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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":" Wneat r rices j. unwie Markets at\nWinnipeg and Chicago\nPage Eleven\n\u25a0fiwppiippip\nBradman in Hospital Sees Team\nCollapse Via Television\nPegs Nlrw\nJapanese Down a Passenger\nDrowned\n14\nWOMEN AND TOT\nDIE AS PLANE IS\nFORCED DOWN IN\nSEA, FIRED UPON\nMachine Guns Used to\nTry to Kill All in\nthe Water\nTHOUGHT DR. SUN\nTO BE ON BOARD?\nHONG KONG, Aug. 24\n(CP)\u2014One of five known survivors of 19 persons aboard a\nChinese-United States owned\nairliner tonight described the\nterror and shooting of the occupants when Japanese pursuit\nplanes forced down and machine-gunned the passenger\ncraft on the south China coast.\nThe large land plane, carrying two women, a baby, a small\nchild and 11 men as passengers\nand a four-man crew, was\nforced to alight on a small rivet\nbetween Canton and Macao.\nH. L Woods of Winfield,\nKansas, the pilot, reported\nJapanese airmen riddled the\nairliner as it sank. Besides Mr.\nWoods, the known survivors\nare his wireless operator, Joe\n\"oh, a passenger, C. N. Lou,\nhd two unidentified passen-\njs. All on the plane except\n^pSHs\" were Chinese.\nLou said two Japanese planes\nopened fire on the airliner shortly\nafter it took off from Hong Kong.\nThe pilot veered south from his\nwestward course to shake off the\nattackers.\nLater five pursuit planes attacked,\ndiving close to the large plane so\nthat it was forced down.\nLou, who reached a Macao hospital with a bullet wound in his neck,\nsaid some of his fellow passengers\nwere wounded while the plane was\nstill in the air <pnd others while\nthey were attempting to reach shore.\n\"The Japanese planes, after machine-gunning ui while In the air,\ncontinued to do so while we were\nattempting  to   go  ashore,\"  Lou\n\u2022aid.\n\"The Japanese pilots seemed determined to kill everybody before\n(Continued on Page Three)\n3000 Fuel Trading\nLicences in B.C.\n. VICTORIA, B. C\u201e Aug. 24 (CP) -\nBritish Columbia has issued 3000\nfuel trading licences, all save 700 of\nwhich are retail petroleum outlets\nsuch as gasoline service stations, Dr.\nW. A. Carrothers, chairman of the\n. provincial fuel control board, said\ntoday.\nLicence issuance has disclosed in\nround figures 2300 retail gasoline\nvendors, 200 retail coal dealers, 316\nwholesale petroleum, 60 wholesale\ncoal dealers, seven oil refineries,\nand 15 coal mines operators doing\nbusiness within British Columbia.\nGets Ducking\nIn River\nPEMBERTON, B. C, Aug. 24\n(CP)\u2014Hon. J. 0. Gardiner, federal\nminister of agriculture, and J. G.\nTurgeon, M.P., had a cold reception at Pemberton today\u2014but it\nwas an. accident.\nThe plane in which they are\nmaking a tour of the Cariboo landed on the river, but couldn t make\nshore. So a dugout canoe set out\nto bring them in.\nThe canoe upset as It neared the\nshore and the two politicians got\na ducking.\nHUNGARY STERN\nWITH THE NAZIS\nBUDAPEST, Aug. 24 (CP-Havas)\n\u2014Hungary's determination not to\ntolerate-*-Nazi movement was demonstrated on two fronts today coincident with fit* h'8h honors being heaped'by Germany upon the\nregent,  Admiral Nicholas  Horthy.\nThe Hungarian supreme court rejected the appeal ot Major Ferenc\nSzalassy, leader of the Hungarian\nNazi party, against the three-year\nprison term meted him for subversive activities. The court's decision is wthout appeal.\nFourNazis and 32 employees of\nthe capital's municipal bus system\nwere arrested for participation in\nthe strike called last Friday in\n\u2022protest against decrees forbidding\npublic service workers to belong\nto Nazi organizations.\n(ol. Spencer's\nDaughter Weds\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 24 (CP) -\nIsobell Louise Spencer, eldest daughter of Col. and Mrs. Victor Spencer\nof Vancouver was married at St,\nAndrews-Wesley church here today\nto John Kenneth Newbury, son of\nMr. and Mrs. Jarvis Newbury of\nVancouver. Dr. C. A. Williams, pastor of the Howard Park United\nchurch of Toronto, officiated at the\nwedding, attended by hundreds of\nfronds and spectators.\nCol. Spencer gave his daughter in\nmarriage. William Hogan of Nanaimo acted as best man for the groom,\nwho is the grandson of the late\nJohn Shaw of Nanaimo, prominent\neducationalist.\nWOMAN HACKS OFF HAND AND RIPS\nOUT EYE AFTER READING BIBLE\nMERCED, Calif., Aug. 24 <AP)-\nA young mother, who accepted literally a Biblical admonition for\natonement of sins, lay in a hospital\njere tonight, her left hand and her\nIght eye missing.\nj Woodrow    Harwell,   20-year-old\nJexas cotton picker, told authorities how his wife, Ola, 26, alter\nreading her Bible ripped out her\neye with a pair of scissors and then\n(hacked her hand off with an axe.\niF. A. Silveira, district attorney,\naid Harwell told him his wife's\ntrange action came last night after\nhey and her two young sons by a\nformer marriage, had knelt in their\none-room cabin and read from the\nBible.\n\"And If thy hand or thy foot\ncauieth thee to stumble, cut It off,\nand cast It from thee; It Is good\nfor thee to enter Into life maimed\nor halt, rather than having two\nhands or two feet to be cast Into\neternal fire.\n\"And If thine eye cauieth thee\nto stumble, pluck It out, and cast\nIt from thee; It Is good for thee\nto enter Into life wltfi one eye,\nrather than having two eyes to be\ncast Into the hell of fire.\"\n'Japanese in Position for 2-Day\nDrive on Hankow, Chinese Capital\n> 8HANGHAI, Aug. 25 (Thursday)\n(AP)\u2014Japanese.forces had fought\ntheir way Into position today for\na two-day drive agalnit Hankow,\nChinese provlilonal capital about\nwhich 1,000,000 defenders were\nsaid to be deployed.\nReporti trom the Central China\nfronti placed one Japanese force\nat a point 100 miles southeast of\nHankow and another In position\nto strike overland 140 miles agalnit\nthe Pelplng-Mankow railway.\nA heavily reinforced Japanese\narmy reported It had smashed\nthrough the east gate of the town\n'of Julchang ln its advance up the\nance\nr\nsouth bank of the Yangtse river on\nHankow, 100 air miles to the northwest.\nFrom central Anhwei province\ncame Chinese reports that Japanese\ncolumns striking westward from\nHofei, provincial .capital, reached\nKwantung and Taokichen, footholds\nfor an assault on the Pelping-Han-\nkow railway, probably at a point\nabout 100 miles north of Hankow.\nJapanese said their troops were\nmopping up Chinese defenders in\nthe walled town of Juichang. Entry\ninto the town came after a month's\nfighting on the Yangtse's south\nbank since the fall of Klakiang, 21\nmiles to the east, on July 26,\nSpecial Train Carries Over\n150 Vincouver Liberals to\nBig Convention at Kelowna\nOthers Piclled Up en\nRoute; Nd News of\nBusiness\nPATTULLO WILL\nOPEN RACE MEET\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 24 (CP)\u2014\nCheered on their way by hundreds of supporters who crowded\ntht Canadian National Railways\nplatform before the the special\ntrain\ngates\nmeeting were enroute to the Interior tonight.\nAt 6:45 p.m. the . aln left, with\nstops planned enroute to pick up\nother delegates. Party ipokeimen\nsaid between 400 and 500 would\nattend the convention, Including\nmoit members of the British Columbia legislature and two federal cabinet ministers.\nSCHOOLS TO BE\nKEPT CLOSED IN\nTURNER VALLEY\nCALGARY, Aug. 24 (CP)- Report of two new cases of poliomy-\npulled out, 150-odd dele- i elitis in Turner Valley today was\nto the Kelowna Liberal followed by ah announcement by\nDr. A. Somerville, district health\nofficer, that nine oilfield schools will\nbe closed' until September 19, two\nweeks after the normal opening\ndate of September 8, One thousand\npupils and 28 teachers will be affected.\nTurner Valley is about 40 miles\nsouth of Calgary.\nJust when medical authorities had\nhoped the peak in the current Infantile paralysis epidemic had been\nreached, four new cases were reported from Calgary, Turner Valley\nand Medicine Hat Three of the\ncases were men over 30 years of\nage.\nThere has been no formal announcement of business to be tackled by convention, first since 1932,\nbut it was learned authoritatively\nsuch matters as health Insurance,\nroad construction and \"better\nterms\", for. the.municipalities were\nalmost sure to be considered.\nMUCH  ENTERTAINMENT\nKELOWNA, B. C, Aug. 24 (CP)\n\u2014Delegates attending the provincial convention of the British Columbia Liberal association will find\ntheir hours away from the convention hall crowded with entertainment.\n(Continued on Paga Twelve)\nHitler Guarantees\nHungarian Border\nBERLIN, Aug. 24 (API-Chancellor Hitler tonight guaranteed the\ninviolability of the borders of neighboring Hungary in an exchange of\ntoasts with his guest, Admiral Nicholas Horthy, regent of Hungary, at\na state dinner.\nEmphasizing the centuries of\nfriendship and cooperation between\nGermany, and the old Austro-Hun-\ngarian empire, Hitler said:\n\"This firmly fouhded community\nbased on mutually unshakeable trust\nwill be of special value of both peoples now that we as neighbors\nthrough historic events (union of\nGermany and Austria) have found\nour definite historical boundaries.\"\nAdmiral Horthy, in responding,\nstressed' the three-cornered mutual\nfriendship of Hungary, Italy and\nGermany and their common will for\na \"just peace.\"\n13 Japanese Are\nSummoned, Coast,\non Illegal Fishing\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 24 (CP) -\nOperators of 13 Japanese fishing\nboats tonight were ordered to appear .before Magistrate C. L. Fillmore here tomorrow on charges of\nfishing in waters for which they had\nno licence to operate.\nThe fishing vessels were sighted in\nthe Strait of Georgia early today by\nthe dominion fisheries patrol boat\nGivenchy.\nLicences were taken from the 13\nfishermen pending outcome of their\ncourt appearance.\nBRITISH OFFICER,\nSHOTATJENINJS\nEXPECTED TO LIVE\nJERUSALEM, Aug. 24 (AP)-\nJ. S. Moffatt, British assistant diitrict commissioner seriously\nwounded by gunmen who Invaded\nhli Jenin office today, wai expected tonight to recover following several blood transfusions.\nThe assailants fired five ihots\npoint blank at Moffatt, second\nBriton of thli rank to be shot\nIn the pait year during disturbances growing out of Arab-Jewish strife. Lewis V. Andrews was\n\u2022lain at Nazareth In September,\n1937.\nNOTED ARCTIC FUR\nTRADER  IS  KILLED\nSEATTLE, Aug. 24 (AP)\u2014Coroner Otto H. Mittelstadt said tonight\na coroner's Jury would seek to determine whether the rifle shot that\nkilled Olaf Swenson, 55, noted Arctic fur trade, was fired intentionally\nor accidentally.\nThe body of Swenson, a large\ncalibre hunting rifle beside it, was\nfound early today by Swenson's\npartner, Lan Ketcham, in the office\nof their fur store.\nMittelstadt quoted Ketcham saying he left Swenson last evening\nwhen the latter remarked \"I think\nI'll stay late and clean the guns.\"\nCleaning equipment was found\nnearby.\nGuards Arrested\nfor Jail Deaths\n. raiL4DEtPHMi?^ug;.'ift<Al*)..\n\u2014Two prison guards were held on\nhomicide charges today in what an\nofficial statement called the \"baking\nto death\" of four hunger-striking\nconvicts in steam-heated punishment cells at the Philadelphia county prison.\nihe arrests precipitated a tug-of-\nwar between Mayor Davie Wilson\nand District Attorney Charles Kelley to fix the blame for the prisoners' suffocation during an organized revolt against \"monotonous\"\nfood.\nTwo leading Investigators declared the convicts stifled in an almost\nair-tight cell block In which steam\nradiators had been-turned on full\nfor two days. The investigators and\na county Judge said' the circumstances showed \"utter ferocity\" and\n\"wanton cruelty.\"\nMayor Wilson ordered the arrest\nof the guards, Alfred W. Brough,\n39, and Francis Smith, 43. Homicide squad detectives took them to\ncity hall.\nPROVINCIAIOR\nFEDERAL PROBE\nTO BE MADE ON\nCOMBINE CHARGE\nWismer, MacDonald\nat Kelowna Ask a\nFormal Request\nALSO ASK FOR D. G.\nISAACS' EVIDENCE\nKELOWNA, B.C., AuB. 24 (CP)\n\u2014A committee of the British Columbia Fruit Growers' association\nmet Attorney General Gordon\nWlsmer and Hon. K. C, MacDonald, provincial mlnliter of agriculture, here today.\nAfter the meeting, It was announced the committee had been\naiked to forwards formal request\nto the attorney general for an\nInvestigation Into charges that a\ncombine controlling shipping of\nwestern Canada fruit and vegetables existed.\nAttorney general waa said to have\nInformed the committee that the\ngovernment would carefully consider such a request and decide\nwhether an investigation should be\nheld by Dominion and provincial\nauthorities.\n(Continued on Page Two.)\nFIRSTPARALYSIS\nCASE VANCOUVER\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 24 (CP)-Dr.\nJ. W. Mcintosh said today a small\nboy living in Point Grey residential\ndistrict was suffering from infantile paralysis, first case of the disease in Vancouver this year.\nA second case was under treatment in hospital here. He was a\nboy from Pendej Harbor who had\nbeen in an \"iron lung\", mechanical\nbreathing device, for several weeks\nA nine-yaar-old Vancouver ..girl\nwho contracted'thedtsfcast. aTSeW\nPark, B,C\u201e died here Monday.\nLord Stanley at\nOttawa Welcomed\nOTTAWA, Aug. 24 (CP)-A form\nal welcome from the government of\nCanada was given Lord Stanley,\nBritish, secretary of state for the\nDominions, and Lady Stanley, by\nPrime Minister Mackenzie King, host\ntonight at a private dinner at the\nOttawa country club.\nGuests included Lord Gowries,\ngovernor-general of Australia, returning from a three-month visit to\nEngland, Sir Edward Ellington, British air marshal and Wing Commander Robb of the British mission\nnow surveying manufacturing and\nair training facilities in Canada.\nTWO TRUCKLOADS OF WHEAT START\n1MJCREST0NGRAIN MARKETING\nCRESTON, B.C., Aug. 24-The first\nof Creston's 1938 wheat crop was\nmarketed today.\nThe Midlands tt Pacific elevator\nreported receiving two truckioads\nfrom the Poole Construction company dyke acreage at the south end\nof Nick's island.\nThere are 700 acres In the tract,\nall spring wheat, Marquis, Reward\nand Thatcher, and it is expected\nto go at least 30 bushels to the acre.\nWednesday's sample was of high\nquality according to Mr. Parson,\nelevator manager.\nCutting is by combine and there is\nno shortage of equipment. Due to\nflooding of the Reclamation farm\nand Creston dyking district there\nare at least 30 idle combines in the\narea.\nCutting will commence in a few\ndays at the north end of the project where Dr. C. P. Bruner has a\nsimilar sized tract, in crop.\nRossland Miner Who Lost Leg\nDies of Pneumonia, Jury Finds;\nAccident Contributing Cause\nBut No Blame to\nBe Attached to\nAnyone\nROSSLAND, B.C., Aug. 24- A\ncoroner's Jury under Dr. H. R.\nChristie, coroner, assigned to investigate into the death of August (Gus)\nBeckman, who died at the hospital\nhere Tuesday noon, returned a verdict this morning that the victim\ndied from pneumonia following the\namputation of the smashed right\nleg.\nHe was injured while working In\na mine shaft on his lease at La Roi\nmine, last Thursday.\nThe Jury visited the scene of the\naccident and was shown by Vanner\nBeckman, stepson of the late Mr,\nBeckman, how the accident occurred, lis verdict read:\n\"We the Jury impanelled to Inquire into the death of August Beckman, having Investigated all the\nevidence bearing on the case, have\nreached the following unanimous\nverdict that August Beckman died\ndirectly due to pneumonia on August 23 at the M.M. hospital, Rossland, at 12:45 p.m.; indirectly, due\nto an accident which he received on\na shaft on the Beckman lease on\nAugust 18 about 9 a.m. wherein he\nsuffered a fracture of the right leg,\nnecessitating   amputation   at   the\nknee.\n\"We find that the accident was\npurely accidental and attach no\nblame to any one.\nADVI8E 8AFETY DEVICE\n\"We recommend that a safety device be placed on the cable attachment to the bucket and a system\nof stop and start bell signals be\nused in workings of this kind.\"\nThe Jury consisted of Wesley McKenzie, foreman; Frank McKenzie,\nW. J. Jamieson, W. E. Trembath,\nA. L. Johnson, and James Benson.\nDr. H. R. Christie was coroner\nIN R088LAND SINCE 1908\nROSSLAND, B.C., Aug. 24-Aug-\nust (Gus) Beckman, age 56, died at\nthe Mater Misericordiae hospital\nhere at 12:45 noon Tuesday.\nMr. Beckman, who was seriously\nInjured while working in the Le\nRoi mine shaft last Thursday, underwent an operation in which his leg\nwas removed.\nHe was born in Wausia, Finland,\nand came to Rossland In 1908. While\nhere he followed logging and mining.\nHis wife three sons and two daughters survive, these being Hugho, Sic-\nrid and Vanner Beckman; Mrs. Irene\nKnox of Tacoma, Wash., and Mrs.\nJack Darough, Kellogg, Idaho.\n. Suitably attired to combat a rising thermometer, Hon. R. J. Manion, new leader of the Conservative party, smiles from behind his\ndesk in the parliament buildings in Ottawa, when visited officially\nfor the first time by photographers, shortly after he was sworn in.\nEyston Streaks Across Salt\nTrack 347.155 Miles an Hour\nFaster on Return Trip but Timing Device Is\nOut of Order and Record Not Official;\n\"Didn't Let It Out,\" He Declares\nBONNEVILLE 8ALT FLATS, Utah, Aug. 24'\"(AP) - Captain\nGeorge E. T. Eyston drove hli ponderous automobile nearly six miles\na minute today but a blazing desert sun threw the delicate timing device out of gear, depriving him of an official record.\nThe Englishman flashed his \"Thunderbolt\" once through the\nmeasured mile at 347.155 miles per hour, faster than man has ever\ntravelled before on land. <>\nOn the return trip, required to\nstrike an average and make the\nmark official, the sun glare caused\na failure in the electric eye that\nmeasures the speed. On this run,\nsaid friends, he hit an unprecedented mark of almost 360 miles\nan hour.\nTO TRY AGAIN\nEyston said he would try again\nas soon as American Automobile\nassociation officials can fix the timing machine probably in the next\nfew days. His performance indicated he can easily eclipse his own\nrecord of 311.42 miles established\nhere last year.\n(Continued on Page Twelve)\nDeath Toll 21 in\nTokyo Air Crash\nTOKYO, Aug. 25 (Thursday).\n(AP)\u2014Teh death toll In Tokyo's\nworst aviation disaster grew to 23\ntoday with 130 persons still in hospital, 20 of them In a critical condition.\nFourteen more persons died of\nburns as the result of a collision\nyesterday between a transport\nplane and a training plane which\nplunged Into an Iron foundry, setting the plant afire with exploding gasoline.\nAt the time, 10 workmen were\nburned to death, and four men in\nthe planes were killed, while nearly 150 were Injured.\n__\\t_M_\n^\u25a0\u2022Bw^apm^^m-ejjtttmjeStw\nMin. Max.\nNELSON      44 83\nVictoria     50 68\nNanaimo     47 83\nVancouver   52 80\nKamloops  48 80\nPrince George  32 80\nEstevan   Point     42 54\nPrince Rupert  48 76\nLangara      48 58\nAtlin     46 68\nDawson, Y. T.  50\nSeattle       50\nPortland  58\nSan Francisco   54\nSpokane  50\nLos Angeles\t\nKelowna    -.... 45\nPenticton _.. 46\nGrand Forks   42\nKaslo    46\nCranbrook     37\nCalgary       42\nEdmonton  : 40\nSwift Current  52\nMoose Jaw   46\nPrince Albert .'.  94\nSaskatoon       52\nQu'Appelle       48\nWinnipeg '  42\nForecasts \u2014 Kootenay \u2014\nwinds   mostly   eastei;ly,  fair\nwarmer.\n64\n82\n82\n64\n92\n62      82\n72\n76\nLight\nand\nGreets\nAdmiral Horthy\nBERLIN, Aug. 24 (AP)-Under\nleaden skies and in drizzling rain\ncheering crowds welcomed Hungary's regent, Admiral Nicholas\nHorthy, to Berlin today on his state\nvisit to Germany.\nHorthy visited the Hamburgh ship\nyards on an extension of the tour\nwhich Monday gave him a firsthand view of the German navy at\nKiel and Tuesday took him to the\nfortified island of Heligoland.\nField Marshal Hermann Wilhelm\nGoering headed the reception. Hitler and Horthy strode side by side\nthrough the drizzle and reviewed a\nguard of honor. Horthy wore a full\nadmiral's uniform and cocked hat;\nHitler was dressed in a plain brown\nNazi uniform. Madame Horthy was\naccompanied by Frau Goering.\nCABINET HEARS\nDETAILS, BACKS\nHIM UP ON PLAN\nTO SPEED OUTPUT\nTells of Inqreases in\nWar Material Output\nBeyond Rhine\n\"PEACE REQUIRES\nSTRONG FRANCE\"\nPARI8, Aug. 24 (AP)\u2014Tho Red; _\nleal Socialist party gave Its president, Premier Edouard Daladier,\nfull backing for his plan to modi*\nfy thS 40-hour week law today\nafter he had warned that German military preparations mada\nnecessary a strengthening\nFrance's defence measures.\nAn abstract of his speech, delivered behind closed doors to\nthe party executive committee,\nsaid the \"premier exposed In tie-\ntall the military preparations of'\nGermany, citing the effectives\nnow under arms and showing the\naccelerated rhythm of war In*\ndustrles beyond the Rhine.\n\"He compared these impressive\nfigures of this constant intensifica*\ntion of production to results now obtained in France and concluded with\nthe urg\u00abnt necessity of increasing\nthe potential strength of France.\"\n(Continued on Page Twelve)\nAlaska Highway\nMay Be Started\nSoon, He States\nSEATTLE, Aug. 24 (AP)-Rep.\nWarren G. Magnuson,, returning\nfrom a conference at Victoria with\nPremier T. D. Pattullo of British\nColumbia, said actual work on the\nUnited States-Alaska highway may\nstart next year.\nMagnuson, acting chairman of the\nAmerican highway commission investigating the project, said \"we\nfound the premier enthusiastic about\nthe undertaking. We want to get\nwork started next spring and believe it can be done.\"\nPLEAD INNOCENT\nIN  VIBERT CASE\nSAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 24 (AP)\n\u2014Thomas White and Archie Andrews, charged with manslaughter in\nthe death of Walter C. Vibert, 45,\nformer Victoria, B.C., bank manager,\npleaded innocent today before Judge\nHugh Smith. Their preliminary hearings were set for Sept. 7.\nHIKES ASSERTS\nWITNESS LYINI\nNEW YORK, Aug. 24 (AP)\nJames J. Hines, veteran Tammany\ndistrict leader accused of accepting,\nmoney to protect the Dutch SchultaI\npolicy racket, stood up in supreme'\ncourt today and cried out that\nGeorge Weinberg, one of state'a\nprincipal witnesses then on tha\nstand, was lying.\nThe- dramatic moment came liltt\nin the afternoon after Lloyd Paul\nStryker, chief defence lawyer, had\nbegun a sharp cross-examination ol\nthe witness.\nWeinberg, a henchman of Schultz;\nhad testified he paid Hines $500 a\nweek or more for protection, start\"\ning in the spring of 1932. The pay.\nments, he testified, took place fro-\nquently in Hines' apartment, CenU\"\nral Park West and 104th street.\n\"Didn't you know,\" Stryker sud\u00bb\ndenly shouted, \"that Mr. Hines nev.\ner moved into that apartment until\nthe first day of October, 1932?\"\nStryker faced Weinberg.\n\"Look Mr. Hines in the face,\" ha\ndirected, \"and repeat again whether\nyou saw him or not either at or- in,\nhis apartment house between the,\nmonth of April and the first of OcU\nober. Look at him and say that.\"\nWeinberg looked and answered)\nquietly: \"I did.\" \u2022'\nHines stared back, and then: \"You\nknow you lie,\" he said.\nHurricane on\nWayr Caribbeai\nJACKSONVILLE, Fla,, Aug. 24\n(AP)\u2014The United States weather\nbureau tonight warned \"all interests\" in the northwestern Caribbean Sea to exercise \"extrema\ncaution\" until a hurricane haa\npassed.\n\"This Is a severe storm,\" said I\n9:30 p.m, advisory which placed\nthe centre of the tropical disturbance 100 miles southwest of\nGrand Gnyman Island.\"\nMEXICO CITY, Aug. 24 (AP)\u2014\nA weather bureau storm warnlnj\ntonight for the coast of Yucatan\nsaid a hurricane was moving\nacross the Caribbean Sea from\nnear Jamaica toward the Yucatan Peninsula.\nAsk Another Search\nfor Russian Airmen\nBARROW, Alaska, Aug. 24 (AP)l\n\u2014Back from another fruitless hunt\nfor the lost Russian transpolar plane^\nmembers of a search party said to-,\nday they were convinced Eskimos\nactually saw Sigismund Levaneff-\nsky's craft disappear near Oliktuk a.\nyear ago this month. They advocated another search of the area.\n _*.\nGov't. Forces Still Control Ihe\nEbro River's West Bank in Spain\nHENDAYE, France, Aug. 24\n(AP) \u2014 Reports from the Ebro\nriver battlefront In South Catalonia Indicated tonight Spanish\ngovernment forces still controlled the west bank.\nConcerted attacks by planet,\ntanks, artillery and troops had\ngiven the Insurgents slight gains\nsince the government's surprise\nthrust of July 25, government\nadvices acknowledged, but only\nat a heavy cost and without budging the main government line.\nThe government still was entrenched east of Gandesa, these reports said. Gandesa was Insurgent\nGeneral  Franco's   south  Catalonia\nregional  headquarters.\nThe Ebro counter offensive wat\nsaid now to be personally command*\ned by Franco from his base at\nVlllalba de Los Arcos, about fiv\u00ab.\nmiles northwest, of Gandesa.\nOn the Tagus river front, t\nnewly-active battle area about 90\nmiles southwest of Madrid, In*\nsgrgents reported their offens-\nIve was nearing the Guadiani\nriver after capture ot Puerto.fl\nSan Vlncente. The Insurgents rej\nported taking 309 square miles In\nthe last three days of the Tagus\nfront.\n PAGI TWO \u25a0\nMrs. 6. Ferguson\nHere Since 1900,\nr Passes at Home\nHusband Founder of\nNelson Transfer\nCompany\n; Mrs, Elizabeth Ferguson, 72,\nwidow ot the late George Ferguson,\nfounder of the Nelson Transfer company, died at her home, 720 Stanley\natreet, Wednesday morning, after\nan Illness of about four years.\nI She became ill shortly before her\nhusband died in 1934. Her son Harry\ndied here last year.\nBorn in Cookstown, Ont., ln 1866,\nah* was married there ln I860, and\ncame to Nelson in 1900.\njor many years, up to the time she\n: became an invalid, she was extremely active in the work of Trinity church, especially with the Wo-\nmens' association.\nSurviving her are one son, John\nA, Ferguson, present manager of\nthe Nelson Transfer company; a\ndaughter, Mrs. G, C. Arneson, in\nNelson; an a sister, Mrs. A. M. Ty-\n. con in Los Angeles.\nlast Slab Concrete\nlo Be laid Friday,\n)ssland Hospital\nROSSLAND, B. C, Aug. 24-Pour-\nI ing concrete on the third and final\nfloor, actually the attic floor, of\nBossland's   $90,000   hospital  wing,\n\u25a0will commence Friday, H, (Curly)\n'Cunliffe, construction superintend-\n\u25a0 ent reported today. This will be the\n1 last big concrete job on the wing.\n;    The forms  have been removed\n' Irom the ground floor, Mr. Cunliffe\nUld.\nI An Interesting feature ot the\n. common roof will be a gable at the\n\u25a0: Georgia street entrance, over which\n-\u25a0will be constructed a large con-\n:. trete cross.\nFollowing the erection of the\nroof, the construction gang will be\nlaid off, and the bricklayers and the\nplasterers will take over. After that\nthe finishing and installation of\n: nqulpment will begin.\nA large number of citizens inspect\nthe construction work and follow its\nprogress with interest.\nFIR SLABWOOD\nDry, IZ-lneh\u2014?4.50 Load\nWilliams Transfer\n1*13 Ward St.        Phone 106\nAt Kelowna\nConvention\nMRS.  R.  L. OLIVER\nof Nelson, who is vice-president' for British Columbia of\nthe National Federation of Liberal Women of Canada, is attending the provincial Liberal\ngathering over in the Okanagan.\nCastlegar Ferry\nPowered by Tug\nas Shaft Breaks\nMain shaft in the Castlegar-Rob-\nson ferry broke Wednesday about\n1 p.m. and ferry service was tied up\nuntil late afternoon, when the Waldie lumbering tug was commissioned to furnish motive power for the\nferry. Reports reaching Nelson Wednesday evening were that it would\nprobably take 17 hours for repairs\nto be made.\nBuses arriving at the ferry about\nthe time of the breakdown ferried\npassengers by rowboat to vehicles\nat either side of the ferry crossing,\nbut cars and trucks lined up to\nawait resumption of service. Lengthy lines were waiting when the tug\nwent into action.\nDEMAND PROSECUTION\nOF HARRY BRIDGES\nCOLUMBUS, O., Aug. 24 (AP)-\nThe veterans of foreign wars, in\nnational encampment here, adopted a resolution today demanding\nprompt prosecution of Harry Bridges, San Francisco maritime union\nleader of the C. 1.0.\nBuy or Sell With a Want Ad\nREAT BRITAIN'S\nREATEST\nn\nORDON'S\nI This advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or by the Government of British Columbia.\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON'S LEADING HOTELS\nHume Hotel.\n...Nelson, B.C\nGEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor.\nSAMPLE ROOMS    :   EXCELLENT DINING ROOM\nEuropean Plan, $1.50 Up\nHUME--H. Grainger, Harry M.\nTucker, Mr. and Mrs. H. R. Gal-\n|braith, Norman Boyd, Vancouver;\nB. Force, W. R. Tait, Victoria;\nJr. and Mrs. B. Gordon, J5, Ripley,\n(Toronto; Mrs. G. Sinclair and Hazel,\nCreston; Mr. and Mrs. G. H. Fraser.\nJ. Broadfoot, Legetta Mason, Winnipeg; M. P. Hynes, Roy A. Wilson,\nNew York City; N. Y.; R. Brough,\nP. M. Wards, Medicine Hat; Miss\nMinnie Y. Bibelhausen, Miss Bertha A. Bibelhausen, Portland, Ore.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nP. and L. KAPAK, Proprietors\nCommercial, Tourist and Family Trade Solicited\nROOMS $1.00 AND UP\nFree Parking NELSON, B. C. Phone 234\nOccidental Hotel\n' 706 Vernon 8t.       Phone 897\nH. WASSICK, Prop.\nj SPECIAL MONTHLY RATES\nGood Comfortable Rooms\nLicensed Premises\nWHEN IT'S NEWS\nYou Read About It In the\nNelson Daily News\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\n\"YOUR   VANCOUVER   HOME\"    Newly Renovated Through-\nf\\aaCC_naaS\u00ab*   U_tk#_nl  ollt-   Phones   and   Elevator.\npuiienn notei A. PAterson, m. of\n900 Seymour St., Vancouver, B. C, Coleman,  Alta.,  Proprietor\nSPOKANE, WASH., HOTELS\nWhan lit SPOKANE You Will Enjoy Staying at the\n4,0Zr Hotel VOLNEY **\u00a3&>\n'   _..,_.__._,  ._,,,\u00ab\u25a0\u00ab  aunu\/M  flllQ  CANADIAN  GUESTS\nNELSON. DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C.-THURSDAY MORNINQ,, AUG, 25, 1931.\nEstimate Apple\nCrop Smaller in\nCanada This Year\nOTTAWA, Aug. 24 (CP) - Tha\ndominion bureau of statistics today\nissued its first forecast ot the 1938\napple crop in Canada, placing it at\n4,90i,000 barrels, a reduction of 243.-\n600 barrels from the 1937 crop.\nThe^nllt and vegetable crop report said the weather, except in\nBritish Columbia, generally has been\nhot with an abundance of rain. In\nBritish Columbia rainfall has been\nso light that in some sections of tbe\nirrigated areas the water had to be\ncut off.\nEstimates of the apple crop by provinces, with 1937 production in\nbrackets, are: Nova Scotia 2,230,000\nbarrels, (2,250,000); New Brunswick\n26,400 barrels (44,000); Quebec 148,\n600 barrels (177,000); Ontario 693,420\nbarrels (745,300); British Columbia\n5,391,000 boxes (8,400,000.)\nMcBride Wins Own\n(up for First Time\nSince He Gave It\nR. L. McBride Wednesday afternoon battled his way for 29 holes\nwith R. E. Horton, the other finalist, before he captured the cup\nbearing his name, for the first time\nsince he gave it, at the Nelson Golf\nte Country club, in finals of the\nMcBride cup competition. The tourney was started last Saturday and\ncontinued Sunday.\nAt the end of the first 18-hole\nmatch, McBride and Horton ended\nall squade. Rules in handicap match\nplan stipulated at least another\nnine-hole match, so they started\nout on the third round. Both players were playing carefully and although McBride carded a medal\nround of 35, Horton did nearly as\nwell, with a 37, to end up still all\nsquare at the 27th hole, McBride\nsinking a'10-foot putt for a half.\nBy mutual agreement, contrary to\nruling in handicap match play, they\ndecided to play until the tie was\nbroken. The 28th hole was halved,\nand McBride won the 29th and the\nmatch with a par three.\nWhile McBride has never before\nheld the trophy of which' he is the\ndonor, Horton has held it once. H.\nW. Seamon, formerly of the Ymir\nYankee Girl mine, was holder of\nthe cup last year.\nConsolation rounds are yet to be\nplayed in the competition.\nCrowd Applauds\nthe (ily Band\nWhile an appreciative audience\nlistened, Nelson City band presented\nan attractive concert of seven selections at the Vernon street bandstand Wednesday evening. The band\nreduced by holidays and sickness to\neight men and the bandmaster, was\ndirected by Rhos Dyke.\nThe program included; March, \"S.\nI, B. A.\", R. B. Hall; descriptive\noverture, 'Northern World', Ed Che-\nnette; march, \"W. M, B.