{"@context":{"@language":"en","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2021-11-30","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1933-09-06","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0404987\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" Creston Growers Believe the\nPrune Crop Is Lost\n\u25a0~Pa_e3\nVOLUME SI\n'\"''\"Wit,\nJapanese Davis Cup Player\nIs Out of Play\n\u2014Pa&e Seven\nN, B.C.\u2014WBdNIBDAI MOBNINO, ICPTEMBER 6, 1933\nnVB CENTI \u00bb COPY\nNUMBER tit\n2J DEAD,  100 a^TJT IN TRAIN WRECK\nTRADE UNIONS\nURGETREATY\nWITH SOVIET\nAsk Support of 40 Hour\nWeek at Brighton\nConference\nPOSITIVE RECOVERY\nPROGRAM IS SOUGHT\n400 Communist Marchers\nRefused Representation at Meeting\nBRIGHTON. Eng.. Sept. 5 (CP &\nAP cables)\u2014Reaoluttona suggesting\nthe conclusion ot a commercial\ntreaty with Uie Soviet Union and\ndeclaring aupport should be forthcoming for a proposed 40-hour week.\nuseful publlo works construction\nand a positive program for promoting Induatrlal and trade recovery\nwere paaaed today at the trades\nunion congress ln aeaalon here.\nDuring the day's speeches 400 unemployed eommunlat marchers from\nLondon assembled near tbe hall and\nsent two delegates to ask tor admission. The congress declined to\nhear them.\nCltrlne'a reeolutlon protested\nagainst what was described aa \"the\ncontinued failure\" of the government to act. Tbe mover aald the\nexpansionist policy being pursued in\nthe United SUtes, bad been advocated by the trades union congress.\nHe added It waa receiving greater\nsupport than at any other period\not history.\nPRAISE ROOSEVELT ACTION\nThe resolution reads ln part:\n\"Tbe congreaa appreciates the significance of the vigorous efforts\nnow being made by President Roose-\nv*lt toward the stimulation and\nregulation of Industry by means oi\nthe Industrial recovery act and silled legislation.\n\"The congress expresses hope that\nwith tho cooperation of the trade\nunions, President Roosevelt wll be\nable to overcome the difficulties\ninvolved.\"\nTbt omgrees listened to T. L.\nBurke of the American Federation\nof Labor laud the American program.\nBurke aaaerted the legislative measures creating It were democratic\nin every essential and that no dictatorship had been set up.\nMargaret Bondfield, former mlnlater of labor, pleaded for a longdistance view ot the situation, urged\npublic worka and pointed out that\nstrenuous efforts had been neceaaary\nto put a few thouaand back to work\nin this country.\nAn emergency resolution waa\nadopted urging the conclusion by\nthe United Kingdom of a commercial treaty with the soviet Union.\nThe extension of adequate credits\nfor trade also was asked.\nNANAIMO. B.C., Sept, 5 (CP)\u2014\nNanaimo pioneers lost another ot\nits membera Sunday when James\nKnight died at hla home here ln\nhla 90th year.\nTOLMIE'S RETIREMENT\nIS UP TO ELECTORS\nPremier Denies He Ia Going to Ottawa Poat; Story\nJust \"Another Falsehood\" He Has \"to Deny\"\nDEATH IN WAKE OF\nRIO GRANDE STORM\nVICTORIA, sept. 5 (CP).\u2014\"My retirement from the premiership is a question for the electors, not the press,\" declared Premier\nB. F. Tolmie of British Columbia\ntoday when questioned concerning current reports of hla political intentions. \"The report that\nI am about to accept a post tn\nthe federal department of agriculture Is Juat another one of\nthose falsehoods I have been\ncompelled to deny recently,\" he\nadded.\n\"At no time during my conversations with Hon. Robert Weir,\nfederal mlnlater of agriculture,\ndid we discuss politics,\" said tbe\npremier, commenting on the report that Mr. Weir's reoent presence ln Victoria, and the fact he\nwas a guest at the Tolmie home,\nhave significance with regard to\nDr. Tolmie's future plans.\n\"The statement to the effect\nI had called a meeting of the\nSaanlch Conaervatlve executive\nfor tomorrow and that I was at\nthat meeting to announce my retirement Is absolutely without\nfoundation,\" Premier Tolmie aald.\n\"No meeting haa been oalled\nby me.\n  \"I regret the neoeaslty of mak-\nPBEMIER  S.  F.  TOLMIE   lng   periodical   denials   of   theee\nfalse statements and only do so at thla time to relieve tbe minds\no*  frlenda who read them and  hava called  me  on  the telephone\nto ascertain tbe truth or otherwise of the reports.\"\nPresident W. O. Wallaoe of the Saanlch Conservative association has left for a motor trip to Eugene, Ore., and will not return\nuntil late ln the week. Before leaving he denied that a meeting\nof the executive had been called for tomorrow. Premier Tolmie\nrepresented Saanlch ln tbe leglalature dissolved last month.\n\"We Need Strong-arm\nStuff\" Say Growers\nOkanagan Fruit Men Would \"Smash Down Trees\"\nof Unaffiliated Unless Shippers Guarantee\nCent Per Pound for All Apples\nKELOWNA, B. C. Sept. 5 (CP).\u2014Threats of \"smashing down the trees\" of those who wound not come into an\nagreement were heard at a meeting here today of Kelowna\nfruit growers who asked of the shippers a guarantee of a\ncent a pound minimum for all apples picked and shipped.\nAt a preliminary meeting it was decided to present a\nresolution embodying the demand, \"one eent a pound, or\non the ground.\" This would mean unless the growers were\nguaranteed one cent a pound '\nthey would leave the --\u2022-,'-\nto rot\nTbey claim that thla price barely\ncovrra coata arm that their returna\nlaat year did not equal thla amount.\nSHIPPERS OPPOSED\nThe ahlppera oppose euch a guarantee and are endeavoring to get a\n100 per cent shipper*, pool. Tbey\nhave aome 76 per cent of the ehlp-\n(Conttnoed on Page Two)\nIMPROVEMENT IN BUSINESS \"PLAINLY\ndiscernible;' SAYS RAIL MINISTER\nWorst Is Over;  Hopes For\nNo False Moves by\nOrders\nNEWMARKET, Sept. S (CP)\u2014Im-\nprovement ln buslneaa being \"plainly\ndiscernible,\" Kon. R. J. Manion,\nminister of rallwaya and canals, believes the worst la over aa far as\nCanadian   railroads   are   concerned.\nIn a paper read^ ln hla absence to\nthe Liberal-Conservative aummer\nschool, the minister expressed his\nconfidence ln the future of the rail-\nDeath of Duncan\nMiss Is Mystery\nPlanks Over Well In Which\nBody Found Baffles\n10 HOUR GALE\nKILLS 20 AND\nINJURES1500\nMillions of Dollars Damage Follows Storm in\nTexas State\nRAIN ADDS TO THE\nHURRICANE TERROR\nStreets Littered, Communications Cut; Real\ntoll Unkonwn\nBROWNSVILLE, Tex., Sept. 6\n(AP)\u2014Twenty persons were killed\nln and around Brownsville when\nthe most serious gulf hurricane\nln 60 rears hit the ctty last night\nand this mornlnf, blowing nearly\n10 hours ln two terrific sections.\nfifteen hundred persons were\nInjured ln this general area. Including two huge coastal rountie*,\nWillacy and  Cameron.\nDAMAGE IN MILLIONS\nEDINBURO, Tex., Sept. 5 (API-\nTwelve known dead, more than 60\nInjured and many millions of doilan\ndamage was the toll of the gulf\nhurricane which last night and today laid waste the rich and populous lower Rio Grande  valley.\nTen wen killed at Herltngen and\n(Continued on Page Two)\nPRAIRIE CITIES\nIN DIRE NEED\n58 Unable Pay ReUef Costa\nPremier Bennett Told\nWelland Man to\nProbe Dispute of\nC.P. Freight Men\nOTTAWA, Sept. 5 (CP)\u2014Lynn\n8. Spencer ot Welland. Ont.,\nhM been appointed by Hon.\nWesley Oordon. minister ot labor, ss chairman ot the board\nof investigation snd conciliation\nln ihe dispute between the Canadian Pacific Railway and Its\nclerks, freight handler*., etc., sna\nsubsidiary  groups.\nRecently W. T. O'Connor, Ottawa, was appointed to ths board\non recommendation of\nthe workers snd Oeorge S. Currie, Montreal, on the recommendation of the company.\nDUNCAN. B.C.. Sept. 6 (CP).\u2014In-\noueet into the death of Maude Lllley whose body was found ln sn\nabsndoned well on a farm near\nCrotton Friday, was adjourned tonight until September  18.\nMlss Lllley had been missing for\nseversl weeks. Hsr body was discovered by Chsrles Bccleston, a\nsheep rancher, while seeking a\nwater supply for his stock. The\nfsct thst the top ot the well was\ncovered with plsnks when the discovery wss msde plsoed sn air of\nmystery about the case. Investigators hsve pointed out thst the plsnks\nmight hsve been replaced by a\npasser-by who did not notloe tne\nbody.\nSelf-inflicted Wound\nCause Coleman Death\nHON.  E. 1.  MANION\nwsys but warned agslnst expecting\ntoo much Improvement under sny\nplan of railway management until\nthere Is s sufficient revival ln world\nbusiness to restore a \"ressonable\nproportion\" of the traffic lost\nthrough recent world-wide stagnation.\n\"We believe we sre entering the\nera ot recovery. We hope during this\ncritical period there msy be no fslse\nmovement from within railway organisations themselves which may\ndelay or retard the natural rettirn\nnt  huMnew.\"   bla   paper  Mid.\nInvents Gas Mask\nto Save the World\nBut Dies in Test\nNIW YORK. Sept. B (AP).\u2014\nLawrence Horvath, 44, looked\nInto the future and saw the nations at war again\u2014millions of\nmen. women and children dying\nln tbe fumes of gu bombs.\n\"I wlll Invsnt a gas mask\nthst will saw tha world,\" he\naald.\nYesterdsy the model mask was\nfinished.\nHe clamped It over hla face\nto test lt, connected the Intake\nto the gu range and turned on\nthe gu.\nThla morning, his wire and\ntwo children, returning from a\nvacation, found him on the\nkitchen floor\u2014deed ot esphyila-\ntlon.\nVANCOUVER, Sept. S (CP).\u2014\nMerton Colem-en, self-confessed\nslayer of Hettie Ball, 21-year-otJ\nCranbrook girl, who wu shot and\nkilled In a cafe In Nelson, July\nlut, came to his death through\nthe effects from self-inflicted gunshot wounds, aooordlng to a coroner's jury verdict returned here\ntoday.\nColeman died In hospital Saturday lut. five days after he had\nbeen admitted from Oakalla Jail\nwhere he wu awaiting trial. After\n.hooting the girl, Coleman turned\nthe gun on himself, but succeeded\nonly In destroying his eyesight.\nSouth Africa Will\nNot Slash Values\nof Its Currency\nPRETORIA. South Africa, Sept. a\n(CP cable)\u2014Aouth Africa definitely\nhu no intention of devaluating lte\ncurrency, according to Hon. N. C.\nHavenga, mlnlater of flnanoe. He\ndeclared while stabilisation was de\nalrable he was not prepared to die\ncuss wbat parity ahould be.\nCANCER TOLL IS\nHIGHEST IN B. C\nOTTAWA. Sept. 6 (OP)\u2014 More\nthan half tbe municipalities of\nSaskatchewan, plagued by drought\nand grasshoppers, will need govern\nment asalstanoe thla winter and 68\nof tbem wlll be unable to pay any\nshare of the ooat, the Dominion\ngovernment was told today. Steps\nan now being taken to reach an\nagreement between the Dominion\nand provincial governments whereby\ntbe extra relief requirements may\nbe met.\nPrime Minister R. B. Bennett and\nthe members of hla cabinet, received a large delegation from Saskatchewan this afternoon and apent\nmore than two hours discussing ths\nproblem. Mr. Bennett had no state'\nment to make. He promised them\nsympathetic consideration.\nHon. M- A. MacPheraon, attorney\ngeneral for Saakatchewan, was\napokeeman for the delegation whlcb\ncontained both provincial and fed-\neral   membera  of  parliament.\nMarkets at\na Glance\nToronto and Montreal\u2014Stocks\nweaken ln  quiet selling.\nToronto  Mines\u2014Irregular,  lower.\nNew Vork\u2014Mild sell-down near\nclose.\nWinnipeg\u2014Wheat   closed   lower.\nToronto\u2014*B a c o n hogs off ear\nunchanged   at  $7.\nLondon\u2014Bar silver and copper\nhigher; tin and zlno lower; lead\nunchanged.\nNew York\u2014Bar silver and tin\nhigher; copper, lead and sine nnchanged.\nNew York\u2014Sugar higher; cotton, rubber and coffee lower.\nNew Yrok\u2014Canadian dollar unchanged at 95V*.\nCOUP DEPOSES\nCUBAN HEAD\nArmy, Navy and Police\nOusted in Bloodless\nStrategy\nBy I. P. Mcknight\nAssociated press Staff Correspondent\n(Copyright 1913 by Associated Press)\nHAVANA, Sept. s.\u2014The resignation of President Carlo* Manuel de\nCespedes wu turned ln tonight as\nthe executive yielded to a revolutionary Junta which seised power\nthrough a bloodless coup, took over\nstrategic poaltiona and ousted army,\nnavy and pollce heads.\nHurriedly summoned back to tbe\npalace from an inspection trip following last Friday'e hurricane, De\nCespedes, in office leas than a\nmonth following the overthrow of\ntbt Oerardo Machado regime, met\n% -revolutionary commlaalon of five\nand then announoed:\n\"I have faithfully fulfilled tbe\nprogram of the revolution of the\npeople. Now lt is time for others\nto assume responsibility. The responsibility will be theirs before history.\"\nPLAINTIFF REFUSES\nTO KISS BIBLE\nFraser Valley Farmera-.Not\nGuilty Cow Theft\nVermont, Long Dry\nState, Votes Wet\nMONTPELIER, Vt., Sept. 5 (AP).\n\u2014Vermont, long a rockbound dry\n-stronghold, today Joined the parade of states favoring repeal of\nthe United States prohibition\namendment, it was tbe 25th consecutive stote to record Itself ln\nopposition to retention of prohibition ln the constitution of the\nrepublic. No state hu voted for\nthe  amendment.\nMarried Jobless in\nCalgary Face Penalty\nFor Loss of Hours\nCALOARY, Sept. 5 (OP)\u2014Out of\nCanary's 3300 married Jobless, 1711\nare aubject to a penalty, which\ncame into effect September l, because they are behind 100 hours ar\nmore on their work carda which\ncontain their record of employment\non relief Jobs. Many are appealing.