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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":" [oX\nExperts \"Find Course Tou&h as\nCanadian Golf Open Starts \u25a0\nPage Nine\nBeaver Creek Beautiful Setting\nfor Cub-Scout Camp\nPeg* Eight\nVOLUME SI\nFIVI CINTI P|R COPY\nON. BRITIIH  COLUMBIA. CANADA-FRIDAY  MORNINO. AUO.  18,  193J\nNUMBIR  101\nFIRE ASHES FAl^N NELSON, WILLOW POINT\n .; i.  . '    \u00bb     j \" m ' . .  .'',.'   .'..',   . . v !\u2014i\u2014-*-*\u2014^  f.' .   .   ' . '      \u2022*\u2014i\u2014\u2014\u2014\u25a0 : :\u2014l \u2666\nHitler Seeks Cooperation of\nHungary in War Reports Hint\nVANCOUVER CUV\nCOUNCILBACKING\nPOLICE FORCES\nRefuse   to   Appoint\nIndependent Body\nfor Probe\nDISCUSS ACTION\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 18 (CP).-\nTha Vancouver Police Commission will consider at Its next meeting, probably iome time next\nweek, what further action to take\non Mayor lyle Telford's charges\nof Inefficiency againit Chief Con-\netable W. W. Foster.\nRunoniibllltv of Investigating\nthe charge was turned back to\nthe commission today atter a ipeclal meeting of the City Council\npaued a resolution expressing\nconfidence ln tha Commission and\npolice force, and in the Commls-\neon'i competence \"to handle any\ninvestigation they might comider\nnecessary.\"\nThe Council refuted to appoint\nan independent commission to Investigate the Mayor'i charges\nchiefly on the grounds that it\nlacked sufficient Information to\ndetermine if such a probe is neceiiary.\n(Continued en Page Seven)\n\"toman\" Areas\nIn Poland Are\n.JnwtttsItbianeTsfl.n'Wwi'\nBerliner Boeraen-Zeltung today demanded annexation to the Retch of\nall \"German\" territory in Poland\n\u2014en area the newspaper estimated\nat about 46,066 square kilometres\n(about 19,000 square miles).\nThe whole of Poland, including\nIhe Clcszyn area annexed from\nCiecho-Slavakla lait year, coven\n150,413 square mila and. contains\na population of 82,347,300. Application of the Boersen-Zeltung's demand would reduce Poland by between 12 and 13 per cent both ln\narea and population. The Munich\nsettlement which gave Germany the\nSudetenland last year cut Czechoslovakia's population and area eacn\nnearly 30 per cent).\nThe Boersen-Zeltung'i diplomatic\ncorrespondent accused Great Britain of having helped to get \"German\" territories for Poland.\nProfeeslng to aniwer foreign reminders that the Reich haa refused\nthe right of self-determlnatldn to\n8,000,000 Czechs, the newspaper said\nPoland wat oppressing 8,000,000\nUkrainians,\nFire in Timber\nArea Is Discovered\nCOURTENAY, B. C, Aug. 17 (CP)\n\u2014Fire raging In fallen and bucked\ntimber was discovered today about\none mile West of Cimp 3, Comox\nLogging Company, 19 mllei North of\nhere.\nTonight the fire had ipread over\n200 acres and was being fought by\n150 employees of the company. A\nstiff Northerly wind was blowing.\nThe fire was ln a section burned\nover last year,\nCampbell River Area\nto Open This Year\nVICTORIA, Aug. 17 (CP)-The\nCampbell River area which was\nclosed to hunters last year after the\ndevastating forest fire will be opened again this year, J. G. Cunningham, British Columbia Game Commissioner, laid today.\nMr. Cunningham uld there was\nenough brood stock of game birds\nleft in the fire area to repopulate lt.\nExamination by the game board's\nofficials show that the stock has\nCome back after last season's closure, and hunting can safely be permitted.\nSearch ior Lost\nCouple Called OH\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 17 (CP) -\nBritish Columbia police tonight called off a search for a California couple after the young man's father\nexplained how earlier reporti originated hit son tnd daughter-in-\nlaw were feared drowned In Howe\n, Sound when a box containing their\nmarriage licence wat found waahed\nup on the ahore.\nNathan Tarr of Sierra Madre,\nI Calif., said his son, Ra.ymond Lewis\ni Tarr and hit wile were at Lough-\n; borough Inlet where they planned\nI tp establish their home when they\nheard a scow transporting their\nfurniture and personal belongings\nI had been swamped en route from\n1 Vancouver.\n*----______ei_______:\nHungarian Minister Received at Mountain\nRetreat; Problems of Great Gravity\nThought to Have Been Discussed\nBy LOUIS P. LOCHNER\nBERLIN, Aug. 17 (AP)\u2014Hitler received Count Stefan Caaky,\nHungarian Foreign Mlnliter, at hli Obtenaliberg mountain retreat\ntoday and teml-offlclal lourcci hinted in agreement wat being reached\nfor Hungary'i cooperation In eaat ot war.\nMeanwhile, a lull In overt development! In tha Oerman-Pollsh\ndispute over Danilg wai used by tht Nail Preu to front pagt reports\nof alleged acta of tcrrorlim agalnit Germans In Poland and of attempts\nby refugeta te reach the Fatherland,\nCount Caaky, aoeempanlid by Dotmi Sztojay, Hungarltn minister\nto Berlin, tptnt several hours with\ntht German chancellor. Ostensibly\nCiaky's visit was to oonvey official greetingi to Hitler In connection with the observance yetterday of tha 26th anniversary of\ntha German leadenfs enlistment al\nI Great War soldier,\nThe tact, however, that Caaky taw\nthe German Foreign Minliter, Joachim von Rlbbentrop at Fuschel\nCattle yetterday and today, nnd\nthat he It the guest of the Minister\nof the Interior. Wilhelm Frlck. at\nLeopoldakron Castle, near Salzburg,\nIndicated problems of great gravity\nwere being discussed.\nSteady Stream of\nDiplomats Talk\nlo Italian Head\nHOiJE. Aug. 17 (AF)\u2014BliwOusiU\nconferred with Foreign Minister\nGeleaoq Ciano one after another\ntonight for an indication of Italy'!\nattitude toward Poland. The Italian preu took the view tenilon wai\nincreasing over Danzig.\nAs talks proceeded In rapid pace,\nPremier Mussolini studied military\nproblems and a decree wai published that all Italian soldiers ln\n^Albania muit remain there until\nfurther notice even .though their\ntermi of service expire.\nThe Britiih Ambassador, Sir Percy Loraine, celled on Count Ciano at the foreign office thli evening. He waa followed by Hans\nGeorge von MacKcnscn, the German Ambassador.\nCount Ciano alao talked briefly\nwith the Pollih Ambauador, General Boleslaw Wleniawa-Dlugos-\nzowskl, tnd the United States Ambassador, William Phillips at the\nSeashore at Ostla,\nCailmlr Papee, Pollih Ambissa-\ndor to the Holy See, also conferred\nwith Lulgl Cardinal Maclione, Papal Secretary ot State,\nOF EASIER MIND\nDANZIG, Aug. 17 (AP). - the\nPolish Commissioner General Marian Chodackl, returned today from\na hurried trip to Warsaw where it\nwm presumed he received new instructions on negotiations with Arthur Grelser, the Danzig Senate\nPresident\nAlthough nothing' could be ascertained of discussions that may have\noccurred between Chodackl and\nGrelser, the Polish Commissioner's\nreturn, Indicating the talks would\nbe continued, gave rite to tome\nfeeling of optimum.\nIn the Free City there were expressions of confidence a peaceful\nsolution might yet be found to the\nquestion: \"Shall Danzig return to\nGermany?\"\nWhile the talks were technically\non trade relations \u2014 Poland controls Danzig customs \u2014 none has\ndoubted that, ln the light of the Nazi\nagitation, they also had considerable\npolitical importance.\nTweedsmuirs Tour\nPeace River; 1000\nCheer, Grande Prairie\nGRANDE PRAIRIE, Alta., Aug. 17\n(CP)\u2014Greeted by 1000 cheering\nNorthern residents, the Governor\nGeneral and Lady Tweedsmuir came\nto Grande Prairie today on their\ntour of the Peace River and British\nColumbia.\nTheir Excellencies arrived here\nfrom Spirit River and made a\nmotor trip through the district en\nroute to Beaverlodge before heading on by car to Dawson Creek,\nB. C. En route to Dawson Creek\nthey are expected to visit some of\nthe 500 refugeei from Czecho-Slovakia ln the Tupper Creek District\nAn unscheduled itop wai made\nby the vice-regal party at Sexsmlth\nwhere His Excellency left hli train\nand placed a wreath on the cenotaph. A group of.Canadian Legion\nmemben formed a guard of honor.\nREPRIEVED SLAYER\nWOULD HAVE DIED IN\nMANNER OF VICTIM\nS,U,T LAKE CITY, Aug. 17 (AP)\n\u2014If and when Trapper George\nHayet, Tooele County \"Demon\nSltyer\", is executed he will be the\n29th Utah murderer to face a tiring iquad.\nHayet wat to be strapped into a\nchair and shot to death in the\nUtah State prison tomorrow at\ndawn, but a last-minute reprieve\nby governor Henry Blood gave him\nat leut a month more of life.\nCarpenters' Wage\nRaised in Victoria\nVICTORIA, Aug. 17 (CP) \u2022\nminimum wage for carpenters\nThe\n- in\nVictoria and vicinity was i-alaed\nfive cents an hour to 75 cents by\norder of the Board of Industrial relations today. The Increase it effective Auguit 21.\nThli will bring the Victoria minimum up to the tame level aa that\nin Greater Vancouver and the Kootenay area.\n(Continued on Pagt Twelve)\nLeague Approval\nof British Plan\nfor Jews Held Up\nGENEVA, Aug. 17 (AP). - Tha\nLeague of Natloni Mandates Commission today withheld approval of\nGreat Britain's plan to make Paleitine an Independent Arab-Jewish\nState.\nThe Commission's report wei considered a first round victory for the\nWorld Zionist Congress here, in iti\nfight for a Jewish national home ln\nthe Hply Lsind.\n' Reporting to the League of Na-\nlons council, the seven members\nf the Mandate. Commission agreed\nunamlnously the new British policy\nput forth in the May 17 White Paper\nwat a complete reversal ot the usual\nInterpretation of th\u00bb Britiih man.\ndtte.\nFour of the teven tald flatly they\ncould not sanction tuch a change ln\npolicy involving limiting Jewish im\nmiration to the Holy Land.\nThe other three, however, declar-\ned they considered the change Justified by the Palestine situation.\nBecause of this split the Commission passed to the League Council meeting next month the decision\nto approve or disapprove of the\nplan:\nFIRES DYING OUT\nIN WASHINGTON\nSEATTLE, Aug. 17 (AP)-T. S.\nGoodyear, Washington State Forestry Supervisor, said tonight all major fires in the State, except those\nat Index and Stevenson, were dying out\nAt Index, the forest fire which\ndestroyed eight buildings yesterday, was itill blazing out of control along a two-mile front, despite efforts of 450 firefighters,\nC. J. Conover, assistant forester\nIn charge of fire control in the\nSnoqualmle National Forest described the Index fire as \"quiet\nbut dangerous\". He said a shift ln\nthe wind might bring the flames\ndown into the town again.\nFrenchman Delivers\nGrim Warning at\nCanadian Bar Meet\nQUEBEC, Aug. 17 (CP). - A\ngrim warning from across the sea\nwas delivered to the Canadian Bar\nAssociation tonight when Maitre\nJacques Charpentler of Paris, rep'\nresenting the French Bar, said the\nday had arrived when the world\nhad to decide whether it should be\nGermanized.\n\"I would Uke to be gay,\" he said,\n\"but every person coming from Europe today knows that tomorrow or\nany day he may be called back to\nsee his home destroyed or hli ton\nmobilized.\n\"The dty It at hand when the\nworld mutt choose whether it shall\nbe Germanized,\" tald Mr. Charpentler. lit may be the end of August or\nthe beginning of September. Let us\nSray God it wtll not happen but\n: lt doei every man must make hla\nchoice.\"\nCHINESE GUNMEN\nSHOOT DANE IN\nSHANGHAI AREA\nSHANGHAI, Aug. 18 (Friday),\n(AP)\u2014Chinese gunmen, today invaded a Western residential dlitrict of the International settle\nment largely inhabited by Americans and killed M, P. Krough, a\nDane.\nKrough, 39, an employee of the\nGreat Northern Telegraph Company, recently was' accused by\nthe Japanese controlled government of pulling down one of its\nflags in the Border Settlement\nHe wu shot at he lett hit home.\n200 FRENCH AIR\nRAIDERS 'BOMB'\nBRITISH CENTRES\nManoeuvres   Success\nand Advance Air\nCooperation\nIS FIRST FLIGHT\nPARIS, Aug. 17 (CP Havai)-\nMore than 200 French bombing\nplanes returned to France tonight\nafter staging \"raids\" over Great\nBritain's industrial centres to teit\neffectiveness of British air de-.\nfences and .give French fliers it\nopportunity to aim at foreign\n\"targets\".\nS.-tin\\.ii     his     tiiiiii\",.y     us'sCui-\npronounced tha manoeuvres a\nsuccess tnd nld they terved to\nidvance Anglo-French air cooperation.\nThousands of Britons uw the\nBomben fly over Liverpool, Bristol, Birmingham, Manchester, Oxford and London.\nIt wu the tint flight of French\nwar planei over England, although British planet have already itaged several flights over\nFranca.\n(Continued on Page (even)\nOne Hurt as (ar\nOff Roa\nApex Collision\n,_.t*rr\nof the Kootenay BeUe\nand Olaf Krone collided about ono\nmile North of Apex on the Nelson-\nNelway road about noon Thursday,\nthe Zeebec car going off the road.\nIt went down about 20 feet and\nlanded on Its riastt \u25a0 \u25a0'\t\nZeebec was driving toward Salmo and Krane toward Nelson when\nthe cara buniped. The passenger\nIllghtly Injured wu In Zeebec's\ncar.\nTWO RUMANIAN\nGUARDS KILLED\nBUCHAREST, Aug. 17 (CP Havas)\u2014The Rumanian Foreign Minister, Grlgore Gafencu, tonight lodged a itrong protest with the Hungarian legation here against a frontier attack by Hungarian ttoops in\nwhich two Rumanian guards were\nkilled, another dangerously wounded and another apparently kidnapped.\nAccording to accounts received\nhere the Incident occurred when\nHungarian soldiers fired on the four\nRumanians.\nDetails of the encounter were\ngiven Rumanian authorities by Sergeant Nicolal Chlosa, near death\nafter being bayoneted by the Hungarians in the fight. A medical orderly ln the Rumanian group disappeared after the skirmish, and lt\nwu believed he had been taken\nover the frontier.\nMichigan Governor\nAims at Gambling\nLANSING, Mich., Aug. 17 (AP)\n\u2014Governor Luren D. Dickinson,\n80-year-old crusader against vice\nand \"high life\" drinking, aimed\na blow at organized gambling in\nMichigan tocfiy.\nHe ordered virtually the entire\nttate police force to teek evi-\nSmoke From Fire Near Nelson\nFloods Valley\nChurning cloudi of smoke that billowed from a Are six milei up\nSproule Creek, Wut of Nelson, Thunday afternoon are ihown u\nthe light of the setting lun outlined them. The picture wu taken from\nthe bottom of Taghum Hill late in the atternoon. Later In the evening the smoke spread all over the West Arm Valley, obliterating hills\nEast o( Nelson, Ashes from the fire fell at Willow Point in the afternoon end ln Nelton in the evening, \u2014Daily Newt Photo.\no ran rair at\nThis Year; Streamlined\nFair Planned for 1940\ne Diaze\nof Unknown Size\non Sproule Creek\nFire Thought to Have Started 3 Miles Abov*\nSettlement of 20 or 30 Families; Fire\nRumored to Have Gone Into Grohman\nTwo hundred men Thurtday night were battling a blase of unknown extent that sprang up about 3 p.m. on the main fork of Sproule\nCreek, West of Nelaon and rapidly Jumped up the mountain side, tanu' I\nby a wind. Clouds of smoke covered the whole valley with a thick brown\nblanket and came down over Nelson ln the evening. The sun for i\ntime was an orange ball in the sky and later was blotted out altogether.\nAshes from the fire fell in Nelson and at Willow Point. It was burning up\nthe West slope of the mountain, late reports said.\nForestry officials believed the fire started about six miles up the\nmain creek, about three miles above a Doukhobor settlement of 20 or\n10 families. At first It was planned to rush 190 men to the scene, hut\nlater another 50 were added to the force. About 105 men were tajfit__\noff the Champion Creek fire, brought under control Thursday morning . I\nand tent to the new fire. Seventy\u00bb\u2014\u2014\u2014 -_*.j]\nmen of the crew of 175 were left\nto watch the Champion Creek blase. |\nNEAR GREEN TIMBER\nThe new fire wat thought to\nhave itarted ln an old burn, possibly\non the ground of the devastating\nfire of 1984, A large number ot\nwindfalls and a lot of young growth\naccounted for the volume of smoke.\nThe fire was near green timber.\nUnconfirmed reporti in the evening laid the tire had Jumped the\nridge and itarted down Into Grohman Creek but theie reporti were\nnot corroborated.\n(Continued on Page Twelve)\nDies Says Bund\nin Touch With\nMovie Induitry Gives\nCourts Hew Problems\nQUEBEC, Aug. !7 (CP). \u2014 Development of uie moving picture Industry hai'creatcd new and complicated problemi for courts and\nlawyers, Jacques Charpentler, bat-\nonnier of the Paris Bar, told the\nannual meeting of the Canadian Bar\nAssocition here today. The central\nproblem related to the ownership\nof films.\n2 OIL FIRMS\nRESCIND (UTS\nOKLAHOMA CITY, Aug. 17 (AP)\n\u2014Mid-continent oil producers\nclaimed an initial victory in their\nBix-state shutdown war against collapsing crude prices today as two\nIndependent companies rescinded\n20-cent per barrel reductions.\nThey were the Bell Oil & Gas\nCompany and the Danzlger Refineries, Incorporated, both of Tulsa.\nHeads of major purchasing companies whose price cuts put into effect last week were responsible for\nthe current crisis gave no indication whether they would follow the\ntwo companies' lead.\n,. A third Independent \u2014 the Caddo\nCrude Oil Purchasing Company of\nLa,\u2014announced  a   10\ndence of gambling violations, ar- Shreveport,   _ .\nrest operators of illegal gambling cent reduction ln the top price of\ndevices and'confltcate equipment' crude.\n(OAST POLICEMAN SAYS \"BRIBE\"\nOF RUM WAS \"Olf T\" FROM DRIVER\n\u25a0 ^ -\u25a0 ii i \u25a0\u2022 \u25a0vriiif tierrtiMiiiiiMi n\nVANCOUVR, Aug. 17 (CP) \u2014\nConstable Hugh Hamilton, charged\nwith Constable Eldon Pinkerton\nwith demanding and accepting a\nbribe, laid ln county court today\nthat he had accepted two bottlei\nof rum from Harvey McKibbon. but\nthat it was a gift from the taxi\ndriver whom he had known for\nthree or four yean.\nCharges against the Constables,\nlaid on Information by McKibbon,\nstate that they accepted two bottlei\nof rum for not pressing a charge\nof speeding against the taxi driver.\nHamilton tald that he ipoke to\nPinkerton, who had warned McKibbon that he would have to get\nhit speedometer checked after travelling over the bridge at 32 miles\nan hour, and that Pinkerton assured\nhim he had no intention of summonsing the taxi driver.\nHe said he patted this Information on to McKibbon and the taxi\ndriver telephoned him about midnight the following evening and\nsaid Tve got two bottles of rum\nfor you.\"\n\"I told him I didn't want It\"\nHamilton continued, adding that\nMcKibbon said: \"I'll bring It up to\nyour house,\" and that he again told\nhim he did not want it.\nHe said the taxi driver arrived\nlater with the parcel and he told\nhim it waa \"not necessary\" but\nthat McKibbon said \"this will show\nyou I appreciate what you have\ndone for me.\"\nHe said that he felt he knew\nMcKibbon well enough that there\nwat nothing wrong in taking tbe\nliquor.\nContinuing hla testimony Hamilton tald that on Aug. 2, a day after\nhe and Conitable Pinkerton had\nbeen charged, he went to Pinker-\nton's home with McKibbon and a\nman identified as Jack Turvey.\nHe said Pinkerton stayed in the\ncar with Turvey while he and McKibbon walked down the street\nand that during their conversation\nthe taxi driver told him that if he\nleft town nothing could be done\nabout the inquiry.,\nEarjy   FQH   Meeting,\nCommunity Drive\nProjected\nNelson will not have a Fall fair\nthis year. But efforts will be instituted almost at once to organise a\n\"streamlined fair\" for 1940, basing\nit upon changing conditions and\nchanging entertainment demands of\nthe public. This was the decision\nof the Fair Board Thursday night.\nIt was agreed the time was too far\nadvanced to permit organising a\nfair for this year; and that consideration should be given immediately\nto a new basis of organization for\nthe future.\nMayor N. C. Stibbs reported the\nCity Council had agreed to a grant\nof $400 to clear up the deficit on the\n1938 fair.\nSuggestions for 1940 were legion.\nThey included a mining convention,\ntentatively scheduled for 1940, ln\nconjunction with the fair; an old\ntimers' and old boys' reunion; a\ncampaign to attract national advertising; bringing Trail and Rossland pro-rec gymnasts to Nelson;\nCaledonian Games, and so on.\nA general meeting, to which representatives of all interested organizations would be invited, was\nplanned for early Fall in order to\norganize a community-wide effort\nto make the 1940 fair a district celebration.\nRoyal Visit Causes\nNew Cooperation\nBetween B.B.C, C.B.C.\nNEW YOBK, Aug. 17 (CP). - A\n\"new cooperation\" between the Canadian and British Broadcasting\nCorporations was announced by\nMajor W. E. Gladstone Murray,\nGeneral Manager of the CBC, on his\narrival here today from London.\nAs a result of the \"very variable\npublicity\" Canadit received In the\nUnited Kingdom through the Royal\nvisit the Canadian Broadcasting\nCorporation will send an Increasing\nnumber of radio programs \"of a\nnational character\" to British wireless listeners, Major Murray\nsaid.\nRain Halts Fires\nYellowknife Area\nEDMONTON, Aug. 17 (CP). -\nForest fires in the Yellowknife mining district of the North West Ter-\nrltorlei, 750 mllet North of here,\npractically have been extinguished\nby good rains said wireless reports\nto Canadian Airways, Ltd., here\ntoday.\nBush fires have been burning ln\nthe district for over a week surrounding the gold mining settlement One,outlying shack was reported to ha\\e been burned a few\ndays ago. The mint occurred today\nto effectively check the fires.\nWASrafaTON,__U IT (AP) -\nFrit*-Kuhn, itolld Fuehrer of the\nGerman-American Bund, gave the\nCongressional Committee on Un-\nAmerican actlvltlei a session of almost constant conflict today. He\nfinally left Iti wltneas chair spout-\ning defiance and predicting the\ncommittee's Investigation would\n\"cost Mr. Diet hit political future.\"\nAfter two days of Kuhn's testimony, repreaentative Dies declared\nIhe committee had made it clear\nthe Bund was working with German\ngovernment agencies and probably\ngetting advice from them.\nKuhn, whose tides of anger were\nstill running high after the hearing had adjourned, hotly told reporters the committee \"did not show\nany proof we are MnAmerican or\nhave any connection with Germany.\"\nMacDonald to Seek\nApproval of British\nPalestine Scheme\nLONDON, Aug.. 17 (CP)\u2014Colonial Secretary Malcolm MacDonald\ndisclosed tonight he would go before the League of Nations council\nin Geneva next month to seek approval for the British Palestine\nplan Which the permanent Mandates Commission today refused to\napprove.\nGovernment circles seemed not\ngreatly disturbed over the commission's refusal although it was admitted this was the first time there\nhad been such a divided opinion on\nany major question.\nOther quarters indicated approval of the policy requires unanimous consent of the League Council and that Judging by the way the\nMandates Commission reacted, this\nmight be difficult to achieve.\nOttawa to Vancouver\nHike Costs Only $1.50\nSASKATOON, Aug. IT (CP). -\nFrom Ottawa to Vancouver on $1.50\nit pretty cheap travelling. Madeline\nLeury, Ottawa High School girl, who\narrived in Saskatoon tonight,\nclaimed to have hitch-hiked from\nCanada's capital city to the Pacific\nCoast on that amount of money.\nShe's on her way home now, and\nsince leaving Vancouver hasn't spent\na cent. .   \u201e\nThe girl said she had made the\ntrip from Ottawa to Vancouver in\n16 days. She only had to aleep outdoors two nights. The rest of the\ntime, farmeri and townsfolk along\nthe way provided her with sleeping\naccommodation and meals.\nFish Resolution\nMay Be Buried by\nCongress Council\nOSLO, Norway, Aug. 17 (AP).\u2014\nDivided opinions of Inter-Parliamentary Union Congress delegates\nIndicated tonight the much-discussed resolution of Hamilton\nFish, Republican member of the\nUnited States House of Representatives urging a 30-day \"truce\"\nin Europe, would be quietly buried ln the Union Council.\nThe Union Rules Committee\nheld such a resolution, not on the\nofficial agenda, may not be debated unless the Council approves\nbr a two-thirds majority,\nPolish Property\nlo Be Broken Up\nDefence Purposes\nWARSAW, Aug. 17 (CP).- The\nPolish Government Issued a decree\ntonight authorizing breaking up and\neventual expropriation of estates en\nthe Polish frontier \u2014 many of them\nGerman-owned \u2014 for defence pur.\nposes.\nIn the Pomeranla and Upper Silesia border districts more than 80\nper cent of the land Is owned by\nmembers of the German minority,\nThe decree authorises the Agrlcul.\nture Ministry, working in conjunc.\ntion with the War or Interior Mln.\nistries, to expropriate any estates\nalong the frontiers for reaaoni ol\nstate. ~r|\nALBERTA SHOWS\nCASH SURPLUS\nEDMONTON, Aug, 17 (AP).-An\noverall cash surplus and reduction\nof the public debt through pay.\nment of the final instalment on the\nsale of the Northern Alberta Railways were reported in the quarterly financial statement of the Alberta Government today.\nThe statement was submitted by\nC. M. Laing, Acting Provincial Auditor, to Hon. Solon Low, Provincial\nTreasurer, and covered the three\nmonths of the 1930-40 fiscal year\nended June 30 last.\n, The overall cash surplus, excluding new borrowings, debt redemption and the final installment on the\nrailway sale, was $316,607 compared\nwith $751,437 for the corresponding\nperiod a year ago.\nThe report gave the net funded\nand unfunded debt of the Province\nas $149,884,668 on June 30 last compared with $154,994,752 at March\n31, 1939.\nRainpour Over Three\nInches at Winnipeg\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 17 (CP)-Mei\norological officials today thumb\nrecord pages back to July, 1914,1 _\nfore they found precipitation figures to better those established by\nthe torrential rains which drenched Winnipeg yesterday.\nA total of 3.23 inches of rain fell\nduring the day\u2014heaviest since July\n14, 25 years ago when 5.26 inchei of\nrain poured down during a six- '\nhour storm. Yesterday's deluge\ncame in two sections, one early ui \u2022\nthe day and the other during the\natternoon,\nNELSON ...\nVictoria .....\nNanalmo ...\nVancouver\nKamloops\nMln.\n.  54\n..55\n. 44\n. 53\n.  57\n- 34\n.  52\n- 51\n- 51\n45\nMax.\n8\n77\n71\n8\nM\n62\n56\n55\n61\n73\n81\nPrince George ....\nEstevan Point .....\nPrince Rupert ....\nLangara  '\t\nAtlin -.\nDawson, Y. T. _  34\nSeattle  __ 51\nPortland, Or  56\nSan Francisco \u2014 53\nSpokane    \u2014- 56\nPenticton     \u2014 34\nVernon - - 55\nKelowna  - 53\nGrand Forks  54\nKaslo  _ _ 52\nCranbrook   \u2014 46\nCalgary   46\nEdmonton  - 54\nSwift Current  54\nMoose Jaw -  50\nPrince Albert   49\nQu'Appelle  -.. 45\nWinnipeg    47\nForecast: Kootenay\u2014Fresh Northwest winds, fine, not much change\nin temperature. Dangerously low\nhumidity.\nWater level at Nelson Thursday\nnight 5.04 feet above the low water\nmark, compared with 4.98 feet Wednesday and 4.81 leet Tuesday nigEU\n62\n88\n88\n71\n70\n91\n93\n87\n82\n72\nis^IMrs'sil.irlis^Sss^l'tists^ffitrts^isftsM\n'        \t\n TWO\nRossland Social \u2666\u2666\nssND, B.C., Aug. 17-Corp-\nR. Lennox ltft Wtdntsdty\n4 t two week'i holldiy it\njit, where he will join Mra\nLennox and family at Cumberland,\nVancouver Island, where they have\nb**n ipending the Summer.\nCarmen aract, accompanied by\nMai Helen Hinion and Thor Olttn.\nall ol Spokine, wu a gueit ot\nMr. Ltnot'i parents, Ma and\nMn, Louli Laface, for th* week-\n\u00a3d. Mn. Carmen LiFoce, who has\nen ipending a week in Rossland,\nMturned with the party to Spokane Monday morning.\nFather F. X. MacAulay, who hai\nviiiting in Ronland with nil\nand iltter-ln-law, Mr, tnd\nMrs. Angus MacAuliy, returned\nto Winnipeg Wednesdiy mornlni.\nMn. Max Woogmm entertained\nas tea hoittii Wednesday ifternoon,\nat her homt on Columbia Avenue,\nMn. E. H. Pool* and diughter\nPatty-Lou of Olympla, Waah., are\nvltltlng Mn, Poole's brother-in-\nlaw and lister, Mr. tnd Mn, B.\nA. Lins. Mr, and Mri. Lint and\nfamily, accompanied by their guesti\nexpect to leave Rossland Thunday\nto visit Mrt, Lint' mother at Humboldt, Saik.\nMr. and Mn. T. R. Glbion of Calgary left Rossland Tuesday alter\nmiking a ihort visit ln Ihe elty.\nMr. and Mn. W. 0. Ternan are\n\u2022pending a vacation at Campbell\nNILSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. 1. C. FRIDAY MORNINO, AUO. 11 1*\n'     '*\u25a0\n-\n\u2022   '  V\n\u25a0\n*\ni\n\u2014\nfarasp\nBLACK&WHITE\nThis advertisement li' not publiihed or dliplayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or by th* Government of Britiih Columbia.\nland\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON'S LEADING HOTELS\nHume Hotel Nelson, B* C*\n(Uorge iENWELL. Proprietor.\nSAMPLE ROOMS    EXCELLENT DINING ROOM\nEuropean Plan, $1.50 Up\nHUMU-F.   A.   Templeton,   Ray\nr. M. McDonald, A. H. Mc-\nVancouver; S. Addison, W.\nPtntlcton, W. F. Willtam-\n. A. Williamson, TraU; C.\nBarclay, A. T. McCormack, H. K.\nMortimer, Don Ellington, Calgary;\nF. Coram, Winnipeg; J. A. Thorn,\nWinnipeg; Ken Petty, Spokane; R,\nG. Holmes, Seattle.\nMEW GRAND HOTEL\nADDITION OP NEW ROOMS WITH BATH\nt. and L. KAPAK, Proprietor!\nluropun Plan 81.00 and Up.\n1MB PARKING        BLK. FROM CIVIC CENTRE        PH. 234\nKOKANEE LODGE\nOn North Shore ol\nKootenty Lake IH\n\u2666    ROOMS      \u2022    MEALS      \u2022    CABINS mllet from\n,    Excellent Culilne \u2014 Qood Beach Nelson\nS=K\nAINSWORTH AND KASLO RESORTS\n;.at-\nAinsworth Hot Springs\nTha Spa ef th* Koettnayt\"\nFISHING \u2014 SWIMMING \u2014 BOATING\nWrit* tor ipeclal vacation ratei.\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\nYOUR  VANCOUVER HOME\"\nDul \u00a3erin Hotel\nWStymaurSt,   Vancouver, B. C.\nNewly renovated throughout Phonos and elevator.\nA. PATERSON. late Ot\nColeman, Alta, Proprietor.\nSPOKANE Hotels and Restaurants\nPEDICORD HOTEL      *.\nComplete Servtct Under On* Root PEDICORD\nIII Rlvinldt Av*. Spokant, Waih. Manager\nWhtn in SPOKANE You Will Enjoy Staying at tha\nlw\u00a3r Hotel VOLNEYP.K!\nIVIRY COURTESY SHOWN OUR CANADIAN GUESTS\nATLANTIC HOTELS],o$?\nPIRST and MADI80N-SP0KANE, WASH..     I Mm\nTHI POPULAR HOTEL FOR CANADIANSV|N SPOKANE\nH0Tix;:itof4ra;;~r\n196 outside roomi all. at moderate rates.\nAPARTMENTS ARE ALSO AVAILABLE IP VOU DESIRE THEM.\nhn\n11526 Sprague - SPOKANE\nDINE      DANCE\n\u2022 BREAKFAST\n\u2022 LUNCHEON\n\u2022 DINNER\nA warm welcome it extended to\nour Canadian frlendi.\nGALAX HOTEL\nTho cleanest Hotel in\n:>;;'   -   Wathiogton\nRATES\u2014?1 to $3 per day\nMain 4 Bernard Spoken*\nSPOKANE HOTELS\nAND. RESTAURANTS\nWELCOME YOU\nTRANSPORTATION\u2014Passenger and Freight\n\u2022FREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE NELSON TWICE DAILY\n5 a.m. and 10:30 a.m.\u2014Eieept Sunday\nTrail Livery Co.\nTrail\u2014Phone 135       Nelson\u2014Phone 35\nj M. H. MolVOR. Peso\nRlvtr and other Vancouver Island\npoint*.\nUr. and Mn. Harold Ktatini and\ntheir daufhter, Mlu Marttret Keat-\nin j, tnd Miu Thercia Sinclair ol\nVancouver, who have been visiting\nMr. JUttlng'i brother and litter-\nin-law, Mr. and Mri. A. K. Kelt-\ninj, left Wedneidiy to return to\nthe Coait.\nJohn Clarke tnd Hirry Woogman\nare tpending t 10-day holiday at\nChristina Lak*.\nMra, H, Leltnwr tnd her daughter, Mlu Ruth Lilimtr, who hivt\nbeen the house guesti of Mri. Lei*.\nmer'i brother-in-law and liiter,'\nDr. and Mri. E. I. Topllff, during\nthe pait month, returned to their\nhorn* at Calgary Friday.\nMr. and Mri. John Berg are vacationing at Spokane.\nBruce MacKenzie returned to the\ncity Saturday, from attending tha\nB.C. mining ctmp it Emory Creek,\nnetr Yale, B.C, Mr. MacKenzie\nhai been at tha camp line* th*\nearly part of June.\nMil* Florence Palmquist ll holidaying tt Vancouver.\nMr. and Mn. W. H. Llttlcjohn\nreturned Sundiy from Vancouver,\nwhere they had t fortnlght'i vacation.\nMilt Joiephlne Fiicher returned\nto Revelstoke Friday. Mlu Fiicher,\nwho hai been residing ln Rotiland\ntor the put two years, hti taken\na poiition at th* King Edward\nHotel ln Revelstoke.\nMra. John Gibson and htr daughter, Mill Jean Gibson, who have\nbean vltltlng ln Roultnd ilnce Frldiy at the home of Mr. and Mri.\nH. M\u00abllor Ungdile, left Tueidiy\nnight for their home tt Lethbridge.\nMr. and Mn. Wilfred Mihv and\nfamily, who have been hollda\nat Vancouver, returned to Row.\nSaturday.\nMm. Frank Thorpe and Infant\ndaughter are making a vliit with\nrelativei at Victoria. Mri. Thorpe\nleft Tuttdty with Mr. tnd Mrt, L.\nC. Macintosh and daughter Jean,\nof Beaver Bend.\nMn. D. D. Morrii and two children arc holidaying at Chrlitina\nLake.\nMri. Garfield Belanger left lait\nFridty for a vacation at the Coait.\nMill Mirgiret Wright, Miss\nClaire Jtmltion, tnd Mlu Ellubeth Atklnion tre attending th*\nSenior Glrli ctmo tt KKooltree.\nMr. and Mn. R. W. Hag\u00bb\u00abn !*-\nturn*d Wedneidiy from a holiday\nipent ln th* Arrow Lakei and Ok\u00bb-\nnagan dlitrlcti.\nMr. and Mn. John Mitchell hay*\nreturned from a two week* holiday ipent at Chrlitina Lake.\nMln Lornlne Berg li viiiting in\nNelion at th* guett of Milt Mary\nMlit Jean Enklne, Mlu Donna\nMacKenile and Miu Dorothy Urquhirt have returned from attending\nJunior Glrli camp at Koolare*.\nMn. G. W. Hertlg and daughter\nLucienne have returned from a holiday tnent at Kailo. '_ ,.\nLadles of the Rouland L. 0. B. A.\nconvened at the Orange Hall on\nMonday evening, honoring the viilt\nof Mn. L. Glddtnt of Vincouver,\nGrand Miltreu for Britiih Columbit\nThree candldatei were Initiated\ninto the lodge during the evening,\nand a pretentatlon wai made to tht\nguett of honor by Mri. R. H. Maton,\nMlitreu.\nAt the cloie of the businesi meeting, a delightful banquet wat enjoyed, to which leveral guests from\nTrail, and alio members ot the Rossland L. 0. L, had been Invited.\nMn. Harold Evani, Mn. George\nJorgemon and Miu Norma Inglis\nwere in charge of arrangements.\nMrt. H. P. Graham and son Harvey of Crinbrook are visiting in\nRossland aa gueiti ot Mn. Graham'! brother-in-law and lister,\nMr. and Mri. W. M. Anderson. Mrs.\nGraham's vialt to this district is of\nlntereit to Caitlegar reiidents at\nMn. Grthtm was the flnt school\nteacher at Castlegar, having taught\nthere in 1908 and 1909.\nMaster Glynn Langdale returned\nto Rowland lait Thunday after a\nthree weeki vacation spent \"with\nfriendl at Lethbridge.\nMrs. Daniel Dosen entertained in\nhonor of the fint birthday of her\nton. Daniel Donald, Wednesday afternoon, when gamea and contests\npaued a very enjoyable afternoon\nfor the children. The small gueits\npreient were Kenneth Scott, Wayne\nFerrey, George Dawson, Helen Ores-\nkovlch, Annie-Louiie Lundtten,\nGarfield Belanger, Dixie Yuriilch,\nMarie Yuriilch, Louli Corrado, Dolores Grubisic, Marlene Falsetto,\nAmerigo Corrado ot Trail, Dora\nDawion and Milan Yuriilch,\nand the gueit of honor.\nOther guetti preient were Mrs.\nPeter Corrado, Miss Florence Corrado, Mn. Victor Falsetto, Mn. Ru.\ndolph Grubliic, Mn. Robert Scott,\nMra. Martin Orekovlch, Mri. Mike\nYurisich, Mn. Norman Dawion, Mr.\na..d Mrs. H. Lundgren and Eugene\nFerrari.\nMn. John Shuteck and son of\nAnnable are visiting Mrt. Shuteck't\nfather, Joseph Couture, and Mill\nFlorence Couture in the City. They\nplan to stay for several weeks.\nPeter Jensen has returned from\na week spent at Sheep Lake.\nAmerigo Corrado of Trail Is viiiting his uncle and aunt. Mr. and\nMrs. Peter Corrado this week.\nPriests Will Honor\nMemory Dead Priests\nin Their Mass Today\n. Prieits.of Nelson diocese in their\nretreat at St. Joseph's Academy\nthia morning will honor the memory of' Very Rev. J. C. McKenzie, parish priest of Cranbrook,\nand Father Michel of St, Eugene\nHoipital, Cranbrook, who died In\nihe past year. They will honor the\nlate priests ln their dialogue mass,\nled by Most Rev. Martin M. Johnion. D.D., Biihop of Nelion.\nThe : an Thursday morning was\ndedicated to the Intentions .of all\nthe priests present.\nThe retreat ia being conducted,\nwith termoni each diy, by Rt. Rev,\nLeontrd Forrestal, D.P., Spiritual\nDirector of St. Peten Seminary*\nLondon, Ont.\nThere are about 24,000 certified\nilr pilots in the United Statei.