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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":" .\u2022aw\nAustralians Run Up Bi_\nLead in Test Match\n\u2014Page Seven\n9BL_i\nCS* Octxj\nVOLUME 33\nU   I I \u2022\u25a0      . U*A**... S\nrfcOVIWCI-H   Ll 8RAK II\n'VICTORIA  B  C\nIMt!\nTrail Evens Ball Series\nPlayoff With Nelson\n\u2014 Page Seven\n\u00aea\nNELSON, BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA-MONDAY MORNING, AUGUST 20, 1984\nFIVE CENT8 A COPY\nNUMBER W!\nRAGING FIRES NEAR LAKESIDE HOMES\n********#*******#*******       ********\nSave Coates and Walton Homes With Difficulty; Fighters Flee; Falling Rocks Hit Two Men\nSweeping Vote for\nChancellor Hitler\nLabatt Hears Own\nMurder Discussed\nKidnap Victim Hears Cold-Blooded Talk Regarding the\nDisposition of His Body\nJOHN LABATT\nHAMILTON, AUJ. 19 (CP)\u2014To lit\nfor teveral hours Wednesday night\nand listen to i cold-blooded discussion ot whit steps ihould be\ntaken to murder him and dispone ot\nhit * body wta the harrowing experience ot John uhatt whilt he\nwit held captive by kidnappers, iccordlng to a source cloee to the\nftmlly. In recounting hit experiences\nwith the kidnappers, Mr. Labatt li\nttld to have Informed hli family\nthit from the length of time he\nwu driven titer being mtde captive tnd hit eyes taped he tu>-\nptcted be hid been held In t tram)\nthick in northern onttrlo or the.\nMuikoka region. He emelled P'ne\nwoodt continually, the kidnappers'\nvictim told his intimate friend upoh\nreturn.\nCLOSING LN\nOn the whole he had* been frett\ned well, but on Wednetdty night\ntht gang ipptrently received word\nfrom tome one keeping them well\nposted on the movement! ot tht\npolice tnd they became agitated.\ntetrlng the authorities were closing\nln on them.\nThe gangsters discussed ln t coldblooded minner i pltn to murder\nMr. Ubatt and all tht detain of\ndisposing of hit body tnd getting\nrid of ill possible traoes ot evidence\nwere talked over ln their victim's\nhetring. Early in the morning, however, their Informant apparently\ngave them more cheery newi, for tht\ngang calmed down and did not teem\nto be ao fearful about tht pollce\ndiscovering their hiding-place.\n\"Outside of the terrible suspense\nof the hours when they were pltn*\nnlng to murder me I wta well\ntreated,\" Mr. Labatt told hla friends.\nROSEMONTHAS\nGRASS BLAZE\nCause  Attributed  to\nChildren Playing\nWith Matches\nRosemont residents had another\nfin eeare Sunday afternoon when a\ngrass fire broke out near the W. O.\nH. fltalnton residence at the foot\nof one of the old Silver Kins tram\ntowers. Alleged to have been started by children playing with matches,\nthe fin. spread rapidly ln the dry\ngrass but was nipped In the bud\nby nearby reUdents who brought\ngarden hoses Into play.\nThe Nelson fire department and\nthe forest branch responded to calls\nbut tht) fire was practically out by\nthe time their men arrived. Seated\nbelow dry grass and brush the fire\nwould have proven a stubborn one\nto combat and a serious menace\nhad It got away.\nRefuses to Discuss\nRumors of Kidnapping\nTORONTO. Aug. 19 (CP).\u2014Harry\nC* Hatch, well-known Toronto dls-\ntlller and sportsman today refused\nto discuss a report that he had\nbeen threatened by purported kidnappers, and Instructed his secretary\nto say \"there ls absolutely nothing\nln the etory, Mr. Hatch does not\ncare to discuss It.\"\nJockey Crushed in\nShaft of Elevator\nClarence Stanski Dies at\nVancouver. Before Could\nBe Taken to Hospital\nVANCOUVER, Aug. le (CP)\u2014Clarence stracskl, well-known Paclfio\ncoast jockey, was killed ln an elevator accident today while going\nto hla room ln a lodal hotel.\nAccording to police, , Stranakl\nstood near the door, and, between\nthe main and first floors, overbalanced and fell. His head caught between the floor of the elevator and\nthe shaft wall and the skull was\nbadly crushed. He was dead before\nhe could be taken to hospital.\nThe fatality followed an altercation ln a cafe. Polloe separated\nStrahskt and a number of other men\nwho were In dispute. The trouble\nstarted again ln the botel lobby\nand police once again restored peace,\nStranakl with two companions then\ndecided to go to his room and the\naccident happened ln the elevator,\nTRANSOCEANIC\nFLIERS CRASH\nNEWPORT, Pembrokeshire, wiles,\nAui. 19 (AP)\u2014Oeorge Pond tnd\nOesare Rahellt, turned btck by t\nratlin storm mer the Irish 'set\non t Rome-to-Dublln fllfht, at*\ntempted to ltnd netr here eirly\nibis morning but enshed Into t\nmountiln In the dtrkness, ruining\nthelr hopes (or a return Atlantic\nillght. Miraculously the; esctped\nserious Injury.\nMarriage Between Prince George\nand Princess Marina Is Rumored\nBy JAMES ... WtU\nBLED, Tngotlttlt, Aug. 19 (AP)\nPrince George, the lourth ot Orrtt\nBritain'! royal sons, was revealed\ntodty tt thc focal point of t plot\u2014\nwith Its object matrimony.\nA high iniiliiiriii said (hit lt It\nKing Alexinder himself, who wishes\nto tee Prince George marry Princess\nMarina, third daughter of Crime\nNicholas tnd Princess olga of\nGreece.\nPrince Oeorge ls here now, at the\nexpress Invitation of Yugoslavia's\nking, and ls ttaylng ts the king's\nguest ln the royal summer palace.\nTht tctutl negotiations, tald the\nauthority, had been assigned to thc\nfluent-tongued Prince Paul, a nephew\nof Alexander and regarded ts very\nclose to the king. Ptul, who ls tn\nOxford graduate, speaks English fluently and thus ls regarded ts peculiarly fitted to speak to George of matrimony, a tubject the English prince\nhas assiduously avoided during hla\n31 years of lite.\nThere were those who believed thtt\nsuggestions of marriage between the\nprince ot Oreat Britain and the\nprincess of Greece might not fall on\nunwilling ears, for Marina, now 27\nyears old, inherited from her ftther,\nt brother of the late King Constantino of Greece, all his pleating personal qualities u well at the betuty\nand charm of her Ruulan mother.\nFour Picnickers\nHurled to Death\nGLASGOW, Ky., Aug. 19 (AP).\u2014\nA Jolly picnic todty becime the\nscene of horrible trtgedy tt Snl-\ntiliiir Welti, t tummer retort netr\nhere, when t suspension foot\nbridge collipsed wtth in estlmtt-\ned 100 people, hurling it least\nfour nf them to detth In the\nrocky thtllowt of Little Barren\nriver, 20 feet below.\nDEADLOCK ON\nWHEATEXPORT\nExporting Nations\nUnable to Agree\nOver Amounts\nBy ALBERT W. WILSON\n(Associated Preu Staff Writer).\nLONDON, Aug. 19 (AP) .-Representatives of whett exporting nttloni were deadlocked tonight on\nthe quwtlon of dividing up the\nestimated lmportint. demtnd of 600,-\n000,000 buthels for 1994-39, tnd\nsomt delegatat to the Internitlonil\nconference predicted privately there\nwu littlt hope of tn Igreement tt\nthlt week'i tettlom.\nThe conference, with 19 nttloni\nrepresented, tdopted tbt 600.ooo.ooo\nbuthels figure provisionally tt representing the demand for the year\nwhich begin Aug. 1, with the reservation thtt lt might be lncreued\nowing to the fact thtt \"world\nsupplies of coarse grains tnd hiy\nfor animal feeding stuffs were materially below normal.\"\nFlntl agreement on thlt figure\nwu expected.\nAn official communique failed to\nmention the ftct, which wu aecer-\ntalned through other official aourcet.\nthtt the \"big four\" exporter*!\u2014\nCanada, United statei, Argentina\nand Auitrtllt\u2014reported ftllure tfter\ntheir flrtt tttempt to decide on\nexport quotu.\nFARM HAIL LOSS\nOVER $4,000,000\nMillion Dollar Loss in Storm\nFriday and Saturday in\nSouthern Saskatchewan\nWINNIPEO, Aug. 19 (CPI\u2014Wett-\nern Ctntdt'i hill losses tonight wen\nmounting over the M.OOOMO-mirk\nwith scores of acres of wheat and\ncoarte gnlni rivtged by the ley\npelleti. \u25a0*-*\u2022*.\nReport! from touthem Sukitchewin were confirming estimates of\n11,000,000 damage In hall losses\nto cropt tnd property ln t ttorm\nwhich swept wldt treu Frldiy\nnight and Saturday.\nLaat Tueaday 1900,000 damage wu\ndont by a hall ttorm which cut tn\ntret 10 mllei wide tnd 90 miles\nlong ln southern Albertt. previous,\nly hall losses ln northwestern Sukatchewan and north central Alberta, chiefly around July lo. caused\n\u20223,000.000 damage to cropt. Other\nscattered storms, tome ln section!\not Manitoba, were believed to htvt\nctuied losses ln tht neighborhood\nof t900,000.\nSTEVENS LEAVES\nFOR THE KOOTENAY\nForecasts Federal Loan May\nBe Announced Within\na Month\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 19 (CP)\u2014Ron.\nR. H.- Steveni left here todty by\nautomobile for hit constituency, Eitt\nKootenty, wltb t ten days vltlt to\nthe cout behind him. He It on his\nwty btck to Otttwt.\nThe miniiter of trtdt tnd commerce, who hu delivered three\nspeeches tnd been occupied with\nInterviewers or business associated\nalmott the whole of hli lo-dty holidty, refuted tny statement to the\npreu thli morning is he left.\nIn tn Interview lwt night Mr.\nSteveni declired definitely the com*\nminion inquiring Into price spreads\nand mut buying would regime thlt\nftll, forecut i federal loan might\nbe announced within a month end\nleft the Impression there would bt\nno genertl election until next yetr.\nWoman Pinned\nBeneath Auto\nWENATCHEE, Wuh., Aug. 10 (CP)\n\u2014Mri. R. Oeorge McCulth, Vtncou*\nvtr. B.C., wu seriously Injured netr\nLetvenworth lite todty, when the\nwu pinned beneath tht overturned\ntutomoblle In which the wu riding.\nShe will recover. Her hutbtnd esctped\nInjury.\nSir Malcolm Plans\nAttempt for 1935\nLONDON, Aug. 10 (AP)\u2014Sir Malcolm Campbell, Brltlih bolder of tht\nworld'i ltnd tpeed record, pltnt to\nihlp hit rebuilt rtclng mtchlne, Bluebird, to the United Stttes eirly In\n1939 with a view of making a freih\nattempt to attain a ipeed of 800\nmiles per.hour,\nWind Again Rises Driving\nFlames Toward the Summer\nResidences Along West Arm\nSalmo Fire Is Quiet; Small Blazes Break Out\nat Several Points But Are Controlled;\nEdward Stein Is Severely Hurt\nTwo hundred fire fighters waged a stubborn battle with\nforest blazes on the precipitous slopes of Mount Nelson,\non the north shore between the Wragge and Blaylock\nhomes, over the week-end and met with varying successes.\nSunday in a fierce fight to block the fire from coming\ndown the Canyon above S. G. Blaylock's summer home, and\nspreading below the guards that have been strung out on\nboth sides of it, two men were injured. Edward Stein was\nstruck a glancing blow on the small of his back by a rock\nthat came hurtling down a cliff, and was taken to Kootenay\nLake General hospital. Another worker was hit but his\ninjuries were not serious. Following the incident fire\nfighters became panicky and a number of them pulled out\nand refused out return.\nAlthough strong winds and low humidity prevailed\nthroughout the interior Saturday and Sunday the fires for\nthe most part were remarkably quiet. Two new fires started\nin the East Kootenay but were of a minor nature, and\nanother was reported at Columbia Gardens. Smoke from\nthe hundreds of blazes spread a thick cloak over many\nparts of the East and West Kootenays during the early\n: morning as the winds quiet*\nRainey Dies\nT. RAINEY\nST. LOUIS, Aug. 19 (CP)-Speak-\ner Henry T. Rainey of the United\nStates house ot representatives died\ntonight.\nThe speaker had come to De Paul\nhospital only recently lrom his home\nat Carrollton. 111., for treatment for\nbronchial Pneumonia. Death came\nunexpectedly at 7.25 pm. Only this\nafternoon his condition was reported as much improved.\nKilled When Top Is\nBlown From Box Car\nCALGARY. Aug. 19 (CP)\u2014Another\nvictim was added tonight to the toll\nof th- wind nnd dust storm which\nswept southern Alberta districts late\nPrlday.\nArchie McDermid, injured when lhe\ntop wu blown from a box car, netr\nCtlgtry, died tn hospital here tonight.\nAt the tame time as McDermid wu\nInjured, Andrew Atrd of Slous Lookout, Ont., met Instant death.\nBrought to hospital here, McDevmld\nnever regained consclousnett. Ht It\nbelieved to have been a resident of\nVancouver.\nIncrease in B.C.\nVehicles on Road\nVICTORIA, Aug. 19 (OP)\u2014The total number of automobiles, Including passenger end commercial vehicles, on the roid ln British Columbli, it thc end of July, vas 83,1134,\ntn Increase of more thin 1900 tt\nthe corresponding time last ..ear.\naccording to, figures released by tht\nprovlnclil motor record office here,\nCows Too Tough\nfor Fishermen\nCOLUMBIA, B.C., Aug. 19 (CP)-\nThe drought problem is something\nterrible. There tre no cowboys on\nCapt Cod tnd when the government\nshipped ln 92 cows to graze the cowi\ngrazed all over. The cowl were too\ntough for the flihermen so the gov*\nernment hid to thlp cowboys ln tl\nwell,\ned down for a time and at\nNelson citizens could hardly\nsee across the Arm.\nThe Salmo and Nelway fire\nwas reported quiet with the\nU.S. forestry officials planning to pull off about 100\nnen at the Nelway end where\nthey again have guard lines\nin good order. The Second\nRelief and 10-Mile fires\nsmoked up considerably during the day but no serious\ntrouble was encountered.\n8AVE HOMES WITH\nDIFFICULTY\nTht big army of fighters htd tht\nbetter of the North Short battle\ntt Neleton until itrong winds etrly\nSundty afternoon tent the fire\ntway to a new itart Tha flrt\nburntd   within   a   ftw  hundred\nfeet of 3. P. Coates' residence and\nthi    Walton     property    acrou\nWrtggt't rldgt. Thete pltcti were\n\u2022saved  through  the utt of two\npumps, one  relaying the wtter\nfrom above the houses where It\nwtt pumped by the first machine\nat tht lakefront.   .\nFurther   along   at   the  summer\nhome of S. G. Blaylock, C. M. &\nS. vice-president and general manager, pumps wcre kept in action wetting down a big 100-foot strip for\nprecautionary  measures.\nMEN HURT\nGuard lines were completed from\nWragges' ridge to the Blaylock\ncanyon and on the otherside east\nfrom the Canyons but the fire, fanned by the heavy winds, worked\nits way down the ravine, spread\nout below the guards and went\nracing up the hill again. In a heated battle to cage the flames in the\nsmall canyon two men were hit\nglancing blows  by  boulders that\n(Continued on Page Eight)\nHe Succeeds\nHimself\nPRESIDENT TRUJIUO\nIt wu not difficult for Ramon L.\nTrujillo to win the presidential election ln the Dominican republic. He\nwas the only candidate for office.\nAlso he was the retiring president,\nso that the presidential robes nre\nalready cut to fit. The 37-year-old\nsoldier began his career in the\nUnited States marine, and proof ol\nhis popularity comes from the lack\nof opposition in a Latin-American\ncountry where politics are an integral part ol dally Uit.\nFIREFIGHTERS\nHAVE HOPE AS\nGALES LESSEN\nThousands Continue\nBattle Flames on\n100 Fronts\nRUSH EXPERIENCED\nMEN TO SPOKANE\nBig Selway Fires\nContinue to\nSpread\nSPOKANE, WUh., Ant. 10 (AP)\n\u2014Thousands of weary flre-tlghtert\ntoday continued to battle mimes\non t hundred fronts ln the I'nlted Stttes' far west.\nLessening gales brought respite\nand hope tn an army of men In\nthe forests of Montana and central Idaho, whUe ln Oregon aad\nCalifornia flret were still raging\nout of control.\nSo serious hive the Idaho-Bel*\nwty flrtt become thtt experienced\nfighter! from New Mexico foreat\nhetdquirtere htvt been rushed to\nSpokine by plmt.\nIn spite of setbacks, crewt which\nhave been battling the eptsl* outbreak of flret In Montana int\nIdaho ln the past five yetrs, took\nhetrt with the abatement of wlndt\nwhich for two dtyi have hurled\nnames through the dry timber.\nNearly 40 blazes were set over the\nweek-end by lightning, 30 of theee\nln the Flathead Nttlontl forest,\nnorth of Missoula. Rain helped men\nIn that tectlon, however, tnd mtny\nof the burnt were brought under\ncontrol.\nCREWS HAVE ROPE\nTht two big Selway fires continued to spread but with quiet atmosphere, crewi held hopes of building\na line thtt would hold.\nIn South Idtho, two mort mines\nmd poulbly some ranch property\nwere destroyed by a flrett fire\nsweeping across tht famed Boltt\nmining basin. Tht burn btd'retched 13,000 acres In size, tnd had tn\nestimated damage of 11,000,000.\nIn the Imntht river tectlon of\nOregon, north ot Fish like ln Baker\ncounty, t flrt hid tpretd over 300\nacres tnd wat being fought by C C O\nworkers.\nSeven hundred men were battling\na 6000-acre fire near Qulncy, Calif.,\nand rangers said considerable wild\nlife, Including herds of deer had been\ndeitroyed.\nSEARCHER IS\nFOUND DEAD\nCoroner States Wounds Self\nInflicted; Zadoronzry Is\nStill Missing\nVICTORIA, Aug. 19 (CP) .-Steve\nZadoronzry hat been missing for t\nweek ln the Prince Rupert dlttrlct\nunder circumstances not* yet explained, and Philip ivmovltch. one ot\nthe searchers, lt dead from self-\ninflicted woundi, according to reports to headquarters of the Britlth\nColumbia provincial police here.\nZadoronzry went berry-picking lttt\nSunday and did not return.\nIvmovltch took ptrt for t dty\nIn the seirch for the misting mm,\ntnd then disappeared himself. His\nbody wtt found litf, tnd t coroner\ndecided tn Induest was unnecessary.\nevidence pointing conclusively to the\nfaet thtt the woundi were telf*\nInflicted.\nPolloe in continuing tht search\nfor Zadoronzry ln rough territory.\nPRETTY GIRL IS\nFIENDLISIV SLAIN\nBAN DIEGO, Cal. Aug. '. (AP)\u2014\nThe fiendish slaying ot 16-year-old\nCella Cota today appeared destined\nto be added to the list of alx unsolved\nhorror-murders here In the last three\nand a half years.\nPoUce were without a lead as to\ntha Identity of thc person who brutally beat and strangled the pretty high\nachool girl to death Friday night and\nleft her ravished body ln her own\nbackyard.\nHEAD CRUSHED\nBY GAS SHOVEL\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 19 (CP)-Pret\nQllUet. 34, Pender street weit. wtt\nlnsttntl; killed when itruck by t\nheavy bucket ol a gaa thovel on\nwhich he wai working tt West Vancouver Saturdiy,\nSILENCE HOLDS\nLABATT HOME\nDeath of Employee\nDoes Not Hinge\non Case\nLONDON, Ont., Aug. 10 (CP)\u2014\nPour dtyt after bit rtlstst by abductors who htd demanded a ransom of $190,000. John S. Ubitt.\nmillionaire head Of the big brewery\nbearing hla name tonight still\nsought tbe quiet seclusion of his\nbrother's home, recovering from\nshock that threatened him with nervous collapse.\nThe members of the Labatt ftmlly were reluctant to discuss the\ncue ln face of reprisal threats from\nthe kidnappera. Silence shrouded the\npalatial four-family homt of tht\nbrother, Bugh, also recovering from\nshock tnd exhaustion Induced by\nhis long sleepiest vigil during John's\ncaptivity.\nDeparture of th\u00bb family physician. Dr W. 3. Tillman, for hit\naummer cottage on Ltkt Huron, In-\n(Continued on Ptgt Eight)\nTORONTO WOMAN\nKILLED IN CRASH\nThree Othera  Seriously Injured in Car Accident\nat Calgary\nCALOART, Aug. IB (OP) \u2014 Mrs.\nEdith Stratton Warren clemee, Foreit Hill, Toronto, was Instantly killed tnd three others were seriously\nInjured, one critically, when two\nautomobiles were ln collision at a\nstreet Intersection here early today.\nA. Woodhouse, Edmonton, owner\not one of the can, is in hospital\nwith a broken nose, Jaw, and collarbone. W. L. Parrlsh. Calgary, owner\nof the other car, and Patrick Beich,\nEdmonton, are tlso In hotplttl, the\nlitter given only tn even chince\nto survive.. He suffered a punctured\npelvis ind other severe Internal Injuries.\nWtth woodhouse were D. C. Phillips, Windsor, ont., tnd Mite C.\n8trlck, Cilgary. In Parrlsh's car\nwere his wife, Mrs. Clemes, Beach,\ntnd Mr. tnd Mrs. W. F. a. Adims,\nOslgtry.\nPollce are Investigating the accident.\nThree Perish at\nBoat Capsizes\nPATNA, India, Aug. 19 (CP-Havat)\n\u2014Oni three passengers, not NO tt\nflrtt reported, perished ln the ctp-\nilzln- md sinking of a ferryboat near\nDahlrt on Wednesdsy, It wis announced here today.\n90 PER CENT\nOF BALLOTS\nFAVORABLE\nReturns Are Almost\nComplete; Vote\nLarge One\nOPPOSITION TO\nHITLER LOUDER\nLoss of Strength\nby No Means\nUniform\nBy WADE WERNER\nAssociated Press Foreign Staff\nberi.in, Ang. 20 (Monday) (AP)\n\u2014About lo per cent of more than\n43.000,000 German voten oppoied\nChancellor Hitler's seizure of the\nrelths presidency, vtrtnaUy complete returns ln the national prtblt-\nclte showed early today.\nThe preliminary final returns,\nmade public at 1 a-m. were: Tet.\nM,\u00abn,\u00bbM; no, t.UJM.S; Invtlld,\n871,056.\nAt wit expected, Hltler'i teet ot\npopultrlty waa overwhelmingly fivor*\nable. But tht volet of the opposition\nwtt illghtly louder than nine month*\nago, when 03 per cent of the electorate\napproved hla action ln withdrawing\nfrom the league of nations.\nLOSS  NOT  UNIFORM\nThe complete unofficial returns\nfrom various key district showed Hit-\nler's lots of strength wis by no metni\nuniform. In the Palatinate, for Instance, the yei vote wis 90 per cent\nof the total, compered to 06.7 lttt\nNovember.\nThc complete unofficial count la\nBerlin gave Hitler 270,541 fewer votei\nthtn he received ln November, t decreue of approximately I per cent.\nThe figures for Greater Berlin: te*\n2,450,869, no 492,563, invtlld 75,129.\nThe tottl vote ln Greater Berlin wtt\n3,018,552. The thoroughness ot tht\ndrive to get the full vote wat Indicated by the fact thtt ln Greater Berlin\nthe total registration was 3,458,188.\nDICTATOR'S MIGHT\nBut on the whole, the plebliclte\nwtt a vast demonstration of a dictator's might. Old and young\u2014voten\ntnd those not yet old enough to\nvote\u2014participated ln the nationwide\nceremony of approval which tt timet\ntook on ilmost t religious color.\nOnly citizens between 20 tnd 103\ntctually cast ballots for (or against)\nHitler's attumptlon of presidential\npower. But even llttle children partook ln the great act of adulation,\naffirmation of or resignation of Hltler'i letde-thlp, come what mty.\nOutside thousands of polling places\nchoirs of whltebtouscd girls stood md\nchanted \"Fuehrer, wc follow three,\nhell, hell, hell.\"\nIn front of thc chancellory ln Wei-\nhelmitrtssc an excited throng ot de-.\nvoteee raised their voices to sing the\nDeutchland hymn and the Nazi Horat\nWeasel tong. They repeatedly chintcd\n\"Let Us See Our Leader,\" and when\nthe fuehrer showed himself st the\nwindow exultation  was  unbounded.\nMarkets at\na Glance'\n(Saturday)\nToronto and Montreal: Industrial\nstocks steady.\nToronto mines: irregularly higher.\nNew York; -Stocks closed slightly\nlower.\nWinnipeg; Wheat market steady.\nLondon: Bar silver higher; other\nmetala unchanged.\nNew Y(*k: Bar silver and oth\u00abr\nmetala unchanged.\nNew York: Cotton lower, other\ncommodity markets cloeed.\nNew York: Canadian dollar down\ntt  to 1.03*4,.\nKidnap Rumor Seen as Reason Cor\nClosely Guarding the Princesses\nLONDON,   Aug.   19   (AP).\u2014The\nSunday Express reports that the\nDuke and Duchess or York and\ntheir daughters, Princess Elizabeth\nand Princes* Margaret Rose, who\nara ln the highlands of Scotland,\nare being guarded by armed men\n\"as though every casual visitor to\nthe district were a potential\ngangster.\"\nThe little princesses, the younger\nof whom will be four Tuesday, are\nln aiasmla castle \"spending their\nsummer holidays behind bolted\ndouble-locked gates,\" the paper says.\nEvery gateway to the grounds,\nthe Sunday Express reports, Is guarded by membera of the Angus polloe\nforce and gamekeepers, and the\nwooded avenues approaching the\ncaatle are patrolled day and night.\nStating that the Inhabitants of\nGlamls, who were accustomed to\nsee Princess Elizabeth and her nurse\nmove freely through tho village ln\nprevious years, are astounded at the\nprecautions, the paper says:\nWHISPER OF KIDNAP\n\"There are whisperings that anonymous letters have been received by\nthe Duchess or York suggesting a\nplot to kidnap the princess.\"\nEven stricter precautions were\nsaid to bc In operation at Gan-\nnochy, 25 miles away, where the\nduke and duchess are members of\nJ, Plerpont Morgan's shooting party\nand Where the guards include two\ndetectives ol Morgan's personal bodyguard who always are armed and\ngamekeepers and beaters attached to\nthe Gannochy grouse moors.\n \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\nPAGE TWO\nTHI NELSON DAILY NEWS, NILION. I.O--MONDAV MORNINO, AUGUST M, 1N4 -\nF AC. HAS BEEN BUSY CLUB\nSINCE ITS INCEPTION IN 1926\nHas Entered Almost\nEvery Line of Sport\nand Won\nTlw Fairview Athletic clut) !\u25a0 now\nabout tbt Only ictlve and united club\nIn Nelion tnd 1934 Ie turning out to\nbe one of Ite moit eucceeeful year,.\nhashing icored wlni ln the basketball.\ntbe Intermediate baseball playoff.\nOn September 38, 1936, cbout U\n\u25a0port enthueluti In Fairview attend\ned a meeting called to discuss the\nsport situation ln Fairview. Jamei\nRlngroie who hae alwayi been to tbe\nforefront ln all iporte wh rt Fairview\nwaa concerned was elected chairman\nof tbe meeting. Previouiiy te thu\ntime all the varioui iporti In Fair-\nview were -run separately and the\nmain object of the meeting wai to\nGuide for Travellers\nNelson, B. C, Hotels\n\"Finest in the Interior\"\nTHE HUME HOTEL\nPHONE  787\nBreakfast 25c to 60c\nLuncheon 35c to 50c-Dinner 35c and 65c\nRotary and Gyro Headquarters\nFree Bue Service Nelion, B.O. Oeorge Benwell, Prop.\nKOMI\u2014Mn. J. H. Wemley, J. D.\nShannon, Nelaon: c. A. Yule, R. S*\nFruer. W. R. Lawrence. Pentlcton;\nR H. Stewart, L. F. Harrli, C. H.\nFraear, 0. W. Chunton, O. A. Munn,\nW 8 Day, W. H. Day, Vancouver;\nC D. Martyn, R. Crawford, Medicine Hat; W. L Zelgler, Wallace,\nIdaho; I. Ooldner, Montreal; Mr.\nand   Mri.   aante.   Ysklma.   Wash.;\nMr. and Mra. any, L. ft Keyt, New\nWeitmlniter; R. R. Oarnett, Klngi-\ngate; Mr. and Mri. P. B. Sourrah,\nVictoria; D. F. ChUholm, Ottawa;\nMr. and Mra. O. Ndion, Coeur\nAlene; Mln R. Dean, Vernon; 0. It.\nTaylor, Calgiry; 0. O. Miller, Ortnd\nForks; J. W* Ruprty and party,\nSpokane.\n-The Savoy Hotel\n\"Where the Guest Is Kind\"\nNelson's Newest and Finest Hotel.\nMany Rooms With Private\nBaths or Showers.\nnt BASIS ST.\nJ. A. KERR. Prop.\nFHONB W\nNILSON. B.O.\nSAVOY\u2014 Mn. Cameron, Creeton;\nMre. Nordman, Beaverdell; Mr. and\nMn. Aehcroft, Thelma Pearson, Mr.\nand Mn. O. Bumfrey, 3. Volpattl, P.\n. Tniani, Mabel Vater. 0. Castaste,\nMlM N. T. Motherwell, J. Joy, H.\nHUketh, Frtnk Porteoui, A. Caldlcott, I. Caldlcott, Trail; Mlu Myra\nBervlei. Mln Florence Servias. Melfort, Stsk.*, D. Slncltlr, Erie; Mr. and\nMtl. A. K. Olien, Sandon; Mill Sylvia\nAftnion, Katlo; Mlu Doi-athy Buther-\nland, Winlaw; C. Set, Olty; Jobn Olien, Paul Lanen, B. H. Melvln, Reno\nMine, Balmo; J. MacDonald, Victoria;\nJ. A. Millar, Mr. tnd Mn. F. Ruahton\nNakuap; O. D. Frith, Ooodenough\nMine, Ymir; B. Burge, Ony Greek;\nH. Grutchfleld, Salmo; Mln Audrey\nMcLeod, Calgary; Mln Ithel Mar.\nshall, Miss Edmee Erlckion, Silver,\nton; Mtrtln McLeod, L. Fenny, A. E\nMalacord, A. Bradwell, Vanoouver.