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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":" \t\n.\u2022\u25a0WUHU-HV\ngppppgpRj\nwmmimmmm\nTrail Goes Game Up on\nRossland in Playoffs\n\u2014-Page Two\n93M\nStock Markets Tumble in\nCanada and U. S.\n\u2014Page Nine\nVOLUME 36 FIVE CENT8 PER COPY \\\/l-V>tltW>\\r   ^^IJ-80N' BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA-TUE8DAY MORNINQ, 8EPT. %,, 1537. NUMBER 158\nWilkins, wit in North, May Be Safe\nOn State Business\nI I\n\\jm\nmm^:-rM\nW \\ v\n_w>v\ns3          '*\nill \u25a0\n'\u25a0\"^fl'W\n11*'*\n7           If\nliS        iti'\nHi\nAnthony Eden, British foreign secretary, and one of the leading figures\nat the recent Nyon conference, is\nshown as he rapped on the prime\nminister's door at 10 Downing street\nLondon. Presumably visiting the\npremier to discuss matters of state,\nEden carried Great Britain's views\non the Mediterranean crisis to Switzerland and was instrumental in\nhaving the nine-power accord put\ninto effect.\nFIND $1100 GOLD\nNUGGET EXPOSED\nIN BED OF (REEK\nTELEGRAPH CREEK, B.C, Sept.\n20 (CP)\u2014 A spectacular-appearing\ngold nugget, weighing 53 ounces, was\nleft with the gold commissioner here\ntoday by its finders, Mr. and Mrs.\nVern Shea, to be sent to the Dominion assay office at Vancouver.\nAt prevailing gold prices the nugget would be worth around $1800.\nTlie big blob of gold is of irregular\nshape, peven and one-eighth inches\nlong, four inches wide and averages\nabout one and one-half inches thick.\nThe Sheas said they found the\nnugget exposed on the bed of Alice\ncreek, a tributary of Boulder creek\nin the Little Muddy district of northern British Columbia, last year,\nbut that they kept their find secret\nuntil now.\nThey showed a second nugget,\nweighing ]5 ounces.\nVancouver to Seek\nto Bar All Types\nVending Machines\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 20 (CP) -\nThe city council's licence commit'\ntee today decided to.recommend a\nlicence by-law amendment to prohibit all types of vending machines\nin Vancouver.\nIt instructed corporation counsel,\nD. E. McTaggart and licence inspector H. Urquhart to prepare a draft\namendment for submission to the\nfull council next Monday.\nThe committee's action was taken\nafter R. Rowe Holland, who said\nhe represented 400 store owners\nand the Vancouver real estate exchange, claimed machine vended\nproducts threatened tlie small profit\nof many retailers.\nS. SLOCAN MAN\nFACES 2 CHARGES\nOF ATTEMPTED\nMURDER, NELSON\nTony Brdar Is Charged\nAlso With Unlawful\nWounding\nIS SEQUEL TO\nKNIFING MELEE\nTwo charges of attempted murder and one of unlawful wounding\nwere laid Monday against Tony\nBrdar, South Slocan, who has\nbeen held in provincial jail at\nNelson since a knifing melee at\nSouth Slocan Saturday night In\nwhich Mrs. Fannie Hadikin, Louis\nKrepan and John Malakoff received wounds.\nMrs. Hadikin, a widow with two\nsmall children, and Krepan, under\ntreatment In Kootenay Lake General hospital, were reported Monday to be progressing, with no\ncomplications so far. The woman\nhas a gash in her side and Krepan\na cut on the top of his head. Malakoff suffered a cheek cut. Mrs.\nHadikin was formerly Mrs. Wis-\nI off.\nCHARGE HEAVY\nDRINKING\nIt is charged that Brdar, after\ndrinking a large quantity of beer,\nwent to the home of Alex Hadikin,\nfather of the woman, and that the\nattack against Mrs. Hadikin and\nKrepan took place there. The woman\nran to the Malakoff home, screaming, and was admitted.\nBrdar, according to information\nobtained by police, tried to get into\nthe Malakoff home, kicking in the\nglass in a door. Malakoff received\nhis wound in going to the door to\nprevent Brdar unlocking it through\nthe broken pane.\nMeanwhile Krepan, police learned, had found shelter in the house of\nAndy Morgich and Nick Torich, and\nwas lying there in a weakened condition. Brdar was using an axe on\nthe door, it was stated, When J. D.\nYeatman arrived and began to talk\nto him. He diverted Brdar's attention from the door but was unable\nto stop him using the axe on Krep-\nan's car, police were told.\nAmong police exhibits in the case\nwill be, it is expected, a pearl-handled pen knife with a bent blade,\npicked up near the Malakoff home.\nChinese Cafemen's\nApplication at the\nCoast Is Adjourned\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 20 (CP) -\nAn application by Denis Murphy,\nbarrister, for an injunction to restrain the city from interfering with\ntlie business of three Chinese restaurants whose civic licences have\nbeen cancelled was adjourned to\nWednesday in Supreme Court here\ntoday.\nWrits were issued on Saturday\nagainst the city and licence inspector H. A. Urquhart, claiming declarations that the cafe owners hold\ngood, valid and subsisting licences\nand that the by-law under which\nthe licences were cancelled is ultra\nvires and in restraint of trade.\nUnder the by-law Chinese cafe\noperators are liable to cancellation\nof  licences if they  employ  white\nFormer Kelowna\nLady Dies, Coast\nVICTORIA, Sept. 20 (CP) \u2014Mrs.\nAda Newby, 70, former resident of\nKelowna, died here today.\nBorn in Leicestershire, England,\nshe came to Canada and settled in\nthe Okanagan, coming here 10 years\nago.\nBritain Defies Japanese\nOrder to Leave Nanking\nDRILLER INJURED\nIN QUEEN TUNNEL\nWHEN A \"MISSED\nSHOT\" EXPLODES\nNick   Cjerninka   in\nDesperate Case in\nHospital\nEYESIGHT LOST;\nSHOCK PROFOUND\nSaid to have drilled into a \"missed\nhole\"\u2014in which was a charge that\nhad failed to explode\u2014Nick Cjerninka, a driller at the Queen mine\noperated by Sheep Creek Gold\nMines, Ltd., was desperately injured Monday afternoon about 3\no'clock, when the charge exploded.\nCjerninka, who was found and\nbrought out by Chick Bush, another\nminor, was treated by Dr. Edward\nMorrison of Salmo, and was later\nrushed to Nelson by the Somers\nambulance, that went out to get\nhim, and placed in Kootenay Lake\nGeneral hospital, where he is under\nthe care of Dr. D. W. McKay.\nThe injured man, who in addition\nto severe injuries to his head and\nthe upper portion of his chest is\nsuffering profoundly from shock, is\nin a serious condition so far as\nchances of recovery are concerned.\nHe has lost the sight of both eyes.\nHe is unmarried.\nEXPORT COPPER\nOFF THIRD CENT\nNEW YORK, Sept. 20 (AP)\u2014Export copper dropped more than 1-3\ncent a pound today, selling at less\nthan 13 cents, and more than a, cent\nunder the 14-cent domestic price.\nLate sales were made on the basis\nof 12.95 to 13.06 cents a pound.\nThe sharp drop led some trade\ncircles to express belief the domestic spot price, maintained for some\ntime, might be reduced.\nCopper futures fell more than %\ncent, carrying all contracts under\n12 cents a pound, or two cents under\nspot metal. Scrap copper fell % of\na cent to around 11 cents, the equivalent of about 12ft cents for refined copper,\nTrustees Favor,\nan Auto Driving\nEducation Course\nVICTORIA, Sept. 20 (CP)-A resolution proposing introduction into\nthe high school curriculum of an\nauto driving educational course was\nadopted by British Columbia school\ntrustees association in convention\nhere today.\nSubmitted by Coldstream school-\nboard and endorsed by the Okanagan branch of the trustees' association, the resolution originally called for an extensive compulsory\ncourse of instruction in safe driving,\nrules of the road and elementary automobile mechanics.\nLion Cubs Meet Photographer\nPOINT OUT JAPAN\nHAS NO RIGHT TO\nORDER BRITONS\nQUIT CHINA CITY\nJapanese in a Foreign\nLand; Warned to Be\nHeld Responsible\nCAPITAL AWAITS\nNOON DEADLINE\nLONDON, Sept. 20 (CP-Havas)-\nThe British government was reported irritated tonight over the Japanese request that British warships\nbe withdrawn from Nanking, and\nspokesmen said the foreign office\nfully approved Admiral Sir Charles\nLittle's rejection of the Japanese demand.\nThe Japanese demand was considered entirely unjustified by British diplomatic observers, who pointed out the Japanese are in foreign\nterritory and are thus unwarranted\nin ordering Britons from Nanking.\nMoreover Britons were annoyed\nwith the \"preemptory\" Japanese action and insist they are within their\nrights in staying in Nanking.\n(Sir Charles warned the Japanese\nnaval commander, Vice-Admiral\nKyoshi Hasegawa, that he would\nhold the Japanese fully responsible\nfor any injuries suffered by British nationals as a result of the air\nraids).\nAlthough they made their debut into this vale of tears at the Bronx,\nN.Y. zoo this summer, this is the first time the twin babies born to\n\"Judy\", young African lioness, have been placed on the spot by the\ncamera. At top, the twins, King and Queenie, appear frankly curious about\nthe strange eye that stares at them so glassily, so (centre), King (or is it\nQueenie?) runs to tell mamma all about it; whereupon (lower), mamma\ngathers in her babies and snarls defiance at the black box with tho staring\neye and displays such an array of dental menace that the photographer\nsuddenly remembered an important appointment.\nCITY AWAITS\nNOON  DEADLINE\n-NANKING, Sept. 21 (Tuesday) \u2014\n(CP)-This city of 1,000,000 people\ntoday awaited grimly a terrific\nbombardment the Japanese navy announced would take place as soon\nas the noon deadline set by Jap-\n(Contlnued on Page Two)\nWIDOW OF JACK\nKIRKUP IS DEAD\nNANAIMO, B.C. Sept. 20 (CP)-\nMrs. John Kirkup, widow of a former government agent here, and onetime policeman at Rossland, died\ntoday after a six weeks illness,\nSurviving are two sons, Jack, British Columbia police constable of\nKimberley, B.C., and Robert of Kelowna, B.C,\nAlta. Liberal Leader\nByelection Candidate\nEDMONTON, Sept. 20 (CP)\u2014E.\nL. Gray, of Brooks, Alta., Alberta\nLiberal leader, was unanimously\nchosen as Liberal candidate in the\nforthcoming Edmonton provincial\nby-election at a Liberal nominating\nconvention here tonight.\nEden Tells of Big Rearmament\nPlan; Rebukes Qermany, Italy\nSays Germany's Problem of Raw Materials\nNot One of Colonies; Reminds Italy She\nWas Not Represented at Nyon\nGENEVA, Sept. 20 (CP)\u2014Foreign Secretary Eden today advised\nthe world Great Britain Is committed Irrevocably to a policy of rearmament unless other nations cease competing for supremacy at arms.\nSpeaking before a hushed League of Nations assembly Eden struck\na note of mingled hope and pessimism. Despite the dark pfcture he paint-\ned and his implied rebukes of Germany and Italy, he emphasized Britain's determination still to strive for peace.\n\"One pledge I can give unequivo-<-.> ,\u2014\u00ab\u2122^-^_VWs--.\t\ncably to this assembly,\" he said, \"is\nthat the government 1 represent will\nspare no endeavour to prevent wat\nfrom engulfing Europe.\"\nHis pledge of Britain's peaceful\npurposes was coupled wilh his statement of willingness to agree to reduction and limitation of armaments.\n\"DANGER  FOR THE\nPEACE OF  EUROPE\"\nEden said war results in the \"impoverishment of the victor to an\nextent only less than that of the\nvanquished\", and that foreign par-\n(:-\nlicipation in Spain's war \"presents\na pregnant danger for the peace of\nEurope,\"\nOf Germany's demands for colonies, he said, \"tlie problem of raw\nmaterials is not primarily, even substantially, one of colonics.\"\nTurning to the measures to which\nBritain has resorted in the face of\na steadily rearming world, Eden\nsaid:\n\"The British naval personnel is being expanded at a rate without precedent in our country in time of\npeace,\" he asserted.\n\"Only  on rare occasions In our\nhistory have comparable naval efforts been made.\nEXPANDING AIR FORCE\n\"At the same time, the program\nfor expansion and re-equipment of\nour air force is going forward, with\nthe result that a formidable increase\nin our offensive as well as defensive\npower is being effected, while the\nequipment of our land forces has\nproceeded with increasing momen-\ntum.\n\"Since I last spoke, the continuous\ngrowth of industry for production\nI for all three services has been taking place at vast extent.\"\nEden infcrcntially held Italy, who\nwith Germany declined to atte'nd the\nnine-power Nyon conference to rid\nthe Mediterranean of piracy, to\nblame for the small areas offered\nher to patrol.\nItaly has demanded patrol parity\nwith France and GVeat Britain.\n\"It was quite impossible to have\nattempted an elaborate plan in negotiations with a country not represented at Nyon,\" Eden observed.\n3.M.&S. Fertilizer\nMixing Plant for\nNew Westminster\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B. C,\nSept. 20 (CP)\u2014Consolidated Mining &, Smelting Co, of Canada,\nLtd., is erecting a $30,000 fertilizer\nmixing plant In this Fraser river\nport. The plant will be equipped\nand operated by Buckerfield's\nLtd.\nThe feed and seed company will\nmake certain mixtures of phosphates, sulphates and other fertilizers for export.\nBurning Cave Found\nin Sinking Canyon\nArea in Idaho\nBUHL, Idaho, Sept. 20 (AP)\n\u2014Out of this land of geological\nquirks today came a new rival\nto Buhl's \"sinking canyon\" fame.\nEd Ulrich, Clover district farmer, and his four sons, discovered a \"burning cave\" in tha\nlittle Salmon river canyon, six\nmiles below Salmon dam.\nHe Thinks Canada's\nProblems Are in\nGood Hands\nTORONTO,  Sept. 20   (CP)-\nCanada's problems appear to be\nin good hands and contain nothing of an insoluble or insuperable character, Rt. Hon. Lord\nHewart of Bury, lord chief justice of England, told the Canadian club here today.\n\"As for the minor problems,\nyou can of course afford to\ntreat them lightly. None of you,\nI imagine, is likely to be kept\nawake nights by doubt of whether appeals to the judicial\ncommittee of the privy council\narc really worth the money they\ncost. None of you, I imagine, is\ndisposed to waste much time\nupon the question whether Canada might usefully by annexed\nor absorbed by the United\nStates.\"\nBrigadier General\/\nAccused of Murder,\nIs Shot and Killed\nSHELBYVILLE, Ky., Sept. 20.\n(AP)\u2014Fire Chief W. Amyx said\nBrigadier General Henry H. Dc1*-\nhardt was shot and killed here\ntonight.\nAmyx said he understood three\nbrothers of Mrs. Verna Garr Taylor, whom the genera! is charged\nwith murdering, surrendered to\npolice immediately after the shoot-\nKASLO (REEK FIRE IS BELIEVED TO\nBE ONLY ONE NOT UNDER (ONTROL\nForest fires originating from Friday's electrical storms over the Kootenay district were burning yesterday on the south fork of Kaslo\ncreek, on Trout creek across the\nlake from New Denver, on the\nheadwaters of Enterprise creek, on\nthe Slocan river just below Slocan\nCity, and on Gold creek, southeast\nof Cranbrook.\nThe Kaslo creek fire, on which 20\nmen were working over the weekend, is believed to be the only one\nnot yet under control. Sunday it\nwas a mile wide, but as it is on a\nburned-over area, no timber is affected, and the fire is more susceptible of attack. This fire is about 15\nmiles up from Kaslo, on Long creek,\nand is lhe largest of the season.\nOne hundred acres is the extent\nof the Trout creek fire, three miles\nup from Slocan lake, on the west\nside. Sunday it travelled very fast\nup the sleep hillside, but it was expected Monday that by nightfall it\nwould be under control, by the crew\nof 40 men engaged. This fire is in\nSecond growth crown timber.\nA small fire just below Slocan\nCity, also of lightning origin, was\npractically .stamped out, according\nto information received by the\nforest branch Monday.\nNo word has been received from\nthe patrol of five men sent up to\nthe Enterprise fire, but its high\nelevation makes it improbable it\nwill be much of a problem.\nFollowing a storm in the Cranbrook area Friday afternon, a fire\non Gold creek was detected Friday\nnight. A crew of three men has it\nunder control.\n14 HURT AS TEAR\nGAS BOMBS LET\nLOOSE, THEATRES\nNEW YORK, Sept. 20 (AP) -\nFourteen persons were injured tonight when tear gas bombs exploded in seven Manhattan and\nBronx motion picture theatres.\nThe series of bombings was the\nworst since the night o\u00a3 September\n12 when more than 50 theatre patrons were injured as chemical mixtures were exploded in 21 theatres\nin what police said was a continuation o\u00a3 a dispute between two organizations o\u00a3 motion picture operators.\nLAST MESSAGE\nSAID HE WOULD\nLAND AT \"FIRST\nSUITABLE\" LAKE\nSearcher   for   Soviet\nAirmen Now Object\nof Search\nHOLLICK-KENYON,\nCHEESEMAN LOST\nMattern Reports\nFLASH !\nFAIRBANKS, Alaska, Sept. 21\n(Tuesday). (AP) \u2014 Sir George\nHubert Wilkin- unreported tor\nseveral hours after landing in the\nbig flying boat at a lake near Aklavik, was asleep and not missing,\nSoviet flight representatives here\nwere informed late Monday.\nRadio advices received here\nfrom Aklavik said:\n\"Wilkins was landing and his\nsignals cut. He didn't go on the\nair again from late afternoon yesterday until noon today. He Is in\nthe delta somewhere. He doesn't\nknow his position but thinks he\ncan find Aklavik as soon as\nweather clears. Aklavik Is In com.\nmunicatlon with him all the time\nnow.\"\nTestifies Hatfield\nPosed as Crew Man\nOTTAWA, Sept. 20 (CP) \u2014 A\nslender, trim matron, who, among\nother things, is a notary public in\ntho little town of Marlboro, N. Y,,\ntoday indicated Captain Freeman\nHatfield, former master of the\nschooner Gypsum Queen, as the man\nwho, in May, 1930, came to her office and made an affidavit, signing\nthe document, \"Tony Matthews.\"\nThe Marlboro notary public was\nMrs. Rotena Dubois. The declaration which she alleged Hatfield\nhad signed set forth that \"Tony Matthews\" was a member of the Gypsum Queen's crew on that last voyage, nnd that) the vessel had been\ntorpedoed by a submarine,\nMin. Max.\nNELSON       46 73\nVictoria     42 60\nVancouver    56 64\nKamloops  62 74\nPrince George  \u00bb 32 62\nEstevan Point  52 CO\nPrince Rupert _ 48 58\nLangara   44 56\nAtlin    -.. 30 54\nDawson, Y. T\"  38 44\nSeattle     56 62\nPortland   ...... 60 68\nSan Francisco - 58 76\nSpokane  58 74\nLos Angeles   62 78\nKelowna     55 78\nPenticton     48\nGrand Forks  46 80\nKaslo  48 -\nCranbrook     41 78\nCalgary       50 68\nEdmonton      '.  52 64\nSwift Current  48 86\nMoose Jaw   48 88\nPrince Albert  42 82\nQu'Appelle   48 84\nWinnipeg    50 78\nForecasts \u2014Okanagan and Kootenay: Moderate winds, mostly westerly: partly cloudy and cooler at\nnight.\nNEW YORK, Sept. 20 (CP)\n\u2014A corrected version of a\nmessage flashed from the flying-boat in which Sir Hubert\nWilkins has searched unsuccessfully for the missing Russian transpolar fliers tonight\nlessened fears the noted Australian and his companions had\nmet a mishap.\nThe Wilkins party has not\nbeen heard from since 4 p.m.\nPST Sunday, when they were\nattempting to reach Aklavik,\nN. W. T., after completing\ntheir fifth aerial hunt,for Sigis-\nmund Levaneffsky and his five\nfellow airmen, who disappeared Aug. 13 while flying from\nRussia to the United States.\nHowever, word that the last message the Royal Canadian corps of\nsignals picked up from the Wilkins'\nplane ended with the information\n\"weather closing in. Shall land at\nfirst suitable lake,\" eased anxiety\nfor their safety.\nTHROUGH EDMONTON\nVilhjalmur Stefansson, president\nof the Explorers club here, which\nhas been coordinating the international hunt for the Russians, said\nthe latest message reached him\nthrough the MacKenzie air service\nheadquarters at Edmonton.\nIt superseded advices the Wilkins'\nplane had taken the air Sunday to\nmake a short hop to the Aklavik\nbase in face of adverse flying conditions and that its radio faded 10\nminutes later without indicating the\nsearchers planned to come down.\nWhen the plane failed to reach\nAklavik Stefansson took preliminary steps toward arranging a search\nfor the searchers.\nCANADIANS WITH HIM\nWilkins, a veteran of the polar\nregions, has been accompanied on\nhis operations by two of Canada's\nbest known fliers,  Air Commodore Herbert Holllck-Kenyon and\nAl Cheesman, as well as Gerald\nBrown, mechanic, and Ray Booth,\nradio operator, both of New York.\nBecause of the proven ability of\nWilkins, Hollick-Kenyon and Cheesman to cope with conditions in the\nnorth, Stefansson said he was not\nunduly worried by lack of word\nfrom them. However, it was clear\nhe was relieved by the late message\nthat they had declared their intention to land.\nTWO AVIATORS DIE\nBROOKVILLE. N.Y., Sept. 20\n(AP)\u2014A United States.navy biplane\nbound from Squantum, Mass., to\nNorfolk, Va., crashed into thick\nwoods on a Long Island north shore\nestate near here today, killing both\noccupants.\nThey were S. A, MacKenzie, a\nlieutenant, and R. A. Schmidt, naval\naviation cadet.\nJimmy Mattern, noted American\nflier, is shown leaving the Soviet\nembassy at Washington after reporting .on his search for six Soviet.\nairmen lost in the Arctic. Mattern\nsearched the polar wastes for 17\ndays in a vainlttempt to locate the\nmen, who disappeared on a Moscow-\nU.S. flight over the north pole.\nROOSEVELTTO\nVISIT VICTORIA\nON OCTOBER 1\nHYDE PARK, N.T., Sept. 20 (CP)\n\u2014A little more than a year after he\npaid an official visit to Canada as\nthe guest of Baron Tweedsmuir,\nPresident Franklin D. Roosevelt will\nagain visit the Dominion this month,\nthis time going to Victoria, B.C.,\nwhile on a speaking tour of the\nwestern United States.\nA tentative itinerary of the president's western trip, issued today\nfrom the summer White House here,\nshowed the president nnd his official party, incuding Mrs, Roosevelt,\nwould be in the British Columbia\ncapital October 1.\nAfter visiting his son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr, and Mrs. John Boet-\ntiger, in Seattle, remaining there,\nover the night of September 29, the\npresident will board a United State-\ndestroyer for the trip to Victoria.\nIn the British Columbia capital\nhe and his party will be the luncheon guests of Lieutenant-governor\nErie W. Hamber and will leave by \u2022\ndestroyer for Port Angeles, Wash.,\nin the afternoon.\n1\nFormer Calgary\nWoman in Coma\nWICHITA, Kas., Sept. 20 (CP)\u2014\nMrs. Anna Kremel, former Calgary\nwoman, lay in a partial coma tonight\nin a Wichita hospital she entered in\nJune, 1936. Hospital attendants said\nthey did not know if her ailment\nhad ever been accurately diagnosed.\n, For 15 months, attendants said,\ntho woman's condition has remained unchanged. A nurse said Mrs.\nKremel often opens her eyes, gazes\nabout the room, but is unable to\nspeak .\nBABY  YACK   BEATEN\nTORONTO, Sept. 20 (CP)\u2014Henry\nHook of Indianapolis, Ind., a cool,\nslugging fighter, tonight won a 10-\nround decision over Baby Yack,\nToronto, Canadian bantam champion. Hook weighed UVVi and Yack,\nwho won a close decision from Hook\na few weeks ago, weighed 117t_.\nCalgary Reports Its Third Case ol\nParalysis; Many New Ones in Ont.\n(By The Canadian Press)\nPostponement of the opening of\nHamilton's McMaster University\nuntil October 6 , was announced\nyesterday (Monday) as various\nOntario centres reported additional cases of infantile paralysis. Ontario remained the centre of the\nepidemic which began to make\nheadway throughout Canada In\nJune.\nFirst University to postpone beginning of the new term, McMaster\nfollowed the lead of numerous high\nand public school boards through\nthe country. Originally scheduled\nto open September 1, many schools\nin the Dominion, especially in Ontario, have not yet started their 1937-\n38 terms.\nCases reported in Ontario yesterday were at Gait where Beverly\ntownship's fifth case since June was\nnoted, at Windsor where the first\nadult was stricken, at Kitchener\nwhere two cases were reported to\nthe health officer and at Niagara\nFalls where St. Patrick's school was\nordered closed on discovery of a\ncase among the students.\nAt Scarborough, Toronto suburb,\nDr. C. D. Farquharson reported three\ncases in one home. Toronto weekend cases totalled 24 with one death\nSunday.\nIn Western Canada Calgary\nreported Its third case, while at\nSherridon, a northern Manitoba\nmining town, three new suspected\ncases were under observation.\nmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm%\n HUPP\n1\n\u2014\n\u2022fSSBWP!\nWWrW        ~ 'WBPl\nPAGE TWO \u2022\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.-TUESDAY MORNING, 8EPT, 21, 1837.\t\nTRAIL IS GAME UP ON ROSSLAND IN BOXLA FINALS\nDOMINION OFFERS PROVINCE ALL\nFISH HATCHERY EQUIPMENT BUT\nUNABLE MAKE GRANT AT PRESENT\nDominion Points Out\nSport Fishing Is\n;:,    a B.C. Matter\nGRANTAND POLICY\nTO BE DETERMINED\nROSSLAND, B.C., Sept. 20-An-\nother chapter in the status of the\nfish hatchery was opened today in a\ncommunication received by W, K.\nEsling, M.P. for Kootenay West, reviewing correspondence between\nthe federal department of fisheries\nand Hon. Ian Mackenzie, as minister for British Columbia, Hon. Mr,\nMackenzie says:\n\"Dear Mr. Esling;\n\"This is with reference to your\nwire about tlie Nelson fish hatchery.\n\"I attach hereto copy of letter\nwhich I have received from the\nminister of fisheries, which Indicates, I believe, lhat a satisfactory\nadjustment of the matter lias now\nbeen reached by consultation between the minister of fisheries and\n\u25a0the provincial attorney-general,\n\"Yours very truly,\n-    \"IAN MacKENZIE.\n\"Ottawa, Sept. 15, 1937.\"\n\"The Hon. Ian MacKenzie. minister of national defence, Ottawa:\n\"My dear colleague:\n\"This is to acknowledge yours of\nthe 9th instant with reference to\n\u25a0 the fish hatchery at Nelson, B.C.\n\"You may know that the department of national defence requested\nus to vacate the basement of the\narmory in which the hatchery was\noperated, and the City of Nelson\ndemanded that the water used in\n\". the hatchery and for tlie purpose\nASTHMA\nTh\u00bb wlf. of a prominent Montreal\nphysician suffered 16 years terribly with Asthma. She has gained 24 Ibs. In weight to almost nor,\nmal and her husband Is so delighted that he has put many patients on \"DAVIS1 ASTHMA\n\u2022REMEDY NO. 7895\". 64 doses at\nyour Druggist $3.60\nof tlie hatchery be paid for at meter\nrates.\n\"This necessitated us to close the\nhatching operations carried on in\nthe basement of the armory and lo\nvacate the premises on September 1.\nNow the City of Nelson is offering\nus free water and free site for the\nbuilding of a new hatchery. Inasmuch as the fish culture being carried on at Nelson is for sport fish\nexclusively, it is a matter of exclusive provincial jurisdiction.\n\"In this, as in every other respect,\nwere are respecting provincial autonomy, and the department does\nnot feel authorized to build a new\nhatchery for the purpose of doing\nwork which should be done by the\nprovince.\n\"Therefore, in order to prevent\nany disruption of sport fisheries in\nBritish Columbia, the department\nis willing to transfer to the province free of charge any hatchery, or\nhatchery equipment, which has\nheretofore been used in the culture\nof sport fish Tlie attorney-general\nis agreeable lo this, though he suggests that tlie province should be\ngiven a lump sum grant to enable\nitself to carry on the work This is\na matter of policy which the department cannot determine, and which\nVill have to receive consideration\nlater on\n\"I have wired this morning to the\nattorney-general as per copy of\ntelegram hereto attached.\n\"Yours truly,\n\"J. E. MICHAUD, Minister of\nFisheries.\n\"Ottawa, Sept. 10, 1937.\n\"The Hon. G. S. Wismer, K.C.,\nattorney-general, Victoria, B.C.:\n\"He sport fisheries Department\nhad to cease operations at Nelson\non account of the city asking that\nthe water be measured by meter\nand militia department needing\nbasement of armory. Now the city is\noffering free water and site. In\nvie wof the fact that sport fishery\nis a matter of exclusive provincial\njurisdiction would suggest your\nprovince immediately taking over\nhatchery equipment free of charge,\nif the province is willing to continue hatchery pending determination of the policy for the future.\n\"J. E. MICHAUD, Minister of\nFisheries.\n\"Ottawa, Sept. 10. 1937.\"\nThe King and Queen are to visit\nLancashire next May.\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON, B.C., HOTELS\nHume Hotel.\n.Nelson, B.C.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor.\nSAMPLE ROOMS   :   EXCELLENT DINING ROOM\nEuropean Plan, $1.50 up\nE. Branson, Brilliant; Mr. and Mrs,\nJ. T. Parder, Phitysbury, Mont.; C,\nF. Park, K. S. Cannoh, Washington,\n. D.C.; Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Ponniciuk\n. G. E. Webb, Vancouver; S. W. Drury\nHunner, Spokane; W. C. Menden-\nhall. Chivychase, Md.; W. S. Fleet,\nPenticton; J. E. O'Brien, Minneapolis; G. L. Parker, Tacoma; T. A.\nlurns, Medicine Hat; M. J. Flanna-\nTraii; H. E. Miard, Fernie; R. W.  gan, Montreal.\nTHE SAVOY HOTEL\n\"Where the Guest is King\"\nMODERN  SAMPLE ROOMS\nLicensed Premises\n124 Baker St.       W. K. Clark, Prop.       Nelson, B. C.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nP. and L. KAPAK, Proprietors\nCommercial, Toiir^t and Family Trade Solicited\nROOMS $1.00 AND UP\nPhone 234\nFree Parking\nNELSON, B.C.\nOccidental Hotel\nMadden Hotel\nrot Vernon St.           Phone 897\nH. WASSICK, Prop.\nSPECIAL MONTHLY RATES\nGood Comfortable Rooms\nA Weleome Awaits You\nJAS.  E.   MADDEN,  Prop.\nCompletely Remodelled.\nHot a.,d Cold Water.\nLicensed Premises\nIn the HEART ot tho City\nEDGEWOOD, B. C, HOTELS\nARROW LAKES HOTEL\nE.   NIEDERMAN,      Comfortable  Rooms\nDropHetor Good  Meals\nEDGEWOOD, P.C.\nLogical    Stopping\nPlace on the\nRoad to Vernon\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\nMemorial Tennis\nSeason Windup Is\nSlated, Week-End\nTRAIL, B.C.. Sept. -O-Memorial\nTennis club will windup the season\nFriday, Saturday and Sunday with\nthe annual men's open and handicap singles tournaments.\nBert Clark and Ed Haley are the\nrespective title holders, and they\nwill be on hand to defend their trophies this season.\nEntries must be in to Ned Rhodes\nor Ed Haley or posted at the courts\nby Friday evening, September 24.\nSalmonbellies\nTrim Richmond\n19-8, First Game\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B.C., Sept.\n20 (CP)\u2014New Westminster Salmonbellies tonight walked awa^ with\nthe first of a best-of-five~_eries for\nthe inter-city box lacrosse championship, defeating Richmond-Homes\n19-8.