\nNBW WESTMINSTER, Sept. 6\u2014\nRobert Scott well-known cattle dealer of the Fraser valley for 40 years,\nand Barry Spagnol, another dealer,\nwere found not guilty ln oounty\ncourt by Judge P. W. Howay on a\ncharge of stealing a black cow from\nDaniel H. O'Byme, Surrey, on\nAugust S,\nDuring the hearing, Daniel O'Byrne\nand his son, K. w, O'Byrne, de\ncllned to kiss the Bible wblle Uklng the oath, tbelr objection being\nbased on religious grounds. Instead,\nthey ralaed their right hands In\naffirmation. Slgurdson alao declined\nto klu tbe Bible, and said he cou'd\nnot do ao because his mother told\nhim not to. Thla reuon was not\naccepted by the court and he wu\nexcused   from   testifying.\nScarlet Fever Cases\nDecline in Province\nVICTORIA, sept. 5\u2014During the\nfirst alx months of 1933 there were\n333 cases -of scarlet fever reported\nthroughout the provlnoe, according\nto Dr. A. M. Mensiee of the provln\nclal health office. The total for\n1933 wu 466, or Just double.\nNotifiable diseases reported in\nAugust included cancer 10, scarlet\nfever 17, tuberculosa 74.\nCUT IT TAXES\nCANADA'S NEED\nFOR COMEBACK\nRothermere Would Also\nCut the Governmental\nExpenditures\nLEAVE TARIFFS, IS\nTIP FROM PEER\nWould Link Canada Currency With That of\nAntipodes\nMURRAY BAT, Que., Bept. 8 (CP).\n\u2014Reduoed governmental expenditure\nand consequently lowered taxes are\nthe beet means of returning Canadian business to a normal condition,\nFREIGHT ENGINE TELESCOPES\nPASSENGER TRAIN, RESCUERS\nPULL OUT 12 MANGLED BODIES\nEngineer Misses Signal ahd Speeding Milk Train\nThrows Passenger Tram Coaches\nInto the Air\nVISCOUNT   ROTHERMERE\nViscount Rothermere,  British newspaper  peer,  uld   here today  in  an\ninterview. Lord Rothermere Is vacationing here. Hs hu left for Montreal.\nLord Rothermere uld:\n\"The taxes of the average citizen could be lowered If the government would  retrench  ln expendl-\n(Contlnned on Page Two)\nMedicine Hat Miss\nWins Movie Chance\nHekn Gray One of 30 Selected In \"Beauty\" Search\nRAINS WIPE OUT\nTHREATS BY FIRES\nRBOINA, Sapt. 5 (CP).\u2014Rains\nduring its. latter part ot last week\nhave effectively stamped out threats\nof serious foreat flies In northern\nSaskatchewan according to officials\nof tha forestry branch of the department of natural resources:\nLATE NEWS FLASHES\nVICTORIA, Sept. S (CP)\u2014Vital\nstatistics for July Included 836\nbirths, 420 deatha and 360 marriages.\nCanoer accounted for fie deatha, tu-\nberculoala 88. motor accident* 8,\nand 37 Infante under one year died.\nBirths, deaths and marriages for\nlarge centers Include NeUon 17\nbirths, nine deatha tnd nine marriages; Trail 13, two and six; Vernon\n18, two and five. Roseiand reporta\nfive births, but no deaths or marriage*.\nOTTAWA.\u2014September 11 and 13\nhave been tet for a Dominion-provincial conference of treasury officials.\nOWKN BOUND.\u2014Seventy-two-foot\nLion's Head fishing tug missing ln\n\u2022torm-awept Oeorglan bay. Plve men\naboard.\nVANCOUVER. \u2014 Ottawa dispatch\nannouncea appointment of W. O.\nMcQuarrle, K.C. to be Justice of\nB.C. court of appeal.\nWASHINOTON, D.C\u2014USA. decides not to lncreaae naval strength\nat Havana following Cuban flare-up.\nDETROIT \u2014 Henry Ford raises\nwages of eome claaaea of employees\nfrom |4 per day to 8480. About\n10,000 employees will benefit in\nFV\u00bbrd's move to go NRA \"one better.\"\nFive-day  week wltb eight-hour day\ncontinues,\nSHONORY CLUB. Quebec.\u2014A. A.\nAdams of Hamilton with 70, takes\ntwo stroke lead ln Dominion senior\ngolf title play.\nLONDON\u2014Britiah government to\noonduct lnveattgatlon Into Import\nof Russian timber Into united Kingdom.\nDETROIT\u2014Revealed that Henry\nFord ts chairman of Dearborn unit\nOf   NRA.\nCoast league\u2014Portland Ti sscramento 4.\nInternational league \u2014 Rochester\n1-7;  Montreal 3-3.\nBrownavllle, Texas.\u2014Twenty killed,\n1800 injured in hurricane.\nHOLLYWOOD, Cal., Sept. S (AP)\n\u2014From a field of 100,000 applicants In every English-speaking\nnation In the world, a film studio\ntonight selected the.30 winners of\nIts \"search for beauty\" contest.\nHelen Oray of Medicine Hat,\nAlta., and Ounnar Freese of Montreal were announced as the Canadian  winners.\nThose selected will be awarded\nfilm contracta for roles In a picture\nthat le to atart produ ctlon October 18.\nFinal selections were made\nthrough screen testa Judged by _ a\nboard of alx member*.-\nPast Grand Master\nof Odd Fellows Dies\nVANCOUVER. Sept. 5 (OP)\u2014A\nchampion marluraa n on Vanobuver\ni.fle ranges Tor many yeara, John\nstevena, ageJ 68, a pioneer realdent\nof British Columbli. la dead at his\nhome on Railwny avenue, Lulu\nisland, followlni; \u25a0 .--ven montha'\ni.-neas.\nThe deceased, who waa past-provincial grand maater of the Independent Order of Odd Fellowa, Manchester unite, was a member of the\nVancouver Pioneers' association and\nthe Vancouver Rifle aasoclatlon. He\ncame to this  city 43 years ago.\nBINGHAMPTON, N.Y., Sept. 5 (AP).\u2014Twenty-thm\npersons were reported dead and more than 100 injured u\nrescuers pulled mangled bodies from the wreckage of a\nfast Chicago to New York Erie passenger train which wu\nrammed by a freight engine here tonight.\nTwelve died at the scene and 11 more died en routt\nto the hospital or shortly after they arrived. Many othen\nwere said to be in a critical condition, some dying ura\nother badly crippled.\nThe first of the dead identified were: Harry WestfaD |\nand Donald Burn, both of Susquehanna.\nAt the Binghampton hospital there were 14 bodies)\nall dead on arrival; and 25 persons injured, many seriously.\nEarly reports were that the passenger cars were con*,\npletely telescoped. Every available ambulance in the city\nwith a corps of physicians and nurses were quickly dla,\npatched to the scene. Both trains were going at high speed\nwhen the crash occurred.\nThe two rear coaches of\na crack Erie passenger traia\nwere tossed into the air bj\na colliding milk train.\nThe coaches came down isl\na mass of bent and splinted I\ned wreckage and mangled |\nImmIii's\nSMASHED LIKE\nEGGSHELL\nA wooden coach just fo*.[\nward of the steel car on th\u00bb|\nend of the flier was smashed like an eggshell by the iniy\npact.\nPassengers in the diner upl\nforward were hurled from I\ntheir seats in a welter of!\nbroken dishes. Many of them*)\nTyphoon Toll Is\n17 Dead; 23 Lost\nin Yellow Sea\nTOKYO, Bept. 5 (AP).\u2014Seventeen dead and 33 mlaslng In\nwestern Japan and southern\nKorea comprised the known toll\ntoday of the typhoon that swept\nout  of  the   Yellow aea.\nYamaguchl and Yamagata prefectures reported three known\ndead and lo missing. Rengo\n(Japaneee) new agency reported\nfrom Seoul, capital of Korea, 14\nkilled and 13 mlaslng. Hundreds\nof houses ln eouthern Korea\nwera reported partially  flooded.\nMANITOBA TOWN\nIS FIRE SWEPT\nForest Fire Situation Serious;\n21 Districts Have\nBlazes\nwnrtnpBo, sept,  s   <op).\u2014pi\u00bb-\nfighting resources of Manitoba were\ntaxed to the limit tonight to check\nforest fires scattered acroaa eastern\nand central Manitoba. Outbreaks\nwere reported from 31 districts.\nChief concern, however, la felt for\nthe blane which roared over a five-\nmile front between Rennle and\nWhttemouth, ln the southeastern\nportion of the province laat night.\nFamilies of settlers and summer\ncampers were evacuated from the\ndanger none tonight. Only the men\nremained behind to keep a watchful eye over a fire that destroyed\nvaluable timber stands, rand the\natatlon and aectlon houae at Rennle, and threatened amall settlement! before rain came to the aid\nof forest rangers.\nMoffat Government\nBelieved Safe in\nSo. Rhodesia Vote\nSALISBURY, Southern Rhodesia,\nSept. fl (CP Cable) .\u2014Southern Rhodesia will elect a new parliament\ntomorrow. Possibility of the defeat\nof the preaent administration under\nPrime Minister H. TJ. Moffat Is not\nconsidered likely ln view of the fact\nthe reform and tabor parties failed\nto reach an election pact and there\nwlll be a number of three cornered\ncontests.\nSeventy-eight nominations for 30\nseats have been made. They are\ndistributed ,aa follows: government\nor Rhodestan party. 30: reform\nparty, 37; labor party, 13; Independents,  nine.\nRevenues of C.N.R.\nUp for 10-Day Period\nMONTREAL, Sept. 6 (CP) .\u2014Gross\nrevenues of Canadian National RaUwaya for the 10-day period ended\nAugust 31. 1933. were M.837.937\ncompared with $4,405,013 for the corresponding period of 1903, an Increase   of   1433.914.\nQUEBEC   M>.s   NAVAL   ANO\nMILITARY  MANOEUVRES\nQUEBBC, Sept. 5 (CP) \u2014Thousands of people watched the first\ncombination naval and military manoeuvres ever \u00ab?cut*d on tlie St.\nI-s wre nee river over the weekend.\nJAMIESON, CP.R.\nOPERATOR, PASSES\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 5 (CP)\u2014W. S\nJamleson, 61. assistant chief operator here end for many years connected with the telegraph department of the Canadian Pacific company in the weet, died suddenly\ntoday.    *\nDeath  wm  due  to  heart  failure.\n(Continued on Page Two)\nRETAILERS' CODE\nSFJS WAGE SCALE\n*12  to $15 for  Clerks;  40\nCents Hour for Laborers\nProposed\nWASHINOTON, Sept. ft (AP)\u2014\nFormulation of trade charters for\ntwo lndustriea, normal employment\nof which wan estimated hy recovery\nadministration officials to embrace\n10,000,000 workers, tonight awaited\nHugh S. Johnson.\nThe administrator disclosed thai*\nwu no further word ea to whether\nHenry Pord would adhere to tht\nNRA'S automobile code.\nA atatement of policy designed to\nsimplify the writing ot a maater\ncode for all retailers before the end\nof the week was ln the handa ct\nArthur D. Whiteside, deputy administrator, ready for Johnson's approval. Tomorrow, publlo hearings\nopen on a single code covering nln*\nof the most important dlvlalona of\ntbe construction industry.\nTha construction code provide*\nwagea ranging from gl3 to gift per\nweek for office workers and a mln*\nImum of 40 oenta an hour for\nlaborers. Maximum hours were Ml\nat 35 per week, averaged over *\nsix months* period, with the added\nprovlsloh no one may work mora\nthan 48 houra in one week nor mom\nthan eight hours a day. ^^^\nDeposed President of\nCuba Refuses Return\nfor Fear of His Lift]\nMONTREAL. Sept. ft (CP)\u2014Fearful guarantees of his personal safety\nwill not hold. Oerardo Machado.\ndeposed president of Cuba, is un*\nwilting to return to his country to\nfaoa trial for offences charged\nagainst htm. \"What good ls thai*\nguarantee of safety to myself. U\nthey cannot protect themselvest\nMachado  aald   here   todsy.\nUnemployed Congress\nDemand Evans* Release\nOTTAWA. Sept. 5 (CP).\u2014The National Congress of Unemployed today passed a resolution demanding\nthe release of Arthur Evans of\nVernon, B. C, held on a charge of\nbeing a member of an Illegal organisation, th* Communist party.\nTHE WEATHER\nTempa'aturea: Mln. MU,\nNELSON*       _. 58       S\u00abi\nVlctorli       53\nVancouver - \u2014 M\nKamloops     53\nEstevan Point  ,  SO\nPrince   Rubert    _ 43\nAtlln    _  M\nM\nss\n. Dawaon\nSeattle\nViscount Grey Is\nStill Unconscious\n(HRISTON iivsK. Hept. 3 (AP).\n\u2014A bulletin late tonliht from the\nbedside or Viscount Orey ot Fallo.\ndon aald lie remained unron-\nscloaa and waa -eVakrr than dur*\nini the mornlnt.\nPortland    \t\nSan Francisco\nSpokane   \t\nPrince Ocorie\nLos Angeles . .\nPenticton   \t\nVernon   \t\nKaalo   \t\nCranbrook\t\nCalgary    \t\nEdmonton\n.... M\n... CO\n... 60\n... aa\n_ to\n... ss\n.... sa\n... 47\n,... S<\n... SB\n... 33\n... 40\nSwift Current ..._\t\nPrince   Albert    44\nQu Appe lr  44\nWinnipeg    _.- M\nNanaimo     _.._ 58\nMoose   Jaw     48\nPorecaat,    Nelson    and    vicinity-.\nMostly cloud;* snd oool with showery\nS6\nno\nSI\nss\nsi\ns\u00ab\n5S:\nSO\n90\n\u00ab8\n78\nSS\n71\n --.\u2014_\u2014-\nDURING BABY'S\nTEETHING TIME\nTh* Bowels Become Loom\nDial-Then, dysentery, colic, oramrxi, I\nmmnifeet   themselves; the  gums  become swollen, uld cankers form in\nihe mouth.   Thia is the time when\nthe mother should uae\nv IXT-OF a\nWILD   _,\nand perhaps sav\u00ab tli*- baby's Ufe.\nOn tins market for 88 yours.\nMORE ABOUT\nTrain Wreck\n(fonilnur i   From  Page  One)\nbecame hysterical searching\nfor relatives and friends\nwhom they had left in the\nrear coaches while they ate.\nTbt milk train, bound from Hor-\nneii to Hoboken with a load, averred off a aide track onto tbe main\nline, brakes nereamlng but too late\nto be effective.\nMOTORISTS   AID\nMotorists, attracted *by tba crash,\nbegan piling tbe victims, some\necreamlng,  othera  unconscious,  into\nw-^s5rrM-itaV^df.iBi_t, | ^.tVo^uTdrl,lM'\"the nMr'\nft dealera. [    ^   available   ambulances,   pbjs*\nU   R\nNEXT I\nH\u00bb!crr   <l  '\nIARBERSHOP\nSKILLED OPERATORS AT YOUR SERVICE\nSpecial Attention to Commercial Travellers\n\u00bbnd  Tourists. Opp.  Imperial  Hank\nlclani and nurses sped to the scene\nfrom Blngbampton and nearby Penn-\nalyvanta towns, the stretcher and\nambulance corps of the Blnghamp-\nton National Ouard went tnto action.\nHospitals, overtaxed by the audden\nemergency, were unable to furnish\na oomplete list of the dead and Injured Immediately, some bodlea -were\nso severely mangled It may be days\nbefore their identities are eatabllahed.