 WW    ."'
*»«--
•**a"*-JB*-PE»P-
'    .VIAL
•   -WARY
•PW-P1
Xoiacco Tax Applies on New
Stock After Sept 12 **; .'■■•
Pagt El«v«n
VOttlME tt
PIVI CENTS PER COPY
i.a°3
Possibility of Interned Men
Work Monashee Suggested
Pagt Sevan
^RITIIH COtUMBIA. CANADA-FRIDAY MORNINO. SEPT. -t. Its*.
NUMBER 127
E BATTLEFIELD AS POLES RETREAT
Tommies Take Posts at Front;
French Take First Prisoners
Cheers Welcome British;
Is Active
Nazi Troops Withdraw to Secondary Defence
Positions Before Saarbruecken;
Weather Slows Advances
BASEL, lent. 14 (CP)—Report! reaching here today from the
Weitern front uld the flnt unite of British troops hid mirehtd Into
tht French Mtglnet forte imldst tht cheers of Frtneh troopi.
It wu btlltvtd htrt tht British htvt ttktn poiition eomiwhtn
Between the Moiillt and the Rhine.
By TAYLOR HENRY '
PARII, Bent. 14 (AP)—Metoriud French advance guarde were
reported following hird on the heels ef retrtitlng Gtrmim tonight
tilting prlsontn u thty advanced In front af the Qerman Industrial
elty of Saarbruecken.
The (Herman troope were reported withdrawing tram tha advtnct
nultloni whioh the French tlreedy hid penetrated In front of aaar-
brueckan, etntnl kty to the Northern flank af tha Weitern front
ARTILLERY ACTION
Tonlghfi 10-word war oommunlqut told ef the flnt prhonere
af war token by tha French, but givt ne dttalla af thtlr number.
it read:
•We ara making leeal advaneu during whloh we took prlsontn."
Tht morning oommunlque uldl "Wrong action by enemy heavy
artillery en the halghta ef Sitrbrutekin."
Thii artillery wu reported pouring tona of high explotlve iheUi on
tbt line of hUli South of sSetr-
bruecken, Main roada were reputed deitroyed tlong which French
troopi un ttttcklng the ctpital of
tbe Saar mining region.
On the height!, two mllu South
ud Southeut of Siirbruecken, tht
main French line apparently wu
being formed behind advance guirdi
which htd penetrated uburbt ol
tht dty. The ovtl-ihiped hills rise
soma 300 yirdi ud commind the
lowludi North of Siirbruecken u
well u those stretching back of the
French llnu South to the town ol
Sarrefuemlnea. .
(Continued an Page two) f-
•■   X '■  ■■"*'*">'     '     "J''
-_t-.it'-  -f. :*- tt    -  :-*ji*   ' *,
Latin-America Keeps
to Prevent Bases
on Atlantic Coast
BUINOSl AIRES, Sept 14 (AP).-
Government spokesmen In Argentina, Bruil tpd Uruguty declared
emphttlctlly,todty thit "every nec-
eaury step'' hu been taken to prevent either ilde of the Europetn wtr
from eitabllshlng tir or nivil buu
on tha South Americu Atlantic
cout
The antrtloni followed upon u
tnnouncement'from London thtt
Germany might tttempt to bete
operatloni here.   -
The navlu ot Argentine ud Brazil are patrolling the ooutllne vigilantly for uy sign of vlolttlon of
their neutrality, Uruguay promited
a cloie watch.
Russia Expected
fo Attack Poles
-News Chronicle
LONDON, Sept 11 (Frlday)-
(CP).—•In a dlipatoh from Copenhagen tedey the Newt Chronlclt
(Liberal) uld Ruulan troopi art
expected to Invade Poland u toon
' tha Poll|h army*! rtilstenu la
_ tfi# Rustiin Pn-mt, H iww
^-lldfiig up an **ureeilen-Os'-
.ssiin-mlnorHU'ln-Polind" camptlgn prtparatory to eoeupylng
the Pollih Ukrtlne-the Provlncu
ef Lwow, Stenliltwow tnd Trim-
pol—end White Ruula up to the
Cunon line ef 1910.
The itory uld the belief wm
current In Berlin that Rumania
weuld be the next victim,
Italy to Discuss
R     Neutrality in War
LONDON, Sept  lg  (Friday)  -
(CP.-Cible) — The Dtlly Expreu
In   the   wtr,   especially   ln   the
Medlterrueen.
The Borne correspondent of the
newipiper itld theu talki havt
ttken place imong Sir Percy Loraine, the Britiih Ambesssdor, Andre
Frucois-Poncet the French Ambuudor, ud Count Gtleuio Cluo,
Itellu Foreign Minister.
WESTMINSTER MILL BURNS
NEW WESTMINSTER, B. C. Sept
14 (CP)—The Queensborough Hardwood ud Tie Mills' plant on nearby
Lulu Island wu dutroyed today by
fire of unknown origin. Lumber
pilu it the plant were also destroyed. Total damage wu estimited tt
MOM.   .
Tfie Western Front
Campbell Adds 3      ~
to His Cabinet
Sept   14
CHAM/OT-TOWN, _
(CP).—Premier Thue A. Cimpbell
idded three minlsteri without portfolio to hit cibinet todiy, ont of
them replacing Council President
B. V. LePage who resigned thli
week to become Lieutenant-Governor ot Prince Edward Iilud.
The new minister!, all farmers,
are Horace Wright of Bedreqlii,
Dugtld MacKinnon ot Mount
Bucbanu and H. H. Cox of
MorreU.
BORAH 0
Oil
/      . v
Repeal Is Denounced;
U. S. to Stand on
;   Neutral Rights
WA»HINOTON, Sept 14 (AP).
—Semtor Wlllltm E. lenh (Rip,
Idiho) tonight denounced the propoied rtpttl ef tht United Statu
tmbtrgo en armi ihlpmenti te
Europe'! billlgirenti u an aet of
Intorventlen In tht conflict, llktly
to bt followed by armed
participation.
"If ln a few monthi we cu ten
tip the law which a nation almoit
unlvenally approved," he aiked In
a radio ipeech, "how long dot you
think lt will take to put aerou the
proposition of unding our young
men Into the trenchea, once we
have Intervened?" -,
•TANMASA   '
NEUTRAL ' „
Borah's tddreu came at tha clou
ot a dty which uw leveral developments in connection with the Euro-
pun wtr ud the ipecltl seulon
of Congreu which li to convene
next Thundiy to consider repul-
Ing the etnbsrgo ud other chingu
lo the Neutrality Act
(Contlnutd en Page Eight).
Silence Clothes Meet of Cabinet
■■■'. Council; Reports Expected Today
OTTAWA, lept 14 (CP)-Cloth-
ad by Ptrliiment with tlmott unlimited poweri tht Oovtrnmtnt
moved forwird todty with preparation! to coniolldite Cimdi'i
fuourcu for t united wtr effort
but ne tnneuncementi followed
tht ifternoon union af ubinet
council.
IHEET AGAIN TODAY
Prime Minister Mackenzie King
ind hii colleagues were in seulon
ler thru hours ud will meet again
tomorrow, whu, it wu intimated,
iome details of the Government's
program might be mtdt public.
Nazi Subs Strike Again,
2 British Ships QoDown
British Losses at 18;
Refugees Delayed
by Sea Warfare
" Oerminy't lubmirlnet, ippirently eoneentratlng their itttok
around tht Britiih lilu, itruck
twlot it Engliih mtrehintmtn on
Thundiy, railing tht known
eount of British lossu to 18.
Known Oermin louu ilnet tht
wtr btgtn amounted to nine.
Thru itruck mlnu,. three ran
aground In Norway after changing eouitu to tvold mlnu ind
tntmy wtnhlpi, tnd thru wtrt
ttteoktd by Britiih shlpi.
Tottl grou tonnige loit tmounted
to at leut 144,845 excluding ctrgo
Worth leveral million! of dollti-i. An
unidentified Germu destroyer wu
alio excluded trom the tonnige
recapitulation.
(Continued on Ptgt Twelve)
.So Quiet in Berlin
Flier Put Papers
Under the Doors
LONDON, Sept 14 (CP).-Brlt-
lib humor continuu to (low through
tbe wir cloudi. . •
A favorite itory ot the war today
concern! u aviator who took part
In one ot the' now-fsmous leaflet
raldi over Germany. He returned
to bue four hours tfter the other
pluei,
"Where the.bllnkety blink hive
you been " the squadron luder uked the belated one,
"Why It wu io quiet over there
in Germany I landed and shoved
the leaflets under the doon," replied the B.O.    :
Lone Eagle Ends
:.   Military Service
WASHINGTON, Sept 14 (AP).-
Colonel Charlu A. Lindbergh completed today hit voluntary army
urvlce of about five monthi. Secretory of War Henry Woodring u-
nounced the flier wu "being relieved from Inactive duty in the
War Department" No further Ught
wu ihed on Ml plut, An Air
Corpi Reserve officer, he aerved
two weeks on active duty and
since May 1 has been serving in an
intctive training atatui, without
pay. '3m> '■■'*
. . , , 111,1,1111   I  I     II
De Valera Makes
Cabinet Changes
iaf.ia||'ii'*J!s Thit it part tstpsM*WM*t*MH\*vi_^Mw pi'uion
troops who htvt penetrated the buin from Bass at Mete and Nancy.
'   French troopi were reported Thundiy to bt preulng hird Into
the zone iround Siirbruecken, taking many priionen among the
•retnatlng Germani. g*.   • '   f*■ \-.-   . *? '•   '.
Duke of Windsor
Received by King
LONDON, Sept 14 (CP)-The
King received the Duke of Wind-
ur thli ifternoon. It wu tht first
tlmt the brothen hid met llnet
September, 1939.
The Duke tnd tht Ducheu of
Windsor returned quietly to Englmd two diyi tgo. Tht Dukt li
awaiting aulgnmtnt to a wtr post
Italy Recognizes
German,Rule Over
Czecho-Slovakia
ROME, Sept 14 (KP% - Formal
Itellu recognition ot Germin rule
over Czecho-Slovakia appeared today with publication of a royal decree eliminating the Itellu legation
ln Prague; A Consulate General was
utablished to replace the legation.
San* Umbrella
Today there wu great ectivity In
the Committe on Informition ud
Censorship needed by Portmiitei
General Norman McLtrty. 1
It is expected unouncements wilf
be mide shortly In the crettlon of
t public informition committee to
relieve Mr. McLirty of the hetvy
idditiontl tesks.
Justice Minister Irnut Lipoihte
il expected to innounce within I
day or two the appointment of a
three nun court of appeal to handle
ippeili from ruling! mtde- under
the Enemy Alien Act
(Continued en Page light).
I With gu muk, but without the
famed umbrella Prime Mlnltter
Nfeyllle Chamberlain li ihown en
route to No. 10 Downing Street,
there to diicuu with otticteli hip-
Siningi In relation to tha lecond
rut War. '
Ottawa Beseiged
Contract-Seekers
OTTAWA, Sept 14 (CP)-Con.
tractors, manufacturers ud business men or their igente htve ln-
vtded thli capital ieeklng wtr orders ud offering to utilize their Industrial facilities to meet the Canadian and allied demand tot supplies
ind equipment
Government officu are bueiged
by hundreds of businessmen trom
all over the country..
"1 am getting out of Ottawa tonight" uid one Ontario Liberal
member ot Parliament "People
have been hounding ma tor jobi
ud contracts."
"People do not leemto realize
that thtre ti no patronage ln this
war effort," said a Saskatchewu
liberal, member. "However, thou
of my riding who'have appealed to
me htve a sincere desire to be help,
ful."
•Government offlclili declare that
the bulk of often have appeared
unselfish ud cooperative.
' Those who seek.interviews with
the Government on matten relating
to war. contracts or the utilisation
of Industrial enterprises ire referred to the defence purchulng bo>rd
which will ihortly be transformed
Into the wtr supply board.
Othen coming to Ottawi to offer
penonal lervice or who write letter! with iuch offers, will be duit
with-by the "voluntary aervice registration bureiu."
Information Board Is
Expected to Be Named
OTTAWA, Sept "14 (CP)-Poit-
muter-General Normu McLirty
is expected to name shortly the personnel ot a new board ot public Information, which would coordinate
news of Canada's war efforts as de.
veloped trom the various government departments.
F.D.R. Foes Will
Attempt lo Keep
Session Open
WASHINGTON, ,*Sept 14 (AP). -
Senttoritl tou of Preiident Rooie-
velt'i propostl to repetl tht United
Stetei arms embargo terved notice
todiy they would, try to hold congreu ln Wuhington continuously,
tfter It convenes ln speciil seulon
next Thunday, to keep check on
the administration's foreign policy.
At the ume time, deminds from
•ome senate ind house of representative members for legislation against
"war profiteering" indicated congreu might not confine itself at
the special session's action on the
administration's suggestion! for rc-
DUBLIN, Stpt 14 (Cf)—Prime viHon of the Neutrality Act It in
Minister Eimon dt Valera made.1 that itatute which bant ihlpmenti
three Important shifts In the Eire ot armi, emmunltion tnd imple-
cibinet tonight • ,'.'.. ments of wsr to natloni now fight-
,t the lime time new,' uvere. i"l I" *urp|f'. ■■'.;____. .. .
' ■. regulations jwrrSntro-l' Some rie^itlaton uld President
-_ -. ----yj i(inUeu might recommend
o curb profit-taking on com-
moditiei. There wu telk tiso thit
he might uk in appropriation of
$100,000,000 to $200,000,000 to expand
ud expedite the National Defence
program.
Senator Clark (Dem.-Mlssourf) a
critic ot the administration's foreign
policies, sounded the opposition keynote with a declaration he hoped
"congreu remain! ln session u
long u the emergency procltimed
by the President exists."
The regulir tession begins Ju, 3
ud if the ipecltl tession extends
throughout thli yur, congress will
be in ilmost continuous seulon at
leut until next spring.
ce Mlnliter Seu MtcEntee
•uumed the portfolio' of industry
and commerce. Tbe former hetd ot
the Industry ud commerce ministry, Seu Lemiu, becime hud of
lupply ud vice-premier Seu T.
O'Kelly becime flnince minliter.
Hit Eire Government It wu announced, hu ttken meuuru to
forbid in cue ot neceulty importation of newipapen printed outiide
the country. Censorship of papers
printed ln Eire had already been
utablished. '   '7     ■
Restriction! were announced tor
control of radio broadcuting.
Further decreu regulated the
price of milk ud other prime com.
moditiei.
San Franciico
Spokue
Penticton
Vernon
Kelownt
Grand Forkt
Kulo
Cranbrook
Calgary
Edmonton:-   ...
Swift Currant
Moote Jew
Prince Albert
Qu'Appelle
Winnipeg   —
Forecute — Kooteniy: Fruh to
itrong Southerly windi, unsettle.
ud cool with ihowen.
Wtter level et Nelion Thunday
night 8.88 feet ebove the loto wtter
mtrk, compired with 9.47 feet Wednudiy night and 5.79 feet Sundiy
night
PUNS MADE FOR CONFIDENTIAL
TALKS TO AID PRESS REPORT WAR
LONDON, Sept 14 (CP). - The
Miniitry of Informition will supply
only "true Information" and authentic newi" to the Britiih pub.
He ud the foreign preu, Lord MacMillan, Minister of Information, told
the House of Lords today.
"I should rither we give leu Informition ud true informition thin
that we Issued to neutral ud tor-
eign countriu a vast mut of material which wu unreliable ud untrue," he uid. "Ih the long run I
think the foreign preu will appreciate the fact thai what they receive from ui ii authentic newi
ud statements only.
"On this Important matter of as-
slsting the preu to handle war
news, arrangements hive been mide
with the Wir Office to lend down
a general rttff officer of high rink
to give confidential talki to ic-
credited representetlvu ot the preu
at weekly Interval!. <
TOfflcera of the Admiralty and
Air Ministry wiU alio telk to the
pres . confidentially, on ipeclal
occuioni."
Lord MicMillin igreed In general with tbe criticism! u to tht
true function! ot tbe department he
uld.
"One eu undentend thit thoee
who are engaged ln the actual work
of war are reluctant tp talk about
it" he uld. adding:
"But I think in a democracy like
oun even the fighting services will
hive to become publicity minded,
not ln a sense of diicloiing' tnythlng. of mllitery vtlue or of comfort to our enemlu, but to remember thtt there It a home front u
well u a front of war ud thit the
maintenance of the ipirit ud morale
of our people ii of ilmost u much
consequence In its contribution to
victory u the morale of the lighting
torcee."
War's Biggest Bal
Waged North of L<
Gdynia Said Capti
Rain Brings Hope of Relief to Warsaw;
Zamosc Fal Is, 100,000 Prisoners     j
'   » Taken by Germans
Unfilled U.S. Arms
Orders, $56,702,063
WASHINGTON, Sept 14 (AP)-
The -State Depirtment reported to-
day that for the flnt eight months
of 1939 .France had unfilled arms
orden, mostly for fighting pluu,
totalling $56,702,083.     -
The report disclosed that v In the
eight months period France had obtained arms exports licences totalling $72,363,381, with tctual exports
Of only $15,661,318.
Great Britein in the same period
obtained more shipments thu licences called for, since - the draw
uppn licence! held over from last
yur. Her export! were $21,159,427.
The United Statu armi export
business, which the Neutrality Act
embargo on armi ihlpmenti hu cut
down, boomed to $115,221,348 in
licences luued in the eight months
end $58,489,588 in tctual exports.   .
Farewell
Scenes like thli were the rule ln
London u British naval reservists
left the metropolis for their battle
itatlona.      •,_____________tKM_____t
POLES STUBBORN
BUDAPEST, Sept 14 (AP)-
Followtng is the text of Polish
staff communiqut No. 14 broad-
cast from Wiruw tonight:
"The Germu air force was very
active todiy. They bombirded
Dubno, Wlod-lmier- ud Radzl-
wia .
"Our iviitora bombed Germu
motorized unite ud ihot down
two pluu.
"In the Suwtltzczyzna region
the Germans crossed our border,
ln the direction ot Lowlcz and
Skierniewice there were wild battles with the Germui.
"The Germui occupied Zt-
motc. Wt repulied attacks en
Lwow ud Wiruw."
UKRAINE II
BATTLEFIELD
BUDAPEST, .Sept 14 (AP)-The
Ukraine, which hu iuffered levere-
ly ln every wir ud every peice
treity ln recent vein, wu turned
Into i battlefield tgtln todty is
Pollih troopi were reported ilowly
filling bick tcrou Southetitern
Poland under preuure ot a German attack.
German amult unite claimed to
have cut the main highway between
Lublin and Lwow, thut beginning
amputation of the Ukraine from the
reit of unconquered Polind, while
German-Slovak motorized column!
reportedly opened a direct attack
on Lwow. i
(Contlnutd en Page Twe)
Bay of Fundy Ship Not
Believed Submarine
SAINT JOHN. N.B, Sept 14 (CP)
—Nival authoritiu wid , tonight
they were ikepticil that i low lying craft reported lighted lh the
Bay of Punday lut night wu t
submarine. > ,
Fishermen, whose namw were not
disclosed, advised Marine Agent
H. F. Morrisey lut night they hid
Men a "long, low veuel with two
mute which might hive been e
submarine," two milei off Grind
Manan, ibout 50 mllu Southwest
ot here.
Nivil officials ukt pruent shipping in ud out of Saint John would
not be enough to rate attention
trom the enemy.
South Africa Does
Not Plan td Send
Its Troops Overseas
LONDON, Stent 14 (CT).-South
Africa does not intend to send troops
overseas, Prime Minister Smuts
iteted today ln a message releued
here by the Ministry of Information,
General SmuU denied South Africa entered the war under "preuure or compulsion" ud said thtt It
wii ln the Dominion'! interut to
enter rither than to wait until
Fuehrer Hitler demanded restitution ot former Germu Southwest
Africi.
LINES PIERCED
By  MELVIN   K. WHITLEATHER  .
BERLIN, Stpt 14 (AP)-Com- <
munlquts tonight cltlmid Qirmin
trmlu in forging iheid In tht
Ent though muting itrong Pollih reilitinct North of Lodi,
white, tht high commind ordered
•ctlon to mett whtt wu called
Britain's tffortt to hilt food ihlpmenti to  Qerminy.
In another theitre of action,
Qdynli, Polind'i only port elty,
wu reported by the Otrmtn't
to have lurrindered ifter a 11-
day ilege.
Of greater importance wu a htah
command claim that the circle
around Wanaw had been cloied tnd
communicitloni levered between
Lublin ud Lwow. "*__
Lwow li ebout 223 mllu Southeut
of Wiruw. Lublin is tbout midway
between the two cltiu,
(Continued an Page Twe)   .
Licences Is Fading
VICTORIA. Sept. 14 (CP)-Tha
war-ciuted ruih tor mirrlige licences in Victoril hu ilackened, but
not until in ill-time record for iiiu-
uce of licence! wu let
In the 14 days sincve the war began, the licence office here hu la-
sued 120 licencu tnd performed 13
civil marriages, tpproxlmitely two
ud i halt tlmu u greit ta tha
usual total tor i ful) month.   .
•Since the rush hai died down, of-
Details uid the licence bureau will
go btck to ite ordinary houn ud
will not remain open ln the evenlngi
u It his done for the hut week.
280 Nazi Planes
Shot Down, Poland
LUBLIN, Poltnd; Sept 14 (CP-
Hivu)—The official Pollih Tele-
graph tgency cltimed tonight 2W
Germu pluu have been,ihot down
in Poland since the beginning of
tfie wtr.
The agency tald that 13.000 Germans, 350 of them officers, have
been made prisonen in that tim*.
Material taken, the agency uld. included 48 Nazi cannon, 218 machine
guns ud more thu 1000 army
automobiles.
Canadian Was Guide "
-   First Air Raiders
LONDON, Sept 14 (CP Ceble)-
A Canadian navigating officer guided the tint flight ot Royal Air force
Slanes which dropped bombt on a
lerman veuel at Wilhelmshaven on
Sept 4. The Miniitry of Information reveeled today.
Hli ntme was not unounced.
Board Trade Resolution Will Urge
Employers Ate Enlisted Men of
Jobs When Demobilized if Fit Work
Government Should Be
Responsible, Those
Unfit Work
Employen ihould auure any
man enllitlng for war urv|ci that
their Jobi would be open to'them
Upon demoblllutlon, provided
they were fit to compete In thim)
and tht Oovtrnmtnt ihould give
the usursnet thet It would mums
ruponilblllty for thou unfit for
work. A resolution to this effect
to be drawn by E. A. Minn, Preildent, Mijor A. E. Dalgu, M.C.
e mimbir of the Boird, ud W.
O. C. Lamkill, Secretary, wu
authorized by the Nelion Botrd of
Trade, it ite luncheon meeting tt
the Hume Thundiy. At tha tug-
gestlon of H. E. Thain the Boerd accepted a proviso, stating that no
upersion wu being cut in the second clause upon governmental efforti at the close of the lut war,
TO CALL
FINE RE3PON8E
The .resolution wu adopted following a short talk by Major Dalgu in which he stated a splendid
response wu being mide by men
of the district to the call tor recrulti for the 111th Battery, R. C. A.
Men were coming from ranches,
mines, lumber camps and many other fields of employment to offer
their services, their only worry being to pau the stiff medicil examination. ,. .   - :
(Continued on Ptgt Eight).
Doukhobor Youth Dragged by Horse
on Glade Ranch Dies Few Minutes
..-.: ■■
.4ii*
CASTLEGAR, B.C, Sept. 14 -
Dragged approximately 400 yards
by a bolting farm hone he was
riding to the hayfield, Peter Popoff,
18-year-old Glade Doukhobor, wai
fatally injured, dying in a few
minutu, thli afternoon about 1:30
o'clock.
The youth, whose stepfather, Peter Ostrikoff, works in Trail, was
preparing to help his stepfather,
Alex Ostrlkoff, in the hayfield on
the Ostrikoff ranch, nur the Markin store, ud harnessing the mare,
rode her out of the stable.
On coming out the animal -hiti,
■Lsmmm-      7.-.,,,- ....       ■_
ud then bolted, ud young Popoff,
who wai dislodged from his sut,
becime entangled ln the harness
as he dropped off. After he had
been dragged about a qutrter of a
mile, be fell free, ln a dying condition.
With fractured skull tnd ihoulder injuries, he died is the grandfather, who hid heard hli cry,
arrived on the icene.
Constable George MacAndrew of
Cutlegar Investigated the tragedy,
and telephoned the facts to the
coroner, who decided no lnqueat
wu j—- "
 ,' .-A,
HI TWO
METAL PRICES
f FAiRTOBC.
VICTORIA, Sept 14 (CP)-War
prices fer basic minerals aad met-
lis pegged at London, Englmd, this
aaa, tre considered itir in Brit-
i  Columbit   tnd   should   allow
fm and continued operstlon by
'   producing mints, whilt dis-
if sporadic new ventures,
_  of the British Columbis
department Mid todsy. Prof-
| li believed unlikely.
, T. Wtlktr, deputy minis
ter of mints, commenting oo tht
United' Kingdom regulation, ttld
copper price worked out it 10.097
cents ptr pound, lead at J.3S5, and
tine it 8.41*i cents per pound ln
Canadian funds, with tht pound tt
Tuesdiy't level of S4.4SS. ThtM
prices compared with copper it
5.972 cenU, letd it 3.344 cents, tnd
sine tt 3.07s cants ptr pound, tht
prevtiling iverigt prices tor list
year.
BritUh Columbit, slid Dr. Wtlktr, stood to gain on all three metals
slightly, tnd on line materially;
while at tht stmt tlmt tht price id-
vancet were not sucb is to encourage i flood of wartlmt mushroom
ventures which could not be maintained undtr normal trtdt conditions.       "   s
■ll advertistmtnt is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control
Board or by the Oovernment ot British Columbia.	
Guide for Travellers
NELSON'S LEADING HOTELS
Hume Hotel Nelson, B.C.
QIOKQI BENWIlt, Proprietor.
SAMPLE ROOMS    EXCELLENT DINING ROOM
/ "irinj-uuuijutjui. •iinruni'>nririririni  'i r **"**
5$* European Plan, $1.50 Up   ,
I HUMB-Mr*. 8. A. Conrad. T. A.
HoUind, G. H. Outrim, r. W. Mathews,  D.  K.  Levene, Mrt.  E.  C.
muhes,   Vancouver;   B.   Dagger,
Benttcton; Frank Putnim, Creston;
H. A. M«ggy, Kootenay Bay: C. H.
BL**"1""  Trail: MUi Alice Wall,
LtFrtnct Creek; C. W. Meldrum,
Seattle; R. M. Oourdle, Cilgiry; R.
W. Jackson, Montreal; A. Coppel-
man, Winnipeg; Hugh P. Kmt, Toronto; T. A. Burns, Mtdtcine Hit;
J. 3. McDonild, Vulctni W. H. Sael-
son and diughter, Banff.
-r*
—
NEW GRAND HOTEL     ** V-t^rT
, ADDITION OP NEW BOOMS WITH BATH
European Plan f 1.00 and Up.
PRES PARKING        BLK. IROM CIVIC CENTRE        PH. SSS
Free Cera to Buses and Tralna
AINSWORTH RESORTS
•  . v.,   ——
P1    , . ,-.,'.
Ainsworth Hot Springs
Swimming Pool
Open every day till 1 a.m.
LUNCH COUNTER and SILVER LEDGE
u        HOTEL in full operation.
• -.*'. ■ y
Hot Springs Hotel
*-".*"■'       Closed for season.
VANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS
I       "YOUR  VANCOUVER  HOME"
Dufferin Hotel T-SSSS. jBSS
tO0 Seymour St,   Vancouver, B. fe    Coltmaa Alta- Proprlttor.
Newly renovated through-
Phi
SPOKANE, WASH., HOTELS
When In SPOKANE You Will Enjoy Staying at th*
,o*iv.r.id.||0te| VOLNEY 0,,pM"•
Avtnut     f#y**e»     W VS.41U A p.ulion Bldg.
EVERY COURTESY SHOWN OUR CANADIAN QUEST*
I ATLANTIC HOTEL SI t0 $71
|    FIRST AND MADISON-SPOKANE. WASH. ■    I **m   I
TRANSPORTATION—FREIGHT LINES
•     ■-.-    -_---'.'    ■ ■   ",rV,»> \i '7    ,i.ft''*^,-^-',sisl.-A,     ...■    ■
■ItpmiMMMi
LEAVE NEUON TWICE DAILY
"5 a.m. and 10:30 a.m.—Except Sunday
Trail Livery Co.
I—-Phone 135    Nelson—Phone 35
M    H.   MelVOR.  P|-OD.
Theft Charge
Against Yeycey
ROSSLAND, B. C. Sept 15-A
ehtrgt against Ami John Veycey
of Rosslind, of beini in possession
of stolen goods wu dismissed by
Miglstrata R. t Pltwmen thla afternoon.
Wtlter Golla, who laid the charge,
testified thtt on July 29 hts truck
htd gone off the Cascade Highway
about 2H milts out of Rossland, tnd
thit ill moviblt ptrts bid been
stripped from it when he went to in-
veetlgate the wreck the Monday following.
On Auguit JShe swore out a
setrch warrant for Veycey and, tc-
oompanled Constable R. B. McKiy
of tot TraU Detachment md Con-
stiblt Wllllim Lumsdtn of tht Rots-
land Detachment of the Provincial
Police, when ht ettrched tht iccui-
td's premises. Tht ttareh rtvtiltd
in tutomobilt coil and is tcctleri-
tor foot pedtl, which he identified
u hiving belonged to the truck.
Questioned by Victor Pibri of
Cameron md Itbri, TrtU counsel
for the detenu, is to how ht could
bt surt thtt these were the istentleil
parU, ht itited thit tht lttd win
on tht coll had been cut by t Jack-
knife, and that tht coll hid Wi
removtd from Ml truck by a limllar
method.
IDENTIFICATION
Mr. Ftbrl suggested thtt thli
oould not be taken w positive Identification, to which the witness replied that a coll was generally re.
moved by disconnecting lt with the
distributor, ind thit. In his opln.
ion, no one would cut the wire, pir-
tlculirly If the coll were new. Ill*
coll In his truck hid been new tnd
ln good condition, ind he hid understood from the former owner that
lt hid bttn installed about eight
monthi ago.        ,    ... ,
Mr. Golla identified the fM[hr
a teer In the rubber ooverlng, which
be seid hid occurred when he was
putting in a new tritumlMion.       •
He alio itited the iccuied hid
brouSht him a pilr of gleuee tfter
the accident telling him ht had
found them ln tht fcuek.'
Contttblt McKty Mid bt found
tht coll ind pedtl in a wooden box
on tht verandth of Veycey'i home.
Veycey told him he bad found the
coll in the Trail City Dump, and
that he hed never seen the pedal
belore, and didn't know where it
had come from.
Constable Lumsden, corroborating
Conitable McKay's evidence, itated
thit at the time toe articlesi were
discovered, Veycey hid uld tht coil
wil in old out tnd wouldn't work.
It wai liter examined by a garage
mechanic and lound to ba In perfect
condition. .   .   -    ,   .
Leonird Sindllord of -Ronland,
who hid font with tht accuied to
the icene of Ute tccldent, itated
thet after looking it the truck, Veycey ihowed him t pair of altssts,
tnd told him he htd picked them
up on tbe bank. Sanilicord stated
thtt Veycey did not touch the truck,
ind returned to Rowland in hli company' ..'■■■'_:.. s
ARGUE QUILT NOT PROVEN
Mr. Tibrt tsked for a dlanlaa)
on groundi of wetk Identification.
Even granting thtt the pert might
hive belonged to GoUi'l truck,
thert wai absolutely no evidence
that the iccuied wis iware thit he
wu ln possession Ot itolen prop
erty, he ttld.
Corporal 3. R. Ltnnox who wai
Erosecuting, uked the magistral! to
ikt Into consideration the wetk
itatementi mide by the iccuied to
the Pollct Officen tt the time of
the search.
"I im not aatistled that there is
enough evidence to Justify my sending a man to the penitentiary," uid
Magistrate Plewman, ln giving his
verdict ,The iccuied might nave
some reuon not connected with the
case for his unwillingness to state
where he obtained the pedal, he
stated. .
Weiss Convicted,
Mail Fraud Case
NEW ORLEANS, Sept 14 (AP).
—Seymour Weiss tnd his four co-
defendants were found "guilty w
chirged" here tonight by t jury in
the federal Court mail fraud trial.
Thote convicted with Weils, New
Orleim and New York hotel executive tnd prominent politician, were
Monte E. Hart, contractor long favored with State busineu; Dr. J. M.
Smith, former President of Loulsiant
State University; Louil Lesage, suspended official of the Standard Oil
Company of Loulsiant tnd J. Emory Aditni, nephew of Dr. Smith's
wife. '; .
Robson Institute
Asked State Cost
TRAIL, B. C Sept 14—A resolution calling for improvement ot
the Robson roid wu moved returned to the Robson Pinners' Institute, by the Trail Boird ot Trade
tonight, asking lt to obtain in estimate on the proposed work so that
the matter could be detlt with more
intelligently.
NELSON DAILY NEW*. NELSON. B-
186 Survivors of
Athenia Get Noisy
Welcome, Montreal
MONTREAL, Sept 14 <CP).-One
hundred ind eighty-six survivors of
the torpedoed BriUsh liner Athenii
received ■ noisy wtloomt htrt tonight u i It-car special train
brought its Cinaditn and United
States passengers into t station
crowded with relttivei tnd well-
wishers.
The train irrived a little mora
thin 24 houn ifter lt left Halifax,
where -IS men women tnd children were landed yesterday from
the rescue ship City of Flint which
hid been their htven since tht
Athenlt wu sunk September t.
liquor Prices
Up in Kootenay
Pricu of liquori and winu hive
been idvinced in conformity with
wir budget taxei announced from
Ottawa. Liquor stores throughout
tht Kooteniy hive ilready "mtrk-
ed up" the tdvancea required by
federal tuts.
Whiskey, gin and brandy art up
from 79 centi to 25 centi a bottle,
varying according to tht slzt 6f
bQttlt. Ovcrproof rum ll up 90 cents
to $1.29; proof rum S9 to 90 cental
wines fivt ind 10 cents: chimpigne
30 and 19 ctnti; and itill wines flvt
centi. ■
NIGHT BASEBALL
PACIFIC COAST
San Francisco  ,,„   IS 21  0
Portlind         2   11  4
Gibson, Leonird and Woodall;
Thomu, Radontta, McMillan ind
Monro.
Sacramento   7 12  1
Oakland __    8  14  2
Freitas and Ofrodowikl; Selveson,
Sheehan and Conroy.
San Diego .   2   8  1
Hollywood   7  IS  1
Humphreys, Pillette and Detore;
Great Northern
Cuts Fares
to SPOKANE
STARTING SEPT. 18
NEW, LOW ROUND-TRIP
FARES
FRUITVALE
COL QARDEN*
On ule daily, except Sunday,
Return; limit 10 tip. 150 poundi
btggigt checked tret. Children
H lift.
I. C. WESTBY
Agent
'387 Biktr St.   Ph. 57
C-FRIDAY MORNINO. SIFT. 18. 1118.
Bittner ind Dapper.
WESTERN INTERNATIONAL
Ticomt.
Spokane _     .
Iteklte, Medlghlni, Cole tnd Clifford; Reid, Jonti tnd Likt.
(Ttcomi leads 2-1 ln beat of five
semi-flnil).
Trail Attitude on
Provincial Boards
Left to Delegates
TRAIL, B. C, .Sept 14 - After
much discussion on the advisability
ol forming I provinciil organization
to deal with matters ot provincial
importance, the Trail Boird ot
Trada tonight decided to leave the
mitter to the discretion of its delegates to a meeting of the Associated
Boards of Trade ot Eastern Britiih
Columbit, which will bt htld at
Nelson Sept. 20 to dlsciua the proposal.
Donald MicDonald forsiw much
friction between demindi ot the
Cout end the Interior, ind could
not we how it would "strengthen
(fur poiition".   ..      • '*-i '
Table for Month .
in Trail Board   -
Overseas Force
TRAIL, B. C., Sept I4-After a
lengthy discussion on the question
Terriers Are Again One Game Up on
Trail In Junta Bo^Jffe-Flnal
B.C. EXHIBIT   ,    ■■
TO STAY OPEN
SAN FRAKCISCO, Sept. 14 (AP)
-British Columbia's exhibit it tht
Golden Gate Internationil Imposition will remain optn until Iht
fiir ends, exposition officials wtrt
informed today.
Leland Cutler, exposition pruldent uid t messige from Prtmier
PittuUo of British Columbli disclosed that tht provinciil government hid reventd t previoui decision to discontinue the exhibit
beciuse of the European wir. Tht
display wu dosed ont d»y. Tht
exposition U scheduled to end
Dec, 2. 	
MORE ABOUT .
Tommies at Front
(Continued From Page Ona) ,
These hllli follow the line of tha
frontier through the little cltiu oi
Schoeneck, Splecheren and Fechln-
gen, til ot which htvt bttn taking
i pounding from Germany heavy
guru for two days.
Ivan undtr huvy bombardment the French troopi were Mir)
to have begun ilowly edging tor.
wird after having been delayed
by the tint rains of tht Autumn.
Reporti from the front itld the
weither hid improved tomewhit
today..
Narrow ilde roadi were ilippery
with mud slowing down the progress ot the French motorlxed unite.
Swollen itreimi increued the infantry'! task ot feeling iti wiy
through tht broken countryside,
pockmarked with shell craters.
Saarbruecken, which lies almost
midway ot this 100-mllt Northern
flank between the Moselle tnd the
Rhine Riven, formi a keystone of
itrong German fortificatloni in idvance ot the Gtrmtn line. Except
for a lector juit Eait ot Saarbruecken, where the French drove
a narrow wedge into Nui outposti,
the German idvanct lint of fortificatloni hu ktpt tht Frtnch tdvinct trom tht main WutwaU.
WEATHER AID*
For the lut day and night weither
hu kept Germin obiervatlon craft
out ot the air and hu liven the
French a chance to weak, forward.
In front ot tht Siirbruecken the
French tdvtnct guards have circled
illghtly to the But are in front of
the town to the South and are approaching along the Wut bank of
ti,e Little Moselle River to the
West of th e City where It
would be possible to pinch ott
the Saarbruecken fortifications.
The French irtillery — famoui
75's and lean-looking 165 millimetre
cinnon known u "long rlflei"—
•re concealed in the Warndt lorut
Etst ot Satrbruecken.
French guns tnswering tht German shelling are pounding the Nazi
advance Unu thtt run through
Siirbruecken luburbi trom Gen
idvance
rbruecken luburl - _
viller. IVi miles Wut iround to
of favoring the Immediate recruiting
of in expeditionary force, the Trail
Board tf Trade tonight decided to
letve the matter on tht tablt tor
ont month.
Tonight's Winner
No. 1 Challenger
' WASHINGTON, Sept 14 (AP)
—The Nitlonil Boxing Auoclition todiy nominated tnt wlnntr
of tomorrow night'i Tony Giltn-
to-Lou Nova bout as tht No., 1
challenger for Heavyweight
Champion Joe Louli.
Bob Pastor, who already' hai a
date with Louii, wu ranked second in the N.B.A.'i quarterly ratings of challengers. Third place wu
reserved tor the loser of the Gal-
ento-Nova fight
France Moves on
War Profiteering
' PARIS, Sept 14 (AP) - The
French government announced tonight it would place taxes perhaps
as high u 100 per cent on business
firms to prevent war profiteering.
A decree, which appeared in the
official Journal today, permiti the
hud of a business—an individual
or stockholders—to take out only
"normal remuneration for service."
On profits above that a heavy
sliding scale excess profits tax goes
into foroe which may ruch 100
per cent
The only French businesses exempted are exporten.
AHMED MEN GET $25
IN HOLDUP AT COAST
VANCOUVER, Sept 14 (CP) •-
Two armed and masked men held
up a clerk ind cuitomen In ■ suburban drug store today and ucaped
with between »25 and 835, later
commandeering ah automobile u a
tire on the machine lh which they
fled blew out.
German Tries Sink,  '
Burn First Vessel
i.   Captured in Port
' LONDON, .Sept. i4 (CP).-A itory
ot how the Britiih trmy captured
the tint German ship of tht war
was disclosed todty.
The seizure wu tnnounced u
made by t battalion of Territoritis
stationed at a London dock.
The ship wat unloading cargo
when i captain ot the Territorials
heard Prime Minister Chamberlain'i words: "We are in a state of
war with Germany'' over the. radio
September 3.
With fixed bayonets tbe Territorial* boarded the craft ind put
her captain and crew under guard.
. A ftw houn later the ship oegtn
sinking and investigation showed
ber seacocks had been opened.
The Territorial captain ordered
the ship's master on deck tnd madt
him indicate how to dose them.
A short time later fire broke out on
the ship. It was extinguished and
th. swells isnrt srew were marched
Saint Jean, an equal distance to tht
Eut
The German picture ihowi a Unt
of perminent lortlficttioni of reinforced concrete blockhouses pinked
up bypillboxes ind machine-gun
nests. Where this line hu been penetrated by the French tdvtnct to
the East the Nui troopi havt retired into the outskirts ot Saarbruecken proper, where lecondary
defencu were thrown up before th*
tint Une wu forced to fall back.
PARIS, Sept 14 (CP.-Havu)-
The fint mui contingent ot Germin priionen wu led Into French
lines today. -    ■
The priionen wore unviaore*;
steel helmets and gray-green uniformi, limllir to those wom by the
Imperiil German troopi 28 yean
ago.
Todiy tor the tint time contact
between the opposing armies wis
close enough to permit taking of
prisonen in sufficient numbers to
warrant mention in' the officii)
^communique.
r
29 Cents for 25
Smokes, Montreal
MONTREAL, Sept 14 (CTP)-Ei
tablishment ot a temporary price ot
20 cents for t package ot 25 clgirettei in the Montreal salu tax zone,
wu announced today by one tobac-
■co compiny here. Addition of the
city ulu tax will bring the price
to 30 centi, compired with the for
mer price ot 25 centi for 24 clgirettei.
The Increue wu the flnt tnnounced here ilnce imposition qf
the wir tax .
Flags Asked Lowered
for Girl "Murdered"
'by Hitler   '
TORONTO, Sept 14 (CP).-Pre.
mier Mitchell Hepburn uld tonight
he would wire Prime MinUter Mackenzie King ind the Premier! ot the
other eight provlncu tomorrow,
uking that flags on public buildings
be flown it hilf-mast until the funeral lervicu for Margiret Hay-
worth trt concluded tt Hamilton
Saturday.
