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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" *-J-^_\u2014'--a-a_a_a_.\nNanaimo Wins; Meet Aldred I\nrnovINC IAL   LIB\nfor Dominion Title victoria s \u00ab\n\u2014Pa&e Ten\nNAAf\nVOtUMI 34\nimiHtra\nFIVE CENTS A COPY\n\u2014*****\u2014\n$14,078,625 Jump in Trade\nof Canada, Four Months\n\u2022\u2014Pa_e Eleven\nNELSON. BRITISH COLUMBIA. CANADA-FRIDAY MORNING. AUGUST 18. IMS\nNUMBER  (7\nITALIAN OCCUPATION OF ETHIOPIA IS\nMUSSOLINI'S LOWEST PRICE FOR PEACE\nSILVER PRICE\nSTILL SINKING\nIN NEW YORK\nDown to 65 3-8, the\nLowest Since\nApril 10\nLONDON PRICE\nIS ALSO REDUCED\nA King's Counsel\nSenate Votes Return\nto Open Trading,\nBut No Effect\nNEW YORK, Aug. 15 (AP).-A\ndisturbed international silver market again held Wall Street's attention today as International speculators continued to sell \"stale long\nholdings in London.      ,\nThe New York price for Imported\nbar tilver wai reduced for the third\nsuccessive time to 65% cents an\nounce, the lowest since April 10.\nThe decline today wai % of a cent\nand tbe total drop ilnce Monday\n2% centa. The London price for\nbar metal was reduced 3-16 penny\nto the equivalent of 65.09 cents.\nBanking quarten felt the magnitude of the United States treasury\ntransactions, with the consequent\nnecessity of exchanging cjollan for\npounds tterling, fully accounted for\nthe current advance ot the Britiih\ncurrency to a new high. Far eastern\ntllver currencies rallied after their\nsharp declines earlier in the week.\nWASHINOTON, Aug. 15 (AP).-\nA return to open silver trading in\nthe United States was voted today\nby the senate without debate. An\n(Continued on Page Two)\nMAKES PLEA FOR\nLIBERALS\nCALGARY, Aug. 15 (CP)-A plea\nfor the election of a stable government in Alberta on August 22 which\nwould coordinate Its efforts with a\nLiberal administration in Ottawa\nwas mada here tonight by W. R.\nHowson, provincial Liberal leader.\n\"It li because the federal Liberals\nhave agreed to adopt the Alberta\nLiberal platform that I am asking\nthe farmers of this province to definitely aupport both the provincial\nLiberal candidates and the federal\nLiberal candidates in Alberta,\" he\nsatd.\nTbe Liberal leader outlined the\nplans of hu party for assistance to\nthe agriculturists.\nBerber Nominated\nCHILLIWACK, B.C, Aug. 15 (CP)\n\u2014H. 3. Barber of Chilliwack has\nbeen nominated Conservative candidate for Frater valley constituency\nin the coming federal election.\nMr. Barber represented the constituency in the last parliament\nR. C.  CROWE  OF  TRAIL\nGeneral counsel of the Consolidated Mining 4 Smelting company of Canada, may now write\n\"K.C.\" after hit name. Hi wai elevated to that dignity on nomination of the mlnliter of Justice, Hon.\nHugh Guthrie. Moit Klng'i Couniel! ate appointed by the lleuten-\nenant-governors-ln-councll on recommendation af th* Ittorneyt-\ngeneral.\n\"ELEGANILYINO\"\nIN STORE\nSEATTLE, Aug. IS (AP)-Ther*e\nwill be iome elegant lying done\nduring the itampede,\" D. E. Griffiths, president of the International\nSourdough reunion, promised today\naa pioneer gold niseert of Alaska\nanil the Yukon ttreafflcd into town\nfor a three-day convention.\nA feature of the convention ls the\ncompetitions, formal and informal,\nof the Ancient Order ot Prevarl-\ncaton.\nWhile there are a lot of Canadians\nhere or en route who can do rather\nnitty prevaricating when they put\ntheir whole heart and imagination\ninto it, the California delegation is\npinning its hopes on T. W. B.\nBucholz of Long Beach, acclaimed\nby Earle Knight of the Alaska\nWeekly of Seattle, as one of the\nmost stupendous prevaricators in\nthe world.\nCOMMITTED FOR\nEXTORTION\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B.C.. Aug.\n15 (CP)\u2014Norman Abbott, 28, was\ncommitted for trial by Magistrate\nH. L. Edmonds in police court today on a charge of demanding $10,-\n000 by menacing lettera from J. G.\nRobson. prominent British Columbia lumberman.\nUTILITIES'HEAD TELLS OF AN\nATTEMPT TO INTIMIDATE EDITORS\nTried to Stop Ads or Change the Editorial\nPolicies of the Newspapers\nDR. FORTIN TO\nSENATE ONLY\nAPPOINTMENT\nNew Ministers Busy\nLearning Their\nDuties\nECONOMIC BODY\nIS NOT SELECTED\nExpect Gobeil to Be\nthe Postmaster\nGeneral\nOTTAWA, Aug. 15 (CP) \u2014 In\nmarked contrast to yesterday's\nseething activity. Parliament hill\nwaa quiet today and only one ap-\ngiintment was announced\u2014that of\nr. Emlle Fortin, M.P. for Levis.\nQue., to the senate. An atmosphere\nof relaxation prevailed about the\neast block with the long-expected\nfiroclamation of dissolution of par-\niament, the fixing of the election\ndate, cabinet rebuilding and filling\nof tbe exceptionally long list of\nhigh government appointments\nlargely dltpoted of.\nOne tenate vacancy remains, also\nin Quebec, and an appointment it\nexpected momentarily, with the\npossibility that it will go to Gustave\nMonette or J. C. H. Dussault, Montreal lawyera.\nSelection of the 15 who will act\n(Continued on Page Two) \u25a0\nMarkets at\na Glance\nBy the Canadian Preaa\nToronto and Montreal\u2014Industrial\nstocks irregularly higher.\nToronto mine*\u2014Higher.\nNew York\u2014Stocks closed lower.\nWinnipeg\u2014Wheat higher.\nToronto \u2014 Bacon hogs off car\nsteady.\nLondon\u2014Bar silver and tin lower;\ncopper and lead higher; zinc unchanged.\nNew York\u2014Bar tilver and tin\nlower: export copper higher; lead\nand zinc unchanged.\nMontreal\u2014Silver lower.\nNew York\u2014Cotton, rubber, coffee and sugar higher.\nNew York\u2014Canadian dollar down\n1-16 to 99 13-16.\nBy RICHARD  L. TURNER\nAstoclited Pren Staff Writer\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 15 (API-\nStepping unexpectedly onto the\n\u25a0enate lobby committee's witness\natand, Howard C. Hopson today deicribed efforts to change the editorial policies of newipapen favoring the public utility bill.\nThe millionaire dictator of the\nAssociated Gat & Electric System\nwhose rotund person has been the\nobject of suddenly stilled senate-\nhouse dispute, and who has been\ncited for contempt by the senate,\nstrode grimly into the committee\nroom after 5 o'clock thit afternoon.\nHe had Just been released by hii\nhouie committee \"bodyguards.\"\nSo quickly wai the committee\ncalled to hear him that only a group\nof newipaper men formed the immediate audience.\nUnder qucitionlng, Hopton testified that representatives were sent\nto the New York Timet after an\neditorial which he considered unfair.\n\"I told our people that the New\nYork Times and their editorial policies did more harm than our advertiiing did good,\" he tald In response\nto questioning by Chairman Hugo\nBlack (D\u201e Ala.).\n\"I saw no advantage ln advertising in a paper that accepted the\nmoney of a business corporation\nthat wai trying to protect its in-\n(Contlnuid on Page Twelve)\nCHANGE IN WIND AIDS FOREST\nFIRE FIGHTERS ACROSS LINE\nWealth-Tax Bill\nThrough Senate\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 15 (AP).-\nThe administration wealth tax\"\nbill whipped through the senate today on a 57 to 22 ballot The action\nstirred proipecti of adjournment\nbefore next week it out\nOnly two dayt of debate preceded the vote to take an estimated\n$250,000,000 from million-dollar incomes, large corporation!, estates\nand gifts. Senator R. M. La Toilette's (Prog-Wis) two efforts to\nboost taxes on small incomes were\ncrushed by three to one majorities.\nBut the bill returned to the house\nwith an amendment quickly interpreted in administration quarters as\nthreatening a serious handicap to\nPresident Rooievelt'! financial program.\nAdopted 40 to 39 on the motion\nof Senator W. E. Borah (R-Ida)\nthis amendment would prohibit future iiauei of tax-exempt federal\ntecurities Treisury official! laid\nImmediately that, if accepted by\nthe houte, the amendment would\nplace the government at a ditad-\nvantage, since states and municipalities would continue to enjoy the\ntax-free privilege on their securities.\n\u2022POKANE, Waih, Aug. 15 (AP)\n\u2014A change in the wind brought aid\nto weary fire tighten on the battle\nline ot the northwest'! wont forest\nblaze today at thousands of men\nheld their gains on a dozen other\nmenacing fronts.\nThe wind veered on the devastating Absaroka range fire in southern\nMontana, sending the flames back\nInto the burned area. Forest officials iald the shift may enable the\narmy of tighten to establish fire\nllnea.\nThe fire had roared down toward\nTJ. S. highway No. 10, into some\nof the mmt heavily timbered and\nscenic country In weitern Montana\nwhen the wind brought a measure ot\nrellet\nTwo hundred, men battled ln\nwestern Oregon to keep an 850-acre\nfire east of Cottage Grove from\nspreading tn green timber of Wil-\nliameltc National forest Some logging camp equipment wai reported\nburned. Other Oregon firei were\ncontrolled.\nThi oldest blaze In the region,\neatt of McCall, Idaho, on tha Idaho\nNational foreit wai believed to\nhive been checked by 1800 fighters after having burned over 20,-\n000 acrei.\nThe Dalles. Ore., fire, definitely\nwat reported to be checked, but\nfighters continued patrolling the 15-\nmlle front. Electric power and light\nservice to tha Dalles, ditrunted it\nthe fint outbreak, wai resumed today over temporary lints.\nJ. Laurie of Trail\non Executive, Chief\nConstables, Canada\nSYDNEY, N.8- Aug. 18 (CP)\u2014\nH. B. Everett constable of Brandon, Man., todiy wat elected pretldent of the Dominion Chief Constables' attoclatlon lucceeding\nChief Oivid Coulter of Hamilton,\nOnt Niagara Falla, Ont, wai selected at the 1936 convention city,\nJohn taurle, Trill, wai elected\nBrltlth Columbia member of tha\nexecutive.\nHEARING ADJOURNED\nVANCOUVER. Aug.15 (AP)-Pre-\nllmlnarv hearing of J. Walker and\nJ. H. JiIcGregor on charges of p_8*\niury wai adjourned until August _K!\nby Magistrate H. S. Wood in police\ncourt today.\nThe two are charged with having\ngiven perjured testimony in a divorce case last October when they\ntestified thev had seen the woman\nrespondent in a Chllliwack hotel on\na certain date. The crown contends\nthe woman was not in Chilliwack\non the BDeclfied date.\nThe divorce action was subsequently dismissed in court at wai\ni damage action bv the woman respondent agalnit McGregor, Walker\nand two other penoni.\nSee Him Smiling!\nD.D. McLEAN\nVeteran Canadian Pacific conductor working out of Nelton, and\nfer the iecond time tlberal standard-bearer In a Dominion gin-\neral election In Kootenay Weit\nDREAD DISUSE\nTOLL NOW 250\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 15 (CP)- A\nstrange equine malady eweeping\nthrough Manitoba and Saskatchewan causing at least 250 deathi may\nbe \"forage poiioning\" and not en-\ncephalomyelltia as previously believed, it waa luggetted tonight\nThe tpread of the disease, which\nparalyzes the brains of horses and\nhas attained epidemic proportions,\ncontinued unabated. Supplies of a\ncurative serunj wme-chaujted htrt,\ntud demanda of veterinarian In\nall parts ot Manitoba went unfilled.\nIn a telegram to the municipal\ncouncil of Rockwood, Man., Hon.\nRobert Weir, mlnlater of agriculture,\nsaid the disease \"may be forage\npoisoning,\" waa not communicable\nand that quarantine meaaures were\nnot neceatary. His department wai\nendeavoring to determine definitely\nthe cause of the disease, he laid.\nMajor Buchanan\nIs Dead\nPOINTE AU PIC, Que, Aug. 15\n(CP)\u2014Major Alexander Buchanan,\n73 member of one of Canada'i leading familiea and a former well-\nknown Montreal horaeman and\nhone judge, died at hii horae here\ntoday after a lengthy illness.\nA son of Alexander Brock Buchanan, former tecretary of the\nBank of Montreal, he wai born in\nQuebec, Associated with the Bank\nof Montreal in Vancouver when\nthe war broke out, hc was appointed\nto the British remount department\nin Moutreal on his retirement from\nthe bank to enter the army, attaining the rank of major. Since the\nwar he had lived in retirement.\nAmong survivors sre his widow,\ndaughter of the late Hon. James\nO'Brien of Montreal; Charles Buchanan, of Vancouver, a brother.\nAlexander Ronald Buchanan of\nVancouver, a nephew and Mrs.\nNancy Stringer of Vancouver, a\nniece.\nTHREE IN HOSPITAL\nNEW WESTMINSTER. Aug. 15\n(CP) \u2014 Three 20-year-old Fraser\nvalley youths are ln hoipital with\nInjuries received when the car in\nwhich they were riding crashed over\na viaduct on the Yale road a halt\nmile cast of Langley Prairie today.\nGeorge Lalng of Langley Prairie\nreceived a broken leg, cuts and\nbruises. .\nWilliam Brandow, also of Langley\nPrairie, has possible fractures of\nboth arms and cuta and bniises.\nRobert Larmon of Mllner received\nsevere head injuries.\n\"SSSfL Shefficld'8 Po8t Brciks!\u00abmunu\nSLAMS U.S. IN  \u201e     rx      i r    n   \u2022 \u2022     EDEN ON EVE OF\nANTNEW TALK New Ground for Dominion tri-power TALK\nStreicher Applauded\nWildly by 25,000\nListeners\nMOCKS \"WIFE\" OF\nU. S. AMBASSADOR\nMust Guard Against\n\"Racial Disgrace\"\nHe Says\nBy MEtVIN K. WHITELEATHER\nAssociated Preu Foreign Staff\nBJiHLlN. Aug. 15 (AP) \u2014 Julius\nStreicher, spearhead of Germany's\nanti-Semitic drive, bitterly assailed\nJews tonight and announced that\nthe Nazi fight against them will\n' continue until all humanity understands the problem.\"\nHis widely heralded speech was\na rambling one. It was wildly applauded by 25.000 listeners in the\nnuge Berlin sportspalast. while\nJews remained in seclusion.\nStreicher said \"lf we lead a woman who haa forgotten her racial\nobligation! through the city \u2022\u2022\u2022 the\nwife of tbe American ambassador\ngeta excited about it\"\nHia reference wu to an Incident\nin Nurnberg when a woman was\nled through the itreeta with a pla-\n(Contlnued on Page Twelve)\nF.D.R. EXPECTS\nSIGN FARM BlU\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 15 (AP>-\nLegiilation intended to bolster the\nUjjjted SUi-t-\u00abrn. prgtran. against\nleial d-fllenges and tighten up lta\nagricultural price efforta today was\nsent to the wnite house by congreis.\nPresident Roosevelt! signature wai\nregarded ai a certainty.\nTbe legislation has two major\naims: to give the secretary of agriculture greater power to keep farm\nprices on parity with those of non-\nagricultural producta; and lnaure\nthat the program will meet constitutional challenges ln the court\nTo get around the possibility of\nattacks on the original AAA on\ngrounda of illegal delegation ot congressional power, safeguards were\nput in the measure which set up\ndefinite standards, guides and\ncourses of action for administrative action.\nThe bill wu amended ln two\nplaces, changes which displeased the\nadministration. With the exception\nof milk, price fixing wu prohibited u a part of the marketing agreement). Added to the bill wu the\nprovision permitting processors to\nrecover processing taxea in event\nthey are later held unconstitutional\nby the courts. The house bill prohibited any such recovery, but the\nsenate permitted recovery by those\nwho could show they hsd not passed on the tax to producers or con-\nlumen.\nMAN IN STREET IN\nUNDERWEAR? NO,\nONLY IN OVERALLS\nEDMONTON, Aug. 15 (CP) \u2014\nNeighbor! phoned the police: \"A\nman'! standing on the itreet in hli\nunderwear.\nAn officer wat lent out and wu\nhe lurpriied. Thc man wai wearing\na white combination overall eult and\nan overcoat\n\"It'a the flnt time these overalls\nhave ever been mistaken for underwear,\" be told the police.\nFACES MANSLAUGHTER\nTRIAL\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 15 (CP) -\nR. L. Mason wai committed today\nto itand trial on a charge of manslaughter In connection with thc\ndeath July 10 of Jackie Finlay. aged\nfour, who was struck down by an\nautomobile, allegedly driven by\nMason, the ume day.\nSIR BASIL BUCKET!, LEADING\nFINANCIER OF BRITAIN, KILLED\nTrain Demolishes His Automobile in Germany;\nWas a Director of Bank of England\nGIESSEN, Germany, Aug. 15 \u2014\n(AP).-Slr Basil Phlllott BlackeU,\nBritish authority on gold and economic problems, wat fatally injured\nin an automobile-train cruh 10\nmllet from here.\nSir Basil died In the Unlvenlty\nclinic of what physicians diagnosed\nu a aevere hemorrhage resulting\nfrom internal Injuries.\nInjured with him wai a woman\nschool teacher from Marburg, an\nold friend, who origlnsllv wss er-\nroneomlv identified is hli wife.\nSir Bull! automobile wu itruck\nby a train on a grade crossing\nthli morning. Death came ahortly\nafter 3 p.m.\nSir Basil was also a director of\nImoerlal and National Communications and associated companies\nand of De Been Mine corporation.\nHe was one of Britain's leading financial authorities.\nSir Bull wu born Jan. 8. 1M2,\nreceived hii maiter of arti degree\nfrom Oxford in 1904 and Immediately entered the treatury.\nIn 1914 he went to the United\n(Continutd on Page Two)\nManage Schools for\nGovernment Upon\nNew Plan\nINSPECTOR AND\nTRUSTEE BOTH\nLeaves Coming Week\nto Assume Work\nat Coast\nUnder Instructions from the de*\npartment of education. Philip H\nSheffield, for the last 12 yean inspector of elementary schooli in\nthis inspectorate, comprising roughly thc West Kootenay territory,\nleaves Nelson the coming week for\nthe coast, to assume the special duties Victoria announced a few days\nago he was to have, as official in\ncharge of an experiment by the department in operation of ichooli in\na special district taken over entirely\nby the government and created by\namalgamating four contiguous\nschool districts, mainly municipal,\nin the Fraser valley. The government, in this experiment will be\ntrying out the main principle of\nschool operation recommended by\nMajor B. H. King, technical adviser\nto the minister ot education, in his\nrecent report which proposed that\nall the public schools should bc\ndirectly administered by the prov\nince.\nNo announcement hu been made\nyet u to who wlll succeed Mr. She!\nfield as Inspector here. He wlll re\nturn here later ln due course to get\nhis family.\nTRUSTEE ANO INSPECTOR\nThe four districts to be amalgamated are the Matsqui municipal\naehool district the Sumas municipal school diitrict. tbe Abbotsford\nrural achool district and the Ab-\nbotsford-Sumas high achool area.\nBesides the elementary schools in\nthe new district created, there are\nthree high schools, and altogether\n(Continued on Page Twelve)\nKootenay\nLoses Him\nCan Not Accept the\nBritish Plan,\nAloisi Says\nNOTHING AIMED\nAT THE OTHERS!\nLondon Uneasy; May\nAllow Arms if\nTalk Fails\nINSPECTOR P. H. SHEFFlEtD\nlnipector of elementary.ichooli\nof the Wett Kootenay and Boundary for the past 12 yean, li being\ntransferred to the coait, to hive\ncharge at official truitee, of four\nmunicipal tchool districts in the\nFraier valley that ara being taken\nover by the government, and\nthrown Into one, to teit experimentally tha principle of government aehool adminlitratlon ai recommended In tha report of Major\nH. B. King, technical advlier to\nthe mlnltter of education. He wlll\nact In the capacity of Inspector\nwith reference to both the high\nand alimentary ichooli, In addition to administering thilr affaln\n\u2022i truitee.\nROCKEFELLER MAKES Gin OF\nOVER $25.000.000 IM STOCK\nGives Unnamed Individuals and Charitable\nOrganizations Oil Securities\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 15 (AP>-\nJohn D. Rockefeller. Jr., today reported making a gift of more than\n$29,000,000 in oil securities less than\na fortnight after President Roosevelt's \"wealth tax\" message.\nThe securities commission was\ntold that unnamed \"indivduali and\ncharitable organizations\" received\n2,100.000 shares of Socony Vacuum\nCorporation common stock, -nil\ngift made June 28, reduced Rockefeller'! holdlngi In the three major\noil companies\u2014Socony, Standard ot\nSteveni Doesn't\n\"Think Much\" of\nRadio Commission\nSASKATOON, Aug. 15 (CP).-\n\"I don't think much of It was the\nresponse of Hon. H. H. Stevens, Reconstruction party leader here tonight when uked \"what do you\nthink of the radio commission?\n\"I think the radio Ux is tx nuisance Ux,\" Mr. Stevens added. It\nne\u00abasai7 it would be better to Ux\nradio tubes insead of making everyone owning a radio pay $2.\n\"The radio commission was, -\nthlnk, an unhappy venture,\" he said.\nHe felt it would be better to have\nindependent lUtlons, always provided that there wu adequate regulation.\t\nTHE WEATHER\nMin. Max.\nNILSON    j\"   22\nVictoria    j\"   Ta\nVancouver  JJ\nKamloops    JJ\nPrince George \u00ab\nEstevan Point  - W\nPrince Rupert \u00ab\nAtlln      JJ\nDawson      - e*\nSeattle   .    \u25a0-\nPortland. Ore. .\nSan Francisco\nSpokane\nLos Angeles\t\nPenticton  \t\nVemon       \t\nGrand Forka .\nKulo        -\nCranbrook \t\nCalgary     _\nEdmonton\nSwift Current .\nPrince Albert\nNew Jersey and Standard of California\u2014to $180,000,000.\nIn thla gift bringing Rockefeller\ndisposals of oil holdings since the\nflrat of the year to $75,000,000, Wall\natreet read a possible passing of a\ngreat name from active management in the petroleum industry.\nThe commission report gave no\nindication whether the famous financier made his gift at this time\nIn expectation that congress would\nvote higher taxes on wealth. Con-\n(Continued on Page Twelve)\nPARIS. Aug. 15 (AP) - Baron\nPompeo Aloisi. head of the IUliai\ndelegation to the tri-power confe*\nence. tonight informed the BritiM\nrepresentative, Anthony\" Eden, thl\nItaly's minimum demand for peace*\nful settlement of her disnute wit|\nEthiopia was occupation of Ethiopia\nbv the Italian army.\nAloisi said that Premier Muuolini\nwould require this condition ln or\u00ab\nder to provide for the enforcement\nof economic privileges.\nIUly. he said, would not be able\nto accept the British plan for ee*\nonomic concessions in Ethiopia un*\nless IUly could make Ethiopia if\nspect them. This, he said, would\nmean IUly must keep armed force!\nIn the east African country.\nAloisi was induced to call on Edea\nit was learned, by Premier Lava\nafter the Italian had refused to villi\nContinued on Page Two)\nFAMOUS INDIAN\nIS DEAD\nWRANGELL, Alaska, Aug. U-t\n(AP)\u2014Joieph Louie, 80-year-old 1st\ndian whose romance with a Hoonai\nIndian girl 60 yean ago la part e\nthe colorful history of Alaska, diet\nyesterday following a heart attad\nLouie was the founder of the Sister\nand Brothen society for Indlani\nborn outside of Wrangell.\nOld tlmera recall that Louie and\nhit young sweetheart, who survive!\nhim, were married agalnrt thl\nwishes of their families. They stoll\ndown the cout in a dugout canoq\nnever to return to their native vil\u00ab\nlagei.\nBoth took part ln the Casslar gold\nrush of 13 then went to Vancouver\nB.C., and New Westminster, when\nthey embraced the Catholic faltfaL\nTne couple returned to WrangeUl\nin 1901.\nIn addition to his widow Louie H\nsurvived by three sons.\nIS FINED FOR SELLING\nMILK WITHOUT LICENCl\nBURNABY, B. C, Aug. 15 (CP)-*\nRalph Wood, dairyman, wu fined\n$25 and costs in police court today\non charges of selling milk without\na license issued by the British Col\u00ab\numbia lower mainland dairy prod*\nucta board.\nSentence wu tuipended In the\ncue of Mrs. Mary Morse on condl-\ntion she does not continue to sell\nmilk without a license.\nSaskatoon     tt\nOu'Apelle -.            60\nWinnipeg            \u00ab\u00ab\nMoose Jrw 52\nForc.-st. Nelson and vicinity: Generally fair and moderately warm.\nLAND SETTLEMENT POLICY IS\nFAVORED BY HON. H.H. STEVENS\nSASKATOON, Aug. 15 (CP).-A\nCanadian Und settlement policy wu\nadvocated by Hon. H. H. Stevens,\nReconstruction party leader, here\ntonight He also asserted \"It would\nbe foolish for Canada to embark\non a great policy of Immigration\nunder present conditions.\" When\nconditions improved to iuch an extent that Canadians were again\nictively employed, immigration policies could be considered.\nBut laid the Reconstruction leader, he believed municipalities, particularly of the west who had arrean of Uxation on farm land,\nmight very well consider a land\nlettlement icheme. They could agree\nwith farmen ln arrean to allow\nthem half their land free of taxation. On the other half persons wh*\u00bb\nwere anxious to get back to airW\ncultural life might be aettled. Th\u00bb\nnew Farmen Debt Adjuitment act,\nhe said, wat a \"mere trifling with\nthe problem\" of agriculture'! needi.\nThe Reconstruction party leader1!\nmeeting In Third Avenue church\nhere tonight heard Mrs. Steveni\nsay a few words in support of hsr\nhusband's cause. After she had been\npresented with a bouquet of flower*\nMn. Stevens came forward and testified to the sincerity and effort at\n(Contlnuid on Page Twelve)\nTHREE GET OLD JOBS BACK AS\nP.E.I. GOVERNMENT LINED UP\nLea Again Minister of Agriculture; Campbell\nAttorney and Advocate-General and\nMclntyre Takes Public Works\nCHARLOTTETOWN, Aug. 15 -\n(CP)\u2014A new government took office in Prince Edward Island today,\nheaded by Hon. Walter M. Lea and\nbacked by a full house of Liberals\nIU membera took the oath from\nLieut.-Governor George DeBlols in\nProvince house's historic old confederation chamber within three\nhoura after Premier W. J. P. MacMillan had resigned with the Con-\n-.ervat've government which met defeat at the polls July 23.\nAfter four years u opposition\nleader, the new premier, one of tht\nisland's most successful farmen.\nagain took up his old portfolio of\nagriculture; and. ln addition, he\nassumed the portfolio of provincial\nsecrcUry-treasurer.\nJames P. Mclntyre, another farm*\ner, again became mlnltter of publia\nworki, the cabinet poit he had filled\nfor five yeara In the previous ad\"\nministration of Hon. A. C Saunden and Mr. Lead.\nA third return to a former post-\n(Continued on Page Two)\n AOE TWO -\nMORE ABOUT\nETHIOPIA\n*    (Continued Prom Pagi Ona)\nhe British diplomat separately on\nhe eve of the scheduled oonferenoe\nletween delegatei of tha French.\nfallen and British government! to-\n\u25a0mw,\nAfter the meeting between the\nwo. it wae aald in informed quar-\nen thit thalr poiitlont were u \"lr-\nCbCPINTHEPINK BY\nrAKINC A SPARKLING\nINVIGORATING\/;\n1\nANDREWS\nUVER SALT\nSmall Tin, Sic i Ura Tin, He:\nttttt. Imti lilui, 7m\nrr.prt.tor,: ScoTT tl TliFNia\nL.MITIP, NflreattU-upon-Tyne.\nKnl-  tSmtributsd in Canada bf\nMcOiliiv>at Bum. Limns,\nB Toronto.\nreconeiUable\" u before the meet-\nPremier Laval, convinced that\npeace ln Africa and the political\nliability of Europe depend upon hit\nefforts to get BriUin and IUly tc\narree, Ulkad with both Anthonj\nEden and Baron Pompeo Aloisl.\nAfter one Ulk Eden returned\nagain to the Qual d'Orsay late lr\nthe afternoon and stressed that Britain Is Only prepared to content to\nItaly'i economic penetration of the\nAfrican empire\u2014not to a political\nintervention.\nThe three\u2014Laval, Eden and Aloisi\u2014will formally ooen the conver*\ntatloni tomorrow. Thev will revolve\naround the tri-power treaty of 1806\nby which Ethiopia wat divided into\ninheres of economic Influence, and\nGreat Britain. France and Italy\npledged themselvei to protect the\nIntegrity of Ethiopia.\nEmperor Haile Selusie of Ethlo-\nnla had a chance of nresent hii hide\nto Laval through Tecla Hawarlat\nhis mlnliter to Paris Hawariat uw\nLaval ihortly before Laval't iecond\ntalk with Eden.\nNicholas Politll. who It expected\nto be officially appointed as a fifth\narbitrator on tha Ualual diipute,\n\u2022hw conferred with Laval.\nArguminti prmntad to Laval\nfer Italy'i program Included: IUly\nmuit protect IU African coloniei\nagalnit a \"wild and dangeroui\"\nnation (Ethlopli) by dliarmlng It;\nIUly mutt expand Itl colonies u\nGreat Britain and Franoe have\ndona; Italy la terily In need of\nraw material! and muit davilop\nhar own luppllei.\nNOT APTIR\nBRITISH   COLONIIS\nROME, Aug. 15 (CP-Havai)-Pre-\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON, B. C, HOTELS\n\"Finut in tht Inttrior''\nHUME HOTEL\nFree Bus Service Oeo. Benwell, Prop.\nBREAKFAST 25c te 60c\nLUNCHEON 35c le 50c       DINNER 35c te 65e\nRotary and Cyro Headquarters\nTelephone 787 Nelson. B.C. tU Virnon It\nHUME \u2014C. Hosken, Vanar; T.\nlaaaenden, C. Garrlck, W. Trump,\nI Haworth, Vancouver; R. Chrii-\ninten, Kelowna; A. La Meeke.\n\u2022enticton; J. Lewlt. M. Wardt, Med-\ncine Hat; Mr. and Mrs. J. Emery,\nidmonton; Mr. and Mrs. L. Keller,\nPatadena, Cal.; Mr. and Mrs. G.\nKeller, Colvllle, Wash.; Dr. tnd Mrs.\nB. Steeni, M. Thonhill, Montreal;\nW. Turner, OUowa; Mr. and Mrt.\nH. Lochta, Seattle, Wath.; M. Hayward, Naw York; J. Blackman, Toronto.\n\\r\nThe Savoy Hotel\n\"Where the Guest Is Kind\"\nNelson's Newest and Finest Hotel.\nMany Rooms With Private\nBaths or Showers\n124 BAKER ST.\nA. KERR. Prop.\nPHONE 19\nNELSON. B.C\nSAVOY\u2014Mr. and Mrs N. Robion,\nIr. and Mn. F. Valkman, Cal-\ntry; W. Kettlewell, Mrs C. Vano,\nJmberley; It. Holmei, Spokane;\n. Hamilton^ Sirdar; C. Fotiett,\ntanbrook; F. Wllmot, Gray Creek;\n[rs.   A.   Mackereth,   Broadwater;\nMlu K. Deane, Mln H. May, Deant-\nhavan; R. \"Meggy, Kootenay Bay;\nJ. Beber, New Denver; T. Fletcher,\nFernle; V. Hutton, Vancouver; G.\nOnofrychuk, Trail; Mn. N. Lunn,\nStratford-on-Avon, England.\nfew Grand Hotel\nP L. KAPAK. Prop.\nHot and Cold Water\nSingle 60o up: doubli 60c up\nMonthly ratu 110.00 up\nPH 214       818 VERNON ST\nQUEEN'S HOTEL\nPITS BOR8ATO. Prop.\nRoomi from 80s te HM\nMonthly 810 and up.\nSteam heated and hot and cold\nwater in every room\n80S BAKER ST. PHONE 80\nOccidental Hotel\n705 Vernon St Phona 687L\nH WAMICK, Prop.\nSPECIAL MONTHLY RATES\nGood Comfortable Rooms\nMlneri' Hiadguartara\nMadden Hotel\nii Welcome Axvaiti You\nJAB. A. MADDEN Pros.\nCompletely Remodelled\nHot and Celd Water\nIn the HEART ol tht City\nPi-ONE 58     &.. w\u00bb\"n \u00bbT\nEDGEWOOD, B. C, HOTELS\nARROW LAKES HOTEL 'OT^\nE. NIEDERMAN,       Comfortable Roomi        Place on the\nProprietor Oood   Meali Read te Varnon\nVANCOUVER, B. C. HOTELS\n\u25a0YOUR VANCOUVER HOME\"      Newly Renovated Throughout\nDufferin Hotel   r^a^\n800 Seymour St      Vancouver l.(j||  Coleman Altav Propfletoj\nout 1\nr__l\nSPOKANE, WASH., HOTELS\nWHEN IN SPOKANE YOU WILL ENJOY STAYING AT\nThe Hotel Volney\nOPPOSITE PAULSEN IUIL0INO\n410 RIVERSIDE AVE. SPOKANE, Wash.\nEvery Courtety Shewn Our Canadian Gueiti\nTRANSPORTATION \u2014 Motor Freight Lines\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE NELSON TWICE DAILY\nS a.m. and 10:30 a.m. Except Sunday\nTrail\nNelton'\nTRI UH CO.\n135\nM. H. MclVOR, Prop.\n35\nmlar Muiioltni. mindful of the tri-\npower tllkt ln Peril over tha threat\not war with Ethiopia, tonight offered Indirect reauurance to Britain and Prance that Italy in no\nwav vlewi the coloniei of theie powen with a predatory eye.\nThe assurance came through what\nwai taken aa an officially inspired\narticle ln hli newspaper, the Popolo\nd'ltalla, at Milan, which 11 duce\nfounded In tha days preceding hli\nadvent ai dictator.\nItaly hai no Intention, the article\n\u2022aid. ot \"dittrubing either France\nor Great Britain ln the posteislon ot\ntheir coloniei or mandates.\"\nIt laid Italy turned to Ethiopia\ntor expansion In order not to hurt\nher former alliei In their colonial\npollutions.\nLONDON   UNEASY\nLONDON. Aug. 15 (AP)\u2014Official\nLondon watched the diplomatic discussions on the Ethiopian problem\nln Paris with much uneaainesi.\nEffort! wera made to counteract\nthe prest report! ln Italy that Britain ll using battering ram tactic\nto prevent war. Informed quarters\ndenied Italian reporti that Londor\nwould threaten to withdraw from\nEuropean affaln ln the event of an\nItalo-Ethloplan war.\nThe government is keeping the\nnuestlon of an armt export ban on\nEthiopia to one side until it tees\nthe outcome at Peril. Thera are\nmany hinti that the ban will be\nraised in the event of failure of the\nconference.\nFIQHT IN ETHIOPIA\nDJIBOUTI, French Somaliland,\nAug. 15 (AP)\u2014Italian oterver-j here\ntook a grave view tonight of a reported altercation at Diredawa,\nEthiopia, etween Renato Mecenate,\nItalian consulate tecretary at Aden,\nand an Ethiopian policemen, durmg which both were aerioutly injured.\nA report of the Incident wai cabled to Premier Muuolini at Rome\nand lt wat pedlcted in iome Quarter! that renresentatloni will be\nmade by the Italian government\nMecenate, accompanied by Count\nDel Glardlna, Italian vice couniul al\nDjibouti, wat on the point of botrd-\n'ng the train at Diredawa for Addis\n\\babe when the argument itarted,\nt wai learned here. Diedawa Is lttl\n-illei from th's city. Paitengert nn\nthe train to Addis Ababa uiually\nttop overnight at the town.\nMORE ABOUT\nP.E.I. CABINET\n(Continued From Page One)\ntlon wai mada as Thane A. Campbell, 40-year-old barrltter, wai\nsworn In ai attorney and advocate-\ngeneral. Mr. Campbell was Liberal\ncampaign leader during the election,\nwhen Mr. Lea was confined to hli\nhome through illness.\nHon. Mark R. McOulcan, K. C,\nassumed the education portfolio.\nFive mlnisten without portollo\nwere named: B. W. LePage. mlnlater without portfolio In the former Liberal government; Lucat R.\nAllen, a member of the legislature\nsince 1828; John A. Campbell, alao\nIn the houie for eight years, and\nMartin Gallant and T. W. L. Prowte.\nThe minliten were choien from\nthe 30 Liberal! whom Mr. Lea led\nto overwhelming victory In last\nmonth'i election. Premier Lea has\nIndicated he will carry on without\nan official opposition.\nAfter any\nEXERCISE\nGIVE YOUR\nBODY EASE\nRUB IN-\nuimou\nTHI NELION DAILY NIWI. NILION. B.C-FRIDAY MORNINO, AUOUIT 18.11\nSocial and Personal\nNews of Trail\nThli ooiumn la In -barge oi Mra Olenn Quayle of TralL All\nevents ul a tonal nature ol Intueii u frail and Iadinar wlll appeal\nln Uiu culuiun Mn Cjuivie will be glad to nave any tuen newa\ntelephoned to bei at bat home In Trail\nTRAIL, B C, Am. 15-Mn. Tony\nLauriente and aon Tommy, who\nhave been holidaying at Kelowna\nwith relative! and friendi, wlll return during the week-end to their\nhome, Victoria itreet\n\u2022 *  \u00bb\nMlta Mae Kelly, who haa been visiting for a few weeks with ber parenta at Sllverton, ia expected back\nIn Trail Sunday.\nMra. M. Mawdsley had aa har\nguett yetterday, Mn. I. Lewli of\nBoswell.