\", R. B.\nHall; selection, 'At Dawning,\"\nCharles Wakefield Cadman; overture \"Recollections of Stephen Foster,\" Mackie-Beyer; waltz, \"Anticipation\"; march \"Tenth Regiment,\"\nR. B. Hall.\nLINEMAN INJURED\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 24 (CP)-\nMichael J. Stevenson, British Columbia Electric lineman, was seriously injured today when he fell\n20 foi1,! from a ladder at a local\nlaundry and struck his head against\na concrete pavement.\nAt hospital his condition was described as \"bad\".\nFind Your Job In the Want Ads\n(toeuJid'fltene\nHOTCL\nSPOKANE\nSpecializing\nIn Genuine\nCHINESE FOOD\n'In  th*  Hurt  of Spoknna*\n\u2014.        ^crot\u00bb   tha   alrwt   from   tht\nAW9 Orwl Northern. Union P.-\nfc% jic\\ fir\"' *\u00bbd Auto-Inttrurbas\nrm   \u2022.\u2022\u00ab- Dtpou   Mr*.   Harry  Gotta\nM,r  Rates from $1.50.\nReduced Fares\nfor\nLABOR\nDAY\nSEPT. 5TH\nBETWEEH ALL STATIONS IN CANADA\nONE-WAY FARE\nAND ONE-QUARTER\nFOR ROUND TRIP\nMinimum Fare 25c\n00IH0-IWT, 2 TO 2 P.M. MPT. t\n(Except where no train servlci Stpt.\n2, tickets will be sold Sept. 1)\nRITURNIHO\u2014Leave destination until\nMidnight, Sept. 6.\nSUEPINU IND PARLOR MR PRIVILEGES\nit iim'ijI rates.\nFull iHfon._a.w__ Iron en\\t Agent.\nW2J-88K\n(^moJIIom. va^tc\nDoukhobor Hall\nI\"\nMeeting place at Castlegar, modernly constructed.\nAmid Kootenay Blossoms\nMiss Belt* Coleman, Front St.,\nArm orchard.\u2014Daily News Photo.\nNelson, photographed In a West\nMRS. BERT ROSS,\nCRANBROOK DIES\nCRANBROOK, B.C., Aug. 24-Mrs.\nBert Ross, 68, an old timer in this\ndistrict, with ID years residence at\nSirdar and the past 15 years at Cranbrook, died yesterday after a'long\nillness.\nBorn Katherine Margaret MacDonald in Bruce County, Ont., she\nwas one of 11 children, eight of\nwhom survive her. Her husband died\nhere a few years ago.\nA brother, Dan MacDonald, East\nKooetnay pioneer, who now resides\nat Detroit, visited her in Cranbrook\nthis summer, and accompanied by a\nsecond brother, Jack MacDonald of\nCreston, they visited-two other brothers, Laughlin and Charles in Mon-\ntana.whom they had not seen for\nsome 20 years.\nAlso surviving are two sisters,\nChristy MacDonald and Mrs. Elsie\nLove in Detroit, and two sisters, Mrs.\nClark and Amanda McDonald in\nBruce County.        ,   .\nNIGHT BALL\nWESTERN INTERNATIONAL\nYakima 2, Vancouver 3.\nSpokane 2, Bellingham 3.\nTacoma 3, Wenatchee 2.\nPACIFIC COAST\nOakland'4, Sacramento 6.\nLos Angeles 3, Hollywood 1.\nINTERNATIONAL\nNewark 2-5, Rochester 1-1.\nASSOCIATION\nLouisville 5, Minneapolis 8.\nIndianapolis 5, St. Paul 8.\nAuthor Who Aided\nDoukhobor Move to\nCanada Near Death\nCHELMSFORD, Eng., Aug. 24\n(CP Cable)\u2014Aylmer Maude, the author who in 1898 helped to arrange\nthe Doukhobor migration to Canada, was critically ill tonight at his\nGreat Baddow home, near here.\nMaude, now 80 years old, is noted\nfor his editing and translation of\nthe works of Tolstoi, the great Russian writer. He lived and worked in\nRussia for many years.\nTyping Error May Cost\n$20,000 .\nJACKSON, Miss,, Aug. 24 (AP)\n\u2014A typist's error apparently will\ncost the state of Mississippi $20,000.\nThe legislature appropriated that\nsum\" to put out a gas well fire in\nKankin county and fixed a 10 per\ncent tax on other .wells of the area\nfrom Aug. 31 through March 31 to\nreimburse the\u00abstate.\nIn the bill, it was discovered yesterday, the dates were typed Aug.\n31, 1939, to March 31, 1939, ending\nthe tax before it starts.\nHeaviest Loser Wins\nLawn Bowling Event,\nC.P.R. Club Greens\nBeaten by widest margin, Jack\nDraper's lawn bowling four was\nthe winner of the \"country store''\ncompetition of the C.P.R. Lawn\nBowling club at the club greens\nWednesday night.\nJ. S. Gouldmg's rink lost to F.\nDoodson's 11-13 but Mr. Draper's\nlost to E. Penwill's 11-18, and on\nthe greater margin won the event.\nThe rinks were; J. S. Goulding.\nJ. Simons, Mrs. F. E. Wheeler and\nJ. Ridley; F. Doodson, S. Bates,\nMrs. J. T. Sindell and J. Graham;\nJ. Draper, E. L. Wright, Mrs. Draper and J. Benart; E. Penwill, H. H.\nSutherland, C. I. Archibald and Miss\nN. Perrier.\nPROBE IS ORDERED\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 24 (AP) -\nThe United States senate campaign\nexpenditures committee ordered today the Investigation asked by Representative Lewis into the conduct\nof the campaign of his opponent for\nthe Democratic senatorial nomination in Maryland, Senator Tydlngs.\nBFATEST   TRAVFI    SYSTEM\nSWELLENDAM, South Africa\n(CP)-Skull \"of Michael Esau, killed\nwhen struck by a stone, was exhibited in court during tne case of\nJan Hendricks, committed for trial\non a charge ot culpable homicide.\nMedieval English shows often sold\npocket-picking  privileges  to . the\nSheep Creek to Ask\nProtection Lost or\nStolen Certificates\nWhen shareholders of Sheep Creek\nGold Mines limited hold their annual meeting at Vancouver August\n31 \"a resolution will be presented...\nasking for approval for an amendment to the company's bylaw to protect the company against claims\narising out of lest or stolen street\ncertificates,\" a Vancouver broker\nreports. \"A similar resolution was\npassed by Gold Belt shareholders at\ntheir last meeting.\"\nLethbridge Man\nWins Banff Golf\nBANFF, Alta., Aug. 24 (CP)-S.\nP. Howard of Lethbridge, Alta., today captured the Willingdon cup,\na medal handicap competition, as\ncompetitors at Banff's golf week\nabandoned play in their knock-out\ncontests for the day.\nHoward, with rounds of 78-81, and\nan eight handicap, led the field with\na net 143, a stroke,better than Jim\nHill of Calgary. Howard also wqn\nthe prize for the low gross score\nafter Ronnie McWilliams of Cal'\ngary shot a 76 In the morning round\nand blew himself to a 90 m the\nafternoon 18.\nMarcia Prior of Victoria and Gladys Atkin, Banff, tied with net 78's\nfor the women's competition. Miss\nPrior took the Associated Screen\nNews trophy on an extra hole playoff with a par five.\nThe two leaders ln both the men's\nand women's matches had large,\nleads over the nearest competitors.\nPlay resumes tomorrow in the match\nplay tournaments.\nNakasun Repeals\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 24 (CP) -\nNakasun, winner of the Lieutenant\nGovernor's handicap last Saturday,\nrepeated again today to take the\nNanaimo handicap decisively from\nEuripedes in the feature race at\nBrighouse. Wracia was third.\nNakasun set his own pace and was\nwell in the clear across the wire\nand paid $5.55, $2.80 and $2.05.\"\nBowery Su, well-ridden by Emil\nSporri, won the sixth when she\ncame from behind to catch the pacemaker, Peace Leg, in a driving finish. The favorite, Exilda, crossed\nthe wire third.\nBowery Su-Peace Leg combination\nwas worth $1555.45 to holders of the\nright one-two bet tickets.\nLove Us won in the second when\nJockey Frank Wilbourne lifted him\nover the wire in front of Sis Simony\nand Tetra Play.\nJungle Hen won a nose decision\nin the opening event when she got\nthe nod in a photo finish with Stan-\nstil and Spartan Beauty.\nLove Us and Mac Phalaris in the\ndaily double combination paid $21.20.\n10 Hurt at Coast\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 24 (CP) -\nTen persons were hurt, none seriously, in separate traffic accidents\nhere late today.\nf\nfob Jiall &yl&A,\n| New Fall Ladies' Wear Footwear Children's Weal\nNewest Fall\nDRESSES\n$3-95\nSmart frocks, $3.95. Molded styles grand for September coatless days and later\n.   *oo. Sizes 14 to 44.\nNewest Fall\nCOATS\n$12-95\nGrand for looks, warmth and\nwear. Expertly tailored reefers and swagger styles.\nFleeces and tweeds. Sizes\n14 to 20.\nNew Fall House Frocks\nDirndls! Coat frocks! In guaranteed colorfast prints. Bright\nas autumn. Sizes 14 to 20. q)  |\nEach  JL.\n.29\n\u00bbg__M^a^K$\u00abi$gyw^^^^^\u00bb^^t\u00ab\u00ab.^^^^^^g^_\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\n\u25a0__\u00b1_\nREADY. TO. WEAR\nCHILDREN'S WEAR\nFOOTWEAR\nBURNS BLOCK\nPNONI73\nMORE ABOUT\nCOMBINE PROBE\n(Continued From Page One)\nAttorney-General Wlsmer asked the committee alio to forward\nevidence   regarding   the  charges\nthat  had  been collected  by  D.\nGodfrey    Isaacs,    Oyama    fruit\ngrower who first made the allegations at a meeting of fruit growers In Vernon last week.\nIf the charges fell under Dominion jurisdiction the provincial government would press Ottawa for an\ninvestigation, Mr. Wismer was said\nto have assured the committee.\nIf the investigation was to be\nheld by provincial authorities, it\nwould probably be conducted by a\nspecial commission rather than\nunder the Sales and Consignment\nact, it was said.\nThe fruit growers committee, appointed by a meeting of the association here yesterday, includes W.\nE. Haskins, chairman of the B. C\nFruit Board, Mr. Isaacs, and President H. A. Lloyd of the Fruit Growers association.\nNo Complaints by\nRossland Patients\nas Wing Goes Up\nROSSLAND, B. C, Aug. 24 -\n\"We have not had a single complaint from the patients in the hospital because of the noise made by\nwing construction gangs,\" was the\nreply of a hospital director to the\nquestion put by the Daily News\nthis afternoon.\n\"Under the capable foreman, H.\n(Curly) Cunliffe, the workers have\nbeen working Bmoothly and as quietly as possible, not giving us any\ntrouble at all.\"\nAt times it was necessary to work\na night shift as well as the day\nshift. Even so, there were no complaints.\nTo date there have been no serious accidents.\nThe BOOTERY Sale\nFinal Clearance\nTHURSDAY    FRIDAY    SATURDAY\nWOMEN'S\nSHOES\n200 PAIRS\nSpring and summer shoes, including\nwhite,   black,   brown.   All   broken\nlines. Sizes 3 to 8. Clearing at ....\n$|.00\nMore than 1400 foxes were killed\nin Tyrone county, Ireland, last year.\nAt West Arm Home\nDrive of delightful proportions at S. G. Blaylock'a We;t Arm\nMEN'S\nSHOES\n150 PAIRS\nOxfords and boots. Brown and black.\nPrice saving values you'll regret if\nyou miss. Buy your fall shoes now and\nsave. Sizes 6 to 11. Reg. to $9.00.\nClearing at  \t\n\u00bb4\n.89\nI\nCHILDREN'S\nSHOES\nOxfordi. Sturdy footwear for school or play. Black\nleather. Wide toes.\nSizes to 7'\/:\u2014SALE\n$1.19\nSizes to 2\u2014SALE\n$1,29\nThe Bootery\nFor Economy Footwear\n411 BAKER ST.\n mfmmwmwtmmmmm^\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C.-THURSDAY MORNINQ, AUG. 25. 1938.\n1101\n-PAQE THREE\nWinning Rossland Team\ni\nHossland soccer team, winner of the Dodlmead shield, emblematic of the Trail city first half soccer league. From left to right they\nare: Back row\u2014Tommy Smith, Gordon Ezart, Johnny Gidinski, Af\nfleck,  Wlndebank  and  Bill  Swanson.  Front  row\u2014Johnny Boyd,\nTommy Ogden, Joe McDonell, Henry, Georgeson and Trimbell.\n|        MORE ABOUT\nPUNE MUCK\n(Continued From Page One)\nwe could' really get clear of the\nplane the Japanese returned again,\nand again, machine-gunning us mercilessly.\n. \"I was hit by a bullet in the neck\nand could do no more than swim\nand run blindly under the diving\nairplanes. My Impression is thai\nmany passengers never had a chance\neven to get out of the plane.\"\nPilot Woods and Radio Operator\nLoh escaped serious injury. Woods\nwas taken aboard the United States\ngunboat Mindanao at Macao.\nPROMINENT BANKERS\nTwo passengers unaccounted for\nBETTER  PLUMBING\nSERVICE\n\u2014PHONE 181\u2014\nB. C. PLUMBING\nond HEATING Co.\nwere prominent Chinese bankers-\nHsu Sing-Loh, member of the Shanghai municipal council and president\nof the National Commercial Savings banks, and Hu Pei-Kong, general manager of the Bank of Communications.\nOfficials of the China National\nAviation Corporation said the Japanese probably thought the plane\nwas carrying Dr. Sun Fo, head of\nthe legislative council of China, just\nreturned from Europe where he\nsought foreign aid against the Japanese.\nDr. Sun cancelled his reservation\novernight and flew to Hankow,\nwhere he arrived today. He is the\nson of the late Dr. Sun Yat-Sen,\nfounder of the Chinese Republic.\nA British gunboat and Chinese\ntroops set out from Canton to search\nthe waterways to Canton's south for\nany other survivors, A United States\ngunboat left Hong Kong on a similar\nmission.\nPREMEDITATED\nAn official of the C.N.A.C, said:\n\"There is no doubt that the attack\nwas entirely premeditated. The\nplane was clearly marked and was\non a regular scheduled run. , . .\"\nUnited States in Crests hold a 45\nper cent share of the aviation corporation and the Chinese government\nholds the remainder.\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or by the Government of British Columbia.\nRossland Social..\nBy MRS. B. B. FERGUSON\nROSSLAND, Aug. 24-Mr\/ W. H.\nReid entertained Tuesday afternoon,\nwith a charmingly appointed tea\nln honor Of Miss Pauline McDonald,\na bride of this month,\nMrs. Ashley Cooper of Victoria, is\nthe guest of her son and daughter-\nin-law, Mr. and Mrs. Guy Cooper.\nMiss Marian,Dally has returned\nfrom a visit to Procter.\nMr. and Mrs. G. Wilson, Miss Sonja Wilson, Miss Olga Osing and Miss\nAlice Larson have returned from\na  two-week holiday  at Christina\nLeo Bourdon of Castlegar is spending a few days with his parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. A. Bourdon.\nMrs. W. Griffiths has returned\nfrom a holiday in Kimberley.\nIra Page has returned from a holiday at Glacier National Park, Mont.\nMr. and Mrs. A. G. Read and Mr.\nand Urs. L. A. Read and family are\nspending a week in Spokane.\nMiss Dorothy Irvin has returned\nfrom a two-week holiday in North-\nport, Wash. .\nMiss Joyce Gordon has returned\nfrom a holiday at Christina lake.\nW. E.'Mellett is spending the week\nin Edmonton. ,    ,   '\nMrs. S. R. Copp of Brandon is the\nguest of her ifiMrMd brother-in-\nlaw, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Stephens.\nMrs. Jack Corner and sons returned to the city today after visiting\nwith Mrs. Corner's parents, Mr. and\nMrs. F. W. Russell, South Slocan.\nE. Hartford has been vjsiting in\nNelson.\nMrs. J. Jones and grandson James\nJones of Winlaw have returned to\ntheir home ittei visiting with Mrs.\nJones' daughter, Mrs. W. Butcher\nof this city. .\nMrs. E. Fleury of Nelson Is Ihe\nguest of her daughter, Mrs. Frank\nG   Bray.\n, H. Elliott spent yesterday in Nelson.\nMrs. Harold Evans has returned\nfrom a visit to Fruitvale.\nMisses Margaret Bussey, Margaret Erickson and Mary Blair of Andre,\nTELEPHONE\nDIRECTORY\nCLOSING\nAugust 31\nAll changes for, the October Issue of the\nWest Kootenay Telephone Directory must\nbe made by this date.\nThe Classified Section \"Where to Buy It\"\nis a paying advertising medium. Make\nyour name conspicuous.\nBRITISH   COLUMBIA   TELEPHONE   COMPANY\n \u25a0   \u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0.-,:\n\u25a0\nAlta., are visiting friends in the\ncity.\nJohn Melville is holidaying in\nVancouver.\nG. W. Harker of Grand Forks was\nin the city yesterday.\nMrs. Gaston Hertig and daughter\nLucienne have returned from Christina Lake, where they have been\nspending the summer.\nMr. and Mrs. Morrison of Chapman Camp announce the engagement of their daughter, Katherine\nLorna, to Everett Clark Price of\nRossland, the marriage to take place\nearly in September. Miss Morrison,\nwas honored at a miscellaneous\nshower at the home of Mrs. Arthur\nDutton, Chapman Camp. Bridge was\nplayed, honors going to Mrs. Jack\nBarrett, and second prize to Miss\nAgnes McGowan, and the consolation\nto Miss Edith Morrison. The bride-\nto-be, who was the recipient of many\npretty gifts, is a former resident\nof Rossland and a sister of Mrs.\nMurdo Morrison.\nMr. and Mrs. H. D. Griswoldare\nholidaying at Paulson.\nMrs. C. H. Yolland and son Clifford, who have been the guests of\nMr. and Mrs. Thomas Yolland, have\nreturned to their home in Penticton.\nGlad of Suggestions\nLord Stanley States\nOTTAWA, Aug. 24 (CP)-Any\nsuggestions the dominions may\nmake to speed up consultations between London and the various\nmembers of the British commonwealth on foreign affairs will be\ngladly received, Lord Stanley, British secretary of state for dominion\naffairs, told a press conference here\ntoday.\nQuestioned on observations by W.\nH. Hughes, Australian minister of\nexternal affairs that the present\nprocedure of routing information\nthrough the Australian high commissioner's office to the Australian\ngovernment was not fast enough\nin these days when foreign relations were changing so rapidly,\nLord Stanley said this had been\nanswered by Prime Minister Lyons\nwho was satisfied with the present\nprocedure.\nHamburg Welcomes\nHitler and Horthy\nHAMBURG, Germany, Aug. 24\n(CP) \u2014 This leading German seaport, once a communist stronghold,\ngave an enthusiastic welcome today\nto Chancellor Hitler and Admiral\nNicholas Horthy regent of Hungary\nwho is in Germany on a state visit.\nCity and government authorities\nwelcomed them on their arrival\nhere from Heligoland, North Sea\nisland which Nazi Germany has\nheavily refortified. The post-war\nVersailles peace treaty ordered destruction of fortifications at Heligoland but the prominent newspaper,\nEssener National Zeitunv, said \"it\nis being created especially as a\nbase for a submarine flotilla\" and\nadded an anti-aircraft training station was located there.\nTO ANSWER HEPBURN\n\"IN A DAY OR TWO\"\nOTTAWA, Aug. 24 (CP)-Prime\nMinister Mackenzie King said today\nhe would reply \"in a day or two\"\nto the letter from Premier Hepburn\nof Ontario asking for a statement of\nDominion government policy on the\nSt. Lawrence waterways project.\nMr. Hepburn's letter, eent the\nprime minister last Friday, was under consideration at a cabinet council today, the prime minister said.\nENCAGE TEACHERS FOR\nSCHOOL AT KIMBERLEY\nFERNIE, B.C. \u2014 The remaining\nvacancies on the Fernie junior and\nsenior high school teaching staffs\nhave been filled with the following\nappointments: Miss Mclvor, J,\nGoldie as commercial instructor,\nMr. Morrison, physical education,\nMr. Salmon as technical and academic Instructor. Miss May Maltman\nwho taught senior English during\nthe past term has been re-engaged.\nCAR OVERTURNS;\nMAN IS KILLED\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 24 (CP)-R. M.\nPenman, 68, of Portage La Prairie,\nMan., was killed and three other\npersons were Injured when an automobile turned turtle between here1\nand Portage La Prairie late last\nnight. Mrs. Penman suffered a broken leg; W. L. Alexander a fractured\ncollar-bone and Mrs. Alexander scv\neral fractured ribs.\nNew-U.S. army tanks of caterpillar type can reach speeds ot 40\nmiles ner hpir.\nitta^fyg\nINCORPORATED  29? MAY. 1070.\nKINGSWAY\nSHIRTS\nMen's fine broadcloth shirts\nin new check end stripe patterns. Collar attached and\nseparate collar styles. Sizes\n\u25a0Wl to-17. tfl OC\nEach   ..........fll.OD\n -Main  Fiber HBC\nMen's Broadcloth\nPYJAMAS\nPre-shrunk   better   quality\nbroadcloth pyjamas, in new\nfall shades. Neatly tailored\ncoats. Trousers have elastic .\ndraw strings. Sizes (PI QC\n36to44........$l.aW\n\u2014Main  Floor HBC\nMEN'S PULLOVER\nSWEATERS\nV-neck, crew neck and zipper fronts in new patterns,\nall-wool sweaters. Colors\nwine, blue and brown with\nneat trim, tf 1 AC\nSizes 36 to 44 ,,,W\u00ab3\n \u2014Main   Floor  H 8 C '\nSUITCASES\nA knock-about suitcase for\nsummer travelling. Strong\nblack or brown fibre construction, metal trim. Handle and lock.\" Stan- d\u00bb1 \"7Q\ndard size  .iplilaJ\n \u2014Main  Floor HBC\nWOMEN'S\nSPORT SOX\nDurable sockees in all the\nwanted shades, with contrasting tops of lastex.\nStock up while the color and\nsize range is complete! In\nsizesm to-10%.     OC-\n'  \u2014Main  Floor HBC\nWATCH\nTHIS SPACE\nTOMORROW\nFOR 'THE BAY'S'\n95e DAYS\nBargain* in every department. Early shopping ii\nadvisable.\nBIG TOWEL SAVINGS\nPASTEL TOWELS\nA GREAT OPPORTUNITY\nSave on Wanted Goods\nChecks, plaids or solid colors\nin a nice heavy hand towel.\nSizes 20x40. Regular     00\n29c value. Each \u00a3\u00ab)C\n\u2014Second Floor HBC\nINGUSH STRIPED TOWELS\nA'very handy size, priced very\nlow. Fringed ends. In size 16x\n32. Just 10 dozen in this OC-\nlot. Special, 2 for LoKi\n\u2014Second Floor HBC\nNEW TEA TOWELS\nBig Irish crash towels, size\n22x29. Lettered \"glass cloth\".\nAll colors; Ordinarily OC-\nsold at 35c. Special, ea. L Jl>\n\u2014Second Floor HBC\nENGLISH SAMPLE TOWELS\nThese come in white only and would regularly sell\nat 39c and 49c each. Your choice of several OQ-\n\u2014Second Floor HBC\nNOVELTY TEA TOWELS\nAll pure Irish linen in rich colorings. Stripes, checks\nand plaids in smart combination. Large       0Q__\u00bb'\n\u2014Second Floor HBC\nstyles. One Price Only, Each\nsize.\nEach\nSALE OF HUCK TOWELS\nCotton huck towels. All white. Hemmed ends.\nHeavy quality. Sizes 17x36. Regular price   1 \"7 .\n\u2014Second Floor HBC\n25c. Special, each\nSPECIAL SHOWING of OVENWARE\nGuaranteed not to burn or break with heat. This\nbeautiful pottery comes in cream ground with a\nprimrose motif. New stock just to hand, including:\nPie Platei, Each 45^ and 55^\nCustards, Eaeh   15tf\nBaking Dishes, Each 59< and 69^\nCasseroles, Each   98<i\nCovered Bowls, Each  59<S 09^ 79^\nSet ef 3 Pudding Bowls, Set  75^\n\u2014Second Floor HBC\nSALE OF LADIES'\nSUMMER DRESSES\nSmart little frocks that will\ncarry yoii through the balance of the summer. Cool\nsheers in pastel colors, silks\nand printed piques in darker shades. There's a dress\nhere to suit your particular\nstyling. Sizes. 14 (0 QQ\nto20,38to42...t]M-.i\/O\n\u2014Main   Floor HBC\nLASTEX GIRDLES\nPantie or garter girdles in\nthe new \"Skintex\" elastic.\nCool and comfortable to\nwear. They have the necessary support without excessive boning. Tea rose in\nsmall, medium       d\u00bb1 OQ\nand large tJH \u2022_\u00a3_\u00ab\/\n \u2014Main   Floor HBC\nSATIN  PANTIES\nYou will buy several pairs\nof these soft satin panties.\nStep-in style, well cut and\ngood fitting. Lastex at the\nwaist and plain or lace\ntrim. Peach and FA\nwhite DUC\n\u2014Second Floor HBC\nPENMAN'S\nLISLE HOSE\nServiceable house stockings\nin fine mercerized lisle that\nwear exceptionally well and\ngive comfort to the wearer.\nShades rifle, debonair and\ndurbar. Sizes 8Vi to QQ\nlOVi. Pair OVZ\n  \u2014Main Floor H.B.C.\nWOMEN'S SHOES\nStylish black or brown Cuban heel ties suitable for\nstreet or dress wear. Sizes 3\nto V\/i.\nPair \t\n \u2014Second Floor HBC\n.$2.98\nSHOPPING BAGS\nHandy sized shopping bags\nof rep cloth in fawn, brown\nand grey. Each with dome\nST\": 59c\n\u2014Main Floor H, B.C.\n.Jim\nkTO\nNew Catholic Church Edifice for Trail\nThis drawing by Architect W. F. Williams\nshows what the Church of St. Anthony of Padya,\nabout to be built on Rossland avenue, Trail, will\nbe like. It will cost about $14,000, and will have\nseating capacity for about 350 worshippers. The\nparish of Trail Is being arranged by Most Rev.\nM. M, Johnson, bishop of Nelson, in three divisions,\nand eventually the division which the Church of\nSt. Anthony of Padua will serve will be a separate\nparish.'\nMOLLISON DIVORCE\nBECOMES ABSOLUTE\nLONDON, Aug. 24 (CP)\u2014The London divorce court today made absolute the divorce decree which\nseparated the Empire's most famous\nflyingcouple, James and Amy Molli-\nson. The decree was granted to the\nformer Amy Johnson last Feb. 8.\nROSSER APPEALS\nMcMINNVILLE, Ore., Aug. 24\n(AP)\u2014An appeal to the Oregon\nsupreme court was filed yesterday\nat Dallas in behalf ot Al E. Rosser,\nformer secretary of the Oregon\ncouncil ot teamster unions, shortly\nafter Circuit Judge Arlie G. Walker withheld execution of sentence\nhere.\nCHARGED WITH STABBING\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 24 (CP) -\nCharles Percy of Winnipeg today\nwas charged ln Winnipeg police\ncourt with wounding with Intent to\nmalm. He Is alleged to have attacked\nMrs. Irene Peterson of Winnipeg\nyesterday inflicting 14 knife wounds.\nMrs. Peterson Is recovering.   .   ,,,\nBUSH FIRE THREATENED\nHOMES AT HAPPY VALLEY\nKIMBERLEY, B. C, - A bush\nfire started Sunday afternoon between the tunnel road and Happy\nValley and fanned by a brisk wind\nspread rapidly, the wind carrying\nit directly toward the homes in\nHappy Valley. A crowd turned out,\nwith lire engine and hose and got\nit under control. A Sudden shower\nhelped greatly. About an acre of\nbusn land was burned before the\nfire waa hemmed in.\nARREST TWO IN RAID\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 24 (CP) -\nAlex Schlosser and Earl Collins today were arrested on charges of having burglar's tools suitable for safe\ncracking after an early morning\nraid when police surrounded a\nbuilding housing a number of small\nstores in the downtown business section.\nCharges of vagrancy were also\nlaid against the men.\nCertain varieties of unbreakable\nbuttons are mada.from aninfial bj\/wrl.\nT\nPropose Three-Man\nBoard, Vancouver\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 24 (CP) -\nA proposal to place a three-man\nboard in charge of civic affairs\nand eliminate committees was made\nby Alderman J. W. Cornett here\nlast night as the city council met\nIn special session with advocates\nof a city manager system.\nThe proposal, which was said lo\ncoincide closely with the aims of\nthe Vancouver council-manager association, will be presented to the\ncity council for consideration Sept.\n12.\nPRISONER'S WRISTS\nSCRATCHED BY GLASS\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 24 (CP) -\nConstable F. Rhuman of the city\npolice said today Russell Mather\nDoyle's wrists were scratched \"by\nglass from a broken light bulb'\nwhen the young man, arrested today\non a charge of attempted robbery\nwith violence, was taken to a hos.\nDital ooeratina room.\nHave You Read the Want Ads?\nGutta Percha\nWholesale\nDistributors\nWood Vallance\nHardware\nCompany, Ltd.\nBaker St.        Nelson, B. C.\nGutta Percha Tires\nSold by\nShorty's Repair\nShop\nSHORTY PERASSO\n714 Baker St.   Nelson, B. C.\n www\nPAGE  FOUR\n-     NILSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C-THURSDAY MORNINQ, AUG. 25. 1986.\nSPECTACULAR PRODUCTION  GIVEN OF CLASSIC TRAGEDY\nOr. Patty Hill...\nWork ol Pioneer\nIn Kindergarten\nField is Praised\nBy GARRY C. MYERS, Ph.D.\nMost who read this column are\nfamiliar' with the modern nursery\nschool, kindergarten and primary\ngrades and their methods of educating young children, which also\nwork well in the hpme.\nThe most outstanding figure in\nthis movement Is Dr. Petty Smith\nijill. As early aa 190J her pioneer\nwork with young children in Louisville, Ky, where she was direct.\nor of kindergarten and primary\ngrades, was attracting wjde attention of edueators. That year she\nwas called to Teachers college, Columbia university. There, in SO\njaars, up to har retirement from\naetive ditty in 1936, she made herself the world's leader in this movement\nIn an interview published In\n\"American Childhood\", Dr. Hill admitted:\n\"We were considered dangerous\nradicals down in Louisville and\nlater at Teachers college. We were\naomething of a curiosity simply\nbecause of our break with traditions.\nAs you know, Froebel outlined his\ntheory in Germany in 1840, introducing play materials' novel for\nBis day but too small to appeal to\nthe self-active bodies and eager,\ncreative minds of young children.\n\"Not only I, but my teachers, studied with the best psychologists of\nthe period who were then pointing\nout the dangers to hand and eye\nresulting from the use of these small\nmaterials. Then it was that we invented large, heavy blocks that demanded the use of the child's whole\nbody and also stimulated the need\nfpr social co-operation with his fallows. .. .\n\"Criticisms Were continued when\nwe attempted to abolish all formal\n(James and to give opportunities to\nChildren to create their own dramatizations, drawings, paintings and\nmodeling. All of these procedures,\nlawless to the people of that day, are\ngenerally accepted in all progresilve  D.._nnt_- KJnxw\nschools at present...   \" rrepars PNDW ...\nBrilliant Colors lobe Worn in\nFall Call For Real Skin Beauty\nToday our Teachars cell*g\u00ab gra\nduates are in charge of nursery\nschool, kindergarten and primary\nwork in almost every teacher-training school in the country and many\nIn the world at large. . . .\nHABITS OARRIED HOME\n\"In all these experiments we were\ndeeply interested ln our endeavors\nto get parents to carry over Into\nthe home the same habits and attitudes started in the school.\"\nDuring the recent summer convention, of the National Education\nassociation, Dr. Hill was the special\nguest of honor at the dinner of the\nklndergarten-prjmar\" section. It was\nmy unusual privilege to introduce\nMiss Hill on that occasion.\nWoman Told ...\nMust Forget Own\nComfort lo Make\nMarriage Success\nBy CAROLINE CHATFIELD\nDear Miss Chatfield: I tried as\nhard as a woman could to make a\ngo of my first marriage but it was\nnot in the cards that it should succeed. When my little girl was seven years old I divorced my husband and took a job to support\nme and my child. A year later the\nboss proposed and I accepted him,\nmainly because he seemed devoted\nto both of us and promised me\nthat my little daughter would have\nall the advantages that I could\nnever hope to give her, even with\nher father's help. He has kept his\npromise but he has made, a prisoner\nof me. He's insanely jealous; has\nfits when the child sees her father\nand doesn't want us to go out anywhere without him- If it weren't\nfor the disgrace of two divorces, I\nwould quit tomorrow for I am utterly sick of being in jail. Please\ntell me what I can do to make my\nhusband see how foolishly ' he's\nbehaving. T. R.\nAnswer: My dear lady, you are\ntrying to .make the trip through\nlife with your, own comfort and\npeace of mind paramount. You will\ndUtliL folt\nBy ALICE LYNN BARRY\nThis is the season when good\noks \"swap\" recipes for jams, jellies\nand preserves. Kitchens are fragrant\nwith the appetizing odor of cooking\nHEAR. THE MAN\nIN THAT\nSNUS-FIT\nTRAILER\nSWEARING\nWIS MORNING?\nSURE! I DONT\nBLAME HIM. HIS\nWIFE F0RG0TT0\nBUY KELLOGG'S\nCORN FLAKES\nFOR BREAKFAST\nCorn Flakes.\nThere's no-'substitute for true Kellogg flavor and crispness.\nOrder Kellogg's Corn Flakes for\nbreakfast tomorrow. Ready to\nserve with milk or cream. Always\noven-fresh in the exclusive heat-\nsealed inner bag. At all grocers.\nMade by Kellogg in London, Ont.\nM.4DE JETTED   \u2022   PACKED BETTER\nmsti urm\nAugust offers few of the dalicate\nblossoms, but many interesting species of the garden variety, and it\nis these simple blooms the smart\nflorlstj like to make up Into corsages. Some of them are the combination of the colorful little zinnias\u2014wa mean tha small hutton\nkind\u2014relieved with sprays of babies' breath, and any tiny blue or\npurple blossom. These are smart for\nthe nosegay size. Dahlias in the new\nfuchsia, purple and ruby shades are\nmost effective with tha pastel\ngowns, but for the corsage we must\ndepend upon jus', now, the gardenia is about the most satisfactory,\nand therefore the flower of August\nAccording to the famous couturiers of Paris, we are to be more\ncolor conscious than ever, and those\ncolors they have already brought\nover are in the rich fuchsias, violets wood browns,' charterouses,\npurples, magentas, rich blues and\nlively greens. They will be in your\nfashion news, but to prepaae you,\nwe must tell you in advance they\naU call for a careful makeup. These\ncolors aje the most difficult for\neveryone, even the young, and for\nyour comfort there is always a\nmakeup to go with each tone.\nBrunettes will find most of the\nshades quit* flattering with their\ndark eyes, but the skin will have\nto be in a warm tone without the\nsuggestion of the blua sallow tint\nthat reflects fatigue.\nJf you are feeling the strain of\ntha long summer, try to get away\nfor a change and rest, and, if possible, make arrangements to have a\ncourse of facials vith the whole\ntreatment of stimulation and the\nfirming mask to bring the tired\nmuscles back to their tine contours.\nTake qare of your hair so it will\nmake a lovaly contrast against\nthese, lively shades. And if It is\nnot possible for you to go to a\ngood shop, you may secure all the\nnice cosmetics as well as the lovely\nsilken mask and do your treatment\nat home.\nWear your tan and freckles until\nyou are about through with your\nbeach and out-of-doors life, and\nthen go to work.\nAn offensive breath is unpardonable, To avoid it, keep\ntha system clean and healthy\n. by eating moderately and by\ndrinking plenty of water' and\nfruit juices. Have the teeth\nlooked over frequently, and if\nthere is any suggestion of bad\nbreath, consult a physician.