 -   '  LIBRARY
Hartnett Sets Catching Record;
Feller Loses Duel   '•'.
Page Nlnt
$21,769 Estimated Needed for
Nelson Street Railway
Page Eleven
BRITISH COLUMBIA. CANADA-SATURDAY MORNINO. SEPT. 2. 1989.
NUMBER 111
MB 17 CITIES:
Britain and France Qive Qermany Last Warning
France Said Unanimous for Support by War
FRENCH FORCES
AWAIT WORD TO
ASSIST POLAND
Ultimatum   Demands
Immediate Halt
of Attack
CIVILIANS WILL
, NOT BE BOMBED
By CHARLES 8. POLTZ, tr.
Anoclittd Prut Stiff Writer
PARIS, Sept 1 (AP)-(Puwd
by tht Frtnch Censor)—France's
powerful fighting forcei, strength,
entd by general mtblllutlon,
tonight wert prepared te go to
tha aid ef htr Polish ally In war
agalnit Germiny. Thay awaited
only the word to move.
France, Ilka Britain, today aent
Oerminy tht equivalent of tn
ultlmttum demanding an Immed
lata halt of aggressive action and
wlthdnwil a? German troopi
from Poland.
But tha Nail aniwer, even before tha meiuge wu delivered
to Otrmtn dlplomiti prtptrlng
to luvt Pirii; wai practically
tartaln te ba a flat "no".
Officially, the flnt day af
French general mobilization dates
from midnight tonight Actually,
It hu bun In affect fer aeveral
daya. ■■   '■. ,
. MARTIAL U^7.7,?.-n:?ZSt&'.
Martial   law   wu   proclaimed
throughout France. But the tact li
the army, nivy and air
,icen ln control ot everything nee
•;sary tor dayi in a imooth, order
ly chinge over from normal con.
trol by civil authoritiei.
(Continued on Page Nine)
Lightning Disables
Power at Cranbrook
CRANBROOK, B. C Sept 1
(CP).—Leu than one-tenth an
Inch of rain fell here thia attar,
noon ending a 90-day drought but
making little impreuion on inchu
ot duit or the precarioui foreit
condition!. Accompanying lightning disabled the power syitem at
4:10, at 8:30 power wu itill oft
Ultimatum   Delivered
in Germany Goes
Unanswered
LITTLE HOPE OF
HITLER HALTING
PARIS. Sept 1 (Saturday) (AP)
—Authoritative French sources
uid todiy thit Pirliament would
decide unanimously to lupport
Poland by making war on Germany.
A Freneh-Brittih ultimatum delivered ln Germany and demanding the Immediate withdrawal of
German troopi now Invading Poland went unanswered. (This dispatch wu filed from Paris at 8:88
a.m., Paris time—8:85 p.m., Friday, PST.)
By J, P. SANDERSON
LAST WARNING
LONDON, Sept I (CP Cable).
(Continued on Page light).
CENSORSJPlN
CANADA TO GET
STARTED TODAY
OTTAWA, Sept 1 (CP)-IniUal
itepi In providing for a censorship In Canada probably will be
taken tomorrow by the appointment of a chief prtu censor, it
wu learned tonight In the Grut
Wir CoL E. J. Chambera, gentleman usher ot the blade rod in the
Senate held that port wtth thr
title at Director ot War Preu
Bureau.
Canada wm probably be divided
hto 11 district! tor applying ctn-
eonhlp, etch with a regional een*
tor acting under instructions trom
the chief censor. This organisation
will work ln cooptration with tht
newipapen and newi agencies in
preventing the publication of ntws
which would be ot advntage to
the enemy.
The Canadian Broadeutlnf Cor
poration already hu authority bj
ihe statute under which it wu ut
up to censor radio broadcutlng, and
this responsibility likely will be
left with tbe corporation,  i
However, to provide for uniform,
lty In cenaonbjp u between ntwi
publiihed ind newi broadcut lt is
expected the chief preu censor uid
the official! of tht CBC will work
ln close cooperation.
TO FIGHT A 10-YEAR WAR"
ANESL
.  :
"England Did Not Play Fair
Says Long German Attack on
Britain; England Sought War
Cities Which May Become the Object of Aerial Bombs
„ The Al
distance bet
which mty, be
* bra ike'•one' ~Qe
miles to fly tn
,ug. 28,1814.
ITALY PLANS TO'
TAKE NO ACTION
IN HOSTILITIES
Expected to Stay Out
Unless Own Land
Is Attacked
RELIEVES  PEOPLE
By RICHARD M. MA880CK
ROMS, Sspt 1 (AP)-Thi Italian government declared today It
would refrain from taking "any
Initiative" In military operations
Rrawing eut of tha Germin-Pollih
Mtllltttt.
Tht announcement, Issuid ifter
a brief ctblntt muting called
by Premier Muatollnl, wu Inter
fireted In foreign olrclea u mitn
ng Italy Intended to ttty eut of
wir until har own territory wu
attacked.
Tha government announeid It
tonsldered  preeautloniry  miu-
nituie already
German   Nation
Stunned at Rush
of Events
DETERMINED TO
' DO THEIR DUTY
BERLIN, Sept 3 (Saturday)-
(AP).—In a long attack on Great
Britain, German political circlei
through the official newi igency
declared todty tint "Germiny i!
reidy to fight t 10-yter wir lor
iti right! and tha final peace ot
Europe*?
Answering what lt charged wen
Engliih effort! to put the blime
on Germany for failure of recent
diplomatic negotiation! in the Poliih conflict the commentary uld:
"England did not play fair. When
that
^Bridges Found Intact-
After Raid Over
Warsaw
HEAVY CARGOES
one   considers
Englmd,
TO HAVE RUSSIA
AND JAPAN SIGN
ROOSEVELT HAS BROAD RANGE OF
POWERS TO PRESERVE NEUTRALITY
By ANDRUI
WASHINGTON, Sept 1 (AP)-
Freildent Rooievelt hu a broad
range of powers, uide from thou
conferred by the Neutrality Act
taking luppllu beyond what may
United Statei neutrality.
Soma are remnanta ot tha Great
War, aome were put on the atatute
book! before the wir. Ai a whole
they give tbe Preiident about u
much power u dou the Neutrality
Act All are designed to keep Amer-
BIRDING
Icmi from helping one ildt or tht
othtr in t conflict
By virtue ot a law ot 1917 the
Preiident In a war in which tha
United Statu ii a neutral, may detain any armed veuel, American
or foreign, ln an American port
until lt li proved to him that the
vessel will not be employed igalnst
tny nation with which the United
States ii it peice ind tint it will
not bt iold to a belligerent nation.
(Continued on Page Nina)
Germany Bigger Than 1914 tee.
HITLER ADDS 80,000
SQUARE MILES AND
20,000,000 PEOPLE
One-Third Annexed Population Non-German;
Natural Resources, Factories Vital
to Nazi Economy Gained
A program for tha German people that itemed fantattle 8>/t yean
ago whan Adolf Hitler took ovtr tht Wllhelmitraut hn added to tha
Rifeh ttrrltorlu tqual almoit to tha area ef Great Britain and a population nearly double that of Canada.
In addition to changing tha Inttrntl itrudurt ef Gtrmtny and
uwlng tha ittdt ef Nuldom, Fuehrer Hitler hn fitttntd tht borders
tf tht Rtlch by mort thin 80/100 iquirt mllu and added 20,000,000
people to the population of Greater Germany.
Whilt upwtrd of one-third of tht tnntxtd populttlon are non-
Qermins, tht territory tbiorbed by plebiscite and occupation eonttlni
natural rtaoureu and factories.
vital to tht Nui economy.
A lucetulon ot bold diplomatic
itrokei, culminitlng In tht historic
non-iggreulon treaty with Russia,
Md t lerles ot bloodlui conquests
'hat radically altered the map of
Europe htvt brought tht 80-year-old
Hitler trom the role of an obscure
visionary to a position of world
t gnlficance.
NAZI HOUR STRIKES
iper-hanger and a
. army dur-
MQSCOW, Sept 1 (AP)-Oer-
mtny wu reported uofficlally tonight to bt making feverish diplo-
mitic effortl to arrange a non-
aggression pact between Soviet
Russia and Japan who have been
engaged in sporadic border fighting on the Manchoukuo-outer Mongolia frontier for months.
Inunenu difficultlei obviouily
lie in the wiy ot such an agreement, observers agree.
On another diplomatic front Informed sources uld thty were skep-
tical ot rumori trom abroad that
Russia and Germany would enter
a military alliance as a sequel to
their own non-aggression pact
Formation ot the new moderate
Japanese cabinet, it wu sugguted
would pruent complications for
German diplomats seeking non-ag-
Jresslon ties between Ruula and
■pan.
B.C. Members lo
Leave for Ottawa
Hitler, formtr
' corporal in the
ing tht Grut Wir, htd tean In hli
eyu on the iftemoon ot January
30, 1933, when ht left the presidential palace ln Berlin ifter accepting
President Piul von Hindenburg's
invitation to form a government.
The Nui hour had itruck ind
when liter in the Kalserhof Hotel
he confronted his imall band ot
clou followers, Dr. Piul Joieph
Goebbels, Hermtnn Wilhelm Goerlng and othen, ba wu unable to
ipeak at tint
(Continued en Page Three)
VANCOUVER, .Sept 1 (CP). -
British Columbia memben of the
Houae of Commoni now In Vancouver today raid they would leave
during the next two dayi for Ot'
tiwi to ittend the extraordinary iei-
lion of Parliament lummoned to
meet September 1.
Then Included Howard Green,
Coniervative, Vancouver-South: G.
G. McGeer, Liberal, Vancouver-Bur,
rard; Angui Maclnnls, ti. ti. T. Van-
couver-Eut and C. Grant MacNeil,
Vancouver-North.
Other British Columbia memben
who will leave thtir homu to at
tend the teuton are W. K. Esling,
Kootenay Wut; Hon. H. H. Steveni.
Coniervative, Kootenay-Eait; Tom
Reid, Liberal, New Wutmlnster, and
J. G. Turgeon, Liberal, Cariboo.
Mr. Miclnnii uid today that, tn
all probability, the C. C. F. would
call a National Council meeUng in
Ottawa before Parliament opens.
"We are very anxloui to discuss tht
whole situation before wt htvt to
make a decision in the Houie," he
stld.
MEN ENLIST AT
GERMAN CONSUL
OFFICE NEW YORK
NEW YORK, Sept t (AP). - A
voluntary enlistment begin todty it
the officu of the Germin Consulite,
by men who itood to lou thtir Germin cltiienship if thty did not register for military urvice.
Dr. Htni Borchen, tht Germin
Consul-General tnd hli itaff withheld ill comment tnd would not
even confirm thtt volunteen wett
being registered.
Canadian Troopi
Pay It Higher
OTTAWA, Sept 1 (CP)-The
pay of Canadian troopi on active
tervlce ii higher today than ln
1814. Instead of $1.10 a day paid
during tha Great War soldlen ot
the non-permanent active mllltla
now being called out on active
service will receive $1.30. This
rate wu announced by tha Defence Department today,
Thli li the pay ot tiie private
soldier. If he haa dependent! the
additional amount payable to hi!
wife (or femal relative who hu
been respomiblt for tht cire ind
management of hii home prior
to enlistment) ll $85 a month.
For etch dependent child the 10I-
dter will receive an allowance ol
another $18 a.month.
FLASHES
WARSAW, Sept » (Saturday-
(CP.-Havu)—The Foreign Office
uid today that German war planu
resumed their attack! on Pollih cities shortly after dawn.
Pultusk wu bombed, it wu announced, and a squadron of German machines flew over Modlin.
Pultusk Is a town of about 20,000
Inhabitants, SO mllu North of Warsaw. Modlin la 10 miles Northwest
of the capital.
WARSAW, Sept 1 (Saturday)
(CP.-Havaa—Martial law wu pro-
claimed throughout Polind early
today.
CONVICT TE
WAT'PA
±
BERLIN, Sept 1 (AP). - Tha
commander of the Germany arm;
Nol.-Gen. Walther von Brauchiticl.
tonight declired the former Fru
City of Dinzlg to bt a region ot
military operatloni.
LONDON, Sept 1 (CP). (Parted
by Britiih Cenaor)—It wu lurned
authoritatively tonight that Britiih Ambauador Sir Nevile Hender-
son called on the German Foreign
Minister, Joachim von Ribbentrop,
in Berlin and handed him a communication relating to Prime Minister Chamberlain's ipeech to Pirliament today.
Foreign Office tourcea uid Von
Rlbbentrop told Sir Nevlle that he
muit refer the communication to
Fuehrer Hitler.
Mining Inititute
Urgei Index of Men
for Technical .Duty
CALGARY. Sept t (CP)i - The
Canadian Inititute of Minimi ind
Metallurgy, at the Weitern C*ada
convention htrt today, ient t two-
lution to Prlmt Minliter MicktsWe
King urging indexing of specialists
so thit men but qualified to render
engineering -or other technological
service ln tht event of war will bt
tvalltble immediately.
The Institute, along with tha En-
Sneering Inititute ot Canadi ind
e Cmadian Institute of Chemistry
recently forwarded data from 30,000
arsons to the Department of
ational Defence:-
VANCOUVER, Sept 1 (CP). -
William McKelvey, lerving i four-
year penitentiary term imposed on
him in County Court two years ago
tor conspiring to defraud, today
told a Police Commission inquiry
that he ind associates had paid
$6000 "protection money" to a former detective of tha Vancouver
Police Depirtment.
: Mayor tyle Telford obtainedMc-
Kelvey'i release from Newwut-
minister penitentiary on order of
Mr. Justice D, A. McDonald to that
he could appear u a witness at the
hearing to substantiate charges that
the mayor madt in tn iffldivlt presented to the commission lut Tuuday.
McKelvey uld the monty wu 10
ptr cent ot a $80,000 fraud and
mentioned namu ot a deceased de
tectlve and one who wai dismissed
leveral yean ago u being recipient
of "payoff money.
The wltneu uld he had made t
itatement on April 3, 1837, at the
home of Superintendent Herbert
Darling, at that time hud ot the
criminal Investigation branch and
since returned to the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, regarding the
alleged "payoffs."
MORE WAR NEWS
Children leave London, page 7,
Goerlng war order, page 7.
Canada moves fast pagi 7.
Chimberliln, pages 7 and 8.
NELSON —j..
Victoria  —.
Nanalmo   	
Vincouver _
Kamloopi 	
Prince George
Estevan Point
Prince Rupert
Langara
Atlin
Mln.
88
83
48
81
82
88
40
49
81
41
37
88
88
58
M
82
87
58
80
,47
46.
41
44
58
Max.
74
88
74
68
83
70
63
56
56
54
61
67
78
66
■76
74
84
80
76
85
76
cablnit met
tht United Statei Ambuudor
Wllllim Phillips delivered to tht
fortlgn offlct a mttugt from
President Rooievelt expressing
hoot wirrlng nttloni would retrain from air bombtrdmentt in
civilian*.
(Contlnutd on Ptgt Nlnt.)
through unconditional lupport of
the Polish itindpoint, Immediately
removed every possibility of German-Polish understanding and the
strange diplomatic attitude of
England during the lut dayi, then
one reilizes thtt England wants
a European wir and intentionally
prepared it"
By LOUIS P. LOCHNER
Auoolattd Preu Staff'Writer
■#fO«*OMUl»Y,--»-^ -}*--, ■.-'.
BERLIN, Stpt' 1tt-*.. '-* With
tht German army asserting Its column! were "deep In Polish territory" tonight, the German nation
stood somewhat stunned and dazed
at the aweep ot eventi, u the fint
diy of its undeclared war with
Poland ended.
(Continued en Page light)
DROPPED IN AREA
i By LLOYO LIHRBAS
Auoclattd Prtu Staff Writer
WARSAW, .Stpt 1 (APWVit
Budapest)—Battles between German and Polish troopi raged un-
abated tonight in Polish border
areu, a general ataff communique
Mid.
The most violent fighting WU
reported trom Silesia, ont of the
three mtln sectors in which Germiny launched ita invulon ot Polind eirly today to begin ber undeclared wtr.
Tht general itaff uld. 1$ Gar-
man warplanei were ihot down
and that Nazi fliers had bombed
17 Polish cities, including Waruw.
Two Polish planes wera lost
Casualtiei had not betn dtter-
mined.
Huge, high-flying bombtra
dropped Urge cirgoei ot explo-
■ivu ln the Wirsaw area close
on the heels of similar raldi on
numerous smaller cities. Tha land
attacks, official advicu Mid, were
in, ibue main- lectors;  -,c,  .
First trom East Prussia agalnit
Dzialdowo and Mlawa; second, from
Pomerania agalnit Chojnice it the
narrowest put of the disputed Cor- ,
ridor; tnd third, trom Breslau
against Katowice.
The Nazi air ralden roeceedei
In getting over Winiw after they
slau
dtd
atl
(Contlnutd on Ptgt light).
Recruiting Begins Kootenayi
Today; Militia Is
CaU Broadcast; Nazis Being Watched; Men Leaving Job!
Four Batteries Being
Brought Up to War
Time Strength
Recruiting In full awing today
In Kootenayi.
Mllltla' unlti   In   Kooteniyi
mobilizing.   ,
Pellet kttp witch en Null.
Vtttran'a  reglitratlen  Hits
complete.
Europetn hostilities were brought
to the front door of Kootenay resl-
CRANBROOK, B. C, Sept 1-
Lltut-Col. O. Philpot stettd tonight tht 84th Field Brigade wu
moblllitd up to itrength for ictlvi
wrvlct undtr Sections 68 tnd 84
tf tht Mllltla Aot Tht bttttrlu
are Handing by In thtlr own bittery armorlei pending furthtr
trdtn.
dtnti Fridty. Complttr mobllin-
Uon of non-permanent militia unite,
hitherto a "ipare time occupation" of
a number of men who had in their
heart! the defence of the country,
wu ordered In telegram received
by battery commanden at Trail,
(Continued en Page light).
Consolidated Men
Warned lo Guard
Against Sabotage
TRAIL, B.C, Sept 1-* O.
Blaylock, President and Managing
Director of the Comolldated Mln*
Ing and Smelting Company Limited, warned employen of tha
aompany today to "keep alert to
prevent ubotege of any kind."
"It ieemi etrttln thtt our country li now at war." tha President's
statement read. "We have on our
force a number ef National! of
thou eountrlu with whloh wa
are fighting. Soma of then min
are naturalised Canadian! and
many othen ire probably not In
lympathy with thalr country'!
policy.
"Pending any action by tha Canadian authorltlei I would aik
every loytl Cinidlin to give thue
mtn tht benefit of tht doubt until thty htvt ihown thit they trt
not loyal to Canada. At tha iama
time I want to remind you thtt
wt mty hivt tctlvt tntmltt In
eur camps and It li tht duty af
tvtry ont to remimber thtt wt
are at war and to keep alert to
prevent ubotege of any kind."
Non-Permanent Units
Are Called Out for
• Defence Canada
OTTAWA. .Sept 1  (CP)-A
oriu and drill-halls throughout I
Dominion were hives of lnduil
tonight as orden were received 1
mobilization of Canada's non-pt
manent active militia. How m»
troops  are being called out
where they will be concentrated I
mained  a aecret ot tha defend
authoritiu.
"We appreciate that during j
Great  War  complete  lnformati
ai to the calling out ot the troo
and the enlistment ot unite
widely broadcast," uid one
official. "But at the moment w
everything coming ln a rush,
haven't  yet got a  clur pictu
as to how but the public Tn ten
can be served. Just exercise a litt
Eatience, and these thing! will !
oned out."
All branchu of the armed foi
have been placed on an active
vice footing, during the itett
"real or apprehended war" which
was proclaimed by the invocation
today of the War Measures Act
This means all the armed torcu so
mobilized are obligated to tha da-
fence ot Canada.
SERVICE WITHIN CANADA
Under present condition! the
fence ot Canada" entilli, for tha
(Contlnutd en Pigi light).
Qu'Appelle
Winnipeg
Forecut tor Kootenay—Moderate
winds, moitly Southerly, partly
cloudy and moderately
King George and
Turkish President
Exchange Messages
ANKARA, Turkey, Sept 1 (CP
Hivu). — A penonal meuage
trom King George to President
Ismet Inonu expressing profound
utlsfactlon at the friendly tlu bttwttn Great Britain and Turkey
In tha present hour wu banded
to the Turkish Preildent tonight
by tht Britiih Ambuudor.
Tne Preildent immtdittely replied ln ilmllar termi.
Tha Klng'l menage, presented by
Ambuudor Sir Hughe Knatchbull-
Hugeuen. expressed "warm greetings" and said that "in iuch inxl-
ous moments" tht King hid "profound sitisfiction in knowing that
tht two peoplu trt linked by .ties
friendship."
U.S. Neutrality lo Be Maintained
li War Declared; Nations Urged
to Refrain From Bombing Qviliar
WASHINGTON, Sept 1 (AP).-
_ belief thtt Gn
tin and Franca would decltrt wtr
Expressing belief thtt Grett Brit
on Germiny tomorrow, United
Statei Government officials said tonight they had finished drafting a
serlu ot proclamations designed to
preserve United States neutrality.
It wai mide known the Government would begin to luue these
proclamations over the weekend if
the war declarations are forthcoming Preiident Roosevelt at a press
conference earlier in the day, had
announced his administration would
do everything in iti power to keep
America out of tht conflftt.
The President later arranged to
addreu the nation over tht thrtt
major broadcasting companiu' facilities at 6 p.m. P. S. T. Sunday.
Aldei nld the talk probably would
bt informative In character, timed
tt tllaying any anxiety.
The President addressed messages
•ly.
Britain and Poland, asking thit they
to Germany, Italy, Trance, Great
exchange a public pledge to refrain
from bombing civilian populitioni
and unfortified cltiu.
(Contlnutd on Page Nine.)
mmM
 	
—
IANADI AN PRESS
)N WAR FOOTING
FO SUPPLY NEWS
.ondon Bureau Chief
Artery of War
News    '   "
TAFF TWICE AS
URGE AS 1914
TORONTO, Sept' 1 (CP)-If war
■souid come, Canadians are allied of getting through their
awipapers the fastest and most
implete reporting that ever sped
tan of bitUe to the folki bick
ome.
Chief artery of war newi would
a  London   Bureau   of  Tht  Ci-
adlan Press, manned by a 24-hour
iff of flvt men, trained in Can-
da and with Britiih and Euro-
Ian   experience   gained   in   the
tare and monthi  leading up to
tie crisis with IU fwar of nerves."
BUI The Cmadian Preu hit more
in twice u large a itaff to guide
oversell report u lt hid during
I Greit Wir, when a correspond'
&qouh'
r*jffis&£ti*
^+tt****Zm*^
ent at tha front and anothir at
London wert iU total personnel in
Europe. ,
TELEPRINTER CABLE
AvtlUblt alio trt tht fuU resources of Reuters, vut aad long.
utabluhed BriUsh news igtncy,
ind it New York, where The Ci-
nidtan Preu miintiint tn important bureau and iU main cable
duk, the reporta ot The Aiwci-
ited Preu ind Agtnct Htvu of
Frince. The London tnd Ntw York
bureiux of Tht Ctntditn Prtu ire
connected by a leued teleprinter
cable.
AU have been buiy itrengthen-
ing mlin strategic centres with additional staff men. Reuters, tor Instinct, hu reinforced iU Amsterdam office, unt a ipccUl correspondent to Wiruw, eitabllihed a
bureau ln Copenhagen, and enlarged iU head office itaff In London.
Complete Auoclatad Preu ataffi
at Parii, Rome and Berlin are
backed up by itaff correipondenU
•t Wtreaw, Danilg tnd Moicow,
keeping telephone tnd cible service lo the AP's London bureiu busy
with t steidy itream ot copy. Tht
AP Mtimttei IU Europem crew
tt four times u Urge u thit which
covered the Greit Wir.
PREPARED FOR RAIDS
Iniurtnce thit the newi (ou
through hu gone firther thin the
■ddlng of trained men to itaffi already expert Reuteri' new head-
qutrttn ln Flttt Street-news
cipital of Europe—U already und-
bigged. Tha building hu ipecltl
concrete bisemenU to protect the
staff ln case of air raids, and trained squadi for flre-tlghting tnd
tint tld. Tht foundition ot the
building off Flett Strut homing
Tht Ctntditn Preu ind Auoci-
ited Preu bureiux hu bten nnd-
begged. ArrangemenU ire mtdt to
transfer both officii from London
without deUy ihould tht neceuity
irise. ,
E. S. Johnion, superintendent ot
the London bureiu of The Canadian Preu, U back at hii desk
after an Auguit tour of European
capitals while war preparations
were at their height Henry C. Cassidy ot tha AP Paris itaff, back
from a tour ot the Wutern Front
ot 1918, reported increued mlUtary
activity all along the line. ■
BLACKPOOL, EngUnd CD-Jacob Epitein'i controversial symbolic
statue of Adam, on exhibition here,
hu been muUlated by Kmeone who
"ibient-mindedly" dug holei in tht
right leg, "pretunubly while listen-
ing to an art lecture," officlala explained. ,   .
NILSON DAILX NEWS. NELSON. B.Cf-tATURDAV MORNINO. SEPT. t
td Fltld Mirihill Goering to be-
so mathlng
Mtrihll
Hiller Blames Poland and Says
He Always Keeps His Promises
NEW YORK, Stal 1 (^).-Tht
Nitlonil Broadcasting Compiny iiiued the following lummiry ot
Adolf HiUer'i ReichiUg ipeech u
releued ln Berlin by the Oernvin
Government tnd reid over the tir
by Max Jordan, NBC repruenta-
tive in Europe:
Dinzlg hu ilwiyi, and atlll Is,
Germin. The corridor ilwiyi wu
•nd still U Germin. The Germin
Ciople hivt developed thou ttrrl-
riu, otherwUa they would atlll ba
barbarian. Thue terrltorlu wert
itvered trom Germiny, ciuiing untold lufferlng to the people who Uvi
there. By peaceful often of I peaceful revUion, I hive tried onct mort
to settle this problem. It U not true
thit wt hive tried to force the luue,
ind previoui issues, all tbe Ume.
There would htvt been Ume enough
to bring about iucIj peaceful rtvi-
ilon.
I mide propoul after propoiil.
concerning diurmiment, concerning
Austrit, concerning Ciecho • Slovakia, and many othtr luuu, but
lt U impossible to carry on If iuch
peaceful revision U found to be unachievable and If the intolerable
condition! persist It hu betn nld
that Germiny break! exlitlng treat-
iii.
•AYS TIME ELEMENT
IMPORTANT
I muit reply that Uie VerulUei
tretty to Germiny dou not mean
Uw, u lt wu forced upon Germiny
with point ot gum. Tht existing
problemi hive to be Mlved. Ihe
wutern powtra mty think thit there
vu no hurry in bringing about iuch
a solution, but tha time element U
not indifferent to us.
I have dlscuuad many pouible
■oluUoni with PolUh statesmen, I
mide in offer to them iome Umt>
•go which wu tht most loytl ind
moit generous Imaginable. Only I,
myself, could havt made such an
offer, although I knew mlllioni ot
Germihi disagreed with me it tha
time. Thi propoul wu turned down
■nd PoUnd then itarted a struggle
and itarted oppreulng tha German
minorities ln that country.
She did not observe her treaty
obligations. We do observe obligi'
tions we hava entered into. No
Frenchman who Uvts in the Saar
territory is being oppressed. I have
warned PoUnd that further mea-
suru of oppreulon and meuures
disregarding exUUng treaties on tht
part of Polind would mean that
ermany would have to act Moner
or liter, t told the Polish tmbusi-
dor here the Germany ot today it
no longer the Germany ot old.
BLAMES POLAND
No power on earth eould tolerate
iuch condlUoni in the long run. After a time, becaute I wu convinced
PoUnd reilly did not want a peace-
1888.
ful tgreement I propoied solution
on the basis of direct negoUitions.
For two long diyi I hive been wilt-
PRICES
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40 OZ. BOTTLE   $4.85
DMHItW tt*. loHW Ir Scetfierf
rm it t rm until
OTCH    WHISKY    AT    ITS
I advertiiement ii not published or dlspltyad by tha Liquor Control
Board or by the Government of BriUsh Columbia.
Guide for Travellers
NELSON'S LEADING HOTELS
ing to see what PoUnd would do.
All I received u an answer wu
that Poland did not want to negotiate with ui, and thU meuige did
not even reach us directly.
The German nation would duerve
to disappear from the political Kent
tf ahe itood for thU tort of treatment
My lovt of petct and my endless
pitienct ihould not be mistaken for
weikness. I, therefore, told the BritUh government lut night thit I
considered the suggestion I hid
mide for a peaceful lettlement of
the Pollih quuUon u i failure, but
that I uw no possibility now of
carrying on strious negotiations
with PoUnd. That country's mobilisation wu the tniwer to my propoul tnd lut night tgt In no leu
thtn 14 border incidenU had occurred which ire Poland'i responsibility.
I am now determined to talk the
same Unguaga to PoUnd that Poland hu been talking to ui. I have
given in to Uie wutern powers for
Hume Hotel Nelson, B.C.
GEORGE BENWELL, Proprlttor.
SAMPLE ROOMS    EXCELLED DINING ROOM
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HUME — Robtrt Kerr, J. Lynn,
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_J, PenUcton; W. P. Beaven, New
Westminster; Joe Bowes ind Ptrtys
Ymlr, Mr. and Mri. T. 8. Mirtyn,
Vernon; Mlu Anne Allen, Miu Miry
Stubbs, Kelowni; Miss Greta Cur*
wen, Nelson; R. W. DeBoo, Toronto;
H. C. Loop, Spokane; J. B. Whalen,
Medicine Hat; A. M. Grler. Calgary;
R. D. Ward, Stockton, Calif.
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VANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS
"YOUR  VANCOUVER  HOME"
tf erin Hotel
MO Slymour St.,   Vincouver, B. C.
Newly renovated through-
eut Phonei end elevator.
A.   PATERSON.   UW   oi
Coleman, Alta, Proprietor.
>0KANE Hotels and Restaurants
Welcome*
SHRINERS!
For   light   refreshments,
dinners, cabins and rooms
cross the free ferry to
Kokanee Lodge
quite tome time, tnd pirticulirly I
hivt ottered fo Englmd thit wt
come to termi on the buU of I
Seneril utUement iffectlng our re-
itlons, but it muit be mutuil; It
muit come tram both ildu.
"NO INTEREST IN WEST*
Germany hu no interett in the
iltuition of western borders btlng
changed ln any respect The Germin
fortifications In tht wut trt meint
to be a recognition of the bordire
it they exUt todiy. I ilio wmt to
think Italy it thU tlmt that aha
consistently backed us up. Of coune,
I do not wmt to appeal to othen
for help. We shiU help ourselves.
As for tha neutrili, aa long u
they remain neutral, we thill re
ipect their neutrality.
(Then the chancellor itarted dls-
cuulng briefly thit psct between
Soviet Ruuii md Germany. He said
that everybody kntw thit different
political doctrinu were subscribed
to ln tbt two countries, but ht uid
Germiny hu no desire of exporting
her own doctrinu into sSoviet Rut
ill).
It Sovlet-Russli igreu tint iht
wiU not export her doctrinu to
our country, the uiuranct U there
by given that we can Uva together
u peaceful neighbors. Tbt pict thit
we htvt concluded with Soviet Russia meant an assurance of peace.
And that never again will we have
to consume our energlu in a major
itruggle.
TALKS CHANGED POLITICAL
TREND
The tremendoui change which bu
been brought about by tha Soviet-
German pact wiU probably mean at
tha aama time that the political
trend in the future will be in a different direction. ThU fact U ot
outstanding Importance md I am
convinced that lt wlU never bt
chinged. I think thit the whole ot
the Germin ptoplt approve of tht
friendship'with Ruuli.
(At thu point tha ChinceUor discussed the iltuition u It !■ ittn by
him this very morning ln respect
to Polind. Ht uld that he wu
determined to aolve the exlsUng
problem, that Danzig had to return
to the Reich, that the Corridor aln
had to become German again, and
that ha desired that relation! with
PoUnd ihould ba revised in iuch a
manner than never again can peace
be dUturbed at the Eutern borders). ,  /
We wlU fight u long is lt will
be neceuary to bring such peaceful conditions about on our Eastern
borden. We wiU tight until thU
present Polish govtrnment or iny
other Polish government wUl mtkt
such a settlement pouible.
NOT TO BOMB NON-"   **
COMBATANTS
I htve no Intention ot fighting
women or children, I have, therefore, given itrict ordtn to the Oer.
mm lir force that only military
fortlficitioni md pointi of military
importance ihould be ittacked.
However, if pur opponenU ihould
not Understand whtt position! wt
ara taking, then Poland ii liable to
nuke an experience that Will bt
terrible beyond description. :
(Hitler then said that lince 5:41
o'clock this morning, German time,
tire wu being: exchanged between
Poland and Germany. The shoU hid
come aerou the border.)
From now on we wtll talk tht
stmt langutge. There wlU be bombi
againit bombs, and it our opponenU
should find that they cannot restrain
themselvu . and. ■ uit poison gu
igalmt ui, lt will be poison gu
against them at the ume time from
us. We ihall figHt until our rights
are granted. We have ipehtj iome
90 billion mirkl tor our nitlonil
defence. Our irmy tnd nivy today
are mort powerful thtn they tvtr
wert md wt ihall not bick down.
I myielf tm todty, md will be from
now on, nothing but the soldier of
the Germin Reich; just ai I have
fought in tbe lut war, so I will
fight now. I shall not take off this
uniform until wa have achilved
victory.
NAMES Hit SUCCESSORS
However, it something should
hippen to me, I wint the Germm
people to know thit I hivt ippolnt-
come my successor. If
should hipptn to Field
Gotrlng, my deputy Rudolf Heu
wlU taka hu place; md U lomething should hsppen to Heu, t senile which I will won appoint, will
elect his lucceisor, the mm mott
worthy to lucceed mt.
I never knew whtt the -novi
'capitulation' meant. If iome people
ihould tvir think thit we could,
bick down and (Iva in, they wlU
be mUtaken. Nevtr again will a da-
feat such u ln November, 1(11. occur. It will ntvtr be repealed in
Germany hiitory. You man of the
German Reichitag, it U not important that we live, but lt U necessary
that our naUon should Uve. It our
will power U strong enough, wt
ibiU win in tht end.
Labor Day Has
Si-Year History
(Sy The Canadian Preu)
An inititutlon peculltr to Cinidi
md tht United Statei, '
»., Labor Dai
WlU bt celebrated Mondty with
littii rutriction trom tbe crUei ol
Europe.
Forty-ilxth mnual observance
for the two North American natloni it peict with etch other
tor 12S yetn, Libor Dty, whilt
dtdicited to orginized worken,
hu become • holiday for all classes,
like tha traditional bank hoUdays
of England.
Agitation for an mnual labor
holldiy, duly proclaimed by the
government was started 87 yun
ago by tht Knlghta ot Libor, then
t powerful organization of work-
in unioni. There were demonstrations ln New York in 1882, 1881
ind 1884 ind in Montreal and Toronto in 1888 md 1888.
The KnlghU df Labor had ceased
IU activities by 1894 md othtr
worken' orgmiiitloni wera taking
ihe lead. In that year the United
Statei Congress provided a Labor
Holiday for the cltlzeni ot the re
pubUc.
A ilmllir meuure wu presented
in Uie Canadian Houu of Commoni tht umt yetr by Sir John
Thompion, then prime minliter.
Sept 1 wu ntmed tht ttatutory
Libor Day. Liter on, to mett tht
demmd tor long weekend!, tbe
holldiy wis fixed tor Uit tint Mon
diy in September.
In tht middle ig
U itaged dtmonitrttlon
recognition of tht worl
laeval lociety. In Utt
1 ictlvltlei developed through'
out Europe, generally with a polit
guilds staged dtmonstnUoni to ob
tain recognition of tht workmm in
editevil. focitty. In liter yein
lnl objective and often marked
by confllrti with luthorlty not contemplated in the Labor Day celebration! in North America.
SociaL....
South  Slocan
.SOUTH SLOCAN, B.C-Mn. 0.
Humphry wu a recent tea hoiteu
it her home "Summerhill" In honor
of her house guests Mn. Roy E.
Frizzell ind Miss Phyllis Frizzell
ot Edmonton. Mn. G. Noel Brown
UNDERWOOD
TYPEWRITERS
Sunditnnd  Adding  Miehlnu
OFFICE SUPPLIES
Underwood Elliot Fither Ltd.
838 Ward St Phoni H
When In SPOKANE You Wilflhioy Staying af tiii
Hotel VOLNEY
mo Rivmid. Hotel VOLNEY *»"*
Avinua     *»w»e»»     w -mf-**^M-f *» Pmlion Sid*.
EVERY COURTESY SHOWN OUR CANADIAN QUESTS
ML_ANnLHOTEtJl.oJ2
BARGAIN
FARES
TO
Vancouver — Victoria — Nanaimo
GOING Sept 15 ONLY
Pram. Nakuip and South, Procter to Midway,
Trail to Caitlegar
RETURN FARES
From                    to Vancouver Victoria Nanaimo
Procter  $13.55 $15.55 $15.05
Nelion     13.05 15.05 14.55
Trail  U.70 14.70 1«0
Grand Fork* ........ 10.45 12.45' 11.95
«— Nakuip   14.55 16.55 16.05
x—Via Robion Wift,
Fam from Arrow Likes ipply Stpt 14 only, returning Sipt 28.
Correspondingly low fares trom intermediate polnti.
FINAL RETURN LIMIT SEPTEMBER 27
Ticket! good in dty eetchti only. No baggage checking privilege!,
No itop ovtn tllowed. Children 3-yeen tnd under 12, half fare.
Regulir train nrvlct in each difecUon.
...     ■ .v    ,i    ■■    ij ■
Fer furthir Informition ipply ta ntarait agint or write H. i,
Lowat, City Tltkit Agint, 802 Biker St, Ntlion, B. C
H. H. Frizzell, Mlu Peggy Tiylor,
Miss June Baddeley and Miss Phyllis Frizzell, Other guests were Mrs.
John Murray, Miu Molly Murray,
Mrs. C. Strongltharm, of New Westminster, Mrs. W. A> MacCabe, Mrs.
J. D. Yeatman, Mn. Frank Scott,
Mn. C. G. Fenwick, Mn. H. Nixon,
Mn. Neeley, Mra. F. H. Russel, Mrs.
S. Ltei, Mn. D. Y. Divli, Mrs.
Grigg, Mrs. Turner Lee, Mn. W. J.
Silverwood, Mn. Colllngwood Gray,
Mn. A. Willey, Mn. A. Slader, Nelson, Mrs. H. Greyion, Mra R. G, S.
Anthony of Trail, Mn, W. Wideson,
Mn. W. W. Bennett, Mn. G. 8.
Cobb, Miss Betty Lewis of North
Battleford, Mrs. G, F. Chapman,
Mn. McDonald, Mn. W. C. Motley,
Mrs. G. L Thompson, Mn. W. J.
Tindale and Mri. Fred Buckley,
Trail,
Mr, and Mn. E. Olion and ion
Eddie were recent guests of Mrs. A.
Jacobson at Wirdner. Mr. and Mn.
A. Jacobson and their two sons returned with them for. a week's visit
Mr. and Mn. Charles Bland and
children Lola and Bobble recenUy
returned from a two-week motoring
trip to Spokane and the Okanagan.
Mri. Alec McDonild ind htr ion
Colin and daughter Gale have returned from a month'i viilt to their
ranch it Oliver.
Frank L. Witti of Palo Alto, Cal,
who hai bean visiting his brother-
in-law ind iliter, Mr. and Mn. W.
J. 0. Oliver for a weak, left for Victoria to ipend a few dayi en route
tc hli homt. Mr. tnd Mra. J. H. Duck
of Nelson were gueiti of Mr. and
Mn. J. Grigg.
Mr, and Mn. E. J. Bowkett and
daughter Mae are holidaying at tha
coast cities for two weeki on i
motoring trip. Mill Monelli Scott,
who hu been ipending the lummer
ln Vincouver ii accompanying them
on their return trip it tht weekend.
John Leei who his been ipending
■ome weeks at Princeton hai re'
turned.
Mr. and Mn. Fred Edwardi ind
ion Dale of Trail hava been viiiting Mr. ind Mrs. M. Edwardi foe a
few dayi.   ,
Mr. ind Mn. F. Rushton of Na-
kuip were guesti of Mr. and Mra.
C. H, Blind tn route to their home
from Nelaon.
Matters Ian and David Greenwood of Willow Point who have
been viiiting Mr. and Mn. R. Grayson, Bonnington, hive returned.
Jack md Chliholm Gray, who
hive been on a camping trip at
Queen's Bty and other points on
Kooteniy Lake, have returned
BohnlngtOA. Mr. and Mra. Colllng-
wood Gray viilted them at Queen's
Bay and returned with them.
SOUTH SLOCAN, B.C.-Mr. tnd
Mrs. W. Liitef »nd Willice, Bennie
and Bernice, motored to Silverton
to ittind the marriage ot Rowland
Hirmiton to Doreen Peachty of
Silverton.. .       „„,
Mrs. E. Olson and ton Eddie were
Rossland visitors.
B. Lowery and ion Wilfred were
viilt n here.
0. W. Humphry ii viiiting at
Mr. and Mn. John Avli hava lett
for t viiit to Spokine.
tdr. and Mri. Wlllltm Bepnitt
htve rttutned trom thtlr wedding
trip thd hivt Uken up rtildtnct
In Stobt Byrei. Mr. Bennett '_ on
tht tuff tf tht Wttt lfooieniy Pow.
-on visitor.
■■
FINK'S
m****'4.
COATS-MILLINERY
(D/lUMp
CoatA.
Dressy fitted coats lead fashion! New
with moulded fronts, back-swept
skirts, rich fur trims! Well tailored
new woolens. Interlined. Persian, fox
—other trims, 14 to 44.
$16.50 lc, $29.50
S-igm***'
tUnbimmeii
faaLL
Softer, more flattering lines here too!
Note squared shoulders, smaller collars. New tweeds, solids, plaids. Fitted,
swagger. Interlined for Winter. 14
to 44.
$1195-% $25.00
BURNS BLOCK
You might be a jaunty iuhlor
... a sophisticated Miss ... a
smart young matron. But what-
ever your type — you'll find
your own enchanting new Fall
Hat at Fink's. See our beautl-
ful new Fall fashions brought
to you at budget prices.
$1.9510.^.95
Ladies' Wear
Children's
Wear
Footwear
CRANBROOK Social...
ana a Nel.
T
TRURO. NS. (CP)-Two wltnts-
its In t case ln the magistrate's
court here refused to kin the Bible
because It was not a new one. They of Miss Marlon Staples at Creston.
were iworn In holding the Bible In |   Mr. and -Mn. R. J. Edwardi and
CRANBROOK, B. C, - Mr. and
Mra J. M Windsor and children
Elizabeth, Jane and Andrew spent
a holiday visiting friends at Banff,
Calgary and High River.
Mr. and Mrs. J. D. MacGillivray
and daughten Annie and Sylvia,
and Mn. T. R. Hiyei hive returned
from vmcouver.   _._...      .
Mr, and Mri. 0. C. Redpath ind
■on hivt returned from a hoUday
at Kailo. , ,    •;
Mrs. tt E. Oibomt and fimlly,
who ipent i holldiy in Vancouver,
have teturned.
Mr. and Mn. R. R. Taylor and ion
Robert are hoUdaylng at Revelitoke.
Mill Ellubeth Godderli li spending i two.week vacation at Trail.
Miss Margaret Hendenon has left
to spend a vacaUon ln Vernon and
Vancouver. . .,
Ronald Moffitt, who visited his
parenti here, has returned to Gold-
m- " .       '
Miss EUeen Johnstone, who his
been visiting her sister, Miss Joyce
Johnstone of New Denver, hat returned.
Mr, and Mrs. George Gibbons tnd
loni Jlfli, Bill ind Maurice, have
left for Jtorth Vancouver, where
Oiey will Wake theie home.
Mri. N. Mclnnli his returned
from a vacation at Banff and Cal.
airy,
Inipector J. E- Brown and ion
WlUird have returned from Vancouver. Mn. Brown and daughten will remain it the Coait until
the end ot tht holldayi,
Miss Eleanor McKowan li I guest
from a holiday at Glacier National
park.
Mr. and Mn. Johann Winklaar
have left to spend a holiday visiting
relatives in California.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Linnell are
spending a vacation visiting Mrs.
Linnell's parents, Mr. and Mn. Marshall. Ashcroft.
CRANBROOK, B.C. - Honoring
her sister-in-law Mrs. W. C. Pratt
of Listowel, Ont, Mn. J. D. MacGillivray enterUined at tea tt the
Crinbrook Golf md Country club
Mondiy ifternoon. A golf tourniment was played when prize winnen were Mn. W. A. Fergie, Mrs.
C. R. Ward and Mn. 0. C, Red-
path, and a special prize wu preiented to the guest ot honor. The
guests were Mrs. Pratt, Mn. G. E.
L. MacKinnon, Mri, Walter B. John-
atone, Mn. P. C. Coe, Mn. Freeman, Mn. 0. C. Redpath, Mn, R.
McBurney, Mri. C. R. Wird, Mn G.
M Argue, Mn. R. Tiylor, Mn, F.
Burgess, Mrs, E. S, Jones, Mn. R.
Forester of Penticton, Mrs. Hogarth,
Mrs. W. A. Fergie, Miss Woodland,
Miss Muriel Baxter, Mrs. A, Finely,
Mn. W. D. Gilroy, Mrs. H. A. McKowan) Mn. W. Manhall md-Mrs.
A. Hiyei.
Mr. md Mn. D. A. Kiyi md
family' hive returned trbm i holldiy at Fairmont and Lakt Whder-
men.
Mlts Diliy Rogers ot CresUn Ii
l guest of her sister, Miss Margaret
Rogen.
Mr. ind Mn. H. Lyoni md ion,
Gordon, ind Mn. Dunley of Dutchess, Alta., have returned liter visit-
la. Mr. and Un. Q. J. QUI.,
man, Sask., ire gueiti ot Mr. md
Mrs. J. D. McGillivray.
Dr. T. Childi and family of Saskatoon ire guesU of Mr. md Mn.