\nDID  NOT  SEE   SIGNAL\nThe engineer of the milk train,\ndared by the crash, said he dtd not\naee the red block warning ot the\npassenger train. He Jammed on his\nbrakes t* soon as he saw a crash\nwas coming, but tt was too late.\nMoat of those killed were riding\ntn the wooden coach, which was\ncrushed to splinters. The steel con-\n. -.miction of the end oar. a compar-\n| lively new coach, waa credited by\n.-.uthorlttea with having kept the\ndeath list from mounting even\nhigher.\nRescue crews encountered difficulty in extricating many of the\nbodies, pinned under heavy Umbera\nand wedged between steel debris.\nOno woman waa hurled more than\n50 feet from the track. She was\ndead  when  found.\n- THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B.C.\u2014WEDNESDAY MOBNINO,\nINSPECTOR GOES\nVERNON ASSIZES\nMORE ABOUT\nSEPTEMBER \u00ab, 1838-\n(Contlnaed From Peie One)\nGuide for Travellers\nNelson, B.C., Hotels\n\"Fmest in\nBreakfast\n25** to UO<*\nLuncheon\n35< to 500\ntht Interior\"\nDinner\n35** and 65<\nPhone 787\nHUME HOTEL\nNWeon. B.C.\nTree Bua service Oeorge Benwell, Prop-\nRotary  and  Oyro  Headquarters\nHUME\u2014C. A. Yule. F. Williams.\nW. R. Lawrenoe, Penticton; Mrs. T.\nT. Haaard. Kimberley; Mr. and Mrs.\nO. 8. Wlndeyer, Longbeach; O. Sibley, R. Steedman, Medicine Hat;\nMajor and Mrs, C H. Htll, Regina;\nIff. and Mrs. Johnston, Lethbridge;\nUt*. Baxendale, a. 8. Otner, Mr.\ntad Mrs. W. J. Sullivan. Trill; Mrs.\nJ. R. Cherry, Vancouver; R. 8. Hawthorn, Palo Alto, Cal.; P. E. Burroughs, Grand Porks; P. O. Otner,\nW. Crooks, Edmonton; R. S. Mc-\nCendrick, Calgary; J. A. Merrlt, Revelstoke; F. A. McOrath. Cranbrook;\nMrs. B. Ball, Urs. A. Gaakell, Urs.\nB. Wlnatanley, Mlohel.\nSchwenjtrs, C. S. Lord, 0* H. Lovitt.\ntwo' at Rio Hondon. These were the\nonly verified deaths. Seven were injured and tn a hoepltal at Mercedes snd 48 were at Harllngen. Of\ntho Injured at Harllngen 10 probably wlll die,\nIndefinite and meagre reporta\nfrom towns in the devastated area\ntold, however, of bodies lying on\nthe highway between the cltlea. A\nnewspaperman, Jack powler, who\nmade a trip from Brownsville to\nMcAUen, eetlmated 300 persons were\ninjured.\n'The ruin is almost impossible of\ndescription,\"  be  aald.\nROTARIANS TO\nTRAVEL ALONE\nTo Run Own Show at Fair;\nCreston Get-Together\"\ni_KjtteKtiti$SSS$j'j.r\nIJISSWWSSWWW**\nfj&he Savoy\n'\"Where the Guett It King\"\nNelson's Newest and Finest Hotel.\nMany Rooms With Private\nBaths or Showers.\nJ. A. KERR, Prop.\n1*14  BAKZB ST. PHONI  13\nVll6ts)3teSSe*&>tatXsjK^.SS&rSS&\u00a3Ul\n(UVOT\u2014J. Freny, Roaaland; Paul\nLaraen,' Sllverton: O. Edatrom, Reno\nmine: Oeorge Hyde, Winnipeg; Mr.\nand Ura. Chili Jensen, Reno mine;\nJamea   A.   Millar,   Nakuap;   J.   A.I\n\u2022;-:x\"\u00abssss*s>sM_\u00abss9\u00a3i\nJonea. Retallack; a. B. Par. Calrary;\nUra. Peter I. Rintina, Bornea Lake:\nPrank Turner, Vanoouver; C. Deporter, Orand Porka.\nNew Grand Hotel\nP.   U   KAPAK,   Prop.\nWeekly and Monthly Ratea\nBot and  cold  Water\n| Slniie SOe sv     Double 11.50 up\nI f 10 a Month and Up\nOccidental Hotel\nttt Ternon St, Phone M7L\na   WASSICK\nftttjr  Kooma  of  Solid  Comtort\nHeadquartera (or Loggera\nand Mlnera\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcome Awaits You\nUS.  B.   MADDEN\nCompletely   Remodelled\nHot   and   Cold   Water\nIn  the HEART of the City\nRotarians will \"paddle their own\ncanoe\" on the concession midway\nof the coming Nelson fair, the club\ninformally decided Tuesday, a proposal from H. M. Whimster that an\noffer to Join forcea wltn the Oyros\nand the Canadian legion, the other\nservloe organisations Interested, be\nmade,   receiving  no   active   support.\nC. W. Tyler reported that, in con-\nJunction with J. P. Fink, of the\nCranbrook club, arrangements for\nthe district Rotary get-together at\nCreaton September IS had been carried forward, and that some representative ranchers of the Creston\nvalley were being invited, with their\nwives.\npresident A. B. Oliker named M.\nE. Harper and Oeorge Ferguson as\nthe club's transportation committee\nfor the event.\nInspector John Macdonald of the\nBrttUh ooiumbt-a police \\*tt by oar\nTueeday morning for Vernon, to at-\ntend the Tale county aaslses opening today. In connection with the\ntrial of Arthur Ivans, the Coaimont\nstrike leader, on a charge of unlawful aaaembly. Ouard I. Bplelmane\naccompanied him to interpret whea\nthe trial of Nick Posnikoff, Orand\nForks Doukhobor merchant, for\nforgery, takee p'.aoe.\nCOURT CHARGE\nFOLLOWS BUMP\nJamee Muir Pleads Guilty to\nCommon Danger\nFears Politics in\nQuebec Treasurer Claims\n\"Confiscation\" Goal of\nAdvocates\nBy   BAV   BROWN\n(Canadian  Press  Staff  Writer).\nQUEBEC, Sept. 6 <CF) .\u2014Advocates\nof a national system of banking\n\"bave confiscation ln mind aa their\nultimate goal,\" the royal commission on banking was told here today by Hon. R. F. Stockwell, Quebec  provlnclsl  treasurer.\nListing the arguments against nationalised banking, previously suggested ln parte of weatern Canada, tha Quebec provincial treasurer\ninsisted a national ayatem would be\nsubject to political influence, persons borrowing from a national\nbank, he feared, would not con-\nalder themselves bound to pay in\nthe same sense aa lt borrowing from\nprivate Individuals. \"When the money owed belongs to a government,\nthe pressure for a moratorium that\nls brought to bear upon politicians\nis sometimes more than they can\nwithstand,\" he wld.\nQUEEN'S HOTEL\nA.   LAPOINTE,   rrop.\nRooms from soe to 11.50 Monthly\n$10 and ap.\nSteam heated and hot and cold\nwater ln every room\n603 Baker St. Phone vo\nIERU.  TOLL UNKNOWN\nThe estimate of injured wu .only\ntentative, he said, since crippled\ncommumca tlona and tha Uttered\nstreets made an \u2022 accurate check\nimmediately impossible. In his survey, however, he said he lound only\na few seriously injured, moet persona having been struck by small\nparticles  of   flying  glaaa  and  wood.\n\"Brownsville. Ban Benito and Harllngen apparently were in the cen'\nter of the hurricane, which struck\nin full force about midnight laat\nnight,\" he aald. \"While everyone\nhad been warned that the atorm\nwould be very severe, many were\nunprepared for what did happen.\n\"It had been blowing hard all\nday yeaterday. but the first high\nwind was felt about 11:30 p.m. suddenly the roar of the storm became\ndeafening, and we all knew the hur-\nrlcane had arrived. The sound of\nfalling signs, tumbling bricks, and\nshattered glass encompassed everything. The wind reached more than\n100 miles an hour.\n100  PER  HOUR\n\"It blew that way until about\n2:30 a.m., when there waa a lull. It\nwas the usual lull that comes when\na hurricane center passes. It was\nca.m until about fi a.m., when tbe\nwind began rising again, and soon\nlt waa tearing away at 100 miles\nan hour.\n\"The high wind continued until\nabout 10:30 o'clock tills morning,\nwhen lt began to recede. There wu\nrain and water everywhere. It fell\nln torrents.\"\nProperty damage wu tremendous.\nThe lou to citrus groves wu eetlmated unofficially at more than\n$3,000,000. Only the most substantial buildings were standing In\nBrownsville ** the gale blew leaser\n\u2022tructurea away like chaff. Municipal water and light planta were put\nout of commlulon, telegraph and\ntelephone lines were battered to\nthe  ground  and  highways torn  up.\nThe 80-mlle square area preeented\na grotesque picture at dusk fell.\nWhere ^4,ter did not cover streets,\nbroken glua from windows Uttered\nthe thoroughfares. Roofs from\nhomea, hotels and bualneu houses\nivere scattered over all the area,\nPower llnea lay idle on the ground,\nconstituting a menace to thou who\nivere able to mske their way about,\nHighways were ripped from one side\nto the other.\nHospitals were filled and the overflow went to churchea and private\nhomes.\nMORE ABOUT\nFRUIT RUMPUS\n(Continued From Page One)\nMedical Examination\nPossible for Veterans\nin the Relief Camps\nA bump administered to eh* ear\n01 Qua Erlckson. en route to the\nprairie from Trail, from behind, on\nthe Ne'eon-Spokane highway a mile\nsouth of town, late Monday afternoon, by a truck operated by Williams Tranafer and driven by Jamu\nC. Muir. resulted in Muir being\ncharged in provincial police court\nTuesday morning with driving to\ntbe oommon  danger.\nHe pleaded guilty, and paid a fine\nof |10 and costs imposed by Stipendiary   Magistrate  John  Cartmel.\nThree motor vehlclu were preeent\nat the acene of the accident, all\nbound for Nelaon. Erlckson's car,\nooming from a side road into the\nmain road, stalled. Then A. L. MacPhee of Kulo drove up, and Erlckson got bis car to pick up enough\nto turn out ao MacPhu Could pau.\nAs thla wu occurring, Muir drove\nup, but hla brakea failed to prevent\nhis bumping Erlckson when he ut\nthem. The top of Erlckson's car wu\nsmuhed.\nN.A.A.A. LIKELY\nTO BREAK EVEN\nIndications Are That Labor\nDay Carried Itself\npere lined up, and If sucoeuful ln\ngetting the remaining 36 per cent,\nexpress the belief they could stabilize the price, prevent price-cutting,\nflooding of prairie markets by competitive offerings and thereby secure orderly marketing and better\nprlcu.\nE. J. Chambers ot the, Aseoclated\nGrowers said the preunt trouble\nwu due to too much individualism\nand at preunt Wealthlu might just\nas well be going on the market at\n$20 a ton Instead of $12 and $14.\nSuggestions that growers might\nnot enter into agreement* that were\noffered for the betterment of the\nInduetry brought a threat of draatlo action from one grower.\nSTRONO  THREATS\n\"If they do not come Into the\nagreement we shall au that\nthey have no apples to ship,\" he\ndeclared. \"1 myself, will be willing to go and smash treu. If\nthey put me In Jail they will at\nleut keep me,* and I am hardly\nable to do that myself under\npresent  conditions.\n\"We nud strong-arm stuff now.\nand not any more kid gloves,\" he\nadded and his remarks were loudly\napplauded.\nHon. J. W. Jonu. British Columbia minister of finance, wu\npreunt at the meeting whloh wu\npresided Over by Thomu Norrla,\nK.O.\nMRS.M.2MSLEY\nMEAT TRAIL\nSocial Editor of the Trail\nDaily Times\nEDMONTON, Bept. 6 (CP)\u2014A.\nA. MacKenzle, chairman of the\nprovincial relief commlulon, states\ntoday, when a report from Calgary\nthat unfit ex-service men were\nbeing unt to work camps wm\ndrawn to his attention, that tn\nrases where objection was taken\nto the men's physical unfitness\ntor camp work, a ucond medical\nexamination would be provided by\nthe military. This arrangement\nhad been made with Brigadier 11.\nMatthews, offloer commanding\nmilitary district No.  13.\nMORE ABOUT\nROTHERMERE\n(Continue*. From Put Om)\nDECLARE WAR\nUPON POVERTY\nTELFORD PLEA\nConscript the Natural Resources Is Aim of the\nCCF.\nIndications Tuesday wera that the\nsplendid Labor day sports program,\nincluding field and track mut, and\nHighland dancing and piping, put\non by the Nelaon Athletic aasoclatlon, had about carried itulf, and\nthat the association would break\neveji on lte big enterprise.\nEagle halt wu packed for the\ndanoe Monday night, and tbls helped a lot toward squaring things.\nThe exact statues wlU not be known\nfor a few days, u not all the blUs\nare in, Prwldent Tony Banks statu.\nThe Labor day celebration oontlnued to a late hour, and the rea-\ntaurante were packed after midnight.\nMost ot the visitors\u2014which included the tennla and golf devotees\nu well u those interested ln the\nsporte m\u00abt\u2014tot away Tueaday.\nJOSEPH BONDELL\nPASSES AT TRAIL\nTRAIL, B. C.        I VANCOUVER, B. C.\nNEW CROWN\nPOINT HOTEL\nEuropean Plan\nHEADQUABTEBS\nCommercial and Tourlit Ttttt\nSample Room,\nCOMMERCIAL   RATES\nWithout   Battl     \u00bbi..v>\nWith Bath __ 12.00 and \u00ab._0.\nTRAIL, B.C.   .\n\"A Palace\nin the Kootenays\"\nDufferin Hotel\nVANCOUVEB\n. B. C.\nBright Rooms\n\u2014 Central\nModerate\nRatea\nA.   Patterion,   late\nof   Coleman.\nCrow,   Neat,\nProprietor\n900   Seymour   St.\nSey.   <43\nVisitors to Nelson\nREAD   THE\nNEUON    DAILY    NEWS\nDurlnf roar nay  in  Nelaon\n\u25a0TRANSPORTATION-Freight & Passenger.\nElk's Taxi, Transfer & Freight Ltd.\nDally Freight Run Ymir. Salmo and Way Points.\nLeaves  Nelson  1  p.iii.ni,... mt.\nBOX   60S     BID   STEVENS,  M|r.      *rnOIIB   \/\/\nGREYHOUND LINES\nANNOUNCE\nNew Through Daily Service\nTO\nNAKUSP, EDGEWOOD, VERNON\nAND OKANAGAN POINTS\nBUS LEAVES DAILY AT 8 A.M.\nTor further particulars aee vour loral flreyhound Agent or\nPhone 800\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLeave NeUon Twice Dally\n6 a.m. and 10:30 a.m. Except Sunday.\nTraU\nI'hone\n135\nTRAIL LIVERY CO.\nM. II. MclVOR, Prop.\nNelson\nPhone\n35\nBeginners Start\nat Trail Schools\nMore at High School; Houston's Resignation Is Not\nAccepted\nTRAIL. B.C., Sept. 8,\u2014Tiro hundred and thirty pupils enrolled at\ntho TraU high school Tuesday mornlnf. the opening day tor tbe term*\nThla figure la greater than laat\nyear's total and lt le expected that\nit will be Increased considerably\nduring the next lew daya. Personnel\nof the high eohool staff wlU be ths\nsums as last year and all teachers\nhava reported for duty. It Is possible than an additional teacher will\nbe required when final organization\nfor the year haa been completed.