\nnever have any satisfaction in living until you begin to include your\ndear ones hi your scheme. Your\npretty talk about care for the\nchild's future doesn't amount to a\nrow of beans; for you have jeopardised it once and are on the point\nof jeopardizing it a second time,\nmerely because lit* is not to your\nliking.\nGranted that husband No. 2 is unreasonable; hia attitude is attributable to the fact that he loves you\nand the little girl and is fearful that\nher own father will come before\nhim in her affections. Right there\nis the guarantee of her future with\nthe step-father; yet you would toss\nit aside but for the thought of\nyour reputation which might be Injured by a second divorce. You are\ntakng no account of your daughter\nwhom you profess to love, ahd you\nare takng no account of the husband   who   is   magnanimous   and\ngenerous even though he is afflicted with an emotional disease-\njealousy.\nMy advice to you is to forget\nyourself for once; turn in to repay\nthat husband for kindness such as\nfew men are capable of and when\nyou have done this you will find\nthet 'lour walls do not a prison\nmake.\" It's not in the cards that\nany .marriage to which you are a\nparty can succeed until yaix learn a\nlong loesson that has been put in a\nshort sentence; \"He that would save\nhis life must lose It\"\nProblems of general Interest submitted by readers will be discussed\nin this column. Letters unsuitable\nfor publication will be answered\npersonally provided they contain\nstamped, self-addressed envelope,\nAll names are held in confidence,\nWrite Miss Chatfield, in care of this\npaper.\nfruit Cupboard shelves are hosts\nto rows of well-filled jars. The flavor\nand acid content of oranges and\nlemons make these fruits valuable\nadditions lo other fruits in many\npopular jellies, jams and conserves.\nSlices of the unpeeled fruit, the\ngrated peel or the juice may be\nused in cooking and canning such\nfruits as pears, apricots, apples, figs,\npeaches, and rhubarb. Inclusion of\nthe peel will give a subtle fragrance\nas well as enhanced flavor.\nLEMON JUICE HELPS\nTh* cloying sweetness of preserves is overcome by the addition\nof one tablespoon of lemon juice to\neach cup of.fruit about two minutes\nbefore removing from heat With\nconserves, one lemon sliced thin is\nadded to each pint of fruit. This\nmay be done with pear, peach, apricot pineapple or tomato conserves.\nExperts recommend the use of a\ntablespoon of lemon juice and one\nteaspoon of salt to each pint jar\nto increase the certainty of success\nin canning such vegetables as corn,\nartichokes, peas, beans, asparagus\nand greens.\nBaked orange and peach jam is\na sure-fire hit No standing over a\nhot range to make this one\u2014the\noven does the job. Ingredients include two medium oranges, one lemon, one dozen fresh peaches and\nsugar. Cut unpeeled lemon and oranges in pieces and put through\nfood grinder. Peel and slice peaches.\nCombine fruit Measure an equal\namount of sugar. Place in shallow\npan and bake two hours In a slow\noven (300 F.). Stir occasionally.\nThis recipe yields about two pints.\nTubercul6sis. . .\nTheories Differ\nBut llrs Wise to\nAvoid Exposure\nBy LOGAN CLENDENING,  M. D.\nThe question of whether tuberculosis can be caught from a consumptive in not as simple as it may\nseem on first sight. The theories\non the matter have gone through\na number of chang-.\nA hundred years ago, when very\nlittle was known about the cause\nof tuberculosis, the idea was that\nit was not contagious at all Then\nthe French physician, Villemin,\npointed out that if a case of consumption were brought into a hospital ward, several other cases would\ndevelop there. He was an army\nphysician and he put his conclusions\nthis way: \"The consumptive, soldier\nis just as much a danger to his fellows in the regiment, as a sheep\nwith anthrax is to the rest of the\nherd.\"\nWhen the cause of tuberculosis\n\u2014the tubercle bacillus\u2014was discovered, opportunity was afforded\nfor. more intensive -tudy of early\ncases. The conclusions arrived at\nPurity\nFLOUR\nMAKES  BETTER   BREAD\nwer* that tuberculosis probably always begins in infancy or very \u00abarly\nlife. It goes through a certain stage\nof development in childhood. Child'\nhood tuberculosis is entlredly different from adult tuberculosis.\nCATCHES IT FROM ADULT\nThe child usually catches tuberculosis from an adult in the family who has an open unsuspected\ncase of tuberculosis of the lungs.\nThe course of the disease depends\non the amount of immunity that\ncan be developed\u2014most often the\ncondition getsi well in childhood\nand leaves nothing but a scar. Sometimes it goes on and develops consumption.\nThe question of whether an adult\ncan catch the disease from another\nis not entirely settled. One view\nstates flatly that nobody catches\ntuberculosis after childhood. But\nthere are others who disagree.\nMyers, for instance, studied groups\nof medical students and nurses in\ntraining\u2014groups that are likely to\nbe exposed to patients with tuberculosis\u2014and found that they did\nbecome infected in a far larger\npercentage than that of the general\npopulation.\nSo the safest thing is to avoid\nexposure. This especially is true\nof infants. They frequently are infected by some old member of the\nhousehold, who has had a chronic\nbronchitis for years. At least, that\nis what is it called. Really when\nan examination is made, it turns\nout the person has had tuberculosis\nunsuspected for many years.        \u2022\nSerial Story . . .\nTWO WORLDS\n,By MAUD McCURDY WELCH\nCHAPTER 25\nThe  letter  from  Jimmy  which\nNoel found in Laurie's purse read\nas follows:\n\"Dear Laurie: I cant persuade\nher to see reason. But even if we\ncan't be married, there's no harm\nin seeing each other ortce in a\nwhile. Please let me see you,\nwon't you, dear?\n\"Jimmy.\"\nThere was no address on the letter. There wasn't even Jimmy's\nlast name. But on the back of the\nenvelope, Noel did find an address.\nTwo eighty-eight Bickford was written in Bmall letters.\nAt last Noel was sure she would\nbe able to find Jimmy. She asked\nRuth Chester to come out in the\nhall, and explained that ahe was\ngoing to find Jimmy and might be\nIngenuity tn New Dress Designs\nMagnificent Setting For Outdoor\nPerformance of \"Faust\" Thrilling\nBy W. B. CLAUSEN\nAiioclated Press Staff Writer\nHOLLYWOOD, Aug. 24 (AP) -\nThe little doctor of Cracow whose\nGlobe Flower li the\nTulip's Rival\nblack magic 430 yean ago gave htm\nundying fame would surely be\nflabbergasted could he witness the\nwiiardry with which his story was\ntold last night ln Hollywood hills,\nunder the stars.\nTh* 1300 spectators, from movie\nstars to curiosity seekers in the\nbrilliant premier audl\u00abnce, gathered in the open air pilgrimage theatre, were thrilled an* \u00abnaied. The\nViennese producer, Max Reinhardt,\nachl*v*d hia desire in Inaugurate]-\nthe first annual Salxburg festlvi\ndesire in Inaugurating\nannual Salxburg festival\nin Hollywood, bringing to the new\nGlobe flowers\nEarly blooming tulips have a rival\nfor showy b\u00ab*uty in tha trollius or\nGlobe flowtr. It la one of the most\nflamboyant of th* early spring perennial blooms. It flowers at the\nsame time as th* early tulips and\ncontinues to bloom for a considerable period.\nGlobe flowers an ideal for use as\neut flowers, and is shown in tha\nGarden-Graph th* blooms are like\nhuge buttercups.\nTrolllu\u00bb should be given an abundance of water, or grown In partial\nshade to assure good growth and\nblooms of the proper sije.\nThe Globe flower comes in both\nsingle aad double varieties, and In\ncolors carrying from a pale yellow\nto a deep orange. A dwarf variety\ncalled Pumllus Is very attractive\nwhen used In rock gardens, bog\nSaniens or as a planting about a gar-\nen pool. \t\nworld of the west an atmosphere of\nenthusiasm as great If not greater\nthan any of his Buropean efforts.\nSince Christopher Marlowe on\nSept. 30, 1594, presented the first\nrecorded showing of a play about\nth* Cracow doctors compact with\nthe devil, no such combination of\natmosphere and talent has been attempted as In last nlght'i produc?\n8iip*rb as was th* acting of Con-\nradTfieg*! in the title role of Faust,\nMargo as Marguerite,. Qeorg* Houston aa M*phlst\u00bbphe)e\u00bb and Leppre\nUlrlc as Martha, the play blended\nInto a harmonious three-hour enhancement in which tb* critic\nthought more of th* unity of th*\nspectacle than Individual performance of the actors.   ..      ,,   _\nWhile Reinhardt followa the Goethe text, albeit in English, his\nstaging ot a prologue, two acts and\nan epilogue embraces many episodes of the Faust tales not in the\nopera versions of Gounod, Berlioz\nor Boito.\nHe has woven a living tapestry\nwith the piece de resistance n* has\nbeen producing year after year\nsine* 1909 in Europe. To use his\nown words, it Is a \"mora dramatic\nand sp*ctacular Faust.\"\nVITTUCCI\nVIBCIN\nOLIVE OH\nMsstW\u00ae\nBy PRUNELLA WOOD\nThis simple but very subtle black crape dress Is by a Paris designer, Balenciaga, who appears to know just what American women\nprefer. The sketches here ar* of* single model, with a neckline that\ncan be changed with the aid of a scarf This scarf treatment is shown\nat top. In the other sketch of the dress, the scarf is worn as- a sash\nbelt and the bat wing bodice is folded-Into itstlf to-give a basque\neffect.\nIn the low-necked version, summer accessories ar* suggested; in\nthe other, advance fall millinery, shoes and gloves. No wardrobe has\na dependable backbone if a plain black frock Is missing from it. This\nimported notion is a particularly happy suggestion.\t\naway an hour or so.\n\"You're very sentimental, aren't\nyou?\" Huth Chester said superciliously.\n\"I believe finding Jimmy would\nhave a lot to do with Laurie's getting well,\" Noel said quietly.\nRuth Chester lifted her beautifully arched dark brows. \"I'm the\none to do the thinking around here.\nYou're merely supposed to carry\nout orders.\"\n\"I'm going to find Jimmy whether you instruct me to or not,\" Noel\nsaid with quiet emphasis, fighting\nback a wave of anger. There was\nsomething about Ruth's superior\nattitude that aroused her, no matter how hard she tried to control\nherself.\nBefore leaving. Noel asked Mrt.\nWfataPalYOUare.Je\nTHANK 00ODNESS\nTHEY SERVE\nMAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE\nIN THIS CLUB-IT WILL\nPICK YOU UflNNOTIME.JANE\nAND DON'T FOWET JANES\nNEW HAT, JOHN... I\nTHINK HE SHOULD PAY UP\nNOW, DON'T YOU, JENKINS?\nWELL YES. IFYOUll PARDON\nME,SIR...ITHINK PERHAPS\nYOUSHOULD-ER.WiYUP,SIR\/\nWHAT A\nRALYOUARE,\nJENKINS...\nBUT IT'S WORTH\nITTO KNOW\nTHE FRIENDLY\nSTIMUIATION\nOFMAXWEU HOUSE\nBlarsorh to stay within call of the\nsick room until she returned. Mrs.\nBlarsom agreed rather ungraciously.\nA few minutes later Noel was\noff on her errand. Bickford was\non the north side of town and Court\nstreet on the south, so Noel had\nto go entirely across the city.\nAt last she found herself In front\nof a neat white cottage with frilly\ncurtains in the windows, the number 288 on the curb ln front of the\nhouse.\nA neat, elderly woman in a big\nwrap-around white apron, her gray\nhair in curlers, answered the door.\n\"I want to see a young man by\nthe name of Jimmy. I don't know\nhis last name, but it's very important that I see him,\" Noel couldn't\nkeep the eagerness from her voice.\n\"He isn't here,\" the woman said.\n\"He lived here about a month ago,\nI think,\" the woman said, looking\nregretfully Into Noel's anxious face\nDo you know where he Is now?\"\nNoel asked ln a voice that hoped\nagainst hope.\nThi\n_'he woman shook her head. \"No,\nI dont You see, I didn't know him.\n\"Then you don't know his last\nname?\" Noel asked, feeling aud'jn-\nly sick at heart She had had every\nconfidence that she would find Jimmy, but she felt that every hope\nshe had was r.ow slipping away.\nThe woman didn't know his last\nname. Then Noel asked if she had\nany idea where he worked. The\nwoman shook her head again.\n\"I just know that a man by the\nname of Jimmy lived in this house\nabout a month ago, and moved\naway,\" the woman said regretfully\nThen added, \"Give me your name\nand telephone number. If I can fipd\nout anything about him, IT\nyou know.\nnd\nlet\nNo\u00abl gave her the information, but\nshe didn't have much hope\nthat\nThis Delicious, Fragrant Coffee...\nBuoys You Up...Never lefs You Down\nThere's such deep satisfaction\nin a fragrant cup Of Maawell\nHouse. Its friendly stimulation\nhelps you over the rough spots\u2014\nbuoys you up \u2014 never lets you\ndown. And the superb, full-bodied\nflavour of this blend of the world's\nchoicest coffees is so rich and\nsmooth.\nVita-Freeh Maxwell House\ncomes to yeu in a Super-Vacuum\ntin\u2014tb* one sure way to bring you\ncoffee teat ii truly mtnttr-lrtsttt.\nFor use in a drip-pot or glass coffee maker get Drip-Grind Maxwell House, but for boiled or\npercolated coffee get th* Regular\nGrind.\nNOW 2 GRINDS\nDRIP GRIND\nAND REGUUR\nIJprsftsH\nMAXWELL HOUSE^COFFEE\nXWE^\n*MAXWEU   Coff\u00ab*\nA\u00a7 HOUSt        .-\nCoff*f\nnoto TO\nTHE LAST DROP\nMIUO-37\nshe would hear from her.\nThere wasn't anything else to do\nbut to go home and admit failure,\nand possibly hear Ruth-Chester say,\n\"I told you 'it was a foolish idea.\"\nBut when Noel reached home,\nshe was in for a surprise. Julian\nwas there. He had taken charge, of\nth* case. He and Ruth Chester were\n1 bending over Laurie's  bed,  their\nfaces Intent and grave. There was\nI something about their expressions\nthat brought a fresh chil) to Noel's\n' heart.\n\"Fm going to chang* the treat-\nI ment and try the ox-blood,\" she\n! heard Julian say as he straightened\nup. \"It's our only chancs,\" he added.\n\"You're   exactly   right,   Doctor\nPaige,\" Ruth answered in her low,\nrich voice.\nThen Julain. saw Noel. He cam*\nover to her. \"I hadn't any idea of\n'        (Continued on Pag* Tan)\nHOW TO BUY\nBY CRADE\nWhen ordering your eggs, poultry, canned\nfruits and vegetables, and creamery butter, ask\nfor the quality you want, by grade \u2014 then look\nfor the grade mark on your purchase. Whm\nyou buy by grade, you buy utUh conftdtmc*.\nEGGS\nThe Gorenunent gredeo of ttm .re,\n(GRADE \"AI\") - GBADE \"A\" - GRADE \"B\" - GRADE \"C\"\nGRADE C, lowest graded.\nquality. (Grade Al,\nLarge, Medium, Pullet,\nfinest quality fresh eggs\nfrom Government inspect.\nGRADE A (three sizes:\nLarge, Medium, Pullet),\nbest quality, suitable for\npoaching, boiling, frying;\nGRADE B, good quality, .,,,.,...,\nslightly inferior to Grade A for    ed flocks, are available m limited\npoaching,   boiling,   frying,   but    quantities in certain localities.)\nentirely suitable lor cooking pur-    Grade names are marked clearly\nposes; on est containers,\nPOULTRY\nTim Gorenunent grades of Poultry ore\nGRADE \"V\nGRADE A, superb birds,\nwell-fleshed, especially\nfattened   for   tenderneaa\n\u2022 . GRADE \"S\" - GR^DE \"C\"\nGRADE C, lowest pttied\nquality.     Graded   poultry\nmay  be  identified  readily\nand flavour; WP^ h * '\u00b0\\mi \"f .\u00bb\u00bb *\nGRADE 8, good bird* lt',i-iv-'ifW\"fi'i'->\"l tilni or breast of the bsrd\nbut not as well-fleshad, fattened -7 Hid for Grade A \u2014 Blue for B \u2014\nor flavoured as Grade i\\; Yellow for C.\nCANNED FRUITS\nAND VEGETABLES\nThe Gorernment grade* of Conned Fruit,, ond VegoUblee ore\nr*_NcvQUAirrr - choice QUAimr - standard quality\nFANCY QUALITV,\npacked from a selection\nof   the   best   fruit   and\nvegetables available;\npractically uniform in\nmaturity and free from blemishes; uniform in size and colour,\ncanned at the proper time, so that\nexcellence of flavour and appearance may be preserved.'\nCHOICE QUALITY, packed from\nfruit and vegetables selected for tenderness _ and\nflavour. Not as uniform\nas \"Fancy Quality;\"\nallows slight variation in\nsize, colour and maturity.\nSTANDARD QUALITY, packed\nfrom fruit and vegetables of good\nquality but not necessarily meeting\nthe higher grade requirements as\nto size, colour and maturity.\nCREAMERY BUTTER\nTho Gorernment Iledee of Creemery Rut I er ore\nfJR?T GRADE - SECOND GRADE - THIRD ORAPE,\nperfect in flavourrmay be\nFIRST GRADE-highest\nquality; excellent flavour;\nwell made; smooth, waxy\ntexture; uniform ih colour,\nSECOND GRAPE\u2014usually im-\nMarketing Service\ndefective in texture or\nuneven in colour.\nTHIRD GRADE\u2014 inferior to second grade in\nflavour, texture or colour.\nDOMINION DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE\nHonourable Jama* C. Gonttiur, Minister\nBUY BY GRADE...BUY WITH CONFIDENCE\n mmmmm*m*mm-m\u00a7wp\nmmw\u2014mmimnmmmmm^\u2014\nvio6-\n      NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C-THURSDAY MORNING, AUG,'i% 1988.\nMrs. (handler Wins Most Prizes\nAIW.I. Flower FeslivaUaslo\nKASLO, B. C\u2014The flower show,\"\nsponsored by the Kaslo and District\nWomen's Institute, and held in the\nCanadian Legion hall Friday was\none of the finest of many similar\nshows to be seen here. In some former years fruit and vegetables were\nSave Time and Labor\nGeneral Electric\nWashers\n$79.50   and up\nNelson Electric Co.\nSS*\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00abSSS\u00bb\u00abSS\u00ab\u00ab\u00abS\u00abS:\nFRESH\nPop * Corn\nGRENFELLS\n*5WM,&*t*fc!&ifcfc*&fcfc&'_S&iMfcfc4_M_M_4_i\u00a3_'\nLadies\nHere is how\nyou con buy\no   pair   of\nSHOES\nFor only\nApple Blossoms\n:..:\u2014. :.\u25a0-:'     ^ :\u25a0\u25a0\n.^ \"\u00ab.4te\u00ab\nWe have lined up a window\nand table display of shoes.\nYou buy one pair for\n$1.95\nThe second pair for\n5c\nAll styles are  included in\nthe lot.\nRemember our\nSALE\nCLOSES\nSATURDAY\nRe Andrew\n& Company\nLeaders in Footfashion\nalso exhibited but this year only\nflowers were shown.\nThose who have regularly attended former like affair? were unanimous in the opinion that the flowers\nsurpassed, both in quality and quantity, those of any previous show.\nThe table containing gladoli was\nin itself a thing of surpassing beauty.\nMany of these entries came from\nthe ranch of Eric Bacchus at Birchdale.\nThere were ten decorated dinner\ntables, all lovely, \"he first prize\nwinner being covered with a fine\nwtiitc linen cloth, .he centre piece\nbeing composed of delicate pink\nsweet peas and dainty tiny blue\nflowers beautifully arranged in a\nsilver basket. E. C. Hunt, horticulturist of Nelson, declared all were\nin the very best of good taste and\nhe found it difficult to make a\nchoice. Mr. Hunt also judged all\nother entries and declared the.flowers to be extra fine specimens of\ntheir various species. The daintily\narranged flower baskets and numerous house plants also came in for\nhigh praise trom Mr. Hunt.\nDuring the afternoon tea was a\nfeature, all tables being continually\nwell filled with visitors.\nA home cooking stall did a gratifying business.\nA fine musical program arranged\nby Mrs. John Keen was presented\nMrs. Keen also officially opened\nthe Jhow.\nThe entire affair was under the\ngeneral convener-ship of Mrs. Fred\nSpeirs, president of the Institute\nMrs. J. J. Skillicorn was the official\nsecretary and Miss Mildred Twiss\nher assistant. Mrs. Frank Helme\nand Mrs. William Whittaker were in\ncharge of the flowers decorated\ntables, etc. Mrs. H. T. Hartin and\nMis. T. H. Horner and Mrs. H. T.\nfor the tea arrangements and the\nMisses Bernice Shaw and Beck served the many patrons. Mrs. A. Mac-\nGillivray had charge of the home\ncooking. The $2 script prize guessing the number of beans contained\nin a.bottle went to Mrs. J. R. Tin-\nwess, Mrs. L. Lockard handling this\nfeature.\nAt night a local orchestra provided excellent music for a dance.\nMrs. T. H. Horner and rMs. H. T.\nHartin were in charge of supper arrangements and Mrs. W. L. Billings\nand Mrs. J. M. Allen were at the\ndoor.\nPRIZE LI8T\nAsters, first, Mrs. Chandler.\nCalendula, first Mrs. McQueen.\nCosmos, first, Mrs. J.  N. Murphy, second, Mrs. MacGillivray.\nDahlias, first, Miss M. Hamilton,\nsecond, Mrs. Lockard.\nEverlasting, first Mrs. M. Murphy.\nLarkspur, first, Mrs. F. Helme;\nsecond Miss M. Hamilton.\nMarigold, (French), first, Mrs.\nWhittaker, second, Mrs. Chandler.\nMarigold, (African), first, Mrs.\nChandler.\nNasturtium, first, Mrs. Goodenough; second, Mrs. Morton.\nNasturtium, (scented) first, Mrs,\nGoodenough.\nPansies. first, Mrs. Helme, second,\nMrs. F. Spiers.\nPetunias, (single), Mrs. Chandler;\nsecond, Mrs, Goodenough.\nPetunias, (double), Mrs. King,\nAinsworth.\nPhlox, (perennial) Mrs. M. Murphy; second, Mrs. Tonkin.\nRoses, first, Mrs. F. Helme; second,\nMrs. F. Speirs.\nSalpigossis, first, Mrs. Horton.\nSnapdragon, first, Miss Bessie McGibbon.\nStocks, first, Mrs. J. F. Shaw; second, Mrs. Morton.\nSweetpeas, first,  Mrs. 'Chandler.\nGladioli, .first,  Mr.  E.   Bacchus,\nBirchdale; second, Mrs. Helme.\nGodetia, first, Mrs. J. F. Shaw.\nGoldenglow, first, Mrs. McQueen;\nsecond, Mrs. Goodenough.\nCoifcction of Annuals, first, Mrs.\nChandler, second, Mrs. Helme.\nCollection of Perennials first Mrs.\nChandler; second, Mrs. Goodenough.\nZinnias, first, Mrs. Chandler; second, Mrs. Helme.\nBest House Plant, first, W. J. Murphy; second, Mrs. J. M. Allen.\nChildren's Collection of Wild Flowers, first, Miss B. McGibbon; second, Gilbert Hartin.\nBest Arranged Basket of Flowers,\nfirst, Mrs. Wellington; second, Mrs.\nNELSON\n\u2666 \u2666\ni\nBy .MRS. M. J. VIGNEUX\nIn the foreground, a Wallace orchard at Boswell. Across the lake, snow covered mountains.\nAydon; recommended, Mrs. Chandler.\nBest Decorated Dinner Table, first,\nMiss E. Shaw; second, Mrs. Aydon;\nrecommended, Miss D. Chandler.\nExibitor Obtaining largest number\nof points; Mrs. Chandler.\nSecond prizes were awarded only\nwhere there were three or more\nentries.\nThere were 30 exhibitors, with a\ngrand total of 125 entries in flowers\nand the entries in the best decorated\ntable competition.\nE.C. Hunt of Nelson acted as judge\nand Mrs. J. J. Skillicorn as secretary\nof flower festival.\nINCREASE U.B.C. FEES\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 24 (CP) -\nThe board of governors of the University of British Columbia has\ndecided to follow its earlier decision to increase tuition fees $25\na year and limit registration, and\ntoday a student committee announced such a decision was \"not\nsatisfactory to  the student body.\"\nSEE    OUR   WINDOWS    FOR\nWEEK-END   SPECIALS\nAt HILLYARD'S\nFairway Grocery\nThe Coolest Store in Town\nPhone 284        Vic Crawford. Mgr.\nServe Kootenay Valley\nCHOCOLATE MILK\nto the children after school,\nan energy drink\nFinal Clearance\nSALE\nThursday, Friday and Saturday only\n$3.95 Summer Dresses$3.95\nThe entire balance of our stock of Summer Suits and\nDresses in all sixes and materials. Regular values to $16.50\nFinal Clearance $3*95\nDo not miss this opportunity to pick up three or four genuine values at a price never before offered.\nEdith A. Carrothers\n569 Ward St. Nelson, B. C.\nOpp. Capitol Theatre.\nNiece of Mrs. Rushton\nMiss Donna Colcley of Winnipeg, is the 11-year-old neicc of Mrs.\nFrank Rushton of Nakusp, who delighted those present at a recent\ngarden party held at New Denver in aid of Slocan Community Hospital by her dancing and acfobatic stunts.\u2014Photos by courtesy of\nMrs. James Draper of New Denver.\nKIMBERLEY Social...\nKIMBERLEY, B. C, - Mr. and\nMrs. J. H.. TweUs, Wilfred and\nLeona, accompanied by Bert Oliver returned Saturday from a holiday spent in Yellowstone, Glacial\nand National Parks,\nMiss Eleanor Reid of Gull Lake,\nSask., has left for home after visiting her cousins, Margene and Helen\nMcClure.\nHelen McClure returned Friday\nfrom Vancouver.\nMrs. Art Mackie and children,\nShirley and Dannie returned Wednesday from a vacation at Can-\nmore, Banff and Calgary. They\nbrought back a nephew, Roy Mackie from Canmore for a visit.\nMr. and Mrs. L. M. Carter and\nMr. and Mrs. Earl Dybeck and two\nchildren of Calgary are visiting Mr.\nand Mrs. C. J: Garossino.\nMrs. Montegani and son of Hillcrest are visiting her cousins, Mr.\nand Mrs. Paul Kozack.\nMiss Molly Smith of Lethbridge,\nwho has been visiting Mr. and Mrs.\nJ, Boardman left Sunday for her\nhome.\nMiss Frances Augustson of Fernie\nis visiting her uncle and aunt, Mr.\nand Mrs. V. Augustson.\nDorothy Derbyshire of Fernie is\nvisiting her uncle and aunt, Mr, and\nMrs. Gus Nord.\nNorman Benson returned Sunday\nfrom a holiday at Vancouver, Chilliwack and Spokane. He left Tuesday for Calgary.\nMrs. Charles Bidder of Cranbrook\nspent Monday with Mrs. G. James\nof Chapman Camp.\nMrs. Hudson of Spokane left on\nMonday for home alter visiting Mr.\nand Mrs. H. C. Pearson.\nJ. G. Knighton returned Friday\nIrom a trip to the Con mine in the\nYellowknife district.\nDr. and Mrs. A. J. Dorman and\ndaughter returned Sunday from a\nvacation near Victoria.\nDr. and Mrs. J. F. Haszard returned Sunday from a Vacation in\nEurope and the doctor's old home\nin P. E. I.\nMrs. Humble of Cowley, Alta., is\nvisiting her cousins, Mr. and Mrs.\nJohn Arbuckle.      ,\nMrs. Dan McKinnon and Mrs.\nFenton Smith returned Sunday from\nSpokane.\nJoyce Bronsdon ot Cranbrook\nspent the week-end with Olla and\nBetty Bentley.\nJ. Colthorpe returned Saturday\nfrom a holiday at Medicine Hat and\nDrumheller.\nKenneth Clements underwent an\noperation Thursday in McDougall\nhospital.\nSvea Pearson Is a patient in the\nlocal hospital.\nKIMBERLEY. B.C.-Mrs. A. Rod-\nenberger of Long Beach, California\nand .Mrs. John' Davis of Vancouver\nnptoted to Kimberley to visit, their\nbrother and sister-in-law, Mr. and\n\u25a0Mrs. J. C. Hart.'Mr. Hart had not\nseen Mrs. Rodenberger for forty-two\nyears.\nBud Hart went up the Elk River\nwith Jack Sanderson and his friends\non the fishing trip last weekend.\nMrs. Hopkins and two children returned Sunday from a vacation at\nWassa Lake,\nMiss Helen Davidson of London,\nDave Sutherland, She came with\nDr. and Mrs. McPherson of Edmon--)\nton, who spent the weekend with\nMr. and Mrs. Sutherland.\nMiss Betty Wallner of- Fernie is\nvisiting Mr. and Mrs. F. A'. Carlson.\nMiss Norma  Damstrom  of Jaffray are vsiiting Mr. and Mrs. D.\nErickson of Upper Blarchmont.\nMrs. John Irving and two sons,\nIrene Shaw, Roy Anderson, Leslie\nBastibul and Norman Anderson\nspent Sunday at Fairmont.\nMr. and Mrs. R. S. Beck and son\nGlenroy, who have been visiting\ntheir parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert\nBeck for a week, left Sunday for\ntheir home in Moyie.\nMrs. Tom Ingram, who has been\nvisiting her brother and sister-in-\nlaw, Mr. and Mrs. John Ellis on the\nCamp Townsite, has left for Van'\ncouver.\nMrs. W. B. Halliday of Calgary ar.\nrived Tuesday to join her husband.\nNprman Allan lelt Monday for\nholiday at Westbridge.\nJimmy Shannon, who was slightly\ninjured in the mine last week is out\nof Ihe hospital.\nWallace Hall left Sunday for Calgary.\nMr. and Mrs. William Vallance returned from a holiday in Spokane\nSunday.\nAndy Orr, Jim Kelly, A. Edwards\nand Albert James returned Sunday\nfrom Wasa.\nMrs. Ben Strangland of Seattle,\nWashington and son, Harry, were\n\\veekei)d guests of Mr, and Mrs. W.\nSwann. Mrs. Milly Dixon and sons,\nHairy and Robert visited Mr. and\nMrs. Swann at the same time. These\nvisitors also visited their brother,\nBill Gelling and their father W. C.\nGelling.\nMr. and Mrs. E. Kennedy spent\nSunday in Fernie. They were accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. Tom\nBoardman.\nMrs. Don Dakin visited her sister,\nMrs. John Barr at Wasa, Sunday.\nMrs. George Logan and family\nspent Sunday at Moyie.\nMr. and Mrs. Muddyman and family spent Sunday at Moyie.\nMr. and Mrs. Joe Brogan visited\nMr. and Mrs. J. Walker Monday. On\nreturning to Cranbrook they took\nMiss Kay Revan, who has been visiting Mr. and Mis. Walker, with\nthem.\nHarold Townsend left Monday for\nRepublic, Washington, on hearing of\nthe sudden death of his mother.\nErnie Nesbitt, John Walker and\nBarbara Nesbitt spent the weekend\nin Lethbridge.\nMr. and Mrs. Lightwood of Trail\nleft for home Thursday after visiting Mr. and Mrs. J. Kelly, They took\nBetty Kelly with them for a visit\nThe ladles of the Eastern Star held\na successful tea and sale of home\ncookingTuesday.\nMrs. D. A. Crossley, Mrs. McWirter\nand Mrs. Charles McKay were in\ncharge of the table of home cooking.\nMrs. R. Beck, Mrs. Norman Newman, Mrs. John Morrison waited on\nthe tea tables.\nMrs. George McFarlane presided\nover the kitchen and Mrs. H. Jones\nand Mrs.. B. H. Bentley ..read tea\ncups.      f\nMrs.  Case from  the McDougall\nSocial...\nWARDNER\nWARDNER, B. C.-Mr. and Mrs.\nL. Flesberg returned Sunday from\nCalgary, Lake Louise and Banff.\nMr. and Mrs. C. Sinclair and son\nRoy, of Flagstone visited Mr. and\nMrs. B. Embree, Sunday.\nMrs. B. Embree and children, returned Sunday from Flagstone,\nwhere they visited Mr. and Mrs. C.\nSinclair,\nMr. and Mrs. W. Fisher and son,\nIvan, spent the week end in Fernie.\nMr. and Mrs. H. Thompson spent\nthe week end in Coal Creek, where\nthey attended the wedding of the\nlatter's brother, J.. Chester.\nIsabel and Douglas Renstrom returned home Saturday.'\nEdith Rader and Jean Hicky of\nFort Steele, are visiting here.\nB. 0. Iverson, is visiting here.\nMrs. Wold and daughters of Laurel, Montana, are visiting Mrs. Wold's\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. Haney.\nMrs. H. Haney and daughter Beverly, of Canal Flats are visiting Mr.\nand Mrs. T. Thompson.\nMrs. E. Rodgers, motored to Cranbrook Monday.\nMinnie Howard of Cranbrook is\nvisiting her cousin, Wilma Fitzsimmons.\nMrs. R. Powers and daughter,\nNellie, of Nelson, were guests of\nMr. and Mrs. R. Richmond.\nMr. and Mrs. R, Thompson, Mrs.\nG. Johnson and Mrs. A. Moberg\nvisited Cranbrook, Sunday.\nConstable Doree and daughter,\nJoan are visiting in Fernie.\nG. Todhunter of Elko was in town\nTuesday.\nMiss A. Trozzo Is\nHonored Guest at\nAppledale Party\nAPPLEDALE, B.C. \u2014 A birthday\nparty in honor of Miss A. Trozzo was\nheld at her home August 18. Cards\nand games were enjoyed, and refreshments were served by Mrs.\nTrozzo,\nThose attending were Mrs. McGregor, Miss M.' McGregor, Miss V.\nWinarski, Miss Betty Moran, Miss A.\nTrozzo, Mrs. Trozzo, F. McGregor,\nF. Trozzo, H. Thompson, B. Needham\nand E. Trozzo.\nA small party was held at the\nhome of Mrs. McGregor, August 20.\nRefreshments were served. Those\npresent were Miss V. Winarski, Miss\nM. McGregor, Miss Betty Moran,\nMiss A. Trozzo, Mrs, McGregor, H.\nThompson, and B. Needham.\nKIMBERLEY ROADS\nBEING IMPROVED\nKIMBERLEY, B. C, - Road\nmaking is going on apace around\nand in Kimberley. The road from\nWycliffe to town is being finished\nwith tarvia and fine gtdVel. The\ndip between the railroad crossing\nin town and the corner is being\nfilled in and finished. The back\nroad from the arena and the Town-\nsite has been graded, widened and\ngravelled. The turns from the highway into Chapman Camp have been\ncleared, widened and are being finished with tarvia. A new sidewalk\nis being laid from Martin's corner\nto the crossing which gives a wide\nswing at the corner instead of the\nsharp turn of former times.\nPROPOSE SINGLE AGENCY\nTO CONTROL MILK SALES\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 24 (CP) -\nFraser Valley Milk Producers' association and the Independent Milk\nProducers' Cooperative association\nhave submitted a brief to the British Columbia lower mainland dairy\nboard proposing creation of a single\nagency to control milkrnarketing in\nVancouver district.\nKIMBERLEY HAS NEW\nSCHOOL PLAY GROUND\nKIMBERLEY, B. C, \u2014 A play\nground and field for sports is being\nfinished south of the High School.\nIt was cleared of trees, levelled and\nthe larger rocks removed and is\nnow being put in order before\nschool begins.\nJUDGE TO RETIRE\nCALGARY, Aug. 23 (CP)\u2014As-\nsociated with the bench and bar in\nAlberta since 1899, Judge Edward\nPeel McNeill, judge of the district\ncourt at Calgary, will retire December 23, when he will attain the age\nof 75, the age limit for judges.\n\u2022  Tuesday afternoon Mrs. W. M.\nCunliffe,  Observatory street, entertained at a smart tea ln honor\nof her daughter, Mrs. H. D. McLaren of Ottawa, who Is spending\na month in Nelson. A bowl of varicolored tiwe\u00abt peas graced the dainty tea table presided over by Mrs.\nR. W. Hinton and Mrs. A. G. Cuthbert, while those acting as servi-\ntcurs were Miss Irene Kerr of Longbeach, Mrs. Bunny Biggar and Mrs.