\nMew Grand Hotel\nr.  U  KAPAK,  Prop.\nWeekly tnd Monthly Rales\nBot and  Cold Water\nSingle tte ap     Double tl-50 up\nRooma S10 > Month ood Up\nOccidental Hotel\nnt Vernon Bt. Phone MTL\nR,  WASS1CK\nSPECIAL MONTHLY RATES\nGood Comfortable Rooms\nMlnen' Headquarten\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcome Awaits You\nJA9   B. MADDEN\nCompletely   Remodelled\nHot  and  Cold   Wtter\nIn  the  HEART of the City\nQUEEN'S HOTEL\nA. LAPOINTE, Prop.\nRoomi from SOo to $1.50\nMonthly $10 and up.\nSteam betted tnd hot and oold\nwater ln every room\n609 Baker St. Phone an\nVancouver, B. C, Hotels\nj  \"VOUR VANCOUVER H6ME\"\nDuffer in Hotel\n1. BOO Seymour SU 8ey. 3157-8\nNewly Renovated Throughout i\nPhonei      \u2022      Elevator\nA. PATERSON, Ute ot\nColeman, Altt.. Proprietor   >\nAaivtaM  Ua4a1 20\u00b0 roomi Including sultei with\nAUSllIl  IIOICI private bathi. Alio housekeeping\nE. A. OREENWOOD--. Manager r00m* *ni *-*'\u2022-*\u2022\n1221 Oranvllle St., Vancouver B.C. Reasonable Rates\nTRANSPORTATION-Freight and Passenger\nNELSON - TRAIL\nBUS STATIONS\nPaiiengen are requested to board busies it Bus Stations In Nelson tnd Trill so it to Insure a better service, ind likewise whtn\nembirklng.\nThe eoiches trivel on Baker street going east ind west Insteid\nof going east on Vernon street is his been the prictice.\nCentral Canadian Greyhound Lines, Ltd.\nPHONE 800 NELSON, B. C. 205 BAKER ST.\nNELSON - TRAIL - ROSSLAND\nDally   Truck\nService\nPhone\nNelson\n77\nFREIGHT LINE\nJ.C. \"SCOTTY\" MUIR. prop.\nPROMPT    EFFICIENT    SERVICE\nAT  ALL  TIMES\nLeaving Nelson\n\u2022t 9 i.m.\nPhone\nTrail\n13 or 101\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE NELSON TWICE DAUY\n5 a.m. and 10:.'i0 a.m. Except Sunday\nTraU\nPhone\n135\nTRAIL LIVERY CO.\nM. H. MclVOR, Prop.\nNelson\nPhone\n35\nbring them ill usder one organlia-\ntlon. Judging (rom development!\n\u25a0Inoe than tbe mwtlng proved one\not the Mggtrt boomi to iporti ln\nPtlrviiw tnd Nelson ll I wbole thtn\ntnythtng elie.\nIt wu decided to call tbe organisation the Palrvlew Amateur Athletic\naaaoclatlon, .and the following om-\ncen wen elected: Honorary president.\n3, F. Morgan; preeldent, Jobn Notmin: vlce-preeldent, Jtck Smith, tnd\nHorace Ward, teeretary'-tretiurer. Roee\nFleming, O. I. Sparki, H. Morgan\nand Jaki Rothery formed the tint\nexecutive.\nThe club hae entered teami ln all\nth- various local leagues and at times\nhave been the only local teama ln\ncompetition against outside cluba. ln\nthe 1931-sa mion thl club started\nthi Ptirvlew outdoor tkittng rink\nWhleh proved one ot tbe moet successful enterprise! ever itarted by the\nelub. Not only did the Fairview people jump tt the chince to have t\nrink ln tbelr own part of the city,\ntnd hundred! ot tkttlng enthusiasts,\nfrom uptown who once tried out the\nIdea of outdoor tkttlng found out\nthe healthful benefits ot lt.\nIn going over the Hit of offlcen\nthroughout the nine yean the organization haa been running, one finds\nthat one of those who deserve the\nmo|t credit for the club'i success Is\nJimmy Rlngrose, whose good business\nhead haa pulled the club through\nmany d....cutties, Bert Walton haa\nbeen vice-president tor five suoces-\nslve'yetn, tnd Jtke Rothery li known\nas the \"daddy\" of sports In Fairview.\nAnother who has always been t hard\nworker for tbe welfare of the club ls\nAlex. lotnln, who was elected preildent ln the 1M3-3J seaaon and reelected tor \"ii IMS-it season.\nPAY ITS OWN WAY\nTbe clubi motto hu been to pay\nlti own wiy and give the public\ntbelr monies worth lor all financial\nand moral support.\nThe following is a year by year\nresult of the activities of the club\nwith the list of officers from time\nto time.\n1926-27\u2014The club fostered senior\nmd junior baseball, intermediate\nand junior hockey and Intermediate\nbasketball in their fint season. The\ngreatest success wu enjoyed in\nthe latter event, the Fairview basketball team winning.the city title\nand then winning the West Kootenay championship by defeating thc\nTrill SUcks.\n1927-2ft-The club fostered the\nsame sports and had the strongest\nbaseball teim in the city under the\nmanagement of Junes Rlngroie, officers for that aeaion were: J. P.\nMorgan, honorary-preildent; Frank\nMcRae, president; Jack Smith, vice-\npresident; and Jack Houston secretary-treasurer. There wu no senior\nbaseball team in the city and the\nFairview team played a number of\noutside teams with considerable\nsuccess.\n19.8-2S-ROSS Fleming wu elected\nhonorary-president; Harry Houston\npresident; Jake Rothery, vice-president! and James Rlngrose secretary-\ntreuurer.\nTbe team competed ln all the various league in the city with fair success.\n1929-30 also 1980-81\u2014The tame officers ctrrled on for the two seasons\nRoss Fleming being the honorary-\npresident, for third season, Jake\nRothery wu elevated to the office of\npruldent;, Bert Wilton wu vice-\npresident and James Rlngrose sec-\nrettry-treuurer,\nFINANCIAL RESERVE\nA strong financial reserve wu\nestablished at this time and all the\nteams were equipped with good uniforms and the best of equipment In\nthe latter season the Fairview Athletic Auociitlon, teems won the city\nIntermediate title, also the juvenile\nchampionship.\n1931-32\u2014This year the organization changed its name to the Fair-\nview Athletic club. The officers\nwere Honorary president, J. P. Morgan, President, Din Underwood,\nvice-president, Jtke Rothery, second-vice-president, Bert Walton,\nsecretary-treasurer, James Ringrose.\nThe club had no regular bueball\nteam In this seuon, but carried\noff the Morgan cup emblematic ol\nthe district men's softball championship, also won the Juvenile\nhockey trophy for the second successive year.\n1932-33\u2014Honorary resident, 3. r.\nMorgan: pneldent, Alex lotnln: first\nvice-president, Bert Wilton; ncond\nvlce-pretldent. Din Underwood; uc*\nrettry-tretiurer, Jamei Rlngroie.\nLADIES   ADMITTED\nOlrls tnd ladlei wen admitted to\nthe club for the first time and a\nladlei' team was entered In the\nlocal girls' wftball league, and the\nFairview Athletic club backed the\nNelaon np la-Uss* hockey team.\nThe juvenile hockey team retained posiemon of the juvenile hockey\ntrophy* The Fairview intermediate\nbaseball team were joint holden of\nthe Tip Top cup with the Maulen\nwhen bad Weather condltlona forced\nan abandoning of tne balance of\nthe series wltb each team having\none victory over the other In the\nplayoffs.\n1933-34\u2014At the start of the 1838-\n34 season a number of the feminine\nsection of the club became disgruntled and deolded to quit\u2014they\nuked for all the moneyi they had\nhelped earn through whist drives\ntnd dancea, u the bails of forming their own organisation. While tt\nwu the igreement of til thtt the\nladlei hid no claim to tny moneyi\nthtt were earned ln the interest\not the club, the officer! decided to\nspilt the total earned by the ladlei'\nsection among all the ladlei, and\nit any wlihed to stay with the club\ntheir share wold nmaln ln the club'i\ntreuury until such time u they\nwlihed tq withdraw lt.\nThe mtjorlty withdrew, but t\nfew ittyed Including Merle Archibald, who wu elected third vlce-\npreildent. Other offlcen were: hon.\npresident, J. F. Morgan; preildent.\nAlex. loanlni flnt vice-president.\nBert Walton; seoond vice-president.\nOeorge   Fawcett;   eecretary-treuurer\nHENDRICKS    KASLO\u2022NELSON\nMOTOR FREIGHT SERVICE\nLEAVING KASLO ANU RETURN-MON., WED. md FRI.\nLEAVES KASLO 5:45 A M       LEAVES NELSON 11 A.M.\nNelion Depot\u2014City Service Station, Phone 5    -     Kulo, Phone 31\nPROMPT    EFFICIENT    \u25a0 E il V 1 C \u25a0\nTRAIL WAITING\nFOOTBALL GAME\nUp to Wallach to Name thc\nDate\nTRAU, B.C., Aug. 18.-Wlth I\ngtmi ilited for tbl Eist and Welt\nKootenay   aoooer   championship   en\nSept. 9. no definite word has yet\nbeen received aa to when the two\ngames yet to be played between Nelion and Trail for the West Kootenay championship an to be held.\nTrail aocoer officiate are of the\nopinion that the dates of these\nmatchea are in the handi of A.\nWallach of Nelson, preildent of the\nWest Kootenay letgue.\nIt wu announced Saturday thtt\nIf word 11 not betrd from Nelion\nsoon, Secretary Bob Laurie of the\nTrill club will claim the right to\npity Klmberley for the Blaylock\nbowl tnd the championship of thl\ntwo countlei.\nNormin Bradley, In conversation\nIn Trail Saturday, remarked tbat\nthe gamei would. probably not be\nplayed till September u prevailing\nweather was too hot for soccer.\nOld timers ot Nelson and Trall\nplan to have a friendly game of\nsoccer ln Trail on Sept. 8, so lt\nappears as though the flnt week\not next month Is going to have\nPlenty of soccer crammed Into lt.\nSocial Events\nof Trail City\nTRAIL, Aug. IS\u2014Miss Once Lynes,\nwho hu been vacationing for about a\nmonth with Trail relatives and with\nfrlendi In Orand Forks, hai returned\nto her home at Winnipeg.\n\u2022 \u2022   #\nMr. and Mn. J. Helmtrlch and baby,\nwho for about t year have bten rending at Creiton, have returned to\nTrail and will make their home here.\ne   \u2022   \u2022\nMn. B. Hoogerwerf hu nturned to\nOrand Forka after apendlng a tew\ndtyt In TnU tnd Roulind.\n\u2022 at\nGeraldlne Fittemn of Orand Forkl\narrived In Trail yeiterday and ll \u2022\nguest tor t week of her sister, Miss\nEunice Patterson.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr.   snd   Mrs.   Ous   Wagner   tre\nipendlng t vtcttlon wltb relitlvu it\nReglnt.\n\u2022 e   \u2022\nConrad Relk leaves tonight for Calgary, when he will spend a week's\nvacation,\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Bert Fowler of Oliver\ntre tpendlng t ttw dtyi ln TnU.\n\u2022 le   *\nT. Htlverson, who wu recently Injured In in automobile accident, la\nrecovering from hla Injuries at Klmberley.\nDamage in Prison Riot\nPONTIAC, 111., Aug. 1\u00bb (AP)\u2014\nRioting which left one man dead,\n28 hurt and state property worth\n1.0,000 destroyed yesterday tt the\nIllinois slate reformatory, wu thl\nresult ot \u2022 genertl prison delivery\nplot, Warden O. H. Lewis tald today.\nThe riot broke out when the prisoners were watching a baseball game\nbetween the prison and a Springfield,\n111., team.\nA concerted rush tt the southern\nwtll of the prison by a comparatively\nsmtll band of the convicts led to t\nwtmlng volley over their heads from\nrifles of the guards. When thli failed\nto check the rueh, a volley wu fired\ndirectly at the mob. Most ot the Injuries were gunshot wounds ln the\nlegs ind brultes.\nWord Awaited on\nSoftball Playoff\nDefinite word ls expected from TrtU\ntoftbtll offlcltli tonight u to the date\nfor the aecond game of the Weit\nKootenay tie serlei between the Nel*\n\u25a0on Hume Hotel club and the Trail\nWoodbutchers. At preeent the Hume\nteam holds a victory over the imelter\ncity aggregation.\nThe Trail club li attempting to\nsecure the ute of Butler park for\nWednesday evening from the Football association, who have been allotted the use of the grounds on Wednesdays, and expect a definite answer\ntonight. In the event that they cannot get tbe grounds for Wednesday\nIt ls likely that the game will take\nplace on Thuraday evening\t\nFlashes From the Wires\nEROINA\u2014Seriously IU for two\nmonths, Idwln Jackaon, 54 prominent Reglna barrister and will\nknown ln tbe city tor his philanthropy, died ben tonight.       ,\nTORONTO\u2014Two gunmen held up\nRay Edmonds, cashier for tbe Acme\nfarmen dairy, and robbed blm of\n1.500 urly today.\nROCKPORD-Henry WtUtce, U.\nS. ucntary of agriculture, declareu\nhimself ln favor of a \"national economic council\" to coordinate activities of the NRA and agriculture adjustment administration.\nWASHINGTON \u2014 A 13,000,000,000\nincrease ln united Statu bank deposits in 13 months was nported\ntoday by J. F. T. O'Connor, comptroller of the currency.\nBERLIN\u2014One of the mut dn-\nnutlc Incidents IA connection wltn\ntodays plebiscite occurred it Re-\ngensburg where t dying woman\ninsisted on casting a ballot. Sbe\nvoted and then died.\nMARSEILLES, France, \u2014Several\npersons were reported killed snd\nothers Injured today in a boiler ex*\n{iloslon on the French steamer Ral-\non, In the Mediterranean.\nAtlanta \u2014The constitution says\nAl Capone wu among 43 priionen\ntransferred today trom the federal\npenitentiary here to the U. S. government's new Alestrai Island prison ln San rrincisco bay.\nChester, N. S.-Ira A. MacKAy,\nDean of the faculty of arts and\nscience of McGlll university, died\nhere today of a heart attack.\nVancouver, Albert Morphett of\nEburne, B. C, ls believed to have\nbeen drowned in the Fraser river\ntoday while duck hunting.\nANTIOONISH, N.B. \u2014 Sweeping\nthrough eunparched tlmberlands, two\nforest tlret wen roaring toward etch\nother tonight tnd threatening t doun\ncommunities In Antlgonlih county.\nNew Ruling Provides Extension of Time\nto Complete Hydro-Electric Building\nBut Commencment of Work\nMust Not Go Beyond\nLicence Limit\nVICTORIA, Aug. 19 (CP)\u2014Regarded u Important to the mining and\nhydro-electric Induatry of British Columbia, Attorney-General Sloan has\n1\/nded down a ruling establishing\nthe principle that under tbe water\nact extension of time may be granted\nfor completion of water power work\nbut not for commencement ot work\nbeyond the Umlt specified In the\nlicence.\nThe ruling wu made In awarding\nthe water rights on Granite creek,\nnear Princeton, to International Placers, Ltd.\nDavid Jennings, a miner, originally\n:. held tbe licence, but bad been unable to start development work before expiry of tbe time limit and\nuked for an extension.\nMajor J. C. MacDonald, comptroller\not water rights for th; provlnoe,\nadvised Jennings that when the \"period for completion of thl work expires and should lt be necessary to\nobtain an extension of time for completion of work,\" the matter tyould\nbe given consideration by the deptrtment.\nWhen the time limited expired In\nternatlontl Placen applied for the\nlease and were granted lt, Jennings\nbeing cancelled.\nThe attorney-general upheld the\ncomptroller -In his ruling that the\nletter applied only to completion of\nthe Work Ud that no power existed\nupder the water act to extend thl\ntime for commencement of work.\n12 BUSINESSES\nNEW AT TRAIL\nTRAIL, Aug. l\u00bb\u2014Twelve new buslneu ventures, tmong them four not\npreviously Issued, htve set ttU on\nthe teu of economic endetvor here\nthlt yea-. The tour new claulfici.\ntlons Include t sporting good! store,\nbuslneu college, snd way office tnd\na wholeule grocery establishment.\nThe other eight new venturu Include a butcher, confectioner, cleaner,\nand dler, music store, pointer and\npublisher, chiropractor, and t vegetable dealer.\nA total of 279 licences have been\nissued for tbe period July lt to Jinuiry IS, 1939. Theu tn In IS clutlfl-\ncttlont but do not include fnilt tnd\nvegetable peddlers, who number It\ntnd irt expected to increase before\nthe period clam.\nHoteii tnd rooming houiei hud the\nHit with 39 licenced, fir thud of thl\nnext classification, groceries, with I\ntottl of IS licences. Third pltce it\noccupied by milk vendors, oi whom\nthen tn 19.\nJack Houston.\nGREATER! MJCCES'\nIt wu ln the 1933-34 season that\nthe club enjoyed the greatest sue\ncesi of Its history. The outdoor rink\nwu-again a big success. Although\nno Juvenile hockey series wu played\ndue to lack of sufflcent Ice at the\nIndoor rink, the club wu awarded\nthe cup for another year. The In*\ntermedlate buketball testa won the\nC. M. Sharp cup which wu put\nup for the first time for the championship of Nelson. Entering the\nrugby field for the first ltme the\nclub sponsored by the Fslrvlew A.C.\nproved their supremacy over every\nother team ln Nelaon to take the\ncity title and then went out and\nbeat an all-star team. The Intermediate baseball team now holds\nI 3-1 game edge ln tbe plsyoffs\nfor the league championship. And\nthe elub wss runners-up In both\nhalvei of th| men's softball league.\nIN NEL80N-\n-SINCE 1899\nWEST TRANSFfeR CO.\nHigh Clau Packing and Crating\nMOTOR VANS FOR LOCAL AND LONG\nDISTANCE HAULING\nPianos Moved and Hoisted\nNelson's Oldest and Most Reliable Transfer Business\nAgents: CROWS NEST PASS COAL CO., LTD.\nPhone 33\nMAJOR SPARKS\nDIES AT COAST\nVICTORIA, Aug. 19 (CPI\u2014Western\nCanada military circles tonight\nmourned the lou of a comrade, Major\nJamea Sparks, 62-year-old veteran ot\ntwo campaigns and connected with\nthe military life of thl wut tor 35\nyein.\nMtjor Sptrki died Frldty it his\nhome hen when he ctmt 10 yetn tgo\ntfter retiring trom ictlve service.\nBora ln London, England. Major\nSparki camt to Otnada In 1M9, Join\nIng the Ctntdt mounted rlflei the\nnut yetr tnd serving with distinction ln thl Boer wtr. Returning to\nCtntdt, hi wu ippolnted ctvtlry instructor for the northwest with headquarten at Medicine Hat, Altt., tnd\nVernon, B.C.\nMaulers Meet\nF.A.C. Tonight\nThe Filrvltw Athletic club'i inter*\nmedlite buebill bine win tttempt\nto mike It four itnlght wint over tbe\nMaulers tonight In an endeavor ta\nclinch tbl Olty Intermediate championship. But thl Maulers wbo htve\nloit three successive games tfter ttk*\nIng the flnt itruggie ln the but tour\nout-of-ieven-game wrlu, trt oontl\ndent of extending the urlu to it\nleut two mon gtmu tnd probtbly\nthne more.\nFrtnk Knft will probibly ittrt on\nthe mound for the Maulers, with Jot\nLanglll, who hu pitched Filrvltw to\nthree wlni the logical .tarter for thi\nFairview club.\nFORTY-TWO NEW\nFIRES IN WEEK\nBrings Total for Year Up to\n403; 43 Fires Still\nBurning\nLachance and Gelinas\nCapture Canoe Race\nTHREE   RIVERS.   Que.,   Aug.   19\n(CP) After a trip through itorm\nind heavy wlndi, their frill canoe\nlashed by rain for the greater part\nof the 100-mlle Journey over the\ntreacherous waters of the St. Maurice river, 63-year-old Joieph Lachane\nand his partner, Victor Oellnai tonight won the flnt canoe race ever*\nto be held on the river here.\nWORK COMPLETE\nON TRAIL WALL\nTRAIL, Aug. 19\u2014With the MCep-\ntlon ot 50 feet which cannot be attempted until the water level li\nlower, the Esplanade wall today la\ncompleted as far aa planned. When\nthe river level drops sufficiently an\nadditional 60 feet of baae wait and\nsuperstructure will be poured, using\nthe entire supply of cement on hand.\nFraser Will Conduct\nWayside Investigation\nVICTORIA, Aug. 19 (CP)-Attor-\nncy-generil Gordon Sloan announced today on investigation of Wayside Mines Limited, will be conducted by G.'L. Fraser of Vancouver\nas commissioner under thc British\nColumbia securities let.\nSix Bears Turn on\nMate and Kill Her\nST. LOUIS. Aug. 19 IAD\u2014Six\nblack bears. at tbe St. Louie too\nturned on tbelr pltmate, \"Brownie,\"\nand killed ner today u several hundred persons crowded to the railings\nto the barless enclosure to watch\nthe tierce but one-sided fight.\nTwo Men to Face\nColemont Charges\nOardnrr Perkins ind Hirry Roulller,\nwho wen sentenced recently on theft\ncharges, wen taken to Pentlcton by\nSergt. C. O. Barber of tbe provlnclil\npolice. At Pentlcton they will face\nchirgei ** breaking and entering the\nColemont liquor itore.\nForty-two new fires started ln\nthe East and west Kootenay snd\nthe Boundary country during thi\npast week, according ta figures reoelved from the forestry bnnch at\nNelaon. Of the.49 that started 38\nwire burning Frldty, mtny of them,\nhowever, being spot fires, or fires\nln lummlt! thtt were not dangerous.\nThli wings thi total for this tin\ndistrict to 403 for the yeir.\nIn But Kooteniy 17 started lut\nweek and 18 wen burning Friday,\nmaking tbe total fire outbreaks 114\nfor that region. The we*st Kootenay\nand Boundary districts had 38 nsw\nfins in the week,. there were 39\nburning Friday, ind the total tor\nthe yeir wu 2.9.\nTHEY HAVE AU\nONE COULD WANT\nHOLLYWOOD, Aug. Id (AP)\u2014\nThe \"ll:: grutest blondes In motion\npicture hiitory,\" a* selected by Anlti\nLou, half-pint-sized brunette writer of the book, \"Gentlemen Prefer\nBlonds,\" are:\nAnn Harding, Constance Ttlmair,\nMary Pickford, Jean Harlow, Marlon Davlu and Lillian Olih.\n\"As I have known them, tbese\nwomen divide all the qualities one\ncould ever want In 1 woman,\" said\nMill Loot,\nHELEN JACOBS TO\nREMAIN AMATEUR\nFOREST HILLS, N.T., Aug. 19 (AP)\nA few mlnutu after Helen Jacobs\nof  Berkeley,  Calif., won  the O. 8.\nwomen'i tennli champlonahlp todsy\nfor  the   third  successive   year  she\nreoelved an offer from Bill O'Brien,\nsports   promoter,   to   turn   professional provided a suitable opponent\ncould be found for her.\nMIM Jacob! smiled and said:\n\"I'm not considering turning pro-\nfesilonsl.\"\nAt the ume time there was a rumor O'Brien hid offered Helen Willi\nMoody a il it, ium of 12.. .000 to give\nup her amateur standing.\nOlsen Pays Fine\nfor Intoxication\nChsrlle Olsen, who sppesred ln\ncity polloe court Saturday morning\nbefon stipendiary Migletrate John\nCartmel, pleaded guilty to a charge\nof being intoxicated In a public\nplace, and wu fined git. He paid\nthe fine.\nLarsen Wins Again\nOREAT YARMOUTH. Bngland, Aug.\n1*3 (OP eable)\u2014Oeorge Linen ot\nHamilton will add tbe Ulph challenge cup to tbe iwlmmlng trophies\nhe will tiki bick to Ctntdt from\nthl Brltlih Empire gtmei.\nYeiterdiy Linen won the 1000-\nyards open scratch race 'hen and\ncaptured the prize. Hla time wu 11\nminutes, 46 2-5 seconds.\nSEEK SERUM\nNelson School Board\nReads Kelowna\nLetter\nConsiderable Interut was express-\nid by school botrd members Frldty\nnlgbt In tn Okanagan article on\ninfantile paralyilt whleh point! out\nthat there ti a, cue of the dread\ndisease In Brltlah Columbia and need\nfor precaution and whloh petitions\nfor donations of blood for serum use.\nThe writer states: \"For some time\nI bive had in mind to speak to\nyou about this disease on account\nof an epidemic ot a seven type of\nInfantile paralyilt ln California.\nThen Is tlwtyi t dinger thit 1\ndlteau prevailing In the neighboring\nUnited Btates. may spreid over our\ncountry tnd now the provincial department of health has wsrned me\nthat a case has occurred In British\nColumbia to It it necessary tor me\nto tell you about the disease.\n\"The wounds made by the epidemic Of 1927-28, In Kelowna are\nnot healed yet aud many of my\nreaden will be reminded of the departing ot a beloved one, or who stlu\nhsve children suffering from the\nafter efleots.\nONLY ONB CABS NOW\nIt U true that there Is up to\nnow only t tingle eau ln B. C. but\nwe can never tell how miny othen\ncan spring up from thla Ungle can\nduring theu summer months,\nmonths, in whtch, genenlly, the\nepidemic starts; and wl btvt\nto conilder whtt the dinger will be.\nThe disease bun I wrong mmi.\nThi word paralyili mikei oni think\ntbout 1 symptom which, in tbt\nmajority ot cam (to per otnt),\ndou not appear. It la but the sign\nof 1 very aevere infection thtt nil\nended ln paralysis. But beyond thoie\nuven infections lie mtny when the\nlymptomi in to illght ind ot 10\n\u25a0hort durttlon that nurly everyone would thing theu li only 1\n\u25a0light indisposition-perhsps 1 slight\ngenertl Infection going on. How often dou It not occur that our littlt\none of five md il\u00ab hu 1 illght\nfever, illght hudache, la vomiting,\nhtd illghtly inflafned throat, ind\ngeti will\" tgtln ifter one or two\ndayit\nMILD ATTACKS\nThe list epidemic ttught ut thit\noften theu night infections in\nmild attacks ot thi dueiu md wi\nremembered tbt ftmlly in whloh\nthru children bid luceeulvtly for\nom or two dtyt these night symptoms until it tbi end of the week\nthe other got t very mttt itttck\nof the disease. Tbl children recovered In one or two dtyt, iven ln one\ntnd t hslf dayi, while In the lut\nchild thi oiietse nn \u2022 nurly htn\ncourse.\nTbe trouble ls thtt wi do not\nknow the germs, or psrhips better to\nuy, we cannot see them, can not\nstudy their behaviour on dlttennt\nmedlt In cum of doubtful diphtheria we ctn ttkt 1 swab cultivate\nthe germs within IS hours, ind\nsometimes even Hu time, we report\nt pMltlve or 1 negative finding. The\nsame thing applies to Scarlet Fever\nthrough the cultivation etc., takee\na longer time. But In Infantile seat.\nalysls wa mlu tbli valuable dlsgdoi-\ntlc help. The germs Ot thi disease\ntn to small we cannot ee* them\nunder the microscope. Just ss the\nvery smtll ittn ln the iky on dirk\nnights do not show up, being overruled u tbey in by the brightness\nof the bigger ones, so then Infantile\nparalysis germs In overruled by\nothen when we try to find tbem\nthrough tbe microscope.\nKNOW CLASSIFICATION\n\"But tn tbe germs themselves\nunknown, in recent yetri we hsve\nfound out more tbout their behaviour and we \u00abvcn known to which\nclassification tbey belong.\n\"The vlrua of infantile paralysis\nls unknown, but by Injecting animals with steadily Increislnj dosea\nof girmt to whleb they were supposed to be related, a aerum Is obtained.\nIn combatting the disease, serum\nls used and we may have a ufer\nserum ln human oonvaletoent serum\nto prevent the sometimes desdly\ncouru of the dluiH. Even deprived\nOf tbe help of laboratory diagnosis,\nthe doctor ls able to dlagnou most\ncases trom the very hour ln which\nthe child fills ill: and serum can\nbe administered at the earliest mo*\nment, even then it may be too\nlate.\nMILDER COL'BSe\n\"It is true thst after Injection\nof the serum the disease sums to\nrun a milder course, we know (hat\nCRUCIAL GAME\nTRAIL SOCCER\nTRAIL, B0., Aug. IB.\u2014Tbi garni\nbetween the Thlstlei and Hottpun\nto be pltytd Mondty inning trill\nbe tbe mott lmportint In the Schofield clip lugue for on ltl ruult\ndepends whleh of tbe two teama\nwill take tbt league title. Thistlu\nbin t illght edge on tbelr opponents howiver for 1 draw will givt\nthem one point, which added to\niheir preient eight will mike nlnl\npointi against the eight pointi of\nthe Hotspurs; seven which tbey now\nhtve tnd tbl ont tor tht draw.\nIt Thistles take thi gtmt It is\nnot known whether Wednesday's\ngtme between the Royaia and Junlora will be played, the ruult of tht\ngame having no effect on the leading potltlon.\nTo Build Bridge\nBlueberry Creek\nTRAIL, Aug. IS\u2014Brldgt Is to be\nbuilt over Blueberry creek within 1\nshort time R. R. Burns, M.P.P., stated\ntodty following receipts of lnformitlon from victoria.\nA fill whleh will eut out 1 wide\niwlng tround the bue of a bill to\nthe cnek and up another Mil to the\nflats on the other side Is pretty well\ncompleted. Materials for the bridge\nare to be prepared immedlitely It li\nundentood.\nRefuse Reduction\non Groin Rates\nOTTAWA, Aug. It (CP)-In a\nJudgement luued here todiy the\nboard ot rtllwiy commisslonen refuted the application of the Midland and Pacific Grain Corporation\nLimited., of Calgary, and Auoelated\napplicants for a reduction on rates\nof grain for export from points in\ntheir respective territories to Vancouver. The Judgement wm dined\nby Dr. S. J, McLean, deputy chairman of the board, and J. A. Stone-\nham, commissioner.