"A Canadian girl Is stilled ii
death," Premier Hepburn stld, "mi
for the murder of Mirgaret Hay-
worth the world'i Jury find. Hitler
guilty. The men and women of Canida will help to execute the sentence
and one day demind thtt Hitler
tppeir before the btr of history to
answer for the murder of thla innocent child."  ,"..,'
Reports Subs Would
Fire on U.S. Ships
Denied by Germans
BERLIN, Sept 14 (AJ*),-A itatement wu issued tonight by DNB
(official German newi agency), denying that a German submarine
commander hid warned the ctp-
taln of in Ahierictn veuel halted
off the Britiih cout that theteattai
tin would bt opined on any Ameri.
pan ship refusing to but whin
comminded.
Captain G. Self, Ulster Of the
Witermtn Steamship lint freighter.
Waeosla, halted off th* Irilh coast,
reported the submarine commimjer
had uld his orders wfere to fire
upon tny vesul  thit  refused  to
TRAIL, BC, Stpt 15-Snatehlng
i slight lead in tht first quarter, at
th* ind of which they led TrtU
Cubs 4-1, Rouland Ternera remained out ia front to strengthen
their margin ind emerge victorious by a 16-12 soon in tht third
;imt of the but-oi-five West Koo-
I  '
tht Tnil rink tonight
•nay Junior Mini-flnal Mriu tt
Terriers wtre victorious ia the
tint lame atter overtimi pity while
Cubs came back to win the second.
Tonight's victory tgiin givu Ier-
ritrs I ont gtmt lud in tht writs
■OX SCORE
ROSStAVD
Pollock 	
Bathie -	
Johnson	
Haiph Scott .
Dugan 	
Topllff   	
Jirgtnstn -
Jim Lafact ..
Jim bcott ....
Jtck Ltiace .
Rt* Scott _..
Dtniky ,	
Cox
Totali
TRAIL
Sapronoff
J. MicKemit _..
Murdoch
Mltttud
Porta _.
Flnnlt  .
MicDontld
F. Pignin 	
A. MacKtnzit
N. Turik
G
. 0
. »
. 0
. 4
. 4
. 4
. 0
.  0
PtPt
0   0
.IS  14  SO   15
Totali 	
Referee*—Ktn Wtir ud Gtorge
Anderson.
Old  Soldier, 87,  Is
Called Up by
Mistake
LONDON, Sept 14 (CP). - thu
Ministry of Information, undtr tht
label "imusing Incident" issued the
following story todiy on in octui-
rtnet it tin depot of t Ltncuhlr*
Regiment:
*> taxi drovt up lo tbt fatu ind
in old gentlemen with t row ot
medals on his chut totttnd out
"Ht wu ushered into the Offlcen
Mess ind tsked to iee tbe Com*
minding Officer.
" 'Good morning, sir,' uld the O. C.
"What un I SO for you?'
" 'Do?' queried tbe old gentlemen,
Tm tt ind they've ctlltd mt up u
a ruervlit', I left tht irmy 30 yein
igo, you must bt hard up far sol-
dim, I terved with your grand-
father it Poom ln '8S.'
"It wu later discovered that he
htd received mobillziUon papers
which should htvt bun ient to his
grandson."    .
MORE ABOUT
NAZIS ADVANCE
(Contlnutd From Pag* Out)
Polish divisions North ot Lodi,
10 mllu Southwut ot the cipital.
win rtported waging t itubborn
fight igalnst capture in what wis regarded here u tht blggut battle ot
the war. I
COUNTER BLOCKADI
. Tht high command, meenwhlle,
Instructed submarlnu tnd wirshlps
to begin in immediate "counter
bloektdt* u in an»wtr to Brltain'i
determinitlon to prevent foodstuffs
from retching tht Reich. Juat how
the blockadi wu will dtvtlop appeared uncertain tonight
Official tyu wtrt flxtd tn the
reaction tf ntutral statu tt Britain'* tnnounotmtsTt In rtetrd tt
tentrapind goods. Tht Rileh ix-
pitted ntutril* tt txtrt thtmwlvt*
te kup trtdt lanu tt Oirminy
tptn for tht "normtl" emount ef
Siod* Otrminy usually buy* from
•m,
Interest wu' mtnlfuter) over
Whether four ot the biggest neutrali
—Soviet Russia, Italy, Jipen ind the
United States—would iccept Britain'! tood bloektdt ot Germtny.
Speciil Interut wu expreued over
the possibility ot the United Statu
getting Involved with Britain over
the "freedom of the Mu" quutlon.
On the Eutern front Gtrmtn military reporti uid mort thin 100,000
Srlsontn hivt been taken. Thou
iken ia the Ridom lector, South
of Wintw, tht surrender of which
wu tnnounced yuttrdty, numbered 00,000, reporti uld.
Tht Inhibltanti of Gdynia, tht
undy, low-lying elty Into which
Polind pound money building a
modern port from a rowboit dock,
surrendered it «:W un. It wu tnnounctd. Gtrmtn reporta quoted
Poliih soldlen u uying the ctty
hid been without brud for two
diy*. Tht lirgest put ot tht poputatlon bad fled. -
In Berlin, another appttl Wu
Issued tt women and mother* te
go to th* wuntt-y ind awlit In
harvuting potatou tnd bttt*.
Hundred* of thouund* tf girl*
bttween th* tgU ef 13 ana -_%
already hav* been trdtrtd Into
fltld* and firm houui,
Tht prosecution of penon* not
obeying wartlmt meuurei began
with the fining ot a restaurant
proprietor 3400 for offering guut*
a choice between two wtrm meet
dishes. At the sunt time in order
wu !isu«d forbidding th* serving ot
hot tood between certain afternoon
■nd evening houn.
tJ^AWlirL
Udy Nelson Silk Crept
ALL THI NEW    Jl fl)
SHADES
LADIIS W1AR     BURNS BLOCK
f rings Septemb
a delegate i'
Trade wu lett to A. H. Carson,
Pruldent at a meeting of tha Board
tonight,
R. M. Hoyland, Secretary, reid
correspondence ctrried on between
the board tnd various official! regarding improvements to the Columbia Gardeni airport md t proposed
feeder line from Oliver. He also
reported thtt K F. Tiedje htd estimited the cost of improvement! to
th* tlrport, necessary to handle
planu that would be used ln the
qervlce. to be (35,000.
All data tvillible wis referred to
tht delegite tttending iht aviation
council meeting.
5 Bodies Removed
From Sub Squalus
PORTSMOUTH, NsH„ Bipt 15
(Frldiy) (AP)-Btdlu ef five ef
tht 2S mtn drowned In tht 1Mb-
mirlnt Squalus whin It sank off
this port Mty 23 win movtd from
tht vttstl'i muddy hull and ear-
rltd uhon urly todty.
i    '  .
Church War Service
Committee k Formed
TORONTO. Sept 14 (CP).-A wtr
service committee wii created todty By tht sub-executive of the
General CounW of tht United
Church Of Ctnidl to guide the
church ln tht ministry of wrvlce
during the wtr.
Elritain May Set Up
Supplies Purchasing
Commission, Canada
NBW YORK, Sept 14 (AP).-Au-
thorititlve banking sourcn here
yith connection. in Grett Britain
uld todty It wis understood the
British Government will shortly wt
up 1 British War Supplies Purdhu-
ing Commiulon. The Commiulon,
It wu reported, would establish
headquarten In Canada, It was suggested thtt liter a similar French
Commission would be tent to
Canldt. .       .   '
tabllih branch oifieu in New York
qnd Washington.   ,   ■
VANCOUVER, Sept. 14 (CP) -
Five youths dressed in dark clothes
and wearing white handkerchiefs
over their faces tonight robbed •
-----a--iaaaaa__Mi_IS_t«_a___
Purpose Survey of
Trail With View
to Town Planning
TRAIL, B. C, Sept It—Town
planning should be considered from
t practical standpoint insofar u tht
City of Trail may bt effected, ao
thtt a conclusion ot a helpful na-
tun miy be irrived it O. A. Wil-
llnger, chairman of the Trill Botrd
of Trade, town-planning committee
told the board tonight
Perhapi moit would be achieved
it present by urging the luthorlties
to make a comprehensive itudy of
the city with a vlstw to forming some
definite development tnd lmprovt-
ipent plin, be uid.
Guut! it tht melting Included
Robert Foxall, President of the Nelson Junior Board ot Trade, and E.
H Puree, Pruldent ot the Robson
Cooperative Exchtngt.
Sees Trail Board
Stabilizing Factor
in War Condition
TRAIL, B-C; Sept 14~TheiiiwlU
be a Job for everyone of ui ti t
board and u Individuals," uld A.
S. Canon, pruldent ot tht Trail
oird of Trade, ipetklng on th*
wtr iltuition, whtn ht tonight
opened the tint meeting of utt
board lince June. '■
"As we, to a certain extent represent the lenior element of the
community, we ihould exercise a
stabilizing Influence. Wt should
(void lethtrgy on ont band, and
hysttrla on the other."
Airport Betterments
at Columbia Gardens
Would Cost $35,000
TRAIL, B. C, Sept 14—A* it wu
not known definitely, whether R.
C Crowe, chtinnin ot the roid*
and bridgu committee, would be
iblt to ittend the B. C, Aviation
Council meeting' at Harriion Hot
Springs September tl, appointment- brought Into the Kooteniy Dlitrict
of tht Trail Board ol from tht Oktnigan, C. S. Squires
Kootenay Fruit Is
Equal to Emergency
Squires Points Out
TRAIL, B. C, Sept 14-Ttklng
exception to the theory that the
retson • requut wu being nude to
hive tht Cuctdt read kept open ln
Winter was io thtt fruit could be
ot Robson stated tblt "Our district
ll prepired to supply the Kooteniyi with fruit while the Cucidc
road ii closed.
"If the Okanagan grew citrous
fruit* It would bt a different matter".        ■ ._   , ;
Arrow Lakes Demand
•   Goes to Committee
TRAIL, B. ti. Sept 14—A ruolu
tion ot tht Lower Arrow Lakes
Board ef Trtdt raying for t lurvey
of t Winter route to link the Arrow lakei with Cout polnti tnd
tht Okanagin, tnd ilso a feeder to
the Big Bend Highwiy, wu referred to the Roids md Bridges Com-
mlttee of the TraU Board of Trtde
tonight
moreaSout
POLES RETREAT
(Contlnutd Frtm Pig* On*)
Lublin I* ibout 100 mllu Southeast ot Warsaw and Lwow about
235 in tht same direction.
Despite disorganization resulting
trom repeited terrific bombings,
Lwow's Polish defenders claimed
to hivt beaten otf a motorlied attack. They were reported eontln-
uinr to 'dig In" In emulation of
thtir countrymen's heroic defence
ot Wintw, whtrt tht tint heavy
Autumnal rains wert uld to havt
fallen, much to tht Joy of tht city'i
defenders who felt the nln would
bog down Germiny'! motorized
force*.
cut orr RSTRSAT
It wu believed certain the Gtrmtn drivt tgainst Lublin caused
tht Polish government to move
farther Eut tfttr only t thort-
stop-ovtr at Nalenwow, in South
Central Poland. It ilso tppearei
tha Invaden by this move were
ilowly closing a tank encirclement
around Wirsaw, ltivlng tht only
ivenue of retreat directly Eastward
through Brxuc tnd Bugiem (Brest
UtvoS).
Tht swift German attack makei
the main highway between Wanaw
and tht Rumanian border the new-
Ut battlefield.
The invaders now ire believed ie
position to ittack Lwow, tht Ukraine'* cipital, down the bighwij
from the North ind from directs
Eastward, driving t tank-furrow
hilfwiy tcrou th* remaining tre*
lection ot Polind.
It tbt Null do that tht quutlon
remiins how mtny Polu would
bt eble to manoeuvre Northward tc
uctpe the dragnet tnd how mtny
would bt forced to cross the Rumanian and Russtin borders in.
face Internment
The Germam' drive Into thi
Ukraine spotlights the long unsolved Ukrainiin problem involving Polind, Soviet Ruuia, Hungiry and Rumania.
While the nitlonaltt.es emerged
trom the Greit Wir u separate
states the Ukrainians camt put divided tmong different lends. The
mtje-r portion ot the land and population wu Incorporated within Soviet Ruult tnd othen within Poland, Rumtnil and Ciecho-Slo-
vikit.
Hungiry ssntered tht picture
when she seized Ruthenia, Easternmost part ot Czecho-Slovakia, last
March.
Plane Manufacturers
Buys Land, Ottawa
OTTAWA, Sept 14 (CP).-Red-
mond Qualn, President, of the Oi.
tawa Car Manufacturing Company,
uid today the company, which is
constructing bombing planes for the
British Air Ministry, has purchased
18 acre* of land confronting tht
Trans-Canada Air Unu' Uplands
airport flvt mllu Southwest of Q*
tawa.
Mr. Qualn nld tht company,
which will hive access to the airport ii not inclined to disclose the
company's plans tor the new property at the present time.
Plumbing
REPAIRS anil ALTERATIONS
I. C. Plumbing fr .Heating Co.
B
JAMES SMITH
TILE CONTRACTOR
Bathroom! - Flreplacu - Sink*
Store front! - Pwoia
618 Robson St.,   Phona 841-L
Sundstnnd  Adding   Machlnu
OFFICE SUPPLIES
Underwood Elliot Fliher Ltd.
US Wird St Phont 99
=COAL=
That Is Always C ood
■us
Western Monarch
$10.50
MO
10.50
LUMP-Less Ash;
PER TON _..,_..„_...-._	
STOVE-Lcss Ash;
PER TON . _._____,	
GALTLUMP-
PIR TON ,._—	
GREENHILL-Washed
Furnace, No Dust;
PER TON _. ..-- 1	
10.50
SPECIAL PRICE ON QUANTITIES
Towler Fuel & Transfer
PHONE 889
526 STANLEY ST.
—
 >jr-tm
-
H.	
T
NO GRUMBLE. AS FIRST PRESSURE
By Tht Canadian Preu
The ptnlnf of the five-cent beak-
it of beer ln Quebec, conceded by
■miller tavern steepen ln Montretl,
today Injected t note of pithoi Into
the harih realitiea ot Ctnidi'i wartime budget.
While houiewlvet besieged groc-
try ihopi tor ltrge luppliet of coffee tnd tet. on which iharp ilsei
In coit are expected, tnd confirmed
tipplera Itld in heavy luppliet of
liquor alio ln ■ race with riling
pricea, there wu i ligh trom the
drinken of nickel. beer ln the
French-Canadian Province.
FOR LOST TIME
Moit of the laier beer itlooni In
Montretl tet up the nickel glutei
Wedneiday but expected it would
be the hit day.
Grumblea were rare u ttxpiy-
era icanned newiptperi tnd Mtl-
mated whtrt tht excite tnd fixation Incretiei would hurt moit
An attitude thit found fivor
with mtny wn expreued In I
Toronto newipaper whoit headline on i budget itory rtad:
"Every tip tnd tvtry puff help
te imtih Hltlerlim."
The reference wu to Increue of
10 centi i pound ln the exctie duty
on coffee under ill tariffs, Increase
of five to 10 centi on Imported tee,
big Jumps ln the dutlei on liquor,
tnd extri dutlei on cigarette! and
tobacco, til of which will be pused
on to the consumer.
LIQUOR COSTS UP '
Drinken of rye whiskey ln Ontario ind Quebec found the price
on I 35 ounce bottle up 80
i bi
to TJ
cents, tccording to,the brand. Ca-
nadian icotchei were 69 centi higher for 26 ounce bottlei. Imported
scotches ind glm were up 75 centi
for 26 ounces. Thirty-five overproof
rum mide the blggeit climb, from
$3.90 to $9.
An indication ot how ill houee-
holder. tre being cilled upon to
make their contribution to the wtr
againit Hitlerism lies ln the new
tsx of eight per cent on electricity
tnd gu billi for domestic lervicei.
Ai to retail itorei and the pricei
of coffee and tea, virtually ill continued selling itockt on hand it
previoui rates.
RATION TEA, COFFEE
Store manager! reported mtny
women were trying to obtain cuei
of tea tnd coffee. Othen winted
20 to 10 pound loti. One Toronto
chain itore itarted rationing coffee
md tea Wednesdiy morning, limiting eifh customer to a pound ot
each.
Provincial Government officials
laid they believed the federal budget would cut Into their incomei.
Hon. Stuart Giraon, provinciil
treuurer ot Manitoba, stld the increued taxei tnd dutlei would reduce hli Government'i revenues,
but he would not estimate to whtt
extent
At Queen'i Pirk ln Toronto,
Premier Hepburn predicted tremen-
doui fill In provinciil revenue"
owing to the surtax on Income tax
Impoied by the Dominion Government. Mr. Hepburn wu reported
considering • surtax for Ontario to
mike up tor the loss.
Doctor Has New
Cancer Treatment
ATLANTIC CTTY, NJ, Sept 14
(AP).—A new treitment for cancer, ot vitamlni plui in extract of
healthy, youthful tissues, wu reported to the Third Intemttlontl
Cancer Congreu here by Dr, J. R.
Davidson, a general practitioner of
Winnipeg.
He hu been working nighti ln
his basement on cancer duet which
he got in treating human beings.
The 60-year-old doctor described
the treatment of three human! by
hli methodi. He uld hli work polnti
towird a pouible wiy of prevention.    '
He luggeited, moreover, thit cancer miy be t diseue like diabetes,
which ii not cured by the remedlei
used, but whose progress ti arrested to thit the victim llvu In comparative health for many yean,
WAR CONTRABAND RULES
TO BE APPLIED AT IRAQ
BAGHDAD, Sept 14 (CP-Htvu).
—British wtr contraband rulei will
be applied by Iraq, it wu tnnounced today. All vessel! putting In at
Bura will be niblect to control
A decree wu Issued procliiming
I state of dinger ot wtr tnd authotv
liing requisitioning of fictoriei ind
ill means of transport, communication! tnd itocki of petroleum ind,
pharmaceutical producti.
KIMBERLEY Social..'.
HMBERU5Y, B. C-Mr. and
Mn. E. H. Frlnell and Mr. and
Mn. Fogarty and two children ot
Valley, Wuh., viilted Mn. Potter.
Mn. J. McNicholai ind Joyce returned from four weeki viilt at
Vancouver tnd Victoria.
WiLSOH
FLY PADS
/)
Etch pid will kill fllee all day aad
every day for three weeki.
■ S padi la eech picket.
10 CENTS PER PACKET
at Drufglitt, Crocere, Count Storu.
WHY PAY MORE?   '. vacation .t
IHE WILSON ay PAD CO, H-ssslUo.,0*. worth.
Mr. and Mn. I. A. McVicar returned after three weekt ln Nelion.
Relph Westgate hu returned trom
a viiit to Penticton.
Mr. and Mn. T. Dtwion returned to Creiton where they viilted
Mr. and Mn. John. The litter two
iccompinled them on a trip to
Sand Point
Mn. W. J. Cooper of Wynndel
hu been vltltlng Mr. ind Mn. Wilfred Muon ind Mix Muon of
Chipmin Ctmp.'■ - •**• ** •(,   '
tin. J. Rollhelser and four'chll-
dren returned after viiiting reit-
tivei in Nelion.
J. Ctviniugh It ipending hli vication in Vincouver.
Mr. end Mn. H. Booth and family returned trom a viilt at the
cout
Mn. Harold Stafford and eons
vilited Kimberley to he the gueiti
of Mr. and Mn. Gilbraith. Mn.
Stafford li raying farewell to her
friendl before moving to Prince
George, where her huiband will
mike hli heidquirten ln hit work
u Inipector of Schooli,
Mr.
Chii
I
Mn.  Roy  Burch
ipmtn ctmp
Trail after viiiting friendl.
tnd
m Cimt
jy Burch ldft
for their home in
Wesley Thomi
to
on returned from
pokine ind Alns-
NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. S.C—FRIDAY MORNING. SEPT. 18, 119.
.3ttH
. PAOE THRE
Public Warntd to
Register Wtpponi
. VICTORIA, Sept 14 (CP) -
Britiah Columbit police heidquirten todty drew attention
of tht public to the necessity
of registering ill concetlible
weapons, iuch U revolvers, automatic pistols tnd my weapon
with a barrel up to 20 inchei
long.
Possession of iuch unregistered
weapon! it in offence, tnd proiecutlon will follow, police uld.
Registration formi may be pi
cared at tny city, munlciptl or
provinciil  police  office   in  the
province.
Hull Explains U.J.
International Law
WASHINGTON, Sept 14 (AP)-
The United Statei Government
lerved notice on belligerent nations
todty thtt it "reserves all rights of
the United States ind iti nitiomls
under internttlonal liw," ind will
tike appropriate measurei w*Avi
the rightt trt violated.
Secretary of State Cordell HuU
luued a formal itatement declar.
Ing: "The Government of the Unit,
ed Statei hu not abandoned any
of iti rlghti u a,neutral under in.
ternttional law.   .
He detailed the varloui itepi
taken through American legislation iuch u a restriction of travel
on belligerent vessels, loam tnd
credits to belligerents, but raid:
"Theie restrictive meaiurei do
not and ctnnot constitute a modi'
ficatlon of the principle! of Ui'
ternitioml law but rather they re'
quire national! of the United Statei
to forego, until the congress shall
decide otherwise, the exercise of
certain right! under these principles."
.  Hull added:
"The principle! of International
law ai regards neutrals uid belli
gerenta hive been evolved through
the centuries, while belligerents
hive frequently departd from thie
principles on one pretext or mother
and hive endeivored to Justify
their action on vtrioui groundi,
the principles atlll lubsist.
"The Government tdhering u lt
does to theie principle!, reserves
til rlghti of the United Statei ud
iti nttlontli under International
law and will tdopt iuch meuurei
u miy teem mott practical and
Erudent when thoie rlghti ire vio-
ited by my ot the belligerenti."
CANNERY ACCOUNTANT
DIES EN ROUTE HOSPITAL
PRINCE RUPERT, B.C.—Roy H.
Gurd of Vincouver, accountant for
tht Caitiir Cannery it Cupaco,
B.C., 19 mllei South Eut ot Prince
Rupert died lut night while being
brought to hoipittl here by the
cannery tender Nishgt for treitment ..   ,     .       .-'       ' _'   '
Gurd wu the ion of Rev. W. H.
Gurd, in etrly Anglican Church
Missionary ln Prince Rupert Dis-
trlct
25 Million Chinese
Fdce Starvation
rnl-fom Winter Floods
SHANGHAI,  Sept   14   (AP)  -
Foreign relief tuthoritlei estimited
todty 26,000,000 Chineie face star-
vatlon md other luffering thli winter from flood! in Hopeh Province
md the Yellow River buin md
drought In Shantung Province.
FaU crop! ln theie areu were
raid to be completely deitroyed. Re.
llgloui ind red cross relief funds
tre netrly exhausted. A survey of
Tientsin, where the fint cold of
•utumn hu mide itself, Indicated
hardships from the recent floods
were Juit itarting.
Travellen report scenes ot desol-
ttion where refugeei are perched
on ton of itrawitackt with farm
animals i slowly starving. On the
edge of Tientsin, hundred! ot coffins hive been wuhed out of a cemetery and up againit a raUway
embankment
dvertisement is not published or displayed by the liquor Control Board or by the
Government of British Columbia.
Britain and U. S.
Seek to Remove
Friction Causes
■y ANDRUE BERDINO
WASHINGTON, Sept 14 (KP).-
Quiet conversations arc under way
between the United States md Great
Britain to eliminate—ln idvtnce—
u mmy u possible of the mtrltime
causes of friction thit trose between
them in the tint greit wtr.
The polnti of possible coUlsion
•re much the seme u those which
produced to much sweat on the di-
ilomatic brow in the first greit wir.
'or initmct:       ■* ..
The United Statet idmitted the
right of Grett Britain to March
American ships If they were impeded ot carrying contraband to
Germany. But it insisted the inrch
ihould be mtde on the high teas
md It the vessel'! cargo and its
papers were found In order, it ihould
be permitted to proceed.       - .
Grett Britain Initead hauled American ihlpi Into British ports,
searched them there, delayed the
slips and chirged them port, wharf-
age, warehouse and other fees.
Already report! have arrived that
American ships have been taken
during the lut leveral dayt into
British ports for examination.
The stite depirtment said the destination of a ihip't cargo ihould be
determined from the ships papen.
but the Britiih during the laat war
detained American ships while
searching for other evidence which
might throw a different light on
the destination of the cargo.
The department sharply objected
to Uie use of the U. S. flag by British merchantmen In order to escape
attack by German submarines md
raiders.
The then State Secretary Ryan
refused to concede Britain's right
to Inititute t blockade of German
ihores hundreds of milei out at aet.
It It not yet known whit Working
igreement ctn be arrived tt with
Grett Britain and France to remove
causes of friction.
Iti principil point, lt il believed
here, will probably take the torm
of iome examination of cargo by
U. S. authoritiei before ahipa leave
American porta. The mture of thi
cirgo ind iti destination may thui
be certified by U, S. officii.! md a
document bearing thli informition
consigned to the ihip'i ciptiln. If
he li itopped by t British wtrshlp,
he cm exhibit the document u
roof of whtt he carriei md where
pro
It'i
going.
Mrs. C. W. Appleyard
"Coming Along", Van.
Mn. C, W. Appleyard ot Nelson,
who hu been in hospital it Vmcouver for aeveral weeks following
tn operation, wu reported Thunday to be "coming along nicely."
It li expected the will be ln hospital for about mother three weeks.
Winklelgh Capt.
Tells Rescue Story
NEW YORK, .Sept 14 (AP) -
Captain Thomu Georgeson, Mast,
er ofthe Britiih Freighter Winklelgh torpedoed off the Irish coast
by a German lubmarlne, raid todiy
upon arrival on the Holland-American Uner Stttendam that the
lubmarlne ciptatn "wu very ftlr,
considering our naUoni were at
wir."
Georgeson, on a boat torpedoed
by the Germain ln the flnt Great
War, and the 30 memben ot hla
crew, Including Philip Lewis, 13-
year-old cabin boy of victoria, B. C.
were picked up by the Statendam
six houn after the Winklelgh sank
Sept 3 while bound for London
from Vincouver with 4,000,000 feet
of lumber.
The captain told thli itory of Uie
torpedoeing:
"we lighted the submarine flnt
when lt wu four or five mllet t-
way. We made no attempt to get
awty beciuse we realized we didn't
htve i chance. When the tubmarine
drew up to within leveral hundred
feet I raw t imall ilgnal flag. Then
it fired one thot over our ihip. I
ordered the engines stopped and
the crew to issemble on deck. The
lubmarlne signalled for me to come
aboard lt
"The captain, who ipoke broken
English, looked over my papen and
kept, one or two to certify thit he
hid sunk our ship. Then he told me
to get my men Into life bolts.'',
Georgeson raid he knew where
he wu md thit he wu "certain
we could retch land or be picked
up by ships which I knew were
ln the vicinity."
Ba md the crew had Ume to get
only a few belongings, but the Utt
boats were "fully provisioned because we were afraid something
like this would happen."
The young cabin boy, enroute to
England to visit hli mother, Mrs.
InglE
r. Le
J, Lewis, declired he "wasn't scared
a bit but I got a little seasick after m hour or two in the life boat.''
Staples Dinnerware Groceries
Sale of SUBSTANDARD TOWELS
6 dozen beautiful TurKish Towels in a new design.     ■_
Slightly substandard. Would sell if perfect at 59caQc
each. Each  . _—-mWmW
MILLENDS of COTTON TWEEDS
These hardwearing tweeds are ideal for Boys' suits, _   _
partts, girls' skirts, slacks, etc. All 36" wide. Reg. aQC
value 59c. Yard  _.-—-w'^
Bleached Sheets
for Less
just 3 dozen of these and
no mort ro be had, Wabasso make. Size 69x87.
All perfect goods. Regular $1.19. Each
79'
Reversible
Two-Tone
BED THROWS
Cosy wool throws In lovely pa.«*el shades of gold
blues, rose gold, green
gold, rose green. Size
66x80. Special price
,98
H
Oddments in WOOL BLANKETS
•
English sample blankets. These are slightly soil
ed. Double bed sizes and values to $5.95 each.  $ A*69
Clearance at, each __—____.._	
36" SHADOW CLOTH
Shades that will tone with any interior scheme. 6
color combinations for.your selection. Reg. value
39c. Yard : : !	
CLEARANCE OF DINNERWARE
Here's your chance to buy odd lines of fine English din nerware at greatly reduced prices. "St. Vincent,"
"Broom", "Poppyland" and Myotts' "Crowning", Every piece perfect end everything excepting cups and.
saucers. Don't miss this opportunity.'■ ,' "" :_'
EACH PIECE 1-3 OF ORIGINAL PRICE
SERVICE GROCERIES - at Groceteria Prices
ON SALE TODAY, SATURDAY AND MONDAY
PORK 8HOUl.Or.RS-* f|i
Union; Lb.
PUREX TISSUE-
3 rolls  -
COCOA—Fry's, Vt Ib.
tlna. Each ... .....
MARMALADE—Sun-
tlpt, 4aj Tin .___-_.	
PITTED 0ATE8-
Fresh; 2 Iba. __...
RAISINS—Sultana
Auitrallan; 2 Iba.	
MILK—Charub, Tall
tlna; t ter   __..
BACON—Premium
Sliced; Par Ib, i	
TUNA   FI8H-
Sclld Meat '/,.;
Sn....__. W
*--Y
20*?
m
m
23*
25U
39*
Lux Flakee: Large cartons, each  22f
Fels Naptha Soap: 3 cakes  2Sf.
Palmolive Soap: 4 cakes  Mty
Oval tlna: 16 ex. tins  98*
Tomato Soup: Campbell's, 3 tins  25.
As advertised in McCalla Magaxlne.
m
BUTTER-Hudsonla*,t>f M
lit Grade; S Iba. _ 9*-*"-t
CHEESE—Hunter'a!/«'•; *AA
Per pkg. , **»r
GHERKINS—MeLar.
an'a; 14 oz. bottles _
JAM—Strawberry, Sun-
line, 4's; Tin _...........
33*
57*
193   PHONES   194
SOCKIYI SALMON- «M
Blue Seal '/a's; 8 tlna iST
TOMATOES-Aylmer,
2's squat; 2 tins
CORN—Aylmsr, Golden Bantam, 17 oa.;
2 for	
PEAS-No. 8 Royal
City, 17 oz.; 2 tine ._
TOMATO JUICE—
Libby's 20 oa.; 2 tine
ORANGES- Sweet
and Juicy; 2 doi, ._
PASTRY FLOUR-
B A KJ 7 Ib. sacks „
21*
23*
17*
.55*
_29*
GRAPEFRUIT-
."£'23*
deGans Brothers Win Ihe Forslund
Aggregate Prize al Edgewood Fair
EDGEWOOD, B. ti — deGans
Brothers carried ott the Captain
Forslund special award for gaining
most points in field and garden
produce and flower classes, at tht
annual Edgewood and Inonoaklin
Valley fair. Results of the tint day's
judging follow:
DAIRY PRODUCI ■
Milk, fresh—Mrs. W. Shlpmaker,
first, deGans Bros, second; and Mis,
3. Pender, third.
Cretin, fresh—deGans Bros, tint;
Mrs. Pender, tecond.
Butter, i plain wrapped—Jowett
Bros, fint; Mrs. Shlpmaker, second.
Butter, 7 days old—deGant Bros,
first; Jowett Bros, second.
Dressed fowl—deGans Bros, first;
Jowett Bros, second.
Hens eggs, white—Mrs. Klein,
first.
Hens eggs, brown—Jowett Bros,
flnt; Miss A. Boothby, second.
Hens eggs, tinted—Mn. Pender,
first; Donselaar Bros, second.
Collection of dairy produce, five
exhibits—Mrs. Klein, first; deGans
Bros, second.
FIELD PRODUCE
Whett In straw—deGans Bros,
tint Donselaar Bros, second.
Oats ln straw—Donselaar Bro).
first; deGans Bros, second.
Barley in straw—Donselaar Bros,
first; deGans Bros, second.
Wheat, soft 18 pounds — W. J.
Loughery, fint
Balkans Walch Belligerents lor Any
Action Which Threatens Neutrality
 .JaJL  •■-■
BUD/LPEST, Sept. 14 (KP).-^tit-
tral nations In southeastern Europe
watched Italy, Soviet Russia and
Germany today for any move which
might draw them into the war now
raging at the Balkan's front door.
Many government leaden feel
continuation of southeastern Europe's neutrality in the conflict and
peace among the Balkan states depend on what courses are pursued
within the next few weeks by the
three powers.
Political figures pointed out that
any attempt of Russia to take Rumania's Bessarabia or Polish Gallcla,
a German threat to use Hungarian
railroads for troop movements
against southeastern Poland, or warlike gestures by Italy would be
enougb to ignite war flames in this
corner of Europe.
Hungary, with German troops
along her northern border and the
Polish war Just IM miles from her
capital, appeared ln the most precarious position,
Hungarian Foreign Minister Count
Stafan Csaky's most recent trip to
Berlin was quickly followed by
Premier Paul Tclesy's speech stressing again Hungary's determination
to stay neutral.
But all tne southeastern countries
sre watching Germany for indications of what ahe mieht do to nuke
certain this "quiet productive work"
ia carried on for her benefit—that
supplies from this area will be
shipped to her and not to the allies.
Britain and France have been
sending buyers into the little Danube nationa with often ln gold for
their producta. Some circles reported many ot these offers have been
accepted.
First Indication of Natl reaction
was a public protest trom Berlin
yesterdsy In which Britain wu
charged with "interfering with the
economic neutrality" ot small nations.
This was followed by announcement from Rumania that Dr. Claudius, chief of the German Finance
Ministry's economic department,
was going to Bucharest Friday to
discuss exports to the Reich, chiefly
oil, and a payment plan, now that
war makes barter difficulL
Significantly, this flying trip to
Bucharest follows closely upon the
announcement that Rumania hu accepted large orden from Britain,
France and Holland.
Obierven said perhaps the greatest threat to Balkan neutrality ts
the possibility Germany may use
"pressure" to corner the oil grain,
metals and other product* ot what
she calls here "lebensraum"—living
snace.
Oata, 18 poundt—deGans Bros,
tint; Donselaar Bros., second
Field peu, 18 pounds—deGans
Bros, tint; deGana Bros, second.
Alfalfa, sheaf hay—deGans Bros,
first; Donselaar Bros, second.
Clover, Alsike—Donselaar Bros,
tint; deGant Bros, second.
Field oarrots—W. Boothby, tint;
J. Egloff, second.
Swede turnips—W. Boothby, tint;
Mn. W. Jowett, second.
Mangels or sugar beeto—deGans
Bros, first; W. Boothby, second.
Potatoes, early—W. Boothby, tint;
W. Shiplaker, second. '     *
Potatoes, late—W. Boothby, tint
Collection of field roots— W.
Boothby, flnt; Mri. W. Jowett, aecond.
QARDEN PRODUCE
Beans, runner—deGans Bret, first
Beans, dwarf—deGans Bros, tint
Beans, pole—deGans Bros., tint;
H. P. Coates, second
Beets, Globe—Mias G. Munn, Nakusp, flnt; Mn. W. Jowett, second.
Swedes table—W. Boothby, first;
W. Boothby, second.
Onions, flat—E. Nash, tint; W. J.
Loughery, second.
Onions, globe—deGans Bros, first;
Mn. W. Jowett second.
Tomatoes, ripe—J. Egloff, flnt;
Mn, W. Jowett second.
Tomatoes, green—E. Naih, tint;
Mn. J. Pender, second.
Carrots, intermediate — Mrs, G-
Munn, first; Mrs. J. Pender, second.
Pannlps — deGana Bros., tint;
Mrs. W. Jowett second.
Corn, sweet stripped—E. Nash,
tint; W. Boothby, second.
Cabbage, Savoy—E. Nash, tint;
J. Egloff, second
Cabbage, late—deGans Bros., tint;
W. Boothby, second.
Cabbage, red—deGans Bros,, tint;
E. Null, second.
Cauliflowei—E. Nuh, tint; W.
Boothby, second.
Cucumber, outdoor—W. 3. Loughery, tint; deGans Bros, second.
Citron—Hugo Klein, tint; Mrs.
Jordan Williams, second.   •
Squuh—E. Nuh, first' W. J.
Loughery, second.
Pumpkin, yellow—E. Nash, first;
W. Boothby, second.
Vegetable marrow — J. Egloff,
flnt; deGans Bros, second.
Garden peas, dried—Mn. J. Pender, first
Beans, white, dried — deGans
Bros, tint
Beans, colored, dried—Mn Pender, fint .   .
Potatoes, early — W. Boothby,
flnt; Mrs. W. Shlpmaker, second.
Potatoes, late-W. Boothby, flnt;
W. J. Loughery, second.
Collection vegetables, 8 varieties
-W. Boothby, tint; Mn. J. Pender,
second.
Priie for largest pumpkin in fair
—Miss G. Munn, Nakusp.
fruit  , ■;;',•
Applet:
Wealthy — Mn. O. Briggeman,
firat: Mn J. Pender, second
Gravensteln—Mn. G. Briggeman,
firat.
Any other variety, Fall—Mrs. G.
Briggeman, tint; Mrs. J. Pender,
second
Mcintosh-Mn. O. Briggeman,
tint.
Wagener —Mn. O. Briggeman,
fint; Mrs. J. Pender, second
Northern Spy-Mrs. O. Brigge-
mtn, first
Delicious—No lint; Mrt. Pender,
second.    .
Jonathan—Mn. G. Briggeman,
flnt; Mrs. J. Pender, tecond
Any other variety, Winter—Mn.
G. Briggeman, tint
Crabapples—Jowett Bros- tint
Other fruits:
Peachea — Mn. G. Briggeman,
first; Mn. O. Briggemtn, tecond.
Petn. Bartlett—Mn. Briggeman,
flnt; Mn. Pender, tecond
Pean, any other variety, Mn. W.
Jowett first; Jowett Bros, seoond.
Plums, yellow—Mn. J. Pender,
tint; Jowett Bros, second
Plums, red or blue—Jowett Broe.
flnt
Plums, any other variety—Jowett
Bros., fint; Mn. Briggemtn, tecond
Collection plums and prunes —
Jowett Broi. tint
Stnwberries-J. Egloff, tint
FLOWERS
Alters—MN. G. Briggeman, tint;
Mn. W. Jowett tecond.
Gladioll-W. Boothby, flnt
Dahliaa-H, P. Coatei, first; Mn.
J. Watson, second
Pansies-Mrs. F. A. Nesbitt tint;
Mn. W. Jowett second.
Zinnias—Mn. W. Jowett tint
Sweet peu, ona color—Mrt. W.
Jowett tint
Bouquet—Mn; T. A. Nesbitt flnt;
Mn. J. Wataon, aecond.
Table' decoration—Mn. T. A. Nesbitt fint; Mn. W. Jowett second.
House plant»-Mn. F, A. Nesbitt
tint; Mrs. J. B. McLeod, second.
Grand Challenge Cup donated by
the late Captain Forslund to the exhibitor scoring the most points in
Field and Garden Produce and Flowen—deGant Broi.
DOMESTIC SCIENCE
Lemon pie—Mn. A. L. Williami,
firat; Mn. F. B. Neibitt second
Apple pie—Mrs. Boothby, tint;
Mn. L. J. deGans, second; tnd Mn.
J. Klein, third
Uniced fruit cake—Mn. L. J. deGans, 1st Mrs. Loughery, 2nd.
Jelly roll-Mra. J. Klein, finf
Mn. L. J. deGans, tecond
Shortbretd—Mn. J. B. McLtod
tint; Miss J. Wttson, second.
Ginger bread—Mn. Watson, tint;
Mrs. Loughery, second
Parker House rolls—Mn. Sims,
tint; Mn. Webster, second
Cherry ttke—Mn. Donielatr,
tint; Mn. Loughery, tecond.
Jams—Mn. Klein, tint; Mn. Pender, second.
Jellies-Mn. Klein, tint; Mist A.
Boothby, second
Canned fruit—Mn. L. J. deGans,
fint; Miss N. Naylor, aecond
Canned vegetable.—Mrt. L. J.
deGans, flnt
Pickles-Mra. L, J. deGana, lint.
Collection of cooking—Mn. L. J.
deGant, first; Mn. J. Klein, second.
Collection of cooking, girls and
boyt—Eileen deGana, flnt; Eileen
Sims, tecond; and Adeline Boothby,
third.
Tet bltcuit competition—Mb. Pender, fint; Mn. Boothby, second; tnd
Mn. C: A. Manhall, third.
White bread—Mn. L. J. deGant,
fint; lira. Donselaar. tecond, and
Mra. C. A. Marshall, third
SEWING, KNITTING, ETC.
Women'i sweater—Mn. R. A. Yeld,
first; Mn. J. Coates, second.
Any article, knitted—Mn. R. A.
Yeld tint; Miss Blackman, second.
Luncheon cloth, colored embroidery-Mrs. F. A. Nesbitt lint; Mrs.
Keifer, Burton, second;
Table centre—Mn. H. Murton,
tint; Mrs. J. B. McLeod, second.
Pair of pillow sllps-Mre. H. Mur.
ton. tint
Cutwork, anv article — Mn. H.
Murton, second.
Crochet work—Miss Margaret deGans, tint; Mn. Keffer, Burton,
■econd.
Crou stltch-Mn. 3. B. McLeod. <
fint; Miss C. deGans, tecond
Three pot holders—Mn. L. J. deGans, 1st; Mrs. Kennedy, Arrow
Park, 2nd.
Sofa cushion, woollen—Mist Dor. ,
It Wttson, 1st Mrs. Jones, 2nd.
Sofa cushion, any other variety-
Mrs. Allardice, 1st; Mn. H. Murton,
2nd and Miu Margaret deGans, 3rd
Fancy apron,—Mn. Kennedy, Arrow Park, 1st; Mn. R. A. Yeld, 2nd
Print Apron—Mn. Lyoni, Arrow
Ptrk, lit; Mri.' deGens, 2nd.
Print morning dress—Mn. deGtnt,
lit; Mn. J. Klein, 2nd
Dreued  doll for  girl*—Hedwlg I
Kleia, 2nd
Rag rug—Mn. Shlpmaker, lit;
Mrs. F. A. Nesbitt, 2nd
Coll. of three trticles made from
flour ucks—Mrs. Briggeman, 1st;
Mrs. Klein, 2nd; Mn. C. A. Marshall, 3rd.
Hindlcraft-Mn.  Allardice,   lit;
Mlu J. Watson, 2nd; Mn. Yeld, Jrd -
tnd G. Glouon, special prize.