\nCharles H. Hamilton. Invited guests\nincluded Mrs. J. D. Kerr, Miss Irene\nKerr, Mrs. James O'Shea, Mrs. E. C.\nWragge, Mrs, E. Pinkham ot Montreal, Mrs. Alex Leith, Mrs. W. R.\nGrubbe, Mrs. James McGregor, Mrs,\nHuyck, Mrs. E. E. L. Dewdney, Mrs.\nHarold  Lakes,  Mrs,  James Johnstone, Miss Phyllis Church of Van-\ncouver, Mrs. A. L. McCulloch, Mrs,\nJ. R. McLellan, Mrs. Hugh W. Robertson, Mrs. Mundy, Miss Alia Johnstone, Mrs. Robert Waldie of Robson,\nMiss Ward, .Mrs. A. Gordon Mackay,\nMiss M. k. Cameron, Mrs. William\nWaldie,  Mrs.  Victor  Owen,  Mrs.\nMark Purser, Mrs. Reginald H. Dill,\nMrs. C. W. Appleyard, Mrs. Gordon Hallett, Mrs. Paul Lincoln, Mrs.\nS. G. Blaylock, Miss Margo Blaylock,  Mrs.  Alfred  MacD  Noxon,\nMiss Gaie Taylor, Mrs. John Gilroy of Willow Point, Mrs, James\nBryden of Trail, Mrs, Fred H. Graham, Mrs. George Johnstone of Vancouver, and Mrs. W. M, Walker.\n\u2022 Mrs. George Johnstone, who\nhas spent two months holidaying in\nNelson, her former home, and while\nhere has been the inspiration of a\nlarge number of social affairs, plans\nto leave this morning for her home\nat Vancouver.\n\u2022 Mrs. N. M. Cummins, Medical\nArts apartments, had as her guests\nher son-in-law and grand daughter,\nE. J, Hacking and Annette of Salmon Arm, who have left to visit\nKaslo. They were accompanied to\nKaslo by Jerry Jerram.\n\u2022 Mr. and, Mrs. H. G. Barber ot\nVancouver, who we're guests of Mr.\nand Mrs. W. Carruthers, Front\nstreet, for a few days, have returned,\nMr. Barber being on the statf of the\nVancouver Daily Province.\n\u2022 Miss Audrey Richardson has\nreturned from holidaying at the\ncoast,\n\u2022 Mrs. John Cunningham plans\nto leave today for Kelowna to be a\ndelegate to the Liberal convention.\n\u2022 H. M. Witt of the Bayonne mine\nvisited Nelson yesterday.\n\u2022 R. E. Crerar, Carbonate street,\nleft for Toronto via the Great Northern yesterday to attend an insurance company convention.\n\u2022 Miss Enid Etter has returned\nfrom Kelowna where she was a\nguest of Mr. and Mrs. J. Wilcox.\n\u2022 A. R. McGregor of Crawford\nBay and his young son were city\nvisitors yesterday.\n\u2022 Shoppers in town yesterday\nincluded Commander Burrard A.\nSmith of Longbeach.\n\u2022 Mrs. L. N. Beckwith, Miss Vera\nBaker of Trail, Miss Jessie McDonald, Miss Grace McDonald, Miss\nFlorence Hoare and Mrs. George\nWallach, have returned from a\nbrief holiday at the Dill camp on\nthe north shore.\n\u2022 Fred L. Irwin and his son have\nleft by motor to visit Mr. Irwin's\nbrother, E. Irwin, at Seattle.\n\u2022 0. C. Bora of New Denver\nvisited Nelson yesterday.\n\u2022 D. C. Cummins left via Great\nNorthern yesterday morning for Toronto to attend an insurance company convention.\n\u2022 Mrs. Henrietta Sutherland, Baker street, plans to leave today for\nKelowna as a delegate to the Liberal convention.\n\u2022 Rev. Thomas P. Freney expects to leave today for Revelstoke.\n\u2022 Miss May Lawson is confined\nto her home with a broken bone\nin her ankle.\n\u2022 Leo Gansner, former resident\nof Nelson, now of Vancouver, is\nholidaying at the home of his mother,\nMrs. P. Gansner, Granite road.\n\u2022 Mrs. Lynch, Miss Emmeline\nPaxton, Miss Jessie Paxton, and\nRev. and Mrs. W. J. Silverwood and\nson, Billy, motored to Camp Koolaree yesterday.\n\u2022 Rev. Leo Hobson, former pastor of St. Francis Xavier parish at\nTrail, now of Powell River, was in\ntown Tuesday en route to visit Trail\nand district: He was accompanied\nby Mr. Culos, also of Powell River.\n\u2022 Mr_> and Mrs. Joseph Janni\nof Wenatchee, Wash., who spent two\nweeks holidaying at the Riesterer\nhome, Robson street, have returned.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. T. B. Higgin-\nbotham of Coleman, Alta., who have\nbeen visiting Mr. and Mrs. Ray\nDempsey at South Slocan and other\nfriends in Nelson, plan to leave today for their home.\n\u2022 Mrs. Ferguson and daughter\nof Sunshine Bay spent yesterday in\nNelson.\n\u2022 Mrs. E .Pinkham of Montreal\nand her two young sons, who spent\na few weeks at the home at Four-\nMile of Mrs. Pinkham's father, E\nC. Wragge, left via the C. P. R. yesterday for the east,\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. C. V, Gagnon,\nSilica street, have as their guests\ntheir son and daughter-in-law, Mr.\nand Mrs. James H. Gagnon of Trail,\nwho arrived Tuesday night from\nVancouver where Mr, Gagnon attended the University of British\nColumbia summer session.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bland\n\u2022 PAQS   FIVH\nand children, Joyce and Bobby, and\nMri. Bland's mother, Mrs. J. F.\nCroll, have returned from a motor\ntrip to Portland, Ore,, Wenatchee,\nSpokane and Grand Coulee,\n\u2022 F, Becker has returned from\na few days at Rossland.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Douglas C. Cummins, Rosemont, have taken up residence ih the Terrace apartments.\n\u2022 Mr, and Mrs, Jack Greenwood\nare spending a few days at Spokane.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Turner\nof Kennewick, Wash., are city visitors.\n\u2022 Mrs. Raoul Green of Blairmore, Alta,, is spending a few days\nat the Hume Hotel visiting Nelson\nfriends.\n\u2022 J. F. Stevenson ot Sunshine\nBay spent yesterday in the city,\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Manson\nleave today to spend a week at Spokane. '\n\u2022 Jack Hopwood of the C. P. R.\nTelegraphs at Vancouver, former\nresident of Nelson, is a guest at the\nhome df Mr, and Mrs. W. Kennedy,\nRobson street\n\u2022 Miss Mary Riesterer and Miss\nEdna Kennedy left yesterday fori\nNorthport, Wash., to visit Mr. and\nMrs. Janni, sr. From there they will\nmotor to Wenatchee. Wash., tp be\nguests of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Janni\nfor the remainder of the school vacation.\n\u2022 Miss Evelyn Higginbotham has\nreturned from spending a vacation\nat the coast.\n\u2022 Captain H. McCarthy of Sunshine Bay visited town yesterday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Harold Emery\nand their children, Gordon and Audrey, have returned from a three-\nweek visit to Chicago, Detroit and\nWinona, Mich.     ,\n\u2022 Mrs. J. A. Donnell, Josephine\nstreet, who spent some time at Vto-\ncouver, has left for the east accompanying the body of her aunt,\nBEATTYHEADING\nFORCRANBROOK\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 24-S!r Edward\nBeatty, G.B.E., chairman and president ot the Canadian Pacific Railway, will pass through Winnipeg\nFriday night in the course ot hia\nannual western inspection trip. Ac\ncompanied by W. M. Neal, of Winnipeg, vice-president ot western\nlines, he will spend about three-'\nweeks at the Pacific coast and in\nthe prairies.\nSpeaking engagements made by\n-Sir Edward will include a dinner\naddress to the Vancouver junior\nboard ot trade on September 1: A\nluncheon of the Edmonton chamber\nof commerce on September 12 and\na dinner meeting of the Port Arthur and Fort William chambers ot\ncommerce at Port Arthur on September 15.\nIn addition Sir Edward will\nspend September 9 at Cranbrook,\nB.C., where in the course of a\nlocal celebration marking the fortieth anniversary of the ooming\nof tha railway to that district, he\nwill receive tha freedom of the\nB.C. city.\nMrs. Ida Laird of Vancouver, whose   ' |!\nburial is to take place in Ontario.\nCheck Discharges from the Bowell\nBowel troubles, although happen-\nbig at any time of the year, are\nmost prevalent during the hot summer and early fall months.\nWhen diarrhoea, dysentery, crumps\nand pains in the intestines or any\nlooseness of the bowels occur get a1 I\nbottle of Dr. Fowler's Extract of '\nWild   Strawberry.    Its  action  ism\npleasant, rapid) reliable aad effectual, and does not leave the bowels\nconstipated.'  It has been on the\nmarket for 92 years.   You do not\nexperiment when you use it. 1\nPlay safe.   Get \"Dr. Fowler's.\"   \u00bb,\nThe T. Milburn Co., Ltd., Toronto, Oat,       I\n<Advt.),i\nOUT THEY GO - -\n* Cartwheels\n* Brims\n* Sailors\nBuy that \"extra\" hat to\nfinish the summer smartly. All our summer hats\nclearing   at\n29c\nCHEERFUL, COLORFUL, COLORFAST\nHOUSEFROCKS\nWell made and cut with full deep hems and attractively\ntrimmed. Sizes for everyone. Stock up for fall and\nsave at these popular prices.\n$1,79     $1:29     89c\nWash fabrics, including voiles, batistes, celanese stripes\nand crease-resisting materials, tubfast and iA.\nshrinkproof. Reduced at, yard WC\nHOW   TO   MAKE   ICED   TEA\nInlust six heaping teaspoons of Salada Black Tu In a pint of fresh, boiling water.\nAfter six minutes strain liquid Info two-quart container. While hot, add 1 to 1 Vi\ncups ef granulated eugar and Juice of i lamone, strained. Stir wall until sugar Is\ndissolved; Ml container with cold water. D\u00bb not allow t\u00bbt to teel Mm adding\ntht toW water\/ otherwise liquid will become cloudy. Serve with chlppod let.\nOniovio la vlaltlno txetr- al.tar.  Mrs. I tnwnxita nnured U'n\nREADY-TO-WEAR - DRY GOODS\nPHONE 200 BAKER ST.\nBe\nAd'vised\nBefore You Buy\nIf a competent expert could pass on each\npurchase you make, you would be sure of\ngetting full value, for every dollar you\nspend. But experts are rare, and even then\nare seldom trained to know more than one\ntype of merchandise. What an imposing\nretinue of these specialists you would need\nto pass judgment on your routine purchases of gasoline and gloves, hammocks\nand hosiery, linen and linoleum!\nBut you can get competent and honest\ncounsel on almost everything you buy\nwithout ever meeting an expert. How?\nBy being ad-vised in advance by the advertising pages of the Nelson Daily News.\nHere you will find all kinds of reput:\nable merchants and manufacturers telling\nyou about their best bargains, and inviting\ncomparisons. In a matter of minutes, you\nwill find more bona fide bargains in print\nthan you would discover on the counters\nof all the stores you could visit in a six-\nday shopping trek.\nRead these advertising pages regularly\nfor just one week, and then you'll know\nfirst-hand that it pays to be. ad-vised be--\nfore you buy. Your money will s-t-r-e-t-c-h\nfurther, and your purchases be more satisfactory.\nBuers and Sellers Both Profit Fror\nNewspaper Advertising\n \u2014\u2014mmmmm\n:\n\u25a0\nMmxx Satig Jfema\nEstablished April 22, 1902\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LnStTED,\n266   Baker  Street,  Nelson,   British  Columbia.\nPhone 144, Private Exchange Connecting All Departments.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRE8B AND,\nTHE   AUDIT  BUREAU 'OP  CIRCULATIONS\nTHURSDAY, AUGUST 25,1938.\nREFUGEES BENEFIT THOSE WHO GIVE\nTHEM SHELTER\nNobody in his right senses would maintain that war\nin the Far East is anything short of calamity. However,\nthe New York Times is authority for the statement that\nthe war has brought an incidental boom to the British port\nof Hong Kong.\nRefugees from Canton have swelled the population\nof the city and its neighbor, Kowloon, from 800,000 to\n1,400,000: \"Hong Kong's harbor is crowded with ships-\nmost of them bringing munitions, war supplies, trucks\nand airplanes for China. And the Hong Kong government\nis not only out of debt but reports a cash surplus on hand\nexceeding $16,000,000.\"\nOf course, this local prosperity in Hong Kong\u2014probably of a fleeting nature-4s not even a drop in the bucket\nto compensate for the vast losses to British trade and capital in China proper.\nMany of the refugees at Hong Kong are wealthy,\nthe Winnipeg Tribune reports. They have given encouragement to those local industries which did not rely upon an\nundisturbed market in China or upon the receipt of Chinese raw materials. Some Hong Kong industries are reported to be stealing Japanese markets.\nThe fact that many refugees are wealthy has an important bearing but it should not obscure the broad fact\nthat in the past, refugees have often brought prosperity\nand have repaid materially those who gave them political\nasylum.\nNone so blind as those that will not see.-\nHenry.\n-Mathew\nWILD LIFE IN NATIONAL PARKS IS\nTOURIST ATTRACTION\nOne of Canada's strongest attractions to tourists is\nits wild life.\nAn abundance of wild life in the national parks of\nCanada is reported for fiscal year ended March 31, 1938.\nWhile a census of the game animals in the larger scenic\n\u25a0 and recreational parks is not practicable owing to the ex-\ntensive area over which they roam, an estimate of species\nin fenced enclosures in the national parks discloses a total\nof 5600 buffalo; 3600 elk; 1512 mule deer; 907 moose; and\n320 antelope, in addition to a small number of hybrids\n(cattalo), Rocky mountain goat, Rocky mountain (bighorn) sheep, white-tailed deer, and yak, which are kept\nfor exhibition purposes.\nPerhaps before long, we will see Kokanee \"National\npark\" included in such reports.\nThe conservation and protection of wild life in all its\nforms continues to be one of the primary functions of the\nnational parks, and* constant patrols by the park warden\nservice insure the safety of the game animals, in addition\nto supplying reliable information on the quantity and general health of the different species. Observations during\nthe year indicate that moose and elk are particularly\nabundant in Jasper and Banff National Parks, while grizzly bear are reported to be more numerous than usual in\ncertain areas in Jasper National Park, Bird life is reported\nto be on the increase, with an abundance of waterfowl in\nevidence at Elk Island, Point Pelee and Prince Edward\nIsland National Parks. A recent check of bird life at Elk\nNational park revealed a total of 190 species.\nThe exhibition herds maintained in the animal paddocks at Banff, Prince Albert, and Riding Mountain National parks continued to be popular points of interest. Late\nin the season the number of animals in the enclosure at\nBanff was greatly reduced, leaving only a few buffalo and\nelk. Ten Canada Geese were obtained as an added attraction for Riding Mountain National park.\nOPPORTUNITY HERE FOR THE\nRIGHT PEOPLE\nEastern Canadian newspapers are taking a great interest in the visit to British Columbia of Sir Henry Page-\nCroft, British parliamentarian and industrialist. He is investigating settlement opportunities in the province, on\nthe invitation of the Prince Rupert city council and with\nthe approval of the provincial government. Of his visit the\nToronto Globe and Mail says:\nWhile extensive unemployment exists opposition to Immigration\nwill continue, on the ground that charity begins at home, and when\nunemployment is normal there will be opposition, as in the past, on\nthe theory that more people mean more competition ior jobs. If\nthere is no disposition to work out a plan to develop the vast inland\nempire of the western coast province with home talent, what justification lor placing obstacles in the way ol British settlers? Big. Gen,\nHornby, whoja campaign to keep Canada British Is well known, as\nan Inspiration behind the BrlUsh Columbia movement, According to\nthe Vancouver Frovifice, his vl\u00abw la that naming prevents a revival\nof Immigration but government inertia and a aorf ot defeatist att|.\ntude m the public mind. Vet there are hundreds ol mlle\u00bb ol rich ter-\nritory around Prince George to be occupied and developed.\nThe Overseas Settlement Board has become incrtulngly concerned with the subject ol migration, noting the danger, In this Do-\nminton particularly, of the British element being overwhelmed by a\npopulation ol non-British stock. The danger point la near, and it ia\nbecoming more difficult to get immigrants from the United Kingdom.\nVarious forms o! legislation have provided security which Is lacking\nhere .Th* British birth rate Is tailing. In tha meantime other crowded\nnations are viewing our open spaces with envious eyes.\nIf British Columbia oannot get rid ol its Japanese settlers It can\nhelp to offset them by oponing the doors to more Britishers. Whether\nor not the right kind of people can be obtained in sufficient numbers\nhas yet to be shown. Success lor the proposal will encourage Saskat-\n\"\u25a0\u2014jran to renew its immigration efforts, which must be described\n]fageous in the light of that province's difficulties.\nbbably Sir Henry will find that the opportunities\n|ovince are many but that they are not generally\n\u25a0vho have failed in England,\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.-THUR8DAY MORNINO, AUG, 26: 1838.\nSAIXY'S SALLIES\nIU\nJmUUMil\n.Almost any woman can keep a secret\u2014in circulation..\nIn Nelson\nBy-Paths\nOn Its way, stage by stage, toward\nthe sunny southland, or in some instances no doubt t'.eady arrived\nthere, the bird population that a\nfew weeks ago was calling frou, tree\nand bush and weed-stalk, or tilling the air with flight, is gone trom\nthis district.\nThe Kootenay today, as far as my\nobservation goes, seems drained ot\nbitds.\nWEATHER TURNED PAQE\nProbably the break ln the weather\nabout the first ot August called the\nturn lor most species, which were\nthen clearly Hocking. With the con-\nllrmed cooler weather and occasional rains, succeeding waves have\ngone, Ull today only the odd bird\nI to be seen.\nLate in July it seemed to me the\nswallows, our formerly so numerous\nviolet-greens, which used to weave\npatterns in the air over the waterfront, were down to small numbers,\nand alter a week's camping at Ainsworth\u2014where, by the way, we saw\nnot a single swallow\u2014I was back\nhere August 10, when they seemed\nabout cleaned out Various waterfront observers noted small groups\nIor a lew days, with August 15 seeing about the last ol them.\nThe araell sparrow species, savannah and chipping, apparently lighted out the first week in August, il\nnot earlier. The last chipping sparrows I saw were at Mile-Point, Ainsworth, August J and 4, but in Nelson I heard not a note nor saw one\nol these diminutive sparrows alter\ntoe last week in July.\nRobins were down to small numbers when August opened, and many\nbelieve that groups seen after that\nwere birds from further north, passing through on migration. George\nBrown saw a concentraUon of robins\nthe late weekend, after which practically none were to be seen. Catbirds vanished about toe lir:t of\nAugust, and toe \u00bbong sparrows as\nwen. Even toe weaver finches or\nhouse sparrows seem now down to\nthe small winter numbers,\nLANE DE8ERTED\nAs a test, on a recent morning I\nwent home by the lane where on\nJuly 27, despite the absence of bird\nsongs, In an elapsed time of four\nminutes 12 bird species disclosed\nthemselves to me. This time I was\nable to see only a soltarjr kingbird, and to hear an invisible robin\nsighing, Most people would have\nbeen unconscious of toe robin, whose\nquiet little sigh seems almost a small\ninsect sound.W I detected it though\nI failed to exacUy locate toe bird.\nHowever, \u00bb high flight of cedar\nwaxwings passed over.\nThis has been a great year for\ncedar waxwings In Nelson, particularly the month of August There\nwere weeks that casual observers\nwould have taken them for swallows\nover the waterfront, as they hawked\nfor insects much as the swallows\nwere doing earlier. However as\nthey would turn ln the sun high in\nthe air, there would be gleams of\nyellow body color and as they alighted on wires, or board walks, the\nperky topknotted little birds, with\nblackbirds on the waterfront.\nNo doubt further waves of them\nwill come in from the north, and\nIrom time to time we shall see concentrations ol robins, for instance,\nsuddenly appearing from nowhere.\nTHE STROLLER.\nV. Questions11\nANSWERS\nThis column of questions and.\nanswers is open to any reader ol\nthe Nelson Dally News. In no\ncase will the name of the person\nasking the question be published\nX. Z., Trail\u2014Is there such a thing\nas a universal language?\nThere are a number of so-called\nuniversal languages but none of\nthem has come into other than\nscattered use. Among them are: Vol-\napuk (1897) Johann M. Schleyer,\nGermany; Esperanto (1897) Dr. L. L.\nZammenhoff, Warsaw; Mondollngue\n(1890); Universal (1893) Eugene\nHeintzeler Germany; Kosmos, (1884)\nEugene A. Landa; Novilatln (1895)\nE. Beerman, Leopzlg, Germany:\nIdiom Neutral (1802) M. Rosenber-\nger, Leningrad, Ro (1806) Rev. E. P.\nFoster, Marietta, Ohio, (he died in\n1937); Afatari-Radio-Code a universal language without grammar or\nvocabulary based on the seven'notes\nof the musical scale; Ido (1907)\nConstructed by an International body\nof philologists and linguists. The\nACTIVE IN . . .\nKOOTENAY LIFE\ntoe form-fitting pearl-grey plumag\nand toe barred tails, were easiU\ndistinguished. They were even walking in the water's edge with the\nblackbirds. '\nThrough most of the season cedar\nwaxwings can be identified In flight\nby their looping tactics, accompanied\nby a tse-tse-tse chatter, especially\nin the spring, before nesting, but\nnow they have a variety of other\ncalls, prominent being a chibby-\nchibby. While Saturday we still had\nheaps of cedar waxwings, this week\neven they seem to have almost disappeared.\nODD BIRDS LEFT\nToday our Nelson birds seem to\nbe represented by a few cedar waxwings, a few kingbirds, a few mountain bluebirds, the occasional robin,\nand some house sparrows, with the\n<--\nliV\nAUNT HET\nOBEHT QUILLEN\nDave Wade has been active in\nthe Nelson Canadian Legion, He\nenjoys funny stories.\n^\u00bb\u00abWS*\u00ab*\u00ab\u00bb5\u00abS5\u00ab\u00ab*_\u00ab\u00ab_\u00bb\u00ab*ft\nfitvwMnui\nW*K*\newsws-\n\"I never ask another woman what\nkind o\" kitchen or bath room she's\ngot. I ftist start braggin' about mine\nand she cuts loose and tells how\nmuch better h_____faJ^t____________t____i__t_________oi\nHe Cot the Story\n, U. S. Ambassador to Britain Jos\neph P. Kennedy, \"snapped up\" a\n$5 bet offered by a Washington\ncorrespondent that the Chamberlain government would not last\nthree months. But perhaps it was\nworth more than $5 to the correspondent to get Mr. Kennedy's\nopinion on a matter he could not'\nproperly discuss in an interview.\n\u2014Financial .Post.\nApology Wai Accepted\nGeneral William Booth, founder\nof the Salvation Army, told this\nstory to his friend Arthur Croxton\n\u2014for many years manager of the\nLondon, Coliseum Music Hall\u2014who\nretells it in his reminiscences,\n\"Crowded Days and Nights\":\nA newspaper reporter, seated at\ntho reporters' table at a great revival service, was asked by a pretty\nSalvation lass:\n\"Are you saved? Come to the\npenitent form.\"\n\"Press,\" was the reporter's reply.\n\"Oh,\" said the Salavation girl,\ngently ond respectfully, \"I beg your\npardon.\"\nSunspots\nThe Japanese do not want one\nInch of Chinese territory, says the\nJap premier. Well, what do you\nknow about that!\u2014they certainly\nhad us fooled, all right.\nHitler is now making war on\nall futuristic and cubislic art. If\nGermans insist on having their\nsurrealism from now on they\nmust get it from Der Fuehrer's\nspeeches.\nIn England they are suggesting\ngas mask golf games in'order to\nget sportsmen accustomed to\nwearing the gadgets. Not a bad\nidea\u2014if prevents the players from\ntalking about their game,\nA Whale Crows Up\nDuring its period of most rapid\ngrowth,, the tinner whale, the whale\nmost hunted for oil nowadays, increases in site each day by the\nequivalent,!\t\nShepard Barclay\nTells How to Bid\nansa in ambush        i\nDID tOU EVER paaa the opponents ault bid beoause you were\nloaded to give him trouble and only\nhoped you could get v crack at biro\nupon a higher level? Aa he fell for\nthe Jpait, did you then try to push\nhim atUl higher by sticking In a\nsupporting bid for one of your partner's suits? H he succumbed to\nthla, aoared to new levels and you\n'then came out ot your ambush and\ndoubled him, didn't you feel amart\nand happy? What would become\nof your joy If your partner then\niteok out the profitable double with\na rebid of his own shit, which got\ndoubled and set?\nAA73\nVKQB8762\nAQJ982\n,V54\nUJ62\n*KJ2\n4-Spades and South 5-CIubs. Wait\ngleefully doubled thla and North\npassed, When It came to East be\nmade the mistake of taklnk out\nInto B-Bpadea, which North doubled. !;\nThe heart 10 lead Immediately\ndrove out Eaat'a A, and when he\nreturned a trump, North cashed a\nheart and offered a olub, which\nSouth waa able to win. Tflereault\nwas Eaat went down one trick.\nTiie score would hava baw quite\ndifferent If Eaat bad paid attention\nto hia partner's double, realizing\nthat .laving pasiod at one stage\nand later doubled, he probably was\nsimply egging South on. South\nwould have been aet three trlcki.\n'**..\nTomorrow's Problem\nA K 10 5 4\nVAJ3\n\u2666 AKQ10\n4\n+ 8\n\u2666 6\n\u00bb10\n\u2666 853\n#AQ976\u201e  . J\n(Dealer: Eaat. Both sidea vulnerable.)\nEast opened the bidding on this\ndeal with 1-DIamond, South over-\nicalled with 2-Clubs, West passed,\nNorth put In a bid of 2-Hearts, East\n2-Spades, South 3-Clubs, West,\n3-Spades,   North   4-Hearts,   East|\n#10 7 4\n\u00bb CJ J 10 0\n5\n#62\n*\\52\n4863\n*B 7\n\u2666 AQ0D\n*J07\nN.\ns.\n\u2666 QJ92\n\u00a5432\n\u2666 K8\n+ 8043\nAAK6\n\u00bbAK8\n\u2666 J 10 7 4\n*KQ10\n(Dealer: South. Eaat-Wert vulnerable.)\nWhat Is South's best play to\nmake 8-No Trump after tha lead\nol the heart Q?\nIdo Society ol America founded 1923,\nFred Krafft, Secy., 488 Abbott Ave,\nRidgefield, N.J.; Anglic, a new international language, proposed by Prof.\nR. E. Zachrisson in 1930, is based on\nan analysis ol all English words in\ngeneral use.\nR. J. B, Nelson\u2014I have an Azalea\nwhich had a lot of blossoms last\nyear but it is growing rather tall\nnow and I wonder if it should be\ntrimmed back for blooming this\nfall.  Should most of  the  new\ngrowth be cut back?\nNo trimming should be done at\nthis time of year. If vou wish to\ntrim your plant you should do so\nafter ]t has finished blooming or in\ntoe early spring. The new growth\nshould not be cut back as it is on the\nnew growth that next year's blooms\nwill come.\nInquirer. Castlegar\u2014Could you tell\nme what colors to mix with a\nwarm drab color paint to make It\na French grey or a deep cream?\nMix black paint (or a very dark\nbrown for a warmer shade) with tbe\ndrab paint to make a French grey.\nYellow and white paint mixed with\nthe drab will make a deep cream.\nM. F, Nelson\u2014Can, you explain why\nNew York City Is called Gotham?\nGotham was the name of a town\nin Nottinghamshire, England, toe Inhabitants of which, about 1200, were\nridiculed for simplicity and shortsightedness and were later termed\nin derision \"the wise men of Gotham.\" Washington Irving in his book,\n\"Solomon Gundy\", applies toe name\nGotham to New York, satirizing the\nshort-sightedness of many of toe\ninhabitant*.\nLooking Backward \u2666. \u2666\n\u25a0> TEN YEARS AQO\nAugust 25, 1928.\nMrs. Frank Graham, who was the\nguest of her parenta, Mr. and Mrs.\nC. Maltby, Fairview, leave* toll\nmorning for her home In Coleman,\nAlta.\u2014Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Steele\nand sons, George and Billy, ot Vancouver are visiting relatives here \u2014\nMr. and Mrs. C. Grant and daughter, Dorothy, who were guests of\nMr. and Mrs. B. Chrlsop, Fairview,\nleave this morning for their home\nat Winnipeg-Mrs. H. H. Pitts left\nfor Kamloops, Victoria, Prince Rupert and other northern points.\u2014\nFifty-one fires reported' during toe\npast week bring the season's total\nto 413.\nTWENTY YEARS AQO\nAugust 15 1918.\nGerman forces are crumbling on\nmany fronts. English troops have\ntaken 5000 prisoners and many guns\nIn 48 hourB.\u2014Pte. Thomas T. Boyes.\nNelson hockey goalie lor a number\nof years, had his thigh fractured by\na gunshot wound and is In hospital\nin France, according to a cable received here\u2014Major J. C. Halsey,\nformer broker of Prince Rupert,\ndied at Balfour sanitarium.\u2014Charles\nF Archer, who la with the flying\ncorps at Toronto, ii home on 10\ndays' leave, visiting his parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. F. E. Archer at Kaslo,\nTHIRTY YEARS AQO\nAugust 25, 1908.\nThe Elk Valley Lumber company\nln West Fernie began the erection\nol a new mill, and will soon be cutting. The city engineer's stall is\nbusy laying out new atreet lines and\nreplacing posts, and the power company has removed masses ol tangled\nwire that covered the city.\u2014Complaints are being made that with the\nIncreasing number ol launches on\nthe lake at night, accidents are occurring, as toe launches do not all\ncarry lights\u2014Born to Mr. and Mrs.\nEdwin Wilkinson, Victoria street,\nAugust 21, a son.\nWHAT THE PRESS\nIS SAYING\nTHE KING'S GIFT TO JOSTON\nAn oak sapling from Windsor\nPark, a gift of the king, will be\nplanted next month on Boston Common, In Massachusetts. It is being\ncarried to the United States by representatives of all ranks of the\nHonorable Artillery Company, who\nwill take part'In toe three-hundredth anniversary celebra jus In Bostons In Boston ol their regimen _al\noffspring, the Ancient and Honorable Artillery Company of Massachusetts, which was founded ln\n1838 by a London member of toe\nH.A.C. who sailed to New England\nwith the Pilgrim Fathers.\nLast summer a delegation from\nthe American regiment came to\nLondon to honor toe four-hundredth\nbirthday of the H-A.C.\nThe king is a member of b   i\nHome\nImprovement\nCover your cracked plaVei\nwith Cottonwood Panels. You\nwill beautify and insulate\nyour home.\nDistrict Distributors:\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Co., Ltd.\nregiments, captain general of the\nHA.C. and honorary member of the\nMassachusetts company, and his\ngift of a oak sapling will be accompanied by a bronie tablet bearing the Royal Arms and a suitable\nInscription.\u2014Manch.-ter  Guardian,\n\"Build B.C. Payroll!\"\nKEEPS\nYOUR\nMONEY\nAT HOME\nPacific Milk keeps your\nmoney at home and because\nit is canned near by. the milk\nreaches your table fresh. The\nwater and climate of British\nColumbia can not be sur:\npassed tor a milk herd and\nso Pacific grows steadily in\ndemand.\nPacific Milk\nIrradiated, of Count\nr \u25a0* mmMm*m ***^*jWMtjutrflftg ii mm\nKOOTENAYS\nAT ANY ONE OF THESE VACATION SPOTS\nYou Are Assured of a Delightful Time\nKING GEORGE\nHOTEL\nKASLO, B.C.\n\u25a0____s^>\u00ab\u00bb_3 -ass-\nExcellent Bathing, Fishing,\nBoating, Hiking\nBoats for Hire\nPLAN YOUR VACATION\nFOR KASLO\nWeekly Ratei From $14.00\nGRAY CREEK\nAUTO CAMP\nLocated at the Kootenay\nLake Ferry Landing,    \u2022:\nCray Creek.\nA delightful place for a\nrestful vacation.\nCABINS \u2014 MEALS\nRunning water, store,\nmilk, fruits, vegetables.\nMake your reservations today for a truly enjoyable\nvacation at a moderate cost.\n\u2022m~t\\T'~i\nArrow Lakes Hotel\nEDGEWOOD. B. C.\nE. NIEDERMAN. Proprietor\nComfortable Rooms\u2014Good Meals\nLogical stopping place on the\n road to Vernon\t\nBALFOUR\nSERVICE\nAuto and Tourists Service\nSHELL CAS and OIL\nIce creaoi, grocery, soft\ndrinks, confectionery\nBALFOUR, B.C.\nBALFOUR BOAT\nLIVERY\nFRANK SEAL\nWeather and water con\nditions Ideal for a picnic\nand fishing. Many good\ncatches made including\nseveral salmon. Get a\nboat and see what you\ncan do!\nBALFOUR. B. C.\nm*\nDELIGHtfUL\nVacation\n= Spend Your  Holidays and -\n3 Week-Ends at the S\n=     OUTLET HOTEL      s\n5 Procter s\nGood meals, friendly service. Excellent   fishing,   boating,   hiking,\nswimming   Furnished cahlni Grocery store tn connection,\nW A WARD. Prop.\nKOKANEE\n-LODGE-\nA mile and a half from the\nNekon' Ferry\nHotel \u2014 Cabins \u2014 Meals\nFISHING \u2014 HUNTING\nBATHING in Season\nAllsebrook's Camp\nNear Kaslo, B.C.\n__,\nLarge, Comfortable Log Cabins. Fishing, Bathing, Boats,\nOutboards. Special combine rate for fishermen for fall.\nCABIN\u2014Sleep two or three adults, with rowboat.\nWeek ^10.00 Fortnight $ 17.00\nLARGE DOUBLE CABINS\u2014For five to six persons,\nand boat.\nWeek $12.00 Fortnight $19.50\nEffective August 25th\nDay rates, Cabin and Boat $2.25 to $2.75\nAnd the loveliest spot on Kootenay Lake for good measure.\nTelephone your reservations.\nFOR A REAL REST AND VACATION \u2014 STOP AT THE\nKOOTENAY COTTAGES\nFOUR MILES FROM THE FERRY AT GRAY CREEK\n\u2022 Every cottage a small\ndream home fully equipped\nfor your every comfort.\n\u2022 A fine boat for fishing\nor boating is included in the\nprice of your cabin.\n\u2022 One of the finest tennis courts In the interior is\nat your disposal.\n\u2022 You may cook in your\nown cosy kitchen or dine at\nthe adjoining lodge, whatever it may be your pleasure\nto do. *\nRATES FROM $5.00 PER DAY or $25.00 PER WEEK\nWRITE FOR FULL INFORMATION OR RESERVATIONS\nTHE IDEAL HOLIDAY RESORT\n^\u25a0H\n\u25a0_\u25a0\n w\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\ntttft\nMoyie Couple Are\nHonored at Party\nMOYIE, B.C.