A. G. Hill.
Dr. ind Mn. Jamea Taylor md
daughter, Marilyn, who have been
guests of Mr. and Mra. Gordon
Dezall and Mill Kathleen Dezall,
have returned to Abbotiford, They
were accompanied by Mn. George
Taylor who haa been visiting Mr.
and Mn. W. G. T. Taylor hera.
Mr. and Mn. Patrick Harrison and
ion of Kamloops are gueiti of Rev,
md Mn. F. V. Hirriion. They left
Tueidiy for a visit at Radium Hot
Springs.
Mn Jt. Newton of Invermere was
a visitor here,     ,
Miss Margaret md Jim Ashworth
were guesti of Mr. and Mn. Gordon
Dezall.
SociaL ., *
ROBSON
ROBSON, B. C-The Robion
Hippy Go Lucky Club 'held a
successful dance in the Robion hall
Saturdiy night Those bn the committee in chirge were the Mines
Hjlen Magee, Meda Hougan, Margaret Miller and Mae Pierce ind
Rex Billtrd.        '.
Miu N. Pierce haa returned »
htr homt ln Calgary tfter ipend.
ing the list two wteks With Mr.
tnd Mrs. E. H. Pitrce.
0. B. Ballard and Rex Ballard
havt left on a trip to Seattle. Vancouver and Victoria, While In Victoria they will be the guests of Mr.
Ballard's brother, George Ballard.
   -
NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON B. C—SATURDAY MORNINO. SEPT. t 1919.
[CHURCHES
IFlrat (Kljurrij oi
%iBt fcrbntta!
(99 BAKER STREET
A Branch ot I'm Mother Church,
The Flnt Church of Christ
Scientist in Boston. Mit
Sundiy School 9:45 t.m.
Sunday Service 11 a-n.
Subject Leuon-Sermon
"MAN"
Wednesdiy Tutimoniti Meeting
I pjn.
FREE READING ROOM IN
CHURCH  BUILDING-
AM Cordially Welcome
lirst
flrPBbgferian
QUjurrt}
Rev. Dr. J. W. Stevemon
Minister:
11 i.m.-"The Joy of Work."
7:30 p.m.-"Not by Might Nor
by Power."
Sundiy ichool wUl re-open on
September 10th.
InttPi. QHjurrlj
oi titanata
ST. PAUL'S TRINITY
United Services will be held
to Trinity. Corner Josephine ud
Silica Streeti.
Public Wonhip it 11 A.M ud
7:30 P.M, conducted by Rev. J.
A. Donnell.
Church Schooli In both St
Piul'i md Trinity will opu on
September 10th.
SrauMnanian
The Little Grey Church We
Love-
Earl E. Lindgren,'Putor
LORD'S DAY SERVICES
10 i.m..
  Sundiy School
11 i.m. _ Scmdimviin Wonhip
7:30 pjn. Engliih Vaper
"Believt to God"
first
©apttBt (El|urrl)
Rtv. Genld M Wtrd—Minister
9:43 A.M.—Church School.
Rev. Joseph Larson of Minneapolis preaching at 11 A.M md
7:30 P.M.
Believen Baptism close ot
evening service.
From Sept 3-17th, each night
(Except Saturday).
Rev. larson preaches at 7:30 PM.
Welcome to AU
6 Months Suspended
Sentence on Liquor
Count Given Word
W. A. Ward of Procter wu given
ilx months suspended sentence
when he pleided guilty to Provinciil Police Court Fridiy morning
to I chirge ot supplying liquor to
a minor. The case wu heard by
Stlpendliry Magistrate William Irvine.
C. B. Garlud ippeired tor Mr.
Ward and ComUble G. A. Brabazon prosecuted,
A New York physician tells ot
working with three neighbors to
clear a city lot ot. ragweed and he
suggeiti that hay fever vletlmi could
do a good deil ln iuch wayi to rid
toemselvu of toelr misery.
MORE ABOUT.
Germany Bigger
(Contlnutd From Ptgt Ont)
Thtt night u Chucellor of Germiny, he itood with Hlndenburg
to t window of tht pallet tnd
witched strums of exulUnt torch-
carrying Naili^-tbe Germin people
Hitler wu ieeklng to "iwiken —
pass on their way to toe creation
of a new kind ot itite.
NAZI TESTAMENT
Hitler hid prepired toe blueprint for hii luper-organlzed nation ln a book written ln 1924
<*when he wu urvtog a untenea
to Landsberg prison for high teuton. In recent yetn, itateimen of
other powen have been reading
i the Nui teiUment "Mtln Kampf"
(My BatUe) ud indulging heavl-
. ly in headache Ublete u chipter
sifter chipter cimt trut.
' In "Mein Kimpf" ht uid Germiny thould not Igtin challenge
' Great Brltain'i nivy. Ht ut forth
Hso thit Germany muit htvt
mora on tot Europem continent
"/tnd when we in Europe today Ulk about ntw land," he
wrote, "we can think above all
only of Ruula ud the border
, atetei under iti control
In effecting hli unprecedented
program for toe Reich, Hitler hai,
piece by piece, deitroyed the Treaty
of Verulllei, which wu duigned
to reduce Germany to lecondiry
Blace In European affaire atter the
treat Wir.
FIREWORKS BEGUN
The Hltlerlin flreworki began
literally February 7, 1933, when
the Reichitag wu burned. Tha
Null blamed toe Communists for
the blue md med lt u a means
ot driving toe Reds farther underground.
On October 21 of the ume yetr,
Germiny   withdrew   from   the
Leigue of Nttlom.
.    In thf flnt month of 19*4, Hit-
-    Itr conoludtd a 10-year frlindinlp
treaty with  Poland, an  Imtru-
mint which enabled tha Null to
forget a powerful txttrntl thrut
.. and concentrate on Internal rt-
orginlntlon. ,
On Juni 30, 1934, Hitter tllml-
nited the oppoiition within hli
own pirty with tht "blood purgt"
whloh itertltd tht world. Ciptiln
Ernest Roehm, chief of tht storm
troopen, tnd Gtntrtl Kurt von
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Tht offloltl count of thou killed
wu 77.       .
In toe Autumn of 1934, ifter
Von Hindenburg's death, Hitler assumed toe title of "Fuehrer of the
Germin People and Chancellor."
dispensing with the office of president.
RECOVERS SAAR
On March 1, 1935. a plebiscite
returned the densely populated
Saar coalfield area to Germany.
Intensive Nazi propaganda was the
main factor in effecting the return
of the 738 square miles of territory
with IU 820,000 inhabitants. It bad
been tdminlstered by Leigue of
output going to Frince. •
Nttlom   commissioners,   the   coll
A little more thm two weeki
liter, Hitler decreed compulsory
militery training for ill Germam.
Next, In lint with Hltler'i plu
tt txpind on tht Europem continent ind not Into oveneu ter-
ritorlei, Germtny ilgned • truty
with Greit Brittln limiting tht
Nui ntvil tonmgt te 35 pir cut
tf Grut Brltain'i. Tht ptct WII
•Igned Juna 18.
ATTACKS ON JEWS
On September 18, 1935, came the
Nuremberg rtclil lawi, which politically and locially ostracized Jewi.
On November 10,1938, following toe
fatel ihooting ot • Germin embassy
official In Parii by • Jewish youth,
anti-Jewish rioting spread through
the Reich, followed by law. ostracizing the Jews economically after
January 1, 1939. A tine ot (400,000,-
000 wu Imposed.
The year 1938 uw the reoccupa-
tion and remilitarization of the
Rhinelmd on March 7, the beginning ot German aid to-the Spanish
Insurgents In July, Inauguration ot
the four-year plan for economic
self-sufficiency in September, creation of the Rome-Berlin axil October 25, and on November 25, the
creation of the anti-comintern pact
with Japu. The action ln the Rhine-
land meant tot return to Germu
jurisdiction of the German Rhine
ud Elbe Rivera, the Kiel Canal
and other waterways.
At horns tha Nail Government
wn hiving terlous conflict! with
the Evingellctl ud Romin Ctth-
olle Churchu bttwien 1934 tnd
1931, with tht Govtrnment In
lomt ImUncu taking ovtr church
property for itite purposes. From
1938 on, domestic polities fill Into
tht biekground In Germtny ud
Hitter concentrated on hli txptn-
•lon program.
From tot tlmt that ht tuumtd
office up to August lg of this yeir,
when Germany took millUry pos.
session ot SlovtkU, thereby ob-
Uinlng t 200-mile frontier on Pound's Southern border, Fuehrer
Hitler had added about 80,000 square
miles of territory and 20.000.000
ptoplt- The method^ were plebls-
cite, absorption aatr occupation.
ANSCHtUS.*^
On Martfi 12,1938, Germin troopi
occupied Auitrii without resistance
ud toe republic of 32,309 squire
milu ind 8,780,000 people becime
a Province ot the Greater Reich,
realizing the Fuehrer'i drum of
inschluss.
In October of toe ume yeir, ifter
t four-power conference it Munich
attended by Prime Minister Chamberlain, Premier Daladler, Premier Mussolini and Hitler, the republic of Czecho-Slovakia - bowed
to the decision of the conferees and
ceded the Sudeten district ot Bohemia to Germiny. In thit wiy,
Hitler gained another 11.500 square
miles of territory and 3,500.000 people, mostly of Germsn origin.
After sinking his teeth Into
Czecho-Slovakia, Hitler decided to
finish the job and on March 15. just
a year after the Austrian uschluss.
Swastika-wearing troopi hinded
tot world t jolt by mirchlng into
Boherhii md Moravia.
POSSESSION OP SLOVAKIA
Thii time toe profit ln tend wu
19,325 squire mllei md In people
0,804,878, mostly non-Germans. Slovakia, under the central portion of
the dismembered Czecho-Slcvekle,
wu Uken under the German wing
u a protectorate. But any semblance of Independence for Slovakia
disappeared August  18  toil yeir,
.   ..   .— :	
"Responsibility lor This Terrible
Catastrophe" Rests on Hitler
Declares Premier Chamberlain
LONDON. sSejil l'tny Radio)
(AP)—Tbt text ot Prlmt Mlnliter
ChtmbtrUto'i ipeech:
I do not propose to uy muy
wordi tonight The time his come
when ictlon nther thin ipeech il
required. Eighteen monthi igo I
prayed thit, the responsibility
might not hU on me to uk this
country to accept the awful arbitrament ot war. I fear that I am
not able to avoid that responsibility. The reiponsibillty for this
terrible catastrophe liu on toe
ihoulden of one mm.
At iny rite, I could not wuh
for conditioni on which iuch ■
burden would fill upon mt clearer than toey are today u to where
I itand (cheen). The Germin
Chancellor hli not huiUted to
plunge tht world into misery in
order to serve bis own senseless
imbltlom.
NEGtECTED NO  MEANS
No mm cm uy thit tht government could hive done more to try
ud keep open the wiy for tion
onble and equitable settlement
of the dispute between Germany
ud Poland nor have we neglected uy mum of miking lt crystal
cleir to the Germu Government
toit if toey Insisted on using force
•gain to the manner ln which they
have med lt ln the put we will
resolve to oppose them by force.
Wa Ihall stand at tha bir of hit-
tory knowing thit tht riipoml-
b 11 lty of thli terrible uUitrophi
Hu on tht ihoulden of ont mtn
—tha Germin Chancellor.
Ht hu not hesitated to plunge
toe world Into misery in order to
aerve hii own senseless imbittons.
The white piper now published
makei tt perfectly clear that our
object hu been to try to bring
about discussions about the Polish-German dispute between the
two countries on terms of equality.
GERMANY
REFUSED PEACE
One passage from a recent communication, dated August 30, hu
showed easily the final clash
might have been avoided had
there been tht least desire on the
part of the German government
to arrive it a peaceful lettlemnt.
The British Government most
strongly urged thit both pirtiei
ihould undertake during the ne-
gotiitiom no iggruaive millUry
movement
The communication uyi tbe
Britiah Government most itroniV
urged thit both pirtiei ihould
undertake negotiation! that n>
•ggreuive military movement
should take place. The Polish
Government replied instantly on
August 31, saying they will pre-
Bare on • reciprocal basis to give
ie formal guarantee.
In the event of negotiation! taking places Polish troops woul.t not
violate the frontiers of tht Reich
provided tht correiponding guir-
tntee wu given regarding nonviolation of Polind by troopi of
tht Reich,
We never hid iny reply from
tht Germin Govtrnment to thit
•uggestlon, ont which If It hid
bttn followtd might hive saved
tht ctUttropht which took plice
thli morning.
(The Prime Minister referred to
the 18 points broadcait by the German Broadcasting System last night
md mentioned the fact that that
statement included this phrase):
In these circumstances the Reich
Government considers its proposals rejected. We mmt examine
that statement: to begin with,
these proposals have never b-en
communicated by Germany to
Poland at all.
On Aug. 29th, replying to a note
we have sent to them, the German
government uid, among other
thlngi, that toey would Tmmedi-'
ately draw proposals for a solution acceptable to toemselvu, and
would, If possible, place these at
the disposal ot the British government before arrival of the Polish negotiator.
It will be leen by examination
of tot white papers that the German government have itated that
they counted upon the arrival of
a plenipotentiary from Poland to
BerUn on Aug, 30th, the toUowing
day.
THE BRITISH ULTIMATUM
So, at toe moit unless toe Get-
man government were prepared
to give toe Britiah government
usurances that Germany bid impended tggreulve ictlon igaimt
PoUnd, ud were prepired
promptly to withdrew their forcei
from Pollih territory, toe Britiih
government would without hesi-
when, "beciuse of the eistlng iltuition, with respect to the German-
Polish dispute over Danzig, the
Nazis took military possession. Slovakia meant an added 14.000 square
miles and 2,450,000 people.
Great BrlUin abandoned Its appeasement policy after Hitler's Bohemia-Moravia grab ud Prime
Minister Chamberlain turned his
efforts to forming an anti-aggression
front to protect tht independence
of smaller powen lying in Hitler's
path.
RETRIEVED SEAPORT
Hitler did not gtve the world
much reit ifter hli unexttton of
Bohemii tnd Moravia. A week
later, March 22, he hid bulldozed
little Lithuinit into giving bick the
Baltic seaport of Memel, taken trom
Germiny by the Truty of Versailles. This action brought back
152,000 people and 1099 square mllei
of territory into toe told.
While toe territory idded to toe
Reich u Hitler found lt dou not
equil toe trei of Prlnoe Edward
Island, toe population annexed Is
ilmost double toit of Canada and
toe land Uken over include! resources md equipment vital to the
Ntzl economy.
IN ECONOMIC TERMI
In economic termi, here \t whit
Hitter hu gained by hit diplomatic
victoriei:
Saar—Coal, plus ont of Europe'!
most tctive industrial centres.
Auitrii—Hiy, clover, diiry producti, potato cropi, lumber, coil md
iron, plm tot country'! economic
woei.
Czecho-Slovikli—Factoriei, Iron.
silver, gold, timber, ,poU
coil radium, chlni, clay, coil, gold.
•Uver, timber, foodstuffs.
Memel—An additional itntegie
leaport on the Baltic Sel.
Except for her oversets colonies.
lost In the Greit Wir, Germany ia
bigger in area md population now
torn ihe wu in 1911
tetlon fulfU their' obligttloni to
PoUnd.
If Gtrminy'i reply to thli Uit
warning li unfivorabli, ind I do
not luggtit thit It li likely te be
othtrwlu, Hli Mijeity'i imbu-
udor li Initructed te uk for hii
pwport
In toe munUme we are await
tog thue propospals. When these
Eropouli ire ready, for we havi'
eard no more about them, he
ihould invite the Poliih imbis-
udor to call thert tnd lend thi
propoiali.
Thereupon, reporta eur ambuudor, In the moit violent termi
Herr von Rlbbentrop uld ht
would ntvtr uk tht tmbuiidor
to viilt him. , .
On Wednudiy night it tot Interview Herr von Ribbentrop produced i lengthy document which
he reid in Germin aloud it top
ipeed. Our embassador uked for
a copy of the document. The reply
wu: "It is now too late as the Polish representative hu not arrived
in Berlin."
So we never got a copy of those
proposals. The first time we heard
of them wu on the broidcut list
night
Lut night tht Polish tmbissi-
dor uw Herr von Rlbbentrop tnd
expressed to him thit they wert
willing io negotliti with Germiny about their dlipute on tn
tquil bull.
Tha Germin government with,
out tny further wtrnlng cromd
thi Pollih frontier it diwn.
It li lince reported thit open
towns have been bombed. In tone
circumtUncu only one coune ii
open to us.
His Malestys ambassador ln
Berlin md the French ambassador have been instructed to hand
to the German government' a
communication.
This uys: "Early this morning
toe German Chancellor issued a
proclamation to the German army
which indicated that he wu about
to atUck Poland.
"Information reaching British
and French governments indicated
that German troopi had crossed
the Polish frontier ud attacks on
Polish territory were proceeding.
AGGRESSIVE ACT
"In these circumstances, lt ap-
Sears to the governments of the
nited Kingdom and France that
by their action the German gov
ernment have created conditions,
namely, an aggressive act of force
agaimt Poland, threatening the
independence of Poland, which
called for the implementation by
the governments of the Vnlted
Kingdom and France of the undertaking to Poland to come to
her assistance.
"I am, accordingly, to inform
your excellency that unless the
German government are prepared
to give His Majestys government
assurance! that the Germm government hive impended aggressive acts against Polud and are
prepared promptly to withdraw
their forces from Polish territory,
His Majesty's government ln the
United Kingdom will without
hesitation fqlfill their obligation
to Poland."
TO ASK FOR PASSPORTS
If Germany's reply to this lut
warning is unfavorable—and I do
not suggest it is likely to be other,
wise—His Majesty's ambassador
is instructed to uk for his passports.
In that case we ire ready.
Finally steps have been taken
In accordance with prearranged
plans. Steps have been taken to
safeguard the position in regard
to stocks and commodities of various kinds.
Our thoughts turn back to 1914.
How do we stand at this time?
The tmwer is that all three tervicei are ready, and that the situation in all directions is more
favorlble add reassuring thaj) before.
Behind the acenes we have
built up a vast organization of
civil defence under the scheme
ot air raid precautions.
Regarding immediate man power requirements, the Royal Navy,
Army and Air Force have u
many men u they can conveniently handle at the present moment There is today no need to
appeal in a general way to recruits iuch is wu issued by Lord
Kitchener 25 yeara ago. It is essential in the vut and tremendous
task thit confront! ui md in view
ot past experience, to organize
our man power this time.
Plumbing
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•
PAM
JUMPER SKIRTS
New gore pleated jumper skirts that are ideal for the
lively modern Miss. Tailored of good quality d>1 AP
flannel. Siies 8 to 14 yl.VO
GIRLS'PRINT DRESSES
Start the new term in one of these good quality gay
prints with the very latest in skirts. Finished at sleeve
and neckline with white pique. (1 AA
Sizes 6 to 14 $1.UU
LADIES' BLOUSES
Softly tailored blouses with tucks, pleats and frilly
fronts. Perfect for wearing with your Fall suits. (1 OQ
Sizes 14 to 42     : «Pl.£-«7
NEW FALL HATS
New high crowns for new flattery. Coachman swirl
brims, toques, and turbans. They come in the £1 AC
latest Fall shades  «$1.3J
Scottie Dresses
The rage of the season. They
are bonnie dresses for bonnie
lassies In rich, colorful Tartan
plaids. Dirndls, swing styles
and gingery jumpers. You will
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opening. Sizes 10 to 18.
*2*<*
GIRLS' SWEATERS
The answer to the "Start ot
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sleeves. Cardigan and pullover
Sizes 6 to 14 $1.UU
Children's School Shoes
Boys' and Misses' Oxfords in black calf leather with rubber
heels. These will be just the shoes for the child hard on footwear.
8to$12  $1.79
Sizes
12'/_-3
$1.89
Boys Black Oxfords
For school or dress wear. New stock just ffO CA
arrived. Sizes XVl to 5'A •.L.OV
GROWING GIRLS' SCHOOL SHOES
Black and brown oxfords and patent strap shoes.
All different patterns and heels. These are shoes
that will stand real hard wear. ffO QO
All sizes from 3Vi to 8  *\-L.uO
Boys' Tweed Suits
Here's a fine assortment of new
tweed suits, in the latest patterns.
Two pair of -longs -with each suit.
Regular cut and sport models with
fancy backs. Sizes 24 to 32 with
extra pants.
$7-95
SPECIAL BARGAIN IN
BOYS' WOOL SWEATERS
Fine flat knit V-Neck pullovers in-
plain shades. Just the right weight
to start school in. QA.
Sizes 24 to 34 ....03C
BOYS'UNDERWEAR SPECIALS
|ockey Shorts , 25*
Balbriggan Combs           49*
L,.
BOYS'DENIM LONGS
Black or blue denims, some are tailored with elastic
backs, others with belt loops, all have wide cuff I
bottoms.' Sizes 24 to 32	
$1.00
BOYS' BROADCLOTH SHIRTS
A large selection of new broadcloth shirts in all the
latest patterns. 7Q<%
Sizes II to 14 ...IIFC
BOYS' PULLOVER SWEATERS
Fine all wool pullovers in new Fall patterns. There's i
sweater hefe to match any outfit. V-Neck or Crew-Neck
Sizes 24 to 34    $1.49
RICH SATIN BEDSPREADS
You would expect to pay at least $4.95 for these beautiful shirred spreads. Colors are gold, wine, rose, green
or orchid. Double bed size with cut; corners. tf O QQ
Special, each **)L.VO
NEW TWEEDS FOR SPORTS COATS
Direct import from England. New coloring and designs
featuring plaids for the Fall season for coats, jackets or
skirts. New, different.      ' tl QQ
54" wide, yard $1.30
SALE OF WOOL TWEEDS
4 smart colorings in pure wool Harris type tweeds.
These are 54" wide and the regular value is $1.49.
Ideal for skirts, coats or suits. t*t Aft
Special price, yard  »Pl.Ww
NEW INDIAN BLANKETS
For auto, couch or bed In authentic designs. These are
part wool and come in size 60x80. Richly bound with
matching sateen. f Q AC
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Perfect Silk HOSE
For economy's sake stock up now
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SCHOOL BAGS
Sturdy covert cloth school bags with a waterproof
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All colors here! Every pair, with neat fitting lastex cuffs!
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White with dainty embroidered corner.. OC.,
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Scribblers (Ink or Pencil), 6 for 25*
Erasers. 2 for     5*
Bay's Big 5 Eraser      5*
Art Eraser  10*
Pencils (H.B.),2for     5*
Pencils  (H.B.), each  ...................    5*
Pen Holders. Each  5* and 10*
Pen Nibs (McLean's), 5 for     5*
Pencil Boxes. Each   15* and 25*
Big 5 Pads (Ruled,or Plain), each     5*
Rulers. Each ....  5* and 10*
R«eve's Student Paint Box. Each  40*
M
 Ml POUR i
NILION DAILY NIWI, NILION. I.C-IATURDAY MORNINO. HPT. t 1MI.
WOMAN SCORNS CIRCUS HIGH WIRE FOR THE ANIMAL CAGE
Physluf Sfrenglh Nof Necessary
in the Training of Wild Animals
ecurity...
facd.ia.lon Is
Only Immunity
Smallpox Germ
y LOGAN CLENDINING, M. 0.
Today wa ara going to consider a
sease that, Instead of being on the
(crease, ii on Uie Increaie-amaU-
pc
It ti a dliaaie that can abiolute-
' be prevented md one thit oan bt
revented extcUy u diphtherli ind
'phold art prevented—by individ-
il Inoculation for immunity.
LDEST OF METHODS
VaccinaUon tgtlnst imallpox ll
it oldest of Uit methods used to
Main Individual Immunity. In the
irly days ot Its uie lt wis iccepted
igerly, because the menace of
lmllpox waa an ever-present and
erifying reality. A long century
ad a half ot freedom from imall-
ox hai lulled Uii world Into the
diet that vaociniUon ll unneces-
iry. Nobody sees smillpox, except
■eaatonaUy. The epidemic! you
o bear about are mild. Why both-
But eonUgloua dlieuti only
tMp; Uiey do not die out Eternal
Stance in immunization ii nee-
istry. We hivi plenty of evidence
iat imallpox mty break out if tbe
rorld ii left unvicctnated.
It ii true of late yean thit the
lieue ii mUd; the deith rate Is
nly hilt of one per cent But ill
benei go ln cycles ot virulence.
P1DIMIC PROPORTIONS
"Thtrt li every probablUty,"
lyi an authority, "that the dis-
ue wiU assume epidemic propor-
ons just aa soon as a false sense of
icurfty results ln a considerable
nvaccinated population."
What the world would be Uke It
virulent epidemic began was de-
eribed by Mactulty.
"Tbat disease over which science
tl achieved a succession of glori-
ui and beneficent victoriei wu
hen the mott terrible of all mlnls-
irs of death. The smallpox was al-
rays present filling the church-
ardi with corpses, tormenting
'ith eonsUnt fetr all whom It had
ot yet stricken, leaving on thoie
rhose lives it spared the hideous
faces ot IU power...."
Vaccination ia best done at an
arly age, from eight to 14 months,
tables at thit tge have Uttle or
10 discomfort from vaccination,
lid it ii important thit thty be
irotected early. After the first vac-
inatlon rtpeUtloni tre adviiiblt
t Intervals of four to seven yean,
BitH there is a record of three suc-
fssful vaccinations.
fTTHIAN SISTERS OF
F   NAKUSP ENTERTAINED
NAJCUSP, B.C.-Mn. T. Htrvey
nterUined the Pythian Slsten of
sfyrtle Temple, No. 16, at afternoon
ea recently. Assisting her were
Its. J. Parent Jr, Mrs. N. A. Her-
idge and Miss NeUle Harvey. Tha
ratals included Mn. C. Campe, Mn,
ft Johnion, Mri. H. Killtn Sr., Mn.
t. Leveque, Mn, L. Ott, Mrs. 0.
ialitrom, Mrs. R. Humphries, Mrs.
It -Cutler, Mm. T. Lodge, Mn. F.
lorrey, Mn. J. Parent Jr., Mis. C
m Herridge, Mn. M Barrow Mn.
f. A. Herridge, Mill C. Balltrom
md Mln N. Harvey.
Ladies Beof Men for
Chicken Supper, Bowie
The ladlei assumed tbe driven'
seiti In the Nelion CPU Liwn
Bowling Club In more wiyi than
ona Thundiy evening whtn four of
tht ladies defeated a picked four ot
tha man by five polnte But It took
tham tt endi, an extra one being
needed, before they won by a icore
of 37-13. Tbe lettn will now play
hoit to Uit ladlei ln t chicken supper.
Tht ladle* were Mrt Ben Whiteside, Mn. H Rom. Mn. F. E. Wheeler tnd Mn. E. Penwill J. Graham,
George Harvey, N. J. Lowei ind
J. P. Morgm comprised the men
unfortunitei.
Ideas of,
Rough Housing In
Sunday School
■y GARRY 0. MYIRI, Ph.D.
From penontl obstrnUoni ■ ud
from testimony by pirenti ln varloui parte of tbe nitlon, I conclude
that there is in Sunday ichool! considerable rowdyism among chUdren trom eight to twelve. In aome
instances there is bedlam. It's not
unusual for children entering a
Sunday school room early to engage in a game of chase, or tor
them to throw things and push up
cHmiL foil
dfauAMWJLL
•y IITIY NIWMAN
TODAY'S MENU
Creim of^Spinach Soup    Cracken
ige
Coffee
.    _ up
Royal Hash    Fried Eg( Plant
Lettuce or Cabbage Salad
Peach Pie
CREAM OF SPINACH SOUP
Ingredients: one Ublespoon butter, three tablespoons flour, one-
fourth cup cream, salt md pepper,
water ln which apinich wu boiled,
milk. Melt butter, idd flour, cream
md water in which spinach was
boiled and milk enough to mike two
cupi ot soup.
Make like white sauce md season
with one-half teaspoon silt a duh
of paprika and a very UtUe curry
powder. Thli lut miy be omitted.
Serves two.
FRIED IGQ PLANT
Para egg plmt md cut in thin,
even slices. Sprinkle with silt ind
pepper tnd coat with flour. Fry
slowly ln bacon fat (two Uble-
spoom) unUl brown tnd crlip.
ROYAL HASH
Ingredients: mtshed poUto, one-
half cup diced cold mett, ont fourth
or one-hilf pound mushrooms, two
tablespoons butter, one Ublespoon
flour, one-half cup stock or one-half
teaspoon meat extract dissolved in
one-half cup hot water.
Grease glass pie plate and on It
make ring of mashed potetoes. Peel
brown skin oft mushroom caps and
break in small pieces, scrape stems
and slice thin. Melt butter in saucepan, add mushroom! ind cook over
low flame for five minutes. Sprinkle
with flour tnd itir until mixed with
fat and Juice ln pin. Add itock tnd
seasoning. Cook until thick, itirrlng
•11 the whilt. Add meet md pour
mixturt into center of potato ring.
Cover with buttered crumbi and
bake until crumbi ind potatoes are
brown.
•ALAD WITH RICI
For a nourishing aalad, combine
lightly two cupi cooked rice, one
cup peu, four tablespoons each
pimento md relish, three Ublespoon! grated cheese, teupoon salt
lettuce and dressing, and three ta
blespoon!   celery,   minced   Chill.
Serve on crlip lettuci with dressing.
TOMATO AND CHICKEN SALAD
One-hilf cup boiled rice, three-
fourths cup diced cooked chicken,
one-half cup cut string beans, two
tablespoons chopped green pepper,
one-half cup diced celery, one-halt
Ublespoon minced pulley, two-
thlrdi cup mayonnaise, two-thirds
cup whipping cream, Ublespoon
gelatin, two tablespoons cold water,
one-halt teaipoon salt md tomito
Ice.
To maka tha tomato Ice, heat two
cups tomato juice, let partially cool.
Add one Ublespoon gelttin moistened in cold witer. Then season
with one teupoon eich lemon juice
salt Worcestershire uuce. Freeze.
To make the salad, combine chicken, beans, rice, pepper, celery md
parsley. Combine mayonnaise and
whipped cream. Soften gelatin ln
water five minutes, men melt lt
over hot water. Cool. Add salt and
combine aU Ingredients except tomato ice.
THEN COMBINE
Line refrigerator pan with waxed
paper. Pour a layer of tomito Ice,
frozen previously to t mushy state,
into freezing tray. Then arrange
layer of chicken salad and cover
with mother layer of tomato Ice.
Freeze. Serve in slices on lettuce,
Yield: lt-two-inch squares.
CHOCOLATI CHIP ICE CREAM
This delicious frozen custtrd,
crunchy with chips of mellow
chocolate, is just ibout the quick-
tit Ice cream then li to make,
too. It can be whipped up in about
lg minutei ind freezes in ibout
an hour. It does not melt rapidly,
mother good featnrt,   .
The recipe requires two-thirds
cup evaporated milk, one egg,
one-fourth cup sugar, one-half
teupoon vanillt, two squares
iweet chocolate, shaved or grated.
Ohill milk thoroughly. Then
whip until stiff. Beat the egg. Add
lugar and vanilla. Fold In stiffly-
whipped milk. Stir in Uie chocolate. Pour at once Into freezing
tray of automaUc refrigerator and
freeze. Yield: one pint
ihovi or hit one mother during the
brief wonhip service or the letson.
A numbtr ot religious education
dlrecton hive expressed to me tht
discoungemtnt with tht growing
lack of restraint at Sunday School
among children of this ige. Om
uld: "And often Uie wont kids ire
splinters trom the pillars of tha
church!"
Pathetically io, for among thi
church plllin ire some parents
who, hiving themselves had i child
hood pretty weU controlled, htvt
become disciples of tbt idvocatet
of excessive freedom for young
children. Appirently it'i the parenti with fini rtmlly tridlUoni md
community Influuct who htve
been tint to relax in home discipline.
IHOULD ISOLATE OFFENDERS
Now tbe Sundiy ichool teicher
feeli thit ihe cinnot demand orderly conduct ln thue rough-necki.
Shi putt up with whtt no pubUc
ichool teicher would tolerate. I
wish she hid Uie courage of her
convictions md would iioltte thi
few chronic tnnoyen, regardleu
of who their parenti are.
If I were a Sunday ichool luperlntendent I ihould find i imill
nook or room of which iome itern
mm would hive charge. To lt I
would lend iome of then young
hoodlum!, thtn I ihould try to find
teachen who could make the lei-
•om mort interesting thu tha usual teacher does;
Nevertheless, lt ll not all a matter of interest for most of the bedlam li creited before and after tha
lesson period, by children who do
not know tha alphabet of regard
for property or othen' rlghti. A
certain Sunday ichool teicher stld
she trained one "wUd" boy by tending him to lit ont day with tht
adult cliai.
BETTER OFF AT HOME
I would count lt tar better moral
training for a child of ttn to be at
home on t vicmt lot or In a park
pitying bill, or engaging in the
rough-and-tumble of the neighborhood playground ,than to attend a
Sunday school where the type Of
discipline order reigns that it now
io common.
But I ihould like rither to hivt
him in t Sundiy ichool when thert
it some semblinct ot order, tnd
where u atmosphere of silf-rt-
straint makes possible a spiritual
attitude, occasionally at least
I should Uke to know what my
readen have to uy about this mit-
ter. Why not write me your Ideu?
SOLVING PARINT PROBLEMS
Q. Should not the chUd earn hit
spending money?
A. There are great valuu In hli
earning money, u from carrying a
paper or from iome othar job outside the routine home program. But
In our modern tlmu relatively few
children can have iuch jobs. For
most of them th«ye wUl hivi to be
■n allowance till iuch time u they
ut able to eam normally.
NAKUSP AUXILIARY
HAS HOSPITAL FETE
NsVKUSP, B.C.—Mn. A. Wition
loaned her homt Wedneiday afternoon for a tea and sale of novelUu
sponsored by tha Women'a HospiUl
Auxiliary in aid of the Arrow Lakes
Hospital. The tea table, presided
over by Mrs. H. Thurgood, wu een-
tied with a bowl of roses. Assisting with the tea were Mrs. Watson,
Mn. W. Maxwell, Mn. R. McCulloch, Miss B. Jamieson, Mn. J.
Motherwell and Mrs. E. Oxenham.
Mn. H. L. Miller was ln chirge of
the sale ot novelUes.
Food Value ...
Period Milk Is
Assured by Up
To Dale Farms
•y DONNA ORACI
Most fimilies have milk on Uie
table for every meal, and for the
growing children lt ia the principal
food. Docton ud nutrition experti have found it to conteln certain ot Uw moit eiienttel tood ale-
men te.
According to Dr. E. V. McCollum,
John Hopkuu univenlty, "milk Is
one food for which there ii no ef-
fecUve substitute." It la a supple-
menUry, protective food because lt
adds to the diet those essentUl
things which are apt to be left
out—the vltemlm, lfmt for teeth,
tnd eailly uied ftti ud protelni
of high quility.
One eminent dentist uyi: "Drink
a bottle of milk a day, eat plenty
of fruit md vegeteblei, end you
nead never fur tnt dentlit"
There ire ftw who retlixt tbe
icienUflc cue ud expert minige-
ment thit gou with tbt conduct ot
a modern milk farm. Thli begins
with the farms ud feeding and
foUowi through to tha consumtr.
It It Interesting to note Uie 12-
point plan compiled by one grett
milk concern. It ll u foUowi:
1. Cowi muit be weU ud beal'
thy.
3. Bams and equipment muit be
uniform ud be iinltiry.
J. Firm cooling ficUltiei muit
meet ipeclftc itendudi,
1 All milk li examined before
accepted at country plinti.
9. Eich producer*! milk It fur.
CHOOSE YOUR SCHOOL FROM THIS LIST
St. Ann's Academy
KAMLOOPS, B. C.
CONDUCTED BY THE SISTERS OF ST. ANN
RESIDENTIAL AND DAY SCHOOL
Grades l-XII Inclusive
Complete One-Year Commercial Department
Music: Students prepared for examinations from
Toronto Conservatory, Trinity College and
Associated Board, London, England.
St. Ann's Academy
NEW WESTMINSTER, B.C.
ReildenUil ind Diy
School for Glrli
A Khool with • homt itmo-
..iphere with attention to building  of Christian  Character.
Grades 1 to 12 Inclusive
Buslneu and Commtrcltl
Courses
Music courses Leidlng to
L.A.B. ind A.T.C.M.
Fill—Pir Annum!
Diy Pupili $20 to $50
Boirden .WOO to $350
Furthtr Particular* and Pros-
pectui write to Sister Superior
Grammar School
Duncan
Vincouver Island, B. C,
Eitabllihed 1028
BOARDING SCHOOL
FOR BOYS
Curriculum u laid down by
the Department of Education,
lg icru of playing tielda.
Healthy surroundings. Modern
equipment. Experienced mu-
ten. Rugby football, cricket
gym, boxing, etc. Moderate
feu. Term starts Sept 18th.
For prospectus write to tbt
Htidmuter, Duncan, B.C.
MOUNT ROYAL
Colgory dQ[[E(JE   Alhrtq
In affiliation with Univenlty of Albirta it a Junior College
Oae. W. Kirby, B.A, D,D, LLD., Principal
Individual Attention—Chrlitlin Atmosphere.
Outdoor and Indoor Sporti. Day and Ruident StudenU
FIRST YEAR UNIVERSITY COURSES
Leading to the degrees of B.A., B.Sc, LL.B. and B. Com. Also the
combined counts of Arts and Commerce, Law or Engineering,
ud tint year Honon coursei.
HICH SCHOOL COURSES, GRADES X, XI and XII
Supervised itudy periods for itudent! who require them.
BUSINESS and SECRETARIAL COURSES
Penonal and clus Instruction ln Shorthand. Typing, Bookkeeping, etc. Office training in college environment The but
at lowest rates. Aik about our Combined Secretarial md B.
Com. course. Send for our School of Commerce booklet "Planning Your Future."
SCHOLARSHIP and BURSARIES
are available fpr deserving itudenti entering on any of above
eounei. Univenlty courses begin Sept 28. High School ud
Busbies! courses Sept 11.
EXPRESSION and DRAMATICS-MUSIC
PubUc Spetking, Play Writing, Acting, Oral Interpretation, ate.
Piano, Singing, Theory, Violin. Speciil Violin ud Gutter
classes. Btby Symphony Orchtttrt. InrtrucUon in thut tubjtcta
may begin at any Ume.
For Calendar write the Reglitrar
MOUNT ROYAL COLLEGE, CALGARY, ALTA.
PITMAN
Business College, Ltd.
ENROLL NOW
Complete Secretarial and
Bookkeeping Coursei
Public and High School Subjects
Civil Service
.    INDIVIDUAL ATTENTION
WRITE FOR PARTICULARS
EVELINE A. C. RICHARDS, Principal
CRANVILLE AND BROADWAY, VANCOUVER, B.C.
THE  VANCOUVER
SCHOOL  OF  ART
Gamble and Dummulr Streets. VANCOUVER, B.C.
Western Canada's Central Institution
for Art Training.
. DAY AND EVENING COURSES
Whole and Pirt-timt Initructlon given ln Drawing,   "
Pitnting, Dulgn, Pictorial Competition, Commercial Art,
Pottery, Interior Decoration, Modelling, Commtrcltl
Drawing.
Modtrn mtthodi Uught by rtcogniztd trtlst initructon.
exhibition of Student art
On view in the school from August 28 to September 9.
PROSPECTUS FREE ON APPLICATION
Director, Chirlii H. Scott 0.8.A,
sjjfttttil
J\\.
ther examined tn country labora-
torlta-
6. Milk |i transported to pasteurising plinti la iniulated tanki at
low temperature.
T. AU milk li examined on arrival at puteurlzlng pluU before
unloading.
I. MUk li igiin ualytad in city
laboratoriu before piiteuriitUon.
t. Witer In tbt planti la regularly tested for purity,
10. SterUled botUu ara examined
by trained men before ud after
filling.
II. After paiteurliatlon, all milk
receiVu a compltte laboratory tn-
ilyib
12. The puteurixatlon plinti are
equipped with modern facilltiei tor
Um scientific ud unlUry puttur-
lntton ud distribution of dtlry
foodi.
Thli Menu like a lot of careful
mantgtmtnt to thou ot ui who
Ukt good milk for granted, but
lt li t greit utlificUon to know we
cu depend on the quility of thii
most perfect food.
A quirt ot mUk amount! to (79
ctloriei.
Influence...
Religion Needed
In All Lives
By CAROLINE CHATFIELD
Ona ot the wiieit but-belovtd
and moit widely rttd of ntwi-
piper women told ma that when
ihe wu employed to write a wo-
man'i pige feature, her big boss
uld to her: "Now itey oft religion
ud pollUci ud you'U get along
ill right Anything you hava to uy
on either ot these subjects will offend lomebody'i itnaiblUtlei."
Well, I've observed thit the
doeint hesitate to recommend Uie
ten commandment! to her readen
NEW YORK (CP)-Harrlet Iwu-
ickt, born ot Ruulan Immigrant
parenti In Chicago and reared In
Canada, wu • high-wire circui acrobat whtn iht mtt Clyde Beatty,
the wlld-mlmil trainer, ilx yein
ago. It took marriage ud three
yein of penuulon to get htm to
ltt btr go Into tht cage wtth Ua
Jungle cati.
With twe acta ot her own, ahe
adds sex appeal to the rut ot the
excitement ln hli ihow. AU In white
—silk blouse, shorts, leither boots-
she worki eight ulmali ln the
cage at once (more than any othtr
woman ever htndled, the uyi) ud
makes a lion and a tiger, natural
enemies, ride on au elephant that
quakes with fair ot both.
Physical itrength doesn't eount In
training wild inlmils, uyi 30-year-
old Mn. Butty.
"A lot ot ptoplt dont retliie
SERIAL STORY...     *■■, ■
PHANTOM RANCH
■y ORIN ARNOLD
SYNOPSIS
Lorena Hamilton, In tha duert
country of Arizona, to visit har
uncle, meeti
Shot Rogen, one of the Phutom
rtpch cowboy* »' the railroad ite-
Je'rry Dile, college bred, li a newcomer to Phutom ruch, who bu
corrupondtd with Lorena.
YESTERDAY Lorena finally reach-
u Phintom Ruch, her MUM*
Uon. Her Uncle la convinced Uie
Mexicui who tried to kidnap her
belong to the bud of Lull Iico-
bir, a revoluUoniit who hu btin
iteillng hi! cattle.
CHAPTER ( ■
Noon had illpped into tha rolling gretn valley, there baton anybody quite realiied it, io intent
hid bten the towrenatlon. A fat
Mexlcu woman -waddled around
tht outiidt ot the ruch home wd
brought the tint realization of
time. .   .    „_
"Iii all theu lenoru to be fix
for dinner?" she asked of Mn. Brazee, indicating the 20-odd rlden
Saliy Brazee almoit bluihed, Sbe
hid been negligent u housewife
ud hosteu..
"Why-why, yei! Yu, Concha,
then men muit be itervedl My
goodness, George, whttever are you
doing, sitting on your hone Uke a
wart! Get theta men down and
washed up and rested, and ltt mt
tted them!" _ ■
Sally Brazee ran back Into the
house ud George swung down
from the uddle. The other men
diimounted, getting and needing
no further invitation. They hadn t
been shown a dlscourteiy,' they hid
just been in earnest discussion.
They knew, of course, that they
ware welcome at tha Phutom, that
they would be fed u long u a bite
of victuals remained.
Two ot the Phutom boyi, aided
by Midnight took all tha mounts
to Uie corral tor watering Ud feeding, and tht men proceeded to a
second watering trough that extended 40 feet trom the baie of a
wlndmUl tower. Lorena wu deeply Interested. With Jerry Dale near
her, the walked betide George Brazee.
"Uncle George, I muit uy or do
lomething to think aU these men,
she began, "but I dont quite know
how to do it—"
Not George, but uother rancher
Interrupted. ,   .,
•Don't try It, UtUe mlu." he «om-
minded, smiling. "Wa don't nttd
lt Anywiy, we dldnt do tnythlng.
It was young Dale here who became the hero. Look at him grin!"
All tytt tumid on Jerry and uv-
eral of the men smiled at him. Shot
Rogen did not imUe. In aU tbt
talk that morning, Shot hid observed a detail tha othen didn't notice.
The story of discovering Lorena
as told by Lorana, hadn't Jibed ex.
acUy with the story, Jtrry told.
Jerry's venion put himself considerably mora ImporUnt in the process.
It wu too trivial to notice much,
Shot Rogers reasoned. And yet be
didn't like Jerry Dale. In common
with aU the Phantom cowboys, with
whom he wu friendly. Shot Juit
couldn't "cotton to" the hmdiome
young college graduate who had
coma to tha Brazee homi two yun
igo ud set up tor scientific studies.
They admitted hli abilitiei in iome
lines; they hoped hit teiti tor improving range cattlt would be luccessful; but they didn't Uke him
personally.
Lorena moved near Shot u they
walked and thanked him again tor
lending her hii bone and piltol
the diy before.
"I ihiU rtplice the pistol u loon
■i I get a chance to buy one," ihe
declired. "The Mexicui took it
and the cartridge belt."
"Skip lt," Shot uld. "I hope it
gou oft and splatters them."
"Are you that bloodthlnty, girt"
she laughed with him thu.
The group had come to the windmill—the wheel high above wu
cllnk-danklng nther merrily in
the noon breeze—and Lorena toon
had har curloiity about tha expedition iitiificd. Matter-of-facUy. the
ranchmen propped their bail on
mother earth, pushed up sleeves,
ud with only cuuil comment!
plunged ln to wuh.
"Splooo-o-o-oo-I" one mtjt lound-
tC off, through the double handful
he had dashed on hii face. Qthen
followed. Only ihe tnd Jerry Dili
how dtngeroui the anlmali are, tt
looki so euy. Tbit'i why wt uie
blink cartridgt gum tnd whice.
They drtmttize the danger to the
audience. The chair we hold tn front
of us is really Uie moit effective
weapon we htvt, ud It probibly
looks sort of silly to iome people.
"The grutest danger comu when
they get into a gang fight You've
gotta break it up quick, became it'a
a big lou if one of tbe ulmali gete
killed or injured. A lion costs ua
■bout S500, i Ugtr 11900. And by
tbt time they're trained they're
worth t lot mora.