\nAt the East Trail achool 38 beginner* were enrolled. Tbe total\nnumber Is slightly lower than laat\nyear, but more puplla are expected\nto bring the number up to laat\nyear's  count.\nThere was a net Increase of 47\npupils thst enrolled at the Central\nachool Tuesday and lt waa expected\nthat others would put ln an appearance ln a few days. There were\nthree beginners at the opening of\nthe school Tuesday morning and 81\nwere at the Central from other\nschools. Forty-five from ths senior\ngrades of East Trail and Tadanac achoola enrolled. Ninety-two pupils left the Central echool for the\nhigh echool ln June by recommendation  or   by   passing  examinations.\nI. II. R. Jeffery. former Crow'a\nNest teacher, is here and Joined the\nstaff today. John Houston, formerly\nof Nelson, who also was appointed\nto the etaff, reported alck, but his\nresignation has not yet been accepted.\nSevan beginners and two othsrs\nexpected within a day or so will\ngive the Tadanac school about the\nsame enrollment aa a year ago, it\nwas  reported  today.\nFor the first time ln England\nscientists in the university lsbor-\nItlrn at Oxford have liquified helium, the non-inflammable gas for\nairships.\nBRICK\nB.C. RED BRICK\nPhone 53\nfor delivered prices.\nBURNS\nCoal & Cartage\nNELSON CITY\nCOUNCIL\nA. D. Pochln received permission\nfrom the city council to tie up the\nship. Kuskanook, to the city wharf\nduring the winter, ae long as lt did\nnot interfere with traffic there.\nMrs. J. Robertson requested that\nthe matter of drainage of their\nproperty on Hoover atreet receive\nthe immediate consideration and\naction of the council. Mr. Robertson\nhas already dug the drain, and :s\nrequesting the city to supply the\ntile. The matter will be taken up\nimmediately.\nBefore Thuraday the oouncll will\nmeet to formulate resolutions and\nquestions which they wlll put before the eonferenoe of the Kootenay.\nBoundary   city   councils.\nMrs. J. Radcllffe waited on the\noounril to uk reason for closing\nthe market on Vernon street. It\nwae revealed that Mrs. Radcllffe\nrefused the offer of $60 a month\nfor the uae of her building for the\nmarket, asking $00. Her refusal, the\ncouncil decided, ooncluded the matter and the market wlll therefore\nremain cloeed.\nInsurance policies which the city\ncarried are due in the Immediate\nfuture and were ordered renewed.\nA request from the Nelson Agriculture aasoclatlon uked loan of\nmaterial to erect a platform for use\nof free acts st tht fair. It wu\ngranted.\nM. J. McLeod uked reconsideration on the matter of his relief\nstatus, claiming he ahould be on\nthe llat. As the relief committee hsd\nalready made Its decision ttt* oouncll   endorsed   its  stand\nH. R. Kitto wrote In uklng attention to flood conditions on his\nLatimer street property. The question ts being taken csrs of.\nA request from the Nstlonsl Fruit\ncompany, who sre moving from\ntheir present site to the corner of\nJoaephlne and Front atreets, that\nthe city pay the costs of a necessary gu extension, wu authorised.\nSteve Medwld waited on the council to object tn a hill for sprinkling\nwhich ho received from the city.\nHe atated he used wster only on\nsix lots snd so should not par for\nthe entire acreage. The matter will\nbe left over until the return of\nQ.   W.   Steele,   sanitary   lnapector.\nTn reply to a letter from J. Pat\nterson. It was ststed there wu no\nspeclsl rate for power for thoee on\nrelief.\nA complaint from the Capitol\nMotora regarding collection of rubbish on Vernon ttreet in front of\nthetr property, due to the Saturday\nmarket, wu referred to the city engineer.\nFEDERAL   PENSIONS  BOABD\nIS    RITTINO    AT    VICTORIA\nTRAIL, B. C, Sept. 8.\u2014Joseph Bon-\ndell, who had been a patient at the\nTrall-Tadanac hospital slnoe August\n38, passed away late Tueeday afternoon. Mr. Bondell was 88 years of\nage.\nROTARIANS LAUD\nTHEIR CHAMPION\nNelson Rotary club beaked Tuesday in glory reflected from Its ne*\ngolf champion, w. J. Meagher. Joe\nwas given a tumultuous round of\napplause on being appropriately Introduced by A. B. Oliker at the\nweekly luncheon.\nCP.R. Earnings Are\nDown for Week\nMONTREAL, Sept. 8 (CP)\u2014Earnings of the Canadlsn Pacific RaUway company for the week ended\nAuguet 81, were: 1933. 18.538.000;\n1933, 8.1.730.000; decrease 8304,000,\naccording to oompany figures.\nFATHER PATRICK BEATON\nINJURED IN TRAIN WRECK\nVANCOUVER. Sept. 8 (CP)\nFather Patrick Beaton, brother of\nFather Beaton of Comox. snd a\nrelative of Mrs. A. O. Beaton of\nVancouver, wu badly injured li\nthe tram wreck recently at Tucum\ncarl.   Mew   Mexico.\nTRAIL, B.C., Sept. 5.\u2014Mra. Maude\nEmsley. eoclal editor of the Trail\nDaUy Times, passed away about a\no'clock Tuesday afternoon at the\nTrall-Tadanac hospital after a ahort\nbut severe Illness. Funeral arrangements have not yet been made.\nBeside her work on the Trail\npaper, Mrs. Emsley wu treasurer of\nthe Arthur Chapman chapter I.O.D.S.\nand a past mlstrees of the local\nLadles' Orange Benevolent sssocla-\ntton, and was well known ln the\ndistrict.\nMrs. Emsley was born ln 1870 at\nBurnley, Lancashire, Eng. She came\nto Canada In 1931, travelling west\nto Trail almost at onoe hnd residing\nhere slnoe. She leaves a son, Wilfred, and a daughter, Mrs. B. A.\nSmith, also a sister, Mrs. A. de\nBruyan of Prultvale.\nAnnie M. Jones Is\nDead in Rossland\nAnnl, Matilda, ai-year-old dautli-\nter ot Mr. and Mra. T. O. Jonee,\nMUl street, died In Roealaad Tueaday after about a three-montba*\nUlneu.\nMlaa Jonea waa born ln cranbrook\nand cr,*ie to Heleon wtth ber parent* ln 1,12. tlw leavea her father\nand mother, one alater Florence And\ntwo brothers. \u2022 Richard (Dtck) and\nMorian Jonee.\nForeign Policy Is\nCabinet Discussion\nLONDON, Sept. 8 (AP).\u2014The cabinet ut for mors than four hours\ntoday and it wu understood a heavy\nprogram chiefly conoerned with\nquestions ot foreign policy wu considered.\nDisarmament and other questions\nlikely to be discussed at Oeneva\noccupied much ot the time.\nArrangements -were made for conversations to taka plaoe ln Paris\nSeptember 18 between tbe British\nand French governments on difficulty that exist regarding tbe British draft oonventlon on disarmament.\nJUDGE ON WAY\nTO REVELSTOKE\nturn to those considered necessary In the years Just prior to\nthe war. Heavy taxes are Impoverishing this country and are used\nln many case* for cultural development away ahead of your\ntimes and actual  needs.\n\"Lower the taxes\u2014end I did\nnot aay tariffs,\" he added emphatically, \"and the people will be able\nto find their fut and their own\nway back to normalcy.\"\nNEWSPRINT  PRICES\nTurning to the Canadian industry\nln which he is particularly interested. Lord Rothermere said he could\neee no promise of an early rise ln\nthe  price of newsprint.\"\nLord Rothermere advanced a new\nmonetary scheme which he uld he\nhad discussed with Premier it\nB. Bennett while crossing with\nhim aboard the liner Empress of\nBritain a few days ago. \"If, aald\nLord Rothermere, \"your Canadian\ncurrency could be linked with that\nof Australia and New Zealand at\na discount of SA per cent In\nratio to sterling, and If Canada\ncould have a dollar worth Intrinsically 75 cents, you would be\nable to undersell nearly all the\nprimary producing countries ln\nwheat, lumber, mean producta and\nbase metals.\"\nVALUE FOR TOIL;\nECONOMIC SECURITY\nVancouver C. C. F. Candidate Is Heard by\nTrail Audience\nFruit Dealers Plan\nBust Inspection Act\nSeek Recovery of $500,000 In\nFees; Consumer Paid\nJudge W. A. Nlabet left Tueaday\nmorning for Revelatoke, where he\nwill hold oounty court.\nSIX INJURED WHEN TRUCK GOES OYER\nBANK IN THE BRILLIANT VICINITY\nTRAIL WILL BUY\n$19,000 IN BONDS\nTRAIL. B.C., Sept. 8 \"-Authorisation to purchase glB.OOo Trail 7 per\noent bonds, at a prloe to yield the\ncity 8.8 psr oent, wu given tbe\nflnanoe committee by the city oouncll Tuesday night. \u00a38315. -4V-. per\ncent first mortgage debenture stock\nof Canadian Nortben Paclflo railway will be sold by the city to\nmake the purchase.\nFlAE BYLAWS READ\nAT TRAIL COUNCIL\nVICTORIA, Sept. 6 (CP)\u2014Capt.\nX. C. MacKenale of Calgary presided\nat the opening seulon of the federal\npension tribunal at tbe court houu\nthti morning, with him on the\nbench an commissioner waa Col. Cy\nPeck, v.c, of Sidney.\nTRAIL. B.C., Sept. 8\u2014The new\nprovincial regulation governing the\nconstruction, installation and maintenance of chimneys, fire places,\nsmoke plpu and furnace chambers,\nalso regulations governing approval\nof sale, tnstallstlon and malntenanoe\nof oil burners snd oil burning\nequipment whlcb have been reoelved from the provincial fire mer-\nshau end whloh hsve heen ln force\nsince the first day of August, were\nread st the council tonight.\nLittle Mary Daniel\nBuried at Trail\nTRAIL. B. C, Sept, 8.\u2014Funeral of\nMary Daniel, Infant daughter of Mr.\nand Mn. Joe Daniel, was conducted\nfrom Graham's Funeral home Tuesday afternoon, Rev. Leo. A. Hobson\nofficiating. Interment was tn the\nMountain View cemetery.\nFour From Government Relief\nCamp; Were on Holidsy\nin Nelson\nTRAIL. B. C, sept. 8.\u2014When a\ngovernment truck went over the\nbank on the Nelson-Trail highway\nnear BrUllant, on a return trip\nfrom Nelson Monday night, six persons were Injured, thru more or\nleu seriously. The Injured were\nbrought to the Trall-Tadanac hospl-\ntil for treatment, three of them\nbeing releaud. Four of the Injured\nwere from tbe government relief\noamp at Bhup creek, one wu from\nRock Creek and the sixth person\nfrom Trail.\nDal McLeod. aged 30. of Sheep\nCreek, a youth who loat one leg\naome time ago. wu the most seriously Injured, sustaining a deep cut\nln his back. Louts Wake, drtcer of\nthe truck, also of Bheep Creek received a finger cut and brulees on\nthe left side. He Is still ln the\nhospltsJ.\nJohn Myuk, 18, Sheep Creek, had\nhis left llttle finger pearly aevered\napd auffered from cute on the face\nand forehead. He is the third of the\nparty ln the hospital. Joe Drapaka.\n17. Sheep creek, suffered factlal\nabrasions. Walter Cltlher, 81, timekeeper at Rock creek had abrasions\non the head and faoe. Angus McLeod of Trail, 17, who was getting\na lift from Nelson, received a\nsprained left shoulder.\nIt ls understood that Wake, the\ndriver of the truck, wlll be charged\nwith driving to the common danger.\nThe cauie of the accident, according to a report wu a faulty steering gear. The truck, a total loss.\nhss-been repaired but a few days\nprior to tbe accident.\nVANCOUVER. Sept. 6 (CP)-^Seven-\nteen leading fruit oommlsslon dealers ol Water street are contemplating an interesting action at law\nagainst the provincial government\nto recover something like $800,000\npaid\u2014they olalm wrongfully\u2014for Inspection fees on Imports over a\nlong  period.\nLeading dealers admitted today\nthey have con-suited legal counsel\nand contemplate asking a flat from\nthe government for tbe right to\nstart suit. unofficlaUy, from the\nstandpoint of the government lt is\nsaid to be doubtful it a flat will\nbe luued, beoause. even lt the tax\nwere wrongfully ooljected, the Water\nstreet brokers have presumably\ncharged the amount during a long\nperiod of years, back to the ultimate consumer, and there la no\nway of reimbursing the consumer\nor the farmer, even U tbe broker\ncould make his claim In port.\nBroadly, the claim ls bued upon\nthe ume proposition which uys\nthat the provincial government bu\nno right in law to collect a tax on\nfuel  oil.\nIntercity Lawn\nSeries Saturday\nTrail  WiU Meet  Nelson  in\nBrewery Cup Series\nTRAIL. B. C. Sept. 8.\u2014At Tads-\nnac on September 0, final games In\nthe Nelson-TraU Intercity lawn bowling series for possession of the\nBrewery eup wUl be played, games\nstarting at 4:30 p.m., lt wai announced today by executive of the\nTrall-Tadanac Lawn Bowling club.\nFour teama will repreunt Trail\nahd have been arranged as follows:\nJ. Thompson. B. a. Stlmmel, O.\nWatson and W. O   Weir.\nH. Johnson, W- Campbell, I. Provost  and  H.  Hardman.\nA. Laurie, J. Deans, C. Lauriente,\nand W. Nelson.\nR. Weir, D. Davii, J. Ferguson and\nD. Forrest.\nMany Newcomers\nNelson Schools\nOne of the features of school\nopening at Neleon Tuesday wu the\nlarge number of newcomers who enrolled at the five Nelson schools.\nHume, Oentral. high and Junior\nhigh  and St. Joseph's ace demy,\nAt Central achool, where 488 attended Tuesdsy morning. 37 new\ncomers were reoelved, besides 84 be\nginners who start in the receiving\nclau* The Junior high enrolled 303\npupils, slightly leu tban lut year.\nNew students appeared In every clau.\nForty-one beginners were taken\nln at Hume school ss compared\nwith as lut year.\nThe attendance wu 311. which\nwas about the ume as lut year.\nTwo hundred attended claases st\nhigh school, but there wu no check\nup on the number of new pupils.\nSt. Joseph's opened with 180 In\nattendance.\nPrincipals of the schools expect\nthose numbers to be substantially\nincreased by the end of the week\nwhen the late holidayers return.\nFrancis Buried on\nQueens Bay Ranch\nEdward C. Francis of Sunshine\nBay, an old timer of the district,\ndied Monday and wu burled on his\nranch Tuesday. The urvlce wu of\na simple nature and wu attended\nby a large number of district\nfriends. Rev. Clyde Harvey of Procter outdated.