\n^BRINGS INSTANT EASE\nfrom ma_pS\\*\\\n\u00ab>l\nOUR HALF YEARLY SALE OFFERS YOU THE MOST SENSATIONAL VALUES \u2014 A STORE WIDE SALE \u2014\nSACRIFICE PRICES \u2014 THIS SEASON'S STOCKS MUST BE CLEARED\u2014\nI -\nLadies* Wear, Children's Wear, Footwear    Sale Starts Fri*, Aug. 18\nDRESSES\nlummer   Drum,\nllzei 14-44. Reg. to $6.00. Silt\n$1\u00bb8\nDRESSES\nSummer Dreuei. With Fabrics\u2014Novel\nCloths. Sizes 14-44. Rag. to $7.00. Salo\n$2-98\nHATS\nOur complete stock tf Summer hats.\nRtg. ta tlM. Sal*\n98\nBLOUSES\nSheers In tailored ind dressy\nSizes 14-44. Rig, to 53.00.\nblouses.\nSale\n\u20221-w\nSUITS\nTailored  suits\u2014In  tweeds \u2014 smartly\ntailored. Sizes 14-20. Reg. to 113.00. Sale\n$\u25a0$\u202295\nCOATS\nCasual Coati. Novtl cloths and tweeds.\nGlies 16-42. Reg. to 120.00. Sale\n$9\n.95\nHOSIERY\nCotton mesh\u2014Chiffon laat toe\nand hail, Rtg. to $1.00. Silt\n69\nLINGERIE\nPanties, Bloomers and Vests.\nWhlte-Tia Rose. Silt\nPURSES\nWhltt tnd prints. Pouch bags, .\nzippers tte. ,neg. $140. Sill\nc\nGLOVES\nSummer fabrics, laces, knits\n\u2014white and colors. Salt\n69\nSLIPS\nAssortment of broken line:\u2014\nwhite tnd tea rose, Sizes 32,\n40, 42, 44. Ssle\n69\nSUMNER\nSHOES\nBroktn llnet. Sandals etc Rig.\nte  $2.95. Silt\n98\"\nWHITE SHOES\nIn pumps, ties, eto. High style\nfootwear. Sizes 4 to  8, Silt\n$1.98\nI\nOTHER LINES\nTin leather and wheat straw\nmuh, optn ton tnd backs\nIncluded. Rtg. to $4.95\n\u00bb2*\nSPORTS WEAR  Oftc\nh Shirts. Slack!  Farmarett*!  Short*   ..       *^m\nBush Shirts, Slacks, Farmerettes, Shorts,\nBathing Suits Oftc $1.49\nRuffle\"! in rnHnn sis- .ills U\/svsl ?,,!.\u00ab       -m *****\nRuffles in cotton or silk\u2014Wool Suits\nCHILDREN'S WEAR\nSOCKS %___%_ PLAYSUITS\nSummer weight, plain colors, lastex tops    II Mfc A  WCj^fc ' Cotton prints, sun ton backs. American prints.\n2 pair for .......;  25< ^*W*:* iXjK -)Y Sizes 6 to 14. Sale\t\nSLACKS                  jf .fte m\u00a3L                   SPORT SHIRTS\nNavy and white colored trim. Sizes 10 to 14,    ^M*_W >\u25a0'_. Ki White cotton mesh, open necks and zippers.\nSale   ^-w-rW* WmMn Sizes 6 to 14. Sale ... ..i' J.y':..\/...'..\t\nPANTIES                 mm Afi \u2122    Pp!\/I                    SHORTS -\nCotton briefs. White only. Sizes 6 to 14.                I *m%' YiihmF White and navY drill, stripe trim. Sizes 8 to 14.\nSale  \u2022 W \\'Mr*W' Sale\t\nDRESSES                ^Ac H If                    FARMERETTES\nCotton prints, guaranteed fast colors. Sizes 1   .^S^V A)    U Cotton drills. Navy with colored braid trim.\nto 14. Sale **w *W \u00b0*   S -Sizes 4 to 14. Sale i\t\nNo Refunds\nNo Exchanges\nEvery sale\nmust be final.\nRUY NOW\nat the seasons\nGreatest Sale\nPHONE\n73\nBURNS\nBLOCK\nLadies' Wear Children's Wear Footwear\nSale Starts\nFriday Aug. 18\n9 A.M.\nSet a Zero Hour\nfor Rosslander\nto Get Licence\nROSSLAND, B.C., Aug. 17-An\nunusual case came up in Roisland\npolice court this atternoon when\nJ. Nichols, formerly ot Midway,\nwas arraigned before Magistrate\nR. E. Plewman on a charge ot\nplying his trade of motor mechanic without having a licence. Nichols was undecided whether to plead\nguilty or not, explaining that although he had actually been earning his living ln Rossland at that\ntrade and without a licence, he\nwas not prepared to count himself guilty when work done by\nhim had been for parties who had\napproached him and he had not\nsolicited the business.\nR. J, Clegg, prosecuting, advised\nNichols to plead guilty In order\nthat the court could pan a judgment, but the accused man stood\npat, offering, however, to plead\nguilty If the court would give him\na week in which to obtain a licence.\nThe court took the view that the\nmain object ot bringing the charge\nwas to establish whether Nlcholt\ncould or could not work ai a motor mechanic without a licence.\nMagistrate Plewman finally adjourned the case until next Thursday at 4 p.m., with the understand.\nIng that if Nichols should take out\na licence before that hour, say at\n2 p.m. Thursday, the authoritiei\nwould drop the case.\nNlcholi, however, wai ordered\nto pay the feei of the witnesses who\nhad been subpoenaed, and who had\nbeen In attendance twice, the cat*\nhaving been first adjourned from\nMonday.\nNelson Maximum Is\nAgain 89 Degrees\nFor th* fourth successive day the\nmaximum tempetature ln Nelson\nThursday wu 19 degrees. The dty\nwu hot tnd sultry all the way\nthrough. Lowest reading tor the 24\nhoun ending tt 5 p.m. wat M degrees.\nThe chief result W billboard regulation, says one obsVver, has been\nto move the board\\back farther\nW\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/M\nwarn.\nM$a&\n1000 Pairs of NEW SHOES for Women\nReduced as Much as 66 2-3%\nHere Is the SALE OF THE YEAR\n-'\u25a0'.' \u25a0        \u2022 .' '     ' ;..\"\u2022\u25a0:' ...   .\/.\u25a0'\u2022\u25a0  *.tf>. *$\u25a0*:' '\u2022 \u25a0-\u25a0\n*|.00     *|49     $2-4*     *I$*\nTIES - PUMPS - SANDALS\nSTARTS TL\ntoday I he\nFRIDAY\nAUG. 18\n ^\n*.\u00ab_.,.\u201e.,-.\u201e,\nKuhn Confronted With Using Money\nFr Balks at Questions\nWASHINGTON, Aug. IT (AP)-\nFritr Kuhn tensely denied before\nthe Houie of Represenlatlve Committee investigating unAmerican\nactlvltlei today that the influence\nof hli brother, Justice Max Kuhn of\nthe German supreme court, had\nnot played any part In hU selection\nv.m\\$\nUNDERWOOD\nI    TYPEWRITERS\nSunditrand  Adding  Machines\nOFFICE SUPPLIES\nUnderwood Elliott Fliher Ltd\n536 Wird St ' Phont M\nti leader ot the Germin-Amerlcin\nBund ln the United Slates.\nKuhn wti ordered to answer e\nquestion of thU ntture after Chairman Martin Dies (Dem.-Texai) had\neut ihort the witness' vigorous protests that Internal affairs ot Germany could have no connection\nwith bund activities ln America.\nWhen Kubn bilked leveral times\nat answering \"yei\" or \"no\" to\nqueries by Rhea Whitley, for the\ncommittee, Represetative Thomai\n(Rep.-New Jeney) chirged Kuhn\nwu making \"every attempt to\nevade questions.\"\nDiet pounded on the table with\nt heavy gavel and the itocky Kuhn\nshouted through the din:\n\"I aiked you to get fair yuettlom\nhere. What hai the supreme court of\nGermany to do with unAmerican\nactlvltlei?\"\nAlluding to a trip which Kuhn\nmd other bund officials made to\nGermany' in 1936, Whitley brought\nup the fact that Kuhn had headed\naiiubscriptlon drive which raised\n$3,000 in. the United States for German winter relief. Kuhn had test!-\nYOB CANT BEAT IT!\nRight from the itart you're going to like Old Virginia\nFine Cut and like it loti..; ,  v\nIt's th* mellowest, mott satisfying tobacco you over\ntucked Into a cigarette paper\u2014parliculatly when you\nun the beit pap\u00bbitr-\"Chantecler\" or \"Vogue.\"\nTry Old Virginia Fine Cut and give your tajte a treat!\nPackage 10j. % lb. Tin 75)!\nPocket Humidor Pouch 1St\n' Im hfiiiIik wttktet\nHi ilgtittri,\nOLD VIRGINIA\nFine Cut\n\" \u25a0 ,..\u00ab';\"i  i ' .,-\u25a0. '   .        '____, ..'\u25a0 ;..\" \u25a0\nPREVENT\nFOREST\nFIRES\ntied thtt he delivered thU money\nin penon to Adolf Hitler.\nU. 8. ATTORNEY GENERAL\nADDRESSED BUND  MEET\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 'l7 l,VF>.-\nFritx Kuhn, leader of the German-\nAmerican Bund, told the Diet Committee today Attorney General\nrank Manny tddreued a Bund\nmeeting In Detroit io IBM.\nKuhn mtde the remark voluntarily at the conclusion of the committee morning teiiion on Unameri-\ncan Actlvltlei.\n\"I'll tell you lomething,\" be uid.\n\"The General Attorney, Mr. Murphy, he once talked at our meeting.\"\n\"Do you mean the Attorney General?\" uked Representative Thomas\n(Rep., N. J.), who had been quei-\ntioning the Bund leader.\n\"Yei,\" Kuhn replied, nodding hta\nhead forwird.\n\"Whert did ht ipeak?\" Thomai\ninquired.\nIn the German Home in Detroit\"\n\"When?\"\n\"In 1W6.\"\n\"Did he ipeak?\"\n\"He wai invited and came and\nipoke about ten minutei.\"\n\"What did he talk about?\"\n\"About Gernlan citiiem.\"\n\"Did he praite the Bund?\"\n\"Oh, no.'r\nChtirmtn Diet (D., Tex.), rapped\nthe gavel for a recess.\nKuhn at one point during the\nmorning questioning grabbed up\nhli brief case as if to walk out on\nthe hearing, after the committee\nrefused to let him have a lawyer.\nKuhn previously had demanded\nunsuccessfully he be given a chmce\nto obtain a Uwyer, after committee\ncounsel had attempted to trace Federal relief money into a 13000 fund\nKuhn collected for Winter relief tu\nGermany in 1936.  .\n\"So these unemployed members\ncontributed money that the United\nStates Government gave them for\nreliet for you to take over ahd .turn\nover to Mr. Hitler tor Winter relief?\" Whitley demanded.\n\"Yei,\" the witness replied and\nthen, apparently realizing the Implications of the itatement, he demanded \"how do you know that?\"\nUnder queitlonfag by Rhea Whitley, \/Committee Attorney, Kuhn\nagreed there were many unemployed\nmemben ot hii organization who,\nat American citizens, were entiUed\nto relief. He said the Bund made no\n\u2022siwsiisu! to priV.idu ai.1 to thcic members Itiell, although he collected\nfundi for German relief needi.\njapaneie Refuse\nBlame of British\nShips Destroyed\nSHANGHAI, Aug. 17 (AP) -\nA Japaneie army spokesman disclosed today Japan had refused to\naccept reiponiibllity for the de-\nitructlon of two BritUh ships ln air\nraids on Ichang August 6.\nThe Japanese asserted the Commander ot the bomben remained\nover Ichang for 10 minutei and law\nno signs of.any veueli afire.\n\"Therefore-if any BritUh veueli\nwere burned or gutted,\" the spokesman laid, \"it ii presumed the ihip\nwai iet afire at aome other moment\nand owing to aome other cause having nothing to do .with the bom-\nWdmenta.\nCoogan Accepts\n,000 as Share\nLOS ANGELES, Aug. 17 (AP).-\nJackle Coogan, who estimated he\nearned $4,000,000 in the daya when\nhe wai \"The Kid\" ol the early\nCharlie Chaplin comedies, accepted\n$126,000 today ai hU share of what\nremains.\nTo hU mother, Mn. Lillian Coogan Bernstein and his stepfather,\nArthur Bernstein, went a simitar\nturn under terms ot an agreement\napproved in Superior Court.\nThe agreement lettled only part\not Coogan'a domestic troubles. HU\nwife, Actress Betty Grable, U suing\nlor divorce.\nCHINESE CHARGED\nATTEMPTED BRIBERY\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 17 (CP)-\nJamei Gee, Chinese, wai charged\nUte yeiterday with attempting to\nbribe a police officer following hU\narrest on an indecent assualt\ncharge.\nDetectlvei said he offered them\n(15 when they took him into custody.\nMANSLAUGHTER CHARGED\nMISSION, B. C, Aug. 17 (CP).\n\u2014Bertll Lowe of Silverdale, B. C,\n20 miles Eait of here, hai been\ncharged with manslaughter follow\ning the death of Tatsuo Fujikawa,\nkilled In a collision on the highway\nnear here July 29.\nNELSON DAILY NIWI. NILION. B. C- FRIDAY MORNINO. AUO. 11. 1M\u00bb\nKoolaree Cavalcade. 1939 \u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nVisitors Are Welcomed by the Senior\nGirls; Kllolos Take Swimming Honors\nOn Viiiton' Dty the morning wat\ndevoted to preparation. Groupi ot\nenergetic campen Marched the\nneighboring woodi and creeki for\nflowen tnd foliage to decorate the\nlodge tnd tablet, and the effect was\npleating.\nVUlton commenced to arrive\nihortly ifter three, while the girls\nheld Uie annual wtter sports. They\nIncluded Mr. tnd Mn. J. Wright,\ntnd Min Smith ot Roulind; Rev.\nand Mn. J. Donnell, Mn. Meggs.\nRon Fleming, Gordon Fleming and\nCllve Fleming, Mr. and Mn. Arthur Baird, Mn. James O'Shea,\nMn. R. Smith, Walter Kettlewell\nMiss Dawn Sharp, Min Pit Gallaher. Miu ShelU Dunwoody, Mln\nLoU Gtmble, MUt Joan Ferguson\nand cousin of Calgary: Mr. and Mri.\nLequereux and family, who are\ncamping at Ferguson's Point; and\nMr. and Mn. Hall and family, who\nare alio camping nearby.\nTee wu served ln the lodge by\nMn. W. C. Kettlewell and Mn. H.\nPeanon. The vUlton were thown\nover the campsite by tht girU tnd\nwere told the itory of many of the\nthing! of Interest tround the ctmp\nMany of the vUlton rtayed for iup-\nper and for part of the exciting\nsoftball game,\nWater sports Included free ityle\niwimming, btck stroke, dog piddle,\ndiving, fiotting, diving for cupi tnd\nt reUy race. The Kilolo tribesmen\ncarried away the honon, winning\nwith a total of tM to 97 pointi.\nAfter stunts ind long! tnd stories\nat the campfire we had a special\ntrett In the lodge when the many\ngood thlngi brought to the camp by\nthe visitor! were shared by all.\nAs a fitting close to the day we\nslept out under the itan.\nMttl THRU\nDIES FROM RAZOR CUTS\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 17 (CP)-An-\ndrew Smolak, 34, died ln hoipital\nhere last night from razor wounds\nwhich police said were self-inflicted Aug. 8 after he nad attacked\nMn. Mary Rondos, 39.\nPolice :ald Smolak attacked the\nwoman ln the kitchen of a downtown cate where she was employed\nand then slashed hii own throat.\nMri. Rondos, who iuffered levere\nwrlit and arm cuts, hai recovered.\nCultivate Corn\nfor Besl Results\nBy DEAN HALLIDAY\nCorn ihould be cultivated often\nin order to get belt reiults. The cultivation, however, muit be ihal.\nlow. Corn roots extend all through\nthe ground between the rowi and\ntslts   tsuois\n$126,1\nCOOLING\nEQUIPMENT\nFor hornet, office, itore or ihop.\nB.\u25a0<__. Plumbing fr Heating Co.\nCreston's New\nGov't. Building\non Victoria Ave.\nCRESTON, B. C. \u2014 Creston'i new\nProvincial Government building will\nbe erected on Victoria Avenue \u2014 at\nthe corner of Vancouver Street.\nWord to thla effect reached here\nWednesday morning.\nThe location is a good one. It u\n150 feet iquare with a slight ilope\nto the Eait. It belongs to T. J.\nCrawford, ir. The building to be\nerected will be ipacious, but there\nwill be ample space for flowen,\nshrubs and grounds.\nNow the site has been settled it\nis understood plans are under way\nto provide a structure adapted to\neffectively beautify the location.\nWith plans completed tenden will\nbe called and construction work\nwill in-l sindfsr wav with the least\npossible delay.\nCreston's Government Building\nwill be ln the same clan as the one\nopened at Powell River the latter\npart of July and ihould lerve Creiton'! needi for many yean.\nIt ip stated It will cost $29,000 to\nerect and equip the new building.\nSociaL . . .\nNAKUSP\nWork Clothes\nBuilt for SERVICE - COMFORT - WEAR\nWORK SHIRTS\nCovert Ctoths\u2014Chambrays\u2014Twills . . . Full size. . .\nPre-shrunk . . . Fast colors ... A sturdy shirt that\nthe \"Bay\" is not afraid to guarantee. Has ^ .J m \u2014\ntwo roomy pockets, in coat style. Sizes 8 \u25a0 ewS\n14V4 to 17V4      Jl\nWORK PANTS\n8 oz. blue denim. \"Extra wear in every pair\". A Kincot\nred back 8 oz. denim in triple stitch and Je ^ -.\u2014\nrivetted or bar tacked at points of strain. 8 \u25a0 \u2022 \/ 5\nSizes 30 to 44. Pair .....'  i V.   '  **%'\nSERVICE GROCERIES at Groceteria Prices\nON SALE TODAY, SATURDAY AND MONDAY\n193   PHONES   194\n37<\nBUTTER\u2014Hudtonlt      OQsr*\nFlnt Gnde; 3 Ibi w-*r\nBACON\u2014Premium,\nSliced in Cello; Lb.\nPORK 8HOULDER8\u2014 _\\_\nUnion Freih; Per Ib. .. *\"\u2022>\n8PICED  HAM\u2014 \\*A\nHormel 1'ij Per tin .... *****\nREADY COOKED DINNER-\nJlffy, 16 oz. tlni. | AA\nEtch\nSALM\nBlue Seal '\/if, 1 tlni.\nSALMON\u2014Sockeye;      -ytA\nSUGAR\u2014\n100 Ib. ucki\n$6.69\nFLOUR\u2014Elllion'i *\u2022 af*\nBett; 49 lb. ucki.... 9*\u00abM\nCOFFEE\u2014Hoittit,\nGround to order; Ib....\nTEA\u2014Ntbob;\nLb\t\nLARD\u2014Shamrock;\n1 Ib. cartom \t\nPUFFED WHEAT-\nHtlf Buihei, tei towtl\nCHEESE\u2014Hunten;\n1 Ib. cartom   \t\nLIME   JUICE\u2014Mont-\nitrrat, quarti, Each ...\nORANGE JUICE\u2014\nTrinidad, 13<\/t oz. 3 for\n32*\nm\n10.\n39*\n2*6.\n77*\n25*\nPINEAPPLE  -  Siloed\nCruihad, Ltrgt tint;\n2 for\t\nBISCUIT8\u2014Chrlitltt\nMtlroie; Per Ib\t\nPITTED DATES\u2014\nFrtth ihipment; 2 lbl.\nSALAD  DRESSING.\u2014\nKraft, 32 or. Jar \t\nSOAP\u2014Palmollve;\n4 cakei \t\nSOAP\u2014Llftbuoy;\n3 cakei ....\t\nOXYDOL-Largt\ncartom. Etch\t\nor\n21*\n27*\n23*\n47*\nW\n22*\n22*,\nORANQES-\nSweet and Juicy\nFreih;\nGRAPEFRUIT-\nFreih; **\u25a0%*\nt for  i-V*\nGutta Pcrcha Tires ire told and\nrecommended by:\nWOOD, VALLANCE HARDWARE\nCO, LTD.\n\u2022HORTY't) REPAIR SHOP\nGUTTAPERCHA\nTIRES\n-orn proni\nlength ot all the roots ot a corn plant\nll leveral hundred teet,\n-At ihown In the garden-graph,\ncorn often hai iurface roots which\nacts at propi at the bottom ot the\nstem.\nThe old method of cultivation alwayi called for corn to be hilled.\nToday this is not thought necessary\nunless the corn Is planted very shallow or unless it is extremely tall\nand there is danger of the wind\nblowing over the stalks. Hilling\ntends to divert rainfall away from\nthe plant.\nAmong the vegetables, lettuce and\nradish seeds may be sown for a late\ncrop and will do eipecially well in\na cold frame if the soil is good.\nBody of Mulatto\nFound in Trunk\nATLANTA, Gt\u201e Aug. 17 (AP)-\nThe battered body ol a young Mulatto woman was found today in\na trunk ai the terminal' railway\nstation.\nChe trunk had arrived yeiterday\nfrom Washington, D. C. Poljce opened it after station employees noticed an odor.\n.The body was clad in a slip, bras-\nliere and bloomers and wai lying\nface down. There wai a pool of\nblood under the head and police\nreported discoloration! on the back,\none hip and leg might be bruises.\nThe victim had been dead leveral\ndayi, police reported.\nNewspapers had been stuffed\naround the body. Fingerprint tests\nof the trunk were ordered.\nTientsin Flooded\nat River Rises\nTIENTSIN, Aug. 17 (AP)-Vlc-\ntoria Road, tha main busineu itreet\nin the British concession, wu a\nfoot under water which gushed\nfrom sewers today ai the Hai River\nrote tt a ateady rate, overflowing\nthe Britiih Bund at one point.\nFarm landi beyond the country\nclub were under six feet of water.\nThe Japaneie dratted one. man from\neach Chineie family to work on\nthe dlkei. Wett of the Chineie city\nvillagers voluntarily, labored to save\nthe embankments, plugging breaches with sandbags. Near the country\nclub swarms ot locusts alighted.\ndriven from low ground by the advancing waten. Peasants wtved red\nflags and hammered gongs to drive\nawty the devouring insects,     y\nTRAINMAN'S DEATH\nRESULT OF FLOOD\nPRATTVILIJE, Ala., Aug. 17 (AP)\n\u2014Death of a trainman, killed u\nhit locomotive plunged down a\nwater-logged fill, was charged today to torrential rainstorms which\nflooded thii mid-state textile town\nto depths of five feet.\nState Patrol Chief T. Weller\nSmith estimated 100 familiei had\nbeen ' evacuated here. National\nguardsmen were called out to reinforce patrol rescue and relief eh-\ndeavors.\nFURTHER ANALYSIS FOR\nCANADIAN COSMETICS\nOTTAWA, Aug. 17 (CP)-rCana-\ndian complexion! are to be further\nsafeguarded.\nCosmetics and drugs sold in Canada after this will be subject to\ncontinuous analysis by a ehemist\niuit engaged by the Food and Drug\nLaboratory of the Department of\nPension! and National Health.\nNAKUSP, B. C.-Miss Kthleen\nFowler has returned from viiiting\nher brother and slser-In-law, Mr.\nand Mrs. Gilbert Fowler, at Castlegar.\nMrs. S. Johnson and daughter,\nShirley were in town from Burton.\nR. F. Peten and his mother, Mrs.\nPeters of Oyama, B. C, visited Nakusp.\nMr. and Mri. G. Carrln and family of Fanny Bay, B. C, were holiday visitors In town.\nD. Embree left Friday for Drumheller where he will work.\nG. Hunter Gardner, Jr, returned\nfrom a week's holiday at the coait.\nMr. and Mrs. G. H. Simpkinion\nof Trail were holiday visitors here.\nN. Roscoe of Nelson was a Nakusp weekend visitor.\nMiss B. Jamieson has returned\nfrom Fauquier where she visited\nrelatives.\nMr. and Mrs. G. Keys had as\nweekend guests, Dr. W. B. Steed\nand Miss Edna Steed of Nelson.\nMr. and Mrs. J. J. Wilson of\nMoose Jaw ' were holiday visitors\nin the district.\nMils Dorothy Walstrom has returned from Koolaree  Camp.\nL. Tattrie of New Denyer was a\nNakusp visitor.\nShoppers in town from Arrow\nPark included Mrs. D. Kent, Misi\nEileen Kent and Mrs. R. L. McGill.\nMrs. J. Markw'ick of Graham's\nLanding was a guest of Mr. mi\nMrs. A. E. Fowler.\nMr. and Mrs. John Hill of Seattle were vacation visitors in the\ndistrict\nMr. and Mrs. J. Hallock of Wallace, Idaho, were guests of Mr. and\nMrs. C. Campe.\nMr. and Mrs. A. K. Miller, Miss\nHelen Miller, Miss B. Jamieson and\nMrs. R. McCulloch motored to the\nGirls' Camp at Slocan Lake Friday.\nMisses Nellie Horrey, Freda Johnson and Kathleen Sutherland have\nreturned from Koolaree Camp.\nMr and Mrs, J. J. Wilson of Moose\nJaw visited the district.\nNAKUSP, B. C.-Mrs. A. Dunn\nhas returned from Salmo, where ih?\nvisited Mr. and Mrs. J. Hopkins\nand Mr. and,Mrs. C. Jansen, and\nNew Denver, where she visited her\nbrother-in-law and sister, Mr. and\nMrs. A. L. Harris.\nJ.s N.' Murphy of Kaslo visited\nNakusp.\nMr. and Mri. R. E. Allen of Nelson\nmotored to Nikuip.\nAlfred Dunn hai returned after\nipending a holiday In New Denver.\nIL E. Horton of Nelaon vilited\nNakuip.\nMri. A. L. Harrii and Miu Nancy\nHarris visited ln Nakusp en route\nto Edgewood to viilt Mri. Harrii'\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. W. Colgrave.\nThey were accompanied by Mri.\nHarris' siiter, Mrs. A. Dunn.\nSam and Clifford Pickard of New\nDenver are gueiti of their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. T. Harvey.\nMiss Mary Nelson, who has been\na guest of Mrs. E. Olson, hai returned to Silverton. She wai accompanied by Miss Gladys Olson.\nThe Junior Girls leaving for Slocan Lake Sunday School Camp this\nweek. Included Mavis Barlow, Sydney Leary, Stella Horrey, Ruby\nBerrard and Amy Crance. Mrs. t.\nDagyllsh accompanied  the  girls.\nMrs. G. Clark and Mist A. Knox\nleft to spend t tew days ln Nelson.\nMr. and Mrs. F. Ruihton have as\nguest, Mr. Rushton's sister, Mrs. W.\nRussell of Vancouver.\nJack Kerr left for Vernon to visit his brother-in-law and sister, Mr.\nand Mri. D. Poole.\nMrs. A. Lldberg Is visiting her\nson-in-law and daughter, Mr. and\nMrs.  A. Renwick, Nelion.\nMr. and Mra C. Rollins and family of Fauquier shopped ln town.\nRoy Olson ii holidaying in Sil\nverton at the home of Mr. and Mn.\nR. DuelL\nMn. A. Cooper of Edgewood ipent\nWednesday in Nakusp.\nMr. and Mrs. Gordon Baird of\nCreston are visiting Mr. Bairirt\nmother, en route to Lumby, w's;re\nthey will be guesti of Mrs. Band's\nparents.\nMiss C. Hopp of Edgewood ipent\nMonday in Nakusp.\nMrs. J. England has returned after\nvisiting relatives in California and\nattending the World's Fair at San\nFrancisco. .\nMr. and Mn. Marsden Baird of\nVancouver are viiiting Mr. Baird'!\nbrother-in-law and sister, Mr. and\nMn. A. Turner.\nMrs. C. W. Webster of Kaslo' was\na guest at Pine Lodge.\nMiss Jean Waterfield, Miss Mabel\nAlpsen and Miss' Betty Gardner\nwere guests of Mr. and Mrs. N,\nWetherstrom, up the lake.\nMr. and Mrs. T. Reid and two\nchildren of Trail, who have been\nvisiting Mrs. Reid's parents, Mr. and\nMrs. W. H. White, returned Tuesday.\nMisses Thelma and Hazel Nyman\nof Rosebery are spending a few\ndays with Mr. and Mrs. J. Cartie.\nC. Horrey has r eturned after\nspending a few days in Vancouver.\nRoy Jones is spending a few days\nholiday in Vernon. ,\nG. C. Martin has left to spend a\nfew days at Nakusp Hot Springs.\nU. S. Bank Robbers\nEscape With Money\nPHILADELPHIA, Aug. 17 (AP)\n\u2014Five men held up employees and\ncustomer! of the Wyoming Bank\nand Trust Company in North Philadelphia today and escaped with\nbetween , $15,000 and 320,000. Officials, said the estimate wai tentative.\nICE\nCALL 106\nWilliams Transfer\nThe \"Blue magic\" thtt restores whiteness to white things is i swish or two\nof Reckitt's Blue in the. last rinsing\nwater. No extra effort and it costs only\na cent or'two a month.\nWhite H act\u2014ttl* m\u2014it if ll set*.\ncolours, tnt el which is ilHt,Withe*4\nReckitt's Blue, u-hile things, titer rt.\ntentedwashings, turn b tjairtl yelht*.\nReckitt's BLUE\nPrtftnti Cloth** Turning Ytllot*\nJAMES SMITH\nTILE CONTRACTOR\nBathroomi \u2014 Fireplace! \u2014 Sink!\nStore Fronts \u2014 Floor!\n618 Robton St.,   Phone 841 -L\nUSE NEWSPAPER ADVERTISING FIRST\nAlways full of\nHere's how Ted\nkeeps io lit... and you can,' tool\nTED KNOWS THESE TWO FACTS:\n1 To avoid the headaches tnd depres-\n\u25a0\u2022 sion bo often resulting from a sluggish\nsystem, you need, enough bulk to keep\nthe food wastes moving promptly!\n2Thoufmmis now enjoy tho benefits\n* of bran in this delicious form. Every\nday they eat appetising Kellogg's Bran\nFlakes. Besides being mildly laxative,\nKellogg's Bran Flakes with other parts\nof wheat supply health-giving proteins.\nIf Tid wars III, he'd sh\n, his doctor\nFirst (tet WeU! Next, keep\nwell It's better to eat\nextra \"bulk\" every dsy\nthu to make frequent use\nof harsh cathartics.\n__\u00a3e\u00a3!_BM-_\njM?*temm%sm,\nSo Tod starts \u25a0y.Ty mom*\nbig thli way\nKnowing the helpfulnesa\nof extra \"bulk\" at breakfast, Ted eats Kellogg's\nBran Flakes every morning\n\u2014 nnd keeps fit!\nflAVOUR? M'lnm. You'll love the\ncrisp, crunchy, mellow-flavoured\ngoodness of Kellogg's Bran Flakes.\nAnd they're so economical I Now\nthey cost you less than ever before. Order the golden-yellow\npackage today. Made by\nKellogg's in London, Canada.\nHiimiiiiii.aiiiiiiii\n xample...\nielf Control Needed by Parents lo\nTrain a Child In Good Manners\nBy OARRY C. MYKR8, Ph.D.\n^Imong tdulti, thoie who have\nMd manneri ire often dubbed\nituck up\" by others who hive not.\nhoie who have not are counted\nporiih by thoie who have. Chil-\nr*n  conitantly  nagged \u25a0 by their\nparenti about manneri come to\nthink of good manneri at mitten\nof mere penonal whims of adults.\nThese children, say trom aix to\n12, likp certain uncouth grown-ups,\nwhen in groupi of their own kind\nIF ITS !3onkn6 ITS GOT TO BI COOD\n\"AYI-TW6 MILK\nIS THRIFTY-\nPUTS AW0-RE CREAM\nIN YOUR\nCOOKING |\"\n\"Ua* Borden'* Evaporated\nMHk for maabed potaton,\ncream soups, and white\nuuce\", advltet Elsie; the\nBorden Cow.\nThe rich creamy (oodnatt\not Borden'l will Improve nil\nyour cooking. It'i the freth\ncountry milk from healthy\nBorden-lntpected cowi like\nElsie, evaporated to double\nrichneiis Borden'l juit\nnaturally mike thlngi ttate\nbetter. And it'i extra-good\nfor all the family becaute it\nli Irradiated for an added\n\u2022upply of the important\n\"Sunshine\" Vitamin D,\nOn all counts; Borden'l\nEvaporated MUk givci you\nextra nourishment very\neconomically.\n%tde*S EVAPORATED MILK\nProve it by the dating test!*\nr To prove how little Old Dutch costs to use, put tho date on tho pack'\nte when you open it. The length of tlmo it lasloplus tho great amount\nficleaning it gives, will surpriseyou.In addition, Old Dutch saves money\niuso it helps keep things now longer. It doesn't ccratch.lt ismado\n1 modern Sclsrnotito.\nTo tavo you tlmo, energy and stops at well aa money, keep a can of\nJOld Dutch in kitchen, bathroom, laundry, garage. Then you havo Old\nTutch handy for porcelain, tllo, woodwork, pota and paita or linoleum.\navo by uilng Old Dutch.\nQ\u00abt\u00abfullKrvlceofUi\u00bb\u00ab\u00abttr\u00abcslT(s\"Ctojsltm\"p\u00abt-\n1 tern tc.poosi. sstthi.Uri.ini Mmtle by Oncid., Ltd.\nOffer, good only in Csssud., expires Dec. 21.1940.\nWit. A. ROQKR8 A-l\nQsulity BUvcrw.re wilh in\novatey at pan lilver sst\npoint of s\nOLD DDTCn CLEANSER, Deyt A 192\n\u20224 MaoiuUy Avenue, Toronto\nI em tssdosht \u2014\u25a0\u2014 windmill pictures from Oil tXjtcJs\nlabels (or complete lobels) ond j ter which pl.os. send\nJM Wsss. A. Rogers T.aspcons ond clscviar teilino obout\nsjtsw Umm, NOTE, Uni ttl ond 3 lobels for Men Ht of\nsst.ospoonlyoud.slro, ,\nfrequtn;\nitly _.\niking run tt othen who\nmannerly. Thli cletrly ii a wiy\nthtjr have of defending* their own\nitate  of  cultural  attainments,  ot\nescaping feeling of Inferiority, even\nexpreu a deal of plea\nture poking fun at o\"\nerly. 1\t\nthty have of defending\" their own\nm   '\"      \" ' \"\nling _\nof winning feelings of superiority.\nFUNCTION OP\nGOOD MANNERS\nAlwiyi thtt mutually antagonistic ittitude will go on, I suppose,\nbut lt ihould decrease tn force at\nmemben of both groupi grow mort\naware of the bailc function of good\nmanneri, namely, coniideration for\nthe rights and feellnti ot othen.\nWt vust not forget, ot course,\nthat cultivation of good manneri\ncalls for self-control, self-sacrifice,\ntherefore effort; and that human\nnature normally seeks Jo escape the\nhard and find the eaiy way.\nThan, too, wa parenti muit admit\nthat our concern tbout our children'! manners tendi to be a selfish\none; for our thought li not io much\nthat they shall grow to be locially\ncomfortable, worthy of approval of\ntheir fellows, likeable ln ihort, ai\nthat by thalr manneri they ihall\nnot bring disapproval upon ui from\nour adult frlendi. It It not true\nthat we often maka our children\nfeel that the good manneri we expect in them are tor our personal\nsatisfaction?\nGAIN BY IMITATION\nProvided \"we adultt wtre disciplined ln good manneri we observed meticulously, tnd were to\nmake our children happy ln our\ncompany, make them alwayi feel\ntheir personality it held in high\neiteem by ui, they, wishing to grow\nup, would by normal Imitation, gain\nNILSON DAILY NIWI. NILION, B. 6. PRIDAY MORNINO. AUO, II. UW\nEffect...\nTo Wear Modern Fashions Smartly\nShoulders Should Be Developed\nat being mannerly Juit ai they gain\niht and weight\nIn quiet moments whan we are\nmastera of ourtelvet and know -we\nhav* our child'i cooperation, let us\nihow him thit tuch items ti eating\ndaintily\u2014taking amall bltet, chewing food with llpt cloied, not talking with food In the mouth and to\non\u2014are reasonable mattert of concern for the comfort of othen In\nour pretence. I with teachen would\nmore often lead their children at\nopportune occaiions to lee the i*a-\ntonablenets of good manneri.\nTreatments...\nPollen Extract\nlor Hay fever\nBy LOGAN CLENDENINQ, M. D.\nThe clatilcal tclentiftc method of\ntreating hay fever it to remove\nsensitivity by the Injection under\nthe skin of an extract or solution of\nthe pollem of the planta which\ncause the ijrmptomi.\nThii treatment It an Imitation of\nthe use of vaccinal to create\nImmunity ln the lnfectlout dlieatel.\nIt would be very scientific If hay\nfever acted like an lnfectloui diteate.\nBut it doeen't. It acta Juit the op-\nmsite. One attack does not confer\nimmunity, but actually greater ten-\ntltivity to the offending pollen.\nPollen extract! then ihould not,\ntheoretically, do good in hay fever.\nPractically, they tometlmet work.\nPORMS OF POLLEN\nTREATMENT\nThree formi of pollen extract\ntreatment are given:\nFIRST \u2014 Preseaional treatment,\nThe extract! are given at weekly\nor leml-weekly intervals, beginning two or three monthi before\nthe hay fever season. The extracts\nfint given are very weak, and are\ngradually increased in strength until Jutt before the opening ot the\nseason a maximum dose it given.\nSECOND \u2014 Coeeeional treatment.\nIt uted to be contldered unsound\nto give the extract! during the tea-\nson when tymptomt had actually\nbegun. But experience hai thown\nthat thli la more successful than\nhad been anticipated and it is quite\npossible to get relief by Injection!\ngiven after the teason has begun.\nTHIRD\u2014Perennial pollen treatment. In patlenta who get no relief\nfrom carefully regulated preteaaonal\ntreatment along with coteaaoiffll\ntreatment it Is recommended that\ntreitment with extracti be carried on throughout the year. Thli\nIs the method of choice for moit\nof those who specialize ln thli work.\nVIEWS DIFFER AS\nTO VALUE\nHow much good doei pollen\ntherapy do? Thit ii by no means\nan easy question to aniwer. The\nspecialist who does the work takes\nan optimistic view ot the lituation;\nthe patient is not always to happy\nabout it\nDifferent parti of the country\nreport different results.\n8URVEY OF REPORTS\nA turvey of reports from all the\nspecialists all over the United States\nand Canada gives the following\nreiults:\nPreseaional treatment \u2014 27 per\ncent, obtained 90 to 100 per cent\nrelief.\nCoteaional treatment \u2014 38 per\ncent obtained 90 to 100 per cent\nrelief.\nPerennial treatment\u201448 per cent\nobtained 90 to 100 per cent relief.\nMADE  IN  CANADA - OF  CANADIAN WHEAT\nAccented ihoulder!, for itviril\nyean the high note in all costumes,\nar* becoming even more coniplcu-\noui. Wa have the broad effects in\neverything from iheer nightgowns\nto leg-o'-mutton fur coiti. Glrli\nwho nave athletic, broad ihoulderi\nare a joy to th* deiigners and\nclothei teem to be fishioned etpec-\nlilly for them. They look tmirt In\neverything. Brotd effect! miy be the\nsynthetic kind, made of pads, but\nmany of th* younger set are doing\nexercliei to develop the smart con-\ntoun for themielvei.\nThere art Mveral ipeclal movements good tor building up chest\ntnd shoulders, but for the Summer,\nwhtn ont may bo outdoors, tennli\ntnd swimming are the beit iportl\nfor thli dtvelopoient, and they fur-\nniih amuiement, at the tame time.\nDeep breathing ll Important for\nihoulder development, and the\nquick movements in tennii will\nhelp to round out the chett and\nBy DONNA QRACE\ngive Uw ihoulden th* right eon'\ntour.\nSimple itretchlng over the hetd\nwith both armi itralght will be effective. Stand erect, extend armi\nout ln front, cheit high and itretch.\nThtn rait* up the retch Jutt tl\nhigh ii possible. Down to the tides\nind repeat. Next, armi out at tb*\nlidei and swing ln circle*. Keep\nthli up tor several minutei,\nFor the wrist ahd forearm, relax\narmi with elbow bent. Shtkt trom\nthe elbows, with both th* hinged\nmovement ot the elbowi tnd looie\nflopping of th* handi. Theie ara\nvary good movementi for flexibility\nand itimulatlng circulation.\nWhen one iwtmi, ther* It con-\ntinuoui movement'Of tb* ihoulder\nmuscles and th* rhythmic itrokei\ntre ture to develop the flat cheit\nand imall ihoulden. Muscles developed In thla way will b\u00ab beiuti-\nful, with firm, healthy ikin,texture.\nSERIAL STORY ...\nWINGS OF YOUTH\nBy HELEN WELSHIMER\nCHAPTER 43\nIf Robert Kenntdy hadnt happened to hav* three houn to wait\nover, as he weit back eut after\nthat haity marriage of Jack and\nJudith'!, fie would not have called\nCorrinne. H\u00ab did to on th* ipur of\ntht moment She wai Sanh Anne'i\n\u25a0liter. She might know about tha\nwall of .:io it that had thut him\naway trom her alitor.\nSure, that waa t>JOd rtaionlngl\nShe might know, but ah* wouldn't\ntoll. And he, of count, nev\u00abr would\natk. But lomething hid gone wrong.\nAnyway, he had three houn to kill\nand if dormitory mealt atlll toi\n)n-\u201e.rl lh* eonventlontl menus. Cor\nrinne might enjoy torn* caviar and\nsteak and a banana split.\nIt was natural when he and Cor\nrlnne were aeatod at a imall. can-\ndle-lightod table, ln th* best dining room In the dty hotel, that sht\nmentioned the mistaken telephone\nIdentity. ,     ,. .\n\"Bob and I are throwing brickbat! at each other again. It'i a\ngame w* play. I thought maybe he\nwanted a truce and 1 wanted the\nmelon. When I get rich, I'm never\ngoing to eat anything that's ln tea-\neon. Juit ipeclal lmporti.\"\nCorrinne had loit five pounds.\nShe knew it because her brown\nskirt had been too big and ihe hid\nfattened it with talety pint, under\nthe yellow angora tweator which\nshe wore beneath her short brown\nJacket. Her eyes were more purple than blue ln their wearlnew\nand her long, tooty lathei retted on\nhar cheeks, -I though I've nldom\nlooked up any more. Whtn ihe did,\nthe lntenilt-' of her gate Wu a little frightening.\nThough ah talked a gnat deal,\nthe reminded Bob of Sarah Anne,\nwho had dark eyes and hair and\nher chin never lowered lta angle\nby a half degree. But the tame\nhurt wu in ner face, the tame\nwonderment and worry.\nBecauit ha iaw that it would do\nCorrinne good to talk he said:\n\"Why brickbats for the combat?\nWhy not bouquets?\"\n\"I've lost favor again. Don't tak\nme why.\" She put down her ipoon\na*.d leu.*'' ^r^rird. Thf mstl H***\ntl'ced' how* little\"the had eatim of\nthe melon which ihe.had waited.