\nU soon u parallels ihowi, UM ter-\num dou not hive tny effect. Pltlnly\nspeaking, we can say we were \"too\nlatt.\" The only value In tbe urum\ntreitment uu Ul the admmittering\nof It It the earliest poulble Ume\nwhin tbt germi bin not grown ln\n\u2022uch abundtnn tbit thi tntl-bodles\ninjeoted Into tbt cblld'i body cannot kill iuch a gntt imount.\nWe know now how to better arm\nourselves igilnst the ipread of disease. We know lt ii ipread by\nchildren who contrtct a mild attack and run around with other\nchildren, we know alio that milk,\nwater md nw vegetable! hav* to\nbe feared, not on account ot thc\ngerms growing on them but on account ot the ftct thit in times of\nepidemics many healthy carrier! ire\nroaming around who, by milking\ncowi. By contaminating water or\nhandling food can spread the dlseisc\nNumeroui other tctutl cues of disease occuring in tht Okanagan\nwere mentioned.\nContinuing thi plea tor serum the\nwriter states: ,\nYou know we have a serum which\nltl low, ind thit none can tell how\nbut thi Health department hai advised me that th* supply of serum\nIt low, and that none can teU how\nmuch will be needed.\n\"In Kelowna we have an abundant supply. It li true that it 11 not\nln the laboratory, but ln the veim\nof those who conque\/ed the disease\nyean ago, to whom natur* gave\nantibodies of which so many are deprived.\n\"You know what I am driving tt.\n. \"I tm hoping (maybe thli word ts\ntoo weak,) perhapi I had better\nsay \"I know that our call will not\nbe ln vain. There are living so\nmany who can help us prepare the\nvaluable serum which may mean\nthe recovery, perhapi uve th* lite\nof those suffering from the dlseue.\nWinding up her appeal the uks\nth* Okanagan Vtlley resident! for\ndonations of blood, pointing out thtt\nthere will be no direct glory, but\nthe satisfaction ot knowing that it\nmay be the means of uvlng life.\nNew Way to Hold Loose\nFALSE TEETH\nFirmly in Place\nDo false teeth annoy and bother\nby dropping and slipping Whett you\neat, talk or laugh? Just sprinkle a\nlittle FASTEETH on your plates.\nThis new, tasteless powder holds\nteeth firm and comfortable. No\ngummy, gooey pasty taste. Hakes\nbreath pleumt. Gtt FASTEETH\ntoday at any drug store. Small and\nlarge site.\nr.iM*_l^Mi|Mii   1 *\n$2200-Holf Cash-5 Per Cent, on Balance\nThii Roasland building Is as good as it looks. On ground floor\nis a bachelor apartment with kitchenette, bath room, large closet,\nfront and side entrances. Upstairs, a modern apartment with living room, dining room, bedroom, bathroom and kitchen on ont\nfloor. Two more bedrooms on lop floor. A bright and cheerful\nhome, leu than 200 feet from the Post Office. Each apartment\nhas a separate front entrance and separate side entrance.\nApply to\nJ. D. Anderson\nTrail, B.C.\nJesse Kemp\nTrail, B.C.\nWaldie Bros.\nTrail, B.C.\n W^^^\u2014\n^3\n-THI NELION DAILY mW(, NELSON, B.C.-MONDAY MORNING, AUGUST 20, 1934 -\nPAGE THREE\nKING COBRA\nBytfARKCHANNING\nWho hu Uved (or twenty-one yean ln the country\nthat he so graphically describes.\nCHAPTER VUI\nThe Maxim's tripod waa shifting\n\u2022lightly with tht quick recoils.\nTat-ttt-tit-Ut-titl\nFurlouilT Gray climbed upward to\ntake command, digging the blunt\ntoes of hit Afghan sandals Into tht\nslippery thtle. From rock to rock he\nleaped till the sweat rolled into hli\neyu from under his khtkl puggrl tnd\nhit mutclet tched with the tpeed ind\n\u2022trtln.\nSuddenly, with discordant howls of\n\"AllahI Ta AUI\" half a down Hillmen tprtng from nowhere, tnd with\ngreasy side-locks tnd tittered theep-\nakln cottt flying In the wind, rushed\nat him Uke a whirlwind, their swords\nglittering. It wtt a band' of Ghazls,\nseeking certain entrance Into Paradise\nby slaying an Unbeliever.\nGray fired, but aimed badly. The\nnext eecond a sword flashed tnd tt Itt\nwlelder took a savage rush it the\nKnglltkman'a head. Gray's gun wit\ncmpt\" He ran ln and tickled hit _**\u25a0*.-\nsallant Rugby ftthlon. The two men\ncrashed to the ground.\nSomeone behind roared out the\n' Sikh battle-cry: \"Wall guruj-ee (tee\nKhalial\" (Tht Filth It the Faith).\nEnglishman tnd Hlllman were locked ln a struggle thtt could only end\nwith the detth of one of them. In\nfilling. Gray\u2014who wat by far tht\nheavier tnd more powerful of the two\n\u2014hit hit trm on t stone, and for the\nmoment pal rendered the limb useless. Wriggling Uke tn eel, the Bill-\nman freed his left htnd tnd drew bis\nsttbblng knlft, fastening hla teeth In\nhli enemy't shoulder it he did to. The\nptln turned the Englishman tick, tnd\nonly by i luperhuman effort wit he\ntble to keep hie mtn under him.\n\"Put thy httd on one tide, sahib!\"\na voice ahouted hoarsely.\nExerting all hit strength. Orty\nforced hit hetd sideways, tnd the\nwtrm barrel df a Lce-Enlleld. topped\nGREAT FUNCTIONS TO MARK 400th\nANNIVERSARY OF CARWR'S TRIP\nPremier R. E Bennett WUl\nUnveil Memorial Cross\nat Gaspe\nSNAP\nIMIMN1\nOWDER\nCLEANS -d POLISHES\nWINDOWS, MIRRORS, IATH\nTUIS \u2022>\u00ab! WASH BASINS.\nCANNO'\nSCRATCH\nwith nine Inches of eteel, slid by his\nneck.\nThere wu a sickening \"crick\" H\ntbe bayonet pierced the Gboat's wlnd-\n\u00ab.\nGreat worki\" exclaimed Gray, rlilng to hli knees. \"Tbe government\nshall surely hear of thy bravery!\"\nBut the man did not reply. He was\nlying on his face with a bullet through\nhis heart\nThe dull roar of an explosion\ncaused Gray to blink his eyes strangely moist, and look downwards. A dun-\ncolored cloud of dual wu rolling slowly up the ravine.\nTbe enemy had blown up the rood.\nFurther- progress wu blocked 1\nThe \"bronze bees of Death\" were\nhumping on all sides, and sinister\ngrey splashes flashed out on the rocks\nas the leaden bullets from the enemy's\nmatchlocks struck them. Flinging\nhimself on his stomach, he took out\nhis notebook and scribbled a message.\nWbo would carry lt to Rlaaldar Sher\nSingh?\nSquirming himself round, he glanced\ndownwards. In a fold ln the ground\ncrouched Khoon, the dwarf, his yellow\nface Impassive and his b-ady black\neyes staring straight at him.\n\"Khoon I\"\nThe Mongol Jerked his massive chin\nInterrogatively. .\n'Carry this chit to Blsaldar Sher\nS' gh sahib! Quick.\"\nThe man'glanced down the hillside\nto where a young Sikh wu knotting\nblood-stained puttee round his\nthigh.\n'The sohlb needs thee, O Slkhl\" he\ncalled.\nGray swore angrily, and wu about\nto repeat his order when It struck\nhim that, after all, the guide was\nright. The sowar wu wounded and\nought to go down ln any caae.\nRising to hla feet, he ran down to\nhim\u2014reached him amid another hailstorm of soft-nosed bullets\u2014and fell\nflat on hts face.\n\"Can you carry this order to Rlaaldar Sher Singh?\"\n\"Ha, sahib!\"\nSteadying himself with his rifle,\nthe wounded man started hts slow\nclimb downwards.\n\"We win, O Khoon!\" aald Gray over\nhis shoulder u he climbed upward,\nfollowed by the dwarf.\nKhoon grunted. He had shadowed\nGray ever since the action started,\nand wu evidently fearless.\nGray realized that the enemy might\nat any moment try to get round his\nflank by working along the tops of\nthe hills, and the orders he had Just\nsent down to Sher Singh were that he\nBy CAMPBELL CARROLL\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nMONTREAL, Aug. 19.\u2014Impressive\nand picturesque functions will exemplify the motto of French Canada,\n\"Je me souvlens (I remember)\" during tbe ceremonies beginning next\nweek to commemorate the 400th anniversary of the landing of the great\nFrench navigator, Jacques Cartler, i\nCanadian shores. , _.- -   , . ,\nThe highlight of tha celebrations \u00ab* rood signs Have been placed In\nwill be the unveiling of a memorial  the   district   to    -   - -\nceremony will be Cardinal J. M. Rod-\nrlque VUleneuve of Quebec, Hon. E.\nL. Patenaude, lieutenant-governor of\nQuebec, and Premier L. A. Taschereau of Quebec.\nRepresenting Great Britain will be\nSir Roger Keyes, admiral of the fleet.\nand Rt. Bon. H A. Fisher, warden of\nNew College, Oxford, and former president of the Board of Education.\nHon. Warren D. Robblns, United\nStates minister to Canada, ond Hon.\nPred H. Brown, senator from the State\nof New Hampshire, will represent the\nUnited States.\nThe stage for the Gupe ceremonies\nhu been carefully prepared. Pcrman*'\ncross hewn from stone secured near\nSt. Vale, at Gupe, by Prime Minister\nR. B. Bennett In the presence of a\ngathering of Canadian and International notables. The cross hu been\nerected on the exact spot where the\nfamous explorer and discoverer of the\nRiver St. Lawrence placed a crucifix\nfollowing the mass he celebrated ln\nthanksgiving for the successful termination of hts hazardous voyage\nacross the Atlantic Into the unknown.\nPrior to the Gupe ceremonies Car-\ntier's discoveries will be commemorated ln Prince Edward Island, where\nrepresentatives of the Canadian and\nFrench, British and United States\ngo.ernments will take part ln the unveiling of a memorial calm ln Char-\nlottetown on Aug. 24. The scene of\nthe anniversary celebrations will then\nbe transferred to Gupe where will be\nInitiated a series of commemorative\nfunctions ln Quebec, Three Rivers,\nMontreal, Ottawa, and Niagara Falls.\nVOYAGE  FROWNED ON\nIt wu said that when Cartler sailed away from St. Malo for his epic\nvoyage he stood like a flama on the\npoop deck of hla tiny craft which wu\nbathed ln sunshine. While the acclaim and prayers of lhe populace\nrang ln his ears the intrepid mariner's Journey wu regarded by the\nKing of France, engaged ln wars, with\ncold annoyance. Like other pioneer\nefforts lt wu estimated by his generation u a failure. Four centuries*.\nhave rolled away to produce a great\nDominion along the shores of and\nbeyond the noble river Cartler discovered.\nParticipating ln the fetes which\nwill center on the rugged cliffs of\nGupe will be a large delegation from\nJacques Cartler's oountry, France and\ndignitaries of church and state In\nCanada. The French delegation will\nbe headed by Plerre-Etlenne Flandln,\nminister of public works, anci M.\nCharlety, rector of the University of\nParis. Tbey wtll traverse the same\nroute taken by Cartler but In a crack\nFrench liner, the Champlaln, named\nfor another Immortal explorer who\ncame to Canada. Joined with Canada's prime minister ln the Gaspe\nKASLO LADIES     .\nTEA HOSTESSES\nKASLO. B.C., Aug. JO.\u2014Mil. R. S.\nWbelltmt tnd htr dtughttr, Mitt\nDltnt Whtllame entertained it t delightful tea recently. The Invited\ngueata were: Mrt. J. 3. Blnnt of Mirror\nlake, Mrt. R. A. Cheater, Milt C. M.\npawcett, Mlat Eileen Oarland of\nWinnipeg, Mrt. Olegerlch of Klmberley, Mlu Laura Glegerich cf Vernon,\nMn. S. Pitt Orlffltba, Mra R. Bewit.\nMrt. D. P. Kane, Mra. O. P. Merrill.\nMlu Margaret Maynard of Vancouver,\nMra. 3. N. Murphy, Mlu Margery Mc*\nO-egor of Weyburn, Saslc., Mn. J. R.\nMcLennan of Trall, Mrt. Walter Newton of Trail, Mlat B. Ptlmer of New\nYo-k, Mn. a. Read, (din Dorli Read,\nMrs. t. M. Bandllanda, Mn. M. Jetty\ntnd Mlu 8. Jetty.\nftOBBYGETS\n\"PUNISHED'\nJOHN\/\nttHM-YlSMltW\n(OtW-TO-MWl\nROOM SIR\/\nSRiBfO?\nWHAT\nOTA MUM\nSRIBCD?\nWILL-\nIHAVENT\n__ KTWAllTrf\nTJfcCOCONUT PIC\nft Wf-Stt?\n%\nM-M-M-MY,\/\nTWSlSSWfU\nPIL'NOWWHIH\nIMTTMSmiOW\nVWIWLl*\nUNDERSTAND?\nKYMOUTKJ\nTOO RM.I\nma\nM-M-M-M-\nmm\nWHAT a miracWorker ii\nCoconut! Coconut can make\nthe humblest coke so lovely, so\nglamorous, that all table chatter\nwill come to a little hush of sheer\npleasure at the sight of itl\nBut the coconut you use must\nlook creamy, moist, tender\u2014\nmust taste deliriously full-flavoured and fresh. That is why\nBaker brings Bakers Southern\nStyle Coconut to you. Itcomes in\na tin! Here is the most modern\nof packaging to bring you as luscious, creamy-moist coconut as\nwhen it was shredded. Ask your\ngrocer for Baker's Southern Style\nCoconut today and serve your\nfamily a \"party\" cake.\nBaker's Premium Shred Coconut is the finest form of sugar-\ncured, shredded coconut in\ntriple-sealed cartons. The improved Premium Shred package\n1 is wax ml and\ng 1 a s s i n e -\nwrapped keeping coconut\nmeaty and\ntender.\nBakers Coconut\nis Made in\nCanada*\nA?M4\nl\nshould send up every man he could\nspar\nOnce more his glasses focusaed the\nscene.\nFiring wu still brisk, but with a\ntendency to diminish. But suddenly\na crashing fire opened on hla left\nfront.\nA body of ths enemy was trying to\nhead them off.\nHastily he sized up the situation.\nHis men could hold them. The only\nnon \u2022commissioned officer near was a\nyoung lance-duffadar.\n\" 'Rapid-Independent,' seven hundred yards!\" snapped Oray. And then\nfinished giving his orders to the N.C*o.\n.... \"I go to tbe hilltop to reconnoitre.\"\n\"Acrha, sahib I\"\nWhen Oray reached his objective\nnot a single enemy was to be seen, and\nthe firing had died down to an occasional desultory sputter. Still, until\nthis crest-line wu held by his own\nmen, there wu danger.\nHe sat down thankfully. His struggle\nwith t<3 Ghazi, and the stiff climb,\nhad given him a raging thirst. No\nwater wu to be fad--he knew that;\nand reaching out his band he plucked\na few blades from a tuft of grass to\nchew them u he wrote. But they were\nmore bitter than he had expected, and\nhe spat them out.\n\"Hers is water.\"\nOray turned, and met a pair of malignant black eyes. Khoon wu holding out to him a Hlllman'a leather\nwater-bottle.\nToo thirsty to speak-. Oray nodded\nhis thanks, and drank deeply of the\nlukewarm contents . . . God! What\nwu happening to him? .,. Why was\nlt growing dark? . . .\nThen tbe hillside seemed to rise up\nand hit him in tbe face.\nKneeling beside the now uncona-\nclous Englishman, the man he hatel.\nwith a savage passion. Khoon put two\nfingers Into his mouth and whistled\nshrilly.\nTHE STRONGHOLD\nShlreen had referred to the Palace\nof the Mirror u \"a grape pip lying ln\na basin.\" The Cobra's stronghold wu,\nproperly speaking, a miniature fortified town nestling ln a small valley,\nringed round by a chain of Jagged,\nInaccessible peaks. Shoulder to immense shoulder they resembled a\ngroup of Tttlans down upon an ant at\ntheir feet.\nOverhanging the palace, so that\nconsiderable portion of lt lay under a\nstupendous canopy of gray etone, wu\na bulging bluff, the top of which\nsloped sharply backwards to end ln\na towering summit, whose dark sides\nwere seamed wltb dazzling anow.\nA score of cascades thundered down\nfrom the surrounding dizzy peaks.\ntheir waters breaking into clouds ot\ndrifting spray, which mingled with\nthe frequent mists that lay protectively over the valley.\nOver all wu the thin, pine-scented\nair\u2014the soul of high altitudes.\nThe site of tbe palace wu evidently the crater of an extinct volcano,\nwhich the winds and rains of ages\nhad transformed Into a fertile valley\n\u2014smiling and flower - covered In\nspring and summer, and Incredibly\nbleak and desolate ln the winter.\nThe ancient stronghold wu square\nln form and surrounded by the remains of two high, bastioned walls of\ngrey stone. Yawnlpig gaps and\nbreaches had been filled up with carefully piled rocks, and mid-way ln the\nouter were ponderous double doors of\nebony\u2014the h^dness of which had\ndefied the centuries.\nThla main entrance opened on to\nan encircling street containing\nsmall bazaar snd the quarters of the\ngarrison. At the top of a steep slope,\nthe slightly lower second wall\u2014In far\nbetter rtpair-*-enclosed the palace and\nIts gardens.\nSuddenly the peacefulneAi of the\nvalley wu shattered by the long-\ndrawn quavering blasts of a horn.\nAs the lut of a thousand mellow\nechoes died away, the dtitant roaring\nof a tigress shook the air. \"Shlv.\" the\ntigress (whose nnme means \"The Destroyer\"). Wis welcoming her lord.\n(TO BE CONTINUED)\nIndicate historical\nspots, while everywhere the Ukness of\nCartler wtll look out from flags and\nposters. When the Champlaln steams\nInto the harbor on Aug. 25, escorted\nby the Precnh cruiser Vauquelln, thc\nvisitors will bc met by 200 small vessels modelled on the type In which\nCartler made his voyage. After thc\nunveiling of the memorial -cross a\nbanquet, at which covers will be laid\nfor 1,000 people, will be tendered visit n\" dignitaries. It will be followed\nby a fete do nutt and concert with\nfireworks. The craft ln thc harbor\nwil be decoratrct with Chinese lanterns. On Sunday, Aug. 26, military\nand pontifical high mass will be solemnized ln Gaspe Cathedral, during\nwhich the musical part of the service\nwill be sung by a choir of 150 singers\naccompanied by a string orchestra.\nThe delegates will leave Oupe Aug.\n27 on the liner Champlaln for Quebec\nwhere a round of official functions\nand interesting side trips hu been\narranged for them, including receptions at tho historic Citadel by Gov-\ne jt General Earl Bessborough, and\nat Spencerwood, the gubernatorial\nresidence. Newspapermen who are\naccompanying the delegratcs from\nFrance will take part ln a Congress\nof the Prench press and be entertained at a luncheon In the Garrison\nclub by the Canadian Press.\nTbe Quebec visit will lut from Aug.\n37 to Aug. 29, when the visitors will\nproceed to Three Rivers to Join ln\nthe unveiling of the monument, \"The\nFleming Torch.\" symbolizing tho\nmaintenance through the centuries\nof Prench and Christian Ideals on this\ncon tinon t.\nINTERNATIONAL   CELEBRATION\nAt Montreal an elaborate program\nof celebrations hu been prepared, the\nmost Important being tlnj remmlng\nof th- great Harbor Bridge over thc\nSt, Lawrence after Jacques Cartler\nand the installation on the structure\nof a copy of Drlvler's bust of the explorer, the original of which wu Installed ln the Place du Canada in\nParis on July 1. The city wtll bc cn\nfete during the celebrations.\nDelegates leave for Ottawa on Sept.\n2 and will spend two days there.\nThuy arc scheduled to arrive in Toronto, Sept. 5 where they will be the\nguests of the Province of Ontario and\nthe city. The University of Toronto\nhu arranged a special programme Uit\nthe Prench speaking guests.\nThe celebrations will be completed\nat Niagara Falls on Sept. 7 where they\nwill take on a wider International aspect and be a part of the ceremonies\ncommemorating the long peace which\nhad prevailed between France, Great\nBritain and the United States,\nPretty Affair\nFlizabeth Millar is Bride of\nMonteith, Powell River\nCRESTON HOSPITAL\nMEMBERSHIP IS IIP\nCRESTON, Aug. 10\u2014There was a\nfair turnout of directors of Creston\nValley Hospital association for the\nAugust meeting on Wednesday evening. The matter of heating the hospital wu brought up and lt was\nfinally agreed to buy boilers, pipes,\netc., from James Cook, u the first\nmove to provide a hot water radiation system. The secretary's report\nshowtd tbat though there wu a\nrecord number of patients, at 68,\nhospital days totalled 326 as against\n368 ln June. Collections were shown\nimproved compared wltb lut month's\nand per capita cost well below the\naverage for the year. The thanka of\nthe association were accorded Creston\nlodge Knights of Pythlu for check\nfor 151, proceeds of tbe First of July\ncelebration; Canyon Ladles* auxiliary\nfor equipment; A. E. Pennon. Erlckson,\nand H. Sepalla, Wynndel, for vegetables. The secretary reported payment\nof IS yearly memberships during July.\nMrs. Willey Bock\nat Bonnington\nBOmONQTON FALLS, Au(. l\u00bb. \u2014\nHn. Andrew Willey bw returned (rom\na wh.'< Tl.lt to Northport wh re ehe\nw\u00abs the guett of Mre. T. Lane.\nNEED MEN FOR\nAIRPORT WORK\nBORTON, B.C., Aug. 19.\u2014A very\npretty wedding took place in Burton\non August in, when Elizabeth Millar,\nsecond daughter of Thomu Millar,\nwas married to William O. Monteith\nof Powell River, B.C.\nThe clu.ich wu tastefully decorated for the occulon with white and\npink flowers, with a floral arch of\nthe same colors and a huge bell of\nflowers and gypsophlla.\nThe bride, wbo entered the church\nwith her father, wore a full length\ndress of white net, with orange blossom wreath and veil. Her sister, Mrs.\nH. Sundstrom, who wu maid of hon-\ner, wore a full length dress of palest\ngreen organdie. ,\nThe bride oarrled a bouquet of\nroses and sweet j ;as, and Mrs. Sundstrom carried a bouquet of sweet peas\nand gypsophlla. Rev. C. Addyman\nconducted the ceremony, his first Introduction to Burton. While the register wu being signed E. Parkyn sang\nu a solo, \"6 Perfect Love.\"\nIn t-he evening a dance and reception wu held ln the Burton hall.\nMr:.. Monteith. prior to her wedding was given aeveral showers and\nteu and was the recipient of numerous gifts, being one of Burtons most\npopular young people. After a honeymoon at the cout, the young\ncouple will make their home at Powell\nRiver, B.C.\nBay Church Helpers\nHave Garden Party\nCRAWFORD BAY. Aug. IS\u2014 The\nchurch helpers held a garden party\non Saturday afternoon ln the Ben-\nacre grounds kindly lent by Mrs.\nOoocb. There were a large number of\nvisitors several coming from Kootenay Bay, a new feature being the\ndelicatessen stall with all kinds of\ncooked dainties which were quickly\nsold by Mrs. Holmes who wu ln\ncharge. Mrs. Frasclo and Mrs. Watson\nwere in charge of fancy stall. Miss\nHlnck, the Dutch auction, Mlas R.\nHoughton soft drinks. Mrs.* Gooch\nwu In charge of the hidden treasure\ncompetition which caused much fun\nand excitement. Mrs. Harrison. Mrs.\nFraser, Mlar Freeman served tea oo\nthe shady verandah. The sum of\n108.10 wu realized.\n, Mrs. Gooch and her two nelces, the\nMisses Kathleen and Daphne Houghton bave returned from a trip to\nBanff. Tbey also enjoyed some good\nfishing ln the Cascade river.\nFERNIE. B.C.. Aug. It?.\u2014Lieut-Col.\nJ. C. Stewart of the Department of\nNational defense wrote uklng the\ncouncil how many slnglo unemployed\nwere available In Fernic wbo would\nwork on the airport extension under\ntbo department's wage scale. Thc\nmatter was left over until thc necessary data could be obtained from the\ngovernment agent.\nAn offer by Wm. Dlcken for baling\nthe hay in the park wu accepted. A\nnumber of persons where granted extensions on or cancellation of their\ntaxes under Bylaw 35fl.\nSearch of records has failed to\nbring to light a survey of the water\nshed area for Pernle and as a result\nthe government has asked for a survey before tbey set aside a restricted\narea. The city fathers decided to\nfind out what kind of survey wu\nneeded and until thla ls settled the\nmatter hu been held over.\nIt waa brought to tho attention f\nthe council that Mr. Mulrhead is\nclaiming about 75 yards or gravel that\nthe city stored on his land. The city\nclerk wu Instructed to see lf thc\nmatter could be straightened out.\nSince the pollce commission could\nnot part with their water heater it\nwu decided to buy a new one for the\nfire hall. The new rules governing\nthe fire hall were endorsed and M.\nParker chosen u acting chief while\nChief Crawford is on his holiday.\nSeveral applications for city auditor\nwere received but the matter was laid\nover.\nThe oouncll decided to Invest the\n12500 sinking fund cuh in Oovernment of B.C. guaranteed P.O.E. 4'i\nper cent bonds, maturing ln 1942, at\n\u202296.75.\nISBERGS LEAVE\nSOUTH SLOCAN\nSOUTH BLOCAN, B.C., Aug. 19. -\nMr. and Mrs. S. Isberg and Miss Ida\nIaberg, who have been settlers ln the\ndistrict for many years, have left by\nmotor tr- Vancouver where they propose making their home.\nHarold Lonj of Nelson was the\nguest of Mr. and Mrs, R. O. Elliott recently ind visited at the pool.\nA sendoff wu given Mrs. P. E. Bllllnghurst and son John who have\nleft .'or Montreal where they board\nthe * \". Duchess of York for England\nto make their home.\nMiss Ellz^eth Laurie and Miss\nSandra Altkffn of Trail are the guests\nof the former's slater, Mrs. E. J. Bowkett, for a few weeks.\nMiss Millie Potosky who has been\nspending two week's visiting friends\nin Vancouver has returned.\nCorn Roast Is\nHeld at Robson\nSALMO NOTES\nViolet Cherbo and\nB. Ingram Are Wed\nMiss Rose Passcuzz Hostess\nat Sirdar; Crew of 40\nWorking on Road\nGoatfell Relief\nCamp Is Closed\nKITCHENER, B.C., Aug. 19.\u2014Fans\nwere disappointed when the CP.lt.\nbridge crew failed to show up for\nthe softball gamo with the Airport\ncrew.\nThe Department of National Defence, Goatfell camp, known u 04\nWest, at Mosqufto creek, wu closed\nWednesday, when til remaining men\nwere transferred to the airport here.\nDecrease ln camp strength wu given\nfor the reason of temporarily closing.\nMr. Lucey, the foreman Is being transferred to Frank, Alta., while the\nstoreman, Mr. Kenny, replaces Mr,\nMcKee at the airport. McKee ls going\nto Y >.k. P. Rae, Oangboss at Ooatfell,\nwill replace Mr. Nellson at the airport,\nwhile Mr, Kelly is remaining as care*\ntaker.\nSALMO, B.C. Aug. 19\u2014A3. Buck-\nworth of Toronto arrived ln town\nMonday and is inspecting flrea on\nvarious timber limits of the A. B.\nBuckworth company.\nMiss Merle McCaslln hu returned\nto her home ln Nelson after spending\na co'i^le of days here.\nMr. and Mrs. James Fraser were\nvisitors V Nelson, Wedneaday.\nF* Whitfield of Nelson wu a busl-\n>    visitor here Tueaday.\nMiss Beth Bustin who hu spent\nthe put three weeks here the guest\nof the Misses Peggy and Shirley Donaldson hu returned to her home ln\nKlmberley. Sbe wu accompanied\nby M1 s Peggy Donaldson.\nMrs. A. McLeod and sons were shoppers to Nelson Thursday.\nIn Germany the Nazi hu created\na custom of mass church weddings\nat which hundreds of men and women are Joined ln wedlock at one\ntime.\nROBSON, B.C., Aug. 10.\u2014The Bar-\nchard summer camp at Robson was\nthe scene of a merry time on Wednesday evening when about thirty young\npeople gathered there, the guests ol\nMiss Phyllis Barchard and her brothers Philip and Francis. The occasion took the form of a corn roa.-t\nwhen hundreds of the golden cars\nwere routed over a huge bon-fin.\nAn evening swim and dancing occupied the time till midnight, wheh\ndainty refreshments were served by\nthe hostess assisted by her mother.\nMrs. W. Barchard and her aunt Mra\nS. E. Horsman of Roland, Man., also\nMrs. Monypenny of Trail. The invited gueste were: Edith Woodburn.\nPhyllis Obome. Jean Ballard, Katherine Nelson, Margaret Curtis. Joyco\nMonypenny, Margaret MUler, Ruby\nNeison, Phyllis Wateon. Josephine MeKinnon, Beatrice Dams, Betty Monypenny, B .trice MeKinnon, Irene\nVcodburn, Mr. and Mrs. J. Martin,\nMrs. Monypenny, Prank Frxlee, Bertie Martin, Jimmy Nelson. Clark Graham. Frank Worley. Ralph Quance.\nFreddie Perrln, Jimmy Davidson, Bert\nJed McGualey. \"Slim\" 8alnsbur>.\nWeir, Len Nleman.