\nTBAIL. B.C. Sept. 8.\u2014In addreu-\nIng a well-attended meeting at the\nOdd Fellowe' hall Tuesday night ln\nsupport of the cooperative Commonwealth Federation. Dr. Lyle Telford, prominent Vancouver physician\nand aurgeon, made the following\natatement:\nIf you wlah to continue tne\npresent collasplng economic system\ntor another five years, vote tor\nthe old party candidates. It, on tbo\nother hand, you desire a change,\nsupport the Cooperative Commonwealth Federation. But, above all.\nbe careful of the type of men you\nchoose and see to lt that they are\nmen ot honesty, character and Integrity, imbued with the Ideal of\nurvlce to mankind and not mere\nplayers of politics.\"\nDr. Telford, in opening, referred\nto the serious problem which faced\nthe most of the people today of\nearning a livelihood. Increasingly\ngreat numbers of people were being ground down under the preunt\neoonomlc system and unemployment.\nWhile not a new thing lt was becoming increasingly serious. He predicted, thst, despite what might be\nuld to the contrary, prosperity\noould not return under the present system. Ths situation was one\nthat must be faced seriously, a new\nplan must be adopted in applying\nof human energy to the natural\nresources so u to produoe a living\nfor tho people.\nDEPLORES  EXPLOITATION\nTne speaker condemned the present system under which the ownership of natural resources and\nmeans of production of wealth and\ntbe control of the banking system\nwere centered in and exploited by\na small group to which some 98\nper oent of mankind had to pay\ntribute ln way of rents, profits, interest and graft. There wae an\nabundance of wealth in the world,\nyet men and women were virtually\nstarving to death. The workers had\nexhausted their pittance of wagea\nas a result of the owning clau closing down the wheels of Industry\nowing to over-production. Unless\nthere wae a radical change ln tlv\nwhole economic system, conditions\nwere bound to become even worse.\nDr. Telford described money as a\nmere acknowledgment of production\nof wealth in the way of tood, manufactured products or something of\nsocial value which people mutually\nrequired. Money, tn itulf, wu not\nof value as a commodity and Its\nIssuance should be a matter for\nthe state end the state alone to\noontrol. There ahould be no limit to\nmoney except that of needs of thc\npeople and their capacity for production. Certainly there wu no\njustification of its exploltstion aa\na medium of exchange by a minority of the people.\nThe C.C.F., the speaker emphasised, did not wsnt chaos, but merely to take over the preunt economic system u a going concern\nand readjust It in an orderly way\nThe Idea wu to take over the\nmeans of production of wealth with\nthe object of making and distributing the thlnga the people required,\nnot wtth the object of making\nproflte, but with the Idea ot providing the people with the necessities of life in the way of food,\nshelter, clothing, etc. After all, this\nwu what the moet people were\nstriving to provide themselves with\ntoday and r*any were being ground\ndown to **\\y death by the worn*\nover their inability to do ao.\nWAR   ON   POVBRTY\n\"Let us declare war upon poverty,\" urged the speaker, \"and conscript the natural resources, the\nmachinery for the production and\ndistribution of wealth and urvtoen\nof the men and women of the\ncountry uy between the ages of\n30  to 86.\"\nA plan for the organization and\nadministration of a new economic\nsystem designed to socialise the\nnatural reaources. tnesns of distribution and trsnsportatlon, banking,\neducation, health, social servlou and\nrecreation was outlined by the\nspesker with the sld of a large\nohart. The object wu to get men\nand women back to work and give\nthem full value for their toll and\nprovide them with economic seeur-\nity. Under this system, he that\nwould not work neither should he\neat nor ehould he that would work\nbe allowed to etsrve. The greatest,\nopportunity possible would be afforded for a self-development cf\nevery cltlaen. A proeperous countrv\nthe speaker described u one that\n\"produced all lte people needed and\ngave Ita people access to all that\nIt produced.\" Human right* would\nbe plaoed before the rights of vested Interests. To ucure heeKh, happiness and security for the peopl*\nwss the Ideal ot the CCF. To\neffect all this, men must be selected\nto govern public affairs who were\npledged to put a new economic\nsystem Into eftect by endenvorlnt;\nto remove some of the old abuses.\nHonest and sober men must bo\nulected to meet the problem.\nThe British Columbia provlnclsl\nelection wm the first opportunity\nthst the C.CF. had to help in\nbringing about a ne.w social order.\nIt wu a people's movement entirelv\nand, eo far, It wu meeting with a\nvastly ' greater response thsn wss\nanticipated. The movement, appeared\ndue to become even better than a\nstrong minority which at flret, hsd\nbeen the moet thst hoped for It\nUNIDENTIFIED   MAN  IS\nLIKELY    A    SL'ICIDE\nNORTH BURNABY. Sept. 8\u2014The\nbody of an unidentified man wm\nfound by boys ln a shack on\nNlchola Chemical company a premises,  Dundas street.\nThe man's throat was cut and a\nrasor was lying on the floor of Uie\nshack.\n *>\n<&>*)\nTBI NEliON DAILT NEWS, NELSON, B-C\u2014WEDNESDAY MOBMNG, SEPTEMBER 1, 1138\nPRUNE CROP IS\nCAUSE WORRY\nGrowers Fear Same Situation as Experienced\nin Okanagan\nWIND IS CAUSE OF\nGREAT APPLE LOSS\nWork on Hospital Pushed; Sirdar Ships FaU\nFruit\nCRESTON, BX!.. Sept. t\u2014Orchard-\nlets ln thla section are Juat a little\nanxious concerning tha prune crop,\ndue to reports coming from Vernon   and  Kelowna   that  with   the\nTYPEWRITING\nLiterary.   Scientific   and\nTechnical Manuscripts.\nEXPERT   SERVICE\u2014MODERATE\nCOST\nPrompt   Delivery   of  ITork   lent\nby Mall.\nANNE BELL\nPublic   Stenographer\nHotel Vancouver, Vancouver, B.O.\ncrop ther*, Just aoout ready to harvest an unlooked for drop of this\nfruit hss aet ln thst wlll average\nat leut 15 per cent of tho crop.\nAbout the middle of August ln the\nOkanagan leaf curl and an unhealthy color In tha foliage was noticed and thla hae bean followed by\na weakening of the sterna permitting\nthe fruit to fall off. The trouble Is\nattributed to the very severe weather encountered about mid-December\nwhen temperature* considerably below aero were encountered with no\nsnow on fabe ground. Exactly the\nsame condition prevailed here, hence\nthe local concern, wblch anxiety la\natrengthened due to the failure of\ntbe strawberry crop from tbe asm*\ncause.\nMr. and Mr*. \u2022 Q. H. Oooderhan.\nof Olelchen, Alta., wer* here at the\nweekend with Mr. and Mr*. R. J.\nForbes, returning from a motor\nvisit at Paclfjc coast polnta.\nMasters Arden and Verdun Cooper\nof Yahk, who have been visiting\nMr. and Mrs. H A. Powell, have\nreturned.\nH. Harrlaon of cranbrook, a relief\nofficial of the liquor oontrol board,\nls het* while the vendor. H. W.\nMcLaren, ls on a two week*' holiday,\nMr. and Mrs. Thoma* Wllaon were\nLabor day weekend visitors wtth the\nlatter'* parents, Mr. and Mr*. H. P.\nWilson, Pernle.\nN. O. Smith returned oa Friday\nfrom a couple of days' visit ln\nNelaon.\nColonel and Mrs. Mallandaine got\naway on Saturday for McBain's Lake,\nwhere they were weekend guest* of\nMr. and Mr*. J. A. Irvine,\nRuth Davis la back from Coeur\nd'AIene. Idaho, for aohool reopening.\nAPPLE  LOSS GREATER\nSummer \"weather oondltlon* ln\nth* dlatrlct were unusual ln that, to\ndate, there ha* been no severe electrical storms,  but  there  has  been\n.A HIGH-GRADE COAL\nTHE OLD RELIABLE\nNewcastle, Drnmheller, (Alta.) la the coal that yields lots of heat\n\u2014consumes  ltaelf\u2014maket  little  waste.    ThU  celebrated   Coal  la\nIhe  easiest  lighting,  the   hest  heating and   the   longest   lasting\ncoal on the market. \t\nWest Transfer Co.\nPhone 33\nBARGAIN FARES\nl$aMileto\nEASTERN\nCANADA\nTicket, on SaU Sept. IS\nto Sept. 26\nFinal lUture L-r-.lt M ia*.\nReturn From       v\nNELSON to\nTORONTO $4750\nOTTAWA $487S\nMONTREAL\"050\nQUEBEC ,537S\nHALIFAX    $6400\nl, fMfJSO'v'l*' T   t **t   J*l*t  1*   1BO\n^ Iroei 0*Mf poiMI\nTlcketa Good In Coecta\nSmall additional Charge let Tourist Sleeper.\nFaU lnjmrmttttn fnm eny A tent\nWSJ\nCANADIAN PACIFIC\nmon win- than uaual, and tha loaa\nof apples, particularly, from thea.\nheavy blows Is the heaviest ln about\nflv. years.\nMia. ft. Heap of Sirdar waa bare\nFriday and Baturday on a vlalt with\nher parenta, Mr. and Wl, w. T.\nSlmlater.\nMr. and Mra. O. Watcher with\nthre. ' nelcea of Edmonton, Alta..\nwera here Saturday, gueata of the\nformers unole. W. H. Watcher.\nMr. and Mra. Matt Moon, arrived home from then* honeymoon\ntrip-.\njamea wllaon of Sirdar waa in\ntown Saturday and reporta fruit\nehlpplng from that point la becoming active, with the orchardlats at\nBoswell and oray Creek bringing In\nthe  fall  applea.\nJ. S. McLaughlin, Mr. Dee and Mr.\nMeggy of Crawford Bay wer. Saturday vlalton.\nPUSH   (JDKPITAI.   WOBK\nFlnlah up work In connection\nwith construction on Creston'a new\npublic hoepltal la betng pushed, and\ntha official opening la planned to\ntake place before the end of the\nmonth. Creston Hospital Women's\nauxiliary an planning to make lt a\nnotable event.\nMr. and Mra. C. B. Twigg and\nMra. Cherrlngton returned on Saturday from Invermere, when tha former and latter had been judging at\ntha fall fair, and nport the exhibition well up to tha atandard of\nother yeara both In the quantity\nand quality of the exhibits, aa well\naa tha attendance.\nFRUIT MOVING\nFROM CRESTON\nTrucks Carry Fruit; Water Gala Is Planned\nCRESTON. B.C., Sept. S\u2014 The\nnumber of locally-owned, as well\naa Alberta trucks engaged In taking\nout fruit and vegetables to prairie\npolnta la the biggest on record, and\nthis deaplte the leaaened buying\npower of agricultural centers ln\nsouthern Alberta. Up to tbe preaent\nthe truck trade seems to be largely\na caah buying proposition, but aa\naoon u the later varieties of applee\nan available swap, of grain, flour,\nand mlllfeeda for applea wlll again\nbe oommon. The outalde truck trade\nla making oonalderable unexpected\nbualneaa at the tourist ptrk.\nLocal reeldents. who wen pressed\nInto service at tbe big foreat fin\nat Tahk about two weeka ago, an\nhome again, aa the fighting crew,\nwhich at one time waa about 186\nmen, haa been nduced to a guard\nof about two doaen, moat of whom\nan from tba Tahk section.\nIf th. weather remalna efficiently warm Creaton wlll have Ita 'Intern water gala at tbe community\nswimming pool ln connection with\nthe Women*. Institute flower ahow\nand aehool fair at exhibition park\non Saturday, September 23, at which\nattractive priaaa will be offend ln\nchlldnn*. event.. With the cool\nevenings and chilly mornings activity at the pool Is confined largely\nto mid-afternoon.\nAooordlng to realty dealers early\nSeptember Mas mon land buyers\nln tne dlttrlet than haa ever bMn\nknown before. The preaent ruah la\nattributed to tba desire of tbe newcomers to get an improved place\nand harveat tba present season's\ncrop. Sales, however, an nil to date,\nthe spread between what the owner\nwanta for his place with tha crop\non the tree., and for delivery aa at\nNovember 1, not quite aui ting the\nprospective   buyer.\nAnnouncing the Opening\nof our\nChristmas Card\nCampaign\nExclusive Designs\nLowest Prices\nPersonal Service\nAGAIN WE WISH TO ANNOUNCE to the people of Nelson and District that our Christmas Cards are now on display;\nwith a greater and more exclusive range than ever.\nOur policy in the past has been to give customers highest\nDuality cards at the lowest possible prices in B.C. We make no\neviation from this statement apd can fully recommend our line\nof Greeting Cards to our customers. Write for samples.\nNo Two Sample* Mike\nSold in TWO DOZEN LOTS ONLY, at prices that run from\n$1.75 to $4*50\nPRINTED WITH YOUR NAME AND ADDRESS\nWait for our salesman\u2014he will call upon you personally\nwithin the next few day*.\nNelson Daily News Job Dept*\nNelson, B. C.\nPHONE 144\nBaker Street\nWHOLE COUNCIL\nTO GO TO TRAIL\nKootenay  Cities Meet\nin Advance of the\nCommission\nMft^or 8. H. Smythe, all available\naldermen, and City Clerk w. >.\nWaason, will compose Nelaon'a delegttlon to the Trail conference of\nKootenay cities of tbe third clua\nThursday, when municipal financing, ftnd particularly the sources\nof revenue available, will be the\nsubjects under discussion.\nAt tha Trail gathering, Mayor\nSmythe aald Tueaday, It la Intended\nto exchange vlewa, and If poaalble\narrive at oommon policies to urge\nbefore the commlaalon on municipal\nfinance w-hen It holds Its Kootenay\nhearing here on September 11.\nJudge Andrew M. Harper of Vancouver, Alex. McD. Pateraon of Ladner, and Herbert Anacomb of Victoria compose the commission, whoee\ngeneral dutlea are \"to review and\ninquire into the financial and administrative conditions of the varloua municipality throughout the\nprorlnce in respect of and tn connection with the dutlea and powera\ngiven to the municipalities by the\nleglalature under the statutes paaaed\nln that behalf aa well aa the finan\ncial   relational..p   between  the  provincial   government   and   the   municipalities.