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiai Loulie Swanton, wbo for\nthe pait two months hai been residing In Trail, returni to her home\nin Rou Spur this evening. Hei\nfather, T. Swanson, motored In to\nmeet her today.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nJack Mathewi hai returned to\nTrail from a ihort holiday at Kaslo\naea\nMn W. Jeffrey hai returned to\nTrail from a holiday at New Denver.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nO. Sandercombe, aftar vacationing at Shutty Bench, hat returned to Trail.\n.  .  \u2022\nJohn Forretter hai returned to\nTrail from a holiday at Pel tlcton.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nDr. W. C. Bradihaw and Mn.\nBradshaw were vlilton Wednesday\nto Brilliant\n\u00ab   \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mn. J. Potter, who have\nbeen tpendlng their holldaya at Kaalo, have returned to Trail.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nMr. and Mn. E. E. Hopwood. Second avenue, are vacationing thli\nweek at Katb.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nOeorge J. Klnnli left thli evening\nfor the coait where he will ipend\na ihort vacaUon. On hli return he\nwll) be accompanied by hii family\nwho have been apendlng the tummer at Vancouver.\n\u2022 tf a\nSvend Chrlttoffenen, wbo hu\nbeen working during the tummer\nat Willow Point hu returned to\nTraiL\n\u2022 *  \u2022\nThomai Spain hu left oa a vacation which will be tpent at coatt\ncities.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nMlit Dorli Johnion ot the Trail\ntelephone itaff it vacationing ln\nthe Okanagan diitrict\n\u2022 \u00bb   \u2022\nMr. and Mn. T. Y. Ewlng, who\nwere gueiti ot relatlvea at New\nDenver have returned to TralL\n\u2022 *  \u2022\nMr. and Mn. Dave Mawdaley have\nbeen vacationing at Penticton tor\nseveral dayi.\n\u00bb  \u2022  \u2022\nThomu Brown, who hu been\nspending a two-week holiday at\nRobion nu returned to TraU.\n\u2022 *  \u2022\nFred Popoff ipent Wednesday\nwith hli family it Brilliant On hir\nreturn to Trail he wai accompanied\nby hli ion, Fred.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nWilliam Donnelly, accompanied\nby hli two granddaughter!, hu lett\nfor the coait where he wlll ipend\na holiday with re'at'vee.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mn. Frank Pennoyer return during the week-end trom a\nvacation which hu been ipent at\nGrand Forki and Chrlitlne Lake.\ni e i\nWilliam Harrlaon retumi tomorrow from a two-week vacation ipent\nat cout cltlea.\n\u2022 \u2022  i\nDave McLennan wu a recent vltltor from Trail to the boundary\ncountary.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nMln Connie Cain, who it veca-\ntionln\" with her mother at Nelson,\nspent Sunday at Procter.\nTO NOMINATE AUC. 23\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 15 (CP) -\nNominating convention of the Vancouver-Burrard Coniervative auociation will be beld Auguit 33. Thott\nmentioned u poulble nominee! Include Col. Nalion Spencer, R. L.\nMaitland. Frank McKee and Alderman H. D. Wilion.\nMORE ABOUT\nAPPOINTMENTS\n(Continued From Page Oni]\nIn an honorary capacity u the economic council of Canada, carrying\nout one phase ot the reform plana\nof Prime Mlnliter R. B. Bennett,\nwai considered today but no decision wai reached and it it quite\npossible thli task will be left ln\nabeyance until after the election.\nSome further change! ln the cabinet may be expected later thy\nweek. It ii undentood the portfolio! of marine and pott-muter*\ngeneral will be ditposed of at once\nand further elevation ot Samuel\nGobeil it contldered a foregone conclusion. Mr. Gobeil who wai member for Compton, Que., wat yetterday sworn in u mlnliter without\nportfolio. He wlll probibly be made\npostmaster-general tomorrow or\nSaturday.\nThe new mlnisten were buiy today acquainting themselvei with\ntheir new dutiei. They attended a\nthort cabinet council in the morning and returned to the eut block\nafter lunch to pou with the prime\nminiiter tor still and talking plcturei.\nToday'i one appointment brlngi\nthe tenite Handing to 83 appointed\not Coniervative government!. 32\nappointed by Liberal governmenti\nmd one vacancy,\nA physician and drugglit, prictlt-\ning In Levlt, Dr. Fortin tint entered\nfederal politlci when he uniucceii-\nfully contested the 1928 general\nelection!. He wu elected In 1930.\nBorn at Levis In 1878, Dr, Fortin\nli ln hli 98th year.\nTHAU do\n) mow\n.<*\n.<\u2022\n... tiiat in tte officers'\nmess, exclutive cluba and\nhigh-claaa hotels, where\nthose who know congregate\n\u2014at the mention oi a cocktail it ia taken ior granted\nthat Gordon's Imported\nGin will be the eaaenUal\ningredient. Gordon't ia\n85% proof\u2014and smoother.\nNEW LOW  PRICES\n13.3 fl. ox., $1.30\n26.6 fl. ox., $2.50\nSASKATOON. Aug. 18 (CP)-\nRelationi of Sir Bull Blackett,\ntank of England director killed ln\nGermany today, are reildent in\nSitkitoon and Winnipeg. Charlea\nEdward Blackett. Winnlpee, Is a\nflnt cousin, and hat a ton, Douglai\nW. H. Blackett, with the T. Eaton\ncompany here. Douglai Blackett\nhad never met Sir Baiil but had\nfrequently corresponded with him.\nOIVE UNEMPLOYED\nMAIL CONCESSION\nLONDON,   (AP)-An   ImporUnt\ngeneral poit office conceulor to all\nunemployed peraona\u2014the tranimli-\ntlon ot application! for employment\nin envelope! bearing a halt-penny\nstamp, hai been made. An official\nsayi: \"It hai been ruled that lf an\nunemployed penon pceta an application for a lob and prlnta \"Ap-\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor pUjgj* te j^^f\",\" <fc\nControl  Board or by the Government of British Columbia be carried at the halfpenny rate.\"\nDlililled aad Bottled la London, Eagland\nTANOUERAY, GORDON \u00ab CO, LTD.\nMORE TRAFFIC\nNEEDED\nSolution of Railway\nProblems Rests\non That\nVANCOUVER, Au* 15 (CP). -\nSolution of problemi facing railroad! Ilea in creating more traffic\nand in eliminating unfair highway\ncompetition, B. T. Chappell, Vancouver, general luperlntendent of\nCanadian National Railwayi, today\ntold the 22nd annual convention\nof the Pacific Cout auociation of\nport authoritlei.\nIn lupporting Mr. Chappell'i argument!. C. A. Cotterell, Vancouver,\naistttant general manager, Canadian Pacific Railway, criticized governmental effort! to regulate buiineu and declared buainesa cannot\nadvance until \"tha preeent era\"\ngovernmental experimentation it\nended.\n\"Although tha automobile li de\norlving the railway of paitenyer\ntraffic, the automobile Itself must\nbe transported in the beginning by\nthe railways and Iti manufacture\nhai stimulated other traffic producing Industrie!,\" Mr. Chappell\nsaid.\n\"The truck li a thorny problem,\nhowever. There are thoee who think\nthe railwayi are backward in failing to go into the truck business;\nbut the railway company, no matter how efficiently lt operated\ntrucks, would loae money competing agalnit operaton ignorant ot\ncosts and ratei.\"\nMORE ABOUT\nSIR BASIL\n(Contlnuid Prom Page One)\nStates on a ipeclal mlulon ln con*\nnectlon with exchange problemi\narising out ot the peat war. In\nOctober. 1915, ha wai largely instrumental, ai a member ot the\n\\nglo-French financial million to\nthe United Statei. tn railing a\n1500*100,000 Anglo-French 1 *n.\nFrom 1918 to 1919 he wai tha\nrepresentative of the Brltlih treat-\nury in the United Statei. For the\nfollowing three yun he wai the\ncontroller of finance ln the treasury\nLONDON, Aug. 15 (AP). \u2014 Sir\nBull Blackett, director of the Bank\nof Entland, of Imoerlil and International Communication! and\nother concerns, killed today ln an\nautomobile accident ln Germanv,\nwai a world authority on economic\nmatten and one of Ihe leading fan-\n'-\u2022ieri of Grut Britain.\nHe wai among the group of econ-\nomlita and finincien recently consulted by David Lloyd George in\nconnection with hit new deal plan.\nSir Basil three yean ago wrote\nthe book \"Planned Money\" ln\nwhich he auggeated a new monetary tyitem which he labelled\n\"Sterllnnaria.\"\nIn 19.13. Sir Basil narrowly ei-\ncaoed duth when an airliner ln\nwhich he was a nauenger made a\nrecord forced landing ln aa African\nlungle.\nIn 1920 he married Mlu Beatrice\ntenner, the diughter of the late\nEdward H. Bonner of New York.\nMORE ABO\nSUVER PRICE\n(Continued From I\ni Oni)\namendment wu adi\nbill which Senator\nto\nner\nje tax\nnomai\nil>Okla) uid would \"bring the illver market to Amerioa.\" Ottered\nby Senator P. A. McCarran (D-Nev),\nthe amendment would repeal thou\n\u2022eclioni of the lilver purchau law\nwhich authorize nationalization of\nailver, tax trading profits at 90 per\ncent and require licences for lmporta and exporta.\nEarlier, Thomas, after conferring\nwith Secretary Morgenthau, sjld\ntha government's illver purchue\nprogram wu a \"farce,\" because tha\ntreasury wat seeking to buy the\nwhite metal as cheaply as possible\nInstead of driving the price upward.\nCoincidentally, continued treasury\nsilver purchue! tailed to eterh the\ndownward trend of prlcea.\nAnother unite development wai\na resolution Introduced by Senator\nKey Plttman (D-Nev) to authorize\na ipeclal committee of five to confer with Morgenthau and itudy thc\neffect of the tllver buying program\nhere and aboard. Ita approval wu\nexpected.\nTbe treatury wu reported un-\nfavnnble to the McCarran amendment preferring to keep control ol\nsliver in thii country. Some quarter! forecut lta rejection by the\nhouie. Open lilver marketi disappeared when Preiident Rooievelt\nnationalized the metal a year ago.\nThe illver purchase law directs\nbuying until treasury atocki reach\none-third the gold lupply or the\nprice reaches $1.29 an ounce.\nEven an announcement by Secretary Morgenth\u00abu that the government was \"still buying\" failed to\ntha price alump\nstatement foi-\nannouncement\n,500,000 ouncet\nyesterday,\nwith Morgenthau during tbe day. Afterward he\nleM the lilverTjHgram \"might at\nwell be abandoned\" unleaa the government wu going to buy with a\nview to remonetlilng the metal\nMONTREAL, Aug. 15 (CP).-Be-\nlief that the Canadian commodity\nexchange would be little affected\nby any repeal of section! of the\nUnited Statei silver purchau law\nto allow open illver trading ln the\nUnited Statei wai expreued In financial clrclei here tonight\nResults\nINTERNATIONAL\nSyracuse 1. Rochuter 6.\nBaltimore IS. Montreal 9, 0.\nAlbany 2. Buffalo IS.\nNewark 2, Toronto 9,\nASSOCIATION\nMilwaukee 1. Toledo i.\nKantu City 0, Columbui I.\nPACIFIC COAIT\nMlttlont 9. Oakland 6.\nLoa Angelea 4. San Franciico 1\nPERSIVERANCIWIN!\nLONDON, (CP).-The iooi latest Inhabitant an African Stanley\ncrane chick, emerged recently from\nan egg weighing half a pound. ThU\nit the first chic'' to be hatehe-l\nhere by Mother Stanley Crane although ihe hu laid eggs for three\nyean.\nBECOMES BARON KENNET\nLONDON, (CP). - Sir Edward\nHilton Young, who wai created a\npeer when he retired from the mln-\nistry of hMlth on the recent reconstruction of the cabinet, hat taken the title of Baron Kennet, of\nthe Dene ln the county of Wilt-\nthlre.\nAUCTION SALE\nSTORE FIXTURES and FITTINGS\nSaturday, Aug. 17\n2:30 P.M.\nCEORCE HORSTIAD,\nAuctioneer\nGoodi on Vltw\nSaturday Morning From\n10 a.m.\nLocation\u2014MEAGHER'S LTD.\nHERE'S an euy wiy to get child-\nran to take an vara gttss tf\nmilk a day! Serve tham Quaker\nPuffed Whut or Quaker Puffed\nRice for supper u well u breakfut\nThe double criipneu of theu\nnatural beilth graini (puffed I\ntimei norm\u00ab 1 size) mike them rodi\nwonderful milk carrien that children can uie a whole glau of milk\non them\u2014and reliih every ipoon-\nful. They're io euy to digeit\u2014\nthey're the Ideal bedtime mack.\nQUAKER PUFFED RICE \u2022 PUFFED WHEAT\nHAVE YOU\nTHE EXTRA VALUE\nIN THE SENSATIONAL\n(made iv GUTTAPERCHA)\nCompare it tide by side with\nall other tires sellinq at the\nSL\nsame price\nDEEPER TREAD\nWIDER TREAD\nMake tbe DEEPER TREAD TEST\nTak* your btuloMi card\nud itud tt ln Um trotd\npatton, aa thorn. Mark\ntbt dqpthl ThaaaU-ad\ntb* mm card In tba\ntraad of any oOutr tin of\numt aiaa tad prica.\nNou tint allothor traada\nan too ahaHow to ooma\nop to lh* mirk \u2014 proof\npoeJtiva that tho Roadflight Trotd U doapar,\n\u2022afw-tood  (Or mon\nr\u00bb.\n_\n\\\n\u2022 MORE RUBBER\n\u2022 STRONGER S1DEWAUS\n\u2022 NEW TOUGHER\nTREAD RUBBER\n\u2022 NEW NON-SKID GRIP\n\u2022 A TIRE WITHOUT\nEQUAL AT ITS PRICE\n\\\n\\\nSee tbe new Roadflight\nbefore you buy any\notber tirt\nSIZl   4.75 . 19\n$1Q50\nOTHER  SIZES\nPROPORTIONATELY\nPRICED\n\"PERKY\"\nFrinttly Unit dutt* Perrl*\n*lbrirm.hhrtd.mUnlihii(,ulU t\nPerth. Strvkt. LttAfir him        \/\niu tbi OP ittltri uiHdom-      \/   rn.\neuro mmm niii\nRUBBrR   LIMIl\nDIAN   RIJHIII I***   I.*OMPANY   IOUN IH   1B8I\nTh* Niw Cum Pireha Roadflight Tim Ar* for Sal* at:\nWood, Vallance Hardware Co. Ltd., Notion, B.C. Shorty's Repair Shop, Nalion, l.C.\n ____-mmmm---t--m\n\u2014\u2014\n' \t\ntoai\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0^\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0^\u25a0^\u25a0\u25a0B\n- PAGI THS\nWILLIAM ROBINSON\nHOWSON, K.C.\nWUUam Roblnion Howion, K.C,\nleader of the Alberta Liberal forcei,\nlias had a varied career from the\ntime he waa a barefooted farm lad\nat Norwood, Ont.. until he became\nhead of the opposition in the Alberta\nlegislature.\nBorn at Norwood March 6. 1883,\non a farm cleared by his grandfather, he wat a tchool teacher at\n18 then bank clerk, bank manager,\ncollector; salesman for farm imple-\nmenta and real estate, university\nitudent, lawyer, soldier, and politician and finally Liberal leade*.\nMr. Howson attended public and\nhigh school at Norwood and began\nteaching at Mather'! Corners. 10\nmilea from Peterborough, Ont. Next\nhe became a clerk in the Soverign\nBank of Canada and later manager\nof the branch at Stirling, Ont. A\nhard worker with both courage and\nability, he found advancement slow\nand he Journeyed west to Edmonton in 1910.\nHia tint job ln Alberta was collecting for an implement firm In\nthe Sedgewick district. Still unsatisfied, he went to Calgary and found\nemployment as a salesman.. It was\nthen he decided he wanted to be a\nlawyer. Going to Wesley college of\nWinnipeg, Mr. Howion took his\nfirst univeraity year there, and then\nreturned to Edmonton and entered\nthe Univenity of Alberta.\nIn the three yeara from 1912 to\n1915 he look the arta and law courses\nat the tame time. Besides working\nto pay for hii tuition, Mr. Howson\nstudied enough to take the university gold medal for highest genera]\nproficiency of any itudent during\nthose three years. He was the flrtt\nAlberta graduate to be elected to\nthe senate of thc university. He\nobtained hit B.A. and LL.B.\nAfter his graduation, Mr. Howson\nenlisted and went overseas, remaining there uritil he returned to Edmonton in 1920. Edmonton Liberals\nrequested him to itand for election\nboth in 1921 and 1926 but hc declined for businesi reasons. He was\nelected to the Alberta legislature\nas a Liberal member for the city of\nEdmonton in 1930. Mr. Howson was\nchosen provincial Liberal leader in\nOctober, 1932, following thc death\nof George Webster. Since 1925 he\nhas been president of the Federal\nLiberal association of the province\nof Alberta.\nMarried in 1916 to Jane Elizabeth\nCaimichael of Edmonton, he has\nthree children, Margaret Carmichael, Isabel Ann ond W. R, Jr, a\nbarrister.\n(More tomorrow)\n'Wef'Vole Means\nHole! lor (reslon\nPost Office Plans\nAre Still in\nAir\nCRESTON, B.C, Aug. IB.\u2014Provided Creston votes \"wet\" on a beer\nparlor plebiscite which the village\ncouncil will sponsor at Uie earlieit\npossible date, Creston il guaranteed\na new $21,000 fully 'modern and\ncomodious hotel to be built at the\ncorner of Canyon itreet and Creston\navenue. John Shean of Lumberton\nii the backer of the hotel project\nand he hai poited a bond of $500 to\nbuild the hotel provided the council takea the vote and it is favorable.\nThla wai the outitanding feature\nof the August eession of the village\ncouncil Monday night at which\nReeve F. H. Jackion presided, and\nCouncillors A. Comfort and Charles\nMurrell were present. The hotel\nagreement wai tentatively entered\ninto at a ipeclal meeting of the\ncouncU op July 29, and waa confirmed at the regular meeting this\nweek. At thii ipeclal meeting a\nresolution was drafted and* submitted at the meeting of the Union\nof Kootenay Municipalities' at Nelson last week by the reeve, who reported lt had been approved with\naome minor changes in the phraseology. The resolution asked that the\nLiquor tct be changed to that the\nmunicipalities and not tbe Liquor\nControi Board would have authority to say how many licenses ihould\nbe Issued in any municipally governed district.\nWOULD HURRY IT\nIn connection with the proposed\nhotel Charles Moore, architect, and\nJ G. Bell, who it acting for Mr.\nShean. were preient to urge all\npossible ipeed io that construction\ncould get under way while the\nweather wai good. Mr. Bell submitted the plana which ihow a two-\nstory-and-basement itructure of\npleasing design. It will have 20 bedroomi, moet of them with baths\nThere wUl be a dining room, rei-\ntaurant, barber ihop, rotunda on\nthe main floor, with attractive entrance and front verandah. The\nbasement will be largely for sample\nrooms. It wiU be of brick or stucco,\nand the cost will not be less than\n$21,000. Messrs. Moore and Bell\nwere pressed to fully complete\neverything that hu to have the an-\nWhen usingxx\nWILSON'S    \\\nFLY PADS)\n-__-, pead directions   \/\n\\v     carefully and\/\n_^   follow thei1 \/\n5    cxactly\/\nf\u00a3eh pad will HU file, all day nd\nevery day for threo weeka.\n3 padt Id each packet*\n10 CENTS PER PACKET\n\u25a0I Drug flin, Grocers, Crnertsl Storm,\nWHY PAY MORE?\nTHB WUSON aY TAD CO, Hemtllm, On.\nSUNDAY\nSTEAMER\nTRIP\nAugust 18\nLe.vt Ntlton Wharf\n12 Noon\nArrivo Bick 9:45 P.M.\nProcter  75c\nAlniworth  $1.00\nKailo     $1.50\nChlldnn 5 ind undtr 12\nhalf far*.\nNo pimi honored.\nproval of the authorities at Victoria and to submit It for Liquor\nControl Board \"O.K.\" to that no\nUme will be lost in auUiorizing the\nplebiscite when the petition arrives.\nOn July 23 the council had another special session at which Mr.\nOswald, deputy provincial fire\nmarshall was present, and fire pro-\ntecUon matters were gone into. Mi.\nOswald had asked for a map of thc\nwaterworks system. Following up\nthis matter letten had been written to the villages of Mission and\nSmithers to find out how they handled the fire protecUon situation,\nand a motion was passed authorizing a conference with Goat Mountain Waterworks company to discuss hydrant installation and maintenance.\nPOSTOFFICE   PLAN8\nSTALLED\nThere was a non-commltal letter\nfrom the deputy postmaster general\nat Ottawa as to Juit where Creston's\nnew postoffice wai at It gave a\nrather faint impression that the\nplans were being rushed and tenders would be called shortly. The\n\"rush\" feature to the plans, however, wai not substantiated in a\nletter from the architect J. Carrie,\nof Nelion. The council want him.\non his next visit to Creston. to give\nan eitlmate on the poiiible cost of\nrebuilding thc Park paviUon to better accommodate indoor iports,\ndances, etc. The best Mr. Carrie\ncould advise was that he would be\nhere possibly in a month.\nHandyman Canute Anderson gave\nhis initial report as fire chief. It\nhad chiefly to do with the fire\ntruck which he reported was not\nbig enough for the work it was expected to perform. It wai a one-ton\nvehicle and something of at least\nton-and-a-half capacity is required.\nHe reported the larger size could\nbe had locally but about about $210\ncash would be required in addiUon\nto the discarded truck. His advice\nas to the unsuitability of the old\ntruck was confirmed by CounciUor\nMurrell. chairman of the fire and\nlight committee, and they were authorized to make an investigation\nand report fully at the September\nsession.\nAccounts pasted tor payment totalled $708. ot which $184 wat for\nlumber used on reconttrucUng Park\nroad bridge and on sidewalk work.\nThe labor bill on the bridge and\nstreet improvements was also high.\nChairman Comfort of the roadi and\nitreeti committee, wai authorized\nto lay two additional planks the full\nlength of Cemetery road bridge.\nCreston Hospital Women's auxiliary wcre given leave to hold a tag\nday for hospital benefit on the date\nof the federal election. The handyman wai Instructed to repaint the\ninterior of the clerk'a office at the\ntown hall some suitable thade. The\npainting of the main haU Interior\nwill be left over until a alack tea-\nson.\nCHANGE IN CHARTER\nThe necetsai-y by-law wai approved asking for changea in the\nvillage charter eo that the elecUon\nof councillors will in future be held\nin accordance with amendments to\nthe Village act It the end of the\nsession the reeve reported briefly\non the Kootenay MunicipaUUet'\nunion convention at Nelion lait\nweek, and adviaed that if Creston\nwant! that organization to back up\nits demand for an amendment to the\nLiquor act it will be necessary for\nCretton to lend a delegate to the\nconvention at Harriton Hot Springs\nin September.\nMiss Dubar Is Bride\nof \"Buster\" Martell\nCRESTON, B.C.. Aug. 15.-A wedding of much interest locally as weU\ni as at Arrow Lakes pointi, wai lol-\ncmnized at Holy Crou church, Crei-\noii, Tuesday morning, when Father\n.lartmann united in marriage Miss\n.\"ilcen Dubar of Creiton ana lately\nof Wynndel, formerly of Burton,\nwith \"Buster\" Martell, eldest ion\nof Mr. and Mra, A. MarteU of Wynndel. Juat the immediate relative!\ni and friendi  witnessed the happy\nI event The bride was attired In a\n! grey and white suit with hat to\n! match and  carried a bouquet of\n! gladioli. Thc bridesmaid waa Mln\nKllen  Uri.  who  costume  wai  of\ni brown and white silk. The best man\nwas the groom'a brother, Joe Mar-\n' tell. After the ceremony the contracting  parties   and   assistants  were\nguests at a wedding breakfast at\nI the home of Mrs. Fred Kllngen-\n| smith.  Later  the  newlywedi  left\nI nn a wedding trip to Spokane. Both\nMr. and Mri. Martell are well known\n1 and popular member! of the younger let here and at Wynndel, at\nwhich latter place they are to re-\nilde.\nBUNYAN'S  IRON  FIDDLE\nBEDFORD, England. (CP). \u2014\nJohn Bunyans Iron fiddle has been\npurchased privately by Sir R. Leicester Harmsworth. He will present lt to the museum at the Bunyan Mceting-Houie here.\nSATURDAY\nand MONDAY\nSUPER VALUES FROM ALL\nDEPARTMENTS ASSURE YOU\nBIG SAVINGS\nHundreds of Pairs of PERFECT\nSILK HOSIERY at Walkout Prices\nPerfect Crepe\nHOSIERY\nGreen Bond1' SHEETS\nOutstanding value. Sold only by HBC.\nGenerous\ns size, 80x100 and long wear- fttflfc  *l*ff\nVC.   DAID *\u2122\ning qua\nBAY DAYS, PAIR\nGrey Wool Rlankets\nTwo of Canada's greatest values. Fine quality in \"grey\"\nor \"silver grey\". Blue striped ends. BAY DAYS\u2014\nNo. 1, 58x76, \u2014 *F OC   No* 2. SO*80. \u2014 \u25a0\n6 lbs., PAIR ..    $Jot7\u00abJ   6 lbs. PAIR\n$6.95\nMadeira Tea Cloths\nBeautifully worked cloths in 36-inch size.\nSeveral designs in the assortment. HBC _\\, \u2022\u00a3   ttt*\nSpecial. V 1 \u00bb7_>\nBAY DAYS, EACH       m\nA Sterling Value in\nBLEACHED SHEETING\nHeavy round thread sheeting of superior quality. If you\nappreciate quality in sheeting you will like this.\n72 inches wide\u2014     FQtf   81 inches wide\u2014     QM\nYARD\n\"Sparva\" SUITING\nA beautiful silk-like mercerized fabric for dresses\nerie, shirts, pajamas and many other uses.\n36 inches wide in 20 wanted shades and\nwhite. Fadeless and unshrinkable.\nBAY DAYS. YARD\t\nling-\n39\nGROWING GIRLS'\nSHAWL-TONGUE OXFORDS\nSoft black calf uppers with shawl tongue\nstrap. Splendid wearing soles and i\n^^L__-__-_-----^-^-^.^_\nrubber heels. Sizes 3 to 8.\nBAY DAYS, PAIR\n$2-95\nMISSES' AND CHILDREN'S\nSTRAPS AND OXFORDS\nSizes 8 to 10'\/2\u2014(I 7C 5i\u00abs 11 to 2\u2014    {1 QC\nPAIR    \u00abJ>1.IO PAIR    tJ>l.JJ\n\"Scooter\" brand play shoes for children, will give a lot of\nsatisfaction and cut down the shoe budget. Black calf\nonly In oxford and strap styles. Leather soles and rubber heels.\nMen's Better Quality\nSUITS *22 s\u00b0\nMen's and young men's suits for business or dress wear.\nBlue serge, grey serge and fancy worsted. Styling and\ntailoring is of the best. Wide and medium width bottoms. Sizes 36 to 44.\nSALE OF\n\"ROYAL\" SHIRTS\nby McGregor ,\nA Special Purchase Maket This Prica Possible\nA regular $3.50 value at a sell-out price. Here is a fine\nquality English broadcloth shirt with loom woven patterns in fine checks and stripes. Collar\nattached style. Assorted sleeve lengths. \u00a3>->'% AA\nOnly a few dozen to clear at this price. \u2122^E.*WW\nWhile they last. EACH       ^\n\"Kingsway\" SHIRTS\nA new shipment of these broadcloth shirts that are so\npopular for business wear. Collar attached and separate\ncollar styles in plains and fancy checks.\n\u00bb1-55 Each  2*>**3,0\u00b0\nSALE ol PURE WOOL SOCKS\nA special pricing on this new shipment of socks means\nsavings to you. Pure soft wool dress socks in a rib-knit.\nAll plain shades.\nPair60c 2Pai'$r\u00b0\u00b0\nStanfield's Heavy WORK SOCKS\nHeavy all wool grey work socks by Stanfield's.\n*-   PAIK   .,\t\n$1.0.\nAnother opportunity to select one or more pairs of these \"Perfect\" dull silk crepe hose, regulars of a dollar line. Large assortment of summer shades. All are full fashioned. Sizes 8 Vi to lOVi.\nSPECIAL, PER PAIR\t\nSERVICE WEIGHT HOSE\nAn exceptional hosiery value in this full fashioned, perfect,\nservice weight hose. Cood summer range of shades from which\nto choose. Sizes 8V2 to lOVi.\nSPbUAL,  PAIR  \t\nPURE SILK HOSE\nSemi-Service and Chiffon\nFull fashioned pure thread silk hosiery. Splendid wearing hose in semi-\nservice and chiffon weight. Cood range of oolors in sizes 8V2 to 10 Vi.\nBAY DAYS\u2014\nPER PAIR *.\t\nSALE OF BETTER DRESSES\nRegular Values $5-95 to $10.95\n1-3 Off \u2014 \u00bb39S\u00ab*7 \u00bb\u2022\nStill a smart range of these better dresses, to finish the nice weather with, and it will pay\nyou to carry these over for next spring at this saving. There are jacket dresses as well as\none-piece types in floral or plain shades. Many sizes for prompt shoppers.\n8:30 A.M. SPECIAL\nMISSES' PIQUE SKIRTS\n25 only of these white pique skirts made with inverted\npleat.Size Hto 18only.\nEACH        ..^\u25a0^\u25a0^\u25a0^l\n75'\n8:30 A.M. SPECIAL   .\n.   Misses' Slacks\nRECU LAR SI.79\nJust what you need for vacation time\u2014a\npair of these well made drill slacks finished O *J    _tA\nwith zipper or button fastening. Shades \u2122 M t-t-v\nare navy and white. Sizes 14 to20. SPECIAL\nGirls' Pastel\nDRESSES\nReg. $1.95 to $2.95\nGrand values in these pastel frocks of crepe or organdy, so hurry down\nwhile there is a good color range to select from.\nSpecial $1.29\nSATIN OR CREPE PANTIES\nBeautiful undies that are trimmed with fine quality lace, or tailored\ntype, finished with dainty faggoting. Tea rose and white. Small, me- 6 \u00abS   AQ\ndium and large sizes. \u2122 M \u2022\"\"\nPAIR       m\nCOTTON CREPE KIMONAS\nOnly a few of these light weight embroidered kimonas that are so easy to pack g \u00abf    \u00a3A\naway, if you are going places. Various \u2122 H\nshades. SPECIAL       \u2014\nPRINT APRONS\nRegular 39c\nPolly Print aprons that are so handy to slip\non, made of fast colored prints in a large\nassortment of patterns.\nSPECIAL  \t\n25\nHBC WEEK*END FOOD SPECIALS\nON SALE FRIDAY, SATURDAY AND MONDAY       193 \u2014PHONES\u2014 194\nBUTTER*\u2014Ruby Creek or Hud- M-M\n\u2022onli. Per lb.       ,    **WT\nSALMON\u2014Clovtr Luf pink, 1i, _Vt_t\nUli. 2 tlni  \"-tr\nTEA\u2014HBC Broken Pekoe.\nPer lb\t\n440\nBAKING  POWDER-Fort Gerry,  fAA\n12 or. tin             \u2022%*TT\nCOCOA\u2014Beker't !ii.\nPer tin\t\nFLOUR-Maple Leet 4ti,\nPer \u00aback \t\nFRUIT COCKTAIL\u2014Nlbob ll.\nPer tin\t\nPINEAPPLE\u2014Faultlm, Sliced or\nCruihed. 2i. 2 tlni     \t\nLOBSTER\u2014Nabob *\/,,.\nPer tin \t\nJELLY POWDERS-Luihui.\n.. _m_w___\\\n150\n$1.69\n280\n230\n230\nMELON AND LEMON JAM-\nNabob. 32 oz. jar\nQUICK  DINNER-Hedlund't,  1i.\nPer till\t\nOVALTINE\u2014Large ilie.\n18 oz. Un \t\nPORK AND BEANS\u2014Helm, 11 oz.\ntlni. 2 tins       ,\t\nPICKLES-Nelly Wonder.\n15 oz. bottle\nGLO-COAT or WAX PASTE\n\u2014Johnion'i. Pcr tin\t\nKETCHUP-Aylmer.\noz. bottle       |.^^H^^B\n33<\n230\n980\n250\n220\n690\n160\nCOFFEE\u2014HBC Luxurloui,\nground to order. Per lb.\n390\nBONELESS CHICKEN-C 4 B, _mA\n'\/te. Per tin  \u25a0*'V\nLight Wool Work Socks\nLight weight grey wool work socks. QC\u00ab?\n5 PAIR FOR  VD\n$jf Itfoftttft lajt ,%*wm-W-\nINOORPORAT-D   Z\u2014 MAV l\u00ab70.\nSOUP\u2014Hedlund'i Muihroom, QA\nPer tin       *wt*\n8PICES-HBC fi**\nPer Un . a+\nSOAP-Lux Toilet 2Z_\n4 cakes . *\"*\u25a0*\nASPARAGUS\u2014Aylmer, i.'t oz.      _\\\\A\nlint. Per tin mm>\nMIXED PEAS AND CARROTS- IE****\nAylmer iquat 2i. Per tin *JV\nCUT GREEN BEANS\u2014Bee Cee 2i. la A\nPer lln **V\nMU8HROOMS-Bucklngham Flnt 99A\nChoice 1i. Par tin \u00bbV\nSPINACH\u2014Royal City, _>\/_t. _%A\nPcr tin         **r\nTOMATOES-Bee Cl., 2'\/ai. -Jl\/4\ni tlni   \"V\nFresh Fruit and Vegetables at Lowest\nMarket Prices\n .,\nAOEFOUR\nMOORE TO START\nANOTHER Mill\nIncrease at Kootenay\nLake of Alberta\nVisitors\nCRESTON, B.C. Aug. IS.-Cecil\nKoorc, formerly ot the Cecil Moore\nrange, Creston, who ia at preient\njoerating a portable sawmill at\nSawfora Bay. was a business vlsl-\nBr on Saturday, and reports that\nit ii thii week itarting up another\nlawmill whieli wlll be located back\nif the Bainbridge ranch at Sanca,\nmd will employ a doaen men for\nIome monthi on a cut of railway\nlies, which will be ihipped from\natbara Siding, near Sirdar. The Sou-\ntoroti mill, operating further weit,\nIt Gnat Creek, il expecting to finil its cut before the end of Sep-\nlimber.\n: Forestry officer J. P. MacDonald\n|nd W. II. Cartwrlght, game warden\nWere at Boswell on official buslneu\ntl the first of tha week.\nDespite the unusual weather that\nbas prevailed it is stated the number ot vliitori from Alberta, who\nuve been holidaying at points along\nKootenay lake, Including Destiny\nlay is the largest ever known. With\nRod hlghwayi it would be hird to\nSredict the increase that might be\nlooked for.\n, Postmaster John Bird of Camp\nUster, In company with Mrs. Bird,\npent   through  on   Wednesday   to\nMnsworth where Mn. Bird will re-\nfMln for a week, but Mr. Bird plans\nreturn Thunday. Capt. Joieph\n11 and Mr. and Mn. Bride of\niberley, who have been holl-\nlying at the Bell ranch at Camp\nliter,  returned Monday from a\nlew dayi ipent at Alniworth.\nKMike Halkow and ion, Bob, ot\nIchel, are vltlton thli week with\nr. and Mn. Frank Travii.\nMn. Wilton and ion, Charlei. of\nSirdar, were viaiton on Saturday,\npey report a new poitofflee hat\nbeen opened at Tye in temporary\nWarteri and report hat lt a boarding\nloute will be erected to better ac-\niwnmodate tha men employed at\nfcyonne mlna construction work.\n111! Swayne hai the dlitinctlon of\nMing Tye'i tint poitmuter.\n[, Mr. and Mn. Bill Kelly and ion,\nNelson's Max\nBaw\nDenny McCulloch of Niiion en-\ntiring Lakealde nark mlnut a\nbathing iult but cirtiln ha hai hli\ntrunk! with hin). Ooi)ny itood betide a huge poplar treet and took\na Max Baar pail for tha cameraman.\nof Elko, are holidaying with her\nmother, Mrt. John Kelly at present.\nA number of Creston, along\nwith the members of the Creiton\nbran band, were at Canyon Friday\nevening for the annual lawn social\ngiven by the United Church Ladlei'\naid at the home of Mr. and Mrt.\nF. Knott. The weather wat ideal\nand the tale of refreshments brought\nln about $35. The band under the\nleadenhlp of W. G. Hendy, wat generoui with the supply of appropriate muilc.\nMr. and Mrs. 0. J. Wlgen went\nthrough by bus at the end of the\nweek on a visit to friends near\nCamroie, Alia. The trip was a memorable one as the but wai caught\non the highway near Camroie, while\na terrific hailstorm passed over,\nmaking travel dangerous.\nMr. and Mrs. Fred Packman of\nCalgiyy went through to Wynndel\nfor a holiday visit with Postmaster\nHOW   TO   MAKE   ICED   TEA\nInfuii tli huplnj tuipooni ef Silida Black Tm In i pint ol freth boiling\n\u25a0atar. Alter iU minutei itiln liquid lato two-quart container While dot, tdd\n1% cupt ef iiinelited raw md the lake of - limoni. Stir will until taair It\nolved; HD container with celd witw. Do not allow Ml to coal befon eiMiag\ncafe* water\/ othirwite liquid wlll become cloudy, Serve wllh chipped Ice.\nG\nSALADA\nless Tm&\nr\nHEY! COME BACK AND\nSEE YOURSELF START\"\nHAT li how a neighbor saluted\nme yesterday morning ai I\nunced along the walk past hia\ntoor, approaching my office.\n. \"Start? I started an hour and\nn half ago, aeven miles away.\"\nL \"Yei. you did not.\" (And he\niked dla disbelief.) \"Why, it's\nly 7 JO.\" But I had sUrted at 6\nn, to walk to ray office seven\njniles away to arrive by 7.30 and\nI was arriving on time, July 24th,\nj kot and humid. I had only to point\nrlt) my iwaat-iaturated shirt to\nConvince him. I walk thoie nearly\n(even milei each morning when in\nToronto unlets it rains. Torontonian! and ex-Torontoniane\nwill believe it when I My I walk\nfrom Westminster Hotel on Jarvii\nnear Dundas Street, where I have\nresided for iome monthi. to the\nbead of Pacific Avenue in West\nToronto. For yean I have walked\nfive miles each morning but I find\nit now a real delight to walk seven\nBiles. Scores of early-rising To.\nyontonians see me, bareheaded,\ncoat and vestless, shirt with short\naleeves and rolled collar, bouncing\n\u2022long on Matthews Guild mocca-\ntin-type shoes, up Jarvis, to Bloor.\nto Dundas, to Pacific, to Vine ana\n\u00bby office.\n- Occasionally, a fellow pedestrian essays to walk with me. Ha\nkeeps up with rae for a few blocks\nthen finds an excuse to turn into a\ntide street Tho farthest any one\nbas held out is flve blocks. At my\noffice I take a shower and more\nexercises. Am I tired after these\nlong walks? Noi I am ecstatic! I\ncould easily turn and walk back\nMd itill feel ecstatic. My buay day\nhas juit begun and will not end\nbefore 7.30 to 9.30 p.m. and then\nI may, as I frequently do. walk\nback again, (almost alwayi In cool\nWeather). On holidays 1 often extend my walk around by \"The Old\nMill\", adding another five miles.