\nEvery day ln every way daytime\nclothes are getting dressier and dressier, according to Paris. Satin Is a\nhighlight of the season's frocks, and\nlame ls good both for tbe more, for*\nmal moments of milady's day, u well\nu for evening.\n^Itataan'ij'Batt \u20acompann.^\nINCQ\u00abFe*WtlO  ttt MM I1Z\u00bb\nQreen Bond SHEETS\n'Bay' Quality\u2014Fair Prices\nThis superb leader is sold by all HBC\nstores and is the finest value to be obtained. Size 81x100. Hemstitched or plain.\nPair $2.75\n_\u00bb\nSIRDAR, B. C Aug. 19\u2014A pretty\nwedding was witnessed here on Monday when Angelina Violet youngest\ndaughter of Mr. and Mrs. P. Cherbo\nwu united ln marriage with Bert\nIngram of Sirdar, Rev. A- O Thomson officiating. Tbe bride who Was\ngiven tn marriage by her father, wu\nbecomingly attired ln white taffeta\nand lace on long princess lines,\nher veil being held in place with\ncoronet of orange blossoms, She\nwore white accessories and carried\na bouquet of carnations, cosmos\nand babies breath. Mrs. Frank Pelle,\nsister of the bride was matron of\nhonor wearing a gown of corn yellow\nchiffon voile with accessories to\nmatch her bouquet consisting of\ngolden glow and babies breath. The\ngroom wu supported by the bride's\nbrother, Vincent Cherbo. Only the\nImmediate family wcre present. Mrs.\nJ Pelle and Mrs. c. Pelle, sisters\noi the bride motored from Calgary\nand Bellevue for the occasion. After\nthe ceremony a dainty supper wu\nserved, the bride's table being centered with a three tier wedding\ncake. The happy couple will reside ln Sirdar for the present.\nA crew of between 40 and 60 men\nis engaged at present on roadwork\nin this area.\nMiss Rose Passcuzzo was a chsrm-\nlng hostess wben she entertained on\nSaturday at the tea hour In honor\nof Mrs. Hugo, nee Miss Vera Turner\nof santa Barbara. Those present were\nMrs. Stan Bysouth of Coalmont, B.C?.,\nMrs. Tom Bysouth of 'Kuskanook,\nMrs James Passcuzzo, Misses Margaret and Daisy Rogers, Miss Francis and Sylvia Talartco, _ Miss Annie\nPasscuzzo.\nThe water as Indicated by guage\nat Slough Bridge read.-* 6-1, a fall\nof .11 for the week.\njack Connel was a visitor at Atbara, on Wednesday evening.\nA bridges of Cranbrook accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. w. H. Ellis\nand daughter Orace of Medicine\nHat, and Mrs. Bellhorn of Redcliffe, Alberta, were visitors it the\nWilson Quarries, at Atbara on Wednesday\nMiss Gwen Wilson has left on a\nvisit to friends at okanagan centre.\nMrs.   Hugo   of   Santa   Barbara   Is\nvisiting  with   her  aunts,  Mrs.  Tom\nand Sam Bysouth Kuskanook.\nThe grader Is busy at preient on\nthe road between Atbira and Kuskanook, Dolf weir being ln charge.\nMrs. Frank Belle of Bellevue and\nMrs. C Pelle of Calgary are visiting\nwith tbelr parenU, Mr. and Mrs P.\nCherbo.\nMr. and Mrs. J. passcuzzo, Lillian\nTrevelyn of Alice Siding snd G.\nKit ml left on a camping trip up\nthe lake ot the week-end.\nCharles WHson was a visitor to\nCanyon taking in the ball game on\nSunday.\nP. Williams and 8. Oslund With\nMrs Marklund of Yahk were visitors to Kuskanook on Sunday.\nD Cam has left for the prairies\nwhere he hu secured employment.\nMrs. Jsmes Wilson entertained at\nthc luDcheon hour on Friday in\nhonor of Mr. and Mrs* J. R. Hack-\nman snd son Leonard of Calgary\nwho hive been on sn extended tour\nthrough the United state.-, nnd B* C.\npoints        \u2022\nThe Qhangelesi\nQycle\nSPRING is gone. Summer is fading. But their retur-R is as inevitable\nas tomorrow's dawn. Next year they will be back again.\nThen it will be the game changeless cycle. . . . Same April showers\nand burst of May flowers. Same old lawn mowing. Same donning of\nwarm-weather togs. Same craving of new summer furniture. Same\nexciting vacation planning. Same hundred and one needs and longings.\nWhy not* provide for such future certainties when the advantages\nare so much in your favor? Buying in August and September what\nyou are going to need or want in June carries the wisdom of Solomon.\nRead the advertisements in this newspaper and W. Watch for the end-\nof-season sales. Compare the values with those of the season's opening.\nPrices are lower because merchants would rather clear out surplus stocks\nat bargain prices than carry them over until next season.\nSo\u2014what'U il be? . . . For next summer's lawn, a premium-quality\nmower at an ordinary-quality price. That long-desired rattan suite for\nthe sun-porch. Some rustic furniture. Awnings. A new refrigerator at\nan irresistable price. Day by day, you'll find them Wl in the advertisements in this newspaper. The raincoat which last Spring seemed a bit\nhigh. Two or three linen suits at a genuine bargain\u2014to be hung away\nfor next summer's torrid waves. A money-saving buy of summer underwear, pajamas, shirts, ties, knickers, sports shoes and stockings.\n PAGE  FOUR\n* THE NILSON DAILY NIWS, NELSON, 1.C.-M0NDAY MORNINO, AUGUST 20, 1614-\nNrlumt flmhj JJeuia\nI        EaublUhed AprU 33. 1903\n\"Interior of British Columbia't Family Newspaper\"\nALL THI NIWS WHILI IT IS NIWS\nPublished    every    morning    ticept    Sundiy by\nthl    NIWS   PUBLISHING    COMPANY,   LIMITED,\n316    Biker    Strut,    Nelson,    Brltlih    Columbia\nPHONI 144, Prlvitt Ixchingt Connecting *U D*p*rtm*nt*\nMember   of   th*   Audit   Buretu   ot   Clrculitloni\nind Tbt Canadian Pnu Ltaud Win Ntwi Service\nMONDAY, AUGUST 20, 1934.\nTHE WORLD DROUGHT\nThe world this year is suffering from the worst\ndrought in modern history. It stretches apparently\nacross the whole northern half of the hemisphere. Not\nonly North America, but Europe and Asia are suffer-\ning from intolerably hot weather and lack of rain. Dispatches from China, indicate that famine conditions\nwill prevail on a large scale through many parts of\nChina and already appeals for help are going out. No\none knows much about Russia, but it is evident that\nRussia has likewise a shortage of crops and a famine\nseems certain.\nBoth these countries are subject to dry spells, crop\nshortage and periodic famines, but it is unusual for\nEurope to experience drought. In Continental Europe\nestimates of 1934 wheat production at present available\ntotal 1,382 million bushels compared with 1,672 million\nbushels in 1933. France, Italy and Germany all report\nsubstantial reductions. Germany has such a crop\nshortage that there is already talk of food rationing.\nIn the Danubian countries, which are the bread basket\nof Europe and ordinarily have a substantial surplus for\nexport, the crops are estimated to be 35 per cent\nsmaller than in 1933.\nAs for the United States it is becoming more and\nmore apparent that the Republic is facing the worst\nnational disaster in its history. The \"Mid-West and\nNorthwestern States have been suffering from a\ndrought which has turned great territories into a\ndesert. There is not a blade of grass and the {rees\nare dying. People wonder if the Great American desert\nis stretching out her tenacles north and west. There\nis talk of thousands of farmers moving to new territory. This dry district reaches up into Western Canada, but the Canadian West as a whole has not suffered like the United States. The Canadian wheat\ncrop will be below the average of recent years, but it\nwill bc larger than last year.\nReciprocity, or no reciprocity pact, it is beginning\nto appear that the United States will be compelled to\nlook to Canada for food supplies for this coming year.\nCanada is the best off of any agricultural country in\nthe northern hemisphere. Trices are bound to go up\nand the outlook is britrh' for Canada.\nTHE NEW NIAGARA\nNiagara River conceals its age. Geologists say it\nis not younger than 26,000 years. How much older it\nis they dare not guess. The river flows northerly in a\ncoarse determined by the Wisconsin ice sheet in its\nadvances and recessions over thc Great Lakes region,\nand its history is a tale of unceasing, irresistible assault on the cliff over which its waters flow to form\ntlie majestic falls that the Iroquois called Jorakare.\nRecently a great chunk fell from the escarpment on\nthe Canadian side, bringing its edge a few feet nearer\nLake Eric.\nThe readers of the rocks say that at first the cataract was at Lewiston; the waters cut away the softer,\ncalceioiiK shale which supports the upper crust of limestone, and the limestone crust, deprived of its supporting underpinning cracks, parts and crashes. The rate\nof recession in the Horseshoe Kails, which is reckoned\nat five fret a year since 1812, is muc-% faster than the\nrate of recession in the American Falls, which is reckoned at from two-tenths of a foot to six-tenths of a\nfoot a year. Vet Niagara is bound by no schedule'; in\nJanuary, 1831, Nature tore from the lip of the American Falls a mass of rock greater than the scientists\nhad figured as the spoil of a millenium of erosion.\nThe progress of attrition is uninterrupted. Nature is not concerned about power dcvelopsrs or sight-\nssers. Yet she does not destroy without warning. The\nengineers tup the river well above the Falls; sightseers will stand in wonder at their maje.ty, for Niagara, its contours ever new, is always imposing.\nCHINA'S WEALTH IS CENTERED\nIN TREATY-PORTS\nref.irlctr._i energies of lhe wealth\".\nThe result fs a grand)*** project,\nJust announced, tor the creation of i\nhuge playgi?und In northern Che\nklang province, which abuts close oi\nto the Shanghai area.\nTOIRIST Olt(. IN1ZATION\nP0IAMCEI THB KCHEME\nA government tourist organization\nhas been organized to finance\nscheme, which Is supported wl\nheartedly by Qeneraltsslmo Chiang\nKai-shek. China's chief warlord, it\nle proposed ti build motor roads along\nwhleh Shanghai's Chinese and f6r-\neipn playboys can race In their roadsters and limousines, to construct no\nless than six huge hotels, with al)\nthe Rppurtensncrs required for a\ngood time, along the road to Hang-\ncbow, and to build a $1,000,600 (silver! bridge across the ChtengUng\nriver, so that mou. cars need not bt\nferried across.\nPlans already arc underway for a\nHangchow Race Club, and Hangchow\nGolf club, where It ls planned to lay\nout the trickiest and most beautiful\ncourse In all China. The only others\nnre ln the treaty ports and ln places\nsuch aa Pelplng. where golfers auch\nthc Japanese abound.\nAlmost nil ot China's wealth now Is\nconcentrated lu the treaty ports protected by foreign military lorces. In\nthe greatest of them all, Shanghai,\nthere ls concentrated not only half\nthe total foreign Investment In China, but bv far the broadest proportion of native capital. Tientsin and\nHong Kong are other cities in which\ntremendous Chinese wealth is concentrated.\nThis concentration hus produced in\nthe cities n smooth, suave, high living\nclass of Chinese bankers, property\nowners ind hi mrrci.Ht.tji alongside\ntheir frlfiids In thr foreign banking\na d commercial communities.\nOKN'TRY HAVF LW-M RK\nAND MONEY TO SPEND\nUnlike any other classes in China,\nthese gentry hav* plentv of time on\ntheir hands and money with which to\nspend It on play. Although Shanghai has its race courses, golf clubs.\nbridle paths and cabarets, there was\nfelt a need for something on a grand\nsclc Chinese financed, which could\nbe hailed as sign of China's advancing process ln the family of nations,\nsnd which would, at the same time,\nprovide an outlet for the deplorably\nCAUSE OF APPENDICITIS UNKNOWN-\nEARLY TREATMENT PREVENTS DEATHS\n\u25a0Y JAME#W. BARTON, M.D.\nAi no one bu yst been tble to\ntell ui tbe ciub* of appendicitis, lt\nis really ln tbe ume clue ea cancer\u2014\ni dleeue wltb in unknown ciute.\nJuit ii there ire miny theories u\nto the dun ol cancer eo eleo with\nippendlciui. Dr. A. Krecke ol Munich\nmentions eeven theorlei u to tbe\nciuie of appendicitis: (1) Infection\u2014\nfnm teeth, tonilli, gall bladder, Inteitine or eliewhere: (J) a spasm or\ncloelng of the opening of tbe appendix into tbe Urge inteitine which\nprevents the content! of ippendli\nfrom coming out Into the Intestine\ntnd getting ctrrled away wltb tbe\not\u00bber wastes from the food: (I) any\nobstruction which Interfere! wltb the\nmovements of the walu of the ippendli; (4) tny error ln diet or t' e\nrating of certiln klndi ot food', (S)\ntny foreign bodlei or substances-\ngrape teed! or litUe bird food particles; (6) tny injury to the ippendli;\n(71 an ailment ilmllir to other ailment! whleb Is liable to itart ln any\ncommunity.\ne   \u2022   \u2022\nDr. Krecke doei not ptn kli faith\non any one of theae theorlei. Foreign\nbodlei\u2014gripe seeds for Instance\u2014very\nseldom cause appendicitis.\nHowever, Juit u ln cincer eirly\noperation sivei life io also ln appendicitis. If discovered and operation performed within the flnt W hours tbe\nduth rata le very, very low, whereas\nliter 38. 48 and 7 hours the death\nrite becomw two, three, or even four\ntimes u high.\nThe biggest trouble physicians have\nli to be called in to aee \u2022 patient who\nhad a \"ston ub ache\" ind either took\nor was given a doae of castor oil or\nepeom salts to \"clear out the itomach\nand Intestine.\" It la thla giving ot \u2022\npurgative that causes the hlgb death\nrate in appendicitis u Uu purgative!\nmiy cause tbe ippendli to burst re*\nsuiting ln peritonitis.\n\"The hlgb death rite ln Philadelphia led to \u2022 campaign beginning ln\n1930 to stop chemists, doctors, and\npatlenta administering purgatives,\nand to prevent delay in patlenta with\npain ln itomach and abdomen In\nfinding out whether or not their\npain wai due to appendicitis.\n- Thli campaign reduced the death\nrate In Philadelphia to the lowest ln\nany big American city.\nRemember, a pain starting In the\n\"stoi ach,\" staying there for three\nto four houn, and then going down\nto lower right aide of abdomen, is\nusually, but not alwiyi, appendicitis.\nWHAT DO YOU THINK?\nAll letters to the editor must be signed with the name ot the\nwriter.  A nom de plume may be used (or publication tt desired.\nStevens Beginning\nat the Wrong End\nTo the Editor:\nBlr\u2014Although Hon. H. H. Stevens\nIs apparently championing tbe cause\nagainst \"sweat shops,\" hli championing of British trade, ln effect, nullities tbe sweat ahop cause. Because,\nCanada, ln competition with the world\ntrade, ln the largest market ln the\nworld muat sell at the right price;\nquota or no quota, unleu Britain li\ngettin* sentimental In business! As\nthere is no sentiment ln business,\nlarger tnde with the old country\nmust mean enlargement of the \"sweat\nshop\" racks to continue ln competition with the markets of tbe world,\nor, a rsdlcal change in the order of\nthings, irrespective of political parties.\nOtherwise, sweat shops will continue ifter the Hon. H. H. Stevens hu\npassed on, even u they wen ln existence long befon be wu In existence,\nsimply because tben la money In\ntbem. Another angle; government Interference in wage scales means\n\"marking up\" tbe domestic price of\ncommodltlei, to offset the \"marking\ndown\" (necessitated by increased cost\npf production., on foreign goods sold;\nremember Jobn D. Rockefeller's million dollar fine, wbo paid lt? so that,\ngovernment interference, lf I may\ncall it that. In the financial setup of\n\"foreign trade\" corporations and com*\npanics, ls much mon necessary than\nstarting at the \"wrong end.\"\nA deliberate start at the wrong\nend smacks of Insincerity, or should\nI say fishy, sort of nd herring so to\nIpeak? FRANK CARTER\nAUNT HET\ni .\u2022\nr_m>\n'A man Is kind o' like a est. He\nain't goln' to leave you lt you feed\nhim rliht and keep blm comfortable.\"\nWHAT THE PRESS\nIS SAYING\nTWO DAM BACKS\nThete are two thinga that keep a\nman from putting a proposition over.\nOne li tbat people misunderstand it\nand the other reason' ll they understand It\u2014Atlanta- ConsUtutlon.\nI'F.KHAI'S IT'S A SUBSTITUTE\nIt li now uld that whiskey ti not\n\u2022n antidote for mike bite. Owing td\nthe scarcity of makes thli li not expected to reduce the drinking.\u2014Chatham Newi.\nMAKING A DISCOVERY\nSome June bridegrooms an finding\nlife one gnnd refrain, Instead of one\ngnnd, iweet song. Refrain from cardi,\nsmoking, booze ahd fishing trips. \u2014\nKitchener Record.\nCONTRACT\nBRIDGE\nBy L V. Sheptrd\n\"Tewtw at tttimtr*\nFORTirVINfi PARTNER'S\nCONFIDENCE\nIt Is a strange fsct tbat some finished plsyera love to get out on a\nUmb. Tbey apparently love to gouge\nopponents for the lut possible trick.\nTo accomplish this they sometimes\ntike chances which ire Impossible to\nJustify, Just u the declarer of tbe\nfollowing hand did.\n\u2666 10\u00bb\nfill     -\n\u2666 KQJ109J\n\u2666 10*5\nIn thrum place, West had a hand\ncalling for an opening bid of 1-spade.\nHe made an opening bid 3 no trumps\nwith a alngleton diamond. Probibly\nJuit because he held ISO acei. Tben\n\u2022Users he wu warned by hli partner's\noverall of 9-8pad\u00ab (which wts some\nbid), hs went t no trumps.\nOf course tbe opening lead wu the\nK of diamond!. Thlt sobered up Weit\nfor i few moment, it leut. He can-\nfully noted that he required 4 entrlei\nIn dummy to take J flneue ln spades.\n1 ln clubs snd a ln hearts. He ahould\nnot bave thought of taking a flneue\ntn a third suit until he bad taken ln\nhie full 9 trlcka. He wun't my partner, so It wu none of my buslneu.\nHaving scanned the hand carefully\nWut led the t ot spadu, to avoid a\nlater block lf all went well. Dummy's\nK won the trick. A return lead of a\nlow spade enabled declarer's J to win\non a finesse. Tbe Ace dropped tbe Q,\nand the t of apadea wu overtaken\nwith dummy's S, giving Wut his first\nt tricks.\nTbe t of hearts wu led. The J won\non a flnease, insuring tbe deelanr 10\ntricks, without further risk. He\" had\nwon t tricks. He held i certain added\ntrlcka ln clubs, snd he could again\nfinesse hearts through South. That\nwu the safe and sane thing to do,\nwtth a flock of established diamonds\nheld In ths North hand.\nAll ot us expected the declarer to\ntake his 10 tricks, and quit, but he led\nhis 8 of clubs, at which ws all wondered. Dummy's K won the trick,\nand back went the i ot cluba, to try\ntbe J finesse. It won. The declarer\nled his ace of clubs, dropped the Q,\nand then he led his 6 of clubs, which\ndummy won with the 7.\nAgain 'hearti were led. The Q won\non a flneue, arte the ice won the\ntwelfth trick. The lut trick went to\nSouth'! good heart. The only remark\ncame ln \u2022 very EngUsh voice from\nEut: \"Beautifully conceived, pirtner,\nbut a bit dangerous, don't you\nthink?\" Not another comment wu\nmade. Weit's face plainly enough\nshowed that ths quiet thrust had\npenetrated.\nUnder an otter by which Devon\ncider manufacturers have given one\nfree apple tree for every ton ot apples\npurchssed, 11,101 trees havs been distributed.\nNEW BATTLESHIPS\nIMPROVED\nBritain's new battleships to be laid\ndown ln 1937 will differ In many ways\nfrom all fighting ahlpa now afloat.\nThey will have guna of a new type,\nfiring nearly twice u faat u tha 15\nInch now ln service; will be armored\nand otherwise protected on an entirely novel plan, and, It ls claimed, be\nable to defy any form of air attack.\nExcept for unimportant areas of the\nupper and shelter decks, the whole\nstructure of tha veaael will ba virtually bombproof.\nBesides a thick steel turtle back\ncovering all machinery, oilers, and\nmagazine spaces, there will be lighter\narmor decks on tha multiple system\nto aot aa bursters to percussion\nbombs. Navigating bridge, gunnery\ncontrol foretop, signaling, searchlight,\nand anti-aircraft gun stations win.\nall have bulletproof protection\nagainat machine gun lira from low\nflying planes. A primary aim of the\ndesign la to produce a ship capable of\nsteaming through a swarm of hostile aircraft without suffering serious\nInjury. Nor la the defense against\naircraft merely passive. The naw\ntypo will have at leaat eight, and\nprobably twelve, quick firing antiaircraft guna, besides numerous multiple machine guns of heavy caliber.\nThe one ln a thousand chance of a\nbomb falling down the funnel\u2014which\nhaa actually happened at practice\u2014la\nguarded against by an Ingenious form\nof funnel cap. According to present\nplana the King Oeorge V, the perfected type of battleship, ls unofficially\nnamed, will be propelled by steam\nturbines, but a Diesel plant la to be\ninstalled for cruising purposes. This\ninnovation la expected to increase\nthe cruising radius to 12,000 miles.\nTEN YEARS AGO\n(From The Dally News of August SO,\n1024)\nEngineer H. D. Dawson and party\nof Kulo have moved to the Meteor\nmine, \u2022\u00bb\n\u2022   \u2022   e\nAn attempt to bum yet another\nDoukhobor ichool wu frustrated Friday night at Spencer, Orand Forks.\n20 YEARS AGO\n(From The Dally News of August 20,\n1914)\nOwing to financial eondltiona dlrecton of the Windermere Dlatrlct\nAgricultural assoclstlon will abandon\nthe annual fair thli year.\nt   *   *\nFire conditions  In the Boundiry\nare reported to be better, and the\nflrei an subsiding. Rain bu helped\nconsiderably.\neee\nWhen the Nelwn school opens for\nthe fall term Monday, no new pupils\nwtll be admitted under 6 yean of age.\n30 YEARS AGO\n(From Tho Dally News of August 20,\n1004)\nFred Stork was elected mayor of\nFernie at the first municipal elections held here today.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nRain and wind cleared tbe air today. The Cottonwood valley fire, regarded as the most dangerous to\nNelson, li being held.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nO. O. Buchanan hu received a telegnm from W. A. Oilllher, M.P. \"Order ln council granting 110 per ton\non leid eoncentntes shipped to Europe Just psued.\nON THE AIR TONIGHT\nCANADIAN  RADIO\nCOMMISSION NETWORK\n&:55 Can.  Pnu News\n6:00 A Tout to Merriment\nf :30 Gothic Choristers (NB.C.-N.T.)\n7:00 Cabaret CuUUIino\n7:30 Newi ind Weither Forecut\n7:38 Jick Denny's Orch.\n0:00 Moonlight on the River\n8:30 Earle Hill's Orch.\n0:00 Songs and Melodies of the Put\n0:18 Rusty and Hia Guitar\n0:30 James Keith, bass, Chllllwaek\n0:45 Frank Chapman, tenor, Trail\nKl\u00abi\n50*0\n6:00\n6:30\n7:00\n7:18\n7:80\n0:00\n0:00\n0:30\n0:30\n0:48\n10:00\n10:18\n10:66\n11:00\n11:00\n11:30\nN.B.C.-KOO NETWORK\nh(.H   KFI   KOO  KOMO   KJR\n620     040     790     920     970\nContented Prognm\nDemltaase Revue\nPrank Buck\nGene and Glenn\nOarden Concert\nShow: Rush Hughu M.C.\nRichard lumber's Orch.\nWalts Time\nPolitical Talk (OO. KFI)\nDuchln'a Orch. (KOO, ?FI)\nNews Flashes\nTom Coakley's Orch.\nPress-Radio News (\nOrgan Concert\nOua Arnheim's Orch.\nJlmmie Qrler'a Orch.     * .\nC.B.S.-DON I.EE NETWORK\nKVI    KFRC    KOIN    KSL    KOI,\n570       610 940       1130    1270\n6:00 Wayne King's Orch.\n6:30 All Por Tou (DL)\n6:46 MlUtary-Band (DL)\n6:45 Hobby Honu (KSL)\n7:00 Fats Waller, songs\n7:15 Glen Gny'i Orch.\n7:46 Jm  Oarber's Orch.\n8:00 Blue Mondiy Jamboree\n8:30 Orchutru\n10:30 Stewart Sisters  (DL)\n10:4.1 Joe Sullivan, pianist (DL)\n11:00 tan Oarber'a Oreb. (DL)\n600 k CJOR\nVancouver\n6:15 Musical Program\n6:46 Newi Varietlea\n7:00 D.OK.K. Quartet\n7:30 Shadow Voice\n7:16 Musical Prognm\n7:45 Art Olnnes\n8:00 Chirles Hovey. baritone\n8:15 Don Flynn, pianist\n8:30 Baseball Broadcast\n10:16 Orchestra\n300 m\n500 w\n680 k KPO\nSan Francisco\n6:30 Safety First\n6:46 Cliff Nazarro\n7:00 College Daze\n7:16 ArgenUne Trio\n7:30 Comedy Stars E.T,\n441  m\n50.000 w\n7:46 Tour Boy's Future\n8:00 Organ Symphony\na SO Stanford Univenlty\nB:46 Stories\n0:00 Orchutra\n0:80 Walt. Time\n10:00 Crosscuts from Logs of the Dsy,\nHarmony Four\n11:00 Gui Arnheim's Orch.\n0)0 k KJR\nSeattle\n6:00 Song Bag\n6:30 Dinner Dansant\n7:i5 Woodwind Enaemble\n7:30 Dollars and CenU\n7:45 Radio Ralph\n8:00 Highlight Hour\n6:30 Purple Ray, Drama\n8:48 Muted Strings\n9:00 Souvenirs. B.T.        k\n0:16 Chamber of Commerce\n10:00 Till Tomorrow\n11:30 Musical Auction\n109.1 m\n5000 \u2022\n1050 k KNX 286.5 nl\nHollywood 50,000 w\n6:15 Concert Group\n6:46 Tour Dinner Danes, I.T,\n7:00 Watanabe and Hon. Archie\n7:30 Lawrence King, tenor\n7:46 King Cowboy\n8:00 The In-Laws\n8:18 World Revue, l.T.\n8:46 Joe Bishop, Mary Rosettl\n9:00 News Service\n9:16 Political Speech\n9:30 Crocketts\nSIPFORTH  THE PROSPECTORS\nDr. T. L. Gledhlll, geologist, grhose\nacademic degrees Include Bachelor of\nArts, Muter of Arts and Doctor of\nPhilosophy, and who bu apent his\nlife studying the Canadian mining\nsituation, agrees with the flews ex-\npre*-*d by the News-Chronicle ln respect to the relstlons wblch should exist between the railway companies\nand the prospector.\nThis paper bad uid that the work\nof the prospector wu such that he\nshould receive preferred treatment ln\ntbe way of fares and accommodation,\non the railways. It wu pointed out\nthat the men who were looking for\nmines were really looking for builneu for the railways and that they\nmight property consider theu men\ntheir own employee!.\nDr. Oledhlll states thit the prospector ls the first man In connection\nwith tbe mining Industry who should\nreceive favorable consideration. Without him there would be no mining induatry. It is to the prospectors that\ncredit must go for the millions now\nbeing distributed annually ln thla\nprovince ln payment of wages for\nsuppUes and by way of dividends.\u2014\nPort Arthur Chronicle.\nCAMP SUPPLIES\nWe are headquarters for\nMINERS' AND CAMPERS' SUPPLIES\nTENTS, PACK SACKS, SLEEPING ROBES,\nTHERMOS BOTTLES, CAMP COTS, CAMP\nCHAIRS, DRINKING CUPS, PICNIC SETS,\nETC., ETC.\nPRICES RIGHT\nNelson Hardware Co*\nWholesale and Retail Quality Hardware\nNELSON, B.C.\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nBv Geo. MeManui\nTILLIE THE TOILER\n*3AV, THEI-ifc'S\nA LITTLE tSVjy\nIM TH6E.E C3OI0E\n3A3A - VaU'LL\nFind HIM RuW\nNlWe*\n-V.UOUNO\nWITH\nOuT\nAwy\nPamtSI\nON\nCOME  --UOKA-V,\nON, CA\"SEV*l|^AR(K\nBo yooie\nDory\nV\nBy Weatover\nTHE GUMPS\nPOOR PICKINGS\n\/^WEU- I WONDER HOW THE TW\u00a9\nANGLERS ARE GETTING ALONG\nAT 9WA0f RE\u00bbT- BIN. AND AHOY GUMP-\nBIM, W* SMART WHEN HE TOOK THAT\nLYtuTwORMALON& WHEN HE W6NT\nPISNING- &>tel>-\u00ab WS TAKING\nNO CWANCES-\nJS TOOK Wt* BAIT WON HIM.-\nAND HAY ONLY HOPE I* THAT THEY OONT\nSHOOT OOT OP SEASON UP THERE -\nSOME \\MM-D HUNTER 18 LIABLE TO\nTAKE POOR UNCLE  BIM POR\nA CRANE OR A PEU CAN -\nANO IT WILL BE 4UST\n'  TOO BAD'\n$i\n\\t\nLMla*\nPOOR BVM-\nE>*RY P6NNV Of HI* FORTUNE\n, TIED UP- UVING OPP HI* NEPMEW-\nWHAT A COME DOWN -\n0US.Y UKE TAKING A WEEP\nOUT OP A NICE GREEN MEADOW\nANO TURNING IT LOOSE\n\u00bb_-   TO GRAZE IN A\nglghf^n GRAVEL WT-\nJ%\nlHS-WTV.0\u2014\n_ U__u\n'\u2014''\u25a0i.__t_Bii*'\"-   \u2022\n \u2014\n\u2022THI NILION DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C-MONDAY MORNING, AUGUIT 20, 1934-\n^SOCIETY\n_\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014__\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014___m__m*\nThli column la conducted by\n'Mra. M. J. Vlgneux, All news ot.i\nndil niture. Including receptlpni.