"I wu awfully brave when I tint
sterted. Then I uw a Ugtr kllltd by
i Uon ont day. It wu In Clydt'i ict
Tht Uon knocked the tiger right
oft her pedeitel and Just twisted
tha poor thing to duth. Thty ilmost   hit  Clyde  when  ther  felt
Seeing lomething like thit taka Uit
bravery right out ot you."
"Monarch of the East" Good Indoor Plant
held back, Lorana noted. She wat
highly amused at it all, but tactful-
ly said nothing.
Cleuicd of visible dirt and lm.
manitly refreshed, tht men moved
ont by ont to tbt two-inch pipe
trom which pumped water catcad-
ed Into tha trough. Each ituck hli
mouth into tile itream, drinking
copiously. George Brazee led tbe
procession bick to the houu, a
good hundred yardi.
"lin't Uncle Georgt hudsomt!1
Lorena murmured to Shot Rogers
then, from the rear. "He walks like
a—a whlte-hilred god or lomething."
"Georgt Brazee It * thorough,
bred," Shot declared. "Mtn In Arizona wiU iweir by him, ma'am.
They hate to tee Um ln trouble."
"Trouble'i not much," Jerry Dale
put in. "Bunch ot Mex ruiueri li
all Wt cu bit .town tbeir ean
ihorto.*
"I ain't io—Tm not ao iuit," Shot
Rogen declired. "Being on the
internitlonil line thli way, the
Phutom ruch invltea thieves, renegades, scum of all sort to tUp over
and take cattle. Cattle are food.
Lull Isoobir Is building himielf
a naw army. Mexico ud Wuhlngton, D. C, arent diplomatic ao
friendly ot late, u you know, mam.
Wa would be insignificant ln thalr
eyu, ud thay wouldn't wut to
recognize any UtUe trouble we complained of. But it we auhiyed a-
crow tha Una on a gunning spree,
we'd dtrn mre bur from thit nil
quick! Thtt'i whit dliturbi your
uncle George - ud I don't burnt'
him."
"Nuti," tatd Dal*.
"All right how about yeu doing—"
Shot Rogin had been about to
"sass" back at Jerry Dale with a
challenge but Mn. Brazee Interrupted them. She called trom the vtr-
udih.
"I wu thit detracted today I
never got my cooking begun right
But we cu do better for mpptr."
Any other womu everywhtre—except a farm womu or a ruch woman—would have been floored by
the necessity of feeding 20 hungry
male guesti on halt u hour'i notice. But Silly had three Mexican
servuts. And being Isolated, ahe
bad to keep abupout itorei on
bud.
Braid consisted of tray after tray
of hot biicuits which kept pouring from tha big ranch ovens even
u tha men ate. And halt u hour
had been time enough to boil a veritable waihtub full ot coftte.
Lorana hid titan earlier, and to
while the man overflowed the grut
dining room to the Uvlng room ihe
walked outiide alone, found a horu
and decided to Inveitigite the big
ruch by herself.
Lorana rode for a half hour, marveling at the scenic beauty aU about
her, thu returned to the house
for a doit impaction ot her uncle'i
boma.
Phutom Ruch headquarten
backed up igalnst a iteep rock buttress nurly 800 feet high. In front
sprawled a highly picturesque valley of perhtps 25 acrei. From thli
front porch of tbe main home, tht
villey appeared ts ba hemmed in
by other mountain! and cliffs, but
dlitent ihidow cricki Lorana knew
would be exlti to othtr valley ud
tlopti whert citUt could graze.
The mtln home Itself wu built of
nitlvt rock, tbout 10 roomi sprawled hippUy iround In no architectural pittera. Tht porch wu a wide
expame roofed by thttched log!
ud with log posts. On tht posts
numerous limbs hid bten left u
toot-long itubi u a convenience
for hinging bridlti, hate, ipun ind
iuch. Moit of tha poiti looked Ukt
hat treei now, Lorena obierved.
She wu itudying these itrange
but fascinating deUili which wera
io unlike htr Kentucky iurround<
. A ipecles of Arum known, at
"Monarch of tha Eut" it tJ« often
called the "Resurrection Plut bt-
cimt lt growi without water or
soil ud therefore ii a novel plant
to mow Indoon during the Winter.
It ilwiyi ittracti ■ greit dul of
Interest, but lt U lilted ln only a
few bulb cateloguu.
Ai pictured In todiy'i Girden-
Graph, "Monarch of the But" re-
lemblu both the calla Illy ud
Jack-ln-the-pulplt
The exotlcally decorated flower
ot the "Monarch of the Eut" appears before tht follige doei. After
the bloom hu died down Uie plut
should be plinted out of doon, to
thit it cm replenish Its strength for
uother blooming period.
Shruba miy be propigated thii
month using greenwood cuttings.
It ii worth wtiljt to try ont ot tht
hormone preparations now on tht
marktt u a mum ot hastening
and lUmulating root development
This treatment li Important to com-
merciil nursery practice, but ami'
teur girdenen will alio find It
useful
ftWtheftbooeet
ings when big Jerry Dale swaggered outside to loin ner. He took hli
hat-tar ud above the cltuest one
-tightened tht leather thong of It
military fashion under hli chin,
ud smiled it tha new girl.
"Say, kid," ha begu, rather cock.
Ily, "you ought nit up fut u you
cu. You'rt gonna hava ma buglng
around. Wt got to go pltcti ana
see thlngi. And llittn, — if uy of
thui dim-witted mugi try horning in, why, I got what lt taktil"
By wiy of demomtratlon, he
flexed hii ri' t arm so thit a powerful biceps muscle bulged thtrt.
Lorena didn't quite know what to
make of him.
To Be Continued
u the perfect law, nor htiitate to
remind them that while nobody cu
break them,, nobody can ucept
punlihmtnt for breaking them.
So let's talk about religion In the
big unit ud iet if wt cu't discover why it la tht fint eutntlil
for lUylng on top of the wheel.
Children Juit mturally behave bat-
ter whu they know papa and mama are ln the background keeping
an eye on them. CaU it fur, or
what have you, they are better tor
that rutralning influence, to uy
nothing of the source ot comfort
whlchv wlu parenti ara to their
young. So It ti with ui chUdren of
a larger growth.
Ai for m, Jtwi and Oentitei, wa
wera brought upon a textbook
that leaves nothing umaid about
our duty to God ud our fellowmen
ud quibble u wt may over non-
esientlili, that textbook contains
all we nead to live by, including
Uie bulc laws on which our civil
Uwi are built Try at wa may wt
can't outwit them.
The textbook ia crammed with
choict literature, poetry, graphic
itoriei, lurching analyili of Uit
bumu heirt and mind which we
may appropriate for tha reading.
But mostly we prefer to pay a psychologist or psychiatrist to come
along ud give ui Uie good nawi u
It It wera brand naw.    -
Wt cunot learn from bitter or
iweet experlenc (if inded we learn
uythlng from experience) more
than li tn the textbook. When the
blowi of life rain down on ui ud
wt are utterly beaten and there's
no comfort to be found uywhen,
comu the quieting echo of a calm
voice "Be itill and know that I am
God." Whu wt'vt cried our eyei
out ud our plUowi ara wet with
tean tha Pialmlsti' wordi ara
iweit to tilt tar, "Wttplng may en-
dura for ttw night but joy cometb
in tho morning.
Ot courie wa arent conscious
thtt we hava louli whu we are
young ud happy ud gay. any
more than wa are conscious of
eyu and ean io loni u wa are
seeing ud hearing like cate ud
blrdt; we don't bother much about
our souls until they ache. But how
they can ache with pain that cu't
be eased with uythlng less than
religion! Religion ptnonlfiid ln t
Higntr Being to whom we cm
pray ud in whom wt cu confide.
SociaL.
CASTLEGAR
CASTLEGAR, B.C.-Roile Ridding hu returned to her homt at
Grand Forki ifter spending i vs.-
citlon here with Mr. ud Mri. L.
Bordon.
Jimmy Rollln of Vallican ii viiiting htrt it ttlt homt ot bis brother.
-ln-liw ind iliter, Mr. ud Mn. A.
Harriion.
Mn. L. S. Scott md ton, Douflu,
of Nelson ara visiting Mr. and Mrs.
O. H. Thiel.
Mr. and Mn. R. DeFoe ud ftmily htve returned to their home hert
after a ihort visit ln Spokant.
D. Frelsen ud Mn. Spence of
Trail were recent vUlton hire.
Pete Snell, Riymond Gotfrlend,
Arnold ud Airon Dubt trt at tht
Catholic Boyi' Cimp on the Wut
Arm ot Kootenay Lakt.
Mr. ud Mn. J, MacKinnon tnd
family .recently viilted Mr, ind Mn.
R MacKinnon tt Creient Villey.
, Mn. J. Wului ud baby ara in
TraU.^ _^
Slocan Valley Women
Talk Eaiy Method!
Canninq; Show Work
PASSMORE, B. C.-The Slocan
Valliy Women'! Inititute mtt Sit.
urdiy In the absence of tht Preildent the Vice Preildent, Mn. W.
Yount presided.
Dlfftrtnt ud Hilar way! of can
ning wera discussed. Mn. G. Strong
dlipliyed i chlldi' toy teddy beir
thit sht hid midt out ot dlicarded
tweed coiting.
Thou preient wire Mn. W.
Young, Mn, W. R. Perry, Mn. F,
Flynn, Miss B. Perry, Mrs. Strong
and Miu Crebbin.
Social .«
NEW DENVER
NEW DENVER, B.C.-Miu Mir.
Jorlt Francis entertained recently
In honor ot htr gueit Miu Evelyn
Gunn of Ntlion. Tbt young folki
enjoyed dancing on the veranda.
Several of the young people u>
slsted Mn. Francii with tha music
Delicious refreshment! were terved
after which dancing contlnutd The
invited gueiti were Mlu Evelyn
Gunn of Nelion, Mlnu Hilda Crel-
Un, Monica Butlin, Olive Tattrie,
Hazel Flint Margarita Campbell
Vtlma Macintosh of Ntlion, Dagmar Olson, and Marjorie Francis,
-Unity Alywin,
!olln Campbell j
Ken -Fowler,' '
flllton Crellin, Donald Francis and
arney Johnion.
Mn. W. F- Jttftry la spending a
holldiy ln Spoktnt.
Mn. H. Blumemuer ud two
children ot Mtrrltt are viiiting ln
town.
H. 0. Ounn left for a few dayi
holldiy ln Spokane, where ha will
meat hla wife, who bu been viiiting ln SeatUe.
Mn. D. T. Shannon and daughter,
Mlu Effie Shunon, ara ipending a
few dayi in Vernon.
Jamu Draper motored to Nelion
for tbt Liberal convenUon.
Two Sets of Twins
in Trail, August
TRAIL, B. C, Sept 1—Forty,
ieven blrthi, five deithi ud tight
mtrrtagu wire reglitered at the
Provincial PoUee Office hert during tht month of Auguit Tha birth*
Included two iete ot twlni.
„rMourdo«»-
rttVe'fflAa.att (fo
rtJou* ouvusiU AMtmrnrim
AadtiM,? sCsUUtfUU,
V. doauW
lixn
Huvy overalls ire tough to
wuh anyway, ud whin they
trt toiled with materiili that
need chemical action to dii-
tolvt... it'i a hopetou teak
for uy womu. "Let the
Laundry do It!" . ,-.
Yn ud your dreu dothu
wUl look Juit that much better too whtn thty are perfectly eluned ud preued In our
dry cleaning depirtment Remember rates ara really i
onabli. '
.:..'.
ROMPT JMCKUP
AND   DELIVCRY
 •——-—
 "■   -.--      .-  ■ .       ;'"^ '"■"■■    '■
\\W
FOR GROWING BOYS AND GIRLS
IN CHILDREN'S SHOES IT REALLY PAYS
TO BUY QUALITY
R, Andrew & Co.
Leaden in Footfathion
Gizeh Temple Band
Plays at Rossland
ROSSLAND, B. C, Stpt t -
Memben of tbe Gizeh Temple
Bind, and other Shriners, who are
attending the convenUon at Trail
and Nelion paid a viilt to Roulind
Friday morning when the band
gave an hour'i concert at the Mater
Mlsericordiae Hospital,
The concert followed an inspection of the new hospital wing, when
The concert followed an lnii
_on of the new hospital wing, when
refreshments were served by the
Ladies' Auxiliary tn the solarium.
Butcherteria
Phone Mows Wl0M
527   *"»WB    528
NELSON'S PREMIER MARKET
$1.00
CHICKEN—Fruhly
Routed; Up from _
BOILING FOWL—
Special; Par Ib. _
23*
ROASTING CHICKEN- *_**A
Special; Par lb. . -*-/**
RUMP ROASTS BEEP-
Good! Ib. -—i——
VEAL ROAITS-Oood;
Lb.,
PORK ROASTS-flood;
Lb..	
2#
aw
Shoulders Spring Lamb:
Boned and Ofli»
Rolled, Ib. L\Jl
VEAL STEAKS—
2 lbl.
HAMBURGER-Good;
2 lbl..
SAUSAGE MEAT-
2 lbl.	
35U
25*
Special  Sal*  of  Corned
R 15c 18c
CHEEIE-Oood Cana.      _AA
dian; Lb, tmfr
BREAKFAST BACON-   *MA
Best allwdl Lb. ******
BACON-No. 2, illud;    *mA
CASH AND CARRY
ROLLED ROASTS—        gSf*
RUMP ROASTS- J/O-t
PICNIC SHOULDERS-   JAjI
POT ROASTS- __A
Up from *"">
FREE DELIVERY
NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. Ife-SATURDAY MORNINO. SEPT. t 1IM.
Rossland Begins
Ball Semis al
Salmo on Sunday
SALMO, B.C. Sept 1—The leml-
flnil playoffi between the Stlmo
Senlon tnd Roulind Mlntn in the
Weit Kooteniy Baseball League
get under way at the Salmo Ball
Park Sunday afternoon at 2:30.
Salmo flnlihed well on top of the
help ln the regular league schedule
while Rouland finished fourth.
Rosslind hu filled to take the
Salmo outfit into camp u yet this
seaion although in the lut two
games things were uncomfortably
close tor the league-leaden.
Red Tulloch will take the mound
for tha vislton while it will rut
between George Niblow and Ted
Clever u to the Salmo pitching
choice.
Two-Pound Baby
Gains, Rossland
ROSSLAND, B.C., Sept 1-Snug-
gled in the depths of an Incubator
at the Mater Misericordiae Hospital, Rossland's smallest citizen entered his tenth diy of lift Friday,
still fighting a strong battle tor existence with the oddt getUng better every day.
Russell Pollock, ion ot Mr. and
Mn. Alexander Pollock, weighed
exactly two poundi when.ha wai
born Auguit 23, and hli weight
Frldiy ihowed a gain ot ilx ouncei.
Baby Russell is following a family tradition set by his lister, threes,
year-old Bernice, who wu the
tint Incubator baby ln the Roulind hoipital. Bernice weighed Vtk
poipidi at birth.
Rossland Stores
Close Labor Day
ROSSLAND. BjO, Stpt 1-Ross-
lind stores will tgt closed on Mondiy, Libor Day, and will remain
open Wedneiday afternoon.
PHONE 910
for utlmatu on lawn and landscape
gardening.
Mae's Greenhouses
J. W. McClelland
Ona Blk. From Hoipltil
Cedir ind Front Ste     Phont 910
Safely for School
Children Sought
by Mayor of Trail
Eight New Teachers
Join Staffs;
Total 60
TRAIL, B. C, .Sept 1-Wlth tht
opening of Tnil-Tadinic ind district schools Tuesday, Miyor I. L.
Groutige today uked that the flnt
Khool week usher in a campaign
ot utety that will maka every
itreet roid tnd highwiy lift for
children; thit the ctmpilgn ot itfe-
ty be carried on voluntarily by
everyone throughout the entire yur.
Sixty teachen, eight of whom
joined the ichool staffs thli term
due to vacancies created by resignations, will begin another term of
imparting knowledge.
Two of the new appointees, E.
Davlu and Mlu Molly E. Cottingham, have been assigned to the
Senior High school staff. Mr. Davlu takes F. J. Field's position u
teacher of mathematics. He is an
arts graduate of tht Univenlty ot
British Columbit. He comu to Trill
from Cranbrook where hi taught
for leveral yun ind wu acting
principal during 1937-38.
Miss Cottingham takes the place
of Mn. R. H. Lowe, who taught
temporarily for a few monthi it
the close ot the lut school yeir.
Miu Cottingham ii also in arte
graduate of the University ot British Columbit and also hu taken
post graduate courses at the Univenlty of Wuhlngton. She taught
for seven yean at Fernie and tour
years at Powell River.
Promoted to Junior High
R. W. Nesbitt, who graduated In
arts, trom the same unlvenity, this
Summer, hu been appointed to
the Junior high school itaff, filling
the vacancy created by the resignation of Mlu Margaret Buchanan,
Mr. Nubltt hu been on the itaff ot
Eut Trail Khool ilnce 1230.
Mlu Mirjeen McLure of Kimberley taka the poiition left vaunt by tha migration ot Mlu
Loli Whimiter u teacher of domutic acience fdr the Junior high
school. Miu McLure received her
home economics degree trom the
Unlvenity of Manitoba in 1232. She
taught two yean in Langley, one
year in Femie and substituted for
several monthi ln Nelion.
' Miss Elsa Gansner ot Nelion and
Stanley Murphy of Vancouver have
been appointed to the Central Khool
itaff, taking poiltidni vicited by
Min Dorothy Elliott tnd Miu Jun
Boomer. Miu Gansner il a former
teicher it Ctntnl Khool, luvlng
there in June 1938 to ipend a year
in Europe.
On Mr. Nubltt'i promotion to the
Junior high Khool itaff, hli position on the Eut Trail itaff will
be taken by T. E. Walmiley, ion
ot W, Walmiley, recently appointed
itation agent at Tadanac, and Mn.
Walmsley, Mr. Walmsley formerly
taught ln Cartler and Mapu, B.C.
Mlu Anne Gray hu also been
appointed to Eut Trail Khool, filling tbt poiition formerly.held by
Mlu Dorothy McKiy, who resigned
ot IU health. Miu Gray hu hid six
yun' experience. She comu here
from Mara where ihe wu principal
lut yur.
NELSON SOCIAL
By MRS. Jl J. VIGNEUX
<SS«S«»333»ftX»t««3«3»»»&?
New Fall Millinery
ARRIVING DAILY
£ditk d CaJUwih-M.
Ot Baker St Phone (TO
R & R Grocery
PHONE 161
Effective Saturday and Monday
...23c
Baking Powder:
Magic 12 oi., tin
Coffee: Froth OO.
Ground, Ib LOI
Com Flakes: Clant     OC.
Kelloggi, 2 pkgi. ... LJl
GINGER ALE
McDonald! Quarti: 1C
Priced at --Ol
Plug 5* deposit on bottle
Cuitard Powder: Miket ilx
BP Wc
Wheat Puffi: Sun-    OC„
land, 3 pkgi. LOI
Potted Meatit
3 tint ......
Bread: All brandt,      OC.
3 loavei LOl
25c
Wax: Wisard, pint    OQ.
bottle ••••«......»****/**
Toilet Soap: OC .
Assorted, 6 for ...LOl
4 ban Royal Crown Soap and
1 comb'.. OQ.
All for LOl
BUTTER
Brightholm First Crade.
|ust try It once. QQ.
3 lbs. OUC
..25c
23c
lie
25c
FRUITS and VEGETABLES
Thirst-Ade Crystals:   IA
Mushroom Broth:
lO'/a os., 2 for .
Mushrooms: 16 ox.
buttons, per tin »..
Mushroom Spread:
Per tin	
Soup: Clark's
Asserted, 3 for ....
Pean: Bartlet, OO.
per baiket LLl
Peachei: Freestone,    OC.
per basket LOl
Crapes: Tokay, OC-
Z    ID$e      *•••••••••••    -mmfVmt
Cantaloups:
4 for .......
Plums: Your choice,   IC.
basket ........... lOl
Watermelon: Cut,
Ib. 	
Radishes: IA.
3 bunches  Vll
25c
5c
Tomatoes: Firm, IA.
basket  lUC
Cabbage, Squash and i .
Marrow, Ib 4C
Carrots, Croon Onions, Cu-
cumbers and Beets: IA.
3 for . 1UC
SociaL....
PASSMORE
PASSMORX, B.C.-<\. J. McCormack ii a patient in Kootenay Lake
General Hotpital.
Viiiton over the weekend trom
Trail included Mr. and Mb. W. H.
Saunden, Harry Saunden, Norman
Rodgen, Philip Thatcher and. David
Somerville.
SoaaL...
SLOCAN PARK
SLOCAN'PAItK, B. C-Mr. aad
Mn, Max Bukin have returned
from the cout
Philip Padowinkoff and Fred
Ptdowfnkoff hive lone to Kelowna
for the apple picking seuon.
Miss Elizabeth Meakin ia viilt-
ina it Kelowna.
Mrs. Walter Lebetoff ot Thrumi
li visiting relatives here.
Mrs. Ben Bukin ot South Sloctn li ipending a week hera with
Mr, and Mn. Max Baikin.
Visiton to Nelson included Walter Greavison, Ronald Greavison,
Mika Poochachoff, Mr, and Mrs.
John Konkin and S. S. Plonldln.
William Lyttstoff hu gone to
Vancouver for treatment. He is In
the Vancouver General Hospital.
Rossland Baby Is
Recovering After
Kicked by Horse
ROSSLAND, B.C., Sept 1-A little gentleman with two very black
e Mn. J. t Hiwu ud diuih-
ttn Loli and Dorothy of North-
brook, Ont, arrived yttttrday
morning to ipend a couple ot
monthi viiiting Mrs. Hawes mother, Mrs. Hirry Houston, Fiirview.
She will alio viilt friend! in tht
surrounding district
e Mrs. Burklnihaw, who hu
been viiiting her mother, Mn. W.
Widd it Crawford. Biy, hu returned to resume her duties at teacher
ln Nelson.
Mr. and Mn. Bruno Bourgeois.
Midden Apartments, Edgewood
Avenue, have returned from a few
days visit in Spokine.
e Mrs. Carl Nykegard and
daughter Mona of Ymir ware city
visitors Thursdiy.
e Mn. A. G. Gallup of Procter,
who hai been i pitient in Kooteniy
Like General Hospital, expect! to
luve Monday for St Piul to vltlt
ber litter.
e Colonel and Mrs. James
Cowan of Shutty Bench spent yuterday tn town.
e Mr. and Mn. Jack McKernan
and family, who have been guests
of the latter's mother, Mrs. T. L.
Marquis, Fairview, have returned
to Spokane.
e Mr. and Mn. A- L. Cruch
have returned from a holiday at
tbe Cout
e W. Young of Passmore ipent
yuterday in the city. '
e Miu Doretta Norrli, Fifth
Street Fairview, hu left tor Calgary, where iha ii spending her
vacation. She wu accompanied by
her young brother.
e Mr. and Mrs. T. D. Birrell of
Sheep Creek are guesti of the lit'
ter'i parenti, Mr. ind Mn. Divid
Wade, Stanley Street
e Mlu Peggy Dunnett, Carbon
ate Street, has returned from spend
ing several weeks at the Cout
e Mrs. John DeKtnder, Rou
ment expects to have as weekend
luests her grandchildren. Mr. and
Mrs. J. DeKinder of Spokane.
e Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Riley ot
Bonnington viilted town yeiterdiy.
e Shoppen ln the city Included
Mr. and Mrs. i. C. Forbei ot Pus-
more.
a Mr. and Mn. G. B. Benti hive
returned from holidaying at tht
Coast
e Mr. and Mri. R. D. Hill,
Joiephlne Street htvt u guests,
Mrs tnd Mrs. Hemiworth ot tho
Dtylight Mint, who trt hera tor
the weekend, tiso Miu E. Fliher of
Worchester, Mass., who hu bten
motoring through Banff, Lake
Loulie and the Windermere and ii
now en route to Ticomi, Wuh.
e Fred Ctmpbell of Calgary,
ex resident of NeUon, arrived
Thursday to spend hli vication at
the home of Mr. and Mn. J. G.
Gamble, Carbonate Street
e Mrs. G. Strobo and daughter
Sylvia of Slocan Park viilted town
yesterday.
e Mrs. O. A. Greer ot New
Denver viilted town yuterday.
Carl Mohr of Toronto, who la
ln tbe dlitrict, ipent yesterdiy in
Ntlson.
e Misi Sidlt Hamberg of Salmo visited the city Thursday.
e Mn. L. Colletti and family
are holidaying ln Spokane.
e Rex Towgood of the Ca*
nadian Bank of Commerce in Fernie viilted hii brother-in-law and
•titer, Mr. and Mn.' W. J. Stur-
?:eon. Terrace Apartment! en route
rom Sandon, where he vliited hli
parenti, Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Towgood, en route to the Windermere
tnd Banff district to continue his
victtlon.
e T. Kelly of Nakusp vUited
Nelson yesterday.
e Mr. and Mn. F. A. Whitfield,
Hall Street have u guut Mrs. Forteath of Kimberley, who hu been
holidaying in Kulo. They alio have
had Mrs. A. Buerge of Gray Creek,
who left yuterday for her home.
e Mrs. J. C. Muir and her mother, Mn. Young, left via the Great
Northern yesterday for California
to spend a holiday.
e Mr. and Mn. William Clirk
ot Ymlr visited Nelson yesterday.
e Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Allan
have taken up residence ln {he
Medical Arts Apartments.
e Mr. and Mrs. Jamu H. Gagnon and daughter Mary Ann, who
have-been spending tne Summer
in Vancouver, where Mr. Gagnon,
attended Univenlty of British Columbia Summer session, and also
visited his parents, Mr. and Mn. C.
Corn: Middleton'i, 00.
the belt, dos. ...£OC
Crten Beam: IA.
3 Ibi  IjC
eyu is playing at the Mater Misericordiae Hospital, Rossland, apparently forgetful ot an accident that
nearly snuffed out hii lift Tues
day afternoon.
Billy, 19-months-old ion ot Mr.
•nd Mn. John Drake of Roisland
Is recovering from a blow received
from a horse's hoot when the animal ran film down while-he was
toddling In the yard of his father's
farm. According to reports, the
hone, owned by F. P. Spring, wu
being ridden by an older child
when the baby got in the way. Ho
wu knocked unconscious when the
hone kicked him ln the centre ot
the forehead.
Tha child hu recovered trom t
concussion, and Is expected to be
able to return to hii homt ln a day
or two.
V. Gagnon, Silica Street, luve thii
morning tor their borne ln Trail.
e Mr. tnd Mrs. Joieph Adkini
of Newhull, Calif., are viiiting the
litter's ptrenti in Slocin City.
e Mrand Mn. E. S. Jonei of
Cranbrook wera recent viiiton in
town.
Robert Mittbew ot Vancouver
returned yuterday morning after
leveral week! with hii grandparent!, Mr. and Mra. G. B. Mittbew, Edgewood Avenue.
e Mr. and Mrs. P, C. Richard!
and family, Josephine Street have
returned from Vancouver, where
Mr. Richards attended University
of Britiih Columbli Summer session.
e Mn. Eric Pitenon ot Kulo
li a gueit of her mother, Mra. M.
Houle, MUI Street
e Mrs. J. Fordyce ot Appledale
la visiting relatives ln town.
e Miu Frances Linville hu lett
for Spokane where sht will bt in
training in tht Deaconeu Hospital
She wu accompanied by her parenti, Mr, and Mrs. E. E. Linville,
Fairview, who havt returned. They
were iccompinled home by Mr.
ind Mn. Samuel Brown ot Medical Lake, who trt ipending their
holldiy in Nelson u their guesti.
e Mr. tnd Mrs. W. S. Ellis uf the
Reno Mine were city visitor! yei-
ttrdty.
e Mn. R. D. McAuliy, Baker
Street left vii Grett Northern
yesterdiy tor Vincouver, she wu
accompanied by htr ion Charles,
who will enter Vincouver College,
a C. S. Cradock, former Nelson-
Ito now ot Vancouver, it a city
viiltor.
e Mlu Marcellt Nedelec plans
to leave this morning to spend the
weekend with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Joseph Nedelec at Yahk.
e Mr. and Mra. J. Morrison and
ion of Kimberley hive arrived in
Nelson for a vacation.   .
e Mr. and Mn. W. Oliver and
daughter, Miu Donna Oliver, and
son, Robert, plan to leave today for
their home in Walla Walla, Wash,
after visiting in Nelson tor the past
week.	
Cranbrook Board
Entertains Spokane
Highway Official
CRANBROOK, B C — An invitation from the Windermere Board
ot Trade, pertaining to the unveiling ot the David Thompson Me-,
mortal on Libor Diys wu read and
accepted at the regular monthly
meeting of the executive of tht
Cranbrook Board of Trade. W., H.
Wilson presided it the meeting.
The resolutions committee was
instructed to draft a resolution ln
reference to law being enacted to
force pedestrians to walk on the
left hand side of tha highway. A
request by A. B. Smith that action
be taken ln placing a directional
sign at the corner of Durick and
Dennii Street directing traffic
West was approved by the Board.
The letter from the Univenlty of
British Columbia extension Rural
Occupational school; asking for tha
Board's support in ascertaining the
advisability of holding the school
ln this district wis held over until
a survey is mtde of prospective itudents. »'»' "
H. A. McKowin reported on the
picnic held it Creston by the Creston Boird of Trade June 3, when
delegates from Spokane, Bonnen
Ferry, Nelion tnd Cranbrook were
preient
A letter wts retd from the secretary of the Spokane Chamber of
Commerce stating that Mr. William
David, representing the Three Flags
Highway Association, would be in
Cranbrook, and last evening Mr.
David was entertained at a supper
here when the matter wu discussed
with him. The memben ot the
Roads Committee were present at
the aupper, together with members
from the Kimberley Board of
Trade, and the work of the Three
Flags Highway wu outlined by Mr.
David. Official action of tht Cran'
brook Board in reference tb assist
ing the Association wu referred to
a general meeting at a later date.
STsMTORD, England (CP)-Rt.
Rev. D. H. Crick, Suffragan Bishop
of Lichfield, hu been appointed
Bishop of Chester; .succeeding Dr.
Geoffrey Fisher, translated to London.
Funeral Services
Held al Natal
for Lino Musslo
NATAL, B. C.-Tht funeral of
the lite Lino Musslo who died suddenly tn tht Michel HospiUl wu
held Auguit 28. Tht funeral procession, leaving the borne of the
deceued, wu beaded by the Italian! Lodge, the Fillberto Duke
D'Oasta ind tha Vittorio Emmin-
uelle. of which be wu a member,
along with the memben of the
United Church, Michel. Rev. Father Downey officiating.
He wai 35 yean of age, bom In'
San Lorenzo ln the Province of
Udlne, Italy on Auguit 3 ln IBM.
Hef leivei hii wife and two children ot Michel and a brother, Giordano Musslo of Trail, a step-sister
at Maple Leaf and'many cousins
throughout Michel and nearby
pointi.
Pallbearen were all choien trom
the Fillberto Duke D'Ooita ot which
Mr. Muuio wu a prominent member. They were Dago Tombosii,
Tylio Tomboul, Pete volpattl, Tony
Quorin, Sylvio Quorin and Babe
Tomboul.
PAQI nvi
TRAIL SOCIAL
By MRS. a & ALLEN
wiicessSs*M<OstsMOs»MiaesiOMsseeieio»a
CLEARANCE OF ALL
Summer MILLINERY
fl.00 to f 1.95
Jo-Jiiott Jit-it Shop.
438 Baker St Ntlion. a a
MS7W«»r.»f»9icaty«ra««>tts,tto
THI BEATTY MODEL A
The world's Finest Ironer givu
you every Ironing convenience.
Iron Electrically wtth a Butty
BEATTY BROS LTD.
Nelton Factory  Branch
Iti Baktr Phont 11
..
_
TRAIL, B.C — The Loytl Orange lodge entertained at a most
enjoyable social evening in tha Orange hall Monday evening complimenting Mr. and Mn. Samuel
Smith, who returned to Trail recently from Vancouver where
they wera married last month.
About 78 memben and friends, including memben of the L.OB.A.
lodges of Rouland and Trail, and
the Rouland Orange lodge, were in
attendance. A delightful program
was enjoyed during the evening.
Thott taking part were Rossland
Salvation Armi Band, initrumental
quartet; Earl Pedicord, recitation;
Mrs. Richardi of Rouland, vocal
solo; Evelyn Faninl, dance selection; Louise Martin, recitation;
Robert Livingston, solo; Miss Frew,
accordian selection; J. Guesford, J.
Hans and J. Reid, accordian, guitar
and violin trio; K. McKay, selection
on the bag pipes. J. M. Doughty
wu chairman, and W. E. Marshall
proposed the tout to the King. A
number of presentations were made
to the guests ot honor. Alex Stephenson, on behalf of the Trail lodge
preiented the bride and groom with
a handsome itindtrd limp. Mn. J.
M Doughty presented them with
a bukel ot individual gifts- from
the L.O.BA. While tht L.O.L tnd
L.O.B.A. ot Roultnd presented
them with a lovely silver tea service. The evening wu concluded
with a couple ot noun of dancing.
Committee in charge included Alex
Stephenson, J. McKinnon and R.
Livingstone. Those serving on the
refreshment committee were Mrs.
Alex Stephenson and Mn. J. M.
Doughty.
Thurlow F. Cumming hu lett for
North Battleford. Sask., where his
marriage to Mlu Alice Petersen,
daughter ot Mr. and Mrs. N. L.
Petersen of that city will take
plice Sunday ln the Bethlehem
church. Mr. Cumming'Is the young-
ut son ot A. E. Cumming of Cal-
ffary, formerly ot Trail, and the
ate Mn. Cumming. On their return
Mr. and Mrs. Cumming will reside
in the Riverside Apartments.
, Mn. Ira Minion wu a recent
visitor to Robson, the guut of Mr.
and Mrs. G. A. Burton at their
Summer Ijoma
Mr. and Mra. Sanford Addlion
and family, formerly of Penticton,
were Tuesday visiton in Trail en
route to Nelson, where they will
make their home.
Miu Marion Willis, who Is a
nune • in - training it Vancouver
General Hospital, has arrived in
Trail to ipend a month's vacation
at the home of her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. R. S. Willis, Tadanac.
Mr. and Mn., A. J. Randell, Oak
Street who spent the put five
weeks holidaying at Vancouver,
Seattle and Spokane, hiv» returned.
Mr. and Mn. F. W. Jackion lett
Tuesdty for Christina Lake, where
they will ipend a few days.
Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Brothen,
Commerce Apartments, ha,ve as
their guest for a few days their
nephew, Glen Willis of Firron. Mr.
Willii leaves shortly for Seattle,
where he will Resume his studlu
at the Univenlty ot Washington.
Mrs. George Walker, accompanied
by her little niece, Lorraine Hill, is
spending the week at Deer Park,
the guut of her mother. Mrs. J.
Worley. ...
J. B. Crelghton of Brandon announces the engagement of his
daughter, Mary Christina, to James
Galbraith of Trail. The wedding
will take place September 15.
Mayor and Mra. E. L. Groutage,
Douglas Hotel, have had u their
guest for the past two weeki the
former'i brother, E. Groutage, who
left Thunday tor hii home at Victoria.
William Scott, after visiting here
for tht pait thret weeki, the house
guut of Mr. md Mn. D. J- Duffus, Daniel Street hu returned to
hii home at Toronto.
Mr. and Mn. Mirk Devlin and
family have returned from Asslnni-
bola, Saik., where they ipent two
weeki holiday.
Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Jefferies and
little son returned Sundiy from
the Cout, where they tpent the
Summer.
Mra. George Murray tnd ions,
Norman and Jack, who ipent the
Summer at Christina Lake, havt
returned. . I
Victor Wilker ts spending a few
dayi holiday it Nakusp.    	
Nelson District
Customs Revenue
August $12,635.84
August custom! and inland revenue collection! for Nelion and dlitrict port! reporting to Nelion,
amounted to $12,899.72, a decline of
$4570.05 compared to August, 1938.
Collections for August of lut year
were $17,205.89.
Nelson collection! were down
$1168.02 to $11,531.70; Waneta down
$3598.40 to $498.84; and Canon down
$15.39 to $9.23.
Cascade collections were up $128.95
to $355.93 and Nelway's total wu up
$88.58 to $215.22, compared to collection! ot the ume month a
year ago. -
SociaL...
SILVERTON
SILVERTON, B. C- Mn. B.
Pengelly is a paUent ln Slocin
Community HospiUl, New Denver.
J. Matheson and J. Jakel ot Wil'
son Creek visited town.
Jack Kelly of the Reno mine
visited his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
J. T. Kelly.
Miu Hilda Crellin ot New Denver was a guut of Mlu Florence
Mou.
C. Holmer ot Sandon spent Sun'
diy at his home here.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Harding ot the
Van Roi mine have taken up rut'
dence in town.
Mn. H. Elsmore it a patient In
Slocan Community Hospital.
H. Liebscher of the Reno mini
wis a weekend guest of his liiter,
Mn. L. Boisvert
C. Schmidt wu in Nelson for a
few dayi.
Mr. and Mn. W. R. Seal have u
guest Mr. Seal's mother, Mn. R.
Seal of Balfour.
W. Morrlion of Trail wu a guest
of Mrs. M. E. Emerson.
W. R. Sell and ion Michiel are
ipending a holiday ln Balfour.
Miu Viva Peaohey who bu been
visiting her father tor several
weeks, left for Nelson after attending the Harmston-Peachey wedding.
C. Martlnsen ot the Kilo mine is
in town.     '
Rev, F. Browne motored to town
Sunday from New Denver.
Trio Charged With
Theft Trail Truck
Remanded for Week
TRAIL, B. C., Sept l»-ATthur
George Comozzi of Revelstoke, Jimmie James of Vernon and Fred
Jamu of North Kamloops elected
to bt tried summarily on charges
of theft of a truck owned by D. S.
Moynes, before Magistrate Parker
Williami, today.
At the requut of city police who
are prosecuting, the trio wera remanded in custody for seven dayi,
until September 8.
The truck wu stolen Tueiday
night in Trail, and found abandoned on the Cascade highway about
a mile East of Sheep Creek Thunday morning. The three men were
arruted ln Grand Forks Thunday
and escorted back to Trail.
FLANNELETTE
FOR FALL
STRIPED FLANNELETTE
Heavy quality. Suitable for shirts or pyjamas.    OC-
36 inches wide, imported quality, yard 0DC
WHITE FLANNELETTE
For all purposes. 1?V4f.   %f
From, yard   IL    I to LJl
man
Iffunt
PHONE 200
BAKER ST.
KIMBERLEY Social..-.
KIMBERLEY. B. C - Miu Mildred Taylor ot Chapman Camp hu
lett for a itay at Vancouver.
Ham Braathen of Windermere la
viiiting H. L. Abbott'i home.
Mr. and Mn. D. Feniom ot Himllton, Ont, are viiiting their ion,
Divid.
Mr. and Mn. A. Wation hive returned trom a holiday at the Cout
Mr. and Mn. A. A. Ward ipent
the weekend at Fairmont
Mr. and Mn. H. R. Banki and
family are on a two weeki vacation
trip.
Gilbert Mennle of Revelitoke hu
returned after viiiting relatives in
Kimberley. His sister, Muriel, who
hu been visiting friends in town,
left Monday for home.
Miu Alice Dacre, Assistant Matron
ot Gait Hospital, Lethbridge, is viiiting her mother. Sht made a trip
by air to viiit the San Franciico
Fair.
Betty Bentley hu returned trom
a vacation at Conquest Suk.
Mrs. Costello ot Wutlock visited
Mrs. R. Westgate.
Mlu Dorothy Gower hu returned
from a holiday at Nelion.
Sim Wormlngton lttt on Sunday
with a pack train ot supplies for
the men fighting tire up Lamb
Creek.
E. Garmeau hu latt for tht Ptace
River district Mr. Levesque and
Jack Cameron accompanied him.
Mr. and Mn. A. Mennle ind family left Monday for Procter after
vUiting Mr. and Mrs. Chirlet Dtkin
and Mr. and Mn. George Login.
Mr. Mennle will return to hit work
it Bayonne mine.
Mr. and Mn. J. Birr and daughter, Eileen, vilited Mr. and Mri.
Don Dakin.
Mr. and Mn. Russell Chapman
havt returned to Regina atter viiiting Mr. and Mn. Percy Mellor.
Miu Ethel NeUy ot Cranbrook is
viiiting Mr. and Mn. B. Markle.
Miu Gena Beatty of Vancouver,
who hai been viiiting Mn. W.
Flett left Frldiy for a trip to Banff.
Billy Hepper la viiiting at Cross-
field, Alta.
Miu Florence Finley of Marysville Visited Mn. M. Charles ot
Chapman Camp.   ■
Mr. and Mrs. E. Coulter and loni,
Lloyd tnd Douggit htvt lett for
two weeki holiday at Alberta and
tha United Statea.
W. Christie ot Lethbridge Is visit.
Ing Mr. and Mn. A. Giles ot Upper <
Blarchmont
Bob Green left for a-vacatlon at]
the Coast.
Jack Corbett and Ernie Stroi.
have left for two weeks holldayi i
Winnipeg.
Mr. and Mrs. Pitenall with L
aid and Tommy, have returned
Calgary after visiting here.
Miss Elvira and Mae Nordlund.
and W. Green spent Sunday at Sin-.
dalr and Radium Hot Springs.
Miu Irene Collier tnd Florence ,
Johnston of Cranbrook visited
Kimberley.
CHIMNEY Fire put
OUT AT ROSSLAND
ROSSLAND. B. C, Sept 1 - A
chimney fire at the home ot Henry
Smith, Jr., on Fifth Avenue was
quickly extinguished by the Rouland Fire Department about 12:30
Friday afternoon.
«$*
SSSSMSaMsMSSSMSMi**
+*mem**m,Tm*m****m*m
$MSSK«S*W«
HOT?    .
Try ona ot our famoui frozen
MALTED CREAMS
Something newi
GOLDEN GATE CAFE
;S»«3«S«<i»9s^KSS»»MS3»»iS»«
For Smart Hoilery Choose
"RAINBOW"
The Gingham Shoppe
Phone 953      Opp. Daily Newa
FLOWERS
Delivered by wire or fut mall
anywhere—anytime.
Kootenay Flower Shop
384 Baker St Phone 982
RADIO SALE
USED RADIOS. Up front ISM
NEW O. E. RADIOS, up from $14.95
Nelson Electric Co.
874 Baker St        -   Phone 280
SCHOOL FROCKS
FOR ALL GRADES -
BETTY  ANN  SHOP
Opp. Capitol Theatre     Phone 1047
MILK
IS A BODY BUILDER
Give plenty ol lt to tht child
KOOTENAY VALLEY DAI
ADVANCE SHOWING
NEW FALL HATS
Milady's Fashion Shopp
ta Baktr St Pbont 874
?!>StSiittSStXc)Si1t)Stt_tXSl)SSSes8M3C_.
NOW SHOWING
A Very Fine Lint ot
LADIES' LEATHER BAC
In calf, morocco, antelope, etc
From 83.95   to $6.95—at
dfawajk. $swt
OT Baker St
Ntlson, B.C
SPECIALS
3 Iba.
••••••■••
BUTTER: No. I Creamery,
COFFEE: Blue Ribbon, Ib	
PUREX TISSUE: 3 for	
BRITTLEBREAD: 2 Ib. pkg	
PORK AND BEANS: 16 oi. talis, 3 for	
RECKITT'S BLUE: 2 for	
PRESERVED CINCER: Lb	
RICE: No. I, 2 Ibt.	
WAX: Johnioni Liquid or P«to, 1-3 un oxtra ..
SARDINES: Brunswick, tin	
WAX PAPER: 100 foot, roll	
RUBBER RINGS: 2 do»	
TOFFEE: .Wrapped Gaiety, Ib	
BABY FOOD: Heins, all kindi, 3 for	
CELERY-
tb.  	
PEAR8-
Btsket ........
GRAPEFRUIT-
7 for  	
CABBAGE
Lb.	
GRAPE8-
2 lbl.	
LETTUCE-
Httd   	
8*
20t?
28*!
25<
CARROTS and BEETS-. fQA
t bunchei  ***y
BANTAM   CORN- Middleton'i,
Fresh this morning; 9M
Doi. _   *°*
GREEN PEPPERS-
t Ibi. .
PEACHES-
Buktt	
BROC0LL1-
t bunchti
8QUA8H-
Lb.  	
BANANAS-
3 Ibi.  —__
POTATOE.V-
12   Ibi.	
TOMATOES-
Bisket _.... 	
VEGETABLE MARROW-
Lb	
Horswill Bros.
PHONE 235
FREE DELIVERY
■■    ■-
Is BRADLEY S £
CASH MEAT MARKET
OUR MEATS GOVERNMENT HEALTH APPROVED
GOOD BUYING FOR SATURDAY
Cash ond Carry
Specials
Pot Roait: Ik 101
Round Steak: Ib. ... 19*
Tender Picnics: lb. ..19*
Boneless Picnics: lb. . 26*
Sliced Bacon: Ib. ... 28*
Hamburg: Fresh, Ib. . 10*
Beef Stewing: 2 lbs. . 27*
Veal Stewing: 2 lbs. . 25*
Veal Roast: Ib 18*
Pork Roast: Ib 25*
Lard: 2 Ibs. 19*
Specially Tender
Beef
Boiling Beef: 3 Ibs.
Rump Roast: Ib. ...
Blade Roast: lb. ...
Rolled Roast: lb. ..
Veal Rump Roast: Ib.
Veal Steaks: 2 Ibs. ....
Pork Leg Roast: lb. .
Good Fowl: .25* and 27.
Frying Chicken: Ib. .. 3'
Butter: No. I, 3 Ibs. 89*
Butter: No. 3, 2 Ibs. 51*
27*
25*
20*
25*
20*
'wrs»^?w.'^!r,*w,;,w?*T''*:n!,***";
 PAOE SIX
Eton Baity Nero*
Eitibllihtd April 22 1803
Bn'ttg* Columbia'* Mott Mtrttting Ntwtpaptr
' Published tvtry morning txetpt Sunday by
tha NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED.
388  Baku  Strut   Ntlion   British   Columbia
Phont 144 Private txehaaM Connecting All Dopartmenta.
MEMBER OF THI CANADIAN  PRESS  AND
THI   AUDIT   BUB.UU   OF   CIRCULATIONS
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 2,1989.