\nMoet persons think this ls a remarkable accomplishment, at almost 78. Well, it is not It Is what\neveryone could easily do at that\n\u25a0ge by living, and especially feed-\nfag, rationally.\nIt it almost entirety a matter nf\nblood condition, which can be toxic\nor non-toxic, vital or devitalised,\nnormally fluid and easily circulated, or viscid (ropy) and circulated with difficulty and heart\n\u2022train, depending upon whether\nthe foodt eaten build vital, nontoxic, alkaline and fluid Mood or\nthe other kind.\nIt ii claimed WU ot our accul-\ntomed foodi are tha other kind,\nthat build devitalized non-reiit-\ntant bodies, while science says only\n10% may be. That is why my\nyouthful elasticity, flexibility, re-\n\u25a0ilience and endurance of body and\nBlind are comldered remarkable\nonly by comparison with bodict to\nbuilt I give thought to the lelection of my foodt. Others do not\nThey pelcct, without thought, denatured, devitaliiod and \u00bbeld_\ntoxin-forming foods and Ihelr\nThe abot* (i fnm a photograph\nof Robt. C. Jarltioa, M.D., uken\nla hli 77ih year.\nbodlei ire the non-vital, non-re-\nalllent and non-resistant kind that\nsuch foodi build. Surely it is time\nthinking people began to think\nrationally about their foods. I\nahall gladly mall to thinking\npeople, free, my literature covering tha foods I eat to build my type\nof vigorously - healthy, and resistant youthful body, upon request\nRoman Meal, Bekus-Puddy,Lishus\nand Kofy-Sub form a large part\nof my food intake, and thi moit\nimporUnt part I could not have\nachieved my type of youthful, re-\nslsUnt body at almost 78 without\nthem. Now, although Summer ii\nwaning, there will be itill plenty\nof hot, humid dayt. My recommendation for theie days is the\nabove-named foodi made into porridge and served ott the ice with\nfruit jelly, honey or maple syrup\nand cream, and for a drink, alkali-\nforming Kofy-Sub. But there are\nother fooda that play an imporUnt part that the health seeker\nthould know about Thii knowledge Is free. Surely worth writing about, address Robt G. Jack-\nson, M.D,eea Vine Ave., Toronto,\nOnt\n*teU\\$\nSketches of New Cabinet\nMinisters\nTHI NIUON DAILV NlWf NILION. EC-FRIDAY MORNING. AUOUST 111MJ\nUlUe Mother\nJ. I. LAWION     \u2022\nNational organizer of tbe Conservative party in the preient general election campaign, J. E. Law-\nson has become pro..ilnent throughout Canada and le known as a vigorous proUgonlat of Oontervatlvi\npolicies, a hard worker and a good\nparliamentary debater. He It a itudent of politlci and In 1933 organized thc Coniervative tummer school\nat Pickering college, Newmarket,\nOnt\nHit work in connection with that,\ncoupled with the capacity he had\nshown in the house of commons at\nchairman of the inecial committee\non the civil service, tingled him out\nat the logical successor to Major\nGeneral A, D. McRae who, in 1930,\nhad organized the Coniervative election campaign.\nMr. Lawson entered politlci In\n1938 when he wu returned by acclamation for the comtituency of\nYork weet. He was returned in\nthe general election of 1930.\nForty-tour yearr old, Mr. Lawson,\nknown familiarly to his friendi is\n'Hal\", wat born It Hamilton, Ont,\nof Scotch parentage. He wat educated there and Otgoode HaU in\nToronto.\nWILLIAM ERNST\nChairman of the houae ot commons fltherlet committee, a clear\nand incisive speaker, with a pleading delivery, William Emit has\nbeen regarded for iome yeara at\nprospective cabinet material. Hia\nparliamentary experience has been\nlengthy, despite his 88 yeari, while\nai a youth he won high distinction\nduring the war.\nDescendent of that hardy ban of\nHanoverians who migrated from\nGermany to Nova Scotia in the 18th\ncentury and founded the progressive settlements of farmera and\nfishermen along the south shore ot\nthat province, William Gordon Ernst\nwas born at Mahone Bay, N. S, In\n1897.\nEducated ln the public ichooli of\nHalifax county, he later attended\nKing'i college and from there tht\nnew mlnliter proceeded to Dalhouiie\nunlversty, Halifax, from which he\nwas graduated with the degree of\nbachelor of lawa.\nSelected as Rhodei icholar for\nNova Scotia, Mr. Emit itudled at\nOxford unlvenlty for a number of\nyears, returning to take up the practice of law in hii native province.\nDuring the war he enlisted in the\n8th BatUlion (Nova Scotia highlan-\nderi), and while serving with that\nunit attained the rank of major.\nand Mrs. H. F. Packman.\nMr. and Mra. Robert Moore of\nFernie are here this week on a visit\nwith his mother, Mrs. H. H. Taylor.\nCranbrook Gyros\nHold Water Sports\nFewer Entrants Than\nUsual Due to Cold\nWeather\nCRANBROOK. B.C.. Aug. 15'-\nThe East Kootenay annual swimming meet was held by the Cranbrook Gyros at tha Gyro pool on\nWednesday afternoon. The program for tbe afternoon was arranged and carried out by Gyroi\nTom Moore and Max Bell and they\nwere atsltted by Angelo Provenzano, Instructor at the pool.\nOwing to cool weather during the\nmonth of July there has been little\nswimming done In the pool, and the\nnumber of contestants in the meet\nthis year was much smaller than in\nprevious years. The Gyro club have\nrecently placed Angelo Provenzano\nas swimming instructor, and it Is\nhoped that the meet next year will\nbe much larger-\nEvery Saturday from now till the\nend of the swimming teason the\nGyro club will hold iwimmlng races\nind diving competitions, free tickets to the theater, being given aa\nprizes.\nThe winners of the swimming\nraeet were as followa (the distance\n.being 23 yards, ln order of first\nand second):\nGirli under 10 yeari\u2014Helen Volley, Ethel Mann.\nBoy\u00ab under 10 yeari\u2014Lloyd Niven, Kimberley; Harold McGowan,\nKimberley.\nGlrli under IJ\u2014Vivian Eberllne,\nDeanic Wallace.\nBoyi under IS. flrtt heat\u2014Peter\nGallipen. Kimberley; Archie McGowan, Kimberley.\nSecond heat \u2014 Frankie Fergie,\nFrank Willlami.\nFinal \u2014 Archie McGowan, Kimberley; Frankie Fergie.\n\u2022 Girli  under   16\u2014Betty  Pearson,\nKimberley; Myrtle Gummer.\nBoyi under 18\u2014Stanley Stone\nKimberley; Red Johnion, Kimberley. \u2022 \u25a0 \u25a0\nTwo Cranbrook teami competed\nin the glrli relay event The wlnnen were Norma Spence, Betty\nDolan. Myrtle Gummer and Eleanor\nMcKowan.\nIn the men'i relay clan there\nwere two teamt, one Cranbrook\nand one Kimberley. The winners\nwere the Kimberley team, remitting of Red Johnion, Stanley Stone,\nKen MacKenzie and Milton Anderson.\nLidiei open race. B0 yardi\u2014Betty\nDblan. Betty Peanon. Kimberley.\nMen'i open race. 80 yarda\u2014Angelo Provenzano. Joe Provenzano.\nThe obitacle race, in which they\nswam lo the center raft, crawled\nunder a large blanket tied over\nthe raft, out of the pool and around\n.i post at the shallow end. swam to\nthe end raft and crawled through\ntwo tires and swam back tn the\nstarting post, wai won bv Joe Provenzano fint and Red Johnion. of\nKimberley. second. A consolation\nprize wai given to little Bobby Niven of Kimberley.\nThe lidiei lunlor diving wn won\nby Mav Volsey. flnt and Edith Slyc\niecond. with the other two conteit-\nanti. Deanle Wallace and Vivian Eb-\nerlineonly, a few marki behind\nthem.\nThe ladlei' tenlor diving, which\ns usually one of the mott Interettlng eventi to ipectaton and Judges\ndid not draw any entranti thli vear.\nThe men'i lunlor diving wai won\nbv Stanley Stone. Kimberley, flrit;\nand Frankle Fergie. the only Cranbrook entrant. In that clan, second.\nOtheri entering In the diving, Lloyd\nFor conspicuous bravery on two occasion!, he was awarded the mlUUry\ncroaa and bar.\nHii entry Into the houie of commoni wai at the genertl election\nof 1926 when he reclaimed tor the\nConiervative party tbe comtituency\nof Queen'i-Lunanberg whleh had\nbeen in the Liberal column tor the\npreceding nine yean. He was again\nsuccessful in 1930 when he defeated\nJ. J. Kinley, his opponent ln the\nforthcoming election.\nREG GEARY\nChairman ot the Parliamentary\nRailway committee, and on occasion,\nicting at deputy speaker ot the\nhouse of commons, Reg Geary has\nbeen a member of the commons for\nthe pait 10 yean, continuing the\nConiervative tradition of Toronto\nsouth when he succeeded Dr. C. E.\nSheard In 1925 at the general election. He hat been returned on each\noccasion since.\nBorn at Strathroy. Ont, Col.\nGeary wat educated at Upper Canada college and the Unlvenlty ot\nToronto. Then he took up the practice of law.\nHe wai mayor of Toronto from\n1910 to 1912. FoUowing that, he wu\nappointed couniel to the city corporation.\nDuring the war, Col. Geary ierv\ned with the 35th Battalion and for\nhii services in France he wai awarded the order of the Britiih Emnire.\nActive tn militia matten in Toronto, he became aisociated with the\nRoyal Grenadlen after his return\nfrom oveneai and from 1924 to 1926\nwas commanding officer of that regiment.\nCol. Geary is 61 years old and a\nwidower.\nSAMUEL GOBEIL\nSamuel Gobeil, who tint entered\nthe house of commons in 1930, was\nborn In La Patrla, Que., in 1875. Ha\nis a milk dealer, waa mayor of hti\nnative town IS yean and prefect of\nCompton county two terms.\nMr. Gobeil contested Compton\ncounty ln the Dominion general\nelection! in 192S and 1926 and wai\ndefeated. He wai a member of the\norganization committee of the Coniervative convention in Winnipeg\ntn 1927 and during hla term in\nthe houie of commoni frequently\nacted at chairman of the committee\nof the whole houie and occasionally\nas acted deputy speaker.\nMr. Gobeil was married in 1899 to\nthe daughter ot J. B. Brousaeau of\nLa Patrie, tnd hai teven children.\nNiven. Milton Anderaon, G. McLennan. M. Davidson ahd Bobby\nNiven, who showed unusual talent\nIn diving for hla age, were all excellent marks.\nThe men's senior diving ona ot\nthe most interesting events ot tha\nafternoon, drew only four entranU\nMax Bell wai marked flnt with\nRalph Swanion of Kimberley being\nmarked a very cloae iecond. Not far\nbehind these two were Ken Mackenzie and SUnley Stone both of\nKimberley.\nThe judgei for tbe diving were\nTom Moore and Angelo Provenzano.\nCORRICT TITLI\nCALGARY-The Official title of\nAlberta's newett politleal group,\nfounded by William Aberhart of\nCalgary, la the \"AlberU Social Credit League\"\nMany have referred to the league\nas the \"Social Credit party\" but\nnomination papen for the group\nbear the correct title.\nKILLED IN MINI\nDBAL. Ingland, (CP).-A col-\nlapae of tha roof at Belteshanger\nColUery, near here, kiUed Percy\nKeetes of Canada Road, Walmer.\nFellow worken itandlng nearby\nescaped death.\nHare we hava Oladyi ind letty\nLearmonth, two Niiion kiddles on\ntha beieh at Laketldr. Bitty li a\nreal llttle mother and Oladyi wai\nhaving a hard tlm* U get a .vay\nfrom hir when thli photo wai\nUken.\nBass Move Into\nKootenay Lake\nAlfalfa Baling Is\nStarted at\nCreston\nCRESTON, B.C, Aug. 15-Rod\nand Gun club membert have been\nadviied that bait from the Kootenay river are again spreading out\ninto Kootenay lake and have oeen\nnoted at BoiweU in contldertble\nnumben thli month. Their wandering into the lake ii not appreciated by anglert ai it will mean a considerable slaughter of the young\nlake trout, wbea ipeeking here at\na sportsmen'! meeting earlier ln\nthe year. Flihery lnipector Robinson explained hit reaaon for not\nputting a cloie season on base it\nbeing desirable to keep the bau\npopulation down to the minimum\nand prevent tham, ai far aa poulble\nfrom moving down itream and out\nInto tha lake.\nMiss Mary Barraclough and friend\nMiss Fern Graham, of Seattle, are\nholidaying wltb tha former's brother-in-law and iliter, Mr. and Mn.\nT. Trevelyan.\nJohn Nygaard hai the Berggren\nportable tawmlll at work on a imall\ncut of ties, at a location at the ent\nof what it known aa the Ridd toad.\nAlfalfa baling li under way tt\nCamp Lliter. The Mrs. Beard ranch\nls the flnt to put the Charles Huicroft baler and crew to work. Tbe\ncrop ia not is heavy at lait year,\nand considerable ot the thnt crop\nwas lost due the rainy weather the\nlatter part of Juna.\nMr. and Mn. Dewey btvt movtd\nInto the Camp Lliter area, and are\noccupying the house on the former\nMillington place. Another newcomer to the Midler lettlement Is William Tann, of Wynndel, who ii proposing to emberk in poultry on\nsome scale.\nWUllam Donaldson wai at Kootenay lake polnta on hli uiual weekend tithing trip but had poor luck\nas the lake wu quite rough.\nA weU defined report hat lt that\nthe education department have acceded to the requett tor the opening of a ichool at Sanca, and ai loon\n\u2022i official advice li received erection of the building will be proceeded with.\nFruit ihipmenta from Nelion eait\nare tapering off npldly. The eait-\nbound trgln it now arriving almost\non time each momlng.\nON THE AIR TONIGHT\nOANADIAN  RADIO\nCOMMIUION NITWORK\n5:00 While Hearts Are Singing,\norch and vocalists. Ottawa (exc.\nB.C.); 5:30 Woodhouse and Hawkins\nin Nitwit Court, Calgary (ex. B.C.);\n5:45 Wilf Carter, Yodelling Cowboy,\nCalgarv, (exc. B. C); 6:00 From a\nRose Garden, Halifax; 6:30 Sinfon-\nietta. orchestra, direction, Alexander Chuhaldin, Toronto: 7:00 Naws\nand Weather Forecast; National\nLiberal association. CKWX and\nB. C. Network: 7:15 Jesse Crawford, organist. N.B.C.-Chi.; 7:30 Earl\nHill's orchestra, Banff; 7:45 Across\nthe Border Dance orchestra, N.B.C-\nN. Y.; 8:00 Live Love and Laugh,\nWinnipeg; 8:30 Ne* s (B.C. Network); Night Son.:. Edmonton CC.\n8:45); 0:00 Marjorie Whitehead, con.,\nVancouver: 9:15 Junior Chamber of\nCivic Affairs, Vancouver; 9:30\nGene Fogarty's orchestra, Jasper;\n10:00 At Grandpa's House, radio\nplay dlr. Mercer McLeod, Trail.\nN.B.C.-KPO NETWORK\nKHQ KOW KFI KPO KOMO KJR\n590 620 640 680 920 170\n8:00 To be announced; 6:00 First\nNighter. original drama. Sageroulst's\norch.: 6:30 Al Pearce Gang, variety;\n7:00 Amw 'n' Andy; 7:15 Tony It\nGus. George Frame Brown: 7:30\nBeauty Box theater: 6:30 Concert,\nmixed ouarlet: 8:45 Leonard Kel-\nler't orch.; 9:00 Reflection!, Boo\nStevens, tenor: Arlle Simmons' orchestra, KPO, KOA; 0:30 Al Kval-\nei'i orch.; 9:43 Ben Pollacks orch.;\n10:00 Newi Flaihet. Sam Havel;\n10:15 Eddie Fitzpatrick. orchestra;\n11:00 The Diamond Honethoe. organ. KPO: Eddie Duchin'i orch.:\n11:30 Orchestra.\nC.B.8. DON Lit NETWORK\nKVI KFRC KOIN KIL KOL\n670 610 640 1130 1270\n5:00 Hollywood Hotel; 6:00 Among\nMv Souvenin (DL): 6:15 Th. Islanders Hawaiian Muilc. 'Dp:\n6:30 Koitelaneti conducting; 7:00\nCarl Hoff't orch.; 7:30 Luigi Roman-\nelli'i orch. C.R.C.-Toronto; 7:45\nStnnie si It Seems. (DLl: 8:00\nFrinkie Matters' orch,: 8:13 Buddy\nGately, songs. DL: 1:30 Richard\nHlmber and Chamnlom: 9:00 Headlines of the Past. (DL); Flovd Towni\norch.: 9:30 Bob Klnnev'i orch. (DL):\nHoratio Zlto'i orch.: 10:00 Jimmy\nDevi.' orch. (DL); 10:30 Merle Carl-\nson's orch., (DL): 11:00 Griff Williams' orch. (DL): 11:30 Les Hite's\norch.. (DL).\ntive AssoclaUon speech; 7:30 Dr.\nLyle Telford. Ulk; 8:00 Oreheitra; 6:18 Studio program; 8:30 Sport;\n10:00 Newi; Other periods: Recordi\n1030 k CFCN MU nx\nCALGARY 10,000 w\n6:30 Prince Mus-Kee-Kee: 6:30\nRed Head Family: 7:00 Real Life\nDrama: 7:15 Ui\\A. Talk, from Edmonton: 7:30 Social Credit Lecture\n6:00 Prince Mus-Kee-Kee: 6:16 Economic Safety League: 8:30 Mrs. Dalton Jeffrey. Soprano; 8:46 C. T.\nJamieion: 9:00 Newi Flashes.\n790 k\nOAKLAND\nKQO\n3713 m\n7500 w\n8:13 Talk of the Town (ET): 8:30\nJoluiny O'Brien, harmonica; 8:45\nHarold Dana, baritone; 9:00 Reflec-\ntlont; 9:30 Paul Pendarvis' orch.;\n10:15 Tom Oerun'i orch.: 11:00 Eddie Duchin'i orch.; 11:30 Jimmie\nGrier'i oreheitra.\n1060 k KNX 285.5 m\nHOLLYWOOD 50,000 w\n8:00 Rheba Crawford; 8:15 Watanabe and Hon. Archie; 8:30 Saffa's\nconcert oreh.; 8:46 Towntend Plan,\npolitical: 9:00 Newt; 9:16 Mutlcal\nMoment!; 9:80 Tonic Tunei; 9:48\nIlollvwood Stadium Boxing: 11:00\nPasadena Civic Auditorium; 11:30\nPete Pontrelll's orch.; 11:45 Trans-\nPacific News.\nBRITISH EMPIRE PROGRAM!\nShort Wave\u2014Paolfle SUndard Time\nTRANSMISSION 6\nTwo ef the following frequencies\nwill be used: OSD 11,750 kcs. (25.53\nm); GSC 9580 kci. (3132m); GSL\n6110 kcs. (49.10m).\n7:00 p.m.\u2014Big Ben. The Central\nBand of H.M. Royal Air Force, conducted by Flight-Lieut. R.P. O'Don-\nneU, M.V.O., Director of Music,\nRoyal Air Force; 7:45 News and Announcements; 8:05 Close down.\n600 k CJOR 499.7 m\nVANCOUVIR 600io\n5:45-6:00 Eb and Zeb, E.T.; 6:15\nNews Flashes: 6*30 Orrhestti: 7:00\nReal Life Dramai; 7:15 Conterva-\nControl Your\nHAY\nFEVER\nDon't kt fUj Ftvtr or\nntmm Mthau moko jr\u00abj\ndrood   mmrntf.     Bring\nptir trouble undor control.   Toko Ton-plotan'o\nRAZ-MAH CipiiiW Eo-\nMM tbo mi-Kry of oon,\nlofluood. itrny *ytt. run*   _________________________________________________________\nS.M nooo, choking. No unoki-o, ontifli, \u2022proyi\nNo Md ro-octioni; no bormful droit. Kolui\nfrom ono tl boi\u2014or money bock. Wo ond II\not drug itoros. Ul\n\"tct 8 jroort I\nbtvt bod bny\nfoTir oodor ron-\nWot by iia-M\nRAZ-MAH o\nllttto be\/on my\noturk to du*.\nNo moro na-\nmor-bmo Blowy.\" \u2022\u2014 Mr.\nXnoodoro Dow-\nMlt. 147 Mil-\nvtrtol Bird.,\nTomato.\nlAZ-MA\nBOUNDARY P\/ftJ\nRENDELLRITES\nMany at Funeral of\nEarly Greenwood\nPioneer\nORAND FORKS, a C, Aug. 15.-\nMany frlendi from Kootenay and\nBoundary were ln Oreenwood on\nTuetday to pay their laat respect!\nto the late O. Arthur Rendell who\ndied at Vancouver after an ill'\nneu of many weeki.\nThe late Mr. Rendell who wai\none of the early pioneers of this district waa bom in St. John's, Newfoundland, in 1861, and was the\nion of Hon. T- G. Rendell, senator\nof St. Johns.\nBUSINESS PIONEER\nHe came to this district from\nVernon ln 1894, and established the\nflrit butlneit in the country, whan\nhe opened a imall {eneral store at\nBoundary Falls.\nLeter he built the Rendell block,\nwhich for many years was occupied\nby the Bank of Montreal, and where\nhe carried on a business lu (enenl\nmerchandise. He alao owned the\nEholt Trading company, and at other\ntlmea bad stores at Denoro and\nMidway.\nIn 1604 Mr. Rendell married Mill\nMinnie Manahan, who wai at that\ntime the fint mitron of Green-\nwood'! flnt hotpltal. They had one\nson, who was drowned in Boundary creek in 1914 while a vary\nsmall child.\nThe deceased was well known ln\nmining circles and was one of the\nfirst men to develop the Lightning\nPeak district, where he with other\nawoclatea owned and operated the\nWaterloo mlnea. Rendell creek ln\nthat dlitrlct wai named after him.\nHe was an ardent Conservative\nand always took an active part In\npolitics. Of a qulst and kind disposition the deceased bad endeared\nhimielf to many and wai well\nknown throughout the Kootenay-\nBoundary is wall as at the coast. He\nls survived by hii widow, alio one\nsister, Mn. George Shea of SL\nJohns. Roy Manahan of Nelton Is\na brother-in-law.\nBURIAL TUI8DAY\nThe body was brought trom Vanoouvar to Greenwood op Monday,\nand funeral services were held at\n9L Juda's Anglican church on Tueiday morning, Rev. T. Scott of Grand\nForki officiating. Mrs. W. M. Go*\nana  aang  \"Ona  Sweetly\nTh,...\u25a0_..**     T5.ll._._\u00bb_,__,_.\u201e     \u201e\u201e\n\u25a0\nSolemn\nThought*. Pgll-bearen were. Ted\nMcArthur, Major A Davla, Charles\nKing. Bert Taylor, '\nS. Larson.\n..  ___avii_.  viiauco\nW. Wilson and\nChanges to Curb\nGoal River Hood\n$15,000 to Be Spent\non Bridge, and\nRiver Control\nCRESTON, B.C.. Aug. 15.-A de\nfinite and business like attempt to\ncurb the wring floods of Goat river along the K V. highway lust\nsouth of the village la now under\nway with the construction of a\nbrand new bridge over the main\nriver channel, and the replacing of\nthe old JOO-foot King truss structure, a short distance south, with a\nfUL A dredge will also be employed to more definitely define the\nmain channel for some distance\nboth up and down strearh at the\nnew bridge. ^^Z\nWork on the new atructure It\nnicely under way. in charge of Paul\nMcMaster, bridge foreman, of the\npublic worka department, who hat\ncrew of about 20 men on the Job,\ntome of whom are ln camp at the\nbridge site, with A. E. French ln\ncharge of the cookhouse.\nThe new bridge will be a Howe\nUuu itructure and will have one\nspan of 180 feel It will have two ap-\nproachei ot IS feet each, the one on\nthe north end iloping up gradually\nfrom the highway, but on the south\nside there wlll be about 200 teet of\ntill to replace the old bridge at that\npoint The bridge itlll further south\nwill not be replaced ai the only time\nlt -suffers li when the overflow ll\nvery aerious. During the past high\nwater season no flood damage\nthreatened it\nThe Howe truss structure will be\not wood and will require about\n110,000 feet ot heavy lumber and\ntimbers. This is being supplied by\nC. O. Rodgen who is bringing In\nabout 65.000 feet of creoioted timber for the under structure. The\n30-toot piling to be used ls also creo-\nsoted. A one-ton pile driver with\ngai engine power ll being used putting down the piling. A temporary I\n-\nJames Mclvor\nJimti Mclvor, prominent mimbtr of tha Nalion branch of the\nCanadian Legion, who wai prominently fated prior to hit dipart-\nuri for a trip te Sootland.\nbridge on the upitearm ilde hn\nbeen completed to take care of the\ntraffic during conitructlon of the\ntpan.\n$12,000 TO Bl SPENT\nAbout $12,000 wlll be ipent on\nthe bridge and river control work,\nthe latter eitimated at about $3000,\nControl work will extend about 800\nteet on both sides of the new bridge\nand li counted upon to keep the\nGoat in the one channel once the\ndredging is completed. With thli\njob under way, along with hard\nlurface roadwork and the erection\nof the elevator and four-room\nichool employment is being provld\ned for almoit every available man.\nSplnl wound long capei, made o!\nvelvet or rich brocade, are being\nshown tor autumn evenings.\nPASSMORE W.I.\nPLAN j-OR DANCI\nPASSMORE, * Aug. W.-Mri ud\nMrs. Nerman Brovva ol Nelson w*w\nvlalton here tor several days during\nlist week, tbe guests of their relative. John Jamieion.\nMrs. R. P. Whlteman was a via-\nitor to Wlnlaw on Sunday, we guaii\nof Mr. and Mrs. P. W. Green.\nThe Women's Institute held e special meeting on Saturday.\nTlie final arnngementa Mr s\ncalllco and collarliw dance wert\nmade\nMr. and Mrs. Alex Smltb of Ntlion were viiiting frlenda her* M\nSunday.\nMAURITANIA MIMINTO\nnard Company preeented \u00bb larfi\nmodel of the Mauretania to be plee-\ned In the Mariner'! Chapel\n^^_^^^^^^^^^^\nHEALTH\nIH THE PALM\nOF YOUR HAND\nlfl ai ilmple u that... gitUag rid of\nthit headachy, half.wtll feeling that keep.\nto many people from enjoying Ufa. Thla\ncondition utuilly coma* boa MM httt\nof coottlpatloa. Yoa ou avoid tt\n\"The palm of your band\" refill ts the\nway thouundl of m.n aod women Uke\nEno'i \"Fruit Salt.\" They pour Eae lata\nthe palm of tin hand aad daih tha pore,\nwhite powder into a glau of weter ...\nand drain thi glaw. It'sa mighty healthful\nthing to do.\nEno quenchei thim, aweetasa the\nitomich. niutralim adds froa fooda.\nEno frets the lateatloee fnm poUoeooi\nwaite, cooli the blooditteem, tooea np\nthe entln loner lyttem. Eno it pleaaant\nto take, geuUe la action. Enry edect of\nEno's \"Fruit Salt\" U btuhdll. Begin\naow to pour htalth from the palm of yeur\nhand. Handy tiie SOc Household tlie 85c\nWhat is this\nSEISMOTITE\"\nthey're aU talking about?\nSelimotlte (pronounced Slr'-mo-the) ll a matchlets, IMM\ntcratchlett   cloning   and  pollihing   material of |    -M\nvolcanic origin. Iti toe lain peniclat cover more       ^W\nlurface beciute ihey are flit-ihiped like tbla, \\_matLm\nAtold deinien conialnlng gritty pertlclii Uki thli; I\nOld Dutch\nNo wondir wotnio ire lo*\nterened ln Old Dutch. It fmrn\nat il climm... thl ptritct deioief\ntat all lurficei oa which water\nmay be uied. Buy oa tbe hindi.\ndoein't dog dnlni, odorless md\nremoval odon. Try I package of\nOld Dutch today\u2014talt it for any\ncleaning talk\u2014It'i the fly\ndernier you nied In yoor home.\n<j*>iA_\n3\nMADE IN CANADA\nFORESTS OF TOMORROWI\nNatural young growth will restock cut-over\nland If flrea are kept out. You can help\nprotect theee foreeta of the future \u2022 \u25a0 . bo\ncareful with fire near theee gone*.\nBt Sura Your Match, Clgarettt or Flrt h Dead Btfort You Lava It.\n_-_i__\n 1   . \"\" .nw .jwiiupp\n\t\n103^\nTHI NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C-FRIOAY MORNING. AUGUST 16.19M\nCHAPMAN (AMP\nBOWLERS WIN\nTake B-rfewery Shield\nBy Downing Their\nOpponents 51-35   i\nKIMBERLEY, B. C, Aug. 15\u2014\nChapman Camp Lawn bowlen journeyed to Cranbrook last Saturday\nto play tor tlic Brewery shield and\nsucceeded in winning by a comfortable margin to bring home the\nABOUT\nSHOES\nIf it'i value in fins footwear to fill ths needi of\n\u2022very member of the family you will do well to\n\u2022hop at our\nSummer\nSHOE\nSALE\nGenuine Savings in\nTrue Quality\nFootwear\nR\u00ab Andrew\n&Co.\nLeaden in Footfathion\ncoveted   ihleld.   The   final   icore\nof the two rinka wat 51-35. Cranbrook atlll have an idea that they [ |\nahould keep the shield and will |>\ncome up ln quest of it on Wednesday.\nMln Jean Chanson returned to\nKimberley Saturday from Calgary\nwhere the has jutt completed a commercial course.\nMiss Netta Henderson hae returned trom Edmonton where the hat\nbeen attending summer school.\nDon McKenzie came over from\nTrail to apend the week-end with\nhie parents at camp.\nMrs. 0. James returned to Chapman Camp Sunday after ipending\na week at Alniworth.\nBill Douglas and Mike Fin left\non Saturday for a 10-day vacation\nin Spokane and diitrict.\nMrs. T. V. Lord ot Trail Is viiiting with her brother and sitter-\nin-law, Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Slade.\nJ. J. Harrington of Fernie has been\nappointed district deputy of the\nKnighti of Columbui for East Kootenay. Mr. Harrington it well known\nin thit district having been an employee of the Trltes Wood Co., at\nFern\nPernle for a number of year.\nKIWANIS GATHER\nAT COAST\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 15 (CP) \u2014\nMore than 1000 delegates are expected here Sunday tor the opening\nof the 18th annual four-day convenUon of the Pacific Northwest\nDistrict of Kiwanis.\nInternaUonal officers, Including\nHarper Gratton, president, Clinton\nHarley, vice-president, Fred C. W.\nParker, secretary, and Trafford Taylor, trustee, will attend. The district\ngovernor is R, George McCuish of\nVancouver.\nM0U8Y HAIR ASSET\nMouse colored hair is sometimes\nan asset, although girls think ot it\nUb a beauty liability. It changes\nunder lights, you tee, to at tome-\nlimes to look brunette ar.d sometimes blond.\nMUs Betty Wyman, one of New\nYork's most photographed models\ntor advertiiing. has it, and slates\nthat to it the owes her continued\ndesirability at a model. For Mist\nWyman can look like different persons because of the changeability ot\nher hair.\nShe ia a college graduate from\nthe middle west, Is five feet fonr in\nheight and weighs 108 pounds. And\nshe began modeling quite by accident during a visit to New York.\nBoy Scouts Pui\non (amp Program\nParents See Boys in\nCamp. Quarters at\nKokanee\nFifty-nine boy scouts from Nelion,\nSalmo and Willow Point are Into\nFOR   UNDYING   SPARKLE\nAND MELIOWER FLAVOUR...\nthe second week of the annual outing at Kokanee and, from all report! brought back by vliitori the\nboys are having a grand Ume thit\nyear despite cool weather. Betides\ndiitrict tcoutt, Ken Mifflin, an American Scout from Colville, Waih.,\nit alio enjoying the outing.\nThe camp is again under the supervision of Jamee Dronatleld, diitrict commissioner, and Fred GUI,\nScout muter of No. - Nelaon troop.\nG. Gorble It camp cook and the\nyoung \"Indlani\" are thriving under\nhit care. \u2022\nAt ln the put vltltor'i day hat\nbeen a big item in camp acUviUes,\nand on Sunday In the neighborhood of 100 friendi and parenta looked in at the camp In the afternoon.\nIn the evening about 50 were preient for the camp tire, sing-song and\nprogram. Visitors again invaded the\ncamp circle Wedneaday and were\nroyally entertained.\nALLAN SPEAKER\nDiitrict Foreiter R. t. Allan of\nNelson wu guest ipeaker at the\nWedneiday  night   camp-fire  pro-\nSam and ipoke on fire protection,\ne urged the boyt to realize their\nrespontibUlty In preventing flret.\nGreen hillsides were more to be\ndesired than charred mini, he aaid.\nThe program opened with a, singsong by the boys and parents gathered around the fire. Donald Gibbon gave cornet solos, and Eric\nHolmgren and a Salmo tcout tang.\nFour boyi, decked out in grass skirts\nmade of grass and water plants\ngave a Kootenay interpretation of\nthe Hawaiian Hula dance. One boy\nhad to beat a hasty retreat during\nthe ceremony. A amall dog wu alio\ndecked out in a gran skirt.\nMisi M. Tattrie\nLeaves Hospital\nSANDON, B.C., Aug. 15-Mr. and\nMra. F. Seale ot Stockton Calif.,\nare houie guetti of Mrt. Scale's\nsister, Mn. J. McK. Boates.\nMitt Mary Tattrie, who hu been\na paUent at the Slocan hoipital,\nNew Denver, for the put 12 weeks,\nsuffering from plural pneumonia,\nhu recovered sufficiently to return to her home.\nMr. and Mn. Doney and aon.\nwere recent guesti of Mrt. Petty at\nNelton.\nRev. M. Fawcett of Calgary, who\nla relieving Rev. J. H. Young ot\nNew Denver, held tervice here on\nSunday morning. He wai accompanied by hli wife and two toni and\nJ. Draper. Thia ia Mr. Fawcett's\nflrtt tr)p to B. C. and they are\ngreatly enjoying the visit.\nRev. W. Little of Lethbridge, who\nwhile a student apent two summers\nin Sandon, wu a visitor in town\nlut week. Mr. Little wai accompanied by his wife, her parents and\nsister, Mr. and Mrs. Neal and daughter.\nH. Muirhead is .a paUent at the\nhospital in New Denver.\nMisa M. Bennet of Toronto, ii the\nhouie gueit of Mr. and Mrs. W. J.\nMcDonald.\nMr, and Mrs. J. McFadden and\ndaughters of Salmo were renewing\nacquaintance in Sandon on Sunday,\nand were gueiti of Mr. and Mrs.\nS. J. Towgood.\nW. S. (Duke) Harrii and Jerry\nTowgood of Nelson were guests\nof Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Towgood on\nSunday.\nMlat Flora Boates of Alamo ls\nspending the week-end at her home.\nMia Rhone and Muriel McLanders are guests of Mrs. Morton at\nKailo.\nThe Champagne of Ginger Alei\nCanada Dry's Sparkling Water is the \"soda-plus.\"\nOpened ,.. and in your refrigerator for 24 long\nhours.. it still comes out full of lively, long-lasting\nsparkle. Because Canada Dry's water is clearer than\ndistilled water and is pm-potnt carbonated.\nFAMILY SIZI L J r (pi\u201e, bottle deposit)\nAh* traiUUe in lie ngultr 12 er. tin\n(Slightly higher in iome localities due to higher freightage)\nSocial Happenings\nin Nelson City\nThli column It conducted by Mrs. M J. Vigneux. All newi of a\nsocial nature including receptions private entertainments, personal\niteme. marriages, etc. will appear In thla column. Telephone Mra.\nVigneux at ber home, BIB SUIca itreet\nMr. and Mrs. C. D. Pearaon an-' choie varl-colored iweet peu and\nnounce the engagement of their babys breath. Her invited guests\nonly daughter, Gladys, to Stewart were Mra. J. A. Mackay, Mitt M.\nG. Smillie, elder ion of Mr. ant! I h. Cameron, Mn. H. Rosllng, Mn.\nMrs. Robert Smillie. The wedding  j0hn Cartmel, Mn. L, V. Rogen.\nwill take place in September.\n\u2022 *   * _^_^H\nHonoring Mn. A. H. Wallace and\nher daughter, Miss Dorothy Wallace,\nwho are leaving at the end of the\nweek on an extended visit to the\nnorth and coatt cities, Mrs. R. A.\nPeebles and daughter, Mrs. Harry\nHarrison ot Kamloops. entertained\nWednesday at a delightful bon-\nvoyage tea at the home on Latimer\nttreet of Mrs. Peebles. The daintily\ncentered tea table Waa preilded\nover by Mn. N. Murphy, while\nMra. Charlei Kelman, Mre. W. E.\nWasson, Mrs.,A. N. Winlaw, Mrs.\nJack McDonald and Miu Helen\nMurphy assisted in serving.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nPeter Germain, formerly of Nelson and now residing in Vancouver,\nU a city vliitor.\neee\nFrank Helme of Kulo visited the\ncity yesterday.\n.  .   .\nMn. A. T. Myers and son Tommy\nlett lut night tor their home ln\nRotetown, Saik., after viiiting at\nthe home of Mr. and Mn. Arthur\nBalrd,  SUica itreet, for the put\ncouple of weeks.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMlsi Marguerite Halgh of Mlulon\nii ipending a few dayt visiting at\nBalfour where the is a guest of Mrs.\nKay MacLean of Trail, who lt holidaying there.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. John Dolphin have\ntaken up reiidence ln the Annable\nblock. Mrs, Dolphin is visiUng her\nlitter, Mn. Kay MacLean, at Balfour.\n\u2022 \u2022   t\nMn. A. W. Horner and daughter,\nMitt Norma Horner of Yarmouth,\nN.S., who have been guesta at the\nhome on Carbonate itreet ot Mn.\nHorner'i ton and daughter-in-law,\nleft yeaterday for the cout cities\nen route to Banff and Lake Loulie.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMlu Irene Kennedy, who ipent\npatt five weeka in the city, a\ngueat of Mn. Erneit Marsden, Baker\nthe\nFIRST SHIP AT\nCHURCHILL\nCHURCHILL, Man., Aug. 15 (CP)\n\u2014Floodlights illuminated this northern port tonight u unloading of\nthe steamship Wentworth went on\napace.\nIt ii expected the ihip which opened the northern navigation teuton\nyeiterday wUl have completed unloading and loading by tne middle\nof next week and be ready to saU for\nEurope.\nUp and down the quay ln the\nshadow of the giant terminal elevator, teama, trucka and donkey engines worked the Wentworth's 2200-\nton cargo.\nSNUFF FOR INFLUENZA\nCAPE TOWN, (CP).-A European in charge of a small corps of\nmessengers declared snuff costing\nsix centt wu responsible for his\nsquad being on duty every day\nthrough an influenza epidemic.\nast five weekt\n _1 Mn. Erneit 1 ^^^^\nitreet, hu returned to Silverton.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMin   Connie   Hancock,   Cedar\nstreet, ls holidaying at Bonnlngton,\ngueat of Mr.  and Mn.  A.  B.\nMacrone.\naee\nMr. end Mrs. S. Curwen of Ymir\nvisited Nelson yesterday.\naee\nMn. Langford, who met with an\naccident a week ago left the Kootenay Lake General hospital yesterday for the home of her daughter,\nMrs. George F. Motion, Baker street.