\n\"Do you think I did lomething io\nupforgiveabl* wh\u00abn I \u2014 went all\nthrough the ceremony with Lynn\nRhodei? I wu hurt, you tee . . .\nSkip it. I want to finiih thli melon.\"\nShe attacked It vigorouily and thU\ntim* did not itop until only the\nthin green shell remained.\n\"You're worrying about tome-\nthing which lin't worth a nickel,\nin ill probability.\"- Bob answered.\n\"How about torn* turtle toup next?\"\n\"I'd rather av* room for the\ntteik tnd muthroomi,\" th* frown-\ncd ot the candle, which ihlvered\nln a ludden draught from the rainy\nnight. \"Bob. if a girl wrote iome\nletters Just becauie she thought the\nsituation   demanded   them,  never\n(Continued on Pa's* Nlnt)\nAt bert, then, only half the patient! obtain the amount of relief\nthey are entitled to. In my judgment, lt li leu than thii. I think\nanyone who ia contemplating pollen\nextract treatment to prevent hay\nfever ihould know that there ii\nabout a one to tive chance of obtaining the amount of relief expected.\nAdminlitratlon of pollem by\nmouth wai diicuieed a few week;\nago. tt li very uncertain and\ncannot be recommended.\nQUESTIONS and ANSWERS\nW. C. C: \"Will you write lomething ln your daily column on St\nVltui, ltt causea and effect!?\"\nAniwer \u2014 St Wut dance, or\nchorea, ii ln all probability an\nlnfectlout dlieate, which affects\nmoitly young people at the adolescent age. Ita effects are to caute\nsudden and unnatural movementi\not the muscles to that the patient\ntwitchet and grimacei. Henca lta\nname, St Vltui dance, tt lt related\nto rheumatism, and may leave effect! on the heart, tlmllar, to acute\nInflammatory rheumatltm. Ita treatment la by tedatlvei and treatment!\nwhich are effective agalnit\nrheumatism.\nWorried Mother: \"Kindly advlie\nwhether my daughter aged 11 needi\niome kind of treatment or will ihe\novercome a bad habit of blinking\nher eyes. She haa been doing thli\nnow for two yean, tt is noticeable\nmoitly when people watch htr. Hai\nthis anything to do with St Vitua?\"\nAnswer\u2014Tlie condition is called\nhabit spasm, or Uc. It hu nothing\nto do with St. Vitus. It la liable to\nbecome wone rather than go away\nspontaneously, tt should be treated\nimmediately by nerve ipeclallit\nmHbfitL (ohm.\nmHoHMwivu.\nBy BET8Y NEWMAN\nTODAY'S MENU\nHam LoM      Baked Potatoei.\nGreen Com\nApple and Celery Salad\nPeach Pie        \u2022 Coffee\nHAM LOAF\nOne pound ground smoked ham,\none pound ground fresh lean\npork, two cupt bread crumbi, one\ntablespoon chopped panley-- (may\nbe omitted), one teaspoon minced\nonion (may be omitted alto), one\ntablespoon chopped celery or one-\nhalf teupoon celery salt, two eggi,\nbeaten, one cup milk or tomato Juice.\nPrepare all Ingredlenti in mixing\nbowl, combine well and put ln a\nS retted baking dish. Bake in 350\negree F. oven for one and one-halt\nhours.\nCREAM HORSERADISH SAUCE\nOne-half cup thick tour cream,\none-half teupoon salt, one teaipoon tugar, one-third cup grated\nhoneradlsh. Whip cream, add silt\nand lugar Ind told in honeradlih.\nPEACH PIE\nMake flaky crust with two cupi\nflour lifted with one-half teaipoon ult and one-quarter teaipoon baking powder, one cup\nlard or other ihortening.\nMit ihortening Into flour mixture with fingers or knife, and\nadd Ice cold water a little at a\ntime until you have a rather stiff\ndough. Roll out and make one\ncrust ln pie pan.\nFill wtth ripe fresh peaches, top\nwith sugar, bits ot butter and a\nsprinkling ot cinnamon and bake\nuntil fruit and crust ara done.\nPut reit of dough ln refrigerator for other plei. Wrap ln waxed\nPaper.  - ,\nUSES FOR CHILI SAUCE\nFrom' chill uuce comes not only\na familiar appetizing relish, but all\nmanner ot piquant possibilities. The\ngood cook it alwayi experimenting,\nfinding new and better wayi to\nuse various ingredients. For salad:\nCombine chill sauce with cottage\ncheeie and grated onion. For sauce:\nHeat chill sauce and pour It hot\nover corned beef hash or meat loaf.\nFar  rflntnat'  __-\u2014\u2014\\ j*.*^-.^ ahiU\nsauce and cream cheeie and a little\nonion Juice.\nFor 'eggs: Chill uuce ln your stuf-\n\u25a0    'g fill!      \t\n\"enty of piqu\nVary French dreii-\nfed egg filling (chopped ripe dives\ntoo) lends it plenty of piquancy.\nFor dressings:\ning with chill saucd. Good with\ncrabmeat ahd tuna.\nMINT, COOL AND TASTY\nWe take a big Jump now frpm the\nspicy chili to Ihe cool, cal\/i mint.\nA new recipe has Just been minted\nln time for the shank end of Summer. It's a two-fruit ice with a\nmint-bed tang.'\nIt'i made with one cup sugar, one-\nhalf cup light corn syrup, one eup\nwater one-half cup freih mint leavei\nor mint essence, one cup unsweetened pineapple Juice, one-half cup\norange Juice ana one egg white.\nCook together tugar, syrup and\nwater to 240 degrees F. or until It\nforms a soft ball when tried ln cold\nwater. Remove trom stove, add the\ncrushed mint leavei.\nIf mlpt essence is used Instead ot\nmint leaves, add next with fruit\nJuices and pour Into medium-size\ntray of automatic refrigerator.\nFretie for 30 mlputet and remove\nfro\u00abi refrigerator. Beat well and add\nond stiffly beaten egg white. Return io refrigerator and freeze (letting control at coldest point) until\nfirm, stirring well every half hour.\nApproximately tour houn freezing\ntime. Makes tlx servings.\nBAKED ICE CREAM\nFor a real treat try a delicloui\nvenlon of Baked Alaska\u2014It It a\nbeauty ot Ice cream, cake and\nmeringue that looks so pretty,\ntastes io good. It it made with\none pint of Ice cream, one iponge\ncake, three-fourths cup nutmeats,\nthree egg whites, tait three tablespoons sugar, one teaipoon ot\nvanilla. .\nRemove centre from top ot the\ncake, leaving a shell at leut three\nJuirtere ot an inch In thickness.\nIll with ice cream and sprinkle\nhalf a cup ot sliced nuta ovtr th*\nic* cream. Cover with a meringue\nmad* by beating egg whitei stiff\nand adding salt sugar and vanilla.\nSprinkle remaining nuta over the\ntop.\nBake in hot oven (450 degree*\nF.) until light brown which\nnot take longer than five miautet,\nS\u00bbrv\u00bb at\nROCHELLE HUDSON\nHONEYMOONS IN MEXICO\nENSENADA, Cal., Aug. 17 (AP)\n\u2014Janet Gaynor'i lucettior In a\nfilm role, like Mlu Gaynor herself, ii honey-mooning ln Mexico.\nRochelle Hudion wai married\nlite Tueidi,' to Hal Thompton of\nHollywood, a writer tt Wilt Dli-\nney itudlot.\nLike Mlu Giynor and Clothing\nDeilgner Gilbert Adrian, who war*\nmarried at Yuma, Ariz., Mondiy,\nMr. and Mn, Thompion wtr* iome-\nwhere ln Mexico today.\nEnglish phyiiclint uied to carry 1\nguld neided cin* with herb* ln tht\nhollow hetd, believing thli would\nprotect them from dlteuet.\nKimberley Girli\nRsturn From Koolar.it\nKIMBERLEY, B. C.-Pttty Palm,\nMarctlla Aldridge, Violet Harwy\nand Jantt MtcUod returned Saturdiy trom C. O. I. T. camp at Koo-\nlire*, reporting a vary tin*\nJtntt MacLeod wu \u00bbl*ct*d\nGirl Camptr by tht fifty girli tt\nCimp. Thtt* four girli ware ln th*\ngroup led by Mlu Marjori* MacLeod that won th* leholarthlp for\nthe hlghut contribution to tht Re-\nllgloui Education Council thli year.\nThii scholarship tent Mirctlli Ald\nridge to the Summen cam\ny. _\ntoted home on Saturday with Mr,\nPatiy, Marctlla and Violet mo\nund Mrt. Altx Pe\u00bbnon.\nSoaaL ...\nSunshine Bay\nSUinHlIfl BAT, B. C.-Arthur\n' tu a patient In\nfor many weeki\nto vtait hii tatbtr\nJ. A. Kniuf. Da waa aooompanled\nby hit filter, Mn. K. Maid* and\nbar three daughten ot Roisland. J.\nKnauf vliited in Ntlion.\nMr. 'and Mn. Nick Doatnbuftt\ntnd children wtr* gueiti ot Mn.\nDosenberger'i mother, Mn. Mac-\nLean, Edgiwood Avenue, Ntlion.\nMn. Otcar Appltton wtt a guut\nof h*r Hiter, Mn. H. H. PltU.   ,\nHivi yeu reid tht \"Clutlfl*d\"t\nDad's Cookies, 3 doz. 25c; 6 doz. 49c\nLye f J | f f JISEKSI Tea\nRoyal\nCrown\n\"\u00bb  MODERi\ni  MARKE'\nphoNE 1009\nOnn|e\nPekoe\n19c lEffl 1 44c\nPrices Effective .Friday and Saturday, Aug. 18 and 19\nTOMATOES Fresh Field 3 Ibs. 19c\n4 for 2\u00a3c\n2 Ibs. 15c\nCANTALOUPS-Large\nGREEN PEPPERS...\nCARROTSte-      3 bunches 9c\nPEACHESK^ Basket 19c\nBANTAM CORN is\"Doz. 27c\nAPPLES Make Delicious Pies 10 lbs. 25c\nPreserving PEACHES-Crate $1.19\nPOTATOES, ORANCES, LEMONS, CELERY, ETC., ETC., ETC.\nButtert Goldvale 3 Ibi. 89*\nFly Coll 6 for   9*\nFly Spray t O'Cedar .... 10 oi. tin 43*\nLemon Ollt O'Cedir Bottle 23*\nWindow Cleaner '.  Bottle 21*\nZipper Mop: O'Cedir .... Eich $1.50\nAmmonia Powder 2 pkti. 191\nFLOUR.. Mb. sack 29c\nROBIN HOOD\nWhole Wheit Flour 5 Ibi. 24*'\nRolled Oati  6 lbl. 301\nSodet: 16 os. premium Pkt. 20*\nAll Bnn: Lirge pkt  20*\nKetchup: Helni Bottlo S2.\nDill Strlpi Bottle W.\nFancy Biscuits 2 lbl. 4ty\nEconomy Lldi ..' Dos. Mty\nNarrow Mouth Lldi  Dos. 16*\nJala Rita: ......V Bottle 23*\nMambiSul Pkt.   9*\nBrooke Bird Seed Pkt. 11*\nCr.am of Wheet i......... Pkt. 22*\nSyrup: Buhive 2 Ib. tin 18*\nSALMON...2 tins29c\nlOOKIYI '\/t'i; LIMIT 4\nPork H* leini: Heinx, 18 ox. 2 tlni 29*\nlelly Powden  5 pkti. 22*\nDogBheuKi 2 Ibi. 23*\nBiking Powder: Blue Ribbon .. Tin 22*\nSeediest Raisins 2 Ibi. 28*\nSalt  3Vz Ib. sack 10*\nHorae'i Custard Tin 34*\nMIRACLE WHIP, 32-oz. bottle 48c\nSILVER WEB TISSUE, 8 rolls 23c\nCAMPFIRE SAUSAGE... Tin 21c\nPickling VINEGAR ZZ Gal. 72c\nCORNED BEEFr; 2 tins 27c\nStrawberry JAM ?Z 4-lb. tin 49c\nCOFFEE\u2014Empress.. 2-lb. jar 69c\nSPECIAL WITH MEAT ORDER\n2 lbs. of Pure Lard\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\n16\n\u00ab\nChoice Boiling Beef .-,\t\nChoice Pot Roasts .\t\nChoice Oven Roosts -\nChoice Prime Ribs, \"Boneless, no waste\".\nTender Veal Roasts \u2014 '..,\u201e -\u25a0,..,\nTender Veal Steaks __ 1 .-\nLittle Pig Sausage \u2014-~\nBreakfast Sausage ..\u2014 \u2014.\nLb. 7c\nLb. 12c\nLb. 14c\nLb. 23c\nLb. 18c\nlbs. 35c\nlbs. 35c\nIbs. 25c\nSpeciali In Freshly Smoked Meats\u2014Also a full line of Cooked Menu\n -\nANDREW'S\nCAN SAVE YOU MONEY ON\nR. Andrew & Co.\nLeaders in Footfathion\nRADIO SALE\nUSED RADIO!. Up from 16.00\nNEW Q. E. RADIOS, up from $14.95\nNelson Electric Co.\n674 Btktr It Phone 260\nTTfg\nFRESH CUT\nFlowers ond Plants\nMac's Greenhouses\nOnt Blk. From Hoipittl\nCedar and Front Sul     Pbont 010\nSSS I\nASK YOUR GROCER FOR\nGOLD MEDAL\nMALT EXTRACT\nDARK, LIGHT, STOUTEX AND HOP FLAVOR\nHighest Quality \u2014 The Best for Your Money\nB.C. Distributors: JAMES MARTIN A CO. Vineouvir, B.C.\nNELSON SOCIAL\nBt URS. li. J. VIGNEUX\nTake home iom\u00ab\nICE CREAM\nind get the family cooled otf.\nWt maka our own. Freth dally.\nGOLDEN GATE CAFE\nw\u00ab\u00aba\u00bbs\u00bb!iwc\u00abawMasxa\u00bbtw\u00bb\u00ab\u00ab\u00bb\nLINGERIE\n25%  DISCOUNT\nJcushion, Jiui Shop.\n436 Baker St.\nNelion, B. C.\nDresses.\nCoats,   Suits,   Hats.\nDrastically Reduced\nfydiik it Cahhotiwu-\n499 Biker St. Pbont 970\nFLOWERS\nDelivered- by wire or fast mail\nanywhere\u2014anytime.\nKootenay Flower Shop\n364 Baktr St. Phone 962\nNew Potatoei:\n10 Ibi\t\nLettuce:\n2 for .\t\nCirrots or Beeti:\n2 bunchei \t\nCelery:\nPerlb\t\n\u00ab\u00bb\u00ab$\u00ab$\u00bbJ\u00ab*\u00ab*\u00ab\u00ab*K*K\u00ab-\nSAFEWAY\nPrices Effective Friday and Saturday, Aug. 18 and 19\nValues in Fruits and Vegetables\nGRAPES -I,     3 Ibs. 25c\nIQ\/.       Applei: Trampar-   OC.\nWl       ent; 6 1b LO\\>\n9c   ?r,r:. 45c\n,.5c   S 14c\n,.8c   EkS\" 17c\nPreserving PEACHES, Crate $1.15\nPURE LARD Limit 2 ibs. ,\nPEAS Aylmer, Sieve 5     . ,\nTOMATOES Aylmer 2Ws.\nKetchup: Heim;\nbottle\t\n19c\nSpaghetti: Libby'i, 1 Q \u201e\n15V4-0X.; 2 tint . Ivl\nTomato Juice:\nPicnic; 5 tint ...\nCrabmeat: Friar,\nVi'i; tin\t\nBonclcn Chicken:\nAylmer; tin ....\nChicken Haddie:\nBrunswick; 2 tint.\nPink Salmon: l'i;\n2 tim\t\nApricoti:  Fraier\nSquati,\n2 for ....\n25c\n19c\n29c\n25c\n25c\nValley:\n25c\nTea: Highway;\nIb\t\nCoffee: Max-i-\nnium; tin ....\n49c\n38c\nButter: Highway    QQ\nFint Crade; 3 Ibs. 03C\nDates: Sair, cooking, 2 Ibi\t\nRaisins:\n2 Ibi\t\nCorn Starch:\nPkt\t\nClothei Pini: Hercules; 3 dox. ...\nSardinei: Brunswick; 2 tint\t\n15c\n25c\n10c\n12c\n9c\nAlpha Milk-Tails. 3 for 25c\nAssorted Powders \u00bb\u25a0\u00bb\"\" 5 for 25c\nOrange Marmalade. 4-lb. tin 45c\nEMPRESS\nCantaloups\nGOOD 8IZE\n5 for .... 25c\nLEMONS\n8UNKI8T\nMad lum  Slzo\nDoz.  ...   19c -\nWatermelon\nlb  4c|\nLb. 10c\n3 for 32c\n.. 3 for 32c\nPalmolive Soap\nOLIVE OIL BEAUTY SOAP\n4 bars  19c\nSPRATTS\nPRODUCTS\nBird Seed:\nPkt.\n15c\nBird Gravel:\nPkt.\n10c\nRoyal\nYeast\nKr; i3c\nQuality MEAT VALUES\nTENDERED PICNICS ..... Lb. 19c\nRound Bone Steaks.... Lb. 18c   Thick Rib Steaks_ Lb. 18c\nSliced Bacon\u2014Choice  .\u2022_  Per Ib. 28c\nHAMBURGER S lbs. 25c\nRED ARROW CRACKERS\nPer\nGRAHAM WAFERS:\n1 -Ib. cello package ...\nASSORTED BISCUITS:\n2 Ibi\t\nCHOCOLATE ECLAIRS:\nPer Ib\t\n19c\n35c\n25c\nPRESERVING SUPPLIES\nMASON JARS\nWIDE MOUTH, QUARTS\nDosen ..... $1.29\n$1.09\n...26c\n...19c\n..5c\nWe Reierve the Right to Limit Quantities\nWIDE MOUTH JARS: Pints;\ndoien   \t\nECONOMY LIDS:\nPer doten\t\nIELS-RITE PECTIN:\nBottle   \t\nRUBBER RINCS:\nPkt\t\n\u2022SAFEWAY STORES LIMITED\n\u2022 Mn. Willlsm Waldle, Gore\nStreet, hu u suest- hn twin grand,\ndaughters, Debbie and Jannie Waldle ot Kimberley. Their father, Fred\nOverwaitea\nLimited\nSPECIALS\nFRIDAY and SATURDAY\nAuguit 18 and 19\nNILION DAILY NIWS, NILSON, B. C\u201e FRIDAY MORNINO.. AUO. II. UN\nWaldie, arrived yesterday and will\nI remain   ln   Nelson   until   Sunday\nevening.\nUrs. D. Root ot Nikusp visited town yest*r<by.\n\u2022 Mrs. Thomu McNeish ot Slocan City and her daughter, Mrs.\nLevesque, were city shoppers yesterday.\n. \u2022 William Rutherford is holidaying at Christina Lake with hit\ndaughter, Mrs. Frank Willis and\nlamily.\nF. Goucher visited Salmo\nWedneiday. i\n\u2022 Shoppers in town yesterday included Colonel Good of Bonnington.\n\u2022 Morris Bercov plana to leave\ntoday via Great Northern for Vancouver and Victoria.\n\u2022 Mrs. Wilford Gray of Fruitvale wu a city visitor yesterday.\n\u2022 Shoppers ln town Wednesday\nincluded Lyman Cole of Erie.\n\u2022 Miss Marjorie Todd, 812 Front\nStreet, returns today from Creaton,\nwhere she spent 10 days u gueat\nof Mix Maisie Ferguson, who will\nreturn with her for the weekend\nhere.\n\u2022 Raymond Rowe of the Good-\nenough mine, Ymlr, visited town\nyesterday.\n\u2022 Westley Calbick spent Wednesday in Salmo.\n, \u2022 Mrs. Fred Steele of Trail is\na guest of Mr. and Mrs. G. W.\nSteele, Silica Street.\n\u2022 William Ferguson of Crestoi\nvisited Nelson yesterday.\nFrank Benion, who was In the\ncity Wednesday to attend the Ben\nnett-Pickard wedding, has returned\nWednesday afternoon Misi\nMargaret Bingham and Miss Pearl\nHarty were joint hostesses at a\ndelightful shower at the home ot\nthe former, honoring Mrs. Sandy\nNord, nee Audrey Wilson. Dainty\nrefreshments were served and the\nhonoree received many useful gifts,\nwhich were wheeled to her In an\nappropriately decorated carriage.\nGuests present were Mrs. S. Nord,\nMiss Myrtle Leet, Miss Adolphine\nEischen, Miss Pauline Wasellnko,\nMiss Joyce Snider, Miss Betty Hardy, Miss Edith Lang, Miss Ann Bengert, Miss Rita Weatherhead, Miss\nPearl Harty and Miss Bingham.\n\u2022 Mrs. F. Speirs of Kaslo visited\nNelson Wednesday.\n\u2022 Charles Hussey, mining man\nof Spokane, visited the city yesterday.\nSARDINES: King\nOicar, 2 tint \t\nPINEAPPLE: Sliced,\ntall, tin \t\nSHRIMPS: Wet or\nDry, tin \t\nCOCOANUT:\nMedium, Lb. .....\nRITZ:  Christie's,\nPkt\t\n26c\n10c\n16c\n16c\n16c\nBROOMS\nRegular 75c. \/Jt*\nSale price ...... UdC\nLICORICE: Alliorti,\nImported, ft. ......\nPAPER NAPKINS:\n2 pkti\t\nCORNED BEEF:\nHelmet, 2 tint for .\nBLEACH: Eureka,\nBottle  \t\nWAX PAPER: Para-\nSani, 100 foot roll ..\n20c\n25c\n29c\n10c\n22c\nB. C. SUGAR\n10 Ibi. for 691\nDATES: Freih pitted, OP.\n2 Ibi. for LJC\nSAUSAGES:\nShamrock, tin\nVINECAR: Heinz white, or\nmalt, 01\n33 oi. bottle OH\nBAKEASY: Shorten\ning, 2 Ibi. for\t\nWAX: Wisard No\nRub, 12 ox. bottle\n25 ox. bottle 59ft\n23c\n23c\n29c\nWALNUTS\nFreih broken, IQ.\nMARSHMALLOWS:\n3 Ib. tin \t\nSOAP: Pure French\nCastile, 28 ox. bar .\n73c\n27c\nMouth\nWide\nQuarti,\nDox. .,\nWide\nPinti,\nDox\t\nEconomy,\nquarti, dox.\nGem, quarts\nDox\t\nCem, pinti,\nDox\t\nJARS\nMouth     Mason,\n$1.39\nMaion,\n$1.19\n$1.39\n$1.25\n$1.05\nCERTO\n2 bottles for 491\nCerto Crystals\n2 pkti. for ... 23<\nRUBBER\nRINGS\nDox. 5<?\n. .. v. w--..;;'\u00ab- 2* Ec\".r.ir.\"-\nton spent yesterday in town.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Cornish are\nin Spokane.\n\u2022 Mrs. D. W. Dow and baby\ndaughter ol. Cranbrook have returned after visiting her parents,\nMr. and Mrs. W. R. Campion,\nLatimer Street.\n\u2022 Mr. Hamllng, M. Barrow and\nA. Jones were recent visitors in\ntown from Nakusp.\n\u2022 Mrs. Burman, who visited her\nson in Nelson and friends in Trail,\nhas left for Creston to visit her\ndaughter before returning to Gull\nLake.\n\u2022 Lieut.-Col. E. Mallandalne of\nCreston visited Nelson yesterday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Bennett,\n99 High Street, have as guests, Mr.\nand Mrs. F. A. Newell of Rossland.\n\u2022 Mrs. Edmund Nagle ot Penticton visited her daughter, Miss\nLouise Nagle ot the staff of Kootenay Lake General Hospital, en\nroute to, visit another daughter in\nKimberley.\n\u2022 Mrs. A, Lidberg returns  to\nTHE BEATTY MODEL A\nThe world's Finest Ironer gives\nyou every ironing' convenience.\nIron Electrically with a Beatty\nBEATTY BROS LTD.\nNelson  Factory   Branch\n321  Baker Phone 91\nFor Smart Vacation Hosiery\nchoose\n\"RAINBOW\"\nHoliday Colors.\nPHONE 053\nThe Gingham Shoppe\nOpp. Daily News\nNakusp today after a lew days'\nvisit at' the boat of her son-in-\nlaw and daughter, Mr. and  Mrs.\nArchie Renwick, Cottonwood Street,\nFairview.\n\u2022 J. Harold Bradshaw, who hai\nbeen swimming instructor while attending Summer School in Victoria,\nhaa returned to Nelson.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. John Tawse ot\nCedar Point spent yesterday in\ntown.\n\u2022 George Lester, High Street,\nvisited Salmo Wednesday.\n\u2022 W. A. Corey of Spokane was\namong City visitors yetterday.\n\u2022 Mrs. Robert Hong of Harrop\napent Wednesday in Nelson,\n\u2022 Cal Ramsden leaves via Great\nNorthern tomorrow for London and\nToronto.\n\u2022 Miss Jean Robertson had as\nSiest Wednesday, Miss Agnes Mc-\nuillln ol Penticton, who was enroute to visit friends in Kimberley.\n\u2022 J. Ashbaugh of Nelson is\nipending a few days in Trail\nand Fruitvale.\n\u2022 Mrs. George W. Steele is confined to her home with a broken\nheel.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Cawley\nwere In town yesterday en route\nhome to Salmo trom a holiday in\nVictoria.\n\u2022 David Laughton, Edgewood\nAvenue visited Salmo Wednesday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Orphlr Bourgeois\nof Cranbrook have returned from\nCrescent Valley, where they visited\nformer's brother, Henri Bourgeois.\n\u2022 Leo Gansner has returned from\na holiday at the Coast.\ni Mrs. A. R. Johnston ol Sunshine Bay is a patient in Kootenay\nLake General Hospital.\ni Bert Banks ol Kimberley has\nreturned atter visiting his lamily,\nholidaying at Willow Point.\n\u2022 Mrs. Friizell and daughter,\nPhyllis, who have been guests ol\nMrs. Friizell's son and daughter-in-\nlaw, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Frizzell,\nKerr Apartments, also ol Mr. and\nMrs. O. W. Humphrey at South\nSlocan, leave tomorrow lor their\nhome in Edmonton.\n\u2022 Mrs. Douglas J. Barclay ol\nKaslo, who has been visiting the\nCoast lor a lew weeks, has returned. She is accompanied by her\nsister-in-law, Miss Barclay ot\nVancouver.\n\u2022 Richard Downey who has been\nattending Summer School at Victoria, arrived in town last night to\nbe a guest at the home on tne Mortn\nShore .ol Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Bradshaw. He is en route to Pouce Coupe,\nwhere he will teach school.\n\u2022 Mrs.. M. Barrow of Nakusp\nvisited town Wednesday.\n\u2022 Kenneth McRory left yesterday for the Coast.\ni H. A. Hollingsworth, Great\nNorthern special agent, spent yesterday in the City.\n\u2022 Miss Margaret Campion of\nCranbrook is expected home from\nthe Coast at the weekend.\ni Among guests at the Becker-\nHigglnbotham wedding at St. Paul's\nUnited Church in Nelson Wednesday afternoon were Mr. and Mrs.\nW. J. Oliver and family, South\nSlocan; J. Smith, Miss J. Smith,\nMr. and Mrs. Gladstone Higginbotham, Prince Edward Island;\nMrs. Rose Dunlop and Winnifred,\nMr. and Mrs. F. Cox, Mr. and Mrs.\nHolmes, Mrs. W. Graham, Mr. and\nMrs. Flynn, Mr. and Mrs. B. Bond,\nRev. and Mrs. H. J. Bevan, Mr. and\nMrs. Neil McKinnon, Mr. and Mrs.\nSherratt, Mr. and Mrs. R. Bell,\nMr. and Mrs. F. Patterson, Coleman, Alta.; Mr. and Mrs. J. Ironmonger Jr., Hillcrest, Alta.; Mrs.\nHaines, Mrs. R. J. Roberts, Calgary; Mr. and. Mrs. R. B. Leard,\nMr. and Mrs. J. Manning, Del-\nburne, Alta.; Mr. and Mrs. C. W.\nMacKinnon and Grace, Maple\nCreek, Sask.\n\u2022 Mrs. J. T. Martindale and\nMrs. R. J. German and daughter,\nLois Ann, of Trail are guests of\nMrs. T. German, Hoover Street, for\na week.\n\u2022 To celebrate the birthday of\nlittle Arlene Baillie of Trail, who\nSale of\nHOUSE\nFROCKS\nSmart colorful frocks for outdoors\nnow\u2014for indoors later. Bright\nfast color prints, new styles. Flared skirts and plain. On sale this\nweek. Size6 14 to 44.\n$1-59\nTknt (|\n<rman\nPHONE 200\nBAKER ST.\n. Fresh Fruit\nand Vegetables\nCANTALOUPS: OC\nLarge, 3 for Wv\nPEACHES: 1Q-\nEating baiket *-*)*>\nBANANAS: Golden,   OQ\nRipe, 3 Ibi. for t-VK,\nLEMONS: Large,\n300'i, dox\t\nCRAPEFRUIT: OC\nLarge, 6 for ttdl\nPOTATOES: IQ.\n10 Ibi. for lvl\nONIONS: Okanagan   IQ\nDry, 5 Ibi. for    1\u00ab7C\nWATERMELON\nLb\t\n29c\n4c\nPEACHES\nFreestone,   preserving,\nCrate'   Jpl.l\"\nFreeitone    preserving,\nNo. 2,\nCrate ...\n$1.10\nFLOUR: Clenora,\n98 lb. sack\t\n'LOUR: Clenora,\n19 1b. sack .....\n$2.45\n$1.29\nPhone 707      Free Delivery\nMILK\nThe best is less in the\nlong run.\nKootenay Volley Dairy\nAugust\nFur Sale\nJust 2 Days Left\nfor theie exceptional bargains\nBaltic Seal Coats\n$59\nto\n$85\nMuskrat Coats\n$110\nto\n$175\nCanadian Squirrel\n$165\nSPECIAL\nDuring thii ule. Your.coat\nrclinod with a guaranteed\nlining, cleaned and gland,\nFrom\n$10.00,. $18.00\nMalcolm's Furs\n659 Baker St.     Phone 960\nCLOCKS\nWe have a nice stock of Westminster Chimes, mantel clocks,\nfancy alarm clocks in both\nspring and electric.\ntJtaAveui. ^melkM,\n497 Baker St Nelson, B.C.\nwas seven years old last Sunday,\nMrs. Gordon Kitchener, her aunt,\nwas a charming hostess Monday,\nat a birthday party at lakeside\nPark. The invited guests were\nJean, Lois Ann, and Noreen Hedley, Catherine Mclnnes of Trail,\nDouglas Holtone, Enid Holtone,\nPatsy McCandless, Jackie Hewlett\nof Trail, Bobby Major of Long-\nbeat, Innes Nelson, Eddie Hedley,\nMargaret Gillies, Beverly G. arid\nPatsy Chalmers of New Westminster, who are here visiting their\naunt, Mrs, Albert Lee. Mrs. Kitchener was assisted by Mr. and Mrs.\nJohn A. Mclnnes of Trail, Mrs. Albert Lee and Mrs. Ella J. Coombs.\n\u2022 Mrs. Dunn has returned to Nakusp atter visiting friends in\nNelson.\n50 Knights and\nD.O.K.K.'s  Meet\nat Salmo Lodge\nAbout 50 Knights of Pythias and\nD.O.K.K.'s gathered in Castle hall\nat Salmo Wednesday night, lodge\nmembers going from Nelson and\nTrail. The second rank, that of\nEsquire, was conferred on R. Johnson. Plans were made to entertain\nthe Grand Chancellor, G. H. Savage of Duncan, when he visits the\ndistrict in the near future.\nNelson men went by special bus\nand Trail men by car. It was a general feeling that J. Lee Stapp,\nSupreme Chancellor, who visited\nNelson Tuesday, was a \"regular\nfellow,\" members said, Following\nthe meeting, coffee, sandwiches,\nsalad and cake were enjoyed.\nThe only active volcano within\nUnited States is Mount Lassen in\nCalifornia.\nTugboat Engineer\nRemanded Weel\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 17 (CP) I\nNelson Maracle, 28-year-old tuj\nboat engineer, appeared in pollt\ncourt today and was remanded t\nMagistrate Mackenzie Matheson f<\none week for trial on a mural\ncharge laid after police investigi\ntion into the drowning of Kennel\nCassidy  another engineer.\nCoroner John Whltbread said I\ninquest would be held Friday in)\nthe death of Cassidy, first engine!\nof the tugboat Clayburn.\nMaracle, tecond engineer ,-iboai\nthe Clayburn told police he did a\nremember what had happened an\ncuuiu nut etti.Yt seeing CaaaM\nstruggling in the water.\nWILSON!\ni\nREALLY K\nOne pad kills flics all day and er.\nday for 2 or S weeki. 3 pads In m\npacket. No spraying, na iticUaj\nno bad odor. Ask your Druggi\nGrocery or General Store.\n10 CENTS PER PACKET;\nWHY PAY MORRtf\nTHB WILSON PLY PAD OtX, r\" '\"\nADVANCE SHOWING\nNEW FALL HATS\nMilady's Fashion Shoppe\n449 Baker SL   ' Phona 874\n5M!\u00bb\u00abSs5\u00abSMM\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00abaK5*SSSSSS5\nFRIDAY and SATURDAY\nPlain and printed linens, linettes and voiles.\nValues to $7.95. Sizes 14 to 48. To Clear ..\nWASH DRESSES\n$2.95\nTillie and Vancouver\nMaid House Frocks\nGood assortment. Guaranteed sun and tubfast. tf1~CA\nSizes 14 to 52. Extra Special   tpl.dM\nGingham Shoppe\nOpp. Daily Newt\nPhone 953\nFREEMAN & LEEW\nFURNITURE COMPANY\nEAGLE BLOCK\nBAKER ST.\n\"The  Houie of Furniture  Styles\"\nPHONE 115\nNELSON, B. C.\nAUGUST SALE SPECIAL\n3 Pee. Massive WALNUT DINING SUIT\nRegular $279.00\nFor gracious living thli\niuite it a necessity.\u2014.\nAndrew Malcolm 2\nNo-mar finish\nThe artful combination\nof good design and selected cabinet walnuts\nis carried out to make \u2022\nsuite of distinction-\nRefractory table, largt\nbuffet with silver\ndrawer. Beautiful china\ncabinet, five diners and\none arm chair with\nleather seats.\nLIBERAL ALLOWANCE ON YOUR OLD FURNITURE\n?T\" .\n\u25a0\u25a0iiiiiigiiitt\n,-M----&---m--imm\n \u2014\nMm\\ Bathj News\nEttabUihtd April tt Mtt\nBHttaA ColttmMo's Mott Inttrttting Newspaper\nPubliihed every morning except Sundiy by\nth* NIWS PUBLISHING COMPANY. LIMITED.\n206   Baker   Street   Nelion.   BritUh   Colombia.\nPhone 144  Private Exchang* Connecting All Department!.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN  PRESS AND\nTHE   AUDIT   BUREAU   OT   CIRCULATIONS\nFRIDAY MORNING, AUGUST 18, 1939.\nGETTING UNDER GOEBBELS' SKIN\nHitler's Germany, with a muzzled press, and domestic\nriticism 100 per cent stifled, hands out from day to day\ni releases which are propaganda and nothing else.\nIt Is a commentary on the German lack of a sense of\ntumor, that a government that seeks constantly to influ-\ncnce the inhabitants of other countries through propaganda, should scream its head off at any effort on the part\nW the democracies to get a few plain words through to the\nCrman people.\nOne of the objects of Berlin vitriol at present Is the\n_Jnent Englishman who, though holding no propaganda\n[(Office, is flooding Germany with his epistles, which pour\n[through the mails to innumerable private addresses, despite all efforts of the universal secret police to stop the\nHide.\nHow this efficient British citizen operates is pictured\nas follows by the London Spectator:\n\"I have often said that if ever a ministry of information were created in this country Commander Stephen King-\n[Hall ought to be given a prominent position in it. In the\nlight of events I am inclined to revise that opinion, for\n{Commander King-Hall, through his own personal letters to\n-Gcrrnss r\u00bb\u00abd?r\u00ab, se\u00abms likely to achieve in his private\ncapacity for it is genuinely a private capacity) more than\n, he could ever accomplish as an official, \u25a0\n\"There could be no more convincing testimony to the\nf success of his efforts in the field of enlightenment and\npropaganda than the fury it has aroused in the breast of\nthe German Minister of Enlightenment and Propaganda\nIHaving read the last of the three letters so far sent I am\naot surprised. It is precisely the right mixture of geniality,\nbadinage and sober argument to attract attention, and if\nnot to convert at any rate to impress. The letter touches\nI lighly but firmly on Germany's financial difficulties, ad-\nI mits freely that we shall have to face the same difficulties, too, but observes that Germany must crash before\nyn do, if only because we entered the armaments race later\nsnd can therefore last longer.\n\"It dwells on the interest the Nazis have in prolonging\nthe Crisis, for 'Is not Nazism a crisis-product T What will\ntWppen to the Nazi chiefs when the crisis ends ? Dr, Goebbels\nis the most unpopular man in all Germany; he will jump\ninto an airplane and make straight for England. He has a\n' profession already planned. What is it? Theatrical management, of course; if he behaves decently he ought to make a\n:' success of it. No wonder Dr. Goebbels boils visibly at every\narrival of a batch of letters arriving through channels\nselected so ingeniously that the Gestapo can never stop,\nthough it may staunch, the flow.\"\nj      CRITICAL DAYS\nLatest'events in the Germany-Poland-Danzig triangle,\n'with Germany at the peak of her mobilized might, in manoeuvres, wear such a grave look that Hitler may have\ndecided to seize, on some manufactured pretext, what\nPoland has thus far refused to yield. Cables suggest that\na military coup is being matured, also that the stroke may\nfall at any moment.\nHitler may still believe that Britain will not join battle\nif he invades Polish territory. Or, if accepting that Britain\nwill act, he may believe that Germany and her pledged\npartner, Italy, are stronger now relatively than they might\nbe later, seeing the way the countries of Southeastern Europe are treating his approaches.\nGermany's control of the pawns on which she confi-\ndently counted in Europe's great political chess-game is\nbeing challenged, Jugoslavia had previously announced\nthat she would remain neutral in any European conf leet.\nWhen German and Italian pressure strove to interpret\nthis neutrality as meaning that Jugoslav railways would\n: be turned over to Axis control in time of war and that Berlin and Rome would supervise Jugoslav military and economic activities, the belligerent Serbs objected. The Jugoslav\npremier now warns his neighbors that his country will\nfight to preserve real neutrality and will not act as a cat's-\npaw against former allies.\nWhat must be even more disturbing to the Germans\nis the uproar in Hungary over Nazi arrogance. All parties\nhave figured Hungary as a likely ally of Germany. But\nmembers of all other parties in the Hungarian Parliament\njoined in denouncing Hungarian Nazis as traitors. Evidence that Germans have been disturbed by this new\nindependence in Hungary and by the phenomenal success\nof a book by a Hungarian professor pointing out Germany's\nmilitary weakness and warning his countrymen against\nbeing tempted into a new alliance with the Reich, after,\nthe Great War disaster is abundant. The Hungarian foreign\nminister was called to meet von Ribbentrop, and it is said\nthat the latter stressed the necessity for Hungary modifying her internal policy which now is anti-Nazi, and completely entrusting her foreign policy to the Rome-Berlin\nAxis.\nNo doubt the Germans thought the Jugoslav Government was so weakened by the separatist activities of the\nCroats that it could not defy Berlin. Now it is apparently\ndoing so with both British and French backing. If Jugoslavia ia forced into the bloc which now includes Rumania,\nTurkey and Greece, German expansion into Southeastern\nNILSON DAILY NEWS. NILSON. B. \u2022* FRIDAY M0RNIN9. AIM. 11. 1W\u00bb\nSALLYS SALLIES\nThe meaning of the three balls in front of a pawnbroker's ihop\nia its two-to-one you will never (et it again.\nOur tuuloglcd gsricr.: \"tstf tf\npresentatives ot our native deer,\nas wejl as foreign onei and city-\ndwellers thut may set some Idea\not theie creaturei, and become\nlufflclenUy familiar with them to\nrecognize them ihould they chance\nupon their haunts.\nOt thete, the Virginia or white-\ntailed deer Ii the most widely distributed and hence bett known. In\nSummer the pelage (word correiponding to plumage in birds) ii a\nrutty-brown color, for Winter, thli\ngradually changet to a distinctly\ngray-brown.\nIrraindad branch-Ilk* shape, found\nln the white-tailed deer, to iiioe*\nof the moote, which are remarkable broad area! with \"tynet\"\n(poind) coming from the broad\nlurface. The caribou hava a suggestion of thli flattening (which is\nlacking in ltt near-relative the\nreindeer). Another unuiual feature\nof the caribou ia that both lexet\ncarry antlers, those of the female\nbeing smaller and ilenderer than\nthe male's.\nIn Northern Europe It found a\ncreature like our moote, which it\nknown at the elk. This It a differ.\nent animal from the one we tome-\nWhlte-talled Deer\nIt li only Uie buck which has\nantlers, these being \"in the velvet\"\nat this Ume. Antlers are apparently\nused only in combat between bucks\nduring the mating season, and are\nshed each year, in the late FaU or\nearly Winter. The stronger ones\nshed them earliest, the weaker continuing to carry them until late\nFebruary or even early March. This\nstems to hold true with all our\ndeer, and those heavy antlers must\nbe a decided encumbrance in Winter, when they have to contend\nwith deep mow.\nAntlers are of a bony structure,\nand, according to Seton, while\ngrowing are lull of blood vessels.\nThen as the growth becomes complete, theie blood vessels gradually withdraw their supply, closing\nit otf at the base leaving a solid\nsubstance, which hardens.\nHorns, on the other hand, are\nhollow and carried for life. In\nhorned mammals both sexes have\nthem.\nGREAT VARIETY\nAntlers show great variation in\ndeveloument,   from   thote   of  a\nWapiti  (Elk)\ntimes call \"eht.\" Our \"elk\" or vs\npiU (Indian name) is more like the\nred deer ot Europe, but larger.\nThe moose with its humped\nshoulders, thick tasselled neck and\nlarge sensitive muzzle, seems ungainly, yet with those magnificent\nantlers, lordly.\nIt seems to be falling back before\nman's enroaching on its haunts, to\na much greater extent than the\nwhite-tailed deer which of late has\nIncreased. Yet authorities have evidence which suggests that the\nmoose was a vanishing mammal\nbefore man appeared on the scene\nat all. So that even in our Umes\nconditions are still acting which in\nbygone ages led to the extermination of one large mammal after\nanother, leaving their place to one\nmore able to survive.\nLooking Backward*..\nTEN YEARS AQO\nFrom Dally News of Aug. 18, 1W9\nGood progress has been made\nduring the past few days with the\nwork of clearing up the debris left\nfrorn the Nelson Fair Building fire.\n\u2014The Bluebell Mines have started\ndevelopment work on the Comfort\nshoot, the program to last for about\na year. RecondiUoning of the mill\nwill follow, and the production will\nbe the biggest in Bluebell's history.\u2014W. Myers of Kaslo visited\nNelson.\u2014-Mr. and Mrs. S. Moore of\nNelson left on a visit to Vancouver,\nTWENTY FIVE YEAR8 AQO\nFrom Daily News of Aug. 18, 181*\nH. M. Scott who during the past\nsummer acted as assistant to M. S.\nMiddleton Assistant Provincial Horticulturist, will leave for Toronto\nto Join a regiment of volunteers\nleaving for European aervice with\nthe first Canadian contingent.\u2014Reginald Hinton Louis of the Kamloops\nLand Registry Office wat married\nyesterday to Winnifred M. Bourke\nof Nelson at Kamloops.\u2014Judge J.\nA. Forin will leave for the coast\non tonight's train.\u2014S. C. Morris\nand Mable McVicar, both of Nelson, were married here yesterday.\u2014\nEleven mines of the Kootenay and\nBoundary shipped 7887 tons of ore\nto the Trail smelter to bring the\ntotal for the year to 228,021 tons.\nFORTY YEARS AGO\nFrom Daily Miner of Aug. 18, 1899\nMr. Greenwood reported that his\nson-in-law, J. J. Campbell, was\nfeeling much better and is now convalescing after his recent illness.\u2014\nThe new Nelson Catholic Church\nis nearing completion and Rev. Fr.\nFerland hoped to have it ready\nfor services by the middle of next\nmonth.