\n\u25a0privtte entertainments, personal\nltemi, mirriiges. etc, will appetr\nin thll column. Telephone Mrs.\nVigneux at ber homi, 819 Silica\nitreet\nMr. tnd Mrs. Arthur Lakes tnd\nsons, Arthur tnd Mike, hive left\nfor Vanoouver, tfter  ipendlng  the\nSut month ln Nelson, guests it the\nome ot Mrs. Likes' parents. Mr.\nand Mn. Oeorge Johnstone, Kooteniy street.\n\u2022   \u2022\nJ. L. Ptrker, manager of thi Two\nStir mini, wu t visitor ln town\nSaturday.\n.   .   \u2022\nDr. and Mn. J. P. Oussln, Oordon\nrotd, htve returned from t month's\nmotor trip to California and Tla\nJuana,\n.   .   .\ntin. 3. Moon tnd ton ot Tnll tn\nguests tt the borne ot Mr. ind Mrt.\nD. McKenzie tnd Mr. tnd Mn. Hirry\nSwlngler, Vernon etreet.\nI   a, t\nM. T. Btnthten of Orty Creek tpent\nSaturdiy In NeUon.\n\u2022 a- i\n. Mr. tnt Mn. Fred Durham of Vancouver, former resident! of Nelion,\nare visiting it Creicent Bay it the\nhome of H. Htyea.\n* \u2022   .\nMlu Francu Andrews, daughter of\nMr. and Mn. J. T. Andrewi of the\nSt.Ann's Academy\nKamloops, B.C.\nSELECT RESIDENTIAL\nSCHOOL FOR GIRLS AND\nYOUNG LADIES\nIn tht City of Sunihlnt\nLocation ideal; climate unexcelled. Primary, Grammar,\nCommercial and High School\nDepartments. Music course\nleads to degrees in Royal\nAcademy and Trinity College\nof London, and to Toronto\nConservatory of Music.\nWrite for Catalogue to\nSISTER SUPERIOR\nSEFTON COLLEGE\nHS FOUL BAY ROAD\nVICTORIA, B.C.\nSchool for Girls, Beginners lo\nMatriculation. A limited number of boarders received. Excellent education, with happy,\ndisciplined home life. Tutorial\nsystem of study. Small classes.\nMusic.   Games.   Art.   Voice\nTraining. Special attention to\nthe Speaking Voice.\nModerate inclusive fees\nWrite\nMill E. F. ROBERTS, L.L.A.\nHeidmlstrm\nnorth shore, who wu operated on\nthe end of thl week tor appendicitis,\nts progreulng favonbly.\nIt!\nMr. tnd Mtl. W. Ramsden htvi left\ntor Calgary.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMlu lather Oliver and Frank Oliver\nleft yuterdiy for t vlilt to MicleM,\nAltt.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nE. Heddle left yeiterdiy on t vlilt\nto Vlrdot, Min.\n.   .   \u2022\nVe*. I. H. Atherton of Vlctorlt,\nwho lt visiting her brothers Wlllltm\ntnd Fred Irvine, hu nturned from\nNew Denvu*where she hu been t\ngueit of MreTisrar White.\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022 \u2022 >\nMr. tnd Mn. Ronmtrk have returned from their, honeymoon ln\nSpokane.\nett\nB. Sutherland haa left tor Ca'\/ary.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. John McPhall, Silica\natreet, have u their guest Mrs. McPhail's sister, Mrs. Alvin Bellinger,\nOf Strathmore, Alta.\n\u2022 e  a\nMn. C. Reynolds of Creiton visited\ntbe city during the week-end.\n\u2022 *   .\nAustin Carter left yesterday morning for Vancouver.\nWilliam Myers of Ka_!.i was a Nelion shopper Saturday.\n> \u2022   \u00bb   .\nlln. L. Arit left yuterday on a\nvisit to Edmonton.\n\u2022 *\u2022   \u2022\nMrs. L. Faulkner of Sllverton was a\nvisitor In town during the week-end.\na   i, i\nMr. and Mn. J. Dronsfield, 120\nNelson avenue, Fairview, have as their\nguuts Mr. and Mn. Q. Qrenn and\ndaughter  Pauline  of  Poplar  Farm,\nStettlir, Alta.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00ab\nMr. and Mn. W. Jamleson of Revelstoke htve returned after visiting\nfrlendi In Nelion. They made the\ntrip by motor via Spokine.\n\u2022 It\nF. M. Bltck of Vincouver visited\nthe city Btturdty.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mn. Walter 8. Crowther,\nObservatory itreet, have u their\ngueiti Mr. a\u00bbd Mn. F. Leeworthy of\nVancouver, md Mn. Crowther'i lister,\nMlu Marguerite Phllbert of Vancouver, who have motored through the\nCariboo dlatrlct.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMra. Shrleves and her children of\nBalfour were recent ehoppers ln the\ncity.\n\u2022 \u2022   i\nMr. tnd Mrs. Oeorge H. Hull, who\nhave spent the put few days guesti\nat the home of the latter'i sisters, C.\nA. Larson and Mn. R. R. Brown,\nhave returned to their home in Seattle; They were accompanied home by\nMn. A. Larson wb\u00ab will epend a\ncouple of weeks visiting Mrs. A. C.\nO'Neill.\n...\n0. A. Mulrhead left yesterday for\nProvost, Alta.\n...\nMr. McLellan of the Utlca mine\nspent the week-end In town.\nMr. and Mrs. Richard Welton and\nson John of Trall were In the city\nS* .utday en route to Balfour where\nthey .sent the week-end.\n\u2022 \u2022  *.\nMIsi Mary Muraro, Granite road,\nreturned Saturday night from Calgary and Edmonton where ln the\nlatter place she waa a guest of Mr.\nGood\t\nHousekeeping\nBy Circle  No. 4 of\nSl Paul's Ladies' Aid\nNone hut tested recipei\nwU) be uuerteo.     ,     ,\nFISH CHOWDER\nFry until crisp ';, cup diced fat ult\npork. Cook slightly In this 2 amall\nallced onions. Strain Into kettle In\nwhich chowder Is to be made. Add 4\ncupi sliced potatoes and 3 cups boiling water and cook tor I or 10 minutes.\nIn another kettle place the hud,\ntall and backbone of a 4 lb. cod or\nhaddock, which has been skinned,\nadd 3 or 3 cups ot cold water and\ncook slowly for 10 minutes. Strain the\nliquid from the fish bones Into the\nfish kettle and add the cod or haddock cut In 2 Inch cubes. Cook until\npotatoes and fish are done. Add 1\nquart scalded milk.\nSalt and'pepper. Pour over broken\nsoda crackers. Tomatoes give an unexpected piquancy of flavor to this\nchowder.\n' ('01)11811 CAKES\nWuh '\/_ lb. of salt codfish In cold\nwater and drain. Place on fire ln cold\nwater and hjlng to a boll very slowly.\nRemove from tire, drain, rinse and\ncool.\nCook ilx medium sized potitoei.\nWuh, cool and mix with ihredded\ncodfish. Add 2 eggs, slightly beaten.\n*\/. teupoon pepper. Mix well. Mold\nInto balls and fry ln.deep fat or ahape\nInto cakes and fry to a golden brown.\nVery nice served with a poached egg.\nriNNAN' 1IADDIE 6l Alloc\nLine a buttered baking dish with\ncracker crumbs. Put in lt alternate\nlayers ot fish and crumbi, seasoning\nwith ult and pepper and dots of butter. Beat together 3 eggs, add to\nthem half a cup ot milk, and pour\nthe eggs and milk over the fish. Put\non a top layer of buttered crumbs,\nand place the dish ln a moderate\noven until the crumbs have become\nbrowned. A garnish of parsley adds\nto the appearance.\nand Mrs. Lawrence McCandllsh, for-\nmerly of Nelton.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMn. D. W. Hutehlion, who hu\nvlilted her brother-ln-ltw tnd llater,\nMr. tnd Mn. W. I. Shaw. Carbonate\n\u25a0treet, left lut night for her home In\nCalgary.\n\u2022 ' *   .\nMn. W. T. Smith of Creicent Bay\nspent Saturday ln Nelion.\nThomu Harrlton leavei today for\nLethbridge.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. ahd Mn. C. B. Hufty, Victoria\nitrut, have had u their gueat Mlu\nMargaret Benoche of Calgary, who has\nbeen visiting at the home of her\nuncle and tunt, Mr. tnd Mrs. H. Dimock of New Denver.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMlu Slgnle Kllberg, Granite road,\nhas returned from a visit ln Edmonton where ahe wu a guest at the\nhome ot her brother-in-law and sister,\nMr. and Mn. Lawrence McCandllsh.\nShe also visited In Calary.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. A. Palmer ot the north shore\nleaves today for Indian Held, Sask.\n\u2022 e ,t\nThe Ltdlu tuxllltry of thl B. ot\nR.T., held a very enjoyible tet recenUy it the home of Mn. Duncan\nMcLean, Falls atreet. The hotteu\nwas assisted ln serving by Mrs. Alex\nSutherltnd tnd Mn. D. D. McLetn,\n...\nMrs. J. R. Ramsden tnd her son\nleft yesterdiy for a visit In Calgary.\na   I. I\nMlu D. Ltrmonth tnd her mother,\nboth of Creston, were city shoppers\nduring the wee: -end.\nL.   McLellan   ot\nSaturday ln town.\nAinsworth  spent\nMrs. Margaret Erlckson, who hu\nspent the put month ln town, a guest\nat the home on Front street of her\nsister, Mn. t. 3. Shardelow, lett yesterday for her home In Seattle.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. M. Murphy, who has recently\nreturned from a six-week visit ln eutern Canada, hu left for Kaslo, her\nformer home.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. J. B. Oray, Baker\nstreet, have as their guests Mlu\nKathleen Crowe and Miss Catherine\nMcLellan of Tadanac.\n\u2022 *  |\nVery Rev.  J.  C.  McKentle,  V.O..\nwho hu been ln Bellingham. Wash.,\nhu left tof Vancouver where he ls\nattending a retreat,\nt .**  I\nMrs. Gladys Webb Foster, Nelson\navenue, Palrvlew, and her son, have\nnturned from Alnaworth when they\nspent a couple of weeks vacation.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mra. L. H. Choquette, Latimer striet. htve returned from t\nmotor trip to the Okanagan district\nand Spokane.\nlttt\nMn. Percy HtUett and daughter\nMargaret of Trall are guests at the\nWIUow Point home of Mr. and Mrs.\nH. E. Dill.\nsee\nMrs. E. H. Forrester tnd child left\nyeiterdiy for a visit to Lethbridge.\ne   \u2022' *\nMrs. George Bhaw and child left\nyeaterday for Lethbridge.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nM>. and Mrs. Thomas Olson of Erie\nspent Saturday In Nelson.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMlu Mary Hawes left for Vancouver\nSaturday morning after spending\nARCHBISHOP VISITS\nSON AT KIMBERLEY\nKIMBERLEY, Aug. 19\u2014Archbishop\nand Mn. de Pender of Vtncouver\nvisited Klmberley Thundty. They\nwere on their wty to Montretl tnd\nitopped oft hen to ue their aon\nwho la a member of the Bank of Montrul ataff.\nMr. and Mn. C. W. Crlsford returned home from their vacation tn\nCalgary, bringing with them Mrs.\nScott ot Slbald, who will visit them\nhen.\nMrs. Alan Bond and family trt\nspending t week with frlendt tt\nCanal Flats.\nMrs. Patnall of Canal Plat! tnd\nher two sons sre visiting her elster.\nMrs. Brock Markle at the townsite.\nMr. and Mrs. Smith and son are also\nwith the Markle famUy. They wiu\nreturn to Spokane nest weik.\nMlu D. Donald Is back on the Job\natter apendlng her hoUdiyi it the\ncout.\nAndy Grant of Chapman Camp ls\nvlilUng at Moyle.\nKimberley Roads\nto Be Tarred\nKIMBERLEY, Aug. 10\u2014Tervli li\ngoing on the roads hen, from the\nfurther end of the townsite, through\ntown and for a mile below town.\nHousekeepers feel like holding a\nthanksgiving, for the duit thli summer li the worst yet. The streets\nhave been a steady grey fog from the\nduit.\nPASSMORE NOTES\nPASSMORE, Aug. 19---Mr. ind Mri.\nA. Davles O'Haly, aon ot South Slocan, spent Sunday u the guuta of\nMr. and Mn. c. Thornber at their\nranch at Passmore.\nJack Thornber or TnU ipent the\nweek-end ts the guest ot hit brother\nmd sister-in-law, Mr tnd Mn. O.\nThornber of Pusmore.\nThe United States is now rated a\nleading world producer of synthetic\ncoal tar chemicals.\nmonth at the home of her pannts,\nMr. and Mrs. F. W. Hswes, Silver King\nroad.\n\u2022 I   *\nMrs. A. Cummins of Gray Creek was\na Nelson visitor Saturday.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nH. T. HarUn of Kaslo and his\nbrother, Dr. David HarUn of Spokine,\nhave returned after spending the\nwuk-end at the home of their mother,\nMrs. Gilbert HarUn, who hu been Ul.\nI. Tltaworth, Mill stnet, wishes to\nannounce the engagement of bis\nyoungest daughter, Eileen (Dixie)\nMary, to A. Stanley Lane of Macleod,\nAlta., the marriage to take place the\nlatter part of August,\nits\nMr. and Mn. Jamea Carlisle announce the marriage of their elder\ndaughter Ellen to Doughy D. Ridge,\neldest eon of Mr. and Mra. W. D.\nRidge, Bonnlngton, tho marriage took\nplace ln Spokane, Auguat 13.\n...\nMr. and Mra. H. I. Dill htve u\ntheir guest Mrs. Dill's brother, Lieut.\nW. H. Hewglll.\nPAGE FIVE\nm\nWomen's and\nMisses'\nCOATS\nSpecially Priced to\nClear at $14.50\nWe have really startling values\nin Women's and Misses' Coats.\nThey are all coats that have sold\nfor a lot more; some are in light\nshades of Tweeds and others in\nnavy crepes; all plain and beautifully tailored. Sizes ranging from\n14 to 38, especially priced-\nat .\u2022 $14.50\nMEAGHER & CO.\n607 BAKER ST.\nT. J. BROADHDRST\nIS LAID TO REST\nImpressive Military Funeral\nGiven  to Klmberley\nYoung Man\nKIMBERLEY, Aug. 19 \u2014 Privtte\nThomu Jamu Broadhurst wss given\nsn Impressive military funeral and\nlaid to rest ln the Klmberley cemetery on Wednesday alternoon. The\nservices wen conducted tt All Saints'\nchurch by the chaplain, Rev. Ctpt.\nT. V. Htrrlion of Crtnbrook. A ltrge\nnumber of offlcen tnd men, N.c.o.s\nwere present, headquarters staff was\nrepresented by Col, D. Philpott and\nCapt. L. S. Wyatt ot Cranbrook and\nCapt. M. J. Evana and Ueut. P. S.\nSutherland, of Klmberley, local company. The tiring party wu under the\ncommand of Sergt. C. Shea while\ndrummers and bugler from Cranbrook were present. The cukct wu\ncarried by Privates Wormlngton, Morrison, Howard and Stedman. Three\nsalutes were fired over the gnve and\nthla wu followed hy the \"Lut Post\"\nand \"Reveille.\" Many friends and\ntownspeople will miss this young man\nwhose death by drowning wu a ahock\nto the community.\nPoison oak and poison ivy are\nmost poisonous in early spring,\nwhen the buds of leaves and flowers\nappear.\nC. Pioneer Is\nDead ot Kelowna*\nKELOWNA, B. C, Aug. 18 (CP)\u2014\nWilliam johnaon Abercromble, gg,\npioneer resident of British Columbia,\nls dud at his home here afer a\nshort illness.\nBorn ln Wlarton, Ont., Mr. Aber-.\ncromble came to Brltlah Columbia\nln 1881), settling ln Vancouver until\nIMS, when he moved here.\nExclusive of the foreign legation\nguards, there are now 3.000 foreigners\nresident in Pelplng, China. Japan\nheads the list wtth 991 Japaneu and\n349 Koreans. The United Statu cornea\nsecond with 609. Ruult it third wtth\n308, and Oreat Britain fourth with\nitt.\nTODAY AT 8:30 Ml\nTHE DOORS SWING OPEN TO THE GREATEST GALAXY\nof Broken Prices Ever Assembled oil Two Bargain Floors\nREAD EVERY PRICE AND GOME EXPECTING MARVELOUS VALUES ON FIRST QUALITY, CLEAN, NEW FURNITURE, CARPETS, ETC.\nLiving Room Suites, Bedroom Suites, Dining Room Suites, Rugs of Every\nDescription and Size, Draper Goods, Curtains,-Comforters, Blankets, Pillows, Pillow Slips, Sheets and Sheeting, Toweling, Linen Table Damask and\nLinen Table Cloths, Linoleum, Table and Bridge Lamps, Smoking Stands,\nBook Cabinets, Desks, Kitchen Cabinets, Lounging Chairs, Baby Buggies,\nMattresses, Bed Springs, Beds, Dressers, Bedspreads, Oil Cloth, Pictures,\nLamp Shades, End Tables, Occasional Chairs, Magazine Stands, Linoleum\nRugs, Window Shades, Window Rods, Breakfast Sets, Sun-room Furniture,\netc., etc. ALL TO GO REGARDLESS OF HOW SLIGHTLY DAMAGED AT\nGENUINE FIRE SALE PRICES.\nREMNANTS\n1 yird uch. 60c to $1.75 yird.\nYour cholci of hundreds JQA\nto choou from. Eich .... M**T\nDRAPERIES\nof All Kinds\nTowels, Etc\nThere's $7000 Worth of\nClean, New Merchandise\nin This  Department  \u2014\nCLOSING OUT AT\nHALF PRICE\n$287.00 DINING\nROOM SUITE\nSolid    Walnut    er    Mahogany\nDining room luites. Bnnd new.\nSALE PRICE       9*3aM0\nBLANKETS\nyirPOcnh.,c?Bk,t-$W.OO\n$47.00\nBreakfast Set\nTable, buffet ind chiln. Bnnd\nSALE  PRICE    $25\u00ab00\n$48.00 SPINNET\nDESK\nBnnd niw Splnntt duk. Solid\nMihogtnny. .99 *7S\n8ALE PRICE 9J**IJ\nBLANKETS\nA iplindld soft wool Ca_<C\nBltnktt going it Ww J\n$26.00\nBreakfast Set\nBnnd new break*  <*__\u00bb\u2022\u00bb AA\nfait sets at ?*fcW\n4-PIECE BEDROOM SUITE\nSolid  Mahogany. Regular $187\nvtlut. Bnnd new. Of f \u00a3 AA\nSALE PRICE\nBRIDGE LAMPS\nComplete with shade, then ire new\nind  clean. C2.2C\n8ALE PRICE S***JJ\nBASEMENT\nHUNDREDS OP PIECES OF FURNITURE, MATTRESSES, PILL0W8.\nLINOLEUMS, ETC, ALL TO OO AT\nA FRACTION OF THE FORMER\nPRICE\n$16.50\nSMYRNA RUGS\nThl Ntwigo Smyrna Rugs, All colon. Sin 4 ft by 7 ft. CQ Qg\nSALE PRICE    9W*W_\\t\nOILCLOTH\nYour choice of our lovtly ntw\nitock of oil cloth. \u2022teat\nYARD    .! -***r\nPICTURES\nYour cholci cf every  picture\nIn thl Store it sctual\nHALF PRICE\nRUGS\nRUGS\n$165.00 DINING\nROOM SUITE\nSolid walnut dining room suite.\nBnnd niw with      C&\/_ Art\n.chiln WOiW\n$50 New Wilton        CJQ AA\nBirrymort Rugt     W,ww\nChesterfield\nSuite\n$150 vilue. 2 chiln -MB AA\n\u2022nd chuterfleld \u00ab?#-\u00bb\u00ab\u00ab\u2022*\n$4*5.00  Bnnd  new\nRugi. 9 ft. by\n10 ft. S In\t\nBirrymore\n$27.00\nBRIDGE AND\nTABLE LAMPS\nTO GO OUT AT ABOUT ONE\nHALF PRICE\nSTANDARD\nFURNITURE CO.\nNELSON, B. C.\n$1.25 BATH\nTOWELS\nNEW CLEAN\nBATH TOWELS\nLARGE SIZE\npk.65\n$57.50 Brand\nNew Barrymore\nRugs\nSin \u00bb ft. by 10 ft, 8 In. Your\ncholct of colors. Ca_f SA\nEACH WW\n PAOE   SIX\n$\"<*!H\nMarket Shrivels to\nSmallest Value\nin 11 Years\nBy FREDERICK OABDN'EB\nAssociated Frees Financial Writer\nNBW   YORK,  Aug.   IB   (AP)\u2014The\nstock market shrivelled to a mere\nshadow of Its erstwhile dimensions\nSaturday as turnover barely reached\n164,000  aharea,  tbe  smaUest for  a\ntwo-hour Saturday session ln 11 yeara.\nTbe volume was too scant to influence-prices appreciably. Tbe market as a whole drifted a trifle lower\nbut remained within tbe recent narrow zone of fluctuations.\nMany ordinary active issues did not\ntrsde. Losses ranging from fractions\nto about a point on tbe average outnumbered small gains.\nThe Standard Statistics company\naverage for 90 stocks eased 3-10 of a\npoint to 71.0.\nThe decUne In cotton wu extended,\nthe mtrket closing OS to 60 cents a\nbale lower but wheat, ln the first Important rally ln a week, recovered H_\nto 3 centa a bushel of IU previous\nlosses. Corn ended about unchanged\nto nearly a cent higher.\nWHEAT JUMPS\nAT CHICAGO\nFears of Frost in Canada\nServes as Stimulant\nTHI NIUON OAILY NIWS, NILSON. B.C\u2014MONDAY MORNING. AUOUST 20, 1M4-\nBirths\nMarket and Mining News\nPOOUIC\u2014To   Mr.   and   Mn.   P.\nEugene   FouUn,   at   tbe   Kootenay\nLake Oeneral hospital. Aug. it. a\nMetal Markets\nNXW TORK, Aug. 10 (AF)\u2014MetaU\nnominally unchanged.\nAt London\u2014Bar allver firm, 1-16\nhigher at 31 %d.\nrlrra\nHMH\"9\nTrail Indians Wins;\nNew Denver Girls\nAre Victors\nCHICAOO, Aug. 19 (AF)\u2014Brisk\nlumps of prices carried tbe wheat\nmarket up 2l_ cents s bushel Saturday, largely because ot efforts of\nmills to supply immediate breadstuff\nneeds.\nPears of sudden frosts In Canada\nlikely to ln]ure wheat crops of\nths prslrie provinces did much to\nstimulate buying.\nwbsst cloaed firm l'i-2'i above\nyesterday's finish, corn \\',-l cent\nadvanced, oats H-V4 up, and provisions unchanged to a rise ot 8\ncents.\nANNIVERSARY OF\n' GOLD RUSH FETED\nMrs. George Black Is Chief\nSpeaker as Pioneer Celebrate at Dawson City\nDAWSON CITT. Yukon Territory.\nAug. 19 (CP).\u2014Thirty eight years\nsgo told wts discovered In the Klondike md one of the most spectacular rushes of man after wealth\nbegan.\nSaturday ln the ordered civilization of Dawion City, pioneers were\ncelebrating the anniversary. There\nwere speeches and flowers, mining\nexhibits snd athletic programs and\nln tbe hUtoricl Arctic Brotherhood\nhall, now known as the Sagle haU.\nthe day closed with a grand ball.\nMrs. Oeorge Black, wife of Hon.\nOeorge Black, speaker of the bouse\nof commons and member for Yukon,\nwu a guest of honor and delivered\nthe principal speech. The hardships\ntnd privations of the early settlers,\nthe romance snd tragedy' of the days\nwhen sourdoughs strove to procure\nthe precious mineral sgalnst the\ndefences of Nature's cold, wilderness snd ruggednese\u2014these were recalled by Mrs. Black.\nMrs. Black concluded ber address\nwith an exhortation to the youth\nof the country to work out th.tr\nown salvation without complaint as\ndid their predecessors.\nBuying of Cheaper\nGold Tilts Market\nTORONTO. Aug. 16 (CP)\u2014WhUe\nthe general market lagged In the cloa*\nIng session of the week on the Toronto exchange, buying of tbe cheaper golda was in sufficient volume to\ngive the mining section an upward\ntilt for the day.\nHolllnger, Friday's gold feature,\nclosed unchanged at 19.85. Bralorne,\nTe<*' Hughes snd Wright Hargreaves\nalso had a little action at steady prices\nwhile Lake Shore, Dome, Mclntyre\nand Pioneer were unchanged.\nIn the secondary golds, BRX. added t, and Cariboo Oold Quarts gained\n7 cenu.\"\nNAKUSP, B. C, Aug. 19\u2014Thuraday, Aug. 16, was a day ot recreation ln Nakuap, The sports on Dominion day having been such a\nsuccess, the Nakusp Recreation association hsve, since then, been\nplanning this other event.\nTwo baseball games, softball and\nsome children's sports held the Interest of a large crowd ot spectators.\nIncluding many visitors trom out\nof town.\nTbe Trail Indians played two\nwinning games during the afternoon. The first victory waa over a\npicked team, representing Burton,\nSllverton and New Denver. The play,\nthroughout, was quite event, neither\nteam gaining a noticeable lead.\nTrail won, score 6-6,\nThe lineups were: Ttlll\u2014Cameron, Burrows, J. KeUy, Declmbrlnl,\nJohnson, Jones, Davidson, Ross, Benoit, N. Zuk.\nPicked team: Hufty Hicks of Slocan; J. Harding, Emerson, Ft. Harding, B. White of Sllverton: Angrlgnon ot New Denver: McCormack,\nJ. Cadden, Johnson ot Burton.\nNAKISp DEFEATED\nThe second game wsa an overwhelming defeat tor Nakuap. Tight\nplaying on both sides marked the\nfirst few innings. Up to th& end\nof tbe sixth Inning Nakusp held\ntheir own wopderfully, but In the\nseventh, Trail added alx mns td their\nscore and won wltb a final chalk\nup ot 8*0. The lineup was as follows: Nakusp\u2014H. Hlltz, J. Harris,\nC. Plcard, R. Jordan, C. Howaetb,\nF. MlUsr, E. White, F. BentodrC.\nCampe.\nNEW DENVER WINS\nThe Nakusp soltball girls played\nNew Denver losing 14-10. There was\na tie at the seventh Inning 10*10,\nbut ln the playoff Nakusp failed\nto score while New Denver added 4\nruns. The players were:\nNew Denver; a. Tier, C. Sells. R,\nAylwln, t. Telr, D. Sells. V. Evans,\nE. shannon, V. Ounn, Edna Shannon.\nNakusp: F, Lidberg, M. Alpsen,\nL. Kerr, N. blip, U Cuslck, O. Howarth, M. Allan, M. Steenhoff, A,\nParents, P. Ward.\nWinners ot the children! events\nwere: Boys long Jump, lg and under\u2014 Hay and R. Mapoh.\nBoys standing Jump, 14 and under. Bay, O. Buerge, R. Mayoh.\nRunning lump, girls 8 and under\n\u2014Gladys Olsen,  Beatrice  Steenhoff.\nOlrls standing Jump, 8 and under, Gladys Olsen, Gcorglna Munn\nOlrls long Jump, 13 and under\u2014\nFlorence Plcard, Monica Butlln.\nOlrls standing Jump, 11 and under\u2014Monica Butlln, Mabel Reid.\nOlrU broad jump, 14 and under\u2014\nF. Plcard, M. Butlln.\nOlrla standing Jump, 14 and under, F. Plcard, M  Butlln.\nBoys 36 yard dash, 13 and under,\nHay S. Plcard.\nBoys IS yard dash 14 and under\n\u2014C. Plcird, F. Mayoh.\nOlrU li yard dash\u2014Florence plcard, Monica Butlln.\nIn charge of these sports were,\nJ. W. Butlln and R. Humphrls.\nThe dance held in the evening ln\nthe Legion hall was one ot the most\nenjoyable social events of the season. A good crowd attended both\nfrom Nakuap and out ot town\npolnU.\nMuch of tbe success of the day\nls due the oftlclaU of the Recreation association. B. Parkinson, O. C,\nMartin and H. L. MlUer.\nMisses Betty Alland, Mary Kershaw and Katie Oxenham returned\nfrom Slocan Lake Olrls camp Thursday.\nFred cuslck, Big FaUe, Michigan,\narrived this week and U the gueat\nof his mother, Mrs. O. C. Martin.\nMrs. A. Harvey Smith and son\nDouglas of Vancouver are the guests\not Mrs. E. C. Johnson.\nIndustrial List\nHas Light Trade\nTORONTO, Au<. 19 (CP)\u2014The Industrial section of the Toronto exchange produced a turnover of fewer\nthan 6000 shares in Saturday's short\nsession, bumping along on the summer\nbottom.\nInternational Nickel led the list\nfor volume, about 1300 aharea trading\non a price concession of '.. C.P.R.\nlost ', and Brazilian was up '._.\nAll the beverage shares were comparatively alow.\nStronger Tone\nat Vancouver\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 19 (CP)\u2014The\ntone wsa stronger on the Vancouver\nstock exchange Saturday. Bralorne\nlost 30 at 14.80, while Sunshine gained 30 at 7.70 and Cariboo advanced 6\nto 1.40.\nCongress wss up 3 at 89, Reno\ngained 2',_ at B81\/. and Premier O Id\nat 1.27, Taylor Bridge at 39, Dentonla\nat 61 and Oold Mountain at 46 wcre\nall one cent higher.\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEO,   Aug.   18    (CP)-CIOS*\ning futures quotations:\nOpen   High    Low   Close\n%l .\n--.iiver Sales\nVANCOUVER, Aug.  19. \u2014  Mining\nshares sold on the Vancouver atock\nex-hame Saturday:\nLISTED\nBradlan 100: Bralorne 396; B R\nCon 9100: B R Ex 29.600; Cariboo\n1000; Oold Belt 1000: Meridian 3000;\nMorning Star 800: Nlcom 3000; Frem\nBorder IOOO; Prem Oold 1960; Reno\n3360; Taylor Bridge 600; Vanalta\n3000: Wayside 2000.\nCI'RB\nAlexandria 6000; Bayview 24.000:\nB C Nickel 3300; Congress 1700;\nCan Rand 1000: Dentonla 4700;\nOrange 3900: Orull Wlhk 1460: Oold\nMten 400: Hercules 7600; Home 3000:\nMlnto 4200: Norgold 3000; Noble\nFive 600: PaviUon 18,000; Porter\nIda 600; Reward 1000: Sllvercrest\n1000; Standard 600; Rufus 3000; Salmon 700; United Emp 3000; Vldette\n100;  Waverley 2000.\nWheat:\nOct.   ..\n88\n6014\na** -;\n84%\nDec\n88 V.\n85 Vi\nMay\n90 J, _\nOats:\nOct.\n43\n43\n41%\nDec.\nU\n42 \u25a0 4\n41%\nMay\nBarley:\n44*\n43$\nOct.\n68\n67 \u00ab4\n66>.\nDec.    .\n66\nMlk\n66\nMay\nFlax:\n\u2014\n\u2014\n\u2014\nOct.   ..\n163\n184\n162\nDec\t\n1651.\n185(4\n164\nMay   ...\nRye:\n'\nOct.\n.1%\n88U\n701!\n73*\u00ab\n67%\nDec.    ..\n68=4\n71*2\n\"sL.\"-\n73\n73V4\nCash prices:\nWheat; No. 1 hard 87: No. 1 nor\n84'.: No. 3 nor. 80%; No. 3 nor. 79;\nNo. 4 nor. 77; No. 6, 71; No. 6, 67:\nfeed 60: No 1 durum 90; No. 1\nA. R. W. 80; track 83%.\nExchange Rates\nNEW YORK. Aug. 19 (AF)\u2014Sterling exchange easy at 16.08% for 60-\nday bills, anu at 16.09% for demand.\nCanadian dollars 3% per cent premium.\nFranca 6.67'\/, eenU.\nItaly 8.69% cenU.\nUruguay 81.89 cents.\nMinneapolis Grain\nMINNEAPOLIS, Aug. 19 (AP) \u2014\nWheat, No. 1 northern 116% to 130%,\nNo. 1 red durum 112% to 113%, old\nSept. 113%, new Sept. 113%, Dec.\n111%. May 111%.\nCorn, No. 3 yellow 74 to 74%.\nOaU, Ro. 3 white 63% to 63%.\nPlax, No. 1, 189% to 203%.\nSweet clover seed 4.00 to 4 60.\nFlour 10 higher. Carload lou family\npatents 7.60 to 7.80 a barrel ln 98-\nPQund cotton sacks. Shipments 26,325.\nPure bran 23.00 to 33.60. Standard\nmiddlings 34.00 to 34.60.\nDow Jones Averages\n30 industrials  90.86 off.26\n20 rails    34.86 off .28\n20 utilities    20.13 off .27\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nLISTED\nA F Corn             .10\nAmsl  Oil      .07%\nBeaver  Silver     .06%\nBradlan  Mlnei     3.75\nBnlorne oold  14.80\nBridge R Con      .09\nBRX Oold       .80\nCariboo   oold       1.40\nC & E Corp      ....    .73\nCoast  Breweries     9.50\nCom OU           M\nOold Belt  35\nHome Oil     1.00\nInt Coil . 13\nMak  Slccar  .        3t\nMcDougal   segur  ...    .03%\nMcLeod Oil -      87\nMercury   OU 13%\nMeridian Mlnea      .09\nModel   OU     .18\nMorn  Star     .15\nNat Silver     .04\nNicola Mines      .20\nOkalta  oils  .  _     05%\nPioneer Oold   12.40\nPremier  Qold    _    1.37\nPremier   Border         \u2014\nQuatalno   Oold    03\nReno Oold -98%\nReevea MacDonald .     .11\nSally   Mlnea   - .82\nSpooner   Oil             .22\n\u25a0ftylor Bridge      .99\nVanalta    10%\nWayside   Oold        .08\nCURBS\nAlexandria Oold  01%\nAnaconda QU      .03%\nBaltac  Oil  .       .04\nBayview Mlnea     .02\nBluebird _         .01\nB C Silver      \u2014\nB C Nickel   _\u25ba     SI\nBig Missouri      35\n\u00a3an Rand           \u2014\nCalmont oil      .07\nCoast  Copper      2.76\nCongress  oold       .39\nCork  Frov      .07\nCrows Nest Oils       .04%\nDalho ale   Mines   ..    .02%\nDalhousle OU 30\nDentonla     51\nDunwell Mines      -30\n.10\n\u202205%\n286\n15.00\n.09%\n.83\n1.45\n9.85\n.37\n1.02\n.16\n.80\n.40\n.15\n.09%\nJl\n.06\n12.80\n1.28\n.01%\n.04\nSO\n16\nIt\nAO\n.08%\n.03 V,\n04 i\n.05\n.03\n.02\n1.10\n1\n.15\n.41\n.08\n.06\nEastcrest Oil\nFairview   amal\nFabyan Otis\nFreehold OU\n.It\nP\n_tn\nOolconda Lead       .37\nSold Mountain .....    .46\nranje   ..      .2\n\u00a7ruU   Wlhksne   .....     \u2014\nalda   Oold         \u2014\u25a0\nHedley   Amal             -SO\nHedley   sterling   .._     \u2014\nHercules  Cona       .04%\nHome Oold      .- 13\nimperial Oil   14 50\nIndian Mines '..\nIndependence -\nJack  Walte  \t\nKoot Belle  \t\nKoot Flo\nLakevlew  Mines\nLucky Jim\nMar Jon Oil\nMerland OU\nMIU  City\nMlnto Oold\nMorton Wolsey\nNoble Five ....\nNordon OU \t\nNorgold   .     ...\nPavilion\nPend OrelUe ..\nPorter Idaho .\nRed Hawk\nReward Mlnee ...\nRoyallte Oil      19.80\nRufus   Argenta   ...\nRuth  Hope\t\nSalmon oold  -\nSllvercrest      .._...\nSnowflake       \t\nStandard Oold    .\nTaylor   Wlndwall\nUnited Empire      .19\nUnited Oil \t\nVldette   oold   \t\nViking  Oold  \t\nWaterloo ._\nWaverlev Tang ~\nWellington -    ....\nWhitewater .   \t\nPacalta    _\nHlghwood Sarcee\nGeorgia River .\nGrandvlew\nSunshine -. \t\nUtlca   \t\n.14\nw\n-08\nat\n.10\n08\nJl\n.10\n.04%\n.14\nToronto Stock Quotations\nAlexandria , \t\nAlgoma     _. \t\nAmity         _._.\t\nAshley   Oold      M\u00ab_\t\nBarry Holllnger\t\nBase   MetaU    \u2014\t\nBear  Exploration  \t\nBig  Missouri    \u2014-. .\nBobjo        \t\nBradlan  ;\t\nBralorne _. ...__..\nBrett Tretheway\t\nBridie  R Exploration \t\nBrownlee\t\nBut Can Oold \t\nBunker   Hill   .\nCan Malartic\nCariboo Oold Quarts  -\nCastle   Trethewsy    \t\nCentral Manitoba - \t\nCentral  Patricia  \t\nghlbbougamou     __. \nlerlcy       ___.._\t\nCoast   copper   \t\nCobalt Contact ......\t\nColumarlo     _.\t\nConarlum    \u201e ._._.\t\nCons U A s   \t\nDome \t\nEldorado          ........\nFalconbrldge     __\t\nOod's Lake   .....\nGranada   .       .\u2014.......\nHollln\u00aber    _\t\nHowey     __.\t\nHudson Bay    ___........\nintl Nlokel     \t\nKlrkland Lake  ....\nLake  Maron\t\nUttle t\u00abng Lac  \t\nLake Shore        \t\nMclntyre    .   ..\nMcVlttle  Orahamme  .....\nMcWatteie Oold \t\nMaca;sa\nMaple Leaf   \t\nMining Corp .... \t\nMoffatt HaU ~J\t\nNlplsslhu   .\t\nNoranda    : \u2014.\nParkhlll   .   \t\nPaymaster        \u2014\u201e. _.\t\npend   Oreille    \u2014~\nPioneer   Oold    \u2014.\t\nPremier Oold  __. .....\nReno \t\nSan  Antonio  _ __,\t\nSherritt oordon ! ....\nSlscoe   ...    \t\n10\n.95\n.29\n.34\n.52\n3.80\n16.00*\n.03\n.80\n.03\n.06\n02\n.83\n140\n.60\n.10%\n.94\n.09%\n.04%\n3.90\n\u202203%\n.33\n138\n38.00\n43.50\n3.61\n3.90\n,2.63\nA3\n19.80\n1.24\n14.00\n24.76\n87%\n.08\n6.90\n63.00\n48.00\n.48\n40\n2.70\n-32\n1.78\n\u202204%\n240\n41A0\n.37%\n.36%\n.66\n13.55\n1.28\n.88\n5.63\n.66\n3.69\nSmelters Oold\t\nSouth Tlblemont \t\nStadacona <      . ..._.\u2014\nSt Anthony    _.\t\nSudbury Basin \u2014.\u2014\nSylvanlte       ....\t\nTeck  Hughes  \u2014\nTowagamac \t\nVentures  ......\nWalte  Amulet \t\nWayside '. .._\u25a0\u2014\nWhite Eagle \u2014-\nWright Hargreavei ......\nOILS\nAcme -\nAJix \t\nA P Coniolldited -\nAssociated .      ....-\t\nBrit Amer Oil \u2014\u2014-\nBaltac OU  .\t\nCalmont      .   \t\nc and E Corp . \t\nChemical  Research  \t\ngalhousle           -  \nDme   OU          -**\nHomestead O and Q -.\nImperial   OU .......\nInternational Pete\t\nLowery   _\t\nMerland \u2014\t\nNordon        - \u25a0\u2014..\u2014\nOil Seectlons - \u2014~\nOlga    \u2014\u2014\nRoyallte     - ~.\nsarnl\u00bb     ._ \t\nwalnwrlght     .............\nIMKSTRIAIX\nBeatty Broe A \t\nBeauharnols       ......\nBell Telephone ..........\nBrarlllan ,_m ....\nBrewers and  Distillers\nCanada  Bread  ...\nCan  Cement\nCan Car and Foundry\nCan Indus Alcohol A ....\nCanada  Dredge\nCan Pac Railway\nCona Baker-lee      \t\nDistillers  Seagram   ..\nDominion   Stores   \t\nFord of Canada a -\nOoodyear Tire      \u2014\nHiram  Wsjksr  . \t\nImperial  Tobacco\nLoblaw A       \t\nMassey Harris\nStandard Paving .\ntSeel ot Canada ..\n24\nf4\n.48\n1.60\n2.80\n6.76\n.40\n.96\n.95\n.08\n22\n9.50\n490\n1.00\n.15\n.15\n13.50\n.04%\n.07\n.73\n1.35\n30\n1.03\n.17\n14.60\n38.00\n.20\n.22\n.08%\n-03%\n.12\n13.60\n05 Vs\nQuotations on Wall Street\nAllegheny\nAm Can.\nAm   For   Pow\nAm Ma ts Fdy\nAm Smelt ts Re\nAm  Telephone\nAm Tobacco ..\nAnaconda     \t\nAtchison\nAuburn Mo ..\nBaldwin\nBait Ss Ohio .\nBendlx   av\nBeth Steel\nCanada Dry .\nCan    Pac\nCerro de Pasco\nChes   6c   Ohio\nChrysler\nCom 6c South\nCon Oas N V\nCorn   prod   ..\nC Wright Pfd\nDunpont\nElec  Pow 6s Ll\nFord   Ens\nFord of Can\nFirst  Na Stores\nFreeport  Tex\nOen Elec\nOen  Foods\nOen   Motors   ..\nGranby    .     ,.\nOrt North Ptd\nGrt West Sugar\nHowe sound\nHudson Mo  ..\nInt   Nickel\nInt Tel 6c Tel\njewel Tea\n25%\n10%\n46\nK\u00bbnn Copper   .\nKresge 8 S\nKroegger 6s ToU\nLehn & Fink\nMilwaukee Pfd\nMont  warl\nNash Motors\nNa Dairy Prod\nN Pow & Lt ....\nN Y Central\nPack Motors .\nPenn Ft R ..   ,\nPhillips Pete\nPure Oil .\nRadio Corp\nRadio Keith Or\nSafeway stores\nS Louis \u25a0 8 F\nShell Union ..\n8 Cal Edison\nBouth   Pacific\nStan Oil ot Cal\nStan OU of Ind\nBtan Oil of N J\nStewart   Warner\nStudebaker\nTex   Corp\nTex  Oulf  Bui\nUn carbide\nUnited Air\nUnite*\"   Bis\nUn   pacific\nU S Pipe\nU 8 Rubber\nU 8 Steel    ...\nVen   Steel     ..\nVan   Bteel    ...\nWest   Electric\nWooivtorth   .    -\n19 ISH\n17% -\n38% 28\n18% \u2014\nS \u2014\n22% 32'\n13% 13<\n17 If\n21% 20%\n234 32-5\n16% 16%\n5% 1%\n% ~\n13% -\n17 18%\n34% 84%\n&%      'i\nMontreal Stock Prices\nB C power A _ 27%\nB C power B  8%\nBuilding products -  31\nCan car 6s Foundry  7%\nCan  Cement             8%\nCan Qen Electric   158%\ngan   Gypsum    \u201e  5%\nan ind Al A  7%\nCan Pac Railway  _.  13%\nCan  Steamers          1%\nCockshutt   Plow     6%\nCons M As S .     138\nDominion Bridge  .:. 33%\nDominion Textile  84\nHamilton   Bridge     4%\nint Nickel    34%\nMassey   Harris       4%\nMontreal power  -  35%\nNat Brewini   27\nNat   Steel   Car        16\nPower  corporaUon ...*. _ 10%\nQuebec   Power  .  16%\nShawlnlgan             \u2022\u25a0..-\u25a0  20%\nnherwln  willlama     18%\nBouth Can Power -  12-4\n?tee' 0_ Canada   .  83\nBrit Amer Oil  13%\nCanada Dredge    \t\nCan  Malting  ..\nCan VIokers\nCan Wineries    \t\nCosgrave Brewing\nDistillers  Seagram   .\nDominion   Engineer\nDominion  Tar\nDryden Paper .\nHome  Oil    \t\nImperial  OU\nIntl Petrol        \t\nMcColl prontenac   ...\nNoranda       \u2014\t\nPage  Hersey\t\nBANKS\nCommerce\t\nDominion   ...\t\nImperlil   .... \t\nImperial     ..\t\nNova  Scotla   -\nRoyal\t\nToronto     ...\nMISCELLANEOUS\nQomlnlon  Stores   I..\nLaura  Secord\nLoblaw Groceries  \t\nWest Csn Flour  ....\nWalker   Brew   ..\n151%\n168\n. 178\n168\n256%\n153%\n. 199%\n17\n55\n17\n\u00ab\n8%\nWHEAT ERRATIC\nWINNIPfcl, Aug. 19 (CP)-Wheat\nfuture fluctuated erratically ln Satur\nday's session of the Winnipeg gr* i exchange and cloaed nervoua, % cent\nhigher to % cent lower.\nOctober wheat tended at 86, December at 66% and May at 89'4 centa.\nkwotiee\n\"B\" Vein Has Ore in\nBoth Directions\nLower Drift\nGoing througb a schist dyke that\nrecently formed the termination to\nthe weat drift In B vein on No. 9 level,\nthe Kootenay Belle gold mine ot tbe\nSheep creek camp, broke Into ore at\nthe end ot the week, F. M. Black,\nmanaging director of Kootenay Belle\nOold Mlnea, Ltd., disclosed at the\nHume Sunday. ThU ls tbe direction\nln wblch leaat baa been expected, for\nmost of the ore concentrations ln the\nKootenay BeUe so far have been to\nthe east or left of the two crosscuts\nthat Intersect the two veins on upper\nand lower levels.\nB vein on the lower level take tbe\neaat face of the drift, cloee to the\nJunction ot A and B, ln five feet of\nmilling ore.\nNow, the west fact of ths long drift,\non the side of tbe crosscut ln the\ndirection of tbe Queen mine, U also\nin substantial ore, a shear tone having been opened up, alx to eight feet\nwide, with valuea In both walla. An\nore ahowlng on the toot-wall has\nwith recent shots opened to 10 Inches,\nwith a possibility of making a strong\nore body. A narrow width on the\nhanging-wall aaaays 2 ouncea of gold,\nwhile the foot-wall for a similar width\ngoes 1.2 ounces. Significance of the\nnew ahowlng U that the ore boun*\nderles ot B vein have not been reach\ned In either direction.\nThe 49th car of ore from the present\ndevelopment operaUon ls now being\nassembled for shipment, Mr. Black\nstated. Returns from TraU on the\n48th car, which wu shipped recently,\nshowed an assay of 2.846 ounces of\ngold per ton for the 47 tons, tbe\ngross value being approximately\n14600.\nConstruction ot the iftw mill ls\nnearing completion, and Installation\nof the machinery will be the next\nstep.\nMr. Black will pay another vlalt to\nthe mine before returning to Van*\ncouver.\nNINE ISSUES ARE\nUP AT MONTREAL\nConsolidated Dips 6 %; Royal\nBank Gains V\/i', Holllnger Higher\nMONTREAL, Aug. 19 (CP)-Issues\non the Montreil stock exchings were\nfirmed at tbe close of Saturday's ab*\nbrevUted session. Of 19 stocks making\nan appearance ln board lots, nine\nwere up, three were down and aeven\nwere  unchanged.\nHolllnger closed up 30 centa.\nRoyal Bank ot Canada appeared at\n187% tor a net gain of Hi. Brazilian\nTraction waa up % to 10% while\nNaUonal Steel Car was % higher\nat 16%.\nConsolidated Smelters, in Its first\nboard lot sale ln about a week, dipped\n6% to 189%. \"\nSales 6031 shares; bonds 13100.\nSS. Princess Royal\nGiven Viking's End\nCanadian Pacific Steamship,\nFormer Queen of Coast\nSeas, Burned\nVICTORIA, Aug. 19 (CP).\u2014An old\nqueen ot the coast-seas of British\nColumbia, with tbe memories of\nmany mariners upon ber decks, had\nbeen given a Viking's end today.\nThe Canadian Pacific Steamship\nSS Princess Royal, already stripped of\nthe fittings that made her a pas*\neenger liner, was given a bath of\noil last night snd the torch put to\nber. Bhe blazed to a fitting finish\nss she lay broadside to the beach\nbetween Esqulmalt lagoon and Albert Head. What U lett ot her will\nbe broken into scrap and shipped\nto Japan.\nThe Princess Royal waa built at\nEsqulmalt In 1907, registered 961\ntons, and was 338 teet long.\nCreston Board Gets\nCord Wood Tenders\nCRESTON, Aug. 19\u2014Creston school\nboard wlU this year pay 13 a cord tor\nIts supply of about 60 cords ot wood.\nTenders were opened at a special\nmeeting ot the board on Wednesday\nevening, and tbe successful bidders\nwere J. C. Martin, John Strobe] and\nWalter Nickel. Messrs: Ooplln and\nRoebuck, wbo Jiavc the contract for\nsome kalsominlng, painting and varnishing at the school building, bave\ntbe work weU ln hand, and everything will be ln first-class shspe for\nthe opening on September 4.\nEx-Reeve L. C. McFarland, formerly at Creeton Motors, but now tn\nPentlcton, wss renewing acquaintances in Creston this week, on a\nbusiness visit. <\nMrs. Wells of Winnipeg arrived on\nThursday morning, and wtll bs spending a month here wltb her brother,\nM. J. Boyd.\nMra. O. R. John and Mra. O. O.\nMcKenzie were visiting lh Klmberley\nduring the week, guests of the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. B\nDawson.\nF. V. Staples and Frank Putnam,\nM.P.P.. ars back from a business visit\nat Beaverdell. Mr. Putnam remained\nin Nelson for a day on political business.\nMr. and Mrs. B. Soucb ot Medicine\nHat, apent a few daya with Mr. and\nMra. J. W. Avery.\nMlaa Alleen Dubar, who hu been\nhere for some months, haa lett for her\nhome ln Nakusp.\nMr. and Mrs. D. F. M-Phee -bd\nson Sandy ars holidaying at Kaalo\nwith tbs former's parenta, Mr, and\nMra. A. L. McPhee.\njob.\nLEGAL\nWATER   NOTICE\nDiversion ead Cee\nTAKE NOTICE that Black watch\nMines Ltd. whose address la Blewett, B. c, will apply for a licence\nto Uke and use 30 cubic feet per\nsecond of water out of Forty Nine\nCreek which flows north westerly\nand drains into Kootenay River,\nabout above Corra Unn.\nThe water will be diverted st a\npoint about 4000 feet upstream from\nPlacer Lease \"Hamilton\" and at 2\nother polnta within boundaries ot\nBUck watch Mines Ltd. leases snd\nwill be used tor hydraulic mining\npurposes upon the plaoer leases Pot\nHole, placer No. 1 Lucky Two. Jig\nSaw, Trl-Color, Ebby, Black Watch\nNoe. 1-7-9-12-14-17 deecrlbed aa placer lease hold HamUton.\nThU notice waa posted on the\nground on the 8th day of August,\n1934.\nA copy of thU notice and an application pursu%nt thereto and to\nthe \"water Act\" will be filed in\ntbe office ot the Water Recorder at\nNelson. B. C.\nObjections to the application may\nbe filed wltb tbe aald Water Recorder or wltb the Comptroller of\nwater Rights, parliament Buildings.\nVictoria, B. C, within thirty days\nafter tbe llrst appearance of this notice ln a local newapaper.\n'Black Watch Mines Ltd., Applicant.\nAgent.\nThe date of the first publication\nM thU notice is 18th ot August, 1934.\nLEGAL   NOTICE\noovernment Liquor Art\nNotice of  Application  for  Ben\nLicence\nNOTICE U hereby given that on\ntbe 1st day of September next the\nundersigned Intends to applv to the\nLiquor Control Board for a licence\nln respect to the premises belne\npart ot a building known as the\nAUen Hotel situated st Nelson upon\nlanda described ss Lot* Two (2)\nThree (31 ln Block Twelve (121.\naccording to the Official Plan ot\nthe City of Nelson, province of\nBritish Columbia. Nelson Lann Reg*\nUtratlon DUtrlct. tn the province\not British ColumbU. for the ssU ol\nbeer by tbe .laas or by the open\nbottle tor consumption on tbe prem.\ntees.\nDATED this 1st -day  of  August\n, CATBRDIA FISAPU\nApplicant\n(34831\nPersonal\nBEACH'S FORMULA, KILLS DAND-\nruffV Brows hslr rapidly: |ara fl.\ntrial alee 25c. Mall orders postpaid.\nL. St B- Beach, acila specialists.\n733 Oranvllle St. Vancouver.\n (8653)\nAN OFFER TO EVERT INVENTOR.\nUat of wanted inventions and full\nformation sent tree Tbe Ramsa.\nCompany, world Patent Attorneys\n373 Bank Street Ottawa Canada\n_ (3613)\nCAR OOINO TO OALOARY. ROOM\nfor two or three. Share expenses.\nWrite Box 3697, Dally News.\t\n (3697)\nBcwrna Itch piieT&lcers. Try Oeo. We's\nChina Remedy at Hudson's Bty Co\n(8603)\nHelp Wanted\nEXPERIENCED OIRL  FOR  QENER\nU work. Write Box 1769, Trail.\n(3703)\nSituations Wanted\nEXPERIENCED OIRL  DESIRES\nhousework. Box 3669, Dally News.\n(3669)\nFor Rent-Houses, Etc.\nFURNISHED    HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms tor rent. Annable Block.\n(3496)\nFURN. OR UNFTON. APTS. BY\nweek or month. Medical Arts Bldg\n(3497)\nFUR.     ROOMS.    STEAM     HSATED.\nshower, terms mod. Cin. Legion.\n (3600)\nTER&ACE  APTS.  Beiutlful  Modem\nFrigidaire equipped suites. (3498)\n6 ROOM FURNISHED'HOU8B CLOSE\nin. Phons 563L. _(8876)\nTWO    ROOM    FURNISHED    SUITE\ntor rent 8tirlln\u00bb Hotel.       (8499)\nSEMI FURNISHED SUITES, CHEAP.\nAshman  Apt.,  BSker  St.    (3657)\nCanadiqn Dollar\nIs Off Fraction\nNEW YORK. Aug. 19 (CP).-Major\ncurrencies turned easier In relation\nto United States funds during qulst\ntrading Saturday on the forelgq ex*\nchants market.\nCanadian dollars closed off % per\noest at 103% while pounds sterling\ndeclined % cent to $6.09% atter\nmelting ln the narrow range of\n85.09% and tbe final prloe. French\ngold franca lost % point to 6.67%\noenta. \/\nEggs Up Half Cent\nMONTREAL, Aug. 19 (CF)\u2014Fresh\nNo. 1 butter ended the week at 18%\ncenta a pound hi carlots or less, unchanged. To retailers, solids wcre 30\ncenta s pound. Receipts for week\n18313 boxes.\nCbeese prices fractionally lower,\nOntario colored ending at 10 centa a\npound. Receipts tor week 29,164 boxes.\nExports to August It.N 165,909 boxes\ncompared wltb 217,127 boxes tor same\nperiod last year.\nGraded shipments on Ontario egga\nln carlots or less were 23 to 24 cenU\na dozen for A large, up % cent. Receipts for the week were 14,114 cases.\nExchanges\nMONTREAL, Aug. 19 (CP)\u2014British and foreign exchange in relation to the Canadian doll... as com-\nPUed by the Boyal Bank ot Canada,\nclosed today as follows:\nArgentina,   peso   .2661\nAustralia, pound                3.9550\nAustria,   schilling    1878\nBelgium, belga ..      - .2334\nBr.zil, mllrels       _ .0674\nChina, Hong Kong dollara .     -3793\nCzechoslovakia, crown .0412\nFrance,  franc ..  0652\nGermany, relcbsmark        3884\nOreat  Britain,  pound        4.9731\nHoUand.   florin          .8687\nHungary,  pengo     .2934\nIndia, rupee - .-    *\u00a5ttt\nJap. n, yen ..         -3968\nNew Ze.land, pound    3.9709\nNorway,  krone       -2501\nPoland,   zlotl  1876\nSouth Africa, pound      4.9615\nSpain, peseta .         .1361\nUnited  States,  dollar,  3   11-32  per\ncent discount\nPound Declines\nMONTREAL, Aug. 19 (CF)\u2014 Tbe\npound declined, tbe United States\ndollar gained ground and the French\nfranc was unchanged on Montreal\ncurrency exchangee Saturdiy. Sterling\nwu ott % cent to 84.97 6-16. The\nUnited States dollar advanced 3-32 of\n1 per cent to 2 1-32 per cent discount\nand the franc was steady at 6.53\ncents.\nCLASSIFIED\nAdvertising\nWhere Buyer and Seller Meet\nFOR\nSERVICE\nPHONE\n144\nOut-of-Town Readers\u2014Prompt\nAttention Given to Mail Orders\nLost and Found\nLOST\u2014ONE ROLL OF BLANKETS\nand bedding near Frultvale on\nAugust 17th. Finder please notify\nR. Wagner at rrultvale and receive reward.  (3898)\nTO FINDERS\nIf you tlnd a cat or a dog. a\npocketbook. Jewelry or fur or\nanything else ot value, telephone\nThe Daily News. A 'Tound\" Ad\nwill be inserted without cost to\nyou We will collect from the\nowner. \t\nFor Sale\nFOR SALE-FIRST.. SECOND AND\nttflrd year hlgb school books at\nhalf price and less. Some perfectly\nnew   Apply postmaster, Perry sid-\n_lng, 8TC._^       (3699)\nFOR SALE - PIANO EXCELLENT\ncondition. Mahogany case. Bar-\ngaln for cash. Phone 218Y. (3663)\nFOR SALE - BARRELS I E OS\nsugsr sacks, liners McDonald Jam\nCo.,   Ltd. (3503)\nFor Sale or Rent\nFOR   SALE   OR   FOR   RENT,   AT-\ntrectlve  new  house\u2014Splendid  location\u2014reasonable.  Apply Mrs.  J\nA. olbson, Oen. Del., Nelson, B.C.\n \u2022       18701)\nFor Exchange\n1932 ESSEX SEDAN. SPLENDID\ncondition tor Ford or Chev light\ndelivery truck In same condition.\nHett, syringe Creek, (3696)\nFor Sale or Exchange\nFOR SALE OR TRADE\u2014450 ACRE\nfarm, 100 meadow. 30 cleared-\nOood houae, 7 rooms. Barn, chick\nenbouse, etc. Running water, what\noffers Send 'replies to R, Carson,\nOerrard, B  C.    (6698)\nLivestock for Sale\nSNAP FOR QUICK SALE. 43 BREED-\ning ewes, 1 reg. Suffolk ram, 30\nlambs ready for market. Apply\nMra. Stuart ovens, Syringe Creek.\nB. C. (3689)\nPoultry and Eggs\nWANTED \u2014 SEVENTY-FIVE      LEO-\nhorn  pullets.  Carey, Oray  creek.\n(8700)\nSummer Resorts\nTHE LODGE. KUSKANOOK B 0\u201e\n17 mllea west of Creston. u'-o and\ncreek fishing swimming, duck\nbunting ln season. Trsllites spend\notf days here, ell 50 week Inclusive\n(34681\nMiscellaneous for Sale\nNEW CROP NO.  1  TIMOTHY HAY,\nNew  crop  second cutting  Alfalfa\n\u00absy.  The   Brackman-Ker  Milling,\nj., Ltd.  .  (3690)\ng0 IT. OF DECKING CHAIN 610. R.\nHalgh, Box 144, NeUon, B. C.\n (3681)\nMiscellaneous Wanted\nOOOD CLEAN  RAQS WANTED- AP-\nply  psllv  New*;  Office i3368)\nMiscellaneous\nHouses\nfor Sale^\n$1000, $1350, 92400\nALL GOOD BUYS\nSmall Down Payment\nBalance as Rent\nC. W. Appleyard\n& Co., Ltd.\nFIRE INSURANCE\nCITY PROPERTY\nNELSON, BRITISH COLUMBIA\n(3693)\n100-000 feet good used pipe;\nall sixes.\nLARGE STOCK PIPE\nFITTINGS, VALVES, ETC.\nEnquiries   Solicited\nSWARTZ.PIPE YARD\n220 E. 1st Ave .Vancouver, B.C.\n(8493>\nNelson Daily News\nClassifie*. Ads bring\nquick results \u2014 try\none.\nKiiMMminuKin\nCLASSIFIED\nADVERTISING\nRATES\nUc a line\nMinimum 2 lines\n2 lines, once  $ 33.\n3 lines, once     J3\n4 lines, once     .44\n2 lines. 6 times    it\n3 lines, 6 times 1.32\n4 lines.(times  1.76\n2 lines, 1 month ..< tM\n3 lines, 1 month  429\n4 lines, 1 month   6.72\nAll above lets 10% for prompt\npayment,\ni!BJii\u2122nBiiii:\u00bblii!ii\u00bbi\u00ab![iiiiiW!!niii\u00bb,i\u00abi!r:!\u00abiH\u00bb:::,i\n 1\nBusiness, Professional\nDirectory\n Accountants\t\nCHA8 P HUNTER.' 8 f A \u00ab\u2022\nMunicipal and Commercial Audits\nP   O   Box 1191, Neleon. B   C\n(3699)\n Assayers\t\nE W W1DDOWSON established 1000.\n306 Josephine Bt.. Neleon. B 0\n (3630)\nOBENVILLE    H     OBIMWOOD.    618\nBaker St., Nelson, Box 736. (3831)\nKOOTENAY    LABORATORIES\nAssayers 3s Chemists\nBox  1343 Trail BC\n (3699)\nBoat Livery\t\nBEST PETERBOROUGH OUTBOARD\nmotor & row boats'for hire by day\n\u2014prank Seal, Balfour. BjC^J3833._\n Chiropodists\t\nDr. Mildred Slmonds Foot Spsclsllst.\n403 pernwell Bldg. Spokane, wish.\n1 (3684)\n Chiropractors\t\nE* M. WARREN. D.C. 613 BAKER\nSt. Office Phone  115. 13635)\nC   HULTQREN,  DC,  Ph.C.  Pslmer\nGraduate. McCulloch Blk. Ph  618.\n(8686)\n Electrical\t\nJ.  P   COATES\u2014The  Electrlo store.\nSupplies snd Installations.\nPhone 766.                 P. O. Box 116.\n \u2022 (3537)_\nFlorists\nNIGHT OR DAY WE ARE ALWAYS\nat vour service, wedding bouquets Funeral designs at short\nnotice NELSON FLOWER 8HOPPE,\nPhone 333  or  289R3. 136381\nJOHNSON'S OREENHOU8ES. Phone\n349 cut flowers potted plants,\nand Iloral designs. i3939)\nHide Dealers\nDEALERS IN HIDES. J.P MOROAN.\n301 BaXer St., Nelson, B.C.  (35401\nInsurance and Real Estate\nROBERTSON REALTY CO- LTD\nRes. estate. Insurance, rentals\nAberdeen hlock^Baker St. (3641)\nT. D. RO88LIN0, 3 ROYAL BANK\nBldg., write, all form of Burglary and Robbery Insurance.\n (3849)\nR   W    DAWSON,   Real   Estate   insurance   Rentala   Next  Hipperson\nHardware.   Baker   street.      (3643)\nC    D    BLACKWOOD    Insurance   ot\nevery description Real Est Ph 99.\n (3644>\nH E. DILL. AUTO AND FIRE IN-\nsurance Real Estate 508 Ward St.\n (8646)\n3 E. ANNABLE REAL ESTATE,\nrentals, insurance   Annable block.\n_^ (3646)\nUFE. FIRE 61 AUTOMOBILE INSUR*\nance   PE. Poulln. ph. 70.  .3547)\nCHAS   F   McHARDY.  IN8URANCB-\nReal   Estate\u2014Phone   135.      (3648)\n Machinists\t\nBENNETT'S UMITED\nFor til classes of Metal work Laths\nWork, Drilling. Boring snd Onndlng,\nMotor Rewinding Acetylene welding.\npiione 593\n324 Vernon street\n (3649)\nEngineers and Surveyors\nA   H   OREEN CO., LTD.   816 WARD\nSt. Phone 284   Nelaon. B.C.  (3560)\nI    8   PETER8\nMining  Engineer\nExamination operation and management of mines and mineral\nproperties   Roasland. BC\n (3661)\n~     H   D   DAWSON-NELSON\nENOINEEfl  AND  SURVEYOR\n (3569)\nBoya C. Aftleck. Box 487. Nelson.\nLands. Mineral Claims. Waterworka\netc. Surveys. Plans and Estimate*.\n (8897)\nSash  Factory\nLAWSON'S SASH  FACTORY   HARD-\nwood merchant  317 Baker street.\n(3688)\nSecnd Hand Stores\nWE   BUY-   8EU    AND   EXCHANOE\nmost  snythlng   The   Ark    ,3364)\nSECOND   HAND    WINDOWS.   MRS.\nKndclllte's, 617 Vernon Bt. -4J50)\n\u201e.- ;,s ..._._\u25a0\u00ab___\n-_\n Pictured together just ifter Britisher won In Davis Cup mitch.\nTrack and Field - Fishing - Motor Boating - Boxing - Wrestling - Swimming - Football\nMetw\nWaftSPoEL\nBaseball - Softball - Tennis - Lacrosse - Rowing - Golf- Lawn Bowling - Rugby, Etc.\nPAOB SEVIN\nTHI NELSON OAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.-MONOAY MORNINO, AUGUST 20, 1934\nPAGE SEVEN\nIUSTRALIA HAS 475 RUNS FOR\nTWO WICKETS IN FINAL MATCH\nonsford and Bradman Break Records With\nPartnership Stand of 451; Big\n.    Lead Over England\nTHE OVAL, London, Aug. 19 (CP Cable)\u2014England\nrayed for rain over the week-end, and it wasn't because\n[ the drought. A wet wicket seemed the only prospect of\nlopping rampaging Australians who crashed into a long\nBd in the season's crucial test cricket match, incidentally\n(lashing all sorts of recordsf\nthe way,\nthe Aussies won the toss when tha\nftt ind deciding test mitch open-\nit t\/>rd'i In brllllmt weither,\nlh 80.000 persona on hand. Tht\n>ket wu Just tbout perfect, ind\nI Australians naturally elected to\nIn to btt. Befort stumps were\niwn, they had rolled up 475 runa\nI tht lou of only two wlcketa.\n!W RECORD\nW. II. Ponsford, with 804 runi\nI his credit, was still unbeaten.\non Bradman batted til diy ind\nlet hit wicket Just t few mtn-\ntes before the close, bat *\u25a0** be-\nin he had compile, _*,, runs,\nltd with ponsford set t ne* \u00bbu-\nme partoershlp record for any\nIcket In Uat cricket,\ntngland's seven best bowlers toll-\ndoggedly In tbl sunshine to\nt)e effect. The bodyline controv-\nly seemed burled for tht tlmt be*\nI tt least, when Wlllltm Vooe of\ntta, whoae performance against\nI AUaeltt a wnk tgo revived It,\n* left off the Engllih tttm.\n(Then the Austles won thi ton\nI crowd settled down to I grim\nUggle, but thiy didn't anticipate\nch a itand aa tht vlslton put up.\nung W  A* Brown lost his wicket\n31, for only lo runs, ud ill\nlined well, especially as Edward\n\u25a0rk of Northants ind six-foot*\ntr Bill Bowes of Derby wen using\nit, bumping balls thtt hid pons*\nrd ducking uneasily.\nIP onsford ducked occasionally\niroughout tbe day, and twloe ha\nII itruck by o. O. Allen, but he\nrved all attacks. At the end\ncrowd gave htm an ovation for\ntruly magnificent Innings.\nRAHMAN At HIS BEST\nBradman wai at hit best. Bt sue*\naded Brown with one wicket down,\nid with ponaford carried the score\n473 before he lost his wicket,\nglng a delivery from Bowes into\n* waiting hands of the ever alert\n\u2022lie Amei, oni ot the finest\numpers England has ever known,\nl footwork, timing, ttroklng tnd\nnersl air of assurance waa a di-\n|ht to tht crowd, iven lf it meant\ndismal reckoning to come when\nIgland gets to bat. Only a few\nInutes before his dismissal, ha\nOked cheers with oae of the long-\nt hltt ever seen at the Oval,\ntlx Hashed off Hedley Verity,\nIW RECORD\nBrtdmin and ponsford put on\nIII runt for thlt second wicket.