THE MADMAN  PLUNGES THE WORLD
INTO WAR
Acting fully ln character, and fulfilling the worst
predicted of him, Hitler, the egomaniac, hu without warning thrown the German armies upon Poland, to crush that
~ country with which a few months ago he told the world
Germany had no quarrel, because it has not handed over
I to him on demand, portions of territory considered absolutely vital to Poland's Independent existence.
He did this after Poland agreed to direct negotiation,
and after he had promulgated to the world—but not to Poland—his latest terms, and at a moment when Mussolini, his
partner in the Rome-Berlin Axis, was proposing a six-
I power cdnference to find a way to preserve peace.
■- ' * This madman also did this not only in defiance of the
opinion of the whole world, but in the knowledge that
Britain and France were pledged to come to Poland's
defence against aggression, and that he was involving in
war the greater part of Europe, and countries in every
quarter of the globe.
\       The egomaniac self-called fuehrer or leader, arrogates
to himself the title of the First Soldier of Germany, as he
tends the German armies forth to "defend Germany's
: honor," and envisions himself going down in history as a
' Napoleon. History, however, will consider him a chieftain
| of infamy, beside whom the bloody Claudius will rank as
saintly.
FAST MOVING  EVENTS
The probability is that within a limited number of
ours Hitler will have refused the ultimatum served upon
him by Britain and France, to recall his armies from
Polish soil, and that thereafter the two great European
democracies will wait only until their ambassadors have
crossed the German border, to launch their forces in an
attack on Germany.
Since Hitler sent his armies in a dawn attack upon
oland, the British parliament has already met once, and
today lt will meet again to hear from Prime Minister Chamberlain the final word.
Also, the Canadian Parliament has been called for
September 7, and no one doubts what it will say.
Bewildered Italy has yet to speak.
Looking Backward.♦♦
NILION DAILY NIWS. NIUON. B.C-4ATUROAY MORNINO. MPT. fe 1838.
TEN YIARI AQO
From Dtlly Newi ot Sept I, 1038
Mlu Marlon Blackwood hu left
for Vancouver to Join the nurse-in-
training clau of the Vmcouver
General Hospital.—Babe Ruth hit
hli 40th home run yeiterday.— A
foreit fire wiped out Waldo, destroying 18 residence! md planer
mill, causing 8200,000 damage.—The
190 Doukhobon who - hive been
inarching on Nelson from Grand
Forki district during the past few
diyi htve been halted outside tht
City limits by the Police md they
have cimped just outside the city.
STYLES HAVE
CHANGED
IN BATHROOMS TOO
Many new and original
bathroom designs have
been inspired by the
smart new lines of modem plumbing fixtures and
accessories. Smart effects
can be obtained and the
decorative motif carried
to a point of refinement
when colored fixtures are
Introduced.
Consult ui whin you comldtr
building or remodelling
Phone 666
Kootenay Plumbing
fir Heating Co., Ltd.
887 Btktr It
"BuUd B.C. Payrolls"
YOU
LIKE
PACIFIC
Pacific Milk is Just pure, rich,
fresh milk, from one of the
best dairying districts in Canada. Only water evaporated out
of it.
True, It is Irradiated for greater
vitamin content to build teeth
and bone in children, but basically Pacific Milk is good because nature is so good to our
country and its cows.
r Pacific Milk
Irradiated and Vacuum Packed
.^...............
TWENTY FIVE YEARS AQO
From Dally Ntws ot Sept 2, 1914
George H. Fraser, President ot the
Trades md Labor Council md a
number of the Nelson Carpenters'
Union, Ii a candidate for the vacancy on the Nelson School Board,
—E. W. Pearstll will leave* on the
Great Northern thli morning for
St Louii.—The customs receipts
for the Fort of Nelion during August imounted to 112,844.4-.—H. it
Gagnon of Grmd Forki il a Nelion viiitor.
FORTY YEAR! AQO
From Daily Miner of Sept J, 1888
There (re large number! of mining men ln town for the meeting of
tht Canadim Mining Inititute tonight Papen will be read by S. 8.
Fowler, Howird Weit R- R- Heily
md W. Pellew-Harvey.-s-D. J. McDonald li suffering trom a lerloui
attack of icirlet fever.—Dr. proctor of Kamloopi li the gueit of the
Rev. Mr. Frew.
J? Questions ??
ANSWERS
Thli column of queitlom md
aniweri Is open to my reider of
the Nelton DaUy Newi. In no
case will the mme ot the perion
liking the queition bt publiihed.
SALLY'S.iALLIES
jad       yOWmm-mltg.
ONI  MINUTE TEIT
L Tbe Pollih Corridor at lta nar.
rowtit point between Danzig and
Germtny il   approximately   how
wide?
2. Why wai tha Republic ot Liberia io named.
8. When md why did Weit Vlr-
glnii. become a 'state?
WORDI OF W1IOOM
Nat to excellence is the
preciation of it—Thackeray.
tp-
TODAYt HOROSCOPE
The beit of fortune ii in itore
for today'i birthday celebrant*
They art favored by eldert, md
thoie who trt young court md marry. A child born on thii data will
have a -harp Intellect md be re-
lourceful, energetic md lnduitri-
ous. A tendency to quarrelsomeness
should be controlled. Such a child
will do well at accountancy.
md ipteulttion, Tbt child ben ea
till date will bt purposeful aad
determined. Hi or she will be a
mixture of caution and ihrewdntit.
But lomewhit erratic wd hyper.
crttlctL
ONI   MINUTE TUT  ANIWERI
t. Fifteen mllei.
1. It wai colonized u a homt
for freed ilivei, the mme ilgnlfy.
ing "Country of the Free."
I. It seceded bom Virginia when
that itate needed from tlie Union
md thty will gain through love during tha Civil War ln the lSSO'i.
HINT! ON fTIOUETTE
When you run up igiinit what
you consider li m idiotic ruli ot
t trmsportatlon company when traveling, don't rave md rut at tht
people employed. They do not maka
the rulei, but are Initructed to
carry them out. Taka tha matter
to tbe management lnsttid of miking lift unpleuant tor innocent
employees.
HOROICOPI FOR IUNDAY
Thoie whoie birthday ii todiy
ire fortunate. The iun ihlnei on
them md thein. Builnen prospers
5"G
A model marriage la one where the husband tells the truth and
tht nit* la tactful and believes him.
fi/ridtpL
Shepard Barclay
Tells How to Bid
and Play
rfATCH YOCB Mttsr
A PLATER who hat opened the
bidding, with a hmd barely above
the borderline, ahould be careful
about bidding again until he heara
trom hia partner In aome way. Be
may bt la very great danger1, particularly If both opponents havt
taken aomt action, iuch ae tht
flnt doubling md the lecond re-
apondlng to lt In thla altuatlon lt
may ba that hla partner la blank
ud that he himielf la caught be-'
tween two etrong handa. .
ill
isu
«AQltTII
Tf,
AA86
VAJSt
♦ QI758
*«
r i
AKJ1
•JQ10
♦ AJI
*KJ8S2
4*141
rnllitt
h"
(Dealer: North. Neither sNt
vulnerable.)
North began thla with 1-Club,
East doubled md Wait responded
with 1-Dlamond. A coniervative
player now would have patatd
Distributed by Xing Futaru Syndicate, tm
thla and the sett round of VU.)
ding would have made him very
glad ha did ao, aa it would hava
ahown the opponenta able to (tt
to 8-No Trumpt and make lt with
one ar more overtricka.
There wu no coniervative kl
the North thla time, however.
After Weit'a l-Dlamond respome
to tht doublt, North atuck hla
ntck out at S-Clube ud Eaat
doubled IL Without going Into tbe
'grueiome detalli, tufflct lt to gay
that ha waa whlp-wwed until he
waa down tour tricks, for a store
to the opponenta ot TOO points.
•  t  •
Mondaye ProHem
4 J 10 8 4 11
VMM
4 None
+ KQI0
4A8T      .-.- ■   4K
»AQ      f* J fieri 18
ei       r •   [ 4JS4
474        ******   ' +A»«!
Ql»     '
J*l
AKIt
, fXIl
(Dealer:  Wtat^ Nt»Mr imw
vulnerable.)
How would you Md tUa hand!
 sslnaxHsf fsfc    fea*
W
for the BOYS and GIRLS
_ r
Boys and Girls Find Novel Ways
of Earning Their Spending Money
 —'        FROM tSi A WIGHT
TO 4 7 A WEEK IS THS RECORD
OP JAMES HUWT, JACKftOUvlU.6,
FLORIDA *SOOA JERKER*
Richard
ot HAVeM
OF
vjooolvu.m,
,Vdo.U6
VCR/,
VJfill
WITH HIS
eicvat
REPAIR
6USIUESS
KltTH UUOU«,OF
PHOEMIX.ARIZOUA,
FIRST BOU6HTA
BAM1AM HEM-MOW
HftHAS TgAJ--
AWD MAKES A     .
OOLLAR A WEEK.'
A4B0UFOF
INOIAUAPOU*
BOY&AUDaiRlA.
PUTOWA
CIRCUS,
AMD
DNIOBD
li,        IrVt     ,
*n     PROFrtj/
Under thli heading the Nelion Dally Newi win preient
eich day a lection ot the Motor-Vehicle Drlver'i Manual issued
by the British Columbia Government Interior drivers will shortly
be required to take examinationi based upon the Information
contained ln the Manual. The question! they miy ba required
to answer will follow tbe sections devoted to informaUon md advice.
We never knew there were to
many ways for boyi ud girli to
make money!
A few weeki ago we published
m article based on letters trom
readen all over the country, which
told how theie young people were
ictually earning their .ipending
money. The letters are itill pouring in, md todiy we're going to
give you the profit-producing ideal
of levenl more retderi.
Cu you Imagine making Ice
cream sodas all day long and getting
Slid for lt? That's what Jamet
unt did. Dont you envy him?
- Jimes It 15. He itirted hli eim-
lng ictivitlet by working ln ■ drug
itore ii m extra delivery boy. At
flnt he received 25 centi for each
night he worked. Then he wai mide
• regulir delivery boy at (2.00 a
week.
After leveral monthi on thli lob,
he wis promoted to night soda boy
Wbtctim 0-mhk-m.
Every motor vehicle, motor cycle
or trailer which la operated on my
highway must be properly licensed.
All motor vehicles, motor cycles
and trailer licenses expire on the
last day of February ln each year.
Motor vehicle licenses may be obtained from the officei of the motor vehicle Branch of the British
Columbli Provinciil Police it New
Weitmlnster, Vmcouver, ud Vlctorli md Government Agencies or
Police Detachments elsewhere.
Application forms for renewal
of motor vehicle licenses, together
with full Instructions, are forwarded to the registered owners of motor-vehicles in the last part ot each
license year for their convenience
in obtaining motor vehicle licenses
for the next year.
Where the residential address of
the registered owner of a motor
vehicle or motor cycle li changed,
the "Motor vehicle Act" requlrei
thit iuch reglitered owner ihall
Immediately notify the Commissioner of Britiih Columbia Provincial Police ln writing of auch a
change of addreu.
Where my change li made ln a
motor vehicle licensed under the
"Motor-Vehicle Act", iuch ai replacing the chassis by another, replacing the body by mother, or
changing the type of the motor vehicle for mother, the registered
owner ot the vehicle Is required to
Immediately notify the Commissioner of British Columbia Provincial Police in writing stating tbe
nature of the change and attaching
thereto the last motor vehicle license Issued ln respect to thit motor-vehicle. Where the engine or
serial number on a motor vehicle
has become illegible or lias been
removed or obliterated, the regft-
tered owner of a motor vehicle it
required to Immediately notify the
Commissioner ot British Columbli
Provinciil Police in writing and apply for a new engine or serial num-
at $4.00 a week, and two monthi
later ha became day soda boy with
a (7.00 weekly ulary. He held this
tob until the end ot vacation, whu
ha gave it up to go back to ichool
However, he now hai mother
job ai helper on ■ milk route. Ht
says he um hli new work Very
much, ind hopet to keep lt a long
tlmt. Jimei geti above average
grade ln ichool, md he hopes to
become a bookkeeper or a government employee after finishing high
and business schools.
8TAG.E A CIRCUI
Putting on i circui Ii the unusual
way of earning money worked out
by a group of boya md girli.
"In the Summer time the boyi
md glrli ot our neighborhood have
quite a bit of ipare time, io we
put on a circus. The older.glrli
plan the program of songs, stunts,
recitation!, dances, etc. The younger
girli ot about nine or ten get together a bingo game md make
prizei.
"The bingo game li played after
the program, md wt chtrgt I penny
Ser gamt. All of tht memben of
ie circui make cindy, drinki, or
something to lell it a reasonable
price. Then we divide the money.
We uiually get a good crowd and
make a nice profit We do not
charge admlulon to tht circui, but
wt tell many refreihmenti.
"I think thla la a good way to
make money, and you ahould try
it too!"
Kleth Lucui, 11 yetn old, ll
miking mort thin t dollir ■ week
with hii chlckeni. In Mirch, 1838,
he bought a bantam hen with money
he had uved from the nickels md
dlmei hii father gave him. He iet
her on eight eggi, ill ot which
hatched. Lut October, ihe hatched
eight out of ten eggi.
Now Kleth hu ten nice red heni,
tnd he hu iold the tooiten for
g.00. Since the chlckeni itarted to
y thty hive etrned him mon thm
a dollar a week, part of which ba la
living to buy more chlckeni.
OTHER NOVEL IDEA!
Wuhing underwear md itockingt
tor working glrli wu the unusual
earning plan worked out by Sara
F. WelU. Her cousin, who worked
all day, complained that aha didn't
hava time to wash theie thlngi, to
Sara took over the job. Gradually
ihe got other working glrli Intereited, and toon iht hid t buiineu. By
working ifter ichool every other
diy, ihe'etrned lunch tnd tpending money, tnd helped buy her
clothei. All ot her cuitomen were
well pleased with her work.
A bicycle repair ihop li operated
by Richard De Haven, 15 yean old.
"We have an empty ihed behind
our houie," Rlchird reporti. "My
brother md I both have blkei, md
I have fixed them both mtny timet.
So with bike riding teuon here, I
went ln the repair buiineu.
"I im using my shed for a ihop.
I found tools iround the houie, md
I took cheeie boxu for ricki ts
keep them In. J charge a quarter
to clem and greue a bicycle and
a dime to fix a flat' I have a lift
ot chargei for othtr Jobi, ud u
tht kids tround my homt have quite
a few blkei, I'm doing very well"
Another boy wasn't satisfied with
one job so he brinched out md got
a couple more. He is Robert Lavieue.
14 yeen old.
Robert worked every evening after ichool In a dry goodi itore, but
he decided he could make more thu
the (1.50 a week which chat job
paid. Here was a restaurant on one
side of the itore, md a lawyer'!
office on the other. Robert talked
to the lawyer md the restaurant
owner, md offered to sweep the
front sidewalk md wuh their windowi three timet eich week for 78
centa a week. He got both job*,
to now hli total earning! are (3.00
Instead of (1.50 weekly.
Faced with the loir ot tht ponlea
iht md her sister loved, Jou Miy-
son not only figured out a way to
keep the pets, but alio made money.
Joan ii 11, When her mother
told her ud her iliter that they
could no longer afford to buy feed
for the two ponlea, the two glrla
decided to give riding leuoni to
their friends.
They put up t ilgn ud In two
diyi htd ilx boyi md glrli who had
obtained permiulon from their par*
end to leirn to ride. Eventually
they got 14 cuitomen, and they
earned enough to teed the ponlea
md have ipending money besides.
So there you have them — mora
bright ideas used by energetic boyt
md girli to earn a few dollan!
We're going to bring you thue
money miking plam ilmost every
week — juit u they in reported
to us by real boya md glrla all over
the country.
It you have earned money, write
us a letter and tell us about H, being
sure to state your age.
Son Who Couldn't Sell
By W. BOYCE MORGAN
T. W, Boswell—Please' give the
business addreu of the Noranda
Mining Company and also of the
Sudbury Nickel Company of
Ontario?
Noranda Mlnu Ltd., 804 Royal
Bank Building, Toronto. Sudbury
Basin Mlnu Ltd. 25 King Street
West Toronto.
R. B, Nelson—b It necessiry to use
new rubber rings on glus jtn
each canning season?
Rubber deteriorate! ud it is i
mistake to uie the ringi a aecond
time. The cost of them ts small compared with the risk of having fruit
and vegetables spoil when old onei
are used.
S. C, Trail—How long wu the front
in the World War?
The total front ln the World War
wu approximately 400 mllu.
How near did the Germans get to
Paris?  «
On September 5,1814 the Germu
line ran through Meaux, and there
were outposts In front ef the main
line which came u near u 14 milei
to Parii.
K P., Nelion—Do lice live on chlckeni ifter they ire killed; if to, tor
whit length of time?
Yes, for tbout two or thrtt days.
W. M. R„ New Denver-Why are
the daya ot tbe week named at
they ire?
Sunday wai anciently dedicated
to the sun. Monday comu trom m
Anglo-Saxon word meaning day of
the moon. Tuesday ia trom the
....     - . .'.'..
Anglo-Saxon word Tiwudag, derived from Tiw, god of war and
dag. meaning day. Wedneiday ii
from Woden or Odin, the highest
god of the Germm! tnd Scandinavians. Thursday was originally con-
leirated to Thor, the god of thunder. Friday ii from Frlgedag, i derivative of Frig, the goddess of
marriage. Saturday ia from Saturn.
The Anglo-Saxon form wu
Saterndag.
J. P. M, Appledale—Cm you pleue
AUNT HET
By ROBERT QUILLEN
"Min write about philosophy, but
women practice It If a woman
looks awful except her teeth or
mkles, iht forgets the rut of her
and thinks only about tbe good
>Mt"A   .
give me the name ot a itamp collecting company?
H. E. Harrii Stamp Company, Dsi-
pirtment   278,    108   Mauachuiett
Avenue, Boston, Man.
Lodges Gather for
Picnic at Farnic
FERNIE. B. C—Oddfellowi trom
Dlitrict Auoclition No. One (Montana) md Dlitrict Auoclation No.
Two (East Kootenay) staged a monster International I. O. O. F. picnic in the Fernie City Park August
27. Local lodges represented at the
picnic included, Kalispell, Poison,
Whitefish, Columbia Falls, Libby,
Big Fork, and Eureka, all of Montana and Cranbrook, Kimberley,
Michel and Fernie, all of East Kootenay and also visiting members
from Coleman, Blalrmore, Hillcrest
and Bellevue lodgei of Alberta.
It wu estimated that 700 Oddfellows, Rebekahs, their wives, husbands ind familiei attended the
picnic tnd enjoyed a fine program
of iportl including children'! md
idult's races, novelty racu, peanut scrambles, hone shoe pitching,
softball and other games. The United statu representative team won
the feature International softball
game by a score of 10-7. Tlie Fernie
City Band waa in attendance md
added greatly to the success of
the picnic. Speakers of the afternoon Included Pait Grand Muter
Murray Saunden of Calgiry. G.
Spink of Kalispell representing Dlitrict Aiiociatlon No. 1, Mr .Dingley of Cranbrook, President of District Association No. 2, and BUI
Johnson of Cnnbrook.
Hi aaiad at hit fathar'a face and uw that It wai bitter with dlujpolntmtnt
INSTALLMENT II     ,
Whu Jim drove hli fither to the
office on the following morning,
Mr. Belder'! determlnttion to iet
Mr. Shilling wu u itrong ti ever.
"I liy iwikt a long time lut
night, trying to figure some unusual
plan of approach," he confessed.
"But I didn't hit on anything that
would work. So u soon as I look
over the mall at the office, you can
drive me out to hit home. I can
get to see that secretary of his, md
111 talk my way part him or break
u arm!"
"Gee, I hope you get to see him."
Jim said. "He certainly ought to be
decent enough to drive out ud
look at the river tract at leut"
"He'i a queer duck, if I ever met
one," Mr. Belder said. "If he'd only
uy something! But when he just
sits there and stent at you with
those steely- eyes, never saying i
word, it stopryou ln your tracks."
A hilf-hour later, Jim iwung tht
cir Into the curb ln front of i big
house fir out on the town's but
residential itreet Mr. Belder itepped out of the cir ind gave the
door r determined ilam.
"Well, here we go," he uld grimly. "It'i now or never!"
"Good luck!" wu atythat Jim
could uy.
He lettled down to wait hoping
that It would be for a long time.
Five minutes passed, thm ten. He
cast anxious eyu at the walk leading up to the house. There wu no
sign ot hia father.
"He must havegot lnl" Jim exulted to himself. "Bet on Dad. When
he really makei up hli mind to put
over a dul he Juat won't be itopped."
Another ten minutei passed. Jim's
attention momentarily wandered to
i couple of small boys who were engaged in ■ bitter argument aerou
the street Then suddenly be heard
footsteps beside the car, md he
swung around eagerly. He gazed
into his father's face, ud saw that
lt was bitter with disappointment
"Dad!" Jim cried "What happened?"
Mr. Belder climbed Into the ear.
slammed the door, end motioned
for Jim to itart the motor. For a
moment he laid absolutely nothing,
but his fists were tightly clenched.
"Well I got to see him, he said
finally, making his voice level with
an effort. "Getting nut his secretary
wu a triumph In itself—lt took me
ten minutes, md was one of the
hardest things I ever accomplished.
You lee-J* ud here Mr. Belder1!
voice becime bitter with urcum—
"Mr. Shilling work! ln hit girden
ln tht morning, and he can't be
bothered with buiineu matters!"
"But you got to see him, in iplte
of that?" Jim uld hopefully.
"Yea. The aecrttary gave me u
awful battle, but he finally let me
go out and lee the old man in the
Jarden. And What do you think he
id? He kept right on fooling around
with a rake all the time I talked
to him, md never said a word.
"I gave him everything I had. Finally I almost begged him to let
me drive him out to see the river
tract He straightened up, itared
it me without ipeiklng for a few
second!, md then pointed to the
gate md uid 'Get out!" And thit
ended thit!"
Jim muttered e lympithetlc word
under hii breath. .His fither lit
silent trying to gather his forces
ifter this crushing defeat Finally
he turned to Jim, md hii eyu were
bird.
AN8WERI TO LA8T WEEK'I
PUZZLE8
1, Crossword Puzzle Solution.
mm® mm
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3. Wagon, alive, glvei, overt, nests.
4. Carnation,   t-rouial,  carnage,
carbon and cartoon,
5. Tolled, told.
The Kitchenette
.   By Aunt Pegoy
If you're having visiton over the
weekend, here's a real treat for
them.
STUFFED POTATO SURPRISE
8 potatoes
S tablespoons butter
4 tablespoons milk
2 egg whites
Parsley, salt and pepper
I eggs
Wuh md bake potatou. Cut a
piece from tbe top of each and carefully remove the content!. Add butter, milk, stiffly beaten egg whites
and seasoning. Line potitoes with
the mixture. Place in each cavity 1
delicately poached egg md cover
wtth more of the potatoei. Brown in
a hot oven for fifteen minutei at a
temperature of 450 degreei. Servei
ilx- .
-Kay's Corner-
By Katharine Houlion    .
PARTY PUN AND NON8ENII
Let'i take your guuta to youi
"•rt gallery" tint On a table you've
arranged an exhibit ot "picturu",
uch bearing a number. Here art
iome suggestions:
Objeot      .
1. A mirror
2. Several pins stuck polnti up la
a map of the City.
3. Match in a glass of water
4. Half gallon preserve jan
5. A blotter
8. Blot of ink, daub ot white pain!
7. Lincoln itamp or coin
Title
1. A Place for Reflection
2. Points of Intrest in Town
S. The Swimming Match .
4. Family Jan
5. An Absorbing Subject   .
8. Study In Black and White
7. Portrait of Abraham Lincoln
Give your guests cardi with a
jumbled list of these titles and have
them place'the number of the picture opposite the title. Offer a small
prize for the tint lilt of correct
answers.
And here's a game everyone aeema
to enjoy. Cut out a number ot advertisements, carefully taking off
all names md printed~matter. Mount
thue on large cards, number them
and pin them up around the room.
Pair off your guests, give each couple a card with the number of ada,
ind let them place the advertiser1!
name and product opposite the cor-
rect number. As t prize, uie one ot
the tdvertlsed articles—perhaps 8
box ot chocolates or a cake of soip.
And here's a brain teaser tor the
older boys md girls. Cut out newa
headings and paste them on largt
cards, then have your gueita write,
in a given time, short notes on the
"current event" to which tht
heeding refers.      	
A imall boy hid juit been vac-
clnated, end Uie doctor prepared to
bandage the sore arm When tha
youngster uld: "Put it on the other
arm. doctor."
"Why, no," uld the physician, "I
want to put the bandage on your
son arm so the boys at school won't
hit you'On tt"	
"Then put it on the other arm,
please. You don't know tbe fellowi
it our ichool"
ANYHOW HE BANS
Mother (to Bobby): "Surely you
did something else but ut it the
ichool treit?'r
Bobby: "Yei, mummie. After tea
we sang a hymn called. 'We cu sing,
full, though we be.'"
Mother learned later that tha
hymn selected had been. "Weak and
sinful though we be."
 m*m
NELSON DAILY NIWI. NILION. ■. &-4ATURDAY MORNINO. KPT. t UN.
Manion Says United Voice ol
Canada Will (all for Complete
Deration With Britain and France
OTTAWA, Stpt 1 (CP)-^onser-
vative Luder Minion today, luued
the foUowlng itatement:
In thli crisis, u In thou of September ud Mirch but I refrained
from making statements regarding
the International iltuition, becime
I felt thit it thli terrible critical
hour ln world affairs, It li the duty
not only ot our public men but of
all othen to endeavor to unify and
lolidify Canadian public opinion.
To hold our country together It tht
fint duty of ill of as.
But unhippUy, wtr between Germiny ud PoUnd li now in pro-
peu, and undoubtedly England and
France, In accordance with their
pledget, win be forced ta declare
war on the ilde ot Polind ud
agalnit International gangsterism, u
displayed by Hitler throughout the
put yur. In this conflict Christianity, democracy ud penonal
liberty art fighting tor their vtry
existence.
Now tint the die U cut I feel
thtt I ihould reiterate my position
u ludtr ot tht National Conitrvi-
tlvt Ptrty.
I adhere completely to tha poiition which wu iet out cleirly by
me March 30 latt ln tin Home ot
Commoni, when I declired my complete tgreement with Sir Wilfrid
Laurler"! stecliritlon thit "when
Britain U at war Canada ii at war."
There can ba no neutrality for
Canadi while Britain Is engaged in
a war ot life ud death. Therefore,
In my opinion the united voice of
Canada wUl call for full cooperation with Britain ud France ln
this terrible conflict
At the ume Ume, ln giving thli
cooperation, lt must be the stead-
bit determlnttion of ill of ui tint
thert be no profiteering ot tny kind
—no unfair idvintage taken by
tnyone—no enrichment for tome
while othen are offering their
Uvea.
The government during thla crlili
hu nol followed the coune taken
by Mr. Chimberliln by cilllng Into
consultation myself or tbe leaden
of the other partlu.
Nevertheleu, u In the othar crl-
ki, so in this, I informed Mr. King
ttit I hold myielf ivallabla for
consultation ind cooperation it uy
time, md iki assistance I can give
to Mr. King and hit government
will be freely given,
I leirn by the preu thit a apeetel
leision of Pirliament ll being celled
for next Thunday. In view of this,
I am communicating to my followers the request that they be ln Ottawa a day or two ln advance of
the seulon.
France Calls Out 8,000,000 Men
Under General Mobilization Decree
PARB, Sept 1 (CP.-Havu)-The
French Government todty decreed
general mobilization of ill tbt nation's ii-med forcei, impoied i state
ot martial law, ud called Parliament into uuion for tomorrow.
Only Parliament cu issue a
declaraUon of war.
Officially tht general mobilization
gou into affect at midnight
Tha decree, approved by tbe cabinet at ail emergency session under
President Lebrun at the Elyaee Palace, coven mobilization of the land,
aea and air arms on aU Frtnch territory proper, ln Algeria and the
French colonies ud all other terri-
toriu under tht tUegitnct ot the
French flag.
Mirttil Uw ("Etat de Siege") wu
established under a second decree ln
M French department! and the Bel-
fort area u weU u in three Algerian department!.
The third decree preiented by
Premier Dtlidler to the Council of
Minlsteri convoked with Housu ot
Piriiament for tomorrow.
Three decreu wen approved
■nanlmoutly.
Tha emergency cabinet meeting
wu called when reporta reached
here tint German troopi had
bombeS aeveral Polish cltiei and
opened hostillUu along tha entire
German-Polish frontier.
The Government luued uother
ud more pressing appeal to tha
civilian population to leave Parte.
The general mobilization meant
that every able bodied Frenchman
would be called to Uie colon. Experti estimated thli would ptect
8,000.000 under armi.
About 3,000,000 already hava been
called by individual notice ud It
wu undentood the fint day ot the
general mobilization wu put otf
until tomorrow to permit tha clear-
tog out ot the men already on the
march.
Premier Daladler wu expected to
reorganize the cabinet creating a
new National Ministry.
Parisians wera calm. The French
capital, although partly evacuated
to responie to previoui Government
requests, wu still teeming with
people, the downtown itreeti
crowded.
BRISTOL, Entfud (CP).—Hirry
Setmore, 56-year-old acrobat feU 40
feet from a trapeze while twinging
from hla heela He wu able to twist
his body ln the all- ud landed almost erect but broke an arm.
Canada Moves Fast to Stand
Beside Britain lor Empire's Defense
.     OTTAWA, Sept 1 fCP)-At 1:18
I  p. m, EDT, Prima Mlnliter Mackenzie King iiiued  tha following
itatement: •
"It ii now apparent that the effort* which hive bten made to pre-
ttrve the peict of Europe ire likely to be ot no avail. In iplte of
then efforti, hostilities hive begun between Germiny and PoUnd
Kwhich threaten tha peace ot the
The' cabinet met at I o'clock this
morning, ud ln accordance with
tha Intimation glvu some dayi igo
decided to htve Pirliament ium-
moned forthwith. A procltmttlon
hu been luued lummonlng Parliament to meet on Thunday next
the Tth toitut
In the event ot the United Kingdom becoming engaged lft war-m
the effort to resist aggression, the
Government of Cuada have unanimously decided, u toon u Parliament meete, to teek iU authority
tor effective cooperation by Cuada at tha ilde of Britain.
Meanwhile neceuary meuuru
wUl continue to be taken tor tht
defence ot Canida. Consultations
with the United Kingdom wiU be
continued. In the Ught ot ill the information at ita disposal, the Government wiU recommend to Parliament the meuuru which it believes to be the most effective for
cooperation and defence.
The Government hu provided for
the lmmedUte luue of a proclamation under the war measures act in
view of the existence ot a state of
apprehended war. Tht militia ot
Canada which a few dayi ago wu
called for voluntary aervice under
tection 63 of the MUlUa Act hu,
under lection M of the stmt act
been ptaced on active urvlce. The
naval lervicei and the air force
have alio been ptaced on active
aervlca.
The people of Cuada will, I am
■ure, face thii grave iltuition with
calm ud confidence ud, above aU
tlse, ln a spirit which will lerve to
preserve the unity ot our country
ud the maintenance ot freedom.
Mr. King made hli unouncement
after a cabinet meeting which authorized proclamation of Uie war
meuures act ud Uie placing of
Canada's military, air ud naval
forces on active tervlce.
The Defence Department at once
■tnt Instructions to offlcen commanding the 10 military districts to
call out additional unite of the non-
permanent militia.
The meeUng itarted at 9 a. ih., ud
a tew minutei later Mr. King came
out to announce ParUament bad
been called for Sept 7. The u<
nouncementa regarding defence
meuuru came Just before 1 p. m.
Pending the assembling of Pir-
Uiment MrTKing uid the Government li taking all neceuary meuures for the defence of Canada.
"I think what I have said thii
morning ii what the people of Canada, Great Britain and of the whole
world wiU be pleased to know,"
the Prime Minister uld.
RECALLS 1(14
Sceiwi reminiscent ot 1914 were
entcted ln the historic privy council chamber of the Eut Block when
the Cabinet assembled for today'i
momentom session. Messengen
rushed ibout ln confusion and high
official! ot tha army and navy were
ln attendance upon Defence Mlnliter Iu Mackenzie.
The Minliter teemed perfectly
calm.
It wu apparent the Government
had made all preparation tor thii
emergency.
In I few minutei a messenger
wu dispatched to the Governor
General, Lord Tweedsmuir, bearing a large sheaf ot orden-ln-coun-
cil for his signature. Obviously they
had been prepared well in advance
and needed only the formality of
adoption.
"Annihilate Ihe Enemy" Cries
Goering in Exclamatory Order
BERLIN, Sept. 1—The Comman-
den in chief ot Germany's army,
navy ud air force—Col. Gen. Waiher Von Brauchitisch, Admiral Erich Raeder ud Field Marshal Herman Goering—Issued "orden ot the
day" pledging loyalty to Hitler ud
the Reich.
The army ud navy orden wert
ihort but Goerlng'i command to
th; tir force wu u exhortetion:
"Comrades! For weeki and months
Fou have experienced unheird ot
unbelievable, provocation! with
1 clenched flite ud gritted teeth.
Tha meuure now li full. No
longer cu the German people
itand for the criminal measurei to
which hundreds md thousands of
Germans alreidy htve fallen victim!.
"The Fuehrer hai caned. Your
greit hour hu arrived!"
After telling the air force Its
"great hour had arrived," Field
Manhal Goerlng, in hli orden, contlnuid:
"Fllert—In lightning tttecki you
wlU annihilate tha enemy whenever he present! himself for bit-
tie or retreita in full rouU
"Men of the ground organlza-
tion—you wUl bt hippy conscientiously to make preparation! tor
attack! ud tor the aatity ot your
comrades in tht air!
"Anti-aircraft artillerymen— you
will bring down every attacker!
"Radiomen—upon you devolves
the responsibility of Insuring the
§uldk   ud   frictionlcas   coopers-
on ot our air forcei
"Comrades! I look each ot you
ln the eyu and pledge each ot you
to give all for the people ud the
fatherland. At your bead, our beloved Fuehrer; behind you. the entire Germu nation united In naUonal socialism.
"Then there cu be but ona s'.o-
gtn for m: Victory!'!.
General Von Briucnttlich'i orden Slid: "In the certainty of our
Just cimt we enter the tight for t
cletr aim:, tbe lasting security ef
Germin tolkdom and German living space igalnst foreign ittecks
ud claims to power. "Forwird
with God for Germany!"'
Admiral Raeder stated: "The
Fuehrer's call has reached m. The
hour of decision finds us ready to
give our all tor the honor, Justice
met liberty of our fatherland,
"Remembering our glorious tradition, we will conduct tbe fight In
unshakable confidence in our Fuehrer and in firm belief In the greit-
nesi ot our people ud the Reich.
"Long Uve the Fuehrer!"
Veteran Battalion
Would Bt Ready to Go
'Anywhere in Empire'
VANCOUVER, Sept 1 (CP) -
Lieutenant-Colonel K. W. Sevorys
eommtndlng officer of tht Veter-
im' Battalion, a volunteer organization compoied of veterani of the
Greit Wir ud other win, todiy
uld tht battalion could be brought
up to a itrength of 1000 men tor
service "anywhere In tbe Empire"
within 24 houn.
Major-General E. HUllam, who
commanded tha 10th Canadian Infantry Brigade to the Great War,
and a veteran of the South African
War and other campaign!, it Colo-
ml-ln-Chlef of tbt unit
Lliut-Col. Savory uld the battalion, which hu a normal membership ot 130 men in Vucouver,
bu received hundreds of applications from varloua parte of the
province.
Stewart Returns
\m
PAN MVI*
WAR MEASURES AO IS NOW IN
FORCE IN CANADA-WIDE POWERS
OTTAWA, Sept 1 (CP). - The
War Measure! Act ot lilt, giving
Uie Government extraordinary pow-
en to act in emergency pending
tha auembly of Pirlliment wu
proclaimed by order in council id-
opted it a meeting of the Government urly today.
Tha War Meuures Act which
ctmi Into being ln 1911 glvu tht
Government wide meuuru of control over shipping, censorship, trade
ud commerce, txproprtauon of
prlvite property, transportation ud
other mitten relttlng to tbt lecur-
ity of tht realm.
It vesta ln the Governor to Council, which ta the Cabinet authority
to luue ordtn ud regulations
which may be deemed neceuary
during a period of "real or apprehended war, lnvulon or lmurrac.
tion." These orden htvt tht forci
ot Itw ud art timed it tmurlng
tht defence, peice, order ud wei.
tare of Canada.
The tubjecti covtred by the Wir
Meuuru Act tre:
(A) Cemonhlp ud the control ud suppression of publict-
tiom, writings, mips, plans, photographs, communicitioni ud
mum of communication;
(B) Arrest detention, axclu-
•lon ud deportation;
(O  Control  ot  the  hirbon.
Krti ud territorial witen ot
nada and tha movement of vu-
aeli;
(D) Transportation by lud,
air or water, and tbe control of
tbe traniport ot penoni ud
thlngi;
<E) Trading, txportttlon, Importation, production and muu-
ftcture;
(F) Appropriation, control, forfeiture and disposition of property
ud of the me thereof.
SPARKS FROM THE WAR ANVIL
Alex Stewart Nelton Chief ot
PoUce, wu able to return to duty
for a ihort ihlft Frldiy morning,
hii tint appearance at the police
office atter a levere ud lengthy
iUneu. The Chief throughout tha
morning wu recipient of congratu-
UUom at being able to return to
hli office.
Sergeant Robert Hanhaw wai
Acting Chief during Chief Stewart1!
absence.
SociaL...
KINGSGATE
KINOaaATE, a C, - mch year
at the commencement ot their
Winter teulona tha Ladtae Study
Club la divided Into two teami
with Captelna ud demerit mirki
trt put againit than for Urdlneis,
negligence ot proper parliamentary
procedure and other mlsdeameanora.
At the end ot the yur the team
with tha most marks agalnit lt hu
to itand treat to the winnen. Thli
yeir tha team under Mn. 8. E.
Gunn loit to the team captained by
Mra. Than ud Saturday night paid
oft The treat took the form of a
viilt to a picture ihow ud eotfte
md cikei in tht community hall
ifterwirdi. Thia wu tha lut official appearance of Mn. i. E. Gunn
U Preiident Mr. Gunn hiving ben
transferred to another port
Jim Mono ot the Winnipeg of.
fice ot the Immigration Service
irrived on Tuetdiy to have charge
of the port until a new appointment ii madt to till tht vtcucy
made by Mr. Gunn'i promotion.
Mr. Mossop li weU known hert
having been the reliet officer tor
quite t number of yein.
Miss Ruth Helling, niece ot Mr.
tnd Mn. Williams, arrived trom
their home in Swedw to taka up
residence with them.
The community haU waa weU
filled Thunday night when a farewell party wu given to honor at
Mr. ud Mn. Gunn. A number ot
hands of bridge were played ud
tha winnen were Joe Brogu ud
Mn. Tommy Balf. An espectally
attractive luncheon wu lerved atter
which Brick Chapman on behalf ot
the community made a presenUtlon
of a stream-lined electric iron to
Mn. Gunn.
Mr. and Mn. Gunn ipoke In a
sincere and simple manner, expressing their appreciation.
Mr. ud Mrs. Ray WlMer ot Kellogg were the guesti ot Mr. and
Mn. Loteelch.
Spencer Lewli' daughter, Jean,
accompanied by bar husband and
two boyi viilted here trom Field,
B.C.
Mn. Hughie Hannah, Sylvia and
June Ellen are ln Cranbrook spending a tew dayi with Mr. Hannah.
Miss Mary Rogentlne of Cloquet
Minn., visited with Mr. and Mn.
E. W. Hall.
Mn. H V. Smith of St Mary's,
Ida., Mrs. H. Reinhardt of Spokine,
and Mn. Nelson ot Lt Jolli, Calif.,
all sisten of E. E. Chapman hivi
had a pleuant reunion at the Chapman home Uit week.
Miss Harroet Barr of Great FaUi,
Mont, is the guest ot Mlu Ruby
Reuter.
Vaccine Successful
Against Horse
Sleeping Sickness
WINNIPEG, Sept 1 (CP).-De-
partments of Agriculture In Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta are
agreed that chick vaccine, used to
Inoculate 50 to 70 per cent of tha
hone poputatlon of the Prairie
Provinces this yur, probably
prevented another outbreak of
encephalomyelitis.
The months of July end August
which proved the moit disastrous ln
previous yetn, have passed and
deaths trom the disease over the entire area toUl only about 90 honei,
nearly aU in Alberta. Lait year,
when the sleeping ilckneu epl-J
demic reached Iti climax, Government flguru ettlmated deithi at
26,000.
J. H. Evins, Mtnltobt Deputy
Minister of Agriculture, uld 175,000
horses were inoculated in Manitoba
this year ud no deaths have been
reported, compared with 10,000 fatalities lut yur. Manttoba'a bona
poputatlon ia about 300,000. I
The Saskatchewan Department ot.
Agriculture estimated 350,000 to 450,-1
000 vaccine treatments were given'
with only three or four N«thi thtt
yur, compired with 13,000 deathi
list yeir. There are 800,000 bonu
in Saskatchewan.
Dr. P. R. Talbot Alberta Government Veterinarian, gives thii year'!
deiths between 40 ind 50 honei.
The diseue kiUed more thu 3000
ln AlberU lut year.
HITLIR RIPLIII TO
ROOSEVILT
WASHINGTON, Sept 1 (API-
Adolf Hitler told President Roosevelt todiy he had "left nothing untried for the purpou of settling
the dlipute between Germany and
Polud in a friendly manner.
CHEER THI KINO
LONDON, Sept 1 — King George
made a penonal viilt to tbt Prlmt
Minliter at 10 Downing Street
while the Wtr Ministry tnd Admlr-
tlty wtre luuing direction! Implementing tht generil mobilization proclaimed by the King'! order in councU,
The King wu greeted by tremen-
doui cheen from tht crowd.
Tbe Monarch had augguted he
drive to the Prime Minister's official ruidence rather thu have
Mr. Chamberlain Interrupt the defence conference to coma to Buckingham Palace.
Hli Majesty relied hli bowler
hat to tbe crowd and hurried Iniide No. 10/
It wu believed to ba the tint
Ume to Britiih hiitory a King had
Journeyed to Downing Street to
receive hia Prima Mlnliter'i report,
DOUBT   RUSSO-QERMAN
MILITARY PACT
MOSCOW, Sept 1 (AP)-Rum-
on abroad of a. poulbUity Ruula
ud Germany win foUow up their
non-aggression pact with a mUi-
tary agreement met with extreme
skepticlim ln Informed clrclu to-
^n
...Jit the foreign colony to Mot-
cow hurd alarming reporti of Eu-
ropeu war, the Rmiian population
wu tranquil and 34,000,000 chUdren wut back to school today,
ONLY X REHEARSAL,
•AYS BERLIN
BERLIN, Sept 1 (AP)-Warn-
lngi of in air raid given Berlin by
iltens at 0:56 p. m, today were later
explained u a reheartu.
BLACKOUT GREAT BRITAIN
LONDON, Sept 1 (CP)—A complete blackout throughout Great
Britain wu ordered in a Government ordlnuct publiihed tonight
MANION OFFERS ASSISTANCE
OTTAWA. .Sept 1 (CP)—Coniervative Leader R, J. Manion today
said whatever assistance he could
give Prime Minister Mackenzie
King ud the Government would ba
glvu freely ud promptly.
HIOH   COMMISSIONERS'
CALL IN LONDON
LONDON, Sept 1 (CP-Havu)-
Tha High Commissioners of Cuada
ud Australia, Vincent Massey and
Stuley Bruce, called at the Dom-
tnioni Office at noon today.
QUEBEC MENACED
■Y 8ABOTAQE
QUEBEC, Sept 1 (CP)- The
Quebec Government hu bora advised that "certain Nazi ud Communistic organization! were pre-
ptred to commit ubotige of public
building! ud induitrlei ln the province," Premier Duplessis Mid today.
''We lnitructed Col. Pa. Pluze,
Commliiioner of thi Provincial PoUce to protect tht people, proper-
tlu ud Interests of this province,"
the Premier laid.' "CoL Piuza hu
been idviied to tike ill the iteps
necessary to meet the situation and
aU tha special constables needed
by industry will be iworn in."
FIVE HUNDRED MILLION
POUNDS WAR VOTE
LONDON, Sept 1 (CP)-(Puied
by British censor)—The House ot
Commons todiy approved a bill
providing $2,110,000,000 to prosecute war, for defence, and for
maintenance of pubUc order, ft.
LEGION OPENS ROOMS
FOR   RECRUITING
EDMONTON., Sept 1 (CP) —
Alberta's 140 branches ot the Canadian Legion have been instructed
to open their clubrooms tnd facili
ties Immedtately to mlllttimen
during uy mobilization ot troops,
it wis unounced here todiv by W.
R. McLaren, Preildent of the Provincial Command.
CHURCHILL SEES
CHAMBERLAIN
LONDON, Sept 1 - Wlniton
Churchill, Brttaln'i World War
Flnt Lord of the Admiralty, conferred with Prime Mlnliter Chamberlain.
LONDON EXCHANGE CLOSED
LONDON, Sept 1 (AP)- The
atock Exchange wu closed.
RESTRICT FOOD PRICES
GEORGETOWN, BritUh Gulna,
Sept 1 (CP Cable)—Buslneu places in this British colony operated
today under maximum price rt-
itrictioni on foodi ud fuel*
MOBILIZE POLICE RESERVES
LONDON, Sut t (CP)-MobUl-
zitlon of Britiih Police reserve!
wu tuthorized by the Government
tonight
CANADA MUST
SUPPORT BRITAIN-
HEPBURN
MAGNETAWAN. Ont, Sept 1
CP)—Cmada would be "ln a nope-
lesi poiition" If ihe failed to lupport Great Britain ln the event ot
war, Premier MltcheU Hepburn ot
Ontario utd Thunday at a Liberal
nominating meeUng here for the
Federal riding of Parry Sound.
The meeting unanimomly named
Arthur G. Slaght to conteit the
riding In the next general election.
TAKES OVER
BRITISH   RAILROADS
LONDON, Srot 1 (CP)- (Paued by Britiih Cenaor)—the Ministry of Transport todiy took over
Britiih raUroadi.
