the council felt all stores should
close at the same time and decided
to take steps to that end. Those responsible for circulating the original
petition will be approached.,
It was pointed out the eight-hour
day was largely responsible for the
petition,
Harry Severn ol
Trail Passes al
Vancouver City
Came to Procter in
1907; Was Engineer
in Tug Service
TRAIL, B. C., Sept. 20- Harry
Severn, highly respected pioneer of
the West Kootenay, passed away in
Shaughnessy Military hospital at
Vancouver Sunday night, following
an illness of several months, according to word received here today.
Although Mr. Severn had been a
resident of Trail for the past 10
years, he had resided at Procter
from 1007 until 1927. For years he
was an engineer on the C. P. R.
tugs which towed barges of cars
between Procter and Kootenay
landing, the water service being
disposed of when the rail link
between these two points was built.
He leaves a great many old friends
along tho Kootenay lake and in
this city.
In Trail he was employed by the
C. M. _ S. company for five years,
in 1931 taking over the position of
caretaker at the local postoffice.
A highly respected citizen "Harry"
as he was widely known, was born
in Wolverhampton, May 3, 1877. He
had a long military record, having
been with the 17th Lancers and
Lord Strathcona's Horse from which
unit he transferred to the Mounted
Machine Gun section. He was a vet-
craij ot the Boer War, serving as _
sergeant, and with with the 225th
Battalion, Canadian Expeditionary
Force in the Great War.
He was a member of the Canadian
Legion, B. E. S. L., Trail Branch,
No. 11.
Mr. Severn loved fishing and
spent many a vacation at Procter,
while residing in Trail.
Mr. Severn was predeceased by
his wife, who passed away in Trail,
August, 1936. Surviving arc three
daughters. Mrs. E. G. Ringheim and
Rose, Trail; and Mrs. Earle Murdin,
Kelowna.
Funeral services will be held
Wednesday at 4 p.m.
To Move Out Two
Occupants Shacks
on the Foreshore
Instructions that city police notify occupants of foreshore shacks
to move out were given by the city
council Monday night. The occupants were notified by the city in
Julyt and out of five shacks two
have been removed, one was vacant
and two are still occupied.
Dr, F. P. Sparks, health officer,
stated a Doukhobor family had since
moved into the vacant shack.
Trail, Lagging al Hall-Way Mark,
Makes About Face lo Tie and Win
Brewery Trophy
Goes lo Trail-
Tadanac Bowlers
Down Nelson 106-71 in
Final, Inter-City
Championship
Driving the Nelson bowlers down
an additional 35 points on their
home greens Saturday, the Trail-
Tadanac Bowling club walloped the
Nelson bowlers 106-71 in the final
intercity competition to capture the
.Brewery cup and the intercity lawn
bowling championship for the year.
The Nelson bowlers travelled to
Trail Saturday by car.
Of the four contests played, F. E.
Wheeler's rink chalked up the only
Nelson victory, when it defeated W
Rae 31-22.
Results with the Trail skips mentioned first follow:
Jim Deans 33, J. S. Goulding 8.
Bob Watson 20, Jack Draper 17.
A. Laurie 31, James Ball 15.
W. Rae 22, F. E. Wheeler 31.    '
Presentation of the cup to William
Rae, vice-president of the Trail-
Tadanac club, was made by Mr.
Wheeler, Nelson president.
Nelson rinks, in order of skip,
third, second and lead follow:
J. S. Goulding, A. G. Lane, David
Laughton and J. Graham; Jack Draper, Sam Brown, F. Davies and William Brown; James Ball, Norman B.
Bradley, J. Simons, and A. T. Richards; F. E. Wheeler, W. T. Calbick,
E. Stangherlin and C. F. McHardy.
MORE ABOUT
CHINA
(Continued From Page On«)
anese commanders for foreign diplomats and Chinese non-combatants to evacuate the capital of
China passed.
The Brltlih emba.Jy decided not
to evacuate the city. The French,
Ruisian, German and Italian officials also stayed, at least temporarily, but the United State, em
bassy, under orders from Wash
Ington, temporarily left, setting
up headquarters on a warship. In
charge of the British embassy Is
R. G. Howe, former counsellor,
who was rushed to Nanking from
London after Ambassador Sir
Hughe Knatchbull-Hugessen was
shot by a Japanese aviator.
After the zero hour for evacua
tion, Japanese stated, a huge fleet of
Japanese bombers would fly over
the city, already subjected to two
severe bombardments yesterday
morning and repeated smaller raids
during the past few weeks.
They would attempt to destroy
this "centre of resistance to the Japanese," it was announced,
Monday's raids demolished 40
Chinese civilians. It was ahead of
Japan's own deadline, set as a
warning to foreigners to flee from
danger.
CANTON BOMBED
HONG KONG, Sept. 21 (Tuesday!
(AP)—Twenty-one   Japanese    air-
TRAIL SOCIAL
By MRS. GLENN QUAYLE
TRAIL, B. C-, Sept. 20 — Mrs.
George Walker, nee Miss Goldic
Worley of Doer Park, whose marriage was celebrated during the
latter part of August, was guest of
honor Friday evening when Mrs,
James Lamont entertained at a postnuptial shower. Autumn flowers in
a colorful display, decorated the
rooms. A doll buggy, decorated in
pink and white, and wheeled into
Hay never
Try one doso "Dr. riatt'n RINEX Prescription". Frel better in a few minutes. A physician's
internal treatment in convenient capsules, Uflte-
li_s—a godsend tor sutTerers .mm Hay Fever,
Rose Fever, Head Colds, Catarrh, Asthma. Not
habit _orminj[. Sneezing, wheezing, itehing eyes,
running nose quickly relieved. Satisfaction
within a few hivurs guarantied or money back.
Your druggist recommends ItlNEX, (1.00.
(Advt.)
NELSON TO
TRAIL TRAIN
SERVICE
Daily Except Sunday
Lv. NELSON
10:35 A.M. 6:30 P.M.
Ar. TRAIL
12:20 P.M. 8:30 P.M.
Sunday Service
Lv NEL80N .... 6:30 P.M.
Ar TRAIL   8:30 P.M.
No Change Enroute
Single Fare .... $1.70
Regular Return . $3.05
Week-End Return $2.15
Gttfdifart
the room by Marilyn and George
Lamont who were dressed as bride
and groom, contained a variety of
delightful gifts. Accompanying the
small bridal couple, was Robert
Lamont, dressed as a minister and
ready to .fulfill the duties of marriage solcmnizer. "Here Comes the
Bride," played on tlie piano by
Mrs. D. F. Stewart, added a realistic touch to the entrancing scene.
Music was featured entertainment
with a sing-song being particularly
enjoyed, music benig supplied by
Mrs. D. F. Stewart and Mrs. W.
Munroe. Delicious refreshments
were served by the hostess. The invited guests were Mrs. Wesley J.
Owen,  Mrs.  James  Thatcher, Mrs.
D. F. Stewart, Mrs, A, Smith, Mrs,
W. Monroe, Mrs. Gordon Fox, Mrs.
E. Mackie, Mrs. Finn, Mrs. O. Moore,
Mrs. O, Moore, Jr., Mrs, A. E, Jeffery, Miss Vivian Lamont and
Jimmy Jeffery
Robert Burns has left for Edmonton where he will continue his studies in medicine at the University of
Alberta.
Ronald McKinnon left Sunday for
Rossland where he has taken up
residence.
Mrs. A. P. Jeffery and son left
[ Monday for Nelson where they will
spend a week's holiday.
Mrs. J. A. Thalman has been removed to her home from the Trail-
Tadanac hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Lewis are
spending a two-week holiday at
their Robson summer home.
Mrs. A. Saunders. Victoria street.
has as her guest Mr. and Mrs. J.
Saunders of Port Arthur.
Remo Toffolo spent the week-end
at Penticton,
Mrs. R. O, Baker has been removed to her home from the Trail-Tadanac hospital,
Douglas Ritchie is among the students from Trail who has left for
Edmonton where he will attend the
University of Alberta.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Hinton and
son have returned to their home
from a holiday trip to the coast.
Mr. and Mrs. Alex Cumming of
Calgary fcre visiting relatives in
Trail, Mr. and Mrs. G- G. Cumming,
T, F. Cumming and Mr. and Mrs.
Lerdy Comes From the
Hospital to Play a
Great Goal Game
MARCUS SMITH IS
STAR WITH FIVE
TRAIL, B. C., Sept. 20—Utterly
hop.less In tha first stanza and
trailing on tht short end of an
8-4 count at half time, Trail tied
up the fixture twice in the third
quarter and managed to forge
ahead far enough In the final
frame to defeat Rossland Redmen
16-15 in the third of * best three
out of five West Kootenay Boxla
league final series here tonight.
Rossland won the first game, Trail
having taken two straight.
The whole town is wondering
what took place in the Trail dressing room during the 10-minute rest,
period at half time, for from then
on tho local squad turned on the
Redmen exactly as they had suffered the attack in the first two
quarters.
Goal-tending was again sensational. Earl LeRoy, who has played
for Trail through the entire season,
today was in hospital, an appendicitis "suspect." He came out and
played, and from all appearances,
LeRoy was in the pink as regards
to his play and played an even
greater game than in the first two
of the series.
SMITH GETS FIVE
Marcus Smith, the red-headed
sensation of the previous game, was
in there again for five goals. His
counters, four of which were scored
in the third, tied up the game for
the first time, Rossland having a solid margin up to that point.
Probably Rossland's loss of Wood
in the last quarter, for approximately
half of the session, had much to do
with Rossland's inability to recover.
He received a bad gash over an eye
soon after the final stanza got
under way and received a grand
ovation when he returned to the
floor, which he had been carried
away from, to finish the dying moments of the fixture.  Apart from this
(,,
injury, no one showed signs of being hurt, the game being exceptionally clean for a playoff battle. Penalties were comparatively few, Bradbury and Snowdon being the only
men to draw more than one two-
minute penalty, hot a single major
being meted out,
When the teams opened the fourth
quarter the score was 13-11 in Red-
"men's favor. Mouse Davy_ opened
the scoring and Temple came
through in a flashy combination
with Miller to tie up the count.
Morris scored on Snowdon's assist
to give Trail a one goal lead for the
first time, Wood was Injured and
as he lay in agony on the floor his
teammate Neill went through to
even the count. Mouse Davy gave
Trail again a one-goal lead, and
Sammartino thrust in another to establish a two-goal margin for the
locals. Hartney came back to pare
Trail's margin down to one goal.
ROSSLAND:
G   A Pen.
Gidinsky       0      0      0
Carkner        110
Hartney     2      1
Davies        0      1      2
Paven       10      0
Walmsley     0      0
Saundry        1      1      2
Scott       1      0-0
Anderson        10      0
Wood      0      0      2
McGuire      4      0      2
Ezart    _    0      0      2
Neil    _    4      2      2
Totals  15 0    12
TRAIL:
G A Pen.
Snowdon       0 14
Preston      0 0      0
Miller   0 1      2
Bradbury    ,  2 1      4
Kendall       0 0      0
Morris    2 0      2
Sammartino      3 10
James     0 0      2
Merlo   0 1      0
Smith      5 0      0
"Mouse" Davy    3 1      2
Temple      1 0      0
Totals     16      6    16
Officials: Ken Paul, referee; Bob
Gifford, judge of play.
planes showered down bombs on
Canton, China's southern metropolis,
in an air raid early today.
The bombardment last 90 minutes.
Reports from Canton said Chinese
pursuit planes "shot down three
Japanese ships."
CHINESE PLANES
STAGE A RAID
SHANGHAI, Sept. 20 (CP) -
Chinese bombing planes dodged
anti-aircraft shells tonight in a new
raid on the Japanese military airfield in Shanghai's Yangtzepoo sector.
The new attack came after a day's
lull in Chinese aerial activity. Several Chinese fliers dived to low altitudes to drop their explosives, but
no planes, apparently, were shot
down.
Health officials reported cholera
was spreading in the foreign areas,
with 1015 cases and 120 deaths thus
far. The disease was reported as
reaching serious proportions among
Japanese troops.
Indications Japanese plan a major offensive against Chinese defenders of Shanghai was seen today
in a Central (Chinese) news report
that Japanese warships stationed off
the northern coast of Kinngsu province have weighed anchor.
JAPANESE ADVANCE
TIENTSIN, Sept. 21 (Tuesday)-
(CP-Havas)—Spreading out fanwise
in tho six different battle sectors of
the north China front, Japanese
armies pressed forward today to
claim victories in almost all sectors,
notwithstanding the muddy roads
and hardening Chinese resistance.
The  Japanese  offensive  in   Sui
yuan province as bolstered with reinforcements of Mongolian horsemen, who slashed their way to vie
tory over a detachment of 1500
Chinese soldiers at Shangtu on the
Suiyuan border, according to a Japanese information received here,
The combined Japanese-Mongolian army then occupied Kaochiaci
a village 35 miles northeast of Cha-
chuan, and started their advance
into Suiyuan this morning.
WITHIN 15 MILES OF
IMPORTANT 8TRONGHOLD
PEIPING, Sept. 20 (AP)—Japanese troops in tanks and armored
trains advanced tonight to within
15 miles M Paotingfu, important
Chinese stronghold in north China.
Steadily driving detachments ol
stubborn Chinese defenders down
the Peiping-Hankow railway, Japanese occupied the towns of Kiu-
cheng and Ansuhsien,
One of the major engagements of
the north China war, probably determining the outcome of that conflict, appeared shaping up at Paotingfu where large numbers of
Chinese soldiers are entrenched.
Employment of White
Girls by Chinese Is
Matter for the Police
That employment of white girls
in Chinese cafes was a matter for
tlie police department to regulate
was the reply of Mayor J. P. Morgan at the council meeting Monday
night when Alderman N. C. Stibbs
stated he had received complaints of
employment of a white girl in a
Chinese restaurant in Nelson.
BUSY CREWS GET AREHA IN SHAPE
FOR FAIR, WHICH OPENS SEPT. 22nd
Working crews were busy all day
Monday in the Civic Centre arena
preparing it to accommodate the
Nelson fall fair, which opens Wednesday.
By Monday evening, a great platform was in place in the centre of
tho arena, while everywhere the
tables to hold the exhibits were in
place.
Erection of booths was under way
Monday evening, and will be com-
pleled today.
STAGE EXHIBITS TODAY
Tuesday will see the exhibits pout-
in from all directions, and over 200
exhibitiors will be busy, staging
their exhibits.
Owing to the space being limited
to the arena, some of the special
displays are going to be cramped for
room. The space allotted the Nelson
manual training exhibit will accommodate only a small part of what it
was intended to show.
All exhibits must be in place Tues-
day night.
Tuesday will also see the Midway
burgeon on the Recreation grounds,
where the Crescent Canadian Shows
will operate all the usual thrill-giving features, in addition to many
sideshows.
Performing troups for the free attractions will be on hand Tuesday, to
make arrangements for their acts.
SPECIAL TUESDAY
SILKNIT LINGERIE
Panties, Briefs. White, Nurose.
39c
Small, medium
and large. ...
fjHEl
wm
Ready-to-Wear
Phone 73 Burnt Block
FINE RESPONSE
TO CITY DRIVE
(LEAR UP DEBT
Wasson Tells Council
Services Arrears
Are Reduced
ACTION NEEDED
IN SOME CASES
A "remarkable response' from the
majority ol Nelson residents in
meeting arrears of water, light and
business licences was reported lo
the city council Monday ni^ht by
W. E. Wasson, city clerk, wnen he
presented a summary of the current
drive to clean up old accounts.
Drastic action would have to bs
taken, however, in the case of a few
who had neither paid up nor made
arrangements to pay up, Mr. Wasson
stated. In some cases, as instructed
by the city council, it would be
necessary to cut off water to delinquents until they arranged to meet
their debts to the city, he added.
This action might be taken this
week.
At the end of May arrears for
light amounted to $11,154.15, and at
the end of August this figure had
been reduced by over $2500 to
$8537.80.
Arrears of water. $34,000, had been
cut down about $5000 to $28,974,
Licence arrears were $944.9Q compared with $1300 at the end of May,
and it was hoped by the end of the
year to have these debts 9p per cent
cleared up.
The response was exceptionally
good, in Mr. Wasson's opinion, since
many persons had been unemployed
or partially employed over several
years. The electric light situation
was better each month and the practice had been instituted, when users
became three months in arrears, ot
notifying them the service would be
discontinued if not paid or arrangements made to pay,
Mr. Wasson felt the city's bad debt
situation, with a business of $12,000
to $13,000 a month, was comparable
with that of trading companies in
the city.
"I don't think so," Alderman N. C,
Stibbs remarked, Alderman P. G.
Morey agreeing the clerk had "a
cinch" in collecting, since the services could be cut off.
"I haven't had a cinch until this
year," Mr. Wasson countered,
PEASE IS VICTOR
BUFFALO, N.Y., Sept. 20 (AP)-
Irving Pease, 1571.-., Toronto, slugged
his way tonight to a six-round decision victory over Jamestown's
Jimmy Cark, 154V„, United States
middleweight Olympic representative at Berlin in 1936.
SONNY  JONES  GETS   DRAW
HOLYOKE, Mass., Sept. 20 (AP)
—Sonny Jones, 146, of Vancouver
and Andre Jessburn, 146, of New
York turned in a classic 10-round
fight here tonight before the official balloting returned a draw decision.
Letter Carrier Service Not Likely
in Trail, Nelson Until October 1st
Switch Assistant
Superintendents
A switch of assistant division superintendents of the Canadian Pacific at Nelson took place Sunday,
when A. P. Thompson, who came
here in the spring from Bassano,
Alta., returned to his former prairie
post, where his special qualifications
are in demand in connection with
tlie winter coal movement, while
his place here vMs taken by D. G.
Beatty, who arrived Sunday morning from Broadview. Sask,
It was last spring that the division
got the additional assistant superintendent, A. J. Ironside of Cranbrook, having previously been the
3, A despatch from the post office
department at Ottawa to W. K. Esling, M.P., Korienay-West, indicates
lhat the Civil Service commission
has not yet determined the qualified applicants for tho positions of
letter-carriers at Trail and Nelson
and the indication is that the service
in these two cities will not be inaugurated until November 1. The
situation is made clear in the following wire:
OTTAWA, Sept. 20,1937
W. K. Esling, M.P.
Rossland, B.C.
Date of inauguration of letter carrier system for Trail and Nelson
depends upon the date on which the
lists of qualified candidates are established by the Civil Service commission.- It is not possible at present
to fix definite date but every effort is being made to commoncc on
or before November first.
1 ■' "Kmirnwnnn
KIDNEY TROUBLE
Causes Backache
To neglect the first symptom of
Kidney trouble might lead to very
serious results. Your kidneys contain thousands of little filters, each
one having special work to perform.
If some of these filters become clogged, poisons and Uric acid enters lhe
blood stream. The result is a backache a dead, heavy pain. The Uric
acid deposits a fine granule in the
joints, causing a pain known as
rheumatism. Nox Kidney Flushers
really flush the kidneys, placing
them in a healthy, sound condition.
No more getting up at night—no
more backache. That sallow complexion is replaced by a natural clear
skin. Your eyes become bright and
your headaches disappear. Each
package of Nox Kidney Flushers
contains a full month's treatment
There is only one Nox Kidney Flusli-
er—they improve your entire general health. Your Kidneys and Liver
will function perfectly. Why not
start today on the road to good
health, let Nox Kidney Flushers
bring you good health. Sold at Fleu-
ry's Pharmacy, Nelson, B.C. (Advt)
FINEST
SAND
AND
GRAVEL
FOR
BUILDING
PURPOSES
Fairview Fuel
Supply tic Teaming Co.
PHONE 701
 f^S^FSW^^?***
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NELSON  DAILY NEWS, NELSON,  B.C.—TUESDAY MORNING. SEPT. 21, 1937.
NELSON SCOUTS
SET PACE NOT
EQUALLED B.C.
Three Win Coronation
King's Scout Award;
Few in Province
Setting a pace unequalled in British Columbia, first Nelson Boy
Scout troop has three members who
have won a coronation King's Scout
certificate, signifying not only that
they have won the most-.sought
award in scouting, but also thai
they achieved the standing within
a limited time set for winning of
the certificates.
"Ordinarily a lad who attains
King's Scout ranking receives only
a badge, for which he must rjualify
each year, but in this year of the
coronation of King George VI a
limited time was given during which
Scouts reaching this standing were
also awarded coronation certificates
explained J. M. Dronsfield, district
commissioner, who presented the
certificates.
Provincial headquarters informed
him few of the certificates were won
in British Columbia.
The new King's Scouts are Morris
Aldersmith, troop leader; David
Rees, patrol leader; and Stanley
Hodgson, patrol leader. While they
still have to prove each year their
qualification to wear the King'1:
Scout badge, they will retain the
certificates.
To obtain the badge, highest in
scouting, the lads had first to obtain
first class standing and then to pass
a number of special badge tests.
TRAIL FIRM IS
INCORPORATED
J. H. Matthews Co., Ltd., of Trail,
has been incorporated, the B. C.
Gazette reports.
Authorized capital of the company is $10,000 divided into 1000
shares of $10 each. Registered office is care of Russell J. G. Richards. Kemp building, 1412 Bay street.
The company will "purchase and
carry on" the business of J. H. Matthews, plumber, heating contractor,
and so on, at Trail.
INDIAN CHIEF DEAD
AFTER INJURED BY
A MOOSE
VANDERHOOF, B.C, Sept. 20
(CP)—Portage Pius, chief of the
Portage Indians, died today in*.
nearby Prince George hospital
from gashes suffered when he
was attacked by a bull moose.
Chief Pius shot the moose and
thinking it dead went for help
to bring in the carcass. When he
returned with three other Indians the moose charged him.    •
ALEX STEWART
REVIEWS TRIP
AT GYRO MEET
An interesting resume of his trip
to the United States was unfolded
by Alex Stewart, Nelson's chief of
city police, before the Nelson Gyros
meeting in the Hume Monday evening.
Mr. Stewart visited mostly sports
cenlres on his trip and he related
visits to prize fights, horse racing
and other sporting activities.
S. C. Morris was appointed chairman at the coming fair, Ado Dieboll
who was placed in charge, appointed
George Dill and R. E. Crerar to prepare the two concession booths
They were given the power to appoint their own committees for the
fair days.
PAGE   THREE
NELSON FAIR ENTRIES BREAK ALL
RECENT RECORDS WITH 1(2) TOTAL
202 Exhibitors Will Show Products;  Marty
Sections Have Entries Every Class;
Calliope Starts Tuning Up
All records of recent years for
entries at the Nelson fall fair Were
broken when George Horstead.
manager, closed the enldy lists for
the three-day district fair that opens
Wednesday.
Entries number 1823, and represent 202 different exhibitors. Twenty-seven different localities are represented.
366 VEGETABLE ENTRIES
The vegetable section will be a
record-breaker, for there are 366
entries in it, all 68 classes named in
the prize list being represented. In
th,. tomato class alone there are
20 entries. The fruit section, of 52
classes, has 336 entries, and there
will be 21 plates of Bartlett pears
in the most numerous class. Field
produce has 24 entries, in 14 classes.
There are 251 entries in the canning section, with all 35 classes fill-
el, and 18 exhibits in the canned peai
class. The home cooking section h3s
195 entries, and only one class out
of the 33 is left unrepresented.
Twenty-three single loaves of bread
constitute the largest class in this
section. Altogether the judges wil1
have to p*ss upon 129 loaves of
bread.
45 FLOWER CLASSES FILLED
Third largest section in the fair
will be the floral, which has just
300 entries,  with  12  collections of
CANADIAN U.S. WIRE FLASHES
NOXACORN
Each ptckai- contain! ipedal (faturw; ma_(
rerlain you get the
YELLOW TUBE AND PACKAGE,
Noracoro Ii »oM  only in tubei.    Your con
removed or money refunded at drug atorei
*i5_—ami Noxacorn today
Sold at: MANN, RUTHERFORD CO.
The Morning AfterTaking
Carters Little Liver Pills
ABERHART HINTS
AGAIN AT ELECTION
EDMONTON. Sept. 20 (CP)—I*
Albertans in sufficient numbers fail
to sign "blue pledges" promising
In support the Social Credit government, it may bo "compulsory" to
call an election, Premier Aberhart
asserted last night. In a week, 3l,37ti
signed pledges have been received,
DISGUISE BUCK
DEER AS DOE
PORT ANGELES, Wash., Sept. 20
(AP).—If anybody shoots Roscow, a
two-ycnr-okl mule deer, it won't be
the fault of friendly game protcC'
tors. Roscow had been having things
pretty soft, living on handouts from
camps and farms. Then he grew
a set of four points horns. Game
protectors sawed off his horns in
the hope hunters will mistake him
for a doe.
NO LIQUOR LICENCE
FOR TRAILER STORE
COLUMBIA, S.C., Sept. 20 (AP),
—The state tax commission put its
foot down today on the request for
a licence to operate a liquor store
in a trailer.
CAPE BRETON
ELECTION OCT. 25
OTTAWA, Sept, 20 (CP) .-Monday, Oct, 25, has been fixed as polling date for the by-election in Cape
Breton North-Victoria, to fill the
house of commons vacancy created
by death of D. A. Cameron, Liberal
member.
HURT IN  FIGHT
IN  VANCOUVER  CAFE
VANCOUVER, Sept. 20 (CP).-A
fracas in a Chinatown cafe early
today resulted in stab-wounds for
James Yelton, North Vancouver.
BUCHAN'S NEW BOOK
DEALS WITH AUGUSTUS
NEW YORK, Sept, 20 (CP).-Lord
Tweedsmuir's new book, "Augustus"
is for fall publication.
The book, a biography of the Ro
man emperor, will be issued as "by
John Buchan," the name Canada'?
governor-general made famous before he was raised to the peerage.
ELEVEN FATALITIES
IN WASHINGTON
SEATTLE, Sept. 20 (AP).—Eleven
persons were dead victims of weekend accidents in Washington state.
Automobiles claimed five lives, three
other persons were killed in Grand
Coulee dam construction mishaps,
a man and a baby were drowned
and a former Minnesota educator
was fatally injured in a fall.
__-  •
WILKINS QUITS
SEARCH FOR RUSSIANS
OTTAWA, Sept. 20 (CP). — Sir
Hubert Wilkins has decided to give
up the hunt for the six Russian
fliers in the Arctic.
ESCAPES WHEN POLICE
OFFICER  FIRES THRICE
VANCOUVER, Sepl. 20 . (CP).-
Police today sought an unidentified
man who ignored three revolver
shots fired over his head and escaped capture by Constable D. H. Grant.
The man was sighted moving
through underbrush in the east-
end. Persons told police he wore a
white handkerchief over the lower
part'of his face and kept one hand
in his pocket as though holding a
gun.
THREE AUTOMOBILE
DEATHS  IN   ONTARIO
TORONTO, Sept. 20 (CP) .--Accidents claimed four lives in Ontario
during the week-end, automobiles
figuring in three deaths and a hunting accident responsible for the
fourth.