\nt tcllpted these mirks: Austtrlls's\nNrevious best second-wicket stand\n[MacArtney tnd Woodfull, 235 it\nMis In 1930); Austrtlit's pre.\nrlous best second-wicket sttnd In\nAy test matched (against south\nifrlca In 1332, Woodfull and Brad-\nBtn, 274); the tlltlmt test ptrt-\nttnblp for tny wicket (Ponsford\nind Brtdman, 313 runs, it Leeds\nlut month); and fimlly the all-\ntime second wicket partnership\n:n flnt-cliu cricket anywhere\u2014\n133 runs, Shrewsbury and Gunn\ntf Notts In 1330.\nOnly tbt tU-time, my-wlcket ptrt-\nershlp for flrst-clase cricket sur-\nved. That It 333 runs, Sutcllfft\ntd Holmei of Yorkshire.\nTbt Australians resume batting\nOnday with a tremendous lead, but\npis match will be played to a fin-\n|h without time limit, as It de.\nthe rubber. The first test\nlw won by Australia, the second\n\u00bb 'England, the third and fourth\nFere drawn. In tddltlon, lt will de-\nthe balanoe of victories between\ntilthd and Austrslls, tied with 31\nit since the classic series began\n1873.\nA bunch ot bananas miy contain\n|i miny as 300 pieces of fruit.\nTIGERS TAKE\n2 ON RED SOX\nYankees Win Two;\nFoxx Out of\nGame\nAMERICAN   LEAOl'E\nW L Pet,\nDetroit    78 40 Mt\nNtw   Tork -   71 44 .617\nClevelind   36 33 .527\nBoston        S3 88 OS\nWuhlngton   63 61 .460\nSt.  LOUil      48   83    .433\nPllllsdelphlt    47   63   -437\nChlctgo   -    41   76   450\nBOSTON, Aug. 13 (AP)\u2014Although\nouthit In both endt of t doubleheider, tbt letgut leading Detroit\nTigers won two games from Boston Red Box todty, 8-6 tnd 4-3,\nbefore a paid attendance of 40.393,\nthe largest American league crowd\nIn Boston's bastbtll hiitory.\n\"Lefty\" Drove wu bitted from\nthe box in the fifth Inning by t\nfive-run attack. Brilliant lupport\nby Owen and Oehrlnger, tnd Oreen-\nbergs batting In tbl pinches, helped Auker win tht tecond gamt.\nPint;\nDetroit _    8   IS   1\nBoiton    6   13  I\nCrowder tnd Hayworth; Orove, H.\nJohnion tnd R. perrell.\nSecond:\nDetroit       4   t   1\nBoeton      3   9.  1\nAuker ind Cochrane, Walberg,\nRhodes and Legett.\nYANKEES WIN TWO\nNEW YORK, Aug. 19 (API\u2014The\nYankees' two collegiate pltchen,\nJohnny Murphy of Pordhim ud\nJohn Broaca of Yale, burled the\nYanka to a double victory over St.\nLoula Browns today, 3-3 and 3-1,\nbefore a Sunday crowd of 34.169,\nSt. Louis errors helped the Yanks\nalong in the first game and Murphy\nhad an euy time winning bl* lath\nvictory of the year.\nPint:\nSt. Lduli _     8   7  3\nNew York    9  7  0\nHadley, McAfee tnd Orube, Murphy tnd Dickey.\nSecond:\nSt. Louil     18   0\nNew York .,  t  9   I\nCHICAOO TIPS SENATORS\nWASHINOTON, Aug. 19 (API\u2014The\nSenators new houw of Dtvld\nmoundsman went to tbe showers\ntoday on bis Initial tppeutnee\nand Chicago heat waahlngton 9*8.\nBut the plnk-whlekered Allen Benson wu not the losing pitcher. McColl, who hurled to bit relief in\nthe eighth, found the Stntton still\nleading st 7*6, Benson hid been\npitching with t blistered finger.\nTwo were out ln tbe eighth. Thin\nthe finger or something let fall\nthne singles, wltb t wtlk, tbtt\nproduced two runt. One mon run\noff McColl, tied the scon.\nChicago      9   13   3\nWashington   ..     8   14   0\nOaston, Oalllvan, Lyons and Shes,\nMadjeskl; Benson, McColl and Stew-\nell.\nNelson's Track\nMeet Sanctioned\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 18 (CP)\u2014\nThi track and field committee of\ntbt British Columbli bnnch of\ntbe tmtteur athletic union of\nCanada yeiterday announced unction had ben granted Vlctorlt to\nhold a trick meet August 23.\nTrack meets were Ilso unctien-\ned for Sept 8, for Nanaimo ind\nNelson.\nBut This Was In the Doubles\u2014\nHELEN JACOBS\nThird Successive\nTitle; Beats S.\nPalfrey    \u2022\nBy BOB CAVAQNARO\nAssoclttcd Press Sports Writer\nFOREST HILLS, N.Y., Aug. 19 (AP)\n\u2014Helen Hull Jtoobt of Berkeley, Ctl.,\nwon tht United Statu women'i tennis\nchampionship for the third successive\nyeir todty, conquering little Sarah\nPalfrey of Brookllne, Mass., tn straight\nsets, 6-1, 6-4.\nOutmanoeuvring her diminutive opponent with vicious chop-shots tnd\nspinners, Mlu Jacobs retained ber\ntitle In 43 mlnutu of pity tnd became thi third pliyer to win the\nchtmplonshl.' three itnlght yetn,\nequalling tha records of Molla Mallory\ntnd Helen Wills Moody.\nIxoept for t brief lapse In tbt uoond Mt, the chtmpion had the perfect\ntouch. Her control wU unshakable.\nAnother decisive tutor In tbl champion'! trlumrv wu htr service. Mln\nJacobs wu credited with four clean\naces.\nI'AIR TO WIN\nMiss Jacobs and Miss Pslfny then\npaired to win tht doublet title. Tbey\nteamed well together to defeat Dor*\nothy Andrui of Stamford, Conn., tnd\nCarolln Babcock of Los Angelu, the\nbeat players In thl singles semifinals yuttrdiy, tn three tttl, 4-6.\n6-8, 6-4.\nIn tn exhibition mttch, pred\nPerry, British-holder ot tbl United\nStttei men's title tnd Roderlch\nMenu], towering Cttchotlovtklin,\nbroke even, Meniel winning tht\ntint ut 9-7, tnd Perry ttklng thi\nucond tot, 6*4.   .\nPlayers Carry on\nDespite Injuries\nIRISH SOCCER\nBELPAST, Aug. 19 (CP Ctblt)\u2014\nOpening fixtures ln the Irlih Soccer\nletgue Stturdiy resulted u follows*.\nColtrtlne 3, Olentvon 1.\nOltntoren 1, Bellymeni t,\nCllftonville 0, Llntl-ld 1,\nCeltic 8, Newry 3.\nLtrne 0, Distillery 6.\nPorttdown 6, Ardt 1.\nBangor 1, Dtrry 6.\nTHI\nBAU SERIES\nWITH NELSON\nBlank Nelson to\nMake Count\nOne-All\nHelen Jacobs and Sarah Pilfrey,\npictured above won the U. S, ladies\ndoubles tennis championship at Forest Hills Sunday, but when they\nfaced one another in the singles\nchampionship event, Helen Jieobs\ntook the match 6-1, 8*4.\nTAKE A COUPLE\nCards and Braves\nSplit; Giants\nBeat Reds\nNATIONAL LEAGUE STANDING\nNtw York  .\nChicago \t\nSt.   Loult   -\nBoston   \t\nPlttaburgh   ..\nBrooklyn \t\niPhlladelphli\nfclnclnnitl   _\nrCl.BOW AMP\nSHOULDtf?\nfi Re DAN6ER\nSPOTS IN ARM-\n|Man and Woman Claim New Records\nas Conquer the English Channel\n[SCOTTISH SOCCER\nfttST DIVISION\nAberdeen 1. Falkirk 0.\nAlbion 3, Patrick 0.\nClyde 3, Dunfermline 1.\nHamilton 3, Ayr 3.\nHetrti 0. Celtics 0.\nKilmarnock 0. Hibernians 1.\nQueens 4, St. Mlrrr-n 1.\nQueen of South 1, Dundee 0.\nItsngen 1, Motherwell 0.\nBt. Johnston 4, Airdrteonians 1.\n\u25a0>\u00a3CONn DIVISION\nArbroath 3. Bt. Bernards 5.\nBrechin 3, Kings 1.    \u2022\nCowdenbeath 1, Porfar 3.\nDundee 4, Dumbarton 3.\nFife 1, Morton 0.\nBUrllng 3, Lanark 3.\nLelth 6, Montrose 4.\nBt. Johnatone 4, Alrdrleonlsns 1.\nRalth 3, Edinburgh 1.\nTemme First to Swim It\nBoth Ways; Emma Faber\nClaims Women's Record\n(INTERNATIONAL\nLEAQUE\nNewark 8, Rochester 1.\nAlbany 4. Bufftlo 10.\nBaltimore 6-3, Montreil 7-1,\nAmerican Association\nColumbus 8-3, St. Psul 8-4.\nIndlsntpollS 5-3. Milwaukee 4-1.\nLouisville 9-7. Kansas CltV 1-3.\nI Toledo 8-0, Minneapolis 11-4.\nCALAIS, Prsnce, Aug. 19 (API-\nTwo swimmerB, one a man and the\nother a woman, struggled acrow the\nEnglish channel in opposite directions today ind each laid claim to\nnew record* for the oft-tried felt.\nj The veteran E. H. Temme becime\nthe first swimmer ln history to\nswim the channel In both directions\nwhen he crawled out of the wtter\nI st Cspt Blanc Net. southwest of\nCalais, st 10:18 tonight, IS hours Ind\n(4 minutes ifter hi hid left south\nPoreland, Englmd. Temme, who\nmade the French-English crossing\nIn 1937. apparently tet up t new\nrecord for the iwlm from Englind\nto Franr*.\nA llttle earlier, Emma Psber of\nAustria made the crossing from\nPrsnce to England tnd claimed t\nnew record for womin, Thtn wu\nconsiderable confusion over htr time.\nShe hertslf uld sbt lift thl prench\ncout tt 1:10 tin. tbit morning\ntnd reached tbt EnglUb cotst 14\nhours tnd 6 mlnutu ltttr. Thlt\ntlmt, It authentic, would glvi tbe\nAustrian the record by t margin of\n33 mlnutu. Gertrude Merit ut\ntht preunt record it 14:81:00 in\n1936.\nHowever, official times for Miss\npaber's feat atlll were lacking to*\nnight,\nFront ano\nBACK OP\nTHIGHS ARE\nPAN\u00a7ER SPOTS\n(\u25a0OR OHARLEV1\nHORSES -\n^\/\/..OmUf\/fMrn\nW. L.\n 75 41\n  70 46\n....... 88 47\n 88 67\n.  64 89\n 40 68\n 44 70\n 40 75\nPet.\n.647\n.603\n.501\n.504\n.478\n.437\n.386\n.348\n(Ai>).--Ohl-\nBy  AL DEMAREE\nAndy Lotshaw, trainer of tbe Chicago Cubt It recognised ii one of\nthe bwt authorities on ailing arma\nand lega ln the big leagues.\n\"The shoulder tnd elbow an tbe\ndanger spots In bill playen' arms\n\u2022nd 'Charley honea' ln their legs.\nOther sore spote can be Ironed out\ntha only cure for theu allmenta\nis rut with gentle massage,\" says\nAndy.\n\"It'i miraculous, however,\" continued Lotehsw, \"how some stir\nplayers ctrry on, even In spite of\nInjuries. 'PU' Traynor, for instance.\nhu tuffered through all his big\nleague career, trom an eye Injury\nand his throwing arm hu bothered\nhim for uvtral seasons. 'Ooou' Oos*\nlln led the American league at bat\none yeir with hie arm ln such terrible ihipe that he oould hardly\nreturn tbe ball to the Infield. Travis\nJsckson, Hughey Crlte, Chick Hsfey\nand wes perrell are other athletes\nwho kept going and dellvend when\nthey should have bun \" \"***\nbench.\"\nCHICAGO WINS TWO\nCHICAOO, Aug. 19\neago Cuba cut half a game off tbe\nlead of New Tork Olants toda? by\nWinning a double-header from Philadelphia Phillies, 3-1 and 4-3.\nOuy Bush outpltcbed Moon ln\nthe nlghtctp, allowing only ill hlta.\ntba Brulni won the gtmt In the\nucond Inning when Cuyler ilngled\nand Hurst bit a homt run.\nPint:\nPhiladelphia   010 000 000\u2014 1   8   4\nChicago    000 901031\u20148   4   0\nC. Davli tnd Todd; Lit ind O'Farrell\nSecond:\nPhiladelphia   ....000001100\u20143   6   0\nChicago    030000 10k\u20144 13   0\nE. Moon, Johnson and J. Wilson:\nBush  and  Hartnett.\nCAKDS   AND   BRAVES\nDIVIDE\nST. LOUIS, Aug. 19 (AP)*\u2014Afttr\npounding tbelr way through six\nCardinal pitchers for t 10-9 victory\nIn tbe first game, Boston's Braves\nran Into an airtight fielding performance and dropped the lecond\ngame to St. Louis 3-1 today.\nHome runs by Medwlck and Collins, thl litter's 38th of the teuon,\ntnd t doublt by Whitehead gave\nthe Cardinal! their three runs ln\nthe tmt inning of the second game.\nPint:\nBoston    401 301101\u201410 14   0\nSt.  Louli    000040 330\u2014 9 17   0\nBrandt, Betts and Hogtn, Spohrer;\nCarleton.   Haines,   Mooney,   Martin\nVance, P. Dean and Davit.\nSecond:\nBoston    000 000 010\u20141   7   I\nSt. Louis   300000 00s\u20143    6    1\nRhem Brown and Hogan; Walker\nand Delancey.\ntho\nHOME RUNS IN\nBiG TIME\nBy THE  ASSOCIATED PRESS\nHome runs yesterday: Johnson,\nAthletics; Higglns, Athletics; Trosky,\nIndlsns; Bolters, Red Bos; Campbell. Browni; Collins. Cardinals;\nMedwlck, Cardinals; Frlsch, Cardinals; Jordan, Braves; Berger, Brtvu;\nHunt, Cubt; one etch.\nTht leaden: poxx, Athletics, 38;\nOehrlg, YinkMi, 87; Ott, Oltntt.\n33; Johnson. Athletics, 30; Collins,\nCardinals, 39.\nLeague totals: American 568, National, 349, total 1107.\nA U. S. govirnment scientist reports that any orchard owner who\nfears losing nis apple trees from\nheavy drought may improve their\nchances bv removing the growing\nfruit.\nSaturday Ball\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nDetroit 7, Boiton 8.\nSt. Louli 1, Ntw York 3.\nCleveland 1-10, Philadelphia 3-0.\nChicago 4-1, Waahlngton 8*4.\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nNew York 6, Cincinnati 0,\nPhlltdelphlt 0, Chicago 3.\nBrooklyn 6, Pittsburgh 3.\nBoston 0, St. Louis 16.\nNORTHERN  LEAGUE\nWinnipeg 11, Superior 10.\nCrookston 6, Duluth 6.\nFargo-Moorhead 8, Eau Claire 5.\nOrand Forki-Bralnerd, rain.\nLOVELOCK\nIS BEATEN\nBronthon Wins After\nThree Defeats; U.S.\nStars Sweep\nYACHT CRUISE                          '\nJ\nI\n^m\u00a7\nBfe*\nMm\n'^\"n**^f^_0^^00^^V -1\nrv.-ytw****--;        *'\u25a0\u2022**          t> **'\nTwo yichts ingigid In i J9*bott Long lilind cruln to Fisher's Island\nfTCOTTY\" CAMPBELL DEFEATS\nSANDY FOR CANADIAN TITLE\nCOUNTY CRICKET\nLONDON, Aug. 19 (CP otblt)-\nCounty cricket mttchu opining todty showed tbt following scores when\nstumps were dnwn:\nWtrwlckihln 346, Middlesex 93 for\none wicket, it Birmingham.\nSomerset 393 for uven (Case 84\nnot out) against Sussex at Eastbourne\nDerbyshire 330, Nottinghamshire 84\nfor uven wickets, at Ilkeston.\nNorthamptonshire 341 tor tight\nwickets (Bakewell 173 Bellamy 76\nnot out) against Olamorgan at Northampton.\nLeicestershire 837 tor eight against\nHampshire at Bournemouth.\nGloucestershire 306, Surrey 30 tor\none wicket, at Cheltenham.\nLancuhlre 388 for ilx (Wataon 136\nnot out) against Kent at Dover.\nYorkshire 383 (Turner 71 not out),\nEswx 49 for no wickets, at Southend.\nGIANTS   WIN\nCINCINNATI, Aug. 18 (AP). \u2014\nCharley Dressen Day\" at tht loctl\nballyard meant only snother lost\ngame to Cincinnati Reds today as\nthe new manager formally waa wei*\ncorned to the olty, his team lost to\nNew York Olanta 6-4 ln tn 11-Inning contest.\nNew York .... OOO 030 003 03\u20146 18 0\nCincinnati .... OOO 010 003 00\u20144 10 0\nShumsker. Smith, Sslveson. Hubbell and Mancuso; Prey. Johnson.\nKlelnhans, Derringer snd Lombardi.\nPARIS, Aui. 19 (AP)-BIU Bonthron, Princeton's great miler, fin*\n\u2022lly turned the tables on Jack Love*\nlock today, defeating the New Zealander over the 1500 metre route aa touring\nathletes of the Unit-\nclean sweep ln the\nclosing meeting of ^-fU^K.1\ntheir European tour.\nBonthron won in __\nthe slow time of, i . .rr__T._,\nthree minutes, 57 se-\"1, E Lov,l6ck\nconds to avenge three prevloui defeats he suffered at Lovelock's\nhands.\nAs usual both Bonthron and hit\nBritish rival Jockeyed for positions\nfar behind the pace-maker in the\nearly stages of the race. Finally,\nwith 300 metres to go, Bonthron\nmade his bid. Flying along at a\nspeedy clip, he raced into the lead\nwith Lovelock close behind.\nFor once the New Zealander could\nnot match Bonthron's finish spurt\nand the big Princeton star held\nhis lead to the finish,\nDOUBLE WINNERS\nExcept for the 15 metres, the\nAmericans competition was limited\nto Franch athletes and the visitors\nwon every one of the U events.\nJack Torrance, huge Louisiana state\nweight man, and Eulace Peacock\nof Temple were doublt wlnnen.\nTorrtnce captured both the shot\nputt and discuss throw and Peacock\ntook the broad jump and the 100\nmetres dash.\nIn the shot putt. Torrance bettered the listed world's record with\na heave of 16.85 metres\u201455 feet\n3 13-32 incheit\u2014 but failed to\nthreaten his own best toss of 57\nfeet 5-32 inch.\nnonoERs in miu i  rmurs\nPITTSBURGH. Aug. 19 (AP).\u2014Behind four-hit pitching by Rsy Benge.\nBrooklyn Dodgers humbled the boys\nfrom Pittsburgh today 2-1, the eecond straight victory for the series\nand the eighth straight they have\nbeat-en   the   Pirates.\nBrooklyn     000 011000\u20142 12   0\nPittsburgh     000000100\u2014 1   4   0\nBenge and Lopez; Hoyt, Smith,\nPrench and Orace.\nPACIFIC COAST\nLEAGUE\nPortland 3-3, Seattle 4-4\nSan Prtnclaco 1-5, Hollywood 5-1\nOakland 6-4, Sacramento 4-1.\nLoi Angelu 5-9, Mlulont 1-1.\nNorthern League\nSUNDAY\nWinnipeg 0-7; Superior 14-3.\nPtrgo-Moorhesd   19-4;   Elu  Clalro\n4-8. '\nCrookston 7-4; Duluth 3-1.\nOrand Porks 7-6: Bralnerd 6-2.\nTRAIL. B. O, Aug. 1*\u2014Bunching\nfive of tbelr seven hltt In tht uoond tnd third lnnlngt which combined with two walks and loose\nfielding on the part of thtlr opponents netted tbem flvt runs, tnd\n\u2022dding tnothtr run In tbe fourth\nInning u tht ruult oi thne consecutive erron, the Trail unlor\nhsubill nine htnded tht visiting\nNelaon club a 6X1 ihutout to go\nInto a tit in tht nee for tht wut\nKootenty lugut ehimpionihlp. Etch\ntetm now holding om victory ovtr\ntbt other,\nClifford Bogstle, who nturned to\ntbe mound for tht Trail team, held\ntht Ntlion nlnt to uvtn bits, tbt\numt number u obtained by tbt\nhome tttm. but whtnu tbt Trail\nturn bunched their hits thou obtained by Nelson wen widely teat-\ntend. In only ont Inning, tht ninth,\ndid the Nelion team git a runner\nsafely to third but. Bogitlt fanned\nnven batten and walked onl.\nNelson btd their but chance to\n\u25a0core in the fifth inning, Horswill.\ntint up, hit safely to ltft field,\nWtlter Olllett, Uld down a perfect\nbunt along the third bau Unt,\nthtt wtnt for an *--*-'-d bit, bit\nucond hit ot tbt gtmi, Smith hit\nto Bogitlt who threw to Rou it\nthird to ntln HonwlU, Andtnon,\nbit to tbt pitcher wbo threw Olllett <\"-* at third and Rou whlpptd\ntht bill ovtr to Declmbrlnl it flnt\nfor t doublt play, tbe only ona ot\ntbt gamt.\nTRAIL SCORES\nBoth tumi were blinked In tbt\nopening Inning, tnd Bogitlt retired\nthe Nelton teim ln succession ln\nthe first of tht wcond. Ross flnt\nup for mil in thi lut of tht uoond, hit uftly to lett fltld. Dt*\nmore'! tttempted sacrifice turned\ninto a short fly that landed betwun ucond and flnt for I hit.\nRothery walked filling tht bius.\nMllburn hit to Isaacson who wu\nstationed at third, and the latter\nthnw Rou out tt tht plate. Bogstle unt \u25a0 roller down the third\nbut' Unt thtt wmt foul, but\nJust before retching tht bag rolled\nIn fsat and want put third, Demore and Rothery scoring before\nthe ball could be recovered, pair-\nburn walked. Lturlentt wu out on\nt sacrifice hit, tbat toon Mllburn.\nIn thi third Inning Tnll idded\ntwo mort runs. Declmbrlnl wu site\non the shortstops trror. Bt went to\nsecond on Ross's sacrifice. Anderson to Bell, and scored on Dt-\nmort'i two bigger to center field.\nTtlll idded their sixth ind final run\nIff the fourth inning, when Laurlente icored u the ruult of thru\nsuccessive erron on the part of th*\nNelion Infield.\nDuring tbt lut four lnnlngi tbat\nTnU bitted, smith who went thl\nrouti tor tht vlalton beld Tnll to\none hit. only two other TnU bitten niched tint, both on errors.\nWltb futer fielding on the ptrt of\nbll teammates, tbt score would\nhive been considerably clour. Smith\nstruckout six batters, walked two\n\u2022nd hit one.\nGRABS OOOD ONE '\nLefty schumikir furnished tht\nfielding highlight of the game wben\nhe made a tenutlontl one handed\nrunning catch or Bogatle's bird hit\nbill to center field In tht eighth\nInning. O'Shei md OlUett were the\npick ot the Nelson team, on ont\nocculon OlUett duplicated the fut\nhe pulled oft twice in the gimt\nhere t wuk igo by throwing t\nrunner out it flrtt from right field,\nMcTler, Demore, Rou ind Mllburn\nwere the outstanding playen on\nthe Trail nln* although tha entln\nclub pliyed errorless bill.\nSummiry:\nBeats Somerville 1\nUp for Golf\nCrown\nBaseball's Big Six\nBy thc Associated Press\nAl Simmons crashed Into the big\nsix yesterday and Paul Waner slipped\nto the bottom of the standing ln an\nafternoon of spotty hitting.\nSimmons connected four times In\nsix attempts, sending his average up\nfour point* to -360. That not only\ngave him the third American league\nplace by putting lilm ahead of Lou\nOehrlg, who hit only once ln tight\ntimes up, but placed him t point\nahetd- ot Winer, who dropped two\npointi when he made three hltlua\nvisits ti the pltte.\nBIU Terry's thru hits in flvi times\nup gave blm a three-point gain for\na -374 average, leaving him only one\npoint behind Heinle Manush, who\ndropped another point by falling to\nhit In hla one time up. Charley\nOehrlnger tn\/isl.d \\lx attempts, dropping five polnta.\nThe standing:\nO   AB   R     H   Pet.\nManush.\nSenaton   107 433   78 163 .875\nTerry, Olanti .. 116 453   99 160 .374\nOehrlnger,\nTlgen     116 480 1L3 165 .867\nOtt, Olanta    116 446 101 161 .363\nSimmons,\nWhit* Sox . 103 419 73 151 .360\nP. Waner, Pirates 111 467   03 164 .359\nNelson\nAnderson,  3b  .\nSchumaker, cf\nO'Shea, e \u2014\nIsaacson, Sb ...\nBeU. lb\nAB R H PO A E\nWaterer, u  4\nHorswill,   lf  4\nOlllett,' rf   8\nSmith, p  --.\u2014 8\nTottli  -..'..88\nTnll:\nPtirbum, lf 8\nLturlente. cf  4\nMcTler, c   \u2014 4\nDecembrlni, lh . 4\nRoss, 3b  3\nDemore, tt \u2014 4'\nRothery, u  \u2014 \u00bb\nMllburn, 3b  4\nBobstle, p \u2022\u2022\u2014\u25a0\u2022 4\n0   7 34 13   8\nRANGERS BOW\nMOTHERWELL\nGlasgow Team Beats\nArch-Rivals; Clyde\nAlso at Top\nGLASGOW, Scotland. Aug. 19 (OP\ncable)\u2014Glasgow Rangers, monirchi\nOf tbt Scottish Football leigue, htvi\nmother victory over their arch-rlvale.\nMotherwell, to their credit, Porty\nthouund people turned out it Ibrox\npark, tvtn If lt ll tbt middle of aummer. to tu Rangers but Motherwell\nby the only goal icored Stturdiy,\nThe two eleven! battled tt tbt top\nall lut season. Ringers winning out\nto cop the champlonahlp. Their first\nclash In tbe new uuon came on the\nucond scheduled dty of pity and tbl\nhome side won a brllllint victory.\nMeiklejohn's counter ln tbi tint\nhalf wu tbt only gotl netted ln the\ndull. It wu a battle ot forward Ones\nthroughout.\nSTRANGE COMPANY AT LEAD\nEarly uuon play iee* strange company tt tht heid ot thi lint dlvliion\u2014Rangers. Hibernians and Clydt.\nHibernians scored thilr lecond victory at the expenu of Kilmarnock,\n1-0, while Clyde won 3-1 over Dunfermline, up from tht uoond dlvliion thli uuon). The tint hilt goal\nby Moffatt gave the Hlbs victory it\nKilmarnock where the homi Mam did\neverything but More. At Clydt tht\nwinners showed improved form over\nlast season.\nCeltic and Hetrti, tub with in\ninitial win, split pointi tt Tynecutle.\nCeltic ihowed a rearranged team and\ntheir forward! did well. Harkneu was\nbrilliant ln goal for the Hearts. St.\nJohnstone got up In a three-day tie\nby tddlng a victory, 4-1 ovtr Airdrteonians, to their draw of lut week.\nthe Saints were on top throughout.\nFerguson getting two goals ln the\nfirst half and Davidson two ln tha\ntecond.\nALBION ROVERS WIN\nAlbion Rovers, who ctme up Into\nthe flnt division with Dunfermline\ntnd lott their first game, won their\nfirst home encounter 9-0 at tht expenu of Pirtlck Thistle. Thl win,\nabout the only uput ot the day, wu\nicored with goal! by Renwlck In\neach half.\nQueen'! Park pleued tbe borne\ncrowd wltb their tint win, beating\nSt. Mlrren, thl cup hunters, t-1.\nDodds, Twice, Cnwford and Martin\nwere tbl soorere.\nRslth Rovsrs, Lelth Athletics tnd\nDundu United wen tbt only teams\nto repeat In thl uoond dlvlalon.\nThird Lanark, down from tbi flnt\nwere held to t 2*2 tie it Eut Stirling.\nBut Cowdenbeath, who tailed the\nflnt division practically all lut winter, took a ucond defeat, thli time\nlosing 3-1 to Porftr Athletics it home.\nLott and Stoefen\nGet Stinging Loss\nNEWPORT R.I., Aug. 19 (AP)\u2014\nOeorge Lott and Lester stoefen,\nDavis cup doubles berets wbo will\ndefend their United Statu titles\nthis week, headed for Philadelphia\nsuffering from a attnglng five-set\n3-8, *6-l, 14-13, 3-8. 6-3 defeat which\nWilmer Atlllson ind Johnny Van\nRyn, t long established nam, handed them today ln tht flnu round\nof the Newport Casino tetm play.\nThe electric industry has produced 1.000,000 watt lampi which\nare \u00abo large that a child could stand\nin the glass bulb.\n\"Sandy\"\nBy J. F. SANDERSON\nCanadian Press Stiff Wrltir\nLaval.iur-le-l.se Golf Club,\nMONTREAL, Qui., Aug. 19 (CP)\n\u2014Albtrt \"8ootty\" Campbell, 20-\nyear-old Seattle lid, todty hold*\nthi Cintdltn Amittur Oolf title\nfor thi lecond year in a row. With\na boyish grin breaking tcrou hit\nsun surtd fsce , ht uw \u2022 10-foot\nSuit drop  Into tht cup it tht\nIth holt here yuttrdiy, difut*\nIng Canada's flnt ranking amateur, C, R. \"Sandy\" Somerville tf\nLondon, Ont., one up.\nClipping two strokes from par to\nretain the Earl Grey cup he won\nlast year at Vancouver, the fair-\nhaired tltllst gave\na   demonstatlon\nof  golfing  ability   and   fighting\nheart   thlt   lifts\nhim to the front\nrink of competitive golfen on th*\ncontinent.   Flg'it.\ning with his back\nto  the  wall,  h\u00bb\ncame from behind in the morning\nto overcome a two hole deficit. In\nthe afternoon, Campbell saw tha\nCinadian run up a three-hole lead\nin the fint five holes With two\nbirdies and an eagle. Ue whittled\ndown thii lead to square the match\nat the 26th and win at the 36th by\ndropping a long twitting putt.\nFORCES CAMPBELL\nSomerville, fighting for his fifth\nCanadian title to add to the American crown he won ln 1932, forced\nCampbell to play the game of hit\nyoung life. In the drama-filled afternoon round he ,had only one bad\nhole, the 36th, and it coit him thc\ntitle. Re forced Campbell te ihoot\n66 in the second round, three under\npat, while he clipped one stroke\nfrom perfect figures himself to card\n142 for the match against the American'! 140.\nThe match wai won and loit on\nthe 447-yard 36-th. The Canadian\nwas ihort with hts Iron to the elevated green and he dubbed hii\nchip ahot, leaving a 30-foot putt.\nAgain he was short with his putt,\nthe ball resting six feet from the\npin. In the meantime, Campbell\nhooked his iron to the left of th*\ngreen and chipped 10 feet short.\nMAKE* PUTT\nEvery eye in th* gallery of 4*500\nwas focused on the young Amerlcin\nwhen he took a light on a long\n\u25a0ide hill putt. He took his time\n\u25a0bout it, knowing it could mean the\nend. From the time he stroked\nwith his old, rusty putter, there\nwas no doubt about the ball lt wu\ntwitting curling along the undulations of the green, but was rolli ig\nfor the yawning cup* like a homing\npigeon to lti loft.\nAll the punch and dram* of th*\nmatch came in the afternoon round.\nBoth played close to par ii^.-th*\nmorning to end all square. Campbell\nwinning the 18th when Sometville\novershot the green and putted short.\nThe afternoon round produced\nfireworki from the start. Somerville\nunk a six-foot down-hill putt for\na birdie at the 19th to regain th*\nlead. He went two up* at the 2 ith\nwith another birdie but loit the\n384-yard 21st when he overshot\nthe green. His ball rested in a\nfootprint in deep sand and he play-\nover the green again for a six.\nMUSH ANNEXES\nTENNIS SINGLES\nAll Western  Csnadian Net\nChamps of 1933 Are\nDethroned\nTotal!    .-. 96   6   7 37 11 0\nScores hy innings: RHE\nNelson    000 000 00O-O    7   S\nTrill    083,101 OOx\u20146    t  0\nStruck out by Bogstle 7, Smith 6.\nBases on belli ott Bogstle 7, Smith 6.\nHit batsman, Falrburn, by Smith\nHomt runi 0. \u2022\nThru but hltt 0.\nTwo blu hlti, Demon, Mllburn and\nO'Shea.\nDouble plays, Bogstle to Rou to\nDecembrlni.\nWild pitches. Smith, 1.\nLeft on bases. Trail 8, Nelaon 1. ,\nUmpires. \"Mystery\" Pasquale, Trill,\nand Slim Kraft, Nelson.\nWINNIPEG. Aug. 19 (CP)\u2014Wuttrn\nCanada's tennli crowni todty perched atop tbe heads of their new owsers. Not a single 1933 tltllst survived\na long week of competition which\nconcluded Saturday at the Manitoba\nhard court* tennia tourney.\nEddie McKush, brilliant young\nWlnnlpegger annexed tht men's\nsingles crown from tht veteran Wal*\nter Gyles and then paired wtth his\nbrother Otto to win tbt mtn'i dou*\nblei. Liter McKush tdded to bis\ntrophies the mixed doublu tttl*.