\u2014Fire Hall No: 2 on Observatory Street between Ward and\nJosephine Streets is now open and\nready for service. It contains all the\nlatest equipment which includes a\nreel, 220 feet of hose, ladders and\nBabcock extinguishers. Two men\nwill sleep at the hall. This new\nhall will do away with the hard\nwork of pulling the heavy fire\nfighting equipment from the No. 1\nhall.\nEurope will face the same difficulties which now hold up a\ndrive through Poland.\nIt has been suggested that Hitler might turn against\nRumania if blocked in Poland. No doubt that question will\nsoon be decided. Europe can hardly continue to keep 8,000,-\n000 men under arms indefinitely. Germany now has. her\nnuudmum of trained forces, some 2,500,000 men, in ma\u00ab\nnoetrms. It will be remembered that similar manoeuvres\nlast year were used to muster the force designed to crush\nCzechoslovakia. ' '\nThe next week or so will demand cool nerves in Europe.\nThere has been no sign of weakening on the part of members of the peace pact. If they stand firmly together the\nstates which are hesitating to take sides are not likely\nto enter the Hitler camp. . \/\nQonbuuL\n\u00a3hidqsL\nWHAT B AM OfEKtKt\nIT B nsBssj Sb stata th* ctt-\ntst oplalooa aa to what\nits. an BsWlsB bid. Beta*\n* wti do It on a hand eon-\ng two aee* and a MA* king.\nbut not on a hand containing two\nace* aad two aide queeni or two\n*0M, a tld* earn**, tad a Jack un-\nd*r put ot tha acta, although the\nlaat two h*n\u00ab5t ara proved by actual hand neotda to bt aomewhat\nbetter ta th* oflenae than lh*\notlun, In iplte ot th* ttt*. that\ntbey nay not conform wtth toroe-\nbody-i Uble ot honor trleka or\nquick trlcki.\n\u25ba ATI\n\\V,t.\n\\vtttt\n+ KQ83 LJLsJ   +A9S\n\u2666 <J\u00bb\n\u00abKI\u00bb87t2\nJQ10\n(Dealer:   North.   North-Strath\nTWa deal wai played Iti a duplicate (tm* ot tix tablet. At two\not then tt wu paated out At two\nNorth opened the bidding with\n1-DUmond nd th* aid* ultimately got into 4-Heartt. At tha other\ntwo, South mad* a third hand\nopening becauie he had auch\ngreat  offenilve values  that he\ncould ceeat up th* probstbUlty of\nhit uking tlx trlcki with that\nault a* th* tramp. Theta f cUow*\nalao got Into 4-Heartt.\nThere It no earthly way to prevent 4-Heartt on thla deal It declarer sloe* Ma work right. At\nmoat of tha Uble* where tht hand\nwaa played in a heart game, Weit\nlad the cluh K ami, getting an en-\neouraging signal, twitched to tha\nolub 3, th* A winning. Eatt\ntwitched to th* tpade J. which\nbrought forth the Q, K and A,\nthen tht declarer ruffed a club,\nftneutd hia diamonds aad oo tb*\nthird round tewed a losing apada,\nbefore h* gave up tha ltad to tht\nheartA.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\n-KOStm*_*_trm-m sTTOOttfla\n49831\n\u00abK\u00bbT4\n+ Q10 8\nAAKJT\n*K063\n\u2666 None\n\u25a0 A J 10842\n\u2666 A\n4, A JTB42\n(Dealer:   Wert.   North-South\nvulnerable.)\n.Why It lt difficult on thla hand\nte pretty good playen to reach\ntbt beat possible contract T\nDtitrlbuud by Klu sTeiturs* Smdiciti. Inc.\n5SS$2JS$5$S$5$S~I\nMnr.'.-.ttuxi-\n5^SSSS3!\u00bb9\u00bbWs\u00bb8S3CaWBejSttt\u00abae\u00bbSa\u00bb\nWHAT DO YOU THINK?\nUtters may be publlahad ovtr a nom da plum*, but th* actual\nmri* of tht wrltar mutt bt olven to th* editor at evidence of\ngood faith. Anonymous letters ge In tht waaU paper baiket\ntatm*\u2014_mm-tm%*\u00bb*ttt$\nDALGAS EXPLAINS PROPOSED AIRPORT\nNOT INTENDED FOR LARGEST PLANES\nTo the Editor of the Dally Newa.\nSir:\u2014This letter hu reference to\nyour report of Mr. W. J. Dalby.\nwho invettlgated the propoied sites\nfor a Nelion airport. In fairness\nto the city aldermen, Mr. R. W.\nDawson and myself, may I state here\nthat our proposed location it not\nfor the purpose of accomodating\nlarge planet but for four main reasons distinctly printed on the plan.\nI fully agree with Mr. Dalby that\na large plane of today could never\nland In Nelson, even if thii city hid\nan airport a mile square and paved,\nbut I do think that thli gentleman\nand other expert! would agree with\nme that neither they or anybody\nelae can truthfully tay what \"a\nplana ot tomorrow\" may do.\nIn conclusion may I add that\nthe only informaUon available re\nair condltioni above and around\nNelson it from the personal experience of Mr. Don Revie and Mr.\nC. Dobbin. Both these pilots report condition! good and no air-\npockets worth mentioning.\nA. K. Dalgas,\nNelson, D.C, Aug. 15, 1938.\nJ? Questions ?J\nANSWERS\nThis column of questions and\nanswers is open to any reader of\ntne Nelton Dally Newt. In no\ncase win the name of the person\nasking Uie question be published.\nC. H., Kimberley \u2014 Can you tell\nme the name of the shrub that is\ngrown quite a lot around Nelson\nand district that blooms the latter\npart of May and it like a tiny\nrote and the flowers are In clusters ahd of a deep pink color.\nIf you mean a bush with long\nslender branches covered with clusters of pink flowen  this  it the\nSplrea Van Houtli.\nH. V. B., Ternie \u2014 I have been\nunable to obUin a complete copy\nof  Alfred Tennyson'i   \"Day   It\nDon.\" I believe that ii the title,\nhowever I do know the poem\nends:\n\"And the night ihall be filled\nwith music,\nAnd cares which Infeit Uie day\nShall fold their tents like Uie\nArabs,\nAnd silently steal away.\"\nWould lt be possible to print the\nentire poem In your column?\nThe poem to which you refer ii\n\"The Day Ia Done,\" by Henry Wadiworth Longfellow.\nTHE DAY IS DONE\nThe day ii done, and the darkness\nFalls from the wingi of Night,\nAa a feather it wafted downward\nFrom an eaglt ln his flight.\nI see Uie lights of the village\nGleam through the rain and the\nmist,\nAnd a feeling of sadness comes o'er\nme,\nThat my soul cannot resist:\nA feeling of sadness and longing,\nThat is not akin to pain,\nAnd resembles sorrow only\nAs the mist resembles the rain.\nCome, read to me tome poem,\nSome simple and heartfelt lay,\nThat shall soothe thit reiUett feeling,\nAnd banish the thought) Ot day.\nNot from the grand old masters, '\nNot from the bardi sublime,\nWhose distant footsteps echo\nThrough the corridort of tim*.\nFor, like strains of martial music,\nTheir mighty thoughts suggest\nLite's endless toil and endeavor;\nAnd tonight I long for rett.     ,\nRead from iome humbler poet,   \u25a0,\nWhose  songi  gushed  from hu\nheart,\nAs  showers  from  the  clouds   of\nSummer,\nOr tean from the eyelids start;\nWho, through long dayt of labor,\nAnd nights devoid of case,\nStill heard in his soul the muiic\nOf wonderful melodies.\nSuch songs have power to quiet\nThe restless pulse of care.\nAnd come like the benediction\nThat follows after prayer.\nThen read from the treasured\nvolume\nThe poem of thy choic*,\nAnd lend to the rhyme Of the poet\nThe beauty of thy vole*.\nAnd the night shall be filled with\nmuaic,\nAnd the caret that infest tb* day\nShall fold their tents, like the Arabs,\nAnd u silently steel away,\nsi\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bbit\u00ab\u00bbaa\u00abW5ti\u00bbew\u00bbw\u00bbM\njut yowiMif\ntMttttti i\nONE-MINUTE TEST\n1. What mammal flies?\n2. In what country are the great\nKukenaam falls?\n3. Where are the world's largest\ntides recorded?\nWORDS OF WISDOM\nAnger begins In folly, and ends\nln repentance.\u2014Pythagoras.\n' HINT8 ON ETIQUETTE\nDo not Interrupt a itory by saying, \"Yea, I have heard that,\" or\n\"I know all about that\" That is\nrude. Have patience to listen quietly until the story Is told, even if you\nhave heard it before.\nTODAY'S HOR08COPE\nFor those whose birthday It on\nthis date a word of warning: Do\nnot permit yourself to be too confident, and remember that \"silence\nis golden.\" Trust your own intuitions and avoid quarrels. The child\nborn today will be fortunate in most\naffairs, Including marriage. He will\nalso be refined, exceedingly artistic\nand musical, with polished man-\nnen, fond of dress and dlaplay-\nsomewhat extravagantly Inclined.\nONE-MINUTE TEST ANSWERS\n1. The bat\n2. In British Guiana, South America.\n3. In the Bay of Fundy, between\nNova Scotia and New Brunswick.\nVERSE\nAFTER THE FIRE\nOver the great and lonely hills\nSoftly, the rain Its magic spills,\nQuenching the flames, which swept\naway\nAll that was here but yesterday.\nCalmly, it shrouds in mists so light\nEach blackened vale and barren\nheight.\nGently, lt soothe! each broken tree\nIn hour of Its extremity.\nThus, after days of raging pain\nSweet Peace must claim her own\nagain;\nAnd claiming, all the silence tills\nOver the great and lonely hills.\nELISABETH HENSTRIDGE.\nWaneta, B. C.\nAUNT HET\nBy ROBERT QU1LLEN\nBY   EDWIN CHILL\nCtfji lt t e. \/tM. if Cmiil Titn CumUmm\nVast Field for Study Is That of Human\nEmotions in Face of Death\nProfessor J. B. S. Haldane, the\ngreat British bio-chemist teals himielf in an airtlht steel chamber tor\n14H hours, and demonstrates, to\nhis own satisfaction, it least that the\nmen ln the sunken tubmarine Thetis\nsuffered no physical pain in their\nlut hours.\nPROF. J. B. 8. HALDANE\nMerely phyilcal pain might be tht\nleast ot one's troubles in Uu. plight.\nEven in such minor tensions as football playing and prize-fighting, the\nmental state seems almost to obliterate the physical. Men come through\niuch engagement badly mauled\nwithout having been more than\nvaguely conscious ol their injuries\nat the time. Soldiew tell similar\nstories of wounds received in battle.\nBut ln these encounten, men get\na counter-surcease, which action\nseems to be the one anodyne for the\nthrall of death and pain.\nDr. George W. Crile, of Cleveland, comparable to Dr. Haldane in\nphysical basis, greatly'widened out\nDR. GEORGE W. CRILE\nhis  attainment! in the atudy of\nhuman emotional tensions and their\nknowledge in this field, In his war-\ntime studies of the functioning ot\nthe glandular mechanism, at the\nzero hour, in battle, or in tha mo*\nment before and after the supreme\ndanger.\nNATURE PROVIDES STIMULUS\nAgain all such studies involve an\nIndividual reinforced by the stimulus of adrenalin which nature provides for such emergencies. Th*\nfeelings ot a doomed man, with hit\nfighting apparatui quiescent or dismantled, are still a dark no-man's\nland ot the human spirit, despite\nsuch research as that of Dr. Haldane.\nOne hesitates to seize on the behaviour of the doomed Claude Joseph Bradley, of Brooklyn, for con-\njective such as this, but since he\nhimself has so gallantly accepted\nthe word of his physician and Is so\ncheerfully and frankly numbering\n\"the day of his temporal breath,\" a\nscientist might, without unseeming-\nly intrusion, consider his passing\nthrough that twilight zone of life\nand death which we all must traverse.\nIt seems to this layman that when\na man says calmly, \"We who ar*\nabout to die salute you,\" and thereafter chats easily with the reportera\nabout what may lie ahead, we ar*\nbeholding a vale of human pilgrimage rarely observed and little understood. Mr. Bradley gives a party\nto his friends, picks up every thread\not his daily living and Is prepared\nto treasure lt to the end. His retrospect, as he talks to the newsmen,\nis not one ot great moments, of th*\nhigh peaks of drama ln hit life.\nSuch v.'2- th* irtmm. of Thornton\nWilder's play, \"Our Town.\" Thos*\nwho passed on learned In the beyond the poignant mystery and\nbeauty, the saviour and the poetry\nof the familiar every-day web ol\nllfs?\u2014coffee ln the morning, aun-\nlight, friends, hunger and good food\n\u2014all the simple tapestry of dally\nliving which make* the mystery w*\nvenerate but never can hope to un-\nderatand.\nMINOR MOMENT8 RETURN\nIt Is a commonplace observation\nthat in moments of great dinger\nene's mind seizes'on the anti-clima\non some irrelevancy of yeart before\n\u2014a line of an old tune, even distinct\nodors from a childhood garden. I*\nthis possibly a touchstone of th*\ndeeper reality of our life which w*\nperhaps disregard or hold too\nlightly?\nHere is John Masefield's grand\nbook, \"The Bird of Dawning.\" Th*\ncrew of the clipper ship. \"Black-\ngauntlet,\" Is shipwrecked. The cook\nand a tailor known as Pott ar*\nclinging to a spar, awash in th*\ngale. The cook, later saved by hit\nmates, tells the story: \"And he said\nto me, 'A bit of Monty'i eel jelly\nwould be a bit of all right. White-\nchapel High ol a Saturday evening,\nwhat?' And I said to him, 'We'E\nhave a bit of Monty, you and I,\nPots, as soon tu we get ashore.' 'No,'\nhe says to me, jutt like that see:\n'No,' he says, 'I shan't ever see that\nshore again. I can't hang on to thi*\nspar,' he says, 'I'm a London man.\nnot a herring,' he .aald, 'Why, Pott,'\nI said, 'we've all got to be herring!\nin a wash-out like thli.' \"Ah,\" h\u00ab\nsays to me, 'you've got that shape\nskin, perhaps; but I'm too cold.' And\nhe just let go and was gone.\"\nIt is barely' possible that poet*\nlike' Matefield may see farther Into\nthese mists than the blo-chemists.\nWHAT THE PRESS IS SAYING\nLEARN CAUTION\nDirect violations' ot the safety\nrules are growing fewer among\nthe private f iyera, no doubt owing in\nlarge measure to the healthy severity with which the new board\nhas treated proved infractions. Care-\nlessness remains and the penalties\nfor carelessness, In preparation for\nthe flight and in operation during\nits course, unfortunately are apt to\nbe even more disastrous than those\nfor inattention and chance-taking at\nthe wheel of the motor car. \u2014 New\nYork Times.\nGOOD HUNTING 8TILL\nNews item: \"In 1189, when\nGeorge Washington arrived in New\nYork for his first inauguration as\nPresident. Greenwich Village was a\npopular Summer resort and there\nwas excellent hunting in the area\nnow occupied by Times Square.'\nAnd 150 years later, with the World's\nFair visitors streaming into town,\nthe New York sharp-shooters will\nfind better hunting than ever in\nthe Times Square area.\u2014Montreal\nGazette.\n\"I like Amy In time, of trouble.\nOthers tell you juit to call On 'em\nif there'i anything they can do,\nbut Amy rolli up htr tleeves and\nittrt'i doin'.\"   -      ,-.' ,\nTHE RAILWAY PLIGHT\nOf course, In Canada, for many\nyears the shareholders in the Canadian Pacific Railways have not\ndrawn a dollar in dividends. Moreover, the average family of Canadians pays from $25 to $30 a year\nfor the losses, wages and upkeep of\nthe Canadian National Railways\nwhether they ride on them or not.\nSo railroad ownership is now a\nilight.\u2014The Brandon Sun.\nUNRULY GUEST\nA California youth haa got our\ngovernment ln a nice mess in Germany. On a visit to the university\ntown of Heidelberg he Inscribed a\nverse deriding the German government in the guest book. Irate townsfolk beat him' up and landed him\nln jail. Then he screamed for help\nand the U. S. consul-general had to\ngo to the Nazi officials, hat in hand,\nasking them to be lenient.\u2014The Boston Post.\nADVANCE RESERVATIONS\nGeorge Buterworth, a 70-year-old\nretired contractor of Bloomfield.\nN. J., hat reserved a room in a St.\nPetersburg, Fla., hotel for the next\n30 Winter seasons. He says he's\nconfident that on his 100th birthday\nhe will be there to toss a coin with\nthe hotel proprietor to determine\nwhether he shall get all his money\nback or pay double for 30 year's\nroom rent.\u2014New York World-Telegram.\nTREE8\nWith magic wand Autumn touchet\nthe swaying limbs with'splashes of\nbrown and red and gold. Winter\nlays bare the exquisite symmetry\nand graceful outlines of snow-laden\nboughs. But at all times a tree il\nfriendly, beneficent, comforting.\u2014\nKitchener Record,\nNOISE FOR JOY\nA correspondent in this newspaper\ncomplains of the use of motor car\nhorns to express the party mood of\nweddings and similar festive occasions. We are Inclined to agree. But\nwe don't think he goes far enough.\nWe believe excessive use of horni\nto denote great joy is not the only\nabuse of them. We suspect they ar*\nalso used too often to express contempt, anger, impatience and all\nof the other unpleasant emotions\nsometimes felt by auto drivers\u2014Th*\nPerior Journal-Transcript.\nA THOUGHT\nA Cleveland judge has barred\nchildren from his divorce court because, he says, it gives them a poor\noutlook on lite. Maybe some kid*\nshouldn't be allowed to go home.\u2014\nKitchener Record.\nACTIVE IN\nKootenay Life\nWidely known among railroaders it John F. (Jack) Kilby ol\nNelson, former locomotive engineer, now retired.\n'iltoiW.inl^ii    ,,\n , -\n Trail Water\n>umpTe$IMayBe\nMade Today, Trail\nTRAIL, B C, Au* 17 - A tat\nBump U expected to bt mtde ot\nEait Trtll't new wtter project Friday, it wu reported today.\nWork on the new development\nhai propeiied well tnd ipeedlljr.\nConcrete footing for the 300,000 |U-\nlon reservoir, above Sunnlngdtle\nBubdlviilon, have been poured, ntw\nwater main laid along Second Avenue to McQuarrle Sreeet, and two\nholet for the pumping lystem drilled, one 110 feet and the other 170\nfeet. A third wu down 163 feet\nThurtday.\nReiulti of Frldty'i teit pump will\npot be known until next week.\n10 Cases Handled\nTrail Court, July\nTRAIL, B. ti, Aug. 17\u2014Ten caiet,\nInvolving ilx infractions of the\nCriminal Code of Canada, one of\n13. C. Statutes and three City By\n^ws,  were  dlipoied   of   in  Trail\nty Police Court in July. This was\nbe report of Joseph McMillen, s\\ct-\nng Chief of Police, to the Trail\nSlice Commission Thursday.\nTotal of $45 ln five  finei was\nKUected, two offenders were ien-\nneed  to  Jail,  and  one received\nimpended tentence.\nMORE ABOUT\nVancouver Police\n(Continued From Ptgt Ont)\nWhether the Police Commiiilon\nrill Invettlgate tht chargei depend!\nargely on Magistrate 0. R, Me-\nJueen, member of the Commlision\nrith M\"yor Telford and Judge A. M.\nlirper.\nMagistrate McQueen tald Tuetdty\nte did not wiih to be connected\nlith the probe lest he be conslder-\n-d biased in view of certain re-\nnarks he made regarding the altua-\nion which appeared recently ln the\nfttss.\nThe maglitrate appeared to adopt\nhe tame attitude when queried to-\nlay, although Judge Harper expressed hii willingness to sit.\nMayor Telford told tbe Council\nhis morning that Magistrate McQueen's unwillingness to lit on a\nirobe of police afialra wai one reaion why the Police Commieslon\nlad lniiited on tht public hearing\nivhlch wai abandoned Tuesday when\nt waa established that the mayor\nreuld not lay the charges against\nfcigadler Foster and then hear them\nn hli capacity ot Commission chair-\nDan.\nMayor Telford Mid no evidence\nwhatsoever hai yet been preiented\nto the Commission not even in camera. He expressed his readiness to\nproduce evidence substantiating hli\nchargei at any time.\nTht council tesiion opened with\nreading of a letter by Mayor Telford luggeitlng \"thli council form\nItself Into a judicial or quaii-]u-\ndicial body and proceed to hear\niuch evidence aa we possess, given\nunder oath.\" As an alternative, the\nMayor recommended \"the appoint-\nKicnt ot a properly constituted tri-\nunaL\"\nNO AUTHORITY\n^Corporation Couneel D. B. Mc-\niggar scotched the first suggestion\n- ruling the council has no auth-\ntority to conduct an Inquiry, il-\nthough lt could gather Information\non the subject Informally. He said\nthe Council hai no power to administer oatht or lummon witnesses.\nAlthough insisting the chargei\nagainst Brigadier Foster and members of his force must be \"substantiated or cleared up,\" aldermen\n\u25a0were loath to take any action until\nthey were given enough information regarding the baiii for the\ncharges to determine it the expense\nof any inquiry was warranted.\nKMayor Telford said the Commit-\noiTwas not in possession ot tuch\nformation.\nThe meeting wat featured by two\nur three heated exchanges, notably\nwtween Mayor Telford and Alderman J. W. Cornett. who ottered to\nresign hii teat it the mayor would\nlo the same and go to the polls in a\ntwo-man fight\nAlderman Cornett tald expense!\nIt the mayor'i office had Increased\nlince Dr. Telford took offloe and declared the added expense of an inquiry would be \"foolish.\"\nConfidence ln the Integrity and\nability of Judge Harper and Mag-\nttrate McQueen wai exprened by\nlearly all the aldermen.\nTwo Houses Going Up\nin Sunningdale, Trail\nTRAIL, B. C Aug. 17-Prelimi-\nnary work on two houses herald!\nthe opening of the City'i tubdivi-\nllon, Sunningdale, North of Gyro\nPark ln Eait Trail. Mri. W. E.\nSchanta and F. W. Forster will be\nIhe ownert of the new retldencei.\nMany new homes are expected to\nte under construction at the new\nfubdiviiion ihortly.\n'Bluebird' Hits High\nSpeed on Trial Run\nCONISTON, England, Aug. 17\n(CP)\u2014Sir Malcolm Campbell'!\nBluebird n hit \"between 110 and\nJM\" mllei per hour on iti debut\ntoday on Coniston water\u2014the fastest time ever made by a speedboat\nIn Great Britain in seven years.\"\n\"I have little doubt we will do\nEB0 or better when the racing en-\nIno Ii put in,\" said Sir Malcolm\nHe used his testing engine with\n'toft\" iparic  plug! to gauge the\nnoeuvrabilify of the oig lilver\njft\nTwice he ripped up and down the\nsy imoothnesi of the lake. On\ntecond trip he came within 60\nof a steamship   laden   with\npapermen and took one hand\niH the wheel to wave.\nDespite earlier protests of disturb-\nthe water a group of citizens\nihed Sir Malcolm well last night.\nIt morning only a few recon-\nables clung to the belief that this\nme of John Ruskin should never\ndisturbed by the roar of motori.\nThe Motor Boat Racing Aisocia-\non  will   clock Sir  Malcolm  to-\norrow over the measured mile.\nHis time today is the fastest done\nBritain lince Kaye Don did 119\np, h, on Loch Lomond.    t\nPucksters-K. P.'s\nPlayoff Game for\nTonight Postponed\nThere wtll be oo gtme between\ntbe Knlghti of Pythiai tnd Puekiten tonight in tht Ntlion men'i\nsoftball final playoffs. President\nJamei Allan wai forced to poitpone\nthe lecond game ot tht itries to\nWedneiday evening late Thunday\nnight\nThe Kept who will meet Castlegar here on Sunday will practice\ntonight initead.\nNATIONAL PARKS\nMORE POPULAR\nOTTAWA, Aug. 17 (CP).-Tour-\n1st travel to Canada'i National\nParks ii ihowlng a marked increase thli year according to figures luued today by the Department of Minet tnd Reiourcei tor the\nfour monthi ended July il.\nBanff National Park ihowed an\nincrease of more than 30 per eent in\nmotor travellers in thtt period, with\n91,590 motor vlilton in the Uit four\nmonthi, compared to C9.2D2 in the\ntame period a year ago.\nJasper National Park, with 11,480\nvisiton, ihowed a gain ot 1440. Kootenay and Yoho National Parki also\nbad Increases with 14,006 and 3371\ntourist registrations respectively. A\nnew high of 57,802 vlilton wai recorded at Waterton Lakei National\nPark, compared to 42,833 ln 1938.\nMORE ABOUT\nFRENCH RAIDERS\n(Continued From Pagt Ont)\nMorning tnd afternoon flights\nwwe carried out. Britiih anti-aircraft guns \"ihelled\" the French\nformation! and Britiih and French\nobservers described the results ai\n\"very intereiting.\"\nThe \"raids\" began ihortly after\n1 a.m. Wednesday when squadron!\ncf heavy bomber; t??k off in for-\nmation and headed toward the English coast\nLIVERPOOL AT DAWN\nAt dawn they reached Liverpool\nafter flying over their other objectives and \"bombed\" the Important Industrial city. By 3:30 n.m.\nthey had returned to the French\ncoast flying at altitudes of between\n13,000 and 20,000 feet\nIn tht forenoon seven squadrons\nof bomben iwept over tht channel,\npreceded by tcoutlng formations,\nhead for Bristol, Birmingham, Manchester, Oxford and Liverpool.\nAt noon 100 bomben were lighted otf the Southern Britiah coait\nflying low. Patroli of Royal Air\nForce tighten aped up to meet them.\nPunued by the Britiih machines,\nthe French plane* succeeded ln\nbombing \"certain points\" on the\ncoast before heading Westward.\nAfter reaching objectives the flnt\nbomben flew over London mid-\nafternoon flying high to avoid the\nballoon barrage which suspended\nsteel cablet designed to protect\nLondon from low-flying enemy raid-\nart. Seventeen of them were lighted over the heart of tbe city.\nHere they were joined by 00\nFrench pursuit planes which protected their withdrawal operation\nto France. By 4:30 p.m. the raiders\nhad reached their home bates.\nNew Denver Girl\nWed at Vancouver\nVANCOUVER, B. C. \u2014 The home\nof Mr. and Mn. F. M. Brady, 2154\nW. Olit Avenue, Vancouver, wat\nthe scene of an impressive wedding ceremony, Tueiday afternoon,\nJuly 18, when Rev. D. W. Scott of\nOcean Park united in marriage,\nGladys May, youngest daughter of\nMr. and Mis. A. Coombes of New\nDenver, and Thomas Leslie Barber,\nyoungest ion of Mr. and Mn. E.\nBarber of Armstrong.\nA profusion of lovely Summer\nflowen, Marguerites, hydrangeas,\nroses, etc., lent their beauty to tlie\nreception rooms. Mn. F. M. Brady,\nwearing a gown of black sheer full\nskirt with Gypsy itripe organza\nblouse and accessories en tone, received the gueits.\nTo the straint of Mendelisohn't\nWedding March, played by Mn.\nF. M. Brady, the bride, entering\nthe drawing room on the arm of\nher brother, A. Coombi of Vancouver, was a picture of loveliness ln\nan ivory satin gown with a Jacket\nof silk lace net the long puff sleeves\nof which ihowed shoulder fullneii\nand tapered to wriit Ughtnesi.\nFalling in clouds to hem of her\ngown, wat her wedding veil of\ntulle, which wat caught to the head\nwith a coronet of orange blossomi.\nThe bride chose white accessories\nand carried an arm bouquet of\nOphelia roses, pale pink and white\ncarnations, swansonia and fern.\nLittle Carol Brady as flower girl,\npreceded the bridal procession. She\nwas a dainty figure in a white Kate\nGreenaway dress with a pale mauve\nsatin sash and hair ribbon. She carried a white basket of pale mauve\nand pink iweet peai bedded in\nbaby's breath, with a mauve tulle\nbow gracing the handle. The matron\nof honor, Mn. A. Coombs sister-in-\nlaw of the bride, wore a rose sheer\ngown designed with full flowing\nskirt and tight silver studded bodice\nwith puff sleeves and matching\nhat of flowen. Her arm bouquet\nwai of pink snapdragons, carnations and fern. The groom wat supported by his brother, E. D. Barber\nof Vancouver.\nDuring the signing of the register\nMn. F. M. Brady beautifully rendered \"0 Promlie Me.\"\nBride's table was adorned with\na white lace cloth centred by a\nthree-tiered wedding cake in pink\nand white. Cream and pink roiebudi\nand silver streamer*, fastened to\nthe chandelier by white wedding\nbelli, gracefully hung to each\ncorner of the table, while tall cream\ntapen in silver holden cast a radiant glow over the scene. Mn. T. A.\nBrady of Victoria, wearing a lavender crepe gown with white accessories presided at the tea urn,\nwhile Mn. F. M. Brady, assisted\nby Mn. A. Crease, served the gueits.\nFollowing the cutting of the wedding cake by the bride, Mr. F. M.\nBrady proposed a toast to the bride,\nto which the groom responded.\nWith the bride wearing a silk\ncrepe redingote of navy and white,\nand matching accessories, the happy\ncouple, amid congratulations and\ngood wishes, left by motor on a\nhoneymoon through Washington.\nThe housefly doei not bite, but It\nspread diseue germs with its feet\nW\ni NILSON DAILY NlWt. NlteON, t, O. FRIDAY MORNINO, AW. tt. WM\n1   \"\"\"   \"'\t\nWt$\nRossland Ties Up West Kootenay\nFootball With 3-2 Victory at Trail\nPlayers Returning\nto Leafs' Roster\nNelson MipltLeifi trt beginning to start flying along lo high\ngear now In preparation for the\nWett Kootenay playoffi deipite\nthe fact that they wert trounced\nin Rouland Wedneidiy night when\nthey wtre minus two of their mtln\ncogs, George Biihop, league-leading\nloorer, and Pat Egan, among the\nleaden.\nBoth were back In uniform for\npractice at tht Civic Arena Thunday night and It wu t stiff workout, too, although Ntlion hid pliyed i gtme only tht previoui night\nOthen who returned to ictlon were\nthe Coach, Jock Walmsley, ind\nPete Bonneville, star centreman. In\ntlmt for the playoffi, Joe Gallicano, mother ilgned pliyer, will\nbegin practicing with (ht teem.\nFreddy Gnvei and Albert Hooker will not be ready probably for\niny letgue games but they will\nbe let for the playoffs. Tbe league\nwinds up on Auguit 29, with Trail\npitying in Nelton.\nNIGHT BASEBALL\nWESTERN   INTERNATIONAL\nYakima o, Tacoma 11.\nSpokane 4, Vancouver 10.\nWemtchee 2, Bellingham 3.\nPACIFIC COA8T\nSacramento tl, Portland 4.\nSen Diego 1, Seattle 1.\nHollywood 4, Oakland 0. .\nSan Francisco 10, Lot Angelei 3.\nSociaL ...\nPROCTER\nPROCTER, B. C\u2014Mr. tnd Mn.\nP. Bouer htd u a guest, Mrs. D.\nKline of Nelson.\nAngui MacLeod hu ltft tor Trtll\nafter viiiting at Procter.\nMn. Davii and Mn. Peterson of\nKellogg, Idaho, were vislton tt the\nOutlet Hotel.\nMr. and Mn. P. Bennett Mr. tnd\nMn. W. McAlpine ind ion, Allan,\nand Mn. R, Walton motored to town\nFriday\nMr. and Mn. W. R. Jtrvii have\nas a guest their daughter, Mrt. W.\nWatkini ud ion Wllllim ot Crowt-\nneit\nE. Drasch of Sheep Creek viilted\nhis parenti, Mr. and Mn. W. Ward.\nD. MacDonald of Nelion and E.\nBoard of Sheep Creek were viiiton at the Outlet\nMn. R. Thompton wu t weekend guest ol Mra. W. O. Rose.\nMn. II. C. Cllne hu left for the\neeeet ,,.    .\nMn. J. P. Bourne wa\u00bb t vititor to\nNelson.\nMr. and Mn. D. MacLeod tnd\nsoni, Donild and Ian of Trail, are\nviiiting Mr. tnd Mn. J. MacLeod.\nMr. ind Mn. B. Tolley of Trill\nvisited Mn. Tolley't parenti, Mr.\nsnd Mn. A. R. Johnston.\n' A. Hendrickson, E. Sktntie tnd\nA. Petenon of Sheep Creek were\nat the Outlet t     .\nMlu .Edith Johnion hu left for\nRouland where the will vltlt her\nuncle tnd mint, Mr. ind Mn. L.\nMiss Bai-bara Ritchie It visiting\nat Nelson. ^_\nR. Smith ot Trtll wm t Proo-\nter visitor.\nMr. tnd Mn. W. Shkwarok puled through Procter Mondty, en\nroute lo Caitlegar, tfter spending\na holiday in eutern cltiei.\nMr. and Mn. O. O. BlrMUnd\nhave left for Salmon Arm. They\nwere gueiti ot Mr. and Mn. C.\nSwanton, while In Procter.\nMr. and Mrs. A. R. Helghton,\nMn. R. Walton tnd Mn. WT McAlpine were motorists to Nelion.\nMylei O'Brien hu returned from\na visit to Rom Spur.\nMiss Dawn Sharp hu left for\nNelson after visiting Miss Kay Mac.\nLeod.\nMiai Margaret Speln and Andy\nSpein spent Sunday in Procter.\nMn. O. Johnion and ton and\nMr. and Mrs. L. Bonacci motored\nto Nelson Saturday.\nSociaL ...\nCamp Lister\nCAMP LISTER, B. C. - Vemon\nMartin ol Alice Siding hu returned\nalter visiting his aunt and uncle, Mr.\nand Mn. J. Ringheim.\nMn. J. C. Helme tnd ion viilted\ntt Bonnen Ferry.\nTom Miwion of Canyon tnd hit\ntieter, Mitt M. Mawton, who recently arrived from England, vilited\nIJiter frlendi\nTeddy Kilgren of Riverview vliited his sister and brother-in-law,\nMr. and Mn. Frank Yerbury.\nMr. Wood ol Kamloopa wu t\nvisitor here,\nJ. W. Moory and ton Ronald have\nleft by car lor Aneroid, Saek.\nManning Powera It working tt\nthe Rodgen mill in Creiton.\nB. B. Stallwood of Nelaon wu a\nweekend gueit ot Col. end Mn. Fred\nLliter.\nJ. Noltn ind Mert McCulloch ware\nweeknd gueiti of Mr. tnd Mn. C.\nHolden, Boiwell\nH. H. Holme lt hauling grain Into\nCreiton from the Garrison ranch,\nPorthiU.\nMn. Mel Defoe ind ton ire\nguests ol Mr. ind Mrs. 3. Nolan,\nBonners Ferry.\nC. H. PMlllpi left tor Aneroid,\nSask. .....\nMr. and Mn. Parankwich and\ngrandchildren ol Viceroy, Sask., visited A. Scoveranki.\nMr. and Mn. Pit Holland ind\ntwo daughten ol Kimberley were\nvisiton here en route to Coeur\nd'Alene and Spokane.\nBill Tupper ol Hazel Creek wu i\nweekend guest of Mr. ind Mrt. A.\nW Sinclair\nMra. Robert Swindell returned to\nTrail after ipending two weekt with\nher parent!, Mr. ind Mn. A. Ttnn.\nShe wu iccompinled by her litter, Mln Bertha Ttnn, who will\nvltlt In Trail.\nIrwin Rylan ol Corn Creek wu\na weekend guest ol hit parents, Mr.\nand Mn. P. Rylan.\nMill Mary Nyggtrd returned to\nCanyon alter viiiting Mr. and Mn.\nG. Gorril.\nMisi Agnet Sinclair of Creiton\nwas a weekend guest ot ber parents,\nMr. and Mn. A. W. Sinclair. -\nBARN&T, Englmd (CPWohn\nFortnum, who died recently in thli\nHerts town It the age of 103, ordered i new tutt on nit lOOlh birthday, insisting on two plin of\ntrouien.\nTitle  Series   Is  All\nSquare, One Game\nto Each\nTRAIL, ft Cs Aug. 17\u2014Ro\u00ablind'i\nRoven ihowed definite Intention of\nreilly Haying in the Wilt Kootenay wooer title round htrt tonight when they wtlked out of\nButler Park with I 3-2 triumph\ntucked away and the title series all\nsquare at two games each.\nIt wu a Paterson field day til\niround, and I lut crowd pleasing\nbattle. The Pateraont came Into the\nlimelight etrly.\nPitying with the wind ln the opener, Roven pressed hard tnd It wu\nnot long until their drives told.\nSandy Patenon banged ln the tint\none, t direct drive Irom centre.\nChriitiino evened the count but\nbelore  the  whittle,  Cruickthtnki\nSithered up t ball that Trail't dc-\nncemen filled to pity, tnd Smashed it put Zuk.\nRoven were pitying egalnit tht\nwind ln the second half but with\nI goal lead and eager to increase lt,\nthey went all out and pushed the\nSmeltennen back Into their own defending zone.\nThey held oommtnd for minutu,\nthtn Trail begin to retaliate tnd\ntiter i smirt passing ttttek, Trall'i\nPitenon, took Strtchan's pm ind\ndrove It between the posts. Tht\nicon wtt tied tnd both fetmi wert\ngiving their beet Ronland mining\nmany chances through lack ot pol\nlih iround the (bal. Laurie tripped Swanson and Roultnd got the\nbreak that won the gtme. It wu\nI Pitenon again who did the trick.\nSandy tent the penalty ihot booming through the uprights, although\nZuk mtde t gallant effort to aave.\nThere were five minutes to go tnd\nthey were tpent in hard defensive\npity by the Rottltnden, Trail miking several clever but vain scoring\netforti.\nLlneupi were:\nRouland \u2014 Gldinikl; Thompion\nand Ezart; Sopko, Sandy Pitenon\nand Trimble; Tommy Smith, Mc-\nSeaeS, Bill Sailer, Cralcfataafc\nand Swanton.\nTrail-Nick Zuk; Tbttchtr tnd\nLimit; Robertton, R. Zuk tnd\nSwtnion; Paterson, Groom, Chriitiino, Strachan tnd Ltwlay,\nOfficials\u2014W. Rae, retiree; Tom\nRoutledge tnd George Watson, linesmen; Robert Forbes md W. Alkeni,\ngoal Judges.\nSocial...\nSILVERTON\n\u25a0WLVWrON. B.C.-Mr. tnd Mn.\nT. Andenon visited Spokine.\nMist Viva Peachey ol Nelion Is\ni guest ol her lather, A. Peachey.\nF. H. Angrignon ol Ntw Denver,\nwu In town,\nMr. md Mrt. E. Erickson tnd\nton Ronald of Erie ire holidaying\nin Silverton.\nBin. i. D. Matheson If visiting\nher son-in-law md daughter, Mr.\nmd Mrs. W. McKty ol Ymlr.\nIt Htlgh tpent t lew days ln\nTrail\nMiw H. Flint ot New Denver\nviilted town.\nMrs. A. Erlckion md children\nEvelyn md Leonard left Thunday lor the Second Relief mine.\nFred Keller ot Erie Is ipending\nt holiday it hli heme here.\nR. C. Hermtton ol Cretoent Villey vliited town Thundiy.\nThe Misses Cora Cooper, Polly\nVanin, Viva Peachey, Doreen\nPcichey, tnd Ctrl Schmidt md\nAlbert Elsmore motored to Slocan\nCity Friday evening.\nMr. and Mrs. W. R. Seal tnd\nfimlly arrived home alter ipending tut week! ln Vmcouver.\nCharles Schmidt vliited Nakusp.\nPeter Browne ol New Denver wu\ni viiitor to Silverton.\nA. H W. Crotsely md R. Rowe\nol tbe L.H. mine, Silverton viilted\nNelson.\nMr. md Mn. Eirl Nelson ol New\nDenver were Silverton vlilton.\nIt. Harding ol Burton City wu a\nguest ol hli mother, Mrs. P. Hard-\nHope George wu ln town from\nNew Denver Monday.\nMn. G. Grimwood and ton Larry\nreturned to Ntlion titer ipending\nt week viiiting Mrs. Qrlmwood't\nptrenti, Mr. and Mn. A. Wallace\nMr. md Mn. J. H. McAullHe tnd\nlamily ol Trtll spent t ihort vacation ln town.\nMiss Lilt Melby ol Sheep Creek\nvilited Silverton en route to Canoe, B.C.\nG. Grimwood of Nelaon tpent\nSundiy ln town.\nAlbin Larsen, who hu been a\nguett ol Mr. md Mrs. O. Bergman\nfor a month, hu returned to Sheep\nCreek.