\nSalmonbellies took a 4-2 lead in\nlhe first, ran it to 9-3 by half-time,\nand rounded off the game by scoring\nsix goals in the final period,\nWest Kootenay\nHas Easement,\nNew Power Line\nTRAIL, B. C, Sept. 20 - Purchase\nof an easement through the Doukhobor Community property at Brilliant as a right-of-way for a new\npower line, was announced today\nby L. A. Campbell, general manager, West Kootenay Power & Light\nCo.\nThe easement about a mile long\nruns   east   from   Brilliant.\nThe new line was necessitated by\nthe relocation of the highway to\nNelson.\nRIFLE RANGE\nTRANSFERRED\nNotification that the \"rifle range\"\nalong Cottonwood creek, familiarly\nknown as Cottonwood city, had\nbeen transferred from- the control\nof the federal department of national defence to the department of\nmines and resources was received\nby the city council Monday night.\"\nIn answer to a request that the\ncity notify squatters on this land\nthe council replied it had no control, \"Cottonwood city\" being outside the city limits.\ncitywTllurge\npromised work\ncemetery road\n\"What progress are we making\nwith Cemetery road surfacing.\" Alderman Roy Sharp asked Monday\nnight at the city Council meeting.\n\"None other than the promise of\nthe member\"\u2014Frank Putnam, M. L.\nA\u2014\"and the engineer.\" Mayor J.\nI'. Morgan replied. Mr. Putnam\nwould be in Nelson Wednesday, he\nsaid, and the council asked that arrangements be made to meet him.\nAlderman Sharp stated he had\nbeen given to understand the government had no money for'its share\nof the projected surfacing. The government intended to do the work as\nsoon as the present road program\nwas completed, the mayor asserted.\nDE VAN'S PILLS\nRelieves congestion also promotes\ncomfort and ease. Does not contain\nharmful or habit forming drugs.\nUsed by women for over thirty five\nyears. Manufactured by Nox Laboratories, Toronto, Ont. On sale at\nFLEURY'S PHARMACY.     (Advt.)\n\"YOUR  VANCOUVER HOME\"    Newly Renovated Throughout\nDuff erin Hotel aTa\"\u2122\" .\u00ab\n900 Seymour St.      Vamouver, B.C.    Coleman. Alta,. Proprietor\nTRANSPORTATION - Passenger and Freight\nCRESTON Freight Truck\n2 ROUND TRIPS WEEKLY\nLEAVE  NELSON  7:30 A.M. TUESDAY  AND  FRIDAY\nLEAVE CRESTON !):00 A.M. WEDNESDAY AND SATURDAY\nPhone 342 Nelson or 16 Creston\nASK THE RED TRUCK FOR SERVICE\nGLEN'S TRANSFER\nP.vO. Box 539\nNelson, B. C.\nSPECIAL\nBARGAIN\nFARE\nTRAIL and\nGrand Forks\nto\nNELSON\nand RETURN\nGOING SEPT. 24 and 25\nreturn up to sept. 27\ncoacTTclass\nReturn Fares to Nelson\nFrom:\nGrand Forks  ... $1.90\nCascade      1.65\nFife       1.55\nPaulson         1.30\nTunnel        1.05\nCoykendahl OO\nRobson West ...      .60\nCastlegar   ., 55\nBrilliant 50\nSouth Slocan ...      .50\nBonnington 50\nKinnaird     60\nBirchbank 80\nTadanac     90\nTrail     95\nChildren 5 and under 12\nhalf fare.\nNo baggage checking\nprivileges\nGbtCditfMt\nEARLY (LOSING\nALL STORES IS\nCOUNCIL'S AIM\nPetition   Is   Received\nFrom Hardware and\nFood Dealers\nPetition of food and hardware\nmerchants of Nelson for passage of\na bylaw compelling 5 o'clock closing\nfor those stores throughout the year\nwas tabled by the city council Monday night pending investigation directed toward obtaining 5 o'clock\nclosing for all stores in the city,\nSince the first of the month some\nstores have remained open until 5:30.\nWhile ii was pointed out the council was unable to refuse such a bylaw, provided two-thirds of the business concerns signed the petition,\nthe council felt all stores should\nclose at the same time and decided\nto take steps to that end. Those responsible for circulating the original\npetition will be approached.,\nIt was pointed out the eight-hour\nday was largely responsible for the\npetition,\nHarry Severn ol\nTrail Passes al\nVancouver City\nCame to Procter in\n1907; Was Engineer\nin Tug Service\nTRAIL, B. C., Sept. 20- Harry\nSevern, highly respected pioneer of\nthe West Kootenay, passed away in\nShaughnessy Military hospital at\nVancouver Sunday night, following\nan illness of several months, according to word received here today.\nAlthough Mr. Severn had been a\nresident of Trail for the past 10\nyears, he had resided at Procter\nfrom 1007 until 1927. For years he\nwas an engineer on the C. P. R.\ntugs which towed barges of cars\nbetween Procter and Kootenay\nlanding, the water service being\ndisposed of when the rail link\nbetween these two points was built.\nHe leaves a great many old friends\nalong tho Kootenay lake and in\nthis city.\nIn Trail he was employed by the\nC. M. _ S. company for five years,\nin 1931 taking over the position of\ncaretaker at the local postoffice.\nA highly respected citizen \"Harry\"\nas he was widely known, was born\nin Wolverhampton, May 3, 1877. He\nhad a long military record, having\nbeen with the 17th Lancers and\nLord Strathcona's Horse from which\nunit he transferred to the Mounted\nMachine Gun section. He was a vet-\ncraij ot the Boer War, serving as _\nsergeant, and with with the 225th\nBattalion, Canadian Expeditionary\nForce in the Great War.\nHe was a member of the Canadian\nLegion, B. E. S. L., Trail Branch,\nNo. 11.\nMr. Severn loved fishing and\nspent many a vacation at Procter,\nwhile residing in Trail.\nMr. Severn was predeceased by\nhis wife, who passed away in Trail,\nAugust, 1936. Surviving arc three\ndaughters. Mrs. E. G. Ringheim and\nRose, Trail; and Mrs. Earle Murdin,\nKelowna.\nFuneral services will be held\nWednesday at 4 p.m.\nTo Move Out Two\nOccupants Shacks\non the Foreshore\nInstructions that city police notify occupants of foreshore shacks\nto move out were given by the city\ncouncil Monday night. The occupants were notified by the city in\nJulyt and out of five shacks two\nhave been removed, one was vacant\nand two are still occupied.\nDr, F. P. Sparks, health officer,\nstated a Doukhobor family had since\nmoved into the vacant shack.\nTrail, Lagging al Hall-Way Mark,\nMakes About Face lo Tie and Win\nBrewery Trophy\nGoes lo Trail-\nTadanac Bowlers\nDown Nelson 106-71 in\nFinal, Inter-City\nChampionship\nDriving the Nelson bowlers down\nan additional 35 points on their\nhome greens Saturday, the Trail-\nTadanac Bowling club walloped the\nNelson bowlers 106-71 in the final\nintercity competition to capture the\n.Brewery cup and the intercity lawn\nbowling championship for the year.\nThe Nelson bowlers travelled to\nTrail Saturday by car.\nOf the four contests played, F. E.\nWheeler's rink chalked up the only\nNelson victory, when it defeated W\nRae 31-22.\nResults with the Trail skips mentioned first follow:\nJim Deans 33, J. S. Goulding 8.\nBob Watson 20, Jack Draper 17.\nA. Laurie 31, James Ball 15.\nW. Rae 22, F. E. Wheeler 31.    '\nPresentation of the cup to William\nRae, vice-president of the Trail-\nTadanac club, was made by Mr.\nWheeler, Nelson president.\nNelson rinks, in order of skip,\nthird, second and lead follow:\nJ. S. Goulding, A. G. Lane, David\nLaughton and J. Graham; Jack Draper, Sam Brown, F. Davies and William Brown; James Ball, Norman B.\nBradley, J. Simons, and A. T. Richards; F. E. Wheeler, W. T. Calbick,\nE. Stangherlin and C. F. McHardy.\nMORE ABOUT\nCHINA\n(Continued From Page On\u00ab)\nanese commanders for foreign diplomats and Chinese non-combatants to evacuate the capital of\nChina passed.\nThe Brltlih emba.Jy decided not\nto evacuate the city. The French,\nRuisian, German and Italian officials also stayed, at least temporarily, but the United State, em\nbassy, under orders from Wash\nIngton, temporarily left, setting\nup headquarters on a warship. In\ncharge of the British embassy Is\nR. G. Howe, former counsellor,\nwho was rushed to Nanking from\nLondon after Ambassador Sir\nHughe Knatchbull-Hugessen was\nshot by a Japanese aviator.\nAfter the zero hour for evacua\ntion, Japanese stated, a huge fleet of\nJapanese bombers would fly over\nthe city, already subjected to two\nsevere bombardments yesterday\nmorning and repeated smaller raids\nduring the past few weeks.\nThey would attempt to destroy\nthis \"centre of resistance to the Japanese,\" it was announced,\nMonday's raids demolished 40\nChinese civilians. It was ahead of\nJapan's own deadline, set as a\nwarning to foreigners to flee from\ndanger.\nCANTON BOMBED\nHONG KONG, Sept. 21 (Tuesday!\n(AP)\u2014Twenty-one   Japanese    air-\nTRAIL SOCIAL\nBy MRS. GLENN QUAYLE\nTRAIL, B. C-, Sept. 20 \u2014 Mrs.\nGeorge Walker, nee Miss Goldic\nWorley of Doer Park, whose marriage was celebrated during the\nlatter part of August, was guest of\nhonor Friday evening when Mrs,\nJames Lamont entertained at a postnuptial shower. Autumn flowers in\na colorful display, decorated the\nrooms. A doll buggy, decorated in\npink and white, and wheeled into\nHay never\nTry one doso \"Dr. riatt'n RINEX Prescription\". Frel better in a few minutes. A physician's\ninternal treatment in convenient capsules, Uflte-\nli_s\u2014a godsend tor sutTerers .mm Hay Fever,\nRose Fever, Head Colds, Catarrh, Asthma. Not\nhabit _orminj[. Sneezing, wheezing, itehing eyes,\nrunning nose quickly relieved. Satisfaction\nwithin a few hivurs guarantied or money back.\nYour druggist recommends ItlNEX, (1.00.\n(Advt.)\nNELSON TO\nTRAIL TRAIN\nSERVICE\nDaily Except Sunday\nLv. NELSON\n10:35 A.M. 6:30 P.M.\nAr. TRAIL\n12:20 P.M. 8:30 P.M.\nSunday Service\nLv NEL80N .... 6:30 P.M.\nAr TRAIL   8:30 P.M.\nNo Change Enroute\nSingle Fare .... $1.70\nRegular Return . $3.05\nWeek-End Return $2.15\nGttfdifart\nthe room by Marilyn and George\nLamont who were dressed as bride\nand groom, contained a variety of\ndelightful gifts. Accompanying the\nsmall bridal couple, was Robert\nLamont, dressed as a minister and\nready to .fulfill the duties of marriage solcmnizer. \"Here Comes the\nBride,\" played on tlie piano by\nMrs. D. F. Stewart, added a realistic touch to the entrancing scene.\nMusic was featured entertainment\nwith a sing-song being particularly\nenjoyed, music benig supplied by\nMrs. D. F. Stewart and Mrs. W.\nMunroe. Delicious refreshments\nwere served by the hostess. The invited guests were Mrs. Wesley J.\nOwen,  Mrs.  James  Thatcher, Mrs.\nD. F. Stewart, Mrs, A, Smith, Mrs,\nW. Monroe, Mrs. Gordon Fox, Mrs.\nE. Mackie, Mrs. Finn, Mrs. O. Moore,\nMrs. O, Moore, Jr., Mrs, A. E, Jeffery, Miss Vivian Lamont and\nJimmy Jeffery\nRobert Burns has left for Edmonton where he will continue his studies in medicine at the University of\nAlberta.\nRonald McKinnon left Sunday for\nRossland where he has taken up\nresidence.\nMrs. A. P. Jeffery and son left\n[ Monday for Nelson where they will\nspend a week's holiday.\nMrs. J. A. Thalman has been removed to her home from the Trail-\nTadanac hospital.\nMr. and Mrs. A. W. Lewis are\nspending a two-week holiday at\ntheir Robson summer home.\nMrs. A. Saunders. Victoria street.\nhas as her guest Mr. and Mrs. J.\nSaunders of Port Arthur.\nRemo Toffolo spent the week-end\nat Penticton,\nMrs. R. O, Baker has been removed to her home from the Trail-Tadanac hospital,\nDouglas Ritchie is among the students from Trail who has left for\nEdmonton where he will attend the\nUniversity of Alberta.\nMr. and Mrs. Thomas Hinton and\nson have returned to their home\nfrom a holiday trip to the coast.\nMr. and Mrs. Alex Cumming of\nCalgary fcre visiting relatives in\nTrail, Mr. and Mrs. G- G. Cumming,\nT, F. Cumming and Mr. and Mrs.\nLerdy Comes From the\nHospital to Play a\nGreat Goal Game\nMARCUS SMITH IS\nSTAR WITH FIVE\nTRAIL, B. C., Sept. 20\u2014Utterly\nhop.less In tha first stanza and\ntrailing on tht short end of an\n8-4 count at half time, Trail tied\nup the fixture twice in the third\nquarter and managed to forge\nahead far enough In the final\nframe to defeat Rossland Redmen\n16-15 in the third of * best three\nout of five West Kootenay Boxla\nleague final series here tonight.\nRossland won the first game, Trail\nhaving taken two straight.\nThe whole town is wondering\nwhat took place in the Trail dressing room during the 10-minute rest,\nperiod at half time, for from then\non tho local squad turned on the\nRedmen exactly as they had suffered the attack in the first two\nquarters.\nGoal-tending was again sensational. Earl LeRoy, who has played\nfor Trail through the entire season,\ntoday was in hospital, an appendicitis \"suspect.\" He came out and\nplayed, and from all appearances,\nLeRoy was in the pink as regards\nto his play and played an even\ngreater game than in the first two\nof the series.\nSMITH GETS FIVE\nMarcus Smith, the red-headed\nsensation of the previous game, was\nin there again for five goals. His\ncounters, four of which were scored\nin the third, tied up the game for\nthe first time, Rossland having a solid margin up to that point.\nProbably Rossland's loss of Wood\nin the last quarter, for approximately\nhalf of the session, had much to do\nwith Rossland's inability to recover.\nHe received a bad gash over an eye\nsoon after the final stanza got\nunder way and received a grand\novation when he returned to the\nfloor, which he had been carried\naway from, to finish the dying moments of the fixture.  Apart from this\n(,,\ninjury, no one showed signs of being hurt, the game being exceptionally clean for a playoff battle. Penalties were comparatively few, Bradbury and Snowdon being the only\nmen to draw more than one two-\nminute penalty, hot a single major\nbeing meted out,\nWhen the teams opened the fourth\nquarter the score was 13-11 in Red-\n\"men's favor. Mouse Davy_ opened\nthe scoring and Temple came\nthrough in a flashy combination\nwith Miller to tie up the count.\nMorris scored on Snowdon's assist\nto give Trail a one goal lead for the\nfirst time, Wood was Injured and\nas he lay in agony on the floor his\nteammate Neill went through to\neven the count. Mouse Davy gave\nTrail again a one-goal lead, and\nSammartino thrust in another to establish a two-goal margin for the\nlocals. Hartney came back to pare\nTrail's margin down to one goal.\nROSSLAND:\nG   A Pen.\nGidinsky       0      0      0\nCarkner        110\nHartney     2      1\nDavies        0      1      2\nPaven       10      0\nWalmsley     0      0\nSaundry        1      1      2\nScott       1      0-0\nAnderson        10      0\nWood      0      0      2\nMcGuire      4      0      2\nEzart    _    0      0      2\nNeil    _    4      2      2\nTotals  15 0    12\nTRAIL:\nG A Pen.\nSnowdon       0 14\nPreston      0 0      0\nMiller   0 1      2\nBradbury    ,  2 1      4\nKendall       0 0      0\nMorris    2 0      2\nSammartino      3 10\nJames     0 0      2\nMerlo   0 1      0\nSmith      5 0      0\n\"Mouse\" Davy    3 1      2\nTemple      1 0      0\nTotals     16      6    16\nOfficials: Ken Paul, referee; Bob\nGifford, judge of play.\nplanes showered down bombs on\nCanton, China's southern metropolis,\nin an air raid early today.\nThe bombardment last 90 minutes.\nReports from Canton said Chinese\npursuit planes \"shot down three\nJapanese ships.\"\nCHINESE PLANES\nSTAGE A RAID\nSHANGHAI, Sept. 20 (CP) -\nChinese bombing planes dodged\nanti-aircraft shells tonight in a new\nraid on the Japanese military airfield in Shanghai's Yangtzepoo sector.\nThe new attack came after a day's\nlull in Chinese aerial activity. Several Chinese fliers dived to low altitudes to drop their explosives, but\nno planes, apparently, were shot\ndown.\nHealth officials reported cholera\nwas spreading in the foreign areas,\nwith 1015 cases and 120 deaths thus\nfar. The disease was reported as\nreaching serious proportions among\nJapanese troops.\nIndications Japanese plan a major offensive against Chinese defenders of Shanghai was seen today\nin a Central (Chinese) news report\nthat Japanese warships stationed off\nthe northern coast of Kinngsu province have weighed anchor.\nJAPANESE ADVANCE\nTIENTSIN, Sept. 21 (Tuesday)-\n(CP-Havas)\u2014Spreading out fanwise\nin tho six different battle sectors of\nthe north China front, Japanese\narmies pressed forward today to\nclaim victories in almost all sectors,\nnotwithstanding the muddy roads\nand hardening Chinese resistance.\nThe  Japanese  offensive  in   Sui\nyuan province as bolstered with reinforcements of Mongolian horsemen, who slashed their way to vie\ntory over a detachment of 1500\nChinese soldiers at Shangtu on the\nSuiyuan border, according to a Japanese information received here,\nThe combined Japanese-Mongolian army then occupied Kaochiaci\na village 35 miles northeast of Cha-\nchuan, and started their advance\ninto Suiyuan this morning.\nWITHIN 15 MILES OF\nIMPORTANT 8TRONGHOLD\nPEIPING, Sept. 20 (AP)\u2014Japanese troops in tanks and armored\ntrains advanced tonight to within\n15 miles M Paotingfu, important\nChinese stronghold in north China.\nSteadily driving detachments ol\nstubborn Chinese defenders down\nthe Peiping-Hankow railway, Japanese occupied the towns of Kiu-\ncheng and Ansuhsien,\nOne of the major engagements of\nthe north China war, probably determining the outcome of that conflict, appeared shaping up at Paotingfu where large numbers of\nChinese soldiers are entrenched.\nEmployment of White\nGirls by Chinese Is\nMatter for the Police\nThat employment of white girls\nin Chinese cafes was a matter for\ntlie police department to regulate\nwas the reply of Mayor J. P. Morgan at the council meeting Monday\nnight when Alderman N. C. Stibbs\nstated he had received complaints of\nemployment of a white girl in a\nChinese restaurant in Nelson.\nBUSY CREWS GET AREHA IN SHAPE\nFOR FAIR, WHICH OPENS SEPT. 22nd\nWorking crews were busy all day\nMonday in the Civic Centre arena\npreparing it to accommodate the\nNelson fall fair, which opens Wednesday.\nBy Monday evening, a great platform was in place in the centre of\ntho arena, while everywhere the\ntables to hold the exhibits were in\nplace.\nErection of booths was under way\nMonday evening, and will be com-\npleled today.\nSTAGE EXHIBITS TODAY\nTuesday will see the exhibits pout-\nin from all directions, and over 200\nexhibitiors will be busy, staging\ntheir exhibits.\nOwing to the space being limited\nto the arena, some of the special\ndisplays are going to be cramped for\nroom. The space allotted the Nelson\nmanual training exhibit will accommodate only a small part of what it\nwas intended to show.\nAll exhibits must be in place Tues-\nday night.\nTuesday will also see the Midway\nburgeon on the Recreation grounds,\nwhere the Crescent Canadian Shows\nwill operate all the usual thrill-giving features, in addition to many\nsideshows.\nPerforming troups for the free attractions will be on hand Tuesday, to\nmake arrangements for their acts.\nSPECIAL TUESDAY\nSILKNIT LINGERIE\nPanties, Briefs. White, Nurose.\n39c\nSmall, medium\nand large. ...\nfjHEl\nwm\nReady-to-Wear\nPhone 73 Burnt Block\nFINE RESPONSE\nTO CITY DRIVE\n(LEAR UP DEBT\nWasson Tells Council\nServices Arrears\nAre Reduced\nACTION NEEDED\nIN SOME CASES\nA \"remarkable response' from the\nmajority ol Nelson residents in\nmeeting arrears of water, light and\nbusiness licences was reported lo\nthe city council Monday ni^ht by\nW. E. Wasson, city clerk, wnen he\npresented a summary of the current\ndrive to clean up old accounts.\nDrastic action would have to bs\ntaken, however, in the case of a few\nwho had neither paid up nor made\narrangements to pay up, Mr. Wasson\nstated. In some cases, as instructed\nby the city council, it would be\nnecessary to cut off water to delinquents until they arranged to meet\ntheir debts to the city, he added.\nThis action might be taken this\nweek.\nAt the end of May arrears for\nlight amounted to $11,154.15, and at\nthe end of August this figure had\nbeen reduced by over $2500 to\n$8537.80.\nArrears of water. $34,000, had been\ncut down about $5000 to $28,974,\nLicence arrears were $944.9Q compared with $1300 at the end of May,\nand it was hoped by the end of the\nyear to have these debts 9p per cent\ncleared up.\nThe response was exceptionally\ngood, in Mr. Wasson's opinion, since\nmany persons had been unemployed\nor partially employed over several\nyears. The electric light situation\nwas better each month and the practice had been instituted, when users\nbecame three months in arrears, ot\nnotifying them the service would be\ndiscontinued if not paid or arrangements made to pay,\nMr. Wasson felt the city's bad debt\nsituation, with a business of $12,000\nto $13,000 a month, was comparable\nwith that of trading companies in\nthe city.\n\"I don't think so,\" Alderman N. C,\nStibbs remarked, Alderman P. G.\nMorey agreeing the clerk had \"a\ncinch\" in collecting, since the services could be cut off.\n\"I haven't had a cinch until this\nyear,\" Mr. Wasson countered,\nPEASE IS VICTOR\nBUFFALO, N.Y., Sept. 20 (AP)-\nIrving Pease, 1571.-., Toronto, slugged\nhis way tonight to a six-round decision victory over Jamestown's\nJimmy Cark, 154V\u201e, United States\nmiddleweight Olympic representative at Berlin in 1936.\nSONNY  JONES  GETS   DRAW\nHOLYOKE, Mass., Sept. 20 (AP)\n\u2014Sonny Jones, 146, of Vancouver\nand Andre Jessburn, 146, of New\nYork turned in a classic 10-round\nfight here tonight before the official balloting returned a draw decision.\nLetter Carrier Service Not Likely\nin Trail, Nelson Until October 1st\nSwitch Assistant\nSuperintendents\nA switch of assistant division superintendents of the Canadian Pacific at Nelson took place Sunday,\nwhen A. P. Thompson, who came\nhere in the spring from Bassano,\nAlta., returned to his former prairie\npost, where his special qualifications\nare in demand in connection with\ntlie winter coal movement, while\nhis place here vMs taken by D. G.\nBeatty, who arrived Sunday morning from Broadview. Sask,\nIt was last spring that the division\ngot the additional assistant superintendent, A. J. Ironside of Cranbrook, having previously been the\n3, A despatch from the post office\ndepartment at Ottawa to W. K. Esling, M.P., Korienay-West, indicates\nlhat the Civil Service commission\nhas not yet determined the qualified applicants for tho positions of\nletter-carriers at Trail and Nelson\nand the indication is that the service\nin these two cities will not be inaugurated until November 1. The\nsituation is made clear in the following wire:\nOTTAWA, Sept. 20,1937\nW. K. Esling, M.P.\nRossland, B.C.\nDate of inauguration of letter carrier system for Trail and Nelson\ndepends upon the date on which the\nlists of qualified candidates are established by the Civil Service commission.- It is not possible at present\nto fix definite date but every effort is being made to commoncc on\nor before November first.\n1 \u25a0' \"Kmirnwnnn\nKIDNEY TROUBLE\nCauses Backache\nTo neglect the first symptom of\nKidney trouble might lead to very\nserious results. Your kidneys contain thousands of little filters, each\none having special work to perform.\nIf some of these filters become clogged, poisons and Uric acid enters lhe\nblood stream. The result is a backache a dead, heavy pain. The Uric\nacid deposits a fine granule in the\njoints, causing a pain known as\nrheumatism. Nox Kidney Flushers\nreally flush the kidneys, placing\nthem in a healthy, sound condition.\nNo more getting up at night\u2014no\nmore backache. That sallow complexion is replaced by a natural clear\nskin. Your eyes become bright and\nyour headaches disappear. Each\npackage of Nox Kidney Flushers\ncontains a full month's treatment\nThere is only one Nox Kidney Flusli-\ner\u2014they improve your entire general health. Your Kidneys and Liver\nwill function perfectly. Why not\nstart today on the road to good\nhealth, let Nox Kidney Flushers\nbring you good health. Sold at Fleu-\nry's Pharmacy, Nelson, B.C. (Advt)\nFINEST\nSAND\nAND\nGRAVEL\nFOR\nBUILDING\nPURPOSES\nFairview Fuel\nSupply tic Teaming Co.\nPHONE 701\n f^S^FSW^^?***\nmm\nmmmmm-imimw^m.wmwwm*M}<ww\nIJPIiWjipWi^HW^\nsas\nNELSON  DAILY NEWS, NELSON,  B.C.\u2014TUESDAY MORNING. SEPT. 21, 1937.\nNELSON SCOUTS\nSET PACE NOT\nEQUALLED B.C.\nThree Win Coronation\nKing's Scout Award;\nFew in Province\nSetting a pace unequalled in British Columbia, first Nelson Boy\nScout troop has three members who\nhave won a coronation King's Scout\ncertificate, signifying not only that\nthey have won the most-.sought\naward in scouting, but also thai\nthey achieved the standing within\na limited time set for winning of\nthe certificates.\n\"Ordinarily a lad who attains\nKing's Scout ranking receives only\na badge, for which he must rjualify\neach year, but in this year of the\ncoronation of King George VI a\nlimited time was given during which\nScouts reaching this standing were\nalso awarded coronation certificates\nexplained J. M. Dronsfield, district\ncommissioner, who presented the\ncertificates.\nProvincial headquarters informed\nhim few of the certificates were won\nin British Columbia.\nThe new King's Scouts are Morris\nAldersmith, troop leader; David\nRees, patrol leader; and Stanley\nHodgson, patrol leader. While they\nstill have to prove each year their\nqualification to wear the King'1:\nScout badge, they will retain the\ncertificates.\nTo obtain the badge, highest in\nscouting, the lads had first to obtain\nfirst class standing and then to pass\na number of special badge tests.\nTRAIL FIRM IS\nINCORPORATED\nJ. H. Matthews Co., Ltd., of Trail,\nhas been incorporated, the B. C.\nGazette reports.\nAuthorized capital of the company is $10,000 divided into 1000\nshares of $10 each. Registered office is care of Russell J. G. Richards. Kemp building, 1412 Bay street.\nThe company will \"purchase and\ncarry on\" the business of J. H. Matthews, plumber, heating contractor,\nand so on, at Trail.\nINDIAN CHIEF DEAD\nAFTER INJURED BY\nA MOOSE\nVANDERHOOF, B.C, Sept. 20\n(CP)\u2014Portage Pius, chief of the\nPortage Indians, died today in*.\nnearby Prince George hospital\nfrom gashes suffered when he\nwas attacked by a bull moose.\nChief Pius shot the moose and\nthinking it dead went for help\nto bring in the carcass. When he\nreturned with three other Indians the moose charged him.    \u2022\nALEX STEWART\nREVIEWS TRIP\nAT GYRO MEET\nAn interesting resume of his trip\nto the United States was unfolded\nby Alex Stewart, Nelson's chief of\ncity police, before the Nelson Gyros\nmeeting in the Hume Monday evening.\nMr. Stewart visited mostly sports\ncenlres on his trip and he related\nvisits to prize fights, horse racing\nand other sporting activities.\nS. C. Morris was appointed chairman at the coming fair, Ado Dieboll\nwho was placed in charge, appointed\nGeorge Dill and R. E. Crerar to prepare the two concession booths\nThey were given the power to appoint their own committees for the\nfair days.\nPAGE   THREE\nNELSON FAIR ENTRIES BREAK ALL\nRECENT RECORDS WITH 1(2) TOTAL\n202 Exhibitors Will Show Products;  Marty\nSections Have Entries Every Class;\nCalliope Starts Tuning Up\nAll records of recent years for\nentries at the Nelson fall fair Were\nbroken when George Horstead.\nmanager, closed the enldy lists for\nthe three-day district fair that opens\nWednesday.\nEntries number 1823, and represent 202 different exhibitors. Twenty-seven different localities are represented.\n366 VEGETABLE ENTRIES\nThe vegetable section will be a\nrecord-breaker, for there are 366\nentries in it, all 68 classes named in\nthe prize list being represented. In\nth,. tomato class alone there are\n20 entries. The fruit section, of 52\nclasses, has 336 entries, and there\nwill be 21 plates of Bartlett pears\nin the most numerous class. Field\nproduce has 24 entries, in 14 classes.\nThere are 251 entries in the canning section, with all 35 classes fill-\nel, and 18 exhibits in the canned peai\nclass. The home cooking section h3s\n195 entries, and only one class out\nof the 33 is left unrepresented.\nTwenty-three single loaves of bread\nconstitute the largest class in this\nsection. Altogether the judges wil1\nhave to p*ss upon 129 loaves of\nbread.\n45 FLOWER CLASSES FILLED\nThird largest section in the fair\nwill be the floral, which has just\n300 entries,  with  12  collections of\nCANADIAN U.S. WIRE FLASHES\nNOXACORN\nEach ptckai- contain! ipedal (faturw; ma_(\nrerlain you get the\nYELLOW TUBE AND PACKAGE,\nNoracoro Ii \u00bboM  only in tubei.    Your con\nremoved or money refunded at drug atorei\n*i5_\u2014ami Noxacorn today\nSold at: MANN, RUTHERFORD CO.\nThe Morning AfterTaking\nCarters Little Liver Pills\nABERHART HINTS\nAGAIN AT ELECTION\nEDMONTON. Sept. 20 (CP)\u2014I*\nAlbertans in sufficient numbers fail\nto sign \"blue pledges\" promising\nIn support the Social Credit government, it may bo \"compulsory\" to\ncall an election, Premier Aberhart\nasserted last night. In a week, 3l,37ti\nsigned pledges have been received,\nDISGUISE BUCK\nDEER AS DOE\nPORT ANGELES, Wash., Sept. 20\n(AP).\u2014If anybody shoots Roscow, a\ntwo-ycnr-okl mule deer, it won't be\nthe fault of friendly game protcC'\ntors. Roscow had been having things\npretty soft, living on handouts from\ncamps and farms. Then he grew\na set of four points horns. Game\nprotectors sawed off his horns in\nthe hope hunters will mistake him\nfor a doe.\nNO LIQUOR LICENCE\nFOR TRAILER STORE\nCOLUMBIA, S.C., Sept. 20 (AP),\n\u2014The state tax commission put its\nfoot down today on the request for\na licence to operate a liquor store\nin a trailer.\nCAPE BRETON\nELECTION OCT. 25\nOTTAWA, Sept, 20 (CP) .-Monday, Oct, 25, has been fixed as polling date for the by-election in Cape\nBreton North-Victoria, to fill the\nhouse of commons vacancy created\nby death of D. A. Cameron, Liberal\nmember.\nHURT IN  FIGHT\nIN  VANCOUVER  CAFE\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 20 (CP).-A\nfracas in a Chinatown cafe early\ntoday resulted in stab-wounds for\nJames Yelton, North Vancouver.\nBUCHAN'S NEW BOOK\nDEALS WITH AUGUSTUS\nNEW YORK, Sept, 20 (CP).-Lord\nTweedsmuir's new book, \"Augustus\"\nis for fall publication.\nThe book, a biography of the Ro\nman emperor, will be issued as \"by\nJohn Buchan,\" the name Canada'?\ngovernor-general made famous before he was raised to the peerage.\nELEVEN FATALITIES\nIN WASHINGTON\nSEATTLE, Sept. 20 (AP).\u2014Eleven\npersons were dead victims of weekend accidents in Washington state.\nAutomobiles claimed five lives, three\nother persons were killed in Grand\nCoulee dam construction mishaps,\na man and a baby were drowned\nand a former Minnesota educator\nwas fatally injured in a fall.\n__-  \u2022\nWILKINS QUITS\nSEARCH FOR RUSSIANS\nOTTAWA, Sept. 20 (CP). \u2014 Sir\nHubert Wilkins has decided to give\nup the hunt for the six Russian\nfliers in the Arctic.\nESCAPES WHEN POLICE\nOFFICER  FIRES THRICE\nVANCOUVER, Sepl. 20 . (CP).-\nPolice today sought an unidentified\nman who ignored three revolver\nshots fired over his head and escaped capture by Constable D. H. Grant.\nThe man was sighted moving\nthrough underbrush in the east-\nend. Persons told police he wore a\nwhite handkerchief over the lower\npart'of his face and kept one hand\nin his pocket as though holding a\ngun.