\n' Oeorge Robinson, Montreal, Canadian Junior champion, eked out a\nclou victory over Bill Stark of Calgary to win the western Junior title.\nStark led the Junior tltleholder 4-0\nIn the final set before yielding thl\nMtlo. The score was 11*6, 1-4, 6-4.\nCOUNTY CRICKET STANDING\nLONDON, Aug. 18 (CP) Cable)\u2014The County Cricket championship\nand table Friday stood al follows:\nW. L. WfL IU Nr. Pt\u00ab Pet\nLanes  19 t 7 4 0 132 57.03\nSussex  li 2 5 7 1 230 86.79\nYo.kJ   11 8 4 3 2 117 98.64\nKent  11 6 6 4 0 207 51.11\nDerby 10 6 6 3 1 193 49.48\nWarwick     8 4 4 4 2 160 48.48\nN0tt\u00bb    8 8 6 5 0 168 48.83\nOlOUC.  10 9 2 3 2 177 48.88\nSurrey     8 6 8 2 0 148 44-24\nEwn     8 4 4 9 1 171 43.84\nMlddleux    6 8 6 2 2, 134 17.22\nL\u00ablc\u00ab\u00abter     S 8 2 6 0 100 33.33\nGlamorgan     3 8 5 3 3 81 27.67\nHants     8 10 8 3 0 94 28.11\nWore    3 11 2 9 0 82 21.86\nSomenet       3 10 0 9 0 72 21*1\nNnrlh'U    . ._    1 17 2 2 0 31 9.S9\n -\u2014^^\nAGE EIGHT\nOur\nRemington\nRepresentative\nwiU be in Nelson all this\nweek.  Phone us for appointments.\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug Go.\nEXPECT A BUSY\nWEEKATOTTAWA\nNegotiations to Continue Between Dominion and the\nProvinces on Relief\nOTTAWA. Aug. 19 (CP)\u2014 With\nPremier Bennett back from Saint\nJobn, where he assisted at celebrations lu honor of New Brunswick's\n150th anniversary, a fairly busy week\nla ln prospect.\nSuch activity as there will be centers upon the continued negotiations\nbetween provinces and Dominion on\ndirect relief. The matter ls settled\nInsofar as the province of Alberta ts\nconcerned, although the problem of\nthe dried out areas of all three western provinces remains to be dealt\nwith, but no agreements have been\nmade with the other provinces.\nPremier Mitchell Hepburn Is scheduled vo arrive here tomorrow to continue discussion of the relief question. It is suggested he may have\nsome new Ideas to present to the\ngovernment as to the dispensation\nof relief.\nThe farmers' debt adjustment act,\npassed at the lest session of parliament, will be proclaimed this week\nas effective In the three prairie provinces on and after September 1. As\nsoon as the necessary machinery can\nbe prepared, lt will also come Into\nforce In the other provinces.\nINSPECT THE\nYANKEE GIRL\nDetroit Man Here to\nNegotiate Stock\nSales\nE. P. Crswford and F. R. Weeks.\nprincipal shareholders and directors\nof the Ymir Yankee Girl Gold\nMines Ltd., have ipent the past\nthree days in the district while inspecting the company's property, the\nYankee Girl, in the Ymir camp, leading custom shipper to Tadanac.\nAt present rapid progress Is being made upon the construction\nof a 100-ton mlU and underground\nworkings are being developed in\npreparation for Its completion. Shipping is to continue at the present\nrate.\nThe property, formerly privately\noperated by Mr. Weekes, and Mr.\nCrawford, is now in the hands of\nthe limited company. Mr. Crawford is the president of the company, Mr. Weekes, vice-pre\u00abident,\nW. A. Sutton of Vancouver, aecre-\ntary-treasurer, and H. W. Seaman,\nmanaging director. D. S. Wallbridge\nof Vancouver completes the directorate.\nCarlton Higble, of Detroit, was\nIn the city with Mr. Weekes and\nMr. Crawford for the negotiation\not the sale of a large block of\nstock.\nDismiss Nurses After\nCase Investigation\nTORONTO, Aug. 1\u00bb (CP).\u2014TWO\nnurses of the Ontario hospital here\nwere dismissed and a complete Investigation ln treatment ot patients\nwas ordered after authorities reviewed treatment of Miss Vlney Smith,\na girl declared to be perfectly normal yet conllned ln Ontario mental\ninstitutions more thsn three yeara\nFirst Fire Call\nin Months, Trail\nTRAIL, B.C., Aug. It.\u2014An almost\nthree-month reoord without a single\ncall was broken Sunday when the\nTrall fire department responded to\nsn alarm at 4.20 pjn., to a small\nfire started in eome packing cases\non Rossland avenue.\nChildren had been playing with\nmatches and tbe dry cases caught\nfire. Fire Chief A. A. McDonald\nstated there waa no rubbish near\nthe cases and that they were all\nplied neatly.\nMORE ABOUT\nFIRES\nTONIGHT\nHON. H. H. STEVENS\nMinister of Trade and Commerce and Chairman\nof Committee investigating unfair trade practices\nwill apeak at a non-partizan meeting under the\nauspices of the Nelson Board of Trade.\nNELSON OPERA HOUSE \u2014 8 P.M.\nBy Popular Demand\nNARK MORTIMER\nAND HIS MUSIC\nWill Play a Return Engagement at the\nEAGLES' HALL\nTomorrow Night-August 21st\nEverybody Came\nNELSON AND DISTRICT OLDTIMERS\nASSOCIATION\nANNUAL BASKET PICNIC\nTO PROCTER\nWednesday, August 22nd.\nS.S. Nasookin\nLeaves City Wharf at t a.m. and 1 p.m.\nAdults fl.00 Children 351\nBRING A BASKET ANO HAVE A GOOD TIME\nWOOD, VALLANCE\nHardware Company, Ltd.\n(Continued From Page Ona)\ncame hurtling down from the cliffs.\nEdward Stein one of the men was\nstruck in the small of the back and\nwas taken to Kootenay Lake General hospital with an injured back.\nAnother man was struck but his\ninjuries were not serious. Several\nfire fighters are receiving treatment\nfor burns.\nNo sooner had tha second man\nbeen hit than 20 fighters scurried from the vicinity declaring\nthat they would not go back. It\nwas   an almost Impossible situation and forest branch offlcllas\ndecided to give up the Idea ef corralling tha fire at the canyon and\nfight It with pumps when It came\ninto range. Three more pumps will\nbe brought Into action today, one\nfrom New Denver, one from Kaslo\nand one from Cranbrook.\nEast of the Blaylock fire a guard\nline was run  up from  Shannon\ncreek to cut oft further spots and\nthe only real danger in sight was\nthe possibilities of the main Grohman creek fire coming over the\nridge and down the Six-Mile valley.\nWhile fires edged their way down\nthe hill closer to the homes, further\npreparations for evacuation on the\npart of cottagers were under way\nand a number of residents who have\nmoved out are not likely to go\nback this summer.\nTrucks carrying fresh crews and\nprovisions kept up a steady run\nbetween Nelson and the North Shore\nmost of the week-end. \/\nFIRE8 AT A GLANCE\nFire situation tn Kootenay and\nBoundary at a glance:\nCranbrook\u2014Small blaze broke out\nover the week-end three miles south\not tiie city and five men were sent\nin. Another new fire is burning on\nBroule creek in Fernie area.\nInvermere\u2014No change.\nFlathead\u2014Twenty more men sent\nin as conditions became more tir-\nious.\nWigwam\u2014Fire well held.\nCreston\u2014Old fire in Alexander\nlimits controlled by crew of 75.\nPOSSIBILITY OF RAIN\nBoundary\u2014Only J8 men fighting\nfire in the Grand Forks and Boundary district During the late afternoon the Forks had exceptionally\nlow temperatures and the humidity\nhigh. At one point the mercury registered 78 and the humidity was\ntaken at 38, giving a fair possibility\nof rain.\nSouth of Nelson the spot (Ire\nwhich broke out of Bremner's ranch\nat Salmo was out and pumps operated from the Salmon river and\nadjoining sloughs were used to\ngood advantage.\nA new tire started during the\nweek at Columbia Gardens in the\nvicinity of an old burn near the airport.\n139 HAY PERMITS\nHAVE BEEN ISSUED\nThree ol Four Vacant Princi-\npalships in the Creston\nValley Filled\n\u25a0THI NILSON DAILY NIWI, NILION, B.C-MONDAY MORNINO, AUGUST \u00bb, UM\nWhere 100 Died in Religions Riots\nD    Ifl\n% *.       . wr\n\"   *,   \"'\nI P\"*$\nm*\n.;\u2022***-*'\nCRESTON, Aug. 19\u2014A total ot 1)9\nIt-rmtts. for 378 tona of horse hay\nand 883 tons ot rushes, have been\nIssued at Wynndel and Creston by\nCreston Valley Stockbreeders' association. The work was in charge of\nCol. M. V. Allan of Nelson, district\nforestec along with Charles Sutcliffe\nand O. Nickel, president and sect;*,\ntary respectively of the association.\nLast year, due to wet weather there\nwas complaint because permit hold-\nerr, who had paid tbelr cutting fees,\nwere unable to take otf their allotted\ntonnage. This year the association hss\nadopted the policy ot not taking\nmoney until they are sure baying can\nbe carried on. About 20 applications\nare held ln abeyance.\nMr. and Mrs. M. R. Joyce, with\nKathleen and Murray, are away on a\nmotor holiday trip via the Benff-\nWlndermere highway to Banff and\nCalgary, planning to return via Lethbridge and Crows Nest Pass.\nColonel and Mrs. Mallandaine were\nrenewing acquaintances ln Bonners\nPerry, Idaho, Wednesday.\nH. H. Wllks has just returned from\na trip to Stettler, Alta., and reports\ngrain crops a i almost average In that\nsection ot the province.\nN. G. Smith, a former Presbyterian\nstudent pastor at Creston, but now\nat Orand Forks, lett for home this\nmorning. He waa here assisting with\nthe funderal of Mrs. M. J. Boyd.\nMrs. H. 8. Nordmann of Beaverdell\nis holidaying here, a guest of Mrs.\nAngus Cameron, at the home of Mr.\nand Mrs. T. Mawson.\nJohn Walker ot Calgary waa a vlaitor during the week, with his brother.\nRev. A. Walker at Trinity Cnlted\nchurch manse.\nThree of four vacant prlnclpalshlps\nof valley schools are definitely filled.\nAt Erlckson. J. I. Colbui of. Pernle\nwill be In charge, replacing Miss M.\nPraser. At Wynndel, Miss Sutton of\nVancouver replaces Miss Harrop, and\nat Huscroft Miss Robinson of Blewett\nwill be In charge ln place of Miss\nOlson, who goes to New Denver. Miss\nPrances Knott replaces Mrs. Id Clark,\nnn Godwin, as junior teacher at\nCanyon.\nMies Marion Parker baa just returned from a three-week holiday\nwith friends ln Nelson.\nJ. P. Johnston, ln company with\nRev, A. O. Thomson, were auto visitors at Cranbrook thla week.\nHilton Toung and Ernest Barnes\nwere visitors with friends at Kaalo\nearlier ln the week.\nARRAN, Saak., (CP)\u2014 Mrs. Annie\nLeglbokoft is 80 years old but what\ndoes she care? Living alone on her\nfarm near here, she cares for her garden, milks the cows and bakes her\nown bread, Bhe recently received her\nfirst pair ot. spectacles, and walked\nfive miles to the village to secure\n11 them.\nSenegales troops, aided by martial\nlaw, are attempting to prevent a\nrepetition of the religious massacre\nat Constantlne, Algeria, in which 100\npersons were killed and more than\n300 wounded as Jews and Arabs\nfought in the streets. Crying \"Death\nto Jews\", the Arabs swarmed into\nthe Jewish quarters, reopening the\nfeud of long standing, following\nthe beating of a Jewish soldier after\nhe allegedly desecrated a mosque.\nAbove, the bridge and gate to Constantlne; below, the Arab quarter.\nBELGIAN STRATOSPHERE BALLOONiSTS\nHAKE IMPORTANT DISCOVERIES IN TRIP\nLand on Yugoslavia Soil After Hope for Them About\nAbandoned\nMARIBOR, Yugoslavia, Aug. 18\n(AP).\u2014The Belgian stratosphere bal-\nloonlsts, Prof. Max Cosyns and Neree\nVanderllst, settled gently to the\nearth ln a corn field near Zinovlje\nlaat night after almost all hope\nfor their safety had been abandoned.\nAll the delicate scientific Instruments with which the balloonlsts\nwent aloft at Hour-Havenne ln Bel-\nglum at dawn yeaterday were intact.\nThe Instruments show no new\nworld height record attained, but\nthat was not the object of the\nnight. The scientists, exhausted but\nuninjured, believed they had gone\nUP nearly 10 miles, far short of the\nrecord.\nAs the great gas bag descended\nIn the gathering dusk farmers ned\nln terror. The strange event was\nbelieve by the simple peasants to\nbe of Infernal origin.\nThe village police came to the\nscene quickly and Informed the pro*\nlessor he waa In Yugoslavia. Then\nvillagers anq officials eagerly ex*\ntended every courtesy.\nIMPORTANT   DISCOVERIES\n\"While lt Is true We failed to\nestablish a world's record for height\nI am quite satisfied with the scientific results of our trip,\" cosyns\ntold ths Associated press. \"I mtde\ncertain discoveries and deductions\nrespecting the movements and ef*\nfacta of cosmic rays which t think\nwill be of great value to science.\nBut tor the present I am keeping\nmy finding secret, and I will not\npublish them until I can check the\nresults.\n\"We reached a height ot 18,000\nmetres, which certainly la no world's\nreoord. But, nevertheless, I wss able\nto make scientific observations of\nthe highest value.\"\nWINNIPEG K.C.\nDROWNS IN RIVER\nHorace Ormond Believed to\nHave Slipped Into Winnipeg River\nMINAKI. Ont., Ausr. IB (CD-\nHorace Ormand, K. C, 69. prominent lawyer In Winnipeg for the\nput 30 years, drowned hero late\nyeaterday ln the Winnipeg river.\nThe body was recovered today.\nDetails surrounding the accident\nwere not available tonight, it was\nlearned Mr. ormand. who came to\nhis summer home Friday for \u00bb\nweek's holiday, had gone lor a walk\nalong the river bank- It Is believed\nhe slipped while walking and was\ncarried away by the current.\nBorn at Pembroke, ont., Mr. or-\nmond came west and finished his\nlaw education at tiie university of\nManitoba. He was called to vhe bar\nIn 1B0V. After practicing ... Mortage la Prairie, Man., he went to\nWinnipeg ln 1904. He was a bencher\nand treasurer of the Manitoba Law\nsociety.\nBesides his widow, two sons and\ntwo daughters, Mr. Ormond Is survived by a brother. Brig.-General\nD. M. Ormond. Ottawa.\nFROSTY ANDERSON\nINJURES HIS HAND\nDemand for Poles Is Slight\nBut Fence Posts Aro\nin Good Demand\nGALLOWAY, Aug. 19 \u2014 Andrew\nWick-man and Gunner Polk, who have\nbeen employed here for aome time,\nleft for Conal Flat where they will\nsaw logs for Mr. Johnson.\nVictor Caldwell motored to Hosmer\nSunday.\n\"Frosty\" Anderson, who Injured his\nhand while employed at the Bear*\nMountain tie plant, was obliged to\ngo for * medical treatment to Cranbrook where lt ls aald blood poison\nhaa set ln which made lt necessary\nto have medical attention at the\nBt. Eugene hospital.\nEd Douchette, who has been Indisposed for some time, Is doing nicely.\nHubert Dumont left Monday to\ntake up his studies ln medicine and\nsurgery at the University of Alberta.\nOrders tor poles are received here\noccasionally but the market ts not\nbrisk for poles while fence posts sre\nIn fairly good demand.\nMajor McKean, 71-year-old war veteran, gave a street cornet-player a\nshilling and aaked him to play the\n\"Laat Post.\" He then saluted with his\nwalking-stick, stepped off the curb\nand waa killed by a passing car.\nThe telephone llnea of the city of\nI*-*.' tork are of sufficient length to\nform 35 lines of wire from thc earth\nto the moon.\nAid Forthcoming for\nBridge River Schools\nVICTORIA, Aug. 19 (CP)\u2014While\nprovincial help with the erection\nof new rural schools has been cut\nfrom 50 to 30 per cent !n the Iorra\nof building advances, this aid. vlll\nbe extended to several new schools\nIn the Bridge River district, Hon.\nDr. Q. M. Weir stated today. Naw\nschool buildings are already started\nat Mlnto and Gold Bridge, while\nanother Is under consideration st\nor near the B. R. X. mine. Provision will be msde for Instruction\nin eight elementary grades ln these\nunits.\nTRAU HOWLERS\nSTRETCH LEAD\nDefeat Nelson 85-76 at the\nSmelter City\nTrail Lawn Bowlers stretched to\n47, their lead in the Kootenay\nBrewery cup inter-city lawn bowling tournament series Saturday, defeating Nelsonites at the smelter\ncity 85-76. Nelson won one match\nand lost three, one by one point.\nResults with Trail rinks mentioned first were:\nR. Leveque. C. Laurlente, D. Long*\nmuir and J. Deans, 17; J. S. Gould-\ning. A. G. Lane, J. Armstrong and\nJ. Draper, 16.\nMr. Cameron, F. Penoyer, F. Weir\nand A. Laurie, 26; J. Simons, C. I.\nArchibald, N. Bradley and F. E.\nWheeler,  IS.\nR. Varcoe, P. Partridge, G. McKay and J. Thompson, 27; S. Bate,\nW. Calbick, F. Doodson and P.\nCoulter, 21.\nE. Thompson, C. Lauriente. W.\nChalmers, and H. Johnson, 15; .1.\nP. Morgan, N. J. Lowes, G. A.\nMeeres and E. Y. Brake, 24.\nRain and Snow Aid\nto Fire Fighters\nWINNIPEO.   Auk.   H   (CP).   \u2014\nniackenrd   tree   stumps,   damaged\nranch building* and Impaired road*\nbuilt  thr   background  tonight  an\nmont forest  flrw In western Cio-\nada were being  anbdued.\nFifty square mllea ln the Castle.\nYarrow. Dry   Pork   and   Carpentlsr\nCreek valleys were consumed by one\nof the Alberta fires. Rain and anow\naided the flre-flghters and tonight\nthe  flames  practically   were  extinguished. The fire ln Twin Butte district, In the Waterton River valley,\nalso was under control.\nFires are still smouldering in some\ndistricts, with forestry men petrolling the areas. The majority of men.\nhowever, have been released to go\nhome. High winds spread the flames\nranldly when they were at their\nheight. Dry weather was the chief\ncause of the outbreaks.\nWARD IS BEST\nSHOTINCANADA\nMakes 168 Out of 175\nto Take King's\nPrize\nCONNAIOHT MIU RANGE,\nSouth March, out., It (CF)\u2014A\ntall, bronzed native of New Brunswick, tonlilit wore the crown of\nCanada's beat shot.\nunder a Mating son and a stiff\nwest   wind,   sent,   jack   Ward,\nlo-jnr-old war veteran of Moncton,   won   the   \"Canadian   Hint's\nprUe,\"    the    governor    general's\nmatch  Saturday, leading home a\nfield of ISO erark marksmen. Tbe\nMaritime   rifleman,   who   learned\nto shoot as a sniper on the battlefields  ot   ranee,  aggregated   168\nof a possible 176, three more than\nhis nearest opponent,\nsensation of the week's grind of\n\u25a0hooting came with the exhibition\nof accuracy displayed by a 17-year-\nold   English    cadet,   corpl.   Oeorge\nChapman, of Bighgate achool, London,   In   the   governors.   The   lad,\nnearly alx  feet  tail, beat the elements for 165 points, but was not\neligible   for   the   first  four   major\nprises, reserved tor Canadians only.\nHe waa placed in fifth place and\nreceived 130.\nBCRKE FINISHES SIXTH\nLieut. Desmond T. Burke, former\nKing's prize winner finished ln a\ntie with six othera wltb 162.\nThree totalled scores of 164, but\nSergt. c. fddlols, Blsley shot of\nCalgary, was awarded aecond place\nmoney on the strength of his showing on the final shoot and Sergt.\nI. K. Bird of Reglna. took third\nplace, and O. P. O, William Taylor,\nof the Royal Canadian navy, Hall-\nlax, fourth.        \u2022\nFollowing the declaring of Sergt.\nWard victor, he wia placed ln the\ntraditional chair, reserved for the\noccasion, and borne to the winner's\nenclosure ln front ot the administration buildings, where Premier r. B-\nBennett, wbo Just returned from\nthe Marltlmes, presented him with\nthe governor general's gold medal,\nS 11. Kiddle wsa declared the Dominion's most consistent shot by\nheading the Blsley team aggregate.\nThe Toronto rifleman, member of\nthis year's Blsley team, aggregated\n687 polnta, one more than Lieut\nBurke.\nMORE ABOUT\n(Continued From Page One)\ndlcated the brothers were ln no\nimmediate need of medical attention but members of the household\nor other sources would not reveal\ncondition of the two men.\nQUASHED RUMORS\nRumors involving tbe death ot a\nbottle washer of the Labatt hnw-\ner; with the kidnapping, were\nquashed by coroner Dr. 3. Cameron\nWilson, who said ln statement issued\nat the request of ths crown attorney, preliminary evidence hsd \"shown\nconclusively\" the death of Oordon\nMcKenzie \"was in no way connected\nwith the Labatt case.\"\nMcKenzie died ln hospital yesterday from a blow on the head and\nsubsequent reports led the crown\nattorney to request Dr. Wllaon to\nIssue a statement to the press.\nSEARCH CENTERS ON DETROIT\nDETROIT, Aug. 16 (AP)\u2014 One\nbranch of the search for the men\nwho kidnapped and released John 8.\nLabatt, wealthy brewer of London,\nOnt, centered ln Detroit tonight after Chief of Detectives Fred W. Frahm\ndisclosed that police suspected a gang\nwhich has operated for a number of\nyeara ln Windsor, Ont, gccaelonaily\ncrossing the International border.\nExplaining the members of this\ngang were known, Frahm said: \"We\nknow who they are and where they\nare. If tbey try to run away, that ls\nevidence ln thetr disfavor and an\nimplication of guilt\nWi Intend to let them alone until\nwe have conferred with police in the\nborder cltlea,\" scjded Frahm, \"and\nchecked all angles. If we build up a\ncase we can and will arrest them,\nthen.\"\nHikers Are Safe\nVANCOOVKR. Aug. ID (CP). \u2014\nLast ln the wild brush country between Utopia lake and Sky Pilot\nmountain, ln the Squamlsh district,\nsince Thursday, three hikers returned safely laat night, provincial police here were advised.\nToo Late to Classify\nFARENHOLTZ\u2014To Mr.  and  Mra.\nHelmut Farenholtz, Friday, Aug. 17,\na daughter.\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nPapers,    Magazines,   periodicals.\nWilliams Newa Stand. i3489>\nWANTED:    PLUMS   AND   BLACKBERRIES. MCDONALD MM CO.\n(6560)\nBASEBALL\u2014 TONIGHT,    MAULERS\nvs.  FAIRVIEW  A.C, S.18 P.M.\n(8706)\nDANCE   AT  AINSWORTH\nHOT   SPRINGS,  AUG.  WND.\nNOVELTIES, ETC.\n(3666)\nOxford Oroup open meeting tonight at 8 p-m. on the beach of Mr.\nR. Fleming, North Shore close to\nferry. \u2022 (3704)\nTONIOHT\nHON.  H.  II.  STEVENS\nNELSON   OPERA  HOUSE\n8 P.M.\n(3694)\nSPRINKLING  RESTRICTIONS\nUntil further notice the hours for\nsprinkling will bs from 7 to 9 a.m..\nand 6 to*8 pm.\u2014City ot Nelaon\n(3604)\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nChapman, William Charles, of Nelson, aged 62, paased away Friday,\nbody will rest at Somers* Funeral\nHome until Tuesday where services\nwill be held at 9 p.m. Rev. W. 3.\nSUverwood    officiating, (3703)\nFALL\nSPECIAL I\nORDER    -\nSAMPLES\nNow is a good time to place that order for a mit\nor overcoat. Samples from Fashion-Craft and Cook\nClothing Co'y. are now here. Orders filled in 16\nto 18 days.\nPRICES RANGE FROM $25.00\nEmory's Ltd.   i\nROSSLANDERS BREAK INTO CRICKET\nPICTURE WITH WIN OVER NELS0N1TE\nScore 100 in Hour and Half\nto Win\nBreaking into tbe picture for the\nfirst time this year, Rossland cricketers defeated Nelaon ln a laat lnninga batting spree at the Recreation grounds Sunday,\nThe Roasland team pulled the\ngame round to make a win over the\nNelson team after tbe latter had\ndeclared their second Innings closed\nst 4.30 pjn., leaving Roasland 106\nto get In one and a half hours of\nplsy. They made the runa tor the\nloss of seven wickets and wltb but\nseven minutes to go.\nAlthough Finney of Rossland performed the hat trick ln Nelson's\nfirst Innings the runs were otherwise\nevenly divided, penny being top\nscorer wltb 36 and tour others getting into double figures, the total\nbeing 101.\nIn Rosslsnd's first Innings Martin\nwaa the only bateman who did much\nscoring carrying out hla bat clean\nthrough the innings and being not\nout at tha close with 34 to his\ncredit out ot a total of 61. Corbyn\nfor Nelaon waa tn good form taking\nseven wickets for 36 runs.\nDAWSON-NEWELL   BAT   WELL\nla Nelson's seoond Innings Newell and Dawson reached double fig-\nurea and with aeven man out tor\n69 the innings waa declared closed\nwith a lead of 99, Rossland however\nby -forceful batting by Martin ably\nseconded by Bell and Coates obtained the necessary runa with three\nwlcketa ln hand and only 7 mlnutea to go,\nScores:\nNelson, first Innings.\nR. Main, o 0. Chambers,\nb Finney      -     1\nB. 3. Newell run out      6\nC.W. Tyler LBW b Finney   # 1\nH D. Dawson, b Snowball    10\nHS. penny, run out     38\nHA. Parker o & b Martin     11\nR. Leonard c Martin B. Finney     13\n3. Corbyn b Bell   \u2014  11\nR. Emmott c Martin b Finney ..    0\nR. Toxall c (s b Finney     0\nF. H. Smith not out -     4\nByes \u2122 - \u2014\u2022\u2022    t\nTotel    - \u2014 ...'.  101\nBowling:\nFinney 6 for 33.\nBell 1 for 30.\nSnowball 1 for 30.\nBoucher 0 tor 13.\nMartin 3 for 16.\nNelaon, 3nd innings.\nS. J. Newell b Bell 16\nH-B. Penney b Bell  _     4\nC.W. Tyler o Snowball b Flnnle    6\nH.D. Dawson b coates  91\nR. Main o Snowball b BeU     4\nH.A. Parker c snowball b BeU ....  3\nR. Leonard c-b Coates  \u2014....   6\nJ. Corbyn not out _    0\nKrtrae -   i\nTotal   (7 wickets) 66\nInnings declared closed.\nBowling.\nBell 4 for 36.\nFinnic 1 for 16.\nSnowball 0 for lt\nCoatee 3 for 4.\nRosslsnd, first Innings.\nE. Martin not out .. 34\nI. Bourchler L.B.W. B. Corbyn ....   1\nA. Snowball b Corbyn     6\nC. Bell, b Corbyn _    0\nF. Coates b corbyn    4\n3. Flnnle o Newell b Dawson     3\nJ. Chambers b Corbyn  ......   S\n3\n0\n.\n4\n13\nL. A. Read b Main\nE. Chesham b corbyn \t\nW. Toogood b Oorbyn \t\nA. O. Read b Main\nByes 10 L Byes 3 extraa\nTotal   -  .\nBowling:\nCorbyn 7 for 36.\nDawson 1 for 17.\nMain 3 for 6.\nRossland and Innings.\nA. Snowball b Corbyn \t\nLA. Read b Corbyn  \u2014\nC Bel] c Newell b Dawson .\nE. Martin b Main .. -\t\nF. Coates LBW. b Parker ...\nJ. Finney b Parker \t\nE. chesham b Main \t\nJ. Bouchler not out \t\nJ. Chambers not out --\t\nByes 3 L Byes 6 extras ...\nTotal (7 wlckete)  _.\u201e\nBowling.\nCorbyn 3 for 39.\nMain 3 for 8.\nDawaon 1 for 30.\nNeweU o for 16.\nParker 3 for 16.\nUmpire, B. Variables.\nfarewell given\npipe Mclennan\nby caledonian!\nTRAIL, Aug, 19\u2014Caledonian soott\nof THU, Joined by a large number!\nfriends, last night bade farewell\nPipe (Jock) McLennan at an sustaining function at the K.P. hall. ifl\nMcLennan la leaving shortly for Scqj\nland. William Forest presided.      J\nA feature of the evening wsa tl\npresentation of the piper by 3, 1\nMcLennan of a purse of gold, tj\nrecipient expressing his thanks.\nAccidentally Shoots\nHimself in Stomac\nVANCOUVER. AUg. 19 (CP)-MeJ\nOraham Wataon, Robaon street, w\nshot in the abdomen Saturday wta\na revolver he wu cleaning aclden\naUy discharged.\nTaken to St. Paul's hoepital, .\ncondition waa said to be \"fair\"\nhospital attendants tonight.\n\u25a0SEE\nVIC GRAVES\nMaster Plumber\nFor Modem Plumbing\nAT MODERATE PRICES\nOpp. City Hill        Phono 8111\nJ.A.C. Laughton, R.0I\nOPTOMETRIST\u2014OPTICIAN     I\nSuite 205. Medical Arts Bulldlngi\nWhen you aak for Face PowdJ\nsay  Day Dream\nMade from finest gnd purest lg\ngradients\u2014In all shsdss     I\nSmythe*! Phar mac jj\nPrescriptions Our Speciality\nPHONE 1\nTennis Players Special\nRacquets Re-Strung Good Of nl\nOrade English Sheep-Gut. 9*\u00ab*|\nSingle Strings; alt!\neach   -,'-\u00bbl\nJOE HOLLAND\nRETAIL LUMBER\nLATH-SHINGLES\nMOULDINGS j\nW. W. PoweU Go. Ltd.\n\"The Home of Good Lumber\"\nPhone 176 Foot of Stanley St\nTODAY\nand Tuesday\n2-7-9\nMft   Ch_mt_t_ntaiUii Quett\nCrpitol\nHer Generous Heart Knew Only How\nto Give, How to Lovel\nANN CLIVE\nHARDING     BROOK\nin\n\"Gallant Lady\"\nwith OTTO-KRUGER\n-Added-\n\"COME TO DINNER\"\nA Burlesque on \"Dinner at Eight\"\nNovelty \u2014 Newt\nI\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_1934_08_20","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\/1.0404736","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":"1934-08-20 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":"1934-08-20 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":""}]}