\u2014Friends of Mr, and\nMrs. Algot Johnson, Sunnyslde\nranch, gave them a surprise party\nSunday when visitors came from\nKimberley, Lumberton, Cranbrook\nand Moyie. Over 69 attended. Refreshments were served on the lawn\nand a beautiful three-tiered cake,\nmade by Mrs. Frank Carlson of\nKimberley, was cut. Later Rev. 0.\nGrondahl, on behalf of all present,\nspoke of the esteem in which Mr.\nand Mrs. Johnson are held and\nwished them manjt years of happi-\nness. John Anderson of Kimberley\nspoke for their Kimberley friends\nand Mr, Lindgren ot Kimberley presented a well-filled purse on behalf\nof JClmberley an(j Cranbrook friends.\nMra. R. A, Smith spoke tor Moyie\nfriends.\nGuests were: Mr, and Mrs. F. A.\nCarlson and f amily.Mr, and Mrs, Oscar Hendrickson, Roy and Emelic;\nMr. and Mrs. A. Hendrickson and\nson, Mr. and Mrs. Lindgren and\nMary Anne; Mr. and Mrs. A. Dellert\nand family, John Anderson, Mr. and\nMrs. J. 0. Pearson, Mr. and Mrs.\nGut Sholund, Mr. and Mrs. L.\nSortome, Mr, and Mrs. John Kadin\nand family, Mr. and Mrs. K. Sahlin,\nMiss A. Sahlin and Mr. and Mrs.\nSjolund and Edwin, all of Kimberley; Mr, and Mrs. Fred Nelson and\nfamily, Mra. K. Erclkson and Emilie,\nMr. and Mrs. H. Anderson, Mr. and\nMrs. 0. Benson and famll- C.\nHogglund, all of Cranbrook; Mr. and\nMrs. John Strand and family, Kitchener; Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Jackson,\nTrail; Mrs. B. Lundeen, Marysville,\nMrs. IV A. Smith, and Eddie, Mrs.\nJames \u2022 Whitehead, Rev. and, Mrs.\nGrondahl, H. Haigh, R. Ramshaw,\nMissel Alice, Frances, Margaret.\nJosy, Jessie Jan Whitehead and\nJimmie WhUeheaf\nFIND BODY OF YOUNG\nMAN, OKANAGAN CAKE\nPENTICTON, B. C, Aug. 24 (GP)\n\u2014Body of a young man identified\nas that of Hugh Pickering of Penticton, Vai fotyid today in Okanagan' lake near the government\nwharf. >   '    -\nPickering disappeared about a\nweek 1(0. Coroner R, B. White\nsaid he thought an Inquest was unnecessary.\nNEU80N DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B. C\u2014THUR8DAY MORNINO, AUG, 25. 1SW.\n. e\u00bba\u00bb WVHH\n\"\nShady Scene at Troll\nBright light and shadows add to beauty of this section of Gyro park, East Trail, \u2014 Daily News Photo.'\nCRESTON Social...\nCRESTON, B. C\u2014Mr. and Mrs.\nGeorge. Belamy and son, John, of\nSaskatoon, are guests of Mr. and\nMrs. R. B. Robinson.\nR. J. Forbes, manager of the Bank\nof Commerce, resumed work Monday.\nMrs. Mallandaine arrived Saturday from a vacation with relatives\nat Vancouver. Victoria and Nanaimo.\nMrs. H. A. Powell and Dorothea\nreturned Saturday from a holido\/\nat points in the British Isles.\nL. A. Campbell, manager of West\nKootenay and Light company, Limited, Trail, visited Creston Fr'day.\nMrs. Wolfman has returned from\nSpokane.\nMr. and Mrs. E. E. Stauffer of\nOlds, Alta., were guests of Mr. and\nMrs. A. R. Lynn last week.\nFrank Putnam, M. L. A., accompanied by Mrs. Putnam, left Tues\nday for Kelowna to attend the B. C.\nLiberal convention.';\nT. Dunseath of Wynndel visited\nCreston Friday. He reports returns\non raspberries and strawberries this\nyear as the lowest tot several sea>\nsons. .\nMr. and Mrs. Ctconnl have returned to Vancouver, after visiting Mr.\nand Mrs. Frank Colli.\nMr. and Mrs. Fred Martello and\ndaughter, Kathlean, are home from\nVancouver, where the former attended summer school: Mr. Martello\nhas been promoted trom Wynndel\npublic school to the staff of the\nConsolidated high school.\nMr. and Mrs. W. L. Hathaway\nwere in from Caittp Hathaway, near\nKitchener, Tuesday, and will return, to their home ln San Francisco\nshortly.\nA. K. Klockmann of Porthill, vis\nited Creston, Tuesday,\nR. G. Newton, superintendent of\nthe federal experimental farm at\nWindermere, was a Creston visitor\nSaturday. .\nCol. and Mrs. Mallandaine were\nSunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Hath'\naway at Kitchener.\nGirl, 11, Can't Swim\nbut Saved Her Sister\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 24 <CP)~\nEleven-yoar-old Dorothy Driscoll\ntoday was a heroine in more eyes\nthan one because ot a plucky rescue ot her little sister Marguerite,\nnine, from the waters ot Burrard\ninlet here Tuesday.\nAlthough she couldn't swim,\nDorothy leaped fully clothed into\nthe inlet near 'here and dragged\nher sister to n boom of logs.\nInoculation against smallpox wag\npracticed before the birth of Christ\nSocial...\nAppledale\nAPPLEDALE, BC\u2014B. Needham\nhas returned trom Nelson,\nMr, and Mrs. D. F. Peters have returned from three weeks' holiday\nat Vancouver.\nMrs. H. Currie of Trail, who vlilted Mrs. E Lansdown, hat returned\nto her home.\nG. Crawford ot Trail ipent the\nweekend at hli rammer home here\nL. Staten of Nelson is visiting hli\ngrandparents, Mr. and Mn. Wynne\nhere. .\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0'\u00bb        '_,\u25a0 :\nDEATHS\nBy The Canadian Pren\n'  OTTAWA - Stephen Edward\nO'Brien, 73, former Militant deputy minister ot public works. I\nMONTREAL \u2014 Edward Jamei\nTurlc, 94, superintendent of general ships of Montreal Light, Heat &\nPower Consolidated.\nOTTAWA -Edward J. McVeigh,\n42, member ot tho board ot control\nand a former city alderman.\nYARMOUTH, N. S. - Hon. Und-\nsay Cann Gardner, (3, speaker of\nthe Nova Scotia legislature and\npresident ot Minards Liniment Co.,\nLtd.\nSTE. ROSE, Que. \u2014 Marcel He-\nbert, 23, noted Montreal pianist and\n1988 winner ot the Prix D'Europe,\nGLENDALE, Calif. - Winfield\nScott Ingram, 55, editor of the Glen-\ndale News Press. Editor ot the Oakland, Calif., Tribune at the time of\nthe San Francisco earthquake and\nlire ot 1906, In which emergency\nho acted u editor ot the San Francisco Call-Chronicle-Examiner, published ln, Oakland while the fire\nraged In San Francisco across the\nbay,\nVANCQUVER - Samuel Law\nPrenter, 63, former Canadian Pacific railway trainmaster and harbor commissioner.\nBRISBANE, (CP)-Blggeit opal\nseen for 20 years at Lightning ridge,\nAustralia's famous opal field has\nbeen found by an old German digger. Valued at \u00a31500 ($7600) it waa\nfound as the digger was abandoning\nhis mine.\nFrom TraU and Robson\n\u25a0 Louise MacLean and Eileen Quance are cousins, granddaughters\not Mr. and Mrs. C. F. McHardy of Nelson and daughters ot Mr. and\nMrs. Kay MacLean of Trail and Mr. and Mrs. Marwin Quance of\nRobson. ._\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0' .   .\nMAYOR MILLER URGES\nFEDERAL WORKS PLAN\nFOR SINGLE JOBLESS\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 24 (CP) -\nA federal work scheme to care for\ntingle, homeless unemployed was\nurged by Mayor G. C. Mfller when\nhe conferred today with Hon. G. S.\nPearson, provincial minister of labor. The conference, held in the\nmayor'! office, was attended by\nAlderman Corey, chairman of civic\nsocial services committee; Alderman J. W. Cornett, finance committee chairman; and City Relief Administrator W. R. Bone.\nThe minister of labor, in ^Vancouver en route to Kelowna to attend the provincial Liberal- con\nvention, is expected to confer again\nwith Mayor Miller on hit return.\nMr. Pearson told reporters he is\nstanding pat on his decision regarding, the question of \"relief for tran-\nslaitt.''\nHEPBURN NOT AT BRIDGE\nOPENING;   WAS ] RESTING\nTORONTO, Aug, 24 (CD-Premier Mitchell Hepburn today gave\nhis lhtentlon to rest up from recent\nstrenuous activities as the reason\nfor not attending the opening ot the\nnew international bridge connecting Canada and the United States\nnear Kingston, Opt. The bridge was\nopened officially by Prime Minister\nKing and President Roosevelt.\nNothing Settled\nIn Trade Treaty\nStates Premier]\nOTTAWA, Aug. 24 <CP)-\"We1\nhave given up nothing and nothing has been settled,\" Prime Minister Mackenzie King replied when\nquestioned today on reports Canada\nwould surrender her wheat prefer-1\nonce in the United Kingdom to facilitate a trade agreement between\nthe United states.\nThe prime minister expressed belief   the   Washington   negotiations\nwould be completed in September.\nand he saw a possibility he would, ^\nbe called upon to visit Wash'-\"-^\nton in, connection with the revi- d<j\nCanada-United States trade agre*\nment\nPRISONER FREED\nBUT REARREST?\"\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 24  (CP> \u2022\nWilliam   A.   Cook,   charged   w>m\nbreaking into the home of Mr..\nScheidel, August 20, was freed\nMagistrate. H. S. Wood today on\ngrounds identification of the prisont |\ner was not sufficient to convict\nCook left the court. As he steppi\nInto the sidewalk In front of the 1\nlice court he was arrested again\u2014\nfor possession of stolen property.\nWAKE UP YOUR\nLIVER BILE-\nAnd You'll Jump Out of Bed In\nMorning Rarin'to go\nTh\u00ab liver should pour out tiro pam* et j I\nliquid Wlo Into youiWoUililll.Ullii.l_l_.\nI.notflowlnllmly.younooddooin'tdisw.\ntt |u\u00bbt .ban tatta bomb. G\u00aba Mott. n   ;\nyour stomach. You get romtiratcd. Harmful\n       Into the body, tncl you tod \u00bb\nE\/mk and tho world looVa punk.\nA mere bowl movement doesn't alwaya sat\nat the cause. Yon need \u25a0omental that wotki\non tho liver aowcll. It Uk<\u00ab thoae food, oil\nCarter'! Uttle liver Pills to t* Utm tin\nKusda ot bilo flowing freely and auk* yon   .\nl\"up nml up\".Uarmlcaa and gentle,they\nmake the bile flow freely. They oo tha sreatt. j\nol calomel but have no calomel or mercury U\nthem. Ask for Carter's Littlo line I'illa by   .\nname I Stubbornly tefuae anything else. 26c.   :\n(AdvOj\nITS COMING \u2022 \u2022 t\nA GIGANTIC CLEARANCE! FOLLOW\nTHE CROWD TO THE RECORD SALE!\nIf you have bought Men's\nWear here before, you know\nhow good 'f hi and if you\nhaven't, your friends will\ntell you. We wish you would\ncome now, .because we are\nselling more of the same at\nvery special prices.\nBOYS'WEAR\n76o Cotton  Polo AftA\nShirts    \u00bb7f\n$126 Pole\nShirts \t\n$1.85 Jumbo\nCoati _\t\n$2.95 Jumbo\nCoats  \t\n$1.00 Tweed\nKnlck\t\n$4.95 Tweed\nOvercoats \t\n$3.7$   Mackinaw\nWlndbreakers \t\nm\n$1.29\n$2.49\nm\n$3.9*\n$2.69\n$1.00 Crew gQA\nSweaters +7T\n$1.25 Crew\nSweaters ...\n79*\n$1,25V-neck  Jacquard QC\/\u00bb\nP, 0. Sweaters  7m*.\n$1.25 Penman's\nP. 0. Sweaters .\n50o  Polo\nSweaters ......\nm\n29*\nw\n$1.29 Running\nShoes\t\n$2.50 Scampers *| no\n$2.25 Scampers        *| An\nBATHING   TRUNKS    ONE-\nTHIRD LES8\nTurnbull Combinations (MA\nshort sleeve and knee \"'r\n$125 Combinations,      OS*}\ngood weight  \"\n$4.50 Mackinaw       &34Q\nZipper w'breakers   \"ffwf\n$1.00 Crew Cotton        >Jt\\A\nPullovers   ITT\n$1.00 Tweed\nKnlcks \t\n65c Golf\nHose  ~.\nCotton Golf\nHose \t\nCotton* Ankle\nSocks\t\nWool Golf\nSocka\t\n39*\nm\n19*\nSALE OPENS SATURDAY, Aug. 27 - 9 a. m.\nMEN'S WEAR-Savinas You\nALL WORK\nGLOVES\nREDUCED\n59*\n$1.00 Suede\nGauntlets ...\nUNDERWEAR\n$1.60 Rib Vesta and Of f Q\nDrawers  - \u00a5\"\u2022\"*\n$225 Stanfleld* Cf m\n2-pleee; eaeh  \"HT\n$8^0 Red Libel *_* 2Q\nCombination! ...-_- tTT\n\u00bb2'M Rlb SI.08\nComblnatloni  9**7*\n$125 Cream  Rib '      naA\nCombinations  W*T\n$1.76 Fleece __t)\nCombinations  -.. Ym*ew*w\n$1.00 Fleece Shirts      sjnA\nor Drawers _ ITT\n$2.75 Rib 4__\nCombinations  9m**\u00a7T\nMen's\nWinterwear\n$8.50 Frelie Coats\n8uede  linen  \t\n$4.79 Pure Wool\nCoats  .\u201e \t\n$5.50 Plaid Mackln. Oj no\naw full ilpper Coats M\u00bb7W\n$10.00 Plush Zipper  _ QO\nCoats  \u2014 W!KT\n$5.50 Grey Frelie\nCoats  \t\nHATS\n$225 Scratch Of OQ\nFait Hat. \u201e_ 9**ml\n$5.60  Stetsons..** QQ\nLarge sixes .93*771\n$2.50 Waterproof\ns *\u25a0*\nMc Summer\nCaps \u2014\t\nm\nmmm\nTOWELS\nSS by 19 Turkish..*_\nEach  *T*\n43 by 19 Turklih._2Q|\u00bb\nEaeh  \\*m\\*'\nDRESS\nOXFORDS\nWORK\nSHOES\nA special line, Q* fit\nPanco, leather V*\u00bb7J\nPanco or '     Oj nn\nleather sole .. 93*17\nWORK\nSHIRTS\n$1.00 Navy\nDrill \t\n$1.00 Blue\nChambray\t\n$1.50  Domet\nEach \t\n$1.75 Suede\nEach  \t\n$1.50 Chambray\nEach _: \t\n\u201e79*\n\u201e_79*\n_98*\n$5.9*\n$3.98\nTIES\n35o  Silk\nTies\t\nm\nBuy for Christmas\n75c Silk\nTies\t\n$\u00bb_. m\n$2.95\nfor  .\n$3.76\nfor   _.\n$4:50\nfor   .\n$5.95\nfor   ..\n95c Carpet\nSlippers \u2014\n$2.69\n$3.39\n$3.98\n$5.39\n\u201e\u201e59*\nMENS\nSUSPENDERS\n76o Suspenders and     aqa\nGarters  W\n75o Suspenders\n39c Suspenders\n49*\n29*\nSWEATERS\nWool Mix\nSleeveless   \t\n$1.00 Wool Mix\nSleeveless White ...\n$2.50 Coats,\nV-neck   \u2014\t\n$2.95 Full Zipper\nCoats ..-\t\nDRESS\nSHIRTS\nWORK SOX\nTo $1.60 Values ngA\n$2.00 Tookea\nfor .,..._,....-...,\nHeather Socka\nPair  \u201e \t\nMettled\nPair \t\n$1.79\n4-lb. Mottled\nPair \t\n29*\nm\n$3.50 Full Zipper\nCoats _ -\n%m Pullover\nWoel\t\n$2.60 Pullover\nWool \u201e\t\n$5.75 Brushed wool\nFull Zipper Coats ..\n$4.95 Brushed Wool\nFull Zipper Coat ..\n$125 Cotton Sport\nLace Necks \t\n$4.95 Brushed Wool\nfull Jlpper.oddsl_.es\n39*\n$1.89\n$249\n$2.89\n$1.98\n$149\n$5.19\n$449\n79*\n$2.98\nDress Sox\nEach   line  a special.\n19*! 29* 39*\n69*\nPANTS\nA Special  Dress       $2 49\nALL DRESS\nPANTS\nREDUCED\nMEN'S\nWORK SHOES\nBlue Denim\nPANTS\nLace Waist\nA Splendid\nAssortment\nMEN'S\nDRESS SOCKS\n.\ng|?^\u201er.d.. $2.29\nSTORE CLOSED FRIDAY-CUTTING PRICES\n pp?\nI PAQE tlOMT    \u25a0'! ' ,\u00bb.\nArrangements for\nRebuilding Dykes\nAl (reslon Made\nI. \u25a0 CRESTON, B.C. \u2014 financial ar-\nI rangements have been made and\nother details worked out tor an\nimmediate start at replacing the\nwashed out section at the Wynndel\nend o! Creston Dyking District, and\nI a comprehensive plan of strong tlicn-\n, Ing the dyke generally, following\nthe receding of he waters that inundated the 7500-acre area early in\nJune. At least $20,000 will be re-\n- quired for repairs\u2014and more, if\nI necessary, to thoroughly rehabili-\n: tatc the levees.\nh Information to this effect was\nforthcoming following a meeting of\nhe landowners in the United Church\nmil, which was largely attended;\nand was presided over by Guy\nConstable, chairman of the dyking\n-.district board of trustees.\n',' j A statement of the expense incurred in the attempt to avert the\ngoing out of the dykes was pre-,\nsented and was generally conceded\n. to be very reasonable. A great deal\nI ft the outlay was for sacks, all of\nwhich are still on hand and available\n|or future emergencies.\nI Dyke repair work will be in\ncharge of Creston Reclamation Company, Limited, in active co-operation with the dyking district qxecu-\nI live. The company has purchased a\ndragline, which will be here this\nweek, and repair operations will get\nfinder way immedia' ly. A start will\nbe made at the south end, but as\nI soon as the big shovel can be used\nat Wynndel end a shift will be made\n. to;tht north and full advantage taken ot the fine weather of early fall\nto complete the break which ex-\n; tends about 800 feet\nII In addition to acquainting the\nlandowners with the flood expense\nand rebuilding cost, farmers were\nasked to express themselves on suggested betterments,  and amongst\nfother things they were unanimous in\n-.asking that lt satisfactory arrangements can be made, that the dyking\ndistrict purchase the dragline tor\nits own use.\nv It was also agreed that as far as\npossible the landowners and their\nI trucks be given tine preference when\ndyke rebuilding commences.\nlINSWORTH\nAINSWORTH, B. C.-Ainsworth\nYoung People's Society sponsored\nan enjoyable beach party near the\n.old wharf on Saturday night.\n; .Community singing, led by Mrs.\nH. S. Currie, was enjoyed. Games\n[ were also played and marshmallows\ntoasted at the bonfire. Dancing was\nafterwards enjoyed at the hall. Mu-\naic being supplied by Mrs. H. S.\nCurrie and Miss Louise Colletti of\nNelson. Among those present wer,e\n! Mrs. J. B. Fletcher, Mrs. H. S. Currie,\nMrs. R. Sherraden, Mr. and Mrs.\nLudivicci, F. Browne, the Misses\nMargery Brown, Alva Johnson, Eileen Fletcher, Isabel Lane, Mavis\nFletcher, Ruby Hansen, Corinne\nFletcher, Doris Fletcher, Mabel\nLane, Mona Mackean, Louise Colletti, Rita Colletti, Rose Zora, Mrs.\nGouchey, Roy Brown, Larry and\nJerry Fitzsimmons, Jack, Lylrean\n-nd Wendell Baker, John McLel-\niii of Kimberley, Ron and Jack\nIriffin, Bill and Tom Lahe and\nVUlie Hansen.\nted Bums has returned to California where he attends school. His\nfather and mother, Mr. and Mrs.\nolm Burns went as far as Spokane\nrtth him.\nBill Lane who spent the week-end\n\u25a0*,' his home here, returned to Nel-\n.M.\nMr. and Mrs. R. Sherraden and\nMrs. Hansen recently visited Nelion.\n\u2022 Mrs. Colletti and family of Nelson\nate holidaying here.\n..Mrs, E. McLellan and her son\nJack returned to Kimberley Sunday\nafter visiting Mr. and Mrs. Frank\nDumas.\n\u25a0 T. Riley of Kaslo was here Sunday\nwith Tom Sleep who is working at\nthe United mine.\nSocial...\nSHEEP CREEK\nI^SHEEP CRIEK, B.C., - Mrs F.\nPhillips and Miss E. Phillips are\nquests of Mr. and Mrs. W. Cart-\nfright\nMiss Shirley Doelle has as her\nIguests Miss Louis t. Engdahl and Miss\nratty Pasley\nJ.R. Thompson  was a visitor to\n\u25a0elson Aug. 20, Mrs. Thompson and\nTfant son are at Kootenay Lake\neneral hospital.\n,   Henry. Bessner is still on the\nlick list\" with an injured foot.\nvMrs. J. Moir and baby are home\nirom Kootenay Lake General hospl-\nal, Nelson.\nMr. and Mrs. Rudd and Mr. and\n\"\" il Ivan Johnson and children have\nt for a holiday at coast points.\nMrs. H. Larsen entertained at the\n\"ea hour Friday when guests were\nllrs. Cartwright, Mrs. Cosnett, Mrs.\nlay, Mrs. Harris, Mrs. Brash, Mrs.\nUncan, Mrs. Palmier and Miss Bcl-\n' Koppel.\nMr. and Mrs. Beck and Mrs. H.\njarsen were week-end shoppers to\nNelson.\n' Mr. and Mrs. H. Beck haye left\nI for Saskatchewan, via Spokane\njThey will remain away two weeks.\n.Nelson visitors included Hrs. Pel-\nir Martin, Mrs. F, Johnson, Mrs.\nMitchell,-Mr. and Mrs. G. Anderson,\nIr. and Mrs. O. Austin and Joyce,\n. Lodder and J. Mallor.\nMrs. May had as her guest Miss\n*etty Koppel, Who has returned to\ner home at Sicamous.\n.Mrs. McPhail has as her guest Mrs.\nClarke of Canyon,\n^hops Off Hand,\nGouges Out Eye\nMERCED, Calif., Aug. 24 (AP)-\n\\ story of how a woman, obsessed\nwith the idea she had sinned, chop-\nbed off her left hand and gouged\nput Mr right eye was told from a\n\"ail cell today by Woodrow Harwell, 20-year-old Texas cotton pick-\nir.\nDistrict Attorney F. A. Sllveira\nbuoted Harwell aa saying he and his\nto young step-sons knelt in pray-\n\u2022 yesterday afternoon in their one\n10m cabin while his 20-year-old\nrite read from the bible.\nMn. Harwell rose from prayer,\n\u2014  husband  related,  saying  her\nhand offended her and she\nfished forgiveness for her sins.\nSilverla  said  the  husband was\nleld for questioning because authorities did not believe it was\nnible for the woman to chop oft\n' own hand.\nNELSON DAILY NEW8. NELSON, B.C.-THURSDAY MORNING, AUG. 26. 1938.\nFREDERICK NIVEN, NOTED\nBRITISH AUTHOR, PREFERS\nTO WORK IN KOOTENAY\nWhy? See, to the left, picture of Mr. Nivfcn's home on the West Arm\nof Kpotertay Lake, near Nelson. No longer \"a rolling (stbne\".\n\"Who's Whp\"'aays of the famous\nauthor 61 \"Justice of the Peace\", of\n\"Mrs. Barry\", of. \"Triumph\" and of\n\"Coloured  Spectacles\"  that he  is\n\"somewhat of a rolling stone.\"\nBut that is not true of his life since\n.--,   h. lefUhe' British Ministry of In-\n\u2022 formation, which he served during\ni     the wW..,\/.'\n\"       He was born in Valparaiso, Chile,\n\u25a0 \u2022, ' sixty years ago, he was educated\nin Glasgow and during his-\"rolling\n1  stoning\" Is staid to have trundled for\n. a short time freight trucks at the C.\n\\   \"  P. R. station at Nelson,\" That was in\n;A    Nelson's quite early days; In \"Wild\nHoney,\" Mr. Niven tells, delightful\n.stories of .tramps in British Columbia's' wilds and of \"queer fellows\"\n(the title of the book when published in England) that he met.\nNiven's \"Justice of the Peace\" is\nincluded In a library of classics. Its\nworth has been honored by introductions by Christopher Morley and\nSir Hugh Walpole. Both \"Triumph\"\nand \"Mrs. Barry\" have been recommended by the English Book Society.\nKootenay's internationally admired author loves mountaineering, but\nmost of all he seems to love his literary work in his cottage at Willow\nPoint, working beside shelves of\nbooks, always a friendly and shaggy\ndog not far away. He likes to roll\nhis own cigarettes, but no longer\nwith elusive Bull Durham he once\nlearned to twine in the prairie.\nThe Niven home is iii thekind of\nsurroundings that used to be called\n\"sylvan\", but it is not In the wilds.\nIt is four miles from Nelson, by\nhighway or motorboat, it has electrid\nlight, and all the rest of it. By telephone Mr. Niven may talk to his\npublisher in New York or if he de\nsires by trans-Atlantic pbone to\nLondon. He tells an amusing story\nabout wayward copy and proofs of\n\"Coloured Spectacles\" which suggest trans-Atlantic telephoning possibilities.\nNor is the atmosphere intellectually that of the .wilds. Mm. Niven,\nwho was Mary Pauline Thorne-\nQuelch, makes one think of Chelsea\nrather than of Skookum Creek, of\nMontparnasse rather than Tete\nJaune Cache. Of charming and very\nreal personality, she comes ot a\nfamily devoted to the dramatic art\nand herself has been associated with\nliterary work and literary people\nalmost since school days.\nThe adjacent photos are Intended\nto suggest why Mr. Niveh prefers to\nwrite his books on the shores of\nKootenay lake, rather than In London, or New York, or Cannes.\nr^mmmmsf^^-\nPHOTO B1!\nA1LV NEWS\nHOLIDAY NOTES\nBy G. S. REES\n(Part 1.)\nDefinitely I like train travel,\nthough salt-water voyaging appeals\nto me more. Nations muss e\"ach'other up and get in caoh other's hair,\ngovernments go haywire, and the\nunemployed sleep in art galleries;\nbudgets remain in a perpetual unbalance and businesses go bust, bul\nthrough all these vicissitudes and\nwith many troubles ot their own,\ntrains leave on time day. after day,\nmonth in\/year out, in all weathers,\nand people arrive at destinations on\ntime, or nearly always. Traffic officers require to know all the answers\nfor delayed trains for their own\ngood. I like to snuggle into scat or\nsleeping berth, wheels clickihg below, with the melodious whistle\ntelling 'em I'm coming right along.\nYou take the high road, I'll take\nthe railroad (With hardly a pause\nfor station identification)! II is a\nfine tribute to the methods which\nhave been developed during recent\nyears for handling traffic and scheduling runs to the increased tempo\nof modern transportation that the\ngiant miracles of steam, oil and electricity riding the rails do not get in\none another's way\u2014at least not very\noften! Rail transport today is faster\nand safer and more friendly than\never: it has taken to modernism from\ntip to tall with siim shafts of silver streaking, tiie steel racetrack\nlike everybody's - business i at. more\ntljan a mile a minute clip on split\nsecond schedules, Gorgeous trains of\nall colors, long gleaming dragons\nthat attract the rail-rider with alluring interior decors of Persian\nblue, or peaches and cream color-\nschemes; with Soil-less chromium\ngadgets housed in lighler-than-steel\nrustless equipment. Soon we shall\nhave conductors wearing gardenias,\nand offering patrons a boutonierro\nof orchids!\nIt is interesllng to note (or is it?)\nthat if all the cars and engines of\nthe' American roads were coupled\ntogether they would make a train\n17,000 miles long, but what would\na master mechanic or a train dispatcher do with it; also that all\nthe dining cars servo enough meals\neach year to feed everyone in Nelson for an indefinite period. What a\npity, by the way, that Uncle Sam\nand John Canuck cannot adequately\nfeed the thousands of their destitute citiziyjs starving in the land of\nplenty.\nThe travelling public is impressed\nby the clean appearance of the\ncoaches they are invited to patronize, and also in a measure by the\nmotive power at the bead-end, but\nrailroad men know that the, roadbed itself and the equipment that\ngoes with it are the real foundation\nof successful and safe rail transportation. The railway takes its very\nname from its, road of steel. Vast\nsums are spent annually in keeping\nthe trackin-firsf class shape; from\nthis indlMct tax on revenue, rubber-\ntired , carriers cavorting along the\nroadways are entirely free and are\nthus placed in a preferred position,\nPAST AND FUTURE    ,\nYea verily, the old iron horse has\nbeen re-shod, and train travel has\nregained a full fledged flavor and\nfavor; streamline, air conditioned\nand fast operating schedules have\nboomed passenger business-by capturing the imagination of the travelling public. The modern vacationist \u2014 1938 model \u2014 in this technological age has conquered space\nand time, and seeks recreation in\never-wWenihg areas. The rapid development of transportation systems\nto meet these up-to-date vacation\nrequirements has been one of the\nprime factors in booming the travel\nbusiness to the world's third largest Industry \u2014 only food and housing rating higher. There has been\na rebirth: of the pioneering spirit\nthat put the railways on the North\nAmerican map in the first place;\nthe railways form an essential link\nin the economic structure, and in\nCanada we have the \"All-red\" route\nthat is a vital link ln Empire communications and vijal for its defence against aggression.. When the\nrubber-tired vehicles cannot 'deliver the goods', the tried and trusty'\nengine hitches on to half a mile of\nbox cars, and \"takes 'em through\"\nwithout more than a casual notice\nof atmospheric hazards.\nSIMPLE LIFER8\nCalifornia's caravanners are familiar adjuncts lo California's highways. Trailers trailing smoothly in\nrear of autos number over, fifteen\nthousand in the States; these rolling\nhomes provide quarters for about\nfifty thousand 'floaters', who sfeep\nnightly under, the rounded roofs\nof their covered wagons. Many\ntrailers are positively luxurious, a\nregular 'Lodge in the wilderness'\nand enable trailer-fans to get back\nto Nature the easiest way, or even\nget off the map, and to wander cdm-\nfortably with the freedom, though\nnot the mode, of raggle-taggle gypsies. Many have the conveniences of\nluxury- flats. Trailer nomads may\nnot be quite as \u25a0 'comfy' \u25a0 as in an\nanchored house,:.but one cannot\n'keep'a house'moving ahead of the\ntax-collector! Doubtless the Powers-\nthat-be will soon discover ways and\nmeans of .chasing the elusive tax-\ndollar to its, lair, and cause the\nwandering tribes to contribute to\nthe high cost of Government.'\n(To Be Continued)\nGardiner Opposes\nImmigration if Not\nAssisted, He Says\nLILLOOET, B. C\u201e Aug. 24 (CP)\n\u2014 , Hon.. James. Gardiner, federal\nminister of agriculture, said here\ntoday he was opposed to placing\nsettlers from the old country on\n\"raw land,\" and leaving thtrti to\n\"fight out their own destiny.\" \u25a0\nMr. Gardiner was commenting on\nproposals for British emigration to\nBritish. Columbia. One '.proponent\nof,such a policy, Sir Henry Page\nCroft, is at present touring British Columbia! to study possibility of\nplacing British settlers in this province,\n\"If provision is made for financing the settlers over the first difficult years, and of training them and\nequipping them for the task, then\nthe plans should be satisfactory,\"\nthe minister, said.\nHe arrived here by plane yesterday, accompanied by J. G. Turgeon,\nLiberal member of parliament for\nCariboo, and Louis LeBourdais,\nLiberal member of the British Columbia legislature for Cariboo riding.\nTRADE UNIONS ARE\nOPPOSED TO SCHEME\nFOR IMMIGRATION\nVANCOUVER,-Aug. 24 (CP)-The\ntrades imion movement is opposed\nto any \u25a0 \"wholesale immigration\nscheme,\" Percy Bengough, secretary\nDf Vancouver, New Westminster and\ndistrict trades and labor council\nsaid today.\nBengough. was commenting on\nproposals of Sir Henry Page Croft,\n-British parliamentarjan now in British Columbia investigating the\npossibility of assisted British emir\ngration to western Canada.\n\"I haven't had time to look fully\ninto this latest idea,\" Bengough\nsaid,( \"but at,otir conventions, we\nhave always opposedsuch-schemes.\"\nBargains In tho \"Classified\" Today\nis    i\n              2.\nhuman side\nInevW\nBY   EDWIN C.HILL\nSir William Johnson  Had  Uncanny Way With  Six  Nations  Indians\nJOSEPH  BRANT\n,     The marks-of his tomahawk\n' are still on the stair-rail of Johnson Hall,\nUp in the beautiful Mohawk valley of New York state they are\ncelebrating the 20Oth anniversary\nof the arrival in this coutry of a\nyoung Irishman who was largely responsible, for making North America\nan English-speaking continent. He\nwas'Sir William Johnson of Johnson Hall. \"Johnson of the Mohawks\",\nand 'no man ever lived a more picturesque and romantic career.\nSir William's deeds loomed large\nin British North America. He exerted a strange and mighty influence\nwith and over the'Iroquois\u2014the finest fighting -n*n this continent ever\nsaw. If you stood today in the great\nentrance door of Johnson Hall, you\nwould see the splid mahogany stair-\nrail which bears' to this day and\nhohr -the gashes made by the hat-\nche* of Joseph Brant, Chief Thay-\nendenaga.as ap order to his Mohawks and all other tribes of the\nSix Niftlons that Sir William's home\nmust'not be molested, even though\nSir William was there in his grave\nand half the confederation were\nfighting tor the British,\nHIS HOME A\nSOCIAL CENTRE\nDown that. noble stairway had\ntripped Sir William's lovely.Indian\n8IR WILLIAM JOHNSON\n\".. , , largely responsible for\nmaking North America an English-speaking continent.\"\nwife. Molly Brant, on the arm of\nbluff, burly Sir William himself.\nHalf the gentry ot New York had\nwalked those halls. For Johnson\nHall, as the seat of His Majesty's\nsuperintendent of the northern Indians, was as important, if not more\nso, than Albany or the town of\nNew York down at the lower end of\nthe Hudson.\nThe whoje Mohawk valley and\ngreat regions to the north and south\nwere the hunting grounds of the Six\nNations,,the,most.warlike and formidable red men of the continent.\nSensitive and savage, as undepend-\nable as the winds, they were held\nin check and in British alliance almost entirely by the genius and\npersonal gifts of Sir William Johnson. Had, it not been for this remarkable man, the French, lavish\nwith their gifts, almost \u201eurely would\nhave won them over, and Canada\nand the American colonies almost\ncertainly have been French.\nFUR TRADE WAR\nTwo huhdred years ago France\nand England were still fighting out\ntheir long battle for the fur trade,\nand incidentally for the richest slice\noMhe continent, Encircling posts and\nmissions ot tbe French- stretched\nfrom the,Gulf of Mexico to the St\nLawrence, with the logical purpose\nof confining the English to tneir\nnarrow stretch of sea coast But between-them, stretching from Nia-\ngara.to the Hudson, was the country\nof the Iroquois\u2014that powerful confederacy of Senecas, Cayugas, Onon-\ndagas, Oneias, Tuscaroras and Mo-\nhawks, which had long been at odds\nwith the French. This was the \"long\nhouse\" of the Six Nations. And as\nthe Senecas were its western guard-\ntans the Mohawks were keepers of\nits eastern gate.\nWON IROQUOIS\nTO ENGLISH\nSir William controlled the Six\nNations of the Iroquios, won them\nto the English side in the final\nstruggle between French and English and held all but one of the tribes\nneutral in the bloodiest of the\nIndian wars. He was as the bicen-\nennial program says \"largely responsible for making North America\nan English-speaking continent.\"\nSir William's mansion Johnson\nHall remains today little changed\nfrom what it was when the council\nfir,es of 'the Six Naions flared on\nits spacious acres and Sir William\nsmoked the pipe of peace with the\ngreat Hendrik, war chief of the\nMohawks.     ,\nHe was a long, lean, flaming-\nhaired Irish lad of 23 when he came\nover as the protege of hi; uncle,\nthe famous Sir Peter Warren, British admiral, for \\vhom Warren St.,\nin New York, is named and who\nonce owned about all the Hudson\nriver waterfront below I4th St.,\nalong with most of Greenwich village.\nUNCLE GAVE\nJOHNSON START\nHis rich uncle \"set him up\" in\nlife by lending the greater part of\nthe money, with which he purchased\n100,000'acres of land in the beautiful Mohawk valley around what Is\nnow Johnstown. All his life he\nadded to that land. For his remarkable services with the Indians the\nBritish parliament made him a grant\not 5000 pounds. He defeated the .