\nTrail Driver Is\nFined, Rossland;\nLearner's Licence\nROSSLAND, B.C., Aug. 1T-A1-\nbert   Jamet   Malnarlch   of Trail\n6leaded guilty before Magistrate\n. E. Plewman here todiy, to t\ncharge of driving without a driver's licence, and wu fined |5 md\ncosts. '\nMalnarlch wet ln possession of i\nIearner'i licence, which itlpulatcd\nthat an tdult bid to be in the car\nwhen he wai at the wheel, but\nwhen apprehended he wu alone,\nMimico Beats Fergus\nin Ontario Boxla\nMIMICO. Aug. 17 (CP)-Ptctd by\nWingman Gordon Galr who popped\nhome live goali, Mimico Mountaineers handed Fergus Thistles in\n18-0 defeat in t icheduled Ontario\nAmateur Lacrone Auociatlon Senior game tonight\t\nPublic Works Man\n\/Believed Drowned\nCOURTENAY, B. C Aug. 17 (CP)\n-Britiih Columbli Police began l\nKarch todty for the body ol Chirlet\nGeddei, 47-year-old Britiih Columbit Public Worki Deptrtment employee believed drowned near Bowser, B. C, 25 mlia South ol here,\nwhen hit S toot row boat wu ippirently swamped by t ridden\niqutlL\nSOUTHALL, Englmd (CP)-An\n18-inch terlil trom t monoplane\nbreaking twty in flight flew\nthrough t bedroom window, ttrlk-\ning the occupant ol the cottage, but\nshe w\u00abi unjnlurn*\nTroll Is Battle\nScene for Third\nSoccer Playoff\nTRAIL, B.C., Aug. 17\u2014Third gamt\nof tht Wut Kooteniy Soccir champiomhip itriei will be played it\nButler Ptrk Sundiy tftirnoon, u-\nsociation ofliciili innounoed lite\ntonight No ictlon wu taken on\nRosiltnd'i proteit agiinit Thuri-\ndiy'i gtmt being pltytd on Trail\nG3und, the proteit automitically\ning dropped by the RottUnden\nwhen they mtrchtd otf vletori 3-1.\nTbt four gtme, tottl point terlei\nlt now tied tt two polnti apiece.\nTwo polnti ire given Ior a win md\nont for t draw. The terlet will go\nto live garnet 11 necessary.\nAlternating ol\nDirectors Plan\nof Junior Board\nNotice ol motion will be given at\ntha next meeting ot tbe Ntlion\nJunior Board ol Trade to amend\nthe comtitution providing lor three\not the tix dlrecton to be elected\nalternate yean, \u00bb tl to provide\ncontinuity of direction. J. u. McKty, Put Preildent proposed the\nchange to the dinner meeting of\ntht botrd tt thi Hume Thursday\nnight\nPropouli to inititute t member-\nihip drive were alio discussed. A\nnumber ol young men had recently established in Nelaon, it wai\npointed out and there were many\nprospective memben if they were\napproached.\nROSSLAND MAKES\nFORMAL PROTEST\nOH FIELD RULING\nTRAIL, B. C, Au* 17\u2014A formal\nproteit exactly u worded ln t\nletter to The Nelson Daily Newi\nSporti Editor, published Thursday,\nwu tiled by Roulind Roven with\nthe Weit Kootenay Soccer Association SaecuUvs. Tssss.isliy. Itolind\npliyen ln I phont message to Trill,\nstated considerable work had been\ndone to the Ronland Held and It\nwu contldered in ihape lor a champiomhip game, deipite the ruling ol\nthe executive to play Thursday's\ngame In Trail because of the field's\ncondition.\nThe Wett Kooteniy title terlet\nwas planned as a two-game home-\nand-home affair between Rossland\nand Trail. After examining Rossland's field lt wu condemned by\nthe executive u unsuitable for tht\nsecond game. This drew the protest\nIrom tht Rotiltndtn.\nNext gtme would be pliyed on\nMonday evening lt wu announced.\nSt. Catharines Beat\nExcelsiors in Boxla\nST. CATHARINES, Ont, Aug. 17\n(CP)-St. Catharlnet Athletics put\non a 14-goal last-hall splurge here\ntonight to defeat Brampton Excelsiors 21-12 in a scheduled Senior\nOntario Amateur Lacrone Aiiociatlon gamt.\nMachinists Pound\nAces for a M Win\nIn Trail Softball\nSecond  Inning  Drive\nGives Margin of,\nVictory\nTRAIL, B. C, Aug. 17-Tht uiually tmooth-worklng Aon wftttll\nmachine iputtered badly at Victoria\nPark Thunday night in the second\ninning of the ucond game ol tht\ncity softball finils and nine ttart\nMachine Shop men who were present at the tlmt ehtrteteriitictlly\npounced on the tiling machine to\ntear tt tpart tnd uncover three\nerron. seven hiti, tnd teven rum.\nThe Aces functioned much better\nfrom then on but tbe Michlnliti\nhad done their work well ud tbt\nmargin they piled up in that Inning\ncarried the ihopmen to 18-3 victory\nmd \u2022 one-game lead in the closely\ncontested title hunt\nThe Machiniita' flnt bueman,\nDuke SeodeUaro, drove a liner\nthrough centre field to send Rico\nMartin in lor the lint acore ot the\ngame in the Inning which proved\nfatal to the Acei. This wu the ilgnal tor the Machinist!' merry-go-\nround and SeodeUaro came borne on\na wild throw from thort to tint on\nNemrava'i blow, Then Doug McDonild poled out i high one thtt\nctme down between the thortatap\nand centre fielder md Nemrava wu\nln. Cameron's clout iloled through\nthe lecond baseman's fingen to\ncount McDonild; Sammy Martin\nscored Cameron; Petrunia idded hit\nbit to the barrage, betting Martin\nin; ind finally a long Ily that bounced unuiually high, leaving the Held,\nadded mother run by meant ol\nPetrunla.\nFrom then on the scoring wu\nclose, with the Acei bringing ln\ntwo rum in the ilxth ud one in\nninth md the Machine ihop adding\none in the fourth and mothir ln\nthe ilxth. Tht Acee wtrmed up\nafter the aecond md iteadled down\nto keep pace with thi Michlnliti.\nActa' rum cime whtn Jot Smoil\ngot I two bigger to icore McGee\n\u2022nd Angerelll socked t nut three-\nbagger to tend ln Benolt Joe Benolt settled down to make tome nice\ncatchet after a bad tecond Inning\nin whloh he lound the bell t little\ntoo slippery.\nPetrunia knocked the bin eut oi\nthe ptrk and managed,to travel\naround the circuit without losing\nhit much-heckled hat which he had\npaused to plaoe oo hli head in\nthe third while Berger wu trotting\nuncontested to lint\nAces' moundsmtn, Run Grahim.\nitruck out live, walked one and\ndished out ten hltt. Doug Norris\nln the opposing eemp itruck out\none, walked two md gave up five\nhiti.\nThe third game of the leriei It\n\u25a0lated lor Monday.\nCuey Jonet wu umpire md Tick\nHall bue ump md Len Hornet\nscorer.\nMiss Datto, Victim\nof Car Accident, Is\nAble Leave Hospital\nMln Join Detta, uriouily Injured when i ctr driven by Qrtydon\nGillett went over the bink June\n27 near Coffee Creek, on the Nel-\nson-Kailo road, hu ltft Kooteniy\nLtki General Hoipital to complete\nconvaletclng at homt. Mitt Detta\nsuffered fractures ud guhu ud\nhu been under treitment In hotpital ilnce. The ear went over the\nbank when a tire blew out ln mining a culvert\nRossland Redmen\nal Trail Tonight\nTRAIL. B. C, Aug. 17-Ronlind\nRedmtn mty htvt bten tblt te\n**f-    f.'   \u25a0 m.T-1      -\nit but they'll htvt l\nr handi tt thty plu oo\nTrill Goldtn Bttn whin tl\ndown from thi Goldtn City -\nAt taut thit'i whtt tilt BTen were\ngrowling todty. They haven't been\ndoing too Miy for themielvu ei\nEar ._\nIfl narrowed down to almoit t\nBeir-Redmtn fight ln the Wut Kooteniy Letgue now, with Netaoo\nniely on the wty Into tte pliy\ndowm with t byt, to fini ow meet\n\u2022 hot btttlt it the Arena Friday,\nFlghU and action hivt mtrkid tvtry\n'- thii tenon.\n1 out\n\u201e Kendall,^ mti-.\nSmith   ui   Ptgnu,   Hertien,\nTemple tad Ttylor, forward!.\nTrailites Plan a\nSoftball Toyrney\nfor Labor Day\nTBABU B. C, Aug. lT-Wttt. U-\nbor Day t blank ipot on their iportl\nprogram, iportl enthuiiuti in talking up i sottbiil tourntmtnt for\nSel dt;  '\niy here, invltatlom will be\nissued to dlitrict mu'i tiemijo\nnartleleate here. T. H Negua will\nbe in charge of entrlei.\ns i.,,m\n% Betriwili\ngoal;   Latham.  _r\"\nPAU MVIM\nTrail Bandsmen\nPlan Great Day\nat Nelson Picnic\nTRAIL, ft C Aug. 17 - H\ntat young ud eld. gimu, t eei\nmd refruhmuta - everything\nmm to make up a gala picnic,'\nbeen included in  Trail On\nLegion Brtn Bmd't ptani for their\npicnic it Nelton Sunday.\nLeaving here by private tee it\n10 un., the btndsmen ud fritodi\nwill make t lull day of it\nbe the \"eats\", tree coffee,\nlugir; refrethmtnta ter the\niportl tnd gamu to keep then bt\nit the itart Liter the bend, \u00ab\nnfwut in.hour 1\nirom \\it-M, niuooi nyw \u00bb\u00bbBoa-\nisndrainSK\nW. Hill li Conductor.     .\nThe concert program loi\nMarch,   \"O Canidi- -\noverture \"Vive ~\nbert; waRi au\nWinter itlectloo\nSgSSf p.'dSW\nEfiw\n\"Liberty BoIT-flooje.\n\u2014     \u25a0\"\u25a0*\u25a0 '\u2014 \"    ' \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\"\u25a0\nBritain and France\nOffered Peace Or Wai\nOver Danilg by Paper\nHtvui^A ftttttS the\ntive Fticiit newipap\nCirllno ilgned by ^\n(BtacWUrt) todty _\nexcellencies'' Prime MmUtarChim.\nberltlh ud Premier Deltdler ef\nFrance tht choici et puce ef 1\n^raWd,\ngovernment\nwuned thit, i ,\nproblem eu be tewed i\nuy etopwmlie.en tteiert <\naxis would se   tmsssOsi,.\n.\"'      Ib  Us*   Dsslm\u2014Allsfl\n5555555^\nAll the Luscious\nTropical Flavor of Rip*\nBananas\nIn the Pdnrt\u2014Auguit Brick\nof the Month the\nGolden Ripe\nBanana Brick\nSALE\nOUR TEAR ENDS THIS MONTH\nEVERYTHING REDUCED IN PRICE TILL AUGUST 31 si\nELECTRIC WASHERS\n$17.50     $12-5\u00b0\n$39.50        $69.50\nFloor models, demonstrators, used washers.\nIRONING Machines\n$39.50      $6950\nComplete your laundry equipment\nVacuum Cleaners\n$11-50 $17.50 $2950\nGREAT VALUES!\nCome early and get the bast bargain.\nTERMS  AS\nLOW AS 75C\nPIER WEEK\n\u25a0\nBeatty- B ros. Lnm bteo\nNELSON FACTORY BRANCH\nBaker Street Phone 91 NeUon, B.C.\n ._-_\u2014\nFACE   EIGHT\n\"\u00bb\u25a0 | *** 1 !\u25a0 SPSISSSJS^ISIPHIPSJS^SI\nNILtON DAILY NEWS, NILtON. B. C FRIDAY MORNINO. AUG. 11. UN |\ng^l_\n_S *m\nAKE LA!\nI   \"Do Your Best\"\nFirst Aid at the camp: Jack Kitchin, Jr., receives treatment to an\nInjured luicc irctr: i\u2014-\u2014* Strfft. Cr!b?r.\",T*^ r* s-<v*nd Trull Paclc.\nThis Cub with the bronzed back is anxiously awaiting tor Peter\nRygh to dish out his supply of tomatoes as the Cubs partake of 'lunch.'\nThe Braves hold a \"pow-wow' beneath the noon-day sun.\nCastlegar, Rossland and Trail\nCubs Camp at Beaver Creek\nSelf-Help Training Is Featured\nBy A. R. JOY\nTRAIL, B. C.,\u2014Leading off from the Trail-Fruitvale Highway about a mile South of Fruitvale there is an insignificant\nroadway, perhaps by most travellers unnoticed. But to a Boy\nScout or Cub that road means a great deal, for it leads to the\nBeaver Camp of the Boy Scout Association of Rossland-Trail\nDistrict. It is where they enjoy a week of living outdoors,\nsleeping under canvas and learning to do things for themselves.\nBeaver Creek, one of the most beautiful creeks in the\ndistrict, worms its way through the Fruitvale Valley, rushing\nover boulders for short distances and swelling out into quiet\npools, Thick brush and timber grow along its banks and the wide\nplateau through which the stream courses is the site of excellent farm land, ideal locations for Summer homes and most important to Scouts and Cubs, Beaver Camp.\nIPEAL LOCATION\nWith tall mountains rising\nabruptly on either side of the\nvalley, the sun is late to rise\nand when it sinks in the West\nearly in the evening the temperature falls quickly and the\nnights are cool. Tall trees and\nthick bushes shade the campers from the sun's blistering\nrays. Beaver Creek flows\nthrough the camp site and in\nit the boys fish and swim. A\ndam has been built a short walk\nfrom the main camp to provide an ideal swimming pool.\nIt is seven or eight feet deep at\none end. Scouts or Cubs go\nswimming in a group, and enjoy diving and a refreshing\nswim only under the watchful\neyes of the senior leaders and\nthe camp supervisor.\nIn the centre of the camp grounds\nis the kitchen and dining room. The\nlatter has no walls. About 50 eat\nat one sitting, An experienced cook\nprepares all the victuals but the\nboys do all other work. Another\nbuilding, bearing a sign \"Headquarters\" carved by some Scout's\nknife, houses necessary equipment,\nfirst aid materials and the canteen. All in all its a place to which\nit would not be necessary to invite\nany boy twice.\nCUB WEEK\nWhile fishing in Beaver Creek,\nI've walked through Beaver Camp\ned, but the last time, when the\nCubs took possession, it was full\nof life, that rich carefree life of\n50 boys between the ages of 8\nand 12 years. It was Cub week and\nthere were 40 from Trail, two from\nRossland and two from Castlegar\nhaving the time ot their life.\nIt was Indian day and the boys\nplayed \"Indian\".\nI missed the first hour of routine\nfrom 7:30 to 8:30, and happened\nalong when several of the lads on\n\"kitchen duty\" were cleaning up\nand the leaders were busying themselves about the main buildings.\nThose in charge were John Kitchin, camp chief, and Arthur Drake,\nassistant camp chief. They were\nassisted by James Street, Adam\nJohnson, Lloyd Groutage, H. Q.\nRogers, Gerald Burch and John\nWoods, Cubmasters.\nMr. Kitchin, who was sipping\ntea when I arrived, invited me to\njoin him. explaining that he was\ntaking the day off and had placed\nMr. Johnson in charge.\nKEEPING  CLEAN\nThe Cubs were all in the stream,\nperforming their ablutions, for\ninspection was to follow at 10 p.m.\nThey were particular too, for the\ntent showing the neatest display\nreceived a pennant and free canteen for the day. They washed each\nother's backs and had their Cub-\nmaster make sure their ears were\nclean.\nMr. Johnson blew the whistle at\n9:55, warning that inspection would\nbegin at the hour, and five minutes\nlater with Mr. Drake, as inspector\nfor the day we made a tour of\nthe tents. Mr. Kitchin was my\nescort and as we visited each pack\nhe pointed out to me various things\nthe boys had made.\n\"Don't they keep things nice\nand clean?\" he asked.\nHANDIWORK\nTho tents were in excellent order. There were baskets the boys\nhad woven in which to keep waste\npaper and other refuse. They had\nset up racks for their towels, with\nthe initials of the respective pack\nmemHers carved at even distances\nalong the rods. There were small\ntables and shelves for their toilet\narticles and rails on which to air\ntheir blankets. Everything was\nturned out of the tents and the\nwalls rolled up. The ground inside\nwas spick ana span.\nAs the Inspection party neared\neach tent, the pack leader lined\nup his Cubs in front of the lent\nand ordered them to give the Cub\nsalute.\n\"Attention! Salute! At Ease.\"\nNo. 2 tent, Fifth Trail Pack, won\nthe pennant, their first time during the week.\nINDIAN DRE8S\nIt was Indian day.\nA  towel tucked into  the front\n..Hi.    u..Ca   ,\/L   ..    I.U.,   .1111..,    ill.'. ,.11. .*\nchrome for war paint, cedar shavings for head feathers, wooden\nspears, bows and arrows, comprised the full Indian dress.\nWhile the boys were aided tn\nmaking spears, bows and arrows,\nthey had to provide the material.\nHewing out spears was hard work\nfor small hands, so the rough work\nwas done by the seniors. Walking\ninto a band of \"Indians\" I was\ngiven my share of work stringing\nbows and making arrows.\nTWA8 EVER THUS\nOccasionally a discussion would\nbreak out about jack-knives, whose\nhad more blades than  the other;\n\"HI there skinny!\" George Watson, second\nfrom the left might be saying as he and three\nother Cubs  enjoy themselves  in Beaver Creek.\nOn George's right is Allan Fort>es. In the centre\not the picture is Gerald Cooper, whilt standing\non tne raft is Roy Machorie.\nwhich had a different gadget than\nthe other.\nAt 12:30 lunch was served and\nI waB invited to join the tribes.\nWhile one little fellow about nine\nyears of age was serving me he\nasked; \"Are you enjoying yourself?\" I certainly was.\n\"That's hospitality for you,\" Mr.\nKitchin commented.\nAlthough Mr. Kitchen informed\nme that the Cubs were given a\nbig breakfast and supper and that\nthe lunch was \"light, I couldn't\nimagine how much those boys\ncould put away at the other two\nmeals.\n\"They ate  30  pounds  of  meat\n,.\u201e..,-..,5.... \"    T    ...*..   ...IA\nThe outdoor dining room was\nvacated for only a short time when\nthe \"Indians\" were buzzing around\nMr. Johnson asking him when the\ncanteen would open.\n10 CENT8  DAY\n\"A half hour ago they finished\na good meal, now they're ready to\neat some more,\" said Mr. Kitchin.\nThen.he explained to me that no\nboy was allowed to spend more\nthan 10 cents a day in the canteen.\nThat provided him with a bottle\nof pop and a chocolate bar or popcorn.\nUntil 2 p.m., when the entire\ncamp went swimming at the big\n\"The ol' swimmin' hole,\" where the Cubs enjoy the time of their lives.\npool, the Cubs were travelling\naround the camp like a lot of\nants. They moved in all directions.\nSome went fishing.\nThen the entire camp gathered\nat the open ground on which the\nflag pole stood and off they went.\nOver bridges made by Scouts and\ndown a wooded trail they walked.\nI accompanied them, for the dam\nwas not far from the road on which\nI caught the bus returning to Trail.\nI had only seen part of their day\nand I wondered from where came\nall the energy for the rest of it.\nThe routine order showed after\nthe swimming period; 4:30, make\nbeds, 5:30. sunper; 6:00, free time;\n8:00, camp fire; 9, cocoa and bis-\ns-siits: 9:15. turn in. and 9:30. lichts\nout.\nAs I sat on the roadside await\ning the bus, I could hear luii\ncries emanating from the awln\nming pool, cries of boyish delight\nI thought of meetings of th4\nBoy Scout Association executive\nwhen men wracked their bralnfl\nfor ways and means of raising!\nfunds to purchase the camp sitej\not long discussed plans for .ayinn\nit out. I thought of the voluntoaq\nwork by men who had once beer\nCubs or Scouts themselves; orj\nmen denied such privileges. I hlti\njust seen the result of their ef-\nforts.\nTheir intangible reward. The*\nboys' happiness, the atmosphere\nin which all good affections grow\nthe wholesome warmth necessarj\nto make the heart-blood circulate\nhealthily and freely, good healii\nand good cheer.\nThese five fierce looking Indian braves, won the pennant on the\nsixth day of camp for neatest and cleanest appearance. They occupied No. 2 tent, Fifth Trail Pack. From left to right they are\nBarry Fletcher, Jack Thompson, Douglas Cake, Gerald Cooper and\nReggie Garnet.\nCRESTON Social.\u2666.\nCRESTON, B.C.-Mr. and Mrs. H.\nA. C, Thicke and the latter's sister,\nMiss Marion Waugh, are visiting\nMrs. Thicke's parents at Rollo, ln\nthe B.C. Peace River sertion.\nEdward Clark and W. J. and\nPercy Truscott were amongst the\nmembers of Wild Rose Lodge, who\nwere at Nelson Monday for the reception accorded the Knights of\nPythias supreme chancellor by\nPythian Lodges in Kootenay-Boundary.\nLeslie Mclnnis lett Tuesday for\nWardner, where he will be employed for the Winter.\nAnnouncement is made of the appointment of Miss Donalda Walker\nI of Nelson, to replace Miss Kathleen\nBurgess on the Consolidated District\npublic school teaching staff. Miss\nWalker has taught at Boswell for\nthree years.\nMr. and Mrs. T. W. Bundy and\nfamily are on a motor trip, plan-\ntnlng to visit at Glacier National\nPark, and Calgary, and a stay at\nBanff and Lake Louise on the return trip.\nMr. and Mrs. R. H. Hansard are\n[     holidaying at Twin Bays. Constable\nAdams of Fernie is assisting with\nProvincial Police work in the ab-\n\u25a0ence of Mr. Hassard.\nMiss Nell Payne has returned to\nduty at Gait Hospital, Lethbridge,\nafter a three weeks' holiday with\nher parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. W.\nPayne.\nR. Millin of Wetaskimin, Alta., is\na guest of his son and daughter-\nin-law, Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Millin.\nMr. and Mrs. Charles O, Rodgers\nand F. C. Rodgers were weekend\nvisiters at Spokane.\nT. Crawford, Jr., was at Thompion Falls, Montana, on Saturday,\nwh'\u2014  he  was  best  man  at  the\nwedding of his friend, Luther Goodwin and Miss Baker ot the same\ntown.\nEdward and Harold Langston were\nat Bonners Ferry, Wednesday, to\nmeet Mrs. H. Langston, on her return from a holiday at Coast points.\nMrs. Stapleton was a guest of\nMrs. E. Martin, Sirdar.\nMrs. Hasting of Vancouver is a\nguest of her brother and sister-in-\nlaw, Mr. and Mrs. W. Liphardt.\nMrs. Wearmouth has been visiting her daughter, Mrs. Aaron Walde,\nat Cranbrook, and friends at Fernie.\nA marriage of interest here was\nsolemnized at Cranbrook Wednesday, when Miss Margarette Mina\nMoore ot Cranbrook was united in\nmarriage to Lewis Adair Stewart\nof' Creston. After a wedding trio\nthe young couple will make their\nhome in town.\nThomas Burke of Vulcan, Alta.,\nwas a weekend Creston visitor.\nMr. and Mrs. A. W. Millin and\nLewis, and the former's father, R.\nMillin of Wetaskiwin, Alta., are\nholidaying at Vancouver. A B. Ness\nis In charge of telephone service\nwork in Mr. Millin's absence.\nLeslie Dee of Castlegar is visiting\nCreston friends.\nMr. and Mrs. Luther Goodwin\nand Mrs. Goodwin, Sr., of Thompson Falls, Montana, visited here on\na motor trip to Bellevue, Alta. The\ntwo former were on their honeymoon, having been married the day\nprevious. They were guests at the\nhome of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Crawford.\nT. H. Wilson of Fernie was here\nat the weekend looking after his\norchard operations East of town.\nMrs. Wilson accompanied him.\nMiss K. Messinger is back on duty\niGRS\nFor Rura\\\nDomestic Use\nANYWHERE\nAvoid wute! Yoa can rook with tfu in your own\n'home no matter wbart you Uvct Real gaa. Ju;t\nlite fn the city \u2014\u25a0 no waiting, foD heat Intftotly.*\nBottled its Is uad the world ow by mora thto\na million pop!* living beyond tha city gu maioa.\nDONT JUST WISH FOR GAS     . HAVE m\nBOTTVED CAS\nVsVNCOUVEK    I I'M IT IO\nVICTORIA\nAuthorized Delivery Service Dealer\nKOOTENAY PLUMBING b HEATING CO., LTD.\n357 Baker Street Phont 666\nat the postoffice atter a month's\nvacation, part of which was spent\nat Calgary, Carmangay and other\nAlberta points.\nH. J. McDougall ot Fort Steele\nwas a visitor at Creston.\nDes Truscott returned Sunday\nfrom a holiday at Vancouver, Victoria and New Westminster.\nMrs. James. Jenkins and young\nson of Michel are guests of Mrs.\nJenkins' parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. H.\nWebster.\nMiss Evelyn Nastasi returned from\nTrail, where she had been holidaying.\nMr. and Mrs. Baker and daughters, Misses Phyllis and Helen Baker,\nof Thompson Falls, Montana, were\nguests of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Crawford.\nMiss Olive Brown of Coleman,\nAlta., is visiting at Christ Church\nrectory, a cuest of Miss Frances and\nMiss Mary Partington.\nMr. and Mrs. Charles Singleton\nof Lancashire, England, are guests\nof Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Stewart,\n(and may decide to make their\nfuture home in Canada at Creston.)\nMr. and Mrs. Clasky of Winnipeg,\nwho have been visiting their son-\nin-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.\nI. Asbell, have lett on a trip to\nChicago and Detroit.\nMrs. M. Talarico ot Trail is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. James\nNastasi.\nSid Legg, has left for his home\nat Calgary. He has been on the\nstaff of the Creston Review for\nthree months, visiting his brother\nH. K. Legg, Review editor.\nMiss Doris Hendy and Mis?\nPhyllis Lowther returned from a\nvisit at Spokane.\nMrs. W. S. McAlpine and son,\nAllan, are holidaying at Procter.\nE. J. Roberts of Spokane visited\nat Creston at the weekend, and\nwas accompanied by Miss Margaret\nRoberts, who has been on a vacation in that city for a month.\n\u25a0 Mr, and Mrs. Cuthbert Webber\nof Newark, N. J., are visiting the\nlatter's parents, Mr. anud Mis. J.\nH. Webster. From here they go to\nVancouver and Coast points.\nT. Wood was a weekend visitor\nat Spokane.\nMrs. Welch has returned to Mellon after visiting her parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. John Spratt. Her daughter, Dorothy, who has been here on\na visit, returned with her.\nMr. and Mrs. W. Goddard of\nCalgary, vliited Mrs. B. Calkin and\nW. Courtney.\nMrs. Leighton of Michel li visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs, G\nCurrie.\nMr. and Mrs. C. F. Raymond are\naway on a two weeks' trip to Tompkins and other points in Saskatchewan.\nParishioners of Christ Church,\nAnglican, and Sunday School pu-\nRESTRICTIONS TIGHTENED TO PREVENT\nILLEGAL ENTRY OF JEWS IN PALESTINE\nJERUSALEM, Aug. 17 (CP-Havas)\u2014A new drive to stamp out\nillegal Jewish immigration into the\nHoly Land by stiff prison terms\nand reinforcement of the coast\nguard was revealed today by the\nPalestine Government.\nThe official gazette published a\ndecree conferring upon the High\nCommissioner for Palestine, Sir\nHarold MacMichael, power to determine the sentences to be meted\nout to illegal immigrants, who will\nbe interned in special camps.\nHitherto the immigrants, mainly\nrefugees from central Europe, had\nbeen given only short jail terms',\nthe heavier penalties being imposed\non the crews of ships involved in\nbringing them to Palestine.\nThe Government intends to\nstrengthen its surveillance of ships\nin nearby waters by constructing 12\ncoastal stations at regular Intervals,\nalong a 200-mile strip.\nSix of these stations have been\ncompleted. Each will be occupied\nby 12 men, six Englishmen and six\nPalestinians, attached to the mounted or motored police. Powerful projectors will cover the coastal waters from these posts to detect any\nship bringing in refugees.\nSince the beginning of this year,\n6150 of the illegal immigrants are\nestimated to have tried to enter\nPalestine aboard 19 ships. Twelve\nhundred of them were sent back\non the ships which brought them.\nAbout 4750 were arrested but permitted to remain in the country.\nAt least 200 others got into the Holy\nLand without going through any\nlegal formalities. All these entries\nare charged against the quota.\npils, to a total of 60, were at Sirdar\nSaturday for the annual congregation picnic, which was much enjoyed by all attending. After the\nJuly-August vacation, the Sunday\nSchool will be resuming Uie first\nSunday  in   September.\nMrs. Frank Forester is visiting at\nMedicine Hat.\nJohn DeVoin is back on Provincial Police duty after a two weeks'\nvacation which he and Mrs. DeVoin\nand children spent at Vancouver,\nwith a stop at Coeur d'Alene, Ida.,\non the return trip.\nMiss Ann Pascuzzo of Sirdar was\na visitor.\nH. A. Powell was at Kootenay\nBay for the weekend, where Mrs.\nPowell and family have a cottage.\nVincent Cherbo of Sirdar was at\nCreston, Saturday, en route to Bonners Ferry, Ida., where his marriage\ntook place to Dorothy E. Lybarger\nof Meadow Lake, Sask, Justice of\nthe Peace N. W. Baker officiated.\nHUNGERFORD PREDICTS\nBUSINESS PROSPERITY\nIF NO WAR THIS YEAR\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 17 (CP)\u2014Business prosperity for Canada unless\na European war interferes was predicted by S. J. Hungerford, Chairman and President of the Canadian\nNational Railways and President\nof trans-Canada Air Lines, in an\ninterview here last night.\n\"Business in Canada will be very\ngood for the balance of the year.\nif war does not come in Europe,\"\nsaid Mr. Hungerford. \"Everything\ndepends on that.\"\nMr Hungerford arrived in Winnipeg from Montreal aboard a TCA\nplane ln the course of an inspection tour of the Western section of\nthe National Air route.\nii>fi1imiliiiiTiiiiirihiiii:iiiinfi\u00bbi.^Tiii   \t\nFORMER GLAMOR CIRL\nIS BANKRUPT\nLOS ANGELES Aug. 17 (AP) -\nTwo decades ago Mae March was a\nglamorous star of the silent movies,\nwith an expensive home, furs,\nclothes. She was a typical child of\nscreen-won luxury.\nToday she has only a $25 touring\ncar, 1931 model, and liabilities of\n$5,250. Her petition for voluntary\nbankruptcy \u25a0 told of inability to\nmeet physicians' and other bills.\nGrasshoppers Leave\nToronto as Suddenly\nas They Arrived\nTORONTO, Aug.' 17 (CP) '.-\nSwarms of grasshoppers that swept\nover several districts of Toronto\nlate yesterday disappeared today\nas suddenly as they appeared. The\ninsects were carried along by a\nstrong Weil wind from' ihe central\nsection of Ontario.\nEntomologists at the University\nof Toronto said, they could not explain the invasion, a new experience for the city.\nMost of the hoppers dropped\ndown in the West end of the city\nbut thousands found their way to\nthe downtown business districts of\nKing and Bay Streets. From the\nwaterfront to the Northern limits\nin the Western section of the city,\nthe insects swarmed over streets\nand buildings. Windows and doors\nhad to be kept closed. Walking on\n\u25a0idewalks  was difficult.\nW. R. Reek, Provincial Deputy\nMinister of Agriculture, said many\ngarden owners in the city complained the insects ruined their\nplants.    ......\n\u2022...;\u25a0.   ,, *<\u25a0_;,; i .,....\"\n, . \"\u25a0\nAdventurer Tells\nStory of Blood-\nDrinking Savages\nBy 8COTT HERSHEY\nNEW YORK, Aug. 17 (AP)-One\nwouldn't think a man who has wandered through African and South\nAmerican jungles alone for five\nyears would be afraid of anything\u2014\nbut Otto Reichfield is. He's afraid of\nthe busy New York streets and\nManhattan's towering buildings.\nThe 29-year-old Austrian who\ngave up his journalistic work in\nVienna five years ago to see the\nworld, exclaimed: \"These buildings!\nThey frighten me, and the streets\u2014\"\nReichfeld returned last month\nfrom South America where he penetrated a jungle fastness in Brazil to\nsolve the fate of Colonel P. H. Fawcett, British explorer who vanished\nthere.\nHe convinced himself Colonel\nFawcett was dead. Reichfield said\nnatives found Colonel Fawcetts\nrifle, that he saw it and he believes\nthe Briton, his son Jack Fawcett,\nand Roxor Rimell, who was with\nthem, were killed by cannibals.\nReichfeld is bubbling over with\nthe tales of hair-raising adventures,\nbut the tops seems to be his experience with Mood-drinking Africans whose chief saved him from\ndeath after Reichsfeld uttered a\nfew words in Arabic just as he was\njust about to be slain.\nThe young adventurer said he had\nstruggled exhausted into the village\nof Kaba in Belgian Congo. There\nwas no sign of life and Reichfeld\nbelieved the village deserted. He\nstumbled into one of the native\nhuts and fell asleep.\nBut the village was not deserted.\nThe entire tribe had gone fishing\nand they returned and found the\nintruder asleep. He was seized and\nbound to a tree. Reichfeld pleaded\nfor his life in all the eight languages\nhe speaks, but to no avail.\nThen in an inspiration he spoke\nthe Arabic words which mean:\n\"You den't understand? Allah is\nmerciful.\"\nThe tribal chieftain, Reichfeld related, understood the word \"Allah\"\nand thought the white visitor had\ncome from God. He was released,\npresented the chief with a pipe and\nsome tobacco and lived with the\ntribe for weeks.\nHe said members of that particular tribe drink the blood of\nwhite men believing it gives them\nextraordinary powers.\nDEATHS\nVANCOUVER-John Williams, 64\npurchasing agent for the Pacific\nGreat Eastern Railway since 1918\nand a former president of the British Columbia Purchasing Agents'\nAssociation.   ,   .\nKIMBERLEY Social...\nKIMBERLEY, B. C\u2014 Mr. and\nMrs. Alex Pearson and family have\nreturned from a vacation spent on\nthe lake near Nelson. Their eldest\ndaughter, Helen, remained to attend Senior C. G. I. T. Camp at\nKoolaree.\nMr. and Mrs. A. Ward returned\nfrom a holiday at the Coast.\nMiss Geva Bennett has left for\nthree weeks vacation at Saskatoon.\nMiss Jean Plant has left for her\nvacation.\nMr. and Mrs. Slade have left for\na' vacation at Vancouver. They\nwere accompanied by Mrs. Slade's\nsister, Miss Lilian Doran of Lethbridge who has been visiting here.\nMrs. Owen, who has undergone\nan operation for appendicitis in\nthe McDougall Hospital is improving steadily.\nMr. and Mrs. Wilfred Clark fro\u00abl\nnear North Bend, visited Miss Edithl\nClark.\nMrs. Harry Logan Is vacationing]\nat Nelson.\nMrs.' M. Benlnatl and daughtefl\nleft la:', week for two weeks at]\nCoeur d'Alene.\nMr. arid Mrs. Jack Shore returned from two weeks at Vancouver.\nMr. and Mrs. Cecil Aikman and\ndaughter have left for a holiday\nat Rosen Lake.\nMrs. T. McCormick and Raymond\nare holidaying at St. Mary's Lake.\nMrs. O. Bozzer and Mrs. Allan\nRichards are camping at Wast\nLake.\nMr. and Mrs. H. G. Smith of Vancouver are visiting their son, D. B.\nSmith of Chapman Camp.\nRobber Killed\nin Gun Battle\nSPOKANE, Wash, Aug. 17 (AP)\n\u2014A robber was killed and two\nyoung police officers wounded today in a gun battle after a series\nof robberies in the early morning\nhours.\nThe slain man, police said, was\nRobert Atkins, about 23, whose address was not known.\nHoward Lyman, 23, who was captured in the gun fight, was being\nheld at city jail on a robery charge.\nThe wounded policemen, neither\ncritically hurt and both new men\non the force, were Don Tesdahl, jr.,\n26, and Robert Johnson, 29.\nFour Out of Seven\nDisapprove Britain\nPalestine Policy\nGENEVA, Aug. 17 (AP). \u2014 Th*\nLeague of Nations Mandates Commission published a report to Hats\nLeague Council today showing fowj\nmembers of seven definitely disap\u00bbj\nprove Britain's plan for an ind*-;\npendent State in Palestine.\nThe other .three rnembers of th\u00bb\nCommission found that \"existl\ncircumstances\" justified the Brit\nGovernment's May 17 white p\u00bbv_\nlimiting Jewish immigration into\nthe Holy Land\nWe will move your furniture and belongings quickly and safely, anywhere in\nthe city.\nPHONE 33\nWest Transfer Co.\nESTABLISHED 1899\n loUp\nm AMAZED AS\nAUSSIES RIDDLE\nDOUBLES STARS\nBROOKIim,    Hill.,   Aug.    17\nAP)- The Auitrallan Davii Cup\nOKM iet off all of thtir batteries\nn the National Doubles tennii\nluartor-finali at Longwood today\nind riddled two fine teams while\nhell-shocking an amazed gallery\nif 4000,\nOnly  Walter   Pate,   non-playing\n\" plain ot the U.S. Davit cup team,\ned unimpreued at Adrian\nand Jack Bromwich, the\nilian acei, overwhelmed Gene\n.fako tnd Jack Tldball of Lot An-\nleles, 6-2, 6-1, 6-2, tnd Harry Hop-\nnan and Jack Crawford outbattled\nCharles Hire of England, and Lad-\nslaw Hecht, former Ctechoslovak-\nm star, 6-3, 3-6, 6-3, 4-6, 6-4.\nMako, a winner here lust year\nvith Don Budge and assured of a\nDavis cup doublei assignment, had\nHon 10 of his 12 tournament starts\nvith Tidball thli year, the best\n'ecord ef any American team.\nHe and Tldball were expected\n10 make lt hot for the Australian\nices, but they were toyed with as\n.hey played their best.\nMalm's weak tervlce, only flaw\nn hli doubles gime, was cracked\nfive out ot ilx timet by the Australians, who totalled but 35 errors\nn the 23 games. *\nThe Australians made 64 placements and limited the hard-hitting\nMako and Tldball to 22 earned\npolnti.\nCrawford and Hopman will op-\nSiie the top-ieeded Frankie Parker\nBevtrly Hills, Calif., and Don\neNcill of Oklahoma City totnor-\nrow, and the other Australians will\ntngage Bobby Riggs and Elwood\nCooke, the Wimbledon champions,\nSiturday for finalists berths.\nEox Warm Up for\nIhowdown Series\nBeating Detroit\nDonald Knocked Out\n'of Box, but Yanks\nSqueeze Win\n(By Tht Cinidlan Press)\nChlctgo White Sox prepared for\ntheir third place American League\nIhowdown' aeries with Cleveland by\nnoting out Detroit yeiterday 2-1.\nThe Sox collected only four hits\notf Freddie Hutchinson and Dizzy\nTtout today, but one ol them, a\ntriple by Luke Appling, came in\nthe fourth along with batt on balls,\ntn Infield out and an error to produce two runi.\nNew York Yankeei squeezed out\n\u2022 94 10-lnnlng victory over Washington Senaton. Atley Donald, the\nMart beit rookie pitcher, was\noelted ont of the box for the fourth\nC0BehindVegiltm\u00b0cdge pitching by\nLefty Grove, Boston Red Sox defeated Athletic!  7-1.\nLittle Cet Laabs wn St. Louis\nBrowns' hero, doubling George\nMcQuinn home in the 10th for a\n6-5 victory over Cleveland In-\ndlini.\nWorking behind the five-hit\npitching of Hugh Caiey, the Dodgen trounced New York. Gianta 5-1.\nThe rookie righthander lost a ihutout in the ilxth when Mel Ott hit\nbis 24th homer of the season.\nI The red.hot Red Birds of St.\nlouis handed Pittsburgh its ninth\nconsecutive baseball defeat 4-2. It\nwaa the fourth straight National\nLeague win for St. Louis and tho\n16th ln the last 18.\nFor the second time this week,\ntte Cincinnati Reds came from behind to win a ball game in the old\nMerriwell manner, downing the Chicago Cubi 7-6 in the 10th inning\ntiter tpottlng them a four-run lead\nIt the star. Rookie Dick West pinch\nJwigled Eddie Joost in with the\nwinning run.\nC. S. Kilgoro Wins\nJames Boa Trophy\nI CONNAUGHT RIFLE RANGES,\niduth March, Ont., Aug. 17 (CP)-\ni&. S. Kllgore of Toronto won the\nJames Boa Service Revolver Cham-\nSlonshlp at the Dominion of Cana-\ni Rifle Association annual meet,\nit wai announced today. He icored\n140 pointi. Lt. S. Johnson, Calgary,\nhad 320.