\nTHREE AUTOMOBILE\nDEATHS  IN   ONTARIO\nTORONTO, Sept. 20 (CP) .--Accidents claimed four lives in Ontario\nduring the week-end, automobiles\nfiguring in three deaths and a hunting accident responsible for the\nfourth.\nSET FIRE WITHOUT\nPERMIT; FINED $25\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 20 (CP). -\nR. Walker, Hilliers, B. C, was fined\n$25 and costs for setting out a fire\nwithout a permit, G. E. Radford was\ngiven suspended sustence on a similar charge at Powell River.\nasters competing in the largest\nclass. In this section there are 45\nclasses, with every class filled.\nNeedlework has 268 entries, with\n1_ pillow-cases competing in one\nof the 81 classes. Fine arts has 70\nentries, in the 25 classes.\nThe inter-district contest, in the\nWomen's istitute class, will be the\nusual attraction, with Nakusp, Bon-\nnington-South Slocan, and Nelson\ninstitutes showing their varied products. There is one entry for tlvs\nindividual ranch display.\n, To complete this record, the dairy\nproducer section has six entries,\nand the honey, two.\nActive work started Monday in\nthe fair building, which will be the\narena at the civic centre, as all\nexhibits must be in place Tuesday\nnight.\nThe first notes of the calliope of\nthe Crescent Canadian shows merry-\ngo-round, which will be one of the\nmidway items, were heard in Nelson gunday, while the apparatus\nwas being tuned up at a garp^e.\nShark Tows\nBoat lh Hours\nGLASGOW, Sept. 20 (CP Cable)\n\u2014A wild ride in a little dinghy towed by a basking shark over a 100-\nmile zigzag route about the Nortli\nChannel of the Irish Sea for 24\nhours, provoking airplane searches\nand causing fire in an attending motorboat, today provided the weekend's saltiest tale from the sea.\nThree sharkhunters\u2014-Captain I. L.\nDavid, H. Webster and Harry Smith\n\u2014left the parent ship Myrtle Saturday in Carradale bay, Kintyre, and\nharpooned a 30-foot, 10-ton shark,\nwhich rushed around and about\nArgyllshire waters in a violent dash\nfor freedom.\nThey were members of a group\nattempting to find out whether a\nnew Scottish industry could be built\nup from the distillation of shark\nliver oil.\nIt was ]1 a.m. Saturday when the\nshark took the dinghy in tow. After\nit had been driven back by tide and\nwind in an attempt to reach the\nopen sea. the shark neared Mother-\nship and Tony Watkins, exnlorer,\nand Dr. Seccombe Hett. scientist,\neffected a perilous transfer to the\ndinghy, relieving the three crew\nmen, who scrambled back to the\nMyrtle.\nAs the shark continued its merry\ncourse throughout the day and Saturday night, several reliefs wore\nmade, hut at dawn, when Watkins\nand Webster were manning the dinghy, the Myrtle caught fire and was\nunable to keep up with the fast-\ntravelling shark.\nWhile the Mothcrship's occupants\nfought the flames, shark and dinghy\ndisappeared. The coastguard became\nalarmed. Three planes set out. and\neventually located the dinghy. The\nshark was almost exhausted but\nalive. Watkins and Webster, weary\nbut victorious, buoyed the shark and\nwent ashore.\nWashington Won't\nAct Between Lewis\nand A. F. L. Unions\nWASHINGTON. Sept. 20 (AP).-\nThe labor relations board declined\ntoday to act in dispute of the International Longshoremen's Union with\ntruck drivers.\n INCORPORATED   27? MAY 1670.\nSwitch IN\nHousehold\nMEDICINES\nENO FRUIT SALTS  79^\nLYDIA E. PINKHAM'S COMPOUND  $1.10\nSAL HEPATICA\u2014Large .... ?1.25\u2014Small .... 65^\nHBC MILK OF MAGNESIA  39?\nPETROLACAR\u2014 (Red Label)     $1.19\nHBC MALT EXTRACT With Cod Liver Oil   89?\nNU]OL   ..'   79?\nIRONIZED YEAST   $1.00\nKRUSCHEN SALTS     69?\nABSORBINE JUNIOR   $1.16\nBAYERS ASPIRINS \u2014 100's ... 9S?\u201424's ... 39?\nFLETCHER'S CASTORIA   35?\nMINARD'S LINIMENT     30?\nDENTAL NEEDS\nCOLGATE'S\u2014\nGiant size   35?\nHUTAX    25?\nKOLYNOS TOOTH\nPASTE     43?\nPEPSODENT TOOTH\nPASTE     39?\nPEBECO TOOTH\nPASTE     25?\nMASSO TOOTH\nBRUSHES\u2014Hard or medium bristle  > 25?\nBAYNAPS\nLarge Absorbent Napkins.       1Q^\nPer box of 12  lIZ\nKLEENEX\nFacial Tissue. 200 sheets in     1Q\npkg. Per pkg lIZ\nKOTEX\nEconomy Box of 48 napkins.\nEach\t\n79c\nBEAUTY AIDS\nWoodbury's TOILET SOAP\u2014 3 for 25?\nBABY'S OWN SOAP\u20143 for  25c*\nPOND'S SKIN TONIC   39?\nDaggett and Ramsdell's COLD OR VANISHING CREAM\u2014Economy jars,\nEach    49? m\\\\WlN\nCREAM OF OLIVES  39?     \u25a0,\u00bb..        ,,\nIERCEN . LOTION      39c      W5*Z^\nITALIAN BALM      29c        \\\\W^\nHIND'S HONEY AND ALMOND . 39?\nPOND'S COLD OR VANISHING CREAM\u2014\nEconomy jar. Each   49?\nNOXZEMA SKIN CREAM\u2014Regular 75c   59?\nPRINCESS PAT LEMON AND ALMOND  43?\nBE SURE\nYou Cet a Key to Captain Kidd's Treasure Chest With\nEvery Cash Purchase of 50c and Every 50c Paid on\nAccount\u2014Tuesday.\nHBC Grocery Specials\nON SALE TODAY, WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY\n193 Phones 194 Free City Delivery\nSOUP\u2014Aylmer, Tomato or Vegetable .... 3 tins 25?\nCOFFEE\u2014H B C Harmony Per Ib. 23?\nSEEDLESS RAISINS\u2014Australian 2 Ibs. 25C\nGREEN CUT BEANS\u2014Aylmer 17 ox. tins, 2 for .. 23?\nPEACHES\u2014Elberta.\nPer crate \t\n$1.49\nPEANUT BUTTER\u2014Squirrel, 2's\nLUSHUS JELLY POWDERS\t\nSPICED BEEF\u2014Swift's, sliced\t\nPEAS\u2014Sieve 5, Aylmer, 17 oi\t\nDARJEELING TEA\u2014Delicious flavor\nPer tin 28?\n3 pkgs. 23?\n. Per Ib. 25?\n. Per tin 11?\n. Per Ib. 87?\nPRUNE JUICE\u201412 ox. tins 2 for 23?\nPITTED DATES\u2014Fresh stock 2 Ibs. 25?\nCOCOA\u2014Fry's, Vl lb. tins Each 22?\nSOAP\u2014Fels Naptha 3 bars 23?\nSOUP MIX 3 Ibs. 25?\nWEIR DEFENDS\nSCHOOL COSTS\nVICTORIA. Sept. 20 (CP)-A defence of education costs in British\nColumbia was presented today by\nG.   M.   Weir,   provincial  education\nminister, in an address to the annual\nconvention of the British Columbia\nSchool Trustees association.\nSpeaking at a luncheon meeting.\nDr. Weir said only three nnd a half\nper cent of the taxes paid by the\naverage wage earner went to education.\n\"Is that a large amount when it is\nconsidered 25 per cent of the population is attending school?\" he asked.\nThe minister said education expenditures were not increasing in\nBritish Columbia; and that changes\nmade in the list of text books during the past few years resulted in a\nnet savings to parents, and not\nrise in cost.\nIn records on almost 60,000 instances where fires have started automatic sprinkler apparatus working, the sprinklers either extinguished or checked the flames.\nWE HAVE REDUCED THE PRICE ON EVERY USED CAR\nBUY A GUARANTEED CAR\nOnly a Small Down Payment\nChoose the car you want from\nour large selection and drive\nit home the same day\u2014A nominal down payment with the\nbalance arranged on low\nmonthly terms is all that is necessary for you to own a car\nthat you will be proud of and\none that will give you many\nmiles of guaranteed transportation,\nWE MUST CLEAR THEM ALL OUT BEFORE WINTER\nREDUCED TO YOUR PRICE\nUnconditional 30-Day Guarantee\nEvery car has been carefully examined and reconditioned by our own\nmechanics. You receive a guarantee\nwith every car giving you free service against mechanical defects for\n30 days. All cars have been inspected and approved.\nCHECK THESE TYPICAL\nLOW PRICES\nCARS TO\nFIT ANY BUDGET\n1936 Plymouth R. S. Coupe:\nRadio and heater. ?Q7C\nPrice       Old\n1935   De   Luxe   Plymouth\nCoupe: $771.\n12,000 miles     \u2022 \u2022 J\n1936 Dodge Sed-A*f\u00a3\nan. Low mileage    jp J J)\n1936 Dodge AAA\nCoupe.  Like  new ywv\n1932 Chevrolet\n2-door Sedan . .\n385\n1929 Chevrolet    f(Df_\n2-door Sedan . . . ir9j\nVALUES\nIN EVERY MAKE\nPEEBLES MOTORS\nWe Have Many Other Cars\nFrom Which to Choose\nGUARANTEED\nPHONE 119\nLIMITED\nUSED CARS\nRECONDITIONED\nNELSON, B. C.\nA Free Demonstration Is\nYours for the Asking\n1934 Chrysler Sedan: A-l\ncondition. $QAA\nPrice     OUU\n1932   Studebaker   Special:\nHigh Six. ?C7C\nPrice      vlO\nOnct afro*, a SAlt tCi&\u00a3 th*\/U\u00bb>W&uckd Ckvt^-Un6t\u00a3kva6k Saouttf.\n\u25a0 A^fa.,..,_.\u201ek.,     .\n JMipipilpppippppif\nmfjj^mj^mmsm^^\nmmms - \u25a0 \u25a0   nilson daily n#w\u00bb, nblson, b. (..-Tuesday morning, sept. 21,1937.\nSITS OF QUEEN MARY TO ALMSHOUSES ARE FRUITFUL\n 1 A\npDrfve Forward . . ,\n\\ Go Back lo School\nKeep on Learning;\nCounsel lo Youth\nA New Nelson Resident\n&\nBy GARRY C, MYERS, PH. D.\nThere are a good many thousand\n~ boys and girls who could greatly\n\u2022' profit from going on to school hut\nR who, because of discouragement\u2014\n^.failing, perhaps, to pass their grades\nI or to graduate with their class\u2014\n40, have decided not to go back to\n^school this fall. Often I wish I\nR might be able to sit down face to\n'\"-face with this youth and try to\nK help him or her to reverse this de-\nw cision.\n\u00a3>    I think I know how this young\nii' person feels. He sees his classmates\nmoving on while he must lag. He\nsuffers from feelings ot inferiority.\nTo return to school and mingle wilh\nyounger  students  would  magnify\nthe suffering he supposes. Therefore he decides to do the easiest\nthing and run away from the im-\n,   mediately unpleasant. But what he\nflails to see is the far greater un-\nSI pleasantness he is bringing to him-\n'self for later years, lie fails now\n\u25a0\u25a0   to realize the remorse he will suffer\nB_ in years to come when, as he looks\nI 3 back, he will say to himself, \"Why\nK- was I so foolish?  If  only I had\nsuch an opportunity now.\"\nI*   My dear young friend: Let me en-\n:.'treat you to return to school and\n\u00bb'; to drive  steadily forward to the\nPj best future you can make for your-\nI 'sell Even though you can get a job,\n.. you will be keeping an older and\n. more deserving person from it,\nKeep on Learning\nAnd you young folk who have\ngraduated from high school or college; Let me beg of you to keep\non learning. In case you have a\nI   job, don't spend  all your leisure\n\u00a3 j hours at empty pleasure. Perhaps\ngl you can take a course or two in a\n' local night high school or college.\nNo such being available, consider a\ncorrespondence course.\nAnd you have the public library.\nDo use it. Ask the librarian to\nhelp you plan a good reading\ncourse. Though we live in the age\nof books, we also live in lhe age\nwhen books are woefully neglected.\nAnd if you have no job. how\nmuch more important it will be for\nyou to set yourself to keep on learning. See the university of books\nright outside your door. And they\n';  are free! \u2022\n_\t\nLiving Room in\nModern Home Is\nSimply Treated\nEJ Dressing up a room in this day ot\nI . simple lines frequently means dress-\nIn ing it down. Except for the house\nIJJ that harks back to the Victorian\n\" era. a lot of frills are out of place\nin a room lhat is to be what ihe\nname implies\u2014a living room.\nThe walls of a living room had\nbeen finished in a rough plaster\nand had panels of narrow moulding.\nAn ornate mantel with a fancy mirror occupied one wall. The electric\nlight fixtures were highly ornamental.\nFirst of all. in the rejuvenation of\nthe room, the panels were removed.\nThe walls were finished in an off-\nwhite shade and there were no light\nbrackets or other ornamentations to\ndetract from the few pictures which\nthe hostess decided to hang.\nA plain mantel was substituted for\nthe more ornate one. An unframed\nmirror was hung over it. White Venetian blinds were hung at the windows and took the place of glass\ncurtains.\nWith this background the housewife combined modern furniture\nand some pieces which had been in\nthe family for generations. Tlie room\ndepended on these furnishings tor\ncolor, the background being without a trace of it.\nPersian scatter nigs lent brilliance\nto a grey carpet. Modern versions\nof Victorian chairs were covered in\nplum and gold damask and a rnfri\n|*_,was upholstered in chartreuse satm.\nLamps- were white. Cigarelte boxes\nMiss Beity Dodd, late of North Battleford, Sask., now resident of\nNelson indicates she likes ice cream made in Nelson, the sunshine of\nthe Kootenays and the refreshing waters of the west arm of Kootenay\nlake. She was snapped while at Lakeside park.\nDoes Not Keep Promise < , _\nHusband Made Pledges lo Win Wife\nbut later tie Forgot All About Them\nBy VIRGINIA LEE\nCircular Movement..\nDaily Massage ol\nScalp Is Ihe Most\nEffective of Tonics\nBy GLADYS GLAD\nSome years ago, I am told, a\nyoung woman mysteriously lost\nall her hair overnight. This lass\nwent In bed in perfect health, but\nawoke to find her hair completely\ngone. And more amazing still, no\ntrace of the hair could be found\nin the bed or about the room.\nThe poor girl must have gotten\nan awful shock when she first\ncaught sight of herself that morning. And show me the girl who\nwouldn't be shocked at suddenly\nfinding herself completely bald!.\nOf course, women today don't\nhave to worry much about becom-\nJjlAp\n<: u   i\u20acrX_____\nAnn Southern\nHer hair U soft,fluffy.\ning bald. But they do have the\nproblem of thinning hair to contend with. Women often become\nalarmed at, lhe sight of a few hairs\nin their brush and comb. They immediately begin to believe that\nthey .are approaching baldness. And\nthey really needn't. For the normal\nand other accessories were Chinese.\nAn Oriental vase and a bowl of\nwhite flowers were the only mantel\ndecorations. The reflection of the\nroom in the mirror, added to the\nimpression of spaciousness.\nThe room, although Its furnishings were formal, gave an appearance of a livable apartment, thoroughly enjoyed by the members of\nthe family.\nscalp   clings   tenaciously   to   the\nhairs growing from it.\nIndeed, the scalp muscles that\njrip the hairs individually and collectively, can develop amazing\npower. I remember once seeing a\nChinese aerial performer, for Instance, who hung by his hair from\ntrapeze.\nIt is a good idea for women to\nattempt to develop the scalp\nmuscles and thus increase their\npower to grip the hair firmly.\nDaily massaging of the scalp is excellent for this purpose. Oddly,\nenough, few women today seem to\nrealize the excellent benefits that\naccrue from systematic scalp massaging. They'll spend large sums\nof money for various scalp tonics,\nand yet they'll neglect the most\neffective hair tonic of all \u2014 the\nbiood!\nCorrect Procedure\nThe hair roots in the scalp are\nsurrounded by minute blood vessels. It is from these numerous\ntiny blood vessels that the hair\nroots obtain their nourishment.\nThe health and beauty of the hair\ndepend upon the quality of nourishment that these hair roots absorb, and if the circulation in\nthe scalp is sluggish, that quantity\nis bound to be small, and the hair\nwill become dull and lifeless from\nlack of sufficient nutrition.\nTo massage your scalp correctly,\nplace your thumbs at the hairline\nat the nape of your neck, with one\nthumb on each side of the spinal\ncolumn. Spread your fingers over\nthe top of your head, covering as\nwide an area as you can.\nThen, pressing tlie fingers firmly,\nrotate the scalp until it moves freely. Continue to move the scalp\nover your skull in slow, circular\nmovements, and shift your fingers\nuntil every part of your scalp has\nbeen treated.\nAnother good method of stimulating lhe circulation in the scalp\nis by lifting the scalp from the\nhead. Take a portion of; the scalp\nbetween your thumb and index\nfinger and lift it. Do this gently\nover your entire head. Then place\nyour hands on the sides of your\nhead,  and  lift  the scalp upward.\nIt's easy to promise things be-1\nfore you marry the gill, but it is\nanother matter to carry them out\nafter the wedding excitement has\ndied down It is like political campaign promises\u2014much easier to\nmake than to fulfill when elected\nto office.\nANXIOUS is a middleaged\nwidow who married a widower\nsome years her senior, and who\npromised her, if she would marry\nhim, to deed his house to her nnd\nalso to make her the beneficiary\nof his insurance. Well, he has\ndone neither, and as Anxious gave\nup a home that her father had\nkept for her to marry the man, she\nfeels as if she was going to get the\nlittle end' of the deal. Her father\nhas since sold the house he was\nkeeping for her.\nAnxious' husband supported 15\nchildren and grandchildren through\nthe depression, but after his first\nwife died they all left him to pay\ntheir debts and would not even\nspeak to him. \"Please tell me how\nyou would solve this riddle,\" begs\nAnxious.\nCan't you speak to the representative of the company in which\nyour husband has his insurance,\nAnxious, and tell them of his intention? Maybe they can persuade\nhim to put it in your name, Of\ncourse if your husband dies before\nyou do you can claim your widow's\nthird in his estate anyway. That\nis the law. But as his relatives\nhave benefited so much in the\npast by his generosity, and have\nbeen ungrateful, you should make\nevery effort to persuade him to do\nas he promised concerning the\nhouse and insurance.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nKISKIE is 18 and is madly in\nlove with a boy of 23. Her father\nis very much opposed to her having\nanything to do with this boy, however, as she is a southerner and he\nis a northerner. The boy has gone\naway for a while, and he doesn't\nknow that Kiskie has been forbidden to go with him. How can she\nbreak the bad news to hint?\nIf Dan comes back, of course he\nwill have to know.that your father\ndoesn't like him and won't let him\nWOMAN AMMONIA VICTIM\nLEEDS, England (CP)\u2014Two 16-\nyear-old boys pleaded not guilty to\nsquirting ammonia at a woman with\nintent to rob. The woman was seriously burnt, and lost the use of one\neye.\ncome to see you. I should think he\nwould make a point of seeing your\nfather and having a talk with him.\nYour dad wouldn't be likely to\nshoot him or anything like-that,\nwould he? Maybe he can convince\nyour father that he is all right.\nAnyhow stop being so dramatic\nabout it. Fathers have opposed\ntheir daughters marriages before\nnow and girls have married the\nmen \u2014 and they sometimes have\nwished they hadn't.\n.  *   *\nPATRICIA wants to advise\nBlonde, the girl who is so tall and\nthin lhat she is afraid people don't\nlike her. Patricia says that unusual height isn't so noticeable if the\ntall person isn't selfconscious about\nit, and tells of a friend whom she\nhelped. \"Really, Blonde, it is not\nhalf as bad if you forget about\nit. As my girl friend became older\nshe got. fatter. Eat and sleep and\nyou will look healthy and happy.\"\nAbout friends, she advises Blonde\nto talk to the neighbor girls and\ninvite them to her home, turn on\nthe radio and dance, then later, go\nfor walks. If she does not know\nhow to dance, learn.. \"Please let\nme know, through Virginia Lee's\ncolumn, how you are getting on,\"\nshe concludes.\nYour letter was a little too long\nto put in in its entirety. Patricia\nso I hope I got enough in to help.\nThank you, dear.\n\u2022   *   *\nSTEADY READER: If your salary is so small that you cannot\nplan on getting married to this\ngirl you are engaged to, it seems\nthat if she is the right kind of\ngirl she will tell you she doesn't\nwant you to go to the expense of\nbuying an engagement ring. That\nis, after all, an uneccessary expense. Better save your money toward a time when you have a\nlarger salary and can plan the future together.\nIf she demands expensive presents knowing that your salary is\nsmall. I think she is selfish and\nmercenary and would not be a\nvery helpful wife. What do you\nthink? Or maybe you are so much\nin love you cannot think clearly\nabout her.\nLondon Season Livens Up; Canadians\nBusy on Development of Television\nBy MOLLIE McGEE IBall Nov. 24. Already 20 charity\nCanadian Press Correspondent      balls are listed to take place before\n\u2022LONDON,  (CP).\u2014It is no mere | Christmas.   Television   parties   are\nSerial Story . . ,\nRustle of Silks\nBy MARIE BLTZARD\nCHAPTER 34\nThe next year passed swiftly,\nMaribarat was a new name in the\n\u25a0couture world watched with interest and with skepticism. She\nwas yet too new to have been tried.\nBefore her others had come, new\nstars in the firmament that had\nflared and faded quickly.\nAdvised now by a large committee of representatives from\nher backers, she was cautioned to\nbe conservative. And, weaned by\nthe intensity of her efforts, her\nromantic dreams spent, she was\nglad enough to follow the lines\nprescribed for her. Her establishment had grown to such proportions\nthat much of the executive work\nhad been apportioned to others.\nOnly in the creation of her models\nwas she sole mistress,\nShe had little time or inclination to regard her work or herself from a standpoint of art. Jt\nwas only when beautiful new\nfabrics were there for her sensitive fingers to touch and respond\nto that any of the things she had\nfelt years before returned to her,\nWith a wealth of rich velvets,\nof clinging sheers, of metallics or\nsupple wools before her, with her\nsketch pad in hand, then she was\n\u201e    , ,  .     ..       .,    ,;.\u201e\u00ab\u201e,.. j\u201e I as   she   had   always   been.   From\nThe forma  satin suit whether In   her \u00a3oft pencil( ^erui]ess flow of\nthe pastel shades or black, is an   beautiful lines emerged.\nideal ensemble for a fill-in or for       The hum  of  work  was  never\nregular wear. slack   in   the   third   floor   work-\nLli\nALPINE MILK\n\"PURE AS THE SNOW\nON MOUNTAIN PEAKS\"\nTRY THIS RECIPE\nIt's Ideal When Made With\nALPINE MILK\nCARAMEL ICING\n1'4 cups granulated sugar, % cup brown\nsugar, 2 tbsp. butter, 1 cup Alpine milk,\nV\/2 tsps. vanilla. Blend milk and sugar.\nAdd butter and cook until mixture forms\na soft ball when tasted in cold water.\nCool; add vanilla. Beat until of consistency\nto spread.\nA WESTERN PRODUCT\nFOR WESTERN PEOPLE\nPURE - RICH - SAFE\nReducing Lunch . .\nhints for\nhousewives\nMenu Hint\nLUNCHEON\nBanana Tricorne Salad\nMelba Toast\nCookies Milk\nDINNER\nBroiled Ham       Baked Peaches\nBaked Potatoes        Squash\nHaw   Carrot   Strips\nApple Pie' Cheese Coffee\nEven the reducer may Indulge in\nthe luncheon menu of salad and\nMelba toast, if she does not eat\ntoo many cookies to make up tlie\nlost calories. Bananas and milk are\na notoriously good combination of\nfoods, recommended by dietitians\nand physicians. The dinner menu is\nbaked in the oven, the Jiroiler being\nused for the ham, and may also be\nused for the peaches which are halved, stoned and either baked or\nbroiled, to be served around the\nmeat on the platter. Bake the squash\nin its shell, and serve with plenty\nof butter and seasoned with pepper\nand salt. Fresh apples pie is my favorite dessert.\nToday', Recipe.\nBANANA   TRICORNE   SALAD.\nDURITY\nFLOUR\nMAKES BETTER OREAD\n\u2014Quarter a peeled ripe banana by\ncutting once crosswise and once\nlengthwise. Arrange three of the\nbanana quarters to form a triangle\non each salad plate. Pile canned\nor fresh cherries or purple grapes\nin the centre of the trtangle. Cut\ncanned pineapple rounds into halves.\nand arrange three or four overlapping in a row at. \"apex\" of banana\ntriangle. Place wedges of cheese on\neach side of the bananas and garnish\nwith greens. Serve with French\ndressing.\nFACTS  AND   FANCIES\nCorn Relish\nThirteen cups corn, thirteen cups\nchopped cabbage, four sweet red or\ngreen peppers, two cups brown sugar, two quarts vinegar, two tablespoons salt, one-half cup dry mustard, one tablespoon flour. Cut the\nsweet corn from the cob. Combine\ningredients in order named, making a paste wilh vinegar, mustard,\nsalt and flour. Cook twenty minutes, after boiling point is reached,\nstirring frequently. Turn into sterile jars and seal.\nLittle Things in Cakes\nThere are many small details to\nbe watched in making oakes. For\nexample, there is the matter oE\ncleaning off the spoon and cleaning\ndown the sides of the bowl carefully and thoroughly after creaming the butter. If this is not done,\nthose flecks of butter and sugar\nmay be mixed in the batter the\nlast minute and cause soggy lumps\nthrough the cake hatter.\nIn the matter of sifting the flour\nbefore measuring, someone said recently that she never sifted the flour,\nbecause she felt the additional flour\nwas needed. Recipes today call for\naccurate measuring, and if flour\nis not sifted before measuring too\nmuch flour will be used in the cake,\nresulting in one which has a dry,\n_-,_.,__\u201e  i\u2014.\u201e.!., -4_.__\u00bb.*_.....:,._._____________\n\"Miss Wade wanted us kids\nshould commute with nature for a\nhalf-hour ever day, think some\nbeautiful thought, an' tell the class\nwhat they is. I hab sat too near the\nkitchen window,- I guess. All I\nseems to commute with is hot apple\npie.\"\nrooms. Her mannequins had no\nlayoff seasons. For all that her\nprices ascended, her clientele did\nnot fall off. She had a rotating\ntrade; there were the seasons when\nthe \"buyers from New York, still\nwary because she was not yet\nconsidered one *of the exclusive\ngroup of the big house, yet,\ntempted by the adaptability of\nher collection, made their visits\nand bought prodigiously of her.\nShe had the trade of the continent\nand of America.\nIt was then that she first discovered her dislike of designing\nfor actresses. Larry Hoik advisea\nher that she must cultivate their\nsponsorship; there was \"nothing tp\nequal the publicity value of doing\na play\".\nMari would not tell him where\nthe complex had begun, or what\nbitter memories it invoked.\nShe had changed in many ways\nin that year. When, at the be'\nginning, she had realized how little of her own business was her\nown, and how completely the res-\nponsiblity was hers, it had laid\nheavily on her mind. Then, as time\npassed and the records were there\nfor her to know how well she was\nsucceeding, she had a new world\nweariness. She didn't, know that\nit was a lack in her life. Previously her ambition had sustained her\nand had made up to her for other\nthings that women want, and now\nthat her ambition was in the process of realization, she found it an\nempty thing.\nWith her responsibility had come\na rjew aloofness, a point of view\ntowards life that was deliberately\nunobjective. She did not want to\nview life and its relation to her,\nyet she was not prepared to be\nobjective.\nShe asked nothing more than to\nhe a passive observer save in the\nhours when she was passionately\nengaged in her work.\nYou saw that in her. You saw\n|- her withdrawal. You saw it in\nher manner, her gracious attention\nthat was seemingly all yours, yet\nyou felt that she had never been\ntouched and would never retain\nwhat she had heard.\nThere were men n her ife that\nyear. Attracted by her cool beauty,\nner impersonal attitude, they\nthought she was mysterieuse; They\n(Continued on Page Five)\nValuable Food . . .\nMany Ways Make\nMilk Palatable if\nYeu Den'l Like II\nBy LOGAN CLENDENING, M. D.\n\"I have been advised to drink\nmilk, but it does not agree with\nme. I can't stand it, What shall I\ndo?\"\nThis wail that comes to my desk\nis one that doctors have to answer\nall the time.\nTo analyze the situation we can\nrecognize tljat there are four possible reasons why milk disagrees,\nand they may be catalogued clearly by answering the following questions.\n1. Does milk disagree with you\nevery time you drink it or just sometimes?\n2. Does It give the same digestive\nsymptoms every time is disagrees\nor do they vary?\n3. Does it affect your digestion\nalone?\n4. Can you take milk In other\nfoods\u2014in coffee, tea or ice cream,\nin bread, with oatmeal?\nThe first group of milk disagreers\nare those with a slight digestive\ndisturbance anyway \u2014 an irritable\ncolon or a mild gallbladder infection. Milk, with all its excellencies,\nis a particularly digestive food, and\nthese people in the periods when\ntheir digestive functions are upset\n_evolt at it.\nThe second group is a modification\nof the first, and without any definite digestive disorders they have a\nsensitive digestive tract in some way\nwhich milk upsets. In some people\nmilk produces a diarrhea, in some\na constipation. When it is well digested'it is constipating, when not.\ndiarrhea results. Modifying the\nmilk, using boiled, skimmed milk,\nwill get around the tendency to\ndiarrhea. And adding cream will\nget around the constipating effect\nThe curd in. cow's milk is large.\nBoiling the milk lessens the curd,\nThat is why it makes it more digestible. The addition of carbonated\nwater, or lime water, does the same\nthing. A mixture of equal parts of\nmilk, cream and carbonated water\nis more palatable and more digestible than plain milk.\nCURDLED MILK DIGESTED\nThe best way to insure against\nthe formation of large* curds is to\ncurdle the milk before ingestion.\nThat is why in this group buttermilk, junket and Koumyss are better tolerated than raw milk.\nThe third group are those who\nare allergic to milk. They should\nhave, to prove this, other symptoms\nthan those referable to the digestive\nsystem\u2014such as hives or asthma,\nI believe these cases must be far\nrarer than the reports one hears\nindicate. A great deal of harm has\nbeen done by taking people off\nsuch necessary articles of fund as\nmilk on very flimsy evidence of\nits allergic qualities. The cases I\nhave heard of strike me as being\nvery poorly analyzed.\nThe last group, the group who\nsays yes to question 4, are those\nwho have a psychic aversion for\nmilk. It is the largest group. I must\nsay I have a great deal of sympathy\nwith them. Intellectually I praise\nmilk, gastronomically the smell and\ntaste of it are insipid beyond words,\nBut for these milk soups, milk\npunches, egg noggs, ice cream and\neven the addition of cream, half\nand half, solves the difficulty.\nTlie modification of milk for\nadults should be .studied as much\nas it has been for children. With\nproper resourcefulness nearly any\nprejudice can be overcome.\ncasual inspection Queen Mary\nmakes on a visit to a charitable\ninstitution. She is always prepared\nwith a cane or umbrella to climb\nflight of stairs. She asks innumerable questions and has a keen eye\nfor discrepancies or innovations.\nHer suggestions and contributions\nare practical and to the point.\nWhile the Queen Mother holidayed at Sandringham she visited an\nalmshouse for the aged at Castle\nRising, a village nearby. A few days\nlater, while a guest at Heacham,\nNorfolk, she went shopping and the\nalmshouse received some much-\nneeded comfortable furniture.