\"\nSUBJECTS   OF   1NQI-IBY\nSpecifically, the commlaalon la\ndirected to  Inquire Into:\n\"(a) The powera and dutlea given\nto municipalities under the provlalons of ths varloua statutes of the\nleglalature;\n\"(b) How, tn whit manner, and\nto what extent thoae statutes have\nbeen and are being administered;\n\"(C) The sources of taxation open\nto municipalities; those which hava\nbeen taken advantage of; thoae\nwhich, lf any, have been exceeded;\nand thoee not entered upon, If any;\n\"(d) Financial and other assist-\nanoe extended to municipalities by\nthe provincial government from\ntime to time;\n\" (e) The relations between the\ngoverning bodies, te-, provincial and\nmunicipal having In view the respective dutlea anU responsibilities\nof each m regard to admlniatratlon\nof affaire In their respective spheres;\n\" (f) Whether In view of the\nlimited taxation powers vested ln\nthe provlnoe lt la possible or Justifiable to extend any greater assistance to municipalities either by\nfurther taxing powers or by grants;\n\"(g) Generally all queatlona and\nsubjects Incidental to or connected\nwith the aubject matter of the\ninquiry.\"\nCHOQUETTE GETS\n11-POUND SALMON\nJ. Choquette and J. McCandllsh\nreturned Saturday nlfht from a\nfishing trip on the main lake with\nan 11-pound salmon and a number\nof trout. Mr. Choquette landed the\naalmon.\n\"Mary E\nARY r AITH\nBy BEATRICE BURTON\n93\nCHAPTER    TWENTY-THREE\nThere waan't a shadow in hla\neye* or a llne of worry In his face.\nHe stood there, calmly breaking\ntheir Uvea to pieces aa If be were\na willful child knocking over a\ntower of building blocks.\n\"Tbe moat unlucky thing that\never happend to ua wae seeing each\nother ln Armbtueter'a store last\nphrlstmes.\" He was turning now to\ngo out of tbe kitchen. \"If that\nhadn't happened everything probably would have turned out all\nright. You'd have married Nesblt,\nand  I'd   have  atuck  to  Janet.\"\n\"Janet.\" Mary Faith bad formed\nthe word with dry itpa that made no\nsound. Janet. The \"loyal Uttle\nkid\" who had left tbe offices of\nMclntrae and Westover when they\nhad let Kim out\u2014who had followed\nhim. to hla own tiny offloe ln the\nTowers Building.\n\"You're leaving me for that gtrl,\nKim. You think you should have\nmarried her Instead of me, don't\nyou?\"\n'1 shouldn't have married anybody,\", he said violently. \"And don't\ntry to hang all the blame on her.\nOur married Ufe has been a flop\nall along and you know tt as well\nas I do.\u2014What do I get out of It,\nI'd like to know? I sit all day ln\na two-by four office, waiting for\na lot of clients wbo never come. I\nalt all evening In this flat, staring\nat the four walla. It's a great life\nfor a man,  Isn't It?\"\nHe swung around and started\ndown the narrow hall that led to\nbhe sleeping rooma at the' back of\nthe   apartment.\nMary Faith followed him. \"Kim.\nyou're Juet discouraged tonight \"\n\"I'm Just through!\" he corrected\nher. \"I'm all through. And I'm\ngetting out now while thc gettlng'a\ngood, flee?\"\nHe pulled bla Gladstone bag\ndown. from the shelf of hla closet\nand opened lt on tbe bed. Then he\nbegan to take his clothea out of\nthe drawers of his dresser\u2014shirts,\nunderwear; socks, handkerchiefs. He\nwent Into tbe bathroom and came\nback with hla tooth brush and hta\nshaving tackle In his hands.\n.\"Kim. you're not going out tonight?   You're  not  going  now?\"\n\"I sure am. I'm going to get lt\nall over and done with before I\nweaken.\u2014I know It's the thing to\ndo and I'm going to do it. Besides,\nit's the twenty-elgth of the month.\nYou and my mother wlll have to\nstep lively lf you're going to be out\nof thla place by the ftrst, It's only\nthree days off.\"\nHe laid a btll on the top of the\ndreaser. \"There's fifty dollars,\" he\nsaid. \"Make lt go as far as you can.\nwlll you? When you need more you\nknow my pbone number downtown\n\u2014and tomorrow wtll you pack up\ntne reat of my clothes and send\nthem over to the Maldons'? They're\ngoing to Iat me sleep on their\ndavenport for a few nights until I\nfind a room. I talked to them about\nlt tonight.\"\nHe waa picking out aome ties\nfrom the downs and downs that\nhung on the Inside of, his closet\ndoor. Mary Faith watched him\nfrom the doorway. She wondered\nIf he remembered tbat he had worn\nthat plain dark green aattn one\non thetr  wedding day?\n\"Kim, don't you remember the\nday we were married?\" ahe asked\nhim suddenly. \"Don't you remember the first aupper we cooked\ndown ln Aunt Ella's kitchen? And\nremember how we woke up on New\nYear's Kve snd listened to tbe\nbells? You can't say that our\nmarried life waa a Top' then, Kiro\nWe were awfully happy, weren't\nwe?'*\nHis shoulders lifted and fell ln a\ncareless shrug. \"That waan't our\nmarried life\u2014that was out honeymoon,\" he said. \"And listen to me,\nMary Faith, why drag up the put?\nWhy be sentimental? Why be sentimental about something that's\nall over? We made a mistake. Let's\nadmit lt and forget It. Let's wipe\nIt off the slate.\"\nAfter that she did not argue\nwith  him.\nShe aMpped out of the house and\naat down on the top step of the\nback porah. The stars were out.\nthick aa water-lilies on the vast\nblack pool of the night aky. Tlie\nair around her waa cool and sweet,\nand somewhere cloae at a hand a\nbird   twittered   aleeplly.\nBhe found herself wondering how\nthe world could be so beautiful and\nao peaceful when life oould be so\nbitterly   cruel.\u2014\n\"I'm going, Mary Faith.\" Kim's\nvoloe came to her through tbe\ndoorway behind her. Turning her\nhead she could see him standing\nln the middle of the kitchen\nwith hla Gladstone bag ln ,hls hand\nand his new light overcoat over\nhis arm. Ue was peering out into\nthe  darkness.\n\"Aren't you coming to say goodbye?\" he asked.\n\"No\u2014I'm not. I'm not leaving\nyou Ktm. You're going away from\nme, and I can't eay good-bye\u2014I'm\nsorry \"\nSbe watched him as he turned\nand walked out of the bright llttle\nroom without another word. Presently she heard the sound of his car\nas It started. When the murmur of\nIts engine hsd died away ln the\ndistance she got up and went beck\nInto   the   kitchen.\nMrs. Farrell was sitting at the\ntable in the dining room. She had\nbeen crying and her eyea were red\nand swollen. She gave Mary Faith\na wild dazed look as she, came Into\nthe room and aat down acroes the\ntable  from  her.\n\"Well, what are we going to do?\"\nshe asked. \"I guesa there Isn't anything to do but what Kimberley told\nus to do, is there?\u2014It kllla me to\nthink of giving up my home and going down to Oancttsville\u2014\" She put\nher face down Into her hands and\nher broad shoulders began to shake\nwith   her   sobbing.\n\"You aren't going to give up your\nhome.\" Mary Faith aald very quietly; but Mrs. Farrell heard her. She\nralaed her face from her handa\ni-od  stared   at  her.\n\"You're going to stay right here.\nand I'm going to atay with you.\"\nMary Faith went on. \"I'll get some\nkind of work to do thts summer\u2014\nand I have seven hundred dollars\nthat we can live on after I have to\nstop working. That ought to tide us\nover \"\nMary Faith drew a deep breath\nand went on: \"You see. It's like\nthis\u2014I'm going to havc my baby In\nJanuary. And I think he ought to\nbo born right herc, where you and\nI can take care of htm, don't you?\"\nThere was a dead alienee In the\nroom for a minute' or two after\nshe stopped talking- Mrs. Farrell'a\neyes grew round and large with her\nastonishment and her mouth fell\nlaxly   open.\n\"A baby?\" she repeated. \"A\nbaby?\" She ahook her head as lf\nshe couldn't believe tt.\n\"Doea Kimberley know this?\" she\nssked sharply.\n\"No. I was going to break the\nnews to him today\u2014and then all\nthis trouble cameup. So I kept atlll,\"\nMary Faith exp.alned simply.\n\"But you shouldn't have kept\nstllll You should have told hlml If\nhe'd known about it he never\nwould have left you the way he\ndid juat now. Never ln this world I\"\nMsry Faith nodded. \"I know It.\n\u2014That'a why I didn't tell him. I\ndidn't want to keep him at all lf\nhe didn't want to stay\u2014and you\nmust promise me that you won't\ntell  him.\"\n(To   be   Continued)\nON THE AIR TONIGHT\nFAOI IHUI\nCANADIAN   RADIO\nCOMMISSION  NETWORK\nCJCJ-CFAC CJCA CHWK rrqcf'KY\n690 730       ltt      MO      110\nCKCK    CFCN    CRCV    CKOV    CHC\n1010        1030        1100        1300    1310\n8:00 \"One Hour With Tou\"\n7:00 Don  ItomanelU's  Orch.\n7:30 News   Bulletin\n7:39 At Bnd ot tha Day\n8:00 Calgary   Program   tWaatarnl\nThe    Srrenaderi\n0:00 Dance  Mualc  from  Banfl\n9:30 Blumber   Music   (Weatern)\nKHQ\nSOO\n8:00\n6:30\n7:00\n7:15\n7:30\n8:00\n8:30\n9:00\n9:30\n9:30\n10:00\n10:18\n11:00\n11:00\n11:30\nNBC-KGO    NETWORK\nKOW   KFI   KOO   KOMO  KJR\n820      640      790       920      970\nCorn   Cob   Pipe   Club,   barn-\nmusic\nShip of Joy. captain Dobbale\nAmos 'n' Andy, blackface oom.\nCheater   H.   PoweU\nBddle  Peabody  and   Inat.  ena.\nMllla'   Musical   Playboya\nMark   Flsher'a   Orch.\nOne Man's Family, aerial dra.\nBenny Merrofl'a Orch.   (KQO)\nWalta Time (KPO to network)\nHews  Plashes\nAnaon  Week'a  Orch.\nOrch.\nOrgan Concert   (KOO)\nMelody Mixers, Beban'a Orch.\nIIM k CRCV\nVANCOUVER\n8:30 Newa    Bulletlna\n8:48 Cardo   Smalley,   violin\n10:30 CRCV  Concert  Orch.\n112.7\n800\n010 k KFRC\n8AN  FRANCISCO\n8:00 Headllnea\n10:00 Newa  Editor\n10:15 Hollywood   News\n13:00 Midnight   Requests\n491.5 in\n1000  w\nCBS-DON   LEE   NETWORKS\nKM      KFRC      KOIN      KSL     KOL\n.170        610 940        1130        1270\n6:00 Ted  Waring planlat and War*\nlng'a  Pennsylvanlana\n6:30 The   Boewell   slaters\n6:48 Human  Side   of   Newa\n7:00 Symphony   Orch,\n7:30 Tom  Oerun'a Orch.\n7:45 Del   Campo,   tenor  and  Orch.\n(Don Lee)\n8*00 Ted  Lewis'  Orch.\n8:30 Burns   and   Allen,   Lombardo'e\nOrch.\n9:00 Dick Jergena' Orch. (Don Lee)\n9:30 Catherine  the   Great   (Don\nLee)\n10:00 Joe Robinson's  Orch.\n10:30 Isle of Oolden  Dreams   (Don\nLee)\n11:00 McElroy'a   Oregonlana   (Don\nLee)\n1210 k CJOR\nVANCOUVER\n6:00 Balladler\n6:15 Musical   Prograr\/\n6:30 Theatre  Critic\n7:00 Avalon   Trio\n7:30 Rocky   Mountalnaera\n8:00 Yodelling   Hobo\n0:16 Newa   Broadcast\n2(7.8 m\n500   w\n680   k KPO\nSAN FRANCISCO\n6:00 Organ   Concert\n6:18 Concert   Miniature\n6:46 Black   and   Blue\n7:00 Bdna Flaher. piano\n7:16 Tartan of the Apea\n7:30 Charlea   W.   Hamp\n7:45 To   be   announced\n8:00 Calif,  on   Parade\n8:30 Crime   Cluea\n9:00 Kay   Kyser's   Oreh.\n9:30 Walts   Time\n10:00 Marshall's   Maverick.*.\n10:30 The   Seven   Seaa\n11:00 Orch.\n11:30 Organ   concert\n441   i\nSO.OOit\nRev. Mr. Silverwood\nSpeaks at So. Slocan\nSOUTH SLOCAN, B. C\u201e Sept. 5.\u2014\nRev. W. J. Sllvevfood officiated\nat aervlee ln St. Matthewe ohurch\non Sunday evening. He preached an\neloquent sermon from ttoe text taken\nfrom 1 St. Peter II chap. V.17\n\"Honor All Men.\" Mlaa Thompaon of\nthe church of the Redeemer Nelson,\nwaa tha organlft. Mr. Silverwood\nwas accompanied on hla visit\nby Mrs. Silverwood, Mlaa T. Barlee,\nof Orand Porks, Mlss Thompson snd\nMlas Mllburn of  Nelaon.\n920 k KOMO\nSEATTLE\n6:30 Arkanaaa  Travelers\n6:46 Dollara  and  Centa\n7:16 Tesa   Wilson\n9:30 Opportunity   Conteet\n0:48 Viennese   Vagabonds\n10:15 New Torker Dance\n325.9 m\niooo   w\n970   k KJR\nSEATTLE\n6:00 Rhapsody   ln   Rhythm\n6:16 Tarzan,   E.   T,\n7:00 Newa Edition\n7:15 Mines  Reporter\n7:30 South   Americana,   1.   T.\n7:46 Lloyd Spencer\n8:30 Bunker HIU  Billies\n9:00 Melodlee and  Memories\n10:00 Viennese   Vagabonds\n309.1\n5000\n1050 k KNX 285.5  m\nHOLLYWOOD 25,000  w\n6:00 Newe  Service\n6:16 Cowboy   Revue\n6:80 Lawrence  King,   tenor\n6:46 Orowlh*   UP,   E.   T.\n7:00 Prank Watenabe\n7:15 Black and Blue, K. T.\n7:30 \"The Hawk.\" E.  T.\n7:46 Count of Monte  crtato\n8:00 Pun-Variety\n9:00 Newa  Service\n9:15 Poetry,   Prose,   Melody    \u25a0\n9:45 Cafe De Paree\n10:15 Orch.\nTINDALE BOYS GO\nTO COAST SCHOOL\nSOUTH SLOCAN, B. C*. Sept. 8.\u2014\nMr. and Mrs. D. J. Davis's children\nDouglas and Barbara bave returned\nfrom Vancouver where they have\nbeen apendlng tbe aummer visiting their grandparents, Mr. and\nMrs. s. Lees. Mlss Hilda Lees accompanied them on their return\nand wlll spend a three week's vacation the guest of Mr. and Mrs.\nDavis.\nH.   Plaatrler   or   Trail   haa   been\nspending  a  few   daya   at   the   pool\nfishing.\nW. Weir of Trail was a weekend  visitor  at the  pool.\nMr. and Mrs. H. Wood were\nNelson   visitors   on   Saturday.\nOrant and Jack Tlndale sons\nof Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Tlndale\nare leaving for Vanoouver where\nthey will attend St. Oeorge'a boarding school.\nMr. and Mrs. A. H. Hopkins of\nTrail have been visitors at the\npool where they enjoyed tbe excellent  sport.\nMaurloe Walker bas returned from\na summer vacation in Victoria to\nresume his position as principal of\nbhe Bonnlngton achool.\nWatch them EAT I\nChildren love the snap,\ncrackle and pop of Kellogg's Rice Krispies and\nthey never tire of the delirious flavor.\nSo nourishing and eaajr\nto digest. Fine for the evening meal as well as breakfait. Oven-fresh. Made by\nKellogg in London, OnL\nListen!\u2014\ngdhmft\nRICE\nKRISPIES\n^'Btttedttjfltag (Eompantt.lSiff\nINCO-tPMATgR   Vt MAY I.7Q.