\nThe Jamei Boa Revolver team\ntrophy went to a Royal Canadian\nMounted Police team of Sgt. O'Connell, Cpl. W. V. C. Chisholm Han-\nley, Saik., and Const. J. H. Blaii of\nMontreal. The team icored 936.\nLos Angeles Sells\nStars to Chicago\nLOS ANGELES, Aug, 17 (CP)-\nThc Loi Angeles Baseball Club announced today the sale of two stars,\nCatcher Bob Collins and Pitcher\nJulio Bonettl, to Chicago Cubs.\nCash and playen were Involved.\n\u25a0\u00bb\u25a0*\u25a0\nBoxla mH-miwarts\nof Rossland\nGordon Ejart: Height 5 feat, 7\nInchei, weight 145 poundi,\n\"Grandpop\"   Ezart   claims   he\nhai  been  playing  lacrosse  In\nRossland since 1880 but a better\nguest il ilnce 1935.\nGordon can be depended upon\nto pace with the best ot 'em on\nthe boxla floor, and has fins\ncheering at his football performances too. Ezart Is -a member\nof the Rossland football team\nplaying in the West Kootenay\nLeigue  playoffs.\n\"Dutch\" Couture: Height 6 feet\n5 inches, weight 140 poundi\n\"Dutch\" U a local product, and\nhu figured in boxla here since\nlta Inception. He his alio done\nhli bit in hockey at Roisland,\nparticularly as a junior.\nSPICE IN SPORT\nBy ALAN'RANDAL\nNEW YORK, Aug. 17 (CP)~\nThe consensus among students ol\nthe blood-letting business is that\nif Henry Armstrong's hands don't\ncrack he will whip the daylights\nout of Lou Ambers next Tuesday.-',-;'*, BOt,tofitrftwlse^ they\nclaim that if the little colored\nchampion'! brittle hands fall to\nstand the gaff, Lou will regain\nhis lightweight crown. . ..\nAt any rate, should Larruping\nLulgl win, he would be the first\nformer champion to regain the\nlightweight crown from the man\nwho took lt from him. ... A\ntough order. . . . Against thtt is\nthe fact nobody, hai licked Luigi\ntwice in a row\u2014he learns too\nmuch about a fellow the first\ntime out. . . . And of all the\nfights Mike Jacobs has carded\nfor the last summer season, the\nAmbers-Armstrong thing shapes\nup as the most fight for the least\nmoney. . . .\nOscar Vltt of Cleveland Indians\nii doubling as third base coach\nand manager for his last season.\n... Next year will find him staying in the dugout where he\nfigures he'll be more valuable.\n... At 36, Charlie Gehringer\nnears the end of the baseball trail\nwith Detroit Tigers and you can\nlook for Young Ben McCoy to\nsucceed him.... Gehringer, rated\nas one of the best aecond basemen\nof all time, is helping McCoy\nprep for the job. . . .\nThe Yankees, it seems, can always count on at least one run\nper game when Joe DIMaggio is\nin the lineup. ... In his 500 big\nleague contests he has driven in\n510 tallies.\n\u2014-. NILION DAILY NIWI, NILION,.I. 0\u201e FRIDAY MORNINO, AUO. 11. 1W \u25a0\nBerg Suspended\nNew Jersey Ring\nTRENTON, N. J, Aug. 17 (AF)-\nJackle (Kid) Berg, veteran English\nwelterweight, was suspended indefinitely today from New Jersey\nrings by Athletic Commissioner\nAbe Greene.\nBerg was scheduled to fight Lou\nFortuna of Philadelphia in Trenton tonight.\nGreene said he was notified by\nBerg's managers that Berg, \"without notice to them, had undergone\nan operation for removal of scar\ntissue around the eyes and would\n1 be unavailable\" for tonight's fight.\nJhjL Wtfsltl Qoto,\nThis advertisement Is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nLeague-Leaders\nAre Here lor\nBoxla Tonight\nSheep   Creek   Faces\nOff With the\nJuniors\nBOXLA STANDINGS\nW    L    F    A    Pet\nSheep Creek .. B    0   1(3   101 1.000\nNelson       S    3    99    97   .500\nSalmo     0    8    93   157   .000\nThe last game of the Salmo Valley-Nelson Boxla League is on tap\nin Nelson tonight when the Junion\nentertain the league-leading Sheep\nCreek Bombers who clinched the\nleadenhip long ago. In fact none of\nthe teams standings can be changed\nby the end of tbe itaaon. Nelson\nplays one mort game in league play,\nthat at Salmo a week hence. Between now and then Sheep Creek\nand Salmo play Wedneiday night\nIn the Salmo Rink.\nAfter twice coming clote lo taking the Bombers, who are really\ndynamiting everything In their path,\nthe Nelson crew, coached by Jock\nWalmsley, Is confident of a victory\nby way of warming up for the\nplayoffs.\nThe Nelson team will be composed of Tommy Cookion, goal;\nGerry Roil, Horace Lapointe and\nEverett Kuhn, defence; Leo McKinnon and Doug BUU, rovtn;\nUlen trice and Karuisi luayu, Cess-\ntrei; Albert Arnott, Frank Rau-\nckett, Emit Wilion and Elmer Gelinai, Ernie DeJong, Jim Brown tnd\nCecil Maloney, wings.\nMayo will be playing his flnt\ngame in hit new ctpaclty at Captain. The reit of the team recently\nelected him to the poit\nTwo Snipers Lead\nin Ontario Shoot\nSOUTH MARCH, Ont, Aug. 17\n(CP)-Sgt. N. L. Beckett, Hamilton,\nOnt., shot, and Pte. E. Nicholson,\nmarksman from Esquimau. B. C,\ntoday led 150 wipers Into the flnti\nstage of the Governor General Medal Match, feature event of the\nDominion of Canada Rifle Asioci-\nation annual meeting,\nSgt. Beckett and Pte. Nicholson,\nposted scores of 103, two ihort of\npossible, to lead the field of some\n300 CanadUn veterani tnd young\nmirksmen In the qualifying stage.\nThe 150 inlperi who qualified will\nshoot in the final stage Saturday,\nbringing the week-long meet to t\nclose. . , ,\nSgt. Beckett posted two possibles\nof 35 at the 200 and 600 yard rangei\nand a 33 at the 500 yardi distance.\nPte. Nicholson fired two possibles\nat the 200 and 500' yard distances\nand a 33 .at the 600 yard range.\nSgt. Beckett's possible at the longer range gave him first place over*\nthe British Columbia ihot.\nTwo women ihoti, Mn. Jean\nDunbar Rayment of Victoria and\nMrs. J. Sangster of Winnipeg qualified today.\nBaseball Scores\nAMERICAN: r H t\nDetroit       J  5  i\nChicago      \u201eIA\u00b0\nHutchinson, Trout and Tebbetts;\nKnott, Lee and Tresh.\nWashington     8 18   1\nNew York        \u00bb  \u00bb   \u00bb\nKrakaukas, Appleton and Gulli-\nani; Donald, Hadley, Murphy and\nDickey, Rosar.\nBoston         7\u00bb   \u00bb\nPhiladelphia        \u25a0 _ 1 JO   \u00bb\nGrove and Desauteli; Reninger\nDean and Hayes.\nCleveland       5 .?  i\nSt. LouU     ....\u2022\u2022   \u00ab 10  1\nEliemtat,  Hudlin  and  Hemsley;\nMills. Trotter, Whitehead and Har-\nihany, Glenn,\nNATIONAL:\nNew York    1   5   0\nBrooklyn    .\u2022\u25a0\u25a0   \u00bb  8  0\nGumbert, Brown, Coffman and\nDanning; Casey and Phelpi.\nSt. Louis       J  8   1\nPittsburgh        J  \u2022   I\nDavis and Padgett; M. Brown,\nSewell and Mueller.\nOhlcago       J \u00ab  ?\nCincinnati          7 17   1\nPage, Root, J. Russell and Mancuso, Garbark; Grlisom, Thompson,\nDavis,   Moore   and   Lombardl,\nHenhberger.\nINTERNATIONAL:\nJersey City 0, 0, Toronto 1,3.\n.Baltimore 6, Montreal 9.\nNewark 5, Rocheiter 7.\nSyracuse 4, Buffalo 1.\nAMERICAN ASSOCIATION:\nSt. Paul 0, Indianapolis 5.\nMilwaukee 8, Columbua 1.\nKansas City 6, 3, Toledo 1,1.   \u2022\nMinneapolis 3, Louisville 0,\nAmerican Stars\nin Semi-Finals\nBROOKLINE, Matt., Aug.. 17\n(AP)-Alice Marble of Beverley\nHllli, Cal., and Mn. Sarah Palfrey\nFabyan of Brookline, women'i national doublet tennii champion!\nfor the pait two yeart, gained the\nlemi-final round of the National\nWomen's Double! Tournament at\nthe Longwood Cricket Club today\nby overwhelming two British\nWightman cup pUyen, Betty Nuthall and Nina Brown. M   8-8.\nBaer Fight Sept. 18\nLUBBOCK, Texai, Aug. 17 (AF)\n\u2014Date of the 10-round heavyweight scrap between Max Baer,\nformer world'i heavyweight\nchampion and Lubbock'! Babe\nRitchie, hn been chinged from\nSept 15 to Monday night, Sept.\n18.\nSCOTTISH CLUBS MAY FIND AWAY\nFROM HOME GAMES HARD SLEDDING\nGLASGOW, Aut. 17 (CP Cable)\n-Scottish football goes Into iti\nsecond week Saturday with an interesting round of mttchei. Thrilling contests a wetk ago marked\ntha opening ot the nine-months\ncompilgn whtn tht success ot\nCowdenbeith (nd Allot, newly promoted clubi, proved the ouUttnd-\ning feiturt.\nThe clubi battle on foreign loll\nit the weekend tnd hird gamei are\nlikely. Cowdenbeath goei to Ftlklrk tnd will be forced to pity at\ntop form to gtt at much as a point.\nIn their Inaugural gime Falkirk's\nsharpshooters trounced Clyde 8-4\non iht Scottiih cujiholders' own\nground. Alloa may find the going\nillghtly euler at Arbroath.\nFreih from a 5-1 victory over St.\nMirren, the champion Rangen are\nexpected to makt tt two straight it\nAyr, defeited 5-0 by Albion Roven ln their Initial match.\nCeltic Ptrk U expected to houie\na capacity crowd for Celtic'! fint\nhome   appearance   Hearts,   Edin\nburgh's premier eleven, supply the\nopposition and will need to tighten\nIU defence which faltered ln the\ndrawn gamt with Partick Thistle\nat Tynecaitlt Ptrk Ult Saturdiy,\nThe CelU went under at Aberdeen.\nAberdeen and Queen of tht South,\neach credited with two points, are\naway from homt. The Dons oppose Motherwell it Fir Park and\nQueen of tht South pUy St. Mirren\nat PaUley. In other mttchei Clyde\nclashes with Hibernian! tt Salter\nRoad, Albion Roven art due at\nPartick and St. Johnttone and\nThird Lanark entertain Kilmarnock\nand Himllton Academicals respectively.\nSecond diviiion gamei a week\nago uw Queen's Pirk, relegated\nfrom the major lugue, successful\nagalnit Airdrleonians tnd the\nAmateun may post their second\nvictory at Dunfermline. Raith Roven who accompanied the QUi-\ngow iquad Into Junior company are\nat home to Brechin City.\nAces Win Again\nIn Softball al\nIhe Golden City\nROSSLAND, B. C, Aug. 17-Dla-\nAcei and Frederlckion'i pky-\ned a pitched battle at tht Ball Park\nThu*\"\"''!}' ri\"ht \"*it** the *c*s coir*\ning through on top ot an 11-8 score\nto register their second victory in\nthe Rouland Intra-Clty League.\nThey won previouily from the\nEsquires.\nAl Wood for Frederlckion'i copped high run honon with three runs\nto hU credit.\nLlneupi were:\nAces\u2014Laface 2b, Lavaretto rf,\nJackson cf, Lefevrt 3b, Sadao ss,\nMaraico lb, Densky cf, Damour If,\nand Lloyd p.\nFrederlckion'i\u2014Lipsett ss, Schley\nrf, Wood lb, McConnell 3b, Johnion cf, Woodward it, McNiven \u2022!,\nNewton 2b, Cowlind p, Noule If.\nScort by innings:\nAcei       300 000 035\u201411\nFrederlckion'i    000 002 204\u2014 8\nUmpirei were Ruity Wynn, plttc;\nLindsay Conroy, bases.\nOrillia Climbs\nAhead of Tigers\nin Eastern Boxla\nORILLIA, Ont, Aug. 17 (CP).-\nOrillla Terriers climbed into lecond plice ahead of Hamilton Tigen\nIn the Senior Ontario Amateur La-\ncroue Auoclation itanding here tonight by trouncing the Tigen 17-10.\nBALL STANDINGS\nAMERICAN\nW\nt,\nPet\nBhd.\nNew York .\n    7\u00ab\n33\n.097\nBoiton   \t\n    87\n39\n.032\nm\n    80\n50\n.545\nm\nCleveland   .\n    57\n51\n.528\nMVt\nDetroit     ...\n    57\n54\n.514\n20\nWashington\nPhiladelphia\n    48\n6S\n.432\n29\n....   38\n71\n.340\n33\nSt. Louis   .\n    32\n74\n.302\n*2Vt\nvlATIONAL\nCincinnati\n    88\n39\nm\n\u2014\nSt. LouU   .\n    82\n44\nMl\nfi\nChicago    ...\nNew York .\n    60\nBI\n.541\n11\n    54\n52\n.509\n14,\nBrooklyn\n    53\n53\n.500\n15,\nPitUburgh\n    49\n55\n.471\nIB\nBoston    .....\n    48\nno\n.434\n22\nPhiladelphia\n....   32\n71\n.311\n34'4\nWonderful Array of Prizes Lined\nUp for Swimming Events: Regatta\nMen'i, women'i boy'i, tnd girl'i\niwimming events on a scale designed to help put the regatta on\nthe map in a big wty ire on ichedule for the NeUon Kinsman Club\nfirst annual regatta and water carnival Auguit 23.\nClub offlclaU itated Thursday\nthey had a wonderful array of prizes\nlined up, and looked for a huge\nentry. The evenU will take place\nbetween the City Wharf and the\nRowing Club float.\nTheie evenU, aa flashy as they\nwill be for conteaUnU and specta\ntors alike, will take a back seat,\nfor right up In the limelight aro\nmotorboat racei, water skiing, rowing races, surf board riding and so\non. Premier event of the motorboat\nraces, of coune, il the 20-mile Western Canada championship battle\nbetween hydropUnes of Gordon\nFinch ot Kelowna, Fred Lindsay of\nSpokane, and the V-bottom dU-\nplacement boat, Lady-Bird, of L.\nF. Gilbert of NeUon.\n\"Never a dull moment\" U the\nway the Klnimen describe their\nregatta.\nSERIAL STORY . . .\nWINGS OF YOUTH\n(Continued From Page Four)\nmeaning them, could it hurt a man\nio terribly to find out about HT\"\nBob wai remembering the night\nhe had seen Sarah Anne in the alcove of the lodge, the missive! In\nher hand. He wu thinking of the\ncurloua ihock he hid felt. That\nteme of faith going out So he\nsaid: \"Yes, it could, for the moment, Corrinne. But any lort of a\nman would come to hU senses and\nrealize It'i none of his business. We\nall do silly things. Why expect perfection?\"\n\"But doesn't love have a right to\ndemand it?\" She leaned forward\nagain, her large eyu Marching his.\n\"No right, my child, but lt thinks\nit hai. Love's not reasonable. You\nlee\u2014\" he drew hU browi together,\nthoughtfully, then smiled and his\nface lighted up. \"It's thU way, take\nit from Dorothy Dlx'i favorite\nnephew! A smart woman tries to\nkeep a man from knowing she's\nhad a foolish Impulse or two. Some\nwomen get away with murder.\nOther! get caught the flnt offense'\n\"Like me,\" very quietly.\nWhen he didn't aniwer, ihe went\non: \"And yet I don't tee how Bob\nRansom could have known about\nthoie few letter! I wrote. Sarah\nAnne got them out of the ufe\u2014I\ntold her how and ihe didn't have\nany trouble\u2014 and ihe destroyed\nthem without anyope citchlng on.\nBut there's nothing\u2014nothing elte\nthat could make that silly nutmeg\nact like thi!.\"\nCorrinne wu so Intereited In\nher own speculations ihe did not\nsee the amazement that came Into\nRobert Kennedy'! eyei, or the deep\nrelief thtt followed. When he ipoke\nhe held hU voice under control,\nvYou mean you wrote tome Ut-\nte'rt and Sarah Anne rescued them\nfor you?\"\n\"Yes, you graip thing! fait, my\nbright young mtn.\" Now Corrinne\nglanced at him curiously.\nStrah.Anne had not written the\nletters. What a colloual fool ht had\nbeen! She had kept her faith.wtth\nCorrinne. Not by a wor<V had ihe\nbetrayed her sister. What a wife\nihe would makei He muit get to a\ntelephone ln a hurry and talk to\nher.\nIn hU ludden lense of exultation\nhe ipoke lmpuUlvely to Corrinne.\n\"\"\u2022tr here, youngster, your Bob ii\nat ichool not far from New York,\nand I'm going in that direction\nnow. Ill give the Ud a ring. We'll\nfind out what'i up. I bet you another tteak that Its nothing.'\nThere wu rapture in the glance\nshe gave him. \"Robert, you tre\nSanta \"ltui and St. Valentine and\nBank,Night and the spring hop all\nin one. In other wordi you re topi.\"\nAlone, Robert Kennedy hurried\nto a telephone. But he could not\nget Sarah Anne, She and Judith\nwere not at any of the hoteli in the\ntown where Corrinne uid they\nwere. He had the operator make\nthe circuit. Apparently they had\ngone on to their next destination\nand he had no idea where that was.\ns\\nyway, this call might be rather\ndumb. Sarah Anne had turned all\noffers of friendship aside. What\nwould ihe want with something\ndeeper? Because he had found\nthat ihe had never stooped would\nmean nothing to her. And the hated\nhitir for hU lack of faith.\nShe had cared a little thet night\nin the churchyard. He knew that,\nand she'd care again. He'd see to\nit!\nBut first he had work'to do, back\nin New York. Thus, it happened\nthat it wu several days later that\nhe found time to uk the younger\nRobert to meet him at the Cornell\nclub for lunch one noon. They\nbrought up the subject of Corrinne.\nHe merely laid: \"That'i ended.\nWashed up for all time. I've a date\ntonight with a girl in \"Sparkle,\nSparkle, Sparkle,' a new ihow that\nis rocking the town. Seen it?\"'\n\"Don't get me wrong. That'i your\nbuslneu. But our fraternity happen! to be the ume, and as one\nold brother to another, what in the\ndickens ii it all about?\"\nThe younger boy's face was ler-\nioui and composed. \"I got taken\nin.That'i all\u2014by a minister'! pretty blue-eyed daughter. Thii Un't\npublic information\u2014so you haven't\nheard it, but ihe took my father\nfor a five-thousand-dollar ride.\"\n'I don't believe it,\" the older Bob\nuld instantly.\n\"Neither did I, until dad showed\nme the check made out to her father and nicely ilgned. Oh, they're\niltck'. Nothing could be proved\nagainit her that way. The old man\ncould uy he ipent the money for\nhymntli or pluih-llned offering\nplatei. So that'i that.\"\nThe man acron the table stared\nback incredulouily. \"You mean you\nbelieve that stuff?\"\n'Didn't I ett the check?\"\nThat'i itill not proofl\"\n\"You'd take her word agalnit my\nfathers?\" Bob Raniom'i eyu gllt-\nteted angrily. \"You mean you dare\nto uy dad's trying to put lomething over on me?\"\n\"Pm not saying anything, but I\nthink you're not showing much\nfaith.\" He itopped ihort. He wai\nremembering that he hadn't either.\nBut he couldn't tell the boy that,\nYet his own Uck of trult ih Sarah\nAnne had been bated on Juit iuch\ncircumstantial evidence.\n\"Oh, 111 own up. I loved Corrinne, but I cm get over it,\" Bob\nRamom wu laying. \"Meantime,\nPm going out tonight and get\ndrunk, blotto, with that girl from\n'Sparkle, Sparkle, Sparkle.' I've\nnever drank before\u2014but, oh, what\na woman can do to your morals!\"\nTo Be Continued\nBowlers of Three\nCities Will Play\nfor Title Trophy\nKaslo,  Trail,   Nelson\n\u2022 Lawn.Bowlers to\nMeet, Nelson\nNeUon C. P. R. Lawn Bowling\nClub memben will be out to defend the Kootenay Brewerlu Trophy ln a tri-clty competition at Nelton Auguit 27. Trail and Kulo\nbowlen will provide tht competition, Kulo entering pUy for the\nfint time thli year.\nNeUon took the trophy lut yur.\nThe two bett rlnkt from etch club\nwill compete.\nIn local competition doublet play\nfor the E. Y. Brake Memorial Cup\nli near an end, and singles are wall\non their way.\nThe Argyle Cup will be drawn for\nnext week, with ladles coming into\ncompetition.\nFull rlnki of four bowlen will\nplay.\nVlilton are welcome at the greens,\nclub officials itate.\nRossland Plays\nBoxla In Trail\nTonight, League\nBOXLA STANDINQS\nW    L    F    A PCt\nNelion       16    7  321   274 .890\nTrail        9   13   288   279 .409\nRouland   ...    4    9   134   191 .300\nTwice io far this season tht Rossland Redmen have mapped long\nwinning itreakt of the Weit Kootenay Boxla League-leading NeUon\nMaple Leafi. Tonight the Golden\nCity Braves have an opportunity\nto itretch their current winning\nstreak to two itralght, something\nthey haven't been able to do all\nyear.\nTonight they take on the Trail\nGolden Bean down in the Columbia River metropolis. It ii expected\nthat perhapi one or two of their\ncrippled players will be ready for\ntonight but they'll have a Job ousting iome of theie juniors who led\nthe way to Wednuday'i trouncing\not the Leafi.\nSo far thla season the Redmen\nhave won two out ot six starts with\nthe Bean. A win tonight and then\nanother one over the Leafi in Nelion Monday will put Roisland up in\nlecond place, where they haven't\nbeen yet\nIt is reported that Ron Forreit\nwill be bacir after a game's absence\nowing to a shoulder injury. Dick\nBurgess will replace Johnny Gidinski in goal, and seeing him between the pipes won't be a new experience for Trail iport fam. He\nplayed goal for the Trail Blazers\nin hockey last winter.\nThe Redmen will be: Burgess,\ngoal; Jack Neal, Orald Neil, Sid\nSimcock and Ernie Carkner, defence; Ross Forreit and Ralph\nScott, roven; Fred Ostrlkoff and\nPaddy Dougan centres; Jack Ross,\nMike Dellch, Dave ForgeniOn, Joe\nLaface, Ralph Saundry and John\nDensky, wines.\nIt will be young Scott'i fourth\nsenior game of the five allowed\nhim. Densky who la another Junior,\nis to play hii fint.\nFor the Bears an old favorite\nwill be back, according to recent\nrumors. Marcus Smith, easy-going\nand colorful centreman, hai returned to the Smelter City after spending most of the leaion coaching the\nVernon Klnimen, entranU in the\nOkanagan Boxla League.\nCOUNTTOHCKET\nLONDON, Aug. 17 (CP Ctble).-\nSuuex defeated Leicestershire by\nan innlngi and 108 runi ln in Engliih County Cricket match concluded today. The two-day conteit between the touring Weit Indlu\neleven and WlUshlre, e minor county, ended In a draw.\nClose-of-ptay scores ln matches\nstarted Wednesday follow:\nSussex 501 for five wickeU, declared; Leicestershire 114 and 281.\nDerbyshire 193 and 146; Gloucei-\ntershlre 81 and 247 for leven wicketi.\nGlamorgan 176 and 72 for two\nwickeU; Lancashire 284.\nHampshire 296; Nottlnghamihlre\n465 for nine wlcketi.\nSurrey 414; Somerset 147 and 185\ntor five wlcketa\nKent 492; Worcestenhlre 142 and\n186 for three.\nYorkihlre 403 and 171 for four,\ndeclared; Warwlckihlre 158 and 113\nfor two.\nMiddlesex 215 and 183; Essex 196\nand 137 for five.\nWut Indiei 270 and 286 for five;\nWiltshire 333 for seven declared.\nAnnual Meeting of\nA. A. U. in November\nEDMONTON, Aug. 17 (CP) -\nFifty-second annual meeting of the\nAmateur Athletic Union of Canada\nwill be held in Hamilton, Ont,\nTuesday and Wednuday, Nov. 28\nand 29, It wu announced tonight\nby John Leslie, Secretary.\nDetails ot the convention have\nyet to be arranged but tha date\nwu tet to permit branches to arrange their annual meeting! which\nmust be held one month previous to\nthe annual meeting of the national\nbody, tald Mr. Leslie. , .\nSCULLER DIES      ,\nLONDON, Aug. 17 (CP Ctble). -\nEric Wlngate, well known English\niculler who paired with W. D. Bid-\nderly to win the Silver GobleU for\nthe Vista Racing Club at the 1937\nRoyal Henley Regatta, died here to-\nstay following an operation.\nMil NINI\nExperts Find Course Tougher Than\nExpected as Canadian Golf Open\nGels Under Way; Only k Break Par\nBy SYDNEY  GRU80N\nSAINT JOHN, N. B.. Aug. 17 (CP)\nThe men who laughed at Riverside's\nyawning bunkers and thick woods,\nhad the Uugh thrown right beck at\nthem today u ptr yielded only four\ntimei ln the tint round of tht\nCanadian open golf championship\nand Harold (Jug) McSpaden, a man\nwho made no predictions, took t\ntwo-stroke lead of 67 on ihe field\nof 82.\nNa fewer than teven had 74s and\nback ot this group at 79 came two\nof the leading amateun, Rou (Sandy) Somerville of London, Ont., and\nHenry Martell of Edmonton, final-\nUt ln the Cantdian amateur and\nrecent winner of the Ontario open.\nSomerville and Martell, both undtr\n70 In practice, were far off their\ngamu. Sandy started into trouble\non the tecond when he drove Into\na rock pile, and finished with lix,\nThe general impression among tht\ntop-flight professionals tfter I tew\npractice roundi had been that Rlvenlde would be torn apart. Yet\nMcSpaden, three-times Muuchu-\nsetU open champion from Winchester, Mail., Arthur Hulbert of Toronto, Ralph Guldahl of Midison, N.J.,\nand Ted Bishop, Boiton amiteur,\nwere the only ones to break Riverside's exacting 70,\nMcSpaden, on a short coune\nwhere his grett Iron pUy U a\nstrong factor, put together a II and\n35 for 67 that left him two itrokei\nahead of Guldahl, the tournament's\nleading favorite who potted a 33\non the Uit nine; Hulbert, one of\nCanada'i leading pros for several\nyean, and BUhop an unknown who\nstartled the gallery with hU line\nround.\nThe wind blew up in the afternoon and wat u much ta bUme u\ntnythlng for the generally high\nicons. Nicely In fifth place, and\ntecond amateur, Phil Fariey of\nToronto ihot two 35s and had Stan\nHome of Montreal and Vic Ghezzi,\nof Deal, N. J, at hU heeli with 71s.\n,Ghetii, who itarted with Guldahl u the choice for the $1000\ntint priie, ihot hU worst round of\nthe week with 36-35\u201471. He hid\nbeen ln the 60'i consUtently ln\npractice.\nBunched with 72s wu a group of\nfive professionals and one amateur,\nJerry GItnferante of Calais, Me.\nThe pros were Jimmy Rlmmer of\nHalifax, leading Merltlmer with\n39-33, E. J. (Dutch) Harrison of\nLittle Rock, Ark., Herman Barron\nof White Plains, N. Y\u201e and Gordon\nBrydson and Bobby Bums of Toronto.\nDick Borthwick of Toronto and\nJules Huot of Quebec had illustrious\ncompany with 73i. Long-hitting\nJimmie Thomson of Shawnee-On-\nDelaware, Pa., and Horton Smith\nof Oak Park. HI, flnlihed that way\ntoo.     '\nRay Getliffe, London, Ont, amateur who fired a two-under 38 coming home, Bobby Gray ot Toronto,\nLeo Diegel of Phllmont, Pa., four-\ntimes winner of the event tnd\nBobby AUton of Ottawa were tied\nwith Somerville end Martell\nIn the peek stretching back of the\n75s were such good golfers as Bobby\nCruickshank of Richmond, Va, 36-\n39\u201477; Red Swanton of Toronto\nand Herb Samwiyi of London, both\nwith 40-37-77; Jack Littler cd Ot-\ntawa 38-40\u2014,78: and John Thortn,\nBoiton, Sp-Ha-rU\nREMEMBER WHEN?\nBy Thi CanadUn Prett\n\u25a0 Joe LouU ikyrocketted back into\nihe circle ut world haavvweijh'.\nchallenger! when he flattened the\nold Boston sailor, Jtck Sharkey, in\nthree roundi at New York three\nyean ago tonight A y\u00ab\u00ab liter De-\ntroit't brown battler reached the\ntop when he defeated Chimpion\nJames J. Braddock at Chicago, June\n22, m*. \u25a0\nTulloch Rejoins\nRossland Miners\nWhen Nelion Seniors meet the\nRossland Minen in the Golden City\nSunday afternoon in a Weit Kootenay Baieball League game, they\nwill daih with a rejuvenated outfit that promliu to' tUlh the margin separating them tnd the Lake-\nildera to a few percentage pointa\nFor back with the Mountain City\nboyt U \"Red\" Tulloch, cheerful,\nredheaded chucker who Jumped the\nMiners early in the season in favor\nof the Prtirtu, But-now the big\nfellow ii back and tettlei the Rosi-\nUnd team's crying need, that of another good chucker. Their Walter\nFlood goei well for the early part\nof the game but can't Uit the route.\nReturn ot Tulloch makei the Minen\none of the strongest teami in the\nloop.\nSports Roundup\nBy EDDIE BRIETZ\nNEW YORK, Aug. 17 (AP). -\nColonel Matt Winn, now at San-\ntoga, won't talk about reporti he'll\nretire as major domo of the Kentucky Derby. . . . Bob Paitor\ngoei Weit Sunday to finUh training tor Joe LouU at Brighton,\nMich.\nThe Weit leemi to have plumb\ngiven up on New York Giants....\nThe other day a Detroit paper\nprinted a itory of a New York\ndefeat bn the obituary page, directly under the death notices....\nIt will cost the Athletici 1800 a\nhead to tnniport the playen by\nboat through the Panama Canal\nto the Nez training camp at Anaheim, Calif....\nPinkie George, Dei Molnet promoter hu bought the contract of\nLee Savoldl, St. Paul heavy-\nv\/eight, from Mike Gibboni. . . .\nThe Dodgen paued the 750,000\nmark In home attendance\nyesterday.\nBATTINGLEADERS\nly Th* Ajwltted *****\nBetting (three leaders ln eech\nleague)\n0 Ab R H Pts.\nDiMaggio, Yank 77 2M 66 118 JM\nFoxx, Red Sox 90 374 104 196 JM\nMize, Cards ... 103 390 75 137 .351\nJohnson, Ath :. 110 400 90 ltt Mt\nAmovict, PhlU 103 37* 54 UI J41\nBonura, Giants 104 389   71 Ml J37\nRome runs:\nAmerican Lugue\u2014Foxx, Bed Sox,\n30; Greenberg, Tigers, 20; Gordon,\nYankees, 18,\nNational League\u2014Ott, Glints, .24; '\nMite, Cardinals, 20; Camilli, Dodgers, 19.\nRuns baited In:\nAmerican League\u2014Williams, Red\nSox, 99; Foxx, Red Sox, 93; Johnson,\nAthletici, 88. .\nNational Lugue \u2014 McCormlck,\nReds, 98; Camilli, Dodgers, 78;\nBonura, GUnts, 76.\nff\/.-f.:-.-\n'i\u00bbSm\\-\nrizz\nThit advertisement U not published\nor displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or by the Government Ot\n BritUh Columbia\t\n\u2014 EDISON\"\u2014*\nMAZDA BULBS\nAcme Automotive\n611 Baker St. Supply Ph. 1010\nMOTORS REBORED\nond WELDING\nShorty's Repair Shop\n714 BAKER ST.      NILSON, B. C.\nx&&.\nTHIS WORLD FAMOUS GIN\nVALUE f\n12 oi.   95c\n25 oz. <1.80\nThla famous tht, known the *mM\nover for Its supreme quality, U now\nobtalnablo at prlcet which mtke lt\nmors thtn ever \u25a0 eeontlonil value.\nDistilled and Bottled by Diitillers Corporation Limited, Montretl\nThia advertisement U not published or displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or by the Government of BritUh Columbia.\t\n-.-\"\u25a0' \u25a0'\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0 . \u25a0 :\n PAOE TEN\n\u2022 NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B. C. FRIDAY MORNINO. AUO. 1\u00ab. 19S9\nThere Are Big Opportunities Here\u2014and Some of Them Are Just What You Need\nt\u00bb>eAmii*\u00bb_m*e^me_m^^\nON THE AIR\n\u25a0WWMtWSMMtWMMIM*\nt-*4o#M9&Mo_xtoea&&\nFRIDAY, AUGUST 18, 1939.\nCKLN\u2014NELSON\nA. M.\u2014\n8:00\u20140 Canada\n8r03\u2014\"You Name It\" programme\n8:15-Newi \u00bb\n10:00\u2014Love Story Girl\n10:lfH-K. L. G. Hospital Programme\n11:00\u2014Morning Bulletin Board\n12:00-Music for Mealtime\nP.M.\u2014\n: 15\u2014Mama Bloom's Brood\n.:30\u2014The J'ews\n:00-Matinee Melodies\n:30-Slgn off\n:30\u2014Children's Requests\n:0O\u2014Strange Adventures\n15\u2014Laff Parade\n8:30\u2014The News\n6:45\u2014Muslcomedy Gems\n7:00\u2014Moon Over Africa\n7:30\u2014Concert Master\n8:00--Memories of Hawaii\n8:30\u2014Hit  Revue \"\u25a0\n9:00-Half and  Half\n9:30\u2014Eventide Echoes\n9:15\u2014This Rhythmic Age\nlOilS-^Romance lc Melody\n10:30\u2014Do You Believe In Ghosts\n10:45\u2014At Close of Day\nll:00-Sign  off\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nA.M.\u2014\n8:00\u2014The Balladeer\n8:15\u2014The Kldoodlers\n8:30\u2014The News\n8:45\u2014The Joyce Trio\n9:00\u2014Jeno Bartal's Orch.\n9:30-Road of Life\n8:45\u2014Vaughn Munroe\n10:00-\"Blg SiBter\"\n10:15\u2014Life and Love of Dr. Susan\n10:30-Canadlan Open Golf Cham-\npionfhi\"\n11:00\u2014The Story \"f Mary Marlin\n11:15\u2014Ma Perkins\n11:30\u2014Pepper Young's Family\nll:45-The Guiding Light\n12;0C\u2014The News\nP.M.\u2014\n12:15\u2014Club Matinee\n1:15\u2014Curley the Yodelling Cowboy\n1:30\u2014Len Salvo-organist\n1:45\u2014Closing Stock Quotations\n2:00\u2014Canadian Open Golf Championship\n2:15\u2014Gray Gordon's Orch.\n2:30\u2014John Gumey-basso\n2:45-Under the Big Top\n3:00\u2014Wilfrid Charette's Orch.\n8:30\u2014Make Mine Music\n4:00\u2014Miss Trent's Children\n4:30\u2014Acadian Serenade\n5:00-Weekly Song Sheet\n6:30\u2014Take a Note\n6:15\u2014The Old Gardener\n6:30\u2014Gilbert Darisse's Orch.\n7:00\u2014The  News\n7:15\u2014Gordon  Manley\u2014pianist.\n7:30\u2014Mart Kenney's Western Gentlemen\n8:00\u2014Woodhouse  and Hawkins\n8:30\u2014Speaking   of   Sport\n8:45\u2014Lawrence   Welks   Orch,\n9:00\u2014On'Wings Of Song    i\n9:30\u2014 Len Hopkins' Orch.\n9:45\u2014The News\n10:00\u2014Dr.    Healey   Willan\u2014Organ\nRecital\n10:30-Ted Weems' Orch.\n11:00\u2014Gary Nottingham's Orch.\nCJAT \u2014TRAIL\nA.M.\u2014\n7:00\u2014Request Program   .\n7:30\u2014News\n7:45-Song Hits\n8:00\u2014 Bulletin Board\n12:00-On With The Dance\nP.M.\u2014\n12:30-Varietles\n12:45\u2014News\nl:0O-Up-to-the-Mlnute\n1:15\u2014Colville Roundup\n2:00\u2014Women's Journal\n3:30\u2014Tantalizing   Rhythms\n3:45\u2014Tea Time Tunes\n4:00\u2014Rhythm and Romance\n4:15\u2014Home   Folks  Frolic\n4:30\u2014Theatre News\n4:45\u2014News\n6:00\u2014Headlines ln Sport\n6:15\u2014Donald Novis\n7:15\u2014Light up and Listen\n7:30\u2014Hollywood Casting Office\nOther periods, CBC Programmes\nTHE NETS' BEST\n1:00\u2014NBC-Red-Cities Service Concert\n1:30\u2014Mutual-Symphony  Orch.\ni:00\u2014Columbia-Ninety-Nine    Men\nand a Girl\n5:30\u2014NBC-Blue-Whlmslcal   Swing\n1:00\u2014Columbia-Grand Central Station\n1:30\u2014Columbia-Robert L. Ripley's\nRelievft  It or  Not\nl:0O-NBC-Red-Fred    Waring   In\nPleasure Time\n':30\u2014NBC-Red-Emery     Deutsch's\nOrch.\n1:00\u2014NBC-Red-Good Morning Tonight\n1:30\u2014NBC-Red-Death Valley Days\n1:00\u2014Columbia-Ernie    Hecksher'j\nOrch.\n1:30\u2014Columbia-M u z z y    Marcel-\nlino's Orch.\ni:00\u2014Mutual-Carol Lofner's Orch.\ni:30\u2014NBC-Red-Gco. Olsen's Orch.\n:00\u2014 Columbia-Pasadena    Civic\nAuditorium Orch,\nNBC-Red\nKFI, Los Angeles; KHQ, Spokane\nKGW, Portland, KOA, Denver\nKPO, San Francisco\nNBC-Blue\nKGA, Spokane, KGO San Francisco\nKJR,     Seattle'\nColumbia\nKNX, Hollywood; KSL, Salt Lake\nCity\nKFPY,   Spokane;   KOIN,   Portland\nMutual-Don  Lee\nKOL, Seattle, KFRC. Siyi Francisco\nCanadian Doctor\nFinds Remedy for\nX-Ray Sickness\nCHICAGO, Aug. 17 (AP)\u2014A cure\nby a Canadian doctor for \"radiation\nsickness,\" which has been a major\nobstacle in giving cancer patients\nX-ray treatments was announced\ntoday by the American Medical Association's journal by Dr. J. Wallace\nGraham of Toronto, Ont.\n,Dr. Graham found that nicotine\nacid, a form of the Vitamin \"B\"\ncomplex, proved \"definitely effective\" in relieving the illness in 74.3\nper cent of 70 patients to whom it\n.was given.\nOf the 70 cases, 27.1 per cent showed \"excellent results and 47.2 per\ncent \"good.\" A \"fair result\" was obtained in 14.3 per cent and in 11.4\nper cent the drug failed.\nThe nicotinic acid, a nutritional\nfactor effective in treating human\npellagra and blacktongue in dogs,\noffers great promise, Dr. Graham\nindicated. He reported that in the\ncases which failed to respond to\nthe drug, the condition of the patient and the advanced stage of the\ndisease seemed to be involved.\nSqualus Raised\nPORTSMOUTH, N. H\u201e Aug. 17\n(AP)\u2014A U. S. Navy salvage crew\ntoday hoisted the sunken submarine Squalus from the ocean floor\nfor the second time in six days and\nthereby placed the bodies of her\n26 dead nearer to release from the\nsea.\nThe three top-most lifting pontoons above the Squalus' stern\nbroke the surface in a characteristic cascade of foam, indicating\nthat end of the craft had been elevated between 60 and 80 feet from\nan   uncharted  mudbank.\nLap Dog Must Sign\nfor Future Biscuits\nBALTIMORE, Aug. 17 (AP).-\nThe law says a little lap dog named\nFlossie must accept a registered letter and sign for, it but doesn't say\nhow.\nJohn Bouse, Register of Wills in\nBaltimore, prepared today to toss\nthe case into the lap of State's Attorney William Walsh for a decision.\nFlossie was the devoted companion1\nof Mrs. Mary Herman, who died\nand in her will set up a $2000 trust\nfund to ensure the care of her pet.\nBut Maryland probata law specifies the Register of Wills must advise any legatee by registered mail\nof the legacy, and the' legatee must\nsign.\nBouse can think of only two solutions: Maybe a guardian can be appointed with powers to sign for\nFlossie's mandatory mail, or Flossie's paw print on the receipt may\nbe accepted for her \"X\".\nFlossie is staying with friends\nuntil her dog-biscuit funds come'\nout of litigation.\nWoman Killed\nas (ar Plunges\nOver 50 Fl. Bank\nASHCROIT, B. ft, Aug. 17 (CP)\n\u2014Mra. Alice Reynolds, 70, of Upper Hat Creek, B. C about 15 miles\nNorth of here, was killed and four\nother persons Injured late yesterday when their automobile plunged\nover a 50-foot' bank on the highway across the Fraser River from\nAshcroft.\nFred Johnson and Leslie McKenna, 25, both of Upper Hat Creek,\nand Earl Reynolds,.21, and Ruby\nCarglle, 13, of Ashcroft, suffered\nsevere shock and bruises.\nMcKenna told police Be was-driving the automobile and that the\ndust from another machine blinded\nhim for a momenL sending his machine over the bank about one-half\nmile West of the Ashcroft Bridge to\nthe Canadian National Railway\ntracks below.\nPolice and a doctor were sent\nfrom here and had difficulty descending to the highway to the railway tracks to assist the accident\nvictims.\nIt was impossible to return to\nthe highway again and the injured\nwere brought to hospital here on\na railway motor speeder.\nMajor War Would\nDestroy Democracy\nGENEVA PARK, Lake Couchl-\nching, Ont., Aug. 17 (CP)\u2014War\nmight lead to disintregration of the\nBritish Empire, Professor' B, Wilkinson of the University of Toronto\nsaid last night in an address to the\nCanadian Institute of Economics\nand Poli'.'-s.\n\"The British Empire almost sustains the political equilibrium of\nthe world at the present time,\" Professor Wilkinson said in his dis-\ncc\"nc en Britiih f?re!\u00b0n svsiis-v\n\"The Empire is the'biggest'booty\never offered to an unscrupulous\naggression.\"\nA major war would, virtually\ndestroy Democracy and possibly\nsubstitute world chaos, the speaker suggested, declaring the same\nthreatening forces of today had\ndestroyed civilizations In the past.