\nOn Sept. 13, Queen Mary began\nher annual visit to Princess Mary\nand the Earl of Harewood at Harewood House near Leeds. She is expected to stay about two weeks\nbefore returning to London.\nMeanwhile the refurnishing of\nroyal palaces in town is nearing\ncompletion. Tlie little Princesses'\nnight nursery has a gay coat of\nsoft yellow paint with a dado of\nbright animal pictures. The Duke\nand Duchess of Gloucester's apartments in St. James palace have been\nrenovated.\nTlie trek of the fashionable back\nto town has started but most first\nvisits are short and to view advance\nfashion shows. One dress house\npresented every woman attending\nthe show with a gardenia, and it\nwas amusing to notice how many ot\nthese flowers appeared later at\nsmart restaurants and at the theatre.\nLittle seamstresses will be busy\nfor the next months for fine handwork is playing an important part\nin the new evening fashions presented. The use of metallic embraid-\nery sponsored by royalty at coronation time is quite papular with\nsequins and beading even appearing on daytime wear in dull opaque\ncolors.\nOne of the most important fall\nfunctions  will  be  the  Ked  Cross\nShould Soak Lawn\nOnce or Twice a Week\nThe most important factor in\nmaintaining a good lawn is correct watering. Faulty watering has\nbeen the cause of more lawfi failures than any of the other many\nmistakes that are made in lawn\nmaintenance, yet the correct method is easier and requires less personal effort.\nIf you sprinkle a lawn every\nnight it causes the roots of the\ngrass plants to grow upwards because tho top inch or two of the\nground is kept moist while the\nstrata directly beneath remains dry.\nIf you do not have a sprinkler\nattachment lay the hose across a\nboard laid flat on the ground and\nlet the water wash across the lawn.\nIf you have a sprinkler, divide\nthe lawn area into sections and\nplace the splinkler in the center\nof each section, ktling it flow\nfor 20 to 30 minutes once a week\nor in very dry weather twice a\nweek.\nONE   MINUTE   PULPIT\nHe that goeth forth and weep-\neth, bearing precious seed, shall\ndoubtless come again with rejoicing,\nbringing his sheaves with him.\u2014\nPsalm  126:6\nthe   latest  week-end  house  party\nentertainment.   Regular   programs\nare published and Canadians take\na prominent part in their making.\nCANADIANS  IN  TELEVISION\nJoan Millar of Vancouver, to be\nremembered as \"Elizabeth the\nQueen\" who won the prize for the\nbest individual performance in the\nOttawa Drama festival of 1934, was\nthe first woman to be given a television contract by the B.B.C. She\nis known as the \"Picture Page\nGirl.\"\nGuy Glover, young actoivpro-\nducer who brought' his troupe of\nunemployed players from Vancouver to Ottawa in 1936, giving performances of \"Waiting for Lefty\"\nto pay their way and eventually\ntaking an Ottawa prize, now is a\ntelevision performer, Elaine Wod-\nson of Toronto is another, while\nElizabeth Sutherland, winner of the\nToronto dramatic contest has arrived to take a screen test with\nAlexander Korda and may also\njoin the crowd.\nOn Sept 28 a television program\n\"Turn Around\" is to be taken on\nthe Empress of Britain at Southampton. Arrival and departure\nscenes picturing the activities surrounding a great liner making a\n24-hour \"turn around\" will form\nthe background of the play to be\nreleased by the B.B.C.\nA Canadian who is making a\nbig \"turn around\" is Marjorie Gordon of Winnipeg, daughter of \"Ralph\nConnor\" the author, and confidential secretary of Malcolm Macttonald\nBritish secretary for the dominions.\nShe sailed during the first week in\nSeptember for Canada via China\nwith Jean McKay of Winnipeg.\nThey will arrive home in November.\nVelvet dresses with lace tops are\ndestined for great popularity for\nluncheon frocks, or for the afternoon bridge.\nEnjoy their freshness* color, taste\nand nourishment . . . rememher\nthese peas are positively NON-\nFATTENING.\n^^.BMAKFASTCfjjf4j\nMK-!\n.*?\n;c\nA 100% WHOLEWHEAT.     -\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022 ALL THE ENe-q^I\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022 AU \u2122E PRoj-p, '\n. ALL THE\n8\u00ab4*<\nMUFFETS\nBRAND\nWHOLE WHEAT BISCUITS ...MADE BY THE QUAKER OATS COMPANY\n mmr\t\n\t\niiillll<|ifM\u00bbi.\u00bbMWairii'i.^M^w\u00bb^^^ \u25a0i.J~.w>\u00bbWM.<.^F.g?^,y~-\n19&.\nDevelopment of\nSchool Grounds\nNow Under Way\nSchool  Board Launch\nProgram at Central,\nJunior High\nPlans of the Nelson school board\nfor development of the grounds of\nthe junior high and Central school\ngrounds are beginning to show ef-\nXect.\nBulldozer, gasoline shovel and\ngrader have been employed at the\njunior high, where two large playgrounds will be developed. At different levels, owing to the contour\nof the ground, the two will be separated by a path to the school entrance. Material from the higher\nlevels .of the previously uneven\ngrouhds and from a bank beside\nthe school on Robson street have\nbeen used to marked effect in establishing the two levels. Passersby\nare now able to see what is planned,\nand how it is to be accomplished,\nConsiderable heavy rock was encountered in the grading.\nAt Central school shade trees\nalong Carbonate street were unrooted by a tractor to make possible\nthe construction of a rock wall, now\nunder way. The wall ultimately will\nbe carried lo lhe level of the present\ngrounds on the Carbonate .street\nside and fill made behind it,\nSo far it has not been possible to\nstart the work planned on the Hume\nschool grounds,\nThe board proposes to carry its\nprogram along as far as funds permit this year, and to continue in the\nfuture on this basis, pressing completion at every opportunity.\nPLANE HITS POLE\nSEATTLE, Sept. 20 (AP)\u2014Two\nGrays Harbor men. Pilot Harry Galloway and John W. Katsonis, were\nslightly injured today when an airplane sheared a telephone pole 14\nmiles south of here near the Blue\nJay inn.\nCity Band Plays\nto a Park Crowd\nNelson city band entertained another large crowd of swimmers\nand park visilors at Lakeside park\nSunday afternoon. Many of the sel*\nections were well received and\nespecially the last one, a selection\nfrom the musical fantasy, \"Woodland\" by Gustav Luders. Fred L.\nIrwin conducted the band.\nProgram follows: March, \"Winning Colors\"\u2014J. E. Wells; medley.\n\"Sweet Old Songs\"\u2014C. W. Dalbey;\n\"Simple Aveu\"\u2014G. F. Thome; idyl,\n\"The Glow-worm\"\u2014Paul Linches;\n\"Humareske\"\u2014Anton Dvorak; \"The\nHoly City\"\u2014Stephen Adams; selection of well known standard songs,\n\"Old Favorites\"\u2014Julius S. Seredy;\nselection from the musical fantasy,\n\"Woodland\"\u2014Gustav Luders.\nAustralian Labor\nHead for Defence\nbut Chiefly in Air\nFREEMANTLE, Western Australia\nSept. 20 (CP)\u2014John Curtin, federal Labor leader, opened his general\nelection campaign here today with\na declaration that, if returned to\npower October 23, labor would give\ntlie Commonwealth Bank complete\ncontrol over the nation's credit and\ninterest rates and direction of general investment and external currency\nrelations.\nLabor, Curtin said, supported Australia rearmament, but would not\nsupport the compulsion of any citizen to serve in foreign battlefields.\nLabor would maintain the Commonwealth navy. The strength of the\nAustralian defence, he continued, lay\nin its aviation. Labor would maintain an air force equal to any that\nmight, possibly be used against the\ncountry.\nA Frencli trawler was arrested off\nDover for poaching.\nOrange Pekoe Blend\n'SALAD\/.\nTEA\nNELSON OAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.\u2014TUESDAY MORNING. SEPT. 21, 1937.\nThree Motorists\nPay $82.50 for\nViolating Laws\nThree men arraigned in city police court Monday before William\nBrown, police magistrate, on charges ot violating motor laws, paid\nfines totalling $82.50.\nGeorge P. LeFort paid a fine of\n$35 on a charge of driving to the\ncommon danger on Front street, Saturday.\nAnother fine of $35 was paid by\nD'Arcy Hughes. Hughes was charged with driving to the common danger Sunday on Nelson avenue when\nhis car leaped a roclt wall and landed in the front yard of Jack Hooger-\nwerf.\nAlfred Carr was fined $12.50 for\nfailing to produce a driver's licence when requested to do so by Inspector John McDonald of the provincial police. Information concerning the charge was laid by Sergeant\nRobert Harshaw of the city police.\nTrain B.C Youth\nfor Industry, She\nUrges Trustees\nVICTORIA, Sept. 20 (CP)-Train-\ning of British Columbia's youth to\ntake its place in industry was recommended today by Mrs. Paul Smith\nmember of the provincial legislature for Vancouver-Burrard, to the\nBritish Columbia School Trustees'\nassociation.\nMrs. Smith told the' 76 delegates\nthe University only provided opportunity for professional training for\n10 per cent of high school graduates.\n\"What about the other 90 per\ncent?\" she asked. \"We are faced\nwith the problem of occupational\ntraining after the children leave\nschool. We haven't given them\nthat opportunity.\n\"Today industry demands trained workmen and our big problem is\npreparing the 90 per cent for occupational and industrial training before they leave school influence,\"\nMrs. Smith said free education was\navailable to United States pupils\nto the age of 21, while British Columbia only made free training\navailable to 18.\nTwo Men Held After\nAttempting to Sell\nRifle, Binoculars\nTwo transients who arrived in\nNelson by car from the west, are\nin custody at the provincial jail,\nafter attempting to sell a rifle, binoculars and electric shaver in a\nNelson second-hand store. Provincial police are' checking the statements made to them by the two\nmen as to ownership of the articles,\nFuneral Services\nal Windermere lor\nOle Olsen, Wilmer\nWINDERMERE, B. C.-A great\nnumber of people attended funeral\nservice of the late Ole Olson of Wilmer, who lost his life recently while\nengaged in operating a circular saw.\nThe deceased was widely and\nfavorably known in the Windermere district. The service was conducted by the Reverend J, L Cleri-\nhue of Invermere. Pall bearers\nwere: Ed Barbour, Neil McLean,\nLester Lund, Dave Nixon, Walter\nSadecn,and Edwin Larsen. A short\nservice was held at the graveside\nin the Windermere cemetery where\na profusion of flowers covered the\ngrave. Besides sorrowing parents,\nMr. and Mrs. Simon Olson of Wilmer, there are left four sisters.\nMargaret, Evelyn, Alice and Edna,\nand one bother, Hugo.\nLabor Splits on\nRearmament\nBy PAT USSHER\nCanadian  Press Staff Writer\nLONDON, Sept. 20 (CP)-Pros-\npects of a Labor party split, over the\nquestion of supporting the government's rearmament program grew\nstronger today as the Labor party\nlaunched a campaign to increase its\nmembership by 100,000.\nWhile party leaders al scores of\nweek-end meetings in the United\nKingdom delivered scathing attacks\non the government\u2014excepting on\nrearmament\u2014the parliamentary Pacific group, holding its national convention in London, denounced rearmament. ,\nGeorge Lansbury, veteran Pacifist and former Labor leader in the\ncommons, moved a resolution, unanimously carried, deploring the rearmament, policy and regretting Labor's acquiescence when the arms\nprogram went through parliament.\n-ANNOUNCING-\nCHRISTMAS CARDS FOR 1937\nAS USUAL, THE NELSON DAILY NEWS CHRISTMAS\nCARDS WILL BE NEW IN DESIGN, SMART AND APPROPRIATE IN STYLE, REASONABLY PRICED, AND\nEXCLUSIVE.\nMISS MARGARET ARTHUR WILL AGAIN BE OUR\nREPRESENTATIVE\nOur Samples Will Be on Display in a Few Days\nPHONE 144\nTo Make an Appointment With Our Representative\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nCOMMERCIAL PRINTING DEPARTMENT\nAWFUL FOR MORAL. IS SWING\nMUSIC; IT MAKES 'EM BOLD\nNEW YORK, Sept. 20 (AP)\u2014Laboratory experiments, with an unsuspecting boy and girl as the guinea pigs, proved swing music \"very\nbad for the morals\", a music official\nannounced today.\n\"It's far more harmful than obscene songs because it arouses the\nlust of .he listeners before they realize it,\" said Arthur Cremin, director\nof the New York schools of music.\n\"We placed a young man and a\ngirl in a room where we could watch\nthem without being observed. Firsts\nwe provided a program of good\nmusic, classical pieces and popular\nsongs, such as waltzes. They were\nfriendly but that was all.\n\"Later we arranged another meeting. This time the radio played swing\nmusic. They were much bolder, both\nof them. The boy took much more\nleeway in his actions, and the girl\ndidn't object\".\n\"You mean they necked?\" be was\nasked.\n\"Yes,\" said Cremin, sadly, \"I mean\nthey necked.\"\nNELSON Social..\nBy MRS. M.J. VIGNEUX\n\u2022 Most Rev. Martin M. Johnson\nleaves on the early morning train\ntoday for Edmonton to preach the\ninaugural sermon of the Eucharlstic\ncongress Wednesday night.\n\u2022 A. H. Donald of Longbeach\nvisited   Nelson  yesterday.\n\u2022 Mrs. Archie Bremner and\ndaughter Joyce of Salmo were visitors in the city at the week-end.\n\u2022 A shopper in town yesterday\nwas Mrs. Innes of Vallican.\n\u2022 J, McGinnis of Ymir spent\nyesterday in Nelson.\n\u2022 Mrs. Charles Dickie of Slocan\nPark was a Nelson visitor yesterday.\n\u2022 A, C. Mesker, mining man of\nMidway, is a city visitor.\n\u2022 Lyall Hawkins, who spent the\nsummer working for the C. M. & S.\ncompany in eastern Canada, left\nNelson \\v_;ei'day for Washington\nState college at Pullman to resume\nhis studies.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. George Hall and\nson were recent, visitors to Spokane.\n\u2022 Mrs, Robert Smith has returned from two months at Ottawa,\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. A, Wilkinson,\nFall street, have returned from a\nmotor trip to Victoria, where they\nvisited Mrs, Wilkinson's mother,\nMrs. Herbert Kecf, who accompanied thorn back to Nelson.\n\u2022 Roy L. Clothier, mining man\nof Vancouver, visited Nelson yesterday\n\u2022 Alfred Hill of Longbeach spent\nyesterday in town.\n\u2022 Mrs. Roy Graham of South\nSlocan and daughter were Nelson\nshoppers yesterday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. F, Irvine of\nCranbrook, who wore recently married, were week-end visitors in Nelson.\n\u2022 Mrs. B. Norcross, Granite road,\nhad as her week-end guest, her son,\nDavid Norcross of the Wilcox mill\nat Ymir.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. F.'C. Pritchard,\nNelson avenue, Fairview, have returned from a short, visit, in Spokane.\n\u2022 Lome Hawkins of Kimberley\nis holidaying in Nelson.\n\u2022 Mrs. Beggs of New Denver\nwas a shopper in town at the weekend.\n\u2022 Mrs. Cawley, who was a patient, at Kootenay Lake General\nhospital, has left for her home at\nSalmo.\n\u2022 J. Bynes of Trail is a guest of\nhis parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. Bynes,\nHall Mines road.\n\u2022 C. Penny of the Pend d'Oreille\nwas a week-end visitor in town.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. A. Fletcher and\nMr. and Mrs. A. Fletcher jr. motored\nto Silverton over the week-end.\n\u2022 J. F. (Billy) Bunyan of the\nYmir Yankee Girl mine is a guest\nof his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J, G.\nBunyan, Silica street.\n\u2022 R. Hong Of Harrop spent yesterday in the city.\n\u2022 Leigh McBride, son of Mr. and\nMrs. R, L. McBride, Hoover street,\nplans lo leave for Edmonton this\nmorning to resume his studies at\nthe University of Alberta.\n\u2022 Mr, and Mrs. G. N. Gilchrist,\nSecond street, Fairview, have as\ntheir guests their daughter, Mrs. E.\nM. Smith of Vancouver, and her\nfriend, Miss M. Gay.\n\u2022 Shoppers in the city yesterday\nincluded Dr. Norrington of Crescent\nBay.\n\u2022 H, D. Foreman, foreman of the\nHighland Surprise mine, was a city\nshopper yesterday,\n\u2022 Mrs. Gordon Hallett is spending a week in Nelson.\n\u2022 Mrs. W. Heart, and daughter\nKathleen of Salmo were visitors in\nNelson  at   the  week-end.\n\u2022 Chief and Mrs. Alex Stewart\nwero recent visitors to Spokane.\n\u2022 Mrs. J. J. Hawkins, formerly\nof Fairview, is a visitor in Nelson\nfrom Ihe maritimes after an absence\nof three years.\n\u2022 Graeme Steed, son of Dr. and\nMrs. W. B. Steed, Latimer street,\nplans to leave today for Edmonton\nto resume his studies at the University of Alberta,\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Ernest W, Steel\nvisited Spokane.\n\u2022 Kenneth Wallace of Boswell\nwas a week-end visitor in town.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Stanley P. Bos-\ntork and son Bobby, Latimer street,\nhave returned from a few days at\nSpokane.\n\u2022 Rev. Thomas P. Freney, formerly of St. Francis Xavier parish\nat Trail, is in Nelson.\n\u2022 L. Erickson of Silverton, who\nvisited Spokane for a few days, has\nreturned,\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Walter Tattrie of\nthe Relief Arlington mine at Erie,\nwho visited Spokane last week,\nhave left on a motor trip to the\nCariboo district.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs, J. Rich and son\n.Robert of Calgary have taken up\nresidence in Nelson, to where Mr.\nRich has been transferred.\n\u2022 Dick Spurway has returned\nfrom a trip to Spokane, Wenatchee\nand Montana. He left Nelson Thursday and returned Sunday night.\n\u2022 Brian Gore, son of Mr. and\nMrs. Harry B, Gore. Cedar street,\nleft Saturday to commence his studies at the University of Alberta at\nEdmonton.\nPresident Congratulates Man Who\nBrought the First Train to Cranbrook\nSir Edward Beatty and\nH. Brock With\nC. P. 46 Years\nCRANBROOK, B. C\u2014Sir Edward\nBeatty, president of the Canadian\nPacific Railway company, accompanied by W. M. Neal, vice-president\nin charge of western lines, C. A. Cot-\ntcrell. assistant general manager of\nwestern lines, E. S. McCracken, divisional superintendent of Nelson and\nA. J. fronside, assistant superintendent of Cranbrook, arrived in the\ncity by special train from Trail and\nNelson at 10:30 Saturdaty evening,\nremaining till four a.m. Sunday.\nThey were accompanied by Sir Edward's guests, Right Honorable Reginald McKenna, former chancellor\nof the Exchequer of Great Britain,\nand Mrs. McKenna,\nThey were met by Mayor T. M\nRoberts. H. A. McKowan, president\nof the Cranbrook board of trade\nand members of the board and city\ncouncil. An invitation was extended to Sir Edward Beatty and other\nofficials to be present at a proposed\ncelebration of the 40th anniversary\nof the arrival of the first train in\nCranbrook, following the laying of\nsteel in 1898. Enthusiasm for the\nidea was expressed by the officials\nand tlie statement was made that if\npossible, they would be present in\nlarge numbers.\nH. Brock, who brought the first\ntrain into Cranbrook, July 26, 1898,\nwas present on the station platform\nand was congratulated by President\nBeatty on having completed 46\nyears of service wilh the C. P. R.\no.\nwhich coincides with the number\nof years the president himself had\nbeen with the company.\nOthers who brought the first train\ninto Cranbrook were Engineer J.\nT. Sarvis of Cranbrook, then a fireman, J. A. Genest, conductor, of\nCranbrook, then a brakeman, and\nDan Murphy, a resident of Cranbrook until his retirement to Vancouver. The late A. McKenzie was\nconductor of lhe train.\nFALL ASSIZES\nDUE OCTOBER\nDates for 1937 fall assizes in southern interior British Columbia are\nlisted by the B. C. Gazette as follows:\nNelson\u2014October 11, criminal and\ncivil.\nFernie\u2014October 14, criminal and\ncivil.\nCranbrook\u2014October 18, civil.\nMercury Registers\n73 Degrees Monday\nHeat of Nelson's late hot spell was\nsomewhat abated Monday by the\npresence of a light wind and clouds\nthat repeatedly crossed the sky.\nMaximum temperature was but 73\nand the minimum dropped to 46, two\ndegrees lower than the previous day.\nThe sun shone for nine and one\nhalf hours but the wind made the\nweather seem slightly cooler than\nin the past few days.\nCable Flashes From Europe-Asia\nBERLIN, Sept. 2(1 CAP).\u2014Air raid\nmanoeuvres threw Berlin into an\nuproar today- -the population was\ndriven into cellars, the propaganda\nministry was burned \"theoretically\nto a cinder\", and the Kaiserhof hotel,\nopposite the foreign office, was\n\"destroyed\".\nCHOLERA  tPIDEMIC\nNOW  IN SHANGHAI\nWASHINGTON. Sept 20 iAPh- \u25a0\nThomas Parran, United States surgeon-general, reported today thai\ncholera in Shanghai \"now is officially considered of epidemic proportions.\"\nSOVIET  AIRMEN'S\nCAMP IS DRIFTING\nMOSCOW, Sepl 20 < APi Com\nmander Ivan Papanin of Ihn Soviet\nNorth Pole expedition today wirelessed iha! his ire floe camo has\ndrifted so far south that, the expedition eventually may have to be tak\nen off by an ice-breaker instead of\na plane as planned.\n\t\nBUBONIC   ADDS\nTO MANCHOUKUO PERILS\nHS1NK1NG. Manchoukuo, Sept.. 20\n(AP).\u2014One hundred and ninety-\neight cases of Bubonic plague were\nreported here by the Domei (Japanese) news agency.\nRULES SPAIN OFF\nLEAGUE COUNCIL\nGENEVA. Sept. 20 (CP-Havas) -\nLeague of Nations today ruled that\nSpain was not eligible to succeed\nitself on the league council. Turkey's bid to succeed itself on the\ncouncil was also rejected.\nSOVIET EXECUTES\nFOUR GRAIN WRECKERS\nMOSCOW, Sept 20 (AP)-Four\npersons were executed and six imprisoned today in the drive against\nanti-Soviet \"wreckers\" that caught\na grain elevator crew in the Caucasus.\nMost of Road From\nKamloops to Coast\nto Be Hard-Surfaced\nVICTORIA, Sept. 20 (CP)- Hon\nFrank M. MacPherson, minister of\npublic works, stated today that\nwith completion of the 1937 highway program, 75 per cent of the\nVancouver-Kamloops road would be\na \"dustless\" highway.\nDifferent types of hard surfacing\nwould have been applied to three-\nquarters of the route this year, Mr.\nMacPherson said.\nSeattle Man Is\nFined, Common\nDanger Charge\nJames M. Yates of Seattle was sentenced Monday afternoon to pay a\nfine of $20 or to serve 14 days in\njail when he was found guilty by\nJohn Cartmel, stipendiary magistrate, on a charge of driving to the\ncommon danger arising when the\ncar of Rev. T. J. S. Ferguson went\nover the bank about a mile and\nhalf east of the Nelson ferry on the\nNelson-Balfour road. No one was\nhurt beyond being bruised and shaken up,\nMr. Ferguson testified the Seattle\ncar in passing struck the front of\nhis auto as it swung in front of him,\nand forced his gar down the bank,\nIt stopped against a tree, badly\ndamaged, near the water's edge,\nMrs. Ferguson told a similar story.\nYates in his defence claimed his\ncar skidded. Fred Johnson, who was\nwitli Yates, stated he felt a slight,\nbump as the cars passed.\nConstable R. A. Lees of the provincial police highway patrol, who\nprosecuted, gave information as to\nthe width of the road and tire marks.\nSerial . . .\nRUSTLE OF SILKS\n(Continued From Page Four)\ndidn't know thai her poise, her\nquietness, her lack of small talk\nwas nothing more than a pose that\ncovered \u2014 emptiness.\nWith her success, her social\ncircle had widened. And wilh the\nincreasing numbers of new friends\nand new activities, there had been\nnew men. Men at first were fascinated, then were a little in awe\nof her. Later, they all acted in\nthe v\/ay of men rationalizing about\nher, confident in their own attractiveness. They tried to break down\nher reserve, to pierce the shell.\nMari often wished that there\nwas one man might make her\nfeel alive, not an instrument of\na profession.\nOf thus she said nothing to anyone, either man or woman. Essentially a lonlcy person, she could\nnot, as she approached her thirties, break an old habit of keeping\nher feelings to herself. And there\nwas no one to whom she could\nhave talked.\nMark Sutherland was as nearly\nher intimate as any person could\nhave been. Even Mark who had\nknown her for six years knew less\nof her\u2014or believed he did\u2014than\nhe had known at first.\nPerhaps it was her reserve, her\nunyielding attitude toward him (hat\nkept him constantly at her sic^e;\nthat is, constantly for Mark. Wherever he went in the travels that\nmade up his life, he was sure to\nturn up in Paris at frequent intervals.\nHe was as well known to Mari's\nfriends as she was, as she was\nlater to learn.\nHer feeling for him had had\ncurious inflations in the years she\nhad known him, yet she had never\nlabeled them. She was glad to\nsee him when he returned to Paris,\ncontent to have him for her escort, enjoyed him because she felt\nmore at ease wth him than with\nothers, and felt no loss when he\nwas off again.\nThere was one man who understood her, He was a doctor from\nVienna. Mari was aware of his\ndark, piercing eyes searching her\nsoul, his waiting for her to speak,\nand was prepared to fend him off\nwith her studied silences. But when\nshe was alone with him. she could\nnot resist him. She talked as she\nnever talked before.\nAnd when she was finished, he\nsaid. \"My dear, Mademoiselle, you\nhave no troubles and therein lies\nyour dissatisfaction.\"\nWhen she protested that she\nwas not dissatisfied, he shrugged\nhis shoulders and said. \"How can\nyou help but be? You are not a\nshallow woman. You could not be\nshallow and be lhe artiste that you\narc. Yet art is not enough. Art\nmust be fed from the well within\nand your well is dry. All art depicts life and if you avoid living,\nhow can you\" touch life? It is not\nsomething that can be lived vicariously. It must be partaken.\nThe lives of people around you are\nlike the things you sec but do not\ntouch. You need vibrancy; without\nit you will soon see that this\nnothingness which exists only for\nyou now will spread into your\ncreative powers,\"\nMari thought about that many\ntimes later, and tho truth of what\nDr. Brande had said was impressed\nupon her. She began to worry\nabout it.\nAnd one day she thrust her sketch\npad away from her and commanded Letitia Higgins to arrange for\nher accommodations on the express\nlo lhe Riviera. It was a vacation that\nshe needed.\nAt (he last moment, she called\nLetitia back and told her lo arrange\nfor accommodations for I wo. She\nwool dlakc Letitia,for Ihere was\nmuch work that she and her secretary could do.\nLetitia stared at her employer\nfor a moment, and forgetting herself said, \"Certainly. Madame. For\n. . . for Mr. Sutherland?\"\nMari didn't look up at once.\nShe should have been shocked but\nshe wasn't. So THAT was what\nothers had thought!\n(To Be Continued)\nSHOOTS RARE BLUE\nSHEEP IN NORTH B. C.\nEDMONTON. Sept. 20 (CP)-Long\nsought by student, of wild life as\none of (he rare Inhabitants of \"Nat\nlire's no-man's land\" in lhe bushland\nof northern British Columbia, four\nspecimens of the stoni or blue\nsheep were shot by Michael Lerner,\nNew York, field associate of the\nAmerican Museum of Natural History.\nPAGE   FIVE\nRoads Spokane\nlo Grand Forks,\nTrail Are Goo.\nBorder  to  Nelson\n\"Very Rough in\nPlaces\"\nExcerpts from the road report (\nthe Inland Automobile association\nas published by the Spokesman-Re*\nview of Spokane, give the following\ninformation on roads from Spokanq'\nto the West Kootenay and Bound'\nary:\n\"Spokane to Grand Forks, B. Ci\nExcellent oiled highway to border;)!\nLaurier to Grand Forks, gravel roadtl\nin good condition. {[\n\"Spokane to Trail and Nelson:!!\nRoads to Nelson via Northport ajidjl\nTrail are in good condition, narrow I\nroad from Northport ^o Patersonljl\nVia Newport and Metaline Falls .romji\nMetaline Falls to border, rougttj\ngravel; border to Nelson, very rougli\nin places.\"\nLatimer Street\nBeing Improve\nPermanent improvement oj: Latimer street, part of the city's current\npublic works program, is under way.'\nA street railway track gang 18\nrcpairing the street car track, putting in new tics and generally put-\nling the track in good condition,\nwhile another crew is mixing antj\nlaying asphalt and a third crew If.\ninstalling  concrete curbs. |\nBlack top is being laid at this time\/\nbetween Stanley and Ward streets.   >!\nWomen Charged\nWith Obstructing\nCharged with obstructing peace\nofficers, Mrs. Vera Savenkofr and I\nPolly Savenkoff were remanded for'1\neight days when they appeared be-\nfore John Cartmel, stipendiary mag--\nistrate, Monday.\nThey are charged with obstruct-''\ning M. E. Harper, sheriff of South\nKootenay, and Gordon Neff, provincial police constable, in connection with an order for eviction ot-\nthe women from premises they oc- \u25a0'\ncupy between Thrums and Tarrys.\nthreiTare appointed\nvote commissioners!\nAppointed to act as elections com-'\nmissioners in Kaslo-Slocan district,1\nas listed in the B. C. Gazette, aw\nThomas Dobson Rogerson, Graham's'\nLanding; . William John Deacon'1\nRogers, East Arrow Park; and:\nGeorge Montague Wilson, East Arrow Park.\nTHE OTHER WOMAN LIVES\nJUST AROUND THE CORNER\nIT may seem unreasonable, buls\nmo-tineucannotunderstandwhy\na woman who is usually happy\nand loving should have recurring\nperiods when her whole character\nseems changed. Ho cannot appreciate the distress, the discomfort\nthat al! women must eudure. Ho\ndoes not know what it is to do\nhousework with an aching back\nand failing energy. All he does\nknow is that other women seera\nmore cheermi by comparison.\nAre you such a three-quarter\nwife\/\nDon't lot the ordeals that all\nwomen face cause you avoidable\ndiscomfort or endanger your home.\nDo as so many wise women hava\n\u2014try I-yclia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.\nFor tliroe generations one woman has told another how to go\n\"smiling through\" with Lydia E.\nrinkhain's Vegetable Compound.\nIt helps Nature tone up the syp-\ntom, thus lessoning tho discomforts froni the functional disorders\nwhich wuraen must endure in the\nthroe ordeals of life: 1. Turning\nfrom girlhood to womanhood. 2. ,\nPreparing for motherhood. 3. Approaching \"middlo age.\"\nDon't be a three-quarter wife,\ntake LYDIA E. PlNKHAM'8\nVEGETABLE COMPOUND and\nGo \"Smiling Through.\" )\n(Advt.)'\n\"Hoot Mon!\nA Bargain!\"\nTalk To\nEdmonton\n(or\n$1.05\n(Station-to-Station)\n$r.8s\nIPerson-to-Person)\nafter 7 p.m. weekdays or\nany time Sundays\nThe  above  rates  cover  a\nthree-minute  conversation.\n(Government Tax Extra)\nB. C. TELEPHONE CO.\n\u2014___\nmmmm\n !.   Jinn HWllWA\nPP^WlPlppif^fp^\nMxm Satig Jferofi\nEstablished April 22, 1902.\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Newspa,\nPublished every morning except Sunday by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED,\n216  Baker  Street,    Nelson,    British  Columbia.\nPhone 144. Private Exchange Connecting All Departments.\nMembers   ot   the   Audit   Bureau   of   Circulations   and\nThe   Canadian   Press   Leased    Wire    News   Service.\nTUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1937.\nTRUST BRITAIN'S SPIRIT SOUND\nAND TIMELY ADVICE\nIn his recent address to the Empire club, Beverley\nBaxter, Canadian member of the British parliament, urged\nCanadians to \"trust and strengthen the spirit of Britain.\"\nThe advice was both sound and timely. Britain deserves\ntrust, and the moral support of the people in the Dominions\nwould encourage and strengthen her in her present international policy.\nThat her policy is one of peace cannot be questioned.\nIn the last ten years she has given proof after proof of\nher will to peace and her dislike of war. In every international dispute, her statesmen have tried to avert conflict, and, when that has proved impossible, they have\nbent all their efforts to localize the strife and prevent it\nfrom spreading. Nothing but goodwill has been shown to\nother countries.\nThere are critics who, professing desire for peace,\nsay that if she had risked war, she might have done more\nto prevent it. The answer to these is that her ministers\nknow more than their critics can ever hope to know, not\nonly of Britain's capacity to fight, but of the determination of other countries. The critics urge a bluff or a\ngamble; the statesmen know that bluffing is not only futile\nbut perilous and that to gamble, with peace as a stake,\nwould be to invite catastrophe.\nThere are other critics who, not satisfied with criticizing the wisdom of the policy, seek Machiavellian motives to account for it. One such, the London correspondent\nof a Canadian paper, declares himself bewildered by what\nhe calls \"the mystery of Britain's policy of drift and inaction.\" The manifestations of \"drift and inaction\" are\nto be seen, to use his own words, in her \"apparent betrayal\nof Abyssinia, of democratic Spain, of the League of Nations' and in her refusal to give aid to China. This suggestion\u2014that Britain is guilty of betrayal if she refuses to\nfight for every country that is attacked\u2014has only to be\nstated to prove itself preposterous. It is, however, an excellent example of the propaganda by which those who\nsympathize with Communism try to influence Canadian\nopinion. Such propaganda gives point and timeliness to\nMr. Baxter's advice.\nSteel workers have apparently chosen automobile driving as their favorite leisure time activity. Three out of four\nsteel workers now own cars, according to an estimate by\nthe Canadian Iron and Steel Institute baspd on information obtained from representative steel plants in Ohio,\nPennsylvania and West Virginia.\nOf the 157,000 steel workers covered by the study,\napproximately ] 17.000 owned passenger rars, it was indicated. If the ratio of car ownership found in these representative steel plants holds pond throughout the industry,\napproximately 400,000 of the 533,000 steel workers now-\nown cars.\nWinnipeg's chief of police, remarking upon the connection between crime and cars, says that the adage \"look\nfor the woman\" is old stuff. Now it is \"look for the automobile.\"\nSchool teachers declare 1\nsalaries are a crying shame.\na relief.\nAUNT HET\nBy ROBERT QU1LLKN\n\"I wish every house had one\nroom with walls made out o'\nmirrors. Mighty few women\nwould be weann' shorts if they\ncould see themfelvTS behind,\"\nBRINCINC UP FATHER\nhat \"in Ontario many of our\nWell, a good cry is always\nGEMS FROM LIFE'S\nSCRAPBOOK\n\"Home is where tho heart is\".\nNELSON DAILY NEW8, NELSON, B.C-TUE8DAY MORNINQ, 8EPT. 21, 1937.'\n\"llnm\u00b0 I\nearth and\nIhnnah ll\"l\n'ions.'\ndearest\ni ne the centre\nlhe\ni should\nlhe boundary\nspot\nof ,'iffcc-\nBaker Eddv\n\"Tho braulv nf I\nThe bler.smg of I\niontmonf,\nTho   plory  of   the\ntality.\"\nhoiro is order\nhouse is eon-\nhouse   is  hospi-\n- House Motto\n\"The mnn v ho builds\nwherewith to pay.\nProvides   n   home   from\nrun   away.\"\nhome is hi\n-Rir Edwi\nnd wants\nwhich   to\n- Young\nTensile.\"\nvd Coke\nBy\ne\n|. B. C.\nLAUGHTER IN COURT\nA man was summoned to appear\nbelore the magistrates on a charge\nof stealing chickens.\n\"You keep quiet,\" advised his solicitor; \"let me do all the talking.\"\nLater in the day he appeared in\nthe dock.\n\"Are you the defendant?\" he was\nasked.\n\"Nay,\" he replied, pointing to\nthe solicitor. \"He's (.'defendant. I'm\nchap what took t'chickens.\"\nIDLE GOSSIP\nHere and there around the town-\nJames Anderson of Victoria, former pioneer of Kaslo,\u2014and well\nknown in mining circles\u2014standing\nat the corner of (he corner of Baker\nand Ward streets and conferring\nwith W. J. Sturgeon\u2014who is still\non crutches\u2014Bert Atkins discussing\nold country football and the sudden changes in leadership\u2014Cy Kid-\nwell recalling a recent trip on the\neast C. P. R. run\u2014Charles Baeltner\nhaving a little difficulty parking\nhis auto beljind a large wood truck\non Baker street\u2014D. D. McLean dolled up in blue suit nnd discussing\nrailway matters\u2014 Charles Watts\nback on the truck after a sojourn\namong the heat waves of the Ainsworth   pool\u2014Alex   Nisbet,   recent\nbridegroom, talking to friends\u2014C.\nW. Tyler and H. M. Whimster having something in common\u2014likely\nRotary business\u2014Bob Wilks of rail'\nroad fame addressing several of the\nboys as \"Sunshine\"\u2014it is a favorite\nexpression\u2014Frank Paddon using\nthe telephone.\u2014 \u00ab\nTHE REASON\n\"Gimme a nickel's worth o' cheese\"\nsaid the small boy to the clerk.\n\"Don't sell nothin' less'n a dime's\nworth,\" said the clerk.\n\"Well, lemme see it.\"\nNo sooner had the man exhibited\nthe dime slice than the boy snatched\nout his Scout knife and cut the\ncheese in two. Then he picked up\none half, laid down the nickel and\nwalked out, remarking: \"Trouble\nwith you, my man, is\u2014You're lazy.\"\n*   \u2022   \u2022\nBELIEVE IT OR NOT\nIt was their anniversary\nBut he forgot it quite,\nYet she never said a word\u2014\nAlthough you'd think she might.\n\u00ab   \u2022. \u2022\nSEA SERPENT\nThe '37 crop of _ea-.erp.nts has\nbeen disappointing, several old reliables have failed to show and one,\nreported in the Mediterranean turned out to be a free-lance submarine.\nCONTRACT\nBRIDGE\nAs Written\nby\nSHEPARD\nBARCLAY\nA  NEGATIVE  INFERENCE\nWhen a player is using the \"three\ntrump echo\", the play of the middle trump followed by Ihe bottom\none shows possession of still another. Playing trumps in .the normal way, with the smallest first\nand then the next highest, signifies that the holding is not of exactly three cards. The negative inference then conveyed, when the player manages lo follow with a higher\ntrump to a third round, makes it\nperfectly clear that if he had not\nthree he had more than three and\ntherefore retains a trump for ruffing or other purposes.\n\u2666\nNone\nVQ9854\n443 2\n+\nK 9754\n48752\nN.\n\u2666 QMS\ntfA K\n1     *>\n\u00bbJ 7 6\n.'.\u25a0 10 8 5\n\u2666 _ 6\n-LA J 6 2\nS.\nAO10 8 3\n4 A K J 10 9\nf 10 3 2\n4AK Q97\n^None\n(Dealer: South. Neither side vul\nnerable.)\nThe  holder  of the  South cards\non  this  deal   opened  the  bidding\nwith 2-Spades.  North  called 2-No\nTrumps.  South 3-Diamonds, North\n3-Hearts,   South   4-Diamonds   and\nNorth 4-Hearts. South foolishly de\ncided to take this to 4-Spades. in\nspite of his h\neart ho\nding.\nAgainst the contract of 4-Spades,\nMillard P. Kaiser of St. Louis, who\nwas paired with Mrs. Kaiser in the\nEast, played the heart A and followed with the heart K. He then\nled a diamond, as the club suit\nseemed too dangerous to fool with\nAfter winning with the diamond\nQ, the declarer cashed the spade\nK, on which Mr. Kaiser played the\nspade 2. When the spade A was\nplayed, West played the spade 5.\nOn the spade J, West played his\nspade 8, and when Mrs. Kaiser won\nwith the Q, she realized that Mr.\nKaiser held one more trump, as\notherwise he would not have played his trumps in the order In which\nhe did. she therefore returned her\nheart J, knowing that her partner\ncould ruff. Any other return would\nhave enabled South to draw trumps\nand run the remaining hearts.\n\u2666 K-8H.\n*84\n\u2666 82\n+ Q742\nVAQJ\n10 6\nOQ J 06\n+ K10.\nA\/.\nS.\n4 A 10 9 I\nOKU\n\u2666 84\n+ 8053\n4Q52\n\u00ab972\n4 A K 10 T t\nSouth. Neither side vul-\n(Dealer:\nnerable.)\nSouth  bid  1-Diamond,   West\nHeart. What should North do?\nLooking Backward...\nTEN  YEARS  AGO\n(September 21, 1937).\nPower line to the Florence mine\nat Ainsworth will be rebuilt from\nNelson.\u2014James Charteris of Kaslo.\nhas gone to Edmonton for the win-\ntor with his father.--Mrs. G, W. Robinson of Procter arrived in Kaslo\nfrom the Lardeau and is the guest\nof Rev and Mrs Christopher Reed.\n\u2014Mr. and Mrs. George Bowker of\nTrail, who are spending the holidays at Willow Point, spent a day\nin Nelson recently.\u2014Mr. and Mrs.\nGeorge Hunter. Edgewood avenue,\nhave left for Spokane where they\nwill attend the air derby.\u2014George\nMurray and his brother, Angus Murray of Trail, were week-end visitors\nto Nelson.--- Mrs. U. Aylmer Coates\nof Burnley, Eng., who has been\nyisitmg her son. J. F. Coates and\nhis wife on Victoria street .has left\nfor her home in England.\u2014Mr. and\nMrs Harold Lakes have returner)\nfrom spending a week-end at Silver-\nton.\nTWENTY YEARS AGO\n(September 21, 10171.\nJohn Blmi\". Creston, is at the\nStrathcona.\u2014Mr. and Mrs. George\nTriekett, New Denver, are in Nelson,   Lieutenant-Colonel Reginald\nD Davies of Cranbrook has been\nwounded in action, \u2014 W. Visnoski of\nCranbrook has been taken seriously\nill overseas. Hotel-: and warehouses\nnumbering 48 will lose their licences\n(vhm the prohibition bill goes, into\ni ffr.[-1 at lh\u00bb firsl of Ihe month -\nI Kul. W. R, Williamson of Nelson\nhas died of gas shell poisoning in\nFrance - Pte T. W. Slader has been\nkilled ill action. George Clerihew\nwas elected a trustee of the Hume\nschool.\nTHIRTY YEARS  AGO\n(September 21, 1907).\nNelson's annual fruit fair September 19 drew a record attendance.\nAngus MeGillivray and A. Erickson,\nthe Sandon rock drilling team, won\nthe contest held at the fair.\u2014R, M.\nPalmer has left for Ihe Okanagan\ndislrict-,1.  S.   C.  Fraser  of  Ross\nland was a visitor to the fair.\u2014Hon.\nJ. H. Turner left recently for Kaslo\nwhere he spent a day before returning to Nelson from where he\nwill visit Rossland the Boundary\ndistrict.\u2014Al Houston, manager of\nthe Broadview mine, is in the city.\nHe reports arrangements are being\nmade in the east for -the financing\nof a mill and other machinery for\nIhe mine\u2014Mrs. W. J. Holmes, Kaslo,\nis at Ihe Strathcona.\nV. Questions V.\nANSWERS\nThis column of questions and\nanswers is open to any reader of\nthe Nelson Daily News. In no\ncase will the name of the person\nasking the question be published.\nE. G , Nelson\u2014What day of the week\ndid October 2, 1916, fall on?\nMonday.\nC. .!. A. T., Nelson-When does the\n1937 fishing season close for trout\n\u25a0 fishing?\nNovember 15 in Kootenay Lake\nand River.   In other streams and\nlakes it varies.\nF, W., Creston\u2014Would you kindly\ninform me what is the regulation\nsize of a bowling green?\nft is 126 feet square.\nN.   E.,   Cranbrook\u2014What   is  'marjoram'?\nAny of several planis of the Mint\nfamily, especially sweet marjoram,\nused for flavoring.\nY. 0\u201e Trail-What is the meaning\nof   the  following   names:   Edith,\nAmy, Diana, Dorothy and Eva?\nEdith  means  happiness   or  rich\ngift; Amy, beloved; Diana, goddess;\nDorothy, the gift of God; and Eva,\nlife.\nDrive Slowly\u2014Road Under Construction\nKootenay residents cry aloud for roads\u2014and through speeding give little assistance to contractors building them. Herewith is a series of pictures on the General Construction company's road surfacing contract along the Thrums-Brilliant section\nof the Trail-Nelson road. Many motorists speeding over the new surfacing who have been stopped have declared they did not\nsee the warning signs. Indifferent motorists make the work of the contractors more difficult, and damage the new road\nsurface.\nIt Is vital to the success of blacktop surfacing when lt Is first\nput down, until lt becomes thoroughly packed, that cars and trucks\nproceed slowly over it. Here is a road sign on the Thrums section of\nthe Trail-Nelson road, with the exhortation to drive slowly.\nThe \"blacktop\" mixer\u2014asphaltic material goes in the box at the\ntop, gravel is fed Into the machine at the other end, and the surfacing\n\"comes out there\", ready for spreading. W. H. Foster, government\npaving inspector, is the figure on the extreme right.\nAn endless bucket conveyor at the new cut above Brilliant loading\ngravel from the stock pile into trucks.\nIllustrating how the mixer, traveling along the road, mixes and\ndeposits the blacktop ready for spreading.\nThe mixer In another role\u2014stationary, filling a bin for trucks to\nhaul the mix to the job.\nThe outfit\u2014mixer, two of the trucks and at the extreme leit\nthe bucket chain loader, near Brilliant\nA grader at work on' Thrums flats, spreading the freshly laid\nsurfacing material.\nRoad scene\nfacing material.\nThrums, showing freshly laid  \"blacktop\" sur-\nWHAT THE PRESS IS SAYING\nthis kind of thing is becoming all\nton common, particularly along\nOntario highways leading out of\ncongested districts. If the penalties are not now sufficiently severe\nto correct this dangerous practice,\nthe Highway Act should be amended to provide only jail terms for the\nconviction of these potential killers.\n\u2014Leamington Post nnd News.\nHOW COARSE FISH GET IN\nFisherman coming back from their\nexpeditions to district lakes this\nseason have reported, on different\noccasions, the presence in them of\na number of \"foreign\" fish, mostly\nthe coarser pike and suckers. These\nfish are not helpful to the trout\nand the bass which are more sought\nafter game fish, to the trout especially, the bass having more powers of\nself defense.\nSome mystery has been express1-\ned about the entry of these fish\nto lakes where they were formerly\nnot known. A local fisherman has\nexpressed an opinion which appears\nprobable. It is that Ihey have been\ntaken in as minnows by fishermen\nintending to use them as bait for\nthe trout or bass, and who, unthinkingly, have thrown them while\nhim   to   repeat  the  offence.    But1 still alive and unused as bait, into\nDRUNK DRIVERS A SERIOUS\nMENACE\nProvincial and local police are\nfinding the highways menaced\nthese days and nights by the presence of men while under the influence of liquor, endeavoring to\ndrive their cars, and accidents from\nthis faupp are hemming nwe and\nmore frequent, says The Amherst-\nburg Echo in an editorial last week.\nArresting the offender, and hailing\nthem before lhe county magistrate\ndoes not, improve conditions. Motor\ndrivers who try to handle their\ncars while drunk, on cmwded highways are potential killers and\nshould he treated as such. Daily\nstories come to headquarters about\nmen interfering with legitimate\ntraffic by getting in front of a\nline and weaving their cars in tortuous passage all over the pavement, Only the other night a case\nOf this kind occurred on highway\nNo. 18 between Amherstburg and\nSandwich, the drunken driver's car\nhitting telegraph poles on both sides\nof the highway as he twisted here\nand there. It was a mistaken kindness not to report him to Officer\nMcQueen so he could have been\ntaught, a lesson that would prevent\nWHAT DO YOU THINK?\nAll letters to the editor must be signed with the name of the\nwriter. A horn de plume may be used for publication if desired.\nLines  in  typewritten  copy should  be  double  spaced.\nBv Ceo. McManus\nYES- \"rOUR HUSBAMD'\nGOUT IS VERY MUCH\nBETTER- HE WAS\nASLEEP AND I PUT\nA BAHDAGE OM IT-\nAMD HE DIDN'T\nEVEN WAKE UP-\nBarking Dogs and\nWater Question\nThe Editor:\nSir\u2014I noticed a recent item in\nthe press tn the effect that the low\nlevel of Kootenay Lake is causing\nsome concern in certain quarters in\nthe Uniled States lest the power\nsupply be impaired.\nMay I suggest that this trouble\ncould speedily be overcome, a good\nturn done to a good neighbor, and\na pleasant time be had by all. if\nall lire owners of all the dogs in\nNelson that aimlessly bark all night\nwould tie large lumps of Nelson's\nrocky foundation to their necks and\nfirmly deposit them in the middle\nof the Lake.\nA by-product of this effort would\nbe that those who do not own dogs\nwould have a better chance to sleep\nat night.\nIf the suggested remedy should\nnot raise the Lake level enough,\nperhaps the owners of the dogs in\nquestion -would accompany their\nnoisy pets to the bottom of the Lake,\nThis might not. be necessary though,\nas the dogs are sufficiently high\npowered to guarantee that our\nneighbors possible power troubles\nwould be cured. Just connect the\nmelancholy yips, yaps, bays and\nbarks of our Nelson dogs through\na sufficient, depth of water to an\nelectric generator (engineers are\nsmart nowadays) and there would\nbe enough power to transport William D. Aberhart (or who else do\nthe water.\nThe suggestion is added that game\nfishermen should be careful in this\nconnection as it would be quite possible to ruin a lake for trout fishing by stocking it wilh pike even\ninadvertently\u2014Port .Arthur News\nChronicle.\nNO GOOD\nThese pesky doctors are always\nupsetting each other's theories, and\nleaving the public as befuddled on\ndiet matters as Albertans are on\neconomics. Now comes a Montreal\n\"medical legal expert,\" talking to\nthe Canadian Dietetic association, to\nsay this reducing fad is mainly\nmoonshine and wasted money.\u2014Edmonton Bulletin.\nyou want lo get rid of) to the moott\nand why not?\nYours faithfully,\nSIMPLE PETER.\nNelson\u20143:00 a.m., Sept. IS, 1937.\nF0R MINING CAMPS\nUnsanded Cottonwood\npanels are suitable for\nal! mining and other\ncamp buildings. They\nare strong, water-\nproof, light and very .\neasy to handle.\nDistrict Distributor*\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Co., Ltd.\n\"Build B. C. Payrolli\"\nic's\nPacifi\nMANY\nGOOD\nUSES\n\"I use Pacific Milk in cakes,\npuddings, custards, creams,\nbread, salad dressing, soups,\neggnoggs,\" writes Mrs. S.\n\"It improves the cooking.\nFor tea, coffee, cocoa, it is\nexcellent. It whips up nicely and is a pleasing addition\nto jellies and desserts.\"\nMany thanks.\nPacific Milk\nIrradiated of Count\ntmmgtm\n Q51\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.-TUE6DAY MORNING, SEPT, 21. 1937.\nTHREE WORLD TITLES AT STAKE IN\nCARNIVAL OF CHAMPIONS THURS.\n^bers and Montanez for Lightweight; Ross\nand Garcia for Welter; Escobar and\nJeffra for the Bantamweight\nSPORTING NEWS\nNEW YORK. Sept. 20 (AP) \u2014\n3iven a break by the weather man,\n[hursday night's carnival of cham-\n.ions at the Polo grounds may out-\niraw last month's Tommy Farr-Joe\nLouis heavyweight scrap, both in\nattendance and gate receipts, promoter Mike Jacobs predicted to-\nlay.\nA large evening of fisticuffing is\npromised. For the first time in ring\nhistory, three world's champions\nwill lay their titles on the line on\na single program and just to add\nspice to the festivities, there will\n>e another joust with half a cham-\nlion involved.\nTop spot on the program goes to\nhe lightweight title between Lou\n.mbers. titleholder, and Pedro\nMontanez, Puerto Eican knockout\nmedalist.\n10SS TO DEFEND TITLE\nNext in interest is the 15-rounder\nn   which  Chicago's   Barney   Ross\nseeks to defend his welterweight\ncrowji against the two-fisted challenge of Ceferino Garcia, young\nFilipino from the far west.\nThe third champion to do his stuff\nwill be little Sixto Escobar, bantamweight titleholder, who will be\npitted against Harry Jeffra of Baltimore, twice victor over Escobar in\nthe over-the-weight matches.\nJacobs originally advertised four\ntitle bouts, with Marcel Thil of\nFrance, the European middleweight\nchamp, going against the rugged\nFred Apostoli of San Francisco, but\nthe New York State Athletic commission spiked this by refusing to\nrecognize the winner as world's\nchampion. Freddy Steele of Spokane is recognized as boss of the\nUnited States 160-pound division, so\ntho best Apostoli can gain by beating Thil is the latter's European\ntitle. Apostoli is the only non-champion to be favored in the betting.\nto. Elsdon and\nHaydon Doubles\nTennis Winners\n\/\/in Four, Draw One\nto Take Fairview\nChampionship\nSurviving a -13 handicap through-\nmt their five matches, Mrs. W. Els-\nIon and Syd Haydon marched off\nwith the mixed doubles crown of\nhe Fairview Tennis club at the\nfairview courts Sunday. Four wins\nind a draw gave them a 33 point\notal, just four points above the\nlearest threat, supplied by the teams\nif Mrs. J. J. Payne and Colin Baker,\nind Mrs. Ernest Marsden and J.\n.. C. Laughton.\nThe American style mixed tour-\nlament was the first of three for\nle club's championships to be\ntaged before the season's close,\nScoring was based on the number\nf games won in a match of eight,\night games comprising a single fix-\nire between two competing teams.\nArrangements for the tourney,\nne of the most successful ever held,\nfere handled by Art Hodson of\nle tournament committee.\nRefreshments were served by a la-\nies' committee.\nA dirth of lady contestants made\nt necessary in some cases for men's\nJams to compete.\nTeams and the results follow:\nMrs. Elsdon and S. Haydon,  33\nlints (four wins, one draw); Mrs.\nI J. Payne and C. Baker, 29 points\ntour wins, one loss and one\nlaw); Mrs. Ernest Marsden and\n1 A. C. Laughton, 29 points (four\n|ns, one draw and one loss); Miss\njuriel Weatherhead and Lome A.\ntadley, 25 points (three wins, three\nfses); Miss Doretto Norris and\nfcrman Boss, 25 points (three wins\npee losses); Jerry Whitfield and\n1 Euerby, 25 points (two wins, three\nlaws and one loss); W. Elsdon and\nlib Elsdon, 23 points (two wins, four\nUses); Mrs. Dauglas Male and John\n[orris, 24 points (three wins, one\naw and a loss);.Doug Elsdon and\nbss Fleming, 22 points (three wins,\niree losses); Harry Parker and\nloyd Irwin, 22 points (three wins,\nIree losses); Miss Muriel    Smith\n[DON'T GO HOME\nHUNGRY\nAfter a Dance or Show\n[Treat   yourself   and   your\nfriends to the many\ntempting\nLate Hour Specials\nat the\nG\nOLDEN\nATE CAFE\nBaker St. Phone 861\nand Ted Baker, 21 points (two wins,\nfour losses); Miss Frances Parker\nand Norman Fawcett, 19 points (one\nwin, one draw, and four losses.)\nArt Forrest on\nWay to England\nTrail   Hockey  Scorer\nIs to Play With\nEarl's Court\nArt Forrest, high scoring centre\nof the Trail Smoke Eaters, is on his\nway to England to join the Earl's\nCourt hockey club. He will join\nJack Forsey, former Calgary, Nelson and Kimberley forward who\nwas with Earl's Court last season,\nin Montreal and sail with him. The\nEnglish hockey season opens about\nOctober 10.\nA Trail product all the way. Art\nwas a member of the first Trail\njunior team to win the B. C. title,\nand which in the Memorial cup play-\ndowns wrote western hockey by\nbeing the first B. C. junior team to\nwin a game from a prairie team.\nTrail lost the scries that year to\nSaskatoon after winning the first\ngame 1-0.\nThe Trail star, two years ago top\nscorer in the Kootenay circuit, was\nscheduled to leave the Kootenays\naboard Monday morning's east-\nbound train.\nEnglish Football\nLONDON, Sept. 20 (CP Cable). -\nResults of English soccer and rugby\nmatches played today;\nSOCCER LEAGUE\nFIRST DIVISION\nBlackpool 1. Brentford 1.\nSECOND DIVISION'\nBlackburn Rovers 2, Fulham 2.\nSheffield United 2, Burnley 1.\nTHIRD DIVISION\nSOUTHERN SECTION\nMillwall 4, Walsall 0.\nRUGBY LEAGUE\nOldham 0, Wigan 5.\nRUGBY UNION\nCrosskeys 3, Aberavon 19.\nPontypool 9, Cardiff 24.\nBOXLA PLAYOFFS\nHALT WHILE FAIR\nOCCUPIES ARENA\nCity boxla league playoff series\nnow well under way come to an\nabrupt halt this week, while the Nelson Agricultural and Industrial associations fair is being held, and will\nbe resumed again next week.\nThe Civic Centre arena is being\nutilized by the fair exhibits and no\nsporting activities will be held there\nduring   the   week.\nHere's how the teams in the various play series stand now;\nBantam league:\nTeam: P W L F A Pts.\nCatholic Boys ...  2   2   0   25    19   4\nBluebirds    2   1   1   31   25   2\nFairview A. C. .. 2   0   2   17   29   0\nJuvenile  league:\nCatholic Boys ... 2   1   1   17   16   2\nPanthers    2   1   1   26   23   2\nKinsmen . 2   1   1   20   24   2\nJunior legaue:\nHornets   1   1   0   14   10   2\nFairview A. C. .. 1   0   1   10   14   0\nThree Leafs in\nRace for City\nBatting Crown\nSunday's softball fixture between\nthe Red Sox and the Maple Leafs,\nwill not only be a race for girls'\ncity league softball championship,\nbut also a race for the city batting\nchampionship and the Al Tregillus\nprize.\nThree hard-hitting lassies are in the\nrace for the batting honors. The\nthree are Alice Gillett, Deanie Wallace and Jean Spiers, all of the\nMaple Leafs' squad.\nHUNTERS-\nHere is the ideal hunting boot that\nwill keep your feet warm and dry in\nthe wettest of weather.\nFROM 10\" TO 16\" HEIGHT\n$7'50*up\nRe Andrew & Co*\nLeaders in.Footfashion\nFour Title Fights mi One Card\nThese eight boxers are to meet in an all-star\nchampionship card Thursday in New York. Seated,\nleft to right, they are: Sixto Escobar, Puerto Rico;\nLou Ambers, Herkimer, N.Y.; Barney Ross, Chicago;\nMarcel Thil, Paris, France. Standing, left to right,\nthe fighters are: Harry Jeffra, Baltimore; Pedro\nMentanez, Puerto Rico; Ceferino Garcia, Los An\ngeles and Fred Apostoli, San Francisco. Escobar is\nbantamweight champion; Lou Ambers, the lightweight champ; Barney Ross, welterweight, Marcel\nThil is the French claimant to the European middleweight title. Thus there will be three world titles\nand one European championship at stake.\nJohnston Begins\nHis'Moving Out'\nNEW YORK, Sept. 20 (AP).\u2014As\nhis trusted handy man, old Sam.Mc-\nQuade, affectionately stripped the\nfaded green walls of his priceless\ncollection of autographed pictures,\nMatchmaker Jimmy Johnston began\nmoving out ot his Madison Square\nGarden haunts today.\nRage, bitterness and then a \"what\nthe hell\" sort of forgiveness alternately played on his haunted\nthoughts as he backtracked his\nstormy six years as Garden matchmaker in the prize fight business\nwhere the doublecross sometimes\nseems to be the mos> popular blow.\nAt the finish he tossed up his hands\nand said:\n\"Sure I hate to move out to make\nway for that other crowd from sixth\navenue (Promoter Mike Jacobs,\nwho takes over the Garden's boxing Oct. 1) but maybe it's the best\nthing that ever happened to me.\nI'll make more money on my own\nas a promoter. I ran 35 world's\nchampionship fights, five of them\nfor the heavyweight title, and the\nGarden never lost a thin dime.''\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nW L Pet.\nNew York  \u2022  85 53 .616\nChicago     84 57 .596\nSt. Louis   75 66 .532\nPittsburgh   75 66 .532\nBoston    71 70 .504\nBrooklyn   61 80 .433\nCincinnati   55 84 .396\nPhiladelphia   55 84 .393\nAMERICAN  LEAGUE\nW L Pet.\nNew York   94 45 .676\nDetroit  83 57 .595\nChicago     78 62 .557\nBoston       72 64 .529\nCleveland    74.66 .529\nWashington   66 73 ..475\nPhiladelphia   47 91 .341\nSt. Loins        42 99 .298\nBROTHERS FAIL\nTO BAG GAME IN\nWEEK-END HUNTS\nEmpty-handedness was the reward of two Nelson hunters over the\nweek-end. Tanny Romano returned Sunday night from the Slocan\ndistrict with no game. His brother\nFreddy, also came back empty-hand\ned from Tye. However, Freddy has\ngone to the Castlegar region, hoping\nthe game in that district is not quite\nso immune to the attractions of a\ngun.\nCHUCKER BREAKS\nARM ON FAST ONE\nWINDERMERE, B. C.-Ebbie Bell,\nson of Mrs. Dorothy Bell of Invermere, B. C, was watching a local\nball game, when somebody nsked\nit he would pitch for awhile, Fbbie\nwound up and sent over a fast\nball, and broke his arm Just above\nthe elbow.\nHe received treatment In the\nLady Elizabeth Bruce Memorial\nhospital in Invermere.\nCall Junior Boxla\nPractice Tonight\nWith the inter-city junior boxla\nplaydowns just over a week distant. Nelson league officials are preparing to whip a team into shape for\nthe tri-circuit battles and tonight all\njunior players to take part in the\nNehon city junior league are called out for a practice at the Recreation grounds.\nWith preparations for the fair under way in the Civic Centre arena,\nplay will so on in the open\nArt Wallace will be in charge of\nthe practice.\nPORT WASHINGTON. N.Y., Sept.\n20 (AP)-Milton Wegeforth of San\nDiego, Cal., sailing Lecky, won\nthe international star class world\nsailing championship by placing\nfourth in the fifth and final race\nof the series.\nFOR OTHER SPORT N\u00a3WS\nSEE PAGE TWO\nJunior Inter-City\nBoxla Playoffs to\nStart Next Week\nAccording to word current in Nelson city boxla league circles the\nintercity playoffs will commence\nnext Wednesday, September 29,\nwith Nelson Civic Centre arena as\nthe first battlegrounds. Nelson and\nTrail rep teams are slated to meet.\nRossland is also included in the\nleague.\nAny player who has participated\nin five senior boxla games will not\nbe allowed to take part in the playoffs. Therefore Ian Dingwall, Al\nHooker and Bill Townsend will be\nexcluded from the Nelson lineups\nand Marcus Smith and \"Mouse\"\nDavy from the Trail team.\n..eaders\n \u00a9\t\n(By Tha Acioclated Press) ,\nDucky Medwick of the Cardinals\nadded anothor point to his batting\naverage yesterday, hitting two-for-\nfour for a .379 reason mark, thereby\nboosting his National league lead\nto 21 points. In the American\nleague side of baseball's oig six Lou\nGehrig of the Yankees picked up a\npoint on pace-setter Charley Gehringer of the Tigers, although each\nhit safely only once in four chances.\nThey wound up with Gehringer way\nout in front with .382 .0 .359 for\nthe \"Iron Horse.\"\nStandings of the leaders (first\nthree in each league):\nG AB R H Pet\nGehringer, Tig 130 508 121 194 .382\nMedwick, Cards 143 580 105 220 .379\nGehrig, Yanks 142 527 129 189 .359\nP. Waner, Pir... 141 573 84 205 .358\nMize, Cards. . 132 510 90 182 .357.\nDiMaggio, Yank 136 562 141 197 .351\nTrail, Rossland\nSoftballers May\nPlay Here Sunday\nPossibilities that Nelson fans will\nbe treated to a double sports dish\nagain Sunday when the Red Sox\nand Maple Leafs meet in the final\nof the city girls' softball league playoffs was expressed by a league official Monday.