\nWomen's Fall Ensemble Day\nat \"The Bay\" Thursday Real Special Values\nWomen's Fall COATS\n19\n.95\nThese are coats that really have\nthe appearance of much desired\nalenderlzing effect and lavishly\ntrimmed vlth furs of voney.\nVlcure Pox, Amerloan opossum\nand aeal. Colors, black, brown,\nnavy  and  green. Slses  14  to 46.\nWomen's\nSmart Fall\nMillinery\n\u25a0^\"iT* Fashion right h\u00bbli\nV to complete that new\noil outfit, that ara\nworn perked over one eye. sport typea. with\nshallow crowns and others with deep crown*, and\nrolled brims. Colors, wine, brown, navy, green\nWnck. Quality, sollel angoras, hir felts, hand\nDbckfd felts, estlm, stitched laffetaa.\n iHOOwecwATtp ft mov tero,\nGROCETERIA      Service Grocery\nPerrin's Fine\nQuality Gloves\nIleal washable kid ln new shades\nfor rail. Tour choice of amart\nplain tailored .illpons or tha\nnewest gauntlet    motifs.\nHire.     t%     10   7   \u25a0   \u2022_\nVr.-\nPair .\n$1-95\nIcing Sugar\u2014 lie\n3 lto,  for   \u00ab\u2022\u2022_\u00bb\nHoiiaehoM   Ammonia\u2014 __X*_.t_-\nBol'le    -  \u2022**\nPrlncaee Aoap Flakea\u2014 tCaf\nWooden  Boi  Sodas ___\/\u25a0\ntor     ***\ncarbolic   Soap\u2014 -\u00bb,\u25a0\ncake     V\ncrosse a Blackwell ft\/*.\nTomato  Jule*\u2014Tin   3-\nI lb. rort Oarry Ent*\nCoffee     3*>v\nPurex   Toilet  Tissue\u2014 mmm.\n1   lor  *\u00bb5C\nTea Blsc\u2014 Whole wheat *C*\u00a3\nflour for hlsculta  **J\nWhite  Beans\u2014 *_\u2022_\u00a3<*\u2022>\n8 lbs. for   Ov\nl-lb,   pkt  taV\nTld Bits-Quick 2JJ<S\nmacaroni; 3 pkts for .... *\"\u2022#'\nHBC Special  'Durotex\nHOSE\nSILK FROCKS\nfor Women\nand Misses\n$7-95\nAttractive dresses at an attractive price, for those wanting to\natart the Pall season right. There\nsre many becoming styles to\nchoose from. Most of them feature the new sleek details, pleated or flared skirts, long sleeves.\nBrown, navy, cricket, cricket\nRreen, cruice blue, wine ami\nblack. Bines  14 to 44.\nLadies' Fashion\nSHOES\nFeaturing the season's newest In\nilea, pumps or gore pumps with\nfleilble soles, cuban or splk.\nheels. Suitable for dress or atreet\nwear, made over combination\nfitting lsst In ___. __,\nwidth A to tl. tt**B-B ACT\nnines 4 to fl \u00ab*\u2022? t\\\\__<twZa.\nTriced    \t\nHANDBAGS\nTo oomplete the Rnaemble ;oi\ncan safely make a selection from\na splendid aE-%o;tment of tl,.\nsmartest styles pouch and envelope. Smart\nmetal motif*\nzipper pocke'.i\nAll newshadr**-\n. Each \t\n$2-95\nThis beautiful au* hose Is one\nof the finest valuea ln Canada,\nlovely dull flalah, full cradle\nfoot, spike heels and rlrot top.\n12 new fall ahadea for your selection. A hose\nthat has a smart aV-Vf-^ aft\nappearance. Sites M W_M**\nSV. to 10V4\nPair \t\nCrepe-de-Chine\nRayon Lingerie\nnose -^\nsmart BJ%|\nDainty garments that you cannot resist in pretty itoe or contrasting applique trims. Man-,\nstyles in panties\nor bloomers. -Soft\nPastel shades. ^^^ f tf*\nSmall. medlumaafl^V\nand large.\nLow priced at.\n95\n MOB room\nittye 2M0utt lath; Stan\n\"Interior of British Columbia's Family Ntwspaptr*\nALL TEU HKWB  WHILE  tl IS  N-TWH\nmwiabsd    avtry   morning   nospt   Sun\u00abr    ut mm__~~~*    \u00ab\u25a0*\u2022\nJSmJBH-NO   COUPANV.   L-UlTEU.   316    Baker    Street.    Nelaon.\nB.oTi-embar of CAHAPIAW PBES8 Lea-ad Wlra Btrvlca\nADVBtTlS_NO  JUTES  ON   APPLIOATICW\ncar rata emu \u00ab-\u00bb\u00bb Da ettn ai tba office of any AdwrtMnj Agency\n\u2022SLJSuSbJ Sa CANADIAN DAILY NEWSPAPERS ASSOCIATION.\nSo. of wbieh tha Nelaon Dally News la a member,     ...\nSUBSCRIPTION  RATES\nBy null tcountry). pat montb ,- -\ntttt yaar\nBt mall ioW>. ft T\u2014\t\nOutalda Canada, per montb ....\ngw yaar ,   \u25a0   .\nDelivered lolty by carrier), par waek\nHr yaar \t\n_\u2022    -SU\n.   6.00\n_ U.OO\n_     .15\n7J0\n. IJ.00\npayable In advance.\nAudit Bureau ot Circulation.\nWEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1988.\nACTIONS OF GERMANY CONTINUE TO\nCONTRADICT HITLER'S WORDS\nThB hope thst Germany would choose to set wisely hi world affairs has been crumbling steadily. In\nits place has come a conviction, which grows steadily,\nthat the mood of Hitler and Germany is revealed by\nwhat Hitler says for home consumption, rather than\nhis messages to the world.\nIt is very difficult to explain the present course\nof European events unless it is first accepted that\nGermany believes she will, within a very few years,\nabsorb Austria, the Polish Corridor, the Saar Basin\nand several other mid-European areas. Followers of\nHitler have committed many provocative acts. They\nhave stirred the Nazi issue in Austria and created a\nsituation which is extremely tense. The appeals they\nhave made to the people of the Saar, which is still under the jurisdiction of the League of Nations, run\ncontrary to international amity.\nOn top of this, there is evidence which seems\nfairly conclusive to show that Germany is re-arming,\nmore or less secretly and in defiance of existing treaties. At the same time it is clear that Nazis are working earnestly to promote a spirit sympathetic to war.\nSo long as the actions of Germany offer a contradiction to the words of Hitler other nations will be\njustified in taking precautionary steps which will insure their ability to control any efforts she may launch\nwith the purpose of re-making the map of Europe. It\nis in this light that plans to expand the Austrian army\nand to strengthen the Little Entente, with French collaboration, must be viewed. These are moves which\nmight tend toward war, but presentt trends in Germany seem to make them necessary.\nECCENTRICITIES OF ENGLISHMEN\nOn some parts of this continent, Englishmen are\nconsidered somewhat eccentric. In many parts of the\nEuropean continent, Englishmen aro believed to be\npeculiar. In Paris, when an Englishman behaves in\nsuch a way as to excite comment, that comment merely\nis \"another mad Englishman.\" But then Englishmen\ndo many things just for the fun of the thing. Although they play the game of cricket very earnestly\nand with deepest gravity, they confess that they play\nthat game just for the fun of the thing. They do\nnot play cricket to lose, of course, but if they cannot\nwin, they -lose with good grace and good-natured philosophy. They may get some fun out of the thing\neven in losing.\nHubert Scott-Paine after arriving in the United\n\u25a0 States with his boat, which raced for tlie Harmsworth\ntrophy, readily and candidly admitted that he had\nlittle chance of winning. How could he win with a\ncrift whicli had but a fraction of the motive power\nof the defender? The feat was mathematically and\nmechanically impossible. Consequently there can be\nno other conclusion than that the challenge was issued\nand the race run just for the fun of the thing. The\noccasion furnished another instance of the eccentricity\nof Englishmen. But then there was what is called\n\"a sporting chance\" of winning, and Mr. Scott-Paine\nwas also assured of a good time in the United States,\na country which is very pleasant to visit in the Autumn of the year, and when the sun has lost some of\nthe fervency of its mid-summer heat.\nThe year is on the turn.   Perfect hands are starting to appear at the bridge table.\n.THI NELSON BAILY N\u00bbWS, NELSON, B.C.\u2014WEDNESDAT MOBNWG, SEPTEMBM \u00ab. -9-S-\n\"Between You\nand Me\"\nBy  J.B.C.\t\nNow tbat Labor day la over tbe\nnext  eicltamant   will   ba  tbe   nnt\nhockey   game  or   the   aeaaon.  Time\nrolls Ita ceaseless course.\n...\nLocal atore wlndowa ahow that\nblack and white are tha big things\nlor the fall ln tha matter of oolor.\nSeveral eyea are sporting the new\nfall modes following the Labor day\ncelebration.   There   are   alao   some\nblacka and bluee.\n,   .   .\nHere'a Bev. Jamea Youngaon's\nI s teet yam.\nOver ln the land of hla birth\nthere wae a chap out fiahlng. He\nwu fiahlng ln prohibited waters.\nAlong came the game keeper and\nnoticing the man fUhlng Illegally\nhe approached him gruffly.\n\"Are you fiahlng thereT\" he aaked.\n\"Oh huh,\" replied the fiaherman\nwith a sickly grin.\n\"Don't you know you can't catch\nflah ln thla lake?\" aaked the game\nkeeper even more gruffly.\nThe anawer waa a nod and another sickly grin which led the gsme\nkeeper to believe the man waa a\nlittle off. I believe the word Mr.\nYouniaon used waa \"daft.\" Mr.\nGamekeeper thought he would have\neome fun ao aaked what kind of\nbait tbe man waa ualng.\n\"I'm using a potato.\" replied fhe\nfiaherman.\nThe gamekeeper waa aure he wae\noff hla head and aaked to aee the\nbait. Sure enough when he hauled\nIn hla line the fisherman had a big\npotato on tbe hook.\n\"Ob, well, carry on fiahlng.\" said\nthe gamekeeper.\nThat e\\>iing the gamekeeper was\nwith a lot ot other chape ln a public\nhouae. The fiaherman had continued\nhla fiahlng but he had replaced the\npotato with aome fine fllea. He\nfilled hla baaket.\n\"WeU,\" aald the gamekeeper, noticing hla acquaintance, \"did you\nhave any luck?\"\n\"Plenty.\" replied the man exhibiting his baaket of flab.\n\"Tou didn't catch thoae with a\npotato,\"  stormed  the  game  warden.\n\"No, air,\" replied the  fisherman.\n\"but 1 caught you  with a potato.\"\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nA lot of Nelaonltes were sore\nTueeday when tbelr Chinamen filled\nto deliver their laundry. \"But,\" eald\nJohn. \"Yeaterday Labor day. Too\nmany bag pipes. No workee.\"\nSome  concerns   are  alow   to   take\nadvantage   of   Innovations,   but   the\nmodern beauty ahop  always profits\nby the latest wrinkle.\n\u2022 \u00ab   .   \u2022\nA woman walked Into Dud Black-\nWood's Insurance office and aald ehe\nwanted aome fire lnaurance. She\nwaa uked what ahe wanted to Insure.\n\"Mah huaband,\" ahe replied.\n'Then you don't want fire lnaurance.\" aald \"Dud.\" \"What you\nwant  la  life   lnaurance.\"\n\"No  I  dont,'  explained   tbe   woman. \"I wanta fire  lnaurance. Mah\nhusband   hu   been   tired   fo'   times\nln  the lut  two  weeka.\"\na   a*   . 0\nA aoldler, recall* Col. Pred Lister\nwent to hla colonel and aaked for\nleave to go home and help hla wife\nwith her spring cleaning.\n\"I don't like to refuse you,\" said\nthe colonel, \"but I've Juat received\na letter from your wife aaying thst\nyou are of no uae around the\nnouae.\"\nThe soldier saluted and turned to\ngo. At the door ne atopped, \"turned\nnnd remarked:\n\"Colonel, there are two persona\nIn thla regiment who handle the\ntruth loosely, and I'm one of them.\nI'm not married.\"\ne   \u2022   \u2022\nSo sorry, colonel!\na. \u2022   a\nAn absent-minded professor married one of hia puplla. The first\nmorning of the honeymoon, he woke\nup and. looking acroaa to her bed,\nexclaimed, \"What, Mlaa Martini you\nhere?\"\nWHAT DO YOU THINK?\nHE FAVORS FERRY\nLANDING AS IT IS\nTo  th*   Bditor:\nSir: I was very glad to we the\nletter In the papers re tbe foolishness of changing from Fraser'R\nLanding to Balfour. The writer\ncovers the subject well and he hu\na host of support?Is. There are\nlot* of sections of the so-called\nhighway to be brought up to\nstandard if we wish the tourist\nto come thla way. It might surprise some to know of the quantity\nwho have gone through the States\nbecause of the condition of oertaln\nparts of the road. We are turning money away by not getting\nthese portions up to standard.\n\u2014C.B.\nBuzz-Saw in the\nHead in Morning\nDeer   sir   editor:\nPlease make room space for some\nwords from  me  here.\nHow you get to say that you\nthink to send the men of much\ngood business from the mob. you\nsoon send to the building of parliament, postage prepaid. X have\nnot  as   'ertaln.\nMister, please you not use had\ncloraform, then you hare not the\nbuzE-saw  ln head next A.  M.\nABC.\nWooden Nutmegs,\nCottonwood Oats for\nHobby-Horses His Idea\nThe longest suspension span ln\nthe world, now being erected over\nthe Oolden Oate. near San Francisco, California, is 700 feet longer\nthan the Oeorge Washington bridge.\nThe towers are 740 feet above mean\nhigh water, with a clearance of\n200   feet.\nTo  the  Editor:\nBlr\u2014I was very favorably impressed with your timely and Inspiring editorial on the advisability\nof wracking our brains (If. any)\nseeking new possibilities for local\nindustry. Unfortunately, the potential production of standard commodities already far exceeds tho\ndemand, although the market for\nspecialties and novelties Is a rich\nvirgin field that as yet Is unexplored and its marvellous possibilities and opportunities are be-\nbeyond   comprehension.\nWhile 1 am far too honest to\nsuggest itiaklng wooden nutmegs\nand too original to advocate printing   wooden   money,   I   do   submit\nAuction and\nContract Bridge\nBy tht World's Leading Authority.\nMILTON C WORK\nTHB   MEXICANS    HAVE    A    WORD\nFOB IT\nTbo Mexicans have a word \"mi-\nnana\", meaning loworrow. which Is\nvery popular ln that country when\nany task la proposed. It ehould\nbe used by Bridge players when\nconsidering any finesse possible to\npostpone. The following hand was\nnot played In Mexico but in a\nrubber gama on a Southern Pacific\ntrain running near the Mexican\nborder.    Bast-West  were  vulnerable.\nthat there aro possibilities ln manufacturing cottonwood oate to teed\nhobby-horses or wooden birdseed\nfor the birds In cuckoo clocks. We\nmight make cedar clubs to bat\nmoth-balls or make wooden gongs\nfor alarm clocks owned by guys\nwho don't have to get up to go\nto work.