SCHOOL CHILDREN
Article made by girls—Eileen deGant, 1st; Grace Lindsay, 2nd; and
Ruth Lindsay, 3rd
Article made by boys—Hugo Klela
lit; Tommy Webster, 2nd
WOMENS INSTITUTE
Baby's Layette exhibition—But*.
ton Women's Institute, tint; Edge-
wood Women'i Institute, second;
Arrow Park Women's Institute, 3rd
Lumberton Men Enlist
LUMBERTON, B. C—JC Lewli and
J. Mason of Lumberton have enlisted for active tervlce ln the Canadian Forcei.     .   .   ,   , ,        . -']
Me
SORE FEET
THIS WAY
Rnb in Minard'a liniment generously,
and feel the relief ttetl over the aching
muscles and joints. For aU muscle ana
joint peine, aches and stiffoata, sprained
anklet, twisted limbe—Minard'a haa
been famous for over 80 yeara; Good
for dandruff ud ikin disorder^ too.
Gtt a bottle today; keep tt _mm
lundy. Kh
ARD'S
INIMENT
m
m
tm^—^^
 	
	
Ml FOUR •
Quitting School Because Youth
Has Failed Can Be His Wont Move
You'll
•RAND
Golden Sweet Corn
Inalit on th*
BEST!
>   ly GARRY C. MYIRS, Ph.D
Ltit Jun* a good nur youthi
tailed to graduate with thtlr high
school clau or te win promotion.
Far too many of them ire not going
bick. While • vtry ttw of these will
find employment moit will not ud
thoie who will bt employed will
probably takt thi plices of older or
mort deserving penoni.
Ot course, lt Is not it all euy for
the youth who hu failed to muster
up courage to go back thli Fall to
finiih the Job. Already atung with
defut, he might feel hii Inferiority
mora keenly If be wut back. At
ltut he thinks io, But If ht only
uted hii reuon, he would iee that
ichoolmatea ud neighbor! Hike
would wteem hla tir more highly
if he returned to Khool and plodded
on, with pirn determination to
finiih th* Job, thu lt he ran away
ud accepted defut with no more
"fight" in him. In a few yun he
will ilio think much more highly
of himself, if he provu now that
he'i not a quitter.
I wish I might lit down ln a quiet
place to reaion with the boy who
ASK YOUR CROCK FOR
D MEDAL
T EXTRACT
,   DARK, UGHT, ITOOTIX AND HOP FLAVOR
!    Highest Quality — The Best for Your Money
M.C. DleWbutora: JAMU MARTIN * 00, Vancouver, B.C.
J'-it
OLD
DUTCH
CLEANSER
I.***
look!
rJC£-7i~
i a way to maka etaaabie eaater.
b gritty cteanaerra. Rs-smaxiber
i bathtub, waahbaeln, and
HbitJjs&tiWt ami atataa and make cleaning harder. Uao only Old Dutoh, tha
eleaneer that doeant scratch, becauae H ia
tnad*w«hS<5iamotit<%
. And here*a another tlme-iaving, atep.
earing euggeetlon: keep a package of Old
I I>is*toyixKkls__i_^bas_iroom,laiindry
and garage. Then you have thla aafa
cleanier handy for cleaning porcelain,
enamel, painted wood week, Hnnlwim, and
Individual WM A. ROGERS Silver Pl<it,>d
SALT and PEPPER SHAKERS
2 Fair* for ONLY 35e* •
<___t- sjsl», too. _o-n> sso lop. Itw sjssqr sUHni and
cl.sttsfcu. Man. bf Onddss, Us. Vm mar orsW ss.
masty met m taatn— Offtr apod onl- fa, Cssssssdss ssssd
sWud ts> pttitt -sspplj. M mill coupon. MOWI
OLDDUICHCLMWaEltDsjptaiSa
*4 MtttgMm Av-- Toronto, Ont,
ItauK-Mhw otbsisWm pkum fcta Old
Daks, ktsth (or comp-st. Ut-U) nd « for
•jrtsich pimm and mt Ht, Wm. A. Bosstn lak
and Pepper •Sbaiatt. MOTBl Bend Ht tot 1 04
iSmlt
Dots., MUt Utt weh Mt ol > ftam,
,\m*mmt
!<*_...
hu ibout mid* up hli mind set ta
return te high ichool thli Fall, whtn
he knowi he should; or with tht girl
ln i likt iltuition.
I ihould try to get the boy to iet
thit relatively few at ichool would
know b* ii * "rtptiter," ud thit
theu Mon would forgtt about it;
that h* miy havt this opportunity
Juit this time; that even if ht wished to return to Khool i ftw yean
liter, lt would be much harder thu
now.
I ihould try te help him iet that
an employer would be far more likely to give him a Job If he flnlihed
school, ud would be Impressed with
his perseverince if he kept on going to ichool in tht face of great
discouragements; that moreover, he
would bt better prepared tn later
lift to face big difficultly and overcome them, because ot facing and
overcoming thli difficulty counge-
ouily; thit he cu't ifford to run
away Just becauie tht battle la
severe.
We wish that mort icbooli ware
idipttd te th* youth who hu failed,
upecially If book leirnlng hu been
herd for him; alio that more teachen undentood iuch ■ youth, *o
they might help him It ichool to
turn te whit h* cu lucceed In doing. It there were more of iuch understanding tnd guidance, thtrt
wculd be fewer failures.
Muy of those who failed have
been poor reader*. It ii not too late
to help them to reid better, tf they
cu bt Induced to read at home
from material far euler thu that
ot high ichool level, ud to reed
te very young children for their enjoyment
If your high ichool bu already
itarted lta Fall term. It ihould not
be too lite for you te go tuck ud
reiume your itudiu. Go ud iee
your principil for idvlce.
SOLVING PARENT PR0BLIMJ
Q. Suppose you had a boy of fourteen who In a fit of rage threw
books he had ln his huds aerou tht
th* floor. Would you cammud him
thm and there to pick up thoie
booki*
A. Not If I had the bralm I wu
bora with.
0. Why doea It happen thit iome
girll ot tht freshman class ot the
high Khool have data with lenior
boyi, and iom* of tht tenlor girli
date up with college itudtnts?
A. Pagt Grandma Nature. A girl
betwten IS ud IS li from one to
three yean older biologically than
a boy who hu lived juit M long
u she haa.
NILION DAILY NIWI. NILION. •.t**y-FRIOAY MORNINO. HFT. 11. USS.
SERIAL STORY . . .
Lob ol Gaiety
If You Tune In
Dear Mlu Chatfleld:
I*v« been married for nln* yun
and havt two lovely children. * boy
ud girl. At twenty-four I im dis-
couriged ud disappointed ln whit
I expected to be the moit wonderful pirt of life. I h*v* been out of
t business office Just long enough
te hivt tbt btbits ud you know
what thii mum: working Iniide tht
bom* ud ouUlde too.
My husband Is tbe bat man ln
th* world, stays at horn* when h*
im't working doesn't drink, i» devoted to the children in* to tne. So
I am not iorry thit I married, but
I am unhappy because I would like
a little fun out of life ud am not
hiving lt In tha nln* yean be hai
never taken me to but one party,
ln tact be takea me nowhere. Could
not yeu tell m* lomething to put a
heart in me? B. L.
Aniw*n
My dtv girt, yon hav* the block*
to build a lovely bouse of heppln*
ess, only trouble being that you
got married before you wer* old
uough to understand building ud
Immediately got weighted down
with carei that have kept you from
learning bow to use the blocks ln
hud. .   .
Wlvu »lwiyi hiv* to make the
pleuure plui. luggeat the gamei
ud teach their husbands how to
play. Now think up some weyi ud
meani of hiving fun. Picnic time
lin't yet put. What about asking
•om* young coupl*, In elrcumitanc-
ea like yours, to go picnicking with
you—taking the children Ilong?
What about putting your suppers
together iome evenings, tint at
one home ud then at another?
What about getting someone to stay
with tha babies one evening a week
while you and your husband go to
the movies?
You'll be surprised how one giy
evening now ud again will lift
your spirits.
All tht music md dancing, laughing and talking which we hear over
the radio wm ilwiyi In the air
but wt didn't hear a bit of it until
tht geniuses with miracles of invention brought it to us, and told
ua to put up our antennae and pick
it out of the air. Lift li like this for
every one ot us: here for us If wi
will hint in ind pick It up; tht
music ll furnished out wt hive to
do our Own dancing; ud lucky wt
are if we hive t partner.
JtuitL fo/L*
cHoiim-mw-iL
By BETSY NEWMAN
t " ! "    "
TODAY'S MENU
Broiled steak Baked Potatoei
Vegetable Salad Bowl
Dressing
Bot Biscuits       Qrapea
Coffste .
VEGETABLE SALAD BOWL
WITH DRESSING
One-half head lettuce, four shell-
td hard-oooked eggi, two peeled
medium tomatoei, one-fourth pound
Americu cheue, one large peeled
onion, minced, one-half cup iliced
cooked beeti, one-hilf eup iweet
mixed plcklei, lix larga itufftd
oliva, six radishes, dressing.
Break up Or cut tht wished lettuce ud line a ulad bowl with lt
Dice the eggs, tomatoei and the
cheat. Tou with the remaining
ingredlenti except the dressing and
arruge in the ulad bowL Chill.
DRESSING
; Juit before serving'pour dreu-
Ing over all;, tou ud serve. Servei
six. Tbe dressing requiru one peel-
ed garlic bud, one-half cup chilled
ulad or olive oil, one-hilf cup
tarragon or wine vinegar, one teaipoon Worcestershire-type sauce,
one teaspoon prepared mustard,
one teaspoon granulated lugar, one
tablespoon mayonnaise, one-eighth
teaapoon paprika, three-quartert
teaspoon salt, speck pepper.
Mince the garlic bud very fine.
Add all the other Ingredlenti and
beat thoroughly together. Serve
over vegetable sated DowL (Tested
by Good Houiekeeplng Institute.)
BROILED  MACKEREL
Ii the silvery mackerel your fa-
#
Always ■ ji
$0
QUESTION?
How io-i$ M Alec fceep
fating lh a fwo-year-oM toH ?
H k* wtr* reely rick, fce'd tee
tha setter r«..
To pt well, lee your doctor! Te
b«p weU, watch your habits I It'i
better te add "hoik" lo your
diet thu to make frequent use
'of harsh cathartics.
I every Manual IMS wayi
Knotrlnglt'tioporteiitto ett enough
"bulk" erery day to guard animt
Incomplete rllmin«tssM,«liisxris»in*-i,
Alee ute KsJls^'sBruFlakat-Mry
morning. UekttptM
TASU 6000?Ton hetl Crlip,
' KaDogg'a Brtn Flaka win on tottt alone!
Eeonomissd, toot Now they cost yoa Uu
than *v*r. Order the golden-yellow package
todiy. Made by Kellogg'a in London, Canadi.
TWO QUICK FACTSt
OTo smui tht dtpreswi-f
tftteta of inoompltt*
elimination, th* head-
tcbtt, dullness, yon need
enouah ''bulk" to keep
the food rata moving
promptly and completely]
Thoasands now enjoy tht
benefits ot bran in thii
delicious torm. Every dty,
they tit Kellogg's Bra*
Flakea. Besides being
mildly laxative, KeUogg'l
Bras Flakes vith other
arts of whut, supply
parts ot wm
health-giving
proteins.
vorit* fish? Then broil a whole
iplit mackerel or fillets. Melt two
tiblespooni butter, add ult and
ont teaspoon finely-chopped mint
Pour over broiled fish. Leave in
ovtn ant minute with th* door
optn. Strv* at once.
HADDOCK  IN  CELERY   SAUCE
For haddock Ip celery uuce, boil
the haddock in fish stock. Serve
with celery uuce. For thi! cook
diced celery tn water to cover until
tender. Drain.
To the water add equal amount
milk. To tach cup liquid uit two
teblupoom butter ud two tablespoons flour. Melt butter. Add flour
When boiling; add milk alowly.
Cook. Seuon with ult ud pepper.
Add cooked celery. Pour sauce over
fiih. Garnish with chopped leavu.
'■'"'" FISH A LA KINO ' ;
Try FUh a la King at that next
•upper party! Melt three tablespoons butter *nd itir in thru
tablespoons flour. When boiling
ilowly add two cupi milk, itirrlng
constantly. When thickened, add
one chopped pimento, one-hall cup
chopped musnroomi ud one-half
cup diced celery. Add two table-
ipooni lemon juice to two cups
cooked fish, flaked. Add to uuce.
season with ult paprlki and one-
fourth teupoon nutmeg. Juit before terving idd one beiten egg to
enrich md bind th* mixturt. Do
not over-cook.    •
SALMON WITH EGG 8AUCE
It madt by cooking the fish ln
flih itock. (Stock is water with
ult vinegar or lemon Juice idded to mtkt fish firm ud white;
to givt flavor, onloni, loup
greens, cirrots, bay-leat and pep-
Sscorns ire added to the water),
ook eight minutes ptr pound.
Serve with white uuce that hu
one hird-botled chopped egg
added for uch cup of sauce uied.
Hollandalse, ihrlmp, lobster, oy-
itera ud caper uuce ..are other
taity combinitions.
MR. AND MRS. |. JEROMI
SOUTH SLOCAN. INFANT
DAUGHTER, CHRISTENED
' SOUTH StOCAN, B. C.-The Rev.
Father McGuire who hai lately
been appointed in chtrge ot Pu-
iih srf tive Sloan District officiated
it the .christening of the lnfmt
daughter of Mr. and Mn. John H.
Jerome. The child wu given the
nune "Gill Cttherlnt Ann". The
Sionaori were Mn. Mariery Mc-
ofhim ud Douglu McDonald.
The baby'i grandmother, Mrs. Jerome, Sr., of Nelion attended al
well u other memben of the family. __
King and Queen
Visit Docks
LONDON, Sept M <CP) - The
King ud Queen vtolted the London
docki today, lnipectlng varloui linen ud coastwise ihip*.
liie Queen visited two of the
ipecial giragu that have been wt
uide for the London itpbuluce
service.
TORONTO (CP)—Softball ll a
good gime for glrli, a iportwrittr
htrt believu. ft act! ai an all-
round body toner, bring! forth
gnoe, quicknui and natural ability.
You'll wy Ifa handy!
Jet Stove Polish
eltani cooking hot store*. Dou not
blacken ud can't explode..
At All I. C. Store*
PHANTOM RANCH
By ORIN ARNOLD
lien ana nil oesi suk sniri, uuu
I bright yellow one used it
xis, ind to waih out ud dry
iome   deu   underwear.   He
•YNOPSII
LORENA HAMILTON hu Mm* to
Arliona te visit hir unci*
GEORGE BRAZEE, awnar of Phantom ranch, whou Ittdlne tow-
beys *r*
JERRY DALE, oollne-bnd ntw-
oomir, who ll fuelnitad by Lor-
•nt, tnd
SHOT ROGER!, wht flndi hlmulf
la Itvt with htr,
a   a   *
YESTERDAY: Rogm glvu Lortn*
a f*w pointers on hindllng *
gun, than teaches htr how to manipulate Indian imoke signals.
CHAPTER 11
Mr. Shot Rogen, quite till ind
straight  ud  very  youthful  det-
Sit* the mtturity tchleved during
U lint qutrter-oentury of lift,
btgu non ifter dinner to pre-
part for tht evening's duce Before two o'clock ln fact he wu Industriously polishing hli boot! ln
the coml. Midnight ut nur him,
giving verbal help.
"You hu to get all the manure
off first Mr. Shot" the blick lid
avowed. "You caln't cover lt up
Ju' with polish."
Midnight took tbt booti Juit to
demonstrate ud ended by doing
tha whole Job.
Next Shot gave attention to hii
trousen.
Ht had comt to tht Phutom
rancho with hii clothing Ind iuch
in tht customary duffel bag. Duffel
wrinkle things badly. Shot had to
pay fat Concha, the Mexican woman, a quarter to press hts best
trousers and his best silk shirt that
wu
rodeos,
him
swapped haircuts with another cow
boy—doing and getting a surprisingly good Job, incidentally—then
took a bath ln the crude shower
arrangement which the men used
In a boardetf-up shack out rear. He
whooped and hollered when he
turned on the water, ud when he
had soaped himself he bunt Into
long: ,
"Rollicking dayi, frollicklng diys,
Out on tbe open range.
Heir you the iwish ot the lartat'i
loopl
The throw! The catch! The Jubilant
whoop
Ot the cowboy whou daring
And generoui ihiring
Of work and ot pleasure
Bring Joy to the ra-*-uge!
Ho-o-o-o-o for the wutern ruge!
EB-YKOW1"
He wu really pretty good with
it even lt he did mix up Ihe words
some ud Insert a lot of ta-ta-ta-
tumi ud sundry shrieks ud yells.
All of it totalled limply a keen
anticipation of the night'i pleasure and a genenl ebullience of
spirits thli day. The noise wai
echoed by hii compuloni and nobody would have ever suspected
thit tht Phantom ranch wu bedeviled with troublt of the most
serloui kind
Meanwhile, Mn. Bratee too, Ud
a corn ot six Mexicu women or
girli nad been slaving. They had
shooed Lorena away from the house
after she and Midnight brought in
armfuls of long green vines.
"This li your party, honey," Aunt
Sally had betmed. You CU work
on the next one when you aren't
tbe new guut of honor.
Loreni didn't even know what
refreshment! were being prepared,
or any ot the detail!. She wu Just
instructed to dress up her prettiest
ud have a good time. t
She had planned to be entirely
dressed ud rudy by nine, the usual starting houn of
trousen of fine weiv*. ihort ef rich
miroon-red madru with tl* of th*
ume material ud fluffed handkerchief of the um* doth ihowlng
in th* breut pocket of hi* eoit
"Yeah, look! extry nice," Shot
repeated. He avoided the other
young mu's eyei. "I hope lt don't
rain no more,'' he uid. Into the
room's space.
He hadn't ailed Lorena, u directed to do ud now the orchestra
of Mexlcu men started tuning up
in their corner of the dining room
ao Shot Just listened. All tt once
Loreni entered th* room behind
Shot He turned when he hurd
her uy hello, but Jerry Dtl* al
ready wu at her tide.
In a quick forceful motion, Jerry
took ber ud duced off.
No other oouplei were In yet
ilthough both Oeorge ud Silly
peered ln u thi music begin. They
were looking happily at the three
young people now, alone on tha
floor.
Loreni'i mouth dropped In mr-
prise whtn Jerry grabbed her.
Quite unconsciously sht dinced a
few steps with him. Then iht abruptly itopped, almost tripping and
looked confusedly at Shot Rogen.
The music ceased then, too, uve
for a violin trying to whine itielf
into tun*.
"Go onl Play!" Jerry called out
forcing ber to duce. He wu grinning broadly, having a grand ume.
"No," uld Lorena. "I—"
Shot wu itarlng, ipellbound. He
held hli great felt sombrero, carefully brushed tonight ud now he
extended lt involuntarily to them
u if in supplication. He reddened,
ud swallowed bard.
"Come on with that muilc!" he
yelled "Duce kid."
Three or four other people, early
arrivals, had heard the calling and
the first music ud they ctme into
the living room looking expectant
happy, but curious now, too. Shot
Rogen turned to glance at them,
then turned back to look at Jerry
ud Lorena In mid-floor.
Lorena itopped flat-footed ud
Jerked her armi free of Jerry. Sbe
wu furious and showed lt
"Stop it!" the mapped "Cu't
you tte I—"
"Nuts!" Hid Jerry Dale, itill grinning and reaching for her again.
"Anybody u iweet u you hu got
to dance nd I'm the one to itart
the-"
He didn't finish.
From somewhere a fist streaked
out A very firm flat, ln lightning-
like mineouvre, Just once.
"Uhn-n-n!" murmured Jerry Dale
u It going to ileep, which Indeed
be wat.
To Be Continued.
Protect Ihe Skin
When Out Doors
By DONNA GRACE
It may uem too lite in tbe ueton
to telk ibout tu ud trecklu, but
during tht Summer it'i ill a matter
of when wt txpou the ikin te tot
sun. Thou who iptnd mott of tht
Summer out ot doon tn tlrtady
nlct ud brown, but ttw lew who
take lata vacation* ud have ipent
meet of the tlmt ln town must ivoid
tbt tint exposure u tf lt wtrt early
Summer.
Some women feel * otrtein relief
from the daily um of miktup whilt
thty tn out on thut drives, ud
thtt ther ar* glvtng th* (Ua ■ rut
Then li no benefit from thii kind
ot chug*, ti muy htvt discovered.
Tbt comblnttion ot wind ud tun.
■long with tht dust of tht road, will
alwayi prov* u ordeil for thi complexion.
Ill* mart girl ud woman will
hav* her bttuty box tlong ud will
mtkt um ot th* aun tea lotioni and
Sun gltiMi will tdd to oni's coo-
tort ud rut tht tyu so thtt thtr*
will bt no squint wrlnklu.
Ther* m alwayi itop* to mix*
ilong th* wiy ud every womu
llku to look her best when she
dons a treih outfit to go to tha hotel
dlntng room.
We believe the h*ir thould b*
covered ud protected An oecuton-
•1 ninnlng will b« good for it but
never permit .th* hair to becom*
dry and htrsh. 	
Without hin, your cottons
or linens (ao white what*
new) tak* oa a yellow doge.
To raitora thalr lovely
WHITENESS-just add t
awlshortwoofReckitt'iBlae
to the last rhtst. No effort
Coat? Aeeatottwoasaonthl
Reckitt's BLUE
Prtventt Your Qotbet Turning Ytlkw
Kentucky  town,
ducu in her
but Aunt Sally
told her to be retdy by eight.
"I declare. Shot!" Mn. Brazee
exclaimed, "it you ain't scrubbed
yourself raw! Go on in the living
room and call Lorena son."
"Whewl" Shot breathed, impressed.
"Look! pretty good, eh Rogen?"
Shot turned to ue Jerry Dale
anirklng it him from i sidt door.
"Why, uh, yei. It ihore doei."
Jerry ihook a little  In lubdued
lucklii
ud down. —    	
suit a double breasted affair ln
collegiate cut light tu coat and
chuckling, eyeing the cowboy
He wore, his best towir
up
OFF
POTS ANO PANS
No need to .crape and acrub
in slimy water. A solution* ot
Qillett's Pure Flake Lye juat
lift* off greaae layers... loosena
hard-baked food . .. takes the
drudgery out of washing
Keep • tin always handyl
up.
•am aHiiern ly In hat rntut. th.
oetlmisftnalflemU
tilt.
turn sooaatT *-iu o.-*t's u*
■oddtt Mb Item ttm nweihl rlmstmt
dlMWit dOffM draiM a • • ntpt cut-
W-ttMtdwntBdodott-iwbydwtwir-i-g
tbe eontettt of the doaet... how It
performi doawa of tfuln. Send for a
fret copy to Standard Branda Ltd.,
fmaer Ate. nd Liberty Street,
Toronto, Ont.
fm irebrnin'j thlr WH«
of catsup-' The cat didn't
«eam to tike ii /
Today's SPECIAL Feature
Chipso
Urge
Size
CHEESE: Kraft, limit lib.
COCOA: Rowntrees _
CHOCOLATE KOTE!1~
TAU MILK: All brands __
MIRACLE WHIP: 32 ox. _
PEANUT BUTTER: Bulk _
BLACKJIGS.,—.__
PEARL SOAP: Limit 8...._
LIFEBUOY SOAP: Limit 6.
MALT VINEGAR -~
PEASORCORN	
SALMON: Sockeye, Vi'i—
TOMATO JUICE: lO'/a oi. _
GRAPEFRUIT JUICE: 47 oi.
ARROW ROOT BISCUITS _
RITZ BISCUITS
__Lb.26c
_~ Lb. 32c
 Bar I4e
_ 3 tins 27o
. Bottle 46c
_ 2 lbs. 21 e
_ 2 Ibs. 19c
.4barsJ7c
.3 bars 21c
Gallon 75c
_ 3 tins 32c
.2 tins 35c
_2tins lie
— Tin 24c
_>.Lb.28c
.__.Pkt.15c
BUTTER: Goldvole 1st grade, 3 Ibs. $1.05
COFFEE: Fresh ground _ Lb. 39c
COCOANUT: Medium — Lb. 16c
JELLY PONDERS 4 for 18c.
High QUALITY MEATS
FRESH KILLED YOUNG FOWL:
Lb.	
25c
■IHT
CHOICE YOUNG BEEF
Boiling Beef .——
Beef Roasts	
Veal Roasts	
Pork Roasts —---
Breakfast Sausage
Little Pig Sausage.
 Lb. 18c
Lb. 16c-18c
 Lb. 22c
 Lb. 28c
 Lb.15e
 Lb. 20c
Also Specials in Smoked Meats
►' MODERN
MAR,aT
"phone 1009^™
CONCORD
GRAPES
Large basket 59c
ORANGES
Good sin
2 doz. ——..
59c
Doz.
LEMONS
Large
31c
7 lbs.
APPLES
Waalthy
21c
PRESERVING
PEACHES
Crate— ._ $1.19
ii i  in i. n   ..■■'. j
GRAPEFRUIT
6 for 26c
CAULIFLOWER
Extra Fins
Large head __.'.. 24c
TOMATOES
6lbs.^  19e
PICKLING
ONIONS
2 Ibs ISc
ONIONS
6lbs._-_-20e
GfcEEN PEPPERS
2 Ibs -I5e
RED PEPPERS
Lb 15c
______•
 l3^
WALK
U as
AS THE
...in
DR.EW.LOCKE
SHOES
$10
.50
• Woman who haven't
walked an extra block la
years tell us that Dr. Lock*
Shoea put wingi oa their feet!
lTtey'«»t»i-«/«*iifc...a_>d
give your loot iuch wonderful
support! Each pair beats th*
signature of their designer
-Dr. M. W. Locke-world-
famous foot specialist,
R. Andrew
& Company
Leaders In Footfashion
i&*-eissae&asaasseeriv>moses?ot)#
New Fall Millinery
ARRIVING DAILY
SdiifL tl CaAJtO-ihsiM.
4M Baker St Phona 170
eaaaflceawtteaaaaaaaaaataaaiaaaac
RADIO SALE
USED RADIOS. Up tram S8.00
NEW Q. E. RADIOS, up from $14-96
Nelson Electric Co.
S74 Baktr 6t Phont 260
90 Odd Fellows,
Rebekahs to Meet
ot Kaslo Saturday
Some 90 Odd Fellowi tnd Re-
bekihi ot the Wut Kooteniy ind
Boundary an expected to father
at Katlo Saturday tor the semiannual meeting ot the Wut Kootenay District Astocittion. A bullosa ot delegitei tr* expected to
letvt Nelson it 1 pjn. tnd sessions
tre-to itart it S oclock.
A new Rebekih Iodf* will be
Instituted it Kulo by the Rebekahs. Odd Fellows wiU be busy
with district business. Some 18 ire
expected trom Sloctn City, tbout
a bora Tnil ind Roultnd, tnd t
number from Grand Forks.
Visiting delegates will return
from Kulo Saturday night
POM TO CONTINUE
PEACE NEGOTIATIONS
CASTEL GANDOLFO, Italy,
Sept 14 (AP)-Pope Plut told the
New Belgian Ambassador to the
Holy See today he would continue
to seek every occasion to conclude
"a puce honorable to everyone."
NELION DAILY NIWS. NILSON. B.C-MIDAY MORNINO. SIFT. IS. 1MB.
Social...
FRUITVALE
FRUITVJUJ., B. G-In compli-
ment tc Hr. and Mn. W. F. Cole,
whose marriage took place recently,
the Fruitvale Women'i Inititute entertained it I miscellaneous shower
in Uw Community Hall. The hall
wu prettily decorated, Ihe stige
and windowi being hung with
lirge white bells tnd stretmen In
pastel shades. Vum at uteri were
also Used.
Carda were enjoyed during the
early pa.t of the evening. Mn. H.
Andenon tnd Mn. 8. T. Crowe cut
for the ladies' tint prize, Mrs. Anderson cutting high. 3. Buchanan
held men's high score. Consolation
went to Mrs. 3. Sadler and David
Doig.
Following cirds the gueiti ot
honor were presented with ■ lovely display of gifts, arranged on
four card tables. Mr. and Mrs. Colt
briefly thanked their friends.
Supper was served tt midnight
tnd dancing wu enjoyed till the
small hours, local talent supplying
the muslr.
Among thou motoring In from
-ti
ff IT'S iBmduti ITS GOT TO BE GOOD
*MY I WHAT A
RBCOMMBNDATION
POR BOROIN'S
IVAPORATSO MIW I*
"Ivwywtw* I ge I meet
rosy-cheeked bottle-fed
biblee brought up on
Borden'l", uyi Elsie, the
Borden Cow.
Elsie Is proud,naturally,
becauie Borden'l Evaporated Milk ii made from
the rich milk of healthy
well-fed Borden cowi like
henelf. It il evaporated
to double-strength creami-
neu ... then irradiated
for an added supply of the
important "Sunihine"
Vitamin D,
Bectuse It'i tuch sjooef
milk.Borden'sEveporated
improve! your cooking,
makes coffee taste perfect.
Alwayi uk your grocer
far Bead.it! t.
ISottlmi EVAPORATED MILK
UNSWCITINID
IRIADIATED
SAFE WAY
Prices!
Friday ind Saturday, Sept 15 and 16
Eggs: Grade B large, processed, doz". 31c
Rolled Oats: Robin Hood, China, pkt. 24c
—LIMIT J—     •
Corn Starch: Canada, 2 pkts.. JL, 19c
Sealers: Mason's, quarts, doz. $1.19
—NARROW MOUTH-
Dates: Fresh,        1C „
Sain, 2 Ibi. .....IDC
Cocoanut: Mad,
Baking Soda; Cow
Brand, pkt. ....
Birds Custard:
17c
Uc
Birds Custard:       1ft-
Fruit Salad: 40.
Libby's, 16 o*. tin LLC
Coldan Bantam 01-
Corn:2 tins ..... LIZ
Clams: Saanich,     IP.
whola, tin  IOC
Butter: First frade, High-
T«H..i  $1.05
m
High Quality Meats
Bacon Ends: Lb.
Pot Roasts: Lb..
Lean Beef and Kidney: Lb..
Cottage Rolls: Lb..
Prime Ribs Rolled Beef: Lb.
Rump Roasts: Lb.    '
Smoked Jowls: Lb. .
Breasts of Veal: Lb. ______
Fresh Codfish: Lb. „	
15c
15c
15e
33c
23c
20c
20c
12c
20c
Crisco: Limit 2,3 lb. tin.....
Jels Rite Pectin: Bottle ...    .
Bran Flakes: Kellogg's, 2 pkts.
57c
18c
17c
LUX TOILET
SOAP
MAYONNAISE
BEST FOODS
3'/i 01, 1Ap
jar  lUC
?"*' 19c
jar   i«/v
""■        34c
jir
JAMS
Fraier Vallay
S"; ...26c
Chocolate
\HT.. 15c
CHIPSO DEAL
I largo pkt. and 2-pleea
glass serving sot, OQ.
For...; _COC
FRY'S COCOA
Fresh Fruits and Vegetables
.......25c
........ 7c
....... 15c
.... 17c
..;..,. 19c
.,:,., 25c
PEACHES: Proostono, (1 IC
Crato  4*1.13
SUGAR WITH PURCHASE OF fin.
ONE CRATE PEACHES: 10 Ibs. .. OjC
CONCORD CRAPES: fin
7 ibs. baiket .,-    OUC
CRAPEFRUIT: OC.
Bfor  -CDC
SUNKIST LEMONS: Of-
Dos.  LtO-
APPLES: OC-
9 Ibs. _.DC
CRAPES: Tokays,
2 Ibs	
CAULIFLOWER:
Lb. ,..'...
CELERY:
2 Ibi	
TOMATOES*.
•fibs.	
PEARS:
Baiket 	
CANTALOUPS:
4 for ..'	
Sunkist ORANGES, 3 Doz. 59c
We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities
•SAFEWAY STORES LIMITED
NELSON SOCIAL
By MBS. li J. VKUTCUX
• Mn. Frank Fox, Strithconi
Hotel, wiihei to innounce tbe en-
Sgement ot her youngest daughter,
irgiret Phyllis to Stanley Doyle,
•on ot Mr _md Mn. V. Doyle, Victoria Strett, the mirrlige to tike
flic* in the Cithedril ot Miry
Immiculat* eirly In October.
• Mill Miry Jarvii ot Procter
wu in th* city Wedneidiy.
• Shoppen In town yeiterdiy included Mn. r. l"rl»by • South Slocin.
• Min Helen Gil-rick, Kerr
Apartments, hu returned trom
ipending her vicitlon in Lethbridge
and Taber, Alta.
• Mn. a A. McGregor of Ymir
ipent yeiterdiy in town.
• tt Johm of Nelwiy vilited
tha city yeiterdiy. '
• George Biddlecombe wu ln
trom Bonnington yeiterdiy.
• Miu Phyllli Laiihley hu returned to Vincouver where lh* it-
tends York Houie.
• Mr. md Mrs. X A. MicKinnon
of Tnil vilited town yeiterdiy.
• Miurice Mil or ind Colin Mijor ot Procter wer* city vislton
Wedneidiy night.
• Shoppen in th* city yeiterdiy Included Mn. Malcolm Cimeron
of Slocin City.
• Mr. i ind Mn. Chirlei Holt ot
Bilfour vliited town yeiterdiy.
• Mr. ind Mn. Fred Cimpbell
of Cilgiry, who were guesti ot thi
latter'i parenti, Mr. ind Mn. 3. F.
Gamble, Carbonate Street, left yeiterdiy by motor for their home.
• Mn. F. Scott of South Slocin
spent yeiterdiy in town.
• Keith'Younger, who vilited Ml
lister. Miss Alison Younger, ln Nelson, left yeiterdiy for Vancouver
when h* will resume hli studies
it the Univenlty ot Britiih Columbli. .   .
• Mr. and Mn. J. I. Riley of
Bonnington were city vlilton to
ittend the funeral of th* former'i
brother, Chirlei Riley.
• L. L. Roblnion ot Ymlr vilited
Nelion yeiterdiy.
• Mrs. F. Ferguson md Mill Lor.
ralnna ot Proctor ipent Wedneiday
ln the dty.
• Captain P. Hirtrldgi ot Bilfour vuited Nelson yesterdiy.
• Elmer Gelinu left yeiterdiy
for Spokim ind will liave there
todiy for London, Ont, to ittend
college.
• Mn. Well* of Slocin City il
ipending a few diyi ln the city:
• Mrs. Honfield ot Willow
Point spent yeiterday In town.
• Mrt. W. Whiteley ot South
Slocin vilited Nelson yesterdiy.
• Mr. ind Mn. E. S. Planta,
Third Street, Fiirview, hiv* u their
guest for i week Mr. Planta'i moth.
er, Mn. Wilter Plinti of Vmcouver,
who ii en route home from New
York, where ihe visited her lon-in-
liw md daughter.
a Mrs. L. Lockhird of Kulo
visited Nelson yesterdiy.
• Mr. md Mra. Otis Decker ot
Weitport, N. Y. ire guesti it tbe
home of Mr. ud Mrs. Fonberg,
Sillci Street.
• Mn. Bowkett of South Slocin
•pent yuterday In th* city.
• T. A. Mill* wu ln th* city
from Willow Point yesterdiy.
• Vlilton in town yeiterdiy1 Included Captain Jack Russell of Riondel.
• Mln Phyllli Paxton ind Mlu
Doris Crofti leiva via the C.P.R.
today for New York, from when
they tail for Englmd.
• Among thoie ittendlng the lut
ot * teries of luncheons it the Nelion Golf md Country Club yesterday were Mn. H. Ruling, Mn. W.
Waldo Ferguson, Mri. L. S. Bradley,
Mn. 0. G. Gallaher, Mn. G. Spencer Godfrey, Mn. Townsend, Mrs.
William Taylor, Mrs. R. L. McBride,
Mn. Harry Burns, Mrs. W. M Walk-
er, Mn. H. H. McKenzie, Mn. Nelson Murphy, Mrs. J. G. Bunyan,
Mn. Arthur Baird, Mn. W. T. Foth-
eringhim, Mrs. William Waldie, Mrs.
V. C. Owen, Mn. A. H. Gracey, Mn.
Harold Lakes, Mn. Alex Allan md
Mn. A. Gordon Mickay.
• Miss Vivian Heartly ot South
Slocan visited Nelson yesterday.
Trail and other polnta to attend
the showe. md dmce, were Mrs. D.
Gillis, Miu Chrissie Gillis, Mln
Dorothy Gillis, Mr. ind Mrs. W.
Brown, Min Eileen Minhill, Mlu
Bessie Doig, Miu Midge Young
md Ralph Spence.
Mr. md Mrs. B. E. Johnson entertained it dinner in compliment to
their house guest, Mrs. M. Biglo
and Daughters Helena and Ivy and
Mn. McMillan ot Manitobi. Other
guesti were Carl Baglo md Leonard Johnson of Trail, Mr, md Mrs.
Steven Mclsaic, Miss Ruth Ericson,
Mn. W. Williams and Marcla, Howard Johnion, Mlu Audrey Johnion,
and Raymond Johnion.
Miss Edith Stalnthorpe ot Trail
wai a weekend guest ot tier brother
in-law md lister, Mr. end Mrs. W.
E. Grieves. _   _
Mlu Jean Grleva ot Trail was
a weekend visitor, it the home ot
her parenti, Mr. and Mn. W. E.
Grieve.
Mr. and Mn. W. Ware have left
by motor to ipend a vacation at
Bolnti in California. They will visit
ie Fair.           •
Mercury Drops to 39
.    Degrees ot Nelson
The mercury dipped to S( degreei
Wednuday night to equal the low-
ut reading sine a last Sprini,
recorded a week or io agp. Maximum temperature for the 24 hours
ending at S pjn. Thunday wu 63
degrees.
Rain commenced to tall lite yes-
srday  atternoon,  but. up  till 5
o'clock only tracu were recorded
Rain continued to iprinkle during
tbe evening.
Overwaitea
Limited
SPECIALS
FRIDAY end SATURDAY
Sept. 15 end 16
PINEAPPLE:
Tails, sliced, tin
SHREDDED
WHEAT: Pkt. ,
CHLORIDE LIME
Tin	
CHIPSO: Special
with serving set
WHEAT PUFFS:
*)$. bushel ....
CHEESE: Kraft,
2 Ib. box	
.lie
lie
:..10c
29c
.33c
.53c
BUTTER
First  pads,  Overwaitea
l\ht!  $l.lw
PEPPERMINT PATTIES:
Lowney's,
1 Ib. pkt.	
SOAP: P. C.
5 cakes tor .....
DOC FOOD: Chem
pion, 2 tins for...
BLUE: Reckitt's,
2 for	
CHEESE: Medium,
Lb	
25c
22c
22c
9c
18c
MILK
Talk, all Unds,      OC.
4 tins for ..aWC
COCOA: Cowan's,     *}f>
New pack, lib. tin.. a^OC
WAXt Wiiard. CO.
No rub, 25 oi. bottlo OVC
PEANUT BRITTLE: 01.
15oi.pkt......... £1C
Freah fruit end vegetables.
Phone 707      Free Delivery
Social
CASTLEGAR
CASTLEGAR, B. ti - 3. Schmidt
ot china Creek wu a recent visitor here at the home ot Mr. md
Mrs. J. MacKinnon.
Miss Josephine md Mln Beatrice
MacKinnon were recent viiiton it
Nelson.
Mr. md Mra. Morrison of Kimberley returned to there ifter ■ few
dayi spent here at the home ot Mr.
and Mrs. A. Caldwell. They were
accompanied on their return by
their granddaughter Dorcas Caldwell, who will visit them there.
Mr. and Mn. W. H. Houston md
son Walter Houston were recent
visiton at Trail.
Mrs. Dorman wu a recent visitor
at Trail.
Harold Hodge wu a Sunday viiltor here:
Mils Dorie Davidson ipent the
week-end it ber horn* here. She
li employed in th* post office it
Ymir.
Rev. D. S. Catchpole of Roulind
held Anglican church services her*
Sundiy ifternoon. -
Mn. E. Wallner entertained a
tew young guests at a party on
Saturday for her daughter, Gale,
Ud nephew Buddy Olson of Nelson on their fourth and third birthdays respectively. Candies ind peanut! formed the fivon of the ifternoon md a lovely lunch wu served. Guesti were Jackie Magee,
Jerry Magee, Florence Lampard.
and Leslie Lampard.
Hospital Frames Its
Member's Certificate
Hospital Association
Signifying th* hospital is a member af Uie American Hospitals Association, a large certificate, hu
been placed on the wall ln the main
hallway of Kooteniy Lake General
Hospital.
Inscription on the certificate reads-
"In consideration ot the high
standard of hospital lervice maintained, in-recognition ot its excellence as aa institution giving scientific cara to the lick and ln appreciation of ita value to the Community, Kootenay Lak* General
Hospital, Nelson, British Columbia,
is hereby endowed with all the
righta, benefit* md privileges of in
institutional member active in the
American Hospital! Auoclation, in
witness whereof the Auoclation hu
caused this certificate to be signed
•nd iti seal to be affixed by Its
President and Executive Secretary
this 26th day of June, 1939. E. Harvey Agnew, M. D., Pruldent; Bert
W. Caldwell, M. D„ Executive
Secretary."
Nine Bodies Wired
C.B.C. Heads, Urge
Hookup for CKLN
Urging full- C.B.C. network ser.
vie* for CKLN such as Nelson
and district had enjoyed for 2V4
days, nine Nelson organizations
sent telegrams to C.B.C. and government officials asking that C.B.C.
service be restored to the Nelson
station. Spearhead of the drive was
the Nelson Board of Trade, while
othen acting included the City of
Nelson, the Junior Board of Trade,
Rotary, Gyro and Kinsmen Clubi,
the I.O.D.E., Women's Institute,
md Nelson Liberal Association.
Rossland Junior Board Preparing
Publicity Pamphlet Upon Rossland
ROSSLAND, B. ti. Sept l*-"Our
itand with regard to tha civic election* li itrictly non-political, but
we ar* prepared to taka m active
lntereit in anything which concern tha City is a whole." Thli
wu tha emphatic itatement mide
by F. L. Fletcher, Chairman of the
Civic Committee, at tha opening
Fall meeting ot the Junior Section, Rosalind Board of Trade,
Wednesday evening.
Referring to the forthcoming civic
elections, to be held ln December,
Mr. Fletcher advocated a program
of activity, with the object ot informing Rossland citizens as to who
wu eligible to vote, md to whit
they were entitled. He proposed repeating lut year'i platform meeting.