SET FIRE WITHOUT
PERMIT; FINED $25
VANCOUVER, Sept. 20 (CP). -
R. Walker, Hilliers, B. C, was fined
$25 and costs for setting out a fire
without a permit, G. E. Radford was
given suspended sustence on a similar charge at Powell River.
asters competing in the largest
class. In this section there are 45
classes, with every class filled.
Needlework has 268 entries, with
1_ pillow-cases competing in one
of the 81 classes. Fine arts has 70
entries, in the 25 classes.
The inter-district contest, in the
Women's istitute class, will be the
usual attraction, with Nakusp, Bon-
nington-South Slocan, and Nelson
institutes showing their varied products. There is one entry for tlvs
individual ranch display.
, To complete this record, the dairy
producer section has six entries,
and the honey, two.
Active work started Monday in
the fair building, which will be the
arena at the civic centre, as all
exhibits must be in place Tuesday
night.
The first notes of the calliope of
the Crescent Canadian shows merry-
go-round, which will be one of the
midway items, were heard in Nelson gunday, while the apparatus
was being tuned up at a garp^e.
Shark Tows
Boat lh Hours
GLASGOW, Sept. 20 (CP Cable)
—A wild ride in a little dinghy towed by a basking shark over a 100-
mile zigzag route about the Nortli
Channel of the Irish Sea for 24
hours, provoking airplane searches
and causing fire in an attending motorboat, today provided the weekend's saltiest tale from the sea.
Three sharkhunters—-Captain I. L.
David, H. Webster and Harry Smith
—left the parent ship Myrtle Saturday in Carradale bay, Kintyre, and
harpooned a 30-foot, 10-ton shark,
which rushed around and about
Argyllshire waters in a violent dash
for freedom.
They were members of a group
attempting to find out whether a
new Scottish industry could be built
up from the distillation of shark
liver oil.
It was ]1 a.m. Saturday when the
shark took the dinghy in tow. After
it had been driven back by tide and
wind in an attempt to reach the
open sea. the shark neared Mother-
ship and Tony Watkins, exnlorer,
and Dr. Seccombe Hett. scientist,
effected a perilous transfer to the
dinghy, relieving the three crew
men, who scrambled back to the
Myrtle.
As the shark continued its merry
course throughout the day and Saturday night, several reliefs wore
made, hut at dawn, when Watkins
and Webster were manning the dinghy, the Myrtle caught fire and was
unable to keep up with the fast-
travelling shark.
While the Mothcrship's occupants
fought the flames, shark and dinghy
disappeared. The coastguard became
alarmed. Three planes set out. and
eventually located the dinghy. The
shark was almost exhausted but
alive. Watkins and Webster, weary
but victorious, buoyed the shark and
went ashore.
Washington Won't
Act Between Lewis
and A. F. L. Unions
WASHINGTON. Sept. 20 (AP).-
The labor relations board declined
today to act in dispute of the International Longshoremen's Union with
truck drivers.
 INCORPORATED   27? MAY 1670.
Switch IN
Household
MEDICINES
ENO FRUIT SALTS  79^
LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S COMPOUND  $1.10
SAL HEPATICA—Large .... ?1.25—Small .... 65^
HBC MILK OF MAGNESIA  39?
PETROLACAR— (Red Label)     $1.19
HBC MALT EXTRACT With Cod Liver Oil   89?
NU]OL   ..'   79?
IRONIZED YEAST   $1.00
KRUSCHEN SALTS     69?
ABSORBINE JUNIOR   $1.16
BAYERS ASPIRINS — 100's ... 9S?—24's ... 39?
FLETCHER'S CASTORIA   35?
MINARD'S LINIMENT     30?
DENTAL NEEDS
COLGATE'S—
Giant size   35?
HUTAX    25?
KOLYNOS TOOTH
PASTE     43?
PEPSODENT TOOTH
PASTE     39?
PEBECO TOOTH
PASTE     25?
MASSO TOOTH
BRUSHES—Hard or medium bristle  > 25?
BAYNAPS
Large Absorbent Napkins.       1Q^
Per box of 12  lIZ
KLEENEX
Facial Tissue. 200 sheets in     1Q
pkg. Per pkg lIZ
KOTEX
Economy Box of 48 napkins.
Each	
79c
BEAUTY AIDS
Woodbury's TOILET SOAP— 3 for 25?
BABY'S OWN SOAP—3 for  25c*
POND'S SKIN TONIC   39?
Daggett and Ramsdell's COLD OR VANISHING CREAM—Economy jars,
Each    49? m\\WlN
CREAM OF OLIVES  39?     ■,»..        ,,
IERCEN . LOTION      39c      W5*Z^
ITALIAN BALM      29c        \\W^
HIND'S HONEY AND ALMOND . 39?
POND'S COLD OR VANISHING CREAM—
Economy jar. Each   49?
NOXZEMA SKIN CREAM—Regular 75c   59?
PRINCESS PAT LEMON AND ALMOND  43?
BE SURE
You Cet a Key to Captain Kidd's Treasure Chest With
Every Cash Purchase of 50c and Every 50c Paid on
Account—Tuesday.
HBC Grocery Specials
ON SALE TODAY, WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY
193 Phones 194 Free City Delivery
SOUP—Aylmer, Tomato or Vegetable .... 3 tins 25?
COFFEE—H B C Harmony Per Ib. 23?
SEEDLESS RAISINS—Australian 2 Ibs. 25C
GREEN CUT BEANS—Aylmer 17 ox. tins, 2 for .. 23?
PEACHES—Elberta.
Per crate 	
$1.49
PEANUT BUTTER—Squirrel, 2's
LUSHUS JELLY POWDERS	
SPICED BEEF—Swift's, sliced	
PEAS—Sieve 5, Aylmer, 17 oi	
DARJEELING TEA—Delicious flavor
Per tin 28?
3 pkgs. 23?
. Per Ib. 25?
. Per tin 11?
. Per Ib. 87?
PRUNE JUICE—12 ox. tins 2 for 23?
PITTED DATES—Fresh stock 2 Ibs. 25?
COCOA—Fry's, Vl lb. tins Each 22?
SOAP—Fels Naptha 3 bars 23?
SOUP MIX 3 Ibs. 25?
WEIR DEFENDS
SCHOOL COSTS
VICTORIA. Sept. 20 (CP)-A defence of education costs in British
Columbia was presented today by
G.   M.   Weir,   provincial  education
minister, in an address to the annual
convention of the British Columbia
School Trustees association.
Speaking at a luncheon meeting.
Dr. Weir said only three nnd a half
per cent of the taxes paid by the
average wage earner went to education.
"Is that a large amount when it is
considered 25 per cent of the population is attending school?" he asked.
The minister said education expenditures were not increasing in
British Columbia; and that changes
made in the list of text books during the past few years resulted in a
net savings to parents, and not
rise in cost.
In records on almost 60,000 instances where fires have started automatic sprinkler apparatus working, the sprinklers either extinguished or checked the flames.
WE HAVE REDUCED THE PRICE ON EVERY USED CAR
BUY A GUARANTEED CAR
Only a Small Down Payment
Choose the car you want from
our large selection and drive
it home the same day—A nominal down payment with the
balance arranged on low
monthly terms is all that is necessary for you to own a car
that you will be proud of and
one that will give you many
miles of guaranteed transportation,
WE MUST CLEAR THEM ALL OUT BEFORE WINTER
REDUCED TO YOUR PRICE
Unconditional 30-Day Guarantee
Every car has been carefully examined and reconditioned by our own
mechanics. You receive a guarantee
with every car giving you free service against mechanical defects for
30 days. All cars have been inspected and approved.
CHECK THESE TYPICAL
LOW PRICES
CARS TO
FIT ANY BUDGET
1936 Plymouth R. S. Coupe:
Radio and heater. ?Q7C
Price       Old
1935   De   Luxe   Plymouth
Coupe: $771.
12,000 miles     • • J
1936 Dodge Sed-A*f£
an. Low mileage    jp J J)
1936 Dodge AAA
Coupe.  Like  new ywv
1932 Chevrolet
2-door Sedan . .
385
1929 Chevrolet    f(Df_
2-door Sedan . . . ir9j
VALUES
IN EVERY MAKE
PEEBLES MOTORS
We Have Many Other Cars
From Which to Choose
GUARANTEED
PHONE 119
LIMITED
USED CARS
RECONDITIONED
NELSON, B. C.
A Free Demonstration Is
Yours for the Asking
1934 Chrysler Sedan: A-l
condition. $QAA
Price     OUU
1932   Studebaker   Special:
High Six. ?C7C
Price      vlO
Onct afro*, a SAlt tCi&£ th*/U»>W&uckd Ckvt^-Un6t£kva6k Saouttf.
■ A^fa.,..,_.„k.,     .
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mmms - ■ ■   nilson daily n#w», nblson, b. (..-Tuesday morning, sept. 21,1937.
SITS OF QUEEN MARY TO ALMSHOUSES ARE FRUITFUL
 1 A
pDrfve Forward . . ,
\ Go Back lo School
Keep on Learning;
Counsel lo Youth
A New Nelson Resident
&
By GARRY C, MYERS, PH. D.
There are a good many thousand
~ boys and girls who could greatly
•' profit from going on to school hut
R who, because of discouragement—
^.failing, perhaps, to pass their grades
I or to graduate with their class—
40, have decided not to go back to
^school this fall. Often I wish I
R might be able to sit down face to
'"-face with this youth and try to
K help him or her to reverse this de-
w cision.
£>    I think I know how this young
ii' person feels. He sees his classmates
moving on while he must lag. He
suffers from feelings ot inferiority.
To return to school and mingle wilh
younger  students  would  magnify
the suffering he supposes. Therefore he decides to do the easiest
thing and run away from the im-
,   mediately unpleasant. But what he
flails to see is the far greater un-
SI pleasantness he is bringing to him-
'self for later years, lie fails now
■■   to realize the remorse he will suffer
B_ in years to come when, as he looks
I 3 back, he will say to himself, "Why
K- was I so foolish?  If  only I had
such an opportunity now."
I*   My dear young friend: Let me en-
:.'treat you to return to school and
»'; to drive  steadily forward to the
Pj best future you can make for your-
I 'sell Even though you can get a job,
.. you will be keeping an older and
. more deserving person from it,
Keep on Learning
And you young folk who have
graduated from high school or college; Let me beg of you to keep
on learning. In case you have a
I   job, don't spend  all your leisure
£ j hours at empty pleasure. Perhaps
gl you can take a course or two in a
' local night high school or college.
No such being available, consider a
correspondence course.
And you have the public library.
Do use it. Ask the librarian to
help you plan a good reading
course. Though we live in the age
of books, we also live in lhe age
when books are woefully neglected.
And if you have no job. how
much more important it will be for
you to set yourself to keep on learning. See the university of books
right outside your door. And they
';  are free! •
_	
Living Room in
Modern Home Is
Simply Treated
EJ Dressing up a room in this day ot
I . simple lines frequently means dress-
In ing it down. Except for the house
IJJ that harks back to the Victorian
" era. a lot of frills are out of place
in a room lhat is to be what ihe
name implies—a living room.
The walls of a living room had
been finished in a rough plaster
and had panels of narrow moulding.
An ornate mantel with a fancy mirror occupied one wall. The electric
light fixtures were highly ornamental.
First of all. in the rejuvenation of
the room, the panels were removed.
The walls were finished in an off-
white shade and there were no light
brackets or other ornamentations to
detract from the few pictures which
the hostess decided to hang.
A plain mantel was substituted for
the more ornate one. An unframed
mirror was hung over it. White Venetian blinds were hung at the windows and took the place of glass
curtains.
With this background the housewife combined modern furniture
and some pieces which had been in
the family for generations. Tlie room
depended on these furnishings tor
color, the background being without a trace of it.
Persian scatter nigs lent brilliance
to a grey carpet. Modern versions
of Victorian chairs were covered in
plum and gold damask and a rnfri
|*_,was upholstered in chartreuse satm.
Lamps- were white. Cigarelte boxes
Miss Beity Dodd, late of North Battleford, Sask., now resident of
Nelson indicates she likes ice cream made in Nelson, the sunshine of
the Kootenays and the refreshing waters of the west arm of Kootenay
lake. She was snapped while at Lakeside park.
Does Not Keep Promise < , _
Husband Made Pledges lo Win Wife
but later tie Forgot All About Them
By VIRGINIA LEE
Circular Movement..
Daily Massage ol
Scalp Is Ihe Most
Effective of Tonics
By GLADYS GLAD
Some years ago, I am told, a
young woman mysteriously lost
all her hair overnight. This lass
went In bed in perfect health, but
awoke to find her hair completely
gone. And more amazing still, no
trace of the hair could be found
in the bed or about the room.
The poor girl must have gotten
an awful shock when she first
caught sight of herself that morning. And show me the girl who
wouldn't be shocked at suddenly
finding herself completely bald!.
Of course, women today don't
have to worry much about becom-
JjlAp
<: u   i€rX_____
Ann Southern
Her hair U soft,fluffy.
ing bald. But they do have the
problem of thinning hair to contend with. Women often become
alarmed at, lhe sight of a few hairs
in their brush and comb. They immediately begin to believe that
they .are approaching baldness. And
they really needn't. For the normal
and other accessories were Chinese.
An Oriental vase and a bowl of
white flowers were the only mantel
decorations. The reflection of the
room in the mirror, added to the
impression of spaciousness.
The room, although Its furnishings were formal, gave an appearance of a livable apartment, thoroughly enjoyed by the members of
the family.
scalp   clings   tenaciously   to   the
hairs growing from it.
Indeed, the scalp muscles that
jrip the hairs individually and collectively, can develop amazing
power. I remember once seeing a
Chinese aerial performer, for Instance, who hung by his hair from
trapeze.
It is a good idea for women to
attempt to develop the scalp
muscles and thus increase their
power to grip the hair firmly.
Daily massaging of the scalp is excellent for this purpose. Oddly,
enough, few women today seem to
realize the excellent benefits that
accrue from systematic scalp massaging. They'll spend large sums
of money for various scalp tonics,
and yet they'll neglect the most
effective hair tonic of all — the
biood!
Correct Procedure
The hair roots in the scalp are
surrounded by minute blood vessels. It is from these numerous
tiny blood vessels that the hair
roots obtain their nourishment.
The health and beauty of the hair
depend upon the quality of nourishment that these hair roots absorb, and if the circulation in
the scalp is sluggish, that quantity
is bound to be small, and the hair
will become dull and lifeless from
lack of sufficient nutrition.
To massage your scalp correctly,
place your thumbs at the hairline
at the nape of your neck, with one
thumb on each side of the spinal
column. Spread your fingers over
the top of your head, covering as
wide an area as you can.
Then, pressing tlie fingers firmly,
rotate the scalp until it moves freely. Continue to move the scalp
over your skull in slow, circular
movements, and shift your fingers
until every part of your scalp has
been treated.
Another good method of stimulating lhe circulation in the scalp
is by lifting the scalp from the
head. Take a portion of; the scalp
between your thumb and index
finger and lift it. Do this gently
over your entire head. Then place
your hands on the sides of your
head,  and  lift  the scalp upward.
It's easy to promise things be-1
fore you marry the gill, but it is
another matter to carry them out
after the wedding excitement has
died down It is like political campaign promises—much easier to
make than to fulfill when elected
to office.
ANXIOUS is a middleaged
widow who married a widower
some years her senior, and who
promised her, if she would marry
him, to deed his house to her nnd
also to make her the beneficiary
of his insurance. Well, he has
done neither, and as Anxious gave
up a home that her father had
kept for her to marry the man, she
feels as if she was going to get the
little end' of the deal. Her father
has since sold the house he was
keeping for her.
Anxious' husband supported 15
children and grandchildren through
the depression, but after his first
wife died they all left him to pay
their debts and would not even
speak to him. "Please tell me how
you would solve this riddle," begs
Anxious.
Can't you speak to the representative of the company in which
your husband has his insurance,
Anxious, and tell them of his intention? Maybe they can persuade
him to put it in your name, Of
course if your husband dies before
you do you can claim your widow's
third in his estate anyway. That
is the law. But as his relatives
have benefited so much in the
past by his generosity, and have
been ungrateful, you should make
every effort to persuade him to do
as he promised concerning the
house and insurance.
•   •   •
KISKIE is 18 and is madly in
love with a boy of 23. Her father
is very much opposed to her having
anything to do with this boy, however, as she is a southerner and he
is a northerner. The boy has gone
away for a while, and he doesn't
know that Kiskie has been forbidden to go with him. How can she
break the bad news to hint?
If Dan comes back, of course he
will have to know.that your father
doesn't like him and won't let him
WOMAN AMMONIA VICTIM
LEEDS, England (CP)—Two 16-
year-old boys pleaded not guilty to
squirting ammonia at a woman with
intent to rob. The woman was seriously burnt, and lost the use of one
eye.
come to see you. I should think he
would make a point of seeing your
father and having a talk with him.
Your dad wouldn't be likely to
shoot him or anything like-that,
would he? Maybe he can convince
your father that he is all right.
Anyhow stop being so dramatic
about it. Fathers have opposed
their daughters marriages before
now and girls have married the
men — and they sometimes have
wished they hadn't.
.  *   *
PATRICIA wants to advise
Blonde, the girl who is so tall and
thin lhat she is afraid people don't
like her. Patricia says that unusual height isn't so noticeable if the
tall person isn't selfconscious about
it, and tells of a friend whom she
helped. "Really, Blonde, it is not
half as bad if you forget about
it. As my girl friend became older
she got. fatter. Eat and sleep and
you will look healthy and happy."
About friends, she advises Blonde
to talk to the neighbor girls and
invite them to her home, turn on
the radio and dance, then later, go
for walks. If she does not know
how to dance, learn.. "Please let
me know, through Virginia Lee's
column, how you are getting on,"
she concludes.
Your letter was a little too long
to put in in its entirety. Patricia
so I hope I got enough in to help.
Thank you, dear.
•   *   *
STEADY READER: If your salary is so small that you cannot
plan on getting married to this
girl you are engaged to, it seems
that if she is the right kind of
girl she will tell you she doesn't
want you to go to the expense of
buying an engagement ring. That
is, after all, an uneccessary expense. Better save your money toward a time when you have a
larger salary and can plan the future together.
If she demands expensive presents knowing that your salary is
small. I think she is selfish and
mercenary and would not be a
very helpful wife. What do you
think? Or maybe you are so much
in love you cannot think clearly
about her.
London Season Livens Up; Canadians
Busy on Development of Television
By MOLLIE McGEE IBall Nov. 24. Already 20 charity
Canadian Press Correspondent      balls are listed to take place before
•LONDON,  (CP).—It is no mere | Christmas.   Television   parties   are
Serial Story . . ,
Rustle of Silks
By MARIE BLTZARD
CHAPTER 34
The next year passed swiftly,
Maribarat was a new name in the
■couture world watched with interest and with skepticism. She
was yet too new to have been tried.
Before her others had come, new
stars in the firmament that had
flared and faded quickly.
Advised now by a large committee of representatives from
her backers, she was cautioned to
be conservative. And, weaned by
the intensity of her efforts, her
romantic dreams spent, she was
glad enough to follow the lines
prescribed for her. Her establishment had grown to such proportions
that much of the executive work
had been apportioned to others.
Only in the creation of her models
was she sole mistress,
She had little time or inclination to regard her work or herself from a standpoint of art. Jt
was only when beautiful new
fabrics were there for her sensitive fingers to touch and respond
to that any of the things she had
felt years before returned to her,
With a wealth of rich velvets,
of clinging sheers, of metallics or
supple wools before her, with her
sketch pad in hand, then she was
„    , ,  .     ..       .,    ,;.„«„,.. j„ I as   she   had   always   been.   From
The forma  satin suit whether In   her £oft pencil( ^erui]ess flow of
the pastel shades or black, is an   beautiful lines emerged.
ideal ensemble for a fill-in or for       The hum  of  work  was  never
regular wear. slack   in   the   third   floor   work-
Lli
ALPINE MILK
"PURE AS THE SNOW
ON MOUNTAIN PEAKS"
TRY THIS RECIPE
It's Ideal When Made With
ALPINE MILK
CARAMEL ICING
1'4 cups granulated sugar, % cup brown
sugar, 2 tbsp. butter, 1 cup Alpine milk,
V/2 tsps. vanilla. Blend milk and sugar.
Add butter and cook until mixture forms
a soft ball when tasted in cold water.
Cool; add vanilla. Beat until of consistency
to spread.
A WESTERN PRODUCT
FOR WESTERN PEOPLE
PURE - RICH - SAFE
Reducing Lunch . .
hints for
housewives
Menu Hint
LUNCHEON
Banana Tricorne Salad
Melba Toast
Cookies Milk
DINNER
Broiled Ham       Baked Peaches
Baked Potatoes        Squash
Haw   Carrot   Strips
Apple Pie' Cheese Coffee
Even the reducer may Indulge in
the luncheon menu of salad and
Melba toast, if she does not eat
too many cookies to make up tlie
lost calories. Bananas and milk are
a notoriously good combination of
foods, recommended by dietitians
and physicians. The dinner menu is
baked in the oven, the Jiroiler being
used for the ham, and may also be
used for the peaches which are halved, stoned and either baked or
broiled, to be served around the
meat on the platter. Bake the squash
in its shell, and serve with plenty
of butter and seasoned with pepper
and salt. Fresh apples pie is my favorite dessert.
Today', Recipe.
BANANA   TRICORNE   SALAD.
DURITY
FLOUR
MAKES BETTER OREAD
—Quarter a peeled ripe banana by
cutting once crosswise and once
lengthwise. Arrange three of the
banana quarters to form a triangle
on each salad plate. Pile canned
or fresh cherries or purple grapes
in the centre of the trtangle. Cut
canned pineapple rounds into halves.
and arrange three or four overlapping in a row at. "apex" of banana
triangle. Place wedges of cheese on
each side of the bananas and garnish
with greens. Serve with French
dressing.
FACTS  AND   FANCIES
Corn Relish
Thirteen cups corn, thirteen cups
chopped cabbage, four sweet red or
green peppers, two cups brown sugar, two quarts vinegar, two tablespoons salt, one-half cup dry mustard, one tablespoon flour. Cut the
sweet corn from the cob. Combine
ingredients in order named, making a paste wilh vinegar, mustard,
salt and flour. Cook twenty minutes, after boiling point is reached,
stirring frequently. Turn into sterile jars and seal.
Little Things in Cakes
There are many small details to
be watched in making oakes. For
example, there is the matter oE
cleaning off the spoon and cleaning
down the sides of the bowl carefully and thoroughly after creaming the butter. If this is not done,
those flecks of butter and sugar
may be mixed in the batter the
last minute and cause soggy lumps
through the cake hatter.
In the matter of sifting the flour
before measuring, someone said recently that she never sifted the flour,
because she felt the additional flour
was needed. Recipes today call for
accurate measuring, and if flour
is not sifted before measuring too
much flour will be used in the cake,
resulting in one which has a dry,
_-,_.,__„  i—.„.!., -4_.__».*_.....:,._._____________
"Miss Wade wanted us kids
should commute with nature for a
half-hour ever day, think some
beautiful thought, an' tell the class
what they is. I hab sat too near the
kitchen window,- I guess. All I
seems to commute with is hot apple
pie."
rooms. Her mannequins had no
layoff seasons. For all that her
prices ascended, her clientele did
not fall off. She had a rotating
trade; there were the seasons when
the "buyers from New York, still
wary because she was not yet
considered one *of the exclusive
group of the big house, yet,
tempted by the adaptability of
her collection, made their visits
and bought prodigiously of her.
She had the trade of the continent
and of America.
It was then that she first discovered her dislike of designing
for actresses. Larry Hoik advisea
her that she must cultivate their
sponsorship; there was "nothing tp
equal the publicity value of doing
a play".
Mari would not tell him where
the complex had begun, or what
bitter memories it invoked.
She had changed in many ways
in that year. When, at the be'
ginning, she had realized how little of her own business was her
own, and how completely the res-
ponsiblity was hers, it had laid
heavily on her mind. Then, as time
passed and the records were there
for her to know how well she was
succeeding, she had a new world
weariness. She didn't, know that
it was a lack in her life. Previously her ambition had sustained her
and had made up to her for other
things that women want, and now
that her ambition was in the process of realization, she found it an
empty thing.
With her responsibility had come
a rjew aloofness, a point of view
towards life that was deliberately
unobjective. She did not want to
view life and its relation to her,
yet she was not prepared to be
objective.
She asked nothing more than to
he a passive observer save in the
hours when she was passionately
engaged in her work.
You saw that in her. You saw
|- her withdrawal. You saw it in
her manner, her gracious attention
that was seemingly all yours, yet
you felt that she had never been
touched and would never retain
what she had heard.
There were men n her ife that
year. Attracted by her cool beauty,
ner impersonal attitude, they
thought she was mysterieuse; They
(Continued on Page Five)
Valuable Food . . .
Many Ways Make
Milk Palatable if
Yeu Den'l Like II
By LOGAN CLENDENING, M. D.
"I have been advised to drink
milk, but it does not agree with
me. I can't stand it, What shall I
do?"
This wail that comes to my desk
is one that doctors have to answer
all the time.
To analyze the situation we can
recognize tljat there are four possible reasons why milk disagrees,
and they may be catalogued clearly by answering the following questions.
1. Does milk disagree with you
every time you drink it or just sometimes?
2. Does It give the same digestive
symptoms every time is disagrees
or do they vary?
3. Does it affect your digestion
alone?
4. Can you take milk In other
foods—in coffee, tea or ice cream,
in bread, with oatmeal?
The first group of milk disagreers
are those with a slight digestive
disturbance anyway — an irritable
colon or a mild gallbladder infection. Milk, with all its excellencies,
is a particularly digestive food, and
these people in the periods when
their digestive functions are upset
_evolt at it.
The second group is a modification
of the first, and without any definite digestive disorders they have a
sensitive digestive tract in some way
which milk upsets. In some people
milk produces a diarrhea, in some
a constipation. When it is well digested'it is constipating, when not.
diarrhea results. Modifying the
milk, using boiled, skimmed milk,
will get around the tendency to
diarrhea. And adding cream will
get around the constipating effect
The curd in. cow's milk is large.
Boiling the milk lessens the curd,
That is why it makes it more digestible. The addition of carbonated
water, or lime water, does the same
thing. A mixture of equal parts of
milk, cream and carbonated water
is more palatable and more digestible than plain milk.
CURDLED MILK DIGESTED
The best way to insure against
the formation of large* curds is to
curdle the milk before ingestion.
That is why in this group buttermilk, junket and Koumyss are better tolerated than raw milk.
The third group are those who
are allergic to milk. They should
have, to prove this, other symptoms
than those referable to the digestive
system—such as hives or asthma,
I believe these cases must be far
rarer than the reports one hears
indicate. A great deal of harm has
been done by taking people off
such necessary articles of fund as
milk on very flimsy evidence of
its allergic qualities. The cases I
have heard of strike me as being
very poorly analyzed.
The last group, the group who
says yes to question 4, are those
who have a psychic aversion for
milk. It is the largest group. I must
say I have a great deal of sympathy
with them. Intellectually I praise
milk, gastronomically the smell and
taste of it are insipid beyond words,
But for these milk soups, milk
punches, egg noggs, ice cream and
even the addition of cream, half
and half, solves the difficulty.