\nFrench in a critical battle, and the\nking made him a baronet and Indian\nsuperintendent.\nHis last years of life saw the\nAmerican revolution impending and\nthe grim prospect saddened him. He\nwas torn terribly between his lifelong habits of loyalty to the British\ncrown and his innate sense of Justice and the spirit of freedom which\nhad grown out of his work and con-\ntacts\u2014out of the air itself.\nWhich way would the gallant old\nsoldier have turned had he lived?\nNo one can say, but I have always\nbelieved he would have cast his\nlot with the colonies, and kept his\nIndians neutral. He died in 1774, at\nthe age of 59.\nPHILATELIST DIES\nNEW, YORK, Aug. 24 (AP)-John\nN. Luff, 77, leading philatelic expert for many years, died yesterday\nat his home here. In 1902, he wrote\n\"The Postage Stamps of the Unite\nStates\" which, still is considered\nstandard ln i* field,\n mmmm\n1)0'\nRossland Juniors\nAre Definitely in\nBoxla Playoffs\nSOSSLAND, B. C, Aug. 24 -\nOfficial word reached the executive\nof the Rossland Terriers Lacrosse\nclub this afternoon saying the Terriers will definitely be in the Rossland-Trail junior lacrosse league\nplayoffs. No dates for the games\nhave been set.\nTha first and second teams and\nthe third and fourth teams will\nclash in sudden death semi-finals,\nand the winners will meet for the\ntitle.\nForm displayed by the Terriers\nin the past few games has been of\nhigh calibre, and this club now\nstands favorite for the title role\nwith many fans,\nCricket Matches\nLONDON, Aug. 24 (CP Cabla)-\nClose ot play scores in English\ncricket matches started today follow:\nGlamorgan 279; Sussex 32 runs\nfor no wickets.\nWorcestershire 73; Nottinghamshire 239 for six.\nGloucestershire 160; Leicestershire 158 for six.\nHampshire 82; and 35 runs for\ntwo wickets; Surrey 123.\nSomerset 225; Kent 204 for six\n(Valentine 114).    .\nMiddlesex 332 (Brown 114), vs\nLancashire.\nDerbyshire 190; Essex 173.\nRACE  P08TPONED\nMARION, Mass., Aug. 24 (AP) -\nHough water tonight forced postponement of the eight-oared race\nbetween crews representing Tabor\nacademy and Radley college of Abingdon, England, until tomorrow. ..\nKelly's Porker\nWins Pig Derby\nWALLA WALLA, Wash, Am-\n24 (AP)-Rojr Kelly's priie porker from hli Lowden lirm responded to much tugging, pistol shooting and personal speed last night\nto win Walli Walla's pig derby,\nwu out la front of tbe entries of\nGuy Kent, Sudbury, and Jake\nSmith. Waltaburg.\nWhile the ipeed shown by the\nchampion ragorback discounted\nKelly's claim his porker could\nbeat a jack rabbit in an uphill\nsprint it did establish him as the\n\"Seabiscuit\" of the United States\npig pons.\n>ItI*I*W*W\u00abW\u00abWtW*W*W\nAMERICAN LEAQUE\nW. L. Pet.\nNew York  77 36 .681\nBolton 63 46 .578\nCleveland   64 47 .577\nWashington    59 57 .509\nDetroit  57 58 .496\nChicago 48 60 .444\nPhiladelphia  40 72 .357\nSt, Louis   39 71 .355\nNATIONAL  LEAGUE\nPittsburgh  69 43 .616\nNew York  64 50 .561\nCincinnati  64 51 .557\nChicago 62 53 .539\nBoston    54 58 .482\nBrooklyn  53 60 .469\nSt. Louis  52 62 .458\nPhiladelphia  34 75 .312\nBallymena Wins\nBELFAST. Aug. 24 (CP Cable)-\nBallymena drubbed CliftonviUe 7-2,\nLinfleld blanked Coleralne 4-0 and\nNewry Town defeated Glentoran 5-1\nin Irish football league matches\nplayed today.\nAlice Marble and Mrs. Fabf an\nSqueeze Out a Win in Nel Play\nBRQOKHNE, Mais., Aug. 24 (AP)\n\u2014The women's United States doubles tennli competition, which has\nbeen relegated ta sideshow status\nsince it was incorporated with the\nmen's team title play, today became\nthe main attraction at Longwood.\nAlthough the only former winners\nIn the men's section, Don Budge and\nGene Mako and the twice successful\nWilmer .Allison ahd Johnny Van\nRymv.pliyed Into the semi-finals,\nthe feminine \u00ab*\u00bbrs provided the\nthrilli,',;,.:' \\''J\nBudge and Mako had an easy assignment gaining the second last\nround hy defeating Russell Bobbitt\nof Atlanta, and Frank Guernsey\nof Orlando, Fla., 8-3, 8-2, 8-3, Allison and Van Ryn entered that\nbracket?'terthe eighth time in the\nlast 10 years, by trouncing Bobby\nRiggs of Chicago, and Bryan Grant\nof Atlanta. 6-1, 8-6, 6-2.\nOnly one domoitlc pair had the\nright to compete in tha remaining\nmen's qnarto^tlhals, Gardner Mul\nloy ot Miami and George Toley of\nLos Angeles, who appeared doomed\nto be the next victims of Adrian\nQuist and Jack Bromwich, the Aus.\ntralian Davis cup stars. The other\nmatch will bring Yvon Petra and\nBernard Destremau, France, against\nHarry Hopman and * Leonard\nSchwartz of Australia,\nTIGHT SQUEEZE\nThe day's highlight was the tight\nsqueeze the defending champions\nln the women's section, Alice Marble\nand' Mra. Sarah Palfrey Fabyan, endured to enter the semi-finals at\nthe expense ot Mme. Sylvia Henrotin of France, and Mrs. Dorothy\nAndrus of New York, 8-4,5-7,12-10.\nAnother favored team to meet\nwith unexpected resistance were\nthe second seeded Britons, Kay\nStammers and Margot Lumb, who\nhad three match points against them\nin the 14th game of the final set\nbefore they pulled out a 6-1,1-6,11-9\nwin over Mrs. Harry Hopman and\nDorothy Stevenson of Australia.\nBRIGHOUSE PARK RACE RESULTS\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 24 (CP) -\nRace results at Brighouse park today:\nFirst race: claiming. Purse $400.\nFor three-year-olds and up, foaled\nin western Canada. Six furlongs.\nJungle Hen   (Haller)   14.10 4.30\n2 55.\n' Stanstill (Cox) 3.05 2.35.\nSpartan Beauty (Wilbourne) 2.45,\nTime 1:13. Also rans: Princess Han,\nGolden Somers, Si Green, Ethel Star,\nMaymlnt, Sunny Knoll and Mary\nIrving.\nSecond race: claiming. Purse $500.\nFor three-year-olds and up foaled in\nwestern Canada. Six furlongs.\nLove Us (Wilbourne) 5.15 3.75,\n2.70.\nSis Simony (Cox) 8.35 5.40.\nIttii Play (Robinson) 8-75.\nTime 1:13 1-5. Also rans: Rose\nCamp, Mopeek, Peace Stone, Barris,\nChatelaine, Sunday Child and Brown\nJester.\nThird race: claiming. Puree $500.\nFor three-year-olds and up. She lurlongs. ,\nMac Phalaris (Craigmyle) 8.40 8.90\n2.90.\nLove Sick (Sporri) 4.10 3.75.\nGrisons (Young) 7.75.\nTime 1:12 4-5. Also ran?; Dalkeith, Gold Streak, Dr. Pook, Sugar Creek, Pass Up, Kelconard. The\ndaily double paid $21.20.\nFourth race; purse $400. For two-\nAMALIE\nOIL\nSHORTY'S\n714 Baker\nREPAIR  SHOP\nNelson, B.C.\nyear-olds. Five and one half furlongs.\n.Saxon Baby\"(Pierson) 7.10 3.00\n2.10.\nDry Hills (Wilbourne) 3.05 2.10.\nVade Retra (Dalmado) 2.05.\nTime 1:07 3-5. Also rans; Truely\nFlo, Lady Giovanada, Marella and\nPiroyal.\nFifth, race; the Nanaimo handicap.\nPurse $1000. For three-year-olds and\nup. Mile and 70 yards.\nNakasun (Pierson) 5.55 2.80 2.05.\nEuripides (Jackson) 2.70 2.05.\nWracia (Sporri) 2.05.\nTime 1:42 3-5. Also rans: Miss\nBam, Be Mine, Dunlin Lady.\nSixth race: claiming. Purse $400.\nFor three-year-olds and up. Mile and\n70 yards.\nBowery (Sporri) 53.15 16.95 6.65.\nPeace Leg (Baxter) 14.40 MS,\nExilda (McCHntock) 2-80.\nTime 1:44 1-5. Also rans; Aka-\nhilos, Just Mrs., Quite Contrary, My\nMint, Spanish Light, Simonette, Red\nCasino, Volsleet, Biddy's Toy The\none-two paid $1555.45.\nSeventh race: claiming. Purse $500.\nFor three-year-olds and up. Mile\nand a half.\nBay Sister Pierson) 9.15 4.70 365.\nLeeward (Craigmyle) 3.95 2.80.\nSand Boot (Cox) 2.80.\nTime 2:32. Also rans: My Gentleman, Shabonee, Idle Talk, Ley-\nburn, Vancouver Express.\nEighth race: hurdles. Purse $3Q0.\nFor four-year-olds and up. One mile\nand one half.\nBummer BUI (Russell) 3.70 2.6(\n2.40.\nPurple Rock'(Cohoe) 3.50 2.75.\nTenhug (Smith' 350.\nTims 2:50, 4-5. Also rans: Boy-\nO'-Mine, Tromporm, Bondalin and\nJungle Chick.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B.C.-THURSDAY MORNINQ. AUG. 25. 1538.\n-PAGE NINI\nVICKERS\nLONDON   DRY\nSSTAJJ:\nT\nISHED\n17 SO\nRough Stuff at TraU\n\"Whiskey\" Wyatt, left, downs Darrel Thompson with a terrific clout over the baqk of the neck\nina\ncar !\npreliminary wrestling bout The referee ii.Oi-\ntobinion.\u2014Daily News Photo.\nThree Surprises,\nEdmonton Races\nEDMONTON, Aug. 24 (CP)-Ed-\nmonton's fall race meet was brought\nto a close before a huge crowd\nwith Plpe'4 Pal, a hot favorite, winning the feature race and favorites\ntaking three of the other six heats.\nPagan Cort, in the second, provided the greatest of the days surprises\nby winning the two-year-old race\non its first time at the barrier. The\ncolt, raced well by Jockey Willie\nCain, came from behind to beat\nMiss Zephyr and Running Rein and\n&ay $15.15, $10.30, $5.80 across the\nBards.\nHighest of the day's winning\nprices, $18.95, was paid by Matilda\nJane in winning the seven-furlong\nfourth race. Well-Heeled furnished\nan upset in winning the last race and\npaying $17.15 \"on the nose\".\nthe daily double, from Escostar in\nthe first race to Sable Gift in the\nthird, paid $31.65 With the Qulnella,\nWeil-Heeled and Royal Cup, paying\n$35.45.\nAlbert Bodiou, leading jockey of\nthe western Catfad^tircult, showed\nhis return to form after a shaking-\nup early in the meet by riding the\nwinners of the last two races.\nBIG LEAGUE BALL\nSCORES\nNATIONAL:\nBrooklyn    0   1   1\nSt. Louis    5  9   0\nHamlin and Campbell; C. Davis\nand Owen.\nBoston     2   9   1\nPittsburgh  :    6   7   0\nHutchinson and Lopes; Bauers\nand Todd.\nNew York    1   4   0\nChicago  ,...._.    6 10   2\nLolirman, Brown, Wittig and\nDanning; Page and O'Dea.\nPhiladephia     1   6   4\nCincinnati   3  5  1\nMulcahy and Atwood; Grissom,\nWeaver and Lombardi.\nAMERICAN:\nFirst game:\nChicago     8 14   1\nNew York  _    5   7  0\nStratton, Lee and Rensa; Chandler, Sundra and Dickey.\nSecond game:\nChicago  _.._..   15  0\nNew York 11 11   0\nGabler  and  Schlueter;  Pearson\nand Dickey.\nCleveland   5 11   0\nBoston    3 10  2\nHarder and Pytlak; Harris, Mc-\nKain and Midkiff and Desautels.\nFirst game:\nDetroit     5  li  1\nPhiladelphia 10 13  3\nAuker, Kennedy, Wade and York;\nPotter and Hayes.\nSecond game:\nDetroit    2   S   1\nPhiladelphia   11 12   2\nLawson, Coffman, Kennedy and\nYork, Tebbets; Caster and Wagner.\nSt. Louis    6   6   1\nWashington    8 10  0\nCox, Vanatta, Johnson and Sul\nlivan; Weaver and R. Ferrell\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control\n\u2022     Beard or b^j the Government of British Columbia.\t\nBatting Leaders\nBy The Aiioclated Pren\nBatting (first three in each league)\nG AB R H Pet\nLombardi, Reds 96 363 44 129 .355\nTravis, Sens. ... HI 426 78 149 .350\nFoxx, R. Sox . 109 411 100 143 .348\nRadcllffe, W. S. 88 342 46 118 .345\nWeintraub PhiL 61 211 33 71 JM\nMcCormick Red 116 497 73 165 .332\nHOME RUNS:\nAmerican league: Greenberg, Tig1\nera, 43; Foxx, Red Sox, 35; York,\nTigers, 28; Johnson, Athletics. 25;\nGehrig, Yankees, 25; Dickey, Yankees, 24; DiMaggio, Yankees, 24;\nClift, Browns, 24.\nNational league: Goodman, Reds,\n28; Ott, Giants, 27; Mize, Cardinals,\n19; Camilli, Dodgers, 17; Medwick,\nCardinals, 16.\nRUNS BATTED IN-\nAmerlcan league: Foxx, Red Sox,\n123; Greenberg, Tlgen, 103; DiMaggio, Yankee*, 97; York, Tigers,\n96; Dickey, Yankees, 94.\nNational league: Ott, Giants, 91;\nMcCormick, Reds, 88; Medwick, Car.\ndlnals, 88; Goodman, Reds, 78; Camilli, Dodgers, 77.\nMARIBYRNONG, Australia (CP)\n-0. Caulfleld lost to D. Allen by 10\nyards after running barefoot for\nmore than two miles in a professional runners' four-mile handicap.\nHe lost his shoes in a mud patch.\nLONDON (CP)-London school,\nboys will take part in a crioket\nmatch. North against South, at Lord's\nSept 6, it is announced\nPasch Is Favorite\nSt. Leger Stakes\nLONDON, Aug. 24 (CP Cable)-\nPasch, owned by H. B. Morris, and\nwinner of the two thousand guineas,\nwai favorite today for the St Leger\nstakes, last of the season's classic\nraces on the Flat to be run Sept 7\nat Doncaster.\nThe ion of Blandford-Paica was\nquoted at 6 to 4 In last night's call\nover of offs at the Victoria club.\nViscount Astor'i Pound Foolish\nwas second choice at 11 to I Other\nodds were: Cave Man and Scottish\nUnion, 7-1; Sadruddln and Glen\nLoan, 100 to 8; Radiant Portmarnock\nand Unbreakable, 100 to 7; Golden\nSovereign and Offered, 100 to 6.\nBlTulGOLF\nNEW YORK, Aug. \u00bb (AP)-De-\nfending Champion Johnny Goodman of Omaha and British Amateur\nChampion Charley Yates of Atlanta head a list of 882 entries for the\n1938 United States amateur golf\nchampionship, to be played Sept.\n12-17 at the Oakmont country club,\nPittsburgh.\nGoodman and Yates, fellowmam-\nbers of this year'i beaten United\nStates Walker cup team, are exempt from sectional qualifying\ncompetition. The district eliminations, with 858 men battling for\n156 places in the 170-man championship starting field, will bt held\nAug. 30, at 31 points throughout\nthe United States.\nTwelve other playera also are\nqualified automatically to compete\nat Oakmont They are T. A. (Tony;\nTorrance, veteran former British\ntitleholder; Leonard Crawley of the\nwinning British Walker cup team;\nBrig.-Gen. A. C, Crltchley of Calgary and London, recent winner of\nthe Belgian open: W. H. Hattersley\nof Australia, and- eight former United States amateur champions.\nThe latter group includes C. Ross\n'Sandy) Somerville, ot London,\nOnt, several times Canadian Amateur champion and winner of the\nUnited States amateur crown. at\nBaltimore in 1932. Sandy has skid\nhe is going to try again this year.\nNine other Canadians will help\nhim carry the Dominion1! challenge.\nHockey Transfer'\nDeadline Sept. 1;\nEast-West Mores\nTORONTO, Aug. 14 (CP)-Begis-\ntrar W. A. Hewitt of the Canadian\nAmateur Hockey association announced today all players seeking\ntransfers necessitating a move\nacross the east and west line at\nThunder Bay, Ont, must notify\ntheir branches and the CAH-A.\nbefore Sept 1.\nMr. Hewitt said, however, the\nplayers will not be required actually to move until Oct 1.\nMonlanez Beats\nCanadian Boxer\nNEW YORK, Aug. 24 (CP)-Padro\nMontanez strengthened his claim\nas number one challenger for tbe\nlightweight boxing championship ot\ntho world by scoring a decisive five-\nround technical knockout victory\nover OrvlUe Drouillard ot Windsor,\nOnt, at Madison Square Garden\ntonight.\nDrouillard weighed 137 pounds to\n138% for the Puerto Rlcan.\nThe Canadian veteran wai grasping the ropes in his tired hinds,\ntrying to raise himself to his feet\nafter a vicious volley of rights and\nlefts to the head, when Referee Arthur Donovan stopped th* fight after two minutes and 14 seconds of the\nfifth round. The bout was scheduled\nfor 10 rounds.\nBuy er Sell With a Want Ad\nIN PUBLIC GOLF\nCLEVELAND, Aug. 24 (AP)-The\nlongshots set a blistering pace which\nran one favorite after another\u2014\namong them the defending champion\u2014out of the United States National public links golf champion\nship race today.\nThe 1937 title winner, Bruoe McCormick, of Los Angeles, headed a\ngroup of highly regarded entries\nwho were blasted to the sidelines\nin tint and tecond round match\ncompetition which saw \"unknowns\"\ntake almost complete command of\nthe annual working man's classic.\nAl a result the title battle was\n\"wide open\" as 18 survivors headed\ninto tomorrow's third round and\nquarter final duels.\nMcCormick, the fire fighter who\nwon the championship at San Francisco, was a first round victim, bowing to Lloyd Nordstrom of Davenport, Iowa, one up over 19 holes.\nOther \"well liked\" players to fade\nwere Walter Burkemo, the curly-\nheaded medalist from Detroit; Don\nErickson, of Lot Angeles, medalist\nand runner-up a year ago, and David A. Mitchell, of Atlanta, Ga, a\nformer champion.\nERNATIONAL\nBaltimore B, Montreal J.\nSyracuie 8, Buffalo 5,\nASSOCIATION\nToledo 5, Kansas City J.\nColumbus g, Milwaukee 13.\nPACIFIC COAST*\nPortland 2, San Diego 1,\nSeattle 8, San Francisco 4.\nScottish Football\nGLASGOW, Aug. 24 (CP Cable)-\nScottish   football  league   matches\nplayed today resulted as follows:\nDiv. I\nAberdeen 3; Partick Thistle 0\nAlbion Rovers i; Arbroath 2\nHamilton Academicals 4, Hibernians 1.\nHearts 4, Third Lanark 2\nKllmarnoclc 0, Celtic 0.\nQueen of South 4, Motherwell 3.\nRaith Rovers 3, Ayr United 1.\nRangers 4, St Johnstone 2\nPARIS (CP)-Gino Bartali, Italian cyclilt won the Tour de France,\n26-day, 2950-mile race around\nFrance, by 18 mlnutei, 27 seconds\nover Fellcien Vervaecke of Belgium.\nThe race went through the Alps and\nPyrenees. ,\n..... ,     ',      ,*'_       V   > I   \u25a0\nCurl Davis Misses No-Hitr No-Run\nGame by Lone Bunt; Cards Win 5-0\nCurt Davli. tha veteran right\nhinder who was tossed Into the\nDizzy Dean deal just for good\nmeasure, camo within a bunt and\na couple of Inches of a no-hlt no-\nrun game, yesterday at ha pitched\ntha Cardinals to a 5-0 victory\nover tha Brooklyn Dodgers.\nThe only hit off him came on a\ndrag bunt tfhleS Ernie Koy beat\nout by Inohas In the saoend Inning.\nOnly one other man readied first\nbase. He wai Cookie Lavagetto\nwho walked In the fifth and then\nwas trapped off tha bag, In all,\nDavis faced only 28 man, one more\nthan the absolute minimum, In\nregistering his tenth win of tha\nMason.\nThe Pltteburgh Pirates belted the\nBoston Bees 6-2 oa seven hits to take\nthe series two out of three and reinforce their National league lead\nto six games over New York.\nPep Young tripled with the bases\nloaded in the fifth inning to spark\na four-run rally which proved the\nmargin of victory as Russ Bauers\nand Ira Hutchinson engaged in a\nslipshod pitching duel.\nThe Cubs backed up Rookie Vance\nPage's four-hit pitching with a five-\nrun rally in the fourth inning to\nwhip the New York Giants 6-1 and\ngain an even break in the two-\ngame series.\nThe defeat dropped tha Giants\n\u2022Ix games out of first place and\nonly half a game In front of third,\nThe Cincinnati Reds combined five\nhits and four Philadelphia errors\nfor a 3-1 victory to sweep the two-\ngame series and place them one-\nSalt game behind the Giants.\nTwo big first innings gave the\nYankees and Chicago White Sox\ntheir aecond itraight doubleheader\nsplit\nThe Sox scored six runs in the\nfirst inning of the opener, featured\nby Manager Jimmy Dykes' homer\nwith two aboard, and went on to an\n8-5 victory. The Yanks flailed Frank\n(Garbo) Gabler for seven.tallies in\ntha opening frame ot tbe nightcap\nand coasted in with an 11 to 1 decision.\n12-GAME LEAD\nThe split coupled with Cleveland's victory in Boston, boosted the\nYanks' American league lead to 12\nfull games.\nBruce Campbell's big bat and Mel\nHarder's hurling gave the Cleveland\nIndiana a 5-3 victory over the Boston Red Sox, but tha Sox retained\na bare percentage hold on second\nplace ip tbe American league.\nMauling  six   .\nhits, the Athletics\ntrolt Tlgen twice, 10-5 and 11-2 te\nend a nine-game losing streak.\nRallying in tha eighth inning to\nbreak a 6-6 tie, the Senator! wan\nfourth place in the American league\nwith an 8-9 victory over the St\nLouis Browns.\npitchers   for   28\n\u2022 defeated the De\nBradman, in a Hospital Bed;!\nSees Match by Television as\nAustralian Batsmen Collapse\nAussies Get 201 and f\n123, Replying to\nRecord 903\nLONDON, Aug. 24 (CP oible)-\n'   d, flght-to-a-fln-\nlsh battle winding up the 1938 tait\nThe long-heral\naeries between England and Australia ended today In the orushlng\ndefeat of the Invading cricketers.\nEngland'i margin of vlotory\u2014an\nInningi and 878 runt\u2014wai the\nbiggest for either country In (2\nyean of International contests.\nfifteen hours' batting netted the\nEnglishmen a record total of 903\nrum.for seven wickets, deolared,\nAustralia's response wu so feeble\nthat the team was dismissed twloa\nIn five hours for scores of 201\nand 123.\nTired and discouraged by absence\nof Captain Don Bradman and J. H.\nSingleton, injured earlier in the\ngame, the nine remaining Australians threw off the restraint that\ncharacterized their batting in previous tests. But the efforts to score\nmade their defence the more vulnerable and they were easy prey for\nthe opposing bowlers.\nON EVEN TERMS\nThe five-game series ended with\nthe countries on even terms with\none victory each. The first two tests\nwere drawn and the third abandoned through rain without a ball being bowled. The Aussies retain the\nmythical Ashes won in England in\n1934 and defended successfully\nagainst Gilbert Allen's team in the\n1936-37 series .in Australia.\nToday's vlotory wai the 85th\nfor England, two.len than Australia. Thirty-one matches have\nended In draws.\nWhen Leonard Hutton, York-\nihlre's 22-year-old first-wicket batsman made 364 runs yesterday to become highest scorer in test-match\ncompetition, he also emerged as\nleading batsman of the current contests. Playing in three ot the four\ntests, he compiled 473 runs in four\ninnings for an average of a little\nmore than 118 runs. Bradman, Australia's leading batsman, made 434\nruns In six innings, twice not out\nan average of 108.50.\nBEST BOWLgR\nJ. O'Reilly stood out as the most\nconsistent bowler in the four tests.\nThe tall New South Wales schoolmaster captured 20 wickets for 610\nruns, an average ot 30.50. The only\nEnglish bowler to play in all the\nmatches was Kenneth Fames. Xuo\nEssex amateur dismissed 17 men .\nfor 581 runs, an average of 34.1,,\nOnly 5000 spectators saw today f\nanti-climax when the overseas playr\ners retired beaten in mid-afternoon!.\nChief honors for bringing about the\ndouble collapse  went to  William\nBowes, another Yorkshireman, and'\nFames, although a slightly worn,\nwcket gave them some assistance, >\nBowes took five first-Inning WtolJ\nets for 49 runs and followed it uo\nwith 2 for 25. Farnes did most dam*\nage in the Australians' second ven* SL\nlure, dismissing four for 63 afteif.\ngetting one for 54 \"in the , initial:,\ninnings.\nBY TELEVISION ,     ,jB\nBitterly disappointed at belni\nkept out ef the concluding stage\nof the International match, Bradman lay In bed at his hotel nun?\nIng a fractured shin-bone. H%\nwatched the match by meant of a\ntelevision set ,\n\"I am keenly disappointed at nof j\nbeing  able to   carry  on   in  thrf.*\nmatch,\" Bradman said, adding hi*\nappreciation for sympathetic mes*\nsages sent to him. *\nThe stocky batting wizard may bt\nallowed to leave his bed in a fern\ndays, but he is unlikely to tak\u00bb\nany further part in the old coun\u00abt\ntry tour. \u00bb;\nREMEMBER WHENii\nLynwood (Schoolboy! Rowe, rang*\nDetroit pitcher,, rang up his lira,\nconsecutive victory for the Tigerfc;\noit Washington four years ago to*\nday. He lost in1 his next appearance\nat Philadelphia four days later. One\nof the hurling  sensations ot the\nAmerican league, Rowe developed\na sore arm last year artd early thlm'\nseason was shipped to Beaumont\nin the Texas league.\nTEST CRICKET SCORE CARD\nig.\nScore-card in the fifth' and final\nEngland-Australia test match follows:\nEngland\u2014First innings 903 for\nseven wicketa declared.\nAustralia\u2014first innings;\nC. L. Badcock, c Hardstaff, b\nBowes 0\nA. Brown, c Hammond, b Leyland\n69\nS. 3. McCabe, c Edrich, b Farnes 14\nA. L. Hassett, c Compton, b Edrich 42\nS. Barnes, b Bowes 41\nB. II. Barnett, 6 Wood, b Bowes 2\nM. G. Waite, b Bowes 8\nW. J. O'Reilly, c Wood, b Bowes 0\nL. Fleefwood-Smith, not out 18\nExtras 9\nTotal 201\nD. G. Bradman, J. H. Fingleton,\nabsent hurt\nFall of wickets: 1-0, 2-19, 3-70, 4-\n145, 5-147, 6-160, 7-160, 8-201,\nBowling:\nOMRW\nK. Farnes  -... 13  2 54   1\nBowes    ....- 19  3 49   5\nEdrich 10   2 55   1\nVerity     5   1 15   0\nLeyland     3.10 11   1\nW. R. Hammond   2   0   8   0\nAustralia\u2014Second innings;\nC. L. Badcock, b Bowes 9\nW. A. Brown, c Edrich, b Farnes 15\nS. J. McCabe, c Wood, b Fames 2\nA. L. Hassett, lbw b Bowes 10\nS. Barnes, lbw b Verity 33 ec\nB. H. Barnett, b Farnes 46\nM. G. Waite, c Edrich b Verity 0\nW. J. O'Reilly, not out 7\nL. Fleetwood-Smith, c Leyland,\nb Farnes 0\nExtras 1\nTotal 123\nD. G. Bradman, J. H. Fingleton\nabsent\u2014hurt.\nFall of wickets: 1-13, 2-18, J-39. 4-\n41, 5-U5, fl-US, 7-117, 8-123.\nBowling:\nOMRW\nK. Fames 12.11 83   4\nQUALITY\nWORK CLOTHING\nJACK BOYCE\nBowes  10  3 28\nLeyland       5  0 19\nVerity \u2022    7   3 16\nHave You a\nUsed    ,\nROWBOAT\n\u2022\nWhy Not Turn It\nInto Cash?\nA WANT AD\nWill Find a\nPurchaser\nTwo (2) lines 6 time* 80c net\nTwo (2)  lines once 20c not\nNelson Daily News\nPHONE 144\nThe new patented Dunlop Fort with Teeth-Edge Traction\nin the only tire of Iti kind in the world... with 2,000 eolid\nrubber teeth to bite and grip the road... providing dependability at every speed... matchless driving eape, alienee and\nconfidence under every road condition. See the new Dunlop\nFort now. With Teeth-Edge Traction...plus 6-ply Cable\nCord Construction... It li your supreme assurance of safety,\nstability and silent, luxurious riding comfort\nReplace your twin tires now with new Dttnlops.\nIIACON SERVICE STATION       MBBLBS MOTORS LTD.\n'   Nelion, B.C. . Nelion, B.C.\nCHARLES WANSTALL\nSilme, B. C.\n.'\u25a0 .r,.i. ..-\nDUNLOP\n\"THE  WORLDS  FINEST  TIRE\"\nDUNLOP \"90\"\n| The world's gfiatest\n,4-ply tin. Silent-running, Cable Cord Con-\nJ struct.on and .xtira\n^ deep, long-wearing,\n\u25a0 non-skid tread.\n \u2014\u2014\nPAGE  TEN-\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C.-THURSDAY MORNING. AUG. 29, 1938.\nIt's Where, What and How You Advertise That Counts-Use a Classified Ad\nChristina the Lovely\nA beautiful photograph of Christina Lake by Miss Peggy McCallum of Trail, daughter of D\u00bbnald McCallum, Grand Forks.\nSerial Story . . .\nTWO WORLDS\n(Continued From Page Four)\nbeing called on this case when you\nwere in my office. Doctor Merridew has been trying to get in touch\nwith me for several days and only\nsucceeded after you left.\"\n\"I'm so glad, so glad you're here,\"\nNoel murmured. \"I know you can\nsave Laurie. I know you can.\"\n\"I hope I can justify your faith,\"\nJulian said gravely. Then asked,\n\"Who is this chap Jimmy? She murmurs his name over and over. 1\nthink it might be well to have him\nhere.\"\nBefore Noel could answer, Ruth\ninterposed. \"Nobody seems to know\nanything about him, Doctor Paige.\nI think myself we should have him\n-.here. There's a psychological effect\nto that sort of thing.\"\nNoel looked at her, an expression on her face of silent disgust.\nBut Ruth smiled sweetly and went\non: \"Miss Shayne has been trying\nto find him.\"\nNoel explained, then, the efforts\nshe had made and how she had\nfailed to find any trace of Jimmy.\nA thoughtful frown came to Julian's face. 'There should be some\n.way we could trace him,\" he said,\nthen added. \"Laurie is very ill, Noel.\nThere's only a fighting chance.\"\n\"But you will save her. I know\nyou will,\" Noel exclaimed passionately.\nA little while later she went over\nto the nearest drug store to get a\n: prescription filled. When she came\nback, Julian and Ruth were talking\ntogether, quietly and earnestly just\noutside the sick room door.\nNoel went in and sat down beside Laurie. She could not keep\nthe tears from her eyes when she\nlooked at the wasted little form, the\nwhite, ravaged face. This was the\n; first time she had ever been face\nI to face with anything so terrible\nI as death. Still she would not\u2014could\nnot, believe\u2014that Laurie would die.\nThen Julian and Ruth came back\nI to   the   bedside,  and  Noel  moved\naway. For something like 10 minutes\nthey stood there studying Laurie's\n- condition, nodding at each other now\n'\u25a0and  then  in silent understanding.\nNoel had never seen two people\nwork together in such perfect harmony as Julian and Ruth Chester.\nIt seemed that the nurse antieipated\nhis every need, even his thoughts.\nSeeing them together, realizing\nhow much they had in common.\nNoel relinquished every faint hope\nShe had had that some day she and\nJulian would find each other.\nJulian was a real man. Thought-\nI ful. highly intelligent. He knew\n1 what he wanted, To him Ruth Chester seemed an ideal woman\u2014the\nI perfect mate. Noel remembered only\nI too well that Juliin had said that\na marriage between himself and\nRuth dicker would be most suitable, had they been attracted to each\nother. And it was plain enough to\nsee that an attraction did exist between them. They seemed to belong\ntogether.\nSitting out in a chair in the hall,\nso as to be close when needed, Noel\nwas aroused from her thoughts by\nJulian's grave voice. \"I didn't know\nuntil Ruth told me that you were\nhelping out during the day. Are\nyou still dancing at\u2014that place?'\nShe nodded. There wasn't anything else to do but admit the truth.\nThen Julian said, \"Miss Chester\nthinks we should make different\narrangements.\"\nNoel might have expected this.\nRuth Chester's plan didn't include\nhaving Noel around where Juliap\ncould see her every Any.\nNoel's first impulse was to come\nout frankly and say that she wasn't going to give up staying with\nLaurie during the day just beeause\nRuth Chester didn't want her. But\ninstead she asked quietly: \"Don't\nyou think I'm capable of really\nhelping?''\n\"I've not been here long enough\nto judge as to that,\" Julian answered frankly.\nNoel's expresion fell. Then she\nlooked up at him eagerly and said:\n\"Kitty Perry said I obeyed instructions well. And I'm not going to\nleave Laurie during the day, unless\n\u2014unless,\" but she didn't finish.\nJulian looked at her gravely. \"But\nI though you were doing it only because there didn't seem to be any\nother way?\"\n\"I'm doing it because I want to.\nand because I know Laurie wants\nme near,\" Noel said firmly. \"And\nif you don't think my inexperience\nis jeopardizing Laurie's chances, I'm\ngoing to stay. If you do\u2014\" but once\nagain Noel couldn't finish.\n\"I do not think that at all,\" Julian told her quickly. \"I was afraid\nit\u2014was too much for you That's\nthe main reason.\"\n\"Then you will let me stay?\" she\nquestioned hopefully.\n\"Provided you get sufficient sleep\nand eat the proper amount of food.\"\n\"Julian, I promise' to do bith,\"\nNoel agreed seriously. She knew\nJulian was giving her orders just\nas he would any other person under his care. But, somehow, it 'vas\nineffably sweet to have him think-\ninE of her again.\nThe next morning, quite early,\nthe woman who lived out on Bick-\nford telephoned and gave Noel the\nname of the place where' Jimmy\nworked.\n(To Be Continued)\nLORD COWRIE IN OTTAWA\nOTTAWA, Aug. 24 (CP)\u2014 LOrd\nCowrie,, governor general of Australia, arrived in Ottawa today en\nroute to Australia after a holiday in\nEngland. He came to Ottawa from\nWashington, D. C.\nKASLO Social...\nKASLO, B. C\u2014Mr. and Mrs. C.\nMarlatt and children Mrs. R. A. Wal-\nllnger and children and Mrs. R.\nAnderson and daughter, all of Trail,\nmade a trip to Lardo Saturday.\nMr. and Mrs. George Baker have\ntaken over the store operated for\nover forty years by the late A. T.\nGarland.\nMr. and Mrs. J. P. Fink have returned to Nelson after spending\nseveral weeks at their summer home\nhere.\nMrs. Mary White has returned\nfrom Nelson.\nRev. G. C. Gardner and Mrs.\nGardner visited New Denver Monday.\nMr. and Mrs. E. Amos and daugh\nter have taken up residence for\nthe winter in the Fink summer\nhome.\nMr. and Mrs. C. W. Webster leave\nWednesday for Kelowna where they\nwill be guests of Mrs. Webster's\nbrother-in-law and sister Mr, and\nMrs. George Anderson. Mr. Webster\nwill attend the B. C. Liberal convention being held in Kelowna.\nF. T. Abey was a recent viator\nin Nakusp.\nH. H. Perkins of Ymir Is a guest\nof his mother Mrs. Alice Perkins.\nH. South was a recent visitor in\nNew Denver.\nMiss Doris Sutherland has returned from Castlegar.\nON THE AIR\n910 k\n\u25a0 Trail\nCJAT\n3.19.6 m\n1000 w\n7:30\u2014All-request program\n: 15\u2014Morning Bulletin Board\n19:00\u2014Jean Ellington, songs\n;30\u2014Street scene\n:45\u2014Waltz Time\n110:00\u2014Big Sister\n10:15\u2014Songs\n10:3(1 Giioa [doming, Neighbor\n11:00\u2014 Mary Marlin\n11:15\u2014Ma Perkins\nIl:30 Pepper Young's Family\n|11:45 The Guiding Light\nB.00 Round-up\nJj2:30\u2014Noontime Novelties\n112.45 Sport Page ol the Air\nTl:00\u2014Rippling Rhythm\n11:15\u2014Backwoods Breakdown\n11:30\u2014Edward Goodyear xylophone\n1:45\u2014Closing stock quotations\n2:00\u2014Dance orch.\n2:30\u2014Tea time musical\n00\u2014From the Pacific\n30 News\n45\u2014On matters musical\n(4:00\u2014Theatre News\n4:30 Times Presents\n5:00\u2014Promenade symphony con.\n:00-Music Hall\n17:00\u2014News\n7:15\u2014\"Listen\"\n7:30\u2014Mart Kenney's orch.