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nA Kennedy of Creston viiited the\ncity yesterday.\nMr. and Mra. William Taylor and\nmn Billy have left for Queens Bay\nwhere they will spend a week, the\nguests of Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Cornish.\naee\nMn. Erneit Marsden, Baker itreet,\nhu returned from Sllverton, where\nihe tpent a few days visiting at the\nhome of Mr. and Mn. Martin Kennedy.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mn. W. McKay, Victoria\nstreet, have u their gueitt, Mr. and\nMn. J. M. Keith ot Calgary, who\nare honeymooning here.\naee\nMlta Mary Barnett of Argenta lt\nspending a week at Shutty Bench,\na guest of Mr. and Mrs. A. P. Alles-\nbrook.\na. a e\nMn. Archie Bremner and daughter of Salmo were among thote attending the Old Timen picnic at\nProcter Wednesday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMn. D. W. McVicar MiU atreet,\nhu u her gueit at her tummer\nplace at Three-mile, her son-in-law\nand daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Wilfred\nWilliams and children of Medicine\nHat, alto another son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Wood\nof Salmon Arm.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMn. W. R. Jarvis and daughter,\nMary Jarvii, of Procter, were city\nvisitors yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Herbert Jackton of\nTrail are holidaying in Nelion.\n\u2022 \u2022   t\nGeorge Porteoui and daughter of\nQueens Bay visited town yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMn. Harold Lakes, Rosemont,\nmade a imart hostess Wedneiday\nwhen ahe entertained at a bridge\nluncheon. For her table center she\nSHREDDED WHEAT\nMADE IN CANADA \u2014 OF CANADIAN WHEAT\nCAT oven-crisp, golden-brown Shredded Wheat Biscuit!,\n** every day. Served with fruit in season, topped off with\nailk or cream, they make a most delicious meal, containing\ntbe vital elements of nature's perfect cereal... whole uht.t\n... in a most easily digestible form.\nMrs. Gordon Hallett, Mrs. ET C.\nWragge, Mn. E. G. Smyth, Mn. P.\nG. Morey, Mra. J. G. Bunyan and\nMrs. L. E. Bordon.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nDr.   David   Hartln   of   Spokane\nmade a brief visit in the city Wednesday.\n\u2022 \u00bb   \u2022\nMiss Helen Sloan ot the British\nColumbia Telephone company staff\nhu left on her vacation to be spent\nat the cout ,\nMlss Joiephlne Varseveld, Kootenay street, visited Miss Yvettc Bourgeois at Crescent Valley yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nB. N. Sharp left Wednesday by\nmotor for Spokane.\n\u2022 \u00bb   \u2022\nMra. A. P. Harmes of Renata visited the city yesterday.\n\u2022 *   *\nA. W. Wright of Vancouver it a\nguest of his ton and daughter-ln-\nlaw, Mr. and Mn. Errol Wright\nae   i\nJ. Cherrlngton of Cretton. who\nhas been spending tome time In\nNelson, has left for Salmo.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nT. Rogen of Sirdar viiited town\nyesterdiy.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nBruno Bourgeoit tpent yesterday\nvisiting relatives at Creicent valley.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMlsi Effle Brooke, who hai recently completed her business\ncourie at thc Nelton Buiineu college, haa returned to her home in\nRouland.\neee\nMr. and Mn. David Laughton,\nEdgewood avenue, have u their\nguest Mrs. Laughton's sister, Mn.\nCharles McLanders of Sandon.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiti Sybil McLean, Victoria street\nis holidaying at Christina lake, the\nguest of the Miues Irene and Win-\nnifred Lightfoot of Grand Forks.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. M. Scally. Observatory street,\nhas returned from a week's visit\nwith friendi in Kelowna,\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nFred  Koch  of Renata  and  his\ndaughter, Miss Laura, are city vis*\niton.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nAmong shoppers in town yesterday wai L. R. Clubine of Boulder\nCreek.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nPoitmuter D. P. Kane and Mrs.\nKane were city visiton yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nShoppen in Nelson yeiterday Included Mra. W.  R.  McDonald of\nSouth  Slocan.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMn. J. J. Fingland of TraU and\nher daughter. Mrs. Woodruff, who\nare summering at WiUow Point,\nwere city ahoppen yesterday.\nMn. A. York, who hu been the\ngueit of her niece Mn. Howard\nBuih, Hoover itreet for the past\nmonth, leavei today for her home\nin Vancouver.  Mn.  York wu a\npioneer  resident   of  Slocan  City.\nHer huaband was the firat mayor\nof that community.\na. v e\nMr. and Mrt. D. Macfarlane, Gore\netreet and daughter Miss Mae Mc-\nfarlane. leave via the Great Northern thi! momlng for Vancouver,\nwbere they will be guuta at the\nhome ot Mra. Macfarlane.'a sister,\nMrt. J. Klnloch, for the next couple\nof weeki.\nC. Fowler of the Reno office staff\nwas in town yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nCaptain T. Peten of Gny Creek\nand hii daughter, Mlas F. Peters,\nwere city shoppers yetterday.\nMajor A. C. Bell of Calgary, who\nwith hit family ia holidaying at\nWiUow Point, went fiihing at the\nSlocan pool yeiterday. He wu accompanied by C. V. Gagnon.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMr. and Mn. D. D. McLean. 206\nVictoria itreet. have returned from\na trip to Nakuip.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. R. Morgan and toni Jack and\nButter, have returned from Longbeach where they vialted Mra. Morgan's brother-in-law and sister, Mr.\nand Mrs. Charles Madden.\nAt Trinity United church, Nelson,\nWednesday evening, the marriage\nwu solemnized of Hilton Young,\nof Canyon. B.C.. and Miss Thressa\n|R. G. Joy and \"Bob\"\nBack From Lardeau\nR. G. Joy and Robert (Bob) Joy\nreturned to Nelton Thursday morning from the Lardeau where they\nhave been for the put two weeks.\nWhile there they did some assess-\nment work on the Ben Lawson mineral claim.\nThey made Uie trip by launch\nand encountered some very rough\nweather Jutt before they reached\nKailo on the return trip.\nDuring the put two weeki the\nLardeau river naB risen about eight |\ninches, they stated.\nFete a Success\nat Crawford Bay\nCRAWFORD BAY, B. C, Aug. 15.\n\u2014The Church helpers held a very\nsuccessful garden fete ou Saturday\nevening at the home ot Mrs. Gooch.\nThere were several attractions and\ngames, including Clock Golf in\ncharge of Mrs. Francis. This was\nwon by Mrs. Manurill and S. Hogarth. Peanut spearing was in charge\nof Mlss Houghton. Mrs. Gooch was\nin charge oi the horse race game,\nand Mrs. H. Richardson a ball game,\nwhich was won by Mrs. Manwill and\nS. Hogarth.\nMn. Fisher at a Bran tub was\ntoon sold out. Mra. Hogarth and\nMits Workman were kept busy serving ice cream. Mra. Holmes did .a\nbrisk business at thc delicatessen\nstall, as did Mrs. Bourne and Mrs.\nBurkinshaw at a White Elephant\ntable. Refreshments were served by\nMrs. McDonald and Mrs. C. Millar.\nA woollen quilt made by the membera wu raffled and won by W.\nBayllss. Chinese lanterns hung\namongst the trees and round the\ngrounds gave a pretty effect. A substantial sum was realized.\nSeveral of thc young people motored over to Gray creek recently,\nwhere a very enjoyable lunch\nparty was held.\nThe Anglican Sunday school picnic was held on Tuesday at Fraser's\nlanding. The children in charge of\nMrs. Burkinshaw, Sunday school\nteacher were driven to Gray Creek\nferry by Mrs. Gooch and Mrs.\nFrancis. All sat down to lunch at\nCherry Bay, and each child was\ngiven candy, oranges and pop.\nG. Wilson hu left for Vancouver\nwhere he will visit for a short time '\nbefore   leaving  for  his   home  in j\nLondon   England.\nMn. Leggett and litUe daughter\nDaphne have returned to Longbeach\nafter visiting Captain and Mrs.\nHlncks.\nMits Eileen Jacobson, who has I\nbeen visiting her parents Mr. and\nMn. Nelson, has returned to Trail.\nMiss M. Clark of Gray Creek is\nvisiting Mr. and Mrs. Harper.\nBOBBIE BURNS' STOCKINGS\nLONDON, (CP). - At Christie's\nrecently $775 wu paid tor a pair\nof stockings which belonged to\nRobert Burns and a letter written\nto a friend expreuing delight at\na \"rile\" in salary.\nWORLD'S   OLDEST   BROTHERS?\nCALCUTTA, (CP)-Fifteen cen-\ntariana Uve in Travancore State,\nSouth India. One of them claims\nto be 120 and hit brother 115. All\nare membera of outcut tribes and\ncan neither read nor write, but\nare In perfect health.\n30-Acre Fire Burns\nin East Kootenay\nOne fire wat burning ln East\nKootenay Thursday, according to\nforestry officials, a 30-acre fire\nburning up St. Mary's river. About\n30 men were sent to fight lt. It was\nnot believed to be of very serious\nnature.\nElsewhere in thc district condiUons were good.\nOrganize Stevens\nUnit, Grand Forks\nGRAND FORKS, Aug. 15-An\nirsanlzina meeting of thc Stevens'\nHcconstructlon oarty. wu held in\nthe Community hall Monday evening. Richard Bell Irving. Stevens'\norganizer, gave a short address and\noutlined the policies of thc party.\nMr. Connell of Vancouver gave a\nresume ot work being done by the\norganizers throughout the province\nOfficers elected nro-lem were: C\nA. S. Atwood. chairman and R.\nKerr, secretary-treasurer.\nLouise McPherson has left for a\nfew days holiday with relatives at\nVancouver.\nAlbert Eureby of Trail is visiting\nhis mother, Mrs. W. Eureby.\nDr, Kubinek and family who have\nbeen visiUng the former's tliiter,\nMrs. E. Ruzicka, have left for their\nhome in Rhode Island.\nMrs. Duane Shinn. who has been\nvisiUng her mother Mrs. A. Dobry,\nleft this week for her home in Seattle.\nMrs. Ruth Hoogerwerf of Vancouver is visiting her mother, Mrs.\nW. Eureby.\nMowat Gowans ot Trail paid a\nbrief visit to his home this week.\nMra. A. McMillan and Miss Elsie\nLlddlcoat, who have been attending the summer school for teachers\nin Victoria havc returned from (hc\ncoast.\nMn. G. L. Landa* has as her\nguests this week, her mother. Mrs.\nStewart of Vancouver, and Mrs.\nNelson Ball of Nelson.\nMiss Ida Hartinger and Miss Alice\nSnraegett left this week for a\ntrip to Los Angeles. San Diego and\nother points in California.\nMrs. H. Matthews was a visitor to\nSpokane this week.\nBIG UBOR DAY\nAT GREENWOOD!\nGREENWOOD,  B.C.,  Aug.   IV\nAs an indication that Greenwood I\nagain on the map due lo the It\ncreased mining activity ln this d_ri\ntrict. a big gala day is being aH\nranged by the board of trade forj\nLabor day. ^^^\u2122\nPlans are being made to decorate!\nthe city. The day's events will start]\nnl 10 a.m. with a grand pprade. head-T\ned by the Grand Forks band, and]\nfollowed by decorated floats sponff\nsored by thc merchants of the cltM\nThe balance of lhe morning Willi\nhe devoted to races for young ano]\nold, including a pony race, tug-off\nwar, etc.\nThe afternoon events will incltK\nbaseball, baby contest, competition!\nfor ore muckers, as well as a midway wherein  side shows  o(  var*\nious attractions will be on displayj\nThe evening program will inclu<__\u00a3\na boxing tournament, at which\nfew of the local boys will displayj\ntheir talents, with others from across]\nthe line. A show at the local th<\nater and a dance will complete 111\nday.\nAT YOUR\nGROCER'S\nAsh For\nMcDONALD'S]\nNEW PACK\nStrawberry\nJAM\nA Nelson Made Product\nMade From Kootensy\nIngredients.\nMarion   Walker,  of  Victoria,   the\nRev. J. A. Donnell officiating.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nMn. J. Potosky of Grand Forks\nand her daughter, Jennie, are city\nvisiton.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nOscar B. Appleton of Sunshine\nBay visited Nelson yesterday. He\nwas accompanied by his son Herbert.\ntea\nMuter David Laughton of Edmonton has returned after a month's\nviiit at the home of his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. David Laughton. alto relaUves in Vancouver.\n* *   \u2022\nMisa Josephine Marapodi, High\nitreet, has left to spend her vacaUon at the coast.\ntea\nMr. and Mrs. William Donaldson\nand son of Sunshine Bay visited\ntown yesterday.\nScreens Are\nNecessary\nFor Health\nand\nComfort\nPUT THEM IN NOW\nAT SPECIALLY\nREDUCED PRICES\nSCREEN DOORS\nALL SIZES\nReg. $2.75\nClear     V-**iS\nReg.\nTo\nClear\n$3.75\n$3.15\nReg.\nTo\nClear\n$5.00\n$4.15\nSCREEN WINDOWS\nADJUSTABLE TO ANY WIDTH\nReg. 50c   |   Reg. 60c   |  Reg. 65c   I   Reg. 75c\n40*        W   i   55<   I   60*\nHIPPERSON\nHARDWARE CO., LIMITED\nPHONE 497 The Friendly Store BOX 414\nGood\nHousekeeping\nBy MRS. MARY MORTON\nMENUS, RECIPES \u00abnd\nHINTS\nMenu Hint\nCreamed Salmon\nBoiled New Potatoei\nSliced Cucumben and Tomatoes\nPeanut Cookies or Bread Pudding\nIced Tea\nCreamed salmon may be made in\na chafing dish at Uie Uble. Such\ntable cookery is pretty and deli-\nclous. The cookies with peanuts are\n\"chewy\"   and   good,   tnd   I   have\ngiven you a new recipe for bread\nouddlng.  Both  theae  recipes   call\nfor evaporated milk. Ute It if you\ncan. although you may Use ordinary sweet milk If you prefer.\nToday'i Recipes\nPeanut Cooklet\u2014Two eggi, one-\n\\ eighth teaapoon talt, one-fourth cup\nirradiated evaporated milk, one teaapoon lemon lulce, two cupt confectioners' lugar, tour cupe (one\npound) finely chopped peanuts.\nBeat egg yolks until thick Mid\nlemon colored. Add ult, milk,\nlemon lulce, blend well, then beat\nin the augar a little at t time. Stir\nIn nutt. then fold ln the ttiffly beaten eng whites. The mixture thould\nbe very stiff. Drop from a teaspoon\nonto a heavy waxed paper. Bake in\na moderate oven 1390-375 degrees\nF.) until brown, tbout 15 minutes.\nRemove paper and cookies from\nbaking iheet. Cool before pulling\ncookies from paper. Yield: Five\ndozen, three-inch cookies.\nTICKLED PINK\nto learn sister-in-law's salad secret\nA  WEEK   LATER\nBread Puddlwr-Three slices stale\nbread, buttered and cut in cubes,\ntwo eggt, one-halt cup lugar. one-\nfourth teaapoon aalt, one tall can\nevaporated milk, one eup boUing\nwater, nutmeg. Place bread cubes\nIn buttered custard cups. Beat eggs,\nadd sugar and aalt and mix well.\nThen add milk and boiling water.\nPour custard mixture over bread\ncubes. Sprinkle top with nutmeg.\nBake in a moderate oven (350 degrees F.) until aet. about 30 minutet. Serve with the following\nsauce: One-half cup orange lulce,\none-half cup natural pineapple\nlulce, and two tablespoons sherry\nflavoring mixed.\nIf you nut parsley in en air-tight\nglasa jar in the refrigerator, it will\nstay green and freth for quite \u2022\nlong time.\nWELL, HELEN. YOUt FAMILY\nCERTAINLY UKU SALADS NOW\n-SINCE IDU STARTED USING\nITS tract Nothing is simpler to mix thto t supremely'\ndelicious salad. Just serve rour favorite recipe with\nReal Mayonnaise\u2014Best Foods Mayonnaise. See how\nperfectly its toe, full flavor blends with any type of\nsalad-fruit, vegetable, chicken, or set food.\nBest Foods is nude of freshly-broken eggs, fine\n\u2022tltd oil, t blend of three choice vinegars, imported\nspices\u2014til whipped utd Double Whipped to creamy\nsmoothness. And because it is so full-bodied.tnd\ncreamy, you ctn blend it with fruit juices,* cream or\nmilk, chili sauce, chopped pickles, etc. Hence, it goes\nmuch further\u2014costs only t trifle per salad. Try it soon!\nBEST F00DS\/^W\n 1\n'\n\t\n\t\nim ux -\ntETHEL TABERNACLE FAMILIES\nHOLD PICNIC, LAKESIDE PARK\ninds Strange\nPigeon in Flock\nB, R. Garnett, of Kingsgate, re-\nBtly noticed a ttrange pigeon in\nI flock, and on closer examination\nfound it had a green rubber\nnd attached to its leg, bearing\nI number 875. There was also an\niminuni band on thc other leg\ninhered KHC-35-5.\nUBSTOPLAY\nSALMO SUNDAY\nIrong Team Coming\nFrom There; Cusick\nHas Disbanded\nJfrollowlng word from Cusick to\nlie effect that the senior team there\nad disbanded for thc year, Pete\napak, manager of the New Orand\nOtcl Cubs got in touch with Salmo\nlursday and lvd made arrange-\nInta for a game with Salmo ihis\nrming Sundav afternoon. The game\nrill start at 2:30 p.m.\nit will be a different team from\nUmo than hai played here before\nia year. Although the former team\nwe the Cubs a couple ot good\nimos before taking tne count, it\n. stated that the team travelling\nunday from there will bc even\nronger than the other, and will\niclude several new faces. Word\nBm Salmo. in fact, was that they\nOped to \"take'' the Cubs. The\nernes of the players, however,\nfere not available.\n[The Cubt held a workout Tues-\n\u00bby night, and will possibly havc\n\u25a0other tonight.\njThey are Tn good shape and the\n\"eckly games tney have been hav-\n\u25a0 since thc local league finished\nla just been enough to keep their\nppetiles whetted.\n..P.R. Bowlers\nWin CP.R. Cup\nDefeat City Men by\nTotal Score of\n147-119\niThc C. P. R. lawn bowling cup,\nnich is up for annual competition\n\u25a0tween lhe C. P. R. bowlers and\nKe city bowlers, was taken by the\n\u00bbrmer by a total score of 147-119.\nhe final games were played Thurs-\nly night.\n[jn the pla\/ Thursday night the\nky tennis won both games but\nlg C. P. R. aggregate had been\nBO well established for it to pull\nhem    up.\nFollowine*   ore   lhe   teams   and\n)t- cs for Thursday night:\nif. P. -Morgan. J. Ball, C. Archl-\n\"Bd and V. Calbick. 17 beat J. Arm-\nJ-oor, .1. Simmon. W. Custancc and\nBate. 13.\nC A. Meeres. J. S. Oouldlng. 0.\nley. nvi J. Oraham. 16, beat J.\nHMr, F,. Penwill, N. J. Lowes, H.\nOien. 14.\nlATEK GIVEN\nMONTH IN JAIL\nFret Patek pleaded guilty to an\nnfraction of the Railway act, rid-\nU a freight train, in provincial\ntolicc court Thursday and was sen-\nenced by Stipendiary Magistrate\nBin Cartmel to pay a fine of $15\nKd cost! or in default lo serve one\nnonth in Jail. He will serve the\nClose to 75 Enjoy the\nOuting; Bentleys\nin Charge\nIn the neighborhood of 75, in-\ncluaing children and adults, attended the annual Bethel Tabernacle picnic held at Lakeside park\nThursday afternoon. Garnet, races,\npeanut scrambles and free ice\ncream were all part of thc outing\nthat wound up about 7 p.m. following a basket lunch.\nOames and picnic arrangements\nwere supervised by Mr. and Mrs.\nL. M. Bentley and volunteer assiit-\nants. The younger children were\nentertained in the afternoon by\ngroup games prior to thc sporti\nprogram.\nA peanut scramble wound up the\nfun, following which thc picnickers\nsat down to a luncheon, 'ihe adults\nserved the young people first and\nin turn were served by the older\nchildren.\n8PORT8 EVENT8\nThree-legged race\u2014Eric Packenham and John Worthington, first;\nMorris Bentley and Elong i_>omcj,\nsecond.\nGirls' three-legged race \u2014 Molra\nPackenham ana Gladys Worthington, first; Alice Greer and lngnd\nKalstrom, second.\nBoys' whccl-barrow race \u2014 Eric\nPackenham and John Worthington,\nfirst; Morris Bentley and Wong\nDomej, second.\nGins' wheel-barrow race\u2014Beulah Greer and Ingrld Kalstrom,\nfirst; Moira Packenham and Gladys\nWorthington, second.\nSir Walter Raleigh race \u2014 Elong\nDomej and Alice Greer, first; ln-\ngrid Kalstrom and Morris Bentley,\nsecond.\nBoys' turtle race\u2014Elong Domej\nand Gordon Ncison first; Eric Packenham and John Worthington, second.\nGirls' turtle race\u2014Moira Packenham and Marion Healey, first; Marjorie Packenham and Gladys Worthington, second.\nSi* and vnder, foot racc\u2014Moodie\nMalina, first; Margaret McLeod,\nsecond.\nBoys' 13 and under\u2014John Worth-\ninglwm, first; Jack Greer, second.\nBoys 16 and under\u2014Eric Packenham, first; Jack Greer, second.\nGirls 10 and under\u2014Junicc Kraft,\nfirst;  Either Anderson, second.\nBoys 10 and under\u2014Manfrid Malina, first; Allan Kalstrom, second.\nThread-and-needle race \u2014 ..aura\nGreer and Bobby Wilbur, fint;\nJohn Worthington and Moira Packenham, second.\nPeanut race, girls\u2014Beulah and\nLaura Oreer, first; Marion Healey\nand Laura Nelson, second.\nWomen's race\u2014Mrs. Greer, first;\nMrs. Malina, second.\nSir Walter Raleigh race for men\nand women\u2014Mrs. Greer and Elong\nDomej, first; Shirley Reid and In-\ngrid Kalstrom, second.\nSir Walter Raleigh race for children \u2014 Elaine Bentley and Jack\nGreer, first; Esther Greer and Joe\nCrosby, second.\nFINISH PAVING\nPART OF AVENUE\nTRAIL, B. C, Aug. 15-Paving of\nlhe east side of Bay avenue, between\nEldorado and Spokane streets was\ncompleted Thursday. The west side\nof tne same block has had coarse\ncrushed rock laid for some time and\nthe surface will be proceeded with\nimmediately.\nRefunding Tender\nAccepted\nHALIFAX, Aug. 15 (CP)-The\nprovince of Nova Scotia announced\ntoday that the tender of a syndicate\nheaded by the firm of Griffis, Fair-\nlough and Norsworlhy had been accented for a refunding loan of $3,-\n806.00*0 for 15 years at 3 per cent.\nThe successful bid was 98.57.\nTHI NELSON DAILY NIWS. NELSON. B.C-FRIDAY MORNINO. AUGUST 16.1M5\nA WEST ARM MECCA\nFather Trail Woman\nPasses at Coast\nTRAIL. B.C.. AUg.15\u2014Coast papen announce the death of John\nSylvester Bowker of Brlghouse,\nLulu Island, B.C.. In hit 69th year.\nMr. Bowker is lurvlved by. besides\nhis wife, a son. John S.. of Victoria,\nand two daughters. Mrs. R. Lowe of\nBrighouie, B.C.. and Mrt. W. II.\nSheppard of Trail.\nJAMES (ARTER\nBURIED, KASLO\nFollowed Mining in\nDistrict for 38\nYears\nKASLO, B.C., Aug. 15-Funeral\nservicei for James Carter were held\nWednesday afternoon from St. Andrew's United church, the Rev. T.\nW. Reed officiating. The church was\nfilled with friends gathered to piy\ntheir last respects to still another\nold timer of the district, interment\ntook place in the city cemetery, the\npallbearers were James Speirs, William Murchlson, John MacPherson,\nA. T. Garland, J. E. Mervyn and\nJack Paterson. all old time friends\nof thc deceased.\nMr. Carter died Saturday at the\nVictorian hospital where he had\nbeen a patient since latt January.\nHe was 79 vears old, and a native\nof Flint, Midi. During the pait 36\nyean he had followed mining In\nthis district, his principle interests\nbeing in thc Flint mine and the\nMartin group in the South Fork\ndistrict.\nA daughter. Mn. Lochnow, and\nher husband of Seattle, -were In to\nattend thc funeral services.\nKING TALKS OF\n(ANADA'SPART\nIF WAR COMES\nSummon Parliament\nv in Case Ethiopian\nWar Breaks\nPEEP-O'-DAY COTTAGE, ON THE NORTH SHORE\n\u2014Photograph by J. H. Allen.\nFrom theie comfortable armchaln, ind In the griteful ihide of\ntree ind verindah roof, vlilton to the home of Mr. and Mn. William\nRutherford look over tha famoui \"Mountain Garden\", and beyond It,\nto tha beautiful ihett of water, the Witt Arm of Kooteniy like, whleh,\nwhen It gett put Nelion, narrow! and ihallowi to ba again the\nKootenay river.\nNELSON REPS\nHOLD BANQUET\nRowling Compliments\nGirls on Their\nSportsmanship\nThe Nelson girls' rep team, and\nofficials of the club met at the\nGolden Gale cafe Thursday night\nfor a banquet and get-together, the\nr\ntoed\nWitf>\ntt\n***\nior-\n6\u00b0'\no&\na*\n\u2022a**\n.0*\not\nti-e?\noYvee*\n44. *0 - ,o*\u00b0\noa***1\n\u2022vci\u00b0e\nT.O.BRIQHTJtCO,\nLIMITED\nCanaoVa Ltr_est\nWintry\nNiagara Falls, Ontario\nFilablietm. ]<7<\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the\nGovernment of British Columbia\nfirst of what was hoped to be an\nannual event. About 20 people werc\nthere.\nGilbert Rowling, manager of the\nteam, was called out of town at the\nlast minute and was unable to be\npresent. The few words which he\nintended saying at thc banquet\nwere read by Rosa Stewart, president of thc Nelson Girls' Softball\nassociation. Mr. Rowling hss been\nmanager of thc representative soft-\nball team since it was first started\ntwo years ago.\nWhile expressing his regret at\nbeing unable to attend. Mr. Rowling\ncomplimented the girls on their\nfine sportsmanship in thc league\nand playoff games. Their spirit and\nlove of fair play had won them\nmany followers, and they had made\nthe game thc success it was in\nNcison.\nDESERVE CREDIT\nAlthough a losing team tcldom\ngained words of approbation, in proportion due, there wai a great deal\nof praiic coming to the Ncison girls\nfor the way they had played. It\nwas no disgrace to bo beaten by a\nteam the calibre of the Trail All-\nStars, art evenly balanced, aggressive and capable aggregation. Both\nin experience and years they had\nthc edge, and -yet the Nelson reps\nhad been up with them all the way.\nNext year, hc believed, Nelson had\nan excellent chance to regain the\nVancouver  Province   trophy.\nSome criticism had been levelled\nat thc softball officials for using so\nmany young players, but such a\npractise, in hts estimation, would\nshow handsome dividends in future\nyears. This year it was a case of\nrebuilding the team due to thc retirement of many of the older players, but next year the present aggregation would bc almost intact.\nPauline Stangherlin, the leading\nhitter of the 1934 series, who was\nforced to the sidelines due to health,\nintended to be back in the game,\ninjuries this year had taken their\ntoil, too, in making thc present\ncampaign a liard one.\nHe though: that it would bc a\ngood idea for both Trail and Nelson\nteams to join the British Columbia\nSoftball association, and have the\nCard Party Hald\nat Mirror Lake\nKASLO. B.C., Aug. 15\u2014Mr. and\nMrs. T. H. Robson and children havc\nreturned from a vacatio\/. spent at\ncoast points. Mr. Robson is in the\nKaslo public tchool teaching staff.\nMiss Moira McLeod, R.N., of Nelson is relieving at the Victorian\nhospital for a few days.\nMr. and Mrs. Harry Epperibn\nhave returned to their home in\nTrail after a short holiday spent\nat Shutty Bench.\nBert McCutcheon, who has been\na guest of his aunt. Mrs. G. C. Read,\nhas returned to his home in Vancouver.\nHugh McKay has returned to thc\nRed Elephant mine where he will\nspend the balance of the summer.\nMr. and Mn. Harley Bruce, with\ntheir children, and other members\nof their holiday party, have left for\ntheir homei in Peoria, 111., after\nspending a vacation in Kaslo the\nguests of Mr. Brucc's mother, Mrs.\nI. Bruce.\nE. G, Scott and Miss E. Scott of\nOyama, B.C., were visitors in thc\ncity Wednesday.\nJ. Watts of frail has joined his\nfamily who arc vacationing in Kaslo.\nMiss Marjorie McGregor, who has\nbeen for the past few weeks, a\nguest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nPeter McGregor, has left for Kelowna where she will be a guest ->\nher brother-in-law and sister, Mr.\nand Mrs. L. S. McKinnon.\nMrs. Frank Helme has returned\nfrom a vly.t to Nelson.\nAndrew Jardine and son have left\nto spend a few days at the Emerald\nHill mine.\nA card party scheduled for the\nsecond day of \"hospital week\" was\nanother unqualified success. The\naffair was held Tuesday evening at\nMirror lake through the kindness of\nMiss Aileen Garland of Winnipeg,\nwho gave the use of her summer\nhome lo the Mirror Lake ladies,\nwho sponsored the party. There\nwere 11 tables in play and several\nother guests werc also present.\nThrough, the efficient arrangements\nArmstrong Is\nTennis Winner\nOpen Matches Will\nBe Played Today\nat Trail\nBritish Columbia ruling officials in I matfo l>y W. V. Papsworth. Kaslo\ncharge of thc series. : \u2022\u2022\u25a0*\u2022 wcre conveyed lo the lake by\nNow that the scries wis over and ! ca!;s !oancd W 'heir owners,\nit could bc talked over calmly and I    painty refreshments were served\nwithout hurting anyone, thc first j ?\".\u00ab caFds* Among 'he Mirror Lake\ngame of the scries was really Nel*\nson's, according to thc ruling given\nout by the provincial body. A team\nthat refused to play off a tie, had\nlo forfeit the game. The umpires\neould call a game if it got too dark,\nbut tic games had to bc played un'.C\na winner emerged.\nIn closing he wished to thank the\nroaches of the team, The Nelson\nDally News and the Nelson business\nmen for their help and assistance\nto the team.\nMr. and Mrs. \"Scotty\" Ross and I \u25a0n\u00b0\u00a3ln\nMlss  Rose Severn  of Trail, who'\nwere inviled to attend the banquet,\nwere unable to make the trip.\nladies directly responsible for thc\nsuccess of the affair were Mesdames\nGeorge Abey, F. H. Abey, J. Kirk.\nMisi Olive Link, and Miss Aileen\nGarland. The Misses Helmar, Johnson and Bowker also assisted in\nserving. Summer guests at Mirror\nLake also aided in many ways as !\nNo organisation of a similar nature brings together more countries\nthan the World's Poultry Science\nassociation does at the World Poultry congresses which are the triennial meetings of the Association.\nCanada takes an important part in\nthc spreading of scientific and practical poultry knowledge and will\nbe represented at Ihe next congress\nwhich wlll be held in Berlin, Germany, in 1836.\ndid Mrs. Papworth of Kaslo. Among\nthose present were Dr. and Mrs. D.\nJ. Barclay, Mr. and Mrs. W. V. Papworth, Mr. and Mrs. Erb of Calgary,\nMr. and Mrs. J. G. Dawson of Oka-\nWash.. Mr. and Mn. F. H.\nAbey, Mrs. Charles Bowker, Mrt.\nGordon Bowker, Mrs. Jack Paterson, Mrs. S. A. Hunter, Mri. McLennan of Trail, Mn. H. D. Dawton\nof Nelton. Mn. J. P. Fink and Miss\nWanda Fink of Cranbrook, Mrt.\nJ. Kirk. Mrs, Walker of Tulsa. Okla.,\nMn. C. Johanson has left for her\nhome in Spokane after spending\n\u2022several dayt renewing acquaintance\nin Kaslo, her former home town.\nMrt. H. S. Whcllami and daughter, Miu Diana Whellams. have returned from a few weeks' visit\nwllh friends In Vancouver.\nMr. and Mrs. H. Forde have left\nTRAIL, B. C, Aug. 15\u2014E. Armitrong beat B. Brown, (-1, 6-1. in a\nconsolation single of thc Trall-Ross-\nland-Tadanac tennis tournament\nThursday afternoon.\nTwo matches scheduled for Friday\nfollow:\nOPEN COMPETITION\nMEN'S SINGLES\nJoe   McDonell    vs.    B.    Clark,\n4:15 p.m.\nCONSOLATION, MEN'S SINGLES\nS. McCatty vs. G. Williams, 5 p.m.\nWith the completion of the two\nopen matches, play will be brought\ndown to the semi-finals which will\ncommence on Saturday at 1:30 p.m.\nNo draws for these matches have\nbeen made but playen in the men's\nsemi-finals and ladies' doubles finals have been requested to be at the\ncourts at the aforementioned hour.\nFinals games of the tournament\narc slated for Sunday at 1:30 p.m.\nMen's consolation! will bc played\nout to the semi-finals on Saturday.\nSaek Relatives\nJohn Mulholland\nAn inquiry, published in the Belfast Telegram, for relatives of John\nMulholland of County Down, is\nproving of interest to J. W. Mulholland, the Nelson prospector-\npoet, to whom some one sent the\nclipping. Mr. Mulholland's people\ncame from thc north of Ireland, and\nhe Is replying to* the advertisement.\nNo information is given In the\nndvertlsement as to Ihe reason for\nII\" inquiry, which is worded as fol-\n' a *:\n.'\u25a0lulholland \u2014 Any relative of\nJohn Mulholland, born about 17(18,\nand wife, Janet Kennedy, born in\nCounty Down, communicate with\nEdward Rhea. Annacloy, Down-\npatrick. Co. Down.\"\nCrowd Tears Pants\nOft Bailiff\nrLATTSBURG, Mo., Aug. 15 (AP)\n\u2014One thousand Irate farmers, uttering threats, tearing clothea and\nswinging fists, surrounded U.S.\nMarshall Henry Dillingham and\nthrec aides today on the court house\nlawn and forcibly prevented the\nforeclosure talc of a farm.\n\"It wit awful,\" Dillingham said\nlater in describing how Ihe farmer!\nrlrcled him and kept him prisoner\nfrom 1:30 to 5 p.m.; \"They were In\nan ugly mood.\"\nThe crowd tore the, trouseri of\nGeorge Colbern. a federal court\nbailiff, matched hli plitol from\nhim and beat him with flats.\nPaving at Trail\nNears Completion\nTRAIL, B.C.. Aug. 15\u2014City public\nwork department expects to complete paving today on the Bav avenue side stript. between Spokane\nand Eldorado streets. With the exception of a finish roat ot asphalt\nwhich will be applied later, surfacing ot the eatt tide was finished\nyesterday.\nLONDON. Ont, Aug. 15 (CP)-\nCanada needs a new government\ncapable of expressing the wlll of\nthe people on peace or war in Europe within the next few months,\nLiberal leader Mackenzie King declared here Thursday at a political\nrally. The Ethiopian crltit contained\nthe aced of a world war and he\npledged himielf if in power to summon parliament before involving\nCanada into conflict.\n\"So far at the Ethiopian situation\nis concerned.\" said Mr. King, \"and\nso far as Canada il concerned Willi\nit, no government hat any right to\nsay what thii country will do with\nrespect to war arising out of that\nsituation until there is a new parliament and a new government in office.\"\nIt was wrong, he laid, to postpone the election so long and leave\nCanada at a critical period without\na parliament and with a government lacking public confidence.\n\"So far at the Liberal party It\nconcerned,'' hc added, \"I aaw now\nthat if the grave responsibility ever\nfell on the head of a Liberal government of deciding on war in Europe\nno decision would be made until\nparliament was assembled, and thc\nwill of parliament would decide.\"\n18-Months-Old Tot\nIs Drowned\nDAWSON CREEK, B.C, Aug. 15\n(CP)\u2014Everne, 18-month-old daughter of Mr. and Mn. Darney of Lone\nPrairie, B.C., 50 miles west of here,\nwas accidentally drowned, according to word reaching here today.\nThere were no details.\nNIGHT BASEBALL\nPacific Coast\nPortland 8, Hollywood 4.\nSeattle 8. 1, Sacramento 8. 0\nAuoclitlon\nSt. Paul 12. Louisville 8.\nFlashes From the Wires\nGETS SIX MONTHS\nREGINA, (CP).-Mlltou Talbot\nwill ipend the next six montha in\nRegina Jail as the result of his plea\nof guilty to cattle theft of six years\nago at Meyronne. He was arrested\nin Wyoming following six years ot\nSursuit by the Royal Canadian\nlounted police and returned to\nAssiniboia following extradition\nproceedings.\nBELLINGHAM LOSES\nVANCOUVER. (CP).-Bunching\nfive ot their 10 safeties, including\nJames' homer with one on base,\nin the seventh Inning, Uniteds took\na 7-4 decision from Bellingham in\nan intercity baseball league game\nhere.\nQARETH JONES KILLED\nLONDON, (AP).-Reuten( British news agency) dispatch from\nPeiping reported Friday that Gar-\neth Jonea, British journalist and\nformer secretary to David Lloyd\nGeorgfe, who was captured by bandits near Kalgen, Chahar province,\ninner Mongolia, a fortnight ago,\nhad been lulled by his capton.