"We intend to give every candidate th* same chance," uld Mr.
Fletcher. "And thli organization will
have nothing to do with sponsoring tny on* man. If Individuals
wish to give their support to i particular party, that ll their privilege."
L. J. Nicholion, Robert Crane,
A. E. Lane, J. R. Cran, L. G.
Christie. S. R. Daviei and Ivan
Gurevich, were appointed to Mr.
Fletcher'! committee.
WANT NORTHPORT i
ROUTE BIGGER
Secretary J. R. Cran wu Instructed to wrlted to the Chief Provincial Geographer it Victoria uking thit the Government road map
of'the Southern Interior be revised
to ihow the Northport-Rossland road
as the main highway leading to
Rossland from the United States. H.
W. Bayley, Chairman of the Publicity and Tourist Committee,
brought the attention of the meeting
to the fact that, on the recently issued Government map, the Cascade
Highway was shown as the main
route, the Northport-Rossland road
being put in the same classification
u the Trail-Waneta road. Mr. Cnn
was also uked to send copies ot this
letter to R. R. Burns, M. P. P. at
Trail, ud to Major Gordon Smith,
Commissioner ot the Travel Bureau.
Approximately $500 wu necessary
to commence a public library, stated
Arthur Turner, Chairman ot the
Library Committee, who uked that
his committee be augmented ln order to plu a definite campaign. Mr.
Turner also reported that it wu not
possible to secure a room in the
Rossland Court House, md that it
waa necessary to locate mother
room for library purpose!.
WORK TOWARD
LIBRARY
Considerable ■ discussion arose
when several members expreued
the opinion that existing wir condltioni might prove a dampener to
the library scheme. A. F. Snowball,
Bernard Ferrey, W. A. Darby, F. C.
Ransom, and Elmer Thompson were
appointed to the Library Committee, which wu uked to make a
thorough investigation and to report to tha next Junior Board
meeting.
H. W. Bayley, Chairman ot the
Tourist md Publicity Committee,
suggested suspending the activities
of his committee, u he felt that the
present international conditions
would have an adverse reaction on
tourist traffic-JIis suggestion caused
a division of opinion, some ot those,
present stating that, in their opinion, tourist trade would not be affected to uy great extent It wu
For Best
QUAKER
IMSSS^SMSaSWtSWWSWSSSSWWiW
Choose Your Fall Hat
From the   , .
BETTY  ANN  SHOP
Opp. Capltol Theatre     Phone 1047
>>)wsatasws»»asaa»»»»8*aM8»
•rvtss&&a>sts&s!>ossafzxtj!8ess_t&&$
NEW SHIPMENT
WOOL DRESSES
Sizei 18-90
Jcu-hwn. Ji/nt Shop.
Ot Bakar St Nelion. R C.
aaeXexSS&i&SSS&i&ASSt-!X!S$l&Si9
THl BEATTY MODEL A
Tha world'i Finut Ironer glvu
you every Ironing conveniences
Iron Electrically with a Butty.
BEATTY   BROS.  LIMITED
Nelson  Fietory  Branch
J.1  Baker Phone SI
Quaker Bran costs
much less and because it is natural
bran, yon get that
real nut flavour
that makes all bran
•dishes richer and
more delicious.
Quaitar
package
from your
Grocer
TaeJa*
FLOWERS
Delivered by win at tost maU
anywhere—anytime,
Kootenay Flower Shop
384 Biker St
Phon* 96-
For Smart Hoiiery Chocs*
"RAINBOW"
The Gingham Shoppe
Phon* BU      Opp. Dally Newa
expected thit Roulind ikllng *c-
tivitiei thli Winter would still prove
■n ittnction, ud Mr. Bayley'i committee wu uked to drift a Rossland
publicity pamphlet for th* ipprovil
ot th* next meeUng .
COMMUNITY CHEIT ~
VOTE
A donation of S9 wu voted toward th* Rossland Community
Chest in response to a letter received, uking for funds, and Gilbert Hunt President of the Junior
Board, wu elected representative
to Community Chest Executive.
A Utter, drafted by J. R. Corner,
of th* Touriit ud Publicity Committee ln reply to ■ request for informition regarding the hiitory of
Roulud, recently received trom V.
J. Freemin, Director of Student Ri-
dio of the Almi Miter Society ot
the Univenlty of British Columbli,
wu read and approved by the meeting This information wu solicited
In order to Include the Golden City
in * aeriu of "Home Town Broad-
cuts'* outlining the hiitory of. the
chief towni md cities ln British
Columbli, pluned for thii Winter.
CLOCKS
W* hava a nlc* itock ot Wutmlniter Chlmu, mutel clockt,
fincy alarm clock! in both
ipring md electric.
mHiVwiaim $M-ritpAL
4S7 Biker St N.lson. SO.
YOUR DINNER
It wouldn't be complete without
■ diih of our own mad*
ICE CREAM
Fruh frozen daily.
GOLDEN GATE CAFE
ENJOY   ■• -
ACHOCOLATE
DAIRY DRINK
Koottnay Vallay Co'op Dairy
PHONE 116
•n-.na riva
Bright
SCARVES
(aJL Jail
$i.oo i
Fashion-right with suits,
sweaters, frocks! Vivid
stripes, plaids, prints, solids! Crepes, sheer wools.
79c to $1.95
Phone 200
Baker St.
PHONE 910
for utlmate* on liwn ud landscape I
gardening.
Mac's Grtenhouiti
J. W. McCleUmd
Ona Blk. From Hospital
Cedar and Front Su.    Phon* 010
»re$'»i»a»»$SiW«W'«',w.y,»wsa I
THI LATEST IN
FALL DRESSES
Milady's Fashion Shoppt
U-M-M-M
YOU'LL LOVE THE SEPTEMBER
BRICK of the MONTH
IT'S MADE OF FRESH TREE
RIPENED PEACHES.
'>■*%
25c
SLIGHTLY HIGHER AT SOME
COUNTRY POINTS
Palm Dairies Limited
FREEMAN & LEEmVF
Furniture Go. tt
THE HOUSE OF FURNITURE STYLES .
Phone 115 .        Nelson, B.C. Eagle Block
SALE OF
CONGOLEUM RUGS
SPECIAL PRICES
TOUR DOLLARS BUY
MORE AT OUR STORE
I
 PAOE SIX
JWbou latlg JfattiB
Established AprU 22 1902
HrtftsA Columbia'i Mott M*rrttttng Ntxctpaptt
Published every morning except Sunday by
the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED.
288   Baker   Street    Nelton    British   .Columbia
Phone IM Private Exchtnn Connecting All Department*
MEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND
THI   AUDIT   BUREAU   OF   CIRCULATIONS
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 15,1989.
ONE ENLISTMENT
A clarifying statement made at Ottawa Monday night
I by Hon. Ian Mackenzie, Minister of National Defence,
respecting terms of enlistment, makes it plain that whatever was formerly the case, there is no difference now
: between enlistment for overseas service and enlistment
for home service. There is now just the one kind of enlistment, and all the recruits now being taken into the Canadian Forces are volunteering for the duration of the War,
\ and "may be placed on service in Canada, or elsewhere for
the defence of Canada." *    :-'  '
Overseas service will not call for a special form of
enlistment. >
Two results follow from the Minister's statement
All those enlisting in the Canadian Forces today art
already in the way of realizing their ambition, If that
ambition is to serve overseas. They are on the way to the
front, whether that front for them Is to be ln Canada, or
across the seas. Service overseas is undoubtedly what the
it majority of Canada's young soldiers hope for.
The other result Is that, when the issue of a Canadian
sditionary Force \t decided, a trained force will be at
hand, ready to go.
Whether an individual soldier, or a military unit,
serres overseas, or at home, or partly in each sphere, the
service will be equally for the defence of Canda, whose
front line, as in the war of 1914-18, is today on the'Western
Front.
Tot SctiohiL SjcJul
.  _y mm   m___w     ,^---M^s.«ssss—pssss-ass-h-——asssssisssiss^     a^^m^mmm m^m^r
Under this heading the Nelson Dally "Newt will preient
each dty a section ot the Motor-Vehicle Driver's Manual luued
I by the British Columbia Government. Interior driven will shortly
be required to take examinations based upon the Information
contained in the Manual. The questions they may be required
to answer will follow the sections devoted to Information and advice.
OfiSM-WtL ofr
U&hickL
PARKINQ.
Parellel.—To park a motor-vehicle
parellel with the curb, between two
other motor-vehicles already parked,
the following procedure should be
followed:—
(a.) See that the apace vacant ta
at least IVi times at long u your
motor-vehicle.
(b.) Slow down gradually after
having looked Into your rear-view
mirror to see that this can be done
aafely, and signal your Intention to
it.) Drive your motor-vehicle parallel with the motor-vehicle behind
which you wish to park, and stop
even with or slightly ahead of the
aame and with about 18 Inches clearance between the motor-vehicles.
(d.)  Watch your opportunity to
atart backing-in, and when clear,
back your motor-vehicle slowly, at
_ -sjhe same time turning your steer-
E
ing-wheel sharply to the right,
watching through the rear window
until your motor-vehicle is at an
angle of approximately 40 degrees
to the curb.
(e.) Back slowly, and when the
front of your motor-vehicle Is level
with the retr of the motor-vehicle
behind which you wish to park, turn
your steering-wheel sharply to the
left and watch the left rear bumper
ot the motor-vehicle ahead to avoid
striking. Back slowly until you come
parallel with the curb,
(f.), Straighten your wheel and
move your motor-vehicle slowly
ahead until It Is an equal distance
between the two motor-vehicles,
with your right wheeli about 6
Inchea trom the curb. Put on your
handbrake and turn otf the Ignition,
and It you are going to leave your
motor-vehicle iee that lt Is lately
locked up.
Before coming out from your
parking space be sure to look back,
and when you can safely swing out
into traffic give the proper signal
so as to warn approaching vehicle!
ot your Intention.
J? Questions ??
ANSWERS
This column at questions aad
answen la open to any reader ot
tht Nelson Dally News. In no
oase will the name of the person
uking the question be published.
I,. F„ Kimberley—Would you please
give me the dates of the lut three
Dominion elections?
September 14, 1828; July 28, 1930;
October 14, 1938.
M. E., Nelson—How long will fruits
canned ln glass Jars keep?
.    It the cam are properly sealed,
the contents will keep indefinitely
•though after two or three years the
I product is apt to become soft or
mushy and there is a loss of flavor.
: Jl. J„ Sunshine Bay—Is lt healthful
l to have plants in a sleeping room?
I An authority on horticulture says
that plants cannot stand bad air,
and they should never be kept in a
sleeping room during the night, for
they consume the fresh air and give
out carbon dioxide which ia detrimental to the health ot the Individual using the room,
C A. H. Trail-Did the Scotch Invent the bagpipes?
The bagpipe is said to have been
introduced Into  Scotland by  the
Norsemen. It Is of very ancient
origin, as representations ot lt tre
to be found on the Grecian and
Roman sculptures, and lt has long
been well known among various
Eastern nations. The Italians hava
a form of bagpipe that is mora
simple than the Highland and tha
Irish.
D. D. Kaslo—What germ does tht
pasteurization of milk destroy?
When the process improperly performed, it destroys the organisms of
typhoid fever, diphtheria, septic
sore throat and dysentry, and gives
protection against foot and mouth
disease. •
F. K., Nelson—When wu Cambridge
University founded?
The origin of Cambridge Unlvenity is obscure. It probably grew
out of a local educational movement during the 12th century. The
flnt of the colleges was founded by
Hugo Bishop ot Ely in 1257.
M. H. Procter—In case of a broken
engagement what becomes of tha
wedding presents?
They are usually returned to the
donor.
THE EXAMPLE
Tha Premier of Slovakia hu announced that hit countfy wlU elect
a National Council "by the wlU of
God and Adolph Hitler," This wu
the combination the former German Emperor used to claim but he
landed in perpetual exile just the
same.—-Brantford Expositor,
.ooking Backward...
TEN YEARS AQO
From Dally Newi ot Sepi 19, 1929
Rev. A. Sutherland irrived from
Vancouver lait night to take over
his duties u Pastor ot the First
Presbyterian Church here, succeeding J. K, Highberger who held the
post for the past five months.—A.
Deverson of Crawford Bay wu a
Nelson visitor yesterday.—New dltr
eet telephone service has Just been
oompleted between Nelson and
Vancouver In the B. C. Telephone
system. In order to complete this
link, a new line was built between
Penticton and Grand Forki over
Anarchist Mountain, work commencing last 'lay.—G. L. Thompson
luperlntendent of the Yankee Girl
Mine near Ymlr, ipent yeiterday
ta Nelson.
TWENTY FIVE YEARS AQO
From Daily News of Sept 15, 1914
The eleventh annual convention
of the British Columbia Associa
tion of School Trustees will ba held
ln Nelson tor three days, commencing today.—Gordon McPhat will
leave on the Great Northern this
morning for Spokane.—J. Johnstone has returned from the Dominion Fruit conference at Grimsby,
—There wiU be a practice shoot
at the rifle range today.—Charles
Steele of the itaff of the Royal
Bank of Canada hu been transferred from Nelion to Rosiland.
40 YEARS AQO
From Daily Miner ot Sept IS, 1899
When the block now being erected
for P. Burns te Co. on Btktr Street
is completed, it will havt tha most
handsome front of any place of
business North of San Francisco.—
It ii thought thtt war ia very Imminent in the Transvaal.—A crew
of men are placing machinery ln
Reisterer'a Brewery.—The new dynamo tnd all the machinery are
being Installed ln tha Power Houie
here.
NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.
SAUYS SALLIES
0.—PRIPAY MORNINO. HIT. Te.
fojrfAari,
Shepard Barclay
Tells How to Bid
snd Play
STAMP CORNER
■My sis Is so dumb—ehe borrowed an electrle drill to aaw
eeeds in her rock garden.
'It Is hard for a man to find tha ideal girl—aha ia attar hir ideal
as well.
g^-^w»5W»^s»»K»g«!«t-;«ws>Mtaa««.
WHAT DO YOU THINK?
Lettert mty bt published ever.a nam de plume, but the actual
name ot tht wrltei must bt given to tht editor u evidence of
good filth. Anonymous letters go In tht waste paper basket
—rt**mt)m-t9tM9tt*) t\-7m*1»*-mm*_mMt*im-
Dr. Phillips Clears Misconception
Leading to "Institute of Silliness"
Strange u It may seem to you, I
was quite well aware that iuch a
demand wu impossible ol fulfilment. Stranger still, I wu concerned, as you are, with the elementary and high schools—not the
universities—ana I Intended this
extreme illustration to show how
reasonable is the demand tor larger
provincial grants and for Dominion grants to give a more equal
chance to children in different
parts ol Canada.
Now that we undentand each
other, u I hope we do, may I
suggest that the remarks of other
speakers you mention may bot
have been to silly to those who
hetrd what came before and after?
After all, the Institute Is held in the
Summer time, and we have to enjoy t little fun, and il the report-
en put only the silly parts on the
wires, you should remember that
we have a hard Winter down East.
CHARLES E PHILLIPS
Ontario College of Education, Toronto, Sept. 9, 1939.
To tha Editor ol
The Daily Newi. .
Sir—A correspondent hu ient mt
a clipping ot an editorial trom your
newspaper dated August 25th and
entitled "An Institute of Silliness".
Since you have given me iome prominence u the arch-perpetrator of
silly ideas, perhaps you will allow
me a little space to explain that
»3OO0 bond.      -
In discussing equality ot educational opportunity in Canada, I
suggested that an average upbringing, an average education up to a
year or two in high school, tnd a
freedom from debt at the age tt
self-support might be regarded u a
fair demand to give an even break
to Canadian boys and girls. I then
uked the audience to put themselves in the position ol Canadians
not yet born. If he had the choice
ol coming to earth or not, what
might the minus-one-year-old Insist upon to ensure the status Just
described? Now the average cost
ol bringing up a child to the age
of self-support in Canada hai been
estimated by the Dominion Bureau
of Statistics u 85000, the cost of
an average public education u $750.
Furthermore, a bright little unbom
mind might estimate hli share of
our public debt in 18 years aa about
$1000.1 therefore suggested that one
ot our unborn citizens might demand m endowment ot 88*50, including the bond you mention.
My Intention was to show how
difficult it might be to achieve true
equality of educational opportunity.
(NOTE-From Dr. Phillips' ax-
planation, it ts clear the brief dispatch from Geneva Ptrk on Lake
Couchiching picturing him at advocating that couples be not allowed to marry until they ihould put
up a $5000 Insurance bond to cover
the maintenance and education Inclusive of a college degree lor each
prospective offspring, wu a perversion of hli remarks, and completely misrepresented their tenor
and Intent—Editor,)
SOTOW TOOt ImXOtVAOM
TBI MOST Important thing
about bidding ayitema ta tor a
player to know which ana Ua
partner la wing. If one eg them
eooaidara tha ahowtag of a new
nut to bt an aheolute soa-round
(ore. npoa hla partner, aad tht
sua appetite him doein't tbtn
aas ba tome vary abrupt ttoppagt
to tha auction aa really atrong
Ikanda, and tt ean coat plenty at
pi
tha hopt that South eould can *____*
other ault bit with wu fuUUled
by South naming 3-Dtamonda. It
happened that South eauldered
tht can at a new ault an abaoWte
forct, but North did not, and aa
rial Both pertntra wen tt ts
tied whin a amall dam waa
made agalnit tha laad af tha
apada K.
At another UUe tha hand waa
hid la more orthodox fashion, bt*
ginning wtth 1-Club by South,
North .-Diamond, Eaat 1-Bpada,
.louth S-Hearta. Weat J-Sptdea,
North 8-Cluba, Hut 8-Sptdu,
South 4>Spadta u a cue bid,
North S-Clube and South S-Ouba.
Anybody bat a noviee oould maka
thla contract plus aa overtrlck.
4 Nona
VAQ9S
♦ A/10S
*AK97S
<t)ealtr: South. Eaat-Wtat trot,
nerable.) '
Benta • deal on wMch a grand
■Urn aaa be made In cluba, but
which ona pair of fine playen In
• tournament atopped at tht In-
atgniflcant contract at .-Diamonds
without althar partner aver having
mentioned tha aide'a beat ault
«outh wu cm of thoee playen
who llkei ta Ud Ua hlgheat rank-
lag ault Silt ao atarted with
1-Heart. .ifter Ua partner tailed
1-No Trump to keep It open. In
Mtt*
• K»
♦ Q10 8
+ QS74S
+ KQUT
*KS4
♦til"
fe     Vii
_S-
Mitt
• 10T4I
AJT8I
}K5
♦ AJ8
♦ A83
.     *io
(Dealer: South NorUi-Southl
vulnerable.)
What la the bett bidding of thiel
dea) at match paint duplicate!
bridge?
Qittrlbiitea by -Us Featum Syadlettt, bt,
NOTES
OM
™ma(tianBircttf\,
By<G R RICHARDSON      J
Tor tha next month, ihort-blrds
ara at their peak in numben, Last
week mention wu made ot some
ipeciea which tre found, u nesting
birds, ln tht polar rtgl.m ot both
hemispheres. Thete, when they
come South, eventually tattle down
tor the Winter ln placei separated
by thousands of milts of wattr.
Other familiei besides tht short.
birdi have clote relativei in both
hemupherei. Glaucous and Black-
backed Guilt, Arctic Term, Jaegen
tnd Murres ire some of tha water
birds. In the Thrush family, our
Robin and tha European Blackbird
ara very close, except for external
color. Some hawks and owli also
fall Into thit clus, tuch u the
Golden Eagle, Peregrine Falcon,
Short-eared Owl and Long-eared
•wl, which have a cosmopolitan
distribution. But all of these are
as nesting birds, either of the Arctic
or Temperate zones, so thit a fam-
TROQON
ily like that ot the Trogons takes
on a particular note ot Interest since
it la strictly one ot the tropics and
tubtroplcs.	
TR0Q0N8 NOT LARGE
Mott trogona ara not vary large,
bodily, They vary trom tbout eight
to fourteen lnchei In length. One
characteristic ia the stout comical
MIL Another, it the imall wetk
feet which hive two toet pointing
forward and two back. In thli connection it li noteworthy that ln tbe
trogom lt li the lint and lecond
toes which point tack Instead ol the
usual first and fourth (or outer
toe).
Trogona do a lot of feeding while
in flight catching Insects and their
larvae and titlng fruit
■  • • •
Stamp collector! are familiar with
the Quetzel, the national bird ol
Mexico and Guatemala the bird
which wu held sacred to the Aztecs.
Thli species (also known u the
Resplendent Trogon) ind Ita relative the Golden-headed Trogon, ara
really gorgeous birds. Both (genu!
pharamacrut) are larger than those
of other genera, have puffy semi-
crested heads snd long plumy
upper tail coverti. In tbe cast of
the    Resplendent   Trogon    these
{ilumes tre very long, ti long or
onger thtn tht bird Itself, tnd curve
gracefully downward, ltt plumage,
except tor the red abdomen, it brilliantly lrrldescent green when tbe
bird is facing the sun and Indigo
when turned away from lt
Getting back to the shore-birds,
mtny of our mud flats around cities
Sy JAMES MONTAQNIS
Two stages ln New Zealind'i discovery tre ihown at top, idvtnce
photoi ot two valuta ln New Zetlind'i centenary issue to bo luued Jan.
3, 1940. At left li Abel Tssman, Holland explorer, who tint sighted
New Zetland ln 184], and at right ii Captain Jamei Cook, who claimed
New Zealand for Great Britain In 1789. Below, left art the flvt sovereigns who htvt ruled New Zetland during iti 100 yetrs, tnd it right
trt idvinced photoi at tht Nttharland'i two itampa to ita railway centenary, issued September 1.
Eastern and Upptr Silesia ara
namet of one-time poitage Issuing
territories which have recently appeared once more on the front page
In connection with demandi from
Germany on Poland. Silesia wu
before the great war a German
province. After, tht war lt became
' ot Poland and Czecho-Slovak-
£*'
Whlte-Rumped Sandpiper
are formed trom sewage dltposal,
io that wt get rather accustomed In
teeing most of the stndpipen in
this odoriferous atmosphere. It rt'
calls to mind a itory ol Dr. Sutton's. Ou his tint morning on South-
tmpton Island, he found a White-
rumped Sandpiper on the garbage
dump. This annoyed hit unit ot
fitness, so ht chased it out on to the
tundra.
ttiltltit^Mj_tttMyiwtMilttittt^
jMi yoW-telfc
ONE-MINUTE TIST
1. In what South Amtrlctn country trt cowboyi traditionally known
u giuchoi.
2. Which of tht Statei li named
tor a Bourbon king ot France?
8. For whom wu Cooperstown.
N. Y. aimed?
WORDS OF WISDOM
God help the man who won't
marry until ht finds t perfect womtn. tnd God help him still more if
he finds here.-Ben TlUett
TODAY'S HOROSCOPE
Ba circumspect during tha next
13-month period, you whoie birthday! art on this data. Avoid loss
or annoyance through relativei, correspondence and travel that threaten
you. A child born today will be
clever and most artistic, a strongly
amorous nature ihould bt restrained, however.
ONE-MINUTE TIST ANSWERS
1. Tht Argentine.
1 Louisiana It mmed tor Loula
XIV.
8. Jamea Fennimore Cooper.
 ! tf
AUNT HET
By ROBERT QUILL-EN
"Denyln* his children a nickel to
spend tln't teachin' 'em thrift They
feel misused and when they Inherit
his pile they'll spend lt fut to get
even with him."
TRAIN FRUIT TREES ON FENCE
By DEAN HALLIDAY
P_t*K TRtt TMAIHtO OH ftUCt Ms*
^HORfZOStY*-, OOUMLM CORDOU MK7VOD
wt-WMf frvt ts* four
Utilize the espalier method of
Srowing trult treu and you can
ave an orchard on the tenet around
your bickytrd.
Espalier dwarf-trained fruit treet
are both useful and decorative.
They can be used againit Walli,
tenet or trellises. They are alio
decorative, u well u practical,
when grown on leaden at the corners of a building or pliced In series
between windows and at doorways.
The single horizontal cordon type ot
espalier tree alto can be tied along
backyard fern
tht top of a itone or brick retaining
wall.
Ai ihown in today'i Garden*
Graph, on small properties, where
there ii not room tor an orchard,
fruit can be grown on boundary
fences by using the horizontal double cordon type Illustrated.
Espalier treei ait available in
apple, pear, plum, peach, nectarine
and apricot. Being dwarf ln lize
espalier trees are easy to spray and
the fruit can bl harvested with
hardly any effort
The portal paper cf Eutern Silesia wu mainly a plebiscite Issue
for use in the territory whilt tht
citizens decided whether they winted to jtvt undtr tha Poliih or
Czech flags.
Regulir poitage newipaper. nodal delivery tnd poitage out
itampi ware uted thtt yetr. With
tht exception of a tew high values
the stampi ar* worth very little
today. The territory wu divided
tccordlngto tht vote ibout equally
between Poland tnd Czechoslovakia, tnd aarly thli yetr Polind tn-
nexed that part of the area which
wu under Citch rult when Germtny mide a protectorate ol
Czecho-Slovakia.
Upper Slltila'rtmtlnod a itamp
ltsulng country till 1(0$, whan the
plebiscite wu taken, dividing tha
aria bttwttn Poland and Gtrminy.
Tht territory trom the tint hid
lta own itampi, inscribed in French,
Polish ind Oermin. The fint issue
appeared in 1920, and later ln the
year a pictorial Issue was printed
showing a dove ot peace flying over
Sllesltn countryside. These lumps
wtrt ovtrprintod ln 1921 for the
plebiscite. Alter the vote a short
iet ippetred with tht trtt under
Pollih occupation, the itamp featur
ing tha Pollih eagle and tactoriet.
The country also luued official
stampi, consisting ot overprints
of various Germin luuei. Tbt of*
flclal itimpi ot Upper Silesii tra
todty tha mott valuable ot tha
itampi ot thli short-lived itamp
laming region.
NEW ISSUES
Great Brltain'i naw high value
itampi wtrt not luued iTmilir to
tht high vilut itampi ot George V.
ti wu expected. The new itampi.
ot which tnt tivt shillings hu ap-
pearesi, ihow a profile ot Georgt VI
and the coat ot Armi on the United
Kingdom . . . Holland Isseed oa
September 1 two stamps to the centenary of tha Netherlandi railwaya
.. . New Zealand on August 19 issued a new sixpence express delivery ittmp featuring a modem
postofflce delivery truck. New postage due itampi htvt also been iiiued. ... The United Statet Issues,
on September 25, a three-cent stamp
to commemorate th* tint printing
preu in colontal Amerlct, tha
Stephen Daya prett in 1839 , . .
Argentina ii prtptring itvertl new
itampi, tor ntw Buenoi Aires
itreeti, far former prttldenta . ..
Luxemburg li to luue a ipaclal two
franc itamp for the philatelic exhibition at Mondorf thU month,. •
Paraguay issued two ittmps recently to commemorate two national
heroei Lopez ind Diu ... Bolivia
hu luued a 10 value aat lor th*
Euchtristic Congreu . . , Algeria
hu luued five itampi tor tha
New York World'i Fair ihowlng
a United Statea freighter unloading. -
WAR OUILT
The clouds of war ar* lowering o'er
the world,
Tha cancerous Pruulan venom
worki again,
Th* ensign of thalr obacana mlndi
i      unfurled
Once more goaa forth with demone
ln lta train.
Tha flagrant crooked crou now
known afar,
Tha emblem of a loul, distorted
mind, *
Thtt bv the evil fore* ot brutal war
Would bind tha chalna of terror
on mankind.
Tht vile thing that In human torm
leadt on
A nttlon mid with Iuit ot Wood
and loot
From whom all tenia of decency
hu gone,
Muit yet be made to ihara their
action1! fruit
What h thli ruthleta meglomaniac'i
aim?     •   ■
What vision hu ha of a final goal?
Nona other thin to win a horrid
fame.
To glorify hia own foul, putrid
•out
And whit of them who follow in
his wtke
And it hit bidding do thtlr bloody
deeds?
Such filthy actioni ha could never
maki
To row from othar than Inherent
And they who itand aloof nor proffer aid
TO save  the vletlmi from tht
Prussian cune,
Ara they ot their own llvei the
more afraid,
Or the depletion of their bulging
puna?
Tha guilt of tha aggressor thty muit
■hart,
Who tacit aid to th* aggreuor
lent
Who watch a  nation perish in
despair
While blood-stained money itill
remalni unspent
Who uses not the powen trom God
received
Till evil hu the nobler rtces
pront, '
By   folly,   cowtrdlct   tnd   greed
deceived
Augmented htte,  miy hivt  to
fight tlone.
The tread of marching hosts again
wt hear.
The low despairing moini of
dying men.
From desecrated homei, forlorn and
drear
Comes womtn'i wall, "Lord muit
it bt again?"
If thtre ba manhood la a nation
left
How can it itand theae agonizing
criea?
Unleu of shame and honor all
bereft
It rests not till tha perpetrator
diet.
Compassion la a thing th.y
misconstrue,
And weakneu, to tha merciful
impute;
There's nothing that tha world can
ufely do
But put in end to every Pruulan
brute.
-SIMPLE SAM.
LAKEFIELD, Ont (CF).-Robtrt
Currit had never fished, md didn't
wtnt to try. But friends coaxed him
into taking t line, tnd within two
minutes he hid tended • record
mukinongt. Now ht llibu ill tht
tlmt.     •
Book Notes
Nelson   Municipal
Library
Before turning to th* FiH spate
of books, a review at titles idded
during the summer might prevent
torn* worthwhllt books belngt overlooked
Through th* coming ituon, th*
.Monday brotdcut from CKLN wil]
detl eich week with booki selected ■
for their current appeal or out-
itanding quality.
Among recent addition! are:
THE ABBOTS HEEL," by Ntll
Bill, '
Tht backgrounds-England In tha
Mth ctntury, torn Into fictions by
Jealousy; the drama—the revolt of
the townsmen againit tht dominating rult of tht Abbey ol Saint Ed*
mund'a Bury, ,
"IN SEARCH OF PEACE" by Ri
Hon. Neville Chamberlain,
A collection ot speeches delivered
by tha Pr1**" Minister trom Mty.
1937, to Mty, 1939.
•THE HAPPINESS OP FATHER
HAPPE," by Ctclly Hal lack.
A grett Joyousneu shines about
thli lovable little monk with hit
quiet humor and fluhlng insight into reality.
"MR. EMMANUEL," by Loula
Goldlno.
Lonely, wile and lelflea, Mr.
Emmanuel goei forth trom the obscurity ot Magnolia Street to pit hli
determlnttion and nobility of spirit
tgtinit the grett forctt of evil ln
the world todty; hit purpose, tt
right a crying wrong dona to another.
"IRISH HOLIDAY," by Dorothy
Hartley.
A delightful record of a haphuard
holiday ipent in travelling by car
tbout Ireland, mostly in regloni
oft the usual touriit routes.
"THE DAY WILL COME," by
Elizabeth Marlon.
Concerning the Swifts, who lived
in the wheat country of Washington.
and the day when the youngest ol
them, Harry, came ot age,
"WILLIAM'S ROOM," by Allot
Qrant Rosman.
A pleasant story of English country life, and of the paying guest
who m established In the house
when the youngest daughter, Penny,
arrived homt.
"WIND, SAND ANO STARS," by
Antolnt dt St Exuptry.
Tha author ol "Night Flight" a
veteran French aviator with tha
perception ot e poet and a phllos.
opher, telli lomething of hli experience and thought   . •       !
"NOT PEACE, BUT A SWORD,"
by Vincent Sheean,
The author ot "Penonil History"
observes events ln Pragut, Vienna,
Madrid, London, Parii, during 13
fateful monthi, and glvu hit own
itory ot thtm.
"THE    PRIORY.**    by    Dorothy
Whipple. ■
An old Priory now itandi U tht
inchor by which, ill tht uncertainties and tears of contemporary life
•re held firm. Thii it entertainment
that springs trom human relation!
well anlayzed and limply drawn.
PROFITS
In contrast to the financial troubles of other lines the city-owned
London tnd Port Stanley Rill*
wty reporti a Mt operating profit
for the fint ilx monthi of thii
yeir of $15,000 or over $1000 mort
thin lor the sime period lut yetr.
Auto competition manifestly haa
not put a losing crimp into thia
•nterpriie.—Brantford Expositor. ■
 Possibility Monashee Road Building
iy Interned Men Suggested lo Board
rade as II Indorses Petition Survey
.•port Nazis Halt
Planes to Yugo Slavia
BUDAPEST, Hungiry, Sept, 14
KP)— It wu reported rtllibly
tt* today that a consignment of
ennan airplanu tor Yugoslavia
u itopped by German author!-
u at fee Yugoslav frontier in a
sputa over transportation facili-
ts.
Stoppage ot tht shipment wu at-
lbuted to Yugoslavia's refusal to
it several trainloads of wheat
trough to Germany until Germany
iturned 400 railroad cars and more
ian 100 Danube River barges.
Varies te Water
Resigns Posl
JOHANNESBURG, Sept. 14 (CP-
euten)—Resignation of Chirlei te
'ater, High Commissioner for South
.frlct in London, wu mnounced
tficlilly today. It wu reported he
'ould be succeeded by S. F. Wster-
>n, South Afrlcen Minliter to
ranee.
Tht name of Charlu te Water
ecame but known to Canadians
osslbly through what he called
too strong an interpretation of his
•ord*" in an Interview he give
'hile visiting Montreal lust three
ena t(o to the day of his resigna-
on.   .
He wai quoted u uying "South
.trice would participate in t gen-
ral tgreement to return German
aloniu (to Germtny) provided the
talon (of South Africa) lost none
t tht security necessary tor it!
xlstenct thereby . . ."
Whit he actually had uid re-
Kdlnf Germany's lott colonies
tt Water told reporten who
ithered early next morning at nil
oteV wu:
"Ai fir u the colonial luue la
ned. It ii my personal opinion,
I htvt long htld, thit tht
ihould no longer deity to
a iplrlt of reuon tnd
ation tht point of vitw of
iny on thli issue u on ill
J issuu which threaten to dil-
urb the peice of the world ...
"I believe perionally South Africi
rould be willing to participate it
conference to examine ln a spirit
1 reason ind moderation the point
ew of Germtny on thli md
issuu which it preient trt
■bing good rotations with thtt
ounl
Pre* Killed in Auto
Accident, Regina
.MOOSE JAW, Sept 14 (CP) -
"hree Regim people were killed
rhen the car in which they were
riving hit a truck at Primrose
rosslng, two mllu Rut ot this City
irly todiy ind rebounded In the
ith of t C. P. R. gas-electric train.
The iet'- are Alvin Nelson, Jam-
Brown md a girl whose name
believed to be Gertrude Elkle.
Chester Morrison, 18, driver ot
t car which was owned by Nel-
in, tnd Miu Frances Vannot ire
hospital suffering from shock
id lace and hmd lacerations,
♦Backs   Edgewood <cn
Robson-Edgewood
Route West
Reminded that the preient rough
Igewood to Vernoi
over the Monashee Pau was open
road trom  Edgewood to Vernon
NIUON DAILY NIW*. NILION. EsV-FRlDAY MORNINC HPT. * WM.
Routes ef Oerman Drives Into Poland
ECION CALLS SPECIAL
MEETINC, MONDAY
OTTAWA, Sept 14 (CP). - A
eciil meeting of the Dominion ex-
utive council of the Canadian Lean will be held here next Monday
decide how the Legion can most
fecflvely contribute to Canada's
ir effort Governor General Lord
-eedsmuir, grand patron ot the
tgion, will attend the meeting pre-
-ed over by Brigadier W. W. roi-
ed up by men interned in a concentration camp during tbe Great
War, and with the suggestion before It that similar work might be
possible during the present wir,
the Nelson Board of Trade tt a
luncheon meeting Thursdiy indorsed tht petition of the Lower
Arrow Likes Botrd of Trede taking for a survey of a complete
Kootenay-Okanagan road via nob-
son and Edgewood.
Tht petition ot tht Lower Arrow
Lakes Board md a letter from Its
president, J. N- MacLeod of Edge-
wood, were referred to the full
Board by its council recently. The
petition iet out that tbe route provided the lowest pass available between the Kooten-.ys md the
Okanagan, en route to the Coast
md would also provide a shorter
route. It would be m ill-weather
road, lt wu pointed out
HANDS FULL
The suggestion thit a concentration camp working on iuch i
road was possible, bearing ln mind
the camp of 1914-18, camt from
John Learmonth in answer to I
protest by H. B. Gore that in view
of the outbreak of war, "the government has iti hands full", ind
the Board should not uk for my
speciil undertaking it thli tlmt.
It wu pointed out the petition
uked only for ■ survey of the
route md in estimate of the cost
of i road, not tor actual launching
of the work.
W. B, Bamford asserted the road
"would be a good thing for Tnil
md a good thing tor Nelson," and
urged thit the petition be indorsed.
Captain Pearson, Now
Paymaster 24th, Out
of Board Trade Work
A letter of appreciation for hi*
servicu will bt forwirded by the
Nelson Boird ot Trade to Capt
H. A. Pearson, now in Cranbrook
u paymaster tor the 24th Field
Brigade, R.C.A.
The Board at its luncheon at the
Hume Thursday received notice
from Captain Pearson that due-to
his present duties he would be unable to take part ln Board activity.
The letter will also congritulite
Captain Pearson on his recovery
from a recent serious illness md
will extend wishes tor hli continued health.
Marked by dotted arrow! on the map ibove
tre the directions taken by the German armiu ln
their grut drive to lubjugitt Polmd. The movement follows t lialf circle, having only the Eutern
ilde et Poland unittacked. Tht arrow* are aimed
at centru coveted by Germany for itnteglc md
induitrlil Importance. The portion ot the map
ihided with diagonal Unu is the main defence area.
Italian Press Says
Germany Will Win
, ROME, Sept 14 (AP)-The Bol.
ognt newspaper II Resto 'D* Car-
lino asserted today that Italy ln
htr present neutrality wu pursuing
the policy ot the Rome-Berlin axis,
The newspaper regarded as tn important Fascist organ, predicted
Germany would win the war and
added:
"And ln the hour ot passage ot
power between the old plutocracies
tnd tht young totalitarian states
Rome will take the place which
belongs to It."
The article wu regarded u most
outspoken to tppeir ln tht Ftscist
press since the war began.
"Italy hu not entered the war
because II Duce sees further than
anyone and is very Jealous of our
blood md our gold." It said.
The newspaper revealed Munollnl had tuured Italy sht would
reach her goals. It added that a-
mong these goals wer* Tunisia,
Jibuti md Suez.
Mishandling of Polish Minorities
Cause of Their Defeat Says Russia
MOSCOW, Sept 14 (CP-Havu)-
ravda, Communiit party organ,
xtay accuied PoUnd ot mlihand-
Of lta Ukrainian, Russitn and
ewlsh minorities In m editorial
n "the Internal causu of Poland's
lilitary defeat" It uid tn pirt:
"Although only 10 diys have pass-
d ilnce the beginning of hostili-
lu between Germany md Poland,
t can already be said that Poland
tu suffered a military defeat that
iu involved the loss by Poland of
ilmost all Its political and econom-
c centres.
"It is difficult to expliln the de-
eat of Poland solely by the super-
or military technique md organisation of the Germans md the
absence of effective aid trom Greit
Britain md France. From all the
military operatloni between Germiny md Poland lt ii Impossible
to find tny example of tny partial
succeu In ont direction or mother
Jn tht Polish resistance to the German offensive.
I "All the tutt In the Polish situation speak of disorganization of
the Polish Government mechine.
This originates in tht tint place
in the International weakness and
contradictions of the Polish itate.
"Polmd li t state of miny na
tionalities. Polu constitute only 60
per cent of the population and the
remaining 40 per cent li made up
of national minorities, principally
the Ukrainians, numbering no fewer thm 8,000,000, and the Byelo
Russians, numbering 3,000,000. The
two principal national groupi constitute t population together of
11,000,000.
"It would, seem that Polind should
have established normtl relations
with such important naUonal minorities. For it is clear that without
assuring rights to the national minorities, it is Impossible to safeguard
its internal unity md national and
political viability, whereas the Polish ruling class engaged ln oppression and repression of the national minorities, especially the Ukrainians md the Byelo Russians.
"Western Ukraine and Western
White Russia are the objects of
exploitation by the large Polish
landlords. The position of the Ukrainians and the Byelo Russians
is characterized by a regime without rights.
"The Polish ruling class maintained its domination over the national mlnorties by punitive expeditions, martial law, white terror campaigns tnd fomentation of
national animosities."
TODAY
I SHOULD
ORDER MY
Winter Coal Supply
PHONE 33
To Get the
Best I'll
'est Transfer Co.
ESTABLISHED 1899
.-----___.
Report Bremen
in Russian Port
BERLIN, Sent 14 (AP)-A nan
with an excellent connection with
the Oerman nevy reported todty
that tht liner Bremen, Germiny's
moit costly passenger vusel, had
been silled to Murmansk, Ruula.
Ht uld the $20,000,000 Ihip, tfter
leiving New York without pusen-
gers tbout M hours before Germany
started htr camptlgn in Poltnd,
took the moit Northerly coune
pouible, entering the Arctic Ocean
from the Atlantic and then proceeding to Kole Bay, where Murmansk la aituated.
LOS ANGELES, Sept 14 (AP).-
Ptuengen md crew ot a Pan-
American airliner arriving today
from Mexico City uld there wu
a rumor in Mexico the Germin
liner Bremen ii at tht Mexican
Port of Progresso, it tht Northern
end of the Yucatan Peninsula on
tht Gulf ot Mexico.	
U. 5. Court Upholds
Kidnap Convictions
in Dr. Berry Case
OLYMPIA, Wuh., Sept 14 (AP).-
The Wuhlngton supreme court upheld today the first degree kidnapping tnd assault convlcltlons ot Dr.
Kent W. Berry and hli three co-
defendants.
All were lentenced to life Imprisonment for the kidnapping a
yur ago of Irving Baker. 38, retired
U. S. Cout Guard lieutenant.
Dr. Berry, prominent Olympia
physician, James Reddick, 28, Olympia taxlcib driver, tnd William K.
McAloon, 80, former Moijteuno,
Wash., night marshill; ilio were
lentenced to JO yetn In prison on
tbeir first degree asssult conviction*,
and-Robert H. Smith, tt, Brady,
Wash., dairyman, wu sentenced to
10 years in prison on a ucond degree assault conviction. <
UNITED CHURCH UNO
DESTROYED AT LUCHOW
TORONTO, Sept 14 (CP).-Def-
lnlte word wu received at the
United Church ot Canadi hud-
quirten bare todiy that church
property at Luchow, China, wu
"mostly destroyed" ln a bombing
raid by Japanese planu aeveral
dayi ago.