\nIt is possible that arrangements\nwill be made to have a Trail and\nRossland team travel here for a\ngame, following the playoff final.\nJean Spiers will make her appearance with the Maple Leafs in\nthe final.\nGomez Wins His\n20th for Yankees\nNEW YORK, Sept. 20 (AP)-Lefty\nGomez became big league baseballs\nfirst 20-game pitching winner of the\nyear today, witli a classy four-hit\nwhitewashing job against the Tigers.\nHis fine flinging, coupled with\nthe timely hitting of Lou Gehrig,\nJoe DiMaggio, who belted his 44th\nhomer of the year, and Bill Dickey,\ngave the Yankees a 5-0 victory over\nDetroit in the finale of their season's series.\nIt was Lefty's fourth straight win\nand second straight shutout. The\nbig league strikeout king fanned\nnine during the game to boost his\nseason total to 184.\nHe did not walk a batter.\nDetroit   0    4    0\nNew York 5    9    0\nWade and York; Gomez and Dickey.\nRED SOX AND\nBROWNS SPLIT\nBOSTON, Sept. 20 (AP).\u2014The\nRed Sox wound up their season's\nseries today with the St. Louis\nBrowns by splitting a doubleheader\nbefore a scant 1500 customers after\nlosing the opener, 8-6. The Sox came\nback to take the nightcap, 7-5, for\ntheir 15th victory of the year over\nSt. Louis against seven defeats.\nFirst game:\nSt. Louis  8   14    0\nBoston    6     9     0\nTrotter, Bonetti and Giuliani;\nMarcum, Walberg, Newsom and Desautels.\nSecond game:\nSt. Louis  5   12    1\nBoston    7   14    0\nWalkup, Koupal and Giuliani;\nGonzales and Berg.\nChicago at Washington and Cleveland at Philadelphia, played at previous dates.\nDAN. BULGER IS\nSTILL FAVORITE\nLONDON, Sept. 20 (CP Cable)-\nSir Abe Bailey's Dan Bulger today\nmaintained his place as favorite for\nthe Cambridgeshire, being backed\nat 21 to 2, The four-year-old won\nthe race last year.\nJames A. de Rothschild's Esque-\nmeling and Robert Middlemas' Fair-\nplay shared second place at 25 to 1.\nOther odds: Artist's Prince 28 to 1,\nScarlet Princess, Spot Barricd, and\nMoody 33 to 1; Le Bambino, Allegiance, and Red Squaw 40 to 1.\nAnother of Sir Abe Bailey's campaigners, Maranta, held his place as\nfavorite for the Cesarewitch, second\nevent of the Newmarket \"autumn\ndouble\". Maranta was backed at\n100 to 6.\nThe Cambridgeshire will be run\nOctober 13 and the Cesarewitch October 17.\nYou Can't Keep Goodman Down\nBy BURNLEY\n^W;.'olp!\u00bbIJ\nif\nXMATeafV\"\nJOHAJAiy\nOODMAN\nMajor and Miss\nP. Campbell Take\nDoubles Tennis\nTriumphing over their opposition\nin seven matches and dropping but\none, Maurice Major and Miss Patricia Campbell ran off with the Nelson Tennis club's mixed doubles\ntitle Sunday at the upper courts.\nTheir seven wins and one loss netted them a total of 67 points, 12\nabove the runners-up, Peter Dewdney and Mrs. George Simpson, who\nbecause of a high handicap garnered but 55 points from their seven\nwins, with but a single loss.\nEight teams of Nelson racket\nwiclders entered this event and the\ntourney, run off under ideal weather conditions, was a splendid success.\nNorval German and Frank B,\nWells were in charge.\nThe tournament was an American\nstyle event, that is every' team participating played every other team.\nTotal points, not matches won, were\nthe deciding factors.\nTeams and results follow:\nMaurice Major and Miss Patricia\nCampbell, 67 points (seven wins,\none loss); Dr. L. J. Maurer and Mrs.\nL. Lindo, 55 points (five wins, three\nlosses); G. Barwis and Mrs. Barwis,\n47 points (six wins, one draw, one\nloss); L. Lindo and Mrs. L. J. Maurer, 36 points (one win, two draws,\nfive losses); Frank B. Wells and Mrs,\nWells, 30 points (one win, two\ndraws, five losses); Norval German\nand Miss H. Haylock, 29 points (two\nwins, two draws and four losses);\nBert Clark and Mrs. C. A. Larson,\n26 points (one win, two draws, five\nlosses); and F. Morris and Miss Isabel Dawson, 24 points (one win, one\ndraw, six losses).\nidoria Results\nWILLOWS PARK, Victoria, Sept.\n20 \u2014 Race results:\nFirst race\u20145>\/_ furlongs:\nLouis Dear (Craigmyle) 6,10 3.45\n2.45.\nGenevieve M.  (Young)  4.65 2.85.\nAncient Rome (Whitacre) 2.70.\nTime 1.08 1-5. Also ran: Bay Salute, Gold Rose, Candid, Maxim Jester.\nSecond race: Six furlongs 30\nyards.\nPlaying On (Baxter) 4.90 3.65 3.10.\nThrillowisp (Craigmyle) 7.40 4.25.\nTriassic (Young) 4.20.\nTime 1.17 4-5. Also ran: Gypso-\nphilia, Lovely Miss, The Miss, Ethel\nStar, Chardie.\nThird race: Six furlongs 30 yard:\nBrown Jester (Duncan) 5.30 3.70\n2.85.\nLibbett (Wilbourne) 6.50 3.95.\nSunny Colleen (Sporri) 2.75.\nTime 1.18 3-5. Also ran: Sunnyfier,\nHojo, Hillstream, Jeanne Son, Nurse\nSimony.\nDaily double (playing on\u2014Brown\nJester) $14.85.\nFourth race: One mile 70 yards.\nBilly Easter (Young) 4.00 3.20 2.50.\nPrincess Han (Duncan) 660 2.95.\nHappy Jester (Craigmyle) 2.40.\nTime 1.46. Also ran: Brown Jug,\nJungle Chick.\nFifth race\u2014Six furlongs 30 yards.\nLady Goldstream (Wilbourne)\n3.50 2.65 3.00.\nLadyfier (Haller) 4.20 365.\nSome Gift (Baxter) 12.90.\nTime 1.17 2-1. Also ran: Tomdil,\nDunholme, Little Boy Blue, Edison,\nSaxon King.\nOne-two $10.40.\nSix race: l1,. furlongs.\nMac's Best (Wilbourne) 6.45 3.50\nout,\nMaggie O'Boyle (Simpson) 7.70\nout.\nSahara Chief (Sporri) out.\nTime 1,09 2-5. Also ran: Blind\nFannie.\nSeventh race: Mile, 70 yards.\nPipes Pal (Baxter) 3.60 2.70 2.75.\nSwepcn  (Young)  5.40 4.20.\nTampa 'Lass (Frasch) 3.35.\nTime 1.46. Also ran: Chas Clarke,\nSedgie, Mahukona, My Gentleman,\nJudge Austin.'\nTRAIL SINGLES\nGOLF ADVANCES\nTO SEMI-FINALS\nTRAIL, B. C., Sept. 19 \u2014 Bert\nClark, L. S. Piper, P. F. Mclntyre,\nand Rube Nesbitt are the seml-\nfinalists of the Rossland-Trail Golf\nand Country club Directors' cup\nsingles tournament that opened here\ntoday.\nThese four men will play off &\u2022\u25a0\ntheir own convenience during the\nweek.\nTo get into the semi-finals of the\nchampionship flight, Clark beat I\nMitchell, Piper beat R. G. Anderson, Mclntyre beat J. Atwell, and\nNesbitt beat Ted Rice.\nPAGE SEVEN\nGIANTS AND CUBS BOTH WIN ON\nEVE OF START OF CRUCIAL SERIES\nWith 2V_ Games Separating Them, New York\nand Chicago Lock Horns Today in\nBattle for National Pennant\nST. LOUIS, Sept. 20 (AP)-By the\nsimple means of getting away to a\nflying start and then giving Carl\nHubbell the job of staying in command the New York Giants walloped the Cardinals 10-3 with a 17-hit\nattack today to retain their 2>,_-\ngame National league lead.\nThe victory, featured by a first-\ninning outburst in which each club\nconnected for six straight hits, driving both starting pitchers to the\nshowers, gave Hubbell the honor of\nbecoming the first pitcher in the\nNational league to win 20 games\nthis year.\nTaking over at the start of the\nthird, after Cliff Melton had been\nbelted out in one-third inning, and\nWalt Brown had been relieved in\none-and-one-third, Hubbell allowed\nfour hits and fanned six in a classy\nseven-inning relief performance. He\nmissed by some three hours the distinction of becoming the first 20-\ngame-flinger m the majors for the\nyear, since Lefty Gomez turned the\ntrick for the Yankees in New York\nduring the afternoon.\nCRUCIAL SERIES DUE\nGetting set for tomorrow's start\nof their crucial series with the second-place Cubs, who whipped\nBrooklyn today, the Giants exploded their heaviest hitting attack since\nmid-August, sewed up the ball game\nwith a five-run splurge in the first\ninning, and wero never in trouble\nwith Hubbell and his screwball on\nduty.\nNew York .... 502 101 100-10 17 1\nSt. Louis ..300 000 000- 3 10 2\nMelton, W. Brown Hubbell and\nMancuso; Weiland, Harrell, Blake\nand Bremej, Ogrodowski.\nCUBS SQUEEZE\nOUT 5-4 WIN\nCHICAGO, Sept. 20 (AP)-The\nChicago Cubs stopped a big Brooklyn Dodger rally with the tying and\nwinning runs on base in the ninth\ninning today to squeeze out a 5-4\nvictory and stay 2'A games behind\nthe Giants in the Na \"\ndog-fight.\nthe Giants in the National league\nGetting their final tune-up for the\nstart of their crucial series with the\nleague leaders tomorrow, the Cubs\nhad smooth sailing through the first\neight innings as Bill Lee limited the\nBrooklyns to two hits. In the ninth,\nhowever, the Dodgers belted Lee\nand his successor, Clay Bryant, to\nthe showers with a rally that netted all their runs and fell just one\nshort of deadlocking the count.\nThe victory, coupled with the Giants' win in St. Louis, left the pennant chase just where it was before\nhostilities got under way today.\nBrooklyn ... 000 000 004\u2014 4 6 1\nChicago      000 203 00*\u2014 5   9   0\nFrankhouse, Lindsey, Henshaw\nand Phelps; Lee, Bryant, Logan and\nHartnett.\nBoston at Cincinnati and Philadelphia at Pittsburgh, played at previous dates.\nOpponents Beware\nFRED  APOSTOLI\nPacific Coast middleweight sensation, looks like an apostle of doom\nfor his opponent, in this unusual\nangle shot. He was snapped after\na workout at Mme. Bey s camp at\nSummit, N.J., where he is training\nfor his bout with Marcel Thil, European champ. The winner will get\na crack at the title held by Fred\nSteele.\nGuldahl Is Again\nWestern Golf Champ\nCLEVELAND,' Sept. 20 AP). -\nRalph Guldahl of Chicago, national\nopen champion, won his second\nstraight western open golf cham-\nionship today, defeating Horton\nimith of Chicago by four strokes\nin an 18-hole playoff. The two tied\nat 288 for the regulation 72 holes\nwhich ended yesterday. Guldahl\nscored par 72 today, while Smith\nskidded to 7fi.\nBOBGENGE\nDIES AT (OAST\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 20 (C.P). \u2014\nBob Genge, former Victoria fiockey\nplayer, died at. his home here today.\nHe was 47.\nGenge learned his hockey in Port\nArthur, Ont., and played on the prairies before turning professional.\nThen he came west, in 1913 joined\nLester Patrick's Victoria team.\nClark, Bennett\nTops in Shoot\nMurray Clark and J. Gordon Bennett split the honors in Sunday's\ntrap shoot of the Nelson Trap and\nSkeet club at the club grounds, both\nsharpshooters taking a first and second in the two contests held. Clark\ngarnered first honors with his 14\nscore in the first, while Bennett\ntook the second shoot with 16.\nWith the hunting season in full\nswing only a few of the gunmen\nappeared for the shoot, most of them\npreferring to try their luck on living\ntargets.\nContestants and scores follows:\nFirst shoot\u2014Murray Clark 14, J.\nGordon Bennett 10, C. E. G. Fisher\n9, Bert Harrison 7 and Frank B.\nWells 2.\nSecond shoot\u2014J. Gordon Bennett 10, Clark 15, Fisher 9, and Harrison 6.\nHoirYe Runs\n\u2014\u2014-\u00a9-^\u2014-\nBy The Associated Preu\nYesterday's homers: DiMaggio,\nYankees; Doerr, Red Sox; Bell,\nBrowns, one each.\n\u2022The leaders: DiMaggio, Yankees,\n44; Gehrig, Yankees, 36; Greenberg,\nTigers, 36; Foxx Red Sox, 33; Ott,\nGiants, 31; York, Tigers, 31.\nLeague totals: American 748, National 590, total 1338.\nN. H. L. Governors\nto Meet Sept. 24\nMONTREAL, Sept. 20 (CP) \u2014\nFrank Calder, president of the National Hockey league, announced\ntoday the meeting of governors,\noriginally scheduled to be held in\nToronto September 25 will be held\nin New York, September 24.\nGiants 7-4 Win\nTies Up Trial\nSenior Softball\nTRAIL, B. C, Sept, 20\u2014Giants\nhanded Cubs a 7-4 defeat to tie up\nthe senior men's softball league second-half finals here Sunday. Cubs\ntook the first game by default. The\nsecond game was a tie.\nIn order to get into the finals of\nthe entire league Cubs must win\nthe next game as Giants were champions of the first half. Should Giants\nwin the second half playoffs it will\nnot be necessary lor any further\ngames, Giants automatically taking\nthe championship and the G, G.\nCumming's cup.\nBudge and Von\nCramm Win on\nPacific Coast\nLOS ANGELES, Sept. 20 (API-\nLed by America's Don Budge and\nBaron Gottfried von Cramm, of Germany, favorites came through unscathed1 in opening rounds of the\nmen's singles in the Pacific southwest tournament at the Los Angeles Tennis club today.\nBudge and his Teuton rival moved\ninto the second round by defaults\nand won their next matches handily. Budge defeated Ted Wellman,\nLos Angeles, 6-3, 6-1, and von\nCramm won from Modeste Aloo,\nSan Francisco, after a match harder\n\"\u25a0-- \"\u25a0- \" \" '  '\nNelson Net Artists Plan Big Day\nSunday; Four Tournaments on Book\nAnother full Sunday is ahead for\nNelson tennis enthusiasts, for both\nclubs, the Fairview Tennis club and\nthe Nelson Tennis club, plan tourneys.\nAs a grand windup to a splendid\nseason Fairview net artists will\nmeet in tournament play, battling\nfor the club's singles championships. Up the hill at the Nelson\nTennis club upper courts the men's\nand ladies' doubles championships\nwill be at. stake.\nHinitt-Haydon cup and the ladies'\nLaughton cup will go on the block\nin the Fairview singles contests.\nBoth will be open handicap affairs,\nlosing players simply being knocked out of play.\nThursday is the deadline set for a\nentry into the Fairview meets, while\nno date has been set as yet for entry for the Nelson club events.\nAmerican style tourneys will be\nheld by the Nelson club, that i\u00ab\nevery team must meet every other\nteam participating.\nHarold H. Hinitt will be In charge\nof (lie Fairview tourney while Norval R. German and Frank Wells will\nPHILIP MORRIS\nsssmm\n \u2014\n|MM|ii|.UI,^i|iji^\nPAGE EIGHT-\nNELSON  DAILY  NEWS.  NELSON.  B.C.\u2014TUESDAY   MORNING. SEPT. 21. 1937.\nRent the Spare Room Make It Help Pay Expenses PL 144\nGLANCES INTO THE MIRROR OF\nLIFE IN KOOTENAY-BOUNDARY\nNEW DENVER\u2014Miss Dora Clever has left to spend a vacation at\nthe home of her brother-in-law and\nsister Mr. and Mrs. H. Bolston of\nKansas City, Miss. . . . Miss Hilda\nCrellin entertained at her home\nTuesday, Aug 31 in honor ot Miss\nMarion Abererombie of Vancouver\nwho has been a guest of her uncle\nand aunt, Dr. and Mrs. A. Francis\nfor the summer. Games were played\n?ftcr which refreshments were served by Mrs. R. W. Crellin assisted by\nMrs. T. Pearson. Guests were\nMarion Abererombie, Marjorie\nFrancis, Blanche Meers, Margaret\nBroughton, Hazel Flint, Dagmar Olsen, Marguerite Campbell, Olive\nTattrie and Hilda Crellin. ... Joe\nLauriente of the Kootenay Belie\nmine, Salmo, is a visitor in town.\n. . . Miss Helena Tarron of Nelson\nis spending a holiday with her parents Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Tarron and\nher sister Mrs. J. Black of Ihe Lucky\nJim mine. . . . Mr. and Mrs. W. H.\nWhite and Miss Betty White of\nNakusp were visilors in town\nThursday.... Mr. and Mrs. A. B. S.\nStanley of Nakusp were visitors\nlast week. . . . Kenneth White of\nNakusp was a visitor in town\nThursday. . . . Mrs. H. Walbaum\nwas hostess to the members of\nPresbyterian church Ladies Aid\nThursday Sept. 2. It was decided to\nhave a sale on October 30, Members present were Mrs. L. D. Irwin,\nMrs. Joseph Taylor, Mrs. Jack Taylor, Miss H. Taylor. Mrs. G. Williamson, Mis. J. C. Harris. Mrs. 0.\nEnockson, Mrs. A. W. Nesmilh, Mrs.\nF. Broughton, Mrs. J. Klicn and\nMrs. H. Walbaum. Visitors were\nMrs. J. Nesmith, Miss Grimmer\nof New Westminster and Miss Blyth\nPresbyterian deaconess. Refreshments were served by Mrs. Walbaum. . . . Thursday Sept. 2 the\nWomen's Auxiliary to St. Stephen's\nAnglican church met at the home\nof Mrs, A. L. Harris. Mrs. F. Browne\nthe president, was in the chair. Refreshments were served by Mrs.\nHarris. Members present were Mrs.\nF. Browne, Mrs. R. W. Crellin. Mrs.\nC. Thring, Mrs. H. Alywin, Miss W.\nAlywin, Miss D. Lowe, Mrs. D.\nPowell, Mrs. A. L. Levy, Miss G\nReynolds, Mrs. L. W. Sells, Miss M.\nMeers Mrs. S. Thomlinson, Mrs.\nH. H.' Pendry and Mrs. W. Cliffe.\nOne visitor, Mrs. G. Bennett, was\npresent.\nNAKUSP, B.C.-E. W. Somers of\nNelson was a week-end visitors m\ntown. . . . Miss E. La Rue of Vancouver, who has been visiting relatives here for the past two months,\nleft Monday. . . . Mr. and Mrs E.\nRussell, who have ben visiting Mrs.\nRussell's parents, Mr. and Mrs. J.\nParent sr., have left for their home\nin Tacoma. . . . F. McDonald of Vancouver was a visitor here Saturday\n. . . Mr. and Mrs. J. Parent sr. have\nreturned from Kamloops where they\nvisited Mrs. Parent's sister, Mrs.\nGenier. . . . Mrs. W. Hubert of Burton spent Friday in Nakusp. . . .\nMrs. J. Gardner of Graham's Landing is visiting Mr. and Mrs. C. L\nHoltz. . . . R. Keffer of Burton was\nin town Saturday. . . . Mrs. E. Hubert of Burton was a guest at the\nhome of Mr. and Mrs. C. Turner.\n... J. Draper of New Denver motored to town Saturday. . . . Mr. and\nMrs. Milton Davies and family of\nKlamath Falls, Ore., who have been\nvisiting Mrs. Davies' parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. J. Parent jr., left for home,\nThursday. . . . Mr. and Mrs. R. A.\nFowler returned recently from a\nmotor trip to Winnipeg and Minaki\nLodge, Ont., were week-end visitors\nin Nakusp. . . . H. J. Murphy ot\nNelson was a Nakusp visitor, . . .\nMr. and Mrs. J. Cookson and L. Eli\nof Burton were Friday visitors to\ntown. . . . William Christopher of\nVernon was a week-end visitor to\nNakusp. . . . Mrs. A. E. Fowler returned last week after spending a\nholiday in Rimby, Calgary and\nBanff. In Rimby Mrs. Fowler visited her brother and sister-in-law. Mr,\nand Mrs. F. Vipond. . . . Mrs. R.\nBrodie and Mrs. E. Brodie were\nweek-end visilors to Nelson.\nMiss Louise Swanson of Fruitvale\nwas a week-end visitor at the home\nof her parents here. . . . Miss Eva\nViau has left for Trail. Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. F. Doerksen of Fruitvale were\nvisitors to Mr. and Mrs. J. McColin's.\n. . . Mr, and Mrs. D. Tremblay and\nson, Paul, of Spokane were visitors\nto Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Tremblay's.\n... V. Weid of Fruitvale was a\nvisitor here. . . . E. Tremblay has\nleft to visit Spokane. . . . Mrs. T. R,\nSwanson has returned from Fruitvale. . . . Mrs. Harry Tremblay and\nMrs. A. Viau were visitors to Trail.\n... 2. LcPage was a visitor to\nT. J. Tremblay's.\nKINGSGATE. EASTPORT-Miss\nLois Graham arrived home Sunday for a vacation accompanied bv\nMiss Katherine Bohychuk of Edmonton Alta. They left again Wednesday for Vancouver accompanied by David and Mre, H. R. 'Graham. , . . The Ladies Contract club\nheld their reorganization meeting\nTuesday at the home of Mrs. Ray\nThomason. Mrs. S. E. Gunn was\nelected president and Mrs. T. J,\nBalf secretary-treasurer. After business was finished bridge was played\nwith Mrs. Paul Thorn finishing up\nas high scorer. . . . Friday evening\nthe Ladies Study club held their\nfirst meeting of the season. The\nhome of Mrs. W. E. Hall was the\nvenue and a comprehensive program of miscellaneous topics was\ngiven. Mrs. Balf was elected vice-\npresident to take the place of Mrs\nW. E. Miller who has resigned.\nMrs. William Dunbar, Mrs. J. B.\nChristensen and Mrs. A. Rebellard\nwere guests of the club for the\nevening. . . . Inspector Cadiz, R. C.\nM. P. of Vancouver was in Kings-\ngate Sunday on his way to Cran-\ni brook. He was accompanied by\nMrs. Cadiz. . . . Corporal J. B\nChristensen, R, C. M. P.\na special course at Regina. . . . Mr.\nand Mrs. Ken Corbett are back in\nEastport. . . F. J. Smyth of Cranbrook passed through here en route\nto Spokane where he will spend a\nholiday.\nSLOCAN PARK\u2014Rev. and Mrs.\nHerman Eldridge were visitors to\nSlocan park and held a service at\nthe home of Mrs. O. Storbo Sunday.\n. . . Mrs. S. Reid celebrated Labor\nDay by giving a luncheon to seven\nladies. . . . Miss D. Illingworth and\nMiss Hannah were visitors to Slocan Park, guests of Mrs. E. H. Greav-\nison Mr.   and   Mrs.   Harold\nGroom. Mrs. E. Groom and Miss\nMiller of Lethbridge, Alta., were\nguests of Mrs. A. D. Crebbin Monday. The motored from Lethbridge.\n. . . School reopened here with Mr.\nBradshaw and Miss Fraser back on\nthe job and an enrollment of 48\npupils. . . . Charles Dickey and Mrs.\nBaskin were shoppers to Nelson\n. . . Mrs. Max Baskin and Miss Crebbin took a four-mile hike on the\nwest side of the Slocan river Labor\nDay. . . . Mr. and Mrs. Pen Baskin\nof South Slocan spent the week-end\nhere, guests of Mr. and Mrs. Max\nBaskin.\nNATAL\u2014Miss Mary Lazaruk of\nNatal is visiting at Hillcrest, Alia.\n. . . Mr. and Mrs. n. Bonar and\nfamily have returned to Michel after a holiday at the coast. ... Mr\nand Mrs. Hockley of Penticton were\nrecent Natal visitors, ... P. Mi-\nhalynuk left Michel last week for\nFort William where he will attend\nthe funeral of a relative. He was\naccompained by his daughter Elizabeth. , . . Miss Vernon Travis of\nNatal is spending a holiday at Creston at the home of Mr. and Mrs.\nF. Travis.\nhere took part in the periodic shoot\ning tests in Cranbrook Monday and\nmade a good enough score to entitle\nhim to have his \"crossed pistols\"\nmounted on his arm. Corporal\nChristensen is in charge of the\nCreston district at present in the\nabsence of Constable Ashby taking\nARROW   CREEK\u2014Mrs.   DeWolfe\nvisited the valley last week. . . . E,\nIngram, who is working in Cranbrook, was home for the week-end.\n... Inspector Brown visited the val-\nthe post | ley las' week. . . . R. Clarkson and\nfamily had visitors from the prairie\nlast week. . . . The A.C.F.C, mcl\nSunday at the home of Mrs. R,\nClarkson and election of officers for\nthe coming year took place, Mrs. F\nBunce was elected president and\nMrs. Boehmcr was reelected secretary-treasurer.\nON THE AIR\nGREENWOOD\u2014Mrs. A. J. Morrison, Mrs. I. Saunders and Miss Alice\nMorrison have left for Vancouver\nand Seattle, . . . H. H. Summersgill\nhas left to spend a vacation at Spokane and Seattle. . . . Mrs. A. J.\nCampbell has left for Vancouver to\nreside L R. Gowans of Grand\nForks spent a short time in town.\na guest of Mr. and Mrs. J. P. C.\nWright en route to Kelowna to\nspend a few months. . . . Emory\nLegault has returned after spending\nhis vacation at his home at Ottawa\n, . . Mi\\ and Mrs. Keady accompanied by Miss A. Simpson have returned after spending a few weeks' vacation at Yellowstone Park. . . . Mr\nand Mrs. W. C. Wilson had as their\nguest R. Mallchue of Vancouver. . .\nA. Sater has returned after spending a few days at Coulee Dam,\nWash, . . . Mr. and Mrs. A. Sale:\nhad as their guests Mr. and Mrs.\nS. Hooker Nelson of Kendrick, Ida.,\nand Mrs. Carl Arsteen of Spokane.\nWasii. . . , Mis. X. Algaard and son.\nTony, of Trail are visiting at the\nhomo of Mr. and Mrs. G. Aunc.\nCANADIAN   BROADCASTING\nCORPORATION   NETWORK\n5:00 Mirror of Music; 5:30 This\nis Paris; 6:00 Its in the air; 6:30\nDrought talk; 7:00 The Vagabonds;\n7:30 Mart Kenney's orchestra,\nToronto; 8:00 Just S'possin', drama,\nWinnipeg; Bob Lyon orchestra;\n8:30 To be announced; 8:45\nGood Evening News, Vancouver; 9:00 As Embers Glow,\nfrom Winnipeg; 9:30 Old Time frolic,\ntrom Saskatoon; 10:00 News, Vancouver; 10:15 Chamber music. Vancouver; 1P:45 Weather forecast.\nN.B.C.-KPO RED NETWORK\nKHQ KGW KFI KPO KOMO\n590 620 640 680 920\n5:00 the Beaux Arts trio; 5:30\nRaymond Ross director of music and\nprogram, Lanny Ross, etc.; 6:30\nJimmie Fidler, Hollywood gossip;\n6:45 Vic and Sade. comedy; 7:00\nAmos 'n' Andy; 7:15 Lou Breeze's\norchestra; 7:30 'Johnny Presents;\n8:00 Death Valley Days, drama; 8:30\nGood Morning Tonight, vocal, Gyula\nOrmay and his orchestra; 9:00\nThrills, drama, Gayne Whitman,\nnarrator, David Broekmai.'s orch,;\n9:30 Carlos Molinas' orch.; 10:00\nNews flashes; 10:15 Edna Fischer\nDirects; 10:30 Jack Winston's orch.;\n11:00 Hal Kemp's orch.; 11:30 Leon\nMojica and orchestra.\nN.B.C.-KGO BLUE NETWORK\nKGO KJR KEX KECA KGA\n790 170 1180 1430 1470\n5:00 Ben Bernie; 5:30 To be announced; 6:45 Manuel and Williamson, harpsichord; 7:00 To be announced; 7:15 Lum and Abner;\n7:30 Eddie Varzo and his orchestra;\nProfessor Fuzzlewit, KGO; 8:00\nDarrcll Dnnnell, News; 8:15 Concert Hall; 8:30 Marvin Frederick and his orchestra; 9:00 Russian Rhapsody; 9:30 King Jester's orchestra; 9:45 Al Vierra's\norchestra; 10:00 Frank Castle's orchestra; 10:30 Jimmy Grier's orch,;\n11:00 Haven of Rest. KECA; 11:30\nCharles Runyan, organist.\nROSS SPUR\u2014Miss Edna Swanson\nof Trail is spending a holiday at\ntlie home of her parents here. . . .\nMr. and Mrs. M. Lajeunese and\ndaughter, Germaine, of Shell River,\nSask., were guests of Mr and Mrs. T.\nJ. Tremblay. ... A. Waldy of Trail\nwas a visitor here.. . . John Colligan\nof Trail was a visitor at the home of\nT. R. Swanson, . . . Bill Moll of\nTrail w\nhome. . , . Mrs. Harry Tremblay\nand infant daughter are guests ol\nMrs, A. Viau, . . . Miss Agnes Swanson is visiting friends at Trail. . . .\nMrs. Jake Wolf was a visitor \\>\nFruitvale. . . . C. Tremblay has left\nto visit relatives at Spokane. . . .\nCOLUMBIA NETWORK\nKVI KOIN KNX KSL KOL\n570 940 1050 1130 1270\n5:00 Biltmore orch.; 5:30 Benny\nGoodman's or,; 6:00 U.S. Navy band;\n6:30 Russell Dorr, baritone; 6:45\nLeaves in the Wind; 7:00 Scat-\ntergood Baines; 7:15 Jay Freeman's\norch.; 7:30 Al Jolson and company;\nKVI, Guy Lombardo's orchestra.\nKOL; 8:00 Al Pearce and his gang;\n8:30 Tommy Dorsey's orch.; 8:45\nSlvles bv Simeone, Art of Convention, KOIN; 9:15 Song Slylisls; 9:30\nArt of Conversation; 10:00 Joaquin Grill orchestra; 10:45 Red\nNorvo's orchestra; 11:00 Eddie Fitzpatrick and orchestra; 11:15 Al Lyons' orchestra; 11:30 Ted Fio-Rito's\norchestra.\n600 k\nVancouver\nCJOR\n499.7 m\n500 w\n5:15 Pete Cowan's Old Timers:\n6:15 Monitor Views the News; 6:45\nSports Resume; 7:00 Stock Quotations; 7:30 Political broadcast; 7:45\nOzzie Ross, tenor; 8:09 O'Brien\nGhost: 8:38 Card Smaller, violinist;\n9:00 Len Chamberlain's orch.; 9:30\nMusic from across the sea; 10:00\nFrank Filianges' orchestra; 10:15\nTropical Sunset; 10:45 Len Chamberlain's orchestra; 11:00 Rhythm\non Record.\n910 K CJAT ,319.6 m\nTrail 1000 w\nvisitor at i LePotes 7 \u201e- MorninB Vespers; 7 15 Musi\ncal clock; 8:00 The request pro,; 8:30\nThe Rossland Bulletin, 9:30 The Old\nTimer; 9:45 Organ Fantasy, 10:00\nMemory Lane; 10:15 What's New;\n10:31) Tire Radio diet; 10,45 MeK.dll\nPipes: 11:00 Morning matinee; 11:15\nKootenay   Echoes;    11.20   Mouito:\nviews the News; 11:45 On Wings\nof Song; 12:15 Spokane Welcomes; 12:30 Pinto Pete; 12:45\nMusical Moments; 1:15 Rhythm and\nRomance; 1:30 Concert Time; 3:00\nIn the Crimelight; 3:30 Cub Reporters; 4:00 Success story; 4:1a\nClub Matinee; 4:30 Cecil and Sally;\n5:00 Theatre News; 5:15 Happy\nValley Folks, E.T.; 5:45 Nonsense\nand Melody; 6:00 See C.B.C. Network except; 6:30 The Buccaneers;\n7:!5 Waltz Time; 8:30 Guilty or\nNot Guilty; 10:45 Lullaby Land.\n1030 k CFCN 293.1 m\nCalgary 10,090 w\n5:00 Concert master; 5:30 Man\nAbout Town; 6:15 The Buccaneers;\n6:30 The Talking Drums; 6:45 Hollywood brevities; 7:00 Russian Gypsy\norchestra; 7:30 The Cub Reporter; 8:00 Charles Magnante; 8:15\nGaieties; 8:30 House of Peter McGregor; 9:00 News flashes; 9:30 Peacock court; 9:45 Garden of melody.\nSHORT WAVE PROGRAMS\nBRITISH  EMPIRE\nTRANSMISSION 6\nGSI 15.20 mcs. (19.66 m.)\nGSF 15.14 mcs. (19.82 m.)\nGSD 11:75 mcs. (25.53 m.)\nGSC 9.58 mcs. (31.32 m.)\n6:00  p. m.-Big Ben. World Affairs, talk.\n6:15\u2014Chamber Music.\n7:35\u2014Musical Interlude.\n7:40\u2014News  and  Announcements.\nINTERNATIONAL\nTOKYO-L45 p.m. Toyama Military Band of the Imperial Japanese Army. JZK. 19.7 m., 15.16 meg.;\nJZJ, 25.4 in., 11.80 meg.\nSCHENECTADY-3 p. m. Science\nin the News. W2XAF, 31.4 m. 9.53\nmeg.\nSCHENECTADY-3,35 p.m. Short\nWave Mail Bag W2XAF, 31.4 m.\n9.53 meg.\nJ3ERLIN- 3:45 p.m. German Musical Instruments, a melodious report. DJD, 25.4 m., 11.77 meg.\nSANTIAGO, CHILE-5:45 p.m.\nSymphony; Opera; Latin American.\nChilean and International music.\nCB960, 31.2 m. 9.60 meg.\nCARACAS -6:0.1 p.m. Los Cum-\naneses, quartet. YVaRC, 51.7 m. 5.8\nmeg.\nBERLIN-6:15 p.m. About Lansquenets, Soldiers and Wandering\nFellows.  DJD, 254 m\u201e   11.77  meg.\nBUENOS AIRES, ARGENTINE-\n8 p.m. Dance Music. LUX, 31.06 m\u201e\n9,66  meg,\nSASKATOON 9:30 p.m. Old Time\nFrolic. CJRO, 48.7 m\u201e 6.15 meg,;\nCJRX 25.5 m\u201e 11.72 meg.\nTOKYO - 9:15 p. in. Children's\nSongs, and Songs for Home Singing. JZK, 19.7 m\u201e 15.16 meg.\nLYNDHURST, AUSTRALIA -\n1 a.m. (Wednesday) National talk\nVK3LR, 31.3 m\u201e 9,58 meg.\n.Nrlamt Eaily -fame\nMember of the Canadian Daily\nNewspapers Assi.riat.on\nTELEPHONE   144\nPrlvatft Exchange Conne_tlno to\nall Departments\nSubscription Rates\nSingle copy  $   .05\nBy carrier per week  _     .25\nBy carrier per yeai  1300\nBy mail in Canada, to subscribers living outside regular\ncarrier areas, per month 60c;\nthree months J 80; six mcyilhs\n$3.00, one year $6 00.\nUnited Stales and Great Britain, one month 75r; six mon.hs\n$4.00; one year $7 50.\nForeign countries, other than\nU S., same as above plus any\nextra postage.\nAdvertising Rates\nIlea Line\n(Minimum 2 lines)\n2 lines, per Insertion  $ .22\n2 lines. Q cunsecutive\ninsertions    88\n(6 for the price of 4)\n3 lines, per insertion  33\n3 lines. 6 consecutive\ninsertions     1.32\n2 lines. 1 month  ... 2.86\n3 lines, 1 month   4.29\nFdr   advertisements   of   more\nthan three lines, calculate on\nthe above basis\nBox   numbers   lie  extra.  This\ncovers any number of insertions\nALL ABOVE RATES LESS 10%\nFOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nBIRTHS\nPANGBURN\u2014To Mr. and Mrs.\nCecil Pangburn. at Victorian hospital, Kaslo, September 8, a daughter.\nPERSONAL\nMEN! GET VIGOR AT ONCE NEW\nOstrex Tonic Tablets contain raw\noyster invigorators and other\nstimulants. One dose peps up organs, glands. If not delighted\nmaker refunds few cents paid\nCall, write. Mann-Rutherford Co\n(2233i\nFRESH SANITARY RUBBER LA-\ntex special guaranteed 25 for $1 00\nWrite for free catalogue. National\nImporters. Box 244, Edmonton. Alberta. <2234)\nMEN'SHSUPERFTNE SANITARY\nRubbers. Send $1.00 for 15 guaranteed. Also LATEX at 25 for\nS1.00. Mention which. BURRARD\nSPECIALTY Co., 18 Hastings St.\nW. Vancouver, (24261\nLEGAL NOTICES\nNOTICE   TO   DELINQUENT\nCO-OWNER.\nTO W, H. MORGAN, or to any\nperson you may have transferred\nyour  V*   interest:\nTake notice that I, the undersigned co-owner with you in the three\nMineral Claims, Gold Knob, Gold\nStream, Bear Paw, situated at Lemon\nCreek in the Slocan Mining District,\nProvince of British Columbia, have\ndone the required work on the above\nmentioned Claims for the years 1934,\n1935, 1936, 1937, in order to hold\nthe same under Section 48 of th(\nMineral Act as amended April 14th\n1930, and if within 90 days of the\npublication of this notice you fail\nor refuse to contribute your portion\nof such expenditure, together with\nthe cost of the advertisement (being\na total of $198,55) your interest in\nsaid Mineral Claims will become\nthe property of the undersigned\nunder Section 4 of the Mineral Ac*.