\nhaving been guests of Mrs. Fnrde's\nRarcnts, Mr. and Mrs. W. Roberts.\nIrs, Forde's brother, Thomas Rob-\n..  ertt. accompanied thc parly to the\nfor thau* home in Vancouver after   coatt.\n\u2666\n\"TARZANS\" LOSE\nTACOMA, (AP).\u2014Tacoma'i modern \"Tarzan!\" are home, fully fed\nand adequately clothed. The boyi,\nTom Vitos and Graham Ring, returning from the wilds of the Olympic peninsula hills after eight days\nspent in \"back to nature' roles.\nThey admitted they were only\n\"babes in the woods. The boyi had\nwagered they could exiit in the\nwoods for a month wearing only\nbathing shorts and tennii thoes and\ncarrying only a fishing line, knives\nand a cigarette lighter. The boys\nmust work 30 days on thc farm of\nWilliam Rast, Tacoma druggist, with\nwhom they had the bet. If they had\nwon Rast would have paid them\n$200.\nDAVIDSON CANDIDATE\nACME, AlU, (CP).-Mayor Andrew Davidson of Calgary has been\nchosen unanimo_rly Conservative\ncandidate in Bow River federal\nriding.\nNOUE BODY FOUND\nCAMDEN. N.J. (CP)-Vlclim of\na mutilation operation, \u2022 the nude\nbody of an unidentified man was\nfound in a shallow grave in the pine\nwoods near Chalsworth. Circling\nbuzzards directed a berry picker to\nthe spot. Ellis H. Parker, chief of\ncounty detectives, expressed the\nbelief the man had been brought to\nthe woods alive and operated upon.\nThe body had been sprinkled with\nquicklime, making the features difficult to identify. The man had been\ndead about three days, Parker said.\nTHREE RESCUED\nPORTLAND (AP) - Forest rangen rescued threc pertons. clad\nonly In bathing suits, who had been\nlost for teveral houn in thc rugged\nTanner creek country along the\nColumbia river eatt of Portland.\nThe trio\u2014Mrt. Elizabeth Scoffern.\n23. and two children, Richard Deck-\nman, 14, and Dorothv Deckman, 16\n\u2014wcre reported missing after they\nhad gone twimming near Bonneville,\nNUDE BODY FOUND\nDRIGGS, Idaho (AP) - Striking\npea pickert have been given the\nchoice of returning to work or leaving this area, placed under martial\nlaw by Gov. C. Ben Ross. Officers\nof the Idaho national guard and of\nTeton county visited the Randolph\nlabor camo and gave assurances\nthat all laborers wishing to return\nto work would be given protection.\nThe itriken there, tald to number\nmore than 400. rejected the offer of\nprotection.\nMcGEER SLAMS BANK\nOF CANADA\nVULCAN. Alta. (CP)-There had\nbeen a betrayal when former Premier J. E. Brownlee of Alberta\nJoined with Lord Mcmillan and Sir\nCharlei Addis In \"putting over\" the\npreient privately owned Bank of\nCanada. Mayor G. G. McGeer of\nVancouver charged ln an address\nhere. Establishment of a nationally\nowned and controlled central bank\nwas urged bv Mavor McGeer who\nsooke on behalf of L. H. Stick. Liberal candidate for Little Bow riding.\nPROVINCE BEATS\nSALMONBELLIES\nNEW WESTMINSTER (CP)-The\nsecond place Province Blue Birds\ndowned New Westminster SalmonbeUies 20-13, in an inter-city box\nlacrosse fixture, at the Arena here.\nThe teams were tied et the end of\nthe first quarter ot four all. The\nBirds however advanced their score\nto 9-6 at half time, and at threc\nquarter time were leading 15-7.\nHUMPHRIES MAY LIVE\nEASTVIEW, N. Y. (AP)-Phyt-\niciani said here that Joe Humphries, noted tight announcer, had\na bare chance to survive. The patient was still ln a comatose state\nresulting from a cerebral hemorrhage suffered Tueiday when he was\nabout to leave a hoipital.\nPROCESSING TAXES UPHELD\nSAN FRANCISCO, lAP) \u2014 The\nninth United Statea circuit court of\nappeal! haa declined temporarily at\nleast, to interfere with the payment\nof AAA procetiing taxes by milling companiea in the itate of Waihington. The tribunal having jurisdiction in Severn western states, denied a temporary restraining order\nsought by thc milling companies\nto prevent the government from collecting the tax. The court ruled that\nthe showing made by the milling\ncompanies was insufficient to warrant a restraining writ\nHEADS FIRE CHIEFS\nBROCKVILLE, Ont. (CP)-Chief\nR.Beaulieu, Quebec, waa chosen\npresident of the Dominion fire\nchiefs' association. Directors will bc\nnamed by the new executive. Windsor was choien as the convention\ncity for next year.\nHOG PRICES SOAR\nCHICAGO, (AP)-Soaring prices\nof hog producta in the big Chicago\nwholesale marketa with correspondingly high quotations at retail counters reflected the highest hog costs\nat the stock yards in nine yean.\nPork prices were it the top for the\nlast five years, with best loins selling wholesale at $30.00 a hundredweight, around $2.00 over top quotations at leading distributing points\nin the east.\nDIFFICULT IN CHINA\nQUEBEC, (CPI\u2014The silver policy of the United States has made\nthings difficult in China, Sir Frederic W. Leith-Ross. noted British\nfnancier and head of tbe economic\ncommsslon to Ihe far east, said here\non his arrival from England aboard\nthe Empress of Britain. Sir Fred-\ncrick is on his way lo China to look\nafter British financal interest* there.\nHc is slopping in Quebec for a few\ndays.\nBORAH FOR PRESIDENT?\nNEW VORK, (API-Sen. Huey P.\nLong of Louisiana has announced\nhis availability for the presidency\nof the United Statei. fint, however,\ncorralling hii declaration behind a\nbristling stand of \"ifs\". The senator named several candidates he\nwould be willing to support, but\nwas particularly partial to Senator\nWilliam E. Borah of Idaho, \"the\ngreatest lawyer ilnce Daniel Webiter.\" \"Senitor Borah,\" Long declared, \"would be the only president to carry every itate ln the union. Tf he ran against Rooievelt It\nwouldn't -bo a race. I consider him\nthe most able man In the senate.\"\nSTOP THAT ITCH\nIn One Minute\nD D. D. FYtKri|t-M Stmt. IM\nIt is really furpriling to tee how Dr.D.D.\nDennis' pure, moling, liquid, antiseptic\nD I) D Prescription quickly Hops itching\ntortures ol eaema. plmplet, nmquito or\nother iniect bitea, riihei ind other Ikin\n\u2022mictions. Forty yeari' world-wide lucceu. lti gentle call penetrate the ikin.\ntoothing and healing the inflamed time**.\nNo fun\u2014no mutt. Clear, greateleaa and\nstainless \u2014 dries up almost immediately.\nTry D. D D. Pretcription today. Stopi\nthe most intense itching instantly. A 35c\ntrial bottle, it any drug store, it guaranteed to prove It\u2014or money hack. D, 1). P.\n<a made by the owners of Itwiaw Balm.\n \u2014_\u2014. \u2014\n-\nioaq\nTHI NILION DAILY NIWI. NILION. i.C-FRIDAY MORNINO. AUOUST 11.USS\n\u2022PAO! MVlTt\n\u25a0B\nFUN FOR THE\nKIDDIES\nVACATION MONTH SUPREME IN\nNELSOH\nEntertainment\nDining and\nDancing\n\"The Queen City of the Kootenays\"\nEntertainment and Shopping Center of the Interior\nBeaches\nThe Wait Arm ef Kootenay Lake aboundi with betutlful Sandy Siaehn and the viiltor te Nelion It allured af the flnut of bathing and iwimmlng undir\nIdeal oondltloni.\nFishing -\nLlttl. nud bi uld of thl fimoui fiihing In Kooteniy\nLake. Partlea ean be orgmized for trolling ilong thi\nmain Like or for trout fiahlng that It to bt enjoyed\nTennis \u2022 - \u2022\nBOATING\nOne of thi meit popultr ef ill Nelton tummer reeru-\ntlont. Tha viiltlng tennii player flndi no difficulty\nwhile In N.l.on In locating ampli iccommeditliini\nfor enjoying i gimi on thi will-kept courti that an\noffered In Nelion.\nNelion itorai abound with tha flntit ef mw ttii\nquality merehindlte. The ihopper Indeed wlll be In\nher glory te will, throughout thi city and ihop In\ntuch delightful ihopi.\ntntm-mm-\nalong thi miny tmaller laket and itreimt thit tur-\nround Nelion.\nHiking \u2022 - -\nCloie to Nelton It situated thi famoui Kokann Glacier\n\u2022nd the hiker wlll thrill to thit ind many other shorter\nhlkei than can be enjoyed during \u2022 visit to Nelton.\nGolfing - - -\nNelion'i beautiful nine-hole count It known at one\nef the flnett and bait-kept counti in tht Inttrior.\nApplications ngardlng grain fen or monthly ratst\ncan bi obtained from thi tecretary.      \u2014\n\u25a0Stmtm.        mmt.\n<t<0\nThe Following Merchants and Business Firms offer you the finest of Merchandise and Service during your stay in Nelson.\nSTAR\nGROCERY\nfor\nQUALITY\nGROCERIES\nand SERVICE\nEmory's Ltd.\nQuality In\nMEN'S WEAR\nLADIES'\nREADY-TO-WEAR\nJas. Weir & Son\n\"Tht Exclusive Store\"\nPhona 22 for\nJOB MINTING\nLettarheadt,   Envelope!,  and\nall klndi of Butlnm Formi.\nH. M. Whimster\nStandard Cafe\n\"Nelion'i Popular\nReitaurant\"\nThe Bait fer Lau\nMilady's Fashion\nShoppe\nStylet for tha Wlll-Draiiid\nUdy\n44 TAXI\nPrompt, Courteoui\nTaxi Service\nMother's Bread\nPhone 210 for Delivery\nChoquette Bros.\nBAKER*\nSAVOY HOTEL\nWhere the Gueet Ii King\nYour Horn* When\nin Nelion\nSmythe's\nPharmacy\nPHONE 1\nPrescription Speclallttl\nGILKER'S\nMen's Wear\nPLAZA\nCAFE\nReal Food With\nSnappy Service\nMacdonalds\nConsolidated Ltd.\nWholeiale Orocert\nPhone 28\nFRONT \u00bbT. NELION\nRamsden's\nQuality Ladies'\nWear\ntea ui FIRST for your Heating, .Plumbing and ventilation\nRequirementi,\nKOOTENAY PLUMBING\nand HEATINC CO., LTD.\nA. H. GREEN\nCompany, Limited\nCONTRACTORS\nFront Street\nNelion\nSafeway Stores\nLtd.\nDISTRIBUTION   WITHOUT\nWASTE\nHudson's Bay Co.\nThe Oldeit Established\nDepirtment Store\nBlanche's\nSpecialty Shoppe\nStylet for the Smart Woman\nELECTRICAL\nRepairs and Suppliei\nJ. F. COATES\nS1S Virnon St        Phone 7M\nRenwick's\nTransfer\nPhone 797\nCoal - Wood - Hauling\nPURITY FLOUR\nBrackmon-Kcr\nMilling Co., Ltd.\nFront St., Nelion, B. C.\nWHEN IN NELSON\nDine at the\nGolden Gate Cafe\nBurns & Co., Ltd.\nThe Home of\nSHAMROCK BRANDS\nR. Andrew & Co.\nLeaden in Footfathion\nGODFREY'S LTD.\n\"The Home of Greater\nValue.\"\nfor Men, Women and\nChildren\nCurlew Dairy Producti\nare pure food producti\nCurlew Creamery\nPALM DAIRIES. LTO.\nPhone Your Job Printing\nOrden to\nNELSON DAILY\nNEWS\nPhone 144\nComplite   Houie   Furnlihin\n\"The Store of Service and\nSatisfaction'*\nStandard\nFurniture Co.\nNelson Transfer\nCompany, Limited\nPhone 35\nAUTO PARTS-TIRES\nR. R. HORNER\nGROCER\nBeatty Bros. Ltd.\nHome Appliances\nIroneri, Waiheri,\nClemen, Polishers\nJ. H. ALLEN\nENLARCINC\nDEVELOPING\nPRINTING\n\u25a0UY-\n\"NELSON BRAND\"\nJAMS and JELLIES\nProducti of the\nMcDonald Jam\nCompany, Limited\nCall Ui Flnt for Coal, Wood,\nCoke, Moving or Trimfir\nWork\nWest Transfer Co.\nPhone 33\nR. W. DAWSON\nReal Estate\u2014lniuranee\nPhone 197       Baker St.\nNelion, I. C.\nTHE MAYOR\nand ALDERMEN\nof the\nCITY\nOF\nNELSON\nInvito you to spend a\njoyoui vacation in\nNelwn\nChas. Morris\nMEN'S and\nBOYS' WEAR\nKootenay Music\nHouse\nNorge and Weitlnghouta\nRefrlgeraton\nD. C. Art Shoppe\nNew Stylei In Suits\nand Dretiet\nStandard Electric\nCanadian  General   Electrlo\nDealen\nPHONE 131\nDr. Ray Shaw\nQuality Dentistry at\na Lower Cost\nNelson Hardware\nCompany\nHardware and Sporting Goodi\nKootenay Steam\nLaundry and\nNo-O-Dor Dry\nCleaning Co.\nP. E. Poulin\nSTOCKS, BONDS\nand INSURANCE\nF. W. Woolworth\nCo., Ltd.\nJ. E. DALE, Mgr.\nCENTRAL\nCANADIAN\nGREYHOUND\nLINES\nInvites you to ipend your\nholidays in NeUon and to\nTRAVEL THE\nMODERN WAY\nby\nGREYHOUND\nJ. P. MORGAN\nNEW and USED\nFURNITURE\nBUSH'S CIGAR\nSTORE\nA Smoke for\nEvery Taite\nLedingham's\nBakery\n \t\n\t\nPAOE ElOHT-\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C-FRIDAY MORNINO. AUOUST 16.1\u00bb35\nEstablished AprU 2_. 1903.\n\"Britiih Columbia'! Mott Interettlng Niwipapef\nAU. THE NEW4 WHILE IT IS NEWS\nPubUihed  every  morning  except  Sunday   by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED.\n310   Baker   Street   Nelwn.   BriUsh   Columbia.\nPhone IU Private Exchange Connecting all Departmentt\n\u2014^__\u2014-_\u2014_.\u2014____-\u2014-____-I\u2014-\"-\u2014.\nMember  of  the  Audit   Bureau  of  Orculattont  and\n\u25a0The   Canadian   Prett   Leased   Wire   Newi   Service.\nFRIDAY, AUGUST 16, 1985.\nBALANCED BLESSINGS\nAmong predictions made by \"Prophet\" Bailey, the\nOntario man who is moving from London to Toronto\nto escape the neighbors who camp on his doorstep and\ndemand foretelling of their future, to a Toronto Star\nwriter, who tells about it in the current weekly just\narrived in Nelson, are that Mackenzie King will carry\nthe Dominion elections, that Hitler will' die within a\nyear by an assassin's bullet, and that Mussolini will die\nwithin a year by an assassin's knife.\nBailey became known to fame last year when Marie\nDressier, King Albert of the Belgians, and Chancellor\nDollfuss of Austria died in the ways he predicted in a\nJanuary 1 seance, with the slight variation that King\nAlbert was lo fall from a tree, not down a mountain slope\n\u2014and who knows that he didn't!\nCanada may have, to suffer a little for the world's\ngoods\u2014if we have to take the prophecy or leave it\u2014but\nit would bc worth something to have thc world safe\nfrom thc two most threatening war-lords.\nlt is rather piling it on, however, for Canada to\nhavc to stand for Hepburn following King. Perhaps we\nhad better let the war-lords live.\nCountless instances of accurate second sight are\nattributed to Bailey. It will be interesting to see how his\nlatest readings of the future, pried out of the unwilling\nprophet who asks only to be a forgotten man for a\nwhile, turn out. October 14 will answer one of the\nquestion***.\nRUST AND TRAIL FERTILIZER\nFor some years Saskatchewan has wished for nothing so much as timely rains for its grain crops.\nThis season copious rains have followed a five-\nyear drought in the sputhern part of the province, and\nbrought on a bountiful crop, that, dispatches of the last\nday or two now announce, is being smitten by rust.\nAn Associated Press dispatch to American papers\nfrom Regina Tueaday quoted the Saskatchewan minister\nof agriculture as predicting the rust would cut the province's wheut output for the year by 50,000,000 bushels.\nRust is a fungus disease that spreads with terrific\nrapidity during certain climatic conditions. Until* recent\nyears the main hope for its eradication was the development of rust-resistant strains of seed wheat.\nBut today one of the claims made for the chemical\nfertilizers manufactured by the Consolidated Mining &\nSmelting Company of Canada is that by their use grain\nis made disease resistant by early germination, stout\ngrowth, and early maturity. Observations on hundreds of\nfarms scattered over the three prairie provinces have\nled to this conclusion.\nOne of the interesting angles to Kootenay folk\u2014and\nmany times more so to the prairie farmers, one would\nsuspect\u2014will be the way in which wheat farms that\nemployed Elephant Brand fertilizers the past spring\nwill be found to have withstood, or surrendered to, the\nplague of rust. If the farms that used these chemical fertilizers stand out, and escape with little rust damage their\nlocalities suffer decimation, the experience will be pointed with a leason that progressive farmers will be unable\nto miss.\nIS ABYSSINIA FABLED OPHIR?\nIs Abyssinia, upon which the full glory or world\npublicity has been turned because of her sudden importance in international affairs, the Biblical region of\nOphir, from which King Solomon obtained gold for the\nTemple of Jerusalem?\nCount Byron de Perek, a Polish explorer, believes\nhe has at last found in the heart of Abyssinia the mythical land of Ophir. The count, who has recently returned\nfrom exploration in the mountains of West 'Abyssinia,\nis quite certain he has discovered the mines which furnished gold for the tombs of the kings of Egypt thousands of years before Christ. Today they are being\nworked for the benefit of local native rulers.\nIt was only with,the greatest difficulty and after\npersonal intervention of Lord Tyrell, formerly British\nambassador in Paris, that he obtained permission from\nthe Emperor of Abyssinia to visit Werka Warka. He entered Abyssinia with six Europeans and a guard of 20\nnegroes after a long journey through Anglo-Egyptian\nSudan. He is convinced that the mines he found are the\nfabled King Solomon's mines.\nThere may be sound foundation for the claim of\nthe Emperor of Abyssinia that he is descended from the\nQueen of Sheba.\nUSE LEECHES FOR\nCURE\nThe Judge of the Workmen's Compensation court at Port of Spain,\nTrinidad, was turprlied to hear\nthat natives of that British island\ncolony still resorted to the old-\ntime remedy of using leechei  to\ncure an injured peraon by bleeding.\nBut H. Hudion Phllllpi, barrister-\nat-law, who was arguing the caae,\nwat not lurprited and told the\ncourt io.\n\"There li a roaring trade between\nMartinique, Guadeloupe and Trinidad with leeches\", he said. \"They\nare procured from the riven of\nthe French coloniei. They are fed\non charcoal and sold In the eastern\nmarket here.\"\nWHAT DO YOU THINK?\nAll lettera to the editor must be ilgned with the name of the\nwriter.   A oom de pltme may be uied for publication it desired.\nLines in typewritten copy ihould be double spaced.\nTHE FUGITIVE SLAVE\n\"1 OUES8 I'M JUST NOT BORN TO THE 8EA, JEEVES!\"\n\u2014American Newspapers. Inc.\nCONTRACT\nBRIDGE\n8y E. V. SHEPARD\n\"Teacher of Teachers\"\nCARELESS PLAY  C08TS GAME\nEveryone sometimes maket mistakes. Followers of every game and\nsnort may have days or even weeks\nof slump in efficiency. Of course\nless able bridge playen require\nlittle to throw them off. Doubtless\nthat accounts for the glaring errors\nmade by fair players with the following deal. Finally thc mistakes\nbecome funny.\n\u2666 Jl\n\u2666M83\n\u2022gin\n\u2022+KQ82\n+ AQ80\ntl\ntK 7 I\n\u2666 I\n410 4 1\nN.\n\u2666 None\n\u2666 Q95\n\u2666 J 10 IS\n4\n\u2666 A J7\u00ab\n6\n10 YEARS AGO   ,\nI Prom Nelton Dally Newt Flin I\n$ 1 1\u2014\u00ab\n(AUGUST 16, 1925)\nMils Lottie Annable has returned\nfrom a visit to Mr. and Mrs. A.\nClyde Emory at WUlow Point.\nJack Annable ot Hall Mines road\nhas as his guest Harold Lanning of\nVancouver.\n\u2022 *   *\nMiss Vera Walley, Stanley street,\nhas as her guest Miss Dorothy Hodgson of Cranbrook.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mn. Harry Dunk, Baker\nstreet, have as guests, Mrs. Clyde\nAvery and young son, Harold, of\nMarcus, Wash.\na) K 10 \u00bb 7 4\nVJ1I4I\n\u2666 AK7\n41\nBidding went: South. 1 spade;\nnaturally West passed, hoping to\nhear more spade bidding; North 2\nno trumps; South, 3 no trumps,\nwhich West doubled, as a signal for\nhit partner to lead through the\nspade hand. Everyone knew what\nwat meant, but partner could not\noblige.\nHolding clubs as his hopes for\nre-entry cards. East led the 6 of diamonds and dummy's 7 held the\ntrick, removing West's only card\nof the suit led. North's chancei to\nso game are too vague to jusUfy\nanything except an attempt to minimize lots, as hc was vulnerable. His\nmost normal play was to lead a\nsmall spade from dummy toward\nthe J. West's best strategy would\nbe to give the declaring side the\nfint two tricks in spades, after\nwhich North would not dare lead\nthe iult again. Initead of leading\nspades the J ot hearts was led, with\nthe K-Q-9 missing. All West had to\ndo to kill that suit was refuse to\ncover with the K, but he covered.\nThe ace won the second trick. Of\ncourse North led back the I. East's\n9 and dummy's 10 covered. Declarer\nthen risked losing* two tricks, by i\nleading the 2. with the Q-7 missing '\nLuckily the play downed both those\ndangerous cards or declarer would\nhave suffered severely through his\nweird strategy.\nEast led another diamond, hoping\nthat his partner held the missing 5.\nbut West let go his lowest spade\nand dummy's K won the trick, then\nSouth took hit good heart, forcing\nWest to discard another spade. Declarer let go his lowest club and so\ndid East. Declarer had done well,\nwinning 5 of the 6 tricks played.\nWhen a low spade was led. West\nshould have won with the Q and led\nthe 10 ot clubs, but he allowed declarer's J to win the eighth trick,\nafter dummy's last re-entry had\ngone through previous play of the\nace of diamonds, upon which West\nled to his lowest club. North led off\nhis K of clubs. East's ace won the\ntrick. East led his J of diamonds\nDummy discarded a spade and West\nlet go his lait club.\nDeclarer wai ln at the tenth trick\nwith his Q of diamonda. having won\n8 tricks to oppohentt' 2. He led his\ngood Q of clubs, giving him game.\nThe last two tricks had to be given\ndefenders, whether a spade or n\nclub was led. Careless defence and\nluck allowed North's bad strategy\nto win.\n20 YEARS AGO\nI From Nelwn Dally Newa Fllei\n<g, j \u2014 \u00bb\n(AUOUST 16, 1916)\nR. Steele of Nelton ia in Ladysmith, and will make a tour of Vancouver Island.\neel\nBorn, August 16, to Mr. and Mrs.\nAnthony Madden of Slocan City, a\nson.\na   e   *\nPte. Douglas Cummins of Uie Mth\nbattalion has returned to camp at\nVefnon. _\n.   \u2022   .       *\nMayor J. J. Malone. Mrs. Malone.\nMiss Edna Malone and a party of\nfriends are leaving lo camp on\nMill creek.\n|   35 YEARS AGO   |\nFrom Nelson Dally Tribune Fllei\n$ . _,\n(AUGUST 16, 1900)\nNorman T. Macleod has resigned\nhis post at sergeant in the local militia owing to pressure of business.\nThe vacancy will bc filled by the\npromotion of Corp. George M. Phillips.\n\u2022   \u00ab - \u2022\n* A. L. Davenport of Spokane has\ntaken an option on the Keystone\nFracUonal mineral claim near Erie\nErratic :Declares\nStevens Fails Get\nRight Inferences\nTo the Editor, NelsmDaily News-\nSir; Of the many tragic thing!\nrannecled with Uie leader of the\n.lecoii6truction ptrty the most regrettable is his profound inability\nto draw the right inference from\nfact* coupled with a hostility to\nnigh finance that has become a\n.atal obsession. Let me illustrate. As\nnroot of the perfidy of the banking\ninterests he cites the fact that bank\ncredits have decreased by $400,000,-\nJOO because the wicked bankers\nhave a homicidal mania that expresses itself in a desire to throttle\nthe business of the country. Thit\nmoney withdrawn from business\nIras been invested ln government\nbonds to the extent of $35,000,000.\nMr. Stevens docs not say what he\nwould do about lt were we kind\nenough to make him premier, but\nit it a fair inference from his remarks that he would compel the\nbanks to sell thc government bonds\nand loan the proceeds to business\nmen at seven ner cent. He it so\nintent on pursuing the bankers that\nhe does not consider the highly\ndangerous nature of the remedy he\nsuggests. The unloading of nearly\nhalf a billion of government bonds\non the market could not fail to lower the value ot the bonds and damage the credit of Canada. Nearly\nhalf a billion of easily obtained\ncredit offered the commercial world\nwould lead to undue expansion at\na time when reasonable cauUon is\nstill necessary. But if Mr. Stevens\nwcre capable of viewing the facts\nwith a calm, judical mind, he would\nsec that what hat happened is not\ndue to the perfidy of the bankers\nbut rather the operation ol a natural law. Men mutt pay more for\ntransient labor than for permanent\nemployment. The rate per day\nshould be higher than the rate per\nmonth. It ia even so with money.\nShort term loans should yield a\nhigher rate of interest than mort**\ngages and government bonds, otherwise all the money available for\ncommercial loans wlll disappear\nand go, as men do, whore service is\nbetter paid.\nIf the banks show a disposition to\nrestrict commercial loans in order\nto invest in government bonds it\nmuit be because the returns sre\ngreater from government bonds at\ncurrent rates of interest. Deduct\nfrom the seven per cent on commercial short term loans the cost of\nmanagement and I think yoa will\nfind the net return less than average rate on government bonds.\nMr. Stevens may have pointed out\na deplorable condition of attain.\nBut tne blame lies at the door of\nthose officious meddlers who have\nfoolishly restricted bank changes\nuntil their own proper business has\nbecome less profitable to bankers\nthan the handling of government\nbonds.\nAgain Mr. Stevens shows inconsistency when he speaks of our living in a land of abundance and in\nthe next breath states that Canada\nsuffen trom a great lack of housing accommodation. I think be said\nit would take about $900,000,000\nto supply the need. Again we may\nthank professional philanthropists\nfor this state of affairs. Why are\npeople unwiUing to buUd houses\nfor rent? Speaking from experience I\nI would say because it does not pay. j\nThe tenant is protected at the expense of the landlord. To one who\nlias had experience with a delfri-\n'\u2022i.cnt tenant would care to build\nanother bouse in order to repeat\nthe experience.\nWhy arc insurance companies,\nloan companies and private individuals unwilling to advance money\ntor building purposes? The answer\nis one word \"Moratoria\". Our legislatures are composed of kind\nhearted people who before they will\nsee anyone turned out of his home\nby a rapacious mortgage, wlU again\nand again patt moratorium. So\nfrequent are these benevolent acts\npassed one never knoyrs without\nconsulting an expert whether the\nmortgage he holds is enforceable or\nnot.\nThe remedy is very simple. Let\nthe B.N.A. act be so amended as to\nmake all moratoria ultra vires and\nlet laws so passed to enable a landlord to get rid of a delinquent tenant without trouble and expense.\nLet these two things be done and\nCanada will experience such a\nbuilding boom as will make the depression seem just like an unpleasant dream.\nERRATIC.\nNelson, B.C, Aug. 14, 1935.\nETHIOPIAN SLAVES\nAND AMERICAN\nONES\nTo the Editor:\nNelpori Daily News:\nSir\u2014My remarks, and the poem I\nenclose, may be of interest as bearing on the Ethiopian questio*. Because slavery still exists- in Ethiopia, some see reason to excuse Mussolini's aggression. But within my\nlife-time, as my poem shows, black\nmen were held in bondage by the\ngreat nation to the south of us, and\nlittle over 100 yean ago great fortunes were built up.in England by\nthe slave trade.\nSurely we should not judge Ethiopia harshly because that trade ls\nnot yet abolished among her wild\ntribes. According to articles lately\nappearing in the Geographic magazine. Haile Selassie is an enlightened and progressive ruler, who is\ndoing his best for his backward\npeople. Give him a chance.\nI was born at Niagara 80 yean\nago and I can just remember the\nsteam boat Chief JusUce that at\nthat time plied between Toronto\nand Niagara. She picked up a fugitive slave out on the lake miles\nfrom shore as my poem describes.\nFrom the slave-holding statei in\nthe south slaves escaped and fled\nnorth to the Canadian border. Sympathizers in the northern states hid\nthem and helped them on, and that\nwas called \"the underground way.\"\nA lady once told me here that her\npeople lived on the underground\nway and helped slaves. The Niagara\nriver wat the Jordan that they\nmust cross to safety.\nF.W. NASH\nRenata, B.C., Aug. 14.\n(A True Story)\nHe fled from the state ot Tennetiee,\nFled for the love of liberty\nSteaUng away toward the North Star\nA fugitive slave before the war:\nGuided along the \"underground way,\"\nTramping at night and hiding by day.\nFootsore and weary at length to stand\nAnd view from afar Ills promised land.\nHis goal In atght. he was not yet free,\nHe'd Jordan to cross to liberty.\nThe Niagara flows both deep and wide.\nAnd safety lay on the other tide.   -\nTrembling thus on the brink of fate\nOn some chance boat he dare not wait,\nIn haste he launched an old barn door\nAnd lo set out for the further shore.\nBut the night was dark; the current swift.\nAnd his clumsy craft was prone to drift\nVainly he strove the far shore to reach.\nVainly he prayed for Niagara's beach.\nDownward and lakeward hli craft would go\nTo the lone breast of Ontario.\nWhen the rising sun dispelled the gloom,\nIt did but disclose an uwful doom.\nTwelve miles or more from the nearest thore\nHis only support a frail old door.\nHelpless and hopeless seemed hit woe.\nThe void above and the deep below,\nAs cold and half-conscious thus he lay,\nAnd the time wore on toward noon-day\nHe dreamt that angels were hovering near.\nWith heavenly music soft and clear.\nTlie old \"Chief Justice\" Niagara bound\nMade with her wheels that heavenly tound.\nHis plight was seen as the boat drew near,\nThey took him on board and gave him cheer.\nWhen they told him where the ship wat bound\nAnd that her deck was freedom's ground.\nHe said with glow on his dusky brow\n\"Thank God, Massa, I'm a free man now.\"\n-F. W.NASH\nREALIZES AMBITION TO DO STEP\nDANCE ON 100TH BIRTHDAY\nEditor's Note\u2014The poem referred\nto appean elsewhere on today'i editorial page, under the heading: \"The\nFugitive Slave.''\nCutting Is Necessary Even if It Is Hard\nBy DEAN HALLIDAY\nCentral Preu Garden Expert\nThere are certain garden flowen\nwhich need to be dealt with severely to get the best results. By thit\nis meant going out and cutting them\n_   back, even lf you must close your\nowned by J. Shuttlcworth and C., eyes M you ciose the shean on\nLadd of Eric. The consideration is I\n$15,000.\n\u00bb   \u00bb   \u2022\nBorn Wednesday, August 13, to\nMr. and Mre. E. S. Wadsworth. accountant of thc Ontario Powder\ncompany, a son.\nSONG\nI      AUNT HET\nI      By ROBERT QUILLEN\n\"I never did believe ln breach-\no'-promise miti. I alwayi figured a woman ain't damaged\nmuch if money will fix the\ndamage.\"\nHow do I love you?\nI do not know.\nOnly because of. you\nGladly I go.\nOnly becauae of you\nLabor is sweet,\nAnd all the song ot you\nSings in my feet.\nOnly the thought of you\n' Trembles and lies\nJust where the world begins\u2014\nUnder my eyes.\n\u2014Irene Rutherford McLeod\nSPEED   PRECEDENT\nGermany has a new train, the\n\"Dashing Cologner.\" which goes\nthe 355 miles from Berlin to Cologne in live hours and nine minutes,\nor 309 minutes. That is said lo be\nabout equal to the speed made by\nthe ex-Kaiser when he left Germany toward the end of 1918. \u2014\nStratford   Beacon-Herald.\nthem! By this time, the violas, can*\ndytuft and forget-me-nots should be\nsheaced, after which give them a\nfeeding of plant food and a thorough\nwatering, or better still, ferUlize\nthem just before a shower.\nNepeta mussini can also be clipped\nback now and a second heavy flowering will delight ys in the fall. Nepeta mussini, with its airy silvery-\ngray green foliage, makes an ideal\nplant for the rockery, as well as a\ngood border plant, owing to its long\nseason ot bloom. The flowers are\nlavender blue and fill in well for arrangements, as well as being exceedingly fragrant, due to the fact that\nit belongs to the mint family.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nTo \"The Garden File\" of House\nBeautiful often comes the query:\nWhat slim upright trees may be\ngrown instead of Lombardy poplar?\nfor a screen, or boundary demarcation? There are none of idenUcal\nclosely serried upright branches, but\nseveral families of trees in their pyramidal forms are acceptable for\nsuch purposes. From Japan comes\nthe Katsura tree, cercidiphyllum\nJaponicum, compact witn oval\nleaves and pyramidal growth from\nthe ground up.\nThe maidenhair tree from China,\n?inkgo tastigiata, with fan-shaped\neaves, is of good shape and immune\nto pests and diseases.\nGREEN RIVER, N. B. (CP)-Bc-\nlieved to be the oldest woman ih\nthe upper St. John river valley. Mn,\nJulie Thibodeau realized a desire to\ndo a \"jig\" on her 100th birthday.\nYean have passed since she took\nan active part at the. community\nsquare dances, but upon reaching\nthe century mark she renewed her\nacquaintance with the bow and\nshuffle in a few easy steps for the\nenjoyment of sons and daughters\nstill living in this vicinity.\nForsaking her little board and\nshingle cabin for the day of days,\nshe greeted thc century at Uie home\nof her son, Felix Thibodeau. Another son and three daughten were\namong the guesti. Some of her 16\nchildren live far away and others\nhave died.\nFriends in Green River parish,\nwhere she has lived since birth,\ngathered for  the celebration. AH\nshe desired, however, was to revive\nthe acUvity of her youth for a few\nmoments and then enjoy the relaxation demanded by her age and 90-\npound fraility.\nHer husband, Damasc Thibodeau,\ndied 24 yean ago. In nccrt yean\nshe has Uved alone in her cabin,\ncontaining a worn old trunk with\nits precious contents, a bed. table,\nstove and rocking chair, all in a\nspaco barely 10 by 8 feet Her chll\"\norcn and neighbon bring in n-eah,\nand she looks forward to an occasional visit from the parish prletl\nNow and then ahe it able to attend\nchurch.\nHaving retained her eyesight and\nhearing, Mn. Thibodeau enjoyi\nnothing more than a chat witt\nneighbor! who keep her informal\nof the \"doings\" along the pleasanl\nGreen River countryside.\nOne bottle of Black 8.\nWhite it ample to explain\nwhy it it the favourite\nwhisky of million! of\npeople all over the world.\nBLACK & WHITE\nSCOTCH WHISKY\nDistilled, Blended and Bottled in Scotland\t\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liqui\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbl\nShearing It good for candytuft ai\nwell ai for violas, forget-me-noti.\nGERM OF INFANTILE PARALYSIS TOO\nSMALL TO BE SEEN\nBy LOGAN CLENDENING. M.D.\nFaced at we are every summer\nby the posilbility of infanUle paralysis, a valuable book for the public is pubUshed this year, \"Infantile\nParalysis\", by Dr. George W.\nDraper.\nThe practical question that people want answered about the subject are such as: \"Are my children\nlikely to get It?\" \"How do they\ncatch it?\" \"What can be done to\nprevent it?\" ''Should they be taken\naway from school or camp or resort\nwhere there have been one or two\ncases?\" \"What is the outlook for\ntreatment when a case does occur?\"\nThe cause of Infantile paralysis\nht a virus\u2014one of those gems too\nUny to be seen even by the moit\npowerful microscope. But we know\nthe disease ii infeeUous. and that\nthe virus ii actually an entity. When\na monkey who hai been infected\nwith the disease diet, its brain can\nbe removed and ground into an\nemulsion and pasted through a\nfilter. Thit clear filtrate, injected\ninto another monkey't brain, will\nreproduce the dlaeaae.