Two mluionirlu ittiched to the
Luchow minion md ichool escaped
unharmed, lt wu definitely utablished They ire Rtv. C. E. Hotf-
man, Renfrew, Ont, md Misi Constance Wird of Vincouver.
HOP PICKERS ENLIST
CHILLIWACK, B. C, Sept 14
(CP)—Managen of the hop yardi
in Chilliwack^ district uid today
some o fthelr regular employees
have been called for military duty
while other young men have enlisted,   "somewhtt  affecting"   tht
harvest of thtlr cropi.
m
Df
to 15 girls tnd 10 men. This num-
L. -.-_       —Til        tU-s,       tflntlltl A.1       *%_,
Canning of the 1939 com crop
started  today, giyinf employment
ber will be doubled next week as
the four-week canning season get*
Into tull iwing.	
Nazis Score British
Attempt to Poison
Latin Relations
BERLIN, Sept 14 (AP).-Britlsh
concern lut Germany try to uttb-
llsh submarint basu In central tnd
South America was denounced in a
communique today u a "clumsy
attempt to create ptnle among Latin-
American nations."
The communique. Issued through
the Germm newi agency, referred
to the British Ministry of Information u the "misinformation miniitry."
(The miniitry lut night uld tht
Britiih Government hid "reuon to
believe tbe enemy may attempt to
establish lubmirine ind air buu
on the coasts of South and Ctntrtl
Americt.")
The Germin communique utd the
British itatement "em not be considered u other thu in attempt
to poison the good, confidential relations between Germany ind Lttin-
American nations tnd u i conscious
step to mislead the American pub-
He.
"It must bt itated once again that
Germany hu no political or military
ambitions of my nature in North.
Central or South America."
British Papers
Back Greenwood
LONDON, .Sept 14 (CP)- The
Mtnschester Guardian today gave
conspicuous attention to tbe problem of idequate munltloni tor Britain'* war effort
The London Newa Chronicle on
it* front page displtyed the attack
on wir profiteering in the Houu
of Commoni by Arthur Greenwood
acting leader ot tbe Labor party,
md hli expreued tear of a crisis
Uke the shell ihortage ot tbe lut
war.
Both theae newipapera and the
Dally Herald (Libor) reemphuiie**.
the main polnta of tha Greenwood
ipeech:
Thit the expulilon of Induitrlil
productivity tor war purpoiu ii
"one ot the mut gigantic problem*
thii country hu ever feced."
Thtt the coordinating miniitry
ot supply li 112 month) behind with
lta census of machinery md "I neve
a feeling tbat lt (industrial prob-
lem) it not being faced with vigor."
That the minister of supply, Leslie Burgin, -would make a great
mistake it ht slid not consult tht
trade unloni in pursuing the desired induitrlil expinsion u to
hours md conditions ot work.
Thit the trade union movement
"hu got to come tn on the ground
floor. It cannot be treated u a p
relation in the discussion ot th
problem*. It ia an equal."
The Manchester Guardian uld
editorially: "One point that must
have occurred to anyone who reads
Prime Minister Chamberlain'i two
'progress reports' ll the absence of
any reference to the lupply of
munition.. It wu a remarkable
omission.
"It li true thtt Mr. Burgin permitted himself to uy in reply to
a quutlon yuterday that ill firms
on munition! havt been uked 'to
proceed on the basil of utilization
of tull capacity* (one would think
to indeed!) But it may be gravely
wondered whether the Govern,
ment hu yet realized the extent
to which our whole industrial life
muit be transformed it we trt
to overcome Germany'i totalitarian
orgenliatlon tor war.
"Mr. Greenwood'! warning wis
none too itrong. We hive hardly
made a beginning tn the mobilization of our engineering reservu
or ln the planning of our labor re-
lourcu to beit the Indefinite increuu ot production thit a long
war involves. And the Government
glvu no lead."
COMMISSIONERS SEEK
NEW AIR ROUTES
OTTAWA, Sept 14 (CD-Member* ot the Board of Transport commiuionen will leave here Siturday
tor Wutern Canada where they
will conduct hearings dealing with
airplane transportation concerns
seeking to extend their services
md develop new routes ln Wutern
tnd Northwestern Cinada.
Hearings will be held ln Victoria
md Vmcouver.
DEATHS
By Tht Canadian Prtu
INVERNESS, Scotlmd—Rt Rev.
Sir David Hunter-Blair, 85, Abbot
Of Dunfermline, who relinquished
a fortune to become a monk.
LYME REGIS, England - Brig.
General Wilfred Swabey, 88, director of supplies and transport in Italy
during the first grut war.
NEW YORK — Jtmu Chmdter
Dayton, 77, publisher of the old New
York Journal from 1913 to 1938.
PORT ARTHUR-Mri. E 3. Mao-
Kay, 68, wife of the Pruldent ot
the Port Arthur Newt-Chronicle
Publishing Company.
OTTAWA—Mrs. Robert Cassels,
84, widow ot t former registrar of
the Supreme Court of Cmada.
TORONTO—John Thompson, 79,
grand steward of the Ormge Lodge
of the Masonic Order for Ontario.
VANCOUVER - George Lydiatt,
73, pioneer of the Glus Industry
ln Canadi.
Mr. Lydiatt wu t director ot the
Dominion Glut Company with
which bt hid been usocitted since
its Inception 37 years ago.
A native of St. Helen's, Ltnct*
shire, Englmd, he came to Canida
in 1873 with his parents. As a youth
be went to Ontario'! North Bay
District wher| he pioneered a farm. I
Liverpool Explosion
Injures Thirty
LIVERPOOL, Englmd, Sept 14
(CP)—Mora then 30 penoni were
Injured lerlously late today In in
explosion and fire in in ollctki
mill ber*.
The mill wu demolished. Ciuw
ot the explosion wu not known.
Brit, to Broadcast
Names of German
Prisoners and Dead
LONDON, Sept. 14 (KP) - The
British Broadcuting Compiny announced todty lt had arranged for
broadcuting u quickly u possible
th* namu of German prisoners
md tha ntmti ot Germin dud and
wounded whou identltlu are definitely established.
"We ihall be publishing the Information for the benefit ot friends
and relative*," th* announcement
nld.
"Some time may yet elapM, how
ever, until we ire tblt to publish
tht flnt casualty list So far no
namu htvt been received from
Poland, although It ia known that
the Viennen division has iuffered
casualties."
It wu understood the names
would be broadcut ln German.
Dr. Coleman Heads
Voluntary Service
OTTAWA, Sept. 14 (CP)-Dr.
E. H. Coleman, under secretary of
Itate, wu named by Postmaster
Genenl McLirty today u head
ot the new Voluntary Service
Registration Bureau.
Thtt bureiu hu bees wt up to
hmdle systematically the thousands ef offer* ot services pouring
into the officu of cibinet min-
members of parliament and
■ government officials. .
Mr. McLarty uid the government Intends to accept We offera
u opportunity arisu. The bureau
will act u a clearing houn where
offers and departmental requests
for special help will come together.
BOARD TRADE BOOKLETS
FORWARDED MONTREAL
Copies of Nelson Board of Trade
booklet! hid been forwirded to
Ian Warren, Montreal, Overseas
Pusenger Agent for tht Cmadian
Pacific Railway suggesting that
touring parties be routed through
the Kooteniyi, W. G. C. Lanskail
reported to the Boird at ita lunch-
ton Thunday.
A reply from Mr. Warren itated
he would be glad to take up the
suggestion but -did not believe
much could be done under pruent
conditions. The booklet! were for-
wtrdtd before the Europem crisis
developed Into war.
CONVICTS BREAK PRISON,
CUARDS POISONED
JOLWr, 111., Sept 14 (ilP).-Su-
itrlntendent Joseph E. Ragen said
Ive guards at Stateville, 111., prison
wera poisoned todiy u part of an
unsuccessful plot of three convicted
murderer! to mike a break tor freedom.
convict* were ciptured u
they wtre running tcrou tht prison
ytrd with t makeshift lidder. Phy-
liclini truted tht five guirdi while
a toxlcologlst attempted to learn
what type of poison wai used. Superintendent Ragen was unable to
leirn immediately bow the poison
wu administered.
lsten. n
varioui
SOLDIERS KILLED
MONCTON, N. B., Sept 14 (CT>.-
Ehllsted only a few dayi tor military urvlct, Prlvttu Emery Rogen
ot nurby Sunny Brae and Aurelle
Chevirie of Moncton were killed
eirly today when believed itruck
by a tut freight train, tbout 13
mllu from Moncton.
Polish Harvesting
Is Completed
LWOW, Poltnd (By Courier to
Rumanian Frontier), Sept 14 (AP)
—Polmd finally hai completed harvesting md hu stored iwiy ibout
500,000,000 bushels of grain.
Poland is one ot Europe's major
producen ot rye md oats, a large
grower of wheat and of tome corn
and barley. Her normal, potato crop
i* about 1,000,000,000 butheli.
Kaslo Auxiliary
legion Pledges
Loyally Empire
To Help Whenever and
Wherever Will Do
Most Good
KASLO, B. C—When a meeting
of the Canadlm Legion Auxiliary
wu held ln the club roomi i reiolutlon wu paued pledging the
memben of tbe auxiliary "to stand
loyally by the Empire md to help
whenever md wherever It will do
the most good."
It wu also urged that all memben md othen should in tht present emergency, buy only their usual luppliu of food, thus avoiding
creiting tn artificial price rise of
commodities.
A vote of thinki wu accorded
the lecretary, Mn. A. Cirney, for
her work during the summer recess. The annual banquet of the
Mth battalion, C. E. F_ wu arranged by Mn. Carney md wu m
outstanding succeu.
Mrs. Sutherland and Mn. McGibbon were hostesses at t tea following the meeting. Mn. McGibbon
presided.
Page Resigns as
Leader of Parly
CANBERRA, Sept 14 (CP-Reu-
ten).—Sir Earle Page itepped down
u leader ot the Australian Country
Party today md wu succeeded by
Archie Cameron, former Postmaster
General, in i move to huten formi-
Hon of i nttiontl government
Sir Earle presented hli resignation lut week tfter holding office
for nearly 30 yetn. Ht explained
"my oontinued leadership might by
penonal reasons impede formation
of t composite government"
At the ptrty meeting during which
Mr. Cameron wu elected luder t
resolution wis passed decltring
lt wu essential thit a national
govtrnment "should be formed on
juit terms" in this time of war.
Spokesmen for the Country Ptrty
uld Prime Minister Robert Menztu'
propoul thtt ht havt tht "unfettered right" to choose the Country
Party memben lt the government
did not fulfil essential conditions.
The Country Party igreed, however, "to keep the door open to
negotiations."
Boys Band Entertain
Passengers Scared
on Atlantic Voyage
WINNIPEG, Sept 14 (CP).-Ca-
nadian boy musicians played on the
blacked-out liner Empress ot Britain to calm their fellow passengers
who were scared of submarines ,lt
wu related today when ISO members
of the Kitsilano Boys Band of Vancouver passed through Winnipeg
en route home.
The band wu to htve played ln
tn international contut In the Alexandra Palace, London, but wu ordered to luve England immediately
on the outbreak of war by Vincent
Massey, Canadian High Commissioner. . -
"On the boat coming btck til the
windows were painted black md
we heard later that we had been
followed by a submarine all the
way across," 18-year-old Fred Tos-
sel stated. "We played tor the passengen twice. Everyone wu down
In the dumps, so we thought we
would give them iome music to
cheer them up."
TRAVELLERS SUFFER
FROM WAR, WEATHER
JUNEAU, Aliikt, Sept 14 (CP)
—Three Canadians—two attorneys
and a Diesel engineer—arrived here
today atter t thret day trip from
Atlin—usually accomplished ln 60
minutes flying time and they blamed the war md weather for the delay.
W. D. Fulton md T. W. Brown of
Prince Rupert md Jamu Ozendale,
Atlin engineer, uld they couldn't
get a Juneau plane to fly them trom
the northern British Columbia town
of Atlln becauie Canadian lawi
prevent American planu from flying over the Dominion without
ipeclal permission.
SOUTH AFRICA MAKES
HOARDING REGULATIONS
CAPE TOWN, Sept 14 (AP).-
South Africa published emergency
regulations today againit hoarding
md profiteering.
The regulations empowered the
Government to requisition goods md
land, to prohibit meetings and processions, restrict liquor sales md
itamp out subversive activities.
It provided for safeguarding of
jobs of employees enlisting for service md extended the Government'!
powen of search. Profiteering was
made punishable by a fine ot £200
or two yean imprisonment
Cancer Patients
Retain Consciousness
in 'Iced Amnesia'
By HOWARD BLAKESLEE
ATLANTIC.CITY, N. J, Sept 14
(AP(—A new step in human hibernation wu announced today to the
third international cancer congress.
It is "iced amnesia", In which
nen and women remain conscious
tor days, but with their bodiu chilled to 88 or 90 degrees, so their
main sensation it drowsiness md
they lie still in a itate ot deepest
rut
Afterwird they have no memory
of what happened, although during the cold amnesia they talk to
their physlciam md nurses, have
blood pressures taken, and occasionally take saline liquids. The liquids are given by tube.
This new amnesia state wu developed at Temple Unlvenity u a
safe method of using the "iced
sleep* which wu mnounced to the
American Medical Association at
St Louii last May. To relieve ptin
in cancer. Then the patients were
put completely to sleep wljh cold
and sedative for five days.
In the new amnesia a penon ll
given eplnal, which puts him to
sleep in his room. He ii cirried
to an air-conditioned room with
an unchanging temperature of 80.
There he li stripped and packed
with ice.
Bay of Fundy
Shipping Warned
SAINT JOHN, N. B- Sept 14
(CP)—A radio warning to all shipping ln the Bay of Fundy wu sent
ou'. from the Red Hud wireless
station today, after fishermen reported to marine agent H. F. Mor-
risey lut night they bad sighted
a craft which may have been a
submarine.
Fishermen told Morrtaey they
had sighted the vesul—which they
uid wu low in the wtter md ippetred to htvt two mists— two
milu fjoutheut of Ground Mtntn.
Fishermen along the New Brunswick cout hive organized into t
voluntary pollct group, with ont
of thtir dutlu to report my suspicious craft or occurencu to cental officials.
M8t iivrx
Additional Room
Castlegar School
Due lo Increase
CASTLEGAR, B. C.-The ichool
opened it Cutlegir with i grett increue In attendance. The term opened'with five roomi md five teachers, u last year, but tht Increue
in pupili wu io greet It wu decided mother room md teicher
were necesary. The sixth room in
the building wu then prepired for
use md mother teacher hired.
The total number ot pupili ln
public ichool li now 169, md in high
•chool 28.
The teaching staff include* Mlu
E. Lemmon ot Nelson, Miu V. Robinson ot Blewett, Miss H. McGauley,
of Cutlegar, Robert Sommers of
Nelson and R. Whittacker ot Kulo.
Judge Recommends
Naturalization of
Nick Polzun, Pole
Following further invutigttlon of
the record of the applicant, His
Honor Judge W ... Nisbet In County
Court recommended Nick Polzun,
Polish carpenter of Nelson, for naturalization. Hli Honor reserved hii
decision on the ippllcitlon Tuesday
until tht record could be checked.
Polzun, single mm, came to Ctntdt trom Poltnd April 21, 1928,
landing it Halifax. He wu born
March 9, 1908, at Detkovicke, Grodno, then part ot Russia, but now
part of Polmd.
After arriving ln Canada he ipent
three monthi it Edmonton, two
yun in Route Villey, nur McBride, B.C., 11 monthi at Grand
Forks ,and the put ieven yean in
Nelion md district
Two New Members
Elected to Board
Membenhlp application* of J.
Ballantyne of Canadlm Acceptance
Corporation Ltd. and of S. T. Oldham, Pruldent of the Nelion Sash
dt Door Co., Ltd., were accepted
without ballot by the Nelson Board
ot Trade Thundiy at lta luncheon
at the Hume.     _,
T. A. Mills, lite member, attended
the meeting, W, A. Harrison recently appointed Manager of Mac-
donalds Consolidated Ltd., also attended u carrying on the membership of hi* firm, formerly held by
David Kerr, now at Vmcouver.
Ministers in High
School Parliamr
Given Portfolio
Junior High Student
to Nominate for
!    Club Officers
With the 1939-40 hool term we
Into its ucond week, High Schoo
and Junior Hugh School student/
are settling down to organlutloi
of their club* and houiu tor an
other yur'i work.
Memben ol the High School Ptr
llament, at a ubintt meeting Wed
nudty ifternoon, were assigned
their portfolio!. The ministers were
elected before school broke up ln
Junt, but usignmeat of tht portfolios wu left over till this term.
First steps to form ichool dubs were
ilso taken.
Junior High School itudent! thli
afternoon will nominite offlcen for
their houiu, Spartans, Vikings tnd
Normans, tnd tor ichool clubs. Election of officen will likely take plice
the following Friday.
Ministers of the High School Ptrliiment, under the leadenhip of
Aim Emmott Prime Minister, are:
Robert Fruer, Minister of Finance;
Helen Alexander, Minister ot records; Stuirt Macintosh, Minister of
Athletici; John Holland, MinUter
ot Clubi tnd International Attain;
•nd Peggy Dunnett Minister of Socltl Activltlu.
A cholct of eight clubi wu preiented the itudente Wednudiy tvtnlng, to decided which they wished
to join. The club's with their spon-
lon ire: Science, J. A. Fraser; Girli*
Gimes, Mlu G. E. Hudion; Boyi'
Gym, D. H. Tye; Girll' Choral, MiM
Amelli Hanna; Camera, W. H. Grey;
Players, Miss Patricia Campbell;
md Dltcuuioni, Gerald Lee. A
study club for those not wishing to
Join my of the othen will alio ba.
started.
The Discussions Club wfll liter
become the Publicttloni Committee, to hive charge of publictttom
of tht ichool tnnutl.
Board of Trade Will
Express Thanks for  .
C.B.C. Hookup Nelson
Expressing gratlficttlon In CKLN
Rtdlo Nelson being hooked up with
the Ctntdian Broadcuting Corpor-
ition network, the Nelson Board
ot Trade directed Thursday thtt
letten of thanks should be ient to
Gladstone Murray, general manager
of the C. B. C. and to Indlviduali
and usoclatiom who gavt their efforti to obtaining the hookup.
Letten will be forwarded to Mr.
Murray md to W. K. Esling, UF.
for Kootenty Wut; Miyor N. C
Stibbi ma the City of Nelion; the
Nelson Junior Board ot Trade: tbe
Rotary, Gyro and Kinsmen Clubi;
Kokanee Chapter, I.O.D.E.; Nelson
Women'i Inititute; md Ntlion Liberal Auoclation.
MALONE HEADS SASK.
R.CA. RECRUITING
REGINA, Sept 14 (CP).-J. Cyril
Maione, with rank ot Wing Commander, hu been appointed to take
charge of recruiting in Saskatchewan for the Royal Canadian Air
Force. He will have headquarten In
Regint with a depot it Saskatoon.
Movement of Brilish Troops Across
Channel Described as Triumph
LEEDS, Englmd, Sept 14 (CP)
Movement of the British expeditionary force to Frmce was described today by the military correspondent of tlie Yorkshire Post
u a "triumph ot determined or*
gantzation."
"The provision of vessels wu the
great problem with i modern army
which is 30 times heavier in bulk
weight owing to mechanization,"
the article uid. "Here the shipping
companies and the mercantile marine played their part bnr dismantling their ships' holds to take
the giant machines.
"German calculatloni up to a
year ago were that even lt the
short chmnel crossing might not
be preventable it wu possible to
make long sea transportation a
dangerous hazard and that submarines md aircraft could prevent
overseas possessions trom being reinforced with ipeed.
"We countered thit by placing
our overseas forces ln accessible
positions during the monthi ot
peace md so limited transportation
to the troops destined for Frmce."
Thii wu a reference to the official announcements of August ln
which the Government made ur-
tain dispositions of reinforcementa
for Singapore md Egypt
Returning to the lubject ot tha
movement of tbe expeditionary
force to Franca, the correspondent
continued:
"Ai far u la known the enemy
gleaned no knowledge ot the long
columns that passed ln recent
nighti through the dirk country
lanes to British harbors. At the
heavy columni irrived docken
made short work ot itowing armor-
ed fighting vehlclu on .shipboard.
Stum was up ud tht shlpi were
quickly away, shadowtd by tht
escorts ot the Roytl Navy,
"Brigade tfter brigade, dlvlilon
atter division were thus transported. The work went on md some
idea ot the enormous mture of the
task may be gathered from the ftct
that a division with its vehlclu oa
a single road stretches for 20 milu.'
One correspondent tt a port in
the louth of England estimated
that tt erne time three traini arrived each hour day md night from
the interior ot Englmd tor the dia-
patch of those troopi which did
not come to the embarkation point
by highway.
POLL TAX  $5.00
Every malt person over the tgt of Twenty-ont years residing
for t ptrlod of one month within tht boundtrlu of tht Munlcl.
ptllty or tht Nelson School Dlitrict during tht yetr who hu ntt
ptld to tht City of Nelton or to tny other Municipality In the
Province meiied taxu to tht vilut of $6.00 on rul property far
tht year tndlng December 31st, 1938, ihall- be liable to pty te
tht City of Nelion. tnd thert shall bt Imposed tnd collected from
such penon. for 1938, tht rate tnd ium of Flvt ($5.00) Dollar*.
(Subject to Statutory Exemptions)
ROAD TAX  $2.00
Every penon between tht ages of Twenty-one yetn tnd Sixty
yun residing within tht Municipality during tny ytar who dou
not pty to tht City of Nelson Retl Eitate ttxet for such yesr shall
bt liable to pty, tnd thill piy to tht uld Municipality, the rati-
and ium of Two ($2.00) Dollire ptr mnum by wty of Roid Tix.
(Subject to Statutory Exemption!)
Both th* Provincial Pod Tax ef $5 and Read Tax ef
$2 are now due and payable by all resident! ef the City
ef Nelaon, who are liable fer them. Refusal of anyone
to make payment upon requeit by tfie Collector, pro-
ceedinga will be taken to collect the amouitjta due.
Payment ef theie taxaa by those liable for tham la
essential before they may register fer er have their
namea retained en the vMera' list fer 1940.
The City of Nelson.
	
	
■
 —.—.—.____«__
	
PAOE   EIOH1
NO NEED FOR INTRODUCTION NOW
WHEN BOY MEETS GIRL IN LONDON
Is?.
)ear Ole Lonnon
Chummier Now
atWar
Sy FRED BACKHOUSE
LONDON, Sept. 14 (CP Cible)
—Life ln this officially blacked-
out Uttle island "aint really" so
Sloomy, lt only because the naves are suffering from the blggeit outbreak of chiimmlncu on
record. It's epidemic.
That well-known British reserve
needed the war to bretk it down.
Nowadays when you dive for the
nearest A.R.P. shelter you don't
ask whether your neighbor went
to tha "right ichool or not
And once illeftt commuten on the
8:37 to town now are like one big
family. That stately fellow wtth the
itarched collar—looks like a civil
lervtnt—who travelled with us lor
yetn ind wu always frozen behind
hit paper, luddenly ups and tells us
there tre t lot ot balloons about
thli morning.
TSKI TSKI
Soon tht whalt cirrltgi li pro.
voktd Into exchanging lift etorlet,
Afterwirds tht Wir Otf Ic* mtjer
who It t fellow puungtr confided, "Dimmit tir, wt ire positively
. Amerletnl"
On city itreet can young men can
(ake advmtage of the fact most girls
fcavt their names and addresses on
cither ■ libel tied to their coati or
on their gu mask boxes.
When a pretty typist boarded a
Piccadilly bus today the aoldien
•nd sailon aboard didn't need an
introduction. They looked it her label And when she left they chorused
"Goodbye, Elsie."
In London's milk ban tnd pubs
they were laughing about those
"Lansbury leaflet" raids on Germany. The itory is that one R. A. F.
pamphlet pilot returned four houn
titer he wu due. He explained,
"Well, sir, ill wu so quiet I went
down and pushed them under the
doon." ,
And wits hive changed Cromwell i
cry to hii troops, "Trust ln God and
keep your powder dry," to "Trust in
Gort and keep your pamphlets dry."
•LANTERNS" REVIVAL
Blackout meuures demand a
flock of expensive little devices like
luminous buttons and glowllghta on
hatribbons, bandeaux and aleeves,
"pour madame," of coune, but most
blokes down our way Just tie a
handkerchief iround the arm. It's
u effective.
But t writer ln the Tlmu lerloui-
ly suggested • revival ot the ancient
Euraley Lanterns, explaining:—
"At Dunley, Gloucesterehlre,
hen ladies and gentlemen used to
I out to dinner together on* dark
(hta the gentlemen pulled out the
tall of their shirts and walked before
to show the way to the ladies. These
were called Dursley lanterns."
""iadame" has the problem ot a
cr' ure that can be worn under the
ui 'nrm caps ol the auxiliary forces.
F.-lured is a style with short curls
at the back ln Astrachan effeet and
two-inch baby curls in front
Another, called the terrier—after
the territorial army— hu the back
cropped short with the front hair
left long and swept up in oft-the-
face curls.
Stores are advertising "air raid
thelter wear for women"  which
, turns out to bt moitly man-tailored
trouien it two quid etch.
Women ln the national service ire
warned by utute complexion tood
rotnuticturen that all thia work in
the open tir will pliy htvoc with
delicate skins unleu xxx.
The cabaret busineu la booming
now restaurants can promise ide-
quite ihelten for cuitomen.
One ot th* fint war-time cabaret artists, ln the great tradition
of tht lut wit's night-time en-
tertilnen, ta ictress Ingi Anderion from Prince George, B. C_
She pioneered it the imirt Cafe
de Paris lut night with witty
tinging. Most of the men present
wore uniforms.
Brighter London wu definitely
on the wsy bick with in tnnouncement tonight that all cinemas, tbei-
tcn ind other entertainments, except ln central London, will be resumed.
The first theatre to open wu at
suburban Golfen Green where a
matinee or Oscar Wilde's "The Importance of Being Earnest" wu
given. The queue formed at 9 ajn.
Arrangements were made to itop
the play at once and let the audience
seek shelter if tn tir raid tlarm
sounded during the performance.
A West end shoe black advertised:
"Why hive your toei trodden on in
the blackout? Come to London'i
fint ihoewhlte."
itat-eon pail* nan-*, nei.as.si. •.dt-triday MOimma. sift, ti, ths.
Fingland Mint Ltd.,
Nelson, Incorporates
VICTORIA, Sept 14 (CP) -
Slowed down by the outbreak ol
war the new companies list in British Columbia showed Uttle tctivlty
this week, with only lour ntw firms
Incorporated:
Broidwty Seafoods Limited, $10,-
000, Vancouver.
Fingland Mine Limited, (NPIs.)
$10,000, Nelson.
Dolam Limited, $10,000, Victoria.
Kent Industries Limited, $25.-
000, Vancouver.
MORE ABOUT
CABINET COUNCIL
(Continued From Page Ont)
It li tntlcipated tht defence pur-
chasingsboard will be the nucleus ot
the war supply board, and that K C.
Vaughan, purchasing agent of the
Canadian National Railways tnd
chairman of the defence purchasing
board, will continue u head of the,
new organization.
The war supply board will be
directly under the Jurisdiction of
Col. Ralston ln hit capacity ot Fin-
ance Minister, u wu the defence
purchasing board. If tt should be
necessary to enlarge the work ol the
board under a full time minister,
it appears likely CoL Ralston would
be its head.   '
j,. ... SPECIAl
f****W   SELECTED
OTEWHISKY
•OTTLIDIN tONOINC_VH*DAllSV»aaOLD
.18 oz. $2.00; 28 oz. $3.18
■om.ce m tow m euuo*
18 ax. $1.70; 28 oz. $2.85; 40 oz. $4.05
MemuoMD aomto in «mim
12 ea. $1.20; 28 et $2.30; 40 oz. $3.40
i slmdcd aw> tomin m tconjwe
28 2/1 oz. $3.75
This advt. is not published or
displayed by ths Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia.
111th FIELD
BATTERY, R.C.A.
NELSON,  B.O.
Daily-order No. 11 by Major A.
E. Dalgas, M.C. Commanding, September 14, 1839.
DUTIES
Orderly officer for the day—2-
Lleut E. M. Gillott; next for duty
2-Lieut G. C. Wallach. Orderly
sergeant for the day—A-Sgt. Oliver
A. D.; next tor duty—L-Sgt. Clark
A. L.
PARADES
Assemble 0800 houn. Fall In 0618
hours.
DRESS
All ranki who htvt received line will wear Held tervlce uniform.
I REVEILLE
LIGHTS OUT
Reveille wtll be sounded 0800
hours. Tattoo 2200- houn. Bdn.,
L-Bdn., not allowed on itreeti
after llghti out hu been lounded
at 2215 houn.
GENERAL
Assembly will take pile* in tilt
Drill Hill only.
A. R. Johnson, 2-Lieut, lor O.C.
Battery.      ,
109th FIELD
BATTERY, R.C.A.
TRAIL, B. C.
Bittery Ordin-By MtJor W. H,
Tiylor, Offlctr Commtndlng—Pirt
1 Orden fer Frldiy, September
15th, 1938.
DUTIES
Orderly officer, Lieut A. T.
Stephenson.
Next for duty, Lieut A. D. Greenwood.
Orderly Sergt, Sgt. Wiley, R. V.
Next for duty, L-Sgt Binks, C. W.
Orderly trumpeter, Tptr. Fox, J.
B.
Guard duty u followi:
DAY GUARD
Bdr. Ttntln, F. (N.CO. l-c): Gnr.
Fitch. W. C; Gnr. McKty, D. A.;
Gnr. Hill, G. H.; Gnr. McKty, J. H.
NIQHT GUARD
Sgt Cumminu, 3. (N.C.O. l-c);
Gnr. McKty, J. R.; Gnr. stinson, B.
Gnr. Simpson, H.
PARADES
0813 hn. Assemble it Armoury.
8830 hn. Fall iti-P.T.
0900 hrs. Defaulters ptnde.
Training u per Syllabus
1348 hrs. Assemble   at   Victoria
Park,    (lt    Inclement
weather—Armoury)
1400 hn. FaU In. '
Training u par Syllabui
NOTE
All ranki ire again reminded that
they are lubject to "Mllitery Law"
at all timet,
3. c McDiarmid,
■ Second-Lieutenint
For O.C. 108th Field Bittery, R.C.A.
MORE ABOUT
Embargo Repeal
(Continued From Paga One)
Secretary of State Cordell Hull
notified the warring nations that
tbe United Statei Government is
standing, ln every wty, upon ita
right! u t neutral under International Law. Any vtolitioni ot
thote righta, he uld, will evoke
tuch action by the United States
"as may teem mott practical tnd
prudent"
The Justice i Department  wu
drifting "antl-protiteering" legislation. Attorney-General Murphy
uid the purpose wu to hive the
legislation ready for possible submission to Congreu in cue it
were needed to prevent "gouging" of consumers through excessive prices.       i
Secretary Morgenthau tnnounced
thit the Treuury wu studying the
possibilities ot tn Improved bud-
Settry position u a result ot the war.
.using commodity prlcet, might
mem a saving on farm benefit
payments lor instance, be aald, and
an upturn In buslneu would reduce relief costs.
From the Federal Reierve Botrd
ctme word thtt the Reierve Banks
bought $230,000,000 ot Government
securities ln the week which closed
September 13, for the purpoie of
•voiding iny undue decline in the
price of thote obligations.
Stephen T. Eirly, the President's
Press Secretary, told newsmen thtt
developments In the wir, the activities ot submarines, tnd the sinking
of the British liner Athenia Influenced Mr. Roosevelt to summon tbe
ipecltl session of Congreu.
Although the debite on the trmi
embtrgo question hit been running on intermittently for monthi,
tnd becime in issue of tint rink
importance with the outbreak of
the war' abroad. Senator Borah's
speech, ln i sense, opened the battle
of the Senate bloc wbich la opposed to repeal.
The Administration winta the embtrgo iboltshed. Roosevelt support-
en trgue that the ban un-neutrally
deprives Great Britain of the advantages to be derived trom her
itrength at tet, . ,  >
CREASE PAINTED MAN    "
ROBS BANK, TORONTO
TORONTO, Sept 14 (CP)-A man
whote face wu smeared with yellow grease paint today held up the
Danforth and Layton Avenue
branch of the Dominion Btnk here
and escaped , with approximately
$2,000.
The robber fired one ihot before
letvlng but pollct uid lt ippirently wu i blink.
POUND TOUCHES
10W SINCE 193)
' NJ4W YORK, ."sept 14 (CP)-Tha
pound iterling slumped to 3.9-H
In terms of tbe United States dollar
todsy ln one of the most freakish
sessions of foreign exchinge detl.
ings here since the outbretk ot wtr.
At noon, with the mirket vlrtuilly
stagnant the pound went down to
3.85, its lowest level since May, 1933.
The British unit opened et an uked price of 3.97% off 33H trom Mon-
day, and with no blda tabled illpped quickly to 3.85. Liter in tnnouncement by the binkers' foreign
exchange committee that United
States demind for dolltr exchange
would be conditionally satisfied in
the London market at $4.02 and a
flush of sterling buying by Japanese Interests sent the pound upwards
to 1.95, ln later dealings iterling
eued to 8.92% at the close.
Following the pound, the Canadian dollar opened short Vt cents
et 9% discount declined to 10 5-18
discount at noon, and wound up at
9% discount for a net lots of one
cent
Tha franc alto kept ptct with
the pound, opening at 2.25*ti for a
loss of ,03V., dipping to 2.19 tt noon
and finishing it 2.24 for i decline of
.oeVi centa on the dty.
i SSS       i
Northern Neutral
Stotes to Discuss
Trade Protection
COPENHAGEN. .Sept 14 (API-
Neutral Northern Europetn states,
fsced with the pressing necessity
of protecting winter supplies, trt
seeking a meins to maintain import and export trade without
dangerously offending the belligerents.
What the neutrali would Uk* to
do already has been expressed by
Finland's foreign minister Elias Er-
kko who uid his country would
try to maintain trade relations with
warring nation! "on an identical
basis, favoring neither tide."
Premlen of Denmirk, Norwiys
Sweden and Finland meet here
Sept 18 to diicuu the iltuition. On
the agenda is the question ot what
measures the Baltic states would
take In the vent of unrestricted submarine -warfare, •
Denmark hu lound lta fishing
fleets demoralized and commercial
navigation crippled by nearby German and British minefields, whence
come almoit daily reporti of linking.
Finland, Ita Biltic outlet practically cloied, ta considering Immediate extension of a railroad to the
Arctic Ocean.
Lithuania already Is feeling an
tcute ihortage of fuel, serious In
view ol the usually severe winters.
Copenhagen, t fortnight ago brilliantly lighted, has become almost
as dirk u the belligerent capital!
Canadian Censor
Wtlter S.-Thompion of Montreel,
veteran newspaper and publicity
man, hu ben named chairman of
the Canadian central censorship
committee.        ,   .
SEARCH VAN. BANDITS
VANCOUVER, fcpt 14 (CP) -
Vancouver polios ar* searching for
two armed and muked btndlts
who list night ittempted to hold up
the clerk tnd six patroni ot a
downtown drug iter*. The men
fled in a car driven by a third man
before obtaining iny loot
Brit, Broadcasts in
Italian, Rumanian
LONDON. Sept 14 (CP) - The
Britiih Broadcuting Corpontlon
mnounced thit beginning today
newi would be regularly broidcut
ln tbe Italian, Rumintan and Serbo-
Croat languages. .
KELOWNA, B.C, Sept 14 (CP).
— The old Okanagan Lake ferry
which piled between Kelowna and
Westbank for 11 yean until replaced
July l by the motor ferry Pendoil,
hu been condemned by federal
steamship Inspecton.
RELIEF ROUS
DOWN IN JULY
OTTAWA, Sept 14 (CD-Unemployment ln Ctntdt during July tell
otf four per cent from the previoui
month tnd wu 3.7 per cent lower
thtn the ume month of 1938, accord
log to a report Issued today by Labor Minister Rogen.
Preliminary flguru ihowed the
grand total of ill classes of penoni
on urban and agricultural relief
amounted to 808,000.
Non-agricultural reliet wu supplied 535/000 persons, t tour per
cent decrease (rom June, but 7.8
per cent higher then July, 1938,
while farmeri and their dependents
receiving aid numbered 271,000 persons, representing decreases of 4-1
and 20 (correct) per cent Of this
total on agricultural aid, 234,000
were located ln the Province ot
Saskatchewan ,the report uid.
"Unemployed but tully employable" penons on relief decreased
5.75 per cent from the previous
month to 140,500 but wu 8.2 per
cent higher than tbe ume month
lut yetr.
U. S. Oil Conduct .
During Great War
Defended by Moffet
ATLANTIC Cmr, N.J, Sept 14
(AP).—The United Statu oil Industry'! economic conduct during
the first Greit Wir wu defended
before the U. S. Petroleum Association today by June! A. Moffett
of New York. American oil for the
alllei wu purchued through the
U. S. petroleum wir service commisilon. of which Motfett wu lecretary.
Moffett uld hta ipeech tnswired
remark! ha attributed to Harold
Ickes, Secretary of the Interior,.thtt
the oil industry operated unsatisfactorily during the wir and that
the prlc* of crude oil went to $3
a birrel.
"Crude oa did not go to $3 i
barrel," Moffett uld. "The bulc
supply of crude oil did not exceed
$2.25 t barrel it the well end for i
considerable time tbe top price wu
$2."
Rossland Social.,
largely to conserve fuel. ,
BOARD TRADE EXPRESSES
SYMPATHY WITH KERR IN
DEATH OF HIS MOTHER
' An "expression of lympithy in
the lou ot his mother, Mrs. Mtry
Kerr, wu extended by the Boird
ot Trade Thunday to D. Louis
Kerr, an active. member of the
boerd.   ■ * * ■       •    «« y*t t ■'«
4S*
Ore Jhtz Qjjl
WotXtt&tMtottHthltom MWWSMWWW'StMwS
FRIDAY, SEPTEMKR-15, 1939,
"Radio Nahon"—Station CKLN—will ba In epara-
Hon alxtaan hoiira dally, carrying Canadian Broadcasting
Corporation programmea, except for station factum, aa
ahown. v
CKLN—NELSON
A.M.— i ;.-■•''.,'
' 7*0—0 Cinada
7:03—Hodge Podge Lodge
8:15—The Newi
9:30—Hollywood Salon Orcheitra
10:00—Kootenay Lake General Hospital Programme
11:00—Morning Bulletin Board
f. M.—
12:30-The Newt
1:00—Matinee Melodiu
6:00—Daily Divertisement
6:15-Lafl Parade    , '
6:80—The Newi „ .
8:45—Just Relax
7:30-The Sportllght
U:00-God Save the King
Other periods—CBC Programmu
CBC PROGRAMMES
A. M.—
8:00—Th* BiUtdeer
8:15—The Kidoodlers
8:30-The News
8:45—The Joyce Trio
9:00—The Happy Gang
9:30-Road of Life
9:45—Vaughn Munro* . ■
10:00—"Big Sister"
10:15—Life and Love of Dr. Sunn
10:30—Rhythm School
ll:00-The Story   t Miry Mtrlln
U:15-Mi Perklni
11:80—Pepper Young'i Ftmily
ll:45-The Guiding Light
12:00—The Newi
P.M.—
180,731,302 BUSHELS
■  WHEAT STORED SEPT. 8
' OTTAWA, Sept 14 (CP)-Cana.
dim wheit In store lor the week
ended Sept 8 totalled 180,731*12
bushels compired with 142,999,827
the previous week ind 89,034.081
the stmt -week lut yetr, the Dominion bureiu ot statistics reported
todiy.
Cinidlin wheat ln the United
States amounted to 7,330,000 bushels, in Increase ol 123,000 over tbe
previous week.
12:15-Club Matinee
l:15-Curley the Yodelling Cowboy
1:30—Len Salvo-organiit
1:45—Closing Stock Quotation*
2:00-Muted Music
2:15—Gray Gordon's Orch.
2:30—Gray Gordon'! Orchutra
2:45-Under the Big Top
8:00-Wilfrld Chirette't Orcheitra
3:30—Weekly  song   Sheet
4:00-Mlss Trent's Children      . ■
4:30—Acadian Serenade
5:00-Make Mine Music
5:30—Jimmie Shields—Tenor
6:15—The Old Girdener
6:30—Gilbert Darisse's Orch.
7:00—The Newi
7:15—Wilf Ctrter—Songi   "
7:30—Mirt Kenney*! Wutern Gentlemen
8:00—Modern Americana
8:45—Will Osborne'i Orchutra
9:0O~On Wings Ot Song
9:30-Len Hopklni' Orch.
9:45—The News
KfcOO-Farl Kellv'i Prog.
10:30—Freddie Mirtin'i Orcheitra
11:00—Gary Nottingham'! Orch.
, CJAT — TRAH. \,
A.M.— *    ^
IM—Requut Program
7:30—Newi
7:45-Song Hita'
8:00— Bulletin Boird
10:30—Melody Time
12:00~On With Th* Danca
P. M.—
12:30-The Newt
12:45—Varietlei
l:00~Up-to-the-Mlnute
1:15—Colville Roundup
2:00—Women'a Radio Journal
3:30—Tantalizing  Rhythm*
3:45—Rhythm and Romance
4:00—The' Newi
4:15—Home Folki Rollo
4:30-Theitr* Newt
4:45—Tea Time Tunu
6:00—Headlines in Sport
6:15—Romance ot Music
6:30—Dinner Music
6:45—Hollywood Casting Ollle*
7:15—Light up and Listen
7:30—The Lone Ranger
Other periods, CBC Programmu
THE NETS' BEST
4:00-NBC-Red-Citlu Service Concert
4:30-Columbla - Johnny Preienta
5:00—Columbia-Make Mine Music
5:30-NBC-Blue - Hirry Horllck't
Orchutra
8-00—Columbia-Grand Central Station
6;30-Columblt-Robert L. Ripley*!
Believe It or Not
7:00-NBC-Red-Fred   Wiring   In
Pleasure Tim*
7:30—NBC-Red-Emery    Deutach'i
Orch.
8:00-NBC-Red-Good Morning Tonight
8:30-NBC-Red-Deeth Velley Dm
8:00—Columbit — Bob Sherwood's
Orch.