CONVOKES DAIL
DUBLIN, Sept 1 (CP)-Prlme
Minister Eamon de Valera tonight
convoked the Dail ud Senate of
Eire to meet tomorrow to consider emergency measurei ti a result
of Germu-Pollsh hostilities,
WARNS U. •.      v        .
WASHINGTON, Sept i <AP)-
Tfat United Statu received, u a
neutral, todiy, lta tint warning
from Uie Germu Government nol
to violate neutrality in the air over
Danzig ud PoUnd.
PROPOSE BRITISH
WAR CABINET
LONDON, Sept 1 (CP)- The
Preu Auoclation tonight reported
that measurei ara in progrew tor
formation ot a war cabinet
Tha new Government would Include Wlniton ChurchUl ud Anthony Eden, u weU u Sir Archi
bald Sinclair ud Arthur Greenwood, Oppoiition Liberal and Labor leaden, tha report uid.
CORRESPONDENCE
CEN80RED
LONDON, Sept 1 (CP)-It wu
anounced officially tonight that unUl further orden censonhlp will
be imposed on sll Britiih postal correspondence directed to "tertaln
foreign countriu." MaU to Uie Dominions ud Colonies wiU not be
affected.
U.S. VETERANS'ASK
CONGRESS VERSION
BOSTON, Sept 1 (AP)— The
Veterani of Foreign Wan. u or
ganizatlon ot approximately 250,-
000 overseas veterani, voted today
to aik President Rooievelt to call
a ipeciil seulon ot the United
States Congreu immediately 'to
protect American Interests" in view
of the war threat abroad.
ASK LABOR TO PREPARE
OTTAWA, Sept 1 (CP)-Libor
Minister Normm Rogers todty asked P. M. Draper, Preildent of the
Trades md Labor Congreu of Canada, to be ready to meet the Government ln connection with Labor's
part in Canada's defence or war
efforts, should such be necessary.
Parliament lo Meet Sept. 7—Militia
(amps to Be Opened; One at Vernon
OTTAWA. Sept 1 (CP).-Amld
tht welter of world-shaking tvtnts
Canada punued calmly today the
coune the Government had long
ago decided on. Parliament wu
called for September 7, and that session will be required to ratify whatever actions the Government proposed to take between now ud that
date.
Already a portion of the militia
foroe hu been assembled and other
armi of tha aervice hive been reinforced.
For the Immediate purpoiei ot
the country the Cabinet will, to ill
likelihood, Issue Governor-General's
warrant!, a procedure adopted
when money not voted by Parliament la needed for urgent naUonal needi.
The mllltli wtll concentrate at
the varloui training centra in the
10 military districts with the units
in the Urger centres of population
called out tint Recruiting for the
militia to bring the various regiments and details .up to war-time
strength wlU probably be proceeded
with Immediately. Tha peace
strength of units li normally about
one-quarter of their war establish-
ment
CAMP AT VERNON
These centru include the Summer cimpi it Aldershot N.S., Sui-
lex, N.B, iVslcirtier ud Mount
Bruno, Que. Birritfleld, Petawawa,
Connaught Niagara, Pinehill, end
Camp Borden, Ont, and In Weitern
Canada the campi it Shilo, Sarcee,
Dundurn ud Vernon.
Confronted with the possibility of
hiving to home Urge concentration! ot troops during the Fill ud
Winter, the Government miy htvt
to requisition provinciil ud municl-
Sal public buildings. Tht construe-
on of wooden hutments of t semipermanent nature wlU likely be
proceeded with.
During the Great War a quarter
ot a century ago the various buildings med for provincial ud regional exhibition! were uied u barracks, and similarly skating rinks,
town-hill! md other commodioui
structures were converted Into quir-
teri for the troopi. The plu wUl
likely be repeated.
COASTAL DEFENCES
MANNED
Canada'i cout defencu ire already manned, tht Royal Canadian
Air Force hu been diitributed on
the coasts ud the non-permanent
wing of thit service, tbe auxiliary
active air force it being recruited
to itrength. The movementi ot Can-
ida's naval units are secret
It is believed Canada will Immediately proceed to mobilize Industry
for war purposes, with a view not
only to manufacture for national
needi but to establish a steady supply for Britain md France.
E. A. Colli, Trail, Telli
Mining Men Canada
Vulnerable to Attack
CALGARY, Sept 1 (CP).-Cua-
dlini who think Cuidt could remain inviolate in Ume of wir ara
Uving ln a "fooli' piradlie," declired
E A. G. Colli of TraU, B.C., In ed-
dressing the Canadiu Inititute of
Mining ud MetaUurgy Weitern
convention here todiy.
Cinidi, rich in ill the iggreuor
nation! require, li vulnerable to tir
attack on ocean ports ud "our
people ihould be protected by the
ume meani u idopted to England,"
he uld.
Creston High
to Have Senior
Malric This Year
CRESTON, B.C.—Senior mttrlcu-
litlon wUl bt Uken at Cretton
high ichool-tha coming term. ThU
wai tha outstanding decision of a
special meeting ot the trustees of
Creston Consolidated School District Wednesday evening. Board
chairman S. A. Speen preiided,
with Trusteu E. E. Cartwrlght F.
H. Jackson md Hilton Young, High
School Principal Stewart J. Graham and E. Marriott public ichool
supervising principil ln attenduce.
Principal Graham recommended
having Grade 13, and after soma
discussion, on motion of Trusteu
Jackson tnd Young, tht matter wu
igreed upon. Ai lut yeir the cost
per pupil will ba »100. $30 of thli
mmt be piid on enrolment ud
$10 a month thereafter.
Ai thli work wtt not provided
for ln tht original budget, the
truiteei are faced with tha need ot
engaging uother teacher. It wu
agreed to uk the department to
give high ichool teaching recognition to Sid Rogen, who had
previously been assigned to Creston
public school. It Victoria it agreeable to thli, L. Glllli wiU be transferred trom Huscroft to Creston
to replica Mr. Rogen, ud another
teacher, preferably a mala, wiU be
secured for Huicroft at the minimum ot $060.
Principal Graham wu in favor to
this, ud supervising principal
Marriott wu abo favorable. It wai
felt lt would be euler, at tbli Ute
date, to secure a pubUc ichool
teacher rither than a high ichool
instructor.
HELP FOR NEEDY AIKED
J. E. Healey, president of Kooteniy Unemployed Men'i Orguiz-
ation, wu preient at the bead of a
delegation trom the unemployed,
uking what Uie board wu prepared to do ln tha way of providing
free textbooks and, to aome cues,
clothing tor children ot men on relief who had not tha meana to purchue booki or clothing,
Mr. Healey advised the heada ot
iuch families were quite wiUing to
do extra dayi' work on relief in
order to lecure tha fundi. Mr.
Healey aUo wu ipokesmu for
soma Arrow Creek parents who
wished the bus to travel about lta
miles put tht ichool ln ordtr to
pick up tht younger children who
would be unable in the Winter ud
bad weather to get to the school-
house to Uke the bm lor Erlckion
around 8 a.m.
The trustees expressed lympathy
with Mr. Healey In hli million. In
the pait there had been no booki
given out free, nor bad fundi ever
been provided tor clothing. It desired books could be bought on the
instalment plan. Due the bad shape
the road wu in beyond Arrow
Creek school no hope wu held out
of extending the bus run.
Mlu Irene ud Miss Nora Passcuzzo of Sirdar wiU be advised
there Is room for them at Creston
high school, and that they cu
travel by ichool bm from Wynndel
to Creston to long u there Is ic-
comodatlon, which it present letmi
certain for tht prerent term.
NEW TEACHERS
High School Principal Graham
■poke enthusiastically of tha qualification! ot the new nigh school
teachers that have been engaged,
particularly of Miss Stewart B.Ai,
the new Latin ud English teacher.
Mr. Smith, who is to take agriculture, ii an enthuiiut in that line,
and has requested that the work ot
beautifying the school groundi be
left to him ud hii students. To
cope with the dust nuisance on
the ichool groundi It li proposed
to sprinkle heavily ud possibly
roll them.
Mr. Graham had no official uti-
mite ot the high ichool attendance,
but expected it would be over 400.
To take cara of the Increased attendance 40 additional lockers had
been bought but lt is now found
another 00 wlU be needed.
These will be ot substanial
wood construction, made ln the
school workship under tha direction of lupervising janitor R. R.
Roebuck.
Supervising principil E. Marriott
of the public ichool wu luccessful
in hiving the hoard purchase some
supplies that had been deferred
pending hli return. Theie Include
an additional typewriter, a loud
speaker for the radio so that four
classes could take instruction in
place of the present two. Two new
portable radios will be purchased
for use at tbe rural ichooli each
alternate month. $70 wlU be ipent
on the overhaul ot the mimeograph. Purchue ot these supplies
wu igreed to on a motion by
Trustees Jackson and Cartwright.
The cook stove to the teacherage
at Alice Siding Is missing, ud the
police will be uked to investigate.
The supply of wood at Arrow Creek
and Alice Siding schools, which
havt been closed, WiU be transferred to Canyon. Thst matter of
shelter in bad weather for pupils
who win gather at Arrow Creek
and Alice Siding for bm transportation now thue two schools
are closest, was briefly discussed,
ud will be taken up at tha next
meeUng. '
Soda!...
Crescent Valley
. CRESCENT- VALLEY, B.C-Mr.
and Mn. Rowland .Harmston (nee
Miss Doreen Peachey), who were
married Sunday at Silverton were
supper guests ot Mr. and Mn. A.
W. Harmston, the former'i parenti,
Sundiy evening, prior to leiving on
their wedding trip. Other guesti Included Mr. ind Mn. J. C. Fletcher
of Nelson, Mr. ind Mn. W. Lister.
Miu Bernice Lister, Wallace and
Bennie Lister of South Slocan, and
Miss Babe Peachey of Silverton. Mr.
and Mre. Rowlmd Harmston. will
make their home at Crescent Wiley.
Chamberlain Announces Ultimatum,
Pinning Blame on Herr Hitler, Who
"Plunges World Into Misery in Order
to Serve Own Senseless Ambitions"
LONDON, Stpt 1.-Tt Par-
lltmtnt Prlmt Mlnliter Chamberlain uld Adolf Hitler "hai not
Imitated to plunge the world
Into mlstry In order to urvt hit
twn unultu ambltlont."
Mr. Chamberlain wu (retted
with a roar of cheen, ud waved
lolemnly ta acknowledgemtnt
Thert wtre criei ot "God bleu
you" and "Good luck."
"I do not propose to uy tuny
words tonight; the Ume hu come
when action rather thu speech li
required," Mr. Chimberliln begin.
"The reiponiibUity tor this terrible citutrophe," he went on, "Uu
on the ihoulden of one min."
The Prime Minister uld thit 18
months igo he hid "prayed thit
tht responsibility might not fill on
me to uk this country to accept
tht awful arbitrament ot war."
"At any rate I eould not with
for condltioni tn whloh iuch a
burden would fill upon ma cleir-
•r thin thay ire todty u to
whtrt I itand. Tht Qirmin Chin-
cillor hu not hiiltatid te plunge
tha world into mlury In ordtr to
um hli own unultu ambltlont."
Mr. ChamberUIn aald Germiny
hid been informed thtt If ihe persisted ln using force Grett Britain
would oppose bar.
Hitler hai put hlmulf grievously In tha wrong, the Prima
Minister declared.
"He hu become the iroh antmy
ef mankind," ht oontinued. "Ha
hai been guilty of tht buest
trtuhtry to all the people to
whom In tha pait ha hai glvin
promlm.
"Wa have no quarrfl with tha
Germu people but whUa we have
no pisifon against thtt people
wt shall enter tht itruggle with
grim determination to overthrow
that system of government which
hu trampled on freedom, crucified mm ud women, ud hu
brought toe world btck to tht
jickbooti of old Pruailmlim.
"Out ot the smoking ruim of tha
Itruggle win irtee a naw order of
lociety. Dlctatonhip will have
been deitroyed forever. I know
to my heart thtt freedom tnd
minkind'i hope of the future cinnot be quenched. I know Uberty
will prevail.'
■y I. F. SANDERSON
(Canadian Prut Staff Writer)
TILLS OF ULTIMATUM
LONDON, Stpt 1 (CP eable)-
(Ptued by British censor)—Britain
Ud Frince hive lent tn ultimatum
to the Germin Government, Prime
Minister Chimberliln told tht
hmhed Home of Commons today.
While he did not actually uie tht
word "ultimatum," tbe Prime Mlnliter disclosed thit the Germin
Government hu been wirned that
unleu lta troops ire withdrawn
from PoUnd "Hli Majeaty'i Government will without hesitation fulfil their obligations" to the Invested
country.
The Prime Minister left no doubt
he believed Germany would not accept u ultimatum ud this would
leave Britain and France no alternative but to declare war.
Tha prime Minister addressed the
Home to a lolemn atmosphere accentuated by the drawn bllndi ind
tht shaded lights. He wu cheered
u he hu never been cheered before. Cheer upon cheer rose it he
pinned tht blame on HiUer tor
lending the world into wir.
Mr. rjhimberlain ipokt with great
feeling, but not with his mual calm.
He pounded the big dispatch box
to front ot him. His voice, which
seldom rises tbovt tht conversation
tone, tt times took on grett volume.
IL DUCI DID HIS BEST
He mtdt ont pointed reference
to Premier Mussolini when he uid
II Duce hid been trying hli but
during the put tew dayi to prevent
war.
Britain, he tald, !■ prepared to tee
war through to the bitter end. She
wu entering tha conflict with a
clear conscience md with the lupport ot the Dominions, ud with the
moral approval of moit of the world.
Tells Vivid Story of German
Air Raid on Warsaw; Attack Bribes
By LLOYD LEHRBA8
(Astoclitid Preu Staff Writer)
WARSAW, Sept  1—»:SS  pjn.—
(AP).—German warplanei swooped
over Warsaw thli afternoon to an
air attack ln advance of three German irmiei Invading thli country.
I am telephoning this dispatch to
Budapest with the phone tn one
hand and a gas mask to the other.
From where I am, I can hear the
wail of power-diving fighting ships
ud cu ue 14 Germin bomben
slowly, steadily following the course
ot the VlstuU River, Poland'i outlet to the sea.
Apparently they are attempting
to destroy all bridges.
The raid begin at about 4:30
p.m. ud ii itill continuing mora
than u hour later.
Tbe German air ralden now—
9:35 p.m.—are coming back after
making a wide circle.
They apparently are heading toward Government building! to the
centre of downtown Wanaw.
I can lee puffi of anti-aircraft
fire.
Although the raid ll atlll on,
there ii no pule.
Across the street from me; hundreds of Inhabitant! are watching
fascinated on roof tops.
Tremendom explosions are shaking the city and rattling windows.
Anti-aircraft ihelli are bursting
iround the bombers which are coming over at u altitude of about
0000 feet
Waruw hid little warning.
Elmer W. Petenon, Associated
Press Chief of Bureiu here, ud I
heard the anti-aircraft gum before
we hurd the acream ot air-raid
alarm ilrem.
It tha bomben hava Ued up traffic over the steel railroad nridge
spanning the Vistula it is a serious
blow for Polud's traffic from here
to the coait ud to the Wut.
The German! apparently tried Tor
definitely military objectives. There
wai no sign of Incendiary bombs.
Reporti have started reaching
here ot Germin air attack! elsewhere ln Poland,
A large number of women ud
children were killed, a Government
communique said, when German
planes bombed a refugee train
from Poznan at the Kutno Station,
70 miles weit of Wanaw.
The tint air raid on Pollih territory, it uid, occurred at Puck-
near Danzig—at 5:40 a.m.
It aaid three German plmu were
shot down near Krakow, four othen near Gdynia—the Pollih port on
the lame harbor is Danzig—ud
that Polish troops had seized a Germm armored train at Chojnioe.
Tha communique charged German troopi invading Pormorze (tht
Poliih Corridor) were "murdering
the Polish population."      '
"Contrary to Hitler'i unouncement" the communique nld, "muy
of the towns bombed had no military or strategic value."
The Germu planes have been
doing iome exceptionally daring
bombing, sometimes diving to about
3000 feet over the Vistula bridges.
It ia now 5:40 pjn. ud the sound
of uti-ilrcraft guns and roaring
airpUne moton has died away.
Apparently, the raid is over.
British Columbia Organizes to
Meet Attach and Prevent Sabotage
-■ i.
minster, Burnaby, North V»neoa«
ver, Wut Vancouver ,and Richmond to arrange the orgulzatlon ot
volunteer brlgadu.
The brigades wlU be asked to help
protect water suppllu ud lewige
services, supply tint lid ud ambulance lervice ln cue ot attack or
Internal ubotige, ud take othar
precaution!.
The Government'! committee directing theie precautions li working
with two experti from Ottawa, ft
comlati of Dr. H. E. Young, Provincial Health Officer, E. W. Griffith.
Reliet Administrator, who ia the
conUct man: Police Commissioner
T. W. S. M. Parsons; Arthur Dixon,
Chief. Engineer; J. A. Walker, terminer Provincial Fire Manhal; Dr.
G. F. Davidson, Welfare Director:
Dr. S. J. Willii, Superintendut or
Education ud Dr. M. W, Thomu
for tha Britiah Columbia Medical
Association.
A handbook on air raid precautions prepared to Ottawa and modeled along lines of Britain's plu la
being used to guide the orgulzatlon.
' VICTORIA, 8ept 1 (CP)—Spurred
by the outbreak of hostilities to
Europe, the Provincial Government
pushed rapidly ahead today with
civilian meuuru to protect tha
populace in case ot attack or sabotage. ,
The new committee for the protection of the civilian poputatlon
called a hurried meeting at the Legislative Buildings ud decided to
call in representative from vulnerable cities along tha lower coast
They will plan organization of
volunteer brigades to take care of
rescue and guard work and protection of vital services, supporting tlie
militia guards already on duty.
Hon. John Hart, Acting Premier,
took charge of the work for the
time being, but the Government wu
advised that Premier Pattullo,
whose plut hu been deliyed by
bad weather on a northern flight,
wlU ipeed aouth trom Juneau,
Alaska.
The Civilian Protection Committee decided to get representative!
from Victoria, Saanich, Oak Bay,
Esquimalt Vancouver, New West-
Catholic Boys Under Canvas . . .
Campers Convinced There Are Snipes
in Camp Area but Are Disillusioned
Monday night the TraU ud Nelson boys were divided Into teams,
ud armed with clubs, lacks, and
lanterns they set out on a snipe-
hunt. After combing the bushes
ud swamps tor several houn the
hunten came btck empty-handed
but were determined to continue
their hunt the following night
Tuesdty morning the enthusiastic
huntsmen were stiU convinced that
there wera snipes In the neigh
borhood until the bluff wu called.
A court session was held Tuesday night to pronounce Judgment
on a guilty parly who had let down
a number of tents on the sleeping
occupants. The lesden were found
gillty in the tint degree and sen-
need to the kitchen and chore
patrol. Another party of wrong-
doen was sentenced to dishwashing for ducking some of their fellow campen In the creek.
TORONTO, (CP).—Don Van
Winkle, 13, icorched down an East
End grade in his homemade "Soap
Box Derby" entry at 24 mllu an
hour, to win a trip to Akron, O..
where he wiU compete In world
championships Aug. 13.
LONDON, (CP).-'Beanteait day*
at Woolwich Arsenal, held each year
on the second Saturday ot July.
commemorates a visit to the arsenal
by George III, incognito, during
which be shared beam ud bacon
with tbe worken. B9Hsi
 "■—
	
I
PAOE  EIOHT
Shriners, Dokkies
Take Over Nelson
Today, festivities
ut
I*
D<
TODAY
12:00 noon—Shrlnen trom Trail;
Dokkies from viried polnti.
1:90 pjn. Shrlnen from C. P. R.
depot to Kooteniy Lakt Generil
HospiUl where Gizeh Temple Bind
will entertain staff ind pitients.
2:00 p.m.—Registration of Dokkies
and social for ladles at K. P. Hall.
3:00 p.m.—Band goei by car to
Lakeside Pirk for program until
ab-sut 4:00 p.m.
8:00   p.m.—Shrlnen   banquet  at
ume Hotel; Dokkiei at K. P. HaU.
7:30 p.m.—Pirade of Shrlnen,
Dokkiei and Nomadi of Avrudaki,
Gizeh Temple Bind leidlng, to Vernon Strett ln front of Civic Ctntrt
tor drills.
8:00 p.m.—Paradt on Vernon
Street to Shell for bind program.
8:13 pjn.—Dokkiei stage ceremonial it Eagle Hall.
9:00 p.m.—Sbrlntr dtnct In Civic
Centre HalL
•UNDAY
3:00 p.m.—Boat excunlon lo Mtln
Like.
Season's Fires
Reach Total 574
Total forest fires ln tbt Nelion
forest district this seuon retched
674 Thursday night, the weekly tabulation at the Nelson Office ot tha
Foreit Branch revealed Friday.
A total ot 149 flrei was reported
during tht week, with 3d of them
atlll burning Thursdiy night Of
thoie reported, 37 were ln Eait Kootenty, 60 ln Weit Kooteniy tnd 28
ln the Boundary, Of thoie still burning, 21 wert ln East Kooteniy, 27
in West Koottnay and eight ln the
Boundary.
Of the ietion'1 total, 203 wen ln
tut Kootenty, 303 in Wett Kootenay, and 68 ln tha Boundary,
TRAIL, TADANAC
TENNIS PLAYERS
COMPETE NELSON
TRAIL, B. C, Sept. 1-There win
be a itrong delegation ot Trail tnd
Tidanac racket wlelden battling
with other district playen at the
annuil Weit Kooteniy Tennli Aiiociatlon tournament at Nelion over
the Labor Day weekend. Weiring
Tadanac Club colon will be Mr.
and Mn. T. H. Weldon, John Salter,
A. M. Chesser, Saul Rothman, W. O.
Williams, George Murray, Stanley
Angui and Mr. and Mn. L, Knowlei.
From the Trill Memorial Club
will go Ned Rhodei, Ed Hadley,
Leonard Evans, Glen Muon tnd
Herbert Oxley.
40 Nelson, District
Students Finish
Writing "Sups"
Approximately 40 Junior and Senior Matriculation itudent! of Nelion and dlitrict completed their
supplemental eximlnatloni at the
Junior High School Friday afternoon, completing five dayi ot
exami. Studenti from Nelion High
School and St. Joseph's Academy at
Nelson, and from Castlegar, Kulo
and Salmo wrote their exams. Inipector F. A. Jewett, had charge.
Exams were held ln tht Junior
High School because of noise created by erection of the High School's
new addition.
Grand Forks Legion
Assures Foster of
Unswerving Loyalty
GRAND FORKS. B. C_ Stpt 1-
Threatenlng war cloudi brought
Canadian Legion Branch into action
100 per cent toniaht They wired
Brigadier W. W. Foster, Dominion
President giving usurinct of un-
iwerving loyilty ind illegiince to
King ind Country ind lought op-
oortunlty to lerve in iny direction.
They requested thii murance be
forwirded to Mlnliter of Defence
•nd uked lutgeitlom u to how
but they Might lervt.
MORE ABOUT
AIR RAIDERS
(Contlnutd From
Ont)
bid betn bilked ln four ttrlltr
•ttempti.
I POLISH PLANEI QO
Tilt tint communique from the
Poliih general itaff uierttd 16
German airplanes wtre ihot down
during tht varloui air raids
throughout tha scene of operations
and that two Polish planei wert
lott in btttlet.
Tht communiqut nld Pollih
troopi gained possession ot two
Germin armored trains.
Apparently directing their attack
on brldgei scross the Vistula river,
Polind'i outlet to tha let, the ilr
ralden itarted the hour ind 10-
minute attack at 4:30 p.m. (7:33
ajn. P.S.T.)
An hour later they cunt btck
tnd headed toward Government
bulldlngi In tha centre of the city.
A vliit to tht highwiy tnd railroad brldgei icross the Vistula, Immediately after the "all clear" signals were given, disclosed there
wu no visible dtmige.
BRIDGES INTACT
Both brldgei wtrt Intact and traffic proceeded normally.
There wu no lign of damage to
bulldlngi ln tha vicinity, although
bomb frigmenti wera picked up.
Official reporti were licking ind
it wu tnnounced thtt complete
surveys of the bombi treu iround
tht capital had not ytt been received.
Soma observera expressed belief
the bombs bad tended either ln
the river or In open ipaces on the
shore opposite the city.
One explanation wai that tha
bomben had dropped their explo-
ilvei on military objtctlyei Just
outside the city and merely were
making a reconnaisanca flight over
the capital.
It wu emphaiized hera that Poland io tir wu fighting only defensively to establish beyond all
doubt Germany Is the aggressor.
Foreign circles speculated that Germany might be seeking only a partial conquest while driving to keep
tbt Western powen neutral.
In a ipeclal decree, Manhal
Smlgly Rydi wu appointed Commander-in-Chief ot all Polind'i
armed forces, and also wu named u
successor to Preildent Moscicki ln
the event tha Presidency should become vacant before the war ends.
A dispitch from Copenhagen,
passed through British censorahip,
laid the Wanaw radio itation reported the Slovak Minister ln Warsaw protested to the Pollih Foreign
Mlnliter, Josef Beck, against German occupation of Slovakia, and
charged that Slovak leaden were
tools in German politics.
Trail, Fernie Couple
Take Out License
COEUR D'ALENE, Ida., Sept 1
(CP). — Marriage license wii taken out today by Mario A. Laxnan,
Trail, B. C, ind Elizabeth Miffiolo,
Fernie, E G
90 Entries as Kootenay lawn Tennis
Tourney Opens This Afternoon, Nelson
The annual Weit Kooteniy Tennis Association tournament iweeps
into action at two polnta in Nelson
this afternoon, opening a three-day
tournament with a total of about 00
. entriei trom all over the B. C. Interior, Alberta and Idaho, and from
Spokane
Beginning at 3:30, play will itart
ln men'i singles and doubles, mixed
doubles and ladlet' singles and doublet competitions at six courts, four
at the Nelson Golf and Country
Club and two at the Court House.
Day time tennii will continue until
8:30 and after that pliy will be
resumed under tht lighti it tht
Court Houit.
Thli will bt iht flnt tlmt In tht
hiitory of the tourntmenti thit provision! have been tor both Indoor
and outdoor, day md night tennis. In cue of rain, matches will be
played at the Civic Centre. Two
court! will be laid out in the Arena
and one in the Badminton Hall, Two
yein igo rain wu reiponilble tor
a number ot matchei being played
at tha Civic Centre. .
DRAWS TO BE POSTED
There have been five timei left
open at the Golf Club coune thli
afternoon, ind then will likely be
taken up by men'i doublei to ba
arranged today. A number of entries Friday night nude it irnpos-
tible to complete the dnwi. Tht
list ot draws will be posted at the
Court House.
Playen art coming from iuch
po nts ai Trail, Rossland, Tadanac
Willow Point Spokane, Coleman,
Cranbrook, Kimberley, Sheep Creek,
Bonnington, Harrop, Procter. Robion, Creston, Tye and Kelowna;
Coeur d'Alene and Wallace, Idaho;
and Spokane.
Three playen coming from the
United States, are bringing along
their own coach.
Draws and timet for tht Leith
Cup play follow:
CHAMPIONSHIP FLIQHT:
1:00 p.m.—L. M. McBride va G.
S Ross.
1:05—T. R. Wilson vi. Riy Stone.
l:10-Ken McBride vi O. G. Gallaher.
1:15—Walter Duckworth vs. Reginald Stone.  *      I
1:20—Clem Wation va. Jimei
Allm.
2:00—Dr. T. H. Bourque va. B.
Townihend.
2:30—Bob Witaon VI. A. Bilrd.
2:35—W. C. Cirlson vi. R. W. Net-
bitt.
Losera ln these gamei will drop
btck into the tint flight while the
winnen proceed in .ehimplonihlp
flight pliy.  ,
SECOND PLIOHT
1:03—J. & Kerr wR.Es Horton.
1:08—L, A. McPhill w J. Fing.
Imd.
lnW-W. S. Birrlck w J. Boyce.
1:18—R, L. McBride w Bert
Banks.
1:22-0. F. AUm w J. Mitchell.
1:30—G. P. Wition w Hirold
Lakei.
1:33-G. Pirkhunt w J. Roblnion.
Sunday—L. 8. Bradley w Jamei
Cherrington.
Losera will drop back Into third
flight play while winnen advance.
FOURTH PLIOHT
1:40—W. Blane w Dr. a H. MacKenzie.
1:50—J. B. «ark vs. J. A. Fergu-
ion. .
1:58-Alex Allm w G. B. Garland.
2:03—J. Hunden w. H. St Denii,
2:08—C. Stark vi, Jamei Paton,
2:09—W. W. Ferguion w W.
Vince..
2:11—9tu Walker w Paul Hunden.
2:15—A. Ballantyne w Blake.
Allm.
Loeen will drop.back to fifth
flight play while winnen advance,
Rain Thought General In District;
Ten-Mile Fire Jumps Line; Two Crews
NE' SON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. ■.C-SATURDAY MORNINO. SEPT. t
Little May Be Lib
Candidate
Cranbrook
MORE ABOUT
CALLED 10 SERVE
WITHIN CANADA
(Continued From Pigi One)
non-permanent mllltla, aervlot only
within Canida.
The troopi miy be tent to poil-
tloni on tha Atlantic or Pacific
Coaiti, or anywhirt within the
country. And they will be required
to repel any invader.
SecUon 88 of the Mllltla Act doei
obligate a member of the non-permanent force to Mrve "In the field"
wherever thit mty bt. Thli memi
tny theitre of wir, either within
or outiide Canidi. It i mm ii so
ordered, he cm not be compelled
to lerve for mort thm ont year
unlesi "In cue ot unavoidable necessity" tha governor-ln-council
orden him to serve tor m additional alx monthi,
Thii obligation, however, hu
never been invoked ind ln actual
practice, hai fallen Into desuetude.
The procedure now It to re-ittest
memben of the Militia for service
in the field specifically "for one
year or'the duration of the war."
That question, however, ii not
likely to wise until parliament
meets, on September 7, tnd decides
the extent to which Canada will
participate in my conflict overseas.
PERMANENT MEN
OO ANYWHERE
With Canada's small permanent
militia, navy md air force, the situation Is different They cm ba sent
anywhere they are ordered to go.
But that again Is dependent on the
will ot parliament for it Is pirliament which votes the money necessiry for their maintenance.
In tctlve service, the non-permanent mllltla, ai at preient called
out becomei automatically mb-
iect to military law. Thla ii embodied in Canada'i military iet up
md ii an adaption for Canadian
purpose! of the irmy mnual act nt
the United Kingdom. The "manual
ot military law" and "the King'!
regulationi md orden" tor Canada are tht two instruments which
govern tht serving troopi. Therein
tn Incorporated all the right! and
prlvllegei of the loldier together
with the restrictions imposed on
him md the virloui rules by which
his conduct is guided.
No clue wis given ln idminlstn-
tlve circles is to Canada'i intention
to organize tn expeditionary force
for tervice In Europe, Nor wit it
indlctted whether tne government
would recommend to Parliament
the creation and despatch of iuch
a force.
Should thli become neceuary, lt
ll undentood the machinery for its
establishment it retdy tnd require!
only parliament1! tiseqt to put it
into operation.
MORE ABOUT
ATTACKS BRITAIN
(Contlnuid From Pigt Ont)
Tht ptoplt were grimly determined, however, thtt eich mm md
woman would do hli or her duty J**1'"4 •■
to tchleve thoie objectivei which. Sin Franciico •_,„„„.
Fuehrer HlUer, ln an Impauloned     Giy and Conroy; S. Gibson and
Reichitag ipeech, declired to be' Woodill. ,
the purpoie of tht Reich'! reiort to . Portland-Seattle gama poitponed
amu.       • I ?£"""■_.?▼ "i?;
Thoie objectivei were reunion of
C. J. Little, Cranbrook
Should Hon. F. M. MacPhenon,
Mlnliter ot Public Worki ind
member for Crinbrook in the
Provincial Houie, resign to take
a proferred post with the Federal
Boird of Transport Commiuionen, the ntme ot C. J. Little will
probably be placed before Cranbrook Llberali to lucceed him u
member for that riding. Mr. Little
hu been ln buiineu in Crinbrook
ilnce 1910, He is • charter member of the Cranbrook Rotary Club
md hu long been active ln Board
of Trade circlet For nine yean
he wu a member ot Cranbrook
City Council He Is also Intereited
in mining.
tlom only u a sub-worker."
These political quirten uld "Englmd didn't even hivt I desirt to
accomplish an understanding."
England "will pay tht bill" If lt
enters wtr, the commentary tald
NIGHT BASEBALL
WEST. INTER.
Bellingham         2  8  0
Spokane   8 12   1
Sheehan md Brenner; Serventi,
Jonis ind Lake.
Vmcouver _:.  0  12
Yakima             3 110
Merrill and Volpl; H. Johnson
and Lorena.
PACIFIC COAST
Sacramento    0   3   2
San Diego        4  3   1
Schmidt Sherer, md Ogi.dow-
skl; Pillette and Detore.
Lot Angelei ..
Hollywood
Bonettl md
and Brenzel
R. Collins;
3  9  0
2   8  2
B..jier
0   4
4 12
Rain that fell ln Nelion md dlitrict Friday afternoon wu thought
to ba general throughout tha Nelion foreit dlitrict and only one
new fire wu reported. It wu a
imall blaze at Blueberry Creek, but
it wu soon under oontrol. The rain
wu fairly general in tht West Kooteniy.
A crew of 20 wis put In West of
Glad* on tha Ttn-Mua tire, to ure-.
vent it coming down the mountain.
A high wind Thundiy tanned the
fire up until lt lumped tha guard on
the Brilliant side, but the crew trom
the Rou Spur side, Just being laid
off that end, Wu put Into ictlon
with tht Brilliant crew It wu believed they would htvt tht flrt
under control again by today.
Tha weather forecut for todiy
raid "ihowery", but tha barometer
wu going up ilighUy,   '
Danzig with the Reich, reititution of
the Pollih Corridor region to Germany and a cessaUon at conditions
along the German-Polish border
which HlUer described u "Macedonian,"  or  terroristic.
Germin troopi tonight wert attacking all along tht Pollih-Otr-
man frontltr tnd wert rtported
to have puihed Into leveril sec-
tlom ot Polind. A communique
from tha high army command
uld advancei of German troopi
md air forces whloh itirted from
Pomtrtnia, Silesia and East Prussia this morning, win will undir wiy towird thtlr objective!.
At tha reiult of ilr raids, including one it Wanaw, Germany was
pronounced "ln complete control of
Polish air."
' The official Interpretation of tha
relaUont between Poland and Germany was that there Is no itate of
war existing. The Embassies ot both
nations still are functioning. In fact
Polish Ambassador Josef Lipskl >as
understood to have made a protest
at the Foreign Office against German military operations in Poland.
ORDERED TO LEAVE
(Parii reporti, however, uld that
Lipskl had received orden trom his
Government to leava Hit Reich).
In Warsaw, too, tha Germm Embassy remains staffed,
German bfflcials insisted all that
had happened was that Germany
struck back after Poland attacked at
Gleiwitz last night and consistently
violated the border ln recent weeks.
Informed quirten frankly admitted, however, that If, for Instance, Katowice In Pollih Silesia
should be "liberated", lt might be
retained permanently by Germany,
although Hitlers 10 points submitted
list night to the world, uld nothing of Silesia. In other words, lt
wu Indicated the 18 pointi no longer
itand ai Germany'i offer ln the
crisis.
As further argument that a state
of war does not exist offlciili
pointed to the tact thit the German-
Italian Military Alliance hai not become operaUve in the sense thit
Italy must glvt Germin military
assistance.
In general, Germany during the
first day of her armed conflict with
Poland, wu trying to organize life
on a martial basis u the emoUonal
strain ot the Fuehrer's fervid ap-
Seal before tha Reichstag gave way
> practical considerations.
Economy meuures were put Into
effect immediately. Bills ot fare
at restaurants wera reduced to a
minimum. Display of electric advertising eigni wu forbidden, ihops
and stores were ordered to cease
show lighting after 9 p.m. and the
schooli wert closed unUl further
notice.
AddtUonal private can and trucki
were requisitioned by tha military,
Tha management ot state theatres
mnounced state operas and theatres
would not resume presentations for
the present   ,
"England today itill facet tha
choice ot whether lt wind to plunge
tha world into misery, but Its poli-
tlci of the lut monthi and the aimi
it thereby puraued leave no doubt
that it will not be deterred from
the consequences of Europem
catastrophe.
"The only real aggreasor, therefore, from the political and historical viewpoint is Great Britain,
whili tiie Pollih Government tunc-
INTERNATIONAL
Montreal 7, Toronto 8.
Newark 9, Baltimore 1.
AMER. ASSOC'N.
Columbus 4, St Paul 3.
ULTIMATE ISSUE
CLEAR—DONNELL
"The ultimate Issue Is clear," ss-
serted Rev. J. A. Donnell of Nelson
Friday u news of European events
cime In ever-Increasing volume.
It is between democracy md
totalitarianism. Democracy hu
many limitations. It it cumbersome,
loose-Jointed, slow-moving, md far
from rendering full Justice to aU.
But it is so much better, has so much
greater possibilities, than any other
order of society that could possibly
take iti place, that it ii worth the
utmost price thit we can conceivably be called on to pay. All thit
Is best in our civilization is it stake.
We cm wtgt a stronger, braver
war, unblinded by hatred, md with
clear-eyed iteadfutneii and unfaltering faith in the best" he declared.
MORE ABOUT.
Recruiting Opens
In Kootenays
(Continued From Paga Ont)
Nelson,. Cnnbrook md Kimberley
about 3 p.m_ Pacific Time, from
headquarters ot Military District 11,
Victoril.
Immediately afterward theae orden were implemented by Lieut-
CoL D. Philpot of Cranbrook, officer commanding the 24th Field
Brigade of which the four batteriei
ire unite, md the mobilizition
Kheme plinned iome time tgo
cimt Into effect The batteriei tre
now proceeding tlong tbe llnet of
thtt Kheme, memben of etch unit
hiving been idvlsed to report to
their commending offlcen. Recruiting to wtr itrength beglni
today..
NAZIS WATCHED
Meanwhile Provincial Police, ln
response to inquiries by The Nelson
Dally News, stated the Null In the
district were known and were being
witches!
At Trill 8. O. Bliyloek, President of tht Conttlldited Mining
4 Smelting Company, luued t
call to amployeei to gutrd agalnit
ubottgt, ind urged thit thut
tmployiu to "give thi benefit of
tht doubt" to nitlonili of othtr
countriei employed by tht Compiny. ptndlng ictlon by tht Cinidlin authorltlti
An augmented police force hu
been employed at tht huge Conioll-
dited metallurgical and chemical
worki at Trail md Tadanac tor iome
Ume.
A report that the C. P. R. wu
placing guards on vital polnti in
tht railway system In this division
wu not confirmed.
CALL IS BROADCAST
In iddlUon to tht mobilizition
orden forwarded by telegraph
and telephone, to bittery commanders, Colonel Philpot lent
messages to the two Kooteniy
rtdlo stations, CKLN at Nelson
md CJAT at Trail, - advising
mllltla members to report to their
batteries and calling tor recrulta.
Tht broadcait message wu:
"All memben ot the 24th Field
Brigade, Roytl Canadian Artillery,
art required to report lmmedittely
to their battery, which hu been
caUed for active service. Thli order ippllei to the 107th Field Battery. Cranbrook; 108th Field Battery, Kimberley; 109th Field Battery, Trail, and 111th Field Battery,
Nelion.
"Recruits in required it once
to bring batteriei up to itrength.
Recruits ihould ipply to the nearest battery armory.
"Thli noUce is given by Lieut-
Col. D. Philpot Officer Commending, 24th Field Brigade."
The 109th at Trail alio broadcut
i message calling iti men'to headquarters.
OVER 100 MEN
NEEDED NELSON
At Nelson Major A. E. Dalgu,
M. C, Officer Commanding the
111th, immediately launched plant
for recruiting more than 100 men
today. Originally recruiting to puce
time itrength wu plmned, but
ihortly itterwird, mother message
authorized recruiting to war Ume
strength.
Major Dalgu stated a large number of car ind truck driven, u
well u cooki. clerks, itores men,
surveyors, irtlflcen, gunnera md
Umber gunnera wera required to
bring the battery to full itrength.
While men might be recruited for
speciil qualification along these
lines, the basis of their training
would be ln gunnery, he stated. All
ranks must be proficient u gunners. Recruits from all district points
will be accepted, recruiting being
carried on from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
. The Ulth Battery will hold roU
call at 8 p.m. During the day training will be under way.
Provincial police had uvirat
callt Frldiy from mm wlihlng
to volunteer for tht following
permanent unite: Royal Canadian
Artillery, Royal Canadian Army
Engineeri ind Royil Cinidlin
Ordmnct Corpi. A call for ault-
able men for then units wu Iiiued Wednudiy, Provinciil Police being tdvlied to tend applicant* to tha local representttlvt of
the Roytl Cinidlin Army Med-
1938.     - 	
leal Corps If thty wtrt suitable.
Transportation will ba pravldid
for thtm ta it to Vlctorli.
MEN LEAVE JOBS
Throughout tht dlitrict men connected with militia until at other
pointi art leaving their work to
aniwer calii from their eommind-
lng offlcen. In t numbtr of cuei
they tn leiving lot* or ire ipply-
ing for leive of iwence. Other men
attached to more distant units, who
havt not received I direct cell, are
reporting to local militia officers.
No official communication or call
hu yet been mtde to tbe Nelson
Branch No. 11 of the Canadian
Legion la relation to the National
Survey of War Vetemi for volunteer service ln etst of tmtrgency,
H I. Thiin, mtniger-tecretary, reported Fridiy. Some 303 veterani
reglitered In Nelion when tht lur-
vey, completed April 22, wu mide.
Thty lignified their wUllngneu to
serve.
VETERANS REOISTERED
Each legion branch hu ln lta
possession I complete nominil roll
or key register of local registration!
•nd hu received instruction thit In
the ibsence ot definite orden, my
requeit from I constituted luthor-
ity for uiiitanct or cooperation is
to bt mtt to tht utmost ot lta
ability.
"Wi know af thtm tnd ara ktep-
Ing tab on them," British Columbli Polio* at Nelton uld Fridty
whtn qutitlontd concerning precaution! btlng taktn igilnit tht
possibility of Null In Nelion md
dlitrict tngiglng In pro-Nul activity. Similar report! wirt coming In ovtr tht Nilwn Dally
Newi letisd win from othir pirt*
of tht country.
TRAIL MOBILIZING
TRAU B.C, Sept 1-Tht 109th
Field Bittery. R.C.A, todty commenced mobilization under orden
trom hetdquarten of Military District 11, Victoril.
Major W. A. Tiylor, Offtctr Com-
minding, tonight rtcelved orden
tor tht men to return to their
homes md return for parade it
tht Armorlei trom 8:30 to 11:30 i.m.
ud 2 to 4:30 pjn. Stturdiy. Training will commence ln the morning.
Strength ot tht unit ll 88 men
ot all ranki ind enlistment! up to
fuU itrength will be received. Several men ilgned up Friday night A
few lubmltted their mmei to the
Provinciil Police office ln tha afternoon.	
MORE ABOUT
BRITAIN-FRANCE
(Continued From Paga Ona)
(Paued by Britiih Ctnior). —
Grett Britain md France gave
Germany her lut wtrning tonight
The British ind French Ambassadors it Berlin were instructed by the two trmed md fully
Oared powen to tell Germany
unless the Reich is prepared
to give assurances its iggreuive
action against Poland Is stopped
the two Democratic nations "will
without hesitation fulfill their obligation! to Poltnd."
The only hope ot eicipe wu for
Germiny to withdraw her armiei
from Polish soil
Thit wu the ilteraitlv* Prima
Mlnliter Chimberliln illowed Germany during • historic itatement
to tha British Parliament
He idmltted there wu ilmost no
hopa that Germany would call a
halt
Franca stood fully beside htr
tily ln tht defence pledges to
Polind u Mr. Chamberlain cast the
die.
Neither power ihowed tha alight-
ut ligni of wivering.
SECRET EXCHANGES
Stent diplomatic ixchingu between Hitter and Mr. Chamberlain, publiihed In a whit* paper
today, diKloitd agrument on ona
omlnoui point — thit If wir
•hould coma, It would be long and
bloodier than tha Onat War.
The BritUh Prima Mlnliter warn
on Aug. 2, 'No greater mlitaki
could be mide" thin the usumption
that tht Russian-German pact would
Erevent the British trom aiding Poind If the latter were attacked.
He idded that "it would bt a
dangerous illusion to think that if
wir once starts, it will come to m
STARTS THIS AFTERNOON WII
ENTRIES IN LEITH CUP MEN'S
11 Ladies to Compete
Kootenay Breweries
Trophy
Tht annual Labor Day weekend
golf tournament at the Nelson Golf
and Country Club, commencing this
ifternoon, hai ill the etrmirki of
ont of the toughest tourniment! of
iny competition ln the Kooteniy for
i long time.
The ehimplonihlp flight of tht
Leith Cup play hu m array.of
18 golfen, ill of whom qualified
under the 80 mirk. Heading tht
qutliflen wu Bob Watson with i
score of 88. He ii the ume player
who copped the B. C. Travellers'
Golf Tourney tn Nelson last June.
Not far behind him were Jim Allm and Ken McBride, who each
carded 89 qualifying scores.
There Is a large out-of-town entry
Including golfen from Trail, Vincouver tnd Kimberley.
Nelion'i "low men" will be right
in there to try ind mike the going
u bird u they cm for ill concerned.
Ctrl Carlion, preient holder of
the Leith Cup, will be defending
his Utle for the third time. He will
hive a hard time ot it for, in all,
there were five playen who beat
hit nullifying icore of 71.
sUI dnwi for the men'i competition ire icheduled for Siturdiy
ifternoon. However for the convenience of those pliyen who ire
unible to pity this ifternoon, they
■re able to play their flnt round
Sunday morning by arrangement
Becauie of the heavy entry, the
lidiei will pliy their first round
of the Kooteniy Brewerlu Trophy
pliy Stturdiy morning.
Then  ire  48  men  entered  ln
their competition md 11 ln the
ladlei' play.