\nProfessor Wilkinson said it was\nthe supreme duty of statesmen to\navoid war. Collapse of the British\nEmpire, \"the greatest Empire since\nthe Roman,\" would go far \"toward\ndestroying Democracy throughout\nthe world,\" he submitted.\nCalling Canadian foreign policy\n\"a definite policy of doing very\nlittle,\" Professor Wlikinson declared North Americans should have a\ngreater realization that \"if the battle for Democracy is lost in Europe\nit is lost in the world.\"\nInstitute Told of\nFascist Canada\nGENEVA PARK, Uke Couchi-\nching, Ont., Aug. 17 (CP). \u2014 A Fascist Canada within the next few\nyears, \"a series of regional Fascist\nregimes and not a National system,\"\nwas envisioned today by B. K.\nSandweli, Editor of The Toronto\nSaturday Night.\nAddressing the Canadian Institute\non economics and politics, Mr. Sand-\nwell said among the Provinces Ontario and Quebec have gone farthest along the road toward Fascism\nbut it was inconceivable these Provinces should be under the \u00abmc\nTotalitarian regime.\nAircraft Carrier Bursts (able\nMakes Runaway launching, I Killed\nBELFAST, Northern Ireland,\nAug. 17 (CP)\u2014An aircraft carrier\nburst her supporting cradle in the\nshipyard where she was built today and made a runaway launching into Belfast Lough, killing\none woman among a crowd of spectators.\nTwenty others were injured as\nH. M. S. Formidable, 23,000-ton\nnewest addition to the Royal Navy\nslid . into the water prematurely,\nhurling blocks of wood supporting\nher keel among the thousands gathered to watch the ceremony.\nMrs. Isable Kirk, one of the onlookers was fatally injured, dying\nin hospital. A flying fragment hit\nher. Her husband suffered minor\ninjuries.\nJust as Lady Wood, wife of Air\nSecretary Sir Kingsley Wood, got\nto the launching platform the vessel broke away in some unexplained manner and began to move\ndown the ways.\nLady Wood managed to break the\ntraditional bottle of wine on the\nreceding bows but that was al*.\nThe formidable ship will house\nmore than GO airplaries and mount\n16 4.5-inch guns.\n.   Lady Wood was accompanied by\nher husband and surrounded   by\nLord Craigavon, Prime Minister of\nNorthern Ireland, the Lord Mayor\nof Belfast and Clergymen assembled to hold a service at the christening.\nThey were startled by the crackling sound of pieces of timber\nbreaking away from the cradle\nsupporting the 735-foot long vessel. As the carrier receded, Lady\nWood reached over the platform\nrailing and hastily broke the christening v.-inc against the ship, calling its name.\nShe could not be heard any distance. Pieces of wood, iron nuts\nand bolts flew into the air. Some\nof them fell among the spectators.\nScores of shipwrights, who were\nbelow the vessel to act in freeing\nher at a given signal, raced to safety as the cradle crashed about\nthem.\nTugs grouped at the end of the\nways to take the carrier in tow\nmanoeuvred hastily to get out of\nthe way of the runaway vessel.\nThe bandmaster of the Royal Ulster Constabulary shared Lady\nWood's presence of mind and struck\nup \"Rule Britannia\" just as if the\nlaunching had been on schedule\nhalf an hour later. When the injured were taken away the planned\nreligious service was carried out.\nWrit for Release\nof Chinese Denied\nSHANGHAI, Aug. 17 (AP). \u2014\nJudge P. Grant Jones today denied a\nwrit of habeas corpus sought by\ntwo Britons for the four Chinese\nsuspects at Tientsin whom Britain\nhas agreed to surrender to Japanese\nauthorities.\nThe four are accused by the Japanese of complicity in the killing of\na Chinese customs official in Japanese-dominated territory in North\nChina.\nThe decision, in the British Supreme Court for China, held that the\npetitioners being neither friends nor\nrelatives of the prisoners, were unauthorized to seek the writ.\nIt was sought by Miss Margery\nFry, prominent in education circles\nin England, and Norman Bentwich,\nVice-President of the Council of\nCivil Liberties in London.\nBarry C. Eastham of Portland,\nOre., later announced in Tientsin he\nwould take up the effort for release\nof the four men. He said representatives of the two petitioners, had\nsought his intervention as a person\nfriendly to the suspects.\nAviation Experts\nVisit Patricia Bay\nVICTORIA, Aug. 17 (CP)-Two\nbig transport planes from Vancouver, carrying 16 Canadian,aviation\nexperts and Royal Canadian Air\nForce officers on an inspection\ntour, made the first landings at-\nthe Patricia Bay Airfield yesterday.\nWork on the Patricia Bay field\nis not yet completed. The runways\nhave yet to be surfaced and hangars constructed.\nWork of clearing 60 acres at the\nsite of the radio Deam station on\nSidney Island is scheduled to begin\ntoday. A power house, transmitting\nstation, four aerial towers and living quarters for the radio operators, will be built.\nNrlsnn Daihi 2fouia\nMember of The Canadian Dally\nNewspapers Association\nTelephone 144\nPrivate Exchange Connecting to\nAll Departments.\nClassified Advertising\nRates \u2014 1 lc Per Line\n(Minimum 2 Lines)\n2 llnei per Insertion I 22\n2 tines. 6 consecutive\nInsertions   .    .88\n(6 for the price of 4)\n3 llnei rer Insertion     33\n1 lilies. 6 consecutive\ninsertions 1 32\n2 lines. 1 month 2.88\n3 lines, 1 month  4.29\nFor advertisements of more than\nthree lines, calculate on\nthe above basis.\nBox numbers lie extra. This\ncovers any number of\nInsertions.\nLECAL NOTICES\n18c per lines, first insertion and\n14c each  subsequent insertion.\nALL   ABOVE   RATES    LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT.\nSPECIAL LOW RATE\nSituations Wanted  25c for any\nrequired   number  of   lines  for\nilx  days,  payable  In  advance.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\nSingle copy  5\nBy carrier, per week\t\nBy carrier, per year\t\nBy Mall:\nOne month\nThree months \t\nSix months\t\nOne year _ _______\n.05\n.25\n13.00\n. $ .75\n. 2.00\n. 4 00\n.   8.00\nAbove rates apply In Canada,\nthe United States, and the\nUnited Kingdom, to subscribers\nliving outside regular carrier\nareas.\nElsewhere ssnd in Osssmriss wlw.ee\nextra postage is required, one\nmonth $1.50, three months $4.00,\nsix months $8.00. one year $15.00.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nSpecial Low Rate for advertisements under this classification\nto assist people seeking employment. Only 25c for one week\n(6 days) covers any number\nof required lines. Payable in\nadvance.\nALL AROUND EXPERIENCED\nfarm hand from the prairie. Have\nlight delivery truck. Would like\na dairy job, milking, driving truck\nand all general work. Would accept any kind of steady job. Box\n\u2022 8181 Daily_News.\t\nYOUNG MAN REQUIRES~WORK.\nWill tackle anything. Experienced in painting ond insulating.\nAlso handy- at gardening, and all\ncarpenter repair work. Box 8187\nDaily News.\nEXPERIENCED BOOKKEEPER &\ngeneral office clerk with best of\nreferences, requires work. Part\ntime accounts a specialty. Will go\nany place. Box 8188 Daily News.\nFIRST CLASS HOUSE KEEPER\nwants work at once. Will go anywhere. Good cook and clean.\nWould like housework or hotel\n;ork. Box 8032 Daily News\nAMBITIOUS YOUNG MAN 27. DE-\nsires work in grocery or meat\nmarket. 12 years expenenre\nQualifications and references. Box\n8081 Daily News.\nCAPABLE GIRL DESIRES GEN-\neral housework or will care for\nelderly couple. Country preferred.\nBox 8148 Daily News.   '\nYOUNG GIRL, EXPERIENCED,\nwants work. Able to cook. Room\n7 Victor Hotel.\nCLASSIFIED  MAIL  ORDERS\nfrom out-of-town residents given\nprompt   attention\nHELP WANTID\nYOU CAN MAKE MONEY TOO!\nEverybody buys Christmas Cards.\nSome agents have been selling\nours to the same customers over\ntwenty years. You can also build\na repeat buslneu. Now Is tbe\ntime. Most buying Is done during\nthe next few weeks. Be ftrsL Thli\nIs our 25th year, and we have prepared a special Jubilee Series\nwhich should sell like hot cakes\nDrop a card today. We will send\nliterature with o u t obligation\nBritish Canadian Publishing Company, Room 27, Manning Chambers, Toronto, Canada.\t\nWANTED MARRIED COUPl_fTS\"-\n35 yrs. for farm. Both willing\nworkers. Able to milk. Man must\nbe handy with repairing. Woman\nSood cook  Neat, clean. No chil-\nren. Box 47, Slocan, B. C.\nYOUTH WANTED FOR CATflY\nfarm. Must be good dry hand\nmilker. English speaking. Box\n8134 Dally News.\nRELIABLE EXPERIENCED GIRL\nfor general housework. Give references   ISox 6K1 Daily Nejwi.\nWANTED - GIRL FOR HOUSE\"-\nwk. Sleep out. References Ph. 255L\nPERSONAL\nMEN - SUITS CLEANED, PRESS-\ned, repaired or altered. H. J\nWilton's, Ph, 107, 534 Josephine.\nFREE-SNAPPY BANDANA WITH\nbottle of Hind's Honey & Almond\nCream 49c, at Mann, Rutherford\nBREAD AT EVERY MEAinS\nwhat the growing child needs!\nBuy Choquette's Mothej^jJBread.\nSANITARY RUBBER~GOODS. 24\nLatex $1. Free price list. J. Jensen,\n_1042 Hajo,Jfancouver, B. C.\t\nWHEN IN VANCOUVER STOP AT\nAimer Hotel. Opp. C. P. R. Depot\nBE ASSURED OF FRESH FRUITS\nand vegetables at all times\u2014buy\nat Star Grocery Spec refrigeration\nNERVOUS BREAKDOWN NER-\nvous     Exhaustion.    Melancholia\nJWrite BoxJ7895 Dally News\nAMY SIZE ROLL FILM DEYE\u00a3\noped and printed, 25c. Every\nbatch of prints Hyp-o-Meter tested, ensuring n on-fading prints.\nKrystal Photos, Wilkie, Sask.\nGENUINE LATEX SPECIAL GTD\n25 for $1.00 or (Iffy prepared 18\nfor 81.00 (free catalogue) National\nImporters. Box 244, Edmonton,\nA N Y SIZE ROLL FILM DEVETJ\"-\noped and printed. 25c. The most\nmodern Photo Finishing Plant in\nthe West. Established over 30 years\nKrystal Photos, WjlkieJSask.\nAN OFFER TO KVKfiY-TCT-\nventor, list of wanted inventions\nand full information sent tree. The\nRamsay Company, World Patent\nAttorneys, 273 Bank St., Ottawa\nLONELY PEOPLE IN CANADA!\nJoin Elite Club. Confidential, reliable. For particulars and de-\nrerir: ;ons send 10c, Box 121.\nRegina, Saskatchewan.\t\nBOYS- ST A M PS - 01 RLS\nForeign and British Colony stamps\nat far less than catalogue prices.\nWrite, at once, for approval sheets\nto G. F. Goodwin. 630 4th Avenue\nWest. Calgary, Alberta.\nANY SIZE SbLL FILM DEVELOT-\ned and printed, 25c. One trial will\nconvince you of the superior\nquality of our work. We use\nonly fresh Printing Paper. Krystal\nPhotos, Wilkie, Saskatchewan.\nENROLL NOW FOR A BFATJT?\nCourse under Professor Nicholas,\ninternationally famous hair stylist\nand Beauty Culture Authority\nWrite for particulars, Spokane\nSchool of Beauty Culture.\nSpokane. Washington. ^^\nHYGIENE SANITARY SUPPCIES\nand drug sundries. For highest\nquality goods at lowest prices,\nwrite for latest price list, or send\n$1 for Special Sample assortment\nof 24 postpaid under plain sealed\ncover. Western Supply Agency,\nBox 667 Vancouver, B. C.\n144 IS THE CLASSIFIED\nPHONE NUMBER\nBIRTHS\nWHITTICK - To Mr. and Mrs.\nRay Whittick at the Mater Miieri-\ncordiae Hospital, Rossland, Auguit\n18, a daughter.  '\nTEACHERS WANTED\nA FIRST CASS EXPERIENCED\nteacher to teach Grades 1 to 6.\nSalary $1000 per year. Duties to\ncommence September 5th. Applications to be made not later\nthan August 23 to J. R. Johnstone,\nSecretary, Coal Creek, B. C.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nVELLO\u2014The new washable\nwall   finish\u2014in   10   colors.\nNo Sizing \u2014 No Odor\nOne application is sufficient.\nUsed on plaster, veneer, wall\nboard and paper.\nPrice $1.25 per 5 Ib. pkg.\nNelson Sash & Door\nCo., Ltd.\n701 Front Street\nPhone 292\nPIPE, TUBES, FITTINGS\nNEW  AND  USED\nLarge stocks for Immediate shipment\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD\n1st Avenue and Main St.\nVancouver, B. C.\nWHISKY BARRELS FOR WINE.\nAll sizes; also barrels for other\npurposes. Active Trading. 916\nPowell Street, Vancouver^B^ C.\nFOR SALE 6 FT. PLATE GLASS\nshowcase, 1st class condition. The\nFashion First Shop, 446 Baker St.\nPIPE AND FITTING\"\nATLAS IRON <_ METALS LTD\n250 Prior Std. Vancouver, B. C\nFOR SALE - BARRELS. KEGS,\njugar -.ch:, liners. McDonald Jao\nCompany, Ltd., Nelson, B, C.\t\nFOR SALE. PIANOT GOOD CON-\ndltlon. Box 8168 Dally News.\nWANTED   MISCELLANEOUS\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS\nor Iron, any quantity. Top prices\npaid. Active Trading Company.\n818 Powell St., Vancouver. B. C.\nWANTED TO PURCHASE 1M-\nmedlately, one cash register. Box\n8163 Daily News.\t\nBOATS AND ENGINES\n24 FT. GAS BOAT, 2 CYLINDER, 7\nH. P. engine. Fairbanks-Morse en-\ngine. Al condition. Phone 934-L.\nMACHINERY\nCITY AUTO WRECKERS CAN\nbring their Portable Arc Welder\nto you, anywhere 431 Josephine st.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND SUPPLIES, ETC.\nPURE BRED AYRSHIRE BULL, 1\nweek old, Dam, R. O. P. record\n12,000 lbs., Sire, Advanced Registry, Class A, Dam of Sire, R. O. P.\nrecord 14,200-lbs. milk, 577 lbs.\nfat.- Doyle, R. R. No. 1.\t\nFOR SALE YOUNG\" PURE BRED\nJersey cow. T. B. tested. Freshened\n1 month. H. A. McCarthy, R. R. 1.\nROOM AND BQARD\nWANTED ROOM AND BOARD-\nSchool teacher, vicinity Junior\nHigh. Sept. 1st. Apply to Box\n8149 Daily News.\nFOR WANT AD\nSERVICE\nPHONE 144\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nREAD THIS\nA REAL HOME newly papered,\npainted and renovated inside and\nout. Modern bathroom fixtures,\nmodern kitchen sink. Wired for\nelectric range. New shingles on root\nand everything possible done to put\nthe property ln first-clasi repair.\nHas large basement with concrete\nand stone walls and cement floor entrance from house and on to side\nlawn. First floor has large living\nroom with fireplace, large dining\nroom with china closet, kitchen,\nsewing room or maid's room, pantry\nand outside shed off kitchen. Second floor has three large bedrooms\nwith closets, separate bathroom and\nioilet and sleeping porch off one of\nbedrooms.\nThe property Is situate In the 900\nBlock, Hoover Street, one of the\nfinest residential districts in the\ncity, has IVt lots, good lawn and\ncement walk to house. A contractor's estimated price new is $6000.\nWe are able to offer this splendid\nhome for $3200 as it stands, on terms,\nor for $3000 cash. This is a chance\nto get a splendid home you can be\nproud of at a sacrifice price. See\nfor further particulars\npobertson nealty f\"ompany l td.\n347 Baker Street Nelson B.C.\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR- SALE,\non easy terms in Alberta and\nSaskatchewan. Write for full Information to 908, Dent, of Natural\nResources, C, P, R,, Calgary, Alta.\nFOR AND WANTED TO RENT\nFOR RENT 3 RM. FURN. HOUSE\nand attic, at Riondel. Finest campsite on lake. G. B. Matthew,\n905 Edgewood Avenue.\n-*r,n   nsrs,,-.   c,v\"~rini*,.ir   siaikt\n706 SiTica Street, $22 per' month'.\nAp. Ph. 662 during business hours\nFOR RENT MODERN APART-\nments. Unfurnished. Apply Room\n203 Johnstone Building.\nWANTED TO RENT-HOUSE BE-\nfore Sept. 15. Reliable tenant. Box\n8147 Daily ^fews.\t\nWANTED TO RENT, 4 OR 5 RM.\nhouse. Reliable tenant. Box 8162\nDaily News.\nFURN. AND UNFURN. 3 & 4 RM.\nsuites, reduced rates. Kerr Apta.\nFOR  RENT APARTMENT,  MED1-\ncal Arts bldg Ap C F McHardy\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms for rent. Annable Block,\nTERRACE APTS Beautiful modern\nfrigidaire equipped suites.\nSINGLE OR TWO-ROOM SUITES\nfor rent. Strathcona Hotel,\t\nROYAL HOTEL. NEW LOW\nmonthly rates. Phone I\nFOR RENT LARGE 6 RM. HOUSS\n1013 Stanley St. Phoney 67.\t\nFOR RENT - 3\"ROOM FLAT. 408\nHouston Street.\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES, ETC.\nFOR SALE - NEW ZEALAND\nWhite and Flemish Giant Rabbits\nfrom prize winning stock at Van-\ncouver Fair. H. Abey, Mirror Lake.\nHUNTERS, 2 B'EAUTIF'UL SPRING-\ner males, 12 and 6 months, retrieve\nland and water. Photos on request.\n^I^Sp^row.Enderby^B. C.\t\n1 ONLY PUREBRED DOBERMAN\nPinscher pup. 3 months old. Ap-\n_ply_Box 8185 Daily News.\nPUREBRED LABRADOR PUPS\nfor sale. Mature dogs. Harrop,\nAbbotsford, B. C.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nFOR SALE, CHICKEN BUSINESS.\n300 laying White Leghorn hens.\nMrs. Joe Payant, Salmo, B. C.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL   DIRICTOI\nASSAYIRS\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, PROVINC1AI\nAnalyst, Assayer, Metallurgica\nEngineer. Sampling Agents\nTrail Smelter. 301-305, Jotep-ia\nStreet, Nelaon, B. C.\nGRENVILLE H. GRIMWOSlT\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist, 41\nFall Street. P. O. Box 9. Natal\nB. C, Representing ihtppar\nInterest at TraU, B. C,\t\nHAROLD iS. ELMES\", ROSSLANl!\nB. C, Provincial Assayer, Chemist\nIndividual Representatives fo\nshippers at Trail Smelter.\nCHIROPRACTORS\nJ R MCMILLAN. D C, NIUHQ\ncalonieter, X-ray  McCullock BU\nDR WU.BERT BROCK PAUlrtJ\nGraduate X-ray 16 rears expert\nence  542 Baker St   Phone Mt.,\nCOR8ETIIRE8\nSPENCER CORSETS. MRS. V   II\nCampbell. 370 Baker St. Ph. \"\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nBOYD C AFFLECK, Fruitvale, B. (\nSurveyor and Engineer. 'Phon\n\"Beaver Falls.\"\nHOMES FOR THE AGED\nCONDUCTED BY THE SIST1-J\nof the Love of Jesus. St Jude'\nHome of Rest for elderly couplei\nSt. Anthony's Guest House aa\nthe Priory Guest House for ladi<\nover sixty. Private rooms wtt\nbath. Beautiful location. A rti\nHome with every comfort. Nursm\ncare when needed. Apply t\nMother Superior, 949 West 37t\nAvenue, Vancouver, B. C,\nINSURANCE AND REAL ESTAT\nC. D. BLACKWOOD, Insurance (\nevery description. Real Kit. Ph. I\n5SE D. Is. KKIlu, AGENT * O\nWawanesa Fire Ins. For better rati\nJ. E. ANNABLE, REAL KSTATl\nRentals, Insurance. Annable Bll\nCHAS. F. McHARDY, INSURANd\nReal Estate. Phone 135.\nR. W. DAWSON, Real Estate, If\nsurance, Rentals. Next Hlppcrso\nHardware. Baker St. Phone 197.\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine shop, acetylene and clectrii\nwelding, motor rewinding, commercial refrigeration.\nPhone 593, 324 Vernon St\nMEMORIALS\nPLACE A BRONZE ONE ON '\ngrave of your loved one. Get prlc\nlist from Bronze Memorials Ltd.\nP. O. Box 726, Vancouver,.B. C.-\nPATENT ATTORNEYS\nW. ST. J, MILLER, A. M. E. L OsJ\nRegistered Patent Attorney, Can\"\nada and U. S. A. 703-2nd St. W,\nCalgary. Advice free, coftfldenti\nnttl|\n8ASH FACTORIES\nLAWSON'S    SASH    FACTOES\nHardwood merchant 273 Baker f\nSECOND HAND STORES\nWE  BUY; SELL &  EXCHANG\nfurniture, etc. Ark Store. Ph. \"\nHOME FURNITURE, BUY, SK\nExch., Rpr\u201e Upholster. Phone MM\nWATCH REPAIRING\nWhen SUTHERLAND repairs\nwatch it is on time all the I\n345.   Baker   St.,   Nelson.   B.\nWant to Sell Something?\nPHONE\n144\nDrama Festivals\nJan. 8-20, Victoria\nVICTORIA, Aug. 16 (CP)-At a\nmeeting of the executive committees of the British Columbia region\nof the Dominion Drama Festivals\nand the Provincial Drama Association here tonight it was decided to\nhold the two festivals during the\nperiod Jan. 8 to 20 in Victoria, The\nDominion Drama Festival will follow immediate! after the Provincial Festival,\nSeveral new classes are being introduced. There is to be an International Play Contest, a Tableaux\nVivante, an unproduced play contest and a Drama Scrapbook contest in addition to regular classes.\nIt was also decided to hold the\nPacific Drama Conference in Victoria on the Sunday during the\nfestival period.\nFISH URGES PLEA TO\nWORLD GOVERNMENTS\nOSLO, Norway, Aug. 17 (API-\nHamilton Fish of New York, sponsoring a 30-day \"war moratorium\"\ntoward settlement of international\ndisputes by negotiation, urged today a \"strong united plea to the\ngovernments of the world, including the Vatican.\"\nHURT IN CAR CRASH\nPIONEER MINE, B. C, Aug. 17\n(CP).\u2014Tom Anderson, resident of\nthis British Columbia mining town,\nwas recovering today from minor\ninjuries suffered last night when his\nautomobile dropped 50 feet from a\nroadway to the back yard of Mrs.\nWalter Sepetney's home.\nYOU OUGHT TO BE ASHAMED-.YOUR SORE FOOT\nWAS PHONY AND THEN YOU DANCE FOR TOY\nJ WHEN AFELLOW HURTS HIMSELF\n.mm\nI DON'T CARE~I\nWAS HAPPY.\nx AM\nHAPPY\nMISS TONES, MY SORE WRIST WONT PREVENT\nME FROM PANCINQ~\nMAY T HAVE THE\nNEXT DANCE?\n ibT)\nIhufdown Oil Strike Takes 70 Per\nCent of U.S. Crude Off World Market\nOKLAHOMA CITY Aug. 17 (AP)\nThe shutdown of oil wells In lix\natet, one of the moit widespread\nfrtailments of raw materials ever\ntempted, took ipproxlmately 70\nWcent of the United Statei' crude\ni oft the world mirket today.\nThe \"Shutdown Strike\" in Okh-\n\u25a0na, Kansas, Arkansas, Texas,\nDUUIana and New Mexico had its\ntoesii in i series of prlci cuts by\nJrchasing companies.\nState regulatory bodies had no\nIports of violations of shut-down\ntiers. Each state hu statute* which\nirmit doling wells to conserve\nMural resource!. The \"ace In the\nSte\" is the Connally \"Hot Oil\" Law\nrohlbiting interstate shipment ot\n11 produced ln violation of itate\nrders.\nFears there would be wideipread\nunemployment faded as surveys and\ncompany announcements indicated\nlesi than 10 per cent of the 200,000-\nodd workers In the midcontinenl\nfield would be temporarily diichlrg-\ned. The others will be given vacation, half-pay or will repair machinery.\nSome leading producers were reported today ready to itart a campaign for an even higher price for\ncrude baling their contention on.\na belief refinery prices would increue within a week and that there\nwould bt i scarcity of crude and\nrefined products,\nBelief that the consumer would\nnot feel the price hike for some\ntime wu expressed by a leading\nbroker.\nThe six elate* produce 68.88 per\ncent of the nation i oil.\nJrown Oil Up\nFive al Toronto\nTORONTO, Aug. 17 (CP). - To-\nnUr stock exchinge moved in a\nirrow range today. Indices ln al-\nrl groups were lower.\nAheid fractionally tt the end\nere Union Gu, Gatineau Power\nreferred, Canadian Canners, Lob-\n!w \"A\", Dominion Bridge, Canadian\nank of Commerce and Canadian\nreweries preferred.\nDomi, Hollinger and Like Shore\nlid off fractionally tnd losses of\nto 10 cent* were recorded by\nBck-Hughei, Sylvanite, Sigma,\nnoneer and Buffalo Ankerite. La-\nique fell 40 to 8.80.\nJteel of Canada preferred was\n\u25a0avlcst loier on the boird, down\nJiong Western oils Brown Oil\nI flv* polnti higher while Acme\nj.unchanged. Home dropped 7\n5iad those on the downside with\n(lo-Canadlan down one. Calgary\nEdmonton recovery closed five\nmXs down.\n\u2022fork on Addition to\n\" Salmo School Begins\nSALMO, B. C.-Work hai begun\nn the addition to the ichool her*\nsat will accommodate high school\nunlit up to and Including grade\nII, The addition will Include a\nIus room, library and laboratory,\nnd a heating plant will be initall-\nd to take care of all the building,\nther improvements planned In-\nlude a Water syitem, lavatories\nnd wash roomi.\nDividends\n: CHICAGO, Aug. 17 (AP). \u2014 Di-\n\u25a0\u25a0jetoii of Internatlonil Harvester\nompany today declared a quar-\n\" j dividend of 40 cents a snare\nhe common stock.\nHCAGO, Aug. 17 (AP). - Dillon of Swift lc Compiny today\n:lnrcd a quarterly dividend of SO\nnts a ihare.\nToronto Elevaton Ltd., preferred,\nBH centi.\n.'Hamilton United Theatres, preferred, IVi per cent.\n\"Cinada Permanent Mortgage Corporation, 2 per cent\n-Pioneer Gold Mines of B. C, Ltd.,\nQuarterly dividend of 10 cents per\n\u2022are.\t\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY, Aug. 17 (CP). - Re-\nKlpts cattle 43; calves nine; hogs\nBl; iheep 75.\n\u2022Cattle market steady. Medium to\nnod heifers 4-4,75; good cows at\n1.80-3.75; good to choice veal calves\nIJO-6; stocker iteera 3.25-4.50.\nBacons 7.65 off trucki.\nU. S. Export Subsidies\nfor Wheat Flour Up\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 17 (API.\u2014\nThe United States Agriculture Department announced today an Increase of 15 centi a birrel ln export\nsubsidies for wheat flour.\nThis boosted flour sutaldlei for\nPacitic Coast porta to |1.56 a birrel for shipments to China and\nHong Kong; $1.45 to the Philippine\nIslands and $1.50 to other foreign\ncountries.\nFlour exported from ill other\nUnited States ports received subsidy\nof $1.55 a barrel.\nCrop Prospects\nContinue Favorable\nMONTREAL, Aug. 17 (CP). -\nCrops over large portions Of Saskatchewan and Alberta \"continue\npromising\" and wheat yields generally ln Manitoba \"will be Satisfactory\" despite the fact \"prospective yields and grade ol grain have\nhpen seriously lowered by extreme\nheat and drought,\" the Bank of\nMontreal weekly telegraphic crop\nreport said today.\nThe report said that in Manitoba \"harvesting is well advanced\nend in Saskatchewan and Southern\nAlberta cutting is fairly general.\"\nLittle precipitation hai occurred in\nAlberta and crops in Central and\nNorthern district! \"would benefit\nfrom heavy rains.\"\nProspects of yields in grains and\ntree fruits are good In British Columbia, \"though in variom areas\nwithout irrigation water rain is urgently needed.\" Harvesting of grain\nwill be in full swing In a few days.\nLondon Stocks React\nto Danzig Situation\nLONDON, Aug. 17 (AP). - Stock\nmarket prices dipped today while\ntension mounted over Danilg.\nTrans-Atlantici attracted a little\nsupport at lower levels. British funds\nclosed above the worst while mosl\nforeign loans shaded downward.\nCommodity stocks ended on the\nminus side. Small declines were in\nthe majority among industrials.\nU.S. Dollar Steady\nLONDON, Aug. 17 (AP). \u2014 The\nUnited States dollar quoted $4.68Vi\nto the pound, In final foreign exchange dealings today, remained unchanged.\nThe French franc also was unal*\ntered at 176.72 to the pound.\nMontreal Produce\nMONTREAL, Aug. 17 (CP). -\nButter, Que. 21-21V4. Eggs, A-largc\n26-T4-27. Salei butter, 100 Que. 21 Vt.\nEggs, 25 A-large, 26%.\nButter futures: Aug. 21-21V4; Sept.\n21V4-VI; Oct. 21VM4; Nov. 22-22Vs.\n1\nNELSON DAILY NlWt, NILSON, B. C, FRIDAY MORNINO, AUG. 11 1131\nPAQI  ELtVIN\nMarket and Mining News\nToronto Stock Quotations\nMINES j\nAfton Mines\t\nAldtrmac Copper \t\nAmm Gold\t\nAnglo Huronlan      2\nArntfleld Gold  \t\n\/katoria Rbuyn \t\n\" inor  Gold        2\ngamac Rouyn \t\nlkfield Gold\t\nse Metal! \t\neattie Gold      1\nlldgood Kirk \t\n\u25a0'\u2022 Miss       .\nb]o Mines\t\nIralome M     11\nirett  Treth   \t\nBuffalo Ank      8\nBunker Hill Extension ....\nCan Malartlc\t\nCariboo Gold Q     2.\nCastle Trethewey      1.\nCentral Patricia     2\nChibougamau    -\nChromium M lc S\t\nCoast Copper  -     1.\nConiaurum   Minet        1.\nConsolidated       42.\nDarkwater\t\nDome   Mines       33.\nDorval Siscoe \t\nEast Malartlc     2.\nEldorado Gold      1\nFalconbridge Nickel     5.\nFederal Kirk \t\nFrancoeur Gold \t\nGillies Lake \t\nGod's Lake Gold \t\nGold  Belt   \t\nGranada Gold  \t\nGrandoro M \t\nunnar Gold  \t\n.^rd Rock Gold     1\nlollinger M     14.\n' wey Gold\t\n_dson Bay M lc S     33.\nInt Nickel      48.\nI M Cons \t\nJack Waite \t\nJacola Gold  \t\n'.err Addison      1\nUrkland Lake          1\nake Shore Mines    40\n,eltch Gold   \t\n:bel Oro M   \t\n.ttle Long Lac      2.\nacassn   Mines        4,\nacLeod Cockshutt      1\n[adsen-R L Gold \t\nandy   M   \t\nSclntyre Porcupine     57\nHcKenzie R L      1\nItcVittie  Graham   \t\nJcWatttn Gold\t\nlining Corp       1\n_ \u00bbto Gold\t\nIloneta  Fore     1\n(lorris Kirk\nllpissing  Mining       1\nNoranda    82\nNormetal   \t\nfJ'Btien   Gold        2.\n_\u201eega Gold \t\nPamour Pore      2\nPaulore M       ;\nymaster  Cons\t\n1\n.02\n,2(1\n,06 Vi\n.25\n.12\n.03\n,38\n08 Vz\n.23\n.15%\n.18\n,16\n.W-k\n.09 \u25a0 i\n.00\n.0114\n.80\n.05 Vi\n65\n20\n.60\n.44\n,15\n.4811;\n90\n60\n.75\n.04%\n,40\n.05 Va\n53\n.02\n,65\n.37\n.05'.i\n.38\n.30\n.02 Vt\n.04 Vi\n.47\n00\n90\n31 Vi\n75\n75\n.03 Vi\n.20\n.0414\n.33\n.40\n.25\n.80\n.03\n.91\n,70\n85\n.35\n.11\n,00\n,25\n.15%\n.55\n.25\n.01\n.00\n.07'\/;\n32\n.50\n.50\n05\n.28\n.02\n.02\n.41\nXI\nPerron Gold        1,92\nPickle Crow      4.65\nPioneer  Gold      2.40\nPremier Gold       1.75\nPowell Rouyn Gold      1.82\nPreston East Dome      1.52\nQuebec Gold     26\nReno Gold  47\nRoche L L  05Vi\nSan Antonio Gold      1,85\nShawkey   Gold     02Vi\nSheep Creek Gold     1.18\nSherritt Gordon      1.00\nSiscoe Gold      1.14\nSladen Malartic  40\nStadacona Rouyn  46\nSt Anthony       09'A\nSudbury   Basin        2.05\nSullivan Cons  77\nSylvanite        3.20\nTeck-Hughes Gold      4.20\nToburn Gold       1..80\nTowagmac   ........'. 20\nVentures        4.65\nWaite Amulet      6.40\nWright Hargreaves      8.05\nYmir Yankee Girl        .04V4\nOILS\nBrit American     21.10\nChem Research   20\nImperial       15.00\nInt Pete     21.73\nTexas Can        67\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi Power A  80\nBell   Telephone      174V4\nBrazilian Traction       73i\nBrew   &   Dist         4V\u00bb\nBrewing   Corp         1\nB C Power A     27\nB C Power B       2V,\nBuilding   Products       17'\u00ab\nCanada Bread            414\nCan Bud  Malting         4\nCan Car lc  Foundry       8%\nCan Cement       714\nCan Dredge      15H\nCan   Malting       3t\nCan Pacific Rlv      3-'t\nCan Ind Alcohol A      1.90\nCons  Bakeries       11\nCosmos           17V4\nDom   Bridge       27\nDom   Stores           554\nDom Tar lc Chemical       4\nDistillers   Seagrams       17\nFanny   Farmer          234\nFord of Canada A       ig^\nGeneral Steel Wares       5(4\nGoodyear  Tire          75\nGypsum  L le  A        4*i\nHamilton Bridge 80\nHiram Walker     42\u00bb\u00bb\nImperial   Tobacco    16'4\nLoblaw   A       26\".\nLoblaw B      23*4\nKelvinator     12\nMaple Leaf Milling     1 85\nMassey Harris            4V\u00ab\nMontreal Power     3114\nMoore Corp           47H\nNat  Steel   Car      *l*'t\nPage Hersey     101\nPower Corp         OVi\nPressed Metals       7V4\nSteel of Canada    72\nStandard PavinB       IV.\nWINNIPEG GRAM\nTRADE LISTLESS\nWINNIPEG, Aug. If (CP).\u2014Traders displayed little Interest In proceeding! on the Winnipeg Qrain Exchange today as wheat futures price!\nfluctuated listlessly at levels\nillghtly below the previoui cloie.\nQuotations closed H-H cent lower\nwith October at 5114, November\n52H, December S2H-V4 and May\nM'i cents.\nOnly 100,000 bushels of export\nbusiness could be confirmed.\nLiverpool closed unchanged to\nHd down, Chicago finished unchanged to H cent off while Buenoi\nAires traderi observed a holiday.\nFairly good buying In Not. 1 and\n2 Northern wu credited to exporters and ihlppen in the caih wheat\nmarket. Operation! Im the coarse\ngrain pit wu dull ilthough barley\nand oati attracted a little buying.\nIMPORTJlAIN\nOTTAWA, Aug. 17 (CP).-Can'\nada'i imports In June totalled $63,'\n709,402 compared with $58,046,098 in\nJune list year, a gain of 8.1 per\ncent, the Dominion Bureiu of Statistics reported today. Purchasei\nfrom the United States amounted\nto $39,388,614 compared with $37,\n081,460 last year and from United\nKingdom $10,124,698 compared with\n$0,241,781. Australia contributed to\nthe value of $1,700,081 against\n$904,260.\nChief supplying countriei were as.\nfollows, with figures for June, 1938,\nIn brackets: Germany $968,453\n($818,598); New Zealand $687,018\n($101,449); BritUh India $670,171\n($840,805);   FrMM  iWJ6,642< ^ ($436,-\nttJlt;    iHlplUI    Cllllo\/lll     \\*pmlA,0-m*.\/',    B*i(.'\nIsh South Africa $327,627 ($15,987);\nArgentina $237,824 ($77,607).\nPetroleum Company\nYear Profits $48,990\nCALGARY, Aug. 17 (CP) .-Commonwealth Pttroltum, Ltd., earned\na net profit of $48,990 for the year\nended May 31, 1989 compared with\na net profit of $35,324 at the end ot\nthe 1938 fiscal year, the annual report ihowed today.\nDividends totalled $37,926 to be\npaid from the net profit were declared Miy 15.\nThe annual meeting will be held\nhere Sept, 1,\nExchanges\nMONTREAL, Aug. 17 (CP)-Brlt-\nIsh and foreign exchange closed\nsteidy today. Nominal ratei for\nlarge amounts:\nGermany, relchsmark, .4014.\nGreat Britain, pound, 4.6B12.\nItaly, lire, ,0526.\nJapan, yen, .2731.\nUnited Statei dollar, par (unch.)\n(Compiled by The Royal Bank of\nCanada).\nMoney\nBy The Cinidlan Preu\nClosing exchange rates:\nAt Montreal-Pound 4.68V4; U. S.\ndollar 1.00; franc 2.64 15-16.\nAt New York-Pound 4.88V4; Canadian dollar 1.00; franc 2.85.\nAt Paris-Pound 176.71 fr,; U, S.\ndollar 37.75 fr.; Canadian dollar\n37.74 fr.\nIn Gold-Pound lit 5d; U. S.\ndollar 59.41 cents; Canadian dollar\n59.43 cents.\nDEPOSITS DECREASE\nOTTAWA, Aug. 17 (CP)-Dominion Government deposits with\nthe Bank of Canada decreased $2,-\n893,000 in the week ended August\n16, it was shown today in the bank's\nweekly statement. Chartered bank\ndeposits decreased $4,162,000 and\nnotes ln circulation increased\n$727,000.\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 17 (CP).\u2014Grain\nfuture! quotations:\nWHEAT     Open High Low Close\nOct    IIS   62Vt   61H   51H\nNov.      52V4   53      52V4   52H\nDec   SSV4  \u00bb8Vi  5JV4  JJfc\nMty    MH   M'A   MVt   MVt\nOATS\nOct    27Vi   28Vt   17Vi   27H\nDec    27V4   27V4   27      27Vt\nMay    28Vi   26tf .MVt   28Vt\nBARLEY\nOcL     M     MV\u00ab   88%   MVt\nNov    SSVi   SJ'A   JJVt   MVt\nDee   33V4  S3H  MVt  MVt\nMay    34Vt   34Vi   34      34Vi\nFLAX\nOcL   127% 128    127% 127%\nDec   -     '-     -    125S\nRYE\nOct    37H   37H   S7H   37Vt\nDec.    MVt   MH   MVt   MVi\nMay       -     -     -      41\nCASH PRICES:\nWHEAT - No. 1 hird 52%; No.\n1 nor. 62; No. 2 nor. MVt; No. 3 nor.\n45; No. 4 nor. 11%; No. 5, 37%;\nNo. 6, 32%; teed M%; No. 1 garnet\n41%; No. 2 garnet M%; No. 3 garnet\n38%; No. 1 durum 45%; No. 4 ipeclal\n39%; No. 5 ipeclal 34%; No. 6\nipeclal 34%; No. 1 mixed 37%;\ntrack 51%.\nOATS - No. 2 C. W. 27; Ex. 3 C.\nW. 25%; No. 1 feed 24%; No. 2\nfeed 22%; No. 3 feed 20%; trick\n26%.\nBARLEY - 6- and 2-row No. 1 ti.\nW. 32%; 6- and 2-row No. 2 C. W.\n32%; 6-row No. 3 C. W. 32%; No. 1\nfeed 32%; No. 2 feed 30; No. 3 feed\n29; track 32%.\nFLAX - No. 1 ti. W. tnd track\n126%; No. 2 C. W. 122%; No. 3 C. W.\n108%; No. 4 C. W. 103%.\nRY - No. 2 C. W. 36%\nStocks Lose Due\nEuropean News\nMONTniCAT,. Awr. 17 (CP). \u2014\nStock market exhibited trash ner-\nvoumets today over European un-\nlettlement and frtctlontl losses were\nspreid through the list.\nMetals on retreat Included Nickel,\nSmelters, Hollinger, Hudion Biy,\nNoranda and Bulolo. In utilities,\nBrazilian, B. C. Power, Power Corporation and Shawinigan slipped\nnarrowly. Dosco and National Steel\nCar both lost ground.\nAlgoma Steal, Asbestos, Steel of\nCanada tnd-Bulldlng Product! were\noff Vi to % point.\nOther iisues on the losing ilde\nwere International Pete, Price Bros..\nSt. Lawrence Corporation. Canadian\nCelanese, Imperial Tobacco and\nMassey Harris.\nLondon Close\nLONDON, Aug. 17 (AP). - Stock\nclosing:\nBrazil $8; C. P. R. $3%; Int Nick\n$48%; U. S. Steel $\u00ab%; Bibcock\nit Wilcox 46s Od; Boots Drug 42s\n10%d; Celanese Corp of Am \u00a35%;\nCent Mining \u00a315%; Consol Gold\nFieldi 67i 6d; Courtauldt 29s 9d;\nCrowns \u00a315; De Been pfd \u00a35%:\nEast Geduld \u00a311; Ford 17s Hid; H,\nB. C. 19s 4V4d; London Midland Rly\n\u00a312%; Metal Box 73t 9d; Mex Eagle\n6s 10%d; Mining Trust 2s; Rand\n\u00a38%; Springs 27* 8d.\nBonds: Britiih 2% per cent Consols\n\u00a366%; British 3% per cent war loan\n\u00a391%; British funding 4s 1960-90\n\u00a3105%. German 5i 1924 \u00a3M%.\nLockheed Aircraft\nProfit Shows Gain\nBURBANK, Calif., Aug. 17 (AP).\n\u2014Lockheed Aircraft Corp. reported\ntoday net profit for the six monthi\nended June 30 of $508,860, equal to\n66 cents each on 775,000 common\nshares, compared with $151,075 equal\nto 23 cents each on 660,879 common\n\u2022hares, In the like 1938 period.\nTha earth's mineral possibilities\nare so nearly explored that In the\npast two years only about 20 new\nminerals were reported all over the\nworld.\nQuotations on Wall Street\nHigh Low Close\nAm Can  100      99% 100\nAm For Power   2%    2%    2%\nAm Smelt It Ref.  44% . 44 - . 44%\nAm Tel  165% 164% 165%\nAm Tob     81%   81%   81%\nAnaconda     25%   24%   24%\nBaldwin       11      10%   10%\nBait lc Ohio     4%    4%    4%\nBendix Av     23%   23%   23%\nBeth Steel    59%   58%   59%\nBorden     20%   20%   20%\nCanada Dry     18%   17%   18  i\nCan Pacific     3%   .3% ,3%\nCerro de Pasco ..   