\nSo the virus exists. It shows remarkable variations in virulence as\nit passes through different monkeys.\nThis accounts for the variable severity of different epidemics.\nThe virus of infantile paralysis is\nalso very tenacious of life. It can\nbe kent in glycerin in an ice box\nover a year without losing its activity. It resists freezing. Different\nchemicals affect it entirely differently\u2014It is remarkably resistant to\ncarbolic acid, while hydrogen peroxide, menthol and bichloride of\nmercury destroy it rapidly.\nReproducing conditions as they\nexist in nature, the infantile virus\nwill survive indefinitely if surrounded by a moist, warm albuminous medium, such as the nasal secretions.\nThis is the mode of its spread. It\nis a carrier disease. Someone who\nhas either had the disease or been\nin contact with one who had it. has\nthe virus implanted in his nasal\ncavity.and carries It about giving\nIt to othen.\nPeople vary in susceptibility also,\nand whether you or your children\ncatch It depends a great deal on this\nsusceptibility in the presence of an\nepidemic.\nThe virus almost certainly enters\nthe body by the nose, and from the\nnose It travels along the nerves bf\nsmell to the brain and central nervous, system. It has an especial\naffinity for nerve tissue, and particularly thc motor cells of the\nspinal cord. '\nNaturally, during an epidemic or\nthe epidemic period, the avoidance\nof as many human contacts as possible is sensible. With the occurrence of one or two cases in an\ninstitution such as a school, it would\nseem thc part o( wisdom lo close\nthe school. If for no other reason,\nfor psychological ones. The scholan who have been exposed but lire\nstill unaffected, often go into a kind\nof panic, and their return homt* is\nimperative on humanitarian\ngrounds.\nPrompt, Efficient Service\n''Phone JJ\nWEST TRANSFER CO.\n723 Baker\nEstablished 1899\nNelson, I. C.\nSLAVES, BRANDY\nSOLD TOGETHER\nSlaves and cherry brandy were\nclassified under tho same heading\nin advertisements in Canada's first\nnewsoaper. Here is an excerpt from\nthe Halifax Gazette, November 1.\n1760:\n\"To be sold at Oublic auction on\nMonday the 3rd ot November at the\nhousc of Mr. John Rider, two slaves,\nvlt.: a boy and a girl, about 11 years\nold; likewise, a puncheon of choice\ndid cherry brandy, with sundry\nother artioles.\"\nMANY .GOVERNMENTS\nIn the 64 years of the Third Republic, France has hed 98 governments. She has had 26 since the wb*.\nnnd 10 in thc last three years. Thi:*,\nis democracy, but it is hardly efficiency.\u2014New York Times. Magazine,\nHAYMOW ERS\nand\nRAKES\nNow it the time te purchase a ntw mower or\nrake for your hay making. We have them in stack.\nMower Repain for Most of tht\nPopular Makes of Machines\nQUICK SERVICEI\nNelson Hardware Co.\nWholesale and Retail Quality Hardware\n ai_i_\u2014a\u2014-\u2014\n\u2014\u2014\n_____._.____.____.__.-_-_-_\u2014\n1030\nTHE NELEON DAILY NEWS NELSON. BC-PRIDAV MORNINO. AUOUST 16.1S3J\n\u25a0PAGE NINI\nUlsmx Daily Nrms\nMember ot tbe Canadian Daily\nNewiptptri Association\nTELEPHONE IM\n{Private Exchange connecting to\nall Depirtment!\nSubscription Rates\nBlnslt copy 1  Bi\nBy carrier, per week     23\nBy carrier, per year 13.00\nBy mail in Canada, to tub-\n\u2022Bribers living outtide regular\ncirrier treat per month. 60c;\nthree monthi $180; iix monthi,\n11.00; one year. $6.00.\nUnited SUtei and Great Britain, one month. 75c; six months,\nHOO; one yetr. $7.50.\nForeign countries, other than\nV- 8. tame at above plui any\nextra postage.\nPERSONAL\nMEN! WORN OUT? NO VITALITY?\nRegain youthful vigor with Men-\nna,\" harmless gland rcitorativc, .\nbox. T. Kerr, Box 353, Vancouver.\n(29751\nEczema Itch Piles Ulcers Try Geo Let\nChlnt Remedy at Hudion i Bay Co\n(27901\nPhone\nJean Robertson\n144\nFor the NELSON DAILY\nNEWS CLASSIFIED\nSERVICE\nSELSON DAILY NEWS CUWIMEb\nids I'll. Iiadlni ulcsmtn ana\nbuvers for Nelion md surroundins\ndistrict\n^I^Atlllt_3\u00abS)\n-*_s \\_   *    Ik.      *^ _tt^*t_\\\nm\n%Rt_____D_N\nREAD THIS FIRST:\nAniwerlng a newipipcr ad for\na companion, pretty Janet Lord\nflndi hereelf In a big, old houie\nwith a ipeechless servant named\nNita. a flendiih dog that answers\nto a myiterioui whistle, an elderly mistrest. Miss Boisevain, wbo\nwears a live chan eleon around\nher neck and admits the is peculiar. Sbe ls amaied to find an\narmy cot ii the only furniture in\nher bedroom. On the way to the\nbig bouie Janet met Blair Rodman who came with her In a\ntruck from tho village to retrieve\nlis\nhe\nIV\ncar. mired in the ditch near\nBoisevain   house   during   a\nerrlfic itorm the night before.\nlafused ihelter there and chaied\nran the houie by thc dog alter\naccident Blair decidei to dc-\nhii trip west after meeting\nmet. when he becomci curious\nbout the mysterious house where\ne girl ii wing* After one night\nider Miss Boiievain'i roof. Janet\nKidei to leave. However, her\n_jployer telle her that is impos-\njle ai the dog. Rajah, hai orden\nkeep her there. Nita ttcretly\narns Janet that she should get\nay from the weird house if the\nin find a wty. Walking around\ngrounds with the dog follow-\nher cloiely. Janet sees a girl'i\nce in the window of one of the\nlh towert of the houie. The\nranger wavei to her.\nOW GO ON WITH THIS STORY)\nChapter 1S\n(1st Boisevain wu fondling the\njneleon with the tlpi of her\nfers. It was half on her bosom\njaglf on her dreu. Janet noticed\nlower part of the reptile chang-\nllowlv to a dirty black. Tbe thin\nchain which wat fastened to\npeck, hung loosely down tbe wo-\ni'l dress. It wtt to fine that lt\nred to be a golden thread.\nWhere do you tleep at night,\nBoiievain?\"  the  girl  aiked\nlidly.\nHere ln this chair. The back tilts\n. and I use that footstool . . .\"\npointed to a hattock nearby ...\nan extension. I live ln this\nI at I have lived for years and\n_J.\"\nHow long have you ... have you\nTunic of Gold\nMetal\nLECAL NOTICES\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nIN   THE   SUPREME   COURT\nBRITISH COLUMBIA.\nIN PROBATE\nOP\nm\nh.\n\\\nIt'i an unusual gown you're\nping, look at this tjinlc frock\nby Clairo Dodd.\nhas an open front, sleevelets\nof dull gold roctai cloth, the\nline pointed toward the knees\n|the waistline defined by a wide\nkid bell, which fastens in two\nIn front.\nUt tunic it worn over a semi-\nfoundation of midnight blue\nIM, with full, gracefully trsil\nskirt\nbeen lame?\" . __\n\"I am not lame, my child. I Just\ncannot walk. I haven't been able to\nwalk for twenty years ... The dog\nis coming.\"\n\"I can't hear him . . .\n\"But I can. I am used to his footsteps ln tbe kitchen. Mv ears are\ntuned so that I can hear the slightest sound. Raiah hatei mc, more\nthan I hale him, but he darei not\ntouch me, darei not look at me ..\nMlss Boisevain was right about\nthe dog. he had shouldered his way\nthrough the swinging door and was\nln the room. In a moment he was\nat Janet's feet glaring at her with\nhia red evet.\nJanet arose and went to the old\npiano. She opened the cover ilowly,\nand looked down at the yellow keyi\nwhich ihone like satin. She wai\nabout lo strike a chord when shs\nwai startled by her employer's\nvoice.\n\"Don't! You must never play\nthat!\"\nThe girl stooped, her handi In\nthe air. She cloted the lid quietly,\nand walked back to the fire.\n\"Why? Don't vou like il!\"\n\"I love It. But I have not played\nfor yean. You must never touch It\"\nThe woman icemed frightened, and\nher voice quavered with excitement.\n\"I didn't mean to alarm you.\"\nJanet uld as she resumed her chair.\n\"But I love to play. too. and I've\nbeen longing to touch the instrument since I first saw lt. I used to\nplay to my father, for houn at a\ntime.\"\nMlss Boisevain was breathing\nheavily as she leaned back In her\nchair. Her hand was trembling on\nthe arm of the chair and her eyes\nwere closed.\nA shrill whistle tounded and\nRajah leaped to his teet and was out\nof the door ln an instant. Janet\nlooked enquiringly at the woman\nwho waa still shaken and weak.\nWhat had she done to upset her so?\nMiss Boisevain's eyes opened\nilowly. and the looked at Janet. A\nfilm of pain teemed to thadow her\nplain face.\nShe bent over, and motioned\nJanet to lean toward her. She could\nscarcely hear the woman's whiipcr\nas she Inclined her head.\n\"I like you. child. And I would\nlet you go ... If I could But I ctn't.','\nlal\n\"But can't you make a ipeclal trip\nup there and take me?\" Blair Rodman aiked McClure. They were lilting in McClurc's garage, and the\nmechanic was fussing with the\nbnkei of a imall car.\n\"I have orden never to go there\nunless I hive supplies from Jimion.\nAnd I adviic you not to go by yourself. You don't know that dog.\"\n\"Damn it all, I'll take my gun, and\nIf the beast gets rambunctious I'll\nfeed him a dose of lead.\"\nEasy to say, but what if the dog\nattacked you before you had time to\nget your gun out?\"\nRodman shrugged his shoulders.\n\"That'i eaiy .. . I'll be ready for\nhim. What about thit other girl you\ntook up there, a few months back?\"\n\"I don't know ... except that ihe\nasked me a lot of questions on the\nway up ... all about the house, and\nMiss Boisevain. I didn't say much,\nbecause It wasn't my placc to. I had\nhad a letter from the old lady, instructing me if a girl came to bring\nher uo. That's all. Didn't have any\nmessage about the girl who came\nup yeaterday. Mlsi Lord, did you\nsay her name wai?\n\"The other girl I took up was\nrather pretty and hod brown hair\nand blue eyes, I think. I remember\nthe eyes, becauie ihe said she\nthought It queer that Miss Boisevain\nespecially had asked in her ad for\na girl with blue eyes. She thought\nit might be because Miss Boisevain\nwas old and set In her ways. Pretty\nUtile thing, she was. although not\nio pretty as Miss Lord. Not nearly\nid nrotly. She chtltered all Ihe\nway uo and said, like Mlss Lord\ndid. she thought she'd like the place.\nAt least she'd try it. I left her ai I\ndid Miss Lord, on the porch, after\nI had taken her smajl trunk off. She\nhad a bag and a imall iteamer\ntrunk. Then I beat it.\"\n\"You say vou left Mlss Lord on\nthe norch?\" Rodman asked.\n\"Yes. She hadn't gone ln yet. Bllt\nI had honked my horn all the way\nup the road as I usually do. and\nNita probably came out to get her.\nI don't know why you're hanging\naround torn herc, Mr. Rodman.\nWon't do vou ony good. You can't\nnet in the house, anyway . . . even\nif ynu want to.\"\n\"I'll get ln some way. I've seen\nJust enough to be powerfully cur-\nlout. Tell me tome more about this\nqueer woman.\"\n\"Everybody 'round here thinks I\nknow a lot that I don't tell... simply becauie I'm the only one who\ngoes uo there. But I don't. I don't\nknow anything about the place or\nMiss Boisevain. She must have a lot\nof money up there, though, and\ncash. too. Nita always gives mc currency and I eet fifteen dollars every\ntime I make the trip. That waS\nagreed on, although I'd been satisfied wllh a lot lett. Only twelve\nmiles a round trip, you know.\"\nIn thi Matttr of tht Estate of\nAnnlt Linebaugh, Deceased.\nTAKE NOTICE that Letteri Probate of the lait will and testament\nof Annie Linebaugh, who died at\nNelson, British Columbia on July\n22nd, 1935, have been lasued to Montague Edward Harper, Executor\nthereof, Official Administrator of\nthe Nelson Electoral Diitrict, pursuant to the Order of Hii Honour\nW. A. Nisbet, Local Judge, dated\nAugust 6th, 1935, and all person!\nclaiming to be crediton of the said\ndeceased or to be entitled to the\nsaid estate are received on or before the 20th day ot September, A D.\n1935 to tend by post prepaid or to\ndeliver to the said Executor or to\nhis Solicitors Messn. Brown lc Dawson their Christian and surnames,\naddreasei and descriptions, full particulars of their claims, a itatement\nof their claims and the nature of\nthe security, (if any), held by them.\nand thereafter the said etlate will\nbc distributed among the parties entitled thereto having regard only to\nthe claims of which said Executor\nhas then notice.\nDATED the 14th day of August,\nA. D. 1935, at Nelson, B. C.\nBROWN & DAWSON,\nSolicitors for the Executor.\nApproved:\nW. J. Sturgeon,\nDistrict Registrar. (2878)\nPRACTICAL NURSING, HOUSE\nkeeping or hotel work. Experienced, middle aged. Box 2976 Dally\nNewt.  (29761\nCAPABLE GIRL WANTS HOUS\u00bb-\nwork In Trail or Nelion. Mm D.\nMorgan, Gen. IM. (2953)\n_Txperie\u00a5ced BAKlR ANB\nMINERAL ACT\n(Form F)\nCertificate of Improvements\nNOTICE\nBoundary Line No. 1, Boundary\nLine No. 2, Northern Light, North\nStar. Evening Star. Suniet Frac\nand Sunriie mineral claimi situate\nIn the Nalion mining dlviilon of\nKootenay dlitrlct\nLocated on Pend d'Orellle River\nand International Boundary.\nTAKE NOTICE that I, A. H\nGreen, acting as Agent for H. H\nShallenberger, Free Miner's Certificate No. 4938-E. intend, sixty dayt\nfrom the date hereof, to apply to\nthe Mining Recorder for Certificate!\nof Improvement! for the ourpoie of\nobtaining Crown Grant! of the above\nclaimi.\nAnd further take notice that action, under lecllon 83. muit be commenced before the Issuance of iuch\nCertificate of Improvement!.\nDated this 15th day of July. AD\n1935.\nA. H. GREEN.\n(2613)\nTRUTH IN ADVERTISING\nThe Nelion Dtlly Newt endetv\non to print onlv truthful clatsl*\nfled advertising and will appreciate having itt attention called\nto any advertising not conforming to the highest standards ot\nhonesty.\nIf you have room for roomen ln\nyour home\u2014and room for their\nrent in your pocket\u2014remember\nthere ia room for your Ad ln thi\n\"Rooms for Rent\" column.\ncook. Box 85, Nelion.\n(29121\nLIVESTOCK WANTED\n\u2022QUIET LOW SET HORSE FOP\norchard work, 7 yeari old. 1500\nlbs. Box 2887 Dllly Newi. I28B7*\nHELP WANTED\nTENDERS WANTID\nTenden are Invited for packing\nand ihlpplng approximately 10.000\nboxei of ipples for Robion, Cooperative Exchange. (M931\nHOUSEKEEPER FOR 3 ADULTS.\nGood home. Daily News. Box 29H1\n       (29811\nWANTED  CAPABLE  GIRL  FOR\nhomework. Apply Box 2938 Daily\nNewi. (2918)\nWANTED\nSALESMEN WANTED\nWANTED A SALESMAN. APPLY\nF. C. Solberg. 507 Carbonate St\nor general delivery, Nelion. (29501\nSUMMER HOMES. RESORTS\nAND CAMPS\nCLEAN COMFORTABLE HOTEL\nFurnlihed cottagei on beach\nReal campi I fiihing and twlm*\nming eta Write U. Outlet hottl\nW. A. Ward, Procter, B.C. (27911\nALPINE fNN. CHRISTINA LATfE\nvia Caicada Ideal holiday retort\nBeautiful lurroundlngi Sporti\n(2792)\n\/60ft H6L1BAV Is dOtf-Wl\nonly whtn you havt vour Ntlion\nDaily Newi coming to you at\nyour vacation home Order It today from your carrier, pottmai*\nter or direct     \t\nFOR RENT. HOUSES,\nAPARTMENTS.  ETC.\nFURN IS ED    HOUSEKEEPING\nroomi for rent Anntble Block.\n (2863)\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nroom. Apply 918 Kootenay St.\n ' (29771\nFURN   OR UNFURN   APTS   BV\nweek o* month. Medical Arta bldg\n(2864)\nTERRACE APTS Beautiful modern\nFrigidaire equipped luitei. (28831\nTELEPHONE\n144\nFOR CLASS AD.\nRESULTS\n\u25a0W\nr\nUsed Cars\nOn This Page\nWHY WALK WHEN\nYOU CAN RIDE?\nOwn One of the Cars\nListed Under\nFOR SALE\nMODERN BUNGALOW. LARGE\nliving room, three bedroomi, kitchen, pantry, bathroom with Pembroke bath and ihower, full concrete basement with furnace. Al!\nin first class condition. Close in\nSmall cash payment, balance like\nrent with low Interest. Phone 219\n (2971)\n.Ve carry largest stock reconditioned\nPipe and fittings suitable for all\npurposes Write Swarti Ptpe Yard\n220-lst E, Vancouver, B.C. (2797)\nFOR SALE-BARRELS KEGS. Sugar sacks linen MrDonald Jam\nCo., Ltd, Nelion. B.C,       (2798)\nI LUMBER WAGON AND 1\nipring wagon. Apply G. Atkinson\nKITCHEN COAL RANGE. $33. Cir-\nculating heater, $10. Good cordl-\ntlon. 818 Mill St. '2063)\nGAS PUMP AND 250 GAL. TANK.\nCheap for cash. Box 2879 Daily\nNewi. (2879)\nHEAVY TRUCK. MRS. E. HEDDI .E.\nWillow Point. <W64)\nLIVESTOCK FOR SALE\nPUREBRED RED POLL BULL, 5\nmonths old, |35. by crossing with\nhorn cattle, offspring 75% hornless. John Egloff, Edgewood, B.C\n      (2959)\nEXCELLENT SADDL-Th5RSE. I>\nyr. old lorrel mare. Cecil Lar-\nson. Yahk, B. C. (2980)\nPROPERTY FOR SALE\nILL HEAJ.TH COMPELS SACRI-\nfice valuable fruit ranch property,\nWillow Point. Commercial cherry\norchard, fine shape. Comfortable\nhome, modern plumbing, electric\nlight, 83600 or nearest offer.\nWorth double. Will poiltlvely be\nsold as going concern for first\nreasonable offer. Tomlinson. R.R.I.\nNelson. (2989>_\nDOCS\nSPRINGER    SPANIEL    PUPPIES\nexcellent shooting dogt. Registered. R. S. Sean, Kamloops, B. C.\n  (2810)\nSLEIGH-DOG PUPPIES FOR\ntale, beat husky strain. Apply D.\nC. Waterfield, Nakuip, B. C.\n(2951)\nLOST AND FOUND\nTo Finders\nIf you find a cat or dog a pocketbook. Jewelry or fur or anything else of value telephone\nThe Daily Newa. A \"Found\"\nAd will be inserted without\ncost to you. We will colled\nfrom the owner.\t\nLOST-GOLD MOUNTED WATER*\nman fountain pen, name engraved, between Innes and Hall Mines\nroad, Phone 398X, Reward, (2972)\nPOULTRY AND~ECCS~\nPHOTOGRAPHY\nFTLBS DEVELOPED-ANY SIZE\n25c With l print fiom uch neg\natlve Extra prints 8 for 25c Sas\nkatchewan photo Supply. Saskn\ntoon. (2796)\nMAKE   AND   SAVE .MONEY\nUse the\nDAILY NEWS CLASSIFIED ADS.\nPATENTS\nAN OFFER TO EVERY INVENTOlt\nLilt of wanted inventions aud lull\ninformation sent free. The Ramsay\nCompany World Patent Attorneys. 273 Bank St Ottawa Canada.\n(2798) -\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED ADS.\nuit   them   It   paw\nBusiness ond Professionol D[rectory_\nAccountant! lniuranee and Real Ettatu\nCHAS  F  HUNTER S.F.A.E.\nInternational Accountant\nP.O. Box 1091     Nelion. B.C.\n(2814)\nAiiayere\nE W WIDDOWSON PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst, Assayer, Chemist Chemical and Metallurgical Engineer\nSampling A ents at Trail and Ta\n\u2022orm. Smelters 301-303 Josephine\nSt., Nelion, B. C. (2815)\nROBERTSON REALTY CO.. LTD\nReal estate, insurance, \"entuls.\n217 Baker St. (28251\nR   W. DAWSC.N, Real Esta'u   Insurance. Rentals Next Klpperum\nHardware Baker street      12820)\nC. D  BLACKWOOD   Insurance of\nevery dt -criptlon. Real Est Ph t>9.\n(2827)\ngRENVILLE H GRIMWOOD\n. nvincial Allayer and Chemlit. 618\nBaker Street Nalion B C.   P.O\nBox No  726. Representing Ship\npers' interest at Trail, B.C. (2816)\nLEGHORN PULLETS\nVery   choice,   vigorous   birds,\nbred to lay and raised on clover\nrange.   8 weeks old. 65c each;\n10 weeks  75c and 12\nweeka 85c.\nSpecial prices on loti of\n100 and over.\nRUMP & SENDALL LTD.\nMilner, B.C.\n(2793)\nUSED CARS\nFOR SALE. 1928 ESSEX SEDAN IN\ngood running order. New battery\nand license price 8150. Apply A R.\nKnauf, Harrop. (2979)\n1927 CHEV. ONE TON TRUCK\nfour speed trans. R. Bobier, Nelson\n  12952)\n27 CHEV TOURING. GOOD CON-\nditlon, $60. Phone 785L1.      (2942)\nTUITION\nINCREASE YOUR EARNING POW-\ner in the capacity pf cott, corporate or mine accountant. Correspondence or personal Instruction. A. S. Baillie. 1010 Hall Build-\ning, Vtncouver, B. C. (2311)\nFARM   LANDS\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non easy terms in Alberta and Saskatchewan. Write for full information to 908-Dept of Natural Resources, CP.R.. Calgary, Alberta\n(2794)\nChiropractors\n\u2022 r. McMillan, d.c.  palmer\ngraduate. McCulloch Blk. Nelson\n_______ (2817)\nE.   M    WARREN   D.C.   BOX   87l\nGllker Block, Phone 113 or 753L\n(2818)\nElectrical\nJ. F COATES -Th. Electric Store.\nSupplies and Installations\nPhone 766 P. O. Box 1085\n(2819)\nEngineer! and Surveyor!\nE. L. WARBURTON & COMPANY\nNELSON. B.C.\nMine Surveys. Plmi tnd Eitlmttei\nAgent!   Oili. Gretses, Specialties Bituminous colli from Crow'i\n.Neit Past Mine supplies and ma*\ncrtnery. Ph. 239. P. O. Box 668\n (2823)\nH. D. DAWSON.       Nelson. B. C.\nMine Surveys and Reporta\nB. C. Land Surveyor.\n(2821)\nBoyd C   Affleck. FruitvaTe. B   C\nLands.   Mineral   Claims,   Water*\nworks, surveys, plans, eitlmatei\n (28221\nA H GREEN CO. LTD 516 'VARD\nSI. Phone 264, Nelson, B.C. (2820)\nFlorists\nSprays, wreaths, symbolic designs,\ncarefully made at reasonable prices\nShipped anywhere. Cut flowen and\nplants\u2014Phone 233\nNELSON FLOWER SHOPPE\n  (2824)\nFun\nSEND US YOUR FUR COAT WE\nguarantee expert remodelling and\nrepair work at low rates. Polar\nFun Ltd., 548 Granville St., Van'r.\n (2870)\nBUY OR SELL WITH A WANT AD\nTHE BUYER AND 8ELLER\nOF  THE   KOOTENAYS\nH. E. DILL. AUTO AND FIRE IN-\nsurance. R.-al Estate. 508 Ward St,\n(2828)\nJ   E. ANNABLE. REiAL -kWaTe.\nrentals, insurance. Annablt block.\n(2829)\nCIfe. fire Atfr6M6___tn_! INSUft-\nance, PE. l'oulin. Ph. 70.      (2830)\nCHAS F McHARDY INSURANTS\nReal Estate. Phone 135.       (2831)\nMachinist*\nBENNETI-S LIMITED\nFor all classes of Metal Work, Lathe\nWork, Drilling, Boring and Grinding.\nMotor Rewinding, Acetylene\nWelding.\nPhone 393           324 Vernon Street\n  (2832)\nMaternity Hemei\nELIZABETH PEEL\nMATERNITY HOME\nStrictly Private. ConfldenUal Physician In attendance. Ph Broad. 3078.\nW-1324 Broadway. Spokane. Waih.\n(2833)\nMining and Mill Machinery\nEMPIRi MACHINES LTD., NEL-\nlon. New and uied machinery.\n  (2834i\nPhotograph!\n\"PHOTOGRAPHS THAT PLEASE\"\nGEO. A MEERES. 715 Baker Ph 46\n  (28351\nSaih   Factory\nLAWSON'S SASH FACTORY Hardwood merchant 217 Baker Sli eet\n  * '28.161\nSecond Hand Stores\nSEE ARK RECONDITIONED COOK\natovet before buying new one.\n12637)\nGood chain, kitchen tables, cooking utensils at Mrs.  Radcllffe s.\n  i2\u00bb3U>\nTypewriter Service\nNELSON TYPEWHITEH AGENC'V\nSales and service Phone 197\n (SN\nWatch Repairing\nSPECIALIST REASONABLE Wui\nguaranteed. P. Boyle. Vernon Si\n128411\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nBy Geo. McManut\nT WELL-SO I'M TO BE\nA MOVIE ACTOR-WELL-\nI THINK I'MCONNA\nLIKB IT- I VVOMDEB\nl WHAT MV FISST\n' PACT WILL BC-\n8\/c\n\u2022 IDS, Kia| Pawn Sjarikm, tu. Cut inula Hi-- smtnat.\nWELL-HEPS\nI AAA-\niy\nf\nOH1 VOU ACE MOT\nWANTED ON LOCATION TODAY-VOO\nMAO BETTER GO\nHOME ANO REST\nUP FOCTO-VOKWOW-\nWELL STA.KT SHOOTING YOO THEW- _.\nsir\nTILLIE THE TOILER\nly Run Weitover\nTHE CUMPS\nBy Sidney Smith\ni To Be Continued I\nTHAT OLD BW UPSTAIR*\nIS AS MAD AS A HORNET,\nTHE WAV SHE KEEPS\nTADON-a ABOUT SOME\nIMAGINARY BILLIONAIRE\nSON-IN-LAW-\nI WONDER IF I HADN'T\nBETTER CALL TWE\nWA60N-SNE\nMI6HT BECOME ,\nVIOLENT-\nLAND *AKES \u2022\nWHATS THAT?\nA6REATBIO\nLIMOUSINE OUT IK)\nFRONT OP OUR DOOR-\nWTH A CHAUFFEUR\n-VND FOOTMAN AND\nA COAT OF ARM V\nAND SOME\n810NDE DtTtlN-^\nOUT-\nOH- MRS. DE STROM -\nVOUR DAUfaWTEft IS HERE\nTO SEE VOU- SUCH A LOVfeLV\nGIRL- \\ NEVER WOULD HAVE\nBEUIVED A Woman At Y0UN6\nAND BEAUTIFUL AS VOU\nCOULD HAVE SUCH A CHARMING,\nGROWN- UP DAUGHTER -\nIT'S SUCH AN HONOR\nTO HAVE HER HERE-\n ~^\n\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\nSARATOGA\nGllmpie of the Saratoga race track at Saratoga Sprlngi, N.Y.\nNANAIMO yETS\nALDRED FOR THE\nDOMINION TITLE\nB. C. Team Beats the\nSupinas Two\nStraight\nLETHBRIDGE, Aug. 15 (CP)-\nNanaimo. B.C., representatives ln\nDominion football association playdowns. tonight won the right to\nmeet Montreal Aldred in the Dominion challenge cup final by defeating Lethbridge Supinas 2-1 here\ntonight. Nanaimo iwept the western\nCanada final seriei In two straight\ngames. Lethbridge loit Tueiday. 3-1.\nNanaimo grabbed an early lead\nwhen Jamei \"Daisy\" Waugh, speedy\ncenter forward, found the net and\nGordon Bell, outside right, made it\nJ-0 before the flrat half ended. Su-\nBinaa, battling detperately to itay\ntn competition, tried hard to overcome the handicap ln the second\nhalf, but were able to icore only\nonee. Jim Radley, iniide right,\ncounting.\nWltb the Albertan team fighting\nfrom whlatle to whittle to avoid\nelimination, play was fast throughout Lethbridge forced from the\natart but Supinas' attacks were\nbroken repeatedly by the tterling\nBritish Columbia defense ot Ernie\n\"Tat\" Edmunds and Andy Gavin.\nPete Inkiter, Nanaimo goalie,\nstood out with hli sensational etops\nas wave after wave of Supinas attacks broke on the British Columbia net\nNanaimo with a two-goal lead\nwere content to play a defensive\n\u25a0arne in the second half and Lethbridge milled eeveral goals by narrow margins as the Albertans\nfought grimly.\n-tatting\njeaders\n a\t\nAfter their figures had been\nchecked and rechecked and a alight\nchange made in their relations as a\nresult Jose Vosmik and Buddy Myer wound up in a tie for the American league batting lead and third\nplace n the big six yeiterday. Myer\nnit twice in four times up yesterday\nand Vosmlk twice in five but the\nthe former had one time at bat eliminated the checkup. Joe Medwick\nmade the days big gain in the big\nsix race, picking up three polnta\nwith three hits in four times up.\nDoc Cramer also gained three points\nwith three hiti in four times up.\nDoc Cramer also gained three points\nwith three blows Tn five times up.\nG    Ab   R   H   Pet\nVaughan,\nPirates .... 99 4\u00ab3 M 144 .397\nMedwlck,\nCardinals 10\u00ab 433 93 152 .379\nVosmlk,\nIndlani 104 439 99 193 _HB\nMyer,\nSenator! 104 421 82 147 .349\nCramer,\nAthletlci 100 447 72 194 .349\nHartnett\nCuba M   303   45   104   M.\nA   DISTINGUISHED WHISKY\nMM\nBOTTIEO IN SCOTLAND\n26% oi. $3.25\nAlto\nCORBY'S SPECIAL\nSELECTED RYE WHISKY\n(OyMnOld)\n16 ot. JUS K ot. St.TJ\nCORBY'S OLD RYE\nWHISKY\n(S y..n Old)\n16 oi  1150 19 ot.ll.iS\nHILLS A UNDERWOOD\nLondon DRY GIN\n11 et 11.19 \u00bb oi 11.19\nHonveoRims\nBy Tha Auoclated Praia\nHome runi yeiterday: Berger,\nBravei 1; Urbanski, Braves 1; Stain-\nback, Cubs 1; Allen, Phillies 1; Mai*\ntin, Cardinals 1; Cronin, Red Six 1;\nWerber, Red Sox 1; Cooke, Red Sox\n1.\nThe leaden: Greenberg, Tigers\n31; Berger, Bravei, 26; Ott Giants\n24; Foxx, Athletici, 22; Johnion,\nAthletics 21; Camilli. Phillies 21.\nLeague totals: National SIS. American 503. Total 1031.\nRowing - Tennis - Soccer - Baseball - Boxing - Wrestling\nIN THE BOMBSHELL\nLacrosse - Golf - Track - Swimming - Horse Racing - Soft Ball\nPAGE TEN\nTHI NILSON DAILY NIWS. NILSON. B.C--FRIDAY MORNING. AUGU8T 19.1936\n-PAGE TEN\nClint Ferguion, amateur iklpper. In the Boiton batin.\nGIANTS FORGE\nAHEAD\nNATIONAL LIAGUE\nW L Pet\nNew York     69 39 .631\nSt Louli     64 42 .604\nChicago       68 45 .602\nPittsburgh     61 52 .540\nBrooklyn     80 58 .463\nPhiladelphia       49 60 .450\nCincinnati     47 64 .423\nBoston    30 78 .278\nNEW YORK, Aug. 15 (AP)-The\nGiants sank the Cardinals deeper\ninto second place today, winning a-\ngrim 5-4 victory in the third game\nof the series as the desperate world\nchampions, now trailing by four\nfull games, beat themselves in their\nanxiety.\nFidgety PhU Colllnt, third St.\nLoula heaver, wild-pitched the game\naway in the teventh, sailing a fast\none over Bill Delancey 'a head to let\nTravis Jackton, Giant third baser\nman, trot home with the deciding\nrun.\nSt Louia  4   10   2\nNew York     __._ 5   12   1\nWalker, Haines, P. Collins and\nDelancey; Parmelee, Smith and\nMancuso.\nWINS 13TH\nBROOKLYN, Aug. 15 (AP) -\nWhile Lonnie Warneke pitched a\nsteady game for his Uth victory of\nthe season, the Cubs batted out an\n11-3 victory over the Dodgers today.\nThe triumph gave the Cuds a halt-\ngame edge over the defeated St.\nLouia Cardinals although the percentage figures kept them in third\nplace by two polnta. Chicago, having played more games, has the\nlower average.\nChicago     11   16   0\nBrooklyn          3   112\nWarneke and Hartnett; Zachary,\nMunns, Baker and Lopez, J. Taylor.\nPHILLIES WIN\nPHILADELPHIA, Aug. 15 (API-\nJoe Bowman held tlie Pirates to\nseven hits and chalked up his sixth\nitraight triumph at the Phillies\nhammered three Pittsburgh pitchen\nfor 19 safeties and a 9-1 victory today.\nAllen hit a homer for the Phils\nana every other man in the lineup\ngot into the hit column. George\nWatkins, after hitting four straight\ntimes, fanned in the closing inning.\nPittsburgh      1    7   2\nPhiladelphia 9   19   1\nBuih, Brown, Hoyt and Grace;\nBowman and Todd.\nBRAVIS WIN 8-0\nBOSTON Aug. 15 (API-Bobby\nBrown hurled two hit hall to ahut\nout the Cincinnati Reds today and\nwin his first game of the seaton for\nthc Bravei. He ran the lowly Bravet*\nwinning streak to three straight\ngames. The icore was 8-0.\nPaul Derringer, Reds' pitcher, and\nErnie Lombardi, catcher, made thc\nonly Cincinnati hits, in the fifth\nand leventh reipectively.\nBrown allowed only two Reds to\ngo as far as second base.\nCincinnati            0    2   6\nBoston   8   13   0\nDerringer, Freitas and Lombard!;\nBrown and Spohrer.\nTO A.K PERRY TO\nPUY IN B.C.\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 15 (CP)-Of-\nficala of tha Vancouver Lawn Ten-\nnil club and acting-Mayor C. E.\nTisdell tonight wired Fred Perry an\ninvitation to pliy an exhibition\nmatch here before tailing for Australia thii fall.\nTennii officials laid if the English\nstar accepted they would invite a\nleading United States player, probably Don Budge of Oakland, star\non the American Davii cup team\nthii year who fell victim to the\ngreat play of Perry at Wimbledon\nin the final round.\nPerry it In Toronto where he It\nscheduled to play an exhibition\nmatch next week.\nHOLMES TAKES\nWAITERS'PUCE\nLONDON. Aug. 19 (CP cable)-E,\nR. T. Holmei. captain of Surrey,\nwlll take the place of Cyril Walters.\nWorcettenhlre'i iklpper. ln the\nEnglish team to meet South Africa\nnext Saturday in the final cricket\ntest between the two countries.\nAnnouncement was made today\nthat Walters had hurt hli thumb at\npractice and would be unable to\nplay. Holmet, a good forcing bat and\na fast bowler, took part In one of\nIhe four tests already played.\nThis advt. Is not published ty\ndisplayed by the Liquor Con\ntrol Board or bv the Government of British Columbia.\nMUSIC'S CHARMS\nLONDON, (CP) \u2014 The annual\ncricket battle between the Army and\nNavy at Lord's wat proceeding\nquietly enoush when the band began to play. Then Capt. G. J. Bryan\nof the Army got busy. He hit 26\nruns off five successive ball and\nwent on to roll up a total of 94. His\nhilt included four tlxea and 12\nfours.\n2IEVENTS0N\nGALA PROGRAM\nDiversified Swimming\nand Diving Next\nWednesday\nTwenty-eight events comprising\nswimming and diving are on the\nprogram for the water gala at Lakeside park next Wednesday, under\nthe auspices of the civic authorities,\nwhen practically all ages up to 16\nyears will be able to compete.\nThere are beginners' eventi ln\nboth the swimming and diving, and\nseveral of the swimming races will\nillustrate different stroket. When it\ncomet to the cross-lake swims, tlie\nage limit is taken off.\nSWIMS\nSwim events sre as followi:\nBeginners, distance, boyi.\nBcglnnent, dlitance, girls.\nFree style under 10, boys, 25\nyarda.\nFree styls under 10, girls, 55 yards.\nFree style under 13, boyi, 25\nyards.\nFree style under 13, girli, 25 yards.\nFree style under 16, boys, 50 yards.\nFree style under 16, girls 50 yards.\nBreast itroke under 13, boys; 25\nyards.\nBreast stroke under 13, girli, 25\nyards.\nBreast itroke under 16, boyi, 50\nyarda.\nBreait itroke under 16, girls, 50\nyards.\nBack stroke under 13, boys, 25\nyards.\nBack itroke, under 13, girls, 25\nyards.\nBack itroke under 16. boyt, 50\nyards.\nBack stroke under 16, girls, 50\nyards.\nAcrosi-lake swim, boyi, open.\nAcross-lake swim, girls, open.\nDIVING\nDiving numbers are at followi:\nBeginners, off float, boyt, two\ndivet.\nBeginners, off float, girls, two\ndives.\nUnder 13 years, off board, boyt,\nthree dives\u2014standing, running, optional.\nUnder 13 years, off board, girls,\nthree dives\u2014standing, running, optional.\nUnder 18 yeara, off board, boyt,\nfour divet \u2014 running, front Jack-\nknife, two optional.\nUnder 16 years, off board, girls,\nfour dives\u2014running, footlock, two\noptional.\nOther events are at followt:\nDuck diving for plates, boyt.\nDuck diving for plates, glrlt.\nLife saving race, boys.\nLife saving race, girls.\nWIGHTMAN (UP\nTENNIS TODAY\nNEW YORK. Aug. 15 (API-\nFeminine tennis sees ot Great Britain and the United States open\ntheir two-day battle for the Wight-\nman cup at nearby Forest Hilit tomorrow with the invading Brilont\nan even-money betting proportion.\nThe United States, led this time\nby Helen Jacobs and Mrs. Ethel\nBurkhardt Arnold, not only has\nwon the cup eight times in the a.\nyears it has been up for competition, but has captured the last four\nseries.\nMain hopes of the British squad\nin singles were Dorothy Round and\nKay Stammers. The latter, a comely\nleft-hander, gave Mrs. Helen Wills\nMoody the only defeat of her campaign abroad thii year.\n\\1<X\\ UHB_>\nT-JCES Hli\nOOLF SERIOUSLY\nIn the Batting Battle\nGabby Fools His Mourners\nBy BILL BRAUCHER\nCentral  Preu Canadian\nSporti Writer\nRegarded at all wathed up ilx\nyeari ago, when a lame arm aent\nhim to the bench after aeven years\nof service with the Cubs, Charles\nLeo (Gabby) Hartnett is very much\nunwashed up in this, hit fourteenth\nseason with the team.\nBesides bolstering a pitching staff\nthat looked very wobbly as tho\nseason started, the Cubs' catcher\nhas been belting the ball these midsummer days right along with the\nleaders, and helping to keep the\nball club right at the heels of the\nGiants and Cardinals.\nJU8T ONE OF\nTHOSE THINGS\nThe sudden rejuvenation of the\nWoontocket wonder it one of the\nsurprises of the season and one of\nthe factors not counted on by the\nexperts when they dissected thc\nCubs' team in spring for the benefit\nof the boyt ln the back room. Gabby's lifetime hitting average it Just\n.290, and in only two of his fifteen\nyears as a ball player has he ever\nhit as respectably as .300.\nThe Cubs' official noiiemaker\nspent one year in a minor league.\nThat was at Worcester in the Eastern league where he put in the\nseason of 1921. When he came to the\nCubs' training camp the following\nspring he announced in no uncertain tones he was all through as a\nWorcester ball player. From now on\nhe would confine his talents to Ihe\nmajors. So far his prediction is OK.\nBill Killefer was managed of the\nCubs then, and between the jobs of\ncatching Grover Alexander all afternoon and trying to catch him nil\nnight (Grover liked to play outdoors of evenings', Bill became\nwearied and sent lhe rookie from\nWorcester in there to see if he could\ntake it. Gabby proved he.could.