9:30—Columbta-Muiiy    Marcel-
lino'i Orch.
10:00-Columbta - Larry   Kenft,
Orchestra
10:30-NBC-Red-Geo. Olsen'i Orch.
11:00— Columbia-Pasadena   Civic
Auditorium Orch.
NBC-Red
KFI, Lot Angeles; KHQ. Spoktnt
KGW, Portltnd. KOA, Denver
KPO, San Franciico
NBC-Blue
KGA, Spokane. KGO San Franciico
.<   KJR,    Setttlt   .
Columbli
KNX. Hollywood: KSL. Salt Ukt
City
KFPY, Spoktne; KOIN. Portltnd
Mututl-Don  tM
KOL, Setttle, KFRC. Sin Fnndtco
ROSSLAND, B. C, Sept 14-S. O.
Palmqulit wu a Spokane viiltor
Thunday, attending a ipecial meeting ot the Fraternal Order ot Eagles.
Muter Richard Meyen is reported
recovering Irom in operation lor
appendicitis, performed at the Mater
Mlsericordiae Hospital Wedneiday.
The Women'i Auxiliary to the Cinidi tn'Legion met it the Rossland
Court House Wednesdiy evening,
when after routine buiineu, Mra.
William Gresley-Jones presented the
/"auxiliary with a new flag. Mn.
William Butorac wu th* winner of
a small raffle, held during the social
hour which followed. Thoie present
included Mrs. Willtam Gresley-
Jones, Mrs. William Butorac, Mn.
T. G. Wood, Mn. Wllllim Bulck,
Mn. John McCuUough, Mn. E. E.
Turner, Mn., John Phllllpi, Mn.
Reginald Symons, Mrs. J, H. Conroy, Mn. Lindsiy Conroy, Mn. John
Bradley. Mn. Wllllim Inglls, Mn.
Henry Bathie, Mrs. E. L. Wilker.
Mn. Robert Richardson, Mn. Alice
Powell, Mn. Irene Knox and Mn.
G. P. Cooper. Plana wera made to
hold a social evening it the home of
Mn. John Phillip* September 29.
Mlu Athlyn Lowu, popular Rouland bride-elect wu gueit of honor
Tuudty evening tt i perty held at
the Roulind Ski Ctbin by tht Consolidated Mining & Smelting Company itenographers. During the evening Mlu Lowes wu made a presentation ot a beautiful ailver cake
plate, and comport A mock wedding wu the featured entertainment those taking pert being Miss
Enid Cooper. Mlu Beth Kollmv,
Mra. Myrtle Askey, Mlu Peggy Ma-
Callum and Mim Audrey Rutledge
of Trail and Mln Eva Wright and
Mist Evelyn Bourchler, of Rossland. Those present from Trail were
Mlu Elleei^ Faulkner, Mlu Dorothy
Donaldson, Miss Doris Nelson, Miss
Lillian Greig, Miu Helen McLaren,
Miw Ruth Brady, Mln Dorothy
Foster, Miu Evelyn DlPasquile,
Mlu Mona Sheilds, Mlu Louise
Bisset Mlu Enid Cooper, Mlu Beth
Kollmar, Mn. Myrtle Askey, Miss
Peggy McCallum and Miu Audrey
Rutledge. Rossland guesta Included
Miss Doris Terzick, Mn. Edith Jure,
Miss Helen Stevens, Miss Dorothea
McDonell, Mlai Lllllu Jarvii, Miss
Evelyn Bourchler tnd Mlu Eva
Wright i
Texas, Yellowknife
Parties, Tourist Park
•*4ake Season Total 73
Two registrations it the City
Touriit Pirk by Thunctay — both
from great distances — brought the
season's total to date to 73. One of
the registration! wu from Texu
and the other from Yellowknife. N.
W. T. Ten parties have reglitered
during September to date.
Speculators Open
to Charge Warns
OTTAWA, Sept 14 (CP)-The
Wartime Pricei and Trade Board
warned tonight that person! or companiu not in the produce business
and therefore not normally engaged
in the buying and selling of butter
may luve themselvu open to prosecution for speculating in butter.
Section nine, subsection two ot the
board's relations states: "No person
shall accumulate or withhold trom
ssle iny necessary of life beyond
•n imount thereof reasonably required tor the use or consumption
of his household or for the ordinary
purpose ot his buslneu."
A statement issued by the board
tonight uld that "steps have already
been taken by the board to secure
Information with regard to the
names, addresses and occupations
of penons or companiu which have
engaged ln this torm of speculation."
MORE ABOUT
REEMPLOYMENT
(Continued From Ptgt Ont)
The Bittery did not know where
tt wu going, but wu not likely to
remain in Nelaon long, he thought
Major Dalgu stated eventa had
proved the war ot 1914-1918 wu by
no meani decisive, "but this one
must be." Another Waterloo wu
coming, he felt
Proposing the resolution, Major
Dalgas received the support of
Mayor N. C. Stibbi, who itated the
City had already taken steps to assure reemployment ot any men who
left the City service to enlist.
The resolution wu moved by Ven.
Archdescon Fred H. Graham and
seconded by Miyor Stibbi.
CANADIAN PENSIONS
Mr. Thain, tnxious thit the resolution should not be Interpreted u
reflecting upon government cire ot
returned men it the conclusion ot
the lut wir, stated "Canada has
the flnut pension scheme on God's
green earth" with the exception only
ot the United States. In the cue of
the United States "casualties" were
comparatively few and could be
treated more generously, he uld.
Imperials did not receive halt the
consideration that Canadians were
given after the wir, Mr. Thain uld.
Canada had not had the experience
of war'! aftermath previously, and
the government had to learn how
to deal with thli problem, but the
good Intentions ot the government
•nd the people in Canada were
never in doubt he userted.
LONDON THEATRES OPEN.
LONDON, Sept 14 (CP).-Lon-
don motion picture theatres Irom
tomorrow on will be permitted to
operate from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. except ln the West End, where they
will cloae at 6 p.m. the home office
announced tonight .
last Respects "
Paid Ihe Ule
W. J. Rich;
Funeral tervlcu were heM l
the Chipel ot the Somen Funei
Home Thunday ifternoon for t
late W. J. (Bosun) Richards, wh|
died ln the Kootenay Lake Genert
Hospital Monday ttternoon at
ige ot 79 yein.   Interment
puce ln the City Cemetery.
Rev. Foster Hilliard conducted t
services.   The   congregation   nn|
"Rock of Agu". Pallbearen wen
Dick Barron, W. K Barron, Jad
Vivian, George Arecott, Matt 1
and Jamu Fowles.
B. C. Indians Killed
in Washington, Aut
Provinciil  Police  "B"   Dlv
headquarters at Nelson were noti
fled  Thursday   that  two  Indlani
Francis Qualtier and Herbert Squa]
kim, were killed tn an auto accident
nur Chopaka, Wash., Wednesday
American luthorltlu were investigating  the  accident  The  Indian
Agent at Vernon hid been notified
PRESBYTERIAN SUNDAY
SCHOOL SLOCAN PICNICS
ST-OCAN CITY, B. C.-The Pre*.
byterian Sunday School picnic vii
held in the City park with upwards of 30 children and equally
u many grown ups attending. Racei were features!
Mayor Peter Swan, Sunday school
superintendent, and Rev. R. Will;
lams ot this mission Held had
charge. Prizes were handed out to
each child by tbe ladlu aid of tha
Church. The weither wu petfei'
This taverusement it not pub
or displayed by the Liquor Conti
Board or by tbe Government <
British Columbia
IMPERIAL BANK'S USEFULNESS TO CANADIAN BUSINESS
Through Ihe various channels of trade from producer
to consumer, flows the merchandise that is sold
ultimately In the retail stores. From manufacturer—
to wholesaler—fo retailer—fo the final consumer
is a journey requiring time and money and bank
service.
Ihe polley of the Bank Is a liberal one towards
Distributors great and small, loans are readily
advanced to wholesalers and retailers in good
financial standing, to enable them to meet seasonal
requirements. The money is available. Consult us.
0
|
IMPERIAL BANK
OF CANADA
'"
. / .   I
HEAD OFFICEi TORONTO     •     •
, -{i 4    *                                         Z -
A. E PHIPPS, President
:11
'■■'•     .     BRANCHES THROUGHOUT CANADA
i                                       - ■      '- ■; ■
H. T. JAFFRAY, General Manager   -
■ ■ ';*■ __w
'■ ,,'jH
{.-'■'■<
.  ■  »-v ■   ■■..■..■    "■■-■"    t   ■■
ifl'sil*as*-tttfc''li*iTv'"iri  : *
 "
Gonzaga Bulldogs Enter
Kootenay Hockey League
.ONG BEACH MISS
SETS GOLF RECORD
'rCVANSTON, HI, Sept 14 (AP).
■Ellubeth Hicks, long-hitting 19-
ear-old star from Long Beich,
•lit., fired a spectacultr 38-37—71
I establish i tournament record of
17 strokes today ln winning the
Ith mnual United Statu Women's
'Mtern 72-hole Medal Play Golf
erby at the Evanston Golf Club.
Iries Nelson
Hie Golf fo
(lose Tonight
itriu cloie tonight for the Nel-
mi Golf and Country Club men md
idy championships which corn-
Knee over the weekend. There is
ready t slieable entry list, tnd by
ie time ill the names are ln, there
til likely be u many u for the
icent Labor Day tournament.
At stake are the Lowe-Appleyard
rophy, at present held by Bob
'ation, md the Ruth Armstrong
die Bowl, now ln the possession of
In. B. Townshend. Play will start
thirdly, continue through Sunday,
id wind up the following weekend
The playen will be placed in the
irlous flights according to handi-
ips, no qualifying roundi being
»1d.
Entriu un be phoned in to the
lubhouse until midnight tonight
IALL STANDINGS
AMERICAN
W
L
Pet Bhd.
fir York ...
.   H
41
.701
-_
Ottofl     -„„
.   81
M
.501
15
h iea io   	
..   T9
99
.671
i»
■TCUUtd   -    .
_   76
61
.Ml
Melt »..- 71
66
.522
uy,
Mtiniton  •••
.i ao
M
.426
37
hiladelphia ...
48
86
.366
47
37
08
.274
58
NATIONAL
inclnnatl  .....
.. a.
60
.631
_
- Louis ...—
.   7»
55
.500
4
hlea^o  _____
..   78
02
.544
1
,.   70
61
.526
UU
(1 York	
-06
66
.504
15<A
Ittjburflh i
..   02
61
.486
am
orston
_   57
74
.435
244
hiladelphia   .
.   41
tl
.311
41
■USMq-
we
il advertliement la not publiihed
dlspliyed by the Liquor Control
ard or by the Government ot
Britiih Columbia
Trail, Kimberley and
Nelson Complete
Setup
Gonugt University Bulldogs
IN definitely In tht Kootenay
Hockey Leagut. This wu tnnounced by Leagut President Normm J. Lowu of Ntlson Thursdiy
ifternoon following i ttlephont
conversation with Fathtr Ptul
Corkery, Director of Athletici tt
tht Univenlty.
It will bt t four-tttm utup,
with Trill, Kimberley tnd Nelson furnishing tht othtr entries,
•nd ont of the brightest seuons In
rectnt yetn tppetra In prospect
With nvenl new pltyen on
hind, Fither Corkery told Mr,
Lowu thtt tht Gonzagans would
bt even stronger this Wlnttr thin
last, whtn they gave etch of tht
thru Koottnty turns htrd gimss.
It It practically definite that the
Coast won't come into the fold thii
yur at leut. "We haven't heard yet
md we don't expect to either," Mr.
Lowes uid "Father Corkery told
me that he had been talking with
Alderman George Mott New Wutmlniter hockey mogul, who is backing imateur hockey on the Cout
The wiy Mott was talking, it seemed
to Indicate that Seattle, Vernon,
Vmcouver md New Westminster
would likely hook up ln mother
Senior B. C. Amateur League, the
winners likely to play off with the
Kootenay titlisti for Provincial
honon."
Father Corkery qutiild Mr.
Lowu on how tht wtr iltuition
would effect tht leigue, but thi
Pruldent whilt admitting thtre
wn still umt tlmt btfort hockey
actually itirted, could tee no ration why It ihouldn't function u
In tht put
FIT IN SCHIDULI*
Tht ichedule of tha Kootenay
League, u far u gamu with the
Bulldog! are concerned, will be
drawn up to fit ln with the Intercollegiate ichedule between universities In Wuhington, Oregon md
California. The Cmadian teami will
play it Spokine on Sundays, the
Unlvenity having leased the Arena
on thou daya.
Father Corkery predicted that
there would bt ne professions!
hockey whatsoever In Spoktne
this yeir, since the Collegians will
htvt tht uu of tht Arent on thi
previous regular home nighti of
thi Clippers.
BALL AT SALMO,
NELSON SUNDAY
Buebtll win hold the sporting
spotlight Sunday it two polnti in
the West Kooteniy. The feature tc-
tion wil Hake place at Salmo .when
the home team md Rossland Miners
finish off their Weit Kootenay semifinal leriu. At Nelion the Trail
Cardinals, awaiting the victor of
theRouland-Salmo affair, wlllnlay
an dthlbitroh' gimeMth Wlocaf
senlon. Thli will likely complete
the Nelson bueball season.
Salmo are one game down In the
semi-finals, having lost the opening
game md drawn the second. If Salmo takes third game and thui tiu
the seriei, t five-inning contest will
be pliyed immedlitely after.
The league finals between Cardinal! ind the Rossland-Salmo winnen will be ill iet to itart tht following Sundty, with a double header
it necessiry.
PETER DAWSON LTD.. SCOTLAND
MM
bll advertisement la not published or displayed by the Liquor Control
Board or by the Government of British Columbia.
NILtON DAILY NIWI. NIUON. te^-FRIDAY MORNIN*. MPT. * MM
SPORT NEWSV
Jfai- Wtftld. Oo-qa.
Bicknell Will
Bring Back New
Hockey Players
Len Bicknell, star detencemin
with the Nelion Maple Leafs in
West Kootenay hockey circles for
several seasons put, hu gone a-
scouting. Of course, it will be a
case of mixing busineu with pleasure for he is it present holidaying
in hit home-town, Brandon. Nick
Smith, Lut utility mtn, iccompanied him.
"Bick" will go on to Winnipeg
ind hu been instructed to lint up
t few players at that point where
so mtny crick Junior squads have
been of late yean, according to
President H. M. Whimster of tbe
Nelson Club Thursday.
It wu reported that apart from
Blcknell'i work, the Leafs practically have two other pliyen within
their fold but identity of the pair
of puckchuen wu not disclosed.
Civil Service
Tennis Tourney
Starts Tonight
Play In the flnt annual Nelson
Civil Service Club tourniment ittrti
under, the llghti on the two club
courts it the Court Home at 7
o'clock tonight and will continue
through Sunday, wuther permitting. Should rain disrupt proceedings, the ktsimimtnt will be cilled
off temporarily.
There trt cupi it stake ln the
mem' and-ladlu' titles in their fint
yur of competition, md prizu up
tor winnen in the men's ladlu' md
mixed doublu eventa,
Drawi for tht tint four houn1
pliy Siturdiy night followi:
7 p.m.—Jeu Ballard vi Priscilla
Gelinu; Mn. S. P. McMordle vi
Mn. Douglu Mile.
6 p.m.-C. S. Price tnd Frank
Weill vs Harold Hinitt and W. Gunn;
Douglu Male and Monty Morley
vi 3. R. Fleming and 3. T. McKay.
, t p.m.—F. Phillips md Mn. D.
Male vi R. CornwiU md Priscilla
Gelinu; R. Dirk md Jean Ballard
va Mr. md Mn. Frank Weill.
10 p.m.—Douglu Malt tnd Mri.
R. W. Leu vi Mn. J. T. McKay
and Jessie Harrop; C. S. Price tnd
Mn. Les McEachern ti E. Hedley
and "|_rj..p..P. Slmpion.'„,,   ...:.
KAYO EXPECTED
INBOIIITONIOHT
PHILADELPHIA, Sept- M (AP).
—There wun't t handful of persons iround town tonight who
thought the slugging get-together of
Tony Galento ind Lou Nova tomorrow night would go the full 11
roundi.
All signs pointed either te a
knockout by the Jeney barkeeper
or a technical kayo with California
Lou on tha winning end long before the bell for the 10th. If Nova,
favored at odds tt high as 1 to 2,
turns tht trick, tht general belief
wu he would do it by cutting Two-
Ton Tony io badly Referee George
Blake would have to'halt the blood-
spilling.
Some 30,000 tana were expected
to contribute to a grou gate ot
ibout $100,000 to su the show, which
ctrried, for the winner, the doubtful honor ot a dunce to
meet Joe Louli for the heavyweight
championship some time next
Spring.       -   '■   ,
Don Latter Leaves
Nelson to Enlist
Machine Gun Corps
Don Lazier, who hu gained a
reputation for himself in city soft-
ball md buketball circlei left for
Calgary to enlist ln a machine gun
corps, preparatory to war lervice.
Lazier hu resided in Nelton for
tbout a year now. During the Winter he played basketball with the
Old Crocks, who were City League
finalists. He wu formerly a centre star with a Saskatoon team.
This Summer ha pitched for the
Knights ot Pythias, and made a
position on the Nelson rep softball
turn. Golf wu mother of hii favorite rtcreitioni.
Redlands Lady Wins
International Bowls
SAN FRANCISCO, Sept 14 (AP).
-Mn. M. Folklni of Redltndi,
Calif, walked off with the women'!
international linglei liwri bowling
championship today igalnst three
to one odds a Sm Francisco u<ni<
finalist would win.
Mn. Folklns defeated Miu Ruth
Lewis of San Francisco, 21 to 14,
and Mn. M. Judge eliminated the
third San Franciscan, Mn. J.
Knights, 31 to 3, in umi-final pliy.
Mn. Folklni then went on io
chalk up a 21 to 8 score ln the lait
round ovir Mn. Judge,
Duck Season Opens
in Kootenay on 23rd
With the duck seuon opening
September 33, the Gime Deptrtment his reminded sportsmen to
cirry licences on some easily visible ptrt ot their clothing u the
regulations require.
At Cruton hunting condltioni trt
reported to be improved ovtr lut
yur. Ducks ind geese trt more
filentiful thli yur than lut, posslb-
y due to the grain crop on the Reclamation Farm and Creston Dyking District areas, which were
doodad out in June 1938.
Lou vs Two-Ton Tonight
Prineiplu ln tonlght't 15-round heavyweight bout In Philadelphia
are Lou Novi, (top), and Tony Galento, (bottom^, Nova ll favored
to win this bout, second only In importance in the heivyweight pic
ture, to the bout between chimpion Joe Louli and Bob Putor In Detroit
next Wednuday. The winnen of thue two bouta are icheduled to meet.
Rugby Union Cancels
All Fixed Games
LONDON, Sept 14 (CP Ctble).-
Announcement wu made today that
the English Rugby Union, governing body of amateur rugby, hid cancelled all fixtures until further notice. All profuilonil rugger htd
previously been suspended ln line
with the atand taken by the soccer
anodationi of England and Scot-
tend.
Christian Leads
Field B.C. Golf
VANCOUVER, Sept 14 (CP). -
Out ot the dirkneu md a driving
rain, a Yakima professional sloshed
tonight with a sodden score-card
md a 30-hole total of 148-a six-
over par performance that wu good
enough to give him the lud over the
65-man field at the halfway mark
ot the British Columbia open golf
championship.
Neil Christian, Boise open champion, and three-time winner ot the
Ptcific Northwut optn title, pliyed
steadily for a pair of 74's that
eclipsed the best other United States,
Vancouver Island md local shot-
maken could do on the toggy fairways of the Point Grey Golf and
Country Club.
Stan Leonard, Vancouver, M-40
-78.
x—Norm Wllklnion, Vancouver,
37-41-78. i
Bob Connolly, Buttle, 16-37—71
Dune Sutherland, Vucouver, 41-
46—87 -
x—Cam McLean, Vucouver, 48-
48-01.
Harold Nlemeyer, Buttle, 31-31
-77.
Laverne Johnstone, Vucouver,
38-40-78.
x—Frank Willey, Vucouver, 48-
38—61
x—Buck Berry, Vancouver, 41-
43—84.
Don Sutherland, Vancouver, 48-
48-76.
x-Wr Newcombe, Victoria, 46-
40—86
Ernest Brown, Vancouver, 4S-38
SjSJ
Ernie Tate, Vucouver, 41-40-61.
x—Monte HUi Vancouver, 41-40
-81.
Jim Christie, SeatUe, 44-36-63.
Htmlih Sutherland, Vineouvir,
48-42—63
x—Hector Stewart Vancouver,
46-44—86. I
x—W.' S. Charlton, Vmcouver,
46-43—31.
x-BUl Font Vucouver, 46-46
-44.
x—George McEwan, Vucouver,
no card.
x—A. B. McKenzie, Vancouver,
no card.
x-H. Ellis, Vancouver, 44-43-88.
x—Vic Gowin, Vucouver, 39-
40-76.
x-Louli Lilonde 40-40-60.
X—Leo Btwlf, Winnipeg, 44-43
—63.
x—John Irvine, Vucouver, 48-
47-62.
Wtlter Wauhid, Mount Vernon,
Wash.  42-38-61.
(End 13-bole scores).
Legend: x—Amateur player.
THAMES DITTON, EngUnd (CP)
—Princes, a hsndsomt chutmit
mart normally on duty tt Padding-
ton, rattled Det-Supt Oeorge Yin-
deli, one,of Scotland Yard's "Big
Five," md only Criminal Investigation Department entry, to victory in
police trottine rices hert,
si
Baseball Scores
AMIRICANI
Sll
Detroit     I W 1
New York   I 1 2
Newiom and Tebbetti; Donald,
Hlldebrand and Roear,
Cleveland      Sll 1
Boston   —     7  6 3
Alien, Dobion, Elsenstat ud Pytlak; Auker, Dickman, Bagby and
Deuuteli.
Chicago    .-.—.. s 1)0
PhUadelphia    4 I 0
Smith, Brown and Treih, Schleu-
ter; Potter and t. Hayes.
St Louii -._..._..  1 « I
Wuhlngton  Ill I
Trotter and Hanhuy; Leonard
ud Ferrell
NATIONAU
Fint game:
New York . » 13  0
CinclnnaU      „_,    I 13   1
Hubbel, Lynn, Oordmtn, Brown
md Danning, Hiyworth; Derringer
and Lombardi. •
Second game:
New York    . -  I 11   I
CinclnnaU     — _....- i 13  3
Salvo, Brown, Gorman ahd Dm-
nlng; Niggeling, Shoffner ud
Hershberger.
Boiton     ... .   * 13 1
St Loula        I 13 •
Sullivan, Frankhouse, Etrley ud
Lopez; Devil, Warneke ud Owen.
Fint game:
Brooklyn .....  I  6  •
Pittsburgh   4 6 6
Tamul|s ud Todd, Hartje, Brown
Ud Berrei.
Second game
Brooklyn 113 0
Pittiburgh  4 13  3
PreMnell,   Crouch  and  Hartje;
Swlgart, Bowman ud MueUer.
Fint game:
Philadelphia I ..__.— 1 I I
Chicago       _ IS 18 0
Beck ud Davii; Root ud Hartnett Garbark.
Second game:
Philadelphia  _ -  111  6
Chicago _   8 10  0
Brunsrr and Warren; French and
Mancuso
INTERNATIONAL
Buffalo i—O 10  I
Rochester ■   Ill
C. Smith ud Savino; Riffeni-
berger md BeiL
Jeney City   — 4 I  1
Newtrk 111   I
Stiles, Carpenter, Puree, Anderion, Vudenberg md Atwood;
Washburn, Mtcon ud Wtgner.
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION
Pltyottl
Louisville ..... 1  5 .1
Minneapolis . 18 31   3
Flowen, Olion. Shifter, ind Mid
Juki; Huh ud Lacy, Rolindton.
Indlmtpolii 13 18  1
Kansu City ... 1   I   j
Johnson ud Baker; Babich md
Riddle.
NORTHERN LEAGUE
•EMI-PINAL
Firgo-Moorhetd 4, Winnipeg 11.
(Winnipeg wini series 4-3)
Horse Racing to Be
Decided Oct. 2
LONDON, .lept 14 (tit Cable).-
Tbe Oovernment will make known
ill decision Oct 3 regarding resumption of hone racing, lt wu announced todiy. If fivonble, racing
will be resumed it certain counes
after Oct. 16. The sport has been
banned since the outbreak of war.
Softballers Ask
for Posfponemenl
of Games at Trail
Nelion repretentaUve loftbtll
teem hu uked Uw TrtU Rept to
postpont a icheduled doubleheader
ot the Wut Kooteniy playoffi ln
the Smelter City Sunday beciuse
of Inability to field a turn. Six
pltyen, including tht turn's top
two pitchers, would not be tblt
to mtkt the trip and Jtmu Alltn
President of the Nelion Softball
Auoclition, decided to uk for a
postponement
Thoie gamu wera to be the aecond ud third games of the but
of five urlu tor tbe dlitrict UUe.
TnU won tha tint la Ntlion 8-3
Uit Sundty.
Len Bicknell Is at pruent hoU-
daying in Brtndon, ud Thundiy
morning, Don Lazier left for Calgary to take up military duties in
a machine gun corpi. Other ab-
lenteu would Include Allm, Ernie
Beland. Jeue Seaby and Sam Pis-
acre ta.
The gamu may be played tha tallowing Sunday ln TralL
Sommerville Wins
From Chapman, in
US Quarter Finals
CmcXA-JO, 8e«. 14 (CP). - c.
Rou Somerville, Cutda'i great In-
terniUonillit icored t 3 tnd 3 victory todty over Dick Chapman of
Greenwood, Conn., to advance into
the qutrter-fintl of tbe United
Statei amateur Jolt championship.
The London, Ont, iter ruched tha
turn two up and defended hia margin u they halved the next ilx holes
fn IdenUcil figurei. On the Mth
Somerville dropped hii putt tu a
birdie than won Um match.
Hli opponent aln is well known
in international circlu. A umi-
flnilist lut yur ln the United Statea
event Chipmin went to Europe this
year to win the French amiteur
UUe and reach the aeml-tintli of
the BriUsh imateur.
Don Schumacher, DaUaa, Tana,
star who yuterdty unt Johnny
Ooodrau to tbe ildelinu, defeited
Ed Meiiter, Wtrreniville, O, 3 tnd
3. Hirry L. Oivtn, Setttle, elimin-
ited Harry Todd, Dallas, with a
two up victory.
. Ray BUlowa. Poughkeepilt, N. Y.
icored a 3 and 1 triumph over John
P. Burke ot Rye, N. Y, the 1166 in-
taroolleglate champion.
Oeorge Dawion, veteran Chlcige-
m who yuterdty ellmimted the
defending champion, WUlle Turneu,
ituck ln the running with i one up
victory t*rtt Melvin (Chick) Herbert from Battle Creek. Mich.
Art Doering, young Chicigo iter,
advanced with a crushing I and 4
victory over Bill Holt ot Pay, N.Y.
RIGGS, MARBLE
IN U.S. SEMIS
FOREST HILLS, N.Y. Sept 14
(AP) - Bobby Riggi ud Allot
Mirble, Wimbledon chtmploni md
primt favorites, moved safely Into
tbt Mml-f inala ot the United Statei
men'i md women'a tennii ohim-
plonshlpt today.
Bobby itroked hla way to a
compirtUvely simple victory over
Hirry Hopman of Auitralia, 6-1,
8-6, 6-8, but Alice bad to turn on
her reserve before ihe eliminated
Mary Hardwlck ot British Wight-
man eup team, 0-3, 6-8, 6-2.
Ihe other umi-finalist it) Riggs
bracket wam't quite decided when
dirkneu itopped play Joe Hunt
of Annapolii and Don McNeiU ot
Oklahoma City tUU were tearing
a third aet apart Htart captured the
fint ut 6-4, fought hit heart out
ta win the ucond 16-13, md they
were deadlocked at 1-6 In Uie third.
Virginia Wolfenden of Su Franciico nirprised the form playen
with a 3-6, 6-1, 6-1 triumph over
Dorothy Bundy of Santa Monica,
and will run Into Mlu Marble Saturday.   .
- e  . i
No. 1939 Cesarewitch
Draw Will Be Oct. 20
LONDON. Sept 14 (CP)-Flit
race and steeplechase progrtmi
for the remainder et'the year lo
Englend were eancelled todty.
Race meets, like theatrei and
other pla«« of entertainment
had been temporarily cloud undtr Grett Brltain'i wartime air
raid prectuUons program.   .
One ot the racu cincelled Is
the Ceurewiteh, icheduled for
Oct 38 at Newmarket md upon
which the Irish iwtepttoku k
baled
In order to hold the iweep-
stikes It waa announced yuterday thtt th* draw wUl be held
Oct 30 u usual, with the 99 tc-
ceptore for the Ceurewiteh going into tha drum. AD who draw
a none wUl ahare equally in the
pooL Comolation prizu slso win
be drawn.
MOTORS REBORED
ond WELDING
Shorty's Repoir Shep
714 BAKER ST.      NELION, B. 0.
Lubricant   Motor  Oil   md
Lubricating Systems
Wholtttlt DMrlbutore
Acme Automotive
611 Baker Supply Phone 1040
\2ol*
PA8I NINE
CHAMP YANKEES ARE NEWSOM'S
MEAT; WINS 6-1 WITH (HinER
(ly The Associated Preu)
...Jig  Bue* Newton, the  Detroit
firebrand, handed tht world ehtm-
6len Yanktu thtlr third eonttou-
vt dtfttt 6-1 with tlx-hlt pitch-
Ing In Ntw York yuttrdty
Evan io Ntw York crowded a
bit dour to clinching of lta
fourth itralght American Lugue
buebtll penntnt, beciuse Boston
Red Sox ilso lost The Yinki now
need only to win three gimes or
Boiton to lose three.
Outfielder Bruce CampbeU topped a perfect day at bat by icorlng the run thai gave Cleveland
Indlani their 8-7 victory over the
Red Sox in Boston. CampbeU contributed a triple, a doubla ud
two ilnglw
ATHLETICS TRIUMPH
Dea Milu' lOth-lnnlng home run
with one on but tnd gilt-edged
pitching by Nelion Potter gavi
Philadelphia AthleUca a 4-3 victory over Chicago White Sox.
Wuhington drubbed the oeUir-
dwelUng St Louii Browni 9-1.
Marshilling 13 hlti ln eich gimi,
the Bedi iwept a National Lugue
doubleheader trom the New York
Otanta at CinclnnaU, 6-5 and 6-3, to
expand thtlr letd over Bt Loula
Cardinal! to four garnet.
Rtdi grouped tlx ef thtlr tint
gtmt rum In tht first thrtt In*
nlngs ta illow Ptul Derringer te
cout to hit 21st triumph of the
yur.
318T POR DAVIS
At St Louis, meanwhfle, illent
Curt Davis alio hurled hit 31st
victory of the yeir for the Cardinali, defusing Uie Boiton Beet,
6-3.
The Brooklyn Dodgen, divided a
doubleheader with the Plratei at
Pittsburgh, losing 4-8 in the fint
game md winning 8-4 ln the night-
The Chicago Cuba iwept both
gamu of a doubleheader with the
Phllidelphii Phllllu todiy, pound-
ing out a 18-1 victory in the opener
and winning 8-3 in the night-
cip.
SOMERVILLE OUSTED FROM U.S.
(K)LF BY LITTLE RAY BILLOWS
CHICAGO, Sept 14 (AP)-Llttle
Bay Billowi ot Poughkeepiii, NY.
S reduced the biggest triumph to-
iy u the Mmi-iinili bracket wu
completed in the 43rd NaUonal
Amateur Oolf championship at
North Shore Country Club when he
diipoted ot Canada'i lut chiUenger.
Billows' 6 and 6 dtfttt of C.
Rou (Stndy) Somirvlllt of London, Ont, chimpion In 1832, wn
tht mott dtclslvt vlotory ef a
quarter finals program which uw
idvtnce of Don Schumtchtr ef
Dillu, Ttxas; Art. Doering of
Chicago, and Marvin (Bud) Wtrd
of Spoktnt, Wuh.
Wtrd, who ilmoit won tht United
Stetei optn championship thla Summer, disposed of Joseph Tnompeon
of Burlington, Ont, in the morning, two up, then defeited Edwin
Kingsley of Mt Lake City, Utah,
3 ud 1.
Tomorrow, after Uie 36 hole route
BIUowi will match ihota with
Schumacher ud Doering wlU batUe Ward.
Billows' game agalnit Somerville
wu u hot u the plui 80 degree
temperature which baked the North
Shore coune. On the outgoing nine
he .had a mesial 81, five under par
md a remtrktble icore considering
only one putt wu conceded. At the
turn he wu five up. He ended the
matching by winning the llth with
a per four to SomerviUe'i bogle
five ud hilvlng tht next two holei.
THOMPSON OUSTED
Earlier Somerville advanced to
mut BUlowa by a 3 md 3 victory
ovtr Dick Chapman, Greenwich,
Conn.
T*homp»on'i pir golf wu no good
tgtinit Wtrd who toured the lint
nine la 34, two under ptr, and took
a two up lud. Ward itrttohed
thla advantage to three up through
18 holei. Thompion, never giving
up, won the 16th ud 17th holes
with a birdie ud a ptr, but Ward
won Uie 16th with a par four when
Thompton knocked hia tea ihot
Into the woodi.
Schumicher, 38-year-old T*xin
who hu won the Eutern imateur
tnd trans-Mississippi UUes, had to
go u extra hole to defut Harry
Givah of Seattle, Wuh. In ■ morning match Schumacher defuted
Ed Meiiter of Warrensville, O, t
ud 3.
Doering, 38- yur-eld graduate
of Stanford University, itaged a
clou battle with tile 37-yeir-old
Dawson, tbe Illinois champ. On tha
18th, Dawson put hit ucond to Uie
right of the green u Doering pitched on in three, 30 feet away. After
Dawion had come up to within
eight fut Doering holed hit long
putt to clinch the verdict. In the
morning Doering defeated BUI Holt
of City. N.Y, 8 md 4.
Riggs Reaches
Semi-Finals
I-OBXST HOLS. N. Y, Stpt 14
(AP). — Bobby Rlggs of Chicigo
reechtd tilt uml-flnili ot tbe United Statei tennii chimploiuhlpe todiy
with t 6-1, 10-8, 6-3, victory over
Hirry Hopmin, Ctpttin ot tht An-
itnliin Davis Cup team.
OMK«rtiMlsylisn«llwiMw''iss-tpM*r<
_»***—Hsiosrtli u ths) •moMlssM ttt
—It tut ntt iM to th. Ilx..
.WBeaeeaeaaaa_ea_aa__aa_aa___aa____ai
'Hi
*$%
'{{'/WH ''///fit ' i
OLD RYE WHISKY
16oj.fl.70 Vmm. |2.85
•Mas, .9445
This adTertlgerrunt is not puMiahedordigplayedby
the Liquor Control Board or by t_» Government c*
Britiih Columbia. -....■
iwdii&l/tMfety
I
Thii advertisemmt ia not published or displayed by the Liquor
Control Board or by the Govermnent of British Columbia.
fi
  ~ '
■
'  ^r-JIWfliUP iJtHID'Wl
paoe Ten
NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON, i. C—FRIOAY MOItNINO. «aP1, Ta. TIM.
It Fays to Advertise on This Page When You Are Looking for a Job
CRANBROOK Social...
CRANBROOK, B.C.-MIU Elet-
nor Green hu returned tfter spending the summer it Mirror Lake.
Mr. ud Mn. Hirold Bridges tnd
family, who have been spending
the summer months at Greu Bay,
have returned to the city.
Mlu Elisabeth Godderis hu returned to the city after spending t
holiday at Vucouver, Trail ud
Spokane,
Miu Olga Belecky, who hu been
ipending the lummer with ber parents it Pernle. hu returned to reiume ber dutlu u instructor it
the St. Eugene training school.
Mn. W. 0. Scott ud daughter
Joanne have returned trom l vltlt
at Vancouver.
Mr. and Mn. A. Steele ud family
hive returned from a holiday it
Vincouver.        *
Miu Simone Bourgeoli ud Mils
Margaret Campion have returned
to resume their dutlu on the ichool
itaff here, tfter spending the holldiy it Nelson and it the Su Francisco fair.
Miu Ethel Nelly hu returned
from 1 two weeki holldiy at Kim-
■Mn." Prink Jehion, who hu beu
viiiting frlendi In the city, hu returned to Cilgiry.
Miu Jeen Glendenning, who ipent
the lummer holidays at Nelson, and
attending the Provinciil Normil
School tt Vlctorli, hu returned to
the city.
Mln Rett Thurston hts returned
from a two-week vtcition it Chilllwack.
Mn. I. G. Dingley ud diughten.
Miu Doris ud Miu Ethel Dingley,
have returned from e visit to Vucouver.
Miu Mirgiret Hendenon'hu returned from t vilit it Vernon.
Mn. A. 3. Ironside ud family
have returned to Weyburn, Sask.,
atter spending the summer here,
guests ot Mn. Selwyn.
Honoring Mn. W. Selma, who
hu left to make her home at Toronto, Mn. Prank Bridgu entertained at t handkerchief ihower.
During the evening 1 presentation
on behalf ot the Baptlit Young
Women'i .Association wu made by
Mlu Louise Bridgu. Mrs. George
Hayman wu winner of the prite
at cardi. The guute were Mn.
Selmes, Mrs. Haymu, Mrs. Eugene
Krown, Mrs. 0. Kiever, Mn. Harold
Bridges, Mn. Charlei Barnei, Mrs.
Manhall MacPhenon, Mn H. Caldwell Miu Louellt Kelly ud Miu
Louise Brldgei.
The Canadian Daughten lodge entertained at tea ln honor of Mn.
Selme!, at the home of Mn. Eugene
Krown, when a presentation from
the lodge memben wu made by
Mrs. H. Caldwell.
Honoring Mln Pearl Kennedy a
no-host party wu held at the home
of Mn. H. A. Fyles by the members
of St. Mary's church choir. A presentation wu made to Miu Kennedy
in appreciation for the servlcu u
church organist She will leave soon
for Vancouver where the will it-
tend Seton ictdemy.
Nrl-um Sally Nrttta
Member ot Tbe Canadlu Daily
Newapepen Auoclition
Telephone 144
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SociaL...
JOHNSON'S
LANDING
JOHNSON'S LANDING, B. C-
Miu Joyce Sutherlind, the new
echool teacher arrived from Selmo.
Mn. Thompson ud two children
of Kulo tre visiting it the home
of Mn. McNicol.
Mlu Louise Denorei- who hu
been holidaying at pointe North ot
the take returned to Nelton Satur-
Jtck Riper tnd Jim McNicol were
visiton to Argenta Sunday.
Algot Johnion, ud Alec Broken-
ahire, who hive been tire-fighting
for iome weeks, returned to the
tending Sunday.
A. R. Barrow, who hu been
cimping it Howser for a tew dtys,
has returned home.
Joe Kline and three frlendi of
Trail, ipent Sundiy ud Mondiy
at Birchdale.
School started Tuuday with a
roll call ot 13, three ot those being
beginnen.
. A. R. Barrow ud Jtck Raper
wera busineu viiiton to Kaslo
Wednuday.
Tom Buhner of Bluebell Gardens
spent t couple of dtys In the settlement this week.
Mr. ind Mrs, 0. 0. Stenberg ud
two children spent Thursday in
Kislo.
Mr.   ud  Mrt.   W.   Biccbus   of
, Birchdale were guute ot Mrs. A. C.
Raper Friday.
Social...
PROCTER
PROCTER, B. C—Mr. ud Mrs.
E. Swanson and daughter of Rossland were guute of Mr. ud Mn.
C. Swanson tnd Mr. ud Mn. 0.
Johnion.
Dr. ud Mrs. MacKenzie of Nelton were motorists to Procter.
Mrs. S. Bonacci wu a shopper
to Nelson.
Mike Sokolowskl hu returned
from the Kooteniy Lake General
Hospital, NeUon.
Kenneth Soles, son of Mr. and
Mn. W. .Soles, has left for Vancouver to join the Mounted Police.
Mr. ud Mrs. 0. MacKay ud son
Glendon of Nelson visited Procter.
Mr. ud Mn. A. -McPhee and son
Jimmie ud Mlu A. Mitchell motored to Nelion.
- Miu Mary Mucha of Vucouver
apent Stturdiy tt the Outlet enroute to Lardo where ihe will viiit
her father. While in Procter the
vilited her brother and liiter-in-
law, Mr. ud Mrs. J. Mucht.
J. Solecki ot Moyie spent Sundiy here.
Mrs. T. Moir ud children were
wekend guests ot Mn. Moir's brother-in-law  end  sister,   Mr.   ud
Mr. ud Mrs. H. Burns ud Mrs.
Mrs. F. Wilton.
N. Murphy of Nelson were visiton
tp Procter.
.    . Mn. 0. Johnion hu u her
guest her sister, Mrs. L. Priore
Bill Volcano tnd party of Nelson
and son of TrtU.
motored to Procter.
Archie Cimpbell ot Trail, Albert Heljeson of TraU ud N. A.
Smith of Vancouver were visiton
at the OuUet
M. Greenlaw ot Lardo pused
through Procter enroute for the
prairies.
Mr. and Mn. G. Hunter ud Mn.
It DiU of Nelson motored t oProc-
ter.
J. Bonacci ud K. MacDonald
were motorists to Nelson.
Mr. and Mrs. Lusctle and Miss
Lanscale and Mra. Dalphne of Nelaon visited Procter.
Jimmie   Crosble    ud    Jimmie
Heighten have left for Nelson to
enlist 1 nthe Royal Canadian Artillery.
., _________________________ •>
Social...
RENATA
RENATA, B. C.-Mlu Laura Koch
left Monday for Trail where she
wiU continue school Work.
Mr. and Mrs. J. Docksteader left
for their home ln TraU on Monday
after tpending uveral weekt at
the home of Mr. J. Gray.
Miu Betty Docksteader of TraU
spent the weekend here with ber
parents.
Mr. and Mn. J. Schuppe have returned to their home ifter a brief
visit to town.
Miss Mary Reimer has returned
to her home here after a visit to
Castlegar md TraU.
Isaac Weibe, Jr. who hat spent
a few weeks in the Okanagu district returned home Mondty,
Miss Lily Hoffman who has been
the guest of Mr. and Mn. J. Ulmi
for t few weeki, returned to her
home in Warfield, Monday.