\n:00\u2014Play Time\n;30\u2014Dance Delight\n;00\u2014String orch.\n8:30 Slumber Hour\n6:45\u2014News\n10:00\u2014Epilogue\n10:30 Swing Cime\n10:45\u2014Sign Off Serenade\nCANADIAN   BROADCASTING\nCORPORATION   NETWORK\nCKOV'CJCJ CJCA CHWK CFQC\n|530       690      730       760       840\nt\nCPJC   CJAT   CKY   CFAC   CJOC\n880        910        910        930        950\nCKCK        CBR\n1010 1100\n4:00 P.M.-\nSinfonietta (CBC)\n4:30 P.M.\u2014\nSummer Theatre (CBC)\n5:00 P.M.\u2014\nPromenade Symphony (CBC)\n6:00 P.M.\u2014\nBing Crosby, Music Hall (CBC)\n6:30 P.M.Henry Weber's revue (CBC)\n7:00 P.M.\u2014\nNews, weather (CBC)\n7:15 P.M.-\nA Student Tramp (CBC)\n7:30 P.M.\u2014\nMart Kenney's orch. (CBC)\n8:00 P.M.\u2014\nPlay Time, drama (CBC)\n8:30 P.M.\u2014\nDance Delight (CBC)\n9:00 P.M.\u2014\nString orch. (CBC)'\n9:45 P.M.\u2014\nNews and weather (CEO\n10:00 P.M.\u2014\nEpilogue (CBC)\nNclami 9ath) Nruia\nMember of theCanadian Daily\n'.    Newspapers Association\nTELEPHONE 144\nPrivate Exchange Connecting to\nAll. Departments\nSubscription Ratei\nSingle copy  ,.,  $   .05\nBy carrier, per week ....     .25\n\u2022': By carrier, per year    13.00\nBy mail In Canada to subscribers living outside regular\ncarrier areas, per month 60c;\nthree months $1.80; six months\n$3.00;' one year $6.00.\nUnited States and Great Britain, one month* 75c: six months\n$4.00; one year $7.50.\nForeign countries, other than\nUnited States, same as above\nplus any extra postage.\nAdvertising Rates\nlie * Lint   ;\n(Minimum-2 Lines)\n2 lines, per Insertion  $ .22\n2 lines, 6 consecutive\nInsertion*     .88\n.(6 for the prlfce of 4)\n3 lines, per insertion  33\n3 lines, 6 consecutive\ninsertions -.   1.32\n2 lines, V month   2.86\n3 lines, 1 month .'. 4.29\nFor   advertisements  of   more\nthan three lines, calculate\n-, on the above basis,.\nBox numbers lie extra. This\ncovers any number of\nInsertions.\nALL    ABOVE   RATES    LE88\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nRates, for advertisements under\nSituations Wanted, 25c for re-\n3uired number of lines for six\nays, payable in advance.\nKELP WANTED\nCANADIAN MANUFACTURER\nhas steady employment for one\nreliable man in Nelson and Creston district. Give past experience,\nage, etc., in first letter,' For full\nparticulars write 408 Lumbermen's\nBldg., Vancouver, B. C.     (2854)\nWANTED - A. HOUSEKEEPER.\nPlease apply Henry Nelson, Kitchener, B. C. (2849)\nTEACHERS WANTED\nFEMALE TEACHER FOR PRInt\nary grades of Yahk school. Must\nplay piano and teach music to\nDivs. I., II., and III. Apply to Mrs.\nA. L Lythgoe, Sec.-Tr\u00abes.   (2800)\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nGIRL, 25 WANTS WORK IN STORE\nexperienced in office work, also\nunderstands soda fountain work.\nWork more essential than good\npay. Ready tp start in Sept Box\n2611 Daily News. (2611)\nLICENCED SCALER, FIRST AID\nCertificate (Industrial). Twp years\ntimekeeping experience in logging\ncamp. Wish work immediately.\nWrite Box 2851 Nelson News.\n(2851)\nGIRL 20, WANTS HOUSEKEEF\ning'job and help cooking in or\naround Nelson, Apply Box 2818\nDaily News. ' (28181\nFINNISH WOMAN WANTS WORK\nby hour. Camp or hotel cook, Go\nanywhere, Ph. 1011L, 416 Silica St.\n(2785)\nCOMPETENT GIRL DESIRES Hotel work or housekeeping; adults\npreferred. Box 2837 Daily News.\n(2837)\nHIGH SCHOOL GIRL WANTS\nwork after school and week-ends.\nBegin now. 642 Wasson St. (2832)\nRELIABLE GIRL WOULD LIKS\nhousecleaning by hour or day\nPhone 670L1. \" (2781)\nAN EXPERIENCED GIRL WANTS\nhousework or any other work.\nPhone 44. (2831)\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nONE OF CANADA'S LARGEST\ndistributors now offers the opportunity to financially responsible\npeople to enter a clean, profitable,\ncash business. Experience unnecessary as we teach you our proven\nmerchandising plan and help you\nselect your location. Many stores\nsuccessfully operating. Wonderful\nopportunity for man and wife. All\nreplies \u2022 in confidence. Box 2585\nDaily News. (2585)\nSocial...\nMOYIE\nMOYIE B. C.-Mr. and Mrs. Herbert L. Jackson of Trail, are guests\nof Mr. and Mrs. James Whitehead\nand family.\nMrs. Alice Guindorr was at home to\nfriends Thursday complimenting\nMrs. Alex Hurry of Cranbrook.\nMr. Burns with his catechism class\nenjoyed a picnic across the lake,\nThursday.\nMoyie ball players met the Cranbrook boys Sunday at the Key City\nin a game of softball. Score was\n20-9 in favor of Cranbrook. Vincent\nConrad umpired the game.\nMr. and Mrs. Harry Smith with\nMrs. J. V. Kershaw and Shirley\nKennedy motored to Kingsgate,\nSunday. \u2022\nMrs. Phill Conrad and family\nwent by car to Kimberley, Thursday.\nYahk challenged Moyie Forestry\nCamp to a ball game at Aldridge\nSunday. The visiting team won.\nJimmie Campbell spent Sunday\nat Moyie.\nMrs. Alice Guindon is a Cranbrook\nhospital patient. - \u25a0.\nMrs. A. Grondahl and son Lloyd\nleft for Vancouver Monday,\nMrs. C. McCarthy is home ftom\nthe coast. ,\nMr. and Mrs. Herbert L. Jackson,\nwith Mr. and Mrs. James Whitehead\nand Misses Alice'and Josy Whitehead visited Kimberley, Wednesday.\nBert Beck is home from the prai-\nLOCCERS' AXES LEAD\nHIKERS TO SAFETY\nROSEBURG, Ore., Aug. 24 (API-\nSounds of loggers' axes' echoing\namong the peaks of the coast range\nled two exhausted lost hikers to\nsafety last night.\nMyron Beck, 19. Louisville. Ky.,\nand Jack Carlan, 20, of New York,\nlost since Sunday morning in the\nrugged Callahan trail section of the\ncoast range west of Roseberg, stumbled last night into the isolated logging camp maintained by the Ford\nLumber company of Roseburg.\nPERSONAL\nVACATION TIME IS SNAPSHOT\ntime. Add to your holidays pleasures-by making sure your films\nare properly developed and printed, thus keeping'an everlasting\nmemory. Filmrf developed and\nprinted for 2bt. Krystal Photos,\nWilkie,- Saskatchewan. (205)\nNEW PEP AT 40 FOR MEN AND\nwomen. New OSTREX TOnic\nTablets contain 2 stimulants from\nraw oysters plus 4 general tonics\nto pep up whole body. Try package today. If not delighted, maker\nrefunds its low price. Call, write\nMann, Rutherford Co. (2187)\nHAVE YOUR RUGS tt CARPETS\nthoroughly cleaned the Schradei\nWay. Satisfaction Grtd. Ph. 564 oi\nwrite for estimates and list ot satisfied cstmrs. Home Rug Cleaners.\n(18261\nCOMPANIES INCORPORATED;\npersonal liability reduced; other\nadvantages; free advice; quick\nwork, fair price. Box 2801 Daily\nNews.' (2801)\nGENUINE LATEX SPECIAL GTD\n25 for $1.00 or jiffy prepared 18\nfor $1.00 (tree catalogue). National\nImporters. Box 244, Edmonton.\n(214)\nAUTOMOTIVE\nvFORD\nANY.SIZE ROLL DEVELOPED\nahd printed 25c. Reprints eight tor\n25c. Mail to Interior Photo Supply.\nBox 2133, Trail, B. C.        (25261\nMEN'S SUPERFINE SANITARY\nrubbers. 18 for $1.00, also Latex\n25 for $1.00. Burrard Specialty, 18\nW. Hastings St\u201e Vancouver, (2610)\nMETROPOLE HOTEL, 320 ABBOTT\nStreet, Vancouver. $1.00 per day\nup. Private bath $1.50. Best value\nin Vancouver. (2307)\nLIVESTOCK\nCompare These Prices\nTHEN\nCompare Values\nOur\nR.& G\nPolicy Sets a Standard\nfor Used Car\nComparisons\nCHEVROLET djftl   _\nCoupe  tDuLO\nPLYMOUTH (tOTK\nSedan  SOU I O\nPONTIAC (U9QK\nSedan ..: tDOOt)\nFORD Coupe <S7(W\\\nLate model iB I JJU\nTERRAPLANE <C_CQK\nCoupe ., \u00abDO\u00ab\/U\nPLYMOUTH flJCCA\nSedan  (DuOU\nFORD <C70K\nTudor  <D I mO\nBUICK COOK\nSedan  _. OOt\/u\nQueen City\nMotors Ltd.\nFORD DEALERS\nNELSON. B.C.\nPhone 43 561 Josephine St.\n(2862)\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nNEW STUCCO BUNGALOW. 4\nrooms and bath. Built In tub.\nOak floors throughout. Wired tor\nelectric radge. Insulated. Full\nbasement. .Has laundry tups, and\nplay,'room. Beautiful location.\nPrice $3200. including Chesterfield, 2 chairs, walnut bedroom\nsuite, side table and electric heater for each room. Terms arranged.\nC.W. Appleyard, Baker St (2852)\nWONDERFUL OPPORTUNITY'\nDesirable one-acre property. Fair-\nview. Tenant there four years:\nrental yields about 10 per cent on\nInvestment. Space for 6 more houses; Lovely view. Good land Sacrifice $750. D. L Kerr. (2554)\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non easy terms ln Alberta and\nSaskatchewaa Write for full information to 908 Dept. of Natural\nResources, C. P. R\u201e Calgary, Alta.\n(228)\nFOR SALE - 6 ACRE RANCH. 2\nstorey furn. house. Water rights,\none acre in garden, one Jersey cow\nand calf. 2 Blocks from Street Car\nLine, $1250. P. O. Box 67.     (2816)\nSTORE. SMALL COUNTRY STORE\nin the Kootenays, wanted for cash.\nPrice required to handle and all\nparticulars to Box 2829 Daily News\n(2829)\nFOR SALE, - LARGE FULLY\nequipped Restaurant, with six\nroom modern apartment above,\nApply Box 10, Creston, B. C.\n(2827)\nFOR SALE FULL SIZE CEMENT\nbasement 22 x 24. Unfin. 4 rmd.\nhouse. 2V.> lots. Cheap for cash.\nApply 302 Union St. (2799)\nWANTED SMALL FURNISHED\napartment. Close in. Write Miss\nHughes, Queen's Bay, B, C, (2853)\n6~ROOM HOUSE FOR SALE. 1011\nFront Street. (2847)\nFOR SALE\nPIPES. TUBES, FITTINGS\nNEW AND USED\nLarge slock for immediate shipment\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD\n1st Avenue and Main SL\nVancouver, B. C.\n <216)\nNO. 1-A DRY WOOD, FIR AND\nTamarac at any length. Cut last\nyear. 2 cords $15. 615 Mill St. Ph.\n696R for snappy service.     (2859)\nSERVICEABLE \"STAR\" CAR, MIL\neage 24.000. Nearly new balloon.|\ntires. Make good light truck. $50 J\nPorteous, Queen's Bay.        (2782) ]\nROOM AND BOARD\nFOR SXLE- WELL MATCHED\nteam horses, 7 years old. $175, or\nsell separate. Raymond Hong,\nHarrop, B.C. (2779)\ntl. B. C. GIRLS-EXCEPTIONALLY\ngood place to\u00bbboard. Apply Mrs.\nDavis 4788 W. 4th, Vancouver, B. C.\n__^  (2828)\nROOM OR ROOM AND BOARD\navailable for gentleman. 642 Wasson St., Rosemont. (2833)\nFor sale pure jersey cow,\nfreshen within 10 days. Third calf.\n$65. Apply Box 2857 Daily News.\n(2857)\nROOM AND BOARD IN NEW PRI-\nvate home close in. Box 2747,\nDally  News. <2747)\nFOR SALE GRADE JERSEY COW\nwith fint calf (heifer). G. Noel\nBrown. Bonnington. <        (2778)\nWANTED 1400 LB. HORSE. MUST\nbe snd. rsnble. P. O. box 415 Nelson\n(2845)\nFOR SALE - PURE BRED JER-\nsey bulls. Reith. Waneta.    (2840)\nAn Ad Here Is Your\nBest Agent\n.IOOM OR ROOM AND BOARD\nfor gentleman. 723 Silica St. (2823)\nFRUIT   ACENTS\nFRUIT   GROWERS\nShip all varieties of fruits. Cherries\nand berries by express, other fruits\nin straight or mixed cars. Receive\nbenefit of the highest prairie market prices. Returns made every\nSaturday.\nTHE  ROYAL FRUIT CO.\n1708   Broad   St,        Regina,  Sask.\n(2022)\nPIPE AND FITTING\nCANADIAN JUNK Company, Ltd\n250 Prior St. Vancouver, B. C.\n (215)\nOFFICE   DESKS   AT   FACTORY\nprices. Agents wanted. Star Woodworks. 2029 Alma Road, Vancouver\n(2850)\nSACKS, BAGS ALL KINDS. PIPE\ntt Fittings all sizes-Active Trading Co., 916 Powell St., Vancouver.\n(1499)\nFOR SALE - BARRELS, KEGS,\nsugar sacks, liners. McDonald Jam\nCo., Ltd., Neison, B. C. (217)\nMILL  ENDS   BIG   LOADS   $3.75.\nSaw Dust $4 unit. Ph. 434R1 or 163.\n    (2515)\nCHEAP. SOME GOOD USED GAS\nranges. Apply office Kerr Apts.\n(2685)\nDOCS, PETS, FOR SALE\nREGISTERED WIRE HAIRED TER-\nrler puppies. From $12. Phone 110,\nH. Harding,, Nelson, (2860)\nREGISTERED  SPRINGER  SPAN-\nlels, R. S. Sears, Kamloops, B. C,\n(2848)\nCLASSIFIED MAIL ORDERS\nfrom out-of-town residents'given\nprompt attention.\nLECAL NOTICES\nMINERAL ACT\n(Form F.)\nCertificate of Improvements\nNOTICE\nDouble Cross Fractional Mineral\nClaim, situate ln the Slocan City\nMining Division of Kootenay District. .\nWhere located:\u2014At Ottawa mine\non Springer creek.\nTAKE NOTICE that I, A. L. Purdy,\nacting as Agent for W. R. Green\nFree Miner's Certificate No. 43018E,\nintend, sixty days from the date\nhereof, to apply to the Mining Recorder for a Certificate of Improvements for the purpose of obtaining\na Crown grant of the above claim.\nAnd further take notice that action, under section 85, must be commenced before the issuance ot such\nCertificBte of Improvements.\nDated this 27th day of June, 1938.\nA. L. PURDY.\n(2170)\nFOR EXCHANCE\nSWAP ACRG. NEAR TRAIL FOR\nami.' ranch near Sch. Box 37 Trail.\n(2855)\nFOR RENT, HOUSES, ROOMS\nAND    APARTMENTS\n2 ROOM APT, 617 VICTORIA ST.\nAvailable Sept 1st. Apply from 4\nto 7 Thursday. No children. (2858)\nFOR RENT.- SMALL HOUSE.\nCentral location. Apply 621 Silica\nStreet or Phone 478R.        (2780)\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms for rent Annable Block. .\n(219)\nAL55\n5   RM   UNFURN.   SUITE,\nfurn. suites. Kerr Apartments.\n(220)\nFURN. HOUSE. CALL 1002 HOO-\nver St 1 blk. from carllne. (2813)\nTERRACE APTS. Beautiful modern\nfrigidaire equipped suites.   (221)\nTWO ROOM FURNISHED SUITE\nfor rent. Stirling Hotel.       (2628) \u25a0\nNEWLY   FURNISHED   SUITES.\nGas. Apply 140 Baker St.   (2772)\n\"FOR  RENT  FIVE  ROOM  MOTT-\nem house. Ph. 45311. (2842)\nHOUSEKEEPING\nVictoria Street.\nROOMS.     420\n(2786) \u2022\nWant to Sell Something?\nPhone\n144\nBusiness and Professional Directory\nAssayers\nEL W. WIDDOWSON, PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst, Assayer, Metallurgical\nEngineer. Sampling Agents at\nTrail Smelter. 301-305 Josephine\nSt., Nelson, B. C. (182)\nGRENVILLE H GRIMWOOD\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist, 420\nFall Street. Nelson, B. C, P. O\nBox   No.   9.   Representing  shipper's interest, Trail, B. C,   (1831\nHAROLD S. ELMES. ROSSI_AND\nB C. Provincial Assayer, Chemist.\nIndividual Representative for\nshippers at Trail Smelter.   (184)\nChiropractors\nj. r. McMillan, d. c, neuro-\ncalometer. X-ray. McCullock Blk.\n(185)\nW. J. BROCK, D. C, 16 years' Ex-\nprnc. Ph. 969 Gilker Blk, Nelson.\n(186)\nFuneral Directors\nSOMERS' FUNERAL HOME\n702 Baker St Phone 252\nCert. Mortician       Lady Attendant\nModern Ambulance Service\n(1901\nInsurance and Real Estate\nROBERTSON REALTY CO, LTD\nReal Estate, Insurance, Rentals.\n347 Baker St., Phone 68.      (191)\nC. D. BLACKWOOD, Insurance of\nevery description. Real Est Ph 98.\n(192)\nH. E. DILL, AUTO AND FIRE IN-\nsurance, Real Estate. 532 Ward St\n(193)\nSEE  D.   L   KERR,  AGENT   FOH\nWawanesa Fire Ins. For better rales\n(194)\nJ. E. ANNABLE,   REAL ESTATE\nRentals, Insurance.   Annable Blk\n,    (195)\nCHAS. F. McHARDY, INSURANCE\nReal Estate. Phone 135.        (196)\nR. W. DAWSON, Real Estate, Insurance, Rentals. Next Hipperson\nHardware, Baker St. Phone 197.\n(197)\nNotaries\nD. J. ROBERTSON, NOTARY PUB-\nlie. 305 Victoria St, Nelson.\" (2673)\nCorsets\nSpencer Corests\", sample sale. M. W,\nMitchell 370 Baker St, Ph. 668.\n(167)\nEngineers and Surveyors\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, Fruitvale, B C.\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor.\nReg. Professional Civil Engineer.\n (188)\nH  D.  DAWSON, Nelson,\nEngineer tt Surveyor\n(1922)\nMachinists\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nFor all Classes of Metal Work, Lathe\nWork. Drilling, Boring and Grinding. Motor Rewiring, Acetylene\nWelding.\nTelephone 593     324 Vernon Street\n(199)\nH. E. STEVENSON. Machinists,\nBlacksmiths, Electric apd Acetylene\nWelders. Expert workmen. Satisfaction guaranteed. Mine te Mill work a\nspecialty. Fully equipped shop. Ph.\n98, 708-12 Vernon St., Nelson.  (201)\nMine & Equipment Machinery\nE. L WARBURTON, Representing\nC. C. Snowdon, Oils, Greases,\nPaints, etc. Agt Mine Mchnry. &\nequlpt, etc. Steam coals. Office\nChamber of Mines, Ph. 994. Box\n28, Nelson. 203)\nSash Factory\nLAWSON'S    SASH    FACTORY,\nHardwood merchant 273 Baker St\n(206)\nWatch Repairing\nWhen SUTHERLAND repairs your\nwatch it Is on time all the time.\n345 Baker St, Nelson. (209)\nSecond'Hand Stores\nWE   BUY,  SELL  &   EXCHANGE\nfurniture, etc The Ark Store.\n(207)\nHOME FURNITURE, BUY, SELL,\nExch,\"Rpr, Upholster. 413 Hall St.\n(1575)\n00\n><\nO\nc\nvt\nm\nD\nPOSTPONE TRIAL\nCHILLIWACK, B. C. Aug. 24 (CP)\n-Trial' of Herbert Rudolph, 20.\ncharged with reckless driving after\na car hit and seriously injured Mrs.\nMargaret Jauzen, August 16, was\nremanded for second time today to\nAugust fl,\n .   \"'\"*\"\"\nmm\u2014mmm\u2014mmm\u20149.\nun\nOre, Concentrate\nTotal al Tadanac\nNear (00,000 Tons\nReceipts of ore and concentrates\nat the Tadanac plant of the Consolidated Mining & Smelting company\nneared 400,\u00ab0 tons August 21 as\nanother week's receipts boosted .the\ntotal for the year to that date, to\n399,262 tons.\nThe company mines total reached\n368,084 tons with the addition of\nthe week's tonnage of 11,797.   \u25a0\nTwenty-three custom shippers\nadded 1468 tons in the week to\nbring their aggregate to 31,173 made\nup of 23,364 tons of ores and 7814\ntons of concentrates.\nThe week's custom shippers were:\nOres\u2014Ayrton Cohen it Co., Nelson, 64; Bear, Hall reek, 1; California, Nelson, 5; Dentonia, Greenwood, 51; Eureka, Republic, Wash.,\n558; Excelsior, Ymir, 4; Grandpra,\nPenticton, 5; Harriet, Erie,'5; Highland Bell, Beaverdell, 129; Kilo,\nLemon Creek, 47; Little Bertha,\nGrand Forks, 31; Lone Sliver, Salmo, 5; Lucky Strike, Salmo, 16; McAllister, Three Forks, 52; North Star,\nGreenwood, 49; Number Seven,\nBoundary Falls, 94; Venus Juno,\nNelson, 5; Wellington, Beaverdell,\n44; Yankee Boy, Grand Forks, 34.\nTotal-1199.\nConcentrates\u2014Durango, Ymir, 124,\nWesko, Ymir, 47; Yankee Girl, Ymir,\n88; Ymir Mill Syndicate, Ymir, 10.\nTotal\u2014269.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELION. B.C.-THURSDAY MORNING, AUG. 25,1938.\nand Mining News\nWheat Plunges\nChicago Market\nCHICAGO, Aug.- 24 (AP)-Wheat\nprices plunged almost three cents a\nbushel from early highs today in a\nburst of selling during the final hour\nand closed at net losses of about\ntwo cents for the session.\nThe decline forced into pit execution a large number of stop loss\norders, which added to the selling.\nA break in Winnipeg quotations\ntouched off the liquidation movement here. Some of the selling was\nattributed to profit taking.\nCorn declined only fractionally,\nbeing strengthened by a renewal of\nexoort sales.\nWheat closed lti-8% lower compared with yesterday's finish, Sept.\n61%-62, Dec. 63%-64; Corn was unchanged to 1% lower, Sept. 51, Dec.\n46%-%; Oats % off,\t\nFIX WHEAT PRICE\nPARIS, Aug. 24 (AP)-The national wheat office today fixed the\nprice for France's 1938 crop at 204\nfrancs a quintal (about $1.50'a bushel at current exchange rates.)\nIn 1937 lt was 180 francs a quintal\n(about $1.35 a bushel.)\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nOpen  High  Low  Close\nWHEAT:\nOct,   .      67%    67%    M%    \u00ab%\nDec 87       67      63%    63%\nMay 70%    60%    67%    67%\nOATS:\nOct    31%    31%    31%    81%\nDec    29%    29%    29%     29%\nBARLEY;\nOct    38%    38%    38       88\nDec    37%    38       37%     37%\nMay       \u2014       -       -       39%\nFLAX:\nOct     141%    -      -     141%\nRYE:\nOct       40%    40%    39%     39%\nDec    40%    40%    40%    40%\nMay      43%    43%  ,42       42%\nCASH PRICES-\nWHEAT - No. 1 nor. 67%; No. 2\nnor. 67%; No. 3 nor. 63%; No. 4\nnor. 57%; No. 5 wheat 50%; No. 6\nwheat 44%; feed 41%; No, 1 Garnet\n57%; No. 2 Garnet 54%; No. 1 durum\n53'\/s; No. 4 special 50%; No. 5 special 44%; No. 6 special 40%; track\n65%; screenings 25.\nOATS \u2014 No. 2 C. W. 31%; No. 3\nC. W. 29%; Ex. 1 feed 29%; No. 1\nfeed 29%; No. 2 feed 21Vs; No. 3\nfeed 24%; track 38%.\nBARLEY \u2014 No. 3 C. W. 37; No. 4\nC. W. 35; No, 5 C. W. 34; No. 6 C. W.\n33; track 37%.\nFLAX-No.  CW. 141%; No. 2\nC. W. 137%; No. 3 C. W. 125%; No. 4\nC. W. 120%; track 139%.\nRYE - No. 2 C. W. 38%.\nDividends\nToronto Elevators Ltd., preferred,\n65% cents.\nBurlington Steel Co. Ltd., 15 cents.\nRemington Rand, Inc, 20 cents\n(preferred $1.12%).\nBell Telephone company of Canada, regular quarterly, two per cent.\nConiaurum Mines limited, five\ncents.\nReno Gold Mines, 1% cents.\nFalconbrldge Nickel Mines limited\n7% cents.\nOILS DOWN AT CALCARY\nCALGARY, Aug. 24 tCP>\u2014Few\nchanges were recorded by Turner\nValley oil issues on the Calgary\nstock exchange during the morning\nsession. Only 6,300 shares changed\nhands.\nTrading was almost at a standstill\nwhen the market opened, and fractional losses were boarded at the\nclose. Foundation dropped half a\npoint at 16; Prairie Royalties was 1\ncent lower at 3%; Sunset closed %\ncent lower at 39% and Calmont was\nfirm at 32.\nDow-Jones Averages\nHigh Low\n30. Industrials  145.30 143.28\n20 rails    29.71 29.08\n15 utilities     30-35 20.05\nVf bonds             \t\nClose Change\n143.53\u2014off .17\n29.25\u2014up 2b\n20.0&-oft .03\n89.37\u2014up    .30\nToronto Stock Quotations\nMINES:\nAlton Mines\t\nAldermac Copper\nAmm Gold\t\nAnglo-Huronlan        3.\nAmtfield Gold .........\nAstoria Rouyn Mines\nAztec Mining  \t\nBagamac Rouyn _\t\nBankfield Gold .._\t\nBase Metals Mining ...\u201e\t\nBeattie Gold Mines \u2014     1\nBidgood Kirkland ..-\t\nBig Missouri \t\nBobjo Mines..\nBralorne Minea '.\nBrett Trethewey   \u2014\nBuffalo Ankerije\t\nBanker Hill Extension\nCanadian Malartic\t\nCariboo Gold Quarta .\nCastle-Trethewey \t\nCentral Patricia  _.___.\nChlbougamau   __\nChromium M & S \u2014\nCoast Copper \u2014\nConiaurum Mines\t\nConsolidated M It S\t\nDarkwater   - -\nDome Mines\t\nDorval-Siscoe .\n._    1\n..._    2.\n34\nEast Malartic     2.\nEldorado Gold -     2.\nFalconbrldge Nickel     5.\nFederal Kirkland    \u2014     .\nFrancoeur Gold  -\nGillies Lake  - -\nGod's Lake Gold -\nGold  Belt      .\nGranada Gold Mines\t\nGrandoro Mines -.\nGunnar Gold\t\nHard Rock Gold     2\nHarker Gold \t\nHollinger       15.\nHowey Gold \t\nHudson Bay M & S    31\nInternational Nickel      50\nJ-M Consolidated     1\nJack Waite      3.\nJacola Gold \t\nKerr-Addison          2.\nKirkland Lake      1\nLake Shore Mines     53\nLamaque Contact \t\nLeitch Gold\t\nLebel Oro Mines\t\nLittle Long Lac     3.\nMacassa Mines     5.\nMacLeod Cockshutt         3.\nMadsen Red Lake Gold ..\nManitoba & Eastern \t\nMandy\t\nMclntyre-Porcuplne      48,\nMcKenzie Red Lake      1\nMcVittle-Graham   \t\nMcWatters Gold  \t\nMining Corporation         2\nMinto Gold \t\nMoneta Porcupine        1\nMorris-Kirklahd    \t\nNlpisslng Mining        1\nNoranda        75.\nNormetal   \t\nO'Brien Gold      3.\nOmega Gold \t\nPamour Porcupine        4\nPaulore M \t\nPaymaster Cons \t\nPend Oreille       1\nPerron Gold        1\nPickle Crow Gold     5.\nPioneer Gold       3.\nPremier Gold     2.\nPowell Rouyn Geld t     2.\nPreston East Dome .....E     1\n,03V4\n.49\n.13%\n.25\n15\n.06\n.05%\n.19\n.62\n.32\n,28\n.31\n.32\n.12\n.60\n.02%\n.15%\n.11%\n.00\n.55\n,90\n.55\n.32%\n.70\n.50\n,45\n.25\n.08\n.00\n,07\n18\n.31\n.90\n.07%\n,32\n,15\n.49\n.46\n.12%\n.05%\n.70\n.22\n.11%\n.25\n.26%\n.00\n.00\n.18\n72\n19%\n.07\n,30\n.25\n.03%\n.85\n.06%\n55\n20\n.65\n.53\n01%\n.18\n,00\n21\n.17\n.66\n10\n,03\n.71\n.10\n.75\n.00\n76\n65\n57\n50\n.09\n.50\n.94\n.45\n.05\n10\n32\n.55\n.76\nReeves MacDonald\t\nReno Gold Mines _\nRitchie Gold Mines \u201e\t\nRoche Long Lac .._ \t\nSan Antonio Gold ..-..'.\t\nShawkey Gold  \t\nSheep Creek Gold\t\nSherritt Gordon\t\nSiscoe Gold \u2014-..\u00bb.\nSladen MalarBc\t\nStadacona Rouyn  .....\nSt Anthony    \t\nSudbury Basin\t\nSullivan Consolidated \t\nSylvanite .\t\nTeck-Hughes Gold \t\nToburn Gold Mines\t\nTowagmac   \t\nVenture*      \t\nWaito Amulet   \t\nWhitewater    _........-\nWright Hargreaves\nYmir Yankee Girl .\nOILS:\nAjax\n.27\n.44\n.02\n\u25a0V\n1.29\n.ObVs\n.93\n1.32\n2.15\n1.04\n.48 \"\n.12\n2.65\n1.10\n3.30\n4.80\n2.06\n.44\n5.75\n5.50\n.04\n7.90\n.14%\nBritish American  \t\nChemical Research \u2014\nImperial \u2014\nInter Petroleum  _....\nMcColl Frontenac \t\nINDU8TRIAL8:\nAbitibi Power  \t\nBell  Telephone\nBrazilian T L It P\t\nBrewers tt Distillers\nBrewing  Corporation\nBrewing Corp Pfd\t\nB C Power A\t\nB C Power B\nBuilding Products \t\nBurt FN \t\nCanada  Bread  \t\nCan Bud Malting\t\nCan Car & Foundry\t\nCan Cement   \t\nCan Cement Pfd \t\nCan Dredge \t\nCan Malting   \t\nCan Pacific Railway ..\nCan Ind Alcohol A\t\nCan Ind Alcohol B\t\nCan W4nerics \t\nCarnation  Pfd  \t\nCons Bakeries\t\nCosmos\t\nDominion Bridge\t\nDom Tar It Chem  \t\nD Tar & Chem Pfd\t\nDistillers Seagrams \t\nFanny Farmer    \t\nFord of Canada A\t\nGen'Steel Wares\t\nGoodyear   Tire   \t\nGypsum L tt A\t\nHarding Carpet \t\nHamilton Bridge   \t\nHamilton Bridge Pfd ....\nHinde  Dauche  \t\nHiram  Walker\t\nIntl Metals\t\nIntl Milling Pfd\t\nImperial Tobacco \t\nLoblaw A\t\nLoblaw B\t\nKelvinator\nMaple Leaf Milling ....\nMassey Harris \t\nMontreal Power\t\nMoore Corp\t\nNat Steel Car   .'....\nOnt Steel Prods\t\nOnt Silk Net \t\nPage Hersey\t\nPower Corp\t\nPressed Metals \t\nSteel of Can \t\n21.60\n.45\n17.25\n26.40\n10.90\n3%\n164%\n12\nS%\n180\n20%\n3%\n30%\n55\n22\n4%\n4%\n17%\n10%\n100\n22\n21\n6%\n2%\n1.85\n3\n104%\n14%\n20%\n37\n8%\n78\n16 V,\n19%\n20%\n8%\n68%\n6%\n3%\n7%\n46\n15\n43%\n7\n101\n15%\n23%\n20%\n13\n3\n8%\n30\n36%\n64%\n12\n5%\n92\n14%\n20\nAdvance on Wall Street Halts\nShort ol Peaks Reached in July\nNEW YORK, Aug. 24 (API-Forward push in the stock market came\nto a halt today just short of the\npeaks attained a month ago in the\nmid-year bull drive.\nBefore the advance played out,\nfurther gains of fractions to around\n2 points had been recorded throughout the list. These were shaved a little before the close but the selling\nwas not urgent. Transactions, in\nfact, became extremely slow after\nbrisk trading around the opening\nwhen prices were moved ahead.\nBrokers regarded the pauses as\nnatural In view of the close approach\nto the July barriers on the upside\nand the market's climb the last\nfortnight. Reluctance to sell among\ntraders was attributed chiefly to\nexpectations of further business Improvement after Labor Day, resting partly on forecasts of a busy\nautumn stretch of automobile production in the manufacture of 1939\ncars.\nA fair demand appeared for Canadian Issues. Ahead minor fractions were Dome, Mclntyre Porcupine, Canadian Pacific, Distillers and\nLake Shore. Hiram Walker, however, dipped. Canada 4s were a shade\nhigher. Montreal funds remained at\n69.65%.\nTurnover in stocks approximated\n1,300,000 shares.\nRail loans rose 1 to more than 4\npoints In the bond market' in a\nwave of buying that spread to other\ndivisions.\nAutomobile and motor supply\nshares again held the speculative\nlimelight as the advance of the\ngroups carried over into early trading from the preceding session. General Motors and Chrysler both sold\nat new 1938 peaks, the former hitting\n50 before profit-taking cut into the\ngains.\nToward the final hour, selected\nissues in the industrial and foreign\ngroups showed gains of from 1 to\nmore than 2 points. Utilities, however, were easy.\nU. S. government obligations were\nIrregular, registering changes for\na 3-32 of a point advance to an\nequal decline.\nRail gainers of two points or more\nincluded: Southern Pacific 4%s of\n'68 and the 4s of '49; Boston It\nMaine 5s of '55; Central Pacific 1st\n4s; and Big Four 4%s of '77.\nIndustrials that climbed 1 to\nmore than 2 points included: Allis-\nChalmers 4s; Armour of Delaware 4s of '57; Childs Co. 5s; General\nSteel Castings 5%s; and Studebaker\n6s.\nIn the foreign list, Abitibi Power\ntt Light 5s jumped more than 3\npoints, and Tokyo City 5s up 2\npoints.\nSavings Deposits Up\nOTTAWA, Aug. 24 (CP)-Sav-\nings deposits in chartered banks at\nthe end of July last totalled $1,-\n622,606,000, a slight increase over\nthe previous month end 'but an increase of $50,000,000 over July 31,\n1937, according to the monthly report of chartered banks to the finance minister.\nCurrent accounts, at $671,165,000,\nwere down $18,000,000 from June 30\nbut up about $35,000,000 compared\nwith the previous year.\nCall loans in Canada were only\nslightly changed in the month but\ndown $42,000,000 compared with\nJuly 31, 1937, while call loans outside Canada were unchanged from\nJune 30 but down $20,000,000 from\nthe previous year.\nLondon Close\nLONDON, Aug. 24 (AP)-Stock\nmarket traders were more cheerful\ntoday following the sharp upward\nswing in Wall street late Tuesday,\nArtificial silk shares were well\nsupported and the industrial group\nlikewise displayed a firm tone. Coppers and otherL base metal issues\nwere prominent in the upward move\nand .the oil and rubber'groups sold\nhigher. Home rails recovered some\nof Tuesday's losses. Gilt edged securities and American shares Improved\nwith the latter gaining 1 to 2 points.\nClosing: Brazil $12%; CPR $6%;\nInt Nick $51%; US Stl $62%; Ang\nAm of So Africa 53s 9d; Cable 8t\nWireless \u00a347%; Cent Mining \u00a32314;\nConsol Gold Fields 75s; East Geduld\n\u00a311%; HBC 21s; Metal Box 75s; Mex\nEagle 4s 6d; Mining Trust 2s 9d;\nSprings 29s 4%d; Trinidad Leaseholds 101s 3d; Venterspost Gold 36s\n3d.\nBonds: Brit 2% pc consols \u00a375\n7-16; 3% pc war loan \u00a3102%; funding 4s 1960-90 \u00a3114.\nU.S. DOLLAR DOWN\nLONDON, Aug. 2 (AP) - The\nUnited States dollar lost % cent in\nterms of sterling today. Final quotation for the unit was $4.88 to the\npound in foreign currency dealings\ncompared with sterling at $4.88 1-16\nin New York overnight.\nFrench francs ended 178.37 to the\npound, net unchanged.\nRENO ADVANCES\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 24 (CP) -\nStocks showed strength today In\nlight trading on the Vancouver market. With most of the action centered\nin golds, transactions totalled 59,-\n210 shares.\nGains were sprinkled throughout\nthe gold list. Cariboo was up 5 at\n2.55, while Hedley Mascot at 1.17\nand Reno at 44 were each up one.\nSeveral other issues showed fractional gains, although Kootenay\nBelle went against the trend and\ndropped 2 to 1.38.\nTrading was light on both base\nmetal and oil divisions. In the base\nmetals, B. C. Nickel and Nicola held\nunchanged at 9 and 3% respectively.\nQuatsino lost % at 3V, and Whitewater held unchanged at 4.\nOils were generally weaker, with\nCalgary & Edmonton dropping 5 to\n2.30. Vulcan gained 2 at .80 and Anglo-Canadian remained unchanged\nat 1.38.\n). J. Warren Is\nGoing to England\nTORONTO, Aug. 24 (CP)-J. J.\nWarren, president of Consolidated\nMining and Smelting company of\nCanada, announced today he wilj\nleave for England Saturday to\nconfer with British authorities on\nlead and zinc metal marketing\nconditions in Great Britain.\nExchanges\nMONTREAL, Aug. 24 (CP)-Brit-\nish and foreign exchange closed\nsteady today. Nominal rates for\nlarge amounts:\nArgentina, peso, .2573.\nAustralia, pound, 3.9109.\nChina, Hong Kong dollars, .3060.\nDenmark, krone, ,2188.\nFrance, franc, .027473.\nGreat Britain, pound, 4.8983,\nIndia, rupee, .3647.\nNew Zealand, pound, 3.9424.\nSouth Africa, pound, 4.8739.\n(Compiled by The Royal Bank of\nCanada.)\nMontreal Stock Exchange\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlta Pac Grain   4\nAssoc Brew of Can  16\nBathurst P & P A  9%\nCanadian Bronze  40\nCan Bronze pfd  29\nCan Car tt Fdy pfd  29%\nCan Celanese  14%\nCan Celanese pfd   96\nCan North Power   17\nCan Steamship   3%\nCan Steamship pfd  14%\nCockshutt Plow   10%\nCon Min tt Smelting  59%\nDominion Coal pfd  18\nDom Steel tt Coal B  14%\nDominion Textile  61\nDryden Paper  8\nFoundation C of C   14\nGatineau Power   12%\nGatineau Power ptd  12%\nGurd Charles   6%\nHoward Smith Paper  15\nH Smith Paper pfd  99\nImperial Oil   17%\nInter Petroleum   2614\nInter Nickel of Can  50\nLake of the Woods  14%\nMcColl Frontenac   11\nNational Brew Ltd   42\nNat Brew pfd  44\nOgilvie Flour new  30\nPrice Bros .-. :  19\nQuebec Power   18\nShawinigan W It P   21\nSt Lawrence Corp      6%\nSt Law Corp pfd    19%\nSouth Can Power    12%\nSteel of Can Pfd     66\nWestern  Grocers    49\nBANKS\nCommerce    175\nDominion   212\nImperial   210\nNova Scotia 308\nRoyal   188\nToronto  235\nCURB\nAbitibi 6 pfd    26>\/4\nBathurst P & P B     9%\nBeauharnois Corp      3%\nBritish American Oil   21%\nCan Industries B     2Vt\nCan  Marconi       IVs\nCan Vickers     9\nCons Paper Corp      8%\nFairchild Aircraft     6%\nFraser Co Ltd     19%\nInter Utilities A      9\nInter Utilities B  75\nLake Sulphite      3\nMacLaren P & P     13%\nMcColl Front Pfd     98%\nMitchell  Robt     20%\nRoyal Oil     47\nUn Dist of Can  ..    95\nWalker Good It W    43%\nWalker  Good Pfd      19%\nQuotations on Wall Street\nHigh  Low\nClose\nInter Nick \t\n50%\n40%\n50\nAmerican Can ..\n. 103% 103\n103%\nInter Tel & Tel\n9\n8%\n8%\nAmer For Pow .