\nCOMES RIGHT BACK\nIt was in 1929 that Hartnett was\nrelegated to the sidelines and it was\ntaken for granted he wm through\nat a big league catcher. During a\nspring training camp game he enthusiastically cut loose with bullet-\nlike pegs and his arm wilted. He\nwas carried as a pinch hitter. In\nthe following season he surprised\neven   himself  with   the  discovery\nGABBY HARTNETT\nthat thc old flipper was as good as\never.\nGabby is of Irish descent, bom\nat Woonsocket, December 20, 1900\nHe is tall for a catcher, 6 feet 1 inch,\nand weighs close to 200 pounds. In\n1929 he married Martha Henrietta\nMarshall of Chicago, and they have\na ton, Charles Leo, five years old.\nHis home during (he winter ia in\nChicago where he tells real estate\nand insurance.\nTo Establish an Official Baseball\nHall of Fame With Just 10 Names\nTo Locate It at Copperstown, N. Y. Where the\nGame Was Introduced in 1839\nBy ALAN GOULD\nAuociited Pren Sporti Editor\nNEW YORK, Aug. 15 (AP)-An\nall-star \"big 10\" consisting of a\ngalaxy of five major league stars\nfrom Ihe 19th century playing ranks\nand as many more from modern\ntimes, will form the foundation for\nan official baseball hall of fame in\nthe national baseball museum, now\nlocated at Copperstown, N.Y., the\ngame's birthplace.\nThc National and American\nleagues jointly will sponsor the plan\nto memoralize the game's greatest\nplaying figures in cooperation with\nthe village of Copperstown, which\nalready has established a sporting\nshrine on the spot where Major-\nGen. Abner Doubleday introduced\n\"base ball\" in 1839.\nDetails were discussed and a general program agreed upon today at\na conference of baseball men with\nArthur Cleland, representing Coop-\nerttown, at tbe offices of Ford C.\nFrick. president of lhe National\nleague,\nDevelopment of the Rail of fame\nwill be a preliminary to the elaborate program planned in observance of baseball's centennial at\nCooperstown in 1939. Its exclusive\nmembenhip will be determined by\na nation-wide vote among sports\nwrite.* i<d editors with final decisions resting in the hands of the\nBaseball Writers Association of\nAmerica.\nThe hall of fame will be limited\nto 10 players only for the time being\nand to focus attention upon its\nestablishment. Others among the\ngame's greats will be picked from\nyear to year. By thc time the game't\ncentennial rolls around, it is noped\nlhat close to 50 all-stars will be\nmemorialized in the museum.\nSelection of the first all-stars\npromises lo develop brisk argument.\nLegendary are many of the feats of\ntlie game's earlier heroes. But the\nrecord books are embellished by\nthe achievements of such renowned\nfigures as A. G. Spalding, aee hurler\nof the 1870s: Charles (Old Hossl\nRadbourne, who pitched Providence\nto n National league pennant in\n1884 by pitching 27 consecutive\ngames, winning 26 of Ihcm: Adrian\nC. IPopi Anson, captain, first baseman and hitting champion of the\nold Chicago While Stockings: Denton iCyi Young, whose pitching\nexploits exiended from the gay 90s\nwell into the new century. George\nWright, shortstop and all-around\naee ot Boston Nationals ln the\ngame's earliest big league days:\nCharlie Rennctt. king-pin\" of thc\nold-time backstops: as well as Mike\nKrllj, F.d Delehanty, Roger Connor,\nBuck Ewing, Hugh Duffy, Dan\nBrouthers ond Willie Keeler.\nPicking the outstanding five since\n1900 may prove no easier, It would\nbe difficult to leave off Christy\nMathewson. Ty Cobb, Babe Ruth.\nHans Wagner or Walter Johnson In\ndetermining the list.\nWhile working In a winter garden show in 1924 I met Bert Lahr,\nthe comedian. Several members of\nour thow played golf every day.\nBert laughed at us but In time he\ngot the bug.\nI don't know of anyone today\nwho takea the game more seriously.\nIn spin* of the fact that hc hai\nplayed with mott of the famoui\npros,  hit  game  larks  consistency.\nHe'll shoot par on one nine and\nthen take 45 or more strokes on the\nnext nine.\nI told him that his swing lacked\none of the main fundamentals when\nhe icored badly. He hai yet to iee\nany difference ln hit iwlng. He\ndoein't realize that it changet with\nhli scores.\nHow to make thc majority of\nyour tcorct good ones is the problem.\nThe only way any player can be\nconsistent iy successful Is by making habit ot the correct iwing.\nLieut.-Col. Fred\nUtlon Wins in\nFeature Shcol\nScores Possible 105 to\nGo Into the Lead\nfor Medal\nBy FOSTER  BARCLAY\nCanadian Preu Stiff Writer\nCONNAUGHT RIFLE RANGES,\nSouth March, Ont, Aug. 15 <CP>-\nA record-equalling possible 105 today thot Lieut.-Col. Fred W. Utton,\nToronto Bitley marksman, inlo lhe\nlead of 150 qualifiers for thc governor-general's gold medal, feature\naward of the Dominion of Canada\nRifle association's annual meet.\nLieutenant-Colonel Utton stood\nalone at the lop of the heap after\nthe closest race on the records\nThree weiternert werc among Ihe\nfive pressing Lieutenant-Colonel\nUtton wllh scores of 104. Sergt. T.\nA. Jenien of 'cnlsfail. Alta.. Corp.\nM. M. Morgan of Winnipeg and\nCapt. W. Wortick of Winnipeg were\nbracketed with Lleut.-Col. C. W. G.\nGibson of Hamilton and Rifleman\nW. Ewing of Montreal. Fourteen hod\n103 and almost 30 hod 102. In all.\n114 qualified outright for thc final\nSaturday with scores of 100 or bel\nter, but 47 with scores of 99 had to\nshoot off for the remaining 36 places.\nSergeant Jensen, Captain Wor-\nsick and Rifleman Ewing met their\nmaster at 600. Thc trio Iiad notched\ndouble possibles over 200 and 600,\nbut at the longer range one of their\nshots went into the inner. Two\nyeors ago. Sergeant Jensen, ace of\nwestern marksmen, won the governor's prize and this week was victorious in thc bankers.\nCorporal Morgan ond Lieutcnanl-\nColonel Gibson, however, scored\ntheir only inner on the short range.\nLatt night Ihe chunky WJnnipefgcr\nset 104 lo shoot at and when things\nappeared black he came through\nwith a brilliant finish.\nAway lo a flying start Lieutenant-\nColonel Utton left no doubt os to\nvictory. He blazed his seven rounds\ntargetword ot 200, Ui^ged for the\nblack, duplicated the perfonuanc*\"*\nwith five olhess at 500 and was the\nbest of the lot at 600.\nBesides winning a silver medal\nLieulcnant-Coloncl Ulton wai\naworded lhe Transvaal cup. awarded to a veteran of the Boer war\nmaking the highest score in the\ngovernor's preliminary.\nA   FAMILY TIE  UP\nMILWAUKEE. Wis. (CP)-Juit\nto complete the record, it ii true\nthat Eddie Marshall of Milwaukee,\nwho smashed the consecutive-gome\nhitting record of thc American association a few days ago. is a brother-\nin-law of Fred Fltzslmmons. New\nYork Giants pitcher. Starting ou\nJune II, Maislinll went 43 enmes In\na row without missing a hit\nHON. JOHN HART\nIN GOLF FINAL\nFinance Minister to\nMeet Bollinger in\nSenior Play\nVICTORIA, Aug. 15 (CPK-Hon.\nJohn Hart, British Columbia minister of financed, caged three birdies\non thc outgoing nine and continued\nbrilliantly on the home stretch to\nenter the final of the grand championship of the Seniors' Northwest\nGolf association tournament today.\nHc defeated Dr. Otis B. Wight,\nPortland, Ore., two up, over the\nOok Bay course.\nThe finance minister had two\nbad holes on the incoming nine\nwhich put his score up to 73, four\nover par. Otherwise tic shot the\nbest golf of the meet, going out\nin 32, one under perfect figures.\nOn the 18th, loss of which would\nhave put the mateh into extra holes,\nHart pulled his tee shot into a\ntrap. He was forced to stand on the\nbank to play his second nnd shot\nsensationally to within 20 feet of\nthe pin. Hc got a par four to win\nthe match.\nHe will meet Jack Bollinger of\nSeattle in the final tomorrow. Bellinger defeated L. H. Abott, Belling-\nton, Wash, threc and one.\nBRIDGES WINS\nFOR TIGERS\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nW. L. Pet\nDetroit  68   38 .842\nNew York 61   43 .567\nBoston    57   49 .538\nChicago 52   60 .510\nCleveland  52   53 .495\nPhiladelphia  46   54 .460\nWashington 45   61 .425\nSt. Louia  35  68 .340\nBRIDGES TAKES  tITH\nDETROIT, Aug. 15 (AP).\u2014Tommy\nBridges, aided by a timely pinch\nsingle in the eighth by Charley\nGehringer, scored his 18th victory\nof the season today as the Detroit\nTigers turned back the Washington\nSenators 6-3.\nWith the score tied at 3-all in\nthe eighth, Gehringer, who had\nbeen on the sidelines scverol days\nwith a knee injury, came in for\nClifton. His singles scored Owen\nand broke the deadlock.\nBridges was knocked flat by\nTravis line drive in thc first of\nthe eighth. In thc Tiger half of\nthc Inning. Owen doubled and Hayworth balled for Bridges. He bunted\nsafely and Schuble ran for him.\nGehringer then was called in and\nsent Owen across the plate with a\nsingle.\nSchuble moved on to third on\nthe hit and tcored When Myer\nmade a great recovery of White's\ndrive and three to Kress to force\nGehringer. Greenberg doubled scoring White.\nWashington   3   7   1\nDetroit    6 10   0\nLinke, Heniick and Bolton;\nBridges. Hogsett and Cochrane.\nYANKS WIN 3-1 \t\nCLEVELAND, Aug. 15 I API. -\nAfter getting only one hit off Willis\nHudlin in tix innings, the Yankees\ndrove him from the slab with a\nthree-run, five-hit burst in the seventh and defeated the Indians 3 to\n1 lodoy.\nNew  tork  3   8   0\nCleveland   1 11   0\nBroaca, Tamulis ond Dickey; Hudlin, L. Brown, Hlldebrand and Phillips, Branzel.\nLEFTY GROVE WINS\nCHICAGO, Aug. II (API.\u2014Supported by a trio of homers by Manager Joe Cronin, Bill Werber and\nDusty Cooke, wliich accounted tor\nall the Boston runs, Lefty Grove\npitched the Red Sox to their third\nstraight victory over the White Sox\n3-1 today. Grove scattered seven\nChicago liitt in hanging up hit season's 15th victory.\nThe defeat was the seventh in\nsuccession for the slumping While\nSox whose August record now\nreads 13 losses against one tie and\nn lone win.\nBoston  3   6   0\nChicngo   1   7  0\nGrove ond R, Ferrell; Tietje,\nSalveson and Seweil.\nBROWN BEATEN\nST. LOUIS, Aug. 15 (AP). \u2014 A\ntriple and four singles off Russ\nVan Atta in the teventh Inning\ngave the Philadelphia Athletics\nthree runs and a 5-3 victory over\nthe Browni today. It wai their third\nin a row at the expense of thc\nleague trailers.\nPhiladelphia   5 13   0\nSI. Loula  3   8   1\nDoyle. Marcum and Richards,\nBerry; Vanalta, Knott and Hemiley,\nGirls Challenge\nFlying Frenchmen\nWant to Meet Cene Nadeau's\nTeam of Softballers\nNelton has had its all-southpaw\nteam, its oldtlmers teams, and now\nacross the horiozn of the sport\nworld drifts an all-national team,\n\"Tlr Flying Frenchmen\". Tlie team,\nnopareiitl.\". is a mentti child of\nGene Nadeau'.**. and as soon as the\nKirl reps heard about it Ihey challenged thc \"Flying Frenchmen\" lo\ncome out into Ihe open and make\ngood the \"flying\" part of their\nname.\nGene's vocol chords have been\nused freelv In boosting for thc Red\nSox, ond then later the rep team.\nAmong the players he had lined\nup are Louis Choquette, F. Cho-\nnuclte. Elmer Gelinas, Gene Poulin.\nArt Perrler. George Maraud, J.\nCote. W. Sturgeon. Johnny Marqul\",\nOeorpe Gelinas, B. Bourpeois, M.\nRobichaud. A. Carrier, A. Blais.\nnnd last but not least French, ii\nGene himself. It Is staled that A.\nGelinas will coach the team.\nThc glrlt ore now waiting an answer lo their challenge.\nBIRTHDAY GREETINGS\nBy Thi Canadian Pratt\nTo Hughle Marks, football and\nbasketball star of St. Michael's\nCollege, Toronto, who is celebrating\nhis 22nd birthday today. Marki is\non American, having been born at\nRochester, N.Y. He has made a\nbrilliant record at St. Michael's, winning all-star O.R.F.U. recognition\nlait fall for his forward-passing.\nThis fall he may play for University\nof Toronto.\nYorkshire About\n(inches Title\nLONDON, Aug. 15 (CP cablel-\nYorkshire practically clinched the\nEnglish county cricket championship today by decisively defeating\nDerbyshire, its nearest rival, by 10\nwickets. The Tykes are now out in\nfront by a wide margin.\nIn the match, completed a day\nahead of schedule, Yorkshire hit\nup 304 runs. The Midlandcrs were\nskittled out for 133 in thc first\ninnings and following on did a\nlittle octter scoring 174. Yorkshire\nscored thc runs necessary for victory without loss. For thc winners\nArthur Sellers scored 73. S. Jacques\ncaptured four wickets for 35 runs\nin the Derbyshire first innings and\nin the second T. F. Smailes had the\nsame average.\nClose of play scores in other\ngames:\nWarwickshire 371. Surrey 364 for\ntive wickets iFlshlock 131 not outl,\nat Birmingham.\nHampshire 305. Leicestershire 3(19\nfor five (Berry 151), ot Portsmouth.\nNottinghamshire 288 and 77 for\nthrec, Somerset 289 (Cameron Uli,\nat Weston-Supcr-Mare.\nSussex 245 and 42 for three, Lancashire 484 for five declared iTvl-\ndesley 137, Paynter 1131, at Manchester.\nGloucestershire 344 and 180. Middlesex 300 and 12 for no wickets.\nat Cheltenham.\nSouth Africans 250 and 223, Essex\n302 and 24 for one, at Southend.\nSOFTBALL FINALS\nSTART NEXT WEEK\nMonday and Thursday evenings\nof next week have been set for the\nfirst two -games of the semi-final\nseries in tne men's softball league\nolayoffs between the Safeways and\nthe Faii-view A.C.\nTlie games will bc played at the\nrecreation grounds, and the Safe-\nways will take the field in the new\noutfits for thc first time.\nUSE THE WANT ADS\nALDRED EASTERI\nCANADA CHAMP]\n\u00ab_ea_M-_M_-\nBeat Fort William by\n2-1 in Second\n1\nFORT WILLIAM, Ont, Aug.\n(CP) \u2014 Montreal Aldred well\ncrowned eastern Canadian aocc\u00ab\nchampions here tonight and earne\nthe right to enter the final of th\nD.F.A. challenge cup by defeatin\nWest Fort William Wanderers 2*\nin the semi-final brackets. Th\nMontrealers won thc first encour\nter Tuesday, 2-0.\nIt   was   a   scintillating  test  bl\ntween two teams adept \u00abt comhini\ntion thrusts, and while Aldred go\nthe   firat   goal,   Waudert   enjoyei\nmore thana a fair share of terrl\ntoriol play. Only steody defensive\ntactics on thc part of the Montreal\nsquad averted thc necessity ot I\nthird game. j\nIt was during a concerted Want\nderer attack that Berdell and Fallon\nthe latter making his first appear!\nance here for Aldrod, combined foi\nthe first goal.\nWest Forts rallied strongly, an\u00ab\nplaying a sound, swinging gama\ngained thc equalizer 15 minutei latei\nthrough Nesblt.\nBejshak sent a well-placed pail\nfor McLean to get the deciding goal\nin the second half.\nRossland to Meet\nTrail in Boxla\nBoth Have Six Wins]\nand Will Try to\nTake Lead\nTRAIL. B. C, Aug. IS.\u2014Trail ad\nRossland lacrosse teams, now til\nfor first ploce in the West KootcnJ\nBoxla league, with four wins al\ntwo losses each, will clash at t|\nrink Friday night.\nRossland  defeated Trail  ln  t\n(jolden city last week and will\nits best to advance to the lead, bl\nTrail boys will bc out there doil\ntheir utmost to prevent Just thatr\nFor the first time in the lo\nfans actually became enthused ov\nthe boxla game when they saw N\nso* defeat their home boyi at t\nrink and an even greater croi\nis anticipated to see Rossland a\nTrail mix in a struggle Ihey ho\nwill contain as much truculer\nas tho fixture just played.\nDOUBLE\n&iantecle)u.\nCIGARETTE  PAPERS\nHAPPY DAYS \/\n13 0Z.1-?\n*oz.'2LS\n\"Stymie\" thirst and fatigue\nwith a long cool Collins\u2014\nand to give that Collins a\nsmoothness and bouquet not\nobtainable with any other\ngin use Burnett's London\nDry\u2014the gin that made the\n19th hole famous\nso\u00ae \u00ae@@gi3ir'\nBURNETTS\nGIN\nSMEWI IG\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the LlqJ\nControl Board or by the Government of British ColuniJ\n ^^^^^^\u25a0^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^g\n[o_\\\nNDUSTPIALS ARE\nLinLE HIGHER\nWRONTO, Aui. 15 (CP)-Thc\n*l*ca on tha induatrlal taction 01\na Toronto exchange ilowed down\nIty, recording a gain In the Index\nJO to 114.20. Action In tha oil,\nM lmpreitlva and Distillen Sea-\ntmt wu ln good fettle until lab\ntht day but profit-taking wai\nider way over the board In the\nlarnoon which shaded galm con-\nUrably. Volume wai 51.300 ihtrei.\nIrty-tlx itocki cloied higher and\n1 lower.\nBuying reached iuch proportion!\nInternational Petroleum, more\ntn 10,000 ihirei changing handi.\n\u2022 prloe WU IWipt Up to 374 be*\nSprofit-taking checked the move,\ning at 37, the stock had a net\nof H.\nTRADE FUTURES\nTODAY\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 13 (CP) - A\nBiblance of palmier dayi came\nKk to the big broad wheat fu-\nrtea board on tha Winnipeg grain\n[change today at tha council au-\nlOrized trading to itart tomorrow\nI two new futurei, October and\nMember.\nCreation of a Dominion wheat\nard wat reipontibla for the change\ntrading condition!. Since expira-\n>n of the July contract, operator!\nlve been able to trade only ln\nagutt wheat, thut leaving the axunge on a cash baiia.\nVINNIPEG GAINS\nWINNIPEG. Aug. 15 (Cf) -\nIheat prlcea gained more ground\nI today'i tetsion of the Winnipeg\n\u25a0aln exchange, recording net '_\u25a0\ntit gaini coincident with frost-\nimage reporti from Alberta and\nrsngth In outalde marketi.\nApart from an early-session bunt\n! itrength when values advanced\n4 Centa. operations were lifeless,\nhe Auguit futurt cloied it S2H\nmti.\nLovf temperature reporti f\"om\nany Alberta polnti brought tear\n\u25a0opt would tuffer damage from\nNt\nSmall export aalea ot Canadian\nbeat approximately .00,000 buih-\ni, alio aided market eentlment,\nI did advancei at Liverpool, Chi-\nIgo and Minneapolis\nLOANS INCREASE\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 13 (AP)-\n\u00bb?ns on securities to broken and\nlalers held by weekly reporting\nember banki in New York City\nlounted to $873,000,000 during the\ntek ending Autust 14 reoresent-\ng an increase of $13,000,000 for the\ntek. The loans for the week ended\nUguit 14, 1934, were $058,000,(100.\nsminion Deposits\nin Bank of Canada\nShow an Increase\nOTTAWA. Ang. 15 (CP)-Do-\ninion government depoilti with\ne Bank of Canada Increaied by\n,014,892 in the week ended August\n: the weekly report ot the bank\nawed today.\nAt the some time notei ln circuit-\n>n declined by S1.0OO.231 while re-\nrve in United Statei funda showed\nI Increase of $2,693,338.\nVancouver Sales\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 15 <CP)-\nInlng shares sold on tha Vaneou-\nt ttock exchange today:\nListed: Big Mist 159*9, Bralorne\n^Bridge R Con 1000. B R X 1000.\nirlboo 1700. Dentonla 1000, Oold\n4000, Inter C 4 C 500, Koot B 200.\ntcjdian 500, Morning S 1200, Natl\n\u25a0MO, Prem G 600. Reno 1300. S\u00ablly\n\u25a0, Salmon 2000, Sheep Creek 1800,\nliytlde 5000.\nCurb: Beaver S 250, B C Nickel\nJO, Congreu 150. Gold Mtn 1250.\nIlconda 900. Grange 5500. Grull\n1 500, ISL Mtn 1500, Mlnto 1000,\nkola 2400, Noble Five 3000, Pend\n700, Pilot 1000, Porter I 2000. Sll-\ntrcrest 1000, Vidette 1100. Wnver-\nr 3500, Whitewater   1000, Ymir\nPGlrl 1000.\t\nExchange Rates\nJNEW YORK, Aug. 15 (CP)-Ster-\nBg exchange easy at $4.97-4 for 60-\nkr bills and at $4,984 for demand.\n[Canadian dollars today 3-16 dit-\nfcunt, yeiterday 4 diicount, week\nho 1-16 dlicount\n[Trance 6.64 Vi centa.\nItaly 635 centi.\nUruguay 81.41 centt.\nTHI NILSON DAILY NIWI. NIUON. i.C-FRIDAY MORNINO AUOUST IS, 1\u00bb\u00bb\nTunnel at Ymir\nConsolidated\nTunntl of the Ymlr Coniolidated mine on Huckliberry creek\nabove Ymlr. It It the 10th level of\ntha old Ymlr mine.\nGOLDS AND QILS\nSTRONGER\nVANCOUVER. Aug. 15 (CP)-\nGold and oil shores strengthened on\nthe Vancouver itock exchange today and moit Issues regained the\nlosses suffered yeiterdav. Trading\nwas quiet with sales totalling only\n75,079 tharei.\nPioneer Gold wai up J5 at 9.75\nand Bralorne advanced 15 to 5.00.\nCariboo was up 3 at 1.13 and Island\nMountain at 91 and Vidette at 22\neach gained 2. Sheep Creek lott 3\nat 1.00 and Congreaa eased 2 at 23.\nUnited Empire wai unchanged at\n3%,\nBig Miuouri advanced 3 to 60,\nPend Orellle lolt a point at 61 and\nB.C. Nickel firmed 4 at 214. Beaver\nSilver it 4% tnd Porter Idaho at\n5*14 eacb lott 4 and Noble Five\neased 4 at 6. Standard Silver It\nLead wai down 3 at 65.\nBONDS IRREGULAR\nNEW YORK. Auf. 15 (AP)-The\nbond market developed an irregular toni today in the face of further\nselling of United Statet government\nlecuritles. Losses ln the federal lilt\nringed from 1-32 to 5-32 of a point\nIn the corporate department rail\nHani turned In a rather ragged performance, with moit losses attributed to profit-taking.\nUtilities and industrials were\nrather narrow, but a number managed to edge forward. The foreign\nsection did little.\nCanadian Dollar\nand Sterling Off\nNEW YORK, Aug. 15 (CP)-Ster-\nling and the Canadian dollar were\nslightly lower, the French franc\nhigher, ln the foreign exchange marketa today.\nThe Dominion dollar extended Its\ndiscount from 4 to 3-16 per cent\nThe pound wu off Vt cent at $4.98\nwhile the franc, closing at 6.64 Vt\ncents, ihowed a gain ot .OOVi of a\nctnt\nMinneapolis Grain\nMINNEAPOLIS, Aug. 15. (AP)-\nWheot Caih: Ne. 1 heavy dark Northern Sprlngi, 60 lbs. im-26K;\nNo. 1 Red Durum 9BH-1-06H. Flour\nunchanged*, shipments 21,736. Pure\nbran 1630-17.\nriRI SWEEPS EIGHT\nACRES\nVICTORIA, Aug. 15 (CP)-Fire\nwhich broke out on the island hlghwiy it tht Coldstream intenection\nwhere a road diversion is being\nmade by the department of public\nworki, yetterday iwept eight acrea\nalong a ildehlll btfort it wit\nbrought undtr control In the evening. On both sldet of the highway,\nforeat scenery marking the entrance\nto the Coldttream valley was blackened bv the flames. Some fairly\ngood timber wu burned on the\nnorth tide of the highway.\nCREDIT OUTSTANDING\nWASHINOTON, Aug. 15 <AP)-\nThe daily average volume of Federal bank credit outatandlng during\nthe week ended August 14 as reported by tbe Federal Reserve\nbanki. wai $2,476,000,000, unchanged\nfrom the preceding week and $10.-\n000,000 above tht corretpondlng\nweek in 1934.\nQuotations on Wall Street\niQlad Chemical 164\n\"^canCtn 142\n__i For Power\nEn Ma & Fdy\nEn Smelt It Re\nEm Telephone\nEn Tobacco ...\nEaconda\t\nItchiion\t\nJubum Moton\nBaldwin ...\u2014\n\u25a0alt It Ohio\n24%\n44\n140%\nKll\n184\n63\n.1\n15%\nCndlx Aviation 184\n35%\nUH\n11%\n584\n474\n62\n334\n684\n74\nlath Steel\t\nItnadt try ....\nEn Pacific _.\n\u25a0eno De Paico\n\u25a0haa It Ohio\n\u25a0on Gai N'T\nTorn  Prod \t\n, Wright Pfd      ...\ntipont  _ 110*4\naatman Kodak 1474\nIPowtr tt Ll     74\nhe .... -- u%\nfid Ingllih ... \u2014\nfcrd ot Can .... \u2014\nint Nat Stores 54%\nReport Texai 254\nMineral Electric 32%\nWril Foodi 364\nEneral Moton 43%\n163\n141\n74\n24\n42%\n139%\n54\n524\n39\n24\n15%\n184\n354\n10%\n11\n66\n46%\n\u00ab0%\n32%\n674\n7%\n1094\n146%\n64\n11%\n514\n254\n31%\nJofe  Duit\n\u25a0oodrlch   .\nihy\nNoi\n__ Uor Pfd\nKt Wit Sugar\nIowa Sound ...\n\u25a0udton Moton\nIter Nickel    29\nIter Tel tt Tel 11%\nTwe'  Tea      644\n\u25a0nn Copper ..  224\n174\n94\n104\n20%\n29%\n48\n9%\n94\n9%\n204\n29%\n284\n11%\n163\n141\n74\n344\n42%\n1404\n98b\n17%\n52%\n30%\n34\n15%\n184\n35%\n114\n11\n56\n47\n614\n32%\n674\n7%\n110%\n1464\n84\n11%\n8%\n274\n524\n254\n32%\n354\n42%\n174\n94\n10\n204\n29%\n474\n9%\n284\nU%\n21}i    21%\nKretge S S _.._\nKregger it Toll\nMick Truck\nMilwaukee Pd\nMont Ward\nNath Moton\nNit Dairy Pro\nN Pow ic Ll   .\nN Y Ctntral\nPtcltlc O & E\nPackard Mot\nPenn R R\nPhllllea Pttt ..\nPure Oil\nRadio Corp\nRadio Keith O\nRem Rand\nSafeway Stort\nShell Union\nS Ctl Ediion\nSouth Ptcific\nSUn Oil Cal\nSUn Oil Ind\nSUn Oil N J\nStewart War\nStudebaker\nTex Coroor   .\nTex Oulf Sul\nTimken Rol\nUnion Carbide\nUnion Oil Cal\nUnited Air\nUnlttd Bltcult\nUnion Pacific\nU S Pint\nU S Rubber .\nU S Steel\nVanadium St\nWarner Broi\nWett Electric\nWestern Un\nWoolworth   \u2022\u25a0\u2022\nWrigley\nYellow   Truck\n264\n31%\n21%\n2%\n36\n15\".\n15%\n12%\n234\n27%\n5\n28%\n26%\n9%\n74\n2%\n10%\n40\n11\n20%\n204\n35%\n28\n47%\nU4%\n21\n34%\n51%\n654\n18%\n17%\n23%\n101%\n\\_\n43%\n154\n5%\n66%\n50\n634\n77\n4\n26 284\n31% 31%\n- 21%\n34 \u00ab\u2022\n34% 354\n15% 15%\n16% 15%\n124 124\n224 ' 22%\n27% 27%\n4?? 4%\n28 284\n24% 254\n9 94\n74 74\n2% 2%\n10% 10%\n39% 40\n10% 10%\n20% 204\n19% 19%\n34% 35\n27% 27%\n46% 46%\n124 124\n3%     44\n204 204\n334 34%\n504 504\n65 65\n164 18%\nMarket and Mining News\nCUSTOMS, EXCISE\nREVENUE LOWER\nOTTAWA, Aug. 15 (CP>\u2014Cui-\n:omt and excise revenue tor the\nnonth of July amounted to $20,035,-\n,97, a drop of $711,097 from the cor-\nesponding month ot 1934. Figures\nisued today by Hon. J. E. Lawson,\nnlniiter of national revenue, dii-\n:loied the major portion of tht\ndecline to hava been in exciie\ntaxea, which were down $621,340\nIrom latt year.\nCuitomi dutiei lait month de-\n\u2022Hned from $8,900,313 ln July, 1984,\no $5,831,061, while excite dutiei\nwere slightly lower at $4,135,869.\nfhe drop here, however, wai only\nJ5208.\nSundry colleetloni dropped by\n$15297-from $70,503 a year tgo\nto $55,208 lttt month.\nThe decline in exciie ttxes was\nfrom $10,634,800 ln July, 1934, to\n,;lo.on,460 lait month.\nFor the flrtt tour monthi of the\ncurrent fiscal year cuitomi and exciie revenuei wat down by $3,30f-\n379 trom the ume period a y -,\nago. Collections this year were $7i.\n348,711 againtt $75,275,090 laat year.\nIn this period exciie dutiei nave\nrisen by $1,283,630 but both cuitomi dutlea and exciie taxei dropped, the former fell by $2,368,796\nand the latter by $2,210,178.\nGOLD OFF THREE\nMONTREAL, Aug. 16 (CP)-Bar\ngold in London off 3 cenU at $34.95\nan ounce ln Canadian fundi; 140s\nId ln Britiih fundi. The fixed $35\nWashington price amounted to $35.03\nin Canadian.\nLogging Executive\nSeriously Hurt\nVICTORIA, AUg. 15 (CP)-After\na 25-mile battle with an ocean storm\n\u2022wd a 40-mile Journey by ambulance\nRobert R. Lamont, executive of tht\n'.amont, Balrd and Ratbear Logging\nCo., Port Renfrew, B. C, wn\nbrought here early today with a\nfractured ikull suffered during leg-\ngin <\u2022 operations.\nAt St. Joseph's hoipltal. hit condition was reported serloui\nWinnioeq Grain\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 15 (CP)\u2014Grain\nFutures QueteUons.\nOpen  High   Low   Clote\nWHEAT*\nAuk    82%    834    624    82%\nOATS:\nOct   ....   32%    33%    33%     33\nDec    314    314    31%    314\nBARLEY:\nOct   ...   344    34%    34%    $4%\nDec    34%    35%    34%    34%\nFLAX:\nOct   ..... 1344   1344   1334   1334\nDec _   -      -       -      121%\nRYE:\nOct   .....   384    38%    384    384\nDtc    394    39%     39%    39%\nCASH WHEAT:\nNo. 1 hard 83%; No. 1 Nor. Ud\ntrack 82%; No. 2 Nor. 78%; No. 3\nNor. and 2 Oarnet 74%; No. 4 68%;\nNo. 5, 63%; No. 6. 624; teed. 584;\nNo. 1 Durum 77%; No. 1 A.R.W.,\n72%; No. 1 Garnet, 76%; acreeningi\n33 centi per ton.\nEastern Sales\nTORONTO. Aug. 1$ (CP)-Salei\nof 100 or more shares oo tha Toronto Stock exchinge. industrial section, todav were: 350 Abitibi; 220\nBeauharn: 890 Brazilian: 1400 Br\nIt DUt; 1056 B A OU; 1692 Canadian\nDred-e; 230 Can I AI; 1393 CPR*\n<35 Cockihutt* 210 D\"~ St: '\"\"\"\nF Farmer; 353 Ford A, 165 Gyp It Al,\n4145 Int Nickel ; 425 Loblaw A; 250\n'.oblaw B: 500 Mania Leaf: 300\nMaple Leaf Pfd; 3800 Mass Harris:\n\"330 Union Oas; 1083 Un Steel; 459\nWalken Pfd.\nMONTREAL Aug. 15 (CP) -\nSalea of 100 or mort ihares on the\nMontreal Stock exchange today\nwere: 163 Ball Tela: 1767 Brazil;\n165 Can S S; 250 Celsnese; 160 Crn\nM E Hd; 171 CPR; 475 Dom Bridge;\n515 Dom S ts C B; 190 Dryden: 320\nFoundation; 1156 Int Nickel: 7605\nMan Harr S; 429 McCoil Front:\n3462 Monti Pow: 160 It L Corp; 306\nSt L P Pfd; 919 Shawinlgan.\n12 INCORPORATIONS\nVICTORIA, Aug. 13 (CP)-Ilght\ncompanies, two tocletles and two cooperative attoclations were granted\nIncorporation ln British Columbia\nthli weak by the registrar of com-\n\u2022oanies. They Included: Rich Btr\nriaceri Ltd. (N.P.L.). $100,000, Vtn\ncouver.\n174\n234\n101\n23%\n101%\n194    194\n14%    14%\n43\n15\n54\n43\n18\n6%\n654 65%\n49 49\n624 634\n- 77\n3% 3%\nAt Ymlr\nConsolidated\nMtyor J, P. Morgan cf Ntlton In\nmining outfit on an Impaction\ntrip at tht Ymlr Contolldited\nproperty. With him It Jack Greenwood, alio prepared for a trip\nunderground.\nDow Jones Averages\n80 industriali\n20 rails\t\n20 utilities .....\n40 bonds \t\nHigh\n128.72\n36.41\n27.31\ntow Clote\n127.07 127.47\n35.85 35.96\n26.80 26.89\n  96.49\nChinge\noff .82\noff .58\noff .40\noff .17\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nLISTED Ild\nA P Con .06%\nAmil Oil <084\nBig Missouri .60\nB C aPckert 13.00\nBralorne 5.00\nB R Con .034\nCariboo Oold Q 1.13\nC tt E Corp  .544\nCoait Brew   13.76\nDentonia       _W4\nGold Belt   J6\nHargal          Dt\nHome OU    M\nInt Coal  20\nKoot Bella  33\nMak Siccar _.. .10\nMcLeod       - ~\u00bb\nMeridian   .04\nModel           \u2014 .21\nMorolne Star  04\nVat Silver        .03\n\"ioneer             8.75\nPremier Gold   1.***\nReno Gold         1.07\nSallv Minea    Al\nSalmon Gold   .11\n''heeo Creek      1.00\n\"aylor Bridge \u2014 .18\n'analta          - \u2014\nWaytlda         13%\n\"TfiiM-non  - -04\n\"URB8\nMex\u00bbndrla      ...\n\u2022^laolcat'^ OU .\u2014 A3\nttv\" SUver   .0*%\n11u\u00abWnl         \u2014 -01\n'\u2022t r miver  l.M\n\u25a0^TNii-kel -_..- -2'tt\n\"-lmont      - -04\n\"nnnrmt       -**\n-\"-tm-'s-lt     .0\u00ab%\n-rows Nttt - .W%\nn\u00abihoi\"'t     .,  3M\n.amanl,^            _ \u2014\n\">'\u00bbt\u00abtor             \u2014\n\u25a0\u00bb*irview Amtl ..... \u2014\n*fi^]]               \u2014\nttA-~* Gold  HI ,\ni-re^nM            -25U\n\"-eo wtntoiprlM _. .W%\nGeo River M\nAik\nS.10\n.04\n1.14\n.60\n14.00\n30\nXI\n.65\n-1\n.36\n.14\n.46\n.04%\n.04\n9.90\n1.45\n1.10\n.13\n1.01\n.17\nHi\n.13\n- .01%\n.05\n.0t4\n1.66\n.23\n\u00bb*+_\n.10\n.04\nfil\nsny,\nJO\nJOS\n.01\nGlacier  Creek  .\nGolconda\t\nGold Mountain .\nGrandvlew \t\nGrange . ..\nGrull Wihkme .\nHecla\nHedley Am\nHighwood Sarcea\nHome Gold \t\nIndian        \t\nIndependence\n'sland Mountain\nLakevlew    \t\nMadlion     \t\nMir Jon      \t\nMercery      \t\nMerlind\nMcGUllvray Coal\nMill City\nMinto\nMorton Woliye .\nNicola \t\n\"ob'e Fivo\t\nNordon     .....\nOkalta       \t\nPaceltn  \t\n\"end OreUlt \t\n\"Hot\n\"orter Idtho\t\nRewird\nRelie' Arlington\n\"ovallte . .\nHutu* Argentt \t\n\"\u2022nchmen't \t\n\"Ivercreit \t\n\"Si'vendo      \t\n\u00abi]Vf-\u00abmlth\n<*-nwf\"''e     \t\nStapH-rd S tt L\t\nOumh'r,* \t\nT.vint* wind   \t\nwie-1 '-\"plre -\n;,tmX,,m*  Oil       \t\nivid-tte \t\nVIH\u00bb\u00ab Oold .  \t\nWeter'oo \t\nw\u00bbv\u00bbr]eT Tang \t\n\"'\u2022'I'neton       \t\nWhitewater\nYmlr Yankee Girl\nm\n.\u00bb\n.08\n.03\n.014\n9.50\n.19\n.114\n.034\n.01\n.91\n.004\n.004\n.10\n.11%\n.174\n.07\n.06%\n.004\n.(*4\n.08\n.12%\n.03%\n.61\n.02%\n.06%\n.02\n.31%\n24.25\n_36\n.00%\n.03\n.01%\n.00%\n.65\n19.60\n.03%\n.22\n.03\n.004\n.04\n.304\n.01%\n.18\n.18\n.03\n.01%\n.07%\n1000\n_U\n.il\n.04%\n.01\n91\nfil\n13\n.'4\n.20\n.30\n.07\n.01\n.10\n.06'*?\n.13\n.04\n.04%\n.6!\n.03\n.06\n.35\n25.00\n.01%\n.40\n.01%\nM\n.m\njm%\n.70\njo vi\n.13\n.0*5\n.011%\nM\n.01%\n.03\n.02\n.05\n.13\nToronto Stock Quotations\nAlgoma  \u2014\u2014\u2022\nAthltT Gold\t\nliarrv HoUlng er \t\nBate Metali        \t\nBankfield     '         \t\nBear Exploration\t\nBig Mluourl\nBoblo\nBnlorne     \t\nBrett Treth\t\nBRX \t\nBrownlee      \t\nBuf Ankirltt \t\nBuf Can Gold \t\nBunker Hill ,, -\nCanadian Klrkland\nCanadian Malartlc .\nCariboo Gold Q\nCalUt Treth \t\nCentnl Man\t\nCentril Pit\nChlbougamou   \u2014____\nClerlcy -\u2014\t\nCoait Copptr  \t\nCobalt Contact  \t\nConarium \t\nCona Min Ik Smelt \t\nDome\nDominion Exploration -._.\nEldorado        _\t\nFalconbrldM\t\nGod'i Lake \t\nGranada   \t\nHardrock     \t\nHoUinger   -\nHowey       \u2014 \t\nHudion Bay \t\nInterational Nickel \t\nKirkland Ltkt   \t\nLake Maron\nUtUe Long Lac\t\nLakt Short  -\nMcLeod Cockihutt _\t\nMclntyre        \t\nMcVltUe Or   , \t\nMeWatten 0\t\nMacassa  \t\nMaple Leaf     _.\u2014\u25a0\u25a0\nMining Corn  \t\nMoffatt HtU \t\nNipltiin*     .\u2014\nNoranda  \t\nParkhiU      \t\nPiymiiter     .... .........\t\nPend OreUle  \t\nPickle Crow ...__.\t\nPioneer Oold\t\nPremier Oold\t\nRtno  -.,\n.034\n.10\n.034\n.54\n.45\n.85\n.61\n.19\n5.00\n.014\n.09\n.01\na.\u00abn\n.01%\n.07\n.01%\n.60\nl.ll\n.94\n.04\n1.74\n.13\n.034\n2.00\n.01%\n1.80\n16650\n37.25\n.044\n1.57\n3.98\n1.57\n.18\n.48\n13.70\n.75\n15.824\n37.00\n.37\n.02%\n4.85\n50.374\n.04%\n37.50\n.14%\n1.67\n1.87\n.04\n1.25\n.01%\n2.26\n38.25\n-M%\n_i\n.62\n2J5T\n9.65\n1.43\n1.08\nStkooit\t\nSan Antonio     - __\t\nShtw Crt-ak     *\u00bb--\nSherritt Gordon \t\nSUmo*  \u2014\nSouth Tiblemont ____-_.\nStadacona        ___..-.\nSt Anthony      ...._\u2014__.....\nSudburr Baaln\t\nSylvanlte \t\nSmelt**-* Oold \t\nTtck Hugher -\u2014\t\nToburn        _ \t\nTowagamtc  \u2014 -\nTreadweU  \t\nVenturei        ...__.__\u2014.-\nWalte Amulet  \t\nWayside  \t\nWhite Eagle \t\nWright Hargreavei \t\nOILS\nAcme   __..-_.\nAjax \t\nBrltlih Amer OU\t\nCalmont  -\nC le E CorooraUon\t\nChemical Reietrch _\t\nDalhouiie    _____\nHomt OU\nHomestead O _\u00ab 0\t\nimperial OU\ninternational Pett\t\nMerland  \t\nNordon        \t\nOil Selectioni  \u2014_-\nOlga  \t\nRovallte\nINDUSTRIALS\nBeatty Broa      \t\nBell Telephone  \t\nBratUlan \t\nBrewen It Diitlllen\t\nCtntdltn   Bread   \t\nCanada Cement\nCan Industrial Ale A\t\nCan Car Fdy\nCanadian Dredge      \t\nCanadian Pacific RaUway\nCom Bakeriei\nDUtillert Seagram \t\nDominion  Storei . .\nFord of Ctntdt \t\nGoodvetr Tirt \t\nHiram Wtlker   \t\n'motrlll Tobtcco _ \t\nLobliw A      \t\nMauey Harrii  1\t\nStandard Paving \t\nStetl of Canada\t\nWalker Braw     _\t\n.034\n3.35\n1.00\n.61\n2.70\n.03\n.224\nX\nIM\n2.10\n.05%\n8.93\n1.08\n.154\n31\nM\n.51\n.124\n.014\n7.30\n.18%\nSI\n16.25\n.04%\n.51\n1.09\nMV,\nM\n.05\n30.25\n37.00\n.16%\n.13\n.044\n034\n34.78\n_.. $\n.... 131%\n.... 84\n.90\n.... 3%\n.._ 6%\n.... 8%\n.... 7\n.... 38%\n... 11\n... 15%\n... 35\n... 9\n... 27%\n.... 66\n  384\n... II\n.... 184\n... 8\n  1\n.... 50%\n.... 3%\nMontreal Stock Prices\nBtU Telephone .\nB C Picking ..