\nDated at Vallican, B.C., this 13th\nday of September, 1937.\nCo-Owner.\nGEORGE SOUCEY.\n(2446)\nHELP WANTED\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nCOOK, PAINTER, BAKER. GARD-\nener or clerk. Very good education, Different languages. Bookkeeping, shorthand in German.\nClean and honest. Box 2493, Daily\nNews.  (2493)\nCDN. WOMAN CLEANING, WASH-\ning, waxing, minding children. 25c\nhr. and crfre. Box 2472 Daily News\n (2472)\nWOMAl^TrxPERIENCEb^OOK\nClean, reliable. Prefer camp. Box\n2500, Daily News. (25001\nPROPERTY, HOUSES. FARMS\nETC., FOR SALE\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non easy terms in Alberta and\nSaskatchewan Write for full in\nformation to 908 Dept of Natural\nResources, C.P.R.. Calgary Alta\n(2243)\nBL7KrX^MAP~782ATFormerjOHN\nSnow place. South Slocan. What\noffers?     Sarah    Hamilton,   1218\nIngraham St., Los Angeles, Calif.\n(24681\nSIX ROOM RESIDENCE, 204 VER\nnqn street. Excellent condition\nfireplace, full cement basement\nand furnace. Phone 662.      (2333)\n2~STOREY>RAME~ HOUSE,\" O UT-\nbuildings. 5 acres. Water rights.\nMile from Nelson. P. O. Box 791.\nNelson. _ (2547)\nMODERN' HOMErTACSES, IRRI-\ngated Orchard. Immediate possession. Mrs. W. B. Martin, Creston.\n(2540)\nPOULTRY, SUPPLIES, ETC.\nCALENDAR AND ADVERTISING\nSpecialty salesman. Exclusive territory, highest commissions, large\nline. Experience preferred, but\nnot necessary. Apply to $ox 521,\nLondon, Ont. (2548)\nMAN OR \"LADY'tcTseLITSPORT\nsuits and dresses for the .Logan\nGarment Ltd.. Lethbridge, Alta\nApply J. H. Bridge. Sales supervisor,  Magrath,  Alta. (2467)\nwanted.experienceTTapple\npackers.    Apply    Boswell    Fruit\nGrowers. (2519)\nTRY A WANT AD\nTHE CUMPS\nPULLETS\ni     ,  ,      ,     Raised from  the\n\"\u25a0ViH'      \"Chicks Which\nGive Results\".\nLeghorns. 8 weeks   $65 per 100\n10 weeks     75 per 100\nBarred Rocks and\nLight Sussex 8 weeks 75 per 100\n10 weeks  85 per 100\nRUMP & SENDALL LTD.\nLangley  Prairie, B.C.\n(2230)\nLEGHORN PULLETS. READY TO\nlay. Highest grade known. Alex\nCheyne, Erie, B. C. (2520)\nSTAMPS\nVlIGHEST PRICES PAID FOR OR-\ndinary used Canadian and all other stamps. Send dime for buying\nprice list \"Stampco.\" Stn. B.,\nWinnipeg. (2371)\nFor Want Ad\nService\nPhone 144\nFOR SALE\nFOR SALE\nProperty on finest central location\nin the city. Lovely view, grocery\nstore Vs block, Public and High\nschools 2 Sc A blocks, 5 minutes from\nBaker.St. Living room, dining room,\nkitchen, 3 bed rooms, bath, All new\nwhite plumbing. Built in features.\nPiped for gas, wired for electric\nrange, tank heater. Concrete foundation, furnace in basement. Suite' in\nbasement consists of living room.\nwall bed, kitchen, bath room, Inlaid\nlinoleum In kitchen and bath room\nAlso light fixtures, modern wiring,\nwith switches and wall plugs everywhere. Basement suite wired separate. Coal and wood goes in basement direct from truck. Back and\nfront porches. Newly decorated and\nin first class condition throughout\nHouse now rented at $30 month\nCan rent suite at $20. Everything\ngoes for $2700. $1600 cash, balance\narranged. Box 2508 Daily News.\n(2508)\nWANTED\nSMALL   UNFURNISHED   HOUSE\nor three rooms.   Phone 249 R2.\n'  (2528)\nWANTED \u2014 Big game  or  medium\nweight rifle. Apply Box 566. (2536)\nAUTOMOTIVE\nWILL TRADE BUICK TOURING\nCar for carpenter work. Box 2554\nDaily News. (2554)\nLOST AND FOUND\nTo Finders\nIf you find a cat or dog, pocket- '\nbook, lewelry or fur. or any j\nthing else of value, telephone\nthe Daily News A \"Found\" Ad\nwill be inserted without rost to\nyou. We will collect from the\nowner.\nLIVESTOCK FOR SALE\nFINE BIG HOLSTEIN COW TO\nfreshen in 3 weeks. Apply 711 Nelson Avenue. (2551)\nDOCS, PETS, FOR SALE\nTWO RED COCKER SPANIEL\npuppies. Phone Rasmussen 678 R2,\nNelson, B. C. (2529)\nFOUND-ROWBOAT OWNER CA*\nhave same by identifying an\npaying for this ad. Apply Dafl]\nNews. (2555H\nFRUIT ACENTS\nFRUIT GROWERS - SHIP US AL!\nvarieties of tree fruits in straigh\nor mixed cars. Receive benefi\nof the highest prairie marke\nprices. Returns made every Satuj\nday. The Royal Fruit Companj\nRegina, Sask. (2186\nBusiness and Professional Directory\nFINE BEAUTY\nSHOP\nin best location In Nelson, doing\na splendid business. First class\nmodern equipment.\nThis Is a going concern with\neverything complete to step in\nand go to \\york.\nTerms reasonable. For further\ninforrnation write to\u2014\nP.O. BOX 1078\n(2458)\nPIPE   1UBES   FITTINGS\nNEW AND USED\nLarge stock for immediate shipment\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD\n1st Avenue and Main St.\nVancouver. B.C.\n(2237)\nPIANO; A BRUNSWICK BALKE\nJunior Billiard and Pool Table,\n3 by 6; Shotgun, Fox, Sterling-\nworth. Phone 245Y. (2475)\npipe and'fittTngs\nCANADIAN  JUNK  Company  Ltd\n250 Prior St. Vancouver. BC\n      (2238)\nFOR SALE - BARRELS, KEGS\nsugar sacks, Ijners. McDonald Jam\nCo.. Ltd., Nelson, B. C^_ (2239)\nVTlWabLE PIANO, GRAMO\"-\nphonc, dresser, bed, 6-hole range,\n406 Richards St. (2505)\nCOOK STOVE, DAVENPORT AND\n3 lb. Computing Scales. 723 Silica.\n(2522)\nWE SELL EVERYTHING AT BAR-\ngain prices. The Ark Store. (2348)\nFOR RENT, HOUSES, APTS.\nETC.\nWILL GIVE 2 ROOM SUITE RENT\nfree to married couple who will\nlook after 5 small suites.   Apply\nC. W. Appleyard Sc Co., Baker St.\n(2549)\n3 UNFURNISHED ROOMS, SUIT-\nable for housekeeping. Private\nhomej.pplyJOS StanleySt. (2521)\nFURN. OR UNFURN. ROOMS,\nsuitable for housekeeping. 518\nCarbonate St. or Ph. 273R.   (2557)\nHOUSE^KEEPING^ROOM. PHONE\nevenings 728X, 718 Silica St.\n(2476)\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms for rent    Annable Bln<'k\n(2240)\nTERRACE APTS Beautiful modern\nfrigidaire equipped suites.   (2241)\nV AC ANf~STORE~ON BAKER~ST.\nApply Nelson Grocery, (2437)\nFur\u00a5iTheT3 SUITES IrT^THE\nKerr apartments. (2242)\nCLASSIFIED MAIL ORDERS\nfrom out-of-town residents given\nprompt attention.\nAssayers\nInsurance and Real Estate\n(Continued)\nE W. WIDDOWSON. PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst.    Assayer.    Metallurgical\nEngineer    Sampling    Agents    at\nTrail Smelter    301-305 Josephine\nSt.. Nelson. B C.                   (2244)\nGRENVILLF, H GRIMWOOD\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist 618\nBiker Street. Nelson   B  C. P  O\nBox   No   726   Representing  ship\nUNDER   NEW    MANAGEMENT-\nDistrict management of the Mu\nual Benefit Health and ace. asso\nnow under supervision of Frank .\nStuart and E. L. Warburton. Ol\nfice:  Aberdeen  Block, 577 Bak<\nstreet, Nelson, P. O. Box 389.\n(2172\nper's interest, Trail. B C.     (2245)\nMachinists\nAutomobile Radiator Repairs\nNELSON RADIATOR WORKS\nExpert Repairs\nNew Cores Installed\nCapitol Motors Building\n(2246)\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nFor all Classes of Metal Work, Lath\nWork, Drilling. Boring and Grind\"\ning. Motor Rewiring, Acetylene\nWelding\nTelephone 503      324 Vernon Stree\n(2260\nChiropractors\nH   E. STEVENSON.   Machinist\nBlacksmiths. Electric and Acetylen\nWelders. Expert workmen.  Satisfac\ntion guaranteed. Mine & Mill work\nspecialty.   Fully equipped shop Pt\n98, 708-12 Vernon St., Nelson. (2261\nj. r  McMillan, d. c. nfuro-\ncalometer and  X-ray     16    years\nexperience. McCullock Blk. (2247)\nCorsets\nMine & Equipment Machiner\nSpencer corests    Surgical Belts M\nW. Mitchell, 370 Baker St. Ph   668.\n(2248)\nE. L. WARBURTON, REPRESENT\ning C, C   Snowdon, oils, grease\npaints, etc.   Agent mine machir\ncry, rails, pipe steels, sheet iro\netc.    Steam   coals.    Office   5!\nWard street. Phone 53.        (226!\nEngineers and Surveyors\nH D DAWSON            Nelson. B. C\nMine Surveys and Reports\nB. C. Land Surveyor.     (2249)\nBO TOCT AFFLECK Fruitvale B C.\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor\nReg. Professional Civil Engineer,\nNotaries\nD.   J.    ROBERTSON.     NOTAR\nPublic. Nelson. Phone I57L. (2261\n(2250)\nPatents\nFuneral Directors\nAN OFFER TO EVERY INVENT\nor, list of wanted inventions an\nfull  information sent free.   Th\nRamsay Company.   World Pater\nAttorneys. 273 Bank St.. Ottawa.\n(226\nSOMERS' FUNERAL HOME\n702 Baker St.                   Phone 252\nCert   Mortician      Lady Attendant\nModern Ambulance Service\n(2251)\nDAVIS   FUNERAL   SERVICE\nEmbalming k Plastic Work\nPhotography\nPhone 95.       * Ambulance Service.\n(2252)\nOUR   BUSINESS   FOR   1936   A\nmost doubled that of 1935.   Th<\nmust be a reason!   A trial ore\nwill convince YOU of the super\nPhoto Finishing done in our pla\nYour films developed and print\n25c Reprints, eight tor 25c. KR.\nTAL  PHOTOS,  WILKIE, SA.\n(221\nInsurance and Real Estate\nROBERTSON REALTY CO., LTD\nReal Estate.   Insurance.    Rentals\n311. Baker St. Phone 68.       (2253)\nr7~W TJaWSON   Real \"Estate   In\nsurance.   Rentals. Next Hipperson\nHardware. Baker St. Phone 197\nSanitariums\n(2254)\nDR. ALDRICH. SPOKANE. WAS\nHeart. Stomach. Kidney. Bladd\nDiseases treated.   X-ray work.\n(226\nC. D. BLACKWOOD,   Insurance of\nevery description.   Real Est. Ph 99\n(2255)\nH. E. DILL, AUTO AND FIRE IN-\nsurance. Real Estate. 508, Ward St\n(2256)\nSash Factory\nLAWSON'S     SASH     FACTOR\nHardwood merchant. 217 Baker !\n(226\nJ. E. ANNABLE,   REAL ESTATE,\nRentals. Insurance.   Annable Blk.\n(2257)\nSEE   D.   L.   KERR,   AGENT   FOR\nWawanesa Fire Ins. For better rates\nSecond Hand Stores\n(2258i\nWE   BUY,   SELL   &   EXCHANG\nfurniture, etc.    The Ark Store.\nCHAS. F. McHARDY. INSURANCE\nBv Cus Edsor\nWHERE'S UNCLE\nBIM ? WHAT'S THE.\nMATTER? WASN'T\nHE ON THE\nBOAT?\nMf CAUSE A\nSCENE?  ISHOULP\nSAY MOT.'   ALL\nTILLIE THE TOILER\nBy Russ Westover\n31 I'H M3-2 LITTLE '5PIWV\nLOOKIN-   FOR REAu\nHATiMOMV-__(\n1  PLAy IT IM THE\nKey of'c*\nTHEN  I  SKIING IT\nDOVJM TD*S\"\nmil\nBUT IT   - UST DOESN'T __EM TO BE\nTHE   MOTES   I   MEED  ARE. *>t>U AMD\nKg\nV_s-yoo\u2014-usr you-my ' rv u \\\nT-I-L-L.-1-E\n<SOOD QP.IEF. THERE'S\nNO OME   THE(2E   '\t\n mwmmiimmmmmmmmmmi\npp^pppipilPl^^\nip>\u00bbP;^\nl5_t.\nRESTON ALREADY IS EXPORTING\nAPPLES, LEADING THE INTERIOR\nrand Forks Shipping\nto Eastern Canada\nMarket\nExport of apples has started in\neston district, the only southern\n:erlor producing district to ship\nt ot the Dominion to date this\nar, states an analysis of crop\nivement as at September 15 by the\nUlsh Columbia Fruit board. So\nI Creston has exported 3174 boxes\nWealthy apples out of an esti-\nlted crop of 27,643 boxes.\nGrand Forks has shipped 1356\nxes of Wealthies to eastern Can\na.\nPears, plums, crabapples and\npies comprise the bulk of fruit\nw moving In the southern in-\nlor, with apples just beginning\nattain volume. Creston shipments\nfar lead Nelson and Grand Forks.\n[lie figures follow:\n:L80N AND DISTRICT\nARS\nMet.      117\nipps Favorite     110\nimlsh    192\n;al   - 419\nUMS\nich Plums   122\nrly Varieties   65\nle Varieties   404\nlal    591\nABAPPLES\nmsccndent  50\nher varieties   36\ntal \t\n'PLES\nokers  .\nichess  .\nialthy .\n446\n10\ntal   .,.\nIE8TON AND DISTRICT\nIARS\nirtlett   2,491\napps Favorite      941\nJules ...k      90\nimish   2,696\ntal  6,218\n,UMS\nach Plums     141\nrly varieties       44\nte varieties   1,083\ntal   1,263\nUNES\nUan     26Si\nABAPPLES\nslop  1,097\nascendent  2,132\nler varieties _      18\nAl \t\nPLES\nliters   ,\nchess  .\n. 3,247\n. 3,528\n, 2,637\nWealthy\n..8,864\n..15,028\nTotal  \t\nGRAND FORKS DISTRICT\nPEARS\nBartlett    394\nClapps Favorite     132\nFlemish     230\nTotal    756\nCRABAPPLES\nHyslop  317\nTranscendent     137\nTotal  !    454\nAPPLES\nCookers   1,054\nDuchess    639\nWealthy  3,746\nTotal\nNELSON DAILY NEW8, NELSON, B. (..-TUESDAY MORNINQ, SEPT. 21, 1937.\nMarket and Mining News\n. 5,439\nWashington Mine\nCompany Is Given\nB. (. Registration\nWith provincial headquarters at\nHall siding, the Canadian Belle\nMining company, incorporated in\nthe State of Washington, ha? been\nregistered in B. C. as an extra-provincial company, states the B. C.\nGazette.\nAttorney of the company is Michael Demytro Herman of Hall Siding:\nHead office of the company is at\n204 Radio Central building Spokane. Paid up capital is $4290.\n\"The company proposed to carry\non in the province the business ot\nprospecting, developing and extracting ore, if found, on the quart?,\ngroup of claims known as the Canadian Belle group, 12 miles south\nof Nelson, B. C, in the Ymir-Nel-\nson district, or such other properties\nthat may be acquired later,\" the\nregistration notice sets out.\nMontreal Produce\nMONTREAL, Sept. 20 (CP) \u2014\nEggs resumed their recent upward\ntrend on Canadian commodity exchange produce section today while\nbutter held steady.\nButter 26%-%; Eggs A large 36-\n37.\nBAR GOLD UNCHANGED\nMONTREAL, Sept. 20 (CP)- Bar\ngold in London unchanged today at\n$34.77 an ounce In Canadian funds;\n140s 2d in British, The fixed $35\nWashington price amounted to the\nsame in Canadian.\nToronto Stock Quotations\nNE8\nton Mines \u2014\t\niermac Copper .\n*andrla Gold ...\ngosy Gold ...,\t\nWield Gold \t\nHey Gold \t\naria Rouyn\t\n: Mining\t\nmac Rouyn ...\nIkfield Gold\t\nMetals \t\n(ttie Gold\t\ngood Kirk \t\nHISS .\nHo Mines \t\nerne Mines \t\nTrethewey \t\ndo Ank .    \t\nliter Hill Ex \t\n\u2022Malartic  \t\nIboo Gold Q\t\nlie Treth \t\nItral Man \t\nItral Pat \t\nTiougamau \t\nlomium M & S \t\njfit Copper \t\nliagas Mines \t\nSiaurum Mines \t\nM & S \t\nIkwater   \t\nMines Ltd \t\nExplor \t\n|*val Siscoe \t\nIt Malartic\t\nlorado Gold \t\nIconbridge  Nickel\nferal Kirk    \t\nIncoeur Gold\t\nIlies Lake  \t\nId's Lake \t\nlid Belt   \t\nlanada Gold\t\nJandoro  Mines  \t\nInnar Gold      \t\nTrd Rock Gold \t\nIrker Gold \t\nlllingcr  Mine  \t\nIwey Gold\nltdson Bay M & S ..\nNickel \t\nIM Con  \t\ntck Waite \t\n\u25a0cola Gold \t\nJrr Add \t\nIrkland  Lake  \t\n|ke Shore \t\nnaque Contact\t\ntitch   Gold   \t\nIbel Oro Mines\t\n\u25a0ttle Long Lac \t\nlacassa Mines\t\nlacLeod Cockshutt ...\nJadsen R L \t\n& East \t\nlandy Mines \t\nlalrooie Mines \t\nBclntyre Porcupine ..\nMcKenzie R L    \t\nBcVittie Graham \t\nMatters  Gold \t\npining Corp \t\nKinto Gold \t\ngoneta Porcupine \t\nJtorris  Kirkland  \t\nliplssing irning  ,\nloranda \t\nlormetal       \t\nI'Brlcn Gold \t\nnega Gold \t\nfcmour Porcupine\t\nIrkhill Gold\t\nlulore M    \t\nlymaster Cons \t\nInd Oreille \t\nIrron  Gold  \t\nIkle Crow Gold \t\nmreer Gold\t\nJemier Gold \t\nIrcupine Crown \t\n\u25a0well Rouyn   \t\nTeston East Dome ...\nI.bec   Gold\t\nlad Authler \t\nIt, Gold Shore \t\nleves  MacDonald  ..\n|no Gold\nx:hie Gold Mines ....\nfche Long Lac \t\nJ Antonio Gold\t\nfcwkev Gold\nleep Creek Gold ....\nlerritt Gordon \t\n\u25a0coe   Gold   \t\npelters Gold\t\n\u25a0den Malartic\t\n[adacona Rouyn\t\n.0214\n.76\n4.25\n.36\n.30\n.06%\n.061.\n.07\n.24%\n.65\n.20\n1.10\n.43\n.46\n.11%\n7.60\n.116\n9.75\n9.75 .\n1.08\n1.50\n.75\n.(15\n2.10\n.27\n.70\n3.00\n1.75\n1.20\n67.35\n.55\n38.75\n.05\nm\n2.13\n6.00\n\u202207 V.\n.50\n.24\n.47t.\n.24\n.13\n\u202205 _\n.70\n1.00\n.13%\n11.15\n.32\n24.35\n52.50\n.23\n.59\n.45\n1.86\n1.28\n..   48.25\n.04\n.54\n.15\n4.60\n4.75\n.30\n.67\n.02'A\n.21\n.ISM,\n33.25\n1.04\n.20\n.39\n2.40\n.1014\n1.68\n.23\n2.00\n51.50\n1.25\n4.05\n.43\n2.62\n.13\n.15\n.44\n2.95\n.76\n4.85\n3.60\n2.10\n.02 %\n1.06\n.88\n.35\n3.00\n.27%\n.04\n.11\n1.40\n.45\n.114\n1.80\n3.05\n01'A\n1.04\n.81\nSt Anthony :      .15\nSudbury Basin      3.2b\nSullivan Cons      1.05\nSylvanite             2.65\nTashota Goldfields       .05%\nTeck Hughes G61d ,     4.90\nToburn Gold      2.05\nTowagamac  85\nVentures Ltd      6.50\nWaite Amulet      2.18\nWhitewater 10\nWright Hargreaves      6.40\nYmir Yankee Girl 26\n0IL8\nAjax Oil  21\nA P Con         39\nBrit Amer Oil     20.50\nBrit Dom 24%\nBrown Oil  38\nCalmont Oil  36\nCalgary & Edmonton     1.75\nChem Research 30\nCommonwealth  19%\nDalhousie 55\nEastcrest    14Vi\nFoundation Pete  20\nFoothills Oil        52\nHighwood Sarcee  14\nHome Oil           1.27\nImperial Oil    18.90\nInt Pete       31.50\nLowery Pete    11%\nMcColl Frontenac       12.50\nMerland      07\nModel Oil  40\nMonarch Roy  25%\nNordon  Oil   20%\nOkalta  96\nPacalta 15\nPantepec       5.50\nRoyalite      31.00\nSouthwest Pete 25\nTexas Can        1.43\nUnited Oil   15\nVulcan   Oil     90\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi Power     4\nBeatty Bros          15\nBell Telephone   1651.\nBrazilian Traction    20%\nBrew Sc Dist     7\nBrit American Oil     20%\nBrewing Corp          2\nBrew Corp  pfd     17%\nB C Power A     34Vi\nB C Power B      7\nBurt F  N     3614\nCan Bakeries A       3\nCan  Bakeries pfd     49\nCan Bread Co      5\nCan Bud Malt      8\nCan Car Sc Fdy _    17%\nCan Cement         10%\nCan Cement pfd  103%\nCan Dredge     37\nCan Malting          35\nCan Pacific Rly           9%\nCan Ind Alcohol A      5%\nCan Ind Alcohol B       4%\nCan   Wineries          1%\nCarnation pfd    102%\nCons Bakeries    22\nCons   Smelters      65%\nCosmos    23\nDom Bridge  '35\nDom   Stores      '     7\nDom Tar & Chemical       Vis\nDom Tar Sc Chem pfd       88\nDist Seagrams     .'    17\nFanny   Farmer      21%\nFord of Canada A     19%\nGoodyear Tire     84%\nGypsum L Sc A       8%\nHarding  Camel      4\nHamilton Bridge           10\nHamilton Bridge pfd ......       .   79\nHinde Dauche  ,.   19%\nHiram Walker 39%\nInt Metals    11\nInt Milling pfd     99%\nImperial Oil           18ft\nImperial Tobacco    13%\nInt Nickel         52%\n'nl Petroleum     31%\nLoblaw A      23%\nLoblaw  B     21\nMaple Leaf Milling      3%\nMassey Harris ,     7\nMcColl  Frontenac     12%\nMontreal Power    29\nMoore Corn      _    38%\nNat Steel Car     30%\nOntario Steel Prods     12\nOntario Silk Net         7\nPage Hersey    91\nPower Corp    17%\nPressed  Metals     27\nSteel of Canada *.   76\nHEMLOCK PEST\nDENUDES TREES\nAT TROUT LAKE\nSpreads Over Several\nSquare Miles in\nShort Time\nCLOUD MOTHS\nARE \"LOOPERS\"\nSpreading rapidly since the original outbreak was reported in July,\na forest pest known as the hemlock\nlooper is now common over several\nsquare miles of Kootenay forest,\ncentering about Trout lake and\nspreading eastward to the Lardeau\nand westward to the Upper Arrow\nlake. How extensive the damage\nmay be is not yet definitely known.\nThe hemlock looper, forest branch\nofficials explain, is a moth, the\ncaterpillar of which defoliates coniferous trees, particularly hemlock,\nand kills them. In addition to the\nloss of the live trees, a serious\nfire hazard may be created. Clouds\nof moths reported from that district\nlatterly are loopers at the breeding\nand egg laying stage.\nTwo entomologists from Vernon\nhave carried out an investigation\nin the area, but so far no report\nhas been received in Nelson of\ntheir activities and the result of\ntheir investigation.\nThe eggs hatch ordinarily in June,\nand feed for six weeks before going\ninto the pupa stage, from which they\nemerge as moths.\nThe method of attack, states literature In the hands of department\nofficials, is to dust the forest from\nairplanes, using calcium arsenate\nIt is considered possible also that\nparasites might effectively control\nThough the looper was first reported in July, it is possible, officials say, that it was present previously but in a dormant state or\nin negligible numbers. The scientific name of the pest is ellopia fis-\ncellaria guen.\nPOUND LOWER\nMONTREAL, Sept. 20 (CP) \u2014\nPound sterling declined % cent on\nMontreal foreign exchanges today\nto 4.95%. The French franc eased\n.01 cent to 3.38 cents while the United States dollar ruled unchanged\nat par.\nOils Trading Is\nLight at Calgary\nCALGARY, Sept 20 (CP-Trad-\ning in oil shares was light on the\nCalgary stock exchange today and\nprices were irregular.\nAnaconda gained a fraction at\n8%; Dalhousie lost 1 at 59 while\nModel dropped 2 at 38 and Calmont\n3 at 38. Richland lost 1 at 20. Mercury and Lethbridge held unchanged.\nSMELTER STOCK\nHITS NEW LOW\nTORONTO, Sept. 20 (CP) \u2014 The\nToronto share market opened the\nweek with another decline, led by\nthe base metals \"with a half dozen\nof the leaders selling at new low\nprices for the year.\nSmelters hit a new low of 66 and\nclosed at 67 off 3% net; while Nickel\nslipped to 51% and closed at 52%\ndown 1% net. Noranda and Hudson Bay dropped a point each.\nMclntyre closed down 1%. Lake\nShore and Dome were off % to a\npoint\nDropping 2 to 4 points were Abitibi, Canadian Car Sc Foundry, Mas-\nsey-Harris Pfd. and Weston. Bathurst Power A dropped 1%.\nMontreal Sees\nMany New Lows\nMONTREAL. Sept. 20 (CP) \u2014At\nleast a dozen new lows for the year\nappeared on the stock market dining today's sessions. Persistent selling reflected weakness in New York\nand London markets.\nSetting a new low for the year at\n51%, Nickel recovered narrowly to\nfinish at 52%, down 1%. Smelters\nacted similarly at 67%, off 2%, after touching 66%. Noranda fell to\na new low at 1 and closed at 52,\noff a point.\nDryden slid 2% points to 10 after\nmaking a new low at 9',.. St. Lawrence Paper preferred went to 67.\nnew low, and finished off three\npoints at 68. Price Brothers lost\n2% at 27% and the preferred two\npoints at 60.\nMontreal\nINDUSTRIALS:\nAlta Pac Grain\t\nAssoc Brew of Can..\t\nBathurst P. Sep A\t\nBell Telephone\t\nBrazilian T L Sc P\t\nB C Power A\t\nB C Power B\t\nBuilding Products \t\nCanada Cement \t\nCan Cement Pfd \t\nCan North Power\t\nCan Steamship\t\nCan Steamship Pfd \t\nCanadian Bronze\t\nCan Car _ Fdy\t\nCan Car Sc Fdy Pfd\t\nCan Celanese \t\nCan Celanese Pfd\t\nCan Hydro-Electric\t\nCan Ind Ale A\t\nCan Ind Ale B \t\nCan Pacific Railway\t\nCockshutt Plow \t\nCon Min & Smelting\t\nDistillers Seagrams \t\nDominion Bridge \t\nDominion Coal Pfd\t\nDom Steel Sc Coal B\t\nDominion .Textile \t\nDryden   Paper\t\nFamous Players C C _..\nGen Steel Wares\t\nGurd Charles\t\nGyp Lime _ Alab \t\nHamilton Bridge   \t\nHoward Smith Paper\t\nH Smith Paper Pfd  _\nImp Tobacco of C\t\nInter Nickel of Can  _\nLake of the Woods ....\t\nMassey Harris \t\nMcColl Frontenac\t\nMontreal L H _ P   \t\nNational Brew Ltd\t\nNat Brew Pfd\t\nNat Steel Car \t\nOgilvie Flour Mills\t\nStock Exchange\n13%\n14\n165\n20%\n34\n6%\n57\n10%\n103\n20\n4%\n10\n37\n11%\n22%\n21%\n115%\n80\n5%\n4%\n9%\n10\n66%\n17\n36\n18%\n16\n76\n10\n14%\n10%\n814\n8%\n9%\n20\n90\n13%\n52%\n19\n7%\n12%\n29%\n38%\n39\n29 %\n220\nOntario Steel Prods     17\nPower Corp of Can     16%\nQuebec Power     17\nSt Lawrence Corp      8\nSt Lawrence Corp Pfd  21%\nSt Lawrence Paper Pfd  68\nSouth Can Power      13%\nShawinigan W & P      24\nSteel of Can   75\nSteel of Can Pfd   68\nWestern Grocers   69\nBANKS:\nBank of Canada  _ 58\nCanadienne Nationale  159\nCommerce    175\nMontreal     200\nNova   Scotia     328\nRoyal      186\nCURB:\nAbitibi P Sc P Co       4\nAcadia Sug Refin       3%\nBeauharnois Corp      5%\nBathurst P _ P B      6%\nBrew Sc Dist Van        7\nBrew Corp of Can       2\nBritish American Oil  20%\nB C Packers     11\nCan Malting Ltd      34\nCan Dredge Sc Dock\nCan Vickers\t\nCan Wineries ..\nCons Paper Corp\nDominion Stores\nDonnacona Paper A       9'\/s\nDonnacona Paper B\nFord Motor A \t\nFraser Co Ltd\t\nImperial   Oil   \t\nInter Petroleum \t\nInter Utilities A\t\nInter Utilities B \t\nMacLaren P & P\t\nMitchell Robt  \t\nPage Hersey Tubes ,\nRoyalite Oil \t\nThrift Stores \t\nUnited Dist of Can ...\nWalker-Good Sc W      39%\nWalker-Good Pfd       1814\n38%\n6\n1%\n11%\n6%\n19%\n20%\n18%\n31%\n16%\n1.10\n19\n.     13\n90\n33\n%\nQuotations\nHigh Low\nAl Chem   191 183\nAm Can   95% 94%\nAm For Power 5% 5%\nAm Mch Sc Fdy 17 16%\nAm Smelt & Re 72% 69%\nAm Telephone. 161% 158%\nAm Tobacco .... 76% 76\nAnaconda   41% 39%\nAtchison      62 59\nAuburn   Motors 13% 13%\nAviation Corp ,. 4% 4%'\nBaldwin Loco .. 13% 13%\nBait Sc Ohio .... 18% 17%\nBendix Av   16% 16\nBeth Steel   76% 73\nBorden     22 21%\nCanada Dry   17% 16%\nC P H     9% 9%\nCcrro de Pasco 55% 53%\nChes Sc Ohio    . 42% 41%\nChrysler    95% 90%\nCon Gas N Y ... 32% 31%\nCorn Prod   59% 58%\nC Wright pfd .. 4% 4%\nDupont     146% 144%\nEastman Kodak 175 173\nEl Pow Sc Lite 16% 15%\nErie ....:.  10% 10%\nFord English .... 6% 6%\nFord of Canada 20% 20%\nFirst Nat Stores 38 37%\nFreeport  Texas 26 25%\nGeneral Electric 44% 43%\nGeneral Foods.. 34% 34%\nGeneral  Motors 49% 48%\nGoodrich     28 27%\nGranby    7% 6%\nGrt North pfd .. 40% 38\nGrt West Sugar 30% 30%\nHecker Prods .. 10% 10\nHowe Sound ... 65 62\nHudson   Motors 11% 10%\nInt Nickel     ... 53% 51%\nInt Tel Sc Tel.... 8% 8%\nJewel Tea   62 62\non Wall Street\nClose\n186\n95%\n5%\n16%\n71\n161%\n76\n41%\n62\n13%\n4%\n13%\n18 \"A\nKill\n76\n21%\n17%\n9%\n55%\n41%\n94%\n32%\n59%\n4%\n146\n174%\n15%\n10%\n6%\n20%\n37%\n26\n44%\n34%\n49%\n28\n7\n40%\n30%\n10%\n65\n11%\n52%\n8%\n62\nKenn Copper ..\nKresge S S\n47%\n45%\n47\n21\n20%\n20%\nKroegger Sc T ..\n19%\n18%\n\"\",\nMack Truck\n33\n32\n33\nMilwaukee pfd.\n1%\n1%\n1%\nMont Ward \t\n49%\n47\n49%\nNash Motors ....\n15%\n15\n15',\nNat Dairy Prod\n17%\n17%\n17%\nNat Pow Sc Lite\n8%\n8%\n8%\nN Y Central ....\n28%\n26%\n27%\nPac Gas & Elec\n29%\n28%\n28%\nPackard Motors\n7%\n7%\n7%\nPenn R R   \t\n31%\n30%\n31%\nPhillips Pete\n49%\n48\n49%\nPure Oil \t\n15%\n15\n15%\nRCA\t\n9%\n9%\n9%\nR K 0 \t\n6%\n(P.\n6%\nRem Rand \t\n18%\n18\n18%\nSafeway   Stores\nShell Union Oil\n29%\n2!)\n29%\n20%\n20\n20%\nS Cal Ed ., \t\n21%\n21%\n21%\nSouth Pacific ..\n32%\n29%\n31%\nStan Oil of Cal\n38%\n38\n38%\nStan Oil of Ind\n39%\n39\n:<:\"\u201e\nStan Oil of N J\n58%\n57\n57%\nStewart Warner\n14%\n14%\nHli\nStudebaker   \t\n10%\n9%\n10\nTexas Corp   ...\n49%\n46\n49%\nTexas Gulf Sul\n34%\n34%\n34%\nTimken  Roller.\n57\n\"',\n56\nUnder Type ...\n79\n77\n78\nUnion Carbide.\n89\n86\n88%\nUn Oil of Cal ..\n21%\n21%\n21%\nUnited Aircraft\n23%\n22\n23\nUnited Biscuit..\nUnion Pacific ..\n21%\n21%\n21%\n104\n102%\n104\nU S Pipe\t\n40\n39\n39\nU S Rubber\t\n40%\n38%\n40%\nU S Steel\n119%\n86\n88%\nVanadium Steel\n24%\n23%\n24%\nWarner Bros ..\n11%\n11%\n11%\nWest Elec  \t\n125\n130%\n124%\nWest Union \t\n34%\n33,\niVri\n34\n42%\n42%\nWrigley, ..'.\t\n68\n63\nlf.%\nYellow Truck ,.\n16%\n18%\nII Months Ore\nAhead Durango\nPlan   Mill   Operation\nto Meet Inaugural\nLiabilities\nEstimate of 40,000 tons of ore\nahead at the Durango. mine near\nYmir, averaging .33 ounces i.. gold,\n2.5 ounces in silver, 6 per cent lead\nand 9 per cent zinc, enough for 18\nmonths mill operation, is revealed\nin a news bulletin issued by a Vancouver brokerage house.\nThe bulletin adds:\n\"As the company has had to\nequip for production with an inadequate amount of cash, it is planned to operate for the first few\nmonths on a grade of feed which\nwill be calculated to net. between\n$50,000 and $60,000. per month.\n\"Ore at present in sight is estimated sufficient to pay off liabilities, including $125,000 loaned by\nDentonia, and leave a profit after\nmeeting cost of equipping the property with a 100-ton mill and a five\nmile aerial tramway. The plant is\nwell located to handle custom ore.\n\"Development plans call for driving a new low level as soon as\nthe mill starts. This will determine\nwhether narrow high grade ore\non No. 3 level was the bottom of\nthe developed oreshoot, or as the\nmanagement expects, the top of a\nnew one.\"\nMontreal Metals\nMONTREAL, Sept. 20 (CP) -\nSpot, copper, electrolytic, 14,60; tin\n61,38; lead 5.60; zinc 5.70; antimony\n17.50; per 100 pounds F. 0. B. Montreal, five-ton lots.\nAuto Firms Can't\nGel Enough Steel\nOTTAWA, Sept. 20 (CP)-De-\nmand for steel throughout the world\nhas reached wartime proportions,\nthe tariff board was told today. It\nresumed its inquiry into the automobile industry.\nRepresentatives of motor car manufacturers presented statements\nthat it was becoming increasingly\ndifficult to fill the 60 per cent Canadian requirement necessary for\nqualifying their products under the\nBritish preference.\nDividends\nCanadian Fairbanks Morse Co.,\npreferred, 1% per cent, payable\nOctober 15 to shareholders of record\nSeptember 30.\nDominion Glass Co., preferred, 1%\nper cent, common 1% per cent, payable October 1 to shareholders of\nrecord September 15\\\nSherwin-Williams Co. of Canada,\npreferred, 1% per cent, payable\nOctober to shareholders of record\nSeptember 15.\nWabasso Cotton Co., common, 25\ncents per share, payable October 1\nto shareholders of record September 18.\nNorthern Canada Mining Corporation, four cents, payable November 1 to shareholders of record\nOctober 1.\nKelvinator of Canada, preferred,\n1% per cent, payable November 15\nto shareholders of record November 5.\nVancouver Wheat\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 20 (CP) \u2014\nVancouver wheat cash prices:\nStraight   Tough\nNo. 1 hard    125     123\nNo. 1 nor    124%   122%\nNo.    nor    119%   117%\nNo. 3 nor    113%   111\nNo. 4 nor    107%   105\nNo. 5 wheat    101%    99\nNo. 6 wheat     88%    86\nFeed         77%    74%\nMetal Markets\nNEW YORK, Sept. 20'<AP)~Cop-\nper quiet, electrolytic spot and future 14.00; export 12.95-13.06.\nTin easy; spot and nearby 58.62%;\nfuture 58.12%.\nLead, quiet; spot New York 6.50-\n55; East St. Louis 6.35.\nZinc steady; East St. Louis spot\nand future 7,25.\nIron quiet; No. 2, F. O. B. eastern\nPennsylvania 25.00; Buffalo 24.00;\nAlabama 20.00.'\nAluminum, virgin, 90 per cent,\n20.00.\nQuicksilver 99.00.\nPlatinum, pure 51.00.\nBar silver unchanged at 44%.\nLONDON, \u2014 Copper, standard\nspot \u00a350 7s 6d, off \u00a32 Is 3d; future \u00a350 8s 9d, off \u00a32; electrolytic\nspot, bid \u00a356 10s, off \u00a31 10s; asked\n\u00a358 10s, off \u00a31 10s.\nTin spot \u00a3268 5s, off \u00a32 15s; future \u00a3257 5s, off \u00a32 15s.\nBids: lead spot \u00a319 7s 6d, off\n12s 6d; future \u00a320 oft 5s.\nZinc spot \u00a320, off \u00a31; future \u00a320\n3s 9d, off \u00a31,\nBar silver 1-16 lower at 1913-16d.\nSeptember Corn\nSlumps, Chicago\nCHICAGO, Sept. 20 (AP) -Wildly\nirregular fluctuations in September\ncorn prices today carried the market over a range of more than 6%\ncents.\nThe day's outcome was 2% cents a\nbushel net loss in September corn.\nTransient rallies which hoisted September corn at one time to more\nthan a cent above Saturday's finish were associated with the circumstance that only 126,000 bushels\nreduction of the amount of uncompleted September contracts was officially shown today to have been\neffected Saturday.