Red Croit Branch Is
Formed, Slocan City
SLOCAN CITY, B. C.-A bnnch
of the Cuidiu Red Crou wu formed here it t public meeting. The
branch Is, wilting for InformtUon
from heidquirten before beginning active work.
Social...
NAKUSP
NAKUSP, B. C-Mlu LUtan Horrey, who leavei thii week for Vucouver to reside, wu the guest ot
honor it 1 surprise party it the
home ot her parenti, Mr. ud Mn.
F. Horrey. Games ud contests
evoked much laughter. At the supper hour Miu Horrey wu showered
with handkerchiefs.
Attending were Misses Helen Millar, Irene Millar, Beatrice Johnson,
Vera Johnson, Betty Davison, Katie Robson, Edith Horrey, Nettie
Sutherland, Doris Harvey, Dolores
Ferric, Betty Mlhialak, NeUle Johnson, Mr. ud Mn. ti. Horrey, William Jupp, Norman Harrison, Roy
Jonu, William Sultan of Vincouver end Mr. ud Mn. F. Horrey
PUPILS
Pupils of St. Mark's Sundiy ichool
were treated when 1 picnic it Box
Lake wu arranged by Rev. and
Mn. F. Daglish. Swimming, games
ud racu preceded tbe picnic lupper,
Mr. and Mrs. D. D. Stelner ot
Hollywood were vislton ln Nakusp.
Miss Nettie Sutherland is leaving
for Trail where- she hu obtained
a position.
J„ Robins ot Arrow Park wu a
visitor in Nakusp.
Miu A. James, Miu Marjorie
Bedwell ud P, Williami were ln
Nakusp from Arrow Park.
Mrs. A. Johnson and R. Johnson
of Burton were among shoppers in
Nakusp,
C. Mayoh wu a motor visitor to
New Denver.
Miss Doris Harvey was a visitor
to New Denver visiting her brother-in-law md sister, Mr. ud Mrs.
H. E. Nelson.
Mr. snd Mrs. C. W. Kennedy ud
Mrs. Jenkins of Arrow Psrk were
visitors to Nikusp,
Mr. ud Mn. J. Dolmu vilited
Nelion ud Trail. ' ,
Mra. Payne of Edgewood ipent a
few daya ln Nakusp the guest of
Mr. and Mn. N. A. Herridge. She Is
enroute to England.
J. Tier ot New Denver wu a
motor visitor to Nakuip.
Mr. ud Mn. A. Lidherg hive hid
u gueiti their lon-in-ltw ud
diughter, Mr. ud Mn. L. Perdue ot
Lethbridge,
Miss Betty Sunstrom ot Burton
is attending high school it Nakusp.
C. B. Dickson, principal of Nakusp high school, ud F. Wood
were motor visitors to Nelson.
Mr. ud Mra. Chatfield ot Chilllwack were among out-of-town vltlton ln Nikusp.
Social...
SLOCAN CITY
SLOCAN CITY, B.C-Mn. J. McKinley ud diughter Mty moved
recently to Nelson to make their
home.
Mn. Pearl M. Conrad of Vucouver, president of the Rebekah Assembly, made her official visit to
Floral Rebekah Lodge No. 15,
Sept 5. At Uie close of the meeting a social hour wu spent with
Uie Odd Fellows.
Mrs. Conrad was the house guut
ot Mr. ud Mrs. F. Storgtrd while
In Slocin City.
Mn. W. Clough. Mn. D. Ewing,
Mn. P. M. Conrad, Mra. T. Cooper
tnd Mri, M- Terry were viiiton to
Vallican on Wednesdiy.
Mr. md Mn. W. P. Newton end
their four children, slso Miss Helen Richirdson, ill of Fishburn,
Alte., ire guute of Mn. Newton's
psrents, Mr. tnd Mra. H. Pirker.
W. E. Pirker left here Sundiy
for Trail. Mn. Pirker ud smell
son, Warwick, wUl visit her for 1
Ume.
Mr. ud Mrs. W. P. Newton ud
diughten, Sophia ud Dorothy,
were visiton to Nelson Saturday,
They were accompanied by Mrs.
H. Parker, and Mrt. H. M Parker
and daughter, Mabel-Anne.
Mr, and Mrs. S. Lewis is borne
again after visiting with their son-
in-law md daughter ud family at
Procter for a few weeks.
Ted Balllnger of Mission Cite,
spent a few days with his uncle
ud aunt Mr. ud Mrs. J. Law. Mr.
Bellinger wu accompanied by
some friends.
Mn. D. McKay ud daughter,
Miu M. Morrison R.N.,,tre vislUng
members of their ftmily in Penticton.
J. Penner of PenUcton wu a recent viiltor here.
Mn. J. Law accompanied her con,
and daughter-in-law and grandson,
to Kimberley to visit for 1 tew
weeks.
Single copy ____
By carrier, per week _—
By carrier, per year _—
By Mail:
One month _____
Three monthi _
Six monthi _____
One year .,
.$ xn
36
13.00
, 200
, 4X10
,   8.00
HELP WANTED
.CHRISTMAS CARD SALESPEO-
ple. Big profit! if you ara a
worker tnd begin NOW. Choice
of 4 different umplet—over 300
designs — more thin twice iny
other Une in Canadt. You ctn
utiify uy tute or pocket book.
20 different Boxed Assortments.
Tags and Suit. Wonderful Birthday Box. Everything you need so
you can teU something to every
prospect No experience necesury.
Extra bonus cards tor urly orders. Literature sent without ob-
UgaUon. Be fint write today.
MASTER KRAFT LIMITED.
Room 14 Doherty Bldg-,
,   ,   Toronto.
WANTED  CAPABLE  GIRL FOR
genenl housework. 812 Silica St
EXPERIENCED   CHAMBERMAID.
Apply Box 8541 Daily News.
PERSONAL
JOIN    OUR    LIBRARY.    ENJOY
reading the latest fiction at.smaU
cost. Mann, fiutherlordj:ompiny.
WHEN IN VANCOUVER STOPAT
Aimer Hotel Opp. C, P. R, Depot
SANITARY PERSONAL RUBBER
goods. 24 latex $1. Free price list
J. Jensen, 1042 Haro St. .Vancouver
SITUATIONS WANTED
Special Low Rate for idvertlse-
mente under thii claudication
to assist people seeking employment Only 25c for one week
(I days) coven any number
ot required Unu. Piytblt.is
id vince.
FIRST CLASS HOUSE KEEPER
wante work it once. WUl go uy-
where. Good cook ud dan.
Would likt homework or hotel
>ork Box 8032 DaUy Newt
AMBITIOUS YOUNG MAN 27. DE-.
lira work In grocery or meat
mirket 12 yein experience.
Qualification! tnd referencu. Box
8081 DiUy Newi.
GIRU 18, WANTS POSITION TO
help with housework, good with
children. WIU work for small stl-
try to nln experience. Box 8487
Dally Newi.      	
SALVATION ARMY - IF YOU
have old clothing, footwear, furni-
ture to spare, please Ph. ui, 618L.
Above rttei apply ta Cuada,
the United Statea, ud tne
United Kingdom, to tubecrlben
Uvlng outiide regular cirrlir
araai.
Elsewhere ud In Cuada where
extra postage It required, one
month $1.50, three monthi 84.00,
lix monthi $800, ont yetr $15.00.
BREAD AT EVERY MEAL IS
whit Uit growing child needil
Buy Choquette'a Mother's Bread
BACK-TO-SCHOOL - YOUR~CHKB
nceds Uie best Fruh Fruite ud
Vegtbls. so buy tt Uie Star. ph. 10.
_EN - SUITS CLEANED. PRESS"-
ed, repaired or altered. H. J.
Wilton's, Ph. 107, 534 Josephine,
Social...
WARDNER
WARDNER, B. C-Mn. A. Andenon and Harold of Jaffray viilted Mn. A. Moberg.
Mr. and Mn. H Thompion ud
J. Martlnoi were vlilton to Crmbrook.
A. Caimi ot Cutl Flite, wu t
visitor here.
Mr, ud Mn. H, Huey of Ctnil
Flat! were viiiton here.
Mr. ud Mn. G. Johnion ud
Hjordli were Cranbrook viiiton.
Mr. ud Mn. F. Thompion were
visitors to Cranbrook.
W. Andenon of Jiffrty wu a
visitor hire.
Mn. Theo Thompion wu a visitor to Cranbrook.
Miu Swea Moberg and G. Thompion were visitors to Crmbrook.
Mr. ud Mn. Charles Nelson ud
Mr. ud Mrs. G. Johnson were vislton to Sand Creek.'
Mr. and Mrs. N. Newman ud Betty Anne of Canal Flats were weekend viiiton of Mr. ud Mrs. J. Andenon.
Mr. ud Mn. 6. Hellmin ud Freda tnd Lome Moore, of Tt Ta
Creek visited Mn. G. Pearson.
Betty Anne Newman entertained
on her tilth birthday Sunday. The
guute were Beatrice, Patsy ud
Dale Embree, Lenard Anderson,
Doris, Ruby, and Frances Shelborn.
Miss Ruth Hamrin wu a visitor
to Cranbrook.
Mr. and Mrt. H. Remtrom, V.
Rhine, and M Coffay were Cnnbrook viiitora.
Iton to Crinbrook.
Mr. ud Mn. A. Kievill were vii-
visiton to Cranbrook.
Mr.  ud  Mn. W. Fisher  were
Miu Kitty Rosicky visited Cranbrook.
Mr. and Mrs. J. Dvorak were
weekend viiiton to Fernie.
Mrs. W. Muir it viiiting at Ctlgtry.
V. Lundbom ud Mn. M. Donahue were Visiton to Crinbrook,
Allan Jonei ot Elko wu a weekend visitor here,
Mr. ind Mn. G. Todhunter ud
Mn. Crosby ot Elko were visitors
here.
Mn, F. Anderson and Mn. P.
Keyandawey wera viiiton to Crmbrook. '
Mrs. P. Keyudtwey entertained
on her fiftieth birthday Friday, Tht
guute were Mrs. B. Embree, Mrs.
0. Holmu, Mn. J. Andenon ud
Mn. F. Anderson.
Mrs. C. Nohels ot Sud Creek
viilted Mrs. F. Andenon.
J. Martlnoi wu a visitor to Crmbrook.
Social...
NATAL
NATAL, B. C—Gordon Ztrke
has returned to Fernie atter visiting Mrs. J. Krall tor the summer.
Billy Eckenley left for his home
atter spending the lummer holidtyi with Mn. S. Chili.
Miu Florence Thompion tnd litter Eitelle returned to Natal after
•pending 1 month'i vacation with
Mr. and Mn. F. Yatei.
Charlie Kraut, Adolph Putlch
and Martin Sedllih of Natal also
Mr. and Mri. J. GtUt. Ralph Caruso, Siro Cimolinl and Mlu Gwen
Billy were weekend visiton to
Kaifspell, Mont
Mr. and Mrs. J. Gaskell, Mn. J.
GukeU Sr. and son Pete ud Miss
Ethyl Haugen returned to Michel
after a two weeks trip to Vucouver.
Mr. ud Mn. L. Gillo ud ftmily
htve left tor 1 two weeks trip to
Banff end the Windermere district
Robert McMeekan of Natal wu
a recent Cranbrook visitor,
Mr. and Mn. Roger Passlott and
daughter Burnlce returned to Michel tfter tpending a hoUday at Edmonton.
Mike ud Eddie Mentello returned to Spokane, Wuh., after spending t tew days at Nate!.
Kenneth Gillt returned to Nttel
ifter viiiUng Mr. ud Mrs, C Boulton tt Spokue.
Mike White hit lett for Vancouver where he wiU go to Normal
school
Dominique Romano ll a paUent
ln the Michel Hoipital ud he is
improving  steadily.
Mrs. J. Krall wu a weekend
guest of Mr. and Mrs. A. Zarko, at
Fernie. ■   .
PERSONAL RUBBER GOODS",
mailed postpaid In plain, sealed
envelope with price list 8 um-
plu 25c. 24 umpla $1.00. Adults
only Atex Rubber Co., Dept. H.
Box 231 Hamilton, Ontario.
GENUINE LATEX SPECIAL GTD
25 (or $1.00 or llffy prepared 18
tor $1.00 (free cateloguel NaUonal
Importen, Box'244, Edmonton
AN OFFER TO EVERY IN-
ventor, list of wanted Inventions
and full informaUon sent free. The
Ramsay Company. World Patent
Attorneys, 273 Bank St., Ottawa
REFINED ENGLISH WIDOW, AGE
42. new from England, wishw to
meet genUcman, with means. Object matrimony. Genuine. Box
1257 Dally News.
MARRY? HUNDREDS TO CHOOBl
from. Many with means, Particulan 10c. Ladlu free. Canadian
Correspondence Club, Box 128,
Calgary, Alberta
VACATION SNAP SHOTS BRlNO
back pleasant memories. Let us
make extra printe for relatives
and friends. Prints 3c each. Films
developed tnd printed 25c
Krystal Photos, WUkle, Sask,
FREE SEX BOOKS, CATALOG US
on requut - 12 pages Includu
Drug Sundrlu. Largest assortment of Sanitary Rubber Goods
tn Canada. Send 25c for ilk sam-
pies Supreme Brand Latex.
Adulti only. Supreme Specialty
Co. Dept N-D, 188 Yonge
Street, Toronto, Onterlo,
BOYS - STAMPS - GIRLS
Foreign ud British Colony stimps
tt tar less than catalogue pricu.
Write tt once, for approval
sheets to G. F. Goodwin, 811, 5th
Avenue West, Calgary, Alberta.
MEN OF 30, 40, 50! WANT Vllf,
Vigor, for rundown body? Try
OSTREX Tablets of raw oyster
stimulants and general body builden. If not delighted with results of
1st package, maker refunds its low
price. Call, write Mann, Rutherford Co. and ill good druggists
FOR WANT AD
SERVICE
PHONE 144
FIRST CLASS COOK WANTS
work. Specisllzlng In putry ud
bread, very economical, clan.
Nondrinker. Box 8387 Dally Newi
LECAL NOTICES
RELIABLE GIRL WOULD LIKE
light homework or wUl look ifter
children by hour. Phone 326R3
YOUNG .FINNISH WOMAN DE-
lires poslUon u housekeeper.
Good referencu. Phone 1011L.
FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS
BUILDING  MA1ERIALS
Cement Ume Pinter ud Brick,
Plinti ud Virniihu, common
ud Cout Lumber. Shinglei,
Lathi ud Moulding!, GUu of ill
kinds. Roofing Material-, Building Papen, Insul-Botrd and Lath,
Calcium Chloride, Reinforcing
Iron, Wall Finiihu.
NELSON SASH & DOOR
CO.. LTD.
701 Front Strut Phone 282
PIPE, rUBES. FITTINGS
NEW AND  USED
Large itocks (or immediate ihipment
SWARTZ PIPE YARD
lit Avenue ud Mlin 8L
 Vucouver, B. C.    	
WHISKY  BARRELS  FOR   WINE.
All liiei; slso birrell for other
.   purpose!.   AcUve   Trading,   818
Powell Street, Vancouver, B. ti.
'.9_
GURNEY ELECTRIC RANGE. 3
element! ud cooker. Practictlly
new. Bargain for cash. Phone 535.
PROPERTY. HOUSES, PARMS
WATER NOTICE
Divenlon ud Uu
TAJCE NOTICI THAT John Blackwood White, whose addreu is Boom
2, Royil Btnk Bldg., 415 Baker St.,
Nelton, Britiih Columbit, wiU ipply for a licence to take ud use one
hundred thouund gallons per day
of water out of wut fork of Sitkum
Creek, which flows south-easterly
aid drains into Kootenay Lake about
nine mUu north-east of Nelson, B. C.
The water will be diverted tt a
point about one mile southerly from
the south-eist corner of the "Highland Chief" mineral cltlm, Lot 2880.
Kooteniy District ind wUl be used
for mining, tnd incidentally domestic purpou upon the lind described u the lurfice of the "Basrn"
mineral claim In Nelson Mining Division not yet surveyed being mUl
ilte ind ctmp ilte.
Thii notice wu ported on the
ground on Uie llth dty of July, 1839.
A copy of thit notice md an tp-
SUcttion punumt thereto ud to
ie "Wtter Act" will be tiled ln the
office of the Water Recorder at
Nelson, British Columbli.
Objections to the tppllcition may
bt filed with the nld Water Recorder or with the Comptroller of
Water Rights, Pirliament Buildings,
Victoria, B. ti, within thirty dayi
tfter the flnt ippciruce ot thii
notice ir *. locil newspiper.
JOHN BLACKWOOD WHIT.!,
Applicant.
By WILLIAM BROWN.
Agent
NOTB-The following idditlonil
item mutt ln every cue, be included
ln Uie noUce when published.
The dtte of Uie tint publiciUon
of thit notice U the 15th day ot
September, 1039.
The ntme of the mine ln respect
of which the wtter lt to be used Is
the Alpine Mine.
Where chtrges tre to be collected
Uie tppllcante must in their publiihed noticei, include t statement
to the effect that the petition tor
approval ot the undertaking u per
section 28 of the Act will be heard
in Uie office of Uie Water Board at
a date to be fixed by Uie Comptroller, and that any Interested penon
may file m objection thereto ln the
office of the Comptroller or ot the
nld Water Recorder.	
INTERESTED IN A'
HOME?
If a 7 room Fairview house suite
your requirements, opportunity
knocki it your door—hot tnd cold
witer in concrete buement for
wuhing, hot water furnace, buUt
in features, fire place, garage, iru-t
trees, liwn, etc. $3500. Aun 5 room
one story house, centnl location.
concrete basement fire place, gar-
age, etc. $1600. The price of both
these properties it leu than halt the
cost. Reasonable terms msy be arranged. Both ownen hive left the
City.
H. E. DILL
Insurance ud Real Estate
532 Wtrd St     Opp. Midden Hotel
LIVESTOCK, POULTRY
AND SUPPLIES, ETC.
FOR SALE HEAVY DUAL WHHl
truck trailer. Booster air brakes.
Chap. Fred Hlookoff, Robion.
PIPE AND FITTING
ATLAS IRON It METALS LTD.
230 Prior St        Vincouver, B. C.
BULLDOG PIPELESS FURNACE,
A-l  condition. Chetp for cuh.
Apply J, Motheryell Ntkuip.
FOR SALE - BARRELS, KEflS".
sugir sacks, linen. McDonald Jam
Compiny, Ltd.. Neuron, B. C.	
CIRCULATOR COAL HEATER. -3.-
celnt cond. $12.50.1021 Latimer St
SMALL QUEBEC HEATER. PR-tC-
tlcally new. Phone 1033L.
MAN'S   TWEED   TOPCOAT.  A-l
condition. Phone 1024R.
WANTED   MISCELLANEOUS
SHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALfl
or Iron, any quantity. Top pricu
paid Active Trading Company,
916 Powell St., Vincouver, B. C.
LOST AND FOUND
To Finders
If you find 1 ett or dog, pocket-
book, Jewelry or fur, or uythlng else of value telephone the
Daily Newa. A "Found'' Ad. will
be Inserted without cost to you.
We will collect from the owner.
FOR SALE 50 TON BALED HAY
No. 1. WUl seU or trade S yr. old
mire, wt 1550, for cittle. For par-
ticulin, B, Cudworth, Greenwood.
FOR SALE! JERSEY AYRSHIRE
cow. Reasonablei Good milker.
N. Veregin, Porto Rico,
fOR SALE JERSEY HElMft. TO
freshen end ot Sept 1st ctlf. J
Derbyshire, Crawford Bay
TWO YOUNG JERSEY^YRgHIHl.
cows. One Just freshened. Apply
Serru, Harrop, B. C
FOR SALE, 1 AYRSfflSffBULL, 1
yqr. F. Andrewi, Harrop, B, C
PETS, CANARIES, IEES, ETC
WIRE HAIRED FOX TERR1JB
pupplee. Pure regUtered itod
Hirding Kennels, Nelson. Ph. 11
PUREBRED LABRADOR PO*
for ule. Mature doga Hanoi
Abbotsford. R C.	
RUSINESS AND
PROFESSIONAL   DIRECTQl
ASSAYERS
E. W. WIDDOWSON, PROVINC1A
A n 11 y 11 Auiyer, MeteUurgla
Engineer. Sampling Agents 8
Trail Smelter. 304-305, Joiephii
Street Nelson, B. C. 	
GRENVTLLE H. GRIMWOOti"
Provinciil Asuyer md Chemist, 4
Fall Street P. O. Box 9, Nelso
B. C. Representing shipper
Interest at Trail, B. C.
HAROLD S. ELMES," "ROSS
B. C. Provincial sVutyer, Chen
Individual   RepresenteUvu   fo
shippen at Trail Smelter,
CHIROPRACTOR*
FOR SALE, ONE OF NELSON'S
finest homes, six rooms, fully
modern, cement ud stone buement furnace heated, two lots,
good girden, centrally located
$3200 00, Chu. F. McHardy.
GOOD FARM IANDS FOR SATE,
on euy terms ln Alberts ud
Saskatchewan. Write for full information to 908, Dent of Natural
Resources, C. P. R., Calgary, Alte,
FOR SALE, LOTS 11,12,13 AND ft
Block 12, Nelson, B. C. Northwest
corner Stanley md Victoril Ste.
$3200.00. Chu. F, McHardy.
FOR SALE, 2 ACRES IN SUBTJSBS
ot Nelion. Good buildings. Will
seU whole or part Apply
Box 8553 Daily News,
FOR SALE OR RENT—5 LOTS,
7 rm. house. Renewed Interior. Ph.
741L or ipply 80 Victoril Street
FOR AND WANTED TO RENT
FIVE ROOM BUNG/VLOW, GOOD
locillty. Furnished $35. Unfurn-
Ished $25 Robertson Retlty Co. Ltd
WANTED LT. HSKPaTRMSTPOR
Mother, diughter, prvt home. Fur,
or unfurn. Box 8482 Dally News.
MARSDEN APTS. 324 VERNON ST.
under new management Redectd.
turn. & unfurn. rooms. Reasonable.
DERKSEN APTS. OPPOSITE THB
Nurses' Home. Furnished or unfurnished13Usl4room suites.
FOR RENT - 2 HOUSEKEEPflJO
rooms. Private home. Vacant
September 15th. Phone 969.
FOR RENT MODERN APART-
ments. Unfurnished. Apply Room
203 Johnstone Building.
NTH. SHORE, H&KS. FERRY. OCT.
1, Large turn, house. Ph. 678R1,
GOOD THRIFTY YOUNG PIGS $5.
F. O. B, A, H. Noakes, Balfour.
WANTED TO BUY GOOD YEAR-
ling hens. Box 8522 DiUy News.
WHITE UJQHORNS  FOR SAlX
Box 8535 Dtlly Newt,	
AUTOMOTIVE,
MOTORCYCLES. BICYCLES
WILL SACRIFICE 1934, MASTER
de luxe Chev. Sdn. 1st class cond.
4 new tlru. New batry. Privately
owned. Box 8511 Daily Newi.
3 USED CARS, REAL BARGAIN'S
See it City Auto Wrecken, 531
Josephine Street or Phone 447.
FOR SALE '35 CHEV. COUPE 17,000
miles. A-l shape. A snap tor
cash. Phone 519-Y.
CLASSIFIED MAIL ORDERS
trom out-of-town residents gives
prompt attention
HOUSE FOR RENT. PART. FURN.
Good locality Box 8497 Dally Newi
8 RM. HOUSE. CLOSE IN. FUEL
enert- Bisement Pumice. Ph. 67.
t RM. HOUSE, CLOSE IN, 3*BEB-
roomi $24 month. C. W. Appleyard
WANTED AT ONCE 3 or 4 ROOM
house. Apply Kitto, Sivoy Hotel
FURN. AND UNFURN. 8 & 4 RM.
suites, reduced ratu. Kerr Apte.
FOR RENT APARTMENT, MEUl-
cal Arte bldg. Ap C F. McHirdy
FOR RENT BY 15th FURMSUlD
house, 3 bedrooms. Phone 957L.
NTH SHORE NR FERRY. OCT. I
Furn  suite. $18. Phone 678R1.
FURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING
rooms for rent Annible Block.
FURNISHED HOUSE KEEPING
rooms for rent K. W. C. Block
TERRACE APTS Beautiful modern
frigidaire equipped suites.
ROYAL  HOTEL.  NEW  LOW
monthly rata. Phone 686.
TEACHERS WANTED
WANTEi>-LADY TEACHER FOR
Xrivate home. Three pupils. Mrs.
. G. Watson, Appledale, B, C.
j. r. McMillan, d, c. neur<
calometer, X-riy, McCullock P
DR.   WILBm*" BROCK,  D,
542 Baker Street Phone 989,
C0R8ETIERES
SPENCER CORSETS. MRS. V. I
Campbell, 370 Btker St Ph. 661
ENQINEERS AND SURVEYOR!
BOYD C. AFFLECK, Frultvile, B. t
Surveyor tnd Engineer. Phon
"Beiver Filta."       	
HOMES FOR THE AQED
CONDUCTED BY THE SISTES
of the Love of Jesus. St Jude
Home ot Rut for elderly couple
St Anthony's Guat Houu ti
the Priory Guat House tor lad)
over ilxty. Prlvite roomi *
btth. Beautiful location. A n
Homt with every comfort Nuni
ctre when needed. Apply
Mother Superior, 849 Wut 17
Avenue, Vincouver, B. C,
INSURANCE AND REAL EITA1
C. D. BLACKWOOD, Insurance 1.
every description. Retl Est Ph. I
SEE D.'L. KERR, AGENT FO
Wiwtneu Flrt Ins, For better raU
J. E. ANNABLE, REAL ESTXT
Rentals, Insurance, Annible B
CHAS. F. McHARDYTJNSURASJ
Reil Estite. Phone 133.
It W. DAWSOiOtaal Estite, !
surance, Rentals. Next Hlppera
Hardware. Baker St Phone If
MACHINIST*
BENNETTS LIMITED
Machine ihop, tcttylene tnd eleetr
welding, motor rewinding, com
mercitl refrigeration
Phone 893 324 Vernon t
MEMORIALS
PLACE A BRONZE ONE ON
grave of your loved one. Get pr
Flit trom Bronie Memorlili Lt
P. O. Box 726, Vucouver, B.
IASH FACTORIES
LAWSOITS    SASH    FACW
Hirdwood merchant. 273 Bal
TOR
SECOND HAND STORES
WE BUY, SELL fc EXCHANj
furniture, etc. Ark Store. Ph. I
HOME FURNITURE. BUVTSB
Exch. Rpr, Upholster. Phone It
WATCH REPAIRING:
When SUTHERLAND repain yt
watch lt U on Ume ill tnt tir
348, Baker Street Nelion, B.
Want to Sell Something?
PHONE    .
« 144
 .
\£D'
TALL ST. SUFFERS
fROM (ASHING
BOOM PROFITS
BJW YORK, Sept 14 (AP). -
t itock market, especially "war
lin." acted tired today and price
nds were highly divergent. Trans-
s were around 2,000,000 shires.
Stiillsh forces remilned ot the
von numerous industries would
iefit substantially from eventual
Sign buying in the United States,
t traders who had piled up boom,
ie profits Inclined to cash in on
i theory the run-up had been a
too ipeedy,
'romlnent on the lowtr drift most
lta* tim* wer* U. S. Steel, Bethle-
n, Texas Corp. md Du Pont.
setter performeri wen Wooi-
xth, International Harvester, Am-
csn Woollens, Fajardo Sugar and
nsolidated Edison.
Janadian ihares getting ahead
ire Hiram Walker and Distillers
rp., with fractional gains. Cana-
m Pacific, Dome Mines and Lake
pre were lower. Dominion ts dlp-
I Ht In th* bond list.
hicago Gains
Unl in Ule
Profit Taking
-HICAGO, Sept 14 (AP).-Wheat
Ices advanced 2% to 3 centa a
ihel today as a fresh buying wave
apt over the grain pita but ibout
If of thli upturn wu loat due to
ayy profit taking.
tha grains lifted pricei to within
a thu a cent of tha warboom
[hs reached lut week.
Wheat closed 1%—1% cents higher
in yesterday, December 87—86%,
iy 88*4-14; corn %-% higher,
■cember B7H—%; May 60%-%;
Is %—1 cent lower.
stern Oils Up
>n Toronto Exch.
TORONTO, Sept 14 (CP).-Dull
iding in a thin buying demand
Te industrial and mining shares
moderate setbick today on To.
ate market while western oils
ntlnued Wednesday's rally. Volte eased off to about 900,000 sharei.
Hamilton Bridge, pfd, weakened
eut S and losses of a point or
ire were netted by Page-Hersey
d Dominion Fourdriei. Senior
Is were steidy. .
Borne Oil sold up to 2.70 and
Md around 2.89 for a net gain of
. Calgary and Edmonton firmed
out 19, Okalt* and other Issues
8 were Anglo-
, Dalhousie, Cal-
iwood and Model.
__ _ to 40 and cloied
put IVi up to'38%.
Nickel, Norahda, Hudson Biy ttsi
rielters' hid los|ei down to Vi.
WINNIPEG GRAIN
WINNIPEO, Sept. 14 <CF).-<Jraln
futures quotations:
Open   High  Low   Close
WHEAT-
Oct, *78%    78%    75*    78%
Nov. .... 78% 81% 7m 79%
Dec. „_, 77% SIS 77% 79%
Miy   .._   81%    89%    81%    84%
OATS:
Oct, SS .    40%    88%    SS
Nov, ___ - - - ■ 38%
Dec __ 38% 30% 33% 38V«
Miy  ....   38%    40%    33%    38%
BARLEY:
Oct.       48       50%    48       40%
Oct niw  43%    48%    43       48
Nov.  .....  —       -       -       46%
Dec   .....48%    49%    48%    48%
May   ....   48%    51       48%    49%
FLAX:
Oct   189       -       -      189
Nov _ —       —       —      162
Dec.   .__  -       -      -     163
Miy   .._  -       -      -     1,80%
EYE*
Oct _'_   58%    58%    18%    88
Nov.  _._   -       -       -       88%
Dec.   ......   58%    80%    98       58%
Miy   ....   80% . 82%    80%    61%
CASH PRICES:
WHEAT-Noi. 1 hird, 1 Nor. ud
trick 77%; No. 3 Nor, 74%; Ne. 8
Nor. 72%; No. 4 Nor. 68%; No. 9,
61%; No. 6, 57%; tied 58%; No. 1
Garnet 88%; No. 2 Garnet 88%;
No. 3 Garnet 63%; No. 1 Durum
68%; No. 4 speciil 67%; No. 5 special
82%; No. 6 special 59%; No. 1 mi-fed
63%.
OATS-No. 3 C. W. 30; Ex. 3 C. W.
38%; No. 3 C. W. 38; No. 1 feed 39%;
No. 2 teed 33; No. 3 feed 31; track
38%.
BARLEY-8- ind. 2-row No. 1
C. W 49; 6- and 2-row No. 3 C. W.
49; S-row No. 3 C. .W. 48; No. 1
feed 48; No. 3 teed 48; No. 3 teed
44; track 48%.
FLAX-No. 1 C. W. 188%; No. 2
C. W. 164%; No. I C. W. 150; No. 4
C. W. 145; track 188%.
RYE-No. 2 ti W.59.
Lumber Exports al
an All-Time High
NEW WESTMINSTER, BC, Sept
14 (CP)—Lumber export! from
thli Fruer River sort reichid in
ill-time high record during August
with deep set cargo*! totalling 46,-
123,173 leet compired wtth 17,-
848,110 feet In August of lut year.
New Wutmlnittr Hirbor, Board
official* unounced todiy.
ToUl ixporti of ill merchudlse
from th* port during the month
reached 105,219 toni, nearly double
the export figure ot 54,156 toni tor
the time month lut year.
Following are the Auguit figurei
for leveral export commodities
with totals for Auguit ot 1938 In
bricketi:
Llth, 16,707 bundle! (6,100): plywood, 2,353,646 square feet (1,M-,-
725); lead, 9,433 toni (11,276); line,
8,254 tons (4,745); illver bullion,
890,067 ounces (440,886); wheit 51,.
599 buiheli (none); pean, 6,411
(2,100).	
DIVIDENDS
Wibiuo Cotton Compiny, Ltd.,
regulir, 29 centi.
The Dominion Bink, 2% per cent,
ible Nov. 1 to ihireholden of record Oct 28.""
Torbnto Stock Quotations
Inks:
Idermae Copper
**■   Gold  ■  ..._
•Huronlan ...
Gold_
_... Rouyn Mlnei
nor Gold  -
mmae Bouyn  _.-..
ikfield Gold    _..
W Metali Mining _
ittle Gold Minei _.
Igood Kirkland .._-.
Missouri    	
>lo Mines	
ilorne Mines —-.
(tt Trethewey _____
(fala Ankerite  .
nker Hill Extenilon
nadian Malartic    ...
riboo Gold Quarti
stle-Trethewey     —
ntral Patricia	
romium M le S	
ut Copper    ......—
niaurum Mines	
nsolidated M tt S ....
rkwater '...... ...
ime Mlnei .if	
irval-Siscoe ',._-__.
at Malartlc    ..............
lorado Gold '.... —
lconbridge Nickel
deral Kirkland   .—
ancoeur Gold-,	
id's Lak* Gold,	
lid Belt   	
fandoro Mines
innar Gold .
ird Rock Gold
Uker Gold >.
•Dinger   ,..-_£_--*-
)wey Gold     '■■■
_dson Bay MAS.
iternational Nickel
M Consolidated   —
ick Waite   ..	
icola Gold  	
err-Addison    	
Irkland Lake -
ake Shore Mlnei.
eitch Gold    	
ebel Oro Mlnei	
Ittle Long Lac   ....
[acassa Mines 	
acLeod Cockshutt
.49%
.06
2.05
,07
.03
1.95
.10
JO
.25
1X12
.11
.12
fflm
8.95
.01
8.00
.08
.59
1.85
.80
2.15
.50
2.25
1.32
48.00
.04
25.75
J03%
2.20
m
5.00
„s
.31
.43%
.19
.04%
.45
.99 .
X)4%
13.00
.29
28.75
47.50
X>2
At
.02%
1.70
1.16
32.00
.70
.02%
2.60
3.95
1.75
Hav* You Some
Uied
Fruit Jars
i     I
Why Not Turn
Them Into Cash?
A WANT AD
I Wil Find'a- ■
I   Purchaser
(2) lines 6 times 80e net
(I) llnu once 20* nit
ilson Daily Newt
(•HONE 144
Madsen Red Lake Gold.
Mandy   	
Mclntyre-Porcuplne  	
McKenzie Red Lake -
McVittie-Graham   	
McWatters Gold ....___
Mining Corporation 	
Moneta Porcupine    _
Morrls-Klrkland   _...__
Nipissing Mining	
Noranda   ._.._...______
Normetal
O'Brien Gold
Omega Gold
Pamour Porcupine _
Paulor* M  _
Paymaster Coni	
Pend Oreille  	
Perron Gold    _-_
Pickle Crow Gold _
Pioneer Gold
Premier Gold
Powell Rouyn Gold .
Preston East Dome ...
Quebec Gold_
Reeves MacDonald   	
Reno Gold Minn __._.
Roche Long Lac —.........
San Antonio Gold   _.....
Shawkey Gold     .____-_
Sheep Creek Gold  ___
Sherritt Gordon   _____
Siscoe Gold   —_____
Sladen Malartlc   _____
Stadacona Rouyn  _____
St Anthony    ...__._—
Sudbury Basin .... .__
Sullivan Contolldited  ...
Sylvanite ■ .'..■....._ _.
Teck-Hughei Gold    —
Toburn Gold Minei .....
Towagmac ■ - —
Venturei  ....,..!. -	
Waite Amulet '. _—
Whitewater     	
Wright Hargreavei   	
Ymlr Yukee Girl  	
OILS:
British Americu   ...........
Chemical Reieirch   .—
Imperial      —_..
Inter Petroleum   	
Texu Canadian  	
INDUSTRIALS:
Abitibi Power  	
Bell Telephone    .....
Brazilian T L tt P	
Brewera & Distillers   ...
Brewing Corporation   _.
B C Power A ,	
B C Power B   ~—
Building Producti - ..._.
Canada Bread    _—..
Can Bud Malting  	
Can Car sft Foundry —
Can Cement 	
Can Dredge 	
Can Malting     	
Can Pacific Railway ._.
Can Ind Alcohol A	
Can Wineries    .........._..
Cons Bikerles     ........
Cosmos     —
Dominion Bridge   _,
Dominion Stores   .	
Distillers Seagrami ...
Fanny Farmer 	
Ford of Canada A -,...
Ren Steel Wares   .....
Goodyear Tire   	
Gypsum L k A ._...
Hamilton Bridge „._
Hiram Walker -.'._,_
Ir/inenal Tobacco _
Loblaw .A ...._.....___
Loblaw, B  	
Kelvinator     -.	
Massey Until   .........
Montreil Power . „
Moore Corp   ....,„...__
Nat Steel Car 	
Page Hersey    	
Preyed Metals   	
Steel of Can	
JT
.17
47.00
1.07
,   .11
,   •*»
US
.85
.05
1.18
70.10
.85
1.80
.24
1.78
.01%
Jl
3.50
1.70
'■■ 4.20
■ 2.25*
1.37
1.62
1.28
.19
.50
.50 .
.04
1.69
.02%
1.10
1.50
.95
J7  -
.32
.09
2.25
.64
2.80
3.90
1.90
.30
4.30
(.10
.08%
7.10
• .03%
21.50
.24
15.00
24.25
.85
2Vi
147
7%
3%
SO
22
2%
13%
.     4%
3%
IS
6%
10%
29%
5%
_*
»%
16%
20
87%
1?*
20%
20
10
79
4
2%
35%
13%
26%
•24%
T9%
7%
.27%
I
102
10%
80
NIUON DAILY NIWS. NILSON, ». C-FRIDAY MORNINO. HPT. 15. 1931.''
V»AOI ILIVIN
Market and Mining Ife^ISS^^
Sask. Manitoba
Wheal Will Be
Shipped Easl
WINNIPEO, S-ept 14 (CD-Reflecting th* heavier movementi of
Canadian wheat and efforts on the
part ot thi Canadian wheit boird
to avert i possible cir shortage
when   deliveries  of whut  reach
Suk volume, the wheit boird his
sued ipeciil Initructiom to the
trade ln regard to th* ihipment of
wheit to termlnil (levators.
Sukitchewu ud Minitoba
wheit is to be shipped to Fort
William ud Port Arthur.
In Alberti carlot! ot No*. 1 ud
3 Northern trom polnti hiving a
ieven cent per hundred weight
or lower freight differential In favor
of Vancouver from stations ln i
direct Un* to Fort William ind
Port Arthur via Edmonton over
C. N. R. and N. A. R. Unei, ind
Cilgiry over C. P. R. llnei, without backhaul, ara to be ihipped
to th* Cmadian Government terminal Interior eleviton at Edmonton and Cilgiry-
Culoti of on* »nd two North«rn
trom ieven cent differential or
lower areu from stations not tributary to Edmonton, Calgary or
Lethbridge but ln -direct lin* to
Fort Wllllim ud Port Arthur vii
Saskatoon or Moose Jaw without
backhaul, will be shipped to Canadian Government Interior terminal (levator! at Saskatoon or
Moo** Jaw respectively.
Carlots of onl C W, Garnet from
Sointi hiving an eight cent per
undredwelght or lower fr*ight
differentlil in fivor ot Vucouver
ire to be shipped to Fort WUliim
ud Port Arthur,
Cirloti of ill other gradei except
Alberta Red Winter from stations
hiving a uven cent per CWT. or
lower freight differential ln favor
of Vancouver are to be shipped to
Fort Wlllism and Port Arthur except one ud two Northern tributary to Lethbridge.
Newsprint Prices
Will Be Unchanged
Until March—-Cullen
NEW YORK, Sept 14 (APIs-International Paper Company, a iub-
ildiary of International Paper &
Power Company, reaffirmed today
the present price of 850 a ton tor
newsprint delivered at New York
ud Chicago tor th* tint three
monthi of 1940.
R. J. Cullen, Preildent of th* company, raid:
"International Paper Company, li
announcing to Iti domestic newsprint customers thit taking advantage of Inventories on hand, the
present price will be protected without change, throughout tha tint
three months of 1940.".
Exchanges
MONTREAL, Sept 14 (CP)-.Britiih and foreign exchange cloied
firmer today. Nominal ratei tor
lirge imounti:
Australia, pound, 3.4986.
China Hong Kong dollan, J82J.
France, true .024842.
Great Britain, pound, 4.8401.
India, rupee, .3376.
Italy, lire, .0579.
Japan, yen, XD\.
New Zealand, pound, 3.4969.
(Compiled by Tha Royal Bank of
Canadi).
BANK OP CANADA
ACCEPTS TREASURY BILLS
OTTAWA, Sept 14 (CP) - The
Bank of Cuada announced today
on behalf ol the Minister of Finance
that tensters had been accepted for
829,000,000 Dominion of Cuada
treasury bills due Dec. 15,1938. The
average discount price of the accepted bida wu $99.78945, and the
average yield wu 446 per cent
New Tariff Schedule
to Australian House
CANBERRA, Sept 14 (CP-Reu-
ters)—A new tiri(. schedule bised
on tariff boird reporti covering
107 Itemi wu preiented to the
Australian House of Representatives today by J. N. Lawson, Minister of Customs and Trad*. The
schedule contains 14 increases and
25 reductions in duties on British
product!..
The former Include cotton towelling, ysrns, towels, power liwn
mowers, flix, yarns ind threads.
Included in the reductions are British refrigerator parts, woollen
tops, yarns ud piece goods, cotton
weaving and knitting yarns, glu-
cou, corn flour ud Jut* yarns.
Railways Plan
Order 25 Million
New Equipment
OTTAWA, S«pt 14 (CP)-Cua-
dlan Railways are planning to give
Immediate orden for about 925,.
000,000 new equipment lt wu authoritatively learned today by th*
Canadian Preu.
The orden will be approximately
equally divided between th* Canadian National ud Cuidiu Pacific railways,
Flnt delivery ot new equipment
which will be ilmost entirely
freight cin ud locomotives, li expected w'thla three - monthi ud
the whole order will be complete
in six months.
The object In giving the larger
order now it to enable th* railways
to meet the abnormal demand! expected becauie high freight rates,
Increased insurance rates ud Kir-
city of shipping- it expected to
ciuse th* freight now routed by
water from Vucouver thrpugh the
Panama Canal to be lent acron
Cinidi, lt wis itited.