\nBrazilian \t\nB C Powtr A\t\nBuild Prod \u2014\nBulolo\nCanada Bronte .\nCtn Ctr Fdy -.\nCm Cement.\nCan Cement Pfd\t\nCan Ind Al A\t\nCan Ind Al B \t\nCPR \t\nCanada Steemera .....\nCockihutt j\nCon M Is Sm\nDom Bridge\t\nDom Glau \t\nDominion Text.\nGn St Wtrea ..\nChai Gurd\t\nHimllton Br ...\nInU Nickel\nMauey Harrli  _____\nMontreal Power _..._.___\nNational Steel Car \t\nNational Brewing _...\nOgllvle   \u2014\nPower Corporation ....\nPrict Broi\t\nQuebec  -.,.- -.\u2014\u2014\n132\n.     %\n.    8%\n.   24\n,   30\n34%\n31\n74\n.    6%\n574\n.    8%\n74\n114\n14\n. 8%\n. 1654\n. 30%\n.113\n.   67\n: ?*\n. 34\n. 28%\n. 4%\n. 33%\n. 16%\n.   36%\n163\n.    94\n.   34\n14%\nShawinlgan -. __\nSherwin   WUUami  \t\nSouth Can Power\t\nSteel of Canadt _....._\t\nCURBS\nBrew it Dlit\nB A  OU       __..\nCanada Celaneie ...\nCanada   Dredge  ....\nCanada Malting ....\nCanoda Wineries ..\nDiitlllen Seagm _\nDryden Paper \t\nImpl OU  \t\nImpl Tob Can\t\nIntl Patrol \t\nMcCoil Frontenac _..\nMitchell Robt\t\nPage Heney ____.\n\u25a0ANKS\nCanada \t\nCanadian .\nCommerce \t\nDominion\t\nMontreal  \t\nNova Scotia\t\nRoyal  _\t\nToronto \t\nMISCELLANEOUS\nDominion Storei \t\nFord Cantda A\t\n124\n124\n50%\n.85\n164\n224\nSO\n33%\n44\n24%\n4\n204\n14\n36%\n13\n4\n80%\n53\n139\n141\n. 165\n. 184\n.370\n. 145\n. 201\n__   27\nMontreal Silver Prices\nMONTREAL, Aug. 15 (CP)-Sllver futures closed lr-\nrenultr on lhe Canadian commodity exchange today, 90 points\noff to 10 up. A total of 18 contracts was traded, 5 September,\n7 December, 6 March.\nOptn High Low Cloie\nD\u00abC.   65.60B\nMarch  66.20B\nSept 64.75B\nOfficials at Ymlr\nConsolidated\nINCOME TAX\nTAKE LOWER\nOTTAWA. Au*. 18 (CP)-A ittte-\nnent luued todty by Hon. J. E.\nLtwion, minltttr of ntUontl revenue, ihowtd Incomt tax collection!\ntor July to htvt totalled $3,843,294.\nThit wu a drop of $19,373 trom the\nttmt montb t yetr tgo.\nFor tht fint four montha of the\nfirtttnt fiical yaar incomt tax col-\nectioni have increaeed by $18,774.-\n933. In tht wmt period of 1934 colleetloni totalled 042,632,980, while\nthit year they htvt loared to $38,-\nT'he Toronto diitrict lead! Canada\nIn incomt tax receipt!. Figuru for\nToronto tnd weitern dlstricU of I\nUie Dominion with lut yeari colleetloni in bracket!, follow:\nToronto $18,734,813 ($13,209,341),\nVancouver $3,262,045 ($2,432,969).\nWinnipeg $1,465,664 ($1,138,293),\nCalgary 1711,403 ($534,922), Edmonton $245,650 ($236,448), Regina $138,-\n290 ($139,392), Saikatoon, $79,085\n($66,732). Yukon $16,023   ($14,460).\nThe Regina distilct dropped by\n$1301.\nMONTREAL UP\nMONTREAL, Aug. 15 (CP) -\nThough a few recent strong stocks\nwilted under profit taking, (lie general trend of the Montreal itock\nexchange today wu Irregularly\nhlgfter.\nMassey-Harrli cloied at 6, up %.\nA few infrequent performen in the\nhigh pricei preferred Utt managed\nto icore good gaini. Outstanding wat\nCanadian Hydro-Electric preferred\nwhich advanced three to 56 while\nInternaUonal Power preferred wu\nup 2 at 47%.\nEncountering profit-taking. CPJt.\nat 11%, Coniolidated Mining &\nSmelting tt 165%, and Shawinlgan\nat 18%. all lott %.\nANOTHER BIG GOLD\nSHIPMENT TO U. S.\nNIW YORK, Aug. 15 (CP)\u2014Tht\nNaw York Fedenl Raaerve bank\ntoday nported reoelpt of $2,633,-\n000 In gold from Canada.\nU. S. Dollar Gaini\nMONTREAL, Aug. 19 (CP)-The\npound iterllng wu up 5-16 cent\nto 4.99 3-16 on Montreal tore,n\nexchange! today while the United\nStatei dollar gained 1-16 ot 1 per\ncent at 1.00 3-16. The French franc\nheld unchanged at 6.65 centa.\nMetal Markets\nNTW YORK. Aug. 15 (API-Copper quiet; electrolytic ipot and future 8.00; export 7.90-96.\nTin easy; tpot and nearby 48.25;\nfuture 47.37.\nIron quiet, unchanged.\nLead steady; tpot New York 4.20-\n25; Eut St. Louia 4.05.\nZinc dull; Eut St. Louis ipot and\ntuture 4.50.\nAluminum 19.00-22.00.\nAntimony, ipot 13.00.\nBtr lUver easy. % lower at 65%.\nAT IXMJD-5N-\nCopper, standard spot \u00a332; future\n\u00a333 7i 6d.\nElectrolytic, tpot \u00a335 10s; future\n\u00a336.\nTin, ipot \u00a3309 5t; future \u00a3207\n13* 8d.\nLead, ipot and future \u00a315 15a.\nZinc, tpot \u00a311 7t 6d; future \u00a315\n12s 8d.\nBtr illver easy, 3-16 lower at 39d\nDominion Livestock\nWINNIPEG. Aug. 15 (CP)-Cat-\ntie 900.\nSteers $6.50.\nHelfen $5.50.\nFed calvei $7.50.\nCowt $2.50.\nBuilt $2.25.\nStocker tnd feeder tteen $4.25.\nStock cowi and heiferi $3.\nCalvei 150.\nVttltri $5.50.\nHogi 53.\nSelect btcon $1 per hetd premium, btcon $9.50, butcheri $1 per\nhead dlicount, heavy $9, lighti nnd\nfeeder! $9.50, iowi $7.\nSheep 136.\nHandywelght Iambi $5.50.\nHandywelght iheap $3.50.\nAt thi mine mouth of tha Ymlr\nConiolidated workingi. 0. D.\nFrith, general luperlntendent, R.\n3, McCorkell, pretldtnt of the organization of Victoria and A. M.\nManion, K.C, M.P.P.. Omineca.\nMINES SOAR\nTORONTO, Aug. 15 (CP)\u2014The\nToronto mining market today rolled\nup a volume of 466.000 sharei to ict\na new record tor the tummer. At\nthe cloie the gold share Index wae\nup XI to 102.34 and the miscellaneous mlnei index 1.10 to 92.87.\nAlthough the general tone of the\ngolds wu strong, Teck-Hughei loit 9\ncenti to 3.94. Against thit Mclntyre\nhad a gain of 4, Lake Shore % and\nBralorne 24 cents, Little Long Lac\nadvanced 19 cent! to 4.85.\nCHICAGO HIGHER\nCHICAGO. Aug. 15 (AP)-In-\ncreailng leverlty of corn crop damage reporta, together with augmented ihlpplng demind for corn,\ndid much to lift pricei of ill grtlnt\ntoday.\nKansas officitl advices tailing ot\neffect! of extreme high tempentures and of lack ot moiiture tald\nthat ln the eaitern half ot the itate\n50 to 75 per cent of the corn crop\nhid been dtmaged beyond the point\nwhere It can produce even 1 fttr\noutput.\nCorn cloied nervous, % to 1%\nhigher, December 87 to 574, wheat\n% to 1 cent up, December 894 to\n89%, oats unchanged to 4 higher.\nPRODUCE EASIER\nMONTREAL, Aug. 15 (CP)-A\nslightly easier tone prevailed on\nMontreal dairy and produce markets today. Butter was 20% centt\nper pound tor No. 1; cheete wat\n10% centt for No. 1; eggs were 27\ncents a dozen; potatoes ranged from\n29 to 30 cent! per 80-pound bag.\nOutput of Creamery\nButter Higher\nOTTAWA, Aug. 19 (CP)-Produc-\nUon of creamery butter during July\namounted to 37,116,468 pounds, an\nincrease of 5.6 per cent compared\nwith 35,148,698 pounds in thc tarn\nmonth lut year, according to a report laaued today by the Dominion\nbureau ot statistics.\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY. Aug. 15 (CP)-Re-\nctlpti yesterday: 269 cattle; 137\ncalvei; 557 hogi; 2673 iheep and\nIambi. Today up to noon: 40 cattle;\none calf; 364 hogs; 255 sheep.\nThere were Insufficient lolei to\nestablish market.\nLast hog tales: Selects 9.45; Bacons\n8.95; Butchers 8.45 off trucki.\n-PAO! ILSVIN\nCANADA'S TRADE\nSHOWS INCREASE\n$14,078,625 Jump in\nFirst Four Months\nof the Year\nOTTAWA, Aug. IB <fcP)\u2014Can-\nada't total trade for tha month of\nJuly had a value of $106,200,016\ncompared with $100,931,175 for tha\nsame month latt year. Thttt flguret were luued todty by Hon.\nJ E. Lawton, miniiter ot national\nrevenue.\nFor the tint four month! ot the\ncurrent fiical year tha total tradt\nof the country wu valued at $398.-\n138,881, an increate ot $14,078,625\njver the tame period of 1934.\nIn July total exporti tmounttd\nIn value to $57,786,238 which) wu\napproximately $1,000,000 hightr\nthan June of 1934. lmporta wtrt\nup. from $44,144,509 tn July of lut\nyear to $48,413,780 lltt month.\nFour of the 12 commodity group!\nregistered gilni ln export lut\nmonth, and eight recorded decUntt.\nThe incrusei were ln manufactured nicktl. which rote from $2.-\n644,987 to $3,309,088; partially manufactured copper, up from $1,676,932\nto $2,469,013; newsprint, from $7,-\n263,463 to $7,446,820 ind meatl, trom\n$1,944,969 to $2,114,758.\nPROFIT TAKEN\nAT NEW YORK\nNEW YORK, Aug. 15 <AP>-\nModerate profit-realizing wu\nagain the dominant feature of tht\nstock market today.\nOils and soma of th* moton and\nspeciiltiei lent a UtUe powtr to tn\notherwise rather tplrltleit performance. Alcoholt followed through for\na Ume on the prevloui day'i up-\nswing, but their flnlih wu unimpressive.\nTaking tht Hit tt 1 wholt ther*\nwere nearly twice u many decUntt\nu advancei. Turnover ln tht ttock\nexchange continued to ihrink from\nhigh leveli ot tht etrly ptrt of tht\nweek. The day'i volume wu 1^83,-\n370 iharei.\nThe Auoclated Press iverage declined .4 ot a point at 48.4, with industrial!, raili and utllitlei ihtrlng\ntbout e-quilly ln tht dip.\nPOTATO GROWER\nTO SUE\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 18 (CP) \u2014\nSuit hu been entered tn BriUih\nColumbia supreme court by Mtll\nBing. Lulu iiland potato grower,\nagainit the B. C. cout vtgttabl*\nmarketing board, Let Gllmore. th*\nboard chairman, and J. Maxwell, ta\nemployee, for a declaration that tht\nprovincial and Dominion natural\nproducta marketing acta trt ultra\nvirei.\nHe will apply Auguit 31 for n\nInterim injunction restraining da*\nfendants from Interfering with tht\nplaintiff ln disposing, ihlpplng and\nselling hia potatoei. covering wtrt\nfcrence with the plaintiff 1 utt tt\nthe hi.hwayi in tht coun* ot ihip<\nping hit potatoes and tha flopping\nand searching of hla trucki. 1\nLondon Close\nLONDON, Aug. 15 (AP)~Clo#-\nIng: Brazilian Traction $8%, CPR\n3114, Nickel $28*%, Brit Am Tblt\n\u00a364. Diitlllen 95s 3d, Hudion Bty\n18s, Imp Tob 142s 6d. Mining Trust\nLtd 5s 9d. Rand Mines \u00a38, Rhodeslan Anglo Am 10s, Rhokana Corn\n\u00a344. Springs 42t 6d, Crown Minu\n\u00a3134. Eatt Geduld \u00a310%, Vlckerf\n16s 14d.\nBonds\u2014British 2% per cant con*\n10I1 \u00a386%, Brlt 34 per cent waa\nloan \u00a31064, Brlt funding 4s 1960-90\n\u00a3118%.\n65.66\n66.55\n6r60\n66.35\n66.10\n66.10\n65.14\n65.10\n65.10B\nExchanges\nMONTREAL, Aug. 16 (CD-British and foreign exchange cloied\nhigher.\nAustria, echlUing      .1910,\nBelgium, belga  1696\nChina, Hong Kong doilan      .4969\nFrance, franc              .0666\nOermany, reichimark       .4053\nGreat Britain, pound      4.9918\nHoUand. florin 6801 '\nItaly, llr*  0827\nJapan, ytn  295'\nSwitzerland, frtnc .328^\nUnlttd SUtes, dollir, 3-18 per cent\npremium.\n(Compiled by tht Roytl Bank ot\nCanada).\nfffffffff tor? f f ? f f ti t v\nid a (omita (kcloet?\nIn simple language it is planned expenditure \u2014 saving a\nreserve for emergency.\nPut \"Savings Account\"\nin the Family Budget\nIMPERIAL BANK\nOF CANADA\nHEAD OFFICE TORONTO\nBRANCHES THROUGHOUT CANADA\nTills advertisement Is not published or displayed by (he Liquor Control Board or by\nthe Government oi British Columbia\n \t\nPAGI TWELVE-\nTHI NILSON DAILY NIWI. NILION. B.C--FAIOAY MORNING. AUGUIT 111985\nLunch Kits\nComplete\n$1.50\nMana, Rutherford\nDrug Co.\nMORE ABOUT\nSTEVENS\n(Continued From Pane One)\nMr. Stevens, asking those present\nto support him. She informed the\naudience that it was almost her\nflnt public address.\n\"EASY MONEY\"\nAgain the Reconstruction party\nleader assailed great corporations\nWho, he claimed, had gathered capital and credit into their hands and\nwere holding up constructive effort. \"Easy money\" would go far\ntoward solving many of Canada's\nproblems.\nHe referred particularly to housing, denouncing the government's\nhousing measure, and declaring that\nif he gained power \"I'd scrap it\nmighty quickly.\" His method would\nbe to call in the mortgage, trust\nand loan companies and tell them\nthat money was required at four\nor five per cent. If they declined\nto provide it he would set up a\nDominion organization, financed\nout of government funds and handle\nCanadas housing problem in that\nway.\nThe law of supply and demand\nwas not functioning in Canada because those In control of credit were\nttanding ln its way.\ni\nOne can still roam in Nottingham-\n\u2022hire in the ancient forest of Sherwood famous for the exploits of\nRobin Hood and his men dressed\nin Lincoln green.\nHere's NEW\nBEAUTY for Your\nHAIR\nIN1.2\nPIFKIINT\nSHAMS \u2014\ntt Match\nYou   H.r\nLovilon  is  that wonderful\nhew odorless, vegetable rinse\nwhich brings lustrous htgh*\nlights and a natural, silken\nsoftness to the hair. Lovalon\nis the easiest thing in the\nworld to use and will give\npour hair beauty beyond your\n'expectations.   Lovalon   does\nnot bleach or dye\u2014it is t\nrinse which wii! not color\nthe scalp or affect the hair in\nany way except to make it *-___-\u2014\u25a0,.,\nmore  loveljr\u2014more radiant.\nTry Lovalon\u2014you'll thank us\nfor telling you about it.\nLOVALON\n35p for 5 rinses\nFor Salt at\nFLEURY'S\nPHARMACY\nPhone 25.      Medical Arti Bldg.\nUPSETS IN GOLF\nATBEUINGHAM\nBELLINGHAM, Waih., Aug. 15\niAP)\u2014A double \"explotlon\" roeked\nthe Washington itate women'i golf\ntournament today when Mra. Guy\nRiegel of Spokane and Mrs. J. D.\nGilmour of Seattle, two of the pre-\nmeet favorites, were put out of the\nrunning as Mrs. Don Scott of Bremerton, Mrs. Everett Wheeler of Belllngham, and Elizabeth Finn and\nMrs. J. R. West of Seattle advanced Into the leml-finali.\nThe two veteran campaigners\nwere eliminated in sensational battles. Mrs. Riegel, a former state\nchampion, bowing to Mitt Finn at\nan extra hole, and Mra. Gilmour,\neo-medallst In the Qualifying plav,\nlosing to Mrs. Wheeler at the 18th,\n1 un.\nMrs. Scott, playing in her third\ntournament, chalked ud the biggest\nvictory fore when she trimmed Mrs,\nG. B. Butter-worth of Seattle, 5\n\u00bbnd 4. and Mrs. West downed Mrs.\nS. P. Nielsen ot Seattle. 4 and 2.\nMORE ABOUT\nSHEFFIELD\n(Continued From Page One)\nsome 60 teachers are on the teaching\nstaffs affected.\nWhile the Victoria dispatch described the post Mr. Sheffield Is to\nhave as that of \"official trustee,\"\nwhich means he will administer the\nschools in the same sense that school\nboards now administer them, it is\nnow known that he is also to supervise them as Inspector, this apDlyin:\nboth to the elementary schooli and\nthe high schools.\nThe government's responsibility\nwill extend to the levying and collection of the taxes, which will be\ntaken out ot municipal handa entirely under the new order.\nHE EXPECTS SUCCESS\nOf his new position. Mr. Sheffield\nobserved, in an interview for publication:\n\"I am assuming a heavy task in\ntaking over new duties in the Fraser valley. It is a demonstration\u2014the\nfirst of its kind in Canada\u2014of centralized direction of schools in municipal areas. Such a demonstration\nin Scotland led recently to the organization of 22 such districts, to\nembrace the whole of Scotland. 1\nfeel sure that with the cooperation\nof the former members of the trustee boards, who are remaining as\nadvisory committees, and the support ol the teaching body in the\nnew area, the plan will prove to be\nas effective in British Columbia as it\nhas proved in Scotland.\"\nREGRETS PARTING\nSpeaking of his tervice here, Mr-\nSheffield said:\n\"I shall leave Nelson and Trail\ndistricts, and the many friends I\nhave made here, with considerable\nregret.\n\"During the 12 years I have served in Nelson much progress has\nbeen made. I took over the work\nof the Doukhobor schools in 1925\nwith not a school building standing\nand not a child attending. The fact\nthat in Jfine nearly a thousand\nDoukhobor children were attending tchool, most of them ln fine\nsubstantial buildings, indicates the\nprogress being made by the Doukhobor people. The growth of tlie\ncities of Trail and Nelson during\nthe last 12 years has been remarkable, and the school systems have\nkept pace with that development\nIn the rural areas many new buildings havc been constructed, but\nwhile some little progress has been\nmade yet much remains to be done.\n\"I am sure the inspector who\ntakes my place here will accomplish much that I have been unable\nto do. I bespeak for him the same\ncooperation that has been afforded\nme. 1 leave with sincere appreciation of the work of the fine men\nand women who have terved as\ntrustees throughout the district.\"\nHIS CAREER\nMr. Sheffield holds the Bachelor\nof Arts degree from Queens university, completing his course at\nsummer school after moving to Nelson. His first experience as an active participant in educational work\nin western Canada date* back to\n1910. After graduating from the Cal-\nCHARLES MORRIS\nMen's and Boys' Wear\nAfter teeing our values and making a purchase\nBill laid: \"I've got a crew of men and next\ntime we come to town I'll bring them here\nto buy!\"\t\n511 Baker      Agent: TIP TOP TAILORS      Phone 147\nMow Trail Fertilizer Is Drilled tn\nOur Stock of Equipment for\nMINERS\nand\nPROSPECTORS\nIs Large and Complete\nCALL AND INSPECT THESE COODS OR\nWRITE FOR FURTHER INFORMATION\nAND PRICES\nETC.\nPROSPECTORS' PICKS\nSHOVELS\nPACK SACKS\nFUSE\nMINER'S LAMPS\nCARBIDE\nTENTS\nBLASTINC CAPS\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Ltd.\nForage Poisoning\nin Washington\nWENATCHIE, Waih., Aug. 1S-\n(AP)\u2014Cattle and horses -ttiU are dying ln thli diitrict from a mysterious\nrange disease deicribed only as\nforage poiioning. What it is in the\nforage that ia causing deaths nobody, Including private, county and\natate docton, hat been able to discover.\nAppeals have been made both to\nthe state and federal governments\ntor a man to come ln and make a\nstudy, but to far they have made\nonly hurried visits, county agents\nreported.\nLosses have been stopped in many\nherds by taking itock from open\nrange and feeding ln barnyards or\nln stubblefields, but groweri who\nhave not teed or stubble itill are\nsuffering losses.\nFISHERMEN NOT\nDROWNED\nATTACHMENT U8ED FOR LARGE-SCALE APPLICATION\nTests by thi experts of the Coniolidited Mining * Smelting\ncompany of Cinada having ihown that the beit germination wai obtained by having the ued grain and tht fertlllwr In cloie proximity\nbut not in contact, while alio leai fertilizer was uied where thli wat\ndone, the Coniolidited detlgned attachments for uie with itandird\ntypes of commercial lied drills or teedtn, tnd manufactured them\nat Tadanac, to enable prairie farmen to uie Warfleld fertlllien\nwithout new Inveitment in seeders. Thli picture ihowi fertilizer\nbeing applied In towing tall wheat on the farm of A. E. Hall, Grand\nForki.\ngary normal tchool in 1908, he began his teaching career in the rural\nschools of Alberta. Moving to British Columbia he was in turn principal of Belmont Superior school\nfor five years, and supervising principal of the elementary schools of\nFernie for three years. In Ausust,\n1923, he  was appointed Inspector\nof schooli with headquarten at Nel\n^^^^^^_^ hat done poit-\ngraduate work in education at the\nson. Since then he has done\nUniversity of British, and at Columbia University in New York.\nAs an author he has written many\narticles for educational magazines,\nand has collaborated with others in\nseveral important textbooks. He is\na co-author of the New Canadian\nArithmetics for grades III to VI,\nand ot the New Canadian Junior\nMathematics for grades VII and\nVIII. He was editor-in-chief of the\nDent's Canadian Series of Junior\nMathematics for grades VII, VIII\nand IX. He was co-author of the\nPrimer and First Reader which are\nnow used throughout the four western provinces. He has also revised\nbooks and procedures for use in\nDoukhobor schools.\nCOMMUNITY WORK\nCitizens of Nelson will probably\nremember Mr. Sheffield, however,\nin part at least, tor his wide community activities. He was on the\norganization committee of the Kootenay Music Festival, and incidentally donor of the tllver shield\nfor rural ichool choirs; is a past\npresident of the Nelson Gyro club;\nand is president of the Fortnightly\nclub. In SL Saviour't church he wat\na member ot the committee in\ncharge of the church's reconstruction. For six years he was on the\nexecutive of the British Columbia\nTeachers federation, and he was its\nfirst vice-president when appointed\nto the Nelson inspectorate. He has\nserved on the Nelson municipal library board for 10 years.\nMORE ABOUT\nNAZI OFFICIAL\n(Continued From Page Ont)\ncard announcing she was a \"racial\ntraitor.\"\n\"Present at the time this incident\noccurred.\" Streicher said, \"was, I\nbelieve, the wife of the American\nambassador, who was shocked. The\nAmerican press said that ln Nurn-\nbcrg Jews and girls were led\nthrough the streets with placards\n'racial traitors' on their breasts.\"\nStreicher apparently referred to\nAmerican Ambassador William E.\nDogg's daughter. Martha, who was\nquoted in America two years ago\nafter a visit to Numberg.\nDenouncing foreign report! of\nanti-Jewish disturbances in Germany, he suggested that foreign\ncountries instead \"report about\nlynch lustice in America.\"\nA8SAIL  INTER-MARRIAGE\nThe Nazi leader assailed inter\nmarriage between Jews and Gentiles, asserting it should be punished\n\"with heavy penitentiary service\"\n\"We must take steps against race\ndisgrace and mixed marriages,\" he\ndeclared.\nStreicher spoke for two.houn and\nt half in the soortspalast and then\nrushed to the tennishalle to address\nan overflow meeting there which,\nin the meanwhile, had listened to\nhis first speech through loudspeakers.\nThousands itood outside the halls\nwhile heavy police guards picketed\nthe neighborhood. Introductory\nspeakers, however, guaranteed that\nno trouble would result and that\nthose who predicted otherwise\nwould be fooled.\nJews remained in their homes.\nNone was to be teen upon the\nitreeti.\nForeign circles seemed astounded\nat Streicher's open reference to a\nmember of the American ambassador's family, and offered the opinion the remarks would not go unnoticed\" diplomatically.\nAmericans in the audience resented also Streicher's premise that\nlynching in the United States offered an excuse for anti-Semitism\nin Germany.\nAfter the addresses, the thousands\nof listeners left quietly for their\nhomes. No disorders were reported.\nMORE ABOUT\nROCKEFELLER\n(Continued From Pagi One)\ntributlom of thli character usually\ntake some time to plan and the program may have been arranged prior\nto the preiident'i message.\nThe market value of the stock on\nJune 28 was about I27.300.0O0. Today, because of market declines, it\nis worth about S2S.000.000. The senate tax bill would Increase the tax\non iuch a gift it made to a tingle\nIndividual by an amount estimated\nupward of Sl.250.000. The tax in\nJune, If going to a single Individual,\nwould have exceeded $10,000,000,\nbut would be much lower if divided, while charitable contributions are largely exempt.\nThe Rockefeller family fortune\nhas Been estimated at from $500,000,-\n000 to $2,500,000,000.\nMORE ABOUT\nUTILITIES'HEAD\n(Continued From Page One)\nvetton and then had editorial writen that had so little knowledge of\nthe situation about which they were\nwriting.\n\"The long and ihort of It it that\nyou tried to see about stopping the\nadt or changing their editorial policies,\" Black persisted.\n\"I told them to see the people of\nthe New York Times and try and\nexplain our problem.\nBlack brought out that Hopton\nhad suggested that advertising in\nthe Hearst papers be increased because they opposed the utilities bill-\nHopson also made suggestions, he\nconceded after questioning, that it-\nforts be made to have papers\n\"switch over,\" Including those bf\nthe Scripps-Howard chain.\nHopson a long involved answers\nfinally had Black Interrupting peremptorily.\n\"Answer the questions,\" he\nsnapped. \"I want it distinctly understood that question! will be\nasked and aniwen given. \"We'll\nhave no speeches and no arguments\nhere.\"\nCommittee membera expressed an\nevident disposition to drop the contempt proceedings against Hopson,\nonce they finally had him on their\nwitness Itand\u2014unless other member! of the senate should object.\nHopson was instructed to return\nto the senate committee as toon as\nthe houae committee finishes questioning him tomorrow. The house\nwill probably finish itt questioning\nin one more session.\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 15 (CP)-\nAfter fellow-flthermen had tpent\nthe night ln a fruitless search tor\nhim, T. Uyeda. Japaneie, and his\nson returned today in their 30-foot\nboat to their dock at the north arm\nof the Fraser river.\nThe men left to fish ln the mouth\nof the Fraser a few days ago and\nwere feared lott in Tueiday night'i\ngale. They stayed in shelter during\nthe blow.\nBLACK FOREST\nWINS\n$10 AND COSTS\nFOR SINGING IN\nSTREETS, TRAIL\nTRAIL, B.C., Aug. 15\u2014For creating\na public disturbance Peter Andries\nand William Bruzmiski were fined\n$10 and costs of $2.50 each when\nthey appeared before Acting Police\nMagistrate Donald' MacDonald in\ncity police court yesterday afternoon.\nContinuing an old custom which\nhas in the past caused considerable\nInconvenience and annoyance to\nresidenti ln the neighborhood of\nElki' hall the accuied had been\nsinging and shouting ln that vicinity\nfollowing a dance in the hall. They\npleaded guilty to the charge.\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nElectrical Supplies\nF. a Smith. 313 Baker SL Ph\nand repalra.\n\"Tl SSS\n(2788)\nAll lummer dreiiet at half price\nat D. C. DRESS SHOPPE.      (2SSS\nAny Cheat Player will be welcomed at Salmo, B.C., Drug Store.\n(292S)\nRAMSDEN'S ARE SELLING LADIES AND MISSES 8LACKS ANO\nBLOUSES AT 60c EACH.      (2983)\nThere will be a meeting of the\nSchool board in the city hail tonight\nat 6 o'clock. (2988)\nEXPERT RADIO SERVICE AT\nSTANDARD ELECTRIC. Phone S38.\nL. M. Bice. (277S)\nC. C. F. Cardi and Dance tonight,\n8 p.m. Shirley hall. Harold Brown'i\nmusic. Door Prize. Free bus from\nBay corner 7.45 p.m. 25 cents. (2989)\nDANCE SATURDAY NIGHT,\nRainbow hall. Jack Lees Cibaret\nBtnd. Gtnti 60c, Ladlu free.\n(2982)\nBASEBALL\nSalmo vi. New Grand Cubt Sundty afternoon. 2:30. Strong team to\nmeet loeali. Be a Booiter.      (2991)\nGREYHOUND leavei Nelion dally\nexcept Sunday at 10.16 a.m. for Spoktne with direct connection! for\nU. 8. and Canadian pointi.     (2986)\nCommencing tomorrow, home\nmade bread, bum, piei, etc., for tile\nat Little Home Cafe, behind Bank\nof Montreal. 12907)\nPUBLIC ADDRESS by E. R. En-\ngel of Edmonton, on Social Credit\nthe solution of eur Economic Problem\u2014Vtrnon St Banditand tonight\nat 8 p.m. A purely educational non-\npolltlcil addriu. Othir leeturei at\nTrail, Saturday and Rouland Sunday, alio it S p.m. Collection t*** defray txpiniei. (2(84)\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nThe body of John Stuirt of Har-\nron rests at Davit Funertl Home\nuntil 2 p.m Stturday. 17 Inst., where\ntervice wlll be conducted bv Rev.\nS. J. Sharkey. Interment ln N\u00bb'<nn\ncemetery. (2980)\nCONVICTED OF\nASSAULT\nVANCOUVER, Aug, 15 (CP) -\nWong Chong Yuen, convicted of\nassaulting a police officer engaged\nin making a seizure of potatoes on\nWong's truck under the vegetable\nmarket board's regulations, was\nfined $10 in Vancouver police court\ntoday.\nMAN RECAPTURED\nCALGARY, Aug. 15 (CP)-One\not the five inmates of tlie Ponoka\nmental hotpltal, who escaped lost\nSunday night, was captured by Royal Canadian Mounted -police at Tro-\nchu today. Hit home It in Calgary.\nThe man told police he left the\nmental hotpltal alone ond knew\nnothing about the other four men.\nLONGACRES TRACK, Seattle,\nAug. 15 (AP)\u2014Off to a poor ttart,\nBlack Foreit, carrying the illkt ot\nthe Geeanee itable, squeezed\nthrough a narrow opening on the\nttretch turn today and won handily the Orthopedic Children's hoipltal handicap of iix furlong! in 1:12.\nBlack Forest paid $8.40, $7.10 and\n13,20; Ikard, sepond, $4.50 and $2.50,\nand Blackboard, third, $2,50.\nJOHN STUART\nPASSES ON\nJohn Stuart, of Harrop, reildent\nof the diitrict for a great many yean\npatted away at 7 o'clock Thursday\nmorning at the Kootenay Lake General hospital. Mr. Stuart was born\nin La Chute, Quebec, in 1861. He\nwas a wheelwright by trade.\nOne sister, Mrs. J; F. Stevens, survives.\nWAY CLEAR FOR\nCOAST BRIDGE\nVICTORIA. Aug. 15 (CP)-Formal\ntransfer of title of the bed of the\nFrater river at the site of the New\nWestminster bridge from the harbor board to the British Columbia\neovernment has been approved by\nthe privy council. Premier T. D.\nPattullo wai informed today.\nThe New Westminster harbor\nboard passed the necessary by-law\nrecommending the transfer and on\nAugust 3 this was approved by order-in-council at Ottawa.\nThis leaves the way clear for the\nbridge work to commence, the premier indicated, and the issuance of\nthe formal certificate of approval is\nanticipated shortly.\nFIND CLIPPING\nOFOLDQUINTS\nDionnes May Not Be\nFirst to Have\nSurvived\nBODY IS FOUND\nBURNABY, B.C., Aug. 15 (CP) -\nThe decomposed body of an elderly\nman identified ai that of Edward\nBradbeer, 74, of South Burnaby,\nwho disappeared from home more\nthan a week ago, wai found today\nin the North Fraaer river near the\nBoundary road.\nTrail Bowlers in\nNtlton Saturday\nTrail lawn bowlera win be In Nelton Saturday to play the local team\nin the third terlea for the Nelson\nBrewery cup. The games will start\nat 6 p.m.   -\nPATTULLO TO GO\n\"ON THE AIR\"\nMONTREAL, Aug. 13 (CP)-Pos-\nsibility the Dionne quintuplets are\nnot the firat tet of quintuplet! ever\nto turvive wat expressed here tonight following discovery in a house\nof an old scrap book kept by the\nlate Alfred Hirst, traveller, soldier,\npoliceman and collector of curiosities.\nA clipping from the San Francisco\nChronicle of nearly 60 yeara ago,\ncontained in the scrap book, Etyt\nquintuplets were bom in October,\n1878, to the wife bf a Muth Aui-\ntralian farmer named Jacob Schiller, a German aettler who with\nmany compatriot! farmed a tract of\nland about 30 miles from the town\nof Kapunda, South Australia. The\nclipping addi: \"All of them are\nalive and are said to be very\nhealthy \"\nAccording to the clipping Mrs.\nSchuler was a huge woman, \"standing six feet four inches in her stockings and turning the scales at 244\npounds stven ounces.\" She had already given birth to five children,\nincluding two pairs of twins.\n\"Thc father of the five ls tald to\nhave aat down stupidly and, mechanically gazed from one infant to\nthe other, simply laid: 'Mein Gott,\nmeln Gott.' There were three bo;v.\nand two girli. All of them are alive\nand tald to be very healthy.\"\nVICTORIA. Aug. 15 (CP)-\"Brl(-\nish Columbia'! position in Dominion affairs\" will be outlined by Premier T. D. Pattullo in a broadcast\nspeech next week.\nThe premier said today hc was\nmaking arrangements for the address from Vancouver. Details will\nbe announced later in the week.\nFind Robbers' Car\nSPOKANE. Wach., Aug. 15 (AP)\n\u2014The bullet-punctured car In which\nthree Rosalia bank robbers escaped\nyesterday after killing Town Marshal Bert Lemley was found late\ntoday In a country schoolyard near\nSpangle. 20 miles south of here. The\nnew development veered the center\nof the widetnread manhunt from\ncentral Idaho to the Spokane region.\nOppostd to Canada\nBeing in War, Says\nStevens, Saskatoon\nSASKATOON. Aug. 15 (CP) -\nNo government should precipitate\nCanada into a foreign war \"unless\nit was clear that the people of the\nDominion undentood the situation\nand approved the action.\" Hon. H.\nH, Stevens. Reconstruction party\nleader, said here tonight\nAt hit meeting Mr. Steveni was\nasked his view of Canada'! participation ln a foreign war. \"It is an\nunthinkable thing that Canada\nshould be drawn into another war.\"\nhe replied. He-added that it was\nhoped British statesmen who had\nbeen so successful In the past would\nsucceed ln averting any tuch catastrophe.\nPrescriptions\nCITY DRUG CO.\nNelion'i Dlipemlng Chemiiti\n10 - PHONES - 11\nGROCERY\nFRIDAY and SATURDAY\nSPECIALS\n| Cider Vinegar Cal. 6911\nSPICES\u2014All kindt   2 tint 15?\nKINC OSCAR SARDINES  2 tint 25?\nSOCKEYE SALMON\u2014 Vn Tin 18?\nNABOB CUT CREEN BEANS 2 tint 25?\nDOLE'S PINEAPPLE JUICE .... Tin 15<*. 2 tint 25?\nThey're Perfect\nThat's What Men\nAre Saying About\nthe New\n\"NEVER WILT1\nSHIRTS\nShirts With the\n\"MARVEL\"\nCOLLAR\n1. Requires no starch\n2. Perfect fit\n3. Starched collar\nappearance\n4. Soft collar comfort\n5. Does not curl\n6. Does not wilt\n7. Does not crush\n6. Does not wrinkle\n$2.00     $2.50\nFMORY'Sl\nLimited\nSummer Fuel\nWILDFIRE STOVE COAL\n$9.00 per TON\nNO SOOT \u2014 NO CLINKERS \u2014 VERY LITTLE ASH\nBurns Coal & Cartage Company\nPhone 53 Nelson, B. C, 518 Ward St\n5T0CK INVESTMENT\nAS YOU 0 LIKE IT\nPAROWAX 1 lb. carton\niw|\nRUBBER JAR RINGS  Doien   5?\nSWEET PICKLES  10-bi. jar 15?\n|MAYONNAISE Fa0;d',     8oz.Jar22g|\u25a0\nTUNA FISH\u2014Flaked 'As    Tin 10?\nMEDIUM COCONUT .. Lb. 19?\nCoffee-Malkin's Best ...... Lb. 391\nTea-Malkin's Best Lb.490\nNABOB ORANGE MARMALADE 32-oi. jar 35?\nBARCO CUBE PINEAPPLE Tall tin 10?\nBORDEN'S CHOCOLATE MALTED MILK .... Tin 35?\nCLEEVE'S ENCLISH RUM BUTTER TOFFEE .. Lb. 39?\nLIFEBUOY SOAP '.. 3 bars 23?\nFruits and Vegetables\nAPRICOTS, crate .. fl.55 PEACHES, basket .. 35?\nSUNKIST ORANCES\u2014Medium slse .... 3 dozen 95?\nCANTELOUPE\u2014Coed tiie   2 for 25?\n| Huckleberries Bskt. 3511\nWATERMELLON   Lb.   5?\nLOCAL BANTAM CORN  Doien 39?\nCUCUMBERS  Each   5?\nCREEN OR WAX BEANS 2 lbs. 15?\nLETTUCE  Large heads 10?\nNEW POTATOES  10 lbs. 25?\n\"HONE VOUR ORDERS\nPree Oellvtry te All Parti ot tht City\nFREIGHT  PREPAID  ON  ALL\nORDERS OVER S10.00\nSTAR VALUE*\nREPUTATION\nAs You'd Like It\nIf you art wlie, ind let tht REPUTATION of a product guld*\nyou ... then liiten to the reputation of BULMAN'8 CANNED\nGOODS. For miny yean they hive been the choice of discriminating people. Order them by ntmt from your grocer.\nAt Lost\nA musical\ndrama that's\nunusual . . .\nbreath-taking\n. . . mighty!\n","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"Nelson (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1935_08_16","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0404599","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.493333","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-117.295833","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1935-08-16 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1935-08-16 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"The Daily News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}