Tlie modification of milk for
adults should be .studied as much
as it has been for children. With
proper resourcefulness nearly any
prejudice can be overcome.
casual inspection Queen Mary
makes on a visit to a charitable
institution. She is always prepared
with a cane or umbrella to climb
flight of stairs. She asks innumerable questions and has a keen eye
for discrepancies or innovations.
Her suggestions and contributions
are practical and to the point.
While the Queen Mother holidayed at Sandringham she visited an
almshouse for the aged at Castle
Rising, a village nearby. A few days
later, while a guest at Heacham,
Norfolk, she went shopping and the
almshouse received some much-
needed comfortable furniture.
On Sept. 13, Queen Mary began
her annual visit to Princess Mary
and the Earl of Harewood at Harewood House near Leeds. She is expected to stay about two weeks
before returning to London.
Meanwhile the refurnishing of
royal palaces in town is nearing
completion. Tlie little Princesses'
night nursery has a gay coat of
soft yellow paint with a dado of
bright animal pictures. The Duke
and Duchess of Gloucester's apartments in St. James palace have been
renovated.
Tlie trek of the fashionable back
to town has started but most first
visits are short and to view advance
fashion shows. One dress house
presented every woman attending
the show with a gardenia, and it
was amusing to notice how many ot
these flowers appeared later at
smart restaurants and at the theatre.
Little seamstresses will be busy
for the next months for fine handwork is playing an important part
in the new evening fashions presented. The use of metallic embraid-
ery sponsored by royalty at coronation time is quite papular with
sequins and beading even appearing on daytime wear in dull opaque
colors.
One of the most important fall
functions  will  be  the  Ked  Cross
Should Soak Lawn
Once or Twice a Week
The most important factor in
maintaining a good lawn is correct watering. Faulty watering has
been the cause of more lawfi failures than any of the other many
mistakes that are made in lawn
maintenance, yet the correct method is easier and requires less personal effort.
If you sprinkle a lawn every
night it causes the roots of the
grass plants to grow upwards because tho top inch or two of the
ground is kept moist while the
strata directly beneath remains dry.
If you do not have a sprinkler
attachment lay the hose across a
board laid flat on the ground and
let the water wash across the lawn.
If you have a sprinkler, divide
the lawn area into sections and
place the splinkler in the center
of each section, ktling it flow
for 20 to 30 minutes once a week
or in very dry weather twice a
week.
ONE   MINUTE   PULPIT
He that goeth forth and weep-
eth, bearing precious seed, shall
doubtless come again with rejoicing,
bringing his sheaves with him.—
Psalm  126:6
the   latest  week-end  house  party
entertainment.   Regular   programs
are published and Canadians take
a prominent part in their making.
CANADIANS  IN  TELEVISION
Joan Millar of Vancouver, to be
remembered as "Elizabeth the
Queen" who won the prize for the
best individual performance in the
Ottawa Drama festival of 1934, was
the first woman to be given a television contract by the B.B.C. She
is known as the "Picture Page
Girl."
Guy Glover, young actoivpro-
ducer who brought' his troupe of
unemployed players from Vancouver to Ottawa in 1936, giving performances of "Waiting for Lefty"
to pay their way and eventually
taking an Ottawa prize, now is a
television performer, Elaine Wod-
son of Toronto is another, while
Elizabeth Sutherland, winner of the
Toronto dramatic contest has arrived to take a screen test with
Alexander Korda and may also
join the crowd.
On Sept 28 a television program
"Turn Around" is to be taken on
the Empress of Britain at Southampton. Arrival and departure
scenes picturing the activities surrounding a great liner making a
24-hour "turn around" will form
the background of the play to be
released by the B.B.C.
A Canadian who is making a
big "turn around" is Marjorie Gordon of Winnipeg, daughter of "Ralph
Connor" the author, and confidential secretary of Malcolm Macttonald
British secretary for the dominions.
She sailed during the first week in
September for Canada via China
with Jean McKay of Winnipeg.
They will arrive home in November.
Velvet dresses with lace tops are
destined for great popularity for
luncheon frocks, or for the afternoon bridge.
Enjoy their freshness* color, taste
and nourishment . . . rememher
these peas are positively NON-
FATTENING.
^^.BMAKFASTCfjjf4j
MK-!
.*?
;c
A 100% WHOLEWHEAT.     -
• • • ALL THE ENe-q^I
• • • AU ™E PRoj-p, '
. ALL THE
8«4*<
MUFFETS
BRAND
WHOLE WHEAT BISCUITS ...MADE BY THE QUAKER OATS COMPANY
 mmr	
	
iiillll<|ifM»i.»MWairii'i.^M^w»^^^ ■i.J~.w>»WM.<.^F.g?^,y~-
19&.
Development of
School Grounds
Now Under Way
School  Board Launch
Program at Central,
Junior High
Plans of the Nelson school board
for development of the grounds of
the junior high and Central school
grounds are beginning to show ef-
Xect.
Bulldozer, gasoline shovel and
grader have been employed at the
junior high, where two large playgrounds will be developed. At different levels, owing to the contour
of the ground, the two will be separated by a path to the school entrance. Material from the higher
levels .of the previously uneven
grouhds and from a bank beside
the school on Robson street have
been used to marked effect in establishing the two levels. Passersby
are now able to see what is planned,
and how it is to be accomplished,
Considerable heavy rock was encountered in the grading.
At Central school shade trees
along Carbonate street were unrooted by a tractor to make possible
the construction of a rock wall, now
under way. The wall ultimately will
be carried lo lhe level of the present
grounds on the Carbonate .street
side and fill made behind it,
So far it has not been possible to
start the work planned on the Hume
school grounds,
The board proposes to carry its
program along as far as funds permit this year, and to continue in the
future on this basis, pressing completion at every opportunity.
PLANE HITS POLE
SEATTLE, Sept. 20 (AP)—Two
Grays Harbor men. Pilot Harry Galloway and John W. Katsonis, were
slightly injured today when an airplane sheared a telephone pole 14
miles south of here near the Blue
Jay inn.
City Band Plays
to a Park Crowd
Nelson city band entertained another large crowd of swimmers
and park visilors at Lakeside park
Sunday afternoon. Many of the sel*
ections were well received and
especially the last one, a selection
from the musical fantasy, "Woodland" by Gustav Luders. Fred L.
Irwin conducted the band.
Program follows: March, "Winning Colors"—J. E. Wells; medley.
"Sweet Old Songs"—C. W. Dalbey;
"Simple Aveu"—G. F. Thome; idyl,
"The Glow-worm"—Paul Linches;
"Humareske"—Anton Dvorak; "The
Holy City"—Stephen Adams; selection of well known standard songs,
"Old Favorites"—Julius S. Seredy;
selection from the musical fantasy,
"Woodland"—Gustav Luders.
Australian Labor
Head for Defence
but Chiefly in Air
FREEMANTLE, Western Australia
Sept. 20 (CP)—John Curtin, federal Labor leader, opened his general
election campaign here today with
a declaration that, if returned to
power October 23, labor would give
tlie Commonwealth Bank complete
control over the nation's credit and
interest rates and direction of general investment and external currency
relations.
Labor, Curtin said, supported Australia rearmament, but would not
support the compulsion of any citizen to serve in foreign battlefields.
Labor would maintain the Commonwealth navy. The strength of the
Australian defence, he continued, lay
in its aviation. Labor would maintain an air force equal to any that
might, possibly be used against the
country.
A Frencli trawler was arrested off
Dover for poaching.
Orange Pekoe Blend
'SALAD/.
TEA
NELSON OAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.—TUESDAY MORNING. SEPT. 21, 1937.
Three Motorists
Pay $82.50 for
Violating Laws
Three men arraigned in city police court Monday before William
Brown, police magistrate, on charges ot violating motor laws, paid
fines totalling $82.50.
George P. LeFort paid a fine of
$35 on a charge of driving to the
common danger on Front street, Saturday.
Another fine of $35 was paid by
D'Arcy Hughes. Hughes was charged with driving to the common danger Sunday on Nelson avenue when
his car leaped a roclt wall and landed in the front yard of Jack Hooger-
werf.
Alfred Carr was fined $12.50 for
failing to produce a driver's licence when requested to do so by Inspector John McDonald of the provincial police. Information concerning the charge was laid by Sergeant
Robert Harshaw of the city police.
Train B.C Youth
for Industry, She
Urges Trustees
VICTORIA, Sept. 20 (CP)-Train-
ing of British Columbia's youth to
take its place in industry was recommended today by Mrs. Paul Smith
member of the provincial legislature for Vancouver-Burrard, to the
British Columbia School Trustees'
association.
Mrs. Smith told the' 76 delegates
the University only provided opportunity for professional training for
10 per cent of high school graduates.
"What about the other 90 per
cent?" she asked. "We are faced
with the problem of occupational
training after the children leave
school. We haven't given them
that opportunity.
"Today industry demands trained workmen and our big problem is
preparing the 90 per cent for occupational and industrial training before they leave school influence,"
Mrs. Smith said free education was
available to United States pupils
to the age of 21, while British Columbia only made free training
available to 18.
Two Men Held After
Attempting to Sell
Rifle, Binoculars
Two transients who arrived in
Nelson by car from the west, are
in custody at the provincial jail,
after attempting to sell a rifle, binoculars and electric shaver in a
Nelson second-hand store. Provincial police are' checking the statements made to them by the two
men as to ownership of the articles,
Funeral Services
al Windermere lor
Ole Olsen, Wilmer
WINDERMERE, B. C.-A great
number of people attended funeral
service of the late Ole Olson of Wilmer, who lost his life recently while
engaged in operating a circular saw.
The deceased was widely and
favorably known in the Windermere district. The service was conducted by the Reverend J, L Cleri-
hue of Invermere. Pall bearers
were: Ed Barbour, Neil McLean,
Lester Lund, Dave Nixon, Walter
Sadecn,and Edwin Larsen. A short
service was held at the graveside
in the Windermere cemetery where
a profusion of flowers covered the
grave. Besides sorrowing parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Simon Olson of Wilmer, there are left four sisters.
Margaret, Evelyn, Alice and Edna,
and one bother, Hugo.
Labor Splits on
Rearmament
By PAT USSHER
Canadian  Press Staff Writer
LONDON, Sept. 20 (CP)-Pros-
pects of a Labor party split, over the
question of supporting the government's rearmament program grew
stronger today as the Labor party
launched a campaign to increase its
membership by 100,000.
While party leaders al scores of
week-end meetings in the United
Kingdom delivered scathing attacks
on the government—excepting on
rearmament—the parliamentary Pacific group, holding its national convention in London, denounced rearmament. ,
George Lansbury, veteran Pacifist and former Labor leader in the
commons, moved a resolution, unanimously carried, deploring the rearmament, policy and regretting Labor's acquiescence when the arms
program went through parliament.
-ANNOUNCING-
CHRISTMAS CARDS FOR 1937
AS USUAL, THE NELSON DAILY NEWS CHRISTMAS
CARDS WILL BE NEW IN DESIGN, SMART AND APPROPRIATE IN STYLE, REASONABLY PRICED, AND
EXCLUSIVE.
MISS MARGARET ARTHUR WILL AGAIN BE OUR
REPRESENTATIVE
Our Samples Will Be on Display in a Few Days
PHONE 144
To Make an Appointment With Our Representative
NELSON DAILY NEWS
COMMERCIAL PRINTING DEPARTMENT
AWFUL FOR MORAL. IS SWING
MUSIC; IT MAKES 'EM BOLD
NEW YORK, Sept. 20 (AP)—Laboratory experiments, with an unsuspecting boy and girl as the guinea pigs, proved swing music "very
bad for the morals", a music official
announced today.
"It's far more harmful than obscene songs because it arouses the
lust of .he listeners before they realize it," said Arthur Cremin, director
of the New York schools of music.
"We placed a young man and a
girl in a room where we could watch
them without being observed. Firsts
we provided a program of good
music, classical pieces and popular
songs, such as waltzes. They were
friendly but that was all.
"Later we arranged another meeting. This time the radio played swing
music. They were much bolder, both
of them. The boy took much more
leeway in his actions, and the girl
didn't object".
"You mean they necked?" be was
asked.
"Yes," said Cremin, sadly, "I mean
they necked."
NELSON Social..
By MRS. M.J. VIGNEUX
• Most Rev. Martin M. Johnson
leaves on the early morning train
today for Edmonton to preach the
inaugural sermon of the Eucharlstic
congress Wednesday night.
• A. H. Donald of Longbeach
visited   Nelson  yesterday.
• Mrs. Archie Bremner and
daughter Joyce of Salmo were visitors in the city at the week-end.
• A shopper in town yesterday
was Mrs. Innes of Vallican.
• J, McGinnis of Ymir spent
yesterday in Nelson.
• Mrs. Charles Dickie of Slocan
Park was a Nelson visitor yesterday.
• A, C. Mesker, mining man of
Midway, is a city visitor.
• Lyall Hawkins, who spent the
summer working for the C. M. & S.
company in eastern Canada, left
Nelson \v_;ei'day for Washington
State college at Pullman to resume
his studies.
• Mr. and Mrs. George Hall and
son were recent, visitors to Spokane.
• Mrs, Robert Smith has returned from two months at Ottawa,
• Mr. and Mrs. A, Wilkinson,
Fall street, have returned from a
motor trip to Victoria, where they
visited Mrs, Wilkinson's mother,
Mrs. Herbert Kecf, who accompanied thorn back to Nelson.
• Roy L. Clothier, mining man
of Vancouver, visited Nelson yesterday
• Alfred Hill of Longbeach spent
yesterday in town.
• Mrs. Roy Graham of South
Slocan and daughter were Nelson
shoppers yesterday.
• Mr. and Mrs. F, Irvine of
Cranbrook, who wore recently married, were week-end visitors in Nelson.
• Mrs. B. Norcross, Granite road,
had as her week-end guest, her son,
David Norcross of the Wilcox mill
at Ymir.
• Mr. and Mrs. F.'C. Pritchard,
Nelson avenue, Fairview, have returned from a short, visit, in Spokane.
• Lome Hawkins of Kimberley
is holidaying in Nelson.
• Mrs. Beggs of New Denver
was a shopper in town at the weekend.
• Mrs. Cawley, who was a patient, at Kootenay Lake General
hospital, has left for her home at
Salmo.
• J. Bynes of Trail is a guest of
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. Bynes,
Hall Mines road.
• C. Penny of the Pend d'Oreille
was a week-end visitor in town.
• Mr. and Mrs. A. Fletcher and
Mr. and Mrs. A. Fletcher jr. motored
to Silverton over the week-end.
• J. F. (Billy) Bunyan of the
Ymir Yankee Girl mine is a guest
of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J, G.
Bunyan, Silica street.
• R. Hong Of Harrop spent yesterday in the city.
• Leigh McBride, son of Mr. and
Mrs. R, L. McBride, Hoover street,
plans lo leave for Edmonton this
morning to resume his studies at
the University of Alberta.
• Mr, and Mrs. G. N. Gilchrist,
Second street, Fairview, have as
their guests their daughter, Mrs. E.
M. Smith of Vancouver, and her
friend, Miss M. Gay.
• Shoppers in the city yesterday
included Dr. Norrington of Crescent
Bay.
• H, D. Foreman, foreman of the
Highland Surprise mine, was a city
shopper yesterday,
• Mrs. Gordon Hallett is spending a week in Nelson.
• Mrs. W. Heart, and daughter
Kathleen of Salmo were visitors in
Nelson  at   the  week-end.
• Chief and Mrs. Alex Stewart
wero recent visitors to Spokane.
• Mrs. J. J. Hawkins, formerly
of Fairview, is a visitor in Nelson
from Ihe maritimes after an absence
of three years.
• Graeme Steed, son of Dr. and
Mrs. W. B. Steed, Latimer street,
plans to leave today for Edmonton
to resume his studies at the University of Alberta,
• Mr. and Mrs. Ernest W, Steel
visited Spokane.
• Kenneth Wallace of Boswell
was a week-end visitor in town.
• Mr. and Mrs. Stanley P. Bos-
tork and son Bobby, Latimer street,
have returned from a few days at
Spokane.
• Rev. Thomas P. Freney, formerly of St. Francis Xavier parish
at Trail, is in Nelson.
• L. Erickson of Silverton, who
visited Spokane for a few days, has
returned,
• Mr. and Mrs. Walter Tattrie of
the Relief Arlington mine at Erie,
who visited Spokane last week,
have left on a motor trip to the
Cariboo district.
• Mr. and Mrs, J. Rich and son
.Robert of Calgary have taken up
residence in Nelson, to where Mr.
Rich has been transferred.
• Dick Spurway has returned
from a trip to Spokane, Wenatchee
and Montana. He left Nelson Thursday and returned Sunday night.
• Brian Gore, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Harry B, Gore. Cedar street,
left Saturday to commence his studies at the University of Alberta at
Edmonton.
President Congratulates Man Who
Brought the First Train to Cranbrook
Sir Edward Beatty and
H. Brock With
C. P. 46 Years
CRANBROOK, B. C—Sir Edward
Beatty, president of the Canadian
Pacific Railway company, accompanied by W. M. Neal, vice-president
in charge of western lines, C. A. Cot-
tcrell. assistant general manager of
western lines, E. S. McCracken, divisional superintendent of Nelson and
A. J. fronside, assistant superintendent of Cranbrook, arrived in the
city by special train from Trail and
Nelson at 10:30 Saturdaty evening,
remaining till four a.m. Sunday.
They were accompanied by Sir Edward's guests, Right Honorable Reginald McKenna, former chancellor
of the Exchequer of Great Britain,
and Mrs. McKenna,
They were met by Mayor T. M
Roberts. H. A. McKowan, president
of the Cranbrook board of trade
and members of the board and city
council. An invitation was extended to Sir Edward Beatty and other
officials to be present at a proposed
celebration of the 40th anniversary
of the arrival of the first train in
Cranbrook, following the laying of
steel in 1898. Enthusiasm for the
idea was expressed by the officials
and tlie statement was made that if
possible, they would be present in
large numbers.
H. Brock, who brought the first
train into Cranbrook, July 26, 1898,
was present on the station platform
and was congratulated by President
Beatty on having completed 46
years of service wilh the C. P. R.
o.
which coincides with the number
of years the president himself had
been with the company.
Others who brought the first train
into Cranbrook were Engineer J.
T. Sarvis of Cranbrook, then a fireman, J. A. Genest, conductor, of
Cranbrook, then a brakeman, and
Dan Murphy, a resident of Cranbrook until his retirement to Vancouver. The late A. McKenzie was
conductor of lhe train.
FALL ASSIZES
DUE OCTOBER
Dates for 1937 fall assizes in southern interior British Columbia are
listed by the B. C. Gazette as follows:
Nelson—October 11, criminal and
civil.
Fernie—October 14, criminal and
civil.
Cranbrook—October 18, civil.
Mercury Registers
73 Degrees Monday
Heat of Nelson's late hot spell was
somewhat abated Monday by the
presence of a light wind and clouds
that repeatedly crossed the sky.
Maximum temperature was but 73
and the minimum dropped to 46, two
degrees lower than the previous day.
The sun shone for nine and one
half hours but the wind made the
weather seem slightly cooler than
in the past few days.
Cable Flashes From Europe-Asia
BERLIN, Sept. 2(1 CAP).—Air raid
manoeuvres threw Berlin into an
uproar today- -the population was
driven into cellars, the propaganda
ministry was burned "theoretically
to a cinder", and the Kaiserhof hotel,
opposite the foreign office, was
"destroyed".
CHOLERA  tPIDEMIC
NOW  IN SHANGHAI
WASHINGTON. Sept 20 iAPh- ■
Thomas Parran, United States surgeon-general, reported today thai
cholera in Shanghai "now is officially considered of epidemic proportions."
SOVIET  AIRMEN'S
CAMP IS DRIFTING
MOSCOW, Sepl 20 < APi Com
mander Ivan Papanin of Ihn Soviet
North Pole expedition today wirelessed iha! his ire floe camo has
drifted so far south that, the expedition eventually may have to be tak
en off by an ice-breaker instead of
a plane as planned.
	
BUBONIC   ADDS
TO MANCHOUKUO PERILS
HS1NK1NG. Manchoukuo, Sept.. 20
(AP).—One hundred and ninety-
eight cases of Bubonic plague were
reported here by the Domei (Japanese) news agency.
RULES SPAIN OFF
LEAGUE COUNCIL
GENEVA. Sept. 20 (CP-Havas) -
League of Nations today ruled that
Spain was not eligible to succeed
itself on the league council. Turkey's bid to succeed itself on the
council was also rejected.
SOVIET EXECUTES
FOUR GRAIN WRECKERS
MOSCOW, Sept 20 (AP)-Four
persons were executed and six imprisoned today in the drive against
anti-Soviet "wreckers" that caught
a grain elevator crew in the Caucasus.
Most of Road From
Kamloops to Coast
to Be Hard-Surfaced
VICTORIA, Sept. 20 (CP)- Hon
Frank M. MacPherson, minister of
public works, stated today that
with completion of the 1937 highway program, 75 per cent of the
Vancouver-Kamloops road would be
a "dustless" highway.
Different types of hard surfacing
would have been applied to three-
quarters of the route this year, Mr.
MacPherson said.
Seattle Man Is
Fined, Common
Danger Charge
James M. Yates of Seattle was sentenced Monday afternoon to pay a
fine of $20 or to serve 14 days in
jail when he was found guilty by
John Cartmel, stipendiary magistrate, on a charge of driving to the
common danger arising when the
car of Rev. T. J. S. Ferguson went
over the bank about a mile and
half east of the Nelson ferry on the
Nelson-Balfour road. No one was
hurt beyond being bruised and shaken up,
Mr. Ferguson testified the Seattle
car in passing struck the front of
his auto as it swung in front of him,
and forced his gar down the bank,
It stopped against a tree, badly
damaged, near the water's edge,
Mrs. Ferguson told a similar story.
Yates in his defence claimed his
car skidded. Fred Johnson, who was
witli Yates, stated he felt a slight,
bump as the cars passed.
Constable R. A. Lees of the provincial police highway patrol, who
prosecuted, gave information as to
the width of the road and tire marks.
Serial . . .
RUSTLE OF SILKS
(Continued From Page Four)
didn't know thai her poise, her
quietness, her lack of small talk
was nothing more than a pose that
covered — emptiness.
With her success, her social
circle had widened. And wilh the
increasing numbers of new friends
and new activities, there had been
new men. Men at first were fascinated, then were a little in awe
of her. Later, they all acted in
the v/ay of men rationalizing about
her, confident in their own attractiveness. They tried to break down
her reserve, to pierce the shell.
Mari often wished that there
was one man might make her
feel alive, not an instrument of
a profession.
Of thus she said nothing to anyone, either man or woman. Essentially a lonlcy person, she could
not, as she approached her thirties, break an old habit of keeping
her feelings to herself. And there
was no one to whom she could
have talked.
Mark Sutherland was as nearly
her intimate as any person could
have been. Even Mark who had
known her for six years knew less
of her—or believed he did—than
he had known at first.
Perhaps it was her reserve, her
unyielding attitude toward him (hat
kept him constantly at her sic^e;
that is, constantly for Mark. Wherever he went in the travels that
made up his life, he was sure to
turn up in Paris at frequent intervals.
He was as well known to Mari's
friends as she was, as she was
later to learn.
Her feeling for him had had
curious inflations in the years she
had known him, yet she had never
labeled them. She was glad to
see him when he returned to Paris,
content to have him for her escort, enjoyed him because she felt
more at ease wth him than with
others, and felt no loss when he
was off again.
There was one man who understood her, He was a doctor from
Vienna. Mari was aware of his
dark, piercing eyes searching her
soul, his waiting for her to speak,
and was prepared to fend him off
with her studied silences. But when
she was alone with him. she could
not resist him. She talked as she
never talked before.
And when she was finished, he
said. "My dear, Mademoiselle, you
have no troubles and therein lies
your dissatisfaction."
When she protested that she
was not dissatisfied, he shrugged
his shoulders and said. "How can
you help but be? You are not a
shallow woman. You could not be
shallow and be lhe artiste that you
arc. Yet art is not enough. Art
must be fed from the well within
and your well is dry. All art depicts life and if you avoid living,
how can you" touch life? It is not
something that can be lived vicariously. It must be partaken.
The lives of people around you are
like the things you sec but do not
touch. You need vibrancy; without
it you will soon see that this
nothingness which exists only for
you now will spread into your
creative powers,"
Mari thought about that many
times later, and tho truth of what
Dr. Brande had said was impressed
upon her. She began to worry
about it.
And one day she thrust her sketch
pad away from her and commanded Letitia Higgins to arrange for
her accommodations on the express
lo lhe Riviera. It was a vacation that
she needed.
At (he last moment, she called
Letitia back and told her lo arrange
for accommodations for I wo. She
wool dlakc Letitia,for Ihere was
much work that she and her secretary could do.
Letitia stared at her employer
for a moment, and forgetting herself said, "Certainly. Madame. For
. . . for Mr. Sutherland?"
Mari didn't look up at once.
She should have been shocked but
she wasn't. So THAT was what
others had thought!
(To Be Continued)
SHOOTS RARE BLUE
SHEEP IN NORTH B. C.
EDMONTON. Sept. 20 (CP)-Long
sought by student, of wild life as
one of (he rare Inhabitants of "Nat
lire's no-man's land" in lhe bushland
of northern British Columbia, four
specimens of the stoni or blue
sheep were shot by Michael Lerner,
New York, field associate of the
American Museum of Natural History.
PAGE   FIVE
Roads Spokane
lo Grand Forks,
Trail Are Goo.
Border  to  Nelson
"Very Rough in
Places"
Excerpts from the road report (
the Inland Automobile association
as published by the Spokesman-Re*
view of Spokane, give the following
information on roads from Spokanq'
to the West Kootenay and Bound'
ary:
"Spokane to Grand Forks, B. Ci
Excellent oiled highway to border;)!
Laurier to Grand Forks, gravel roadtl
in good condition. {[
"Spokane to Trail and Nelson:!!
Roads to Nelson via Northport ajidjl
Trail are in good condition, narrow I
road from Northport ^o Patersonljl
Via Newport and Metaline Falls .romji
Metaline Falls to border, rougttj
gravel; border to Nelson, very rougli
in places."
Latimer Street
Being Improve
Permanent improvement oj: Latimer street, part of the city's current
public works program, is under way.'
A street railway track gang 18
rcpairing the street car track, putting in new tics and generally put-
ling the track in good condition,
while another crew is mixing antj
laying asphalt and a third crew If.
installing  concrete curbs. |
Black top is being laid at this time/
between Stanley and Ward streets.   >!
Women Charged
With Obstructing
Charged with obstructing peace
officers, Mrs. Vera Savenkofr and I
Polly Savenkoff were remanded for'1
eight days when they appeared be-
fore John Cartmel, stipendiary mag--
istrate, Monday.
They are charged with obstruct-''
ing M. E. Harper, sheriff of South
Kootenay, and Gordon Neff, provincial police constable, in connection with an order for eviction ot-
the women from premises they oc- ■'
cupy between Thrums and Tarrys.
threiTare appointed
vote commissioners!