It was learned thi Government
li anxloui to hav* all tha raUway
requirement! completed ii Mon
u possible so the plinti now miking equipment cu be transformed
Into munition! pluti.
MARKETS AT A
GLANCE
•y Tli* Cinidlin Preu   ,
Toronto—Western oili itocki are
higher; mines ud tndustriili lower.
Montreil—Stoeki closed lower.
New York —Stocka cloied
unchmged.
Winnipeg-Wheat 2% to 2% centi
higher.
Toronto—Bacon hogi (dreued),
weaker at 11.75..
London—Bar silver lower.
New York-Silver lower; othar
metals unchanged.
Montreal—Silver ateaUy.
New York-Cotton rubber, lugar
ud coffee higher.
New York—Canadian dollar down
a cent to J0%. ,
Money
By Tha Canadian Preu
Closing exchange rates:
At Montreal-Pound 4.84; U. S.
dollar 1.11; franc 2.46 7-16.'
At New York—Pound 3.03; Canadian dollar .90%; franc 2.24.
• At P*ris--Pound 176.625 fr.; U. S.
dollar. 43.80  fr.;  Canadian  dollar
49.98 tr.
In Gold-Pound lOl Id; U. S.
dollar 6Q.92 cenU; Canadian dollar
95.65 cents.
HART TO CO NEW YORK
TO SIGN B. C. BONDS
VICTORIA, Sept 14 (CP).-Hon.
John Hart B. ti. Minister ot Finance, will leave this weekend for
a quick round trip.to New York
where he will sign bondi for I
33,000,000 loin Issue floated there
by the Province, iome monthi ago.
Quotations
High Low
Am Cu  113 111%
Am For Pow Mt   2%     2%
Am Smelt & Re  98% 57
Am Tel .' 163 . 162
Am Tob  .  79% . 78%
Amcondi .  35% 34%
Baldwin   . _  13% "18' '
Bait & Ohio _    8%     8
Bendix Av _  31% 30%
Beth Steel   04% 9l%
Borden   _™ 21% 20%
Can Dry -. ,.   14% 14%,
Can Pac  ,-....    5%     5%
Cerro de Puco"> 44% 43%
Chrysler    89% 87%
Con Gu N Y _  80% 30%
C Wright pfd ..   27% 26%
Dupont   184% 180%
Eaat Kodak __ 125 153
Free Texas .._  42% 41%
Gen Elec .  40 39%
Gen Foodi   54% 53%
Gen Moton .....   23% 32%
Goodrich     8VS , 8
Granby _   30% 29%
Great Nor pfd .  65% 54% .
Howe Sound ...    6%     6%
Hud Moton   43% 42%
on Wall Street
Close
111%
2%
57%
162%
79%
33%
18%
8%
30%
03
-58
' 5%
44
89%
30%
27
181%
155
42%
40
54%
23%
8
30%
64%
6%
42%
Inter Nickel ....
Inter Tel & Tel
Mack Truck ...
Mont Ward 	
Nash Moton _
N Y Central ._
Pack Moton _.
Phllllpi Pet* ....
Radio Corp ...
Rem Rand ......
Safeway Storu
SheU Un „._.__
S Cal Edison ...
Stan Oil of N J
Texai Corp ...
Texu Gulf Sul
Under Type ...
Un Carbide ...
Un Oil of Cal _
Un Aircraft __
Un Pic ._./._-.
U S Rub 	
U S Steel _..__
U S Steel —_
Warner Broi __
West Elec	
West Un ...
Woolworth 	
Yellow Truck .
8% 8%      6%
43% 42% 43%
54% 63% 54%
' 6% 6%      6%
20% . 19% 20%
4% 4%      4%
25% 23% 24%
6% 6%      6%
13% 12% 13%
42% 41% .41%.
15% 14*4 15%
25 . 25 25
53% 82% 82%
48% 47% 48
37% 36% 37
81% 49% 50%
94% 90% 81%
18% 18% 18%
44 . 42% 43%
100 99% 99%
46% 44% 45%
78% 76% 77%
|8% 76% 77%
4% 4%      4%
117% 118% 119%
32% 28% 82%
99 38% 38%
19% 18% 19%
34% 33% 33%
Montreal Stock Exchange
INDUSTRIALS
Alte Pic Grain 	
Assoc Brew of Cin ...»
Bithunt P te? K . ...
Canadiu Bronse „_..._..
Can Bronie pfd ...	
Can Car * Fdy pfd	
Can Celanese .". 	
Can Celanese pfd	
Can North Power....	
Can Steamship 	
Can Steamship pfd .__...
Con Min St Smelting	
Dominion Coal pfd .......
Dom Steel te Coal B'_..
Dominion Textile _,	
Dryden Paper  _._,
Foundation C of C _____
Gatineau Power ___.
Gatincu Tower pfd 	
Gurd Charles .: 	
Howard Smith Paper	
H Smith Plait ttt	
Imperial Oil
Inter Petroleum 	
Inter Nickel of Can
Lak* of the'Woods...
McColl Frontenac ....
National Brew Ltd ....
Nat Brew pfd	
Ogilvie Flour new ....
,    3%
.   11
,    S
.   39%
. 105
.25%
,   17:
.103%
.' 13
.    4%
.   14%
.   50"
,   SO
.   15%
.   83%
.    6%
.    8%
.   12
.   82%
3%
13%
96
.'18
.   34%
.   47%
.   22%
'   .6%
31 '
38
32
Quebec Power	
Shawinigan W St P ...
St Lawrence Corp „
St Law Corp pfd .	
South Can Power ......
Steel ot Can ptd	
BANKS
Commerce	
Nova Scotia .
Toronto	
CURB
Abitibi 6j>fd ....
18
19%
8
13%
11%
83
.138.
. 200
Bathunt J? St P'B ..	
Beauharnois Corp	
British American Oil ..:_
B C Packers 	
Cah Vickers ______
Cons Paper Corp 	
Donnacona Paper A ——
Donnicona Paper B _.__
Fairchild Aircraft	
Fraier Co Ltd _...-...
Inter Utilities A _____
Inter Utllitiei B	
Like Sulphite .._	
MacLaren P Jt P „ ...
McColl Frontenic pfd ....
Mitchell Robt 	
Royalite Oil ,.	
United Dlst of Can	
Walker Good «t W	
11%
2%
4
21%
15%
6
7%
6
5%
5%
•15%
7%
.50
IH
16
SO
14
«
.55
35'i
Mcintosh Apples
lo Start Moving
Sept. tl, Kelowna
KELOWNA, B. C, Sept. 14 (CP)
—Flnt movement of Mcintosh red
applu trom the Okanagan Valley
district to Vancouver ud other
British Columbia coast cities will
start Sept 18, according to u order
issued by the British Columbli
Tree Fruit Boird hen.
Mcintosh Redi ire later In maturing thla yeir than ln previoui
seasons, however, ud the general
eastward movement WlU not start
betore Sept 25.
More thu one third of the crop
of'wealthy applu has been sold on
th* domutic mirket by British
Columbia Tree Fruits, Ltd. 'the
ilngle agency which directs nil
of fruit to the domestic market.
Fruit board official! uy in ad-
vinc* ot freight ud insuruce rites
for ihlpmenti on both Atlantic
and Pacific oceani will mike export difficult thii yur.
United Kingdom buyen are atand
Ing by their agreements, however,
and lew cancellations hav* been
received. A number of new orders
have also arrived from Great Britain sine* the itart ot th* war.
Board official* report freight rates
tor Atlantic shipments have idvinced by t third thli week, from
32 to 43 centi on a box of apples.
Pacific ratu show a similar advance, jumping trom 77% cents to
31.03 a box.
Oils Prominent
on (oast Market
VANCOUVER, SfJfet 14 (CP). -
Oil itocki climbed on the Vancouver Stock Exchange today, dominating the market tn heavy trading and
golds ind bue metali also moved up
u 306,555 shares changed hands.
Horn* OU ihot up 22 cent! to 2.70,
Cilgiry St Edmonton 20 to 2.30, Calmont 6 to 44, Vulcan 9 to 64, Dal-
housi* 7 to 62, Anglo-Canadian 6 to
1.09, ud Aniconda 2% to 11%.
Royil Cuidiu it 19% and Royal
Crest at 11 were both up 1 ud
Mar Jon tinned % to 4%.
Fend Oreille wu spectacular In
the bue metals, climbing 40 centa
to 3.35. Reeves MacDonald gained 2
to 60, Reliet Arlington % to 15,
Whitewater % to 8% and Lucky
Jim % to S. Quatsino at 4% and
Wellington at 3% were unchanged.
Bralorne gold wu up 15 to 9.90
but Cariboo feU oft 12 to 1.78. Privateer dropped 2 to 89 while Reno
gained 13% to 33, Hedley Mascot 5
to 40, and Dentonia % to 2%.
GOVT. DEPOSITS
'UP $11,518,000
OTTAWA, Sept 14 (CP)-Increue
of $11,518,000 ln Dominion Government deposits wu shown today In
the Bank ot Canada's statement for
the week ended September 13. Deposits ot chartered banks also wer*
up by $4,578,000 and notei In circulation $4.928.000..
Ration of net reserve to notes and
deposit liabilities was 62.18 per
cent thii week, 60.31 lut week.
Calgary Oils Up
CALGARY, Sept. 14 (CP).-Olls
contlnued'thelr upwird iwing today
on Calgary itock exchinge ln sympathy with strong outside markets.
Gains up to 28 points were recorded.
Turnover Jumped to 76,630 shares.
Calgary and Edmonton gained 25
at 2.20, Horn* 15 at 2.60, OkalU eight
kt 1.20 ud Anglo-Canadian live at
1.07, « i
Montreal Produce
MONTREAL, .Sept. 14 (CP) -
Spot: butter, Que. 26% traded; western June 26-26%. Eggs, A-large
35b; pullets A-2flb; B-large 24b;
C 17b. Sales: butter, 800 Que, 26%.
Butter futuru: Sept 26%-%; Oct.
29%-%; Nov. 26J4--7. Sales: two
Nov. contracts at 27.
Have You Read the Classified?
Metal Markets
LONDON,  Sept   14   (AP).-Bar
gold 168i, unchanged.  (Equivalent
$33 JM).
Bir silver 31%d, oft MS. (Equlvilent 39.09 centi).
MONTRIAL I
Bir gold In London wu down
19 centi it $35.14 in ounce ln Canadian funds; 168s ln British, representing the Bank of England's buying price. The fixed $85 Washington
price amounted to $38.41 ln Canadian.
Silver futuru closed steady today.
Offering price Sept. 40.95.
NEW YORK
Copper steidy; *lectro!yllc ipot
12.00.
Tin steidy; spot ud neirby 70—75
Leid iteady; ipot New York 5.50—
55; East St. Louil 5.35.
Zinc steady; Eut St. Louli ipot
ud forwird 6.25. Quicksilver 145.
Platinum 38—40.
Bar sUver 38, otf % cent.
OTTAWA, S*pt 14 (CP). - Th*
new Increued excls* tax on clgir-
«ttu ud tobtcco li ippllcibl* only
to n«w itock put out by muufic-
turen on ud ifter Sept. 12, official!
of the excise division of the national
Revenue department said today.
Winnipeg Wheat
Futures Gain
WINNIPEG, Sept 14 (CP).-Ac-
tlve buying by exporters, mill* and
southern housu brought good gains
to whut future* pricu on Winnipeg
grain exchange today. Quotations
climbed u much u 4% cent* but
light selling came in at top level!
•nd at the close vilues were 2%—
2% higher, October it 78%, November 79%, December 79%—80 ud
May 84%-%.
Export ulu of Cuidiu whut
ud flour were estimated at nearly
1,000,000 bushels for th* diy. United
Kingdom buyen were mentioned
prominently in Uie oveneu trans-
action. .
lively trading kept deileri busy
through the session.
Mills ind exporter! conUnued
their icUvi demud for lower grides
of cuh whut but lick ot offerings
■gain rutricted actual sales, Coana
grain pricu moved ahead in rather
quiet trading.     .    ,
American Company'
Receives Order for
Canadian Planes
LOS ANGELES, Cat, Sept 14
i(AP)—Kinner Moton, Inc., announced today lt had received an
$83,000 order from Fleet Aircraft
Ltd. Fort Erie, Ont, for 50 Kinner
R-5; series 2, 160 horse powtr, 8
cylinder airplane motors.
Although ihipment into Cuidi
Il banned under the United Statu
Neutrality Act the Company stated that the order wu accompanied by a letter of credit assuring
payment upon delivery of the engines either to the Company ln Ca
nada or to i warehouse ln this
country. The engines may be placed
in storage ln the United States un-
til whatever future date the Canadiu firm may legally take delivery.
Thii ii the second order received from the aame Canadian plane
muufacturer in ont month.
Brown-Moyer Oil
Aug. Revenue $75,141
CALGARY, Sept 14 (AP)- The
Brown-Moyer-Brown group, of Turner Valley oil wells had riet revenue of $75, 141 for the month of
August compared with $98,817 for
July, the monthly report showed
today.
,        ■.' ' '   i,
Calgary Livestock
CALGARY, Sept 14 (CP).-Re-
ceipti today: Cattle 297; calvu 72;
hogi 303; sheep 16.
Cattle market 25 to 50 centi higher
thii week; veil calves $1 hlghtr.
Good grau steen 6.25—6.75; good
heifers 6.25—6.75;  medium helfen
5—6; biby beef 7.75; good cows 5—
5.50; good to choice veal calves 7-
7.50.      '
Last bacons 8.35.
U. S. Gov'ts. Gain
NEW YORK, Sent 14 (AP) --
New buying "from the outside" advanced U. S. Government bond pri-
ees slightly today, while corporate
Issues milled uncertainly In uneven
trends.
Foreign government! again generally declined fractions ilthough
some Latin Americu resisted this
trend.
Dow Jones Averages
30 lndustriill
20 nlli  	
13 uUlltira
40 bonds ....
High Low Close Chmge
155.54 151.96 153.71 off    .Vi
32.93 32.10 32.40 ott    .17
24.62 24.17 24.31 up    .01
•  —— 86-30 up    _>3
Vancouver Stock Exchange
MINES:
Big Missouri    	
Bralornt   u_
Cariboo Gold\...._
Dentonia	
Fairview Amal	
Federal Gold  -
George Cop .-_.-
Golconda     .........
Gold Belt _._	
Grandview    .
Gruil-Wihksne ....
Hedley Mascot „...
Home Gold    ...
Indian Minu 	
Inter Coal te Cokt
Koot Belle ....:.—
Lucky Jim ..............
Mak Sic Gold	
McGIUivray     ._._
Minto Gold  _.
Nicola M & M	
Noble Five .
Ptnd OreUle ...	
Pioneer Gold 	
Porter Idaho ...:...
Premier Border ...
Premier Gold   .....
Quatsino   .	
Privateer    „...__-
Reeves MacD	
Relief  Art  	
Reno Gold ,—
Rufus Art ......	
Silly Minu	
Salmon Gold ..'.	
8he*p Creek ._.„,..
Silbak Premier ..
Silver Crest	
Vidette Gold 	
Waverly T  ........,.._
Bid
' .10
9.85
1.78
.02%
.02
.00%
JO
.08
.22
.17
■Jl
.40
xw%
.01
XI
.80
.04%
.00%
X)
. .01%
.03%
.04%
2.50
2.22
.03%
,01
1.38 '■
M
'.SS'
.15   '
.50
.01%
~7
.04
1.08
1.00
.01%
.00%
Ask
lit
m
.01%
.33.
.00
.18
.02%
.43
-M
M%
.02
.03%
.04%
2.55
2.25
.04
l's.01%
1.40
.04%
.91
.58
.54
1.11
.06
.01
Wesko Mlnu  	
Whitewater	
OILS'.
A P Con __.
Amalgamated. _
Anaconda     .
Anglo Cin ..........
Baftie  .....	
Brown Corp 	
Calgary & Edm ...
Calmont	
Commonwealth  ...
Dalhousie.  	
Davlu Pete _
Eut Crest  ......
Foundation Pete .„
Four Star Pete _.
Freehold Corp........
Hargal      -....:-
Highwood Sarcee..
Home      ,_-
Madison   .... ._.—
Mar Jon   .-...—
McDoug Seg
McLeod new .
Mercury   _-
Mill City Pete. .....
Model       _
Monarch Roy .........
Okalti Com-	
Pacalta    	
Prairie Roy ........
toyalite        _.
outh End P*t* _-_
Southwest Pttt —
Spooner  	
United      ,_.
Vanalta   	
Vulcan
INDUSTRIALS:
Capital   Est   	
Coast  Brew
.00%      .00%
.08%      .09
_1
MVt
.11%
1.09
.03
.02%
2.29
.43
.28
.80
.34
.08
'' .13%
.03%
JO   |
.21
2.69
.04
-.04
.16
.05
.08
.06
.30
.09
1.20
. .07
.21
37.00
Hi
M
ffi
.11    .
.08%
.64
.75 -
_a
,01
.12
i:io-
. -M
2.30
.45
.28
.40
.09
.15
.14%
.04
J5
.22
.04%
.17
. J2
1.25
.08%
.24%
40.00.
,06%
.11
1.08
1.18
Stock Only After September 12
Under thi war budget pruented
to the Houie ot Commoni tht txist
tu on clgartttu wu laeriutd by
$1 ptr 1000 cigarettes and on tobacco
by five centi • pound.
The Increued tax la not applicable
to itocki which wtrt in merchinti'
hinds prior to Sept 12, officials said.
Wholesalers, Retailers Still in a
Quandry Over Food, Tobacco Taxes
*.'
No Word by Thursday
When  to Effect
Higher Prices
GROCERIES, MEATS
ARE ALREADY UP
World Exchanges
NEW YORK, Sept 14 (AP)-A
widely erratic pound sterling broke
to It* lowut point* sine* May,
1933 today, then rallied in late trading but cloied down 7% ctnti bt-
low yesttrday'i finish. Banker!
uid the brttk cime on orden to
sell "it the mirket"
At one time during tht diy It
touched $3.85 ifter finishing it $4.01
yesterdiy. Tonight's final figure
was $3.92%.
Tht rally followed announcement
that "any American demand for
foreign exchangi will bt utisfted
ln tht London market at $4.02 if
such demud is ln connection with
the liquidation ot United States
prt-wir sterling balances or with
tht current trade transaction* of
tht British Empire."
The French franc closed off .06%
of a cent Tht Belgian belga gained
.01 ot a cut Cinidlan dollar cloied it eo%:
Closing rites follow, Grtit Britain ln dollars, others ln centi:
Great Britain, demud 8.02%;
Greit Britain, cables 3.92%; 60-
day bills 3.90%; 90-diy bills 3.89%;
Canada, Montreal ln Ntw York
90.00; Canada, New York ln Montreal 110.009; Belgium 17.12; Denmark 19.85; Finlud 3.00; Fruct
2.23; Gtrmuy unquoted, benevolent 18.75, travel unquoted; Greece
.80n; Hungary 19.50n; Italy 5.21;
Nethtrlandi 53.08; Norway 22.75;
Poland 18.80n; Portugal 3.75n; Rumania ,70n; Sweden 23.80; Switzerland 22.68; Argentina (official) un-
Suoted; Argentina (free) 23.75;
raiil (official) unquoted; Brazil
(fret) 8:00; Mexico 18.50n; Japan
23.00n: Hong Kong 26.00; Shanghai
7.00; Yugoslivli 2.28n.
GRAIN EXPORTS
HIGH IN AUGUST
OTTAWA, Stpt 14 (CP) .-Export
of whut wheat flour, oata ud ryt
ln August wtrt higher thu in August 1938, whilt birley shipments
wert lowtr, tht Dominion Bureau
of Statistic reported todiy.
Export! with flguru for Auguit
1938. ln bricketi: Wheit 10,272,929
buiheli (6,266,055); whut flour 379,-
270 barrels (286,270); barley 1,073,750
nushels (1,253,883); oati 1,009,105
buiheli (701.748); ud ry* 501,409
buiheli (148,533).
London Stocks
Quiet at Close
LONDON, Sept 14 (AP).-InlUil
improvement wu milntslned in th*
stock mirket today but interest lagged in late dealings ud the close
wasquiet. Industrials were neglected
and finished mostly lower. International issues were steadier. Copper
and rubber sharu eued ud oili
were quieter.
-. ' ,      .
London Close   '
LONDON, Sept 14 (AP)-HBritllh
■tock closings:
Cent Mining £14, Consol Gold
Fields 48s 9d, Dt Beers dfd £5%,
Distillers 58s, Imp Chem 20i 6d, Imp
Tob 108 i 9d, Rodeslu Anglo Am
24i 6d, Vickers 16s 10%d.
DOME MINES DIVIDEND
TORONTO, Sept 14 (CP).-Dome
Mlnu, Limited,, todiy unounced
50-cent piymenti for their next two
quarterly dividend!. Th* tint ll
payable Oct 20 to ihireholden of
record Sept SO ind the iicond il
payable Ju. 20 to ihireholden df
record Dec. 30.     , .   .
Wholuilen and rttellcn In Ntlson wtre still in a quandry Thursday over th* newly imposed taxu
on foodstuffs, tobiccos, md ilec*
triclty ud gu for domestic pur*
poses, Imposed under tht new Canadiu war burgtt
Wholeulen still had no definite
word is to whtn to Impost tha
taxes. Most retailers had already
placed tht higher prices on thtlr
goodi by Wednesdiy or Thursdiy
to ivoid louu ai tht only stocka
available were those ilready on
the shelves. Wlru wtrt itnt back
and forth trom minuficturtr to
wholesaler to retailer, with whole-
sileri ud retailen climorlng for
more supplies and manufictureri
replying they could not furnish
them at present There wu no
shortage of food ud no dugtr ot
uy shortage, but supplies wer*
not being lent out till more definite prices on them were titibllsh-
ed. Retilleri emphatically dented
they were profiteering by placing
the higher pricu on goodi without iny official word, but wer*
merely protecting themselves ai
their itocki wire io imill. Thty
hid not thought to itock up ahead
of the ntw tex levies. One merchmt believed that no retailer in
Nelion hid mora thin 200 or 300
pouhdi of tei, it the mut on hi*
shelves. The retailer* wert (till
"hoping ud praying" thit niw
supplies would be ln within th*
next tew daya.
WIDE IFFICTt FILT
Ona wholeuler itated tha (antral public itemed to bt ot th*
opinion thit th* n«w texu implied only to fruh ud imoked
meita, tobiccoi, cigarettes, ud
electricity ud gu. This wu not
the cue, however, for cucelllng
the exemption of sales tax on such
goodi aa cmned fiih would pile*
higher pricu on that commodity.
A greit muy other 'foodi would
also rise in prlct.
Ont tobicco wholeuler, nol
knowing when to plice tht tex on
hli itocki, iteted on aU Involcei
Thursdiy thit the retailer would
have to pay the extra, cost tt th*
tax had already taken effect
The Increase In carbonic acid gaa
for loft drink making would not
b* large enough to rail* the prlc*
to the consumer. Tht mtnufictur-
ers would absorb the cost it wu
•aid.
Montreal Stocks    V
Show Slight Losses
MONTREAL, Sept 14 (CP).-Th*
■tock mirket iluted towird th*
losing sidt in lite dealings today.
Louu of fraction! to about ona
point ihowed for United Steel, Algoma Steel, Aibutoi ud Steel.*.
Canada. '
Cuidiu Car common ud preferred and C. P. R. declined narrowly. National Steel Cir gained
ground. Metali on retreat included
Nickel, Smelten, Hudion Bay Mining ud Noranda.
Bell Telephone ud Power Corporation weakened. Oils edged up
i trifle.
Small louu umt out for Prlca
Brothers, Howard Smith, Dryden
ud Massey Harrii.
The News FRONTS
LONDON
7m.':\        PARIS . .-rifc.-:
™ BERLIN w
WARSAW   :
BUDAPEST
"':,:;V':-     ROME ;,
WASHINGTON
■■„■ OTTAWA ^
W MOSCOW W
TOKYO
Fronyhe Orient to the Occident, from the tundras
to the tropics, reliable accounts of the happenings
of the day.
Keep up to date on swiftly moving events
:    , the world over.
READ THE
 -.-"-•
■ 	
PAM TWK.VT
NILSON DAILY NIW* NIUON, Isfc-rWOAY MOMfmt. MPT. tt.
H:l*JfcrJ'H
jjjjijiaainniitii"" 11—tt~ l
TODAY AMD
SATURDAY
COMPLETE SHOWS AT 2:00, 7:00 AND 8:55
NEVER BEFORE A PICTURE LIKE THIS
AIRLINER DOWN IN Jl
Iri) 8n ll stistn im tt—stt.tl
IwteeliaiteK Jii *m,-fX
AT 2:50, 7:40, 9:45
NtTE IS* 35.f.
PLUS—Screen Snapihote, Cemedy, Sport, Newa
24 HOUR S
Dodge—DeSoto—Texico Producta
Sowtrby-Cuthbert Ltd.
Oppoilte the
Poitofflce ud Humt Hotel
Lambert1!
LUMBER
PHONE 82
I
Ladlei' and Centa' Overcoaft
CLEANED, PRESSED,
REPAIRED and RELINED
Phone 1042 fer Pricu
^ondltL CbaiuVt-,
PHONE25
PretcripMom
Compounded
1 Accurately
Fleury's Pharmacy
MEDICAL ARTS BLOCK -
FORSALE
'34 Chevrolet Ught
DeUvery .... $300
Guaranteed Condition. Terms
Can Be Arranged.
Ymlr Transport
'   Carage
.     Ymir. " "
MM Endt, letd .
S loidi fer ___
Slibwood, $ aerdt
Itw Duit, unit _
WOOD Now
_$$.76
_ $10.00
_ $10.00
 »4.00
Phone 163 or 434R1
,t 4 »■♦».«> i.a ******
Cream-0 Milk
DBUCIOUS AND APPETIZING
Qood tor tha Children
PALM  DAIRIES  LIMITED
>>»-♦♦ * oo	
VIC GRAVES
MASTER PLUMBER
Per all your need! In plumbing rtpilrt, tlttrttlont, and
r Initillttloni.
Ph. IIS       Ml VICTORIA ST.
■AST TRAIL LOTS
Send tor map and price Hit Maki
a itert on hiving tout own Borne
—with our monthly eaiy payment
. Robertion Realty Co. Ltd.
Nelion.  B.C.
=
FACIALS MANICURES
SHAMPOOS    PERMANENTS
Haifch Tru-Art
Beiuty Salon
Phona 127        Johnstone Blk.
1937 FORD
4-deer eedin. Bttutlful maroon fin'
Ish, Tlrei ind motor in ftK_*t
excellent ihipe. Prlea _-  TTf**
PEEILES MOTORS
Biktr It      Limited      Phone 118
-^
Prepare for It NOW! Aaaore frailer comfort and fuel
. economy through the Winter.
We cin gtve you double aervice: the flnett coal mined—
The fineit building miteriili available, Including
insulation and waHboarda.
'■.'■' ,  .'■ ' .  ■       ■ * ■■! .      >',
PHONE 53—FOR THE SOLUTION OF HOW TO KEEP
WINTER OUT OF YOUR HOUSEI
■a
DUMBER 6, COAL CO.I
£trVi0j/w,Mti'£ftidU^ N
sissia.
Don't Be
We have C. G. L. Electric
Heaters to take the chi.ll
from your rooms these fall
evenings. '    \X^:-.-■/'
660 Watt-Each ._.
1000 Watt—Eaeh _ -
Wood,Vaixance
Hardware Company, Limited
IM More Men Are
Sought by IMih
Battery al Trail
■ TRAIL, B.C.. Sept lt-The K»th
Field Bittery, R.C.A, hn Usued
the adl tor mother 100 men, espec-
lilly those speciilized in mechanics, truck driving, tailoring, cooking, tnd thoemiktng, tnd thote experienced in tmiteur md commerciil ridio operation!.
i Tat loctl bittery will itirt Mondiy a regular training ichedule ot
theoretical tnd practical work.
New men ire shaping up satisfactorily ln their training.
Informition lt being twitted of
the establishment of t general recruiting depot tor ill branches of
service.
Men who hive signed with the
bittery since the list list was published ire Gunners G. T. Milne, R.
H. Saunders, W. St G. Kemp, M O.
Burnt, A. H. Clark, G. D. Lent-
man, L. G. C. Robertson, W. Martin, M R. Zentgnt W. A. M. Sutherlind, J. M Fox, C. V. Hillett H.
J. W. Purdy.G. w. Coover, A. Pit-
terson, J. Patterson, 3. Pearson,
F. W. Ctrruthera, D. Ross, t, R.
Sutherlind, P. C. Lawley, D. A.
McKty, L. J. Dawson, S. Reid, P.
Tintin, O. H. HIU, E. Jl. Cleverly,
A. a Bennett W. A. Morrice. C.
T. G. Ingram, N. J. Harry, E. Foil,
E. Olson, 3. Lussier; Ltnce-Sgt D,
J. Itnson.
PANITAT. Indit (CP)-A pitched
battle between police ind villagers
neir here resulted ln severe Injuries
to two villager!. Fireirmi were
uid In the fray, tnd two Muslims
were trrested it letdert.
TOO UTE TO CLASSIFY
ROOMS FOR RENT. APPLY 410
•Victoria Street.
EXPERIENCED WOMAN COOK
winted at onct. Capable of handling kitchen. Box 8556 Daily News
ttS«elmttaSm>i^»i*Kimm«m*tammmtSS«ttai}
NEWS OF THE DAY
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS AND
REPAIR WORK. WEBB'S Ma Biker
. —DANCE— »'
Tonight at Willow Point
Rowntreee pestellee and gumt,
Ideal for bridge. Wtlft Ntwt.
Elgin meet tonight at I p,m.
, Specie!.      ,    '      •
' Phone KITCHENER for eut flow-
en tnd Flonl. Designs.
CAPTAIN BLACK-the beet tt
pipe. BUIH'S 632 Biker Street •
EDISON MAZDA LAMPS, P. H.
•MITH, PHONE HM, 381 Biker St
ATTREE STUDIOS OP DANCINO
Registration! today and Saturday,
Beautiful hew decoration!, colorful lighting effects, a popular dance
bind tnd a smooth floor, make
dancing a real pleasure it the Eaglet
Hill every Stturdiy night
WINDOW   GLASS
Dont wilt for bid weither, let
yeur broken windows repilred now.
We hive a lerge itock ind cm eut
te any required slie, HIPPERSON'S.
TODAY 4 TOMORROW, SPECIAL
How lait—Rtg. H for 75c. Houu
Dresses, Reg. to $2.98 for $1.76.
.      BETTY ANN IHOP
Opp. Capltol Theitre
OUTLET HOTEL
TAKE YOUR HOLIDAYS AT
PROCTER, B.C.
FISHING,  BOATING, SWIMMING,
88 Foot Cibln Cruiser for hire '
Ciblns In the orchtrd for rent
FISH and
CHIPS
To Tiki Oiit, 251
The PERCOLATOR
>36 FORD COUPE
RADIO HEATER. *$<__-_
1st Cltst Shtpe. Price _-_. *W»«*
Automobile Brokers
Jtck McDowell    Howird Thurmin
Next Sivoy Hotel
LAKEFRONT PROPERTY
FOR SALE
Desirable North Shore locitlon,
one mile from Nelson  ferry.
Plenty of water, will divide to
iuit purchaser. Eaiy Termi.
T. D. ROSLING
8 Royal Bank Bldg.      Phona T17
Kootenay No-Odor
Dry Cleaning Co.
Phone 128
FOR PROMPT IERVICI
SWEATERS AND
JACKETS
A Large Virlety     ?
TOR CHILLY EVENINGS
CodfreysVlimlled
■s
Financial Security
INVESTORS SYNDICATE
Monthly Savinji Plan
R. Wa DAWSON
Bonded Representitlve.
Box 11      HlBpenon Blk.
-
.197
CREASING AND MARFAK
LUBRICATION
WASHING - PARTS
SEIBERLING  TIRES
SKY CHIEF AUTO
208 Biker     SERVICE     Phone 122
MORE ABOUT
NAZI sins
(Continued From Pege One)
The totil number ot ihlpi lott
ln the wtr n fir retched 82, Including one French and tour
neu trill.
NEW TANKER
Ltteit victims of Nui subs were
the British Influence, a tanker built
thii yeer.for the British-^ibiin
oil trade tnd the Britiih motor
freighter, Vincouver City, employed
ln the South Pacific-England trade
and owned by the Reardon Smith
Line, Ltd
The 4885-ton Vucouver City wu
torpedoed ott the South Cout of
Eire and her crew retcued by in
unnimed Dutch tinker with u-
liitance of planei, according to t
menage trom the United Statei
liner Preildent Rooievelt
The 8431-ton Britiih Influence,
owned by the British Tinker Compiny, Ltd. ot London, wu mmk
ibout 300 mllei off the cout ot Ireland. Her crew wu retcued by the
Norwegian freighter Ida Bakke,
the United Statei liner Manhittin
reported.
REFUGEES HELD UP
Sea warfare wat earning terious
deity In return of refugeei from
Europe. The Holland America line
announced 1700 Americana tt Rotterdam and Antwerp would be delayed in tailing for home becauie
the British held the liners Nleirw
Amsterdam tnd Pennland tor a
contraband search.
The Norwegian Americin lint in.
nounced in Norwty thtt ill pusenger space had been told up to
October 17.
BRITAIN TIGHTENS UP
CHECK FOR CONTRABAND
LONDON. Sept 14 (CP). - The
British Government todty Intensified ltt drive to halt the flow of
wtr supplies to Germtny, declaring
that "already large quantities ot
contraband have been stopped and
prevented from reaching the
enemy."
The Admiralty disclosed the
Nleuw Amsterdam, fUgsbip of tht
Holland America line, wu exun-
ined yeiterdiy for contrtbtnd tnd
thtt .more thin a icore of ihlpi
wert detained ott the Boutheaat
cout todiy tor lurching.
Previously the Miniitry of Economic Warfare hid tnnounced the
leisure ot the cargo of the Netherlands iteamer Groenlo u suspected
contraband ind the searching of in
American ihip, the Black Oiprey.
Tht Nleuw Amsterdam and the
Black Osprey were released after
teerch.
Pleads Guilty to
Having Liquor in
Cafe in Rossland
ROSSLAND, B. C, Sept 14 -
Norman Nordqulst of Rossland,
pleaded guilty to being ln possession of liquor while In t restaurant
and wu given one year'i suspended
sentence by Magistrate R. E. PleW'
man thli iftemoon.
Corporal G. R. Lennox bt Uying
the charge, uked leniency for
Nordquist, ititing thtt thli wu hli
tint offend and that he wu not
Intoxicated it the time in question.
BERLIN REMOVES
TAXIS SAVE GAS
BERLIN, Sept 14 <AP> .-Berlin
ttxicibe wert removed from ier.
vice today u t gasoline conserve.
tion meuure. with omnibus ind
ttreet ctr tervlce already cur.
tilled, night transportation became in acute problem for cittern
of the Reich ctpltaL
No Announcement of
Mortar's Successor
OTTAWA, Sept. 14 (CP).-Formtl
approval by His Majesty ot the
Government's selection of a successor to Sir Herbert Mtrler u
Ctntditn Minliter to the United
Statei hu not yet been received
from London, it wu learned today,
and no announcement will be made
until that approval ii received.
Je A. C. Laughton
Optometrist >
SUITE MS, MEDICAL ARTS BLDO
Trading Fruit Is
Unshackled, Trail
Asserts Haskins
TRAIL. B.C.. Sept 14-W. I.
Hukins, chairman of the B.C. Fruit
Board, on t brief visit to Trail
thii week, expressed concern over
reports "thit beciuie of the control legislation under which the
Boird operate!, the price of fruit
it set at a high figure, and that
while consumer! go hungry for
fruit It roti on the ground In the
Okanagan and the regulations of
the board are the cause of this ttate
of iff tin".   -
"It is hard to understand why
these misleading itatementi are
mide, or why tnyone ihould be Interested ln creating a feeling of
antagonism between the workers of
Trail md the fermen of the Oktn-
agan", Mr. Haskins ssid. "Each of
these groups, like ill other groups
tnd classes ln our economic setup, Is dependent on tbe good will
ind cooperation of the other if the
best Interests of til ire to be terved.
The fruit groweri buy their fertilizer! tnd ipray material from
Trail, tnd in turn the consumers
of Trail buy their fruit from the
Okanagan. This Is u it should be."
Mr. Haskins uid it could not be
too clearly stated that the Fruit
Board hu never at any time made
tny regulations of sny kind which
in any way hindered or hampered
the free trading of fruit to TraU.
"No regulationi of any kind prevent either growers or merchants
making any deal they like with one
another." Mr. Haskins slid. "No
price ii iet by the Botrd, tnd no
regulationi of iny kind hinder the
free flow of thi product, ln ftct,
there il no difference ln Trail between the handling or merchandising of fruit and of tny other
commodity."
BACKBITE
Bicktcht tablet! for tht kldntyt.
Relltvu baekieh!, lumbago
rhtumitlimr-
PER
BOX
BUY A HOME BEFORE WINTER
We ire offering some good buys
$800 to 19000
Look over our list, we mty have
whit you wtnt
HUE. DILL
532 WARD ST.
T. H. WATERS & CO.
.  .'   ,        LIMITED 1
Wt ipeclallze ln glass tor buildings, lutomobiles, boita and
furniture.
WINDOWS REOIAZED
Qrehf ell's Cafe
DELICIOUS
FISH and CHIPS
^^^ ,^_M '^m^ __■■_' t__m ^^__ _m_. _m_ ^^m
And at tht STAR yen lava In ad wayi—Ba cause you gtt tht finttt of foodi at mod-
"oratt pricta delivered promptly to your door, you aavt younelf tho necetaity of carry-
Ing tham homt and of worrying about Infer ior quality.
Friday and Saturday Specials
PURE PORK SAUSAGE: OP
Swift'i Premium, Lb. tin .... fit) C
8fAUSAQE-8wlft'i Brookflild, Fruh,
Pure Pork; Lb. pkt ...	
CORNED BEEF-EI RaneMi    ;"•',"
E tlni j ;—u,
CHEESE-Kraft!     ■■  • •' ...  !
2 Ib. box — „_.—..„. __
SALAD DRESSINQ-rMlracle Whip;
32 oz. Jar __-._ ..-_..—__.
IVORY SOAP—2 large ban, regular
•tOtf value for __.___.__	
1.2 Piece GIsMi terving Set and 1 larga
pkg. Chlpio; All for _.
25<
29*
55*
45*
■IS*'
27*
TOMATO KETCHUP: Nabob,
Large bottle, 1 for.........
35c
H. P. 8AUCE-
Bottle	
TOMATO SOUP-Campbell*i;
S tine	
tHRIMPS—Blick Label, wet or dry
pack; 2 tlni  .......__
SANDWICH MEATB-Hidlund'i
Auorted; S tlni ___	
PRUNES—Nabob, extra large, Santa
Clara; 2 Ib. eirton — i   ., I	
CERTO—For preiervlng;
t bottiu	
.29*
.25*
39*
25*
25*
49*
GOLDEN CORN-Royal City;
• » tint .	
GREEN CUT BEANS—
> tint	
BUTTER WAFERS—Chrlitle'i Rlti; .
2 pkts. :„__„____
STRAWBERRY JAM—Pure, speciil
peck; 4 Ib. tin	
35*
35*
35*
.59*
I DADS COOKIES: Oatmttl tr
Cocoanut,! do.. .■■■,..„.
SHELLED WALNUTS-Fruh white
mut quartan; Lb....
BAKERS COCONUT-Medlum;  '
Lb ._-_.._._>.__	
GRAPEFRUIT JUICE-Dr. Phillip**,
glint M oz. tin; 2 for _....	
VINEGAR—Helm, pure milt white or
Cider; W/t ot bottle _,
VINEGAR—Holbrook'! Imported, pure
Milt; Gallon ,
LUX TOILET IOAP—
4 bin	
29*
.19*
m
19*
89*
25*
BUTTER: Clartiholm, firat (PI AC
grade, 31ba  «?1.U«J
Freih direct from the creamery
MARMALADE—Suntlpt, Orange,
Limon, Grapefruit; 4 lb. tin	
49*
Fresh Fruits and Vegetables
HUCKLEBERRIES—
Buktt : .
PEARS—
Buktt	
PEACHES—Freetteni;
Buktt . _,
GRAPES—Okt-tgtn Coneordi;
Ltrgt buktt — ..........
35*
15*
«5*
I          CANTALOUP: Okanagan
—
1 Medium alio, 4 for	
25*
1 Large also,	
IO*
1 Extra large, 2 for ...........
25*
tWEET POTATOES—
t Ibi. i _-
TURNIPS—
t Ibi. - -,,.
PARSNIPS-
I lbl.	
UTAH CELERY—
Lb.  —
GOLDEN BANTAM CORN—
Doten - __..._,_,
.25*
25*
.25*
„9*
25*
TOMATOES:            :.:        11"
Baiket .,, ivC
IE 10 OR 11 FOR PROMPT DELIVERY
rfrlGRocERYfir
Service
±177777:
ROOFING
Eoves Troughs, etc.
R. H. Maber
Phone est   ., 510 Koottnty tt
tm&SSte&S3tmt&SX&&mi$*S&)&C_m
You'll never regret buying
a made to meaiure iuit from
JACK BOYCE
iU Baker Style Shop Phone 180
Headquarter* for
Leishman Clothtt
We like to sell clothes to ]
men   who   realiit   that
clothes mean a  lot  in
everyday life — Busintas
and social. That's why
you    ean   expect    our J
clothes to do their part to I
maka you look your pert/
EMORY'S
Limited
Tht Man't Stort
=
FUR STORAGE
REPAIR* AND REMODEL*
Malcolms Furs
ISt Btker Bt
Phone I
s
No war cltiut In for
nuurtnet  contrieti  until
notice, full imount! ptld in;
dent ilckneu or deith. Buy ;
Phone 980
FRANK A STI
S7T Biker St,
SS
A
BA1
From fe.05
Koottnay Motors
elion) Ltd. Wiitneltl
■V
(Nelion)
See the Thrilling Auto Races
on the Famous Indianttpolis
.'., * Speedway'
At the Civic Friday & Saturday
For 20 constcutivt ytors tht winning
;- cars havt bttn equipped with
For 15 Consecutive Years. We
,: Have Sold Firestone Tires
Exclusively       ?
We Know of None
The Smedley Garage Co.
509 Vernon St.
Phont71
The Sign of a Goc
Garage Service
NELSON TRANSFER
-." Company, Limited
35-PHONES-35
V
m^f>frf^!^m*^f_*r*»M