LADIES' PLAY
Three gamei ire Kheduled In the
tint round of the lidles' play. At
9:45 thli morning Mn. L. 5. Bradley md Mn. Hirold Lakes will
play, md the following gamu be-
Special Session ol Parliament Will
Show Canada's Foreign Policy—Esling
Leaves Today, Special
Session Called by
Mackenzie King
KING FOLLOWING
LAURIERS WORDS
ROSSLAND, B. C, Sept 1 -
"This special session," stated W. K.
Esling, MP., for Kootenay Wut
who leavu Saturday night for Ottawa to attend a special session of
Parliament called for September
7, "will undoubtedly reveal to the
world just what Canada's foreign
Falley Is." The session was called
riday tor next Thursday by Prime
Minister Mackenzie King.
"The Prime Minister has made lt
clear that he accepts the declaration of his Illustrious predecessor,
Sir Wilfred Laurier, that when
Grut Britain Is at war, Cmada is
at war," Mr. Esling said.
"This is his definite statement, but
on the face ot this declaration, Canada's foreign policy Is not u emphatically defined as ii the policy
of other Dominions.
"South Africa, New Zealand and
Australli hive reputedly told the
world thtt they ire behind Great
Britain to the lut mm ind the
lut dollar, while the itatement of
Canada'! policy made by the Prime
Minliter at tha notable lathering
at Toronto on August 8 last was:
T will not siy whit Cinada will
do ln regard to a lituation that
will arlie it iome future time, and
under circumitancu ot which we
know nothing.'
"In other wordi," concluded Mr.
Esling, "Canada'i policy u outlined
by the Prime Minister could reidlly
be construed u equlvilent to saying that Parliament will bt called
to determine whether the coune
which may be puraued by Great
Britain in thli world crlili il Justified.
W. K. I8LINO
world hu been wondering what
"Durini the out few weeki, the Cintdt'i foreign policyJrully la."
tween Mri. B. Townihend md Mlu
Connie Smith, md Mn. J. Fingland
md Miu C- Hickman will itart five
minutu . reipectlvely ifter etch
other.
Byei wera drawn by Mn. S.
Walker, Mn. R. I> McBride md
Mn. Alex AUm, md Mn. W. W.
Ferguion ind Mlu J. Diamond drew
■ bye to pliy uch other in the
second round, .  .
DRAWS '
Tlmt and location ot draw* tot
opening play thli afternoon.
GOLF CLUB
2:30 to 3:30—
G. D. Barwli ot Hirrop vi S. M.
Rothman of TralL
Dr. Alello of Colemm n C.3.
Prlct of Hirrop.
George Jenkim of Colemm vi H.
D. Sinclair of Cranbrook.
A. M. Major of Procter vi W. O.
Beech of TralL
3:38 to 4:30—
R. & Howe ot Coleman va A. M.
Chester of Trill.
Miu Miry Stubba ot Kelowna VI
Mn. Jicquei Morm ot Spoktnt.
4:30 to 5:30—
Jick N\jl ud UI" M*ry McDonnell of Roultnd vi Mr. md
Mn. G. D. Barwii of Harrop.
COURT HOUSE
2:30 to 3:38-
Joe McDonnell ot Roulind ft
William Billoch of Colemm.
L. A. Freemm of Rosslind vt R.
Cornwall ot Nelion.
3:30 to 4:30—
Mlu Kay Nlibet and Mlu Doreen Dunnett of Nelion vi Mln K.
McLenntn and Mlu N, Beley ot
Ronland.
Bob Schwenger ot Nelion vi W.
O. Williams of TralL
4:30 to 6:30—
Mrs. Carl Larson md Mn, Douglu Male ot Nelion vi Mlu Pirn
Tiylor ot Willow Point md Miu
B. Diimond of TraU.
Mra. N. T. Weldon md Miu B.
Wright of Trail vi Mn. Frank
Wells and Mlu Priicllla Gelinaa of
Nelion.
Rain Fails to Dampen Spirits of
Shriners and Spectators at Trail
etrly end even If success on mr
one of several fronts on which ft
would be engaged ihould have been
securest"
BLOODIER THAN 1914-13
Hitler, the following diy, wrote,
"an Incalculable war between Germany and England would be bloodier than that ot 1914 to 1918" He
said war "could at best bring some
profit to Germany but nont at all
to England."
Mr. Chamberlain, ln the exchange!, repeatedly urged for clarification. He uld he wanted "no
iuch tragic misunderstandings" ts
were tlleged igiinst Grttt Britain
in 1914.
He propoied a "period ot truce,"
urging suppression of polemics, In-
citations, ind unverified reporti of
border Incidents until Poland md
Germany would bring about an
atmosphere in which they could
directly negotiate.
Hitler countered that "allegations
diuemlnated by Englmd regarding
Germm mobilization igalnst Poland
and the assertion of aggressive designs towird Rumania and Hungary" plui Britiih guarantees to
Polish Independence had dispelled
Poland'i Inclination to negotiate.
It wu repeatedly itated by the
German Fuehrer that the Dmzig
md Corridor questions must be
settled.
Poland'! "actual provocation!"
havt become Intolerable, Hitler
wrote, and "lt mikei no difference
who ia reiponilble."
The peiceful lolution of the Pollih problem, Der Fuehrer wrote,
"li not a decision which ruts on
Germany, but primarily on those
who . .. hive itubbomly ind con-
ilitently oppoted tny peaceful revision" of the Veraifllei Tretty.
Hitler contended he hid fought
for Anglo-German friendship "ill
my life." However, he Mid "the
attitude adopted by Britiih diplomacy — at any rate up to the
preient — hu, however, convinced
ma ot tha futility of iuch an attempt Should thert be my change
. .. nobody could be hippier thm
LONDON, (CP)-A hone doing
trlcki ln tha reception room of i
Strand hotel tttricted tht ittention
of passenby here. It wu Champion,
tha mount ot Gent Autry, American motion picture iter who ii staying at the lame hotel where Tom
Mix itayed with hli trick horse
yean ago.
Plastlci ara being used for |olt
Colorful  Parade and
Concert; Visitors
Banquet Guests
TRAIL. B. C, Sept 1—A heavy
rain hen this afternoon failed to
dampen the spirits of the colorful
Shriners convening ln the City.
Nor did It keep at homo. Trail citizens who again jammed the Intersection of Spokme Street and Bay
Avenue to enjoy the band concert of the Gizeh Temple Band from
Victoria. The rain subsided shortly
before the flnt number ot the pro:
gram wu played.
Thli morning the Shrlnen viilted
Rossland ind rendered concert! ln
front ot the Mater Mlaericordlaa
Hospital and at the itand on Columbia Avenue. .    ^
They returned to Trail for lunch
and after parading through tha
itreeti of the City'i buiineu lection, went to the Masonic Temple,
Victoria Street where a ceremonial
wu conducted.
100 AT BANQUET
In tlie evening over 100 Shrlnen
and ladles gathered in the Crown
Point Hotel Palm Room, where a
bmquet wu held and the addresses
of several ipeaken enjoyed.
Dr. ,T. J. Muir, General Chairman
of the Trail Reception Committee,
tendered a welcome to gueiti who
cime from Spokane, Tacoma, Nelion, Calgary, Victoria, Vancouver,
New Weitminiter, the Boundary and
Slocan districts, and Nakusp. The
Rouland-Trail Shrina Club wu well
represented.
With only one exception the complete divan from El Katif Temple,
Spokane, wu in attendance. About
80 per cent ot the Nelson memben
.were present
Principal ipeaken ln addition to
Dr. Muir were WHllam Ron, II-
lustrious Potentate of Gizeh Temple, Victoria; Otto Warren, Illustrious Potentate of El Katif Temple,
Spokane; E. D. McKenzie, Past Potentate of Gizeh Temple and Imertus
member for Crippled Children, of
the Imperial Council, New Westminster; Cecil Graves, Past Potentate, Gizeh Temple, Victoria; and
Harper Joy, Director of the Spokane
Shrine Club.
Fred Butterfield ot Victoria is
Recorder.
Telegraph Service
Is Interrupted Out
of Rossland Friday
ROSSLAND, B. ti. Sept 1-Tele-
graphic communlcition out of Rossland was Interrupted tor a Ume
Friday afternoon. A storm In the
district wu believed to hive disrupted the lervice, the telegraph
wlru being reported down.
Shriners' Big Dance at
Rink Is Marked
By Lighting
TRJUL, B. C, .-apt t-In vivid
contrast to the fire of tenia iportl
battles and din of noisy crowds, tha
Trail Rink tonight took on a aofter
atmosphere when the Rossland-Trall
Shrine Club held iti big danca in
honor of Britiih Columbia, Alberta
and Wuhlngton Shrlnen convei
here.
Beneath loft multi-colored ligl
itrung the length and breadth ot t
newly unded floor, dtnctd a mon
iter crowd to the lyncopated mui'
of a ilx-pleoa orcheitra comprlii
o< memben of the Gizeh Ten-
Bind ot Victoria.
Memben ot the band ud pan
In the uniformi of the order, addeu
to tte decorative coloring. Various
types of paper halt blended with
tiie bright red fezzu worn by tha
Shrlnen. .     : '
Late In the night a multitude ot
balloons wu releaied trom largt
suspended netl. ffl
The dance wound up tha actlvltlei
ot tht Shrlnen ln TraU and Rou- ]
land, a merry round since their i
rival Thursday evening.
Saturday morning they entrain f
Nelson, where further Shrli
acUvltiu take place.
Runaway Horse at
Warfield Ends Up
in a '-Tough Spot"
TRAIL, B. C, Sept 1—A common
occurrence ot tht horse md buggy
dayi, unique In thli igt of automobiles, was brought back today ln
Warfield when a hone owned by a
Chinese vegetable peddler rm iwiy.
But Dobbin found thit ht wu not
u tgilt u in yeiteryeir, for ha
cime to i hilt in t tough ipot to
get out ot when he plunged pert
way down a iteep bank between
Rossland Avenue and Tadanac. Men
had to ihovel land md remove a
portion of a cribbing to release
him. He wu returned Intact to hla
owner.
Pattullo Delayed
KETCHIKAN, Aluka, Sept 1
(KP)—Forced down by bad flying weather, Premier T. D. Pattullo of Britiih Columbia landed
here today on a flight from Jun*
eau to Victoria.
CRANWELL, Englmd CP)—While
hii test pilot father, Ctpt Thomu
Stack, Uy ln hoipital recovering
trom crash injuries, 21-year-old
Tommy Stack received the Sword
of Honor, as tht but ilr force
cadet In camp here.
250 Shriners, Dokkies and Wives
in Nelson Today tor Festivities
Today li the big diy for Shrlnen
md Dokkiu in Nelson—they even
plin to cheit the weather man if
he ahould decide to order rain tor
the diy. They will cirry on tny-
wiy. About 100 Shrlnen md ibout
130 Dokkiu md their Wlvu wUl
Invade Nelion.
Dazzling Uniforms and drills, with
colored lights to touch oft in the big
parade at night; splendid band programs, and a danca are among the
day's highlights.
Arriving at noon, both lodgu will
itart their respective festivities soon
afterward. Shrlnen wUl parade
from the C. P. R. depot to Kootenay Lake General Hospital for entertainment of the staff ind patients
by the Gizeh Temple Band. The
band wlU play at Lakeside Park
afterward.
The two orden wUl hold bmqueti
it 8 p.m. ■
Led by the colorful temple band,
a pirade starting at 7:30 oa Baker
Street will be a real ipectacle, tot
lt will Include Shrlnen, Dokkiu
and Nomadi of Avrudaka. Besides
tricky marching drills by the Nomads Drill team, tht pitrols of
both tht Shrlnen md the Dokkiei
will go through their rupectlvi
drills. One of the features counted
on to be spectacular in tht paradt
will be colored lighti ctrrled by
memben ot tht D.O.K.K. Drill
team.
Climax of the parade will be •
drill by the combined squids In
front ot the Civic Centre on Vernon Street Liter the pirade will reform and will go back to tht Vernon Street Bind Shell for a program by the Gizeh Temple Band
At 8:18 the Dokkiu hold theil
big ceremonial in the Eagle Hall.
, Winding up the Shrinen" program
li a dmce which wiU be large md
merry.
A boat trip to the main lakt tot
Dokkies md their wlvu ia plann«/
Sunday.
 [i<
pRTNEn GETS CATCHING RECORD;
PEARSON WINS DUEL WITH FELLER
By Tha Canadian Preu
Gtbby Hirtnttt ciught Ml 1722nd
ime at Brooklyn yuterday, uttlng
niw record for cttching ln one
■gut ind celebrated thi occasion
ith a home run. But aU it did
as uve hli Chicago Cubs from
ihutout In Uit lecond hilt of a
oubleheader u they lett 3-1 tfter
azing the Dodgen 8-2 la tht open.
r,
The Cubi hid everything they
eeded in thi tint conteit—eight-
it pitching by Lefty Larry French
nd a  10-hlt offensive which In-
luded homi rum by Hmk Leiber
nd Gui Mancuso. Hirtnett'i hom-
n put the Cubs ahead in the iec-
md itanzt  of  thi  nightcap, but
ht Dodgers came right back with
[wo rum on t single, t walk md
Mimger Leo Durocher's doublt.
"Dixie   Wilker'i   flnt   National
League home run accounted tor the
Dodgen' other telly In the eighth
u little Vito Tamulis checked Chi.
eago on six-hit pitching for hli
uventh victory.
FELLER BEATEN
In tht American League, Bob
Feller'i fireball cooled off at Cleveland and the Indians undertook to
out-slug the New York Vanki —
ud like ac muy others, fiUtd by
u 114 mirgin.
Joe piMiggio hid mother ont of
hii field dayi, hitting two triples
ud a ilngle to bit in ilx rum, ud
with lomt important auiitance
from tht rut of tht Yukee clouten,
the end wu inevitable even though
Clevelind succeeded to estching
the chapplons to the seventh.
For two innlngi the gime wu a
scoreleu itruggle between Monte
Peanon and Feller, leeklni hit 20th
victory ind getting, Instead, hit
eighth defeat Jeff Heath homed
tor the Indiana to toe ilxth.
At Detroit tha Tigen advanced
to within a half-game of tht fourth
place Clevelind Indlani ln the
league standings u thty downed
tht Boston Red Sox, 14.-10, to score
t iweep ot the three-game lerles.
Tht Tigen hammered out 15 hlti,
one leu thu Boiton, the blows
Including two bomtn by Frank
(Pinky) Hlgglni ud one by Georgt
Tebbetti.
Bill Posedel won his 18th
of the season for tht Boston
to t night gime shutUng out tht
Phillies, 0 to 0, with tight hiti before 8674 It Shlbe Pirk.
Gibbons Again
Leads Goalies
DAVE QIBBONI
. Save Gibboni, now to hit fourth
yur with tha Nelion Maple Leafi,
wu again tha but goalie ln tbe
Wut Kooteniy boxli loop during
the current leuon, flguru releued
by Lome A. Mark, League Statistician, ihow.
Davia appured to 25 gimei with
the Leafs, milling but one game,
and allowed 301 goals to be icored
on him, u average of Juit fractionally ovtr 12 goali a conteit Hli
neirut competitor, Louli Moro ot
Trail, playing hii tint unior teuon,
ihowed consistent Improvement during the lugue schedule, ud ba
yielded 249 goals in 20 gamu tor
n average of 1241.
Among regular goalies Johnny GI-
kllnski of Rosslind completed tht
(Urt with a mark of lt.l goali a game.
had 170 goili icored on him ln
turn**-
Stew Bradley of TraU of tha tub-
tltutes wu icored upon 04 tlmu to
tt gimu, an avenge ot 10.7. Doug
Stall of Nelion uw 17 goali bit tha
igging behind him in the only game
ie played to. He completed the sea-
on playing up on the front llnet.
Sammy Saprunoff, another TraU
nan, had tive goali ilip by him to
me period. Dick Burgeu, former
rraD Blazer hockey goalie and play-
ng with Rossland in boxU until
eavtng presently for Scotland for
■the winter, wu scored on 92 tlmu
■to four garnet, u average ot 23
poala. „  -
(BALL STANDINGS
(AMERICAN
Siw-Tork m.
oiton _____
Chicago	
Cleveland	
Detroit	
Wuhlngton _
Philadelphia
et Louii —
NATIONAL
i Clncinntti —
i St LouU —
Chlctgo —.
Brooklyn _._
New York _
Pittsburgh _
Boston ——
Phllidelphii
13H
W L Pet Bhd.
16 30.710
74 40 .002
07 55 .549   20
«fl 57 .637   21%
00 58 .532   22
54 72.429
44 78 .381
89
43
.3*  VI Sti  52%
45.819
51 .571
58.562
57 .517
56 JM
84.468
68.449
79 .331
5%
7%
12
13%
19
20%
84
■ BOMBERS SWAMP
1      REGINA 'RIDERS
WINNIPEG, ,Sept 1 (CP) .-Winnipeg Blue Bomben iwept Into the
Western Interprovlnclal FootbaU
Union leadenhip tonight on the
Itrength ot a versatile atUck that
out-manoeuvred Regim Roughrid-
en' famoui defence tor a 20-6
' ylctory.
The all-around play of Wayne
eheley, iturdy halfback from Augui-
una College, South Dakota, ud
the imashing giini ot Wlnnlpeg'i
own Andy Blebtr led the Bomber
auault Sheley'a forward-passing
wu a hazard throughout ud he
•cored one touchdown. Blabor
plowed tor muy long gtini ud
crossed tha line twice.
Ian Dingwall Brings
Sprained Ankle Home
With Him From Trip
Iu Dingwall of the Nebon Maple
leifi hu irrived back to the City
following a viiit it Kelowna but
he brought a crocked ukle with
him. It isn't badly iprlined, however, md he will be ih ihipe for
the finite with tht wtontn ot tha
Trell-Roulmd seriei.
Coil and Condenser
TESTERS
Shorty's Repair Shop
714 Btker St Nelton, B.C.
Bantam Baseball
Semis to Start
Today, Two Games
Nelson BanUm buebiU iwingi
Into id final itan todty at the
Recreation Groundi with morning
ind ifternoon gimei between tht
Tigen tnd tht Yinkeu. Thli are
part of the aeml-tinil serlu, a but
of three affair, for the right to meet
the Gianta, who flnlihed on top to
tht regulir leigue ichedule, tor the
leigue UUe.
If a third game li neceuary It
wUl be played the following Satur.
day u part ot a doubleheader, Uie
tint gamt ot tot finali completing
the twin bilL
THREE CRICKET
MATCHES OFF
LONDON, gtpt 1 (CF.-Cablt)-
Three Engliih County criektt
matchu have been cancelled owing
to the International crista It wu
unounced today. Thay are the Middlesex-Kent gime at Lord'i - ud
Yorkihlre-M. C. C. conteit at Scarborough, both icheduled to itart tomorrow ud the Lmctshire-Lelcest-
ershlre fixture ctrdtd tor Monday
at Manchester.
Hedlev Verity, Yorkshire's 34-
year-old bowler, turned to the anion'! grettest performance today u
tht White Rom County defeated
Sussex by nine wlcketi.
Verity took ieven Sussex wicketi
for nlnt rum. Sussex hid compiled
a f Irst-innlngs icore of 387 rum but
IU lecond lnningi netted only 33.
The Derbyihlre-Lelcesten hire
gime wu abandoned today due to a
aodden wicket
The icoru:
Sussex 387 and 33; Yorkshire 302.
Derbyshire 226 and 214; Leicestershire 174 ud 51 rum tor one wicket
Harrop Defeats
Procter Softball
HARROP, B. C. - Bunching all
their rum tn two comecutlve lnningi, the ucond ud third, the
Harrop loftbtUtn took a 7-4 victory from Procter Stan at the Harrop Field Wednuday.
Procter took a one-run lud ln tht
tint hilt ot the tint toning when
McMuUln wu driven home by MacKinnon. In their halt of the lecond.
Wilt Fitchett Wildo ud Ruther-
glen tach crossed Uie pltte to tend
Hirrop to front of a 3-1 acort. The
winnen tdded four more to thsvj
next toning when Ogilvie, Fair-
bank, Merrlam ud Waldo each
icored. Procter flnlihed off tha
scoring for the day with three in the
fourth, Hendricks, Ritchie ud Brian
each bringing to wins.
Bert Fitchett umpired.
Teams were:
Procter-Milu Brian 2b, Gibbi
McMullin ss, Bob Noakes lb, Hil-
lam MacKinnon n, p, Fred Podmor-
off cf, Loull DeCoq c, Maurice
Major If. Wu Hendrlcka rt, and
Paul Ritchie 3b.
Harrop—Sonny Howard a, Bunt
Ogilvie cf, David Fairbank 8b, Lon
Merrltm lb, Walt Fitchett p. Gordon Waldo 2b, Bill Ruthergien It.
Bill McNown u and Bert Janun rf.
Baseball Scores
NATIONAL LIAOUI
(Flnt gime)
Chicigo  _.  6 10 0
Brooklyn  ..._    18  0
French ud Mincaio; Pressnell,
Holllngsworth ind Todd.
(Second gtmt)    -
Chlctgo _. 16 6
Brooklyn _._.  ITI
Lee, Whitehill ud Hirtnett; Ta-
mulli ud Phelpi.
Boston . __  6 11   0
Philidelphte    0  8   1
Posedel ud Lopti; Barrel!, Kerkileck ud Divli.
AMERICAN LEAGUI
New York 11 16 1
Clevelind _    8 14  1
Pearson, Handler, Ruiio and
Dickey; Feller, Dobion, Broaca,
Elsenstat Milnar ud Hemiley.
Boston 10 16   1
Detroit  14 IB  I
Auker, Dlckmn, Heving tnd Peacock; Owen, Thomai, McKiln md
Tebbetti.
INTERNATIONAL
Jeney City 7, Syracuse' 1
Buffalo 3, Rochuter 2.
Soccer Cancellation
Not Warranted Says
Home Affairs Office
LONDON, Sept 1 (CP Ctble).-
the Football Auoclition hu u-
nounced a meuige hu heu received from the office of tha Secretary of State for Home Attain
that the tltuatlon In tot United
Kingdom trliing trom tht International crisis dou not warrant
cancellation of tha PootbeU Sched
ult tomorrow.
NELION OAILY NIWS. NILION. B C—SATUROAY MORNINO. SEPT. ». IKI.
PAOI NINI
|$L      Wffd^^tm
Salmo Plays al
Trail on Sunday
in Men Softball
The Nelson men's represtntitlvi
softball ttam will bt Idle this weekend whUe thi Tnil ind Silmo clubi
battle at TraU Sundiy for the right
to play the Lakuiden the Mowing
Sunday In tha West Kooteniy finali
which will commence In Nelion
with a doubleheader. Third and
fourth gamu will ba played at tha
home of the wlnneri of the Salmo-
Trall leriea. Other ditei have not
been Issued yet by officials.
Trail and Salmo wUl likely play
In the morning Sunday stmt muy
of the Silmo pliyen pliy bisebill
u wtll tnd havt to bt bick home
to play the Lakestders the following
afternoon to tha opening Wut
Kooteniy butbtU lemi-finii.
Fernie Prepares
For Grand Labor
Day Celebration
FERNIE, B. C—PUni are practically complete for Fernle'i monitor Libor Dty celebntion which
ii to be held September 8 and 4.
The celebration will comminct on
Sundiy with the buebtll ud football gamu. The main iportl commence on Monday with a morning
parade md prlzu for but floati,
can, blcyclei, honu, ud but representative coitumei. In addition
there wUl be a children1! pet pinde.
Chlldren'i racu, bicycle racee and
other track eventi will be held in
the City Park during tha afternoon.
A clock golf tournament will be
held on the Hoipittl liwn Sundiy
and Monday. Prizei to this event
wiU be awarded for low icores.
Footbill fini wiU be able to iet
iome fine teami ln action ai leveral
entrtet are expected, tome of which
Include Trail United, Klmbirley
Sulllvin Mine, Coleman Ringers,
Gilt Minen from Lethbridge tnd
Ftrnlt ISO'!. SoftbtU tl drawing a
Urgt numbtr of entrtet with teimi
coming from Kimberley, Lumber-
ton, Coltmtn, Fernie ud Spokane.
BuebeU li definitely ln for two
big dayi u nine teama have signified thtlr Intention of entering tht
tourniment Some of tht teami expected to enter include Cnnbrook,
Coleman, ud Natal, Blairmore, Hillcreit, Kimberley, Elk VaUey and
Fernie, Other teami likely to inter
ire the Lethbridge Mlneri ud
Libby, Mont Evening progruns include in athletic dispUy by tot
E. SpeUberg troupe of locil ithlttu,
t bind concert by the Ftrnlt City
Bud, a midnight frolic Sunday
night ud a dance Monday evening.
Tht proceed! ot the celebntion win
be donated to the Fernie Generil
HoiplUL	
Fishmen Turn on
Adanacs at Coast
NEW WESTMINSTER. B. C, Sept.
1 (CP)—New Weitminiter Adanaci'
prediction that toey would take
Salmonbellies, their home-town rivals, "three itralght'1 to the lemi-
final round of the Inter-City Box
Lacrosse League champiomhip has
been shattered.
Lut night tbe rampaging Salmon-
belliei breezed by Admass, last
yeir'i titlliti, for a well-earned
13-8 victory to the third game of
a best-of-five lerlu. Admici won
tot tint two gtmes. The next mitch
will be pliyed here Monday.
The Fishmen were never ln slang-
tr of losing the fixture u they pity-
td ont of toelr but gamei of the 1181
Muon, checking, pissing ind ihooting with almoit perfect precision,
behind toe "superb* goal tending ot
Pete Anthony.
Ranged Is Europe's
Greatest Optimist
HELSINKI, FlnUnd — Here In
Helsinki you can meet the biggest
optimist to Europe; a stocky, quiet-
spoken mm who li ipending million!. A wir would tumble hii
plans like t home of cards.
He Is J. W. Rangen preiident of
the Orguizlng Committee to Finland tor the 1M0 Olympic Gamei.
You cu find him, early or late, at
a simple desk, ud ha telli you
"Finland will be ready for tha
Gamu."
He muit lupervise the expenditure, by the Olympic! Committee,
by Finland ud by Helsinki, ot
lomt 490,000,000 marks, or clou to
110,000,000. He te the leading figure
in a program which will ue a
total Investment official ud private, of u utlmated * *
For Finlud  that'i
vtte, of_an utlmated $18,000,000,
and back of It there'i the threit
money,
thtt Europe mty blow up In imokt
ud' dtitroy ill hli plui. But
that'i lomething Mr. Ttangall doein't let himielf think about.
"You know," he uyi, and grim
boyishly, u he clenchei one very
■bit looking flit "I ihall personally whip uybody or everybody who
starts a war to Europe."
Tht ntw stadium ii being en-
Urged to accommodate iome 62,000
spectators. The Olympic swimming
pool, to a rock ud tree setting of
unusual natural beauty, li weU
•long. Homing arrangement! for
viiiton ud for tha 4,000 athlettf,
coaches, trainers, ara progreulng.
A new ichool for nunei. win
homt 860 women athletes. A ntw
military cadet ichool wUl home
880 athlete!.
BISHOP AUCKLAND, EngUnd
(CP)—John Clipham, 18, ud Donald Kenyon, 18, ot Stourbridge
Gnmmir School, wiU pUy for Weit
Bromwlch Albion to the English
football Leigue toll leuon.
THII BAIEBALL
September I—Ntlion tt TraU;
Roulind at Salmo.
September 10—TraU at NeUon;
Salmo at Rouland.
September 13—Nelson at TraU;
Rossland at Salmo.
The above ichedule Is for toe
Wut Kooteniy Buebtll Leigue
seml-flnils, Nelson ud TraU pitying off to decide who meeti tht victor of tbt Salmo-Roasland lemli.
Indlcitioni art, however, thit tht
playoffi wiU not be u easy u that,
tor Con Cummlm, mimger of tha
Lakeiidt crew, hu voiced strenuous
objection to proposals by Trail ud
Rosslind for toe UUa itruggle.
ANOTHER DEADLOCK
While Rossland md TnU were
preparing for tha opening semifinal of the boxU loop Wednesday
night toe telephone wire between
Nelson and toe Smelter City' received toelr regular singeing by the
voices ot sport moguls when Louie
Demore, Trill Cardinal boss, vociferously tangled with Con Cummlm, Likulde City club mentor.
It wu not divulged who paid for
the call but the convenatlon ended
somewhere ta the vicinity of where
It started.
According to Demore, Cummlngi
It protesting igtlmt the participation in tht Wett Kooteniy pteyoffs
of Tick HiU, Sllven Decembrinl
md Cliff Bogstie, former TriU tenlor Cardinal itan.
IALMO IATIIFIED
"RossUnd needed a short-itop ud
Silmo ltt them hive Tick." Loulo
unfolded to thii quarter. "We uted
Bogstle because Ewing ll out fire-
fighting ud 1 don't know when he'll
be btck—tnd you know I cu't pitch
tny more. But I know nothing ot
Decembrinl being lined up with
uyont."
When the proteit retched Bog-
lUe'i eirs, ht pointed out that Nelion Won its only gime from Trail
lut yur whu he hurled hii loni
gime of the season.
Elliott Crowe, preiident ot tht
Wut Kootenay loop, Wedneidiy
night give his okay to Bogstie hurling for Cardinals. '
"Bogstie's been a ruident of Trail
for five yurs," Mr. Crowe slid,
"ud thit maku him eligible. It
would be different tf he had been
imported for the playoffs."
We hope the difficulty will be
ironed out soon. People Just can't
seem to Interest themselves ln bueball and hockey at the ume Ume.
Ab Cronie uys that the rumor
circulating in Trail that Ab Cronie
will play hockey ln Calgary this
winter, ii news to Ab Cronie. ...
It is reported that Dive Duchak
hat been playing rugby in Calgary.
... Mike Buckna ii miking arrangement! to leave on September
28 tor Prague to again coach a
hockey club there, and it hoping
no win will tffect hli trip or tht
iport... Joe Buckna, Mlke'i cousin, hopu to hivt hli book on tbt
Trail Smoke Eateri otf the preu in
ibout lix or eight week'i time, ...
They call Moro, tht boxU goalie,
"Crlbbage," becauie he wean iweater No. 19.
Cummins Decides to Take His Team
to Trail Sunday to Start Playoffs
Out to Beat Bogstie
and All, He :
Says
REMEMBER WHEN?
George Young, who gained International tame when he iwim the
treicherout Catalina Chunel to
1927, won the CanadUn National
Exhibition 13-mUe iwim at Toronto, eight yean ago today. It wai
the only year the Toronto twtov-
mer finished ln tht money.
Natal, Elk Valley
Play 10-10 Draw
NATAL, B. C. - PUytog a port-
Soned game in the Crow'i Nest Pau
uebaU League at the NaUl Park,
Auguit 28 the Natal-Michel Buffaioei and the Elk VaUey Senaton
battled to a 10-10 Ue.
Both teami med two pitchen.
Tha Buffaioei got away to a good
itart to the fint inning by icoring
five rum on four hiti, an error ud
a- walk. Pitcher Volpattl went to
the ihowen ud wu replaced by
Hampton who went the rest of the
game allowing six hiti tor five rum
while itriking out ieven bitten. For
the Buffaloes Little started on the
mound but weakened in the third
inning, being repliced by Manager
Louis Krall, who wtnUnto the box
tor the tint time this aeason. Poor
control forced him to retire as he
iva out four of the alx walka
„jued to the Elk VaUey turn during
the few Innings that he worked.
Little wu again Uken from the out.
field and uqt in to finish the gamt.
Between the two they struck out
nine Elk Valley batten, who icored
ill ot their rum except one to two
big innlngi, toe third, when they
brought ln four rum on four hlti
ind two wilks ud tn tht fifth when
they chalked up flvt mort on three
hits, two erron ud two walka to
Uke a 8-5 lead.
The Bufftloei ctme back itrong
in the fifth to icon two runa and
to tht tixth to icore three.
The game was umpired by E.
Krall, Q. D'Angello ud J. Thornton
of NaUl-MlcheL
SUMMARY
HER
Semton  004 031 0-10  5 10
Buffaioei     BOO 023 0— 8  t 10
Batteries: VoIpatU, Hampton and
BlUy; UtUe, L. Knll ud Weaver.
Natal Buffaloes
Win ot Fernie
FERNIE, B. C—Capltelliing on
Fernte erron Nitel-Mlchel Buf-
Uloei defeated Fernie 10-2 to a
postponed Crow's Nest Pass Bueball, leagut. game played hert on
Wednesday evening. By their win
tha Buffaioei clinched a place to
the league pUyoffs. Tom Krall, ace
hurler of the Buffi, limited the lo-
cili to ilx bite ind wu In trouble
only In tbe sixth whu the locals
collected three hits tnd a walk,
which, in iplte of a fut double
play were good for both ot their
runs, Archie Price who started on
tha mound lor the locals wai nicked for five hlti ud five unearned
rum before retiring trom tbe game
in the fifth toning.
Natal icored four unearned rum
in the third Inning when the teim
bitted around. A. Androlick wai
thrown out it tint Little walked
ud Katrichak filed out Tom Krall
slnglid to left sending Little to
tbSd m took second on the throw
to third. NaUl idded uothir un-
urned run In tht fourth ud icored four timei in the leventh with
three ot them uneirned, due to
willii ud erron. Their lut run
cime ln tht eighth u the reiult
of two long triplet by tht Krall
brothen, Tom and Andy, The game
wai called to the eighth due to
darkness,     j
Determined "to get our own back
by really walloping; them," President T. Con Cumnuni of the Nelson Bueball Club wiU definitely
Uke hii team to TraU Sundiy to
pliy tot opening game of toe best-
of-three leml-finafi with the Cardinali for the right to meet the winner
of the RosiUnd-Salmo series, alio
commencing Sunday, In Salmo, to
tht West Kootenay Baseball Leagut
flnali. Tht second games ot tht
two serlu wUl bt played ln Nelson ud RossUnd respectively tha
following Sunday.
"Demore and Petrunla haven't
been shooting square with us,"
Cummins uld. "Rules were made at
the beginning of the seaion that
none of Trail's big team of laat
year wera going to play, and hera
Demon sure enough breaki them.
Not long ago Petrunia told me he
would itand behind ma ud not
allow any of theie pliyen to pUy,
and then he promptly gou back on
hit word ud adds Tick Hall to hte
lineup. They don't need Hall either,
for now, with Wilson ud Tulloch,
they've got t itronger team thu
when they won the championship
test year. But we'll play thtm, ud
beat them, too."
It will be a lefthanded pitching
duel, Vic Howard tor Nelion and
Cliff Bogstle for TraU. Behind the
plate for Nelson will be Gordon
fychardion. The other players wiU
be chosen from Doc Chodorcoff, Roy
Anderson, Tom Mclnnes, Ernie Beland, Walt Gelling, Jake Alles, Steve
Smith, Jesse Seaby. Albert Euerby
wUl also probably go, it was
announced.
HIS SELECTION
HASTINGS VICTOR
VANCOUVER, .Sept 1 (CP)-Hls
Selection made every post a winning ont it Haitingi Park today to
capture tha fifth race and a puna
of (900 from Rafter and Goole.
Tha hone kept cloae to the rail
and finished two lengthi ahead ot
Rafter to pay $13.90,14.30, md 33.20.
for a $2 pari-mutuel bet Rafter wu
worth 3350 ud $2.70 while Goole
paid $3.53.
Third largut diily double of the
teuon wu potted todiy when Bell
Rip, winner in the itcond, combined with Wexford Boy, victor to
the tint event to pay $341.35.
Higheit diily double payoff hera
toil Summer waa $929.65.
DAVIS CUP PLAY
STARTS TODAY
HAVERFORD, Pa., Sept. 1 (AP)
—Bobby Riggi of the United Stetel
and John Bromwlch of Australli,
chimpion! ot their respective countriei, cluh tomorrow it the Merlon
Cricket Club to the opening match
of the Davis Sup challenge round,
ln which toe Aussies hava, been
established slight favorltu.
Following thit match, America's
No. 2 stir, Fruklt Parker, ties up
with Adrian Quist of Australia to
mother singles tngagement to complete the tint day'i pUy.
CAMBUSLANO, Scotttnd <CP>-
After leelng Thomu Bell, 21-yeir-
old Iniide forwird, icon two goili
for hli lunlor leigut teim hert,
Fred Everiss, Secretary of Wut
Bromwich Albion, ilgned BeU for
tot Engliih dub.
LONDON (CP)-Thlrteen ll a!
lucky number for the racehoni
Eroiion. In hit tint season of racing lut yetr he did not win ln
■even iterti. He loit five racu this
yetr, but ln tht 13th net, ht led
tht field.
Little Finland
Proud of Honor
Olympic Games
.    By ELMER W. PITIRSON
Auoeltttd Prtu Stiff Writer
HELSINKI, FlnJud-WhUl othtr
nitiont gird thtmtelvu for wtr, Fin.
lud prepare! for the Olympic
Gamu, ud there'i lomething hon-
est-to-goodneu romintlc tbout thii
preparation. .
It'i tbe romance ot a UtUe country that'i io proud ovtr tot Olympic Gimei it'i retdy to buit It'i
tht romance of clean, honeit hospitality, ud a back-breaking determination to ihow the world.
There te tomtthing refreihlng
tbout toll. Vou come to Finland with
your mind full of war talk but htrt
no ont wtnto to Uiten. If you don't
talk Olympic Gamei hert, you can't
do uythlng mora than lit on a park
bench and mumble to yourself.
The whole thing Is epidemic You
get into a taxi ud toe driver busts
out with a couple of brand new Engliih words. He'i itudylng Engliih
to be ready for the Olympic Gamei.
You go into the countryside ud
you find farmers painting their
housei—a yur in advance—Juit to
be lure. You find home-ownen
planting new trees, new gardens.
Tht police are studying foreign
lmguagei Helsinki and Finlud ire
getting retdy to be coamopohten
hoste.
There'i good rtuon for all toil.
It tent going to bt iU roaei and
moonlight for a City of 800,000 to
play hort to an event which may
see 100,000 foreign vislton crowded
Into the City for diyi at a time.
This isn't Lot Angelei or Berlin or
Parte.
THROW BIS PARTY
What la Helsinki? Ifs a pretty
little City, ao cleu you think twice
before throwing a match to the gutter, with natural scenery ot water,
trees and rocky promontories. It hu
large outdoor reiteunnti where you
drink coffee ud listen to mused
bandi. In June ud July lt doein't
get dark at night (the old midnight
sun idei) and you go to bad it
midnight thinking you've been up
iU night Tht men ire real men
and the glrli are very, vtry pretty.
Hehinkl It going to throw a Urge-
scale party. They are building a
couple of new hoteb, but this ii Inly
a drop ln the bucket ai fir u accommodation U concerned. So 10,000 vltlton wlU be accommodated ln
ships ln toe harbor. A list ot 32,900
private roomi hu been prepired already and thli ligurt will bt booittd
to 48,000.       •..    ,
Eating la alao a problem. Thtrt
wiU be new ruUurante; tremen-
dom open-air attain. For tot bulk
of toe Finnish vislton there wUl be
lomething like field kitcheni.
And here te Flnniih hoiplUUty:
the Finns will be told to lUy away
from the resteurants, to ut where
best they cu, so that foreign viiiton
miy be lerved properly.
' To underiUnd toil attitude toward the Olympic Gamu, you hava
to undenUnd thit tha Gamei represent a dream coma true for toll
plucky and proud UtUe country,
MORE ABOUT
FRANCE
(Continued From Page Ona)
Parliament hat been called Into
session for a "National Defence"
session tomorrow. Muy deputies
will appear ln service uniform for
the session, expected to be similar
to thtt historic union ot Tuesday,
Aug. 4, 1914.
(Havaa Ntwi Agtney reported
conviction wu itrong a govtrnment of Nttiontl Union would bt
formed, ptrhtpi btfort parliament aanvenu tomorrows)
President Roosevelt's message on
outlawing tbe bombing ol clvU
populations wu well received to
France. Tha main worry of most
Frenchmen marching off to their
posts wu tha safety of thoie at
home.
The Carman imbisiy itiff ap.
parenti1/' hid no doubte tbout
French action on toe morrows
Thay packed to ba ready to go ai
icon u thty Itirn from Berlin
whether thay hivt t reply to dt-
liver to tht French ultlmitum or
whtthtr It limply will bt ignored.
The French governmut told tht
United Stetu President "orden al'
reidy have been given toe commander-in-chief ot all French forcei" to avoid bombardment of clvU-
iu population!.
Thli, however, wu aignlflcutly
added:
"It goei without uying that the
French government reurvu any
action it considers appropriate It
iti adversary falls to observe tht
restrictions which toe French government Itself hu pliced on the
operatloni ot iti terltl forcu."
F.A.C. Did Not A$k
for Salmo Guarantee
SUm Porter, President of the Fair-
view AthleUc Club, aUted that the
reason the club faUed to meet Salmo
ln ita Ust league game a week ago
waa due to the fact that toe club
did not have lufficient pUyen it
the time and at no time had the
Club Executive- approached toe
Salmo Club for a guarantee of any
kind, u reported trom a certain
iource.
HORSHAM, EngUnd (CP)-Ced-
ric Bower, 15, nurly lott hli nerve
in a golf tournament hera whu ba
mat hit hudmuter, B. V. F. Brack-
enbury in the ucond round. But
ht recovered wd detuted "Tht
Head."
BRIGHTLINGSEA, EngUnd (CP)
—Competitor ta • BrighUingsear-
Ostend race, toe yacht VemeU
abandoned the rice to iniit tht
smaU yacht Wantelo, whote auxiliary had toiled. .Wantelo signalled
distress flying i red ihirt     *'
English Golfer
Pam Barton, Britiih llnki itar.
blaiti her way out ot a und trap
on toe Wee Burn Country Club
links it Norton, Conn. Miu Barton competed In the American
National Womtn'i Golf champion-
ihip.
MORE ABOUT
U.S. NEUTRALITY
(Contlnutd Prom Page Ona)
By noon ha had received epprov
ing reipomei trom Grett BrlUin
md France, Italy thought its itatement that lt contemplated no mUi-
Ury operations for the present wu
sufficient. From Germuy ud Hitler there came, for the Ume being at
leut no amwer. Tha Britiih ud
French pledges were glvu on condition that their adverury also ob-
•erve the ume limiUtlona on aerial
warfare.
In addiUon, the Pruldent received
Hugh R. Wilion, Ambuudor to
Gtrmany, and accepted hia reilgnt-
tion. The diplomat lt wai announced, will tssume ipectel dutiei
at toe State Department Maaking
uy ilgniflcuce the move might
have, both toe Pruldent ud State
Secretary Hull decUned to dlacuu
the retioni behind lt
MORE ABOUT
ROOSEVELT
(Contlnutd Prim Page Ont)
He may prevent tht departure ot
a ihip when he. h. reuon to believe It will carry fuel, armi, ammunition, mm, luppliu, diipatchu
or information to any warship ot
a belligerent Thli, however, alio
is covered by tha Neutrality Act ot
1937.
ENFORCES PINAL CODE
The Preildent alio enforcu a
wide variety of provisions at tot
United Stetu Penil Codt of 1909
relating to toe maintenance ot neutrality. The code coven' actlvltlei
of Amerlcani thit might prejudice
American neutrality. It forbidi:
Accepting ud exercising a commission to tervt a belligerent by
lud or ua:
Enlisting to the lervice of a belligerent u a Midler, marine or au.
men on board uy warship;
Enlisting uother penon to iuch
service;
Hiring another penon to leevt
tot United Stetei with tht intention of enlisting;
Fitting out or arming and commissioning uy ihip to be employed
to the lervice of a belligerent;
Setting on toot or providing or
preparing the meant for any mill-
tary expedition.
OTHIR PROVISIONS
Here are other provliioni tha
Pruldent will enforce:
No belligerent warship ll to be
permitted to mike uie of u Americin port trom which t visiel of u
opposing nation hu departed, until
at lent at houn sitter tot Utter
ihip left
A wtrihlp muit letve within 14
houn after lta entrance Into u
Americu port except to cue ot
bid weithtr or ot requiring provision! tor IU crew or of needing
reptln. But lt muit leave u toon
u pouible after 24 houn without
which ht mty exercise to preurvt
be neceuary for her Immediate
ma. Tha ume wanhlp may not
again fuel in an American port
until atter three monthi have pau-
ad.
It there art aeveral veueli et
belligerents ln an Americu port
they must leave alternatively, fint
a vessel of ona aide, then a venal
ot the other.
The President alto cu proclilm
that Americu ihlpi may not carry
armi or iddltrt to belligerenti or
tttempt to break any blockade
which may be lawfully eiUbliihed
ud maintained.
He may alio proclaim that Amer-
teui who claim protection ot the
United Stetu and miiconduct thim-
telvei towird a belligerent wUl
do K at thtlr own peril
Fragment! of the iheU ot a 40,000,-
000-year-old turtle trom Englud
have been fitted together at toe
Field Muieum tn Chicigo.
Headey lead Is
Unimpaired as
42nd Week Ends
With nlnt wteki remaining, at
toe 91 wuki ln the Britiih Columbia Laying Conteit, the C. Hetdey
A Soni pen malntalna ita lead at
better than 75 polnta, though slipping a trifle to toe 42nd week. Any
pen that overtakes It must gain' an
average of over eight points a week.
This has bam done a number of
tlmu, when the leader went Into a
•lump, due to toe moult or other
camei, but thli particular leader
hu been a consistent gilner almoit
without exception to the lut two
or thret monthi.
Point! ef tot top itven pent,
tmong whom the winner will cer-
Ulnly be found, tre: Hetdey, 2479 4;
M. H. Ruttledge, 2402.4; G. L H.
PoUok, 2378.5; F. C. Evam, 2375.1;
W. J. Schiebler, 2344; C. Vroom,
2342.9: Windermere Experimental
Stttion, 2339.5.