Appointed to act as elections com-'
missioners in Kaslo-Slocan district,1
as listed in the B. C. Gazette, aw
Thomas Dobson Rogerson, Graham's'
Landing; . William John Deacon'1
Rogers, East Arrow Park; and:
George Montague Wilson, East Arrow Park.
THE OTHER WOMAN LIVES
JUST AROUND THE CORNER
IT may seem unreasonable, buls
mo-tineucannotunderstandwhy
a woman who is usually happy
and loving should have recurring
periods when her whole character
seems changed. Ho cannot appreciate the distress, the discomfort
that al! women must eudure. Ho
does not know what it is to do
housework with an aching back
and failing energy. All he does
know is that other women seera
more cheermi by comparison.
Are you such a three-quarter
wife/
Don't lot the ordeals that all
women face cause you avoidable
discomfort or endanger your home.
Do as so many wise women hava
—try I-yclia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.
For tliroe generations one woman has told another how to go
"smiling through" with Lydia E.
rinkhain's Vegetable Compound.
It helps Nature tone up the syp-
tom, thus lessoning tho discomforts froni the functional disorders
which wuraen must endure in the
throe ordeals of life: 1. Turning
from girlhood to womanhood. 2. ,
Preparing for motherhood. 3. Approaching "middlo age."
Don't be a three-quarter wife,
take LYDIA E. PlNKHAM'8
VEGETABLE COMPOUND and
Go "Smiling Through." )
(Advt.)'
"Hoot Mon!
A Bargain!"
Talk To
Edmonton
(or
$1.05
(Station-to-Station)
$r.8s
IPerson-to-Person)
after 7 p.m. weekdays or
any time Sundays
The  above  rates  cover  a
three-minute  conversation.
(Government Tax Extra)
B. C. TELEPHONE CO.
—___
mmmm
 !.   Jinn HWllWA
PP^WlPlppif^fp^
Mxm Satig Jferofi
Established April 22, 1902.
British Columbia's Most Interesting Newspa,
Published every morning except Sunday by
the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED,
216  Baker  Street,    Nelson,    British  Columbia.
Phone 144. Private Exchange Connecting All Departments.
Members   ot   the   Audit   Bureau   of   Circulations   and
The   Canadian   Press   Leased    Wire    News   Service.
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1937.
TRUST BRITAIN'S SPIRIT SOUND
AND TIMELY ADVICE
In his recent address to the Empire club, Beverley
Baxter, Canadian member of the British parliament, urged
Canadians to "trust and strengthen the spirit of Britain."
The advice was both sound and timely. Britain deserves
trust, and the moral support of the people in the Dominions
would encourage and strengthen her in her present international policy.
That her policy is one of peace cannot be questioned.
In the last ten years she has given proof after proof of
her will to peace and her dislike of war. In every international dispute, her statesmen have tried to avert conflict, and, when that has proved impossible, they have
bent all their efforts to localize the strife and prevent it
from spreading. Nothing but goodwill has been shown to
other countries.
There are critics who, professing desire for peace,
say that if she had risked war, she might have done more
to prevent it. The answer to these is that her ministers
know more than their critics can ever hope to know, not
only of Britain's capacity to fight, but of the determination of other countries. The critics urge a bluff or a
gamble; the statesmen know that bluffing is not only futile
but perilous and that to gamble, with peace as a stake,
would be to invite catastrophe.
There are other critics who, not satisfied with criticizing the wisdom of the policy, seek Machiavellian motives to account for it. One such, the London correspondent
of a Canadian paper, declares himself bewildered by what
he calls "the mystery of Britain's policy of drift and inaction." The manifestations of "drift and inaction" are
to be seen, to use his own words, in her "apparent betrayal
of Abyssinia, of democratic Spain, of the League of Nations' and in her refusal to give aid to China. This suggestion—that Britain is guilty of betrayal if she refuses to
fight for every country that is attacked—has only to be
stated to prove itself preposterous. It is, however, an excellent example of the propaganda by which those who
sympathize with Communism try to influence Canadian
opinion. Such propaganda gives point and timeliness to
Mr. Baxter's advice.
Steel workers have apparently chosen automobile driving as their favorite leisure time activity. Three out of four
steel workers now own cars, according to an estimate by
the Canadian Iron and Steel Institute baspd on information obtained from representative steel plants in Ohio,
Pennsylvania and West Virginia.
Of the 157,000 steel workers covered by the study,
approximately ] 17.000 owned passenger rars, it was indicated. If the ratio of car ownership found in these representative steel plants holds pond throughout the industry,
approximately 400,000 of the 533,000 steel workers now-
own cars.
Winnipeg's chief of police, remarking upon the connection between crime and cars, says that the adage "look
for the woman" is old stuff. Now it is "look for the automobile."
School teachers declare 1
salaries are a crying shame.
a relief.
AUNT HET
By ROBERT QU1LLKN
"I wish every house had one
room with walls made out o'
mirrors. Mighty few women
would be weann' shorts if they
could see themfelvTS behind,"
BRINCINC UP FATHER
hat "in Ontario many of our
Well, a good cry is always
GEMS FROM LIFE'S
SCRAPBOOK
"Home is where tho heart is".
NELSON DAILY NEW8, NELSON, B.C-TUE8DAY MORNINQ, 8EPT. 21, 1937.'
"llnm° I
earth and
Ihnnah ll"l
'ions.'
dearest
i ne the centre
lhe
i should
lhe boundary
spot
of ,'iffcc-
Baker Eddv
"Tho braulv nf I
The bler.smg of I
iontmonf,
Tho   plory  of   the
tality."
hoiro is order
house is eon-
house   is  hospi-
- House Motto
"The mnn v ho builds
wherewith to pay.
Provides   n   home   from
run   away."
home is hi
-Rir Edwi
nd wants
which   to
- Young
Tensile."
vd Coke
By
e
|. B. C.
LAUGHTER IN COURT
A man was summoned to appear
belore the magistrates on a charge
of stealing chickens.
"You keep quiet," advised his solicitor; "let me do all the talking."
Later in the day he appeared in
the dock.
"Are you the defendant?" he was
asked.
"Nay," he replied, pointing to
the solicitor. "He's (.'defendant. I'm
chap what took t'chickens."
IDLE GOSSIP
Here and there around the town-
James Anderson of Victoria, former pioneer of Kaslo,—and well
known in mining circles—standing
at the corner of (he corner of Baker
and Ward streets and conferring
with W. J. Sturgeon—who is still
on crutches—Bert Atkins discussing
old country football and the sudden changes in leadership—Cy Kid-
well recalling a recent trip on the
east C. P. R. run—Charles Baeltner
having a little difficulty parking
his auto beljind a large wood truck
on Baker street—D. D. McLean dolled up in blue suit nnd discussing
railway matters— Charles Watts
back on the truck after a sojourn
among the heat waves of the Ainsworth   pool—Alex   Nisbet,   recent
bridegroom, talking to friends—C.
W. Tyler and H. M. Whimster having something in common—likely
Rotary business—Bob Wilks of rail'
road fame addressing several of the
boys as "Sunshine"—it is a favorite
expression—Frank Paddon using
the telephone.— «
THE REASON
"Gimme a nickel's worth o' cheese"
said the small boy to the clerk.
"Don't sell nothin' less'n a dime's
worth," said the clerk.
"Well, lemme see it."
No sooner had the man exhibited
the dime slice than the boy snatched
out his Scout knife and cut the
cheese in two. Then he picked up
one half, laid down the nickel and
walked out, remarking: "Trouble
with you, my man, is—You're lazy."
*   •   •
BELIEVE IT OR NOT
It was their anniversary
But he forgot it quite,
Yet she never said a word—
Although you'd think she might.
«   •. •
SEA SERPENT
The '37 crop of _ea-.erp.nts has
been disappointing, several old reliables have failed to show and one,
reported in the Mediterranean turned out to be a free-lance submarine.
CONTRACT
BRIDGE
As Written
by
SHEPARD
BARCLAY
A  NEGATIVE  INFERENCE
When a player is using the "three
trump echo", the play of the middle trump followed by Ihe bottom
one shows possession of still another. Playing trumps in .the normal way, with the smallest first
and then the next highest, signifies that the holding is not of exactly three cards. The negative inference then conveyed, when the player manages lo follow with a higher
trump to a third round, makes it
perfectly clear that if he had not
three he had more than three and
therefore retains a trump for ruffing or other purposes.
♦
None
VQ9854
443 2
+
K 9754
48752
N.
♦ QMS
tfA K
1     *>
»J 7 6
.'.■ 10 8 5
♦ _ 6
-LA J 6 2
S.
AO10 8 3
4 A K J 10 9
f 10 3 2
4AK Q97
^None
(Dealer: South. Neither side vul
nerable.)
The  holder  of the  South cards
on  this  deal   opened  the  bidding
with 2-Spades.  North  called 2-No
Trumps.  South 3-Diamonds, North
3-Hearts,   South   4-Diamonds   and
North 4-Hearts. South foolishly de
cided to take this to 4-Spades. in
spite of his h
eart ho
ding.
Against the contract of 4-Spades,
Millard P. Kaiser of St. Louis, who
was paired with Mrs. Kaiser in the
East, played the heart A and followed with the heart K. He then
led a diamond, as the club suit
seemed too dangerous to fool with
After winning with the diamond
Q, the declarer cashed the spade
K, on which Mr. Kaiser played the
spade 2. When the spade A was
played, West played the spade 5.
On the spade J, West played his
spade 8, and when Mrs. Kaiser won
with the Q, she realized that Mr.
Kaiser held one more trump, as
otherwise he would not have played his trumps in the order In which
he did. she therefore returned her
heart J, knowing that her partner
could ruff. Any other return would
have enabled South to draw trumps
and run the remaining hearts.
♦ K-8H.
*84
♦ 82
+ Q742
VAQJ
10 6
OQ J 06
+ K10.
A/.
S.
4 A 10 9 I
OKU
♦ 84
+ 8053
4Q52
«972
4 A K 10 T t
South. Neither side vul-
(Dealer:
nerable.)
South  bid  1-Diamond,   West
Heart. What should North do?
Looking Backward...
TEN  YEARS  AGO
(September 21, 1937).
Power line to the Florence mine
at Ainsworth will be rebuilt from
Nelson.—James Charteris of Kaslo.
has gone to Edmonton for the win-
tor with his father.--Mrs. G, W. Robinson of Procter arrived in Kaslo
from the Lardeau and is the guest
of Rev and Mrs Christopher Reed.
—Mr. and Mrs. George Bowker of
Trail, who are spending the holidays at Willow Point, spent a day
in Nelson recently.—Mr. and Mrs.
George Hunter. Edgewood avenue,
have left for Spokane where they
will attend the air derby.—George
Murray and his brother, Angus Murray of Trail, were week-end visitors
to Nelson.--- Mrs. U. Aylmer Coates
of Burnley, Eng., who has been
yisitmg her son. J. F. Coates and
his wife on Victoria street .has left
for her home in England.—Mr. and
Mrs Harold Lakes have returner)
from spending a week-end at Silver-
ton.
TWENTY YEARS AGO
(September 21, 10171.
John Blmi". Creston, is at the
Strathcona.—Mr. and Mrs. George
Triekett, New Denver, are in Nelson,   Lieutenant-Colonel Reginald
D Davies of Cranbrook has been
wounded in action, — W. Visnoski of
Cranbrook has been taken seriously
ill overseas. Hotel-: and warehouses
numbering 48 will lose their licences
(vhm the prohibition bill goes, into
i ffr.[-1 at lh» firsl of Ihe month -
I Kul. W. R, Williamson of Nelson
has died of gas shell poisoning in
France - Pte T. W. Slader has been
killed ill action. George Clerihew
was elected a trustee of the Hume
school.
THIRTY YEARS  AGO
(September 21, 1907).
Nelson's annual fruit fair September 19 drew a record attendance.
Angus MeGillivray and A. Erickson,
the Sandon rock drilling team, won
the contest held at the fair.—R, M.
Palmer has left for Ihe Okanagan
dislrict-,1.  S.   C.  Fraser  of  Ross
land was a visitor to the fair.—Hon.
J. H. Turner left recently for Kaslo
where he spent a day before returning to Nelson from where he
will visit Rossland the Boundary
district.—Al Houston, manager of
the Broadview mine, is in the city.
He reports arrangements are being
made in the east for -the financing
of a mill and other machinery for
Ihe mine—Mrs. W. J. Holmes, Kaslo,
is at Ihe Strathcona.
V. Questions V.
ANSWERS
This column of questions and
answers is open to any reader of
the Nelson Daily News. In no
case will the name of the person
asking the question be published.
E. G , Nelson—What day of the week
did October 2, 1916, fall on?
Monday.
C. .!. A. T., Nelson-When does the
1937 fishing season close for trout
■ fishing?
November 15 in Kootenay Lake
and River.   In other streams and
lakes it varies.
F, W., Creston—Would you kindly
inform me what is the regulation
size of a bowling green?
ft is 126 feet square.
N.   E.,   Cranbrook—What   is  'marjoram'?
Any of several planis of the Mint
family, especially sweet marjoram,
used for flavoring.
Y. 0„ Trail-What is the meaning
of   the  following   names:   Edith,
Amy, Diana, Dorothy and Eva?
Edith  means  happiness   or  rich
gift; Amy, beloved; Diana, goddess;
Dorothy, the gift of God; and Eva,
life.
Drive Slowly—Road Under Construction
Kootenay residents cry aloud for roads—and through speeding give little assistance to contractors building them. Herewith is a series of pictures on the General Construction company's road surfacing contract along the Thrums-Brilliant section
of the Trail-Nelson road. Many motorists speeding over the new surfacing who have been stopped have declared they did not
see the warning signs. Indifferent motorists make the work of the contractors more difficult, and damage the new road
surface.
It Is vital to the success of blacktop surfacing when lt Is first
put down, until lt becomes thoroughly packed, that cars and trucks
proceed slowly over it. Here is a road sign on the Thrums section of
the Trail-Nelson road, with the exhortation to drive slowly.
The "blacktop" mixer—asphaltic material goes in the box at the
top, gravel is fed Into the machine at the other end, and the surfacing
"comes out there", ready for spreading. W. H. Foster, government
paving inspector, is the figure on the extreme right.
An endless bucket conveyor at the new cut above Brilliant loading
gravel from the stock pile into trucks.
Illustrating how the mixer, traveling along the road, mixes and
deposits the blacktop ready for spreading.
The mixer In another role—stationary, filling a bin for trucks to
haul the mix to the job.
The outfit—mixer, two of the trucks and at the extreme leit
the bucket chain loader, near Brilliant
A grader at work on' Thrums flats, spreading the freshly laid
surfacing material.
Road scene
facing material.
Thrums, showing freshly laid  "blacktop" sur-
WHAT THE PRESS IS SAYING
this kind of thing is becoming all
ton common, particularly along
Ontario highways leading out of
congested districts. If the penalties are not now sufficiently severe
to correct this dangerous practice,
the Highway Act should be amended to provide only jail terms for the
conviction of these potential killers.
—Leamington Post nnd News.
HOW COARSE FISH GET IN
Fisherman coming back from their
expeditions to district lakes this
season have reported, on different
occasions, the presence in them of
a number of "foreign" fish, mostly
the coarser pike and suckers. These
fish are not helpful to the trout
and the bass which are more sought
after game fish, to the trout especially, the bass having more powers of
self defense.
Some mystery has been express1-
ed about the entry of these fish
to lakes where they were formerly
not known. A local fisherman has
expressed an opinion which appears
probable. It is that Ihey have been
taken in as minnows by fishermen
intending to use them as bait for
the trout or bass, and who, unthinkingly, have thrown them while
him   to   repeat  the  offence.    But1 still alive and unused as bait, into
DRUNK DRIVERS A SERIOUS
MENACE
Provincial and local police are
finding the highways menaced
these days and nights by the presence of men while under the influence of liquor, endeavoring to
drive their cars, and accidents from
this faupp are hemming nwe and
more frequent, says The Amherst-
burg Echo in an editorial last week.
Arresting the offender, and hailing
them before lhe county magistrate
does not, improve conditions. Motor
drivers who try to handle their
cars while drunk, on cmwded highways are potential killers and
should he treated as such. Daily
stories come to headquarters about
men interfering with legitimate
traffic by getting in front of a
line and weaving their cars in tortuous passage all over the pavement, Only the other night a case
Of this kind occurred on highway
No. 18 between Amherstburg and
Sandwich, the drunken driver's car
hitting telegraph poles on both sides
of the highway as he twisted here
and there. It was a mistaken kindness not to report him to Officer
McQueen so he could have been
taught, a lesson that would prevent
WHAT DO YOU THINK?
All letters to the editor must be signed with the name of the
writer. A horn de plume may be used for publication if desired.
Lines  in  typewritten  copy should  be  double  spaced.
Bv Ceo. McManus
YES- "rOUR HUSBAMD'
GOUT IS VERY MUCH
BETTER- HE WAS
ASLEEP AND I PUT
A BAHDAGE OM IT-
AMD HE DIDN'T
EVEN WAKE UP-
Barking Dogs and
Water Question
The Editor:
Sir—I noticed a recent item in
the press tn the effect that the low
level of Kootenay Lake is causing
some concern in certain quarters in
the Uniled States lest the power
supply be impaired.
May I suggest that this trouble
could speedily be overcome, a good
turn done to a good neighbor, and
a pleasant time be had by all. if
all lire owners of all the dogs in
Nelson that aimlessly bark all night
would tie large lumps of Nelson's
rocky foundation to their necks and
firmly deposit them in the middle
of the Lake.
A by-product of this effort would
be that those who do not own dogs
would have a better chance to sleep
at night.
If the suggested remedy should
not raise the Lake level enough,
perhaps the owners of the dogs in
question -would accompany their
noisy pets to the bottom of the Lake,
This might not. be necessary though,
as the dogs are sufficiently high
powered to guarantee that our
neighbors possible power troubles
would be cured. Just connect the
melancholy yips, yaps, bays and
barks of our Nelson dogs through
a sufficient, depth of water to an
electric generator (engineers are
smart nowadays) and there would
be enough power to transport William D. Aberhart (or who else do
the water.
The suggestion is added that game
fishermen should be careful in this
connection as it would be quite possible to ruin a lake for trout fishing by stocking it wilh pike even
inadvertently—Port .Arthur News
Chronicle.
NO GOOD
These pesky doctors are always
upsetting each other's theories, and
leaving the public as befuddled on
diet matters as Albertans are on
economics. Now comes a Montreal
"medical legal expert," talking to
the Canadian Dietetic association, to
say this reducing fad is mainly
moonshine and wasted money.—Edmonton Bulletin.
you want lo get rid of) to the moott
and why not?
Yours faithfully,
SIMPLE PETER.
Nelson—3:00 a.m., Sept. IS, 1937.
F0R MINING CAMPS
Unsanded Cottonwood
panels are suitable for
al! mining and other
camp buildings. They
are strong, water-
proof, light and very .
easy to handle.
District Distributor*
Wood, Vallance
Hardware Co., Ltd.
"Build B. C. Payrolli"
ic's
Pacifi
MANY
GOOD
USES
"I use Pacific Milk in cakes,
puddings, custards, creams,
bread, salad dressing, soups,
eggnoggs," writes Mrs. S.
"It improves the cooking.
For tea, coffee, cocoa, it is
excellent. It whips up nicely and is a pleasing addition
to jellies and desserts."
Many thanks.
Pacific Milk
Irradiated of Count
tmmgtm
 Q51
NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.-TUE6DAY MORNING, SEPT, 21. 1937.
THREE WORLD TITLES AT STAKE IN
CARNIVAL OF CHAMPIONS THURS.
^bers and Montanez for Lightweight; Ross
and Garcia for Welter; Escobar and
Jeffra for the Bantamweight
SPORTING NEWS
NEW YORK. Sept. 20 (AP) —
3iven a break by the weather man,
[hursday night's carnival of cham-
.ions at the Polo grounds may out-
iraw last month's Tommy Farr-Joe
Louis heavyweight scrap, both in
attendance and gate receipts, promoter Mike Jacobs predicted to-
lay.
A large evening of fisticuffing is
promised. For the first time in ring
history, three world's champions
will lay their titles on the line on
a single program and just to add
spice to the festivities, there will
>e another joust with half a cham-
lion involved.
Top spot on the program goes to
he lightweight title between Lou
.mbers. titleholder, and Pedro
Montanez, Puerto Eican knockout
medalist.
10SS TO DEFEND TITLE
Next in interest is the 15-rounder
n   which  Chicago's   Barney   Ross
seeks to defend his welterweight
crowji against the two-fisted challenge of Ceferino Garcia, young
Filipino from the far west.
The third champion to do his stuff
will be little Sixto Escobar, bantamweight titleholder, who will be
pitted against Harry Jeffra of Baltimore, twice victor over Escobar in
the over-the-weight matches.
Jacobs originally advertised four
title bouts, with Marcel Thil of
France, the European middleweight
champ, going against the rugged
Fred Apostoli of San Francisco, but
the New York State Athletic commission spiked this by refusing to
recognize the winner as world's
champion. Freddy Steele of Spokane is recognized as boss of the
United States 160-pound division, so
tho best Apostoli can gain by beating Thil is the latter's European
title. Apostoli is the only non-champion to be favored in the betting.
to. Elsdon and
Haydon Doubles
Tennis Winners
//in Four, Draw One
to Take Fairview
Championship
Surviving a -13 handicap through-
mt their five matches, Mrs. W. Els-
Ion and Syd Haydon marched off
with the mixed doubles crown of
he Fairview Tennis club at the
fairview courts Sunday. Four wins
ind a draw gave them a 33 point
otal, just four points above the
learest threat, supplied by the teams
if Mrs. J. J. Payne and Colin Baker,
ind Mrs. Ernest Marsden and J.
.. C. Laughton.
The American style mixed tour-
lament was the first of three for
le club's championships to be
taged before the season's close,
Scoring was based on the number
f games won in a match of eight,
ight games comprising a single fix-
ire between two competing teams.
Arrangements for the tourney,
ne of the most successful ever held,
fere handled by Art Hodson of
le tournament committee.
Refreshments were served by a la-
ies' committee.
A dirth of lady contestants made
t necessary in some cases for men's
Jams to compete.
Teams and the results follow:
Mrs. Elsdon and S. Haydon,  33
lints (four wins, one draw); Mrs.
I J. Payne and C. Baker, 29 points
tour wins, one loss and one
law); Mrs. Ernest Marsden and
1 A. C. Laughton, 29 points (four
|ns, one draw and one loss); Miss
juriel Weatherhead and Lome A.
tadley, 25 points (three wins, three
fses); Miss Doretto Norris and
fcrman Boss, 25 points (three wins
pee losses); Jerry Whitfield and
1 Euerby, 25 points (two wins, three
laws and one loss); W. Elsdon and
lib Elsdon, 23 points (two wins, four
Uses); Mrs. Dauglas Male and John
[orris, 24 points (three wins, one
aw and a loss);.Doug Elsdon and
bss Fleming, 22 points (three wins,
iree losses); Harry Parker and
loyd Irwin, 22 points (three wins,
Iree losses); Miss Muriel    Smith
[DON'T GO HOME
HUNGRY
After a Dance or Show
[Treat   yourself   and   your
friends to the many
tempting
Late Hour Specials
at the
G
OLDEN
ATE CAFE
Baker St. Phone 861
and Ted Baker, 21 points (two wins,
four losses); Miss Frances Parker
and Norman Fawcett, 19 points (one
win, one draw, and four losses.)
Art Forrest on
Way to England
Trail   Hockey  Scorer
Is to Play With
Earl's Court
Art Forrest, high scoring centre
of the Trail Smoke Eaters, is on his
way to England to join the Earl's
Court hockey club. He will join
Jack Forsey, former Calgary, Nelson and Kimberley forward who
was with Earl's Court last season,
in Montreal and sail with him. The
English hockey season opens about
October 10.
A Trail product all the way. Art
was a member of the first Trail
junior team to win the B. C. title,
and which in the Memorial cup play-
downs wrote western hockey by
being the first B. C. junior team to
win a game from a prairie team.
Trail lost the scries that year to
Saskatoon after winning the first
game 1-0.
The Trail star, two years ago top
scorer in the Kootenay circuit, was
scheduled to leave the Kootenays
aboard Monday morning's east-
bound train.
English Football
LONDON, Sept. 20 (CP Cable). -
Results of English soccer and rugby
matches played today;
SOCCER LEAGUE
FIRST DIVISION
Blackpool 1. Brentford 1.
SECOND DIVISION'
Blackburn Rovers 2, Fulham 2.
Sheffield United 2, Burnley 1.
THIRD DIVISION
SOUTHERN SECTION
Millwall 4, Walsall 0.
RUGBY LEAGUE
Oldham 0, Wigan 5.
RUGBY UNION
Crosskeys 3, Aberavon 19.
Pontypool 9, Cardiff 24.
BOXLA PLAYOFFS
HALT WHILE FAIR
OCCUPIES ARENA
City boxla league playoff series
now well under way come to an
abrupt halt this week, while the Nelson Agricultural and Industrial associations fair is being held, and will
be resumed again next week.
The Civic Centre arena is being
utilized by the fair exhibits and no
sporting activities will be held there
during   the   week.
Here's how the teams in the various play series stand now;
Bantam league:
Team: P W L F A Pts.
Catholic Boys ...  2   2   0   25    19   4
Bluebirds    2   1   1   31   25   2
Fairview A. C. .. 2   0   2   17   29   0
Juvenile  league:
Catholic Boys ... 2   1   1   17   16   2
Panthers    2   1   1   26   23   2
Kinsmen . 2   1   1   20   24   2
Junior legaue:
Hornets   1   1   0   14   10   2
Fairview A. C. .. 1   0   1   10   14   0
Three Leafs in
Race for City
Batting Crown
Sunday's softball fixture between
the Red Sox and the Maple Leafs,
will not only be a race for girls'
city league softball championship,
but also a race for the city batting
championship and the Al Tregillus
prize.
Three hard-hitting lassies are in the
race for the batting honors. The
three are Alice Gillett, Deanie Wallace and Jean Spiers, all of the
Maple Leafs' squad.
HUNTERS-
Here is the ideal hunting boot that
will keep your feet warm and dry in
the wettest of weather.
FROM 10" TO 16" HEIGHT
$7'50*up
Re Andrew & Co*
Leaders in.Footfashion
Four Title Fights mi One Card
These eight boxers are to meet in an all-star
championship card Thursday in New York. Seated,
left to right, they are: Sixto Escobar, Puerto Rico;
Lou Ambers, Herkimer, N.Y.; Barney Ross, Chicago;
Marcel Thil, Paris, France. Standing, left to right,
the fighters are: Harry Jeffra, Baltimore; Pedro
Mentanez, Puerto Rico; Ceferino Garcia, Los An
geles and Fred Apostoli, San Francisco. Escobar is
bantamweight champion; Lou Ambers, the lightweight champ; Barney Ross, welterweight, Marcel
Thil is the French claimant to the European middleweight title. Thus there will be three world titles
and one European championship at stake.