\n.    4%    4\n4\n42%\n41%\n42\nAm Smelt It Ref   50%   49%\n49%\nMack Truck :\t\n27'\/,\n26%\n26%\nAmer Tele\n146% 145% 145%\n.   89%   88%   89%\nMontgomery Ward\nNash Motors    \t\n49%\n11%\n48%\n10%\n48%\nAmer Tobacco .\n11\nAnaconda \t\n.   36      35%\n35%\nNew York Cen ....\n2(1%\n19%\n19%\nBaldwin   \t\n.   10 \u25a0'\u25a0  9%\n9%\nPackard Motors ..\n5%\n5%\n5%\nBait It Ohio . .\n.    .8%    8%\n8%\nPenn R R\t\n21%\n20%\n20%\n.'24%   23%\n23%\nPhillips Pete    ....\n40%\n39%\n39%\nBeth Steel \t\n.   61%   60\nnoy.\nRadio Corp   \t\n7%\n7%\n7%\nBorden\t\n:    16%    16%\n16%\nRem Rand   \t\n16%\n16\n16%\nCanada Dry\nCanadian Pac ...\n.   19%   18%\n18%\nSafeway Stores ..\nShell Union     \t\n19%\n18%\n111%\n.    6%    6%\n6%\n16%\n16%\n16%\n22%\nCerro De Pasco\n.   54%   45\n45\nS Cal Edison  \t\n22%\n22-\nChrysler \t\n.   77      75%\n,76%\nStan Oil of N J ..\n55%\n54%\n54%\nCon Gas N Y\t\n.   28%   28\n26\nTexas Corp \t\nTexas Gulf Sul..\n46%\n45%\n45%\nC Wright pfd ...\n.    5%    5%\n5%\n37%\n36\n37\n135% 133% 133%\n. 176% 174    174\nTilhken Roller ..\nUnderwood  Type\n51%\n61%\nBl%\n51%\nEastman Kodak\nFord English\nFord of Canada .\n..    4%   -\n\u2014\nUnion Carbide  ...\n84%\n84\n84%\n.   20%   -\n\u2014\nUnion Oil of Cal..\n21%\n20%\n20%\nFreeport Texas\n.   30      29%\n30%\nUnited Aircraft  ..\n27%\n27%\n27%\nGeneral Elec \t\n.   43%   42%\n42Vt\nUnion Pacific ..\n92\n91%\n91%\nGeneral Foods .\n.   35%   35\n35\nUS Rubber    ....\n48\n46%\n46%\nGeneral Motors\n.   50      49%\n49%\nU S Steel \t\n61%\n6(1%\n60%\n.   25%   24%\n24%\nWarner Bro\t\n6%\n5%\n6%\nGranby\t\nGreat Nor pfd ...\n.    6%    6%\n6%\nWest Elect\t\n105% 104\n104\n.   23%   22%\n22%\nWest Union \t\n30%\n29%\n29%\nHowe Sound \t\n.   '-1      46%\n46%\nWoolworth .e\t\n46 Vi\n45%\n46\nMetal Markets\nLONDON, Aug. 24 (AP)\u2014Closing:\nCopper, standard spot \u00a340 12s fid,\nfuture \u00a340 17s Od, both up lis 3d;\nElectrolyte spot bid \u00a348 15s up\n16s; asked 46 5s, up 6s.\nTin spot \u00a3194 5s, up \u00a33; future\n\u00a3195 5s, up \u00a33 5s.\nBids: lead spot \u00a314 12s 6<1, future\n\u00a31413s 9d, both up 13s 9d.\nZinc spot \u00a313 9s, up 3s ,d; future\n\u00a313 8s Od, up 2s Od.\nBar gold 142s 0d, off % penny,\n(equivalent $34.77.)\nBar Silver 19%d, off 3-16.\nNEW YORK\u2014Copper steady; Electrolytic spot 10.12%; export 10.07%.\nTin firm; spot and nearby 43.75;\nforward 43.85.\nLead steady; spot New York 4.90-\n95; East St Louis 4.75.\nZinc steady; East St Louis spot\nand forward 4.75.\nBar silver 42%, unchanged.\nMONTREAL\u2014Spot: Copper, electrolytic, 1US5; Tin 46%; Lead 4.50;\nAntimony 15.\nBar gold ln London steady at $34.89\nin Canadian funds; 142s 6d in British. The fixed $35 Washington price\namounted to $35.12 in Canadian.\nSilver futures closed steady and\nunchanged today. No sales. Bids:\nAug. 42.40, Sept 42.15, Dec. 41.85.\nRemoval ol Wheat\nPreference Will\nNot Hurt Canada\nSTE. ANNE DE BELLEVUE,\nQue., Aug. 24 (CP)\u2014Delegates to\nthe International conference of agricultural economics expressed belief today that removal ot Canada's\nwheat preference in the United\nKingdom market, as forecast by\nthe Manchester Guardian, would\nhave no appreciable effect on the\nDominion's wheat sales in the United Kingdom.\nEconomists from Canada and\nEngland united ln declaring any\nCanadian abandonment ot the preferential rate of entry, in order to\nfacilitate the proposed Anglo-American trade treaty would not bring\nabout any great drop in Canada's\npresent exports to the United Kingdom.\nMARKETS AT A\nGLANCE\n(By The Canadian Press)\nToronto and Montreal\u2014Industrial\nstocks higher.\nToronto Mines\u2014Irregularly higher.\nNew York\u2014Stocks closed higher.\nWinnipeg\u2014Wheat down 2%-2%\nlower, Oct. 64%.\nToronto\u2014Bacon hogs off truck\nsteady at $9-$9.25.\nLondon\u2014Bar silver lower; copper,\ntin, lead and zinc higher.\nNew York\u2014Bar silver, cbpper,\nlead and zinc unchanged; tin higher.\nMontreal\u2014Siver unchanged.\nNew York \u2014 Coffee ana rubber\nhigher; cotton lower; sugar irregular.\nNew York\u2014Canadian dollar 1-32\nhigher at 99 11-16.\nMoney\nBy The Canadian Press\nClosing exchange rates:\nAt Montreal \u2014 Pound 4.89 13-16;\nU. S. dollar 1.00 5-16; franc 2.74 23-32.\nAt New York \u2014 Pound'4,88; Ca-\nnadlan dollar .99 11-16; franc 2.73%.\nAt Paris \u2014 Pound 178.34 fr.; U.\nS. dollar 36.55% fr.; Canadian dollar 38.43 fr.\nIn Gold - Pound Us lid; U. S.\ndollar 59.44 cents; Canadian dollar\n59.24 cents.\nQuebec Has Surplus\nMONTREAL, Aug. 24 (CP)-Que-\nbec had a surplus of $3,008,287 of\nordinary revenues against ordinary\nexpenditures in the year ended\nJune 30, provincial treasurer Martin\nFisher announced today.\nExpenditures during the fiscal\nyear amounted to $350,335,750 and\nrevenue totalled $53,344,037.\nExtraordinary expenditures for\naid to colonization, unemployment\nrelief and similar purposes amounted to $12,446,555. Direct relief cost\nthe province $2,482,427 and public\nworks to relieve unemployment\namounted to $8,601,952. '\nFreak Tree Roots at Balfour\n-PAQE ELFVEN\n- \u25a0''\u25a0'   *      .\u20ac*'<*_._\u00ab,\n%K, j\n________ **      SMBH\ngP;iM\n-   \u2022-     \u2022a.'***\n\u25a0    '   f'w\"\n'.\n^ W !\nIT';\":       *'|\net .\nm%    \\     '\n_,                                       _M\nm_ \u25a0\u25a0>.      \u2022 _\n^\u25a0B'l'Vll'.l\njfc?\n\u25a0    : \u25a0 '\n1\n\u2666\n, s*\n:\nJohn 0. Dolphin of Trail took this photo from the hornett Balfour of C. F. McHardy. Looking across tha\nlake toward Pocter.\nWheal Futures\nDown, Winnipeg\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 24 (CP)-Sou-\nthern selling and hedging pressure\npushed Winnipeg wheat futures\nsharply lower today toward lows\nuntouched ln about five years. At\nthe close values were 2%-2% lower,\nOctober ahd November 64%, December 64% and May 67 2-5 cents.\nAfter listless Sessions earlier in\nthe week when prices failed to\nmove more than % cent during entire sessions, sellers became active\non a report from Chicago that the\nUnited States government has agreed\nto subsidize 590,000,000 bushels of\nU. S. wheat.\nAbout 200,000 bushels of Canadian wheat were worked for export account.\nDeclining cash wheat spreads\nadded to general bearish atmosphere\nof the pit. The four top grades of\nred springs dropped a cent or more\nwith No. 2 northern taking leadership at three cents down. The latter\ngrade almost wiped out its premium over the October future. No. 1\nwas still at a four-cent premium\nand No. 3 at one cent premium.\nLiverpool closed %d higher to\n%d lower. Buenos Aires eased %-%\ncent at noon.\nCoarse grains were steady in quiet\ntrade.\nMontreal Produce\nMONTREAL, Aug. 24 (CP)-But-\nter spot, Quebec fresh (92 score)\n22%-%; sales: 100 Quebec fresh (92\nscore) at 23.\nCheese spot: Ontario white and\ncolored 13%B. Sales: 750 Quebec\nwhite at 13 13-16,200 Quebec colored\nat 13 15-16.\nEggs spot: Ontario A large 30A.\nTo arrive: Butter, Quebec fresh\n(92 score) at 22%-%.\nButter futures: Irregular, % cent\nhigher to %. lower; August 22%-23;\none November, contract was sold\nat 23% and one at 23%.\nVancouver Wheat\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 24  (CP) -\nVancouver wheat cash prices:\nStraight Tough\nNo. 1 hard     65%      63%\nNo.  1   nor    65%      63%\nNo.   2   nor    61%      59%\nNo. 3 nor    57%      55%\nNo. 4 nor    54%      52%\nNo. 5 wheat     50%      48%\nNo. 6 wheat     46%      44%\nFeed         39%      37%\nBULSAR, India (CP)\u2014Rainfall at\nthis town near Bombay reached 26\ninches in 72 hours, causing serious\nfloods in the river Auranga. Total\nrainfall since start of the monsoon\nwas 51 inches.\nVancouver .Stock Exchange\nMINES:\nAztec     \t\nBC Nickel\t\nBig Missouri\t\nBluebird   \t\nBralorne \t\nBridge Riv Con\t\nCariboo Gold\t\nDentonia   \t\nFairview Amal\t\nFederal Gold \t\nGeorge Copper\t\nGolconda   \t\nGold Belt \t\nGold Mpilnt \t\nGrandview   \t\nGrull-Wihksne   ....\nHaida  Gold\t\nHedley Mascot\t\nHedley Sterling\t\nHome Gold  \t\nIndian Mines \t\nInter Coal & Coke\nIsland Mount \t\nKoot Belle  \t\nLucky Jim,\t\nMcGilllvray   \t\nMinto  Gold  \t\nNicola M & M ....\nNoble   Five   \t\nPend Oreille  \t\nPilot  Gold   \t\nPioneer Gold \t\nPorter Idaho  \t\nPremier Border ....\nPremier Gold\t\nQuatsino   \t\nQuesnelle Q \t\nReeves MacD \t\nRelief Arl \t\nReno Gold \t\nReward     \t\nRufus Argenta\t\nSally Mines \t\n\u2022SSlmon Gold \t\nSilbak Premier .,-\nBid\n.06%\n.09\n.30%\n.01%\n9.50\n.01%\n2.55\n.05%\n.07%\n.01\n.27%\n.05\n.48\n.01\n.07\n.03\n.02%\n1.18\n.00%\n.01%\n.23\n1.38\n1.38\n.02\n.21%\n.03%\n.03\n.02%\n1.85\n.01\n3.00\n.03\n.01\n2.37\n.04\n.09%\n.28%\n.16\n.43\n.04\n.01\n.04\n.10%\n1.80\nAsk\n.07\n.10\n.32\n9.60\n.08\n.01%\n.49\n.02\n.07%\n.o;i%\n.03%\n1.19\n.01%\n1.39\n.02%\n.04\n.03\n1.95\n.01%\n3.05\n.04\n.01%\n2.40\n.09%\n.34\n.01%\n.12\n2.00'\n__\nSunloch Mines\t\nTaylor B R \t\nVldette Gold \t\nWaverly T \t\nWellington   \t\nWesko Mines \t\nWhite Eagle \t\nWhitewater \t\nYmir Yank Girl .\nOILS:\nBid\n.15\n.03\n.07\n.00%\n.01%\n.02%\n.01%\n.04\n.14%\n,17\nAsk\n.03%\n.08\n.00%\n.02\n.02%\n.02\n.05\n.17\nAmalgamated \t\n.00%\n.01\nBaltac    \t\n.03%\nmVt\nBrown Corp \t\n.31\n.33\nCalgary & Edm ..\n2.30\n2.35\nCalmont  \t\n.31\n\u2014\nCommonwealth   ..\n.26\n\u2014\nDalhousie \t\n.40\n\u2014\n.31\n\u2014\nEast Crest \t\n.07\n\u2014\nFirestone Pete ....\n.13%\n.14\nFoundation Pete ..\n.14\n.16\nFour Star Pete ....\n.13\n\u2014\nFreehold Corp\t\n.03%\n\u2014\nHighwood Sarcee\n.09\n\u2014\n1.17\n1.20\n.04%\n.06%\n\u2014\nMcDoug Seg \t\n.15%\n.16\nMercury    ... \t\n.09\n\u2014\nMonarch Roy \t\n.11\n\u2014\nNordon Corp \t\n.11\n.13\nOkalta  com  .;\t\n1.24\n1.28\nPacalta    \t\n.05%\n\u2014\nPrairie Roy \t\n.31\n.32\n45.50\n\u2014\nSpy Hill Roy ....\n.03%\n.04\nUnited    \t\n.11%\n\u2014\nVanalta     \t\n.05\n\u2014\nVulcan    \t\n.74\n.80\nINDUSTRIALS:\nB   C   Elec   \t\n109.50\n\u2014\nBrew tt Dist \t\n5.25\n\u2014\nCapital  Est  \t\n\u2014\n1.90\nCoast Brew \t\n1.31    i\n1.35\nPacific Coyle\t\n.15\n\u2014\nWorld   Exchanges\nNEW YORK, Aug. 24 (AP)-The\nFrench franc, in the face of cabinet\ndifficulties and labor troubles, today edged forward .00 3-16 of a cent\nto 2.73%. Sterling gained 5-16 of a\ncent to $4.88%. The Canadian dollar was up 1-32 of a cent at 99 11-16.\nClosing rates, Great Britain in\ndollars, others in cents:\nGreat Britain 4.88%; 60-day bills\n4.87%; Canada, Montreal in New\nYork 99.68%; New York in Montreal 100.31%; Belgium 16.87%;\nCzechoslovakia 3.45%; Denmark 21.-\n81; Finland 2.17; France 2.73%; Germany 40.10, benevolent 19.20, travel\n21.70; Greece .90; Hungary 19.85; Italy 5.26%; Jugoslavia 2.34; Netherlands 54.73; Norway 24.54; Poland\n18.87; Portugal 4.43%; Rumania .75;\nSweden 25.18; Switzerland 22.92%;\nArgentina 32.54N: Brazil (free) 5.85\nN; Mexico City 20.25N; Japan 28.47;\nHong Kong 30.55; Shanghai 17.45.\nRates in spot cables unless otherwise indicated. (N)\u2014 Nominal.\nSome Gains On\nMontreal Market\nMONTREAL, Aug. 24 (CP)-The\nslock market jogged along with several fair-sized gains to its credit\nnear the close today in spite of the\nactive profit-taking during the afternoon.\nSt Lawrence pfd climbed 2% and\nBathurst %. Noranda added % and\nSmelters a quarter while Nickel\nslipped off fractionally.\nHalf point gains were marked up\nin the Utility and Equipment sections for National Steel Car, Dominion Steel and Coal B. Power corporation and Brazilian Traction.\nFoundation Company soared 1%\nwhile Imperial Oil firmed %.\nSenior Golds Are\nStrong at Toronlc\nTORONTO, Aug. 24 (CP)-Senlor.\ngolds displayed strength on Toron- j\nto stock exchange, today but base\nmetals dropped some of their early.\ngains and junior gold issues sank\nirregularly. Utilities were best gainers. Western oils were irregular,\nThe transfers approximated 400,000\nshares.\nBralorne held a 10 point gain at\n9.60. Little Long Lac, Pioneer and\nPickel Crow spurted about five.\nO'Brien dipped 10 to 3.65.\nHard Rock sank around a point\nto 2.23 while Preston added one,\nMining Corporation advanced seven I\nto 2.10.\nNickel kept around 50 for a drop\nof % and Noranda was steady at 75\nbut Falconbridge eased 15 to 5.85\nwhile Smelters and Ventures softened a bit. Wait Amulet advanced\n20 to 5.70.\nFord held its ground In the industrial list, ranging around 20 7-10\nfor a new 1938 high.\nBig' oils fluctuated narrowly with\nthe only important changes being,,\nSupertest's three-point advance to I\n36 and the point loss absorbed by1'\nMcColl.\nRoyalite held a 1% advance at 47,\nTexas Canadian pushed up four.\nBrown and Okalta dropped two\npoints each.\nCOLD STORAGE PLANT\nOPENS AT CHILLIWACK\nCHILLIWACK, B. C. Aug. 24 (CP)\n\u2014This week Chilliwack is celebrating opening of a cold storage\nand locker plant with 300 lockers\navailable for immediate use. The\nnew plant is similar t6 those In operation in the state of Washington.\nGOOD PRINTING IS TO YOUR BUSINESS\u2014AS\u2014GOOD FOOD IS TO A\nGROWING BOY\u2014\nIt helpi to build a strong sound institution that will\nstand a better chance of pulling through future periods of business ills.\nOUR BUSINESS IS THE\nPRODUCTION OF GOOD PRINTING\nLet us give you a quotation on your printing\nrequirements.\u2014PHONE 144\nOR WRITE THE\nCommercial Printing Department.\n jppp^p^\nvmm'\njmmsmom&HomotioeMMa^\nLAST TIMES\nTODAY\nCOMPLETE SHOWS AT 2:00, 7:00 AND 8:38\nBank Nite Tonite\nOne Grand Prize\u2014$25.00 Cash\nSomething Very Wonderful        A.t\n\"White Banners\"      2:16\nWith CLAUDE RAINS,\nFAY BAINTER\n7:06\n10:11\nFiction's Hero Kills Killers\n\"THE SAINT IN NEW YORK\"\nWITH\nLOUIS HAYWARD \u2022 KAY SUTTON\nDRAW AT 10:00\nNIGHT 151 and 25f>\nFriday\nSaturday\n\"TROPIC HOLIDAY\"\nAlso \"BAR 20 JUSTICE\"\n| J. AX. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSuite 205 Medical Arts Bldg\nBETTER CLASS\nUSED CARS\nat\nKline's City Service\nJaek McDowell    Howard Thurman\n44 TAXI\nCON. CUMMINS\n50c up to 5 passengers\nAny place in the city\nYour   Grocer   or   nearest   Service\nStation can supply you with\nLEDINCHAM'S\nMILK   BREAD\nHOOD BAKING CO., LTD.\n-. \u00ab*\u00abss\u00abws*$*\u00bbs\u00abs\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab_\u00bb\u00ab$\u00ab*\u00ab\nBattery Repairs\nPHONE 930\nNelson Battery Shop\nLauritz Block, Fairview\nHOT WEATHER   |\nMEALS AT THE  |\n|Star Cafe |\nDunlop Tires\nTHE WORLD'S  BEST\nPeebles Motors Ltd.\nMORE ABOUT\nFRANCE\n(Continued Prom Page Ona)\n\"The rudiments oi peace require\nthat France be strong,\" he told his\nfollowers.\nThe executive committee of the\nparty, a Conservative unit of the\nPopular Front which is outnumbered\nonly by the Socialists ln the house\nof deputies, then aivted a motion\nassuring Daladier of its \"complete\nconfidence\" and calling for the cooperation of \"all parties which seek the\nsafety of liberty, of peace and of the\nfatherland.\"\nDaladier, who on Sunday announced his plan to alter the 40-hour\nweek law which now applies to 8,-\n000,000 workers, promised that the\nprinciple of the short week would\nbe maintained, and that the longer\nhours would be applied only to industries were absolutely necessary.\n8EE JACK HOdQERWERF\nStandard Electric\nfor\nElectrical   Contracting\nPHONE 838      817 VERNON 8T.\nAcross from New Grand  Hotal\n1930 FORD MODEL A\nROADSTER\n$135\nKOOTENAY MOTORS\n(NEL80N)   LTD.-PHONE  117\nPHONE 25\nPrescriptions\nCompounded\nAccurately\nFleury's Pharmacy\nMedical Arts Blook\nROOFING\nEaves Troughs, etc.\nR. H. Maber\nPhone 655    610 Kootenay St.\nDRY MILL WOOD\n$450\nRADIO POLES\u2014Ea.\nBurns Coal & Cartage Co.\n12   INCH\nLENGTHS\nPER\nLOAD\n40-FOOT RADIO POLES\u2014Each $4.00\nPHONE 53\nWARD ST.\nft   NOW  IS\nTHE TIME\nTO PAINT\nYour Cabinets, Cupboards, Furniture with\nSatin Glo Satin Finish\nA semi gloss for all Interior Decoration\nSatin Glo Enamel\u2014Quick Drying\nA high gloss. The best all purpose enamel\nfor interior and exterior surfaces\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Ltd.\nNELSON, B. C.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NILSON. B.C\u2014THURSDAY MORNING, AUG. 25,,\n\"GAYETY\"\nA fint English Toffee.\nSpecial at, per pound\n30c\nMann,Rutherford\nDrug Co.\nApple Movement\nIs light So Far\nMovement of apples In Kootenay\nand Arrow lakes haa so far been\nrestricted to transparents, Red As-\ntrachan and Duchess, early apples\nused mostly for cooking, fruit men\nreported Wednesday. Packing houses\nso far had not handled any volume.\nIn expectation of volume movement shortly, supplies are being\nlaid in at the various packing houses\nln the district\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nFOR YOUR FLOOR NEEDS SEE\nOR PHONE H. RONMARK.   (1910)\nWanted early Applet and Plumi.\nMCDONALD JAM COMPANY.\n(2369)\nSAFETY AND SERVICE\nPHONE 83   B. B. TAXI   PHONE 93\n(2321)\n1935, 2-ton Ford truck, reconditioned, a real unit for $725.00. Queen\nCity Motors Ltd. (2663)\nDANCE AT AINSWORTH SATURDAY NIGHT. 3 PIECE ORCH.\n(2844)\nSome of our Specials\u2014\nThermos Bottles 33c, Covered\nRoasters 69c. Aluminum Percolators\n72c \u2014 Hlpperson's. (751)\nPythian Sisters Degree Staff whist\ndrive Friday, Aug. 26. K. P. Hall.\n8 p.m., Admission 25c. (2861)\nDANCE\u2014Every Saturday at Armory. Margaret Graham's orchestra.\n50c and 26c (2655)\nNo need to miss any of the news\nfrom home when you can have the\nDaily News sent to your summer\naddress. (1988)\nRadio Service by a Certified\nTechnician\nMcKAY A 8TRETTON\n(106)\nAINSWORTH HOT SPRINGS\nHOTEL, Special Weekly Rates for\nthe balance of season. Room and\nmaalt, $18 per week. . (2573)\nWe Invite you to inspect the new\nSpeed Queen Washer, (69,50 up.\nTerms.\nJOHN DEWICK, Fink Block.\n(2729)\n1932 Ford L. D. Dandy shape. A\nBargain at $375.00. Queen City Motors Ltd. (2863)\nWhen you buy a WILLIS PIANO\nyou buy the best We have them\nfrom  $3#>.00_\u2014Terms.\nKOOTENAY MUSIC H0U8E\n(708)\nI.. O. O. F.\nKootenay Lodge No. 16\nMembers and sojourning brothers\nare requested to meet at the hall at\n2:30 today for the purpose of at'\ntending the funeral of our late brother, E. C, Traves. (2867)\nNEL80N HIGHLAND DANCERS,\nNOW 18 THE TIME TO SHOW\nYOUR ABILITY AT LABOR DAY\nSPORTS. CLASSES 10 AND UNDER, 13 AND UNDER, 16 AND\nUNDER. FORMS FROM A. WALL\nACH, 908 LATIMER 8T.        (2580)\nCARD OF THANKS\nMr. and Mrs. J. Vecchio and family wish to thank their friends for\nthe spiritual and floral offerings\nduring their recent sad bereavement\nin the loss of their dear mother\nand grandmother. (2856)\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nBECKMAN, Augustus - Aged 56,\npassed away at Rossland Tuesday.\nFuneral from Gospel Hall, Rossland\nFriday at 2 p.m., Rev. E. Lindgren\nofficiating. (2866)\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nTRAVES, Edmund C.,-Of Edge-\nwood, passed away Tuesday. Body\nrests at Somers Funeral Home where\nservice will be held today, Thursday, at 3 p.m., Rev. Foster Hilliard\nofficiating. No flowers by request.\n(2864)\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nFERGUSON, Mrs. George-Passed\naway Wednesday, Body rests at\nSomers FuneraJ Home until Friday\nthence to Trinity United churcn\nwhere service will be held at 2 p.m..\nRev. Foster Hilliard officiating.\n(2865)\nEDMONTON\n$22.75\nRETURN\nPhone 800 for further\nparticul.ui.\nGREY\/HOUND\ny\nE. C. Treves, Trail Blazer of B.C..\nLast Original Member P. Burns & Co.\nDies al Nakusp; Was 7( Years of Age\nBacked Nelson Power\nPlant and Trinity\nUnited Church    '\nA trail blazer of British Columbia,\nwhere he has lived for 48 years,\nand the last remaining member of\nthe original P. Burns lc Co., Edmund\nC. Traves of Edgewood, died in Arrow Lakes hospital at Nakusp Tuesday, following an illness of about\nnine months. He was 74 years of\nage, and was a brother of the late\nT. A. Traves of Nelson, who died\nfive years ago.\nIn 1890 he came to Nelson from\nCalgary, working for Wilson & Perdue, butchers. In 1892 he married\nMiss Mary Ann McEeachern, their\nmarriage licence being the first licence issued at the registry office in\nNelson. Mrs. Margaret Madden, and\nher husband, the late Thomas Madden, secured the second licence. Mr.\nTraves and Mr. Madden and their\nfiancees, who were close friends.\nwished to have a double wedding.\nTheir wish was to have Mr. Traves\nand his bride, who were Protestants,\nand Mr. Madden and his bride, who\nwere Catholics, stand back to back,\nwith a- Protestant preacher and\nCatholic priest, respectively, before\nthem. Permission, however, was not\ngranted for the double wedding.\nENTERED BUSINE8S 1896\nMr. Traves entered business for\nhimself in Nelson in 1896, opening\nthe West Kootenay Butcher company, on Ward street. He continued\nin business for himself until 1909,\nwhen he sold out to P. Burns It\nCo., and moved to New Westminster\nas district manager for the company. He retired in 1928 from P.\nBurns It Co., and went to his\nranch at Edgewood where he lived\nuntil the time of his death.\nWhile in Nelson, Mr.'Traves was\none of the organizers of Kootenay\nlodge No. 16, I .0. O. F.,,and was\na member of that lodge until his\ndeath. He was also one of the original organizers and directors of\nthe Nelson fair.\nHe was an active supporter of\nmunicipal power in Nelson. Another of his \"causes\" was the erection\nof a modern Trinity church.\nBorn in Rochester, Mass., in 1864,\nMr. Traves moved with his family to\nLondon, Ont, as an infant, and\nlived there until he was 20 years\nold. He received all his schooling\nthere.\nIn 1884 he moved to Winnipeg, and\nin 1885 came west to Calgary with\nthe militia at the time of the Riel\nrebellion. While In Calgary he was\nassociated with the original P. Burns\ncompany.\nOnly last Monday, Mrs. Traves\nreceived a letter from Richard\nBurns, one of the officials of P.\nBurns & Co., thanking Mr. Traves\nand herself for information regarding early days in the Kootenays,\nbut Mr. Traves was too ill to hear\nthe letter read. The company Is\npreparing a book on early life of the\ncompany, and a great deal of material in it is from Mr. and Mrs.\nTraves.\nBesides his wife, he is survived by\none son, C. W. Traves, of Edmonton, poultry commissioner for Alberta. Another son, E. C. Traves,\njr., was killed in France in 1917, and\nthe eldest son, Arthur, died in infancy. An adopted daughter, Myrtle,\ndied in New Westminster in 1930.\nThe funeral will be held today in\nNelson.\nI.O.D.E. Tag\/Trail,\nBrings in $225 for\nLabor Day Program\nTRAIL, B. C\u201e Aug. 24 \u2014 The Canadian Legion Labor Day Sports\ncommittee received $225 from a tag\nconducted Tuesday by members of\nthe two Trail branches of the\nI.O.D.E. The money will be used to\npurchase treats for the kiddles.\nSeven Prisoners\nFrom E. Kootenay\nJailed al Nelson\nSeven prisoners were added to\nthe population of the Nelson jail in\na single group when Constables R. K.\nLeighton, Robert Ring and D. G.\nNeff escorted six men and a woman\nto this city from East Kootenay.\nSeven prisoners released kept the\njail population on an even keel at 67.\nThe newcomers were:\nAgnes Tennese, Windermere, sentenced to one month for manufacturing intoxicating liquor, and-Moses\nIsaac Tennese, Windermere, sentenced to six months for assault occasioning bodily harm, both naving\nappeared before A. M. Chisholm,\nstipendiary magistrate.\nElliott Dale and Norman Blaine,\ncharged with the theft of grease\nguns to the value of $40 and tools\nto the value of $25. Each was sentenced by J. M. Leask, stipendiary\nmagistrate at Cranbrook, to six\nmonths and three months, the sentences being concurrent.\nFrank Romano, sentenced by M.\nJ. Halpin, stipendiary magistrate at\nKimberley, to four months for theft\nof money.\n. Joseph Alton, sentenced on two\ncharges of obtaining money by false\npretences, three months being given\nhim by H. A. Bryant, stipendiary\nmagistrate at Fernie, and two months\nby Mr. Leask at Cranbrook, the\nsentences being concurrent.\nJohn Angus McDonald, sentenced\nby Mr. Leask to serve six months\nfor. supplying liquor to an Indian,\nMORE ABOUT\nEYSTON\n(Continued From Page One)\nEyston summed up his emotions\nafterwards In a typical understatement; \"Only ona word,\nwhittling, describes It. I Just\nwhittled through the air.\"\nTo the spectators herded far back\nfrom the black line down the 13-\nmile straightaway the passage of\nthe \"Thunderbolt was just a flash\nof flame from the exhausts and a\ncloud of salt.\nNARROW  ESCAPE\nThere wat one narrow escape\non the tecond trip. An automobile\npandered near the course. Eyston twerved but the car ttopped\nshort cf the track.\nThat the record will fall seemed\ncertain, for waiting to do his bit\nIs another Englishman, John Cobb,\nwho has proclaimed his shark-\nshaped machine as faster than anything on wheels, which includes\nEyston's car.\nConcealing the chagrin he must\nhave felt over the technicality that\nkept his amazing records off the\nbooks, Eyston declined to predict\nwhat his car would do if pressed.\nHe didn't let it out, he said.\n\"Just for an experiment I gunned\nher to the floor at the end of the\nmile on the south trip,\" said Eyston. \"She shot ahead amazingly.\"\nCranbrook Wire Theft\nResults in Two-Year\nTerm for Roy Ribich\nCharged with the theft of 7000\npounds of transmission wire in\nCranbrook neighborhood, Roy Ri-\nbisch was sentenced Wednesday by\nhis honor Judge G. H. Thompson to\nserve two years in New Westminster\npenitentiary, stated a radio message\nto provincial police at Nelson. Committed after a preliminary hearing\nfor trial In a higher court, Ribisch\nelected speedy trial and appeared\nbefore Judge Thompson.\nAndy Hoffman, who was arrested\nwith Ribisch and charged similarly.\nwas tried summarily and sentenced\nto nine months in jail.\nThey were charged with the theft\nof copper wire and other materials,\nthe wire alone being valued at $1100.\nSold in Calgary, lt was traced by\npolice from the foothills city to\nthe B. C. coast ,\n1988.   . !\u2014;\t\n\"Sudden Death\" for\nUnited or Rossland\nin Soccer at Trail\nTRAIL, B. C, Aug. 24-Confid-\nence of a win over Rossland at\nButler park Thursday night was\nexpressed today by \"Jock Lilley,\nmanager of the Uniteds, who meet\nthe golden city team in a sudden\ndeath game to decide which squad\nwill play Adanacs Monday for the\nSchofleld soccer cup. When Gunners failed to field a team last Monday it was decided to finish off the\naeries with two games. Adanacs\ndrew,a bye to advance to the final.\nSMALL FIRE IS\nBEING FOUGHT\nSITKUM CREEK\nRossland Fire Flares\nUp; Believed Not\nBe Pangerous\nA small forest fire on Sitkum\ncreek, on the West Arm was the\noutstanding development Wednesday on the (Ire front in Kootenay\nand Boundary. A small crew was\nsent out in the. afternoon and was\nexpected to have it under control\nduring the night. It was reported to\nbe at a point where it might become\ndangerous.\nClouds of smoke vlsitble from\nNelson led to many phone inquiries.\nRangers sent out a few men to\nthe fire' west of Rossland, a serious\noutbreak 10 days ago which was\nbrought under control and dampened down by rains, and upon which\na patrol only has since been engaged. It was reported a section of\nthe fire had flared up again but it\nwas not believed to be serious.\nOther than these two, all fires in\nthe Kootenay-Boundary were out\nor so nearly so that patrols only\nwere necessary.\nPatty Berg Wins\nCHICAGO, Aug. 24 (AP)-Light-\nning struck figuratively and literally in the Women's United States\nwestern golf championship touma\nment today as Marion Miley of Lexington, Ky., defending champion,\nwas blasted out of the second round\nplayed in drenching rain, thunder\nand blinding lighfnlng flashes.\nThe young defending champion,\ntwice winner of the honor, was beaten 3 and 2 by Mrs. Court Weil, Cin\nclnnati, seasoned veteran.\nPatty Berg of Minneapolis, win\nner of eight of 11 tournaments this\nyear, who is strongly favored to\nsucceed Miss Miley, easily conquered\nPhyllis Buchanan, Denver, 7 and 6.\nHarriet Hubbard\nAyer\nBEAUY KITS\nFor the Particular Lady with\nsensitive skin.\n\u2014\n$3\neach\nc\\r__m\nFAMED ARCTIC FUR\nMERCHANT IS DEAD\nSEATTLE, Wash,, Aug. 24 (AP)\n\u2014Olaf Swenson, famed Arctic fur\nmerchant, was found dead today ln\nthe office of his,fur store, a rifle\nnearby.\nDetectives said it appeared the\nrifle might have been discharged\naccidentally while Swenson was\ncleaning it.\nCIVIC\nToday,  Friday, Saturday\nAn outstanding double program.\nMORE ABOUT\nLIBERAL CONFAB\n(Continued.From Page One)\nFeature of tha two-day program arranged by Kelowna Liberal* and board of -trade member! will be tomorrow't race meet,\nthe first to be held here In 25\nyeart. It wil be opened by Premier T. D. Patullo, who will ride\nto the track In an old stage coach\nreminiscent of pre-rallway dayt\nIn the Frater canyon.\nThe parade will be led by the\nCanadian Legion pipe band, which\nwill include Tom Reid, member of\nparliament for New Westminster.\nTomorrow night Mr. Pattullo is\nscheduled to address an open air\nmeeting and the following evening\nan exhibition of water sports will\nbe given at the Kelowna Aquatic\nclub.\nANNOUNCE AGREEMENT\nVATICAN CITY, Aug. 24 (AP)-\nThe Vatican newspaper, L'Osserva-\ntore Romano, today announced an\nagreement between the Fascist party and Catholic Action, lay organization of the Roman Catholic\nchurch, permitting leaders of each\norganization to be members of the\nother.\nVANCOUVER HOTEL\nOF WOULD-BE\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 24 (CP) -\nRussell Mather Doyle, 36, was arrested and charged with attempted\nrobbery with violence today less\nthan two blocks from a hotel where\na night clerk had set a lone gunman in flight with a blaze of revolver shots.\nJason Graham, the hotel night\nclerk, reported to police a man had\nentered the hotel and attempted to\nstage a holdup. Graham said he\nwas able to disarm the bandit and\nthen forced him to run away with\na volley of shots from the attack-\nCLERK USES GUN\nROBBER IN A CHASE\ner's own gun.\nAI Abercromble, a taxi driver\nwho heard the shots, joined Graham in the chase. For a time, Ab-\nercrombie was in the line of fire,\nbut continued following the man\nand once almost captured him.\nA few minutes later Police Constable George Ledingham, and Detectives Percy Pitts and Frank\nMaher, saw Doyle running along\na street with Graham and Abercromble following him. Ledingham\nfired one shot and the man fell and\nwas placed under arrest.\nShe Makes You\nLIVE It, Too!\nTHEY\nWON'T\n<0RGET\nLAUDE BAiNS \u25a0 GLORIA\nICKSON-EDWARD NORRIS\nVoted one of the ten best pictures of the year by the Motion\nPicture Digest.\nOur second hit\u2014\nIDlfH  \"~ ' 110\nFELLOWS * CARRILLO\nComplete at 7:00, 8:40\nAdmission 25c, 15c, 10c,\nFall\nSamples\nCook Clothing\nLeishman\nFashion-Craft\nThe new fall samples are\nhere. Let us make that\nnew suit-to-measure. Fit\nand satisfaction absolutely guaranteed. See these\nnew samples now.\nEMORY'S\n^ LIMITED\nTESTED\u2014QUALITY\nDOUGHNUTS\nFresh Daily\nAT THE\nPERCOLATOR\nE. W. KOPECKI-509 Baker.\nBEAUTY 8ERVICE THAT'S\nCOMPLETE\nHaircuits, Shampoos, Manicures.\nTinting, Massage, Waving.\nmiadu'i.\ntfimuJtu, (pahloh.\nPhone 244\n577 Baker St\n76 GAS\nEric's Motor Service\n295 Baker St.\nPhone 75\nFRANK A. STUART\nThe Insurance Man\nPhone 980     577 Baker St.\nNELSON, B. C.\nTIP TOP TAILORS\nFall Samples Here\nCHARLES MORRIS\nPhone 147\n547 Baker\nYour mirror will show the\ndifference in your looks\u2014\nBefore and after you have\nbeen to the\nHai&h Tru-Art\nBeauty Salon\nPhone 327 425 Baker St.\nPHONE 8J5\nfor better and prompter service In plumbing repairs and\nalterations.\nVIC GRAVES\nMaster plumber\nMBBBHHM\nTIRES AND TERMS FOR ALL!\n\u2014*.\nUHV\nffilillWW 'U\nm   K   ti  M\nfif\nJ  LwJ! O\nWE ARE PROUD TO SHOW\nOUR EXTENSIVE STOCK OF\nBRAND NEW GUARANTEED\nGOODYEAR TIRES. COME IN\nTODAY! TAKE YOUR CHOICE\nAND PAY ON EASY TERMS-\nNO RED TAPE-NO DELAY.\nYOU'LL BE PLEASANTLY SURPRISED AT THE CONVENIENCE OF\nOUR TIME PAYMENT PLAN.\nNELSON GOODYEAR DEALERS\nNelson Transfer\nCompany, Ltd.\nPHONE 35\nNELSON, B. C.\nJ\n","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"Nelson (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1938_08_25","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\/1.0414411","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.493333","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-117.295833","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1938-08-25 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1938-08-25 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":""}]}