\nAt the close corn futures varied\nfrom 2% cents lower to 1% higher\ncompared with Saturday's finish,\nSeptember 1.02%; December 63%-\n%, wheat 1 cent to 2% up, September 1.04%, December 1,05-1.05%; and\noats unchanged to % advanced.\nNew York (rashes\nNEW YORK, Sept. 20 (AP)-Stock\nmarket leaders dropped to new\" low\nlevels for the past 21 months or\nlonger today, although extreme losses of one to nine points were cut\ndown or cancelled by a slow last-\nhour rally.\nThe news picture, while spotty,\nshowed little change and brokerage\nquarters attributed the further setback in the last partly to weak securities markets abroad, and continued doubts regarding business\ntrends. '\nThe Associated Press average of\n60 stocks was off .6 of a point at 57.1,\nbottom mark for this index since\nJanuary 21, 1936. At its worst the\naverage was down nearly 2 points.\nTransfers totalled 1,550,350 shares\ncompared with 814,050 last Friday.\n\u25a0 1 , : _  PAGE  NINI\nEAST KOOTEHAY PRODUCING MORE\nCOAL, THOUGH TOTAL IS STILL 219\nTONS UNDER AUGUST OF LAST YEAR\nCoal Creek Colliery Production Gains 1179\nTons While Michel Figure Down 1398-\nB.C. Total Is Up 17,306 Tons\nProduction of coal in East Kootenay in August showed a net reduction, compared with last year, of 219 tons, figures included in the August\nreport of the chief inspector of mines reveaL The figures indicates increasing production in the East Kootenay since for several months\npreviously production totals were considerably under last year.\nCoal Creek colliery showed a gain of 1179 tons compared with August\nof last year, while Michel production was down 1398 tons. Michel produced\n4184 tons of coke.\nIn the entire province a gain of 17,306 tons was reported, the Vancouver Island and Nicola-Princeton districts both showing increases.\nThe figures, in tons, follow:\nEA8T KOOTENAY DISTRICT\n1937 1936\nCoal Creek Colliery     7,823 6,644\nMichel Colliery     34,696       36,094\nTOTAL FOR EAST KOOTENAY 742,519 42 738\nVANCOUVER ISLAND DISTRICT\nCanadian Collieries (D) Ltd,\nComox Colliery  27,264 14,938\nNorthfleld Mine   11,045 \u2014\nWestern Fuel Corporation Ltd, \u2022\nNo. 1 mine :  14,441 21,935\nReserve mine   11,134 12,659\nOther Collieries:\nLantzville Colliery   589 452\nIda Clara Colliery   - 176\nChamber's mine   147 93\nBeban's mine   743 147\nLoudcn's mine   125 \u2014\nBigg's mine  :  \u2014 81\nTOTAL FOR VANCOUVER ISLAND  66,388 50,481\nNICOLA PRINCETON  DISTRICT\nCoalmont Collieries Ltd  8,475 7,232\nMiddlesboro Collieries Ltd  1,814 1,336\nPleasant Valley Colliery   \u2014 488\nBlue Flame Colliery   \u2014 982\nGranby Cons. M. S. _ P. Co. Ltd.\n(Bromley Vale Colliery)  _   951 \u2014\nTulameen Valley Coal mine (Lind)   677 \u2014\nRed Triangle mine  23 \u2014\nTOTAL FOR NICOLA PRINCETON    11,940       10,038\nNORTHERN DISTRICT\nBulkley Valley Colliery t a       300 584\nTOTAL FOR PROVINCE 121,147      103,841\nU. S. IS CANADA'S\nBEST CUSTOMER\nOTTAWA, Sept. 20 (CP)- Canada's export trade for August reached $107,471,000, an increase of $8,-\nm,p> oyer August, 1936. United\nStates was best single customer, taking $44,122,000 worth, slightly less\nthan r\u00a7r purchases from the Dominion in August of last year.\nDominion Bonds\nWINNIPEG, Sept. 20 (CP)-Dom-\ninion of Canada bond quotations today;\n4% per cent Sept. 1,1940 (C) 107%\n108%; 5 per cent Nov. 15, 1941 (C)\n110%, 111%; 4 per cent Oct. 15,1945-\n43 (C) 106%, 107%; 4% per cent\nFeb. 1, 1046, (C) 109%, 111; 4 per\ncent Oct. 15, 1949-44 (C) 102%,\n103%; 4 per cent Oct. 15,1952, 47 (C)\n105%, 106%; 3 per cent June 1,1955,\n50 (C) 96%, 97%; 4% per cent Nov.\n1, 1958, 48 (C) 110%, 111%; 21% per\ncent Nov. 1, 1959, 49 (C) 110%,\n111%; 3% per cent June 1, 1966,\n56 (C) 98%, 99%; 3 per cent perpet-\nuals (C) 87%, 88%.\nBONDS LOWER\nNEW YORK, Sept. 20 (AP)\u2014After\na week's forward push, federal loans\nwere suddenly halted and forced\ndown as much as 17-32 of a point ih\na drooping bond market today.\nCorporates and foreign dollar issues\ngave up fractions to around 4%\npoints on sizeable turnover. Leading the foreign Issues to lower\nground were Abitibi Power Sc Paper 5's, off 4% to 80%. Japan 6%'s\ndropped 2% to 83 and Rome 6%'s\nwere off 1% to 70.\nDow-Jones Averages\nHigh Low\n30 Industrials  .:  156.92 152.36\n20 Rails     41.98 40.80\n20 Utilities     24.67 23.95\n40 Bonds     \u25a0\u2014\u25a0        \t\nClose Change\n155.56\u2014off 2.27\n41.80\u2014unchgd\n24.43\u2014off   .07\n98.17\u2014off   .28\nMontreal Silver Quotations\nMONTREAL, Sept. 20 (CP)\u2014Silver futures closed steady today 10\npoints higher to 10 points lower. No sales. Bids: Sept. 44.40; Dec. 44.15;\nMarch and May 43.00.\nVancouver\nLI8TED Bid\nA P Con  28\nAmal Oil 05%\nAztec Min Co  08\nBig Missouri 44\nBralorne      7.75\nBrewers Sc Dist ....     7.00\nBridge River  Con      .02%\nC & E Corp      1.82\nCalmont Oil  37\nCariboo Gold       1.55\nCoast Breweries ....   12,00      12\nDentonia  12%\nGold Belt Mines ..      .23\nHargal Oil  20\nHome Oil       135\nInter Coal  21%\nIsland Mount  :.      .80\nKootenay Belle 95\nMak Siccar .:        \u2014 .\nMcDoug Seg Ex ..      .17\nMinto  11\nModel Oil  38\nPioneer Gold       3.70\nPremier Gold       2.14\nPremier  Border  ..      .01%\nQualsino 04\nRelief Arlington ..      .16\nReno Gold  80\nReeves MacDonald      .60\nSalmon Gold        \u2014\nSheep Creek  85\nSilbak Premier     1.70\nTaylor B River 03%\nVanalta Ltd        \u2014\nVidette    25\nWesko   14\nCURB\nAnaconda  08\nBeaver Silver 01%\nBluebird   01%\nB C Nickel 11%\nCongress  02%\nCork Province  01\nCrows Nest New ..      .05\nDalhousie, Oils    .>. -53\nMil  '\nStock Exchange\nAsk\nBid\n\u2014\nDavies  Petroleum\n.29\n\u2014\nDunwell Mining ....\n.02%\n.08%\nFairview Amal \t\n.05\n\u2014\nFederal Gold \t\n.01%\n7.85\nFoundation Pete ..\n.20\n7.50\nFreehold Oil \t\n.05%\n.03%\n\u2014\n1.85\nGeo Enterprise \t\n.03%\n.40\nGold Mountain \t\n.03\n1.60\n.14%\n2.50\n.01\n.13\n.01%\n\u2014\n.01%\n.24\n.01%\n1.40\nLakeview Mine\t\n.01%\n\u2014\nLowery Pete \t\n.10\n\u2014\n.03\n1.00\nMadison Oil \t\n.05%\n.02\n.08%\n.18\n.21\n.11%\nMcGillivray .._\t\n.19%\n\u2014\n.2(1\n\u2014\n.04%\n2.18\n.04%\n.01%\n.20\n.04%\n.911\n.18\n.15%\n\u2014\nPend Oreille \t\n2.92\n.70\n.04%\n.07%\nPilot Gold \t\n.02\n.90\n.07%\n2.00\n.02\n\u2014\n.06%\n.08\nRoyalite Oil \t\n33.00\n.30\n.   .02\n_-\n.04\n.01%\n.08%\n\u2014\n.02\nUnited Distillers ....\n.92\nUnited Oil    -\n.15\n\u2014\nViking Gold \t\n.34\n\t\n.95\n.011.\nWavcrley T new ..\n,   .00%\n.06\nWellington Mines..\n.02%\n\u2014\nWhitewater \t\n.09%\nAsk\n.30\n.21\n.07\n.'10\n.04\n.15\n.01%\n.01%\n.03%\n.06%\n.08\n.24\n.27\n.1)5\n.05\n.22\n1.00\n.17\n3.00\n.04%\n.10\n.02%\n.07\n36.00\n.02%\n.02\n.45\n.16%\n1.00\n.00%\n.03\n. .09%\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG, Sept. 20 (CP)-Grain\nfutures quotations:\nOpen  High  Low  Close\nWHEAT-\nOct 125%   127%   124%   126%\nNov  124%   126%   124%   126%\nDec. ..:  122%   123%   121%   123%\nMay  123%   124%   122%   124%\nOATS-\nOct    51%     52%     51%     52%\nDec    48%     49        48%     49\nMay       48       48%    48       48%\nBARLEY-\nOct    59%     60        59%     60\nDec    57%     58%     57%    58%\nMay       56%     51%     56%    56%\nF'LAX-\nOct  176%    -       -      176%\nDec  176%     -        -      176%\nMay   179      180      179      180\nRYE-\nOct    88%     89%'   88       89%\nDec    88%     89%     87%     89%\nMay     89%     89%    88%    89%\nCASH WHEAT-\nNo. 1 hard 133%; No. 1 Nor. 133%;\nNo. 2 nor. 129%: No. 3 nor. 121%; No.\n4 nor. 115%; No. 5, 111%; No. 0.\n97%; feed 88%; No. 1 Garnet 121%;\nNo. 2 Garnet 118%; No. 1 Durum\n108%; No. 1 A.R.W. 116%; No. \\\nspecial 110%; No. 5 special 107%;\nNo. 6 special 95%; track 131%;\nscreenings $8 per ton.\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY, Sept 20 (CP)-Re-\nceipts, to non, HI cattle; 28' calves;\nno liogs; 436 sheep\nCattle market active and prices\nstronger; common to medium butcher steers 3.00-4.50; good heifers \\75;\ngood cows 3,00-3.75; go\/>d to choice\nveal calves 5.25-6,00.\nNo hog sales; last week's close,\nselects 10.05-10.10; bacons 0,55-9.60;\nbutchers 9.05-9.10, off trucks.\nMINING SHARES SOLD FREELY\nIN LONDON\nLONDON, Sept. 20 (AP)- The\nstock market continued to exhibit\na weak tone today and transatlantic shares were in large supply. The\ngilt-edged group and foreign bonds\nwere exceptions and moved a little\nhigher. Industrial issues, especially\nrayon, liquor and tobaccos sold\nlower and steel and oils were heavy.\nHome rails moved irregularly and\nmining shares were freely offered.\nDOLLAR STRONGER AGAINST\nSTERLING\nLONDON, Sept. 20 (AP)- The\nUnited States dollar improved %\nof a cent at $4.95 11-16 to the pound\nin final foreign exchange transactions today\nFrench franc closed 146.50 to the\npound against 146.59 the previous\nclose.\nCANADIAN DOLLAR\nUNCHANGED\nNEW YORK, Sept. 20 (AP)-British ptjund sterling was % of a cent\nlower at $4.94%. The Canadian dollar was unchanged at par. In London the United States dollar.advanced % cent to $4.95 11-16 to the\npound\nWinnipeg Higher\nWINNIPEG, Sept. 20 (CP)\u2014 Unsettled North American stock markets and bearish crop news from\nthe Argentine caused wheat futures\non the Winnipeg grain exchange\ntoday to move nervously within a\nnarrow range around the previous\nclose. Final prices were 1% cents\nto % cent higher, October at $1.26%,\nNovember $1.26%, December $1.23%-\n% and May $1.24%.\nEarly reports of rains In Argentina caused an easier tendency In\nthe first hour.\nLater strength at Chicago where\neastern interests were reported selling stocks and buying wheat,\nbrought out short covering and minor gains were posted.\nMoney\nBy The Canadian Preu\nClosing exchange rates:\nAt Montreal\u2014Pound 4.95%; franc\n3.38; U.S. dollar par.\nAt New York \u2014 Pound ..85%!\nfranc 3.38; Canadian dollar par.\nAt Paris-Pound 146.47% fr. U. S.\ndollar 29.59 fr.; Canadian dollar\n29.54 3-16 fr.\nIn gold-Pound 12s Id; U.S. dollar\n59.46 cents; Canadian dollar 69.44\ncents.\nExchanges\nMONTREAL. Sept. 29 (CP)-Brlt-\nish and foreign exchange closed\nsteady today. Nominal rates for\nlarge amounts:\nAustralia, pound, 3.9578\nBelgium, belga, .1683\nDenmark, krone, .2213\nFrance, franc, .0338\nGreat Britain, pound, 4.9575\nHolland, florin, .5521\nHungary, pengo, .1968\nIndia, rupee, .3748\nNew Zealand, pound, 3.9894\nNorway, krone, .2491\nSouth Africa, pound. 4,9321\nSweden, krone, .2556\nUnited States, dollar, par.\n(Compiled by the Royal Bank of\nCanada).\nLondon Close\nLONDON, Sept. 20 (AP)\u2014 Closing: Brazilian \u00a320%; C. P. R. $9%;\nInternational Nickel $53%; International T. & T. $8%; U. S. Steel\n$99%; Central Mining \u00a321; Consol\nGold Fields 71s 3d; Courtaulds 51s\n6d; Crown \u00a312%; De Beers Dfd.\n\u00a315% ex-dividend; Ford 25s 6d; H.\nB. C. 29s (id; Metal Box Ltd. 76s 3d;\nMining Trust Ltd. 4s 4%d; Rand \u00a37;\nRhodcsian Anglo Am. 26s; Springs\n28s l%d.\nBonds: 2% per cent Consols \u00a373%\nBritish 3% per cent War Loan\n\u00a3100%; British Funding 4s 1960-90\n\u00a3110%.\nNELSON CURLING RINK\nLIMITED \"DISSOLVED\"\nNotice is given in the current issue of the B. C. Gazette that \"the\nNelson Curling Rink, limited was. . .\nstruck off the register and dissolved.\"\nCAMROSE, Alta. (CP).\u2014When\nAndrew Doucette. instructor in the\nnormal school here, returned from\nhis two-month's vacation he discovered these unusual circumstances. His home had been burglarized,\none of the beds had been occupied,\nand -everything had been -tossed\nabout as if a big party was held\nbefore he got there.\nA. M, Webb\n& Co., Ltd.\nINVESTMENTS\n562 WARD ST.     NELSON\nPhone 923\u20148 a.m. to Noon\n ^'l.^^<'y'w\"'yj>.'.'y^?^^wi!w^'M^<w\u00bb\u00bbw\u00bb\nPAGE TEN\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B. C.-TUESDAY MORNING. SEPT. 21, 1937,\nFICTION\nLibrary Discards Clearing\nAt 351 Each\n3 for $|.00\nMann, Rutherford\nDrag Co.\nW.F. Mercier Is\nDead, Portland\nFormer CP. Shipyard\nWorker Left Nelson\nMany Years Ago\nWord has been received In Nelson\no. the death in Portland, Oregon,\nof a Nelson old-timer in the person\nof William F. Merrier. He collapsed\nwhile at work on Terminal No. 4\nin Portland and died from natural\ncauses. Mr. Mercier resided in Nelson well over 30 years ago and was\nfor many years with the C. P. H.\nshipyards where he was forcm-n\nunder the late James M. Bulger. He\nleft Nelson to take up residence in\nPortland.\nAt the time of his death he was\n67 years of age. He is survived by\nhis wife, Mrs. Merrier, his daughter Mrs. R. P. Mullen, and two sons,\nN. F. and Joseph, and two sisters,\nMargaret Mercier and Mrs. F. W.\nConway, all of Portland, and a brother, T. E. Burns, of St Louis.\nFuneral services took place on\nAugust 27 from the Holy Redeemer\nChurch in Portland to Mount Calvary cemetery.\nSALVATION ARMY HEAD\nWILL VISIT CANADA\nLONDON, Sept. 20 (CP-Havas)-\nGeneral Evangeline Booth, international commander of the Salvation\narmy, will leave Southampton Wednesday for New York to spend almost two months in Canada and the\nUnited States. General Booth will\nlecture in Winnipeg and Montreal.\ntrapTed on trestle\nschool boy killed\nTACOMA, Wash., Sept. 20 (AP).\n\u2014Trapped on a log trestle, Charles\nA. Brosamer, 15, freshman football\nplayer at Bellarmine high school\nhere, was killed by a trolley car\ntoday.\nHE WAS SECRETARY\nTO THEODORE ROOSEVELT\nGLEN COVE, N.Y.. Sept. 20. (API\n\u2014William Loen. 70, died in a hospital yesterday of pneumonia. He was\na secretary of late President Theodore Roosevelt.\nJ. A. C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nDominion Asks\nTrail Council\nlo Cut Trees\nDeclares   Huge   Elms\nNuisance; Letter Is\nTabled for Time\nCOUNCIL ORDERS\nA FLUME BUILT\nTRAIL, B. C, Sept. 20\u2014In response to a letter from the Trail-\nTadanac school board the Trail city\ncouncil, meeting Monday evening,\nset next Monday as the date when\nthey would meet members of the\nboard to receive estimates of extraordinary expenditure.\nLetter received _rm the secretary\nof the Union of B. C. Municipalities\nsuggesting the council approve the\namendment to the Library act was\nfiled.\nThe district resident architect\nof the Dominion department of\npublic works wrote a.klng that\nthe lone tree on Cedar avenue\nfronting the post office, be removed as.it was considered a\nmenace. As the government was\npaying for the black topping\nwhich was being done In front\nof the building, it was felt they\nwere entitled to this consideration.\nRequest alio wa\u00ab made that two\ntrees   on Eldorado street   be removed since they were creating\ntoo much shade for the worn of\noffice employees.   The letter was\ntabled for consideration.\nWater applications of J. W. Laz-\nareff and A. Hubscher were referred to the fire, water and light committee and the city engineer. S. S.\nMcDiarmid, with power to act.\nReport of Fire Chief A. A. MacDonald covering the convention of\nfire chiefs at Spokane was filed.\nIn the report Chief MacDonald\nstated Alderman John Young, whd\naccompanied him to'the convention,\nwas introduced as an honored guest.\nNEW FLUME\nThe city engineer was instructed\nto go ahead with construction of a\nnew flume at the rear of the Montana hotel on Rossland avenue,\nSpeaking for the board of works,\nAlderman J. R. Anderson recommended a wall be put back Si Helena street on the property adjacent\nto the home being erected by Gordon Redgrave. The hole will be\nleft so that steps may be built. The\nrecommendation was passed.\nW. E. B. Monypenny, city clerk,\nwas instructed to write to the Motor\nInn advising them that it was too\nlate to commence blacktopping the\nroad fronting their property.\nA: B. Thompson accepted the appointment to the council of the\nHealth League of Canada. Dr. J.\nL. Gayton city health officer, will\nbe asked by letter to also represent\nthe city of Trail on the health\ncouncil.\nOrioles to Meet\nNewark in Final\nBALTIMORE, Sept, 20 (AP)-Bal-\ntimore Orioles defeated Montreal\nRoyals, 4-2, tonight to win their\nsemi-final series in the International\nbaseball league's post-season playoffs and enter the final round agaist\nthe Champion Newark Bears for the\ngovernors cup and the right to represent the league in the little world\nseries.\nScore:\nMontreal   100 000 100\u20142    7    1\nBaltimore .... Oil 022 OOx\u20144   12    0\nSmythe and Hargrave; Fischer,\nSivess and Gray.\n(Baltimore wins aeries, 3-1).\nSuite 205\nMedical Arts Bldg\nSell It With a Want Ad\nBurns Coal & Cartage Co.\nNelson, B. C.\nGait, Wildfire and Greenhill Coals\nCordwood and Millwood\nLumber and Timbers\nGeneral Hauling\nWarehousing.\nAgenri (or\nCANADA ROOF PRODUCTS LTD.\nPACIFIC COAST PIPE CO., LTD.\nPHONE 53\n518 WARD ST.\nTHE\nHUNTING\nSEASON\nIS\nNOW\nOPEN\nBE SURE AND GET THE\nAMMUNITION THAT IS\nBest by Test!\nFOR extreme high velocity\nshooting we recommend\nDominion Pneumatic Cartridges, and for standard sighting\nwe recommend Dominion Soft\nPoint High Velocity Cartridges.\nCall and see us about your\nhunting requirements and look\nover our stock of up-to-date\nequipment.\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Ltd.\nDEATHS\n(By The Canadian Press)\nNEW YORK\u2014Herman L. Gant-\nvoort, 50, former theatrical producer, actor, songwriter and script\nwriter for silent pictures.\nLONDON \u2014 Winnie Melville, \u00ab,\nactress-singer.\nMONTREAI^Harold Rolph, 65,\npresident of engineering firm.\nBELF AST-William James Whiteside, wireless operator at the Father\nPoint station of the St. Lawrence\nriver at the time of the Titanic disaster in 1912,\nVANCOUVER \u2014 Mrs. William\nCraig, 73, hurt in fall two weeks ago.\n\"Miss Idaho\" Hurt\nin Auto Crash\nMOSCOW, Idaho, Sept. 20 (API.\n\u2014One University of Idaho student\nwas killed and three persons\u2014one of\nthem \"Miss Idaho of 1937\"\u2014were injured in an automobile crash between here and Pullman, Wash., this\nmorning.\nBob Baker was killed. His sister,\nMartha Jane, a university graduate\nlast June and named \"Miss Idaho'\nfor the San Francisco Bay bridge\ncelebration, was injured.\nBrake, Wheeler\nand Richard's\nRinks Winners\nThree further contests in the slow\nmoving mixed doubles tourney of\nthe C. P. R. Lawn Bowling club,\nwhich opened here Labor day, went\nby the board Monday night, Mrs. E.\nY. Brake's, Mrs. F. E. Wheeler's\nand Mrs. A. T. Richard's rinks chalking up wins.\nHigh scoring for the winners was\nthe order of the night as the results\nfollowing show:\nMrs. Richards 17, Mrs. W. T. Calbick 5.\nMrs. Wheeler 22, Mrs, J. T. Sindel\n7.\nMrs. Brake 26, Mrs. A. G. Lane 7.\nIn another game of the same tourney played previously. Mrs, Brake's\nrink triumphed over that of Miss\nGrace Laughton's, 17-13.\nRinks, in order of skip and lead,\nfollow:\nMrs. Brake and H. H. Sutherland,\nMrs. Lane and F. N. Lang, Mrs.\nWheeler and F. E. Wheeler, Mrs.\nSindfl and J. Graham, Mrs. Richards\nand N. J. Lowes, Mrs. Calbick and\nAllan Bennett, and Miss Laughton\nand E. W. Penwill.\nBattling through a tight game to\na tie Mrs. J. C. Hooker and Mrs.\nW. Calbick's rinks closed their late\ngame 18-18 Monday night.\nTeams in order of skip and lead\nwere:\nMrs. Calbick and E. Stangherlin;\nand Mrs. Hooker and C. I. Archibald.\nTREAT ML ALIKE\nIN WORLD TRADE\nDEMANDS HULL\nBOSTON, Sept. 20 (AP)\u2014 Secretary of State Cordell Hull pleaded\ntoday for an end to unlicenced force\nand the return of a \"reign of law\"\nin the world.\nThe way to this, the United States\ncabinet member asserted, is through\nworld-wide liberalization of trade\npolicies on the principle of equality of treatment for all.\n\"The world needs a return to belief in the pledged word, in a reign\nof law rather than unlicenced force,\nin the supreme value of human\nrights and liberties,\" the secretary\nof state said.\nHull warned prosperity engendered by huge armament expenditures is artificial and temporary.\nWant Ads Get Results\nNews of the Day\nLOST\u2014Red Sox softball mask. Return to Gelinas' store. (2562)\nBOYS'   BAND   PRACTICE TONIGHT, 7:30 SHARP. (2F63)\nMusical Supplies of any description.\nKOOTENAY MU8IC HOUSE\n(2453)\nBOWL ON STANDARD SIZE ALLEYS AT GELINAS' RECREATION\n(2175)\nCIVIC THEATRE every week day\nover CJAT, 5:10 p.m.\n(2558)\nLUNCH at the GOLDEN  GATE\nCAFE. A good menu to choose from.\n(2497)\nFIVE CASH PRIZES\nWhlst \u2014 To-night at 8:30 p. m.\nCathedral hall. (2550)\nSchool authorities are complaining parents allow their children to\nstay up too late.\nIT'S COOLER THESE NIGHTS-\nHOW ABOUT CHILE CON CARNE\nAT GRENFELL'S CAFE?       (2559)\nH. M. Angus, Pianist, Accompanist, Teacher.   All grades. Advanced\nAcoustics. Expert Tuner. Ph. 544.\n(2501)\nHave your Photos for Christmas\ntaken while In for the Pair. Special\noffer now.   VOGUE STUDIO.\n(2552)\nA complete price range of Electric\nHeating Pads.\nMcKAY & STRETTON\n(2481)\nYou get better reception with\nBURGE8S A, B & C Radio Batteries\nand 1000 Hour A Battery. Hipperson's. (2503)\nReserve Friday, October 29th for\nKootenay District Masonic Ball In\nthe. Civic Centre. Everybody welcome. (2543)\nLADIES\u2014mannish tailored suits and\ntop coats made to your Individual\nmeasure.   Fit guaranteed,\nJACK   BOYCE\n(2553)\nNELSON BADMINTON ASS'N.\nANNUAL MEETING TUE8., SEPT.\n21, 8 P. M., at CIVIC BADMINTON\nLOUNGE. IMPORTANT BUSINESS\nALL INTEREST-ED PLEASE ATTEND. (2544)\nMr. E. E. Richards of Victoria, will\ngive an Illustrated lecture In the\nBaptist church at 8 p.m. Wednesday.\nSubject: \"The Kingdom and the\nThrone of the Lord.\" Auspices British Israel Association. (2561)\nPhone KITCHENER'S'for Floral\ndesigns and cut flowers.        (2496)\nATTENTION\nKNIGHT8 OF PYTHIAS\nAll Knights and Visiting Brothers\nare requested to be at Lodge 7:30\np.m. sharp tonight to meet our\nGrand Chancellor Bro. Batten of\nRevelstoke, Pythian Sisters at 9\np.m. (2556)\nNOTICE\nA public meeting to make plans\nfor the sending of fruit, vegetables,\netc. from the district to needy people in the drought-stricken areas in\nthe prairie provinces will be held in\nthe Council Chamber of the City\nHall tonight at 8 o'clock. All interested in this necessary work are invited to attend.\nJ. P. MORGAN,\nMayor.\n(2513)\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nSEVERN\u2014 Passed away at Vancouver, Sunday, September 19, Harry\nSevern, age 60 years. Funeral service will be held at St. Andrew's\nAnglican church Wed., Sept. 22 at\n1 p.m. Rev. L. A. Morrant, officiating. Clark's Funeral Chapel in\ncharge of arrangements.        (2565)\nH. W. CANN IS\nLAID AT REST\nFuneral service for H. W. Cann,\nwho passed away Friday in the Kootenay Lake General hospital, was\nheld at 2. pjn. Monday from the\nDavis Funeral Service parlors. Rev.\nH. W. Guscott conducted the services\nat the parlors and graveside. Miss\nAlice May Eccles presided at the\norgan and the hymn sung was\n\"Abide With Me.\" Pallbearers were\nWilliam Campion, S. C. Scott, William Eccles, Hager Renwick, F. C.\nDavis and A. E. Cornfield. Interment was In the^Ielson cemetery.\nBritain Offers New\nTrade Concessions\nlo Foreign Nations\nEden Willing to Lessen\nPreference to Colonies,\nNot Dominion\nGENEVA Sept. 20 (CP-Havas). \u2014\nGreat Britain is ready to contribute\nto world economic betterment by\nopening discussions with all governments looking toward a modification of preferential customs duties\nin British colonial territories, Foreign Secretary Eden told the League\nof Nations assembly today.\nHe also stated that a most-f avor-\ned-natlon agreement between\nGreat Britain and the United\nStates \"would be of capital interest to the entire world.\"\nEden declared Great Britain's\nprotectionist policy had been unjustly criticized. An important part\nof the British market remains largely open, aiding world economic recovery and proving Britain's policy\nis elastic, he said.\nSPECIAL ROUND TRIP EXCURSION RATES AT FARE\nAND ONE QUARTER\nTO THE\nNELSON FALL FAIR\nBY GREYHOUND\nTickets on sale from Tuesday,\nSeptember 21st, to Monday, September 27th, inclusive, Return\nlimit, midnight Monday, September 27, 1937.\nSee your local Greyhound agent\nfor particulars.\nCommencing Tuesday evening,\nSept. 21st., a limited number of\nkeys to the Treasure Chest will\nbe distributed by Greyhound\nLines to passengers arriving at\nNelson.\nGreyhound Lines\nNelson Denot - 205 Baker St.\nPHONE 800        (2232)\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nLOST - WALLET CONTAINING\nmoney, driver's licence, Vancouver address. Reward. Return to\nDaily News. (2560)\nROOM AND BOARD, 512 Carbonate\nstreet.  Phone 273-L. (2564)\n30th  ANNUAL\nNELSON\nFAIR\n3\u2014BIG DAYS\u20143\nCIVIC CENTRE-NELSON, B.C.\u2014SEPT. 22-23-24\nReduced Rates on All Transportation Lines\nl P.M.    TWICE DAILY     8 P.M.\nFOUR\n\"JOE FANTON TRIO\"\nSENSATIONAL RING ACT\nDON LAVOLA\nKING OF THE WIRE\nMacDONALD TRIO\nFOUR\n*\nACTS\nTRICK BICYCLISTS\n\"DUKE\"\nKOOTENAY'S OWN  WONDER  DOG\nACTS\nAUCTION SALE\nOF PRIZE BOXE8\nOF APPLES\nFriday Night 9 o'clock\nSpecial\nFor the Wind Up of the Thirtieth Annual Fair\nTHE SILVER TONE SEVEN ORCHESTRA\nhas been especially engaged for a mammoth dance In the amusement\nhall Civic Centre on  Friday evening Sept. 24th\u2014Tickets 60c\nDON'T FORCET YOUR KEYS FOR THE TREASURE CHEST\nNOTICE TO\nEXHIBITORS\nALL  EXHIBITS  MUST  BE  IN\nTHE RINK BY 8 O'CLOCK THIS\nEVENING - ENTRANCE FROM\nRECREATION  GROUNDS\nNEW PRICES\nOF ADMISSION\nAdults 251     Children  15?\nNO SEASON TICKETS\nHORTH. SASK.\nABLAZE WITH\nFOREST FIRES\nREGINA, Sept. 20 (CP)\u2014Forest\nfires in northern Saskatchewan are\nnow beyond control, Hon. T. C. Davis\nacting minister of natural resources,\nsaid today. The fires are the worst in\nthe province's history, and there is\nlittle hope for thousands of acres\nof timber unless rain comes immediately.\nEire fighting operations now engage 2000 men.\n\"The whole north is ablaze,\" Mr.\nDavis said.\nTURNER VALLEY SEEKS\nWIDER OIL MARKETS\nCALGARY, Sept. 20 (CP)-Seek-\ning wider markets for the production of Turner Valley, now rated\nat' 10,000 barrels of crude oil daily,\nthe aid of Sir Edward Beatty, president of the Canadian Pacific railway,\nwas sought by the Petroleum Producers' association here.\nMellon Millions\nGo to Charities\nPITTSBURGH, Sept. 20 (AP).-\nThe will of the late Andrew W.\nMellon, leaving his entire fortune\not between $100,000,000 and $200,-\n000,000 to his educational and charitable trust, was filed -today.\nJack Ludlow, Hurt\nin Bicycle-Auto\nCrash, Progresses\nJack Ludlow, son of Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. E. Ludlow, 609 Cedar street, who\nwas injured Thursday morning when\nhis bicycle struck an auto driven\nby Carl A. Larson, is reported to\nbe making steady progress in the\nKootenay Lake General hospital.\nThe lad's injuries consisted of a\ncrushed chest, deep wounds in his\nback and one in each leg and\nbruises. His bicycle struck the\nauto when he was riding down\nSilica street on to Ward street, and\nMr. Larson was turning off Ward\nup Silica street.\nLOST YOUTH LEAVES\nNAME, ARROW. ON TREE\nTIMMINS, Ont., Sept. 20 (CP)\u2014\nDiscovery of the name \"Bill Barilko\"\nand an arrow freshly carved on a\ntree trunk encouraged searchers today as they pressed a hunt through\nGodfrey township bush for the 20-\nyear-old Timmins youth, lost since\nlast Wednesday.\nEMPIRE FARMERS\nTO MEET AT SYDNEY\nSYDNEY, Australia, Sept. 20 \u2014\n(CP). \u2014 A conference of Empire\nfarmers will be held here in March\nwhen agricultural problems will be\nthreshed out by experts from the\nDominions, colonies and United\nKingdom.\nThe meeting follows the suggestions of Canadian agricultural leaders.\nTHREE DRUNKS ATTACK\nCOAST VISITOR ON FERRY\nVANCOUVER, B.C., Sept. 20 (CP)\n-S. Abrahamson, a visitor here from\nPortland, Ore., reported to city police he was attacked by three men\non a harbor ferry Sunday. evening.\nAbrahamson said the men were apparently intoxicated.\nCatacombs of the early Christian\nera have been discovered five miles\nfrom Nazareth, with inscription and\npictures still preserved in them.\nROOFING\nEaves Troughs, etc.\nR. H. Maber\nPhone 665      610 Kootenay St.\nUnion Packing\nCo. Ltd.\nOF\nCALGARY, ALBERTA\nMeat Packers and\nProyisioners\nMAKERS OF:\nThe Famous Tender Made Hams\nand Tender Made Picnic Shoulders.  Thistle  and   Home   Brand\nProducts.\nWe have taken over the\nWilliams' Cartage Co., cold\nstorage plant in Nelson, and\nwill in future carry a stock\nof these products for the accommodation of the retail\nmerchants and grocers.\nMR. W. McCAMON, who\nhas represented the company in the Kootenays for\nthe past 10 years, assisted\nby Mr. J. Rich, will be in\ncharge.\nUNION PACKING\nCO., LTD.\nBox 879 Phone 106\nNELSON, B.C.\nPANTS\nfor\nWork or Dress\nWORSTEDS In dark shades\nand Grey Cheviots, 69 \u00a3Q\nGENUINE \"DIXON\" *M Q__\nTWEEDS: Pair W'J'*\nENGLISH HAIRLINE\n\u2122USER8: $4-50\nFINE WOOL WORSTED8. In\nmany new patterns: CJC nt\nPair : . _W->\nYOUNG MEN'8 COLLEGI-\nATE8. New and ()A|J\n\u2022mart: Pair 9*7*\nGODFREYS'\n LIMITED\n378 BAKER       PHONE 270\nEMORY'S.\nLimited\nNEW\nDISCOVERY\nHolds Up Sockt without\nseparate Garters.\nThe quickest way to put on g\nIt to \u00abllp Into Holeproof Auto-\noart Socki. Tht knitted-ln Lute*\ntopi hold them up tccurely and\ncom. through every washing with\nelasticity perf-cll Tint your ltd\nto a pair now. You'll thank I\nNewest styles.\nJlOltPWOO\nAUTOGART\nSOCKS\nTESTED AND APPROVB) IY\nHET1ER FABRICS TESTING BUREAU\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 20 (CP);\nSidney Barrett, 58-year-old war ve\neran pleaded guilty to arson tods\nand was remanded to Sept. 24 II\nsentence. Barrett threw gasolln\nsoaked rags on the root ol a neigl\nbor's house following a quarrel.\n^\u25a03\n-WHAT MAN COULD RESIST...\n...the flame of love that burned in her\neyes\u2014the allure of her lips...Magnetic\nDietrich \u2014daring Donat \u2014togetherl\nALEXANDER KORD*\/.w,-rt.\nm a r i f n r r o n f R t\nDIETRICH DONAT\nFrom .ho novel by Directed by \u25a0# J\nJAMES HILTON \u2022 JACQUES. FEYDER        ,]\n\u2014 Added Short Subjects \u2014\nWALT DISNEY'S   \"MICKEY'S AMATEURS\"\nComedy\u2014\"STRIKE, YOU'RE OUT\"\n\"CAFE METROPOLE\"\nand \"MIDNITE TAXI\"\n;\u25a0  ,.'.      \u25a0        ,. .\n.    _ _______\n!\n\t\n\t\n____________________________\n______\n_________\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_1937_09_21","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\/1.0413409","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":"1937-09-21 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":"1937-09-21 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":""}]}