Johnston Begins
His'Moving Out'
NEW YORK, Sept. 20 (AP).—As
his trusted handy man, old Sam.Mc-
Quade, affectionately stripped the
faded green walls of his priceless
collection of autographed pictures,
Matchmaker Jimmy Johnston began
moving out ot his Madison Square
Garden haunts today.
Rage, bitterness and then a "what
the hell" sort of forgiveness alternately played on his haunted
thoughts as he backtracked his
stormy six years as Garden matchmaker in the prize fight business
where the doublecross sometimes
seems to be the mos> popular blow.
At the finish he tossed up his hands
and said:
"Sure I hate to move out to make
way for that other crowd from sixth
avenue (Promoter Mike Jacobs,
who takes over the Garden's boxing Oct. 1) but maybe it's the best
thing that ever happened to me.
I'll make more money on my own
as a promoter. I ran 35 world's
championship fights, five of them
for the heavyweight title, and the
Garden never lost a thin dime.''
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W L Pet.
New York  •  85 53 .616
Chicago     84 57 .596
St. Louis   75 66 .532
Pittsburgh   75 66 .532
Boston    71 70 .504
Brooklyn   61 80 .433
Cincinnati   55 84 .396
Philadelphia   55 84 .393
AMERICAN  LEAGUE
W L Pet.
New York   94 45 .676
Detroit  83 57 .595
Chicago     78 62 .557
Boston       72 64 .529
Cleveland    74.66 .529
Washington   66 73 ..475
Philadelphia   47 91 .341
St. Loins        42 99 .298
BROTHERS FAIL
TO BAG GAME IN
WEEK-END HUNTS
Empty-handedness was the reward of two Nelson hunters over the
week-end. Tanny Romano returned Sunday night from the Slocan
district with no game. His brother
Freddy, also came back empty-hand
ed from Tye. However, Freddy has
gone to the Castlegar region, hoping
the game in that district is not quite
so immune to the attractions of a
gun.
CHUCKER BREAKS
ARM ON FAST ONE
WINDERMERE, B. C.-Ebbie Bell,
son of Mrs. Dorothy Bell of Invermere, B. C, was watching a local
ball game, when somebody nsked
it he would pitch for awhile, Fbbie
wound up and sent over a fast
ball, and broke his arm Just above
the elbow.
He received treatment In the
Lady Elizabeth Bruce Memorial
hospital in Invermere.
Call Junior Boxla
Practice Tonight
With the inter-city junior boxla
playdowns just over a week distant. Nelson league officials are preparing to whip a team into shape for
the tri-circuit battles and tonight all
junior players to take part in the
Nehon city junior league are called out for a practice at the Recreation grounds.
With preparations for the fair under way in the Civic Centre arena,
play will so on in the open
Art Wallace will be in charge of
the practice.
PORT WASHINGTON. N.Y., Sept.
20 (AP)-Milton Wegeforth of San
Diego, Cal., sailing Lecky, won
the international star class world
sailing championship by placing
fourth in the fifth and final race
of the series.
FOR OTHER SPORT N£WS
SEE PAGE TWO
Junior Inter-City
Boxla Playoffs to
Start Next Week
According to word current in Nelson city boxla league circles the
intercity playoffs will commence
next Wednesday, September 29,
with Nelson Civic Centre arena as
the first battlegrounds. Nelson and
Trail rep teams are slated to meet.
Rossland is also included in the
league.
Any player who has participated
in five senior boxla games will not
be allowed to take part in the playoffs. Therefore Ian Dingwall, Al
Hooker and Bill Townsend will be
excluded from the Nelson lineups
and Marcus Smith and "Mouse"
Davy from the Trail team.
..eaders
 ©	
(By Tha Acioclated Press) ,
Ducky Medwick of the Cardinals
added anothor point to his batting
average yesterday, hitting two-for-
four for a .379 reason mark, thereby
boosting his National league lead
to 21 points. In the American
league side of baseball's oig six Lou
Gehrig of the Yankees picked up a
point on pace-setter Charley Gehringer of the Tigers, although each
hit safely only once in four chances.
They wound up with Gehringer way
out in front with .382 .0 .359 for
the "Iron Horse."
Standings of the leaders (first
three in each league):
G AB R H Pet
Gehringer, Tig 130 508 121 194 .382
Medwick, Cards 143 580 105 220 .379
Gehrig, Yanks 142 527 129 189 .359
P. Waner, Pir... 141 573 84 205 .358
Mize, Cards. . 132 510 90 182 .357.
DiMaggio, Yank 136 562 141 197 .351
Trail, Rossland
Softballers May
Play Here Sunday
Possibilities that Nelson fans will
be treated to a double sports dish
again Sunday when the Red Sox
and Maple Leafs meet in the final
of the city girls' softball league playoffs was expressed by a league official Monday.
It is possible that arrangements
will be made to have a Trail and
Rossland team travel here for a
game, following the playoff final.
Jean Spiers will make her appearance with the Maple Leafs in
the final.
Gomez Wins His
20th for Yankees
NEW YORK, Sept. 20 (AP)-Lefty
Gomez became big league baseballs
first 20-game pitching winner of the
year today, witli a classy four-hit
whitewashing job against the Tigers.
His fine flinging, coupled with
the timely hitting of Lou Gehrig,
Joe DiMaggio, who belted his 44th
homer of the year, and Bill Dickey,
gave the Yankees a 5-0 victory over
Detroit in the finale of their season's series.
It was Lefty's fourth straight win
and second straight shutout. The
big league strikeout king fanned
nine during the game to boost his
season total to 184.
He did not walk a batter.
Detroit   0    4    0
New York 5    9    0
Wade and York; Gomez and Dickey.
RED SOX AND
BROWNS SPLIT
BOSTON, Sept. 20 (AP).—The
Red Sox wound up their season's
series today with the St. Louis
Browns by splitting a doubleheader
before a scant 1500 customers after
losing the opener, 8-6. The Sox came
back to take the nightcap, 7-5, for
their 15th victory of the year over
St. Louis against seven defeats.
First game:
St. Louis  8   14    0
Boston    6     9     0
Trotter, Bonetti and Giuliani;
Marcum, Walberg, Newsom and Desautels.
Second game:
St. Louis  5   12    1
Boston    7   14    0
Walkup, Koupal and Giuliani;
Gonzales and Berg.
Chicago at Washington and Cleveland at Philadelphia, played at previous dates.
DAN. BULGER IS
STILL FAVORITE
LONDON, Sept. 20 (CP Cable)-
Sir Abe Bailey's Dan Bulger today
maintained his place as favorite for
the Cambridgeshire, being backed
at 21 to 2, The four-year-old won
the race last year.
James A. de Rothschild's Esque-
meling and Robert Middlemas' Fair-
play shared second place at 25 to 1.
Other odds: Artist's Prince 28 to 1,
Scarlet Princess, Spot Barricd, and
Moody 33 to 1; Le Bambino, Allegiance, and Red Squaw 40 to 1.
Another of Sir Abe Bailey's campaigners, Maranta, held his place as
favorite for the Cesarewitch, second
event of the Newmarket "autumn
double". Maranta was backed at
100 to 6.
The Cambridgeshire will be run
October 13 and the Cesarewitch October 17.
You Can't Keep Goodman Down
By BURNLEY
^W;.'olp!»IJ
if
XMATeafV"
JOHAJAiy
OODMAN
Major and Miss
P. Campbell Take
Doubles Tennis
Triumphing over their opposition
in seven matches and dropping but
one, Maurice Major and Miss Patricia Campbell ran off with the Nelson Tennis club's mixed doubles
title Sunday at the upper courts.
Their seven wins and one loss netted them a total of 67 points, 12
above the runners-up, Peter Dewdney and Mrs. George Simpson, who
because of a high handicap garnered but 55 points from their seven
wins, with but a single loss.
Eight teams of Nelson racket
wiclders entered this event and the
tourney, run off under ideal weather conditions, was a splendid success.
Norval German and Frank B,
Wells were in charge.
The tournament was an American
style event, that is every' team participating played every other team.
Total points, not matches won, were
the deciding factors.
Teams and results follow:
Maurice Major and Miss Patricia
Campbell, 67 points (seven wins,
one loss); Dr. L. J. Maurer and Mrs.
L. Lindo, 55 points (five wins, three
losses); G. Barwis and Mrs. Barwis,
47 points (six wins, one draw, one
loss); L. Lindo and Mrs. L. J. Maurer, 36 points (one win, two draws,
five losses); Frank B. Wells and Mrs,
Wells, 30 points (one win, two
draws, five losses); Norval German
and Miss H. Haylock, 29 points (two
wins, two draws and four losses);
Bert Clark and Mrs. C. A. Larson,
26 points (one win, two draws, five
losses); and F. Morris and Miss Isabel Dawson, 24 points (one win, one
draw, six losses).
idoria Results
WILLOWS PARK, Victoria, Sept.
20 — Race results:
First race—5>/_ furlongs:
Louis Dear (Craigmyle) 6,10 3.45
2.45.
Genevieve M.  (Young)  4.65 2.85.
Ancient Rome (Whitacre) 2.70.
Time 1.08 1-5. Also ran: Bay Salute, Gold Rose, Candid, Maxim Jester.
Second race: Six furlongs 30
yards.
Playing On (Baxter) 4.90 3.65 3.10.
Thrillowisp (Craigmyle) 7.40 4.25.
Triassic (Young) 4.20.
Time 1.17 4-5. Also ran: Gypso-
philia, Lovely Miss, The Miss, Ethel
Star, Chardie.
Third race: Six furlongs 30 yard:
Brown Jester (Duncan) 5.30 3.70
2.85.
Libbett (Wilbourne) 6.50 3.95.
Sunny Colleen (Sporri) 2.75.
Time 1.18 3-5. Also ran: Sunnyfier,
Hojo, Hillstream, Jeanne Son, Nurse
Simony.
Daily double (playing on—Brown
Jester) $14.85.
Fourth race: One mile 70 yards.
Billy Easter (Young) 4.00 3.20 2.50.
Princess Han (Duncan) 660 2.95.
Happy Jester (Craigmyle) 2.40.
Time 1.46. Also ran: Brown Jug,
Jungle Chick.
Fifth race—Six furlongs 30 yards.
Lady Goldstream (Wilbourne)
3.50 2.65 3.00.
Ladyfier (Haller) 4.20 365.
Some Gift (Baxter) 12.90.
Time 1.17 2-1. Also ran: Tomdil,
Dunholme, Little Boy Blue, Edison,
Saxon King.
One-two $10.40.
Six race: l1,. furlongs.
Mac's Best (Wilbourne) 6.45 3.50
out,
Maggie O'Boyle (Simpson) 7.70
out.
Sahara Chief (Sporri) out.
Time 1,09 2-5. Also ran: Blind
Fannie.
Seventh race: Mile, 70 yards.
Pipes Pal (Baxter) 3.60 2.70 2.75.
Swepcn  (Young)  5.40 4.20.
Tampa 'Lass (Frasch) 3.35.
Time 1.46. Also ran: Chas Clarke,
Sedgie, Mahukona, My Gentleman,
Judge Austin.'
TRAIL SINGLES
GOLF ADVANCES
TO SEMI-FINALS
TRAIL, B. C., Sept. 19 — Bert
Clark, L. S. Piper, P. F. Mclntyre,
and Rube Nesbitt are the seml-
finalists of the Rossland-Trail Golf
and Country club Directors' cup
singles tournament that opened here
today.
These four men will play off &•■
their own convenience during the
week.
To get into the semi-finals of the
championship flight, Clark beat I
Mitchell, Piper beat R. G. Anderson, Mclntyre beat J. Atwell, and
Nesbitt beat Ted Rice.
PAGE SEVEN
GIANTS AND CUBS BOTH WIN ON
EVE OF START OF CRUCIAL SERIES
With 2V_ Games Separating Them, New York
and Chicago Lock Horns Today in
Battle for National Pennant
ST. LOUIS, Sept. 20 (AP)-By the
simple means of getting away to a
flying start and then giving Carl
Hubbell the job of staying in command the New York Giants walloped the Cardinals 10-3 with a 17-hit
attack today to retain their 2>,_-
game National league lead.
The victory, featured by a first-
inning outburst in which each club
connected for six straight hits, driving both starting pitchers to the
showers, gave Hubbell the honor of
becoming the first pitcher in the
National league to win 20 games
this year.
Taking over at the start of the
third, after Cliff Melton had been
belted out in one-third inning, and
Walt Brown had been relieved in
one-and-one-third, Hubbell allowed
four hits and fanned six in a classy
seven-inning relief performance. He
missed by some three hours the distinction of becoming the first 20-
game-flinger m the majors for the
year, since Lefty Gomez turned the
trick for the Yankees in New York
during the afternoon.
CRUCIAL SERIES DUE
Getting set for tomorrow's start
of their crucial series with the second-place Cubs, who whipped
Brooklyn today, the Giants exploded their heaviest hitting attack since
mid-August, sewed up the ball game
with a five-run splurge in the first
inning, and wero never in trouble
with Hubbell and his screwball on
duty.
New York .... 502 101 100-10 17 1
St. Louis ..300 000 000- 3 10 2
Melton, W. Brown Hubbell and
Mancuso; Weiland, Harrell, Blake
and Bremej, Ogrodowski.
CUBS SQUEEZE
OUT 5-4 WIN
CHICAGO, Sept. 20 (AP)-The
Chicago Cubs stopped a big Brooklyn Dodger rally with the tying and
winning runs on base in the ninth
inning today to squeeze out a 5-4
victory and stay 2'A games behind
the Giants in the Na "
dog-fight.
the Giants in the National league
Getting their final tune-up for the
start of their crucial series with the
league leaders tomorrow, the Cubs
had smooth sailing through the first
eight innings as Bill Lee limited the
Brooklyns to two hits. In the ninth,
however, the Dodgers belted Lee
and his successor, Clay Bryant, to
the showers with a rally that netted all their runs and fell just one
short of deadlocking the count.
The victory, coupled with the Giants' win in St. Louis, left the pennant chase just where it was before
hostilities got under way today.
Brooklyn ... 000 000 004— 4 6 1
Chicago      000 203 00*— 5   9   0
Frankhouse, Lindsey, Henshaw
and Phelps; Lee, Bryant, Logan and
Hartnett.
Boston at Cincinnati and Philadelphia at Pittsburgh, played at previous dates.
Opponents Beware
FRED  APOSTOLI
Pacific Coast middleweight sensation, looks like an apostle of doom
for his opponent, in this unusual
angle shot. He was snapped after
a workout at Mme. Bey s camp at
Summit, N.J., where he is training
for his bout with Marcel Thil, European champ. The winner will get
a crack at the title held by Fred
Steele.
Guldahl Is Again
Western Golf Champ
CLEVELAND,' Sept. 20 AP). -
Ralph Guldahl of Chicago, national
open champion, won his second
straight western open golf cham-
ionship today, defeating Horton
imith of Chicago by four strokes
in an 18-hole playoff. The two tied
at 288 for the regulation 72 holes
which ended yesterday. Guldahl
scored par 72 today, while Smith
skidded to 7fi.
BOBGENGE
DIES AT (OAST
VANCOUVER, Sept. 20 (C.P). —
Bob Genge, former Victoria fiockey
player, died at. his home here today.
He was 47.
Genge learned his hockey in Port
Arthur, Ont., and played on the prairies before turning professional.
Then he came west, in 1913 joined
Lester Patrick's Victoria team.
Clark, Bennett
Tops in Shoot
Murray Clark and J. Gordon Bennett split the honors in Sunday's
trap shoot of the Nelson Trap and
Skeet club at the club grounds, both
sharpshooters taking a first and second in the two contests held. Clark
garnered first honors with his 14
score in the first, while Bennett
took the second shoot with 16.
With the hunting season in full
swing only a few of the gunmen
appeared for the shoot, most of them
preferring to try their luck on living
targets.
Contestants and scores follows:
First shoot—Murray Clark 14, J.
Gordon Bennett 10, C. E. G. Fisher
9, Bert Harrison 7 and Frank B.
Wells 2.
Second shoot—J. Gordon Bennett 10, Clark 15, Fisher 9, and Harrison 6.
HoirYe Runs
——-©-^—-
By The Associated Preu
Yesterday's homers: DiMaggio,
Yankees; Doerr, Red Sox; Bell,
Browns, one each.
•The leaders: DiMaggio, Yankees,
44; Gehrig, Yankees, 36; Greenberg,
Tigers, 36; Foxx Red Sox, 33; Ott,
Giants, 31; York, Tigers, 31.
League totals: American 748, National 590, total 1338.
N. H. L. Governors
to Meet Sept. 24
MONTREAL, Sept. 20 (CP) —
Frank Calder, president of the National Hockey league, announced
today the meeting of governors,
originally scheduled to be held in
Toronto September 25 will be held
in New York, September 24.
Giants 7-4 Win
Ties Up Trial
Senior Softball
TRAIL, B. C, Sept, 20—Giants
handed Cubs a 7-4 defeat to tie up
the senior men's softball league second-half finals here Sunday. Cubs
took the first game by default. The
second game was a tie.
In order to get into the finals of
the entire league Cubs must win
the next game as Giants were champions of the first half. Should Giants
win the second half playoffs it will
not be necessary lor any further
games, Giants automatically taking
the championship and the G, G.
Cumming's cup.
Budge and Von
Cramm Win on
Pacific Coast
LOS ANGELES, Sept. 20 (API-
Led by America's Don Budge and
Baron Gottfried von Cramm, of Germany, favorites came through unscathed1 in opening rounds of the
men's singles in the Pacific southwest tournament at the Los Angeles Tennis club today.
Budge and his Teuton rival moved
into the second round by defaults
and won their next matches handily. Budge defeated Ted Wellman,
Los Angeles, 6-3, 6-1, and von
Cramm won from Modeste Aloo,
San Francisco, after a match harder
"■-- "■- " " '  '
Nelson Net Artists Plan Big Day
Sunday; Four Tournaments on Book
Another full Sunday is ahead for
Nelson tennis enthusiasts, for both
clubs, the Fairview Tennis club and
the Nelson Tennis club, plan tourneys.
As a grand windup to a splendid
season Fairview net artists will
meet in tournament play, battling
for the club's singles championships. Up the hill at the Nelson
Tennis club upper courts the men's
and ladies' doubles championships
will be at. stake.
Hinitt-Haydon cup and the ladies'
Laughton cup will go on the block
in the Fairview singles contests.
Both will be open handicap affairs,
losing players simply being knocked out of play.
Thursday is the deadline set for a
entry into the Fairview meets, while
no date has been set as yet for entry for the Nelson club events.
American style tourneys will be
held by the Nelson club, that i«
every team must meet every other
team participating.
Harold H. Hinitt will be In charge
of (lie Fairview tourney while Norval R. German and Frank Wells will
PHILIP MORRIS
sssmm
 —
|MM|ii|.UI,^i|iji^
PAGE EIGHT-
NELSON  DAILY  NEWS.  NELSON.  B.C.—TUESDAY   MORNING. SEPT. 21. 1937.
Rent the Spare Room Make It Help Pay Expenses PL 144
GLANCES INTO THE MIRROR OF
LIFE IN KOOTENAY-BOUNDARY
NEW DENVER—Miss Dora Clever has left to spend a vacation at
the home of her brother-in-law and
sister Mr. and Mrs. H. Bolston of
Kansas City, Miss. . . . Miss Hilda
Crellin entertained at her home
Tuesday, Aug 31 in honor ot Miss
Marion Abererombie of Vancouver
who has been a guest of her uncle
and aunt, Dr. and Mrs. A. Francis
for the summer. Games were played
?ftcr which refreshments were served by Mrs. R. W. Crellin assisted by
Mrs. T. Pearson. Guests were
Marion Abererombie, Marjorie
Francis, Blanche Meers, Margaret
Broughton, Hazel Flint, Dagmar Olsen, Marguerite Campbell, Olive
Tattrie and Hilda Crellin. ... Joe
Lauriente of the Kootenay Belie
mine, Salmo, is a visitor in town.
. . . Miss Helena Tarron of Nelson
is spending a holiday with her parents Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Tarron and
her sister Mrs. J. Black of Ihe Lucky
Jim mine. . . . Mr. and Mrs. W. H.
White and Miss Betty White of
Nakusp were visilors in town
Thursday.... Mr. and Mrs. A. B. S.
Stanley of Nakusp were visitors
last week. . . . Kenneth White of
Nakusp was a visitor in town
Thursday. . . . Mrs. H. Walbaum
was hostess to the members of
Presbyterian church Ladies Aid
Thursday Sept. 2. It was decided to
have a sale on October 30, Members present were Mrs. L. D. Irwin,
Mrs. Joseph Taylor, Mrs. Jack Taylor, Miss H. Taylor. Mrs. G. Williamson, Mis. J. C. Harris. Mrs. 0.
Enockson, Mrs. A. W. Nesmilh, Mrs.
F. Broughton, Mrs. J. Klicn and
Mrs. H. Walbaum. Visitors were
Mrs. J. Nesmith, Miss Grimmer
of New Westminster and Miss Blyth
Presbyterian deaconess. Refreshments were served by Mrs. Walbaum. . . . Thursday Sept. 2 the
Women's Auxiliary to St. Stephen's
Anglican church met at the home
of Mrs, A. L. Harris. Mrs. F. Browne
the president, was in the chair. Refreshments were served by Mrs.
Harris. Members present were Mrs.
F. Browne, Mrs. R. W. Crellin. Mrs.
C. Thring, Mrs. H. Alywin, Miss W.
Alywin, Miss D. Lowe, Mrs. D.
Powell, Mrs. A. L. Levy, Miss G
Reynolds, Mrs. L. W. Sells, Miss M.
Meers Mrs. S. Thomlinson, Mrs.
H. H.' Pendry and Mrs. W. Cliffe.
One visitor, Mrs. G. Bennett, was
present.
NAKUSP, B.C.-E. W. Somers of
Nelson was a week-end visitors m
town. . . . Miss E. La Rue of Vancouver, who has been visiting relatives here for the past two months,
left Monday. . . . Mr. and Mrs E.
Russell, who have ben visiting Mrs.
Russell's parents, Mr. and Mrs. J.
Parent sr., have left for their home
in Tacoma. . . . F. McDonald of Vancouver was a visitor here Saturday
. . . Mr. and Mrs. J. Parent sr. have
returned from Kamloops where they
visited Mrs. Parent's sister, Mrs.
Genier. . . . Mrs. W. Hubert of Burton spent Friday in Nakusp. . . .
Mrs. J. Gardner of Graham's Landing is visiting Mr. and Mrs. C. L
Holtz. . . . R. Keffer of Burton was
in town Saturday. . . . Mrs. E. Hubert of Burton was a guest at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. C. Turner.
... J. Draper of New Denver motored to town Saturday. . . . Mr. and
Mrs. Milton Davies and family of
Klamath Falls, Ore., who have been
visiting Mrs. Davies' parents, Mr.
and Mrs. J. Parent jr., left for home,
Thursday. . . . Mr. and Mrs. R. A.
Fowler returned recently from a
motor trip to Winnipeg and Minaki
Lodge, Ont., were week-end visitors
in Nakusp. . . . H. J. Murphy ot
Nelson was a Nakusp visitor, . . .
Mr. and Mrs. J. Cookson and L. Eli
of Burton were Friday visitors to
town. . . . William Christopher of
Vernon was a week-end visitor to
Nakusp. . . . Mrs. A. E. Fowler returned last week after spending a
holiday in Rimby, Calgary and
Banff. In Rimby Mrs. Fowler visited her brother and sister-in-law. Mr,
and Mrs. F. Vipond. . . . Mrs. R.
Brodie and Mrs. E. Brodie were
week-end visilors to Nelson.
Miss Louise Swanson of Fruitvale
was a week-end visitor at the home
of her parents here. . . . Miss Eva
Viau has left for Trail. Mr. and Mrs.
J. F. Doerksen of Fruitvale were
visitors to Mr. and Mrs. J. McColin's.
. . . Mr, and Mrs. D. Tremblay and
son, Paul, of Spokane were visitors
to Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Tremblay's.
... V. Weid of Fruitvale was a
visitor here. . . . E. Tremblay has
left to visit Spokane. . . . Mrs. T. R,
Swanson has returned from Fruitvale. . . . Mrs. Harry Tremblay and
Mrs. A. Viau were visitors to Trail.
... 2. LcPage was a visitor to
T. J. Tremblay's.
KINGSGATE. EASTPORT-Miss
Lois Graham arrived home Sunday for a vacation accompanied bv
Miss Katherine Bohychuk of Edmonton Alta. They left again Wednesday for Vancouver accompanied by David and Mre, H. R. 'Graham. , . . The Ladies Contract club
held their reorganization meeting
Tuesday at the home of Mrs. Ray
Thomason. Mrs. S. E. Gunn was
elected president and Mrs. T. J,
Balf secretary-treasurer. After business was finished bridge was played
with Mrs. Paul Thorn finishing up
as high scorer. . . . Friday evening
the Ladies Study club held their
first meeting of the season. The
home of Mrs. W. E. Hall was the
venue and a comprehensive program of miscellaneous topics was
given. Mrs. Balf was elected vice-
president to take the place of Mrs
W. E. Miller who has resigned.
Mrs. William Dunbar, Mrs. J. B.
Christensen and Mrs. A. Rebellard
were guests of the club for the
evening. . . . Inspector Cadiz, R. C.
M. P. of Vancouver was in Kings-
gate Sunday on his way to Cran-
i brook. He was accompanied by
Mrs. Cadiz. . . . Corporal J. B
Christensen, R, C. M. P.
a special course at Regina. . . . Mr.
and Mrs. Ken Corbett are back in
Eastport. . . F. J. Smyth of Cranbrook passed through here en route
to Spokane where he will spend a
holiday.
SLOCAN PARK—Rev. and Mrs.
Herman Eldridge were visitors to
Slocan park and held a service at
the home of Mrs. O. Storbo Sunday.
. . . Mrs. S. Reid celebrated Labor
Day by giving a luncheon to seven
ladies. . . . Miss D. Illingworth and
Miss Hannah were visitors to Slocan Park, guests of Mrs. E. H. Greav-
ison Mr.   and   Mrs.   Harold
Groom. Mrs. E. Groom and Miss
Miller of Lethbridge, Alta., were
guests of Mrs. A. D. Crebbin Monday. The motored from Lethbridge.
. . . School reopened here with Mr.
Bradshaw and Miss Fraser back on
the job and an enrollment of 48
pupils. . . . Charles Dickey and Mrs.
Baskin were shoppers to Nelson
. . . Mrs. Max Baskin and Miss Crebbin took a four-mile hike on the
west side of the Slocan river Labor
Day. . . . Mr. and Mrs. Pen Baskin
of South Slocan spent the week-end
here, guests of Mr. and Mrs. Max
Baskin.
NATAL—Miss Mary Lazaruk of
Natal is visiting at Hillcrest, Alia.