35      35      35\nChrysler    81      79% \u25a0 80%\nCon Gas N Y    31%   31%   31%\nC Wright pfd     24      23%   23%\nDu Pont  159% 158    158%\nEastman Kodak .. 171% 170% 170%\nGen Electric     36%   35%   36%\nGen Foods ....:..:..;. \u25a0 46%   46      46\nGen  Motors     46%   45%   46\nGoodrich     20%   19%   20\nGranby         6%     6%     6%\nGreat Nor pld ......   23%   23%   23%\nHowe Sound .' .'. '49    '49      49\nHudson Motors ....    5%     5%     5%\nInter Nickel    49%   49%   49%\nHigh\nInter Tel le Tel .. 6\nKenn Copper   34%\nMont Ward   50%\nNash Motors  6%\nN Y Central   14\nPackard Motors .. 3%\nPenn R R   17\nPhillips Pete   33\nPullman  25%\nRadio Corp   6%\nRem Rand  11%\nSafeway Stores .. 44%\nShell Union   10%\nS Cal Edison   28%\nStan Oil of N J .. 40\nTexas  Corp    34%\nTimken Roller  43\nUnion  Carbide .. 79%\nUnion Oil ol Cal.. 16\nUnited Aircraft .. 35%\nUnion Pacific ..-..., 96%\nU S Rubber   42%\nU S Steel  47%\nWarner Bros   4%\nWest Electric   104%\nWest Union   24\nWoolworth  '48%\nYellow Truck .... '^5%\nLow   Close\n5%    8%\n34%   84%\n49%   49%\n6%\n6%\n13% 14\n3 3%\n16% 16%\n32% 32%\n25% 25%\nS%- \u25a0 6%\n11% 11%\n43% 44\n10% 10%\n28% 28%\n39% 40\n33% 34%\n43 43\n78% 79\n16 16\n35% 35%\n96% 96%\n41% 41 Vi\n46% 46%\n4% 4%\n103% 104%\n23 23%\n48% 48%\n15 15%\nMontreal Stock Exchange\nINDUSTRIALS;\nAlta Pac Grain \t\nAssoc Brew of Can .'...:\nBathurst P & P A \t\nCan Bronze \t\nCan Bronze pfd \t\nCan Car lc Fdy pfd\t\nCan Celanese \t\nCan Celanese pfd\t\nCan North Power\t\nCan Steamship \t\nCan Steamship pfd \t\nCockshutt Plow \t\nCon Min Sr Smelting .\nDominion Coal pfd\t\nDom Steel & Coal B .\nDominion Textile \t\nDryden Paper ..:...' ;..:\nFoundation C of C\t\nGatineau Power\nGatineau Power pfd \t\nGurd Charlei \t\nHoward Smith Piper \t\nHowird Smith Paper pfd .\nImperial  Oil \t\nInter Petroleum \t\nInter Nickel of Can\t\nLake of the Woods\t\nMcColl Frontenac \t\nNational Brew Ltd \u201e\nNat Brew pfd\t\nOgilvie Flour New\t\nTrice Bros,.,!\t\nQuebec Power    \u25a0   , , \u201e\n. 2%\n. 10%\n. 5%\n. 34\n. 105- \u2022\n. 19%\n. 17%\n. 110\n. 16%\n.1.50\n. 7%\n. 6\n. 43\n. 18%\n. 10%\n. 69\n. 8%\n, -\n. 14%\n. 94\n. 5\n. 10%\n: a.\n21%\n48%\n18%\n6\n40\n42%\n26%\n10\n16\nShawnigan W le P    19%\nSt Law Corp 2%\nSt. Law Corp pfd      9%\nSouth Can Power .J.    11%\nSteel ot Can pfd .....';    71\n\u25a0Western Grocers ' 43%\nBANK8:\nCommerce IM\nDominion  208\nImperial    218\nMontreal'\/. 213\nNova Scotia 301\nRoyal   190\nToronto 252\nCURB:\nAMP pfd    5%\nBathiurit P lc P B     2\nBeauharnois Corp _     4%\nBritish' American Oil    21\nB C packers     16%\nCan Vickers ....:     2%\nCom Paper Corp -.    3%\nFalrchild. Aircraft     4\nErater Co Ltd ...      8%\nInter Utilities A 7.75\nInter Utilltl.ii B  .40\nLak* Sulphite M\nMacLaren P lc P    '9%\nMcColl Frontenac pfd    89\nMitchell Robt \u201e J.     t\nRoyalite Oil :.    32%\nUnited Dist of Can , 50\nWalker Good tc W    48\nWalker Good pfd    20%\nWall SI. Stocks\nGenerally Lower\nNEW YORK,  Aug. 17  (AP). -\nStocks generally crawled over I\nslightly lowtr trtll in today'i market.\nThe one encouraging feature of\nth* proceedings, from the standpoint of analysts, wu thit tailing\ndried up to a mere trickle. Transfers\nfor tha five houn wtre in the\nneighborhood ot 460,000 shares.\nwhile there were a few lossu ot\niround l point, tht majority of recessions wtrt In imall fraction!. In\naddition, a handful of favorites\nmanaged to cloae a shade ahead.\nAs in yesterday's retreat, brokers\nattributed the slip-shod proceedings\nto wary traderi who refused to step\nInto the buying range because of\nthe latest German-Poliih wtr rumbling! which revived ftart the Dan-\ntig row wm about to break \"wide\nopen\" tnd again endanger the peace\nof Europe.\nImporttnt Investment holding!, financial quarters reported, were still\nIntact and market moves, lately have\nbeen due mainly to In-and-out \"professionals\" ittempting to catch\nminor price twlngs.\nBuslneu hopes continued u a\nprime bolstering influence.\nAlthough ralli were not particularly responsive, a contra-seasonal\nJump in lut week's freight loadings\nserved to prop sentiment.\nOff a shade the greater part of\nthe session \u2014 some cime back at\nthe last \u2014 were U. S. Steel, Youngstown Sheet, Montgomery Ward, J.\nI. Case, American Telephone, Anaconda, Westinghouse, Philip Morris,\nPhillips Petroleum, Celaneie, Loft,\nAlibi Chalmers and Great Northern.\nResistant were Dow Chemical,\nBethlehem Steel, General Motors,\nU. S. Rubber, International Harvester, Kennecott, U. s. steel, Im ?oni.\nKimberley Selling\nBooster Tickets for\nBig Football Series\nKIMBERLEY, B, C. - The Sullivan Mine Football Club has decided\nto bring the Trail Football Club\nhere for the annual battle for possession of the Blaylock Bowl. In\norder to raise the guarantee of $80,\nthe Kimberley boys are selling\nbooster tickets, hoping to receive as\nfine support from the public ti ln\nother yetrs.\nThe teim It training well ln\npreparation for the coming title\nseries,\nWheat Down After\nMonth's Best Level\nCHICAGO, Aug. 17 (AP). - The\nwheat market developed a downward trend today after advancing\nin early dealing! to the best level\nof the month.\nTrade here reflected a decline at\nLiverpool and there was evidence of\nswitching of hedges from September contracts into more deferred de-\nliverfe*, which depreued the May\n1940 option particularly.\nWheat cloaed unchanged to %\ncent lower compared with yesterday's finish, September 65%, December 65%-%; corn unchanged to %\noff. September 43%-%, Decenaber\n42%-%; Oats % lower to % higher.\nOkalta Down 8\nCALGARY, Aug. 17 (CP). -\nOkalta fell eight points to the 92-\ncent level under a selling wave that\nstruck Calgary's stock exchange today. Transfers totalled 13,410.\nOther ihares moved irregular\nwithin a narrow range. United at\nleven Anglo-Canadian at 90, and\nDalhousie at 36, each eued a point.\nU.S. Gov'ts. Decline\nNEW YORK, Aug. 17 (AP). -\nInterest ln foreign government loans\ncontracted sharply today. Warsaw\nCity assented 4%! of '58, however,\ngained more than a point on a few\nsales.\nU. S. Governments crossed the\ntape at declines running to ai much\nas 9-32nd of a point.\nLONDON (CP)\u2014Shipment-of 130\nEnglish prize cattle, purchased by\nthe Soviet government, was cancelled when one bull died suddenly\nat Tilbury docks. Officials suspected\nanthrax infection in the consignment.\nMetal Markets\nLONDON, Aug. 17 (AP). - Clot\nIng: Copper, standard spot \u00a344, off\n2s Ud; future \u00a344 2t lid, off Is 3d:\nelectrolytic spot, bid \u00a360, asked\n\u00a350 10s. both off 5s.\nTin ipot \u00a3221 15s. of 2s 6d.\nBids: Lead spot \u00a315 17s 6d, future \u00a316 15s, both up 2s 6d.\nBar gold \u25a0 148s 7d, unchmged.\n'Equivalent $34.79.) Bar silver 17d,\noff 1-16.\nMONTREAL \u2014 Bar gold in Lon'\ndon wu unchanged at $34.78 an\nounce ln Cinidiin fundi; 148s 7d In\nBritish. The fixed $35 Wuhington\nprice amounted to $35 in Canadian\nwith the Unlted~States dollar at pir.\nSpot; Copper, electrolytic 11.90;\ntin 52.90; lead 4.85; zinc 4.53; anti\nmony 14.00.\nSilver futuru cloied iteady, 16\npoints off. Bid: Aug. 33.10.\n\u25a0 NEW YORK, - Copper steady;\nelectrolytic spot 10.50; export 10,55,\nTin steady; spot ind nearby it\n48.75; forward 48.50. Lead steady;\nspot, New York 8.06-10; Eut St\nLouis 4.90.\nZinc steady; East St. Louli spot\ntnd forward 4.75.\nBar silver 35%, unchanged,\nGolds Losses Worst\nin Slow Session on\nVancouver Exchange\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 17 (CP). \u2014\nAlmost ill major Itiuei ilanted\ndownward on a listless aesalon of\nthe Vancouver Stock Exchange today. Gold stocks suffered the worst\nlosses dropping u much as twenty\nfive cents. Transactions for the day\ntotalled 39,155 shares.\nBralorne tumbled 25 cent* to\n11.00 ln the precious metals sections while Privateer continued to\ndecline, dropping 7 to 1.08. Hedley\nMascot at 72, Reno at 47% and Pioneer at z.40 were aii oit one ceui.\nBig Missouri was up one cent to\n13, while Cariboo at 2.18 and Premier at 1.81 were unchanged. Sheep\nCreek was up one cent at 1.18 and\nReward remained at 1% while trad\nIng 11,000 shares,\nTn the oils, Home skidded 4 to\n2.08, Calgary lc Edmonton dropped\n2 to 1.B4 and Sunset eased one cent\nto 41. Extension firmed % to 21%,\nand Mar Jon was 4% unchanged.\nCommoil was up 4 at 35.\nWorld Exchanges\nNEW YORK, Aug. 17 (AP).-Brlt\nish pounds for future delivery drop\nped sharply in the foreign exchinge\nmarket today aa rumors circulated\nthrough money capitals of new\nthreats, via Danzig, to European\npeace.\nSterling due In 90 days was quoted\n2% cents below the spot rate, com\npared with 1 15-16 cents Wedn26\nday. The spot price, however, was\nunchanged at $4.68%, held In line by\nofficial  control operations.\nThe guilder dipped .02 of a cent\nIn relation to the United Statet\ndollar. The French franc advanced\nslightly to 2.65 and the Canadian\ndollar was unchanged at par.\nClosing prices, Great Britain in\ndollars, others in cents:\nGreat Britain 4.68%, 60-day bills\n4.66%; Canada, Montreal in New\nYork 100.00; Canada, New York in\nMontreal 100.00; Belgium 16.99;\nDenmark 20.91; Finland 2.07; France\n2.65; Germany 40.13, benevolent\n19.25, travel 22.80; Greece .85%;\nHungary 19.70; Italy 5.26%; Netherlands 53.63; Norway 23.53; Poland\n18.65; Portugal 4.27; Rumania .72;\nSweden 24.13; Switzerland 22.58%;\nArgentine (official) 31.21; Argentine (free) 23.20; Brazil (official)\n6.05; Brazil (free) 5.10; Mexico\n17.00N: Japan 27.31; Hong Kong\n28.52; Shanghai 16.95; Yugoslavia\n2.30.\nRates in spot cables unless\notherwise indicated. N\u2014Nominal.\nWork Started Nakusp\nWharf; New Approach\nNAKUSP, B.C.-Work hu commenced on the construction of a\nnew approach to Nakusp Government, Wharf. L. Robson of Burton is in charge of the Job apd a\ncrew of five local men are employed. The crew is being changed\nat intervals to give more men the\nbenefit of a few days work.\nHARRISBURG, Ont, (CP)-Farm-\ners here had a scare when Gilbert\nManncn reported the dread Japanese beetle was attacking his crops.\nAgricultural College officials relieved everybody by labelling the\nbug a dogbane.\nDow Jones Averages\n\u25a0\"' '\u25a0 - \u25a0                           High    Low Close Change\n30  industrials             ....'     138.89   137.38 138.33 off    .11\n20  rail*            \u2022           27M    27-65 2771 otf    -29\nis utilities \u2022; 7. 7 ::       26.07 25.81 25.93 o\u00ab .22\n40  bonds                89.62 off    .09\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nMINES\nBig Missouri \t\nBralorne \t\nBridge River Con .\nCariboo  Gold  \t\nDentonia  $\nFairview Amal\t\nFederal Gold\t\nGolconda \t\nGold Belt \t\nGrandview \t\nGrull-Wlhlusne \t\nHedley Mascot \t\nHome Gold\t\nIndian Mines \t\nInter, Coal lc Coke\nIsland Mountain ....\nKootenay Belle\t\nLucky Jim \t\nMak Siccar Gold ..\nMinto \t\nMcGillivray \t\nNicola -\nNoble Five -\t\nPend Oreille  .'.\nPilot  \u2022\u25a0\t\nPioneer \t\nPorWr   -\nP. Border \t\nTemlqr\t\n'riv*t*er  \t\nluatiino \t\nRelief Arl\t\nReno  -\t\nReward ...\nRufus  :....\nSally  -\nSalmon\t\nSheep Creek \t\nSilbak Premier .....\nSilvcrcrest   -\nBid\n.12\n11.00\n.02\n2.15\n.02\n.03\n.00%\n.04%\n.31\n.04%\n.01%\n.70\n.00%\n.00%\n.32\n1.03\n.77\n.01%\n.00%\n.01%\n.20\n.02%\n.01%\n1.31\n.00%\n2.36\n.01%\n.00%\nLM\n.02%\n.12%\n.48%\n.01%\n.00%\n.03%\n1.17\nAsk\n.15\n11.25\n220\n.02%\n.03%\n.74\n.01%\n.34\n1.05\n.80\n.01%\n.02\n.03\n.02\n2.50\n.01\n1.83\n1.08\n.03\n,13%\n.49\n.02%\n.01\n.08%\n1.18\n1.27\n.00%       \u2014\nSurf Inlet \t\nTaylor  \t\nWellington \t\nWesko  \t\nWhitewater\t\nYmir Yankee Girl\nOILS\nA. P. Con \t\nAmalgamated  \t\nAnaconda  \t\nAnglo Can \t\nBaltac\t\nBritish Dom\t\nCalgary Sc Ed\t\nCalmont   \t\nCommonwealth   ....\nDalhousie \t\nEast   Crest  \t\nFirestone Pete \t\nFour Star Pete\t\nFreehold Corp \t\nHargal  OU \t\nHome Oil \t\nMadison   \t\nMar  Jon   \t\nMcDougall   Segur\nMercury  Oil  \t\nMerland   \t\nMid-West Ptte \t\nMill City Pete \t\nOkalta  com  \t\nPacalta   \t\nPrairie Roy\t\nSouth End Pete ....\nUnited \t\nVanalta   \t\nWest Flank\nINDUSTRIALS\nCapital  Estates  ....\nCoast Brew\t\n.Pacific  Coyle   \t\nU D L \t\n.16\n.05\n.00%\n.00%\n.02%\n.04\n13.15\n.00%\n.06\n.88\n.01%\n.01\n1.81\n.25\n.36\n.05\n.07\n.12\n.03%\n.19\n2.05\n.02%\n.04\n.11%\n.06%\n.03%\n.02%\n.05\n.90\n.04%\n.21\n.02%\n.07\n.04%\n.04 ti\n.90\n1.26\n.12\n.50\n.06\n.00%\n.03\n.05\n.07\n.02\n1.83\n.33\n.03 Vi\n.21\n2.08\n.04%\n.12\n.04\n.06\n.04\n.09\n.06\nNewsprint From U.S. Southern Pine\nMay Mean Home Source of Supply\nLUFKIN, Tex., Aug. 17 (AP).-A\nthree-way dream it coming true In\ntht steel, wood and masonry that\nsoon will form the firat pltnt to\nmike newsprint from Southern\nUnited Statei pine.\nIt waa the dream, fint ot Charltt\nHolmei Herty; naxt, ot Francii Patrick Garvin tnd thtn, of tht ptney\nwoodi people throughout the South.\nDr. Herty wti the scientist and\nresearch worker who gtvt many\nyeart of hli Ufa proving it hli laboratory ln Savannah, Oa., that\nnewsprint could be made trom\nSouthern pine wood. Oarvan, Preildent ot the Chemical foundition of\ntail and contributed freely In money\nto keep the paper-making experiment! going.\nBoth died before their drum tc-\ntually wit realized, Oarvan in 1937\ntnd Herty in 1938, but not befort\nthe doctrine they preached took\nroot.\nWith cotton waning u a producer of wealth, Southerners began\nto look to their pine lands u a new\nlource of riches And now thrt*\nmllei tait of Lufkin tt Herty, embryo town namtd for Dr. Harty, ia\nraiting a $6,000,000 plant for making\nnewsprint. At lirge as thli enterprise ti, mmy tee It merely ti i beginning. I. L. Kurth, Prtildint ot\nthe mill put lt mit wan\n\"We hop* to turn out about 80,000\ntons of newsprint innuilly, I feel\nthtt thli It Just a ttart, and that\nsoon tfter tht South other Hirty't\n(newsprint towni) will ipring up.\nTexu ilont consumes mora thin\n110,000 toni of newsprint annually,\nor mort than twlct ti much is tha\nctptclty oi our mill.''\nTht pioneer plant, expected to\nemploy between 800 and 1000 men\ndirectly and many othen Indirectly\nin supplying its raw mtttrlils,\nshould be completed and begin production by the end of th* ytar.\nKeenly interested ln the new van.\ntura ire Southern newspaper pub*\nllihert who look to tht naw industry u a home iource of thtlr\npaper supply, which now It lirgely\nimported, moit of it from Canada.\nSocial . . .\nSALMO\nSALMO, B. C-Mn. Watentreet\nhid at gueiti, htr listen Mri. W.\nShtell ol Nakuip, Mrs, Hunter\nSmith and ion Darryl of Hedley\nand Mary Rose of Edmonton, also\nher diughter Pat, who hai bten\nwith Mn. Shlell at Nikuip for\niome time.\nMr. tnd Mrs. L. O. Moir hid ai\ngueiti over tha weekend Mn. W.\nChurches md diughter Edith of\nRosiland.\nEddie Nord of Hedley Is a guest\nof his brother-in-law ind niter,\nMr. and Mrs. J. Parent. He will accompany home, Mri. Nord and ion\nHenry.\nMr. and Mri, C. A, Ctwley and\ndaughter Margery returned from\nVincouver,\nH. ?sry.'\u00abr vi.lt\u00abd Nulivin Mon.\nday.\nMr. and Mrs. A. Bremner motored to Nelion Sundiy via Trail and\nRossland. They wer* accompanied\nhome by their niece, Mln Mona\nMiller.\nFred Lindstrom md daughters\nShirley, Naomi and Carol returned Monday from Seattle and points\nsouth, where they enjoyed i month\nholiday,\nMr. and Mri. M, C. Donaldson\nand family have returned from\nSeaside, Ore., where they spent a\nmonth's  vacation.\nA. C. Cawley has returned from\na week's vacation at Seaside, Ore,\nGeorge T. Matthews wis a viiitor\nto Nelson.    ,\nMRS. BRODIE SPEAKS\nTO NAKUSP SOCIETY\nNAKUSP, B.C.-Mrs. R. Brodie\ngave an Interesting talk on The\nNtw Canadian\", a topic taken from\nthe study book, at a meeting of\nthe Nakusp Women's Missionary\nSociety Tuesday afternoon in the\nUnited Church. Miss J. FaWcett wis\nthe soloist, and the devotional period was led by Mrs. C. B. Ham-\nbling and Mrt. M, Kerr.\nSociaL ....\nSLOCAN CITY\nSLOCAN CITY, B.C.-Mlu floi-\nenoa Baillie hn returned to Trail\natter being the gueit ot Mr. md\nMrs. K. Popoff.\nMiss June Graham Is horn* tgiln\nafter   visiting  relative!   ln   Trail.\nMr. and Mri, Ash Bailie ot Trail\nare guesti of Mn. Baillle's pirmti,\nMr. tnd Mn. K. Popoff.\nMn. J, Ltw it home aglin attif\nvisiting her son-in-law and diughter, Mr. and Mri. George Stewart\nmd little grind-diughter Ivy at\nSandon.\nMr. md Mn. J. Shaw ltft Monday for their home at Bralorne,\nafter viiiting relatives htr* tor \u2022\nmonth. They were accompanied\nby Mn, Shaw'i titter, Min B*atric\u00ab\nZi)oc who will vltlt tor a time.\nMr. md Mn. J. Grior md diughter Pat. md Mln Maryl Tattrie ol\nNew Denver were weekend vial*\nton here.\nMrs. T, McNeish ud ton Murray,\nvliited Lardo during tha weekend,\nguests of Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Lava.\nque. They were accompanied by\nMill Audrey Leveque, who had\nbeen a guest of her grandparents,\nMr. and Mn. T. McNeish, md he*\nuncle, Murray McNeish, for a few\nSLOCAN CTTY, B. C. - Mr. and\nMn. Clifford Swan md family ot,\nKimberley, who are on their way\nhome from Vincouver, ara visiting\nrelatives here for a few dayi.\nMrs. John Life, Sr., of NeUon, M\nspending a portion of the Summest\nat her home here. Mn. Lift It accompanied by Mn. F. Norrli and\ndaughter Golda Norrli, alio at\nNelion.\nMn. H. Derrig ipent a few daytl\nwith friendl at Winlaw and Apple\u00ab\ndale.\nJ. Gray of Nelton was hera for *\nfew dayi tha guest of Captain and,\nMn. F. Broughton and family.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Boudier left\nafter their visit here at the home ot\nMrs. Boudler's father to mak*\ntheir home at the Kootenay Bell*\nmine, having returned from theit\nhoneymoon In Spokane.\nU.S. Gov't, lo Take Cotton Loan Titles\nfor Exchange Trade With Britain\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 17 (AP). -\nHenry Wallace, Secretary of Agriculture, announced today the United\nStates Government would take title\nto more than half of the 11,420,000\nbales of cotton held under loans to\ngrowers to carry out the cotton-\nrubber exchange agreement with\nBritain.\nAt the same time, the secretary\nsaid the Commodity Credit Corporation would extend Government\nloans on the 1938 crop cotton ofr\none year until July 31, 1940. All of\nthe Government loans on cotton are\non an annual basis and mature on\nJuly 31.\nWallace said the Government\nLoan Corporation already had taken\ntitle to 1,670,000 bale, of 1934 crop\ncotton, Sept. 1 ot this year he tald\nthe Government would tak* title to\n5,270,000 balea of 1937 crop cotton.\nAlthough the exchinge of surplut\nAmerican cotton for Britiih rubber\ntentatively calls for only between\n500,000 and 600,000 bales, the tacr\u00ab*\ntary said it was necessary to tak*\ntitle to the 1937 crop alio in order to\nprovide the quality needed.\nIn addition to the Britiah deal.\nofficials recently have announced\ntentative aale of 250,000 balea ot '\nGovernment Loan cotton to Spain\nand pouible sale of another 188,000\nbales to France and Switzerland.\nCotton going to Britain, Franc*\nand Switzerland, must be held it\na war reierve for five yean, or\nuntil an emergency prevents uiual\npurchases of American cotton.\nPRINTING\nOF ALL\nKINDS\nOur modern plant is equipped to handle\nyour next printing job no matter what\nit is. We do all kinds of printing with\nthe assurance of quality workmanship\nand satisfaction.\nWe wil! gladly help you design your\nprinted pieces and quote prices.\nPHONE 144\nOur Representative Will Call\nOut of Town Customers Write the\nJfatemt latin \u00ae*m\nCOMMERCIAL  PRINTING   DEPT.\n266 BAKER ST. NELSON, B. C.\n \u2014\nat**mMmtm-mttmt*ttmtMmtmmi\u00bbtmmimmmt\u00bbtmmimiim\nTODAY .AMD\nSATURDAY\nCOMPLETE SHOWS AT 2:00,7:00 AND 9:02\nSONJA HENIE TYRONE POWER\nRUDY\nromancing to tht lix\nnew hit melodies of\nSECOND\nFIDDLE\nVALLEE\nfDNA MAY\nOLIVER\nMARY MIAIY\nIYLI TAIIOT\nALAN DINIHART\nSONIA SKATES HU SENSATIONAL TANCO\nNITE:   lSti-S&t.    I\nPLUS\u2014DISNEY CARTOON. NOVELTY and NtWS\nMt__jMstmttMMMM______t_t_1_____*_t_**\nLAKEFRONT PROPERTY\nFOR SALE\nDesirable North Shore location,\none  mile  from  Nelion   ferry.\nPlenty of water, will divide to\n\u25a0uit purchaser. Easy Termi.\nT. D. ROSLINC\n3 Royal Bank Bldg.       Phone 717\nFACIALS MANICURES\nSHAMPOOS    PERMANENTS\nHaifch Tru-Art\nBeauty Salon\nPhone 327   .      Johnstone Blk.\n1936 Oldsmoblle\nFORDOR TOURINC SEDAN\nLIKE NEW - GOOD BUY\nPEEBLES MOTORS\nPhone 111\n*mmmm*mm\nBaker St     Limited\nTbe Home of\nGuaranteed\nWork Clothing\nGodfreys' Ltd.\nSEB\nVIC  GRAVES\nMASTER  PLUMBER\nFor all your needa In plumbing repaln, alterations, and\nInstallation!.\nPh. 816       801 VICTORIA (T.\nDWELLING HOUSES Wanted\nWinted llltlngi of homei for sale.\nWa have prospective buyers, your\nproperty may tult them. -\nH.E. DUX\n682 Ward St      Opp. Madden Hotel\nJUNIOR LACROSSE\nLEAGUE GAME\nNelson Junion vi. Sheep Creole Bombers\nNELSON CIVIC ARENA:  TONIGHT\nWEST END DOOR OPEN AT 7:30. CAME AT 8.\nADMISSION \u2014 Adulti 25^. Children l<ty\nThis li the list league game prior to Junior Playdowni\nWednesday Aug. 23\nTHE NELSON\nKINSMEN CLUB\nWill Present Its\nFIRST ANNUAL\nWater Carnival\nA COMPLETE PROGRAM INCLUDING\nSPEED BOAT RACES\nINBOARD AND OUTBOARD\nROWING RACES\nKELOWNA VI NELSON\nSWIMMING RACES\nMEN'S, WOMEN'S-BOYI', GIRLS'\nNOVELTY EVENTS\nWATER  SKIING\u2014CANOE TILTING-COMEDY  NUMBERS\nLIKE A THREE RING CIRCUS\nNever a Dull Moment\nAdmission: 50^\u2014Entitles holder to bleacher chair en\nthe City Wharf.\nMONSTER REGATTA DANCE\nEAGLE HALL, 9 P.M.\nCome out and support the Kinsmen In their efforts\nto revive water sports in Nelson.\nCAMP in\nCOMFORT\nWHY BE UNCOMFORTABLE DURING YOUR\nCAMPING HOLIDAY?\nCOLEMAN CAMP STOVES: Each $6.95\nSave time, trouble and tempers by providing\ngas cooking service no matter where you\nare. No Waiting \u2014 Easy Filling \u2014 Clean.\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Limited\nNelton, B. C.\nMORE ABOUT\nSPROULE CREEK\nFIRE\n(Continued From Paga Ont)\nA. G. Lambert of Nelton, who\noperated the A. G. Lambert Company Ltd. sawmill and logging operatloni In the Sproule Creek region\nbetween 1922 and 1928, itated he\nthought the tire might be ln nil\ncompany's old workings.\nRadio communication between the\ntire icene and Nelson Forestry headquarters wat incomplete. The operator of a portable set at the fire\ncould ipeak to Nelion but could\nnot heir the voices of those at the\ntending station in the forettry\nwarehouie.\nThe weather forecait Thursday\nnight wai \"continued hot and dry\nfor another three dayi.\"\nMcculloch fire\ncontrolled\nThe McCulloch tire on tha divide\nbetween the Kettle Villey md Okanagan, which had ipread to 430\nacrei, waa reported brought under\ncontrol by the crew of 120 men, and\nit wai expected 90 would be laid\noff today.\nCrew on the Marlon Creek fire ln\nUIBILilW\ni 1. EC. FRIDAY MORNINO, AUO. 11. 1MI \u2014\nLate Nelsonlte\nW**\nsswwwawcwcawww\nNEWS OF IHE DAY\n<s\u00bb\u00bbs\u00bb\u00ab\u00bb\u00bbw\u00abtt3W\u00bb^\u00bb\u00bb\u00a3;\u00bb\nWanted huckleberriei. McDONALD\nJAM   COMPANY   LTD.\nNelson    School    Boird    Regulir\nmeeting tonight, 8 p.m. City Hill.\nKODAK  FILMS ANO  DEVELOPING DONE AT DUSH'G, 632 Btktr.\nEDI80N MAZDA LAMP8, F. H.\n8MITH, PHONE 666, 351 Baker 8L\nMUSICAL   INSTRUMENTS   AND\nREPAIR WORK. WEBB'8 SOS Baker\nDance at Willow Point Tuesday,\nAug. 22. Admission SO cents. Margaret Graham's Orchestra.\nTha whole town Is talking about\nthe Opening Dance In the newly\ndecorated Eagle Hall tomorrow nite.\nOkanagan cant's, canning peaches,\ntomatoei, Watermelon, \u2014 RADIE'8\nPUBLIC MARKET.\nElectrle Toasters, (1.49. Vacuum\nbottlei 32c. Aluminum Percolators,\n69c. See our windows for other\nspecials. \u2014 HIPPERSON'S.\nSEE US FIRST FOR ALL BUILD\nING SUPPLIES. Nelson Saih A Door\nCompany, Ltd., Front SL Phone 292,\nOUTLKT HOTEL\nTAKE YOUR HOLIDAY8 AT\nPROCTER, B. C.\nFISHING,  BOATING, SWIMMING\n36 Foot Cabin Cruiser for hire\nCablm In the orchard for rent\nOne-piece cabinet\u2014 One-piece top\n\u2014Lifetime Porcelain Inside and out\n\u2014Features of the new Frigidaire\nElectric Range. See them on display\nat HIPPERSON'S.\nEatt Kootenay wis Increased from\n24 to 40 at the tire burned lower\ndown the mountain, giving the crew\nconsiderable trouble at ona polnL\nThe Palliter River fi{e In the same\nregion, however, wu well under\ncontrol, with leven men guarding it\nNo word had been received from\nthe man aent In to investigate a\nblue in the Hone Thief Creek region in the Invermere.\nPACK TRAIN OUT\nSeventy-four men, with 10 pick\nhorsei, were tt the Lamb Creek\nblaze on Moyie Lake, but no report was received from them. No\nword was received from 12 men tent\nfar up the St. Mary's River above\nRedding Creek.\nIn the Ijrdeau country, condltioni were the tame as In the put\nfew days, with 10 men on the Howser Lake fire and eight on Cascade\nCreek.\nFifteen men were itill at work on\nthe Fotthall Creek blaze in the\nNakusp district, while the fire reported earlier ln the week, two\nmiles West of Midway, wu under\ncontrol.\nFernie, Creiton and New Denver ranger dlttrlcta were free of\nfires.\nMORE ABOUT\nHUNGARY\n(Continued From Page Ont)\nThis practically wu admitted by\nthe Dienst Aus Deutrehltnd, which\nis considered u speaking for the\nGovernment.\nIt said today:\n\"Agreement between Germany and\nHungary has been rendered tecure\nin every direction. Thli hat been\nmade evident anew by the latest\nvisit of Minister Csaky to Salzburg.\nSEE EYE TO EYE\n\"Hungary and Germany tee completely eye to eye at regards\ntheir conception of cooperating\npolitically.\"\nThe Utmost secrecy prevailed\nconcerning the nature of any agree'\nment reached.\nInformed political circles felt cer\ntain the main points under discussion were:\n1. Hungary's readiness to permit\nthe German army, ln the event of\nsa anr.cd conflict, to occupy the\nCarpatho-Ukraine. This would give\nGermany a great strategic advantage\nin two directions \u2014 Poland and\nRumania.\n2. The prospects of remodelling\nHungary along Fascist-Nazi lines.\nOccasion for an especially heated\noutburst of anti-Polish sentiments\nwas given today by the fact Polish\nInsurgents, who cut off certain parts\nof Upper Silesia from the Reich 20\nyears ago, are having special celebrations these days commemorating\ntheir exploits.\nPropaganda Mlnliter Goebbels'\nDer Angriff conducted a terlei of\ntelephone Inquiries to Upper 81-\nlesla border towni, iuch u Hlndenburg, Ratlbcr and Rosenberg,\nto determine the lott of German\nrefugeei.\nThese refugeei, the paper then\nreported, prefer tha danger of\ndrowning In the Oder River, which\nthey mutt crou in order to reich\nthe Germin shores, or of being\nshot by Pollih Frontier Guardi, to\ni \"maltreatment by Pollih mobs.\"\nio Play Violin\non Radio Today\nMary E. White Lived\nin Nelson About\n20 Years\nMary K White, widow of the late\nBruce M White and reildent in\nNelion for about 20 yean, may be\nheard to Nelton radio listeners this\nmorning for three-quarters ot an\nhour, itarting at 10 o'clock, over\nShortwave Radio Station WSXL,\nN.B.C. International in a violin recital from Radio City, New York.\nMr. White, uncle of John B.\nWhite, Spokane Attorney, came to\nNelion with hii wife ln about tha\nmiddle BO'a. After Mr. White died\nabout the time of tha Great War,\nMrs. White left to reside with her\nchildren, believed to' be two or\nthree boyt, In other parti. Mr.\nWhite had been actively Interested\nln various dlitrict mines, particularly in the Sandon area.\nWhile In Nelton the family resided at 923 Vernon StreeL Besides\ngiving many recitals, Mrs. White\nwas also prominent here In literary circles, particularly poetry.\nPeru to Stay Out\nof Olympic Games\nLIMA, Peru, Aug. 17 (AP)-The\nNational Sporti Committee today\napproved a report ot the committee\non international championships recommending Peru should not participate in the Olympic Games ln\nFinland next year, bued \"on the\nexperience obtained at Berlin in\n1936.\"\nIn the Berlin Gamei the Peruvian\nsoccer team defeated Austria, 4-2,\nbut the match was ruled out on\nalleged technicalities and ordered\nre-played. Peru refused to do so\nand withdrew from further participation.\nLUMBERMAN DIE8\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 17 <CP>-\n\u00bbs.,....-\u00a3i services v.ri!l ce heW M<*n-\nday\"\"for\"joe Gonzales, 58, Britiih\nColumbia lumberman. He died yesterday. He also operated timber\ncompanlei ln Wuhlngton and Oregon Statea and in Mexico.\nRent your houte with a want ad.\nLos Angeles Pitcher\nRetains Leadership\nLOS JUJGELE8, Atli 17 (AP).-\nJulio Bonettl of Los Angelea continued to bead tha Pacific Coait\nLeigue pitching averages in games\nplayed through Tueiday, while Sacramento'! Tony Freitaa remained\nthe strikeout king ot the circuit.\nBonettl, while derrlcked for a\npinch hitter Tuetdiy nlghL kept Intact his record of 15 garnet won and\n3 lent, while Freitu hat whiffed 129\nbatten tn winning 16 garnet and\nloiing the'iame number, according\nto unofficial statistics released here\ntoday.\n2 Bantam Baseball\nGames This Morning\nBANTAM BALL STANDINGS\nW t   Pd.\nGlanti         \u00ab    *\nTigen \u2022   *\nYinkeei 4    4\nCubi      4\nFURSTORAGE\nREPAIRS AND REMODELS\nMalcolm's Furs\nBaker SL\nPhone 900\nFIRE CHIEF AND SKY CHIEF\nGASOLINE\nAT\nSKY CHIEF AUTO\n206 Bakar    SERVICE'    Phona 112\nM-mmm\nDodgen      - \u2014   8\nThit morning at tha Recreation\nGroundt, itarting at D o'clock there\nwill be two garnet played ln tbe\nNelion Bantam Bueball League. In\nthe firat game ln which the Tigen\nmeet the Yankeei, the Tigen have\na chance to forge ahead to undla-\nputed possession of flnt place ln\nthe league. However U Yanki win\nit will put them in a virtual tie\nwith the Tigen for lecond place and\na tew percentage polnta to the good,\nhaving two gamei In hand. .\nThe lecond game will tee the\nDodgen and Cubs playing off their\ntie game of last Wednesday. A victory for the Cubs, if the Yankees\nlose, would put them in third place\nln the standings. A win for the\nDodgen would give them a fourth-\nplace tie with the Cubi themselves.\nA bantam rep practice lt also\nscheduled.\nSend Ut Tour\nMaU Orders\nPrompt, Efficient\nService\nMillionaire Posts\n$175,000 in Bonds\nCHICAGO, Aug. 17 (AP)-M. L.\nAnnenberg, hli Mn, Wilter, arid\ntwo buiineu associates surrendered to the United Statet Marshal\ntoday, potted bondt totalling $175.-\n000 and were released until their\ntrial on chargei of evading $5,548,-\n384 tax, plus penalties, on the publisher's income.\n1936 CHEVROLET\nVrtan Expreu. Excellent Condition.\nNew Rubber. A Red Star Value\nSowerby-Cuthbert Ltd.\nOpposite tht\nPostofflce and Hume Hotel\nJ. A. C\u00bb Laughton\nOptometrist\nSUITE 205. MEDICAL ARTS BLDG\nsuppose you And i have a\n\"Fire Side Chat\" about Educating\nJunior. It lt bound to cost money\nto Educate your Child. Phone me\nat 080. Will be glad to talk over\nthis important matter.\nFRANK A. STUART\n577 Baker SL Nelton, B.C.\nFRIED CHICKEN\nSaturdiy and Sunday .. 501\nQrenfeWs Cafe\nTHE VALUE MINDED LADY KNOWS THAT WITH AN\nACCOUNT AT THE STAR SHE'S GETTING THE BEST\nIN SERVICE AT MODERATE PRICES\nPhone 10 or 11 for Friday and Saturday Specials\nBABY BEETS: Royal City,\n2 tint  \t\nEUREKA BLEACH:\nQuart bottle, 2 for\t\nPEARL WHITE SOAP:\n5 ban \t\nJOHNSONS FLOOR WAX:\nAll kinds, tin\t\nCARROT JUICE: Diamond A,\n2'i, tin \t\nGRAPEFRUIT JUICE: Libby'i,\nCiant, 50 ox. tin\t\n29c\n25c\n19c\n59c\n19c\n25c\nSOAP DEAL\n3 bar* Woodbury's Facial Soap, 1 bottle\nAlmond Rote Lotion, QC\n35c value for uoC\nLIME JUICE: Montscrr.it,\nPure, 19 oz. bottle\t\nLEMON JUICE: Libby'i, pure\nuniweetened, 8 oz. tin, 2 for .\nPRUNES: Nabob extra large,\nfancy, 2 Ib. carton\t\nSWEET GHERKINS PICKLES:\nPolly Prim, 18 ox. jar\t\nNABOB TOMATO KETCHUP:\nLarge bottle, 2. for\t\nMAYONNAISE: Beit Foods,\n8 oz. jar\t\n16 oz. jar 39tf\nDUNBAR SHRIMP: Faney. or\ntall tins, 2 for JjC\n45c\n29c\n25c\n25c\n35c\n21c\nFruits and\nVegetables\nCANTALOUPS:\nOkanagan, vine ripened.\nExtra large, 2 for .. 25<*\nLarge, 3 for  25^\nMedium, 4 for .... 25.\n25c\nBLACKBERRIES:\n3 for\t\nWATERMELON: 01\/ -\nWhole, Ib. ... J72C\nCut, Ib ,.. 41\nPEACHES: Pre- <M OC\nserving, crate . .leLed\nBaikets  23\u00a3\nBANANAS:\n3 Ibs ,\nYELLOW BEANS: GREEN\nIT: 19c\nCORN: Golden      00\nBantam, doz OLC\n29c\nTUNA FISH: Oceanic,\nlight meat, 'A's, 3 for ....\nSALMON: Libby's, Red Alaska,     OQ.\nTall, Ib. tin  \u00bbwC\nSARDINES: King Oscar,    \"\n2 tins ,\nCORNED BEEF: Bovril,\ngenuine, 2 tins ,\nMEAT PASTES: Assorted,\nHedlund's, 3 tins\t\nSPECIAL CHICKEN LOAF:\nSwift's, sliced to order, Ib. .\nSIDE BACON: Homo Brand,\nspecial cure, piece, Ib\t\nSliced, Ib 35<\nPICNIC SHOULDERS: Tender       1Q\nMade, 6 to 8 Ib. average, Ib iJii\nBUTTER: Claresholm,\n1st grade, 3 Ibs\t\nFresh direct from the creamery\nCLOVER HONEY: Oft.\n21b. tin .itV-Z\nICING SUGAR: 1ft\n2 Ib. carton  l\u00ab\/l\nBAKER'S COOKING lft.\nCHOCOLATE: Vi lb. cake lUC\nPASTRY FLOUR: Brunton's, OP.\n, Australian, 5 Ib. ssck ttdZ\nSWANS DOWN CAKE FLOUR:    OC 0\nPkt.  LDC\nDAD'S COOKIES: Oatmeal or\nCocoanut, 2 doz. pkt.\t\n35c\n29c\n39c\n25c\n39c\n29c\n89c\n17c\nNakoB\nNabob Coffee\nLb. tin... 39c\nSauerkraut \u00bbn\u00abi Weiners\nOn* tin Libby's Sauerkraut; One Ib. Swift's     Oft.\nSkinless Weiners, all for OUl\nOrder SUMMER WOOD Now\nMill  Endi, load : $3.75\nS lotdi tor $10.00\nSltbwood. S cordi $10.00\nSaw Duit, unit I 4.00\nSummer\nNeckwear\nLook over your tie rack\u2014 |\nNeed on\u00ab or two to match j\ncertain   shirts   or   suits.\nThen come and look ovtr\nour tie racks. Hundreds of\nbeautiful  ties in richest\ncolorings,\n50*     75*     fl.00\nEMORY'S]\nLimited\nTht Man't Stort\n$5.00TOsANYO10fl\nfor nama of uied ear proepaet  L\n(Unless we already havt the name)|\nIf a tale It concluded\nAUTOMOBILE BROKERS\nJtck McDowell 4 Howard Thurrr\nNext Savor Hotel\nPhone 163 or 434R1\nPHONE 128\nFOR PROMPT SERVICE\nKOOTENAY NO-ODOR\nDRY CLEANING CO.\nT. H. WATERS & CO.\nLIMITED\nWe specialize ln glass for building!, automobiles, boats and\nfurniture.\nWINDOWS REGLAZED\n**iiiiiiiiriiitTtTiiii*Tii-i-i**itriiii<l*iiw\nKEEP COOL\nIn Clean Clothes\n^smdkb tflMUWiA,\nPHONE 1042\n1934 Chevrolet\nDeluxe Sedan\n2 tpart tlrtt\nKootenay Motors\n(Nelion) Ltd. Phont 117\nNAILS are an important part\nof women being well groomed.\nEAST TRAIL LOTS\nSend for map and price lltL\na itart on having your own I\n\u2014with our monthly eaiy ply\nRobertion Realty Co. Ltd.\nNtlion,  B.C. '\nFountain\nService\nThe PERCOLATOI\n(Lambert's\nFOR\nLUMBER\nPHONE 82\nCATALINA and JANTZEN\nBATHING TRUNKS]\nJack Boyce\nS14 Biker    8tyle Shop    Phone 19\nDally   Oellverltvt\nill parti of th* city.\n577 BAKER ST.\nPARLOR\nPHONE 244\nROOFING\nEaves Troughs, etc.\nR.H. Maber\nPhon* 655      810 Kootenay St\nFinancial Security\nINVESTORS SYNDICATE\nMonthly Savings Plsn\nR. W. DAWSON\nBonded Representative\nBox SI      Hlpperson Blk.      Ph. 107\nPHONE 25\nPrescriptions\nCompounded\nI   \"Cj^^JT-       Accurately\nFleury's Pharmacy\nMEDICAL ARTS BLOCK\nCIVIC\nI    UST TIMES TODAY\nComplete at 7:00-8:10\nsJEANETTC        Pr,0M ^*<!-tf\u2022\n.J!P01\nEDDY\n^Girli\n>OR LOVE OR MONEY\"\n_^_\u2014\"   \u2022\/\"'-.' \u2014*,\u25a0\n\u2014Start! Tomorrow\u2014\n\"SUSANNAH OF THI\nMOUNTIES\"\nAIM\n\"ALL-AMERICAN\nSWEETHEART\"\nUNBEATABLE\nJim Only, fyuijwwit s$. Hit-* -Kind.\nin. a. fijuilic ^tViaqsL in,\nih, 9nbUii-A.\nECHLIN MOTOR TUNE-UP\nLABORATORY\nEliminates all guess work in tuning motors\u2014Assuring you\nof positive engine performance at minimum cost.\nNelson Transfer\nCompany, Limited\n3.5\u2014PHONES\u201436\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. 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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_1939_08_18","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\/1.0414253","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. 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Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1939-08-18 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":""}]}