Following li (ha record of tht 34
conteit pern it the end ot toe 42nd
week, omitting toe week'i eggi ud
the performanct ot tot Individual
bird*
Breed ud owner Wki. Ttl.    TO
Pte. Eggi   Pte.
t. C, Rhode leland Reda:
Allen, A. M. ....... 42.9 1M0 1758.3
Arnould. H. K. A. 44.4 1810 1997.7
Brown, Mlu A. O. 52.8 1989 2309.0
Brown, Jack  31.7 1581 1740.8
Burgeu, John .... 51.8 195> 2307.8
Finch, Lewli H . 38.9 1090 1759.4
Gime, Geo. W 51.4 2048 22S3.9
Goodman, John .. 39.1 1848 2100.2
Russell. D  48.1 1949 2078.3
SUverman, F. H. 40.8 1828 1876.5
Thomson, R. G..... 48.8 2092 2232.4
Birred Plymouth Rdcki
Brown, Miss A. G. 48.8
i*   ■
1881
1988.8
Cram, Jick       . 41.7
1824
1878.0
Goldlng, C. G. ... 34.8
1722
1753.8
Barnevtldtn:
FlU-Herbert J. O. MB
1855
19TM
8. C. White Lighorm:
Chilmen, J. _ 58.3
1942
2230.8
Corlett Mra. E. K. 47.4
1887
2158.2
2017
2375.1
FiirweitherW.M.43.9
1848
1888.3
Goldlng, C. O. ... 44.9
1597
1817.2
Headey, C. & Sou 52 J
2223
2476.4
Henke, Ulrich ... 80.4
2038
2274.1
Kerfoot W. D. _ 88.0
2035
2223.3
Lawson, M  30.8
1883
1888.8
Pollok, O. L. H. . 47.7
2137
2378.5
Ruttledge, M. H... 55.2
2098
2402.4
Schiebler, W. J. _ 48.8
1999
2M4.0
Schofield, A. W... 40*
Smith, T. J.  42.8
2028
2278.1
2000
2187 J)
1893
20093
Swenuon,   P.  ... 45.3
1863
2139.7
Vroom.  C 57.1
2097
2342*
Witeon, A. G 34.3
1888
2018.8
Wndrmr. Ex. Stn. 87.2
1994
2339*
MORE ABOUT
ITALY
(Contlnuid From Paga Ona)
While tha content ef Italy's reply wai net midi publlo hert, it
wu believed tha eablntt felt Ita
communique following tht mtttlng—ttetlng It wtt not Uking
mlllUry action at preient—covered the ground tufflclintly.
. Announcement ot tha cabinet'!
decision relieved Itelians, whose
hope ot avoiding conflict dwindled
with toe outbreak of fighting between Germany md Poland, They
had Uken comfort earlier from Fu-
erher Hitler's declaration he did
not intend calling on IUly for aid.
The official communique uld tha
cabinet bad examined tha Polish
situation, "the origin of which goea
back to the Vanillin tretty."
Tht ctblnet uld toe statement,
took cognizance of aU document*
preauted by the Foreign Minister,
Count Galeaiio Cltno, which ihow*
ed "the work ctrrled out by U Duce
to auure Europe ot a peace bated
on Juitlce."
PRAISES PEOPLE
Tbe communique addreued "hWh
praiu to tha Italian people tor toe
example ot discipline and calm of
which it hai given—at alwayi-
proof."
Reflecting toe general Italian
hope BrlUin ud France would let
Germany ud PoUnd fight alone,
the authorlUUve Virginlo Gayda
wrote to the Glornale d'ltaUa:
"Italy hu done all ibe could to
■vert toll war. It ii up to the
other powere to circumscribe If.
Among the documinte tha cab.
Inet had btfort It reaching ttt df
elilon wit a ttltgram from Pu.
trhrtr Hitter to Premier Munollnl txprenlng confidence thtt
Otrmtny would not nttd tht aid
of ths; Italian army,
.... .... _______"•—_-__»——_—__. „_ ;_
Stibbi, Benwell Judge
Local Aquatic Sports
Mayor N. C. Stibbi wd Alderman
George Benwell ware Judgu at the
Nelaon Annual Aquatic Sporti held
it Lakeside Park Thunday afters-
noon under tha apomonhlp of tha
Nelton City Council.
Llfe-Guird Brian Gore tnd Swimming Imtructreu Shirley Boomer
supervised tbe program. Auiiting
them were Paul Hookingi ud Albert Daynard.
* ' i        ■
About one-half the men who of*
ply for position! ln the flying cadet*
fall became ot poor eyealght
Entries lor Caledonian Sports and
Dancing al Nelson Reach New High
The wuther ll Clan McLeary'i
Kle concern now u aU Indlcitioni
point to one ot the moat luccessful
sports diy that Nelion hu hid for
yun when the annual Caledonian
Gamu ara held at tha Recreation
Ground* Labor Day.
Entrlu for the piping ud ductog
have topped the 30 mark now, largut toul on record by far. Contest-
nte are coming from all over Alberta ud toe B.C. Interior. And la
the track and field competitions,
entrlu continued to itretra Into the
handi of Albert Wallach, Secretary
ot toe Ou McLeary Sporti Association, up to a Ute hour Friday
night the dotto* date. -•
Mr. WalUch wu toe busiest mah
to town yeiterday, u ha nuhed
•round supervising work to be dont
tt toe Recreation Grounds, making
up toe priie list ud composing
the program. ■'.
Then win be ta the vicinity of
ipproxlmitely 80 entrlu ln tot trick
tnd field competitions. Among toe
Utett entries wu thtt of t relay
I teim trom Kimberley tnd Cnn-
[brook which will hivt competition
from it leut one Nelson turn. The
litter wiU be composed of three
Nelson ipeediten ud one from
Castlegar, toe runnen being Howdle
CampbeU, Harold Mayo, Bob Andrew ud Elmer Dams respectively.
In toe 220-yard and quarter-mile
events will be Rev. Gerald M.
Ward, ot Ntlion, recent itar iprtater
at U B. C.
' • Panmylvanla OU it Ita Beit
QUAKER STATE
■ ■;.  Wholeule Dtetrtbuton
Acme Automotive
61 VBiker St. Supply Ph. 1040
sW_HnMiiMaa«'
 	
—
PAGE TEN
NELSON DAILY NIWS. NEtSON. B. C-SATURDAY MORNING. SEPT. I IMS.
There Are Big Opportunities Here—and Some of Them Are Just What You Need
l»W»t»»a«tKa»r^OT^.«-/^.99«3wai^wwa^^«?oa9wa»'>>«a»wt
ttssswawsswrawMitt*
SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 2. 1939
CKLN—NELSON
A.M.—
8:00-0 Canada
8:30—Hodge Podge Lodge
8:15—Tha Newi
10:00—Hospital Programme
11:00—Morning Bulletin Board
U'OO-Muiic for Mealtime
P. M.—
12:30-Tht Newi
1:30-Sign Off
8:30—Children'i Requeit Program
6:00—Police Headquarter!
6:15—Supper Melodiei
6:30—The iVewi
7:30—The Sportlight
7:45-Petite Musicile ,
8:45—Tin Pin Alley Goal to Town
10:45-At Close of Day
U.OO-Sign Otf
CBC PROGRAMMES
A.M.—
8:00—Luigi Romanelll'i Orchestra
8:30-The News
8:45-Al Gilbert'i Trio
8:00—Jem Ellington—vocillst
»:15—The Joyce Trio
»:30—LltUe Virlety Show
10:00—Bay Kinney'i Orcheitra
11:00—Up with the Curtain
12:00—The Newa
P. M.—
»:15-Club Mitinet
I:00-Celtic Ceilidh
1:30—Ella Fitzgerald tnd htr orch.
1:45—doling Stock Quotttioni
2:00—Ftul Decker's Orch.
1:30—Ici Ton Chante
l:00-The UtUe Review
8:30—Glenn Miller'i Orch.
4:00—Charles Barnette'i Orch.
4:30-Hawali Calls
1:00—Leon Zuckert and hli Gypsy
Orch.
6:00—Symphonic Strlngi
7:00-Tht Newi
7:15—Random  Rhythm
7:30—Don Turner'i Orch.
8:00—Jimmy fowler's Old Timen
6:30-1 Cover Uie Witerfront
8:45-ArUa Shaw and hla Orch.
>:00-To be announced
9:30—Ran Wilde'i Orch.
»:45-The Newi
10:00—Larry Kent'i Oreh.
10:30—Len Hopktn'i Orch.
ll:00-Giry Nc»Unghim'i Oreh.
ll:30-Deryl Hirpe'i Orch.
CJAT —TRAIL
A. M.—
7:00—Request Progrim
7:30-Newi
7:45—Song Hits
8:00— Morning Bulletin Boird
12:00-On With tht Dance
P. M—
12:4»-The Newi
l:0O-Up-to-tht-Minutt
1:15—Varietiea
4:0O-The Newi
4:30—Theitre Newi
4:45—Tei Time Tunei
8:00—Headlines tn Sport
6:15—Dinner Music
THE NETS' BEST
8:SO-NBC-Red — Arch Oboler'i
Plays.
5;4»-ColumbIa - Siturday Night
Serenade
6:00—NBC-Red  —  Benny  Goodman's Orch,
8:30—NBC-Red—Gny      Gordon'i
Orch.
7:0O-NBC-Red - National Barn
Dance
7:30-NBC-Blue - Horace Heldt'i
Orch,
8:00-Columbii-Hlt Pirade: Lanny Ross
8:30-NBC-Red - Ray Herbeck's
Orch.
8:0o-NBC-Red - Jan    Garber's
Orch.
8:30—Don   Lee—Paul   Pendirvli'
Orch.
10:00—Columbit—Freddy    Mtrtin'i
Orcheitri
10:80—Columbli — Pasadena Dance
11:00—NBC-Blut — Organ Concert
SUNDAY. SEPTEMBER 3, 1939
CKLN—NELSON
A. M.—
10:3O—Music for Sunday
11:00—Ferdinand  Strack'i  Concert
Orcheitri
P. M.—
1:00—Spanish Strings
2:00—In tht Bandstand
3:00—Concert Programme
6:00—Standard Male Chorui
6:30—Stnngt Adventure!
6:45-Pacific Paradise
7:00—Popular Music of the Day
7:30 to 8:30—Music Loven' Hour
9:00—Organ Moodi ,
9:30-Sign Off
CBC PROGRAMMES
A.M.—
8:00—Walter Logan'! Muslcale
8:30-Salt Lake  City  Tabarmclc
Choir
8:00—Norman Cloutier'i Orch.
9:30—Sundiy Symphonettt
10:00—Chimber Music
10:30—Devotional Service
11:00—Columbii Broidcastlng Symphony
12:00—Tne Hour of Musicil Fun
P.M.—
12:80—Tapettry Muiicile
l:0O-The Church df the Air
1:30—Horace MacEwen, pianist
2:00—Canadian Grenadier Guards
Band
J:S0-The World "oday
3:00-Melodic Strlngi
>:30-Ten Musical Maldi
4:00—Charlie McCirthy te Edgar
Btrgen
6:00—Appointment with Agostinl
»:30-Organ Recital
6:00—Muilc from Manuscript
6:30-By the Sea
7:00-The Newi
7:30-ReclUl Seriei
8:00-Cirl Hills, orginUt
8:30—Choristers A Strings
9:00—Paul Martin ind hli Music
9:45-The News.     ■
10:00—Sanctuary
10:30—Bridgt to Dreamland
CJAT-TRAIL
A.M.—
11:00—Knox United Church Service
P. M.—
6:00—Tht King'i Men
7:30—Hawaiian Fantasies
8:00—Knox Church Service     '
9:00—Church ln the Wildwood
9:15-The Old Refrains
Othpr periods, CBC Programmes.
THE NETS' BEST
11:00—Columbia—Columbia  Broadcasting Symhony
12:30-NBC-Red - Tha   World   Is
Yours
8:30—NBC-Red-Bandwagon
4:00—NBC-Red-Bergen A
McCarthy
8:00—Columbia — Ford   Summer
Hour
5:30—NBC-Red-American  Album
of Familiar Music
6:00-NBC-Blue-Voice of Hawaii
8:00—NBC-Red-Hollywood   Playhouse, drama
10:00—Columbla-Tlto Gulzar, Tnr.
10:15—NBC-Red—Bridge to Dreamland.
11:00—NBC-Blue-Chu. Runyan. organist
NBC-Red-KFI, Loi Angeles; KHQ,
Spoktne;   KGW.   Portland;    KOA,    Denver;
KPO, San Franc'.co.
NBC-Blue-KGA,  Spokane;   KGO.
San   Franciico;   K J R.
SeatUe.
Columbla-KNX, Hollywood; KSL,
Salt Lake City; KFPY,
Spokine;   KOIN,   Portland.
Mutual—Don    Lee-KOL,    SeatUe;
KFRC, San Franciico.
Mothers Weep, Men Grimr as Million
(hildren Are Hurried From London
By DREW MIDDLETON
Associated Press Stiff Writer
LONDON, Sept 1 (AP) (Passed
by British Censor)—London sent
away iti children and turned ltt
face to the grim proapect of wir today ai more than a million youngsters, beginning at dawn, left the
metropolis for safety in the countryside.
Within the next few days more
than 3,000,000 persons will have
been sent from the various key cities.
Today's withdrawal jammed surface
traffic throughout London's business
lection and touched the busy "city"
itreeti with sadness.
At the Liverpool Street and London Bridge railroad stations, in the
heart of London's poorer sections,
children were in line, with their
mothers nearby, from early morning.
School teacheri lined them up:
children of four and five, frightened
by the roar and busUe of the big
station; older boys yanking the
girls' hair; big girls with a toddler
clinging to each hand.
Thtre were 3000 children ln one
line at London Bridge, which gives
Its name to a children's game.
Each had a gai misk slung over
his shoulder ind even the smallest
among them clutched a big canvis
duffel bag containing blankets and
clothes. From the tops of some bags
dolls peered out One boy dropped
his bag and a bunch of lead soldiers
spilled out onto tbe platform.
These children were poor. But
even the poorest had a bag of candy
or cakes, a departing gift trom his
parents.
One child of five had a tiny tin
bucket and spade with him. He
thought he was going to the seashore. Really he didn t know, nei
ther did his mother. None of them
knew where they were going.
Loudspeakers in the stations
boomed orders, teachers shepherded
their charges down the platforms,
and the trains were loaded swiftly.
The children, who had treated the
evacuation as a huge joke ln their
rehearsal for It last Saturday, were
silent and wondering today. When
the time came to leave, they turned
anxious eyes toward their mothers,
who stood behind a line of police.
The children cried:
"Good bye, Mother. When will I
see you? I'll write. Tell Dad goodbye.
Many mothers, who had been up
all night getting their children
ready, broke down as the long files
shuffled down the platform. Eyes
red from weeping, they stood with
coats hastily thrown over bouse
aprons and waved.
They stood there, waving, u long
as the trains remained in sight crying openly. Commuters who had rearranged their schedules to come In
after the trains had pulled out arrived while they still were there
weeping together while the men
and women, rich and poor, stood
stood silent and grim.
Not until the last car had disappeared down the tracks did they
leave, for empty homes.
Castlegar Folk Hear
Talk on Technocracy
CASTLEGAR, B. C—A successful meeting was held Wednesday
night by the Trail Branch of Technocracy Inc. An interested audience of about 125 listened to lectures given by Walter Simmons
and Walter Sahl.
Nelann Saily Nrma
Member ot Tbt Ctntditn DaUy
Ntwipapere Auoclition
Ttlepshont 144
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Hitler Mystery
Man lo Staff
By LOUIS LOCHNER
(Associated Press Stiff Writer)
BERLIN, Sept 1 (AP).-Fuehrer
Hitler today literally held the se
cret of hla future moves in the Pol'
Ish conflict in his own breait
No one, not even Marshal Geor
ing, nor Rudolf Hess, hii trusted
lteutenanti, knew whit he .would
do next
This version was given the Asso
elated Press by a man who had opportunity for a checkup almost hour
to hour of the Fuehrer's icUons
during the put week.
In the most critical moments, he
sild, Hitler locks himielf up in hii
room md leei no one.
Such i moment ume Wedneidiy
ifter Sir Neville Henderson, the
British Ambassador, preiented him
with Britain'! counter-questions, to
his proposals.
For almost two hours he remained
absolutely alone, deciding on his
future course.
Last night he was again reported
in solitary mediation.
Men in hia entourage are nearly
at the end ot their strength, this Informant said. Night after night, since
arriving at the Chancellery a week
ago tonight, Hitler has been working till 4 a.m. All through the night
and early morning hours he kept
summoning advisers, experts and
aides.
The Associated Press' Informant
said frankly that the Fuehrer's attitude during the present crisis puzzles many of his most ardent supporters.
111th BATTERY
NELSON
R.C.A.  (N.P.)
Weekly Ordtr by Mtjor A. E. Dilgai
M. C, week commencing 1st Sept.
1934—Order No. 21.
PART 1
DUTIES:
Orderly Officer for the week, 2-
Lieut G. C. Wallach. Next for duty.
2-Lieut A. R. Johnson. Orderly
Sergeant for the week: L-Sergt. J. E.
Clark. Next for duty: L-Sergt. T. Lee.
Orderly Bombardier for the week:
Bdr. R. S. Fraser. Next for duty:
Bdr. W. Wools. Trumpeter on duty:
Boy G. M. Leask.
PARADES:
The Battery will parade In full
strength at 2000 hours, Sept. 2,1039.
DRESS:
Field service uniform.
GENERAL:
The 111th (N) Field Battery, R.
C. A., have by order of the Nat Def.
H. Q., been mobilized with effect
from this day.
All ranks are reminded that thli
mobilization order muit be obeyed
■t once.
(Signed)      2-Lleut E. M. Gillott,
Orderly Officer for O. C. Bty.
Heavy Losses as
Japanese and
Mongols Clash
MOSCOW. Sept. 1 (Af). - Tiss.
officii! newi agency, announced
today • Jipinese-Mmchoukuoin
force hid been "liquidated" by a
Soviet-Outer Mongolian land and
air offensive ilong the common border of Manchoukuo and Outer
Mongolia.
The announcement uid Uie troopi
suffered "greit losses ln manpower
•nd equipment" between Auguit 21
•nd 28.	
OSHAWA, Ont. (CP) .-Believed
to have itruck her head on rock
bottom' while diving into Lake Ontario, Ruby Devlnei, 16. Is In hoipltil here in a "completely ptralyz-
td" condiUon.
(       ' ■ ',   ,',
PERSONAL
WHEN IN VANCOUVER STOP AT
Aimer Hotel Opp. C. P. It Depot
MEN - SUITS CLEANED, PRHSS-
ed, repaired or altered: H. J
Wilton1!, Ph. 107, 534 Josephine.
THE LAROEST ASSORTMENT OF
text books ln Kootenay on display
Minn, Rutherford Cc 498 Baker.
SANITARY RUBBIS GOODS. 24
Latex $1. Fret price list J. Jensen.
1042 Hiro, Vincouver, B. C
BREAD AT EVERY MEAL IS
whit tbt growing child needs!
Buy Choquette's Mother's Breid
BACK-TO-SCHOOL - YOUR CHITS
needs the best Fresh Fruits tnd
Vegtbli. io buy it the Stir. Ph. H>.
Toucan run.a home kin-
dergarten with our help.     Tht
Canadian  Kindergarten Institute.
Winnipeg, Manitoba.
AN OFFE?. TO EVERY IN-
ventor. Hit of wanted inventions
and full information sent free. Tht
Ramsay Compiny, World Patent
Attorneyi, 273 Bank St, Ottawa
GENUINE UTEX SPECIAL GTD
25 for $1.00 or jiffy prepared 18
tor $1X10 (fret catalogue) National
Importer!, Box 244, Edmonton.
REFINED ENGLISH WIDOW, AOl
42, new trom Englmd, wishes to
meet gentleman, with meani. Object matrimony. Genuine. Box
8257 Dally Newi,
MARRY? HUNDREDS TO CHOOSE
from. Many with meani, Particular! 10c. Ladlei free. Canadian
Correspondence Club, Box 128,
Calgary, Alberta.
VACATION SNAP SHOTS BRING
back pleasant memories. Let us
make extra prlnta for relatives
and friends. Prints Sc each. Films
developed ind printed 25c,
Krystal Photos, Wilkie, Sask.
PERSONAL RUBBER GOODS
mailed postpaid in plain, sealed
envelope'with price list. 8 samples 25c. 24 samples $1.00. Adults
only Atex Rubber Co., Dept. H.
Box 231 Hamilton, Ontario.
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Foreign and British Colony stamps
at tar less than catalogue prices.
Write at once, for approval
sheets to G. F. Goodwin, 811, 5th
Avenue West Calgary, Alberta.
HYGIENE SANITARY SUPPLIES
and drug sundries. For highest
quality goods at lowest prices,
write for latest price list or send
$1 for Special Sample assortment
of 24 postpaid under plain sealed
cover. Western Supply Agency,
Box 667 Vancouver, B. C.
FREE SEX BOOKS, CATALOGUE
on request - 12 pages includes
Drug Sundries. Largest assortment of Sanitary Rubber Goods
in Canada. Send 25c for six sam-
ples Supreme Brand Latex.
Adults only. Supreme Specialty
Co.. Dept N-D. 169 Yonge
Street, Toronto, Ontario,     '
TEACHERS WANTED
WANTED-LADY TEACHER FOR
private home. Three pupils. Mrs
A. G. Watson. Appledale, B. C.
B.C. Cities Improve
VICTORIA, Sept 1 (CP) .-British Columbia municipal administrations improved their position ln 1938,
adhering for the most part to rigid
economies, E. H. Brldgman, deputy
minister of municipal affairs, reported to the provincial government yesterday in his annuil report Summary of municipal government forms l large portion ot
the printed report this year.
Refunding ot $17,119,760 by Victoria city on the plan recently
adopted by ratepayers formed the
chief certificate of approval issued
by the Department for money bylaws issued last year. Elsewhere municipalities carried on with their
budgets with results that are reduced to tables ln the report and
shown in comparison with prior
years.
HELP WANTED
HOW TO GET A GOVERNMENT
job u Letter Carrier, Postal Clerk.
Customs Examiner, Stenographer,
etc. Free Booklet Thi 11 C. C.
Schools, Ltd, Winnipeg. Oldest
In Canada. No Agents.   	
WANTED - A MAN TO WORK ON
a ranch. Must ba ible to mUk.
J. A. Robinson, Blewett P. O, R C.
WANTED - EXPERIENCED GIRL
tor housework. Sleep out Box
8352 Dally Newi. 	
ACENTS WANTED
PREMIER ART GUILD, THE LAR-
gest personal greeting card company ln Canada, with branches
from coait to coait, invite you to
apply for an agency to uU printed
to order Christmas Cards. Sample
book supplied without charge.
Most complete line of boxed u-
sortments which pay our sain
itaff up to 50% commission Experience unnecesury. Write to
Premier Art Guild, 576 Seymour
Street Vancouver, B. C.	
SITUATIONS WANTED
Special Low Rata for advertue-
menti under thii clusificstion
to assist people seeking employment Only 25c for one week
(6 days) covers any number
of required lines. Payable, In
advance.
WELL EDUCATED MARRIED
couple, farm or ranch work, 85
and SO yeart of age, Canadian.
Capable ot taking full charge.
Separate bouse preferable. Own
truck. No chUdren. Box 8337
Daily News. _________
YOUNG MAN REQUIRES WORK.
Will tackle anything. Experienced in painting and Insulating.
Also handy at gardening and all
carpenter repair work. Box 8383
Daily Newi. 	
EXPERIENCED BOOKKEEPER te
generil office clerk with belt of
referencei, requirei work Pirt
Ume account! a specialty. WUl go
any place. Box 8382 Daily News,
FIRST CLASS HOUSE KEEPER
wants work at once. WiU go any-
whert. Good cook and dun.
Would likt boustwork or hottl
;ork. Box 8032 DtUy Ntwt,
AMBITIOUS YOUNG MAN 27. DE-
lires work in grocery or mett
market 12 yeart experience.
Qualification! and referencu. Box
8081 Daily Newi. __^___^
FIRST CLASS COOK WANTS
work. Specializing in pastry tnd
bread. Very economical, clean,
Nondrinker. Box 8387_Dally_Newi
EXPERIENCED GIRL WXNTS
work ii housekeeper or u girl
for generil housework. City pre-
ferred. Box 8366 Daily Newi.
HIGH SCHOOL GIRL, 17, EXPECT-
enced, wtnti homt in return for
services In Trail. Write Miu
Swanson, Rosi Spur, B._C.
GIRL 16, EXPERIENCED, WXNTB
light housework, cue of children. Full time. Gilbert! Robert,
1011, Fourth Street 	
GIRL GOING TO BUSINESS
School wanta room and board in
exchange for light atrvlcet. Box
B277 Dilly_ Newi;	
WILLING BOY, 17, WANTS WORK
in town or farm. Write 819 Victoria Lane, Nelion, or Phone in
mornings 658X. ■
EXPERIENCED PACKER WANTS
work packing apples anywhere.
Write Miss E. Reimer, Renata, B.C,
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
GEN. STORE AND ICE CREAM
parlor. Good paying buslneu in
progressive dist Forced to sell
owing to ill health. Apply to Box
 B335 Dally Newi.
FOR SALE, KOFFEE KABIN OPP.
Daily News. Good business. Write
or caU 265 Baker St., Nelson, B. C.
144 IS THE CLASSIFIED
PHONE NUMBER
IIRTHS
POUNDER — At Kooteniy Lake
General Hospital, August 31, 1939,
to Mr and Mra. Ernest Pounder,
686 Baker Street e_aon.	
STANLEY - To Mr.~an3_M5.
A. B. S. Stanley, Jr, at Arrow
Lakes HospiUl, Frldiy, Auguit 25,
a ion, Denu Edwird.
PENGALLY — To Mr. ind Mn.
Pengally  of. Silverton,  at  Slocan
Community Hoipital, a daughter, on
Auguit 24, 1939.        _
ELSMORE - To Mr. tnd Mre.
Elsmore of Silverton, it Slocin
Community Hoipittl, a daughter, on
August 24, 1939,
HASCARL - To Mr. and Mre.
L. Hiscirl, Jr, of Brouie. at Arrow Laku Hoipital, August 21, a
daughter.	
HUFTY - At the Kootenay Uke
Genera; Hoipital, August 31. 1939.
to Mr. and Mra. Charlei Hufty, a
BAKER - To Mr. and Mn. R.
Baker of. Burton, at Arrow Lakei
Hoipltil, Auguit 23, i wn.
FOR AND WANTED TO RENT
MARSDEN APTS. 408 VERNON .ST.
undtr ntw management Rtdtctd.
■ turn. A unfurn. roomi. Reasonable.
WANTED FOR RENT, "BSBEHS
houu with 3 bedroomi or could
purchue on rental bails. Ph. 823R.
FOR   RENT   MODERN   APART-
menu. Unfurnished. Apply Room
203 Johnstone Building.      	
WANTED  TO   RElJt  A" IStATX
house ln Nelson by October  1.
Box 7428 DaUy News.
FIVE ROOM HOUSE ANDT5UT-
bulldings, 12 loU in garden and
orchard Phona 384-L3,
FOR  RENT -  HOUSEKEEPING.
roomi, furnished. 711 Vernon St
WANTED,   FURN.   OR   UNFUlS.
room or suite Box 8319 Diily Newi
FOR RENT - 6 ROOM HOUSE,
Furnace. SUnley Street Phone 67.
FURN. ,\ND UNFURN, 3 A ?"Ktt
lultei, reduced ratea. Kerr Aptt.
FOR RENT APARTMENT, MEDICI) Arts bldg Ap C. F McHirdy
* URN ISH Eb HOUSEKEEPING
rooms for rent Annible Block.
TERRACE APTS. Beautiful modern
frigidaire equipped suites
ROYAL HOTEL NEW LOW
monthly ntw. Phone 686.
FURNISHED HOUSE FOR RENT.
Phone 218X. i
ROOM AND BOARD
TEN MINUTES FROM NORMAL
School. Lirge, well furnished
rooms. Good food. Convenient
wtrm md comfortable, write etrly
to Mn. A. J. Robert 2621
Richmond Avenue, Victort, B. C.
COMFORTABLE ROOM WITH
board. Furnace heated. Ph. 898X3.
COMFORTABLE ROOM AND
board for itudent 810 forbopttt.
COMFORTABLE BOARD A ROOM
1 ichl. girl. Box 8296 Dally News.
WANTED ROOM AND BOARD".
Box 8316 Dally News.
LIVESTOCK, POULTRY
AND SUPPLIES, ETC.
PURE   BRED   AYRSHIRE   COW.
Fresh 4th calf. W, Thompson. Ymir
YOUNG PIGS - SIZE AND QUAC
■ lty $8, delivered Alex Cheyne, Erie
6 WKS. PIGS $5. PRICE DELVRD.
Good stock Riverside Ranch, TraU
PETS, CANARIES, BEES, ETC.
PUREBRED LABRADOR PUP?
for ule. Mature doga. Harrop,
Abbotsford. B. C.	
MACHINERY
CITY AUTO WRECKERS CAN
bring their Portable Arc Welder
to you, anywhere. 431 Josephine it
PROPERTY. HOUSES, FARMS
For Sale
One of Nelion'i moit beautiful ind
modern homei, the property of the
Utt Dr. D. W. McKay. Splendidly
located on two lirge loU in Rosemont House ii stuccoed ind consists of Urge living-room with open
fireplace; glassed-in alcove; dining-
room and breakfast-room; kitchen
with built-in plumbing. Upstairs,
three bedrooms; den paneUed with
maple; tiled bathroom built-in
plumbing. Floors downstairs oik
inliy, upiUln cout fir. Equipped
throughout with very but electric
light fixture!.
FuU buement stone toundittoni.
Moit modern Delco Automatic Oil
Furnace, thermostat control, hot water heating throughout houie. Splendid girden ind garage, til ln first-
class condition.
This property Is being offered for
leu than halt IU original cost
For Further Particulars
APPLY
R. W. Dawson
Phone 197 Hlpperson Block
P. O. Box No. 61
5 Room House
Full concrete buement a real low
price. Owner left town. _ 10AA
Terms .  tblZUU
7 Room Fine Fairview
House
$ lots, fruit trees, grass liwn, etc.
Panelled dining room, built ln cupboards, wardrobes, fire place, full
concrete basement, hot water furnace, hot and cold water in buement for wuhing. Coit   _ QCTAA
over $7000. Price OOOUU
Cuh payment $500. Bal. monthly.
H. E. DILL
Iniurancc tnd Reil Estitt
532 Wtrd St     Opp. Midden Hotel
GOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE,
on easy terms in Alberta and
Saskatchewan. Write for fuU information to 808, Dept of Natural
Resources, C. P. R, Calgary, A1U.
FOR RENT. FARM, CHEAP~TO
right party^Box 6310 DaUy News.
FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS
PIPE, TUBES. FITTINGS
NEW AND USED
Large itocks for immediate ihipment
SWMTZ PIPE YARD
lit Avenue tnd Main St
Vancouver, B. C,
WHISKY   BARRELS  FOR  #1NS.
AU lizes; abo barrels for other
Purposes.   Active   Trading,   916
owell Street, Vancouver, B, C
PIPE AND FITTING
ATLAS IRON A METALS LTD.
250 Prior Std. Vancouver, B. C
FOR SALE - BARRELS. KEGS,
lugar sacks, liners. McDonald Jim
Company, Ltd, Nelion, B, C.
.SILVER PLATED CONN SAX5-
phone md can. Excellent con-
dition. $25. Phone 189L1.	
PIANO FOR SALE IN EXCELLENT
condition. Box 8323 Daily Newi.
WANTED   MISCELLANEOUS
SHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS
or iron, any quantity. Top pricu
paid. Active Trading Company,
916 PoweU St., Vancouver. B. C.
WANTED-GOOD SECOWHAND
rifles. 676 Baker St Phone 1045.
AUTOMOTIVE,
MOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES
FOR SALE - Hi TO VA
trucks, including 1 dump and <
IVi ton panel deUvery. WiU '
can In trade and will pay i
difference if necessiry. Write
Phone NeUon Transfer Com'
piny, ^td. Phone 35.
OC. M. "BICYCLE, EXCELLtOT
cond Double btr $20. Phone 189U.
BUSINESS AND
PROFESSIONAL   DIRECTORY
AMAVERt
E W. WIDDOWSON. PROVINCIAL
A n 11 y ■ t Auiyer. MeuUurgical
Engineer. Sampling Agents foi
Trail Smelter. 301-305. Josephine
Street, NeUon, B. C.	
GRENVILLE H. GRIMWOOD
Provincial Assayer and Chemist, 426
Fall Street P O. Box 9, Nelaon,
B. C. Representing shipper■
Interest it Trail, B. C.
HAROLD S ELMES. ROSSLAND,
B. C, Provincial Assayer, Chemlat
Individual RepresenUtlves ta*
shippers at TraU Smelter.
CHIROPRACTORS
j R MCMILLAN. D C, NEURO.
ealometer, X-ray  McCullock Blk,
DR WII3ERT BROCK PALMER
Graduate X-ray 16 rears expert-
ence 542 Baker St  Phone 969
CORSETIERES
SPENCER CORSETS, MRS. V   M.
Cimpbell. 370 Btker St  Ph. 668,
ENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS
BOYD C. AFFLECK Fruitvale, B C
Surveyor and Engineer. "Phona
"Beaver TilliT*
HOMES FOR THE AGED
CONDUCTED BY THE SISTERS
ot the Love of Jeiui. St Jude'a
Home ot Rut for elderly couplet.
St Anthony'i Guut Houte and
the Priory Guest House for Udies
ovtr sixty. Privite roomi with
bath. Beautiful location. A real
Homt with every comfort Nursing
care when needed. Apply to
Mother Superior, 949 Wut 27th
Avenue, Vancouver, B. C.
INSURANCE ANO REAL ESTATI
ti D. BLACKWOOD. Insurance ot
every description, Retl Est Ph. 99.
S2E D. L KERR, AGENTT1T8
Wiwtneu Fire ins. For better ratea
J. E. ANNABLE, REAL ESTATI,
Rentals. Insurance. Annsble Blk,
CHAS. F. McHARDY, INSURANCE,
Real Estate. Phone 135.
R W. DAWSON, Real Estate. In
surance, Rentals. Next Hlpperson
Hardware. Baker St Phone 197.
MACHINISTS
BENNETTS LIMITED
Machine ahop, acetylene and electrle
welding, motor rewinding, com/
merclal refrigeration.
Phone 893, 824 Vemon St
PATENT ATTORNEYS      ■.
W. ST. J. MILLER. A. M. E. L
Registered Patent Attorney, C
ada and U. S. A. 703-2nd St
Calgary. Advice fret, confidential
SASH FACTORIES
LAWSON'S    SASH    FACTOR!
Hardwood merchant 273 Baker S
SECOND HAND STORES
WE  BUY,  SELL b  EXCHANG
furniture, etc. Ark Store, Ph.
m
HOME FURNITURE, BUY, SELI
Exch., Rpr, Upholster. Phone __
WATCH REPAIRING
When SUTHERLAND repairs vou
watch lt U on Ume til Ult turn
845.   Baktr   St.,   NeUon,   B.
vi
m
I THANK YOU,MR.
Sftl66S,FOR TELLIN6
MY BOSS IT WAS AN
ACCIDENTS MISHT
MOT HAVE BELIEVED
MB
 l    :_.      ■■_   . •', ,:■ ...   -.;_ ■ .-. .. ; •._.; ;',
WELL,! KNEW HE
WAS A FRIEND <
YOURS AND If
DIDNT WANT
TO SEE
A FRIEND
OF YOURS,
«BTT
OH,I THINK YOU'RE THE MOST ^|
L NOBLE PERSON   **"
I EVER KNEW,
|60SH
iw'i^i rtii-ilil'ii'slsssiti ii i ■' i n 11 min im iijfitin' Afl
 :
U^t
\l\,m\. Poller's Estimate lo Pu!
Street Railway in Safe Condition
[ as Outlined by Railway Inspector
toe's Report and Potter's Estimates Form the
Basis of Considerable'Discussion
by City Council
Report of Wllllim Rie, Provinciil Inipector of Rillwiys, out-
...Ing work necessary for the safe operation of the City of Nelson street
Eilwiy, and tht utimitu prepired by R. E. Potter, formerly City
mgineer, which hivt formed the bull of considerable discussion by
pt City Council, follow:
RAE'S REPORT    jPOTTER'S ESTIMATE
I tm submitting report of work
lecessiry to be done thli yeir on
'he tracki tnd equipment of the
Sty itreet rallwiy lyiteni which
vu Inspected on Tuesdty, June 8,
.838, ln company with yourself, Al-
lerman A. Ritchie, Chairman of the
Street Railway Committee, and the
;lty Engineer, R. E. Potter.
On inspection ot the track! md
■oadbed the following work re-
lulru to be done:
1. Nelion Avenue loop— New
trog md iwitch tiei, tiso five
lengths of new rill require to be
Sut In. Gutrd nil to be renewed on
ie whole curve md lined up.
2. Nelson Avenu.e md Ferry Roid
—Four lengths of nil require to be
renewed.
I. Nelion Avenue— Where tbe
light steel Is used tie plates should
be put under ill joints, trick lined I
up md tracki to be lifted it itreet
crowing where below grade.
4, Behnsen md Nelson Avenue
curve—Requires to be rellned md
guard rail let in.
8. Front Street at Pine — Curve
rails to be renewed md tie plates
to be put on. New guard rills also
to be put ln. Old rails cm be used
for guard rails,
8. Front Street at Willow-This
track Is worn out Also the frogs
lind iwltchu ue beyond repair,
would recommend thit the frogs
be ttken out tnd new rails be put
pn. The old passing track be left in
pace and covered with asphilt
PAIIINQ TRACK
I 7. The passing track ahould bo
Installed on Josephine Street be-
ween Biker md Vernon Streets,
rhis will equalize the running time
vhen two cars are ln operation. It
vill also be of comiderable benefit
o the pitrom of your railway, tt-
leclally when the Auditorium ii
Ming used. Intended passengen
an meet can at this pusing track
or both direction! ot the City. Alio
luring the Summer double-header
:an cm bt used from the City to
tht Park and a twenty-minute ier-
vlct cm be given when neceuary.
I. Front Street and Hall Street
Crossing—Two lengthi of rail re-
juired.
I. Front Street Hill to Ward-
Track requiru lining up. Endi of
rails require to be filled in md
pound.
10. Front Street md Ward Street
itirve—Requiru renewing, put in
ie plates and reline "track;
ll.Stanley Street from Baker to
.•timer—New reliy steel ihould be
Ut ln li the present rails are get-
ing very flat and thin. This old
leei cu be uied for guard rails.
NELION OAILY NEWI. NELION. I.C-IATURDAY MORNINO. HIT. t 1938.
PAOE ILIVIN
Market and Mining News
EBUILD  IWITCH
12. Stanley md Latimer curve—
Rebuild the switch md frog and In-
_ ill iwitch tlu. Shim up iwitch
■olnta.
12. Hill Mints Roid md Xooten-
i Street curve—Requires the outdo rail renewed and curve to be
led. up.
14. Car barn switchei—New frog
njulred. New running rail require-
1 tor the two iwltchu md a new
lacing  block.  Switch  pointi  to
■•lined up.
■ 15. Robion tnd Observatory
■urve—New outalde rail required
■nd guard nil iet in. Curve to be
■ned up. .
■ 16. Robion Street—Endi of rail
■equlre to be filled up by welding
|tnd Install tie plates.
17. Stanley Street—Several rills
J be welded it tht ends ilso new
olu required in the tie plates.
18. Stanley md Innu Streets—
■This tiso applies to Innes Street
18.   Cedar   Street—Broken   rail
Et the derail at Hoover Street
roiling requires to be renewed.
20. Cedar and Carbonate Streets
-Curve requires new outside rails
nd guard rail reset Curve to be
ned up.
21. Latimer md Hendryx—Curve
i be lined up. Close in guird rail
22. Latimer Street—Several of
the nil ends require to be welded
and ground ln.
28. Regarding the tlu, you will
require approximately 2900 for
renewal. I would atrongly recommend thit tie plates be used under
all small rail joints md curves. In
order to do this work you will require about one mile of good relay steel.
Trolley wire
24. Regarding the trolley wire, It
wu noticed South of Front Street
and Josephine Street that it was
getting very small and within the
next three yean you will need
about 12,000 feet of new trolley
wire to replace thii worn wire.
The itreet can are in very fair
condition and with the ordinary
maintenance you ihould hive a
number of yean aervice trom them.
The moton thit are being uied in
can No. 21 md 22 were manufactured by the Allis Chalmeri Bullock Electric Company, tnd they
do not. mike thli type of motor
any mort and I would recommend
that you take up with the General
Electric or Canadian Westinghouse
Companiu the question ■ of supplying hew motors in the near
future to one of these can u I believe the present trucks md motor
cuings are ot the standard equipment It will require tour motors
for each car but if one car is fitted with the four new motors
tne motors taken from tht car
can be used as sparu for tne other
car. The truck springs on cars require to be reset and retempered.
This can be done when the the
cars are brought in for overhaul. I would alto recommend thit
the leg beirlng journals on the
axlei be standariied so that when
necessary to renew tht bearingi it
would grettlv tsiist in tht repain.
Ai Mr. Potter, City Englnur,
knowi whit li required to bt done,
I would be pleased 11 you would
advise the action your Council
is taking In this matter as this
work is required to be done in the
Interest of safety of passengen md
equipment j
An estimate of tht cost of placing
the Nelson Street Railway In good
operating condition: The Items will
be considered flnt from the Inspector's letter of June 8, snd other
Items added u has been found
necessary. Ties will be added as a
unit, alio extra steel and track
olatei, ballast snd welding low
joint!, hauling, also ipiclng blocks
■nd bolts—
(1) Nelson Avenue loop — New
frog No. 4 ot 72-pound steel, dty to
itiDDly steel—875; switch ties, complete iet—85; new gutrd rail—(do
not use rill off Stanley Street as
ball Is too thin, use new rail here)—
length of guard rail aoproxlmately
210 feet. (Thli Item will be included
with coit of steel blow) j five lengths
new rail, labor and fittings—$50;
reline curve, let new guard rill,
libor-880.
(2) Nelson Avenue it Ferry Roid
—four leniths curve rail to be renewed it $12, ill new ties—$48.
(8) Nelion Avenue—Miny new
tlu ire required on thii itreet md
tie plates installed under nil ends.
Gnde will be made parallel to
street on West side. This steel
should be replaced with' heivter
steel from Stanley Street. The cost
will not be much greater as i lirge
oercenUge of the tlu will hive to
be reolaced. Libor, not Including
changing gnde or tlu, iteel. 2600
feet of steel chanced, cost—$550.
(4) Behnsen Street md Nelson
Avenue curve-Rellne "isrve md reset tuird rail, libor—$75. >
(5) Front Street at Pine—New
steel here and new guard rill: New
lies, rebuild both curves, libor—
$120; rood to be isphalted ifter repairs—$200.
(8) Front Street it Willow-Small
rail uied here: if not chinged for
ltrger nil put tie plates under ill
joints md renew tlu, roid to be
atphilted ifter recain: uphalt, 300
feet it $1—8300; old pining trick-
Cut out froas ind isphilt ove- present track: fix road, libor—$50.
(7) New nisslng tnck — Two
Iwltchu it 5)125—$250; two frogs it
854—$108; two matet-gllS: ties,
libor of setting—$60; nils, (Included below): build up road and as-
nhalt one block, 712 sauire yards—
$712; labor of laying, fitting, bonding, etc.—$120. N.B. Switches, frogs
md matu, $10 each to tnital
(8) Front Street ind Hall Street
crossing—Two leneths rail: libor—-
$20: road work—$30.
<8) Front Street Hall to Ward-
Lining, welding, etc: labor of lining
md lifting, two blocks—8100.
(10) Front Street md Wird Street
curve—Relocite curve, put In new
steel, tlu. ballast etc., 300 feet track
18 rails at $10. (labor, bondi, spikes,
bending)—8180; tear uo old track, 88
per rail—890; rebuild roid at old
and new wlocatlon—$600.
(11) Stanley Street, Baker to
Lttlmtr—Relay steel with new 72-
Dound. length ot track 1888 feet
$374; lengthi of rill, 118 it $3.25—
8374; dig out unhalt md old ballait
•nd replace ballait. uohilt crossings, six crossings 70 feet long at
$70-$420.
(12) Stanley and Lillmer curvet-
New frogs—$75; libor—410; iwitch
ties—35; new switch—$120; libor—
$10; new mite—$60; labor—$10; two
length steel at $10-$20.
(13) Hall Minn Road and Kootenay Street curves—New steel and
guard rail, 12 rails at $10-8120:
tear up road and reasphalt at $1,25
per lineal foot—$250.
(14) Car bam switches—Two new
frogs at $75—$150; two new iwltchu
at *120—$240; labor-$40.
(15) Robion md Observitory
Street curves—New steel ill around
curve, 12 lengthi ind asphalt (see
Hall Mines Road and Kootenay
Street curve)—$370.
(16) Robion Street-Welds, tie
plates, etc.
(17) Stanley. Strut-Welds, Ue
pletes, etc.
(18) Stanley md Innu Streets—
Ralli to be spiced, tie nlitu, tlu
etc.. weld low ioints, ballast
(19) Cedar Street—Same.
(20) Cedar and Carbonate Street
cnrvei—12 length curve, u ibove—
$370.
(21) Latimer and Hendryx—Clote
In guard rail—$75; isphalt—$50.
(22) Latimer Street-Weld ends.
Winnipeg Wheal
Holds Opening
Jump of 5 Cents
WINNIPEG. Bept I (CP).-Flve-
eent illowible limit lupi which
wheit futuru pricu nude when
operatloni opened on Winnipeg
grain exchinge todiy wen held
throughout the session. Valuu closed at their itarting levels, with October posting i final price of 84,
November 65%, December 85% and
May 68%.
War newi from Eutern Europe
brought a buying rush u soon u
trading wu resumed ind within •
few seconds quotations had lumped
to permissible limit Following the
opening iplurge, operatloni slowed
practically to a standstill u viluu
clung etslly to the top levels.
All coane grtin pricu loired the
five-cent limit in hectic trading.
Export interests dliplayed an active demand for cuh whut ilthough few isles were confirmed.
Excellent buying idvinced Liverpool vtluei 1%-I%d while United
Statu wheat futuru pricei hiked
their limits In all deferred positions.
WINNIPEG GRAIN
WINNIPEG, Sept 1 (CP)-Graln
futuru quotations:
Open
High
Low
Cloie
WHEAT:
Oct    84
SSS.
__>
84
Nov.  ___' S8H
*—
—.
85%
Dec.   _  65%
—>
—.