. . . Mr. and Mrs. n. Bonar and
family have returned to Michel after a holiday at the coast. ... Mr
and Mrs. Hockley of Penticton were
recent Natal visitors, ... P. Mi-
halynuk left Michel last week for
Fort William where he will attend
the funeral of a relative. He was
accompained by his daughter Elizabeth. , . . Miss Vernon Travis of
Natal is spending a holiday at Creston at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
F. Travis.
here took part in the periodic shoot
ing tests in Cranbrook Monday and
made a good enough score to entitle
him to have his "crossed pistols"
mounted on his arm. Corporal
Christensen is in charge of the
Creston district at present in the
absence of Constable Ashby taking
ARROW   CREEK—Mrs.   DeWolfe
visited the valley last week. . . . E,
Ingram, who is working in Cranbrook, was home for the week-end.
... Inspector Brown visited the val-
the post | ley las' week. . . . R. Clarkson and
family had visitors from the prairie
last week. . . . The A.C.F.C, mcl
Sunday at the home of Mrs. R,
Clarkson and election of officers for
the coming year took place, Mrs. F
Bunce was elected president and
Mrs. Boehmcr was reelected secretary-treasurer.
ON THE AIR
GREENWOOD—Mrs. A. J. Morrison, Mrs. I. Saunders and Miss Alice
Morrison have left for Vancouver
and Seattle, . . . H. H. Summersgill
has left to spend a vacation at Spokane and Seattle. . . . Mrs. A. J.
Campbell has left for Vancouver to
reside L R. Gowans of Grand
Forks spent a short time in town.
a guest of Mr. and Mrs. J. P. C.
Wright en route to Kelowna to
spend a few months. . . . Emory
Legault has returned after spending
his vacation at his home at Ottawa
, . . Mi\ and Mrs. Keady accompanied by Miss A. Simpson have returned after spending a few weeks' vacation at Yellowstone Park. . . . Mr
and Mrs. W. C. Wilson had as their
guest R. Mallchue of Vancouver. . .
A. Sater has returned after spending a few days at Coulee Dam,
Wash, . . . Mr. and Mrs. A. Sale:
had as their guests Mr. and Mrs.
S. Hooker Nelson of Kendrick, Ida.,
and Mrs. Carl Arsteen of Spokane.
Wasii. . . , Mis. X. Algaard and son.
Tony, of Trail are visiting at the
homo of Mr. and Mrs. G. Aunc.
CANADIAN   BROADCASTING
CORPORATION   NETWORK
5:00 Mirror of Music; 5:30 This
is Paris; 6:00 Its in the air; 6:30
Drought talk; 7:00 The Vagabonds;
7:30 Mart Kenney's orchestra,
Toronto; 8:00 Just S'possin', drama,
Winnipeg; Bob Lyon orchestra;
8:30 To be announced; 8:45
Good Evening News, Vancouver; 9:00 As Embers Glow,
from Winnipeg; 9:30 Old Time frolic,
trom Saskatoon; 10:00 News, Vancouver; 10:15 Chamber music. Vancouver; 1P:45 Weather forecast.
N.B.C.-KPO RED NETWORK
KHQ KGW KFI KPO KOMO
590 620 640 680 920
5:00 the Beaux Arts trio; 5:30
Raymond Ross director of music and
program, Lanny Ross, etc.; 6:30
Jimmie Fidler, Hollywood gossip;
6:45 Vic and Sade. comedy; 7:00
Amos 'n' Andy; 7:15 Lou Breeze's
orchestra; 7:30 'Johnny Presents;
8:00 Death Valley Days, drama; 8:30
Good Morning Tonight, vocal, Gyula
Ormay and his orchestra; 9:00
Thrills, drama, Gayne Whitman,
narrator, David Broekmai.'s orch,;
9:30 Carlos Molinas' orch.; 10:00
News flashes; 10:15 Edna Fischer
Directs; 10:30 Jack Winston's orch.;
11:00 Hal Kemp's orch.; 11:30 Leon
Mojica and orchestra.
N.B.C.-KGO BLUE NETWORK
KGO KJR KEX KECA KGA
790 170 1180 1430 1470
5:00 Ben Bernie; 5:30 To be announced; 6:45 Manuel and Williamson, harpsichord; 7:00 To be announced; 7:15 Lum and Abner;
7:30 Eddie Varzo and his orchestra;
Professor Fuzzlewit, KGO; 8:00
Darrcll Dnnnell, News; 8:15 Concert Hall; 8:30 Marvin Frederick and his orchestra; 9:00 Russian Rhapsody; 9:30 King Jester's orchestra; 9:45 Al Vierra's
orchestra; 10:00 Frank Castle's orchestra; 10:30 Jimmy Grier's orch,;
11:00 Haven of Rest. KECA; 11:30
Charles Runyan, organist.
ROSS SPUR—Miss Edna Swanson
of Trail is spending a holiday at
tlie home of her parents here. . . .
Mr. and Mrs. M. Lajeunese and
daughter, Germaine, of Shell River,
Sask., were guests of Mr and Mrs. T.
J. Tremblay. ... A. Waldy of Trail
was a visitor here.. . . John Colligan
of Trail was a visitor at the home of
T. R. Swanson, . . . Bill Moll of
Trail w
home. . , . Mrs. Harry Tremblay
and infant daughter are guests ol
Mrs, A. Viau, . . . Miss Agnes Swanson is visiting friends at Trail. . . .
Mrs. Jake Wolf was a visitor \>
Fruitvale. . . . C. Tremblay has left
to visit relatives at Spokane. . . .
COLUMBIA NETWORK
KVI KOIN KNX KSL KOL
570 940 1050 1130 1270
5:00 Biltmore orch.; 5:30 Benny
Goodman's or,; 6:00 U.S. Navy band;
6:30 Russell Dorr, baritone; 6:45
Leaves in the Wind; 7:00 Scat-
tergood Baines; 7:15 Jay Freeman's
orch.; 7:30 Al Jolson and company;
KVI, Guy Lombardo's orchestra.
KOL; 8:00 Al Pearce and his gang;
8:30 Tommy Dorsey's orch.; 8:45
Slvles bv Simeone, Art of Convention, KOIN; 9:15 Song Slylisls; 9:30
Art of Conversation; 10:00 Joaquin Grill orchestra; 10:45 Red
Norvo's orchestra; 11:00 Eddie Fitzpatrick and orchestra; 11:15 Al Lyons' orchestra; 11:30 Ted Fio-Rito's
orchestra.
600 k
Vancouver
CJOR
499.7 m
500 w
5:15 Pete Cowan's Old Timers:
6:15 Monitor Views the News; 6:45
Sports Resume; 7:00 Stock Quotations; 7:30 Political broadcast; 7:45
Ozzie Ross, tenor; 8:09 O'Brien
Ghost: 8:38 Card Smaller, violinist;
9:00 Len Chamberlain's orch.; 9:30
Music from across the sea; 10:00
Frank Filianges' orchestra; 10:15
Tropical Sunset; 10:45 Len Chamberlain's orchestra; 11:00 Rhythm
on Record.
910 K CJAT ,319.6 m
Trail 1000 w
visitor at i LePotes 7 „- MorninB Vespers; 7 15 Musi
cal clock; 8:00 The request pro,; 8:30
The Rossland Bulletin, 9:30 The Old
Timer; 9:45 Organ Fantasy, 10:00
Memory Lane; 10:15 What's New;
10:31) Tire Radio diet; 10,45 MeK.dll
Pipes: 11:00 Morning matinee; 11:15
Kootenay   Echoes;    11.20   Mouito:
views the News; 11:45 On Wings
of Song; 12:15 Spokane Welcomes; 12:30 Pinto Pete; 12:45
Musical Moments; 1:15 Rhythm and
Romance; 1:30 Concert Time; 3:00
In the Crimelight; 3:30 Cub Reporters; 4:00 Success story; 4:1a
Club Matinee; 4:30 Cecil and Sally;
5:00 Theatre News; 5:15 Happy
Valley Folks, E.T.; 5:45 Nonsense
and Melody; 6:00 See C.B.C. Network except; 6:30 The Buccaneers;
7:!5 Waltz Time; 8:30 Guilty or
Not Guilty; 10:45 Lullaby Land.
1030 k CFCN 293.1 m
Calgary 10,090 w
5:00 Concert master; 5:30 Man
About Town; 6:15 The Buccaneers;
6:30 The Talking Drums; 6:45 Hollywood brevities; 7:00 Russian Gypsy
orchestra; 7:30 The Cub Reporter; 8:00 Charles Magnante; 8:15
Gaieties; 8:30 House of Peter McGregor; 9:00 News flashes; 9:30 Peacock court; 9:45 Garden of melody.
SHORT WAVE PROGRAMS
BRITISH  EMPIRE
TRANSMISSION 6
GSI 15.20 mcs. (19.66 m.)
GSF 15.14 mcs. (19.82 m.)
GSD 11:75 mcs. (25.53 m.)
GSC 9.58 mcs. (31.32 m.)
6:00  p. m.-Big Ben. World Affairs, talk.
6:15—Chamber Music.
7:35—Musical Interlude.
7:40—News  and  Announcements.
INTERNATIONAL
TOKYO-L45 p.m. Toyama Military Band of the Imperial Japanese Army. JZK. 19.7 m., 15.16 meg.;
JZJ, 25.4 in., 11.80 meg.
SCHENECTADY-3 p. m. Science
in the News. W2XAF, 31.4 m. 9.53
meg.
SCHENECTADY-3,35 p.m. Short
Wave Mail Bag W2XAF, 31.4 m.
9.53 meg.
J3ERLIN- 3:45 p.m. German Musical Instruments, a melodious report. DJD, 25.4 m., 11.77 meg.
SANTIAGO, CHILE-5:45 p.m.
Symphony; Opera; Latin American.
Chilean and International music.
CB960, 31.2 m. 9.60 meg.
CARACAS -6:0.1 p.m. Los Cum-
aneses, quartet. YVaRC, 51.7 m. 5.8
meg.
BERLIN-6:15 p.m. About Lansquenets, Soldiers and Wandering
Fellows.  DJD, 254 m„   11.77  meg.
BUENOS AIRES, ARGENTINE-
8 p.m. Dance Music. LUX, 31.06 m„
9,66  meg,
SASKATOON 9:30 p.m. Old Time
Frolic. CJRO, 48.7 m„ 6.15 meg,;
CJRX 25.5 m„ 11.72 meg.
TOKYO - 9:15 p. in. Children's
Songs, and Songs for Home Singing. JZK, 19.7 m„ 15.16 meg.
LYNDHURST, AUSTRALIA -
1 a.m. (Wednesday) National talk
VK3LR, 31.3 m„ 9,58 meg.
.Nrlamt Eaily -fame
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BIRTHS
PANGBURN—To Mr. and Mrs.
Cecil Pangburn. at Victorian hospital, Kaslo, September 8, a daughter.
PERSONAL
MEN! GET VIGOR AT ONCE NEW
Ostrex Tonic Tablets contain raw
oyster invigorators and other
stimulants. One dose peps up organs, glands. If not delighted
maker refunds few cents paid
Call, write. Mann-Rutherford Co
(2233i
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LEGAL NOTICES
NOTICE   TO   DELINQUENT
CO-OWNER.
TO W, H. MORGAN, or to any
person you may have transferred
your  V*   interest:
Take notice that I, the undersigned co-owner with you in the three
Mineral Claims, Gold Knob, Gold
Stream, Bear Paw, situated at Lemon
Creek in the Slocan Mining District,
Province of British Columbia, have
done the required work on the above
mentioned Claims for the years 1934,
1935, 1936, 1937, in order to hold
the same under Section 48 of th(
Mineral Act as amended April 14th
1930, and if within 90 days of the
publication of this notice you fail
or refuse to contribute your portion
of such expenditure, together with
the cost of the advertisement (being
a total of $198,55) your interest in
said Mineral Claims will become
the property of the undersigned
under Section 4 of the Mineral Ac*.
Dated at Vallican, B.C., this 13th
day of September, 1937.
Co-Owner.
GEORGE SOUCEY.
(2446)
HELP WANTED
SITUATIONS WANTED
COOK, PAINTER, BAKER. GARD-
ener or clerk. Very good education, Different languages. Bookkeeping, shorthand in German.
Clean and honest. Box 2493, Daily
News.  (2493)
CDN. WOMAN CLEANING, WASH-
ing, waxing, minding children. 25c
hr. and crfre. Box 2472 Daily News
 (2472)
WOMAl^TrxPERIENCEb^OOK
Clean, reliable. Prefer camp. Box
2500, Daily News. (25001
PROPERTY, HOUSES. FARMS
ETC., FOR SALE
GOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE
on easy terms in Alberta and
Saskatchewan Write for full in
formation to 908 Dept of Natural
Resources, C.P.R.. Calgary Alta
(2243)
BL7KrX^MAP~782ATFormerjOHN
Snow place. South Slocan. What
offers?     Sarah    Hamilton,   1218
Ingraham St., Los Angeles, Calif.
(24681
SIX ROOM RESIDENCE, 204 VER
nqn street. Excellent condition
fireplace, full cement basement
and furnace. Phone 662.      (2333)
2~STOREY>RAME~ HOUSE," O UT-
buildings. 5 acres. Water rights.
Mile from Nelson. P. O. Box 791.
Nelson. _ (2547)
MODERN' HOMErTACSES, IRRI-
gated Orchard. Immediate possession. Mrs. W. B. Martin, Creston.
(2540)
POULTRY, SUPPLIES, ETC.
CALENDAR AND ADVERTISING
Specialty salesman. Exclusive territory, highest commissions, large
line. Experience preferred, but
not necessary. Apply to $ox 521,
London, Ont. (2548)
MAN OR "LADY'tcTseLITSPORT
suits and dresses for the .Logan
Garment Ltd.. Lethbridge, Alta
Apply J. H. Bridge. Sales supervisor,  Magrath,  Alta. (2467)
wanted.experienceTTapple
packers.    Apply    Boswell    Fruit
Growers. (2519)
TRY A WANT AD
THE CUMPS
PULLETS
i     ,  ,      ,     Raised from  the
"■ViH'      "Chicks Which
Give Results".
Leghorns. 8 weeks   $65 per 100
10 weeks     75 per 100
Barred Rocks and
Light Sussex 8 weeks 75 per 100
10 weeks  85 per 100
RUMP & SENDALL LTD.
Langley  Prairie, B.C.
(2230)
LEGHORN PULLETS. READY TO
lay. Highest grade known. Alex
Cheyne, Erie, B. C. (2520)
STAMPS
VlIGHEST PRICES PAID FOR OR-
dinary used Canadian and all other stamps. Send dime for buying
price list "Stampco." Stn. B.,
Winnipeg. (2371)
For Want Ad
Service
Phone 144
FOR SALE
FOR SALE
Property on finest central location
in the city. Lovely view, grocery
store Vs block, Public and High
schools 2 Sc A blocks, 5 minutes from
Baker.St. Living room, dining room,
kitchen, 3 bed rooms, bath, All new
white plumbing. Built in features.
Piped for gas, wired for electric
range, tank heater. Concrete foundation, furnace in basement. Suite' in
basement consists of living room.
wall bed, kitchen, bath room, Inlaid
linoleum In kitchen and bath room
Also light fixtures, modern wiring,
with switches and wall plugs everywhere. Basement suite wired separate. Coal and wood goes in basement direct from truck. Back and
front porches. Newly decorated and
in first class condition throughout
House now rented at $30 month
Can rent suite at $20. Everything
goes for $2700. $1600 cash, balance
arranged. Box 2508 Daily News.
(2508)
WANTED
SMALL   UNFURNISHED   HOUSE
or three rooms.   Phone 249 R2.
'  (2528)
WANTED — Big game  or  medium
weight rifle. Apply Box 566. (2536)
AUTOMOTIVE
WILL TRADE BUICK TOURING
Car for carpenter work. Box 2554
Daily News. (2554)
LOST AND FOUND
To Finders
If you find a cat or dog, pocket- '
book, lewelry or fur. or any j
thing else of value, telephone
the Daily News A "Found" Ad
will be inserted without rost to
you. We will collect from the
owner.
LIVESTOCK FOR SALE
FINE BIG HOLSTEIN COW TO
freshen in 3 weeks. Apply 711 Nelson Avenue. (2551)
DOCS, PETS, FOR SALE
TWO RED COCKER SPANIEL
puppies. Phone Rasmussen 678 R2,
Nelson, B. C. (2529)
FOUND-ROWBOAT OWNER CA*
have same by identifying an
paying for this ad. Apply Dafl]
News. (2555H
FRUIT ACENTS
FRUIT GROWERS - SHIP US AL!
varieties of tree fruits in straigh
or mixed cars. Receive benefi
of the highest prairie marke
prices. Returns made every Satuj
day. The Royal Fruit Companj
Regina, Sask. (2186
Business and Professional Directory
FINE BEAUTY
SHOP
in best location In Nelson, doing
a splendid business. First class
modern equipment.
This Is a going concern with
everything complete to step in
and go to \york.
Terms reasonable. For further
inforrnation write to—
P.O. BOX 1078
(2458)
PIPE   1UBES   FITTINGS
NEW AND USED
Large stock for immediate shipment
SWARTZ PIPE YARD
1st Avenue and Main St.
Vancouver. B.C.
(2237)
PIANO; A BRUNSWICK BALKE
Junior Billiard and Pool Table,
3 by 6; Shotgun, Fox, Sterling-
worth. Phone 245Y. (2475)
pipe and'fittTngs
CANADIAN  JUNK  Company  Ltd
250 Prior St. Vancouver. BC
      (2238)
FOR SALE - BARRELS, KEGS
sugar sacks, Ijners. McDonald Jam
Co.. Ltd., Nelson, B. C^_ (2239)
VTlWabLE PIANO, GRAMO"-
phonc, dresser, bed, 6-hole range,
406 Richards St. (2505)
COOK STOVE, DAVENPORT AND
3 lb. Computing Scales. 723 Silica.
(2522)
WE SELL EVERYTHING AT BAR-
gain prices. The Ark Store. (2348)
FOR RENT, HOUSES, APTS.
ETC.
WILL GIVE 2 ROOM SUITE RENT
free to married couple who will
look after 5 small suites.   Apply
C. W. Appleyard Sc Co., Baker St.
(2549)
3 UNFURNISHED ROOMS, SUIT-
able for housekeeping. Private
homej.pplyJOS StanleySt. (2521)
FURN. OR UNFURN. ROOMS,
suitable for housekeeping. 518
Carbonate St. or Ph. 273R.   (2557)
HOUSE^KEEPING^ROOM. PHONE
evenings 728X, 718 Silica St.
(2476)
FURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING
rooms for rent    Annable Bln<'k
(2240)
TERRACE APTS Beautiful modern
frigidaire equipped suites.   (2241)
V AC ANf~STORE~ON BAKER~ST.
Apply Nelson Grocery, (2437)
Fur¥iTheT3 SUITES IrT^THE
Kerr apartments. (2242)
CLASSIFIED MAIL ORDERS
from out-of-town residents given
prompt attention.
Assayers
Insurance and Real Estate
(Continued)
E W. WIDDOWSON. PROVINCIAL
Analyst.    Assayer.    Metallurgical
Engineer    Sampling    Agents    at
Trail Smelter    301-305 Josephine
St.. Nelson. B C.                   (2244)
GRENVILLF, H GRIMWOOD
Provincial Assayer and Chemist 618
Biker Street. Nelson   B  C. P  O
Box   No   726   Representing  ship
UNDER   NEW    MANAGEMENT-
District management of the Mu
ual Benefit Health and ace. asso
now under supervision of Frank .
Stuart and E. L. Warburton. Ol
fice:  Aberdeen  Block, 577 Bak<
street, Nelson, P. O. Box 389.
(2172
per's interest, Trail. B C.     (2245)
Machinists
Automobile Radiator Repairs
NELSON RADIATOR WORKS
Expert Repairs
New Cores Installed
Capitol Motors Building
(2246)
BENNETT'S LIMITED
For all Classes of Metal Work, Lath
Work, Drilling. Boring and Grind"
ing. Motor Rewiring, Acetylene
Welding
Telephone 503      324 Vernon Stree
(2260
Chiropractors
H   E. STEVENSON.   Machinist
Blacksmiths. Electric and Acetylen
Welders. Expert workmen.  Satisfac
tion guaranteed. Mine & Mill work
specialty.   Fully equipped shop Pt
98, 708-12 Vernon St., Nelson. (2261
j. r  McMillan, d. c. nfuro-
calometer and  X-ray     16    years
experience. McCullock Blk. (2247)
Corsets
Mine & Equipment Machiner
Spencer corests    Surgical Belts M
W. Mitchell, 370 Baker St. Ph   668.
(2248)
E. L. WARBURTON, REPRESENT
ing C, C   Snowdon, oils, grease
paints, etc.   Agent mine machir
cry, rails, pipe steels, sheet iro
etc.    Steam   coals.    Office   5!
Ward street. Phone 53.        (226!
Engineers and Surveyors
H D DAWSON            Nelson. B. C
Mine Surveys and Reports
B. C. Land Surveyor.     (2249)
BO TOCT AFFLECK Fruitvale B C.
British Columbia Land Surveyor
Reg. Professional Civil Engineer,
Notaries
D.   J.    ROBERTSON.     NOTAR
Public. Nelson. Phone I57L. (2261
(2250)
Patents
Funeral Directors
AN OFFER TO EVERY INVENT
or, list of wanted inventions an
full  information sent free.   Th
Ramsay Company.   World Pater
Attorneys. 273 Bank St.. Ottawa.
(226
SOMERS' FUNERAL HOME
702 Baker St.                   Phone 252
Cert   Mortician      Lady Attendant
Modern Ambulance Service
(2251)
DAVIS   FUNERAL   SERVICE
Embalming k Plastic Work
Photography
Phone 95.       * Ambulance Service.
(2252)
OUR   BUSINESS   FOR   1936   A
most doubled that of 1935.   Th<
must be a reason!   A trial ore
will convince YOU of the super
Photo Finishing done in our pla
Your films developed and print
25c Reprints, eight tor 25c. KR.
TAL  PHOTOS,  WILKIE, SA.
(221
Insurance and Real Estate
ROBERTSON REALTY CO., LTD
Real Estate.   Insurance.    Rentals
311. Baker St. Phone 68.       (2253)
r7~W TJaWSON   Real "Estate   In
surance.   Rentals. Next Hipperson
Hardware. Baker St. Phone 197
Sanitariums
(2254)
DR. ALDRICH. SPOKANE. WAS
Heart. Stomach. Kidney. Bladd
Diseases treated.   X-ray work.
(226
C. D. BLACKWOOD,   Insurance of
every description.   Real Est. Ph 99
(2255)
H. E. DILL, AUTO AND FIRE IN-
surance. Real Estate. 508, Ward St
(2256)
Sash Factory
LAWSON'S     SASH     FACTOR
Hardwood merchant. 217 Baker !
(226
J. E. ANNABLE,   REAL ESTATE,
Rentals. Insurance.   Annable Blk.
(2257)
SEE   D.   L.   KERR,   AGENT   FOR
Wawanesa Fire Ins. For better rates
Second Hand Stores
(2258i
WE   BUY,   SELL   &   EXCHANG
furniture, etc.    The Ark Store.
CHAS. F. McHARDY. INSURANCE
Bv Cus Edsor
WHERE'S UNCLE
BIM ? WHAT'S THE.
MATTER? WASN'T
HE ON THE
BOAT?
Mf CAUSE A
SCENE?  ISHOULP
SAY MOT.'   ALL
TILLIE THE TOILER
By Russ Westover
31 I'H M3-2 LITTLE '5PIWV
LOOKIN-   FOR REAu
HATiMOMV-__(
1  PLAy IT IM THE
Key of'c*
THEN  I  SKIING IT
DOVJM TD*S"
mil
BUT IT   - UST DOESN'T __EM TO BE
THE   MOTES   I   MEED  ARE. *>t>U AMD
Kg
V_s-yoo—-usr you-my ' rv u \
T-I-L-L.-1-E
<SOOD QP.IEF. THERE'S
NO OME   THE(2E   '	
 mwmmiimmmmmmmmmmi
pp^pppipilPl^^
ip>»P;^
l5_t.
RESTON ALREADY IS EXPORTING
APPLES, LEADING THE INTERIOR
rand Forks Shipping
to Eastern Canada
Market
Export of apples has started in
eston district, the only southern
:erlor producing district to ship
t ot the Dominion to date this
ar, states an analysis of crop
ivement as at September 15 by the
Ulsh Columbia Fruit board. So
I Creston has exported 3174 boxes
Wealthy apples out of an esti-
lted crop of 27,643 boxes.
Grand Forks has shipped 1356
xes of Wealthies to eastern Can
a.
Pears, plums, crabapples and
pies comprise the bulk of fruit
w moving In the southern in-
lor, with apples just beginning
attain volume. Creston shipments
far lead Nelson and Grand Forks.
[lie figures follow:
:L80N AND DISTRICT
ARS
Met.      117
ipps Favorite     110
imlsh    192
;al   - 419
UMS
ich Plums   122
rly Varieties   65
le Varieties   404
lal    591
ABAPPLES
msccndent  50
her varieties   36
tal 	
'PLES
okers  .
ichess  .
ialthy .
446
10
tal   .,.
IE8TON AND DISTRICT
IARS
irtlett   2,491
apps Favorite      941
Jules ...k      90
imish   2,696
tal  6,218
,UMS
ach Plums     141
rly varieties       44
te varieties   1,083
tal   1,263
UNES
Uan     26Si
ABAPPLES
slop  1,097
ascendent  2,132
ler varieties _      18
Al 	
PLES
liters   ,
chess  .
. 3,247
. 3,528
, 2,637
Wealthy
..8,864
..15,028
Total  	
GRAND FORKS DISTRICT
PEARS
Bartlett    394
Clapps Favorite     132
Flemish     230
Total    756
CRABAPPLES
Hyslop  317
Transcendent     137
Total  !    454
APPLES
Cookers   1,054
Duchess    639
Wealthy  3,746
Total
NELSON DAILY NEW8, NELSON, B. (..-TUESDAY MORNINQ, SEPT. 21, 1937.
Market and Mining News
. 5,439
Washington Mine
Company Is Given
B. (. Registration
With provincial headquarters at
Hall siding, the Canadian Belle
Mining company, incorporated in
the State of Washington, ha? been
registered in B. C. as an extra-provincial company, states the B. C.
Gazette.
Attorney of the company is Michael Demytro Herman of Hall Siding:
Head office of the company is at
204 Radio Central building Spokane. Paid up capital is $4290.
"The company proposed to carry
on in the province the business ot
prospecting, developing and extracting ore, if found, on the quart?,
group of claims known as the Canadian Belle group, 12 miles south
of Nelson, B. C, in the Ymir-Nel-
son district, or such other properties
that may be acquired later," the
registration notice sets out.
Montreal Produce
MONTREAL, Sept. 20 (CP) —
Eggs resumed their recent upward
trend on Canadian commodity exchange produce section today while
butter held steady.
Butter 26%-%; Eggs A large 36-
37.
BAR GOLD UNCHANGED
MONTREAL, Sept. 20 (CP)- Bar
gold in London unchanged today at
$34.77 an ounce In Canadian funds;
140s 2d in British, The fixed $35
Washington price amounted to the
same in Canadian.
Toronto Stock Quotations
NE8
ton Mines —	
iermac Copper .
*andrla Gold ...
gosy Gold ...,	
Wield Gold 	
Hey Gold 	
aria Rouyn	
: Mining	
mac Rouyn ...
Ikfield Gold	
Metals 	
(ttie Gold	
good Kirk 	
HISS .
Ho Mines 	
erne Mines 	
Trethewey 	
do Ank .    	
liter Hill Ex 	
•Malartic  	
Iboo Gold Q	
lie Treth 	
Itral Man 	
Itral Pat 	
Tiougamau 	
lomium M & S 	
jfit Copper 	
liagas Mines 	
Siaurum Mines 	
M & S 	
Ikwater   	
Mines Ltd 	
Explor 	
|*val Siscoe 	
It Malartic	
lorado Gold 	
Iconbridge  Nickel
feral Kirk    	
Incoeur Gold	
Ilies Lake  	
Id's Lake 	
lid Belt   	
lanada Gold	
Jandoro  Mines  	
Innar Gold      	
Trd Rock Gold 	
Irker Gold 	
lllingcr  Mine  	
Iwey Gold
ltdson Bay M & S ..
Nickel 	
IM Con  	
tck Waite 	
■cola Gold 	
Jrr Add 	
Irkland  Lake  	
|ke Shore 	
naque Contact	
titch   Gold   	
Ibel Oro Mines	
■ttle Long Lac 	
lacassa Mines	
lacLeod Cockshutt ...
Jadsen R L 	
& East 	
landy Mines 	
lalrooie Mines 	
Bclntyre Porcupine ..
McKenzie R L    	
BcVittie Graham 	
Matters  Gold 	
pining Corp 	
Kinto Gold 	
goneta Porcupine 	
Jtorris  Kirkland  	
liplssing irning  ,
loranda 	
lormetal       	
I'Brlcn Gold 	
nega Gold 	
fcmour Porcupine	
Irkhill Gold	
lulore M    	
lymaster Cons 	
Ind Oreille 	
Irron  Gold  	
Ikle Crow Gold 	
mreer Gold	
Jemier Gold 	
Ircupine Crown 	
■well Rouyn   	
Teston East Dome ...
I.bec   Gold	
lad Authler 	
It, Gold Shore 	
leves  MacDonald  ..
|no Gold
x:hie Gold Mines ....
fche Long Lac 	
J Antonio Gold	
fcwkev Gold
leep Creek Gold ....
lerritt Gordon 	
■coe   Gold   	
pelters Gold	
■den Malartic	
[adacona Rouyn	
.0214
.76
4.25
.36
.30
.06%
.061.
.07
.24%
.65
.20
1.10
.43
.46
.11%
7.60
.116
9.75
9.75 .
1.08
1.50
.75
.(15
2.10
.27
.70
3.00
1.75
1.20
67.35
.55
38.75
.05
m
2.13
6.00
•07 V.
.50
.24
.47t.
.24
.13
•05 _
.70
1.00
.13%
11.15
.32
24.35
52.50
.23
.59
.45
1.86
1.28
..   48.25
.04
.54
.15
4.60
4.75
.30
.67
.02'A
.21
.ISM,
33.25
1.04
.20
.39
2.40
.1014
1.68
.23
2.00
51.50
1.25
4.05
.43
2.62
.13
.15
.44
2.95
.76
4.85
3.60
2.10
.02 %
1.06
.88
.35
3.00
.27%
.04
.11
1.40
.45
.114
1.80
3.05
01'A
1.04
.81
St Anthony :      .15
Sudbury Basin      3.2b
Sullivan Cons      1.05
Sylvanite             2.65
Tashota Goldfields       .05%
Teck Hughes G61d ,     4.90
Toburn Gold      2.05
Towagamac  85
Ventures Ltd      6.50
Waite Amulet      2.18
Whitewater 10
Wright Hargreaves      6.40
Ymir Yankee Girl 26
0IL8
Ajax Oil  21
A P Con         39
Brit Amer Oil     20.50
Brit Dom 24%
Brown Oil  38
Calmont Oil  36
Calgary & Edmonton     1.75
Chem Research 30
Commonwealth  19%
Dalhousie 55
Eastcrest    14Vi
Foundation Pete  20
Foothills Oil        52
Highwood Sarcee  14
Home Oil           1.27
Imperial Oil    18.90
Int Pete       31.50
Lowery Pete    11%
McColl Frontenac       12.50
Merland      07
Model Oil  40
Monarch Roy  25%
Nordon  Oil   20%
Okalta  96
Pacalta 15
Pantepec       5.50
Royalite      31.00
Southwest Pete 25
Texas Can        1.43
United Oil   15
Vulcan   Oil     90
INDUSTRIALS
Abitibi Power     4
Beatty Bros          15
Bell Telephone   1651.
Brazilian Traction    20%
Brew Sc Dist     7
Brit American Oil     20%
Brewing Corp          2
Brew Corp  pfd     17%
B C Power A     34Vi
B C Power B      7
Burt F  N     3614
Can Bakeries A       3
Can  Bakeries pfd     49
Can Bread Co      5
Can Bud Malt      8
Can Car Sc Fdy _    17%
Can Cement         10%
Can Cement pfd  103%
Can Dredge     37
Can Malting          35
Can Pacific Rly           9%
Can Ind Alcohol A      5%
Can Ind Alcohol B       4%
Can   Wineries          1%
Carnation pfd    102%
Cons Bakeries    22
Cons   Smelters      65%
Cosmos    23
Dom Bridge  '35
Dom   Stores      '     7
Dom Tar & Chemical       Vis
Dom Tar Sc Chem pfd       88
Dist Seagrams     .'    17
Fanny   Farmer      21%
Ford of Canada A     19%
Goodyear Tire     84%
Gypsum L Sc A       8%
Harding  Camel      4
Hamilton Bridge           10
Hamilton Bridge pfd ......       .   79
Hinde Dauche  ,.   19%
Hiram Walker 39%
Int Metals    11
Int Milling pfd     99%
Imperial Oil           18ft
Imperial Tobacco    13%
Int Nickel         52%
'nl Petroleum     31%
Loblaw A      23%
Loblaw  B     21
Maple Leaf Milling      3%
Massey Harris ,     7
McColl  Frontenac     12%
Montreal Power    29
Moore Corn      _    38%
Nat Steel Car     30%
Ontario Steel Prods     12
Ontario Silk Net         7
Page Hersey    91
Power Corp    17%
Pressed  Metals     27
Steel of Canada *.   76
HEMLOCK PEST
DENUDES TREES
AT TROUT LAKE
Spreads Over Several
Square Miles in
Short Time
CLOUD MOTHS
ARE "LOOPERS"
Spreading rapidly since the original outbreak was reported in July,
a forest pest known as the hemlock
looper is now common over several
square miles of Kootenay forest,
centering about Trout lake and
spreading eastward to the Lardeau
and westward to the Upper Arrow
lake. How extensive the damage
may be is not yet definitely known.
The hemlock looper, forest branch
officials explain, is a moth, the
caterpillar of which defoliates coniferous trees, particularly hemlock,
and kills them. In addition to the
loss of the live trees, a serious
fire hazard may be created. Clouds
of moths reported from that district
latterly are loopers at the breeding
and egg laying stage.
Two entomologists from Vernon
have carried out an investigation
in the area, but so far no report
has been received in Nelson of
their activities and the result of
their investigation.
The eggs hatch ordinarily in June,
and feed for six weeks before going
into the pupa stage, from which they
emerge as moths.
The method of attack, states literature In the hands of department
officials, is to dust the forest from
airplanes, using calcium arsenate
It is considered possible also that
parasites might effectively control
Though the looper was first reported in July, it is possible, officials say, that it was present previously but in a dormant state or
in negligible numbers. The scientific name of the pest is ellopia fis-
cellaria guen.
POUND LOWER
MONTREAL, Sept. 20 (CP) —
Pound sterling declined % cent on
Montreal foreign exchanges today
to 4.95%. The French franc eased
.01 cent to 3.38 cents while the United States dollar ruled unchanged
at par.
Oils Trading Is
Light at Calgary
CALGARY, Sept 20 (CP-Trad-
ing in oil shares was light on the
Calgary stock exchange today and
prices were irregular.
Anaconda gained a fraction at
8%; Dalhousie lost 1 at 59 while
Model dropped 2 at 38 and Calmont
3 at 38. Richland lost 1 at 20. Mercury and Lethbridge held unchanged.
SMELTER STOCK
HITS NEW LOW
TORONTO, Sept. 20 (CP) — The
Toronto share market opened the
week with another decline, led by
the base metals "with a half dozen
of the leaders selling at new low
prices for the year.
Smelters hit a new low of 66 and
closed at 67 off 3% net; while Nickel
slipped to 51% and closed at 52%
down 1% net. Noranda and Hudson Bay dropped a point each.
Mclntyre closed down 1%. Lake
Shore and Dome were off % to a
point
Dropping 2 to 4 points were Abitibi, Canadian Car Sc Foundry, Mas-
sey-Harris Pfd. and Weston. Bathurst Power A dropped 1%.
Montreal Sees
Many New Lows
MONTREAL. Sept. 20 (CP) —At
least a dozen new lows for the year
appeared on the stock market dining today's sessions. Persistent selling reflected weakness in New York
and London markets.
Setting a new low for the year at
51%, Nickel recovered narrowly to
finish at 52%, down 1%. Smelters
acted similarly at 67%, off 2%, after touching 66%. Noranda fell to
a new low at 1 and closed at 52,
off a point.
Dryden slid 2% points to 10 after
making a new low at 9',.. St. Lawrence Paper preferred went to 67.
new low, and finished off three
points at 68. Price Brothers lost
2% at 27% and the preferred two
points at 60.
Montreal
INDUSTRIALS:
Alta Pac Grain	
Assoc Brew of Can..	
Bathurst P. Sep A	
Bell Telephone	
Brazilian T L Sc P	
B C Power A	
B C Power B	
Building Products 	
Canada Cement 	
Can Cement Pfd 	
Can North Power	
Can Steamship	
Can Steamship Pfd 	
Canadian Bronze	
Can Car _ Fdy	
Can Car Sc Fdy Pfd	
Can Celanese 	
Can Celanese Pfd	
Can Hydro-Electric	
Can Ind Ale A	
Can Ind Ale B 	
Can Pacific Railway	
Cockshutt Plow 	
Con Min & Smelting	
Distillers Seagrams 	
Dominion Bridge 	
Dominion Coal Pfd	
Dom Steel Sc Coal B	
Dominion .Textile 	
Dryden   Paper	
Famous Players C C _..
Gen Steel Wares	
Gurd Charles	
Gyp Lime _ Alab 	
Hamilton Bridge   	
Howard Smith Paper	
H Smith Paper Pfd  _
Imp Tobacco of C	
Inter Nickel of Can  _
Lake of the Woods ....	
Massey Harris 	
McColl Frontenac	
Montreal L H _ P   	
National Brew Ltd	
Nat Brew Pfd	
Nat Steel Car 	
Ogilvie Flour Mills	
Stock Exchange
13%
14
165
20%
34
6%
57
10%
103
20
4%
10
37
11%
22%
21%
115%
80
5%
4%
9%
10
66%
17
36
18%
16
76
10
14%
10%
814
8%
9%
20
90
13%
52%
19
7%
12%
29%
38%
39
29 %
220
Ontario Steel Prods     17
Power Corp of Can     16%
Quebec Power     17
St Lawrence Corp      8
St Lawrence Corp Pfd  21%
St Lawrence Paper Pfd  68
South Can Power      13%
Shawinigan W & P      24
Steel of Can   75
Steel of Can Pfd   68
Western Grocers   69
BANKS:
Bank of Canada  _ 58
Canadienne Nationale  159
Commerce    175
Montreal     200
Nova   Scotia     328
Royal      186
CURB:
Abitibi P Sc P Co       4
Acadia Sug Refin       3%
Beauharnois Corp      5%
Bathurst P _ P B      6%
Brew Sc Dist Van        7
Brew Corp of Can       2
British American Oil  20%
B C Packers     11
Can Malting Ltd      34
Can Dredge Sc Dock
Can Vickers	
Can Wineries ..
Cons Paper Corp
Dominion Stores
Donnacona Paper A       9'/s
Donnacona Paper B
Ford Motor A 	
Fraser Co Ltd	
Imperial   Oil   	
Inter Petroleum 	
Inter Utilities A	
Inter Utilities B 	
MacLaren P & P	
Mitchell Robt  	
Page Hersey Tubes ,
Royalite Oil 	
Thrift Stores 	
United Dist of Can ...
Walker-Good Sc W      39%
Walker-Good Pfd       1814
38%
6
1%
11%
6%
19%
20%
18%
31%
16%
1.10
19
.     13
90
33
%
Quotations
High Low
Al Chem   191 183
Am Can   95% 94%
Am For Power 5% 5%
Am Mch Sc Fdy 17 16%
Am Smelt & Re 72% 69%
Am Telephone. 161% 158%
Am Tobacco .... 76% 76
Anaconda   41% 39%
Atchison      62 59
Auburn   Motors 13% 13%
Aviation Corp ,. 4% 4%'
Baldwin Loco .. 13% 13%
Bait Sc Ohio .... 18% 17%
Bendix Av   16% 16
Beth Steel   76% 73
Borden     22 21%
Canada Dry   17% 16%
C P H     9% 9%
Ccrro de Pasco 55% 53%
Ches Sc Ohio    . 42% 41%
Chrysler    95% 90%
Con Gas N Y ... 32% 31%
Corn Prod   59% 58%
C Wright pfd .. 4% 4%
Dupont     146% 144%
Eastman Kodak 175 173
El Pow Sc Lite 16% 15%
Erie ....:.  10% 10%
Ford English .... 6% 6%
Ford of Canada 20% 20%
First Nat Stores 38 37%
Freeport  Texas 26 25%
General Electric 44% 43%
General Foods.. 34% 34%
General  Motors 49% 48%
Goodrich     28 27%
Granby    7% 6%
Grt North pfd .. 40% 38
Grt West Sugar 30% 30%
Hecker Prods .. 10% 10
Howe Sound ... 65 62
Hudson   Motors 11% 10%
Int Nickel     ... 53% 51%
Int Tel Sc Tel.... 8% 8%
Jewel Tea   62 62
on Wall Street
Close
186
95%
5%
16%
71
161%
76
41%
62
13%
4%
13%
18 "A
Kill
76
21%
17%
9%
55%
41%
94%
32%
59%
4%
146
174%
15%
10%
6%
20%
37%
26
44%
34%
49%
28
7
40%
30%
10%
65
11%
52%
8%
62
Kenn Copper ..
Kresge S S
47%
45%
47
21
20%
20%
Kroegger Sc T ..
19%
18%
"",
Mack Truck
33
32
33
Milwaukee pfd.
1%
1%
1%
Mont Ward 	
49%
47
49%
Nash Motors ....
15%
15
15',
Nat Dairy Prod
17%
17%
17%
Nat Pow Sc Lite
8%
8%
8%
N Y Central ....
28%
26%
27%
Pac Gas & Elec
29%
28%
28%
Packard Motors
7%
7%
7%
Penn R R   	
31%
30%
31%
Phillips Pete
49%
48
49%
Pure Oil 	
15%
15
15%
RCA	
9%
9%
9%
R K 0 	
6%
(P.
6%
Rem Rand 	
18%
18
18%
Safeway   Stores
Shell Union Oil
29%
2!)
29%
20%
20
20%
S Cal Ed ., 	
21%
21%
21%
South Pacific ..
32%
29%
31%
Stan Oil of Cal
38%
38
38%
Stan Oil of Ind
39%
39
:<:"„
Stan Oil of N J
58%
57
57%
Stewart Warner
14%
14%
Hli
Studebaker   	
10%
9%
10
Texas Corp   ...
49%
46
49%
Texas Gulf Sul
34%
34%
34%
Timken  Roller.
57
"',
56
Under Type ...
79
77
78
Union Carbide.
89
86
88%
Un Oil of Cal ..
21%
21%
21%
United Aircraft
23%
22
23
United Biscuit..
Union Pacific ..
21%
21%
21%
104
102%
104
U S Pipe	
40
39
39
U S Rubber	
40%
38%
40%
U S Steel
119%
86
88%
Vanadium Steel
24%
23%
24%
Warner Bros ..
11%
11%
11%
West Elec  	
125
130%
124%
West Union 	
34%
33,
iVri
34
42%
42%
Wrigley, ..'.	
68
63
lf.%
Yellow Truck ,.
16%
18%
II Months Ore
Ahead Durango
Plan   Mill   Operation
to Meet Inaugural
Liabilities
Estimate of 40,000 tons of ore
ahead at the Durango. mine near
Ymir, averaging .33 ounces i.. gold,
2.5 ounces in silver, 6 per cent lead
and 9 per cent zinc, enough for 18
months mill operation, is revealed
in a news bulletin issued by a Vancouver brokerage house.
The bulletin adds:
"As the company has had to
equip for production with an inadequate amount of cash, it is planned to operate for the first few
months on a grade of feed which
will be calculated to net. between
$50,000 and $60,000. per month.
"Ore at present in sight is estimated sufficient to pay off liabilities, including $125,000 loaned by
Dentonia, and leave a profit after
meeting cost of equipping the property with a 100-ton mill and a five
mile aerial tramway. The plant is
well located to handle custom ore.
"Development plans call for driving a new low level as soon as
the mill starts. This will determine
whether narrow high grade ore
on No. 3 level was the bottom of
the developed oreshoot, or as the
management expects, the top of a
new one."
Montreal Metals
MONTREAL, Sept. 20 (CP) -
Spot, copper, electrolytic, 14,60; tin
61,38; lead 5.60; zinc 5.70; antimony
17.50; per 100 pounds F. 0. B. Montreal, five-ton lots.
Auto Firms Can't
Gel Enough Steel
OTTAWA, Sept. 20 (CP)-De-
mand for steel throughout the world
has reached wartime proportions,
the tariff board was told today. It
resumed its inquiry into the automobile industry.
Representatives of motor car manufacturers presented statements
that it was becoming increasingly
difficult to fill the 60 per cent Canadian requirement necessary for
qualifying their products under the
British preference.
Dividends
Canadian Fairbanks Morse Co.,
preferred, 1% per cent, payable
October 15 to shareholders of record
September 30.
Dominion Glass Co., preferred, 1%
per cent, common 1% per cent, payable October 1 to shareholders of
record September 15\
Sherwin-Williams Co. of Canada,
preferred, 1% per cent, payable
October to shareholders of record
September 15.
Wabasso Cotton Co., common, 25
cents per share, payable October 1
to shareholders of record September 18.
Northern Canada Mining Corporation, four cents, payable November 1 to shareholders of record
October 1.
Kelvinator of Canada, preferred,
1% per cent, payable November 15
to shareholders of record November 5.
Vancouver Wheat
VANCOUVER, Sept. 20 (CP) —
Vancouver wheat cash prices:
Straight   Tough
No. 1 hard    125     123
No. 1 nor    124%   122%
No.    nor    119%   117%
No. 3 nor    113%   111
No. 4 nor    107%   105
No. 5 wheat    101%    99
No. 6 wheat     88%    86
Feed         77%    74%
Metal Markets
NEW YORK, Sept. 20'<AP)~Cop-
per quiet, electrolytic spot and future 14.00; export 12.95-13.06.
Tin easy; spot and nearby 58.62%;
future 58.12%.
Lead, quiet; spot New York 6.50-
55; East St. Louis 6.35.
Zinc steady; East St. Louis spot
and future 7,25.
Iron quiet; No. 2, F. O. B. eastern
Pennsylvania 25.00; Buffalo 24.00;
Alabama 20.00.'
Aluminum, virgin, 90 per cent,
20.00.
Quicksilver 99.00.
Platinum, pure 51.00.
Bar silver unchanged at 44%.
LONDON, — Copper, standard
spot £50 7s 6d, off £2 Is 3d; future £50 8s 9d, off £2; electrolytic
spot, bid £56 10s, off £1 10s; asked
£58 10s, off £1 10s.
Tin spot £268 5s, off £2 15s; future £257 5s, off £2 15s.
Bids: lead spot £19 7s 6d, off
12s 6d; future £20 oft 5s.
Zinc spot £20, off £1; future £20
3s 9d, off £1,
Bar silver 1-16 lower at 1913-16d.
September Corn
Slumps, Chicago
CHICAGO, Sept. 20 (AP) -Wildly
irregular fluctuations in September
corn prices today carried the market over a range of more than 6%
cents.
The day's outcome was 2% cents a
bushel net loss in September corn.
Transient rallies which hoisted September corn at one time to more
than a cent above Saturday's finish were associated with the circumstance that only 126,000 bushels
reduction of the amount of uncompleted September contracts was officially shown today to have been
effected Saturday.
At the close corn futures varied
from 2% cents lower to 1% higher
compared with Saturday's finish,
September 1.02%; December 63%-
%, wheat 1 cent to 2% up, September 1.04%, December 1,05-1.05%; and
oats unchanged to % advanced.
New York (rashes
NEW YORK, Sept. 20 (AP)-Stock
market leaders dropped to new" low
levels for the past 21 months or
longer today, although extreme losses of one to nine points were cut
down or cancelled by a slow last-
hour rally.
The news picture, while spotty,
showed little change and brokerage
quarters attributed the further setback in the last partly to weak securities markets abroad, and continued doubts regarding business
trends. '
The Associated Press average of
60 stocks was off .6 of a point at 57.1,
bottom mark for this index since
January 21, 1936. At its worst the
average was down nearly 2 points.
Transfers totalled 1,550,350 shares
compared with 814,050 last Friday.
■ 1 , : _  PAGE  NINI
EAST KOOTEHAY PRODUCING MORE
COAL, THOUGH TOTAL IS STILL 219
TONS UNDER AUGUST OF LAST YEAR
Coal Creek Colliery Production Gains 1179
Tons While Michel Figure Down 1398-
B.C. Total Is Up 17,306 Tons
Production of coal in East Kootenay in August showed a net reduction, compared with last year, of 219 tons, figures included in the August
report of the chief inspector of mines reveaL The figures indicates increasing production in the East Kootenay since for several months
previously production totals were considerably under last year.
Coal Creek colliery showed a gain of 1179 tons compared with August
of last year, while Michel production was down 1398 tons. Michel produced
4184 tons of coke.
In the entire province a gain of 17,306 tons was reported, the Vancouver Island and Nicola-Princeton districts both showing increases.
The figures, in tons, follow:
EA8T KOOTENAY DISTRICT
1937 1936
Coal Creek Colliery     7,823 6,644
Michel Colliery     34,696       36,094
TOTAL FOR EAST KOOTENAY 742,519 42 738
VANCOUVER ISLAND DISTRICT
Canadian Collieries (D) Ltd,
Comox Colliery  27,264 14,938
Northfleld Mine   11,045 —
Western Fuel Corporation Ltd, •
No. 1 mine :  14,441 21,935
Reserve mine   11,134 12,659
Other Collieries:
Lantzville Colliery   589 452
Ida Clara Colliery   - 176
Chamber's mine   147 93
Beban's mine   743 147
Loudcn's mine   125 —
Bigg's mine  :  — 81
TOTAL FOR VANCOUVER ISLAND  66,388 50,481
NICOLA PRINCETON  DISTRICT
Coalmont Collieries Ltd  8,475 7,232
Middlesboro Collieries Ltd  1,814 1,336
Pleasant Valley Colliery   — 488
Blue Flame Colliery   — 982
Granby Cons. M. S. _ P. Co. Ltd.
(Bromley Vale Colliery)  _   951 —
Tulameen Valley Coal mine (Lind)   677 —
Red Triangle mine  23 —
TOTAL FOR NICOLA PRINCETON    11,940       10,038
NORTHERN DISTRICT
Bulkley Valley Colliery t a       300 584
TOTAL FOR PROVINCE 121,147      103,841
U. S. IS CANADA'S
BEST CUSTOMER
OTTAWA, Sept. 20 (CP)- Canada's export trade for August reached $107,471,000, an increase of $8,-
m,p> oyer August, 1936. United
States was best single customer, taking $44,122,000 worth, slightly less
than r§r purchases from the Dominion in August of last year.
Dominion Bonds
WINNIPEG, Sept. 20 (CP)-Dom-
inion of Canada bond quotations today;
4% per cent Sept. 1,1940 (C) 107%
108%; 5 per cent Nov. 15, 1941 (C)
110%, 111%; 4 per cent Oct. 15,1945-
43 (C) 106%, 107%; 4% per cent
Feb. 1, 1046, (C) 109%, 111; 4 per
cent Oct. 15, 1949-44 (C) 102%,
103%; 4 per cent Oct. 15,1952, 47 (C)
105%, 106%; 3 per cent June 1,1955,
50 (C) 96%, 97%; 4% per cent Nov.
1, 1958, 48 (C) 110%, 111%; 21% per
cent Nov. 1, 1959, 49 (C) 110%,
111%; 3% per cent June 1, 1966,
56 (C) 98%, 99%; 3 per cent perpet-
uals (C) 87%, 88%.
BONDS LOWER
NEW YORK, Sept. 20 (AP)—After
a week's forward push, federal loans
were suddenly halted and forced
down as much as 17-32 of a point ih
a drooping bond market today.
Corporates and foreign dollar issues
gave up fractions to around 4%
points on sizeable turnover. Leading the foreign Issues to lower
ground were Abitibi Power Sc Paper 5's, off 4% to 80%. Japan 6%'s
dropped 2% to 83 and Rome 6%'s
were off 1% to 70.
Dow-Jones Averages
High Low
30 Industrials  .:  156.92 152.36
20 Rails     41.98 40.80
20 Utilities     24.67 23.95
40 Bonds     ■—■        	
Close Change
155.56—off 2.27
41.80—unchgd
24.43—off   .07
98.17—off   .28
Montreal Silver Quotations
MONTREAL, Sept. 20 (CP)—Silver futures closed steady today 10
points higher to 10 points lower. No sales. Bids: Sept. 44.40; Dec. 44.15;
March and May 43.00.
Vancouver
LI8TED Bid
A P Con  28
Amal Oil 05%
Aztec Min Co  08
Big Missouri 44
Bralorne      7.75
Brewers Sc Dist ....     7.00
Bridge River  Con      .02%
C & E Corp      1.82
Calmont Oil  37
Cariboo Gold       1.55
Coast Breweries ....   12,00      12
Dentonia  12%
Gold Belt Mines ..      .23
Hargal Oil  20
Home Oil       135
Inter Coal  21%
Island Mount  :.      .80
Kootenay Belle 95
Mak Siccar .:        — .
McDoug Seg Ex ..      .17
Minto  11
Model Oil  38
Pioneer Gold       3.70
Premier Gold       2.14
Premier  Border  ..      .01%
Qualsino 04
Relief Arlington ..      .16
Reno Gold  80
Reeves MacDonald      .60
Salmon Gold        —
Sheep Creek  85
Silbak Premier     1.70
Taylor B River 03%
Vanalta Ltd        —
Vidette    25
Wesko   14
CURB
Anaconda  08
Beaver Silver 01%
Bluebird   01%
B C Nickel 11%
Congress  02%
Cork Province  01
Crows Nest New ..      .05
Dalhousie, Oils    .>. -53
Mil  '
Stock Exchange
Ask
Bid
—
Davies  Petroleum
.29
—
Dunwell Mining ....