65 Ms
Miy   .__   8814
—
*-
88%
OATS:
Oct   __S1
84
81
84
Nov 34%
34%
14%
XV,
Dec.   _.  SOU
32%
80%
82%
Miy   ...   33%
83%
81%
33%
BARLEY:
Oct    88
40%
39%
38%
40%
Oct naw  38
88
38%
Dec.      .   38%
38%
37
38%
May _  38    .
,40%
37%
40%
FLAX:
Oct ___ 137
—
—.
lit
Dec   -
-Sk
—
131%
RYE:
Oct 44%
44%
41
44%
Dec 44%
48
43%
45
May  ..._  47
47%
48%
47%
CHICAGO WHEAT
PRICES SOAR
Strong Rally al
Toronto Close
TORONTO, Sept 1 (CP)-Toronto
listings swung into a itrong rally In
the lut hour todiy. But metal
stocks were the tint to follow New
York's leid ind the gold! tnd Industrials fell into itep at'a slower
pice.
An order barring ihort'-ielling
relieved the mirket of in anticipated heavy run of urly selling ind
lossu in the secondary golds were
held down to 25 to DO centi md tn
mmy cuu to 10 to 20 centi. Like
Shore md Dome wetkened 1 to
2%. Other', union dropped less
than 81.
Nickel tdvinced to 50, up three
points. Noranda came back from
73% to 78, cutting the lou to about
3. Smelten and Hudson Bay closed
unchanged to slightly higher.
Nitlonil Steel Cir ihowed t imall
gain. Banki were all down at the
close. Foods dropped a point or
more. Senior oils sold back a point
or mort.
Home Oil md Calgary-Edmonton
halved urly louu of 30 to 35 cents.
Money
By The,Cinidlin Prtu
Closing exchinge rates:
At Montreil—Pound 4.48%; U. S.
dollar 1.04%; franc 2.53%. ,
At New York-Pound 4.88; Canadian dollar .95%; franc 2.43.
At Paris—Pound (unavailable); U.
S. dollar 41.85 fr.; Canadian dollar
39.68 fr.
In Gold-Pound ltd 7d; U. S.
dollar 61.68 centi; Canadian dollar
59.87 cents.
Calgary Oil Declines
CJVLGARY, Sept 1 (CP).-Louu
up to 30 cents were marked ln oils
on Calgary stock exchange today,
Transfers totalled 12,670.
Calgary and Edmonton dipped 30
at 1.25 md Home, bid at 1.38, wu
off 20.
CASH PRICES:
WHEAT-No. 1 hard md No. 1
Nor. 65; No. 2 Nor. 61%; No. 3 Nor.
57%; No. 4 Nor. 52; No. 8, 47; No. 8,
42%; feed 42; No. 1 Garnet 54%:
No. 2 Garnet 51%; No. 3 Garnet 31;
No. 1 Durum 56%; No. 4 special 52;
No. 8 special 47%; No. 8 special
44%; No. 1 mixed 50; tnck 84.
OATS-No. 2 C. W. and tnck
33%; Ex. 3 C. W. and No. 3 C. W.
31%; No 1 feed 80%; No. 1 feed
28%; No 3 feed 26%.
BARLEY—S- and 2-row No. 1 C.
W. 39%; 8- and 2-row No. 2 C. W.
88%; 6-row No. 3 C. W. 38%; No. 1
feed 38%; No. 2 feed 38; No. 3 feed
34; track 39%.
FLAX-No. 1 C. W. md track
138; No. 2 C, W. 132; No. 3 C. W.
118; No 4 C. W. 113.
RYE-No. 2 C. W. 43%,
Copper Boosted
to lO'Ac a Found
NEW YORK, Sept 1 (AP).-A
leading producer boosted the price
ol refined lopper % cent todiy
to 10% centi i pound, the highest
since AprlL
The tdvinet time atter Insistent demand through tht day had
influenced several lelleri to withdraw at the 10% cent level
Exchanges
MONTREJU-, Sept. 1 <CP).-Brlt-
ish tnd foreign exchange closed
firmer today. Nominal rates tor
lerge amountt:
Australia, pound, 3.5757.
France, franc, .025348.
Great Britain, pound, 4.4878.
New Zraland, pound, 3.6084.
South Africa, pound, 4.4611,
United Statu, dollar, 4% p. c.
prem. (2% p. c.)
(Compiled by The Royal Bank of
Cmada).
Foreign Loons Down
NEW YORK, Sept 1 (AP).-For-
elgn loans and many-domestic corporate bonda tumbled todty on her
newi ot the outbreak of hostilities
in Europe, Louu of 1 to iround 6
pointi were numeroui tn the foreign
and corporation divisions nur midday. Sharp decline! appeared in
Italy ■ Ts. Milan 6%s, Belgium 6s,
Norward 4i md Denmirk 8s.
CHICAGO, Sept 1 (AP) .-Grain
pricu sosrded u high u they could
ur.der trading rules today u tht
outbreak of fighting In Europe
Itunned the fininclal district
Whut pricu jumped 8 to 8 centi
■ bushel, corn 4 to 8 cents, old I
to 6 centi md rye 8 to 8 centi.
Beciuse United Statu govern,
ment md exchange regulations prohibit further price advance In a
single seulon, thue giini brought
Ibout a. trading dudlock Inumuch
u very Uttle grain wai ottered for
ule even it the sharp idvance.
Cluing pricei for practically every
grain contnet quoted on the exchinge were at the pegged Umiti
tor the union. Whut wu 5 to 8
cents net higher, September 75%.
December 73% md Miy 74%. Corn
closed 4 to 6% cents up, September
50-49%, December 48%; cati 3 to
4% higher ■
War Commodities
Soar, Wall SI.
NEW YORK, Sept. 1 (AP).-Wir
fever turned m Urly rout In today'i itock mirket into i spectacular upward reversal for many
shares that had tumbled at much
u 8 pointi it the wont Giins of
1 to 4 were distributed it the finish, ilthough in assortment ot Issues
failed to participate.
Selling wut fast in the flnt hour,
but dried up nur midday with re-
coverlu seen here md there.
Wir commodities loired ind demmd then turned brisk for iharei
of sugar companiu, coppers, chemicals and tlrcrafti. Steels ravened
tbemielvu in the lut lip md moit
posted lubttantial net idvinces.
Losses ln other groupi were cm-
celled In many Instance! at the
clue.
Volume picked up enough on' the
belated comeback to put the ticker
tape behind lor t while md transfers tor the teuton were ln the
neighborhood of 2,000,000 shares, one
of the largut turnovers since Mirch
31.
Metal Markets
The ipot mitil pricu eerrltd
. dally from Montreal will net be
available "for a fiw diys" dut tt
thi International iltuition, It WU
tnnounctd todiy by tht dultn
supplying tht pricu.
LONDON, Stpt 1 (AP). - Gold
bin were quoted ln the open mirket today at 180a, up 1 shilling from
Thunday. Tbe price wu fixed on a
lupply md demand bull. (Bued
on iterling at 84-19 the equivalent
wu $3382.) Deallngi were imill
with the continent working both
wayi
Bar illver wu quoted it 19%d,
up 1 5-16 pence from Thundiy. (The
equlvilent bued on sterling it 84-19
WU 37.24 centi.)
MONTREAL
Bir gold in London declined 88
centi to 834.32 in oance in Canadian funds; 160s ln British. The fixed $35 Washington price amounted
to $36.05 in Canadian.
Silvtr futuru cloied firmer today,
125 pointa up. Bid: Sept 36.95.
NEW YORK    -
Copper iteady; electrolytic ipot
10.50, export 10.67%.
Tin nominal, no quotation!.
Lud iteady, ipot New York 5.05—
10, Eut St. Louli 4.90.
Zinc itudy, Eut St Louli ipot
md forward 4.76.
Bar lilver 35%, unchmged.
Ute Rally Fails
to Boost Tone on
Vancouver Exchange
Highland Surprise
Whitewater Mines Subject to "War7'
Clause; to Vacate in Event of War
Short Selling
Economic Index Up
OTTAWA, Sept. 1 (CP). - Dominion Bureau Of Statistic! reported
today ita economic Index rose to
108.1 in the week ended Aug. 28
from 108.0 the previous week ind
107.4 in the corresponding wtek of
1938.
Rent your house with a want ad.
Prohibited
Montreal Stocks Use
MONTREAL, Sept 1 (CP).-Th»
stock mirket retreated from frictions to two polnti ih orderly trading todiy ln the wake ot the outbreak of hostilities In Europe. One
issue lost seven points.
With short selling prohibited, Nor-
ir.di dropped two points. Among
losers of one point or so were Foundation Compiny, Building Products,
Nitlonil Steel Cir, Hollinger, Gitineiu, Montrul Power, International Pete, Canadlm Celanese md
Nitlonil Brewerlu. Bell Telephone
fell seven points.
VANCOUVER, Sept 1 (CP). *t- A
lite rally on Vancouver Stock Exchinge todiy tailed to wipe out
sharp decline! posted In etrly trading, lntereit wu centred mainly tn
the gold dlvlilon ilthough oils
stocks were fairly active. Transfers
totalled 75,905 snares.
Exchange officials stated no ihort
win would be permitted shortly
after the start of forenoon session.
Bralorne gold topped activity but
dropped $1.10 to $9.00. Privateer declined 15 to 80 and Cariboo Oold
Quarti slipped a similar amount
to 1.85. Five-cent lossei wert recorded ln Kooteniy Belli it 60, Pioneer it 2.15. Sheep Creek it 1.01
•nd Gold Belt it 22. Premier dipped
29 cents, to ,1.20 ud Reno wu off
10 to 29,
Home oil declined 23 ctnti to 1.35
In fair trtding while Cilgiry A Edmonton lost 21 at 1.25. Okilta it 86
and Anglo Canadian at 60 uch lett
12 centi ind other leidlng oili wtre
quiet
U.S. Dollar $4.19
LONDON, Sept. 1 (AP). - The
United Statu dollar wu quoted at
84.19 to tht pound In tht foreign
exchange mirket todiy. Operatloni
were it • complete standstill with
all quotations nominal. Tha American unit compiled with iterling
ai $4.33 In New York list Thundiy.
. The French franc fell off in relation to iterling ind wis quoted at
175.73 to the pound against 175.37,
Ihe previous close.
World Exchanges
NEW YORK, Sept 1 (AP).-The
start of fighting between Germany
md Poland gave foreign exchanges
fresh cauM for nervousneu today
•nd the principil currency rites
fluctuated sharply.
The Britiih pound met tupport titer tn Urly fill to $4.20 In termi ot
tht United Statei dollir, off 13
centa. It cime back to $4.26 at the
clou. ■ |
Detalli In ill currendu continued
on I restricted bull because of the
suspension of London mtrkttt dut
to tht nitlonil emergency.
The French trine followed tho
Iterling, doting down D6 of I cent
it 2.43. Belglm, Swlii md Netherlands currencies on the other hmd,
were marked up lubitantllUy on Indlcitioni of • movement ef capital
to thete neutral natloni from placei
neirer tht trouble lone. The Swiss
rite gilned .14 of t ctnt ln termi of
the dollir while the-guilder cloud
.1' ot a cent higher.
The Cmadian dollar, rallying
illghtly from lta low, ended down
2% centi it • discount of 4%.
Closing quotations, Grut Britain
In dollan, othen In ctnti, follow:
Grut Britain, demmd 415; Grut
Britain, cable 4.26; Cinadi, Montrul
in New York 85.62%; Cinada, New
York ln Montrul 104.37%: Belgium
17.15; Denmark 20.00; France 2.43;
Germany 39.80; Netherlands 53.50;
Norway 22.90; Sweden 23.90; Switrer-
lend 22.80 Japan 24.87%N; Hong
Kong 27.00; Shanghai 7.50.
Ratei in ipot cabin unlets
otherwise Indicated. N—Nominal.
Calgary Livestock
CALGARY, Sept 1 (CP). - Receipts: Cattle 183; calvei 28; hogs
end sheep nil.
Cattle mirket iteady.
Good to choice veal calvu 5.50—
3.75.
Lut baconi 7.
Good Iambi 8.50—8.10 yuterdiy.
Whitewater May Wish'
to Produce Lead
ond Zinc
Option hu been taken by the
Highland Surprise Mining Compiny
Ltd. on the flotation plint of Whitewater Minu Ltd. lubject to a
"war" cliuse. That is, lt condition
became favorable for Whitewater
to operate tor production of lead
and zinc, Highlmd Surprise would
get 60 days notice to vacate. The mill
handlu 150 tons dtlly of Whitewater ore and, it ti believed, could
hmdle trom 79 to 100 torn diily of
the much harder Highland Surpriie
gold beirlng ore.
The mill is 2% mllu trom the
Highlmd Surnrlse. the route being
a down grade all the way. Ore
would be trucked trom Highland
Surprise to the mill.
J. D. Galloway, M. E., Highland
Surprise consultant viilted the property, itudylng the feasibility trom
i cost standpoint ot Installing a
hydro plant for mint operation.
Officials of Highland Surprise ny
it is likely tha company will utlllie
the Whitewater mill If the European
situation clurs without war. While
there Is not ore blocked out to warrant putting ln their own mill the
proposed arrangement they believe,
would permit the building up of
substantial fund from eerningi to*
ward further development
From Whitewtter'i standpoint tht
trrangement ln tddltion to bringing in a monthly rental would uve
the expense of watchmen and maintenance. Alterations in the flow
sheet to permit handling ot the gold
ore would not be extensive, lt It
explained.
Dividends
Cinidlin Gtnertl Electric Co,
Ltd., $1.50.
British Columbli Power Corporation, Ltd.. Clau "A," 80 centa.
Creston Village Takes Over the
Operating oi Waterworks Plant
ly following the vote, and the ar-
rangtment li thit ill witer ratal
CRESTON, B. C Sept 1-Crut-
on li now operating iti munlclpal-
ly-owned domutic witer work!
lyitem. At a ipecial meeting of the
Council Tueidiy lt wu formally
taken over trom the Goit Mountain
Witer Worki Company.
Purchase wai tuthorlted by a
vote of village property ownen it
the end of Miy when by i poll of
ibout 140-22 the neceuary bylaw
to borrow $35,000 with which to
make the purchase wai carried.
Superintendent Wllllim Ferguson
Is retained it hli former ulary, and
H. A. Powell li made collector on
a part-time buii it 860 a month.
The lyitem ictually became the
property of the Village immediate-
Green Wins Contracf for Rebuilding
Nine-Tenths Mile Road East of Trail
MONTREAL, Sept I (CP). -
Montrul itock exchinge innounced
todiy "short selling ln stocks listed
on this exchinge Is prohibited/'
TORONTO, Sept 1, (CP).-To-
ronto exchinge todiy tnnounced
short-selling would be prohibited.
SEAFORTH. Ont (CT)-A full-
sized problem ts the mountain-ish
growing out of i fence post it the
home of Dr. J. D. Colqunoun here.
Dr. Colquhoun says "the problem
Is, how does the tree live?"
Quotations on Wall Street
High'
Am Cm  _  S7Va
Am For Pow .... 2%
Am Smelt & Re 46%
Am Tel  158%
TRACK
(23) Tlu—Nelson Avenue,' 2600
feet—1775 tlu: curves, 2500 feet—
1666 ties; Stanley Street 1900 feet—
1-265 ties; balance of track 9200 feet,
ties, 6125. change 25 per cent—12334
tiei; total tiet—6241. '
6241 tiei at 33 cents—$2,180; labor
replacing tiei it 50 centi—$3,120,
total $5,300.
One mile of iteel—$1,670.
500 tie plates tt 30 cents—$250.
Labor of Discing tie plates, 28
cents each—$125.
Welding low Ioints and grinding
level. 500 at $1.75-$875.
Bolts, 1408-372
Spiku. 30 kegs, 600 pounds—8300.
(24) Trolley—Many trolley poles
need replacing and the trolley wire
also. This will amount to $3500 if
completed, but for the present, renewing what copper Is necessary
and the poles in bad condition—
$2,500.
(25) Can—Virloui equipment required and previously preiented,
ii: pirts—1682.
Four G.E. 67 motors it $442—
$1,848.
Changes to truck frames for new
motors, etc., four it $108—$400.
Total coit-$21.709.
Good Mineralization
on Eighth Level of
Kootenay Belle Vein
Showing good mineralization
across • width of five feet where
first Intersected! the m»in vein
hU been cut on-the eighth level
of the Kootenay belle Gold Minei
Ltd. property at Sheep Creek.
Since the new depth prbgram
Itarted below the ilxth level Kooteniy Belle hit tdded 250 ttet ot
depth on thii vein. Ore ii being
drtwn from tht seventh level as
stone preparation proceed!.
Steidy progress continue! on the
shaft sinking to open twe more
levels and alto on the Dixie raise
While not yet conclusive recent results   in   the   raise   have   liven
Am Tob .
Anaconda   ..
Baldwin   	
Bait A Ohio
Bendix Av
Beth Steel .
Borden   	
Can Dry 	
Can Pac 	
Cerro de Pasco
Chrysler	
Con Gu N Y
C Wright pfd -•
Dupont    _  162%
Eut Kodak .--159%
77
28%
13
4%
23%
. 85%
19
15%
4
37
78%
29%
5%
Gen Elec .
Gen Foods .
Gen Motori —
Goodrich	
Granby _*_.___
Greit Nor pfd -
Howe Sound .._
Hi/d Motori 	
mter Nickel ....
35%
43%
44%
19%
7%
21%
50
5 '
48%
Low .
Cloie
95
96%
2
2%
46%'
46%
154%
158%
76%
77
23
28%
9%
13
4
4%
20%
23%
54%
65
13%
.18%
14%
15%
3%
3%
32%
37 '
72%
78%
28%
29%
4%
6%
154%
162%
158%
159%
32%
35%
40%
40%
41%
44%
16%
19%
3%
7%
19%
21%
45%
50
4%
5
44%
48%
Inter Tel & Tel
Kenn Cop	
Mont Wird -_
Nash Motori .._
N Y Central __
Pack Motori ...
Penn R R	
Phillips Pete __
Pullman 	
Radio Corp —
Rem Rand 	
Safeway Stored
Shell Un  _.
S Cal Edison ....
Stan Oil of N J
Texu Corp     37
Texas Gulf Sul  27
Timken Roll ....
Un Carbide ..._.
Un Oil of Cal ■
Un Aircraft -._
Un Pac	
U SRub
82
47
5%
12%
3%
13%
36%
83%
5%
10%
42
10
28
40%
40%
80
15%
36%
91%
41%
52
4%
U S Steel	
Warner Broi ._
West Elec  102%
Wut Un .__..._   22%
Woolworth ......  44%
Yellow Truck ..   14%
4%
59
45
5
11%
3
15
33%
22%
5
9%
38%
9%
25%
39
34%
26
38
73%
15%
32%
91%
35%
43%
3%
95%
19%
41%
12%
VICTORIA, Sept 1 <CP)-Con-
tract! for two piecu ot road work
in tht Province hive been awarded
by Public Workt Deptrtment
General Comtruction Compiny, at
a figure of $30,228.60 will carry out
4.5 mllu of the Lougheed Highway
between Boundary Roid md Underhill Avenue.
A. H. Green A Co, Wu iwtrded
nine-tenths of ■ milt of reconstruction- on Trail-Pend d'Oreille-
Salmo road at a figure of $11,079.00,
The read work for which A. H.
Green A Co. have a contract will
begin at the end of the present
blacktop on the road East trom
Trail. Mr. Green stated Thursday
night the work would be started at
once.
Toronto Stock Quotations
paid since June 1 become the property of the Village, and the Village
will pay the Company all operal-
Ing costs since June 1.
The debentures to be luued to
provide the purchue price, will be
dated from June 1, and bond-holders will be paid a 8 per eent Interest as from thit date, but ire
to repay the lntereit ot June, July
ind Auguit ii no ptymtnti for
debentures hive u yet been mtde.
The system wu Installed tbout
30 yetri igo, md hu bttn extended from time to time to meet
the requirement! ot a growing
Municipality.
Dow Jones Averages
30 induitrllli
20 rails  -'•
15 utilltlu 	
40 bondi	
High
136.08
25.09
23.97
Low
127.51
24.90
22.90
Close
133.25
25.93
23.58
86.81
Chmge
up .84
off .17
ott .95
oft   1.20
Montreal Stock Exchange
INDUSTRIALS
Alta Pac Grain .
MINES:
Afton Minu 	
Aldermac Copper
Amm Gold
.01%
.32
.04%
4%
62
47
5
12%
3
15%
36%
22%
6%
m
42
10
25%
40%
37
28
40%
so
15%
36%
91%
40%
52
4%
102%
19%
41%
14%
Anglo-Huronian   —    2.O0
Arntfield Gold   	
Aitria Rouyn Minu ....
Aunor -
Bagamac Rouyn  —
Binkfield Gold    .-_.-
Base Metali Mining	
Beattie Gold Minu	
Bidgood Kirkland   	
Big Missouri 	
Bobjo Mines
Vancouver Stock .Exchange
Bid Ask
MINES:
Big Mluourl    _._      .11   ■ •**.
Bralorne  9.00 8.15
Cariboo Gold  185   . -
Dentonia    _      - .02%
Fairview Amal   ...      - .03
Federal Gold .      .00% -
Golconda     _      — -.05%
Gold  Belt       _» .25
Grandview          .05% —
Hedley Mascot       — .50
Inter Coal A Coke     .27 M
Island Mount   • — -W
Koot Belle        - -60
Lucky Jim  -     .01% .01%
Mak Sic Gold   .....      00% —
McGillivray           30 —
Minto Gold     • - 02 •
Nlcnla M A M —     -02 D2%
Noble Five       .01% 01%
Pend Oreille  1.35 1.46
Pilot Gold .   .i       00%      -
Plonter Gold  - 3.10 2.20
Porter Idaho  -     JJ1H      —
Premier Border ....     .00% .00%
Premier Gold   ..... MB 1.20
Outtsino  -       .02% .-03%
Privateer            .80 .85
Reeves-MacD       -20 .24
Relief   Arl        - -09
Rufus Arg 	
Sally Mlnei   ....
Salmon Gold	
Sheep Creek 	
Tiylor B R   ...
Vidette Gold _.-
Wiverly T 	
Wuko Minu ...
Whitewater
Ymlr Yink Olrl
OILS;
Amalgamated
Baltac      	
Calgary It Edm
Calmont  ...,	
Commonwealth
Daviu Pete  ...
Eut Creit   	
Freehold Corp	
$$»     .'.ZZZ
Madiion     ....	
McDoug sag   	
Okalta Com ......_.
Pacalta     	
Prairie Roy 	
Royalite       ..........
South End Pett ...
United      "I......
Vimlti     \	
Bid
.00%
.04
1.00
M
.00%
.00%
.02%
.02%
.00%
•-01%:
1.21
.20
Aik
.01
.09
.05
.05%
.00%
1.25
.08
.02%
1.85
.07
.17
.13
.92
.10
.10%
.06%
0.70
.01
7.50
.03
58
Bralorne Mlnu 	
Brett Trethewey   ..	
Bulfilo Ankerite   	
Bunker Hill Extension .
Cmadian Malartic	
Cariboo Gold Quarti      1.81
Outle-Trethewey         .70
Central Patricia  -~    195
.11%
.42
Chlbougamau •
Chromium M & S .
Coast Copper
2.00
Pickle Crow Gold  3.60
Pioneer Gold     2.20
Premier Gold ..   1J0
Powell Rouyn Gold „  1.40
Preston East Dome   ....  1.20
QuebsM Gold      .40
Reno Gold Mines    .30
Roche Long Lac     .04
San Antonio Gold   ......... 1.44
Shawkey Gold   _>2
Sheep Creek Gold   1.00
Sherrltt Gordon    __.  1.08
Siscoe Gold    85
Sladen Malartlc -  .       .28
Stadacona Rouyn         .31
St Anthony     _       .07%
Sudbury Buin   MP.
Sullivan Consolidated        .62
Sylvanite      2.85
Teck-Hughes Gold   3.80
Toburn Gold Mines     1.50
Towagmac     ........      20
Ventures   4.10
Waite Amulet    6.10
Wright Hargreavu     7.00
Assoc Brew ot Ctn ...
Bithurst P A P A	
Cmadian Bronie	
Cm Bronie pfd —
Cm Cir A Fdy pfd _.
Cm Celmue 	
Cm Celanese pfd	
Cm North Power ___.
Cm Steimshlp	
Cin Steamship pfd —
Cockshutt Plow 	
Con Mln A Smelting ..
Dominion Coal pfd	
Dom Steel tt Coal B .
Dominion Textile	
Dryden Paper 	
Foundation C of C ___
Gitineiu Pdwer —
Gitlnuu Power ptd .-
Gurd Chirlu	
Howird Smith Paper .
H Smith Paper pfd __
Imperial Oil...
Coast copper          -,:
Coniaurum Mines    -    J-JJ
Consolidated M A S	
Darkwater	
Dome Mlnu     —
Dorvil-Siscoe    ~~
East Malartlc    	
Eldorado Gold     —
Filconbrldge Nickel ._
Federal Kirkland    -
Francoeur Gold  -
Gllliu Lake  -
God'i Lake Gold .......
Grandoro Mlnu ._-.-.
Gunnar Gold   	
Hard Rock Gold  .
Hirker Gold    —
Hollinger, -	
Howey Gold    ■■—
Hudson Bsy M tt S —
Intermtlonil Nickel
J.M ConsoUdtted	
Jtck Waite -
Jacola Gold  • .t....'...—~
Kerr-Addison    - _~
Klrkland Lake •	
Lake Shore Mlnu  —
Leitch Gold  —
Lebel Oro Minu  	
LltUe Long Lac	
Macassa Mines
- M
.X
.03%,
.02%'
.20
1.32
.02
, St
,   -62
A3
.19%
28.00
.02
.03
.04%
.03
1.33
.88
•20
.02%
sn
.04%
MacLeod Cockshutt
Madsen Red Lake Gold
Mandy	
Mclntyre-Porcuplne  	
McKeniie Red Lake   	
McVlttle-Grthatn	
McW»tteri Gold    	
Mining Corporation	
Montta Porcupine   	
Morrls-Kirkltnd   ____
Nipissing Mlnng    ——
Noranda    _____
Normetal ...i
O'Brien Oold   _
Omega Gold 	
Pamour Porcupine    	
Paymaster Com ..____
r«end Or'illi!        1.33
42.75
.04
30.00
.03
2.16
.73
5.30
.02%
.28
.05
.35
.04%
.35
.70
.06
12.50
.25
33.25
80.00
.02%
.21
.03%
1.38
1.10
36.00
.61
.02
2.60 .
3.90
1.40
.22 .
.10
54.00
1.06 ;
.10
.42
1.00
|
1.1$
73.25
* -.50
1.40
,   .23
1.70
32
Ymir Yankee Girl .
OILS:
British American .	
Home	
Imperial     ....
Texas Canadian   —
INDUSTRIALS:
Abitibi Power A	
Bell Telephone    	
Brazilian T L A P .....
Brewen A Distillers ..
Brewing Corp , ,	
B C Power B :.:..:	
Building  Products  ....
Canadi Bread   	
Ctn Bud Malting ...:..
Can Car A Foundry
Can Cemeiit	
Can Dredge    .-.	
Can Malting   	
Can Pacific Rallwiy ..
Cm Ind Alcohol A ...
Can Winerlu   —...
Cons Bakeries 	
Cosmos —_
Dominion Bridge   ......
Dominion Stores   	
Dom Tar A Chem ...
Distillers Seagrams   .
Fanny Farmer   	
Ford of Canada A .....
Gen Steel Waru ......
Goodyeir Tire    	
Gypsum L A A .........
Hamilton Bridge  .	
Hiram Walker	
Imperial Tobacco   ....
Loblaw  A	
Loblaw   B
Kelvinator     	
Maple Ult Milling
Massey Harris 	
Montrul Power    ..
Moore Corp    ...
Nat Steel Car	
Page Hersey     	
Power Corp	
Pressed Metals    ..
Steel of Can
.03%
19.50
13.50
19.75
.60
4%
ISO
8
3
.90
2%
15%
3%
3
7%
6
10
31
34.
a
• 14%
17%
27
4%
3%
15%
20%
.   17
5
70%
3
.90
18%
25%
Inter Petroleum	
Inter Nickel of Cm
Like of the Woodi....
McColl Frontenic —
Nitlonil Brew Ltd ...
Nit Brew pfd	
Ogilvie Flour new ...
Price Bros  	
Quebec Power 	
Shiwlnlgan W A P _-
St Lawrence Corp —
St Liw Corp pfd	
1.40
15%
,    5
30
.105
.   18%
.   15
.   95
,   15%
.    1%
,    7
.    5
.   43
.   16
.    9%
.   89
.    3
.    6%
.   13
.   88
.    8
.    8%
.  90
.   18%
.   19
.   50
.   18
.    5%
..   37
.   40
.  25%
.    7%
_   15%
_   19
.    2
..    7%
South Cin Power .
Steel of Cm pfd ....
Wutern Grocen _,
BANKS
Commerce ___—
Dominion ______
Imperiil  —_-___.
Montretl	
Nova Scotta	
Royal
Toronto '■—-—~
CURB
Abitibi 6 pfd 	
Bathunt P It P B —
Beauharnoli Corp ......
Britiih Americin Oil.
B C Picken 	
Cm Industriu B	
Can Marconi , -_
Can Vickers
Con Paper Corp —.
Donnacona Paper A _,
Donnacona Paper B _
Falrchild Aircraft —
Fruer Co Ltd .._._.__
Inter Utilities A	
Inter Utllitira B	
Lake Sulphite —
MacLaren P A P -
McColl Frontenac pfd.
Mitchell Robt 	
Power Corp pfd ...
Royalite Oil	
Thrift Storu —
United Dist of Can __
Walker Good * W .
.-tm
.73
- 45 V«
.160    .
. 195
.209%
:S*
. 170
.230
. 4%
. .1%
_ 4
. 19%
_ 12
.210
. 90
m      3
- 3%.
. 2%
_,    2%
V'i
m -73
m       8
_  98
- 7«4
- 99%
- 28    '
_100
_   SO
38%
Walker Good pld    tt
23%
36%
41
98
7%
3
74
More Than
960 Sport Stories
In one month's Issues of the Daily News
there were more than 960 stories on
sports, giving accounts of games In the
major snd minor leagues, end the locsl
and district competitions.
Daily News sport coverage brings you I
colorful account of games of all kinds-
lacrosse, hockey, tennis, golf, soccer,
cricket, swimming, baseball, softball.
basketball—.''..-
READ ABOUT THEM ALL IN THE
MamtMgNrittB
  ,1.1. . ,.,
HIP
•MMJfMMMWMMM}
ui in iMWiiPH   un iiiipwimi ijpiu.h ..in
J »■*■■■■ ■.■" " ■
PA8I TWILVI
w>»»s«i3»sa*aajiesj«sis)i)iiis))si)»»ssis»iiii»si>a>>>sss.ss8»sis»isiss;
li-Oild!™* Today
CONTINUOUS SHOW FROM 1:00 P.M.
ACTION -•- THRILLS -•- ROMANCE
A Sags of the Taming of the Early West
"Frontier Marshal''
with
1:30
3:49
5:50
7:51V
9:52
RANDOLPH SCOTT — NANCY KELLY — CESAR
ROMERO — BINNIE BARNES — JOHN CARRADINE
ADDED        Diinty Cartoon, Musiesl. NITI
SHORTS Popular Sclents, News       1&# «$£
SPECIAL MATINEE-FOR CHILDREN AT 1:00.
OUR NEW SERIAL — "TREASURE ISLAND"
With ■ Cartoon — "PORKY'S HARE HUNT"
Melvyn Douglas • lean Blondall
in "GOOD CIRLS CO TO PARIS"
Sugar Bowl
Grocery
Corner Mill tt and Josephine
Specials Good for Saturday
and Tuesday Sept. 2 and 5
35*
40(
BACON—Premium illeed;
Pir Ib. 	
EGOS—Qrtdt A, Ltrgt,
Fruhi Doi.	
BUTTER—Tht fineit OQA
Glendilt No. V, S Ibi. for _ "•»»•
SUGAR—Cnnulited:
SO lin. for 	
SHORTENING—Blkiliy;
or Lird; S Ibt. for	
PUREX TISSUE-1
S rolli for
$1.35
33*
4St
m
ORANGES—Tht flnett
lunklit; S dot. 	
PINT   JARS-Wldt   Mouth   er
Economy; &1.XO
Per dot  9*-*9**
ECONOMY CAPI-
2 doi. for __
SCHRAMM  LIDS-
Per doi. _ ..._—-
MILK-Till lire:
Pir dot, ..	
COFFEE-Nlbobi
2 Ibi. for 	
CORN FLAKEI-Kll
logg'i; 3 for ........—
SALMON-PInk, tall tlni; J_"_4
8 for __    ***
PITTED DATES-Fruhj
2 lbs. for
.5515
.35*
.950
.79*
.2»
BOLOGNA 8AUSAGE-
Sllced; Per Ib.	
PEACHES—Freih, table;
2 lbl. for _.	
Preiervlng No. 1;
Per crite 	
250
200
250
$1.30
PHONE 110
Wi Invite you to open an account
with ui TODAY. We shall appreciate your buiineu and give
you utlifictlon.
Freih Milk, Crum, loe Crum,
Revels, Cakes, etc.
EAST TRAIL LOTS
Send for map apd price lttt Maki
a itirt on having your own Homt
—with our monthly euy piyment
Robertson Realty Co. Ltd.
Nelion,   B.C.
A TOAST TO  OUR
EMPIRE
WITH
Columbia
Lager
Beer
Kootenay
Breweries
Limited
Thli idvertliement li not publiihed
or displayed by the Liquor Control
Boird or by the Government ot
Britiih Columbli.
i      B
jNoif It S |m||i|||n,||||||||||m|||||||||"|m|m|111111111111!
MONO-DOR
|' The One Door That Is Adaptable to
| Modern Interiors at a Practical Price.
I A Reinforced Lumber Core in Scientific  |
Grid Construction Faced Both Sides With  1
SYLVAPLY
| FOR FULL PARTICULARS CALL OR WRITE |
I Burns Lumber & Coal Co. j
§   Phone 53 "Everything for the Builder" Nelson, B. C.   i
riiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir
News of the Day
GYPROC
for YOUR HOMEI
Make Improvements and Repairs
NOW!
Have you ao extra-large room In
your borne? Make it into two;
Turn attic or baaemeot from
waste space intoattrtctive rooms.-
GYPROC makes sturdy, fireproof vermin-proof partitions.; i
permanent and quickly erected.-
GYPROC provides the rigid,
non-warping strength of %"
thickness of mineral gypsunu   Cuts
snd nails ss easily as lumber;
Be sure tospedfyGYPROCRreProof
Wall Botrd. Write fbr literature;
Wood, Vallance
Hardware Company, Limited
toti-m/"
Britiah Ntwiptptn tnd Mijulnie
BIIHOP1! NIWI STAND
Labor Day Sporti South Slocan.
Dance In ivening. Inna' Orcheitra.
Nilion Womin't Inititute Wilf trt
Tie Dty tn Saturday, Sapttmbtr 8
NOTICE
NO ARMORY DANCI TONIGHT
NILION DAILY NIWI, NILION. slC,—SATURDAY ItORNINi, IIFT. I.
Fathtr of Rosiland
Men Dies in Moncton
ROSSLAND. B. C. Sept 1 - K.
M. McKenile died tt Moncton, N. B.
Autuit 18. Ht wti the fither of
F. II. McKeniie ind Wilbur McKenile of Roulind.
Mr. McKenile, who wu tbout SS
yein ot i(e, li lurvived by hli
wife, two daughter! and three toni.
Wt replice broken iprlngi. Nelion
Auto Wrkg. Ph. 848, 817 Vernon SL
FILM! AND DEVELOPING DONE
AT VALENTINE'!.
Liber Diy Dtnct, Sapttmbtr 4th,
louth lloein Inntt Orehiitra
LABOR   DAY   DANCE,   CIVIC
CENTRE. Adm. Gmti 78c Lidlu 28c
TENNII A GOLF CLUB  DANCI
NELION GOLF CLUB TONIGHT
BAND end ORCHEITRA INSTRUMENTS. Reliable etrlnge, iccmorlii
WEBB'S, SOS Blkir Strut
•EE A. TERRILL FOR UPHOLSTERING AND DRAPERIES. 120
HIGH ITREET.
ROYAL HOTEL
Mixlmum Comfort it Minimum
Coit by Diy, Week er Month.,
New Low Monthly Ritei
Mldnltt Frolic Dinci Sundiy Nlti
In tht ntwly decorited Eiglei Hill.
Noviltlei, Noliemiken, Fun ation; Dtnct undtr Cryittl Bill of
a Thouund Qltimt.
MeCALL'B NEEDLEWORK NOW
TO HAND AT VALENTINE'!.
WINDOW GLASI - Gtt your
broken windowi repilrtd btfort the
wttthtr brtiki Wt hivt til iliti
In itock ind out n required — At
HIPPERSON'S
Seven Girli, Four
Boys in Auguit at
Rouland Hoipital
ROSSLAND, B.C., Sept 1-The
Srli took a lead ln the 1938 Round itork competition In Auguit
when ieven girli and tour boyi
were entered on the birth retiiter
tt tht Miter Mlierlcordiie Hospital. At the end of July there were
30 boyi ind 30 girll recorded. Thii
bring! the total to 87 glrli and 34
boyi for the yeir to dite.
Vital ititlitici luued from the
Roultnd Court Houu ihow regis-
trttlon ot 10 blrthi, ont deith tnd
no mtrriigei In Auguit.
Hive yeu read tha "ClaulfledT
FUR STORAGE
REPAIR! AND REMODEL!
Malcolm's Furs
S5» Baker 8L Phone 880
My Buiineu It—
"Helping People Save Money"
Frank A. Stuart
Nelion, B.C. Phone 880
FRIED CHICKEN
Saturdiy and Sunday .. 50^
Qrenfell's Cafe
New Fall Samples
Just Arrived
Jack Boyce •
514 Biker   Ityle Ihop   Phona 180
CHURCH OF THE REDEEMER
lunday, Itpt Ird, rtf ulir lervl.
cm it 1:00—11:00 a.m. and 7:30 p_n.
•ermon lubjiot: "Tht Mortl Foun-
dttloni of Pttot." i
OUTLET HOTEL
TAKE YOUR HOLIDAY! AT
PROCTER B C
FISHING,  BOATING, SWIMMING
SS Foot Cibln Crulur for bin
Cablna In the orchard for. rent
ATTENTION NOMADI A DOKK'I
Of The Dlitrict
Binquit TODAY, 8 p.m. Ihirp
Bt urlyl Ctremonlil it I p.m.
BE SURE TO HAVE YOUR TYROI
ON HAND
Alniworth Bot Spring! Hottl
wiihei to mnounct thtt dut to the
holldiy. tht pool will bt open ell
dty Mondty. Tht pool will be clewed Tueidiy lniteid ot Monday
of thla week.
N6TICI TO PARENTI
Pre-School  MEDICAL  EXAMINATION! for BEGINNER! and NEW
STUDENTS:   ■
HUME ICHOOL, I a.m, TODAY.
LABOR DAY IPORT! AND
DANCING, IWORD DANCI AND
HIGHLAND FLING LIMITED TO
CONTESTANT! UP TO 14 FROM
TRAIL AND NILION. PROGRAM
BEGINS AT 8:30 A. M. ADMISSION
ADULTS BOo, CHILDREN 160.
'   TODAY ONLY
Sale ef Vancouver Maid, Lady
Vancouver and Tlllla Frocki. All
ilzei. 11.81 Viluei to S-.8B. Phm
torn Hon, Reg. 81, tt 76c.
BETTY ANN SHOP
Oppoilti Capitol Thettrt
TOO UTE TO CLASSIFY
FOR SUE, '28 CHEVROLET SB-
din, gd. ihipe. Dty Auto Wrecken
J, A. C. Laughton
Optometrist
SUITE 205. MEDICAL ARTS BLDO
Order SUMMER WOOD Now
Mill Endi, loid  I 8.78
8 loidi for 310.00
Slibwood, I eordi          '     310.00
Saw Duit, unit  $ 4.00
At Jonella
Cleaners
In iniwer to many recent lnqulrlei
I wiih to announce that I am permanently located at Jonella Clean-
ert-670 Biker St, PHONE 1042
FOR DISTUfCTTVE DRY CLEAN-
roo- JOHN THOM.
1936 CHEVROLET
!/i-ton Expreu. Excellent Condition.
New Rubber. A Red Iter Vtlut
Sowerby-Cuthbert Ltd.
Oppoiltt the
Poitofflct tnd Humt Hottl
Kootenay No-Odor
CLEANERS AND DYERS
Export Repalre—Alteratlona
PHONE 128
-II I '♦♦-'» !**/*.!. -♦♦-♦«-♦
Cream-0 Milk
Try a plot for your
SUNDAY DESSERTS
PALM  DAIRIES LIMITED
hi.» > tt-i'i
Phoni 163 or 434RI
MARFAK CHASSIS
LUBRICATION
Last. Twice u Long
SKY CHIEF AUTO SERVICE
Nilion, B.C.
Phont 182
T. H. Woten 6- Co.
Llmlttd
Bulldin and Contracton     *
Figured Gltn — Munnnt,
Aretlo and Moaa ptttirni,
Alwaya In itock.
WINDOWI REGLAZED
lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillliilliiiilllll
FUMIGATE WITH
SMYTHE'S
BUCK DEATH TO BUCS
10,000 found dead ln one home.
SMYTHE'S PHARMACY
PH6NE 1
lllllllllllllllllll.illlllllllllllllllllllllllll
I
Lambert's
por
LUMBER
PHONE 82
I
;    NELSON
BUSINESS COLLEGE
Tht Collegt With a ProvintM Reputation
Individual Tuition. Commence Any Time
NELSON BUSINESS COLLEGE GRADUATES are holding
over 90% of office positions in Nelson and District.
If you received your training at the ■
NELSON BUSINESS COLLEGE
you will stand head and shoulders above the rest. '
COMPLETE COMMERCIAL COURSE     .
New Term Commences Tuesday, September 5th, 1939.,
107 Baker Street. Phone 603
No traffic will be allowed on the route of the
Shriner's parade Saturday from the C.P.R. depot
. to Kootenay Lake General Hospital, from 1:30
p.m. until arrival of parade at hospital. Parade
will go up Baker Street to Cedar Street; along
Cedar Street to Edgewood Avenue and then to
hospital, where the Band will play. At 3 p.m.,
there will be a band concert at Lakeside Park..
Banquet at Hume Hotel at 6 p.m.   .,'..,
Dance at Civic Centre at 9 p.m.
By Order,
A. cKmiuhaw
ACTING CHIEF OF CITY POLICE.
PHONE 815
far better and prompter tir-
vltt In plumbing reptln and
alteratlona.
VIC GRAVES
MAITIR PLUMBER
KODAKS
Kodak Film
Finishing
m
AU the planeti put together would
form a man only one-ieven hundredth the liie of the ran.
DOMINION
HOUSING LOANS
H.E. DILL
AUTHORIZED AGENT
Aik tor Informition
Doughnuts
AT VOUR
OROCER'I
The PERCOLATOR
Your mirror will ihow the difference In your appearance before and after you've been to the
Hai&h Tru-Art
Beauty Salon
Phone 8-7 Johnstone Blk.
SWEATERS AND
JACKETS
A Large Variety
'   IOR CHILLY EVENINGS
Godfreys1 Limited
Outfitting older boyi for school Is Important business
with us. Styles are right—quality Is right—price Is right
YOUTHS' SUITS
f 25.00 and up
TWEED PANTS
f 4.25 and up
SWEATERS
f3.75 and up.
WINDBREAKERS
95.00 and f 6.00
'•.   RAINCOATS
•96.75 to f 12.00
SOCKS
50* arid 75*
Emory's Ltd.
1934 FORD
LIGHT DELIVERY
8 Ply Oversize Tlrei.
Little Longer Wheelbaie
Automobile Broken
Jick McDowell    Howird Thurmin
Next Sivoy Hotel      1
PHONE 25
Prescriptions
Compounded
Accurately
Fleury's Pharmacy
MEDICAL ART! BLOCK
1935 CHEVROLET
MASTER  DELUXE COUPE
PERFECT -SCl-t
CONDITION  yj/J
PEEBLES  MOTORS
Bakir It      Limited      Phone 118
LISTEN  FOR
"the Sportliglit"
ON
GKLN-Nelson
EVERY EVENINGAT7:30
Ask for
Mcdonald's
Ginger Ale
Quality, yim-L
Modi by Your Ntlson Owned Induitry
QUARTS 15c
Plui Bottle Dipoilt
McDonald Jam Co, Ltd.
E-B-B——
TONIGHT
Gizeh Shrine Dance
AT THE AUDITORIUM, NELSON
9:00 P.M.
iMrnlssi.il—Slrf ssssh
Enjoy^a Real Frolic
GAIETY   '•   FUN   •   COLOR
CIZEH'S SUPERB DANCE ORCHESTRA
WELCOME, EVERYONE!
ROOFING
Eaves Troughs, etc.
R.H. Maber
Phone SSS     810 Kootenay It
LAKEFRONT PROPERTY
FOR IALI
Deilrable North Shore location.
One mile trom Nelion  terry.
Plenty of water, wlO divide to
iuit purchaier. Euy Terms.
T.D. ROSLING
8 Royal Bank Bldg.      Phone TIT
Financial Security
INVESTORS SYNDICATE
Monthly Swings Plsn
R. W. DAWSON
Bonded RepreientiUve
Box 81     Hlppirton Blk.     Ph. 1
CLEANING — 1042
PRESSING)
1042 — REPAIRING
S-m-Lk. CL-ansM,
»33 FORD SEDAN
SZ% $350|
Kootenay Motors
(Nelaon) Ltd. Phona 117 I
Under Western
Star."
itirrlng        .
Roy Rogen—Smiley Burnette
TODAY, MON., TUES.
MATINEE AT 2 P.M.
Complete at 2:00—7:00-8:30
Pricei: Mat 25o-10c. Eva. SSc-ISo
CIVIC
We've
Taken Off
AllWeCan
t
OH OUR STOCK OF
USED
CARS
As 1 clean-up before the
new models come In we have
really cut prices on our
stock.
Perhaps the car for
you is here at a
bargain.
For full particulars call or
write Earl Linville or jsck
Miller st the
NELSON TRANSFER
Company, Limited
35    PHONES - 36