.02%
.08%
Fairview Amal 	
.05
—
Federal Gold 	
.01%
7.85
Foundation Pete ..
.20
7.50
Freehold Oil 	
.05%
.03%
—
1.85
Geo Enterprise 	
.03%
.40
Gold Mountain 	
.03
1.60
.14%
2.50
.01
.13
.01%
—
.01%
.24
.01%
1.40
Lakeview Mine	
.01%
—
Lowery Pete 	
.10
—
.03
1.00
Madison Oil 	
.05%
.02
.08%
.18
.21
.11%
McGillivray .._	
.19%
—
.2(1
—
.04%
2.18
.04%
.01%
.20
.04%
.911
.18
.15%
—
Pend Oreille 	
2.92
.70
.04%
.07%
Pilot Gold 	
.02
.90
.07%
2.00
.02
—
.06%
.08
Royalite Oil 	
33.00
.30
.   .02
_-
.04
.01%
.08%
—
.02
United Distillers ....
.92
United Oil    -
.15
—
Viking Gold 	
.34
	
.95
.011.
Wavcrley T new ..
,   .00%
.06
Wellington Mines..
.02%
—
Whitewater 	
.09%
Ask
.30
.21
.07
.'10
.04
.15
.01%
.01%
.03%
.06%
.08
.24
.27
.1)5
.05
.22
1.00
.17
3.00
.04%
.10
.02%
.07
36.00
.02%
.02
.45
.16%
1.00
.00%
.03
. .09%
Winnipeg Grain
WINNIPEG, Sept. 20 (CP)-Grain
futures quotations:
Open  High  Low  Close
WHEAT-
Oct 125%   127%   124%   126%
Nov  124%   126%   124%   126%
Dec. ..:  122%   123%   121%   123%
May  123%   124%   122%   124%
OATS-
Oct    51%     52%     51%     52%
Dec    48%     49        48%     49
May       48       48%    48       48%
BARLEY-
Oct    59%     60        59%     60
Dec    57%     58%     57%    58%
May       56%     51%     56%    56%
F'LAX-
Oct  176%    -       -      176%
Dec  176%     -        -      176%
May   179      180      179      180
RYE-
Oct    88%     89%'   88       89%
Dec    88%     89%     87%     89%
May     89%     89%    88%    89%
CASH WHEAT-
No. 1 hard 133%; No. 1 Nor. 133%;
No. 2 nor. 129%: No. 3 nor. 121%; No.
4 nor. 115%; No. 5, 111%; No. 0.
97%; feed 88%; No. 1 Garnet 121%;
No. 2 Garnet 118%; No. 1 Durum
108%; No. 1 A.R.W. 116%; No. \
special 110%; No. 5 special 107%;
No. 6 special 95%; track 131%;
screenings $8 per ton.
Calgary Livestock
CALGARY, Sept 20 (CP)-Re-
ceipts, to non, HI cattle; 28' calves;
no liogs; 436 sheep
Cattle market active and prices
stronger; common to medium butcher steers 3.00-4.50; good heifers \75;
good cows 3,00-3.75; go/>d to choice
veal calves 5.25-6,00.
No hog sales; last week's close,
selects 10.05-10.10; bacons 0,55-9.60;
butchers 9.05-9.10, off trucks.
MINING SHARES SOLD FREELY
IN LONDON
LONDON, Sept. 20 (AP)- The
stock market continued to exhibit
a weak tone today and transatlantic shares were in large supply. The
gilt-edged group and foreign bonds
were exceptions and moved a little
higher. Industrial issues, especially
rayon, liquor and tobaccos sold
lower and steel and oils were heavy.
Home rails moved irregularly and
mining shares were freely offered.
DOLLAR STRONGER AGAINST
STERLING
LONDON, Sept. 20 (AP)- The
United States dollar improved %
of a cent at $4.95 11-16 to the pound
in final foreign exchange transactions today
French franc closed 146.50 to the
pound against 146.59 the previous
close.
CANADIAN DOLLAR
UNCHANGED
NEW YORK, Sept. 20 (AP)-British ptjund sterling was % of a cent
lower at $4.94%. The Canadian dollar was unchanged at par. In London the United States dollar.advanced % cent to $4.95 11-16 to the
pound
Winnipeg Higher
WINNIPEG, Sept. 20 (CP)— Unsettled North American stock markets and bearish crop news from
the Argentine caused wheat futures
on the Winnipeg grain exchange
today to move nervously within a
narrow range around the previous
close. Final prices were 1% cents
to % cent higher, October at $1.26%,
November $1.26%, December $1.23%-
% and May $1.24%.
Early reports of rains In Argentina caused an easier tendency In
the first hour.
Later strength at Chicago where
eastern interests were reported selling stocks and buying wheat,
brought out short covering and minor gains were posted.
Money
By The Canadian Preu
Closing exchange rates:
At Montreal—Pound 4.95%; franc
3.38; U.S. dollar par.
At New York — Pound ..85%!
franc 3.38; Canadian dollar par.
At Paris-Pound 146.47% fr. U. S.
dollar 29.59 fr.; Canadian dollar
29.54 3-16 fr.
In gold-Pound 12s Id; U.S. dollar
59.46 cents; Canadian dollar 69.44
cents.
Exchanges
MONTREAL. Sept. 29 (CP)-Brlt-
ish and foreign exchange closed
steady today. Nominal rates for
large amounts:
Australia, pound, 3.9578
Belgium, belga, .1683
Denmark, krone, .2213
France, franc, .0338
Great Britain, pound, 4.9575
Holland, florin, .5521
Hungary, pengo, .1968
India, rupee, .3748
New Zealand, pound, 3.9894
Norway, krone, .2491
South Africa, pound. 4,9321
Sweden, krone, .2556
United States, dollar, par.
(Compiled by the Royal Bank of
Canada).
London Close
LONDON, Sept. 20 (AP)— Closing: Brazilian £20%; C. P. R. $9%;
International Nickel $53%; International T. & T. $8%; U. S. Steel
$99%; Central Mining £21; Consol
Gold Fields 71s 3d; Courtaulds 51s
6d; Crown £12%; De Beers Dfd.
£15% ex-dividend; Ford 25s 6d; H.
B. C. 29s (id; Metal Box Ltd. 76s 3d;
Mining Trust Ltd. 4s 4%d; Rand £7;
Rhodcsian Anglo Am. 26s; Springs
28s l%d.
Bonds: 2% per cent Consols £73%
British 3% per cent War Loan
£100%; British Funding 4s 1960-90
£110%.
NELSON CURLING RINK
LIMITED "DISSOLVED"
Notice is given in the current issue of the B. C. Gazette that "the
Nelson Curling Rink, limited was. . .
struck off the register and dissolved."
CAMROSE, Alta. (CP).—When
Andrew Doucette. instructor in the
normal school here, returned from
his two-month's vacation he discovered these unusual circumstances. His home had been burglarized,
one of the beds had been occupied,
and -everything had been -tossed
about as if a big party was held
before he got there.
A. M, Webb
& Co., Ltd.
INVESTMENTS
562 WARD ST.     NELSON
Phone 923—8 a.m. to Noon
 ^'l.^^<'y'w"'yj>.'.'y^?^^wi!w^'M^<w»»w»
PAGE TEN
NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B. C.-TUESDAY MORNING. SEPT. 21, 1937,
FICTION
Library Discards Clearing
At 351 Each
3 for $|.00
Mann, Rutherford
Drag Co.
W.F. Mercier Is
Dead, Portland
Former CP. Shipyard
Worker Left Nelson
Many Years Ago
Word has been received In Nelson
o. the death in Portland, Oregon,
of a Nelson old-timer in the person
of William F. Merrier. He collapsed
while at work on Terminal No. 4
in Portland and died from natural
causes. Mr. Mercier resided in Nelson well over 30 years ago and was
for many years with the C. P. H.
shipyards where he was forcm-n
under the late James M. Bulger. He
left Nelson to take up residence in
Portland.
At the time of his death he was
67 years of age. He is survived by
his wife, Mrs. Merrier, his daughter Mrs. R. P. Mullen, and two sons,
N. F. and Joseph, and two sisters,
Margaret Mercier and Mrs. F. W.
Conway, all of Portland, and a brother, T. E. Burns, of St Louis.
Funeral services took place on
August 27 from the Holy Redeemer
Church in Portland to Mount Calvary cemetery.
SALVATION ARMY HEAD
WILL VISIT CANADA
LONDON, Sept. 20 (CP-Havas)-
General Evangeline Booth, international commander of the Salvation
army, will leave Southampton Wednesday for New York to spend almost two months in Canada and the
United States. General Booth will
lecture in Winnipeg and Montreal.
trapTed on trestle
school boy killed
TACOMA, Wash., Sept. 20 (AP).
—Trapped on a log trestle, Charles
A. Brosamer, 15, freshman football
player at Bellarmine high school
here, was killed by a trolley car
today.
HE WAS SECRETARY
TO THEODORE ROOSEVELT
GLEN COVE, N.Y.. Sept. 20. (API
—William Loen. 70, died in a hospital yesterday of pneumonia. He was
a secretary of late President Theodore Roosevelt.
J. A. C. Laughton
Optometrist
Dominion Asks
Trail Council
lo Cut Trees
Declares   Huge   Elms
Nuisance; Letter Is
Tabled for Time
COUNCIL ORDERS
A FLUME BUILT
TRAIL, B. C, Sept. 20—In response to a letter from the Trail-
Tadanac school board the Trail city
council, meeting Monday evening,
set next Monday as the date when
they would meet members of the
board to receive estimates of extraordinary expenditure.
Letter received _rm the secretary
of the Union of B. C. Municipalities
suggesting the council approve the
amendment to the Library act was
filed.
The district resident architect
of the Dominion department of
public works wrote a.klng that
the lone tree on Cedar avenue
fronting the post office, be removed as.it was considered a
menace. As the government was
paying for the black topping
which was being done In front
of the building, it was felt they
were entitled to this consideration.
Request alio wa« made that two
trees   on Eldorado street   be removed since they were creating
too much shade for the worn of
office employees.   The letter was
tabled for consideration.
Water applications of J. W. Laz-
areff and A. Hubscher were referred to the fire, water and light committee and the city engineer. S. S.
McDiarmid, with power to act.
Report of Fire Chief A. A. MacDonald covering the convention of
fire chiefs at Spokane was filed.
In the report Chief MacDonald
stated Alderman John Young, whd
accompanied him to'the convention,
was introduced as an honored guest.
NEW FLUME
The city engineer was instructed
to go ahead with construction of a
new flume at the rear of the Montana hotel on Rossland avenue,
Speaking for the board of works,
Alderman J. R. Anderson recommended a wall be put back Si Helena street on the property adjacent
to the home being erected by Gordon Redgrave. The hole will be
left so that steps may be built. The
recommendation was passed.
W. E. B. Monypenny, city clerk,
was instructed to write to the Motor
Inn advising them that it was too
late to commence blacktopping the
road fronting their property.
A: B. Thompson accepted the appointment to the council of the
Health League of Canada. Dr. J.
L. Gayton city health officer, will
be asked by letter to also represent
the city of Trail on the health
council.
Orioles to Meet
Newark in Final
BALTIMORE, Sept, 20 (AP)-Bal-
timore Orioles defeated Montreal
Royals, 4-2, tonight to win their
semi-final series in the International
baseball league's post-season playoffs and enter the final round agaist
the Champion Newark Bears for the
governors cup and the right to represent the league in the little world
series.
Score:
Montreal   100 000 100—2    7    1
Baltimore .... Oil 022 OOx—4   12    0
Smythe and Hargrave; Fischer,
Sivess and Gray.
(Baltimore wins aeries, 3-1).
Suite 205
Medical Arts Bldg
Sell It With a Want Ad
Burns Coal & Cartage Co.
Nelson, B. C.
Gait, Wildfire and Greenhill Coals
Cordwood and Millwood
Lumber and Timbers
General Hauling
Warehousing.
Agenri (or
CANADA ROOF PRODUCTS LTD.
PACIFIC COAST PIPE CO., LTD.
PHONE 53
518 WARD ST.
THE
HUNTING
SEASON
IS
NOW
OPEN
BE SURE AND GET THE
AMMUNITION THAT IS
Best by Test!
FOR extreme high velocity
shooting we recommend
Dominion Pneumatic Cartridges, and for standard sighting
we recommend Dominion Soft
Point High Velocity Cartridges.
Call and see us about your
hunting requirements and look
over our stock of up-to-date
equipment.
Wood, Vallance
Hardware Company, Ltd.
DEATHS
(By The Canadian Press)
NEW YORK—Herman L. Gant-
voort, 50, former theatrical producer, actor, songwriter and script
writer for silent pictures.
LONDON — Winnie Melville, «,
actress-singer.
MONTREAI^Harold Rolph, 65,
president of engineering firm.
BELF AST-William James Whiteside, wireless operator at the Father
Point station of the St. Lawrence
river at the time of the Titanic disaster in 1912,
VANCOUVER — Mrs. William
Craig, 73, hurt in fall two weeks ago.
"Miss Idaho" Hurt
in Auto Crash
MOSCOW, Idaho, Sept. 20 (API.
—One University of Idaho student
was killed and three persons—one of
them "Miss Idaho of 1937"—were injured in an automobile crash between here and Pullman, Wash., this
morning.
Bob Baker was killed. His sister,
Martha Jane, a university graduate
last June and named "Miss Idaho'
for the San Francisco Bay bridge
celebration, was injured.
Brake, Wheeler
and Richard's
Rinks Winners
Three further contests in the slow
moving mixed doubles tourney of
the C. P. R. Lawn Bowling club,
which opened here Labor day, went
by the board Monday night, Mrs. E.
Y. Brake's, Mrs. F. E. Wheeler's
and Mrs. A. T. Richard's rinks chalking up wins.
High scoring for the winners was
the order of the night as the results
following show:
Mrs. Richards 17, Mrs. W. T. Calbick 5.
Mrs. Wheeler 22, Mrs, J. T. Sindel
7.
Mrs. Brake 26, Mrs. A. G. Lane 7.
In another game of the same tourney played previously. Mrs, Brake's
rink triumphed over that of Miss
Grace Laughton's, 17-13.
Rinks, in order of skip and lead,
follow:
Mrs. Brake and H. H. Sutherland,
Mrs. Lane and F. N. Lang, Mrs.
Wheeler and F. E. Wheeler, Mrs.
Sindfl and J. Graham, Mrs. Richards
and N. J. Lowes, Mrs. Calbick and
Allan Bennett, and Miss Laughton
and E. W. Penwill.
Battling through a tight game to
a tie Mrs. J. C. Hooker and Mrs.
W. Calbick's rinks closed their late
game 18-18 Monday night.
Teams in order of skip and lead
were:
Mrs. Calbick and E. Stangherlin;
and Mrs. Hooker and C. I. Archibald.
TREAT ML ALIKE
IN WORLD TRADE
DEMANDS HULL
BOSTON, Sept. 20 (AP)— Secretary of State Cordell Hull pleaded
today for an end to unlicenced force
and the return of a "reign of law"
in the world.
The way to this, the United States
cabinet member asserted, is through
world-wide liberalization of trade
policies on the principle of equality of treatment for all.
"The world needs a return to belief in the pledged word, in a reign
of law rather than unlicenced force,
in the supreme value of human
rights and liberties," the secretary
of state said.
Hull warned prosperity engendered by huge armament expenditures is artificial and temporary.
Want Ads Get Results
News of the Day
LOST—Red Sox softball mask. Return to Gelinas' store. (2562)
BOYS'   BAND   PRACTICE TONIGHT, 7:30 SHARP. (2F63)
Musical Supplies of any description.
KOOTENAY MU8IC HOUSE
(2453)
BOWL ON STANDARD SIZE ALLEYS AT GELINAS' RECREATION
(2175)
CIVIC THEATRE every week day
over CJAT, 5:10 p.m.
(2558)
LUNCH at the GOLDEN  GATE
CAFE. A good menu to choose from.
(2497)
FIVE CASH PRIZES
Whlst — To-night at 8:30 p. m.
Cathedral hall. (2550)
School authorities are complaining parents allow their children to
stay up too late.
IT'S COOLER THESE NIGHTS-
HOW ABOUT CHILE CON CARNE
AT GRENFELL'S CAFE?       (2559)
H. M. Angus, Pianist, Accompanist, Teacher.   All grades. Advanced
Acoustics. Expert Tuner. Ph. 544.
(2501)
Have your Photos for Christmas
taken while In for the Pair. Special
offer now.   VOGUE STUDIO.
(2552)
A complete price range of Electric
Heating Pads.
McKAY & STRETTON
(2481)
You get better reception with
BURGE8S A, B & C Radio Batteries
and 1000 Hour A Battery. Hipperson's. (2503)
Reserve Friday, October 29th for
Kootenay District Masonic Ball In
the. Civic Centre. Everybody welcome. (2543)
LADIES—mannish tailored suits and
top coats made to your Individual
measure.   Fit guaranteed,
JACK   BOYCE
(2553)
NELSON BADMINTON ASS'N.
ANNUAL MEETING TUE8., SEPT.
21, 8 P. M., at CIVIC BADMINTON
LOUNGE. IMPORTANT BUSINESS
ALL INTEREST-ED PLEASE ATTEND. (2544)
Mr. E. E. Richards of Victoria, will
give an Illustrated lecture In the
Baptist church at 8 p.m. Wednesday.
Subject: "The Kingdom and the
Throne of the Lord." Auspices British Israel Association. (2561)
Phone KITCHENER'S'for Floral
designs and cut flowers.        (2496)
ATTENTION
KNIGHT8 OF PYTHIAS
All Knights and Visiting Brothers
are requested to be at Lodge 7:30
p.m. sharp tonight to meet our
Grand Chancellor Bro. Batten of
Revelstoke, Pythian Sisters at 9
p.m. (2556)
NOTICE
A public meeting to make plans
for the sending of fruit, vegetables,
etc. from the district to needy people in the drought-stricken areas in
the prairie provinces will be held in
the Council Chamber of the City
Hall tonight at 8 o'clock. All interested in this necessary work are invited to attend.
J. P. MORGAN,
Mayor.
(2513)
FUNERAL NOTICE
SEVERN— Passed away at Vancouver, Sunday, September 19, Harry
Severn, age 60 years. Funeral service will be held at St. Andrew's
Anglican church Wed., Sept. 22 at
1 p.m. Rev. L. A. Morrant, officiating. Clark's Funeral Chapel in
charge of arrangements.        (2565)
H. W. CANN IS
LAID AT REST
Funeral service for H. W. Cann,
who passed away Friday in the Kootenay Lake General hospital, was
held at 2. pjn. Monday from the
Davis Funeral Service parlors. Rev.
H. W. Guscott conducted the services
at the parlors and graveside. Miss
Alice May Eccles presided at the
organ and the hymn sung was
"Abide With Me." Pallbearers were
William Campion, S. C. Scott, William Eccles, Hager Renwick, F. C.
Davis and A. E. Cornfield. Interment was In the^Ielson cemetery.
Britain Offers New
Trade Concessions
lo Foreign Nations
Eden Willing to Lessen
Preference to Colonies,
Not Dominion
GENEVA Sept. 20 (CP-Havas). —
Great Britain is ready to contribute
to world economic betterment by
opening discussions with all governments looking toward a modification of preferential customs duties
in British colonial territories, Foreign Secretary Eden told the League
of Nations assembly today.
He also stated that a most-f avor-
ed-natlon agreement between
Great Britain and the United
States "would be of capital interest to the entire world."
Eden declared Great Britain's
protectionist policy had been unjustly criticized. An important part
of the British market remains largely open, aiding world economic recovery and proving Britain's policy
is elastic, he said.
SPECIAL ROUND TRIP EXCURSION RATES AT FARE
AND ONE QUARTER
TO THE
NELSON FALL FAIR
BY GREYHOUND
Tickets on sale from Tuesday,
September 21st, to Monday, September 27th, inclusive, Return
limit, midnight Monday, September 27, 1937.
See your local Greyhound agent
for particulars.
Commencing Tuesday evening,
Sept. 21st., a limited number of
keys to the Treasure Chest will
be distributed by Greyhound
Lines to passengers arriving at
Nelson.
Greyhound Lines
Nelson Denot - 205 Baker St.
PHONE 800        (2232)
TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY
LOST - WALLET CONTAINING
money, driver's licence, Vancouver address. Reward. Return to
Daily News. (2560)
ROOM AND BOARD, 512 Carbonate
street.  Phone 273-L. (2564)
30th  ANNUAL
NELSON
FAIR
3—BIG DAYS—3
CIVIC CENTRE-NELSON, B.C.—SEPT. 22-23-24
Reduced Rates on All Transportation Lines
l P.M.    TWICE DAILY     8 P.M.
FOUR
"JOE FANTON TRIO"
SENSATIONAL RING ACT
DON LAVOLA
KING OF THE WIRE
MacDONALD TRIO
FOUR
*
ACTS
TRICK BICYCLISTS
"DUKE"
KOOTENAY'S OWN  WONDER  DOG
ACTS
AUCTION SALE
OF PRIZE BOXE8
OF APPLES
Friday Night 9 o'clock
Special
For the Wind Up of the Thirtieth Annual Fair
THE SILVER TONE SEVEN ORCHESTRA
has been especially engaged for a mammoth dance In the amusement
hall Civic Centre on  Friday evening Sept. 24th—Tickets 60c
DON'T FORCET YOUR KEYS FOR THE TREASURE CHEST
NOTICE TO
EXHIBITORS
ALL  EXHIBITS  MUST  BE  IN
THE RINK BY 8 O'CLOCK THIS
EVENING - ENTRANCE FROM
RECREATION  GROUNDS
NEW PRICES
OF ADMISSION
Adults 251     Children  15?
NO SEASON TICKETS
HORTH. SASK.
ABLAZE WITH
FOREST FIRES
REGINA, Sept. 20 (CP)—Forest
fires in northern Saskatchewan are
now beyond control, Hon. T. C. Davis
acting minister of natural resources,
said today. The fires are the worst in
the province's history, and there is
little hope for thousands of acres
of timber unless rain comes immediately.
Eire fighting operations now engage 2000 men.
"The whole north is ablaze," Mr.
Davis said.
TURNER VALLEY SEEKS
WIDER OIL MARKETS
CALGARY, Sept. 20 (CP)-Seek-
ing wider markets for the production of Turner Valley, now rated
at' 10,000 barrels of crude oil daily,
the aid of Sir Edward Beatty, president of the Canadian Pacific railway,
was sought by the Petroleum Producers' association here.
Mellon Millions
Go to Charities
PITTSBURGH, Sept. 20 (AP).-
The will of the late Andrew W.
Mellon, leaving his entire fortune
ot between $100,000,000 and $200,-
000,000 to his educational and charitable trust, was filed -today.
Jack Ludlow, Hurt
in Bicycle-Auto
Crash, Progresses
Jack Ludlow, son of Mr. and Mrs.
J. E. Ludlow, 609 Cedar street, who
was injured Thursday morning when
his bicycle struck an auto driven
by Carl A. Larson, is reported to
be making steady progress in the
Kootenay Lake General hospital.
The lad's injuries consisted of a
crushed chest, deep wounds in his
back and one in each leg and
bruises. His bicycle struck the
auto when he was riding down
Silica street on to Ward street, and
Mr. Larson was turning off Ward
up Silica street.
LOST YOUTH LEAVES
NAME, ARROW. ON TREE
TIMMINS, Ont., Sept. 20 (CP)—
Discovery of the name "Bill Barilko"
and an arrow freshly carved on a
tree trunk encouraged searchers today as they pressed a hunt through
Godfrey township bush for the 20-
year-old Timmins youth, lost since
last Wednesday.
EMPIRE FARMERS
TO MEET AT SYDNEY
SYDNEY, Australia, Sept. 20 —
(CP). — A conference of Empire
farmers will be held here in March
when agricultural problems will be
threshed out by experts from the
Dominions, colonies and United
Kingdom.
The meeting follows the suggestions of Canadian agricultural leaders.
THREE DRUNKS ATTACK
COAST VISITOR ON FERRY
VANCOUVER, B.C., Sept. 20 (CP)
-S. Abrahamson, a visitor here from
Portland, Ore., reported to city police he was attacked by three men
on a harbor ferry Sunday. evening.
Abrahamson said the men were apparently intoxicated.
Catacombs of the early Christian
era have been discovered five miles
from Nazareth, with inscription and
pictures still preserved in them.
ROOFING
Eaves Troughs, etc.
R. H. Maber
Phone 665      610 Kootenay St.
Union Packing
Co. Ltd.
OF
CALGARY, ALBERTA
Meat Packers and
Proyisioners
MAKERS OF:
The Famous Tender Made Hams
and Tender Made Picnic Shoulders.  Thistle  and   Home   Brand
Products.
We have taken over the
Williams' Cartage Co., cold
storage plant in Nelson, and
will in future carry a stock
of these products for the accommodation of the retail
merchants and grocers.
MR. W. McCAMON, who
has represented the company in the Kootenays for
the past 10 years, assisted
by Mr. J. Rich, will be in
charge.
UNION PACKING
CO., LTD.
Box 879 Phone 106
NELSON, B.C.
PANTS
for
Work or Dress
WORSTEDS In dark shades
and Grey Cheviots, 69 £Q
GENUINE "DIXON" *M Q__
TWEEDS: Pair W'J'*
ENGLISH HAIRLINE
™USER8: $4-50
FINE WOOL WORSTED8. In
many new patterns: CJC nt
Pair : . _W->
YOUNG MEN'8 COLLEGI-
ATE8. New and ()A|J
•mart: Pair 9*7*
GODFREYS'
 LIMITED
378 BAKER       PHONE 270
EMORY'S.
Limited
NEW
DISCOVERY
Holds Up Sockt without
separate Garters.
The quickest way to put on g
It to «llp Into Holeproof Auto-
oart Socki. Tht knitted-ln Lute*
topi hold them up tccurely and
com. through every washing with
elasticity perf-cll Tint your ltd
to a pair now. You'll thank I
Newest styles.
JlOltPWOO
AUTOGART
SOCKS
TESTED AND APPROVB) IY
HET1ER FABRICS TESTING BUREAU
VANCOUVER, Sept. 20 (CP);
Sidney Barrett, 58-year-old war ve
eran pleaded guilty to arson tods
and was remanded to Sept. 24 II
sentence. Barrett threw gasolln
soaked rags on the root ol a neigl
bor's house following a quarrel.
^■3
-WHAT MAN COULD RESIST...
...the flame of love that burned in her
eyes—the allure of her lips...Magnetic
Dietrich —daring Donat —togetherl
ALEXANDER KORD*/.w,-rt.
m a r i f n r r o n f R t
DIETRICH DONAT
From .ho novel by Directed by ■# J
JAMES HILTON • JACQUES. FEYDER        ,]
— Added Short Subjects —
WALT DISNEY'S   "MICKEY'S AMATEURS"
Comedy—"STRIKE, YOU'RE OUT"
"CAFE METROPOLE"
and "MIDNITE TAXI"
;■  ,.'.      ■        ,. .
.    _ _______
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