\nWe might find a ready market\nfor wooden buoya to flout woods-\nworth's non-interesting bearing\nbonds. We might make toy floats\nto keep Tolmie's political head\nabove water. Bowser might need\na few aound planks for his platform, and we might cut down a\nfew plum treea to make some extra\nspecial veneer to paste on Pattullo's\nnew cabinet to make It look like\nthe real thing. We might make\na lot of wooden chestnuts for the\nuse ot stump speakers ln the ooming election and might aell a lot\not ladders to the aspirants for\npolitical honors so they oan climb\nout of their preeent obscurity. We\nmight even aell \u00bb lot of lumber\nto make a penitent bench large\nenough to accommodate all the\nback-sliders and new converts who\nwill be rushing to the Orand Old\nLiberal party ln order that they\nmay be saved while there la yet\ntime.\nWe might make wood aloohol for\nthe canned heat artists and revive\nSilver King Mike's Industry of making wooden grates for cook-stoves.\nWe might make wooden duck-eggs\nand hatch out decoy ducks. We\ncould turn out wooden men to act\nas puppets for the provincial executive of the C. C. T. ln the next\nlegislature and start making wooden\nshoes for the use of capitalists\nwhen the dictatorship of the proletariat starts.\nThen again we might get the old\nSwedish buck-saw honed up and\nstart getting a big pile of firewood stacked up behind the shack\nfor the long, hard, tough winter\nthst is rapidly and Inevitably approaching. Home industry, like\ncharity, really begins at home and\nwe might profitably emulate the\nwisdom of the wife of the eouthern hlllybllly who suddenly became\nrich through the sale ot the mineral\nrights to his rocky farm. The man\nbought his sons a car, and a piano\nfor hts daughter. The old lady\nsaid that If It wasn't taking too\nmuch ehe would Uke a new axe.\nThe firewood stunt ls however the\nonly sensible thing I can think of\nat the moment.\n\u2014DRIFTWOOD.\nWHAT THE PRESS IS SAYING\nVOCATIONAL   TRAINING\nVocational education, searching for\nnew worlds to conquer, has Invaded\nJungles of darkest Africa. We learn\nthat specialised courses of study\nare betng planned for the tribal\nchiefs of Basutoland, and probably\nfor other provinces in that llttle\neducated oontlnent, which now enters upon a new and dubious\nphase of Its strange history.\nThe director of technical education\nln Basutoland, a visitor on our\nshores, observe* that tha chiefs\n\"must be Instructed In civic duty.\nThey muat have a smattering ot\nbook-keeping and economics, a little\nof agriculture and knowledge of\ntheir  own   tribal   laws.\"\nWithout presuming to find fault\nwith so splendid a prospect ln educational experiment, the outline appears to us potentially hanardous.\nWhat lc \"a smattering of eoonomlea?\" It seems to us that the\nmain trouble with most of the\nnations ln more civilised portions\nof the globe ls that their leadera\nhava acquired a smattering of economics, at onoe the moat potent and\nthe most deceptive spienoe known\nto man. These chieftains ln Basutoland have been going their own\nway for centuries, learning the rules\nTwenty Years Ago\n(From The Dally News of September\n6,  1913)\nThe laying of steel on the Kettle\nValley has reached a point 20 miles\nbeyond   Carml.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nThousands ot tons of ore were\ntorn down by a blest of 34 tons of\ndynamite   eet   off   in   the   Mother\nTHAT BODY OF YOURS\nBy  JAMES  \\T   BARlUN,  M.D.\nPSORIASIS   CLRED'BV    FAT\nFREE  DIET\nOne of the skin ailments that\ndiscourages both patient and physician is psoriasis\u2014white scaly patches like mortar on the skin which,\nwhen the scales sre peeled off\nleave  a  bleeding surfaoe.\nJust what causes this ailment\nhas never been discovered. By\nusing arsenic internally (Fowler's\nsolution) and ammonlated mercury\non the scaly patches, most cases\nclear up in time, only to break out\nagain   perhaps  in   a   few   montha.\nThat \"nervousness' may be t\nfactor Is admitted by many skin\nspec! al Is ts, as also ls the possl -\nblllty of some gland disturbance\nin the body.\nThus the manner in which the\nbody processes handle some foods\nmay be a fault, as leaving out certain \"foods from the diet has\ncleared up a number of cases.\nSome research men have found\nthat lt ts during the cold weather\nthst this skin ailment gets worse,\nand point out that psoriasis dots\nnot exist In  the  tropica.\nDrs. O. Oruts and M. Burger.\nBerlin, relate some of their studies\nwhich tend to show that the underlying cauae of psoriasis Is probably\na disturbance in the way In which\nthe body uses the fat food a--cream,\nbutter, fat meat.\nPsoriasis may be due to the\nblood veasels of the skin allowing too much fst to be poured out\non t he surface of t he skin, or\nbecause the form in which the\nfat reaches the skin Is so altered\nthat  irritation  arises.\nin msny cases as lt ls the fata\nthat cause the trouble, cutting\ndown on the fats should be good\ntreatment.\nTo prove this Drs. Outz and Burger stopped all other forms of\ntreatment in eleven cases, and aim-\nply omitted the fate ln the diet.\nWhat   was   the   result?\nIn four cases that had resisted\nall other tttttt of treatment, leaving out the fats In the diet resulted in a complete cure; In five\ncases considerable Improvements\nwere observed, and two cases stilt\nbeing treated, likewise show Improvement.\nLode   mine   nesr   Oreenwood   last\nweek.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nThe new powder factory hss commenced operation on a dally output\nof three  tons.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nW. O. Norrle, superintendent of\nthe Lucky Jim mine, came ln yesterday for s vlalt ln the city.\nTHE RHYMING\nOPTIMIST\nBt ALINE MICHAMJg\nSouth pruwd and WMt. with\nmore than Jour hllh-card trlcka, a\nNo Trump oount of IB, and at leut\none stopper In every ault, bid two\nNo Trumpa In prelerenee to one\nClub. The Ctub bid might produce a No Trump by Eaat, and\nWeat pretera to become the Declarer\nIt the hand la played at No\nTrumpa tn order to have the orl-\nIlnal lead come up to hla tenace.\nEaat'a aound ralae to three No\nTrumpa would have concluded the\nbidding II North, alttlng over the\nDeclarer, had not aeen lit to double.\nHe expected to take one trick In\neach ault' and hoped that South\nwould produce aome valuable card\nor carda which would aet the contract. He did not atop to consider that the double would be\nept to furnish the Declarer with\ninformation which might tnable\nhim to fulfil a oontract that without  the  double would  have  failed.\nNorth led the Deuoe ol Spades\nand South'a Jack wie won by\nWeat'a Ace. The Declarer, marking\nSouth with the now alngleton\nQueen ol Spadee. realised that a\nhold-up would aid the adversaries\nln eatabllahlng tha ault. Baat was\nput In with the Ace ot Hearta and.\nu waa to be expected, the Club\nUnease loet to North's King. Horth\nled a aecond amall Spade which\nwaa won by South'a Queen. South\nthen led \u00bb Diamond and. with the\nlocation of the adverse high cards\nunmarked. Declarer, who oould\ncount only eight aure tricks, might\nhave been tempted to make a\ngame-loalng flnease. But the double\nproved * llfe-eaver. The finesse\nwaa refused In order to take advantage of the time factor. Trlcka\n_-0, lour Cluba were cashed; on\n'the last the Horth hand waa reduced to four carda. he waa left\nwith the Kings of Spadee and Diamonds and the Queen-Ten of\nHearts. Declarer oould mark every\ncard, ao he Put Horth ln with a\nSpade (a Diamond would have been\nJuat aa ellectlve). North cashed the\nKing of Diamonda and then had to\nlead . Heart up to Declarer's King-\nJack. Consequently, Declarer lost\ntwo Spades, one Diamond, and\none Club, fulfilling hla three No\nTrumpa  contract.\n25 Years Ago\n(From The Dally News of September\n6, l\u00bbn\u00ab.)\nA. S. Ooodeve. tbe Conservative\ncandidate for Kootenay in the next\nfederal elections, came ln laat night\non the Crow boat.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nThomaa A. Edison paaeed through\nNelson yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nT.   Mlchell,   grsnd   tyler   of   the\nMasonic grand lodge ln B. C. came\nln laat night from the coast and tomorrow lays the corner atone of\nthe new public echool.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nH. W. Power, manager of the\nKaalo Kootenalan and Mlaa Llla M.\nOraney of Bpokane were married at\nYakima, Wash., September 1.\nTen Years Ago\n(From The Dally Nsws or September\nfi, 1923.)\nAn order of the Odd Fellow's\nlodge was formed in Kimberley last\nnight. D. H. Proudfoot, master of\nthe locsl lodge, took charge of the\nceremony.\n\u2022 e   \u2022\nMlss Charlotte Douglas has left\nfor Qray creek where she will resume her duties ss tescher.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nThe Installation of the new X-ray\nIn Kootenay Lake Oenersl hospital.\nbas  been   completed.\n\u00bb   \u2022   \u2022\nTemperatures yesterdsy were 44\nsnd 79 degrees.\nor thetr trsde by hard experience.\u2014\nThe Atlanta Journal.\nTASCHEREAU IS SENIOR PREMIER\nHon. L. A. Taschereau, premier\nof Quebec, has held of rice con*\ntinuoualy longer thsn any other\npremier ln Canada. Mr. Taschereau\nls starting his fourteenth year as\npremier or Quebec. He took offlos\non   July   8,   1030.\nNext ln line la Hon. John Bracken\npremier of Manitoba, who has been\nIn office since August e, 1923, Mr.\nTaschereau Is a Liberal and Mr.\nBracken   ls   a   Liberal-Progressive.\nFollowing sre the premiers In th*\norder In which they have taken offloe. The list Includes Prime Un-\ntster Bennett.\n1. Hon. L. A. Tasohereau, Liberal,\nQuebec,  July  8,   1930.\n3. Hon. John Bracken. Liberal,\nProgressive, Manitoba, August I,\n1933.\n3. Hon. J. E. Brownlee, United\nFarmers of Alberta, November 38,\n1035.\n4. Hon. s. F. Tolmie, Conservative,\nBrttUh   Columbia,  August  31,   1938.\n5. Hon. J. T. M. Anderson, Conservative. Saskatchewan, September\n9,   19*9.\n<J. Rt. Hon. B. B. Bennett, Conservative, Dominion of Canada, August 7. 1930.\n7. Hon. O. 8* Harrington. Conservative, Nova Scotia, August II,\n1930.\n8. Hon. O- S. Henry. Conservative,\nOntario,   December   15.   1980.\n9. Hon. J. D. Stewart, Conservative.  Prince Edward Island, August\n39     1931\n10. Hon. L. P. D. Tilley. Conservative, New Brunswick, June 1, 19S3.\n\u2014Border Cltiss Star.\nTold in Rime\nWAIT   ON   THE   LORD\nPsalm 37\u201414.\nO the  waiting aoul  ls strong\nThough the waiting time be long,\nHe can sing his grateful song\nIn   the  gloom.\nFot he  knows the  darkest  night\nHas lis end in day spring bright,\nAnd the wrongs shall be put right\u2014\nAnd by  Whom\u2014\nBy   the   Ood   whose  searching  eyes\nSee   beneath   the   dense   disguise\nWhere  the  motive  naked   lies\nAt life's oore.\nFilling stoutest hearts with  fears\nHe  wlll  dry  the  mourner's  tears\nAnd   the  locust-eaten   years\nWill restore.\nCan  the  waiting  soul  forget\nChrist who paid his deepest debt,\nAnd In tender pity met\nMore demands,\nPledge  that  every  minor  claim\nLaid   against   Hts  servant's   name\nShall be cancelled by the same.\nPierced   Hands.\nWhen this sovereign Lord shall rise\nWith  the  answer to his cries\nAnd abundance of supplies\nFor his need.\nThen the slowness ot Hts feet\nShall outstrip with esse complete\nAll the  fleetest of the fleet\nHuman speed.\nOh, tla glorious to wait'\nFor a Ood ao rich  and great\nAnd   His   righteousness   relate\nIn a song.\nYouth  shall   loss   lte  vaulting   vim\nManhood   wilt   with   weary   limb.\nBut tha heart thst waits  for Him\nShall   be  strong.\nIsaiah   40.-30-81       KATE   McNEILL.\n\"STRAIGHT\nIS THE\nWAY4'\nTO\nOOOD\nCREDIT .\nInspect Our Stock\nof Quality and\nDistinctive\nBath Room Fixtures\nat Low Cost\nKOOTENAY\nPlumbing -&\nHeating Co., Ltd.\nJ. A. SMITH i\n313 Baker St.\nT.  S.  JEMSON\nPhone 686\nA house, I onoe believed, was nothing more\nThan so much brick snd mortar,\nframe  and stone,\nTo welcome all alike who sought\nita door,\nA thing which any man might\nbuild  and  own.\nI thought a houss could be transferred   away.\nThough orie had dwelt within It\nfifty   years.\nForgetting   Ita  slleglanoe  In   a  day,\nIts old. sweet bondages of smiles\nand  tears.\nBut now I know a house ean\nhave   a   soul\nWhose love csn lighten, hat can\nshade a Ufe;\nFour walls and roof and sills sre\nnot the  whole.\nIt ls too does to human peace and\nstrife.\nFresh Joy there ls and comfort without\nIn an old house, aa kindly ss a\nfriend.\nA portable telephone hss been in-\nTented to enable a motorist, carrying the Instrument ln hts car, plug\nln at sockets attached st frequent\nintervals to telephone lines snd gat\na connection without leaving his\ncar.\nAUNT HET\n\"They dont say much, but\nI never aaw a dead man's relatives thst didn't get mad at\nthe wsy his widow spent the\nlife   lnsuranoe.\"\nTHE GURU'S\u2014\nDESTINATION UNKNOWN\nBSlr\u2014 IO LET MILLIE OtOOiE HER\n^\"' WEWMN-- GtFT f ROM AMON__ A\nMILLION DOLLARS -WORTH Of (ssMfi-\nHcm COMPLETELY HAPPY BIM IS\nTONM.HT- BUT HOVsl HORRIFIED\nVIOUIJO HE BE IF HE KNEW\nTHM* ARtH-FIEND ZANDER\nr\u00bb AT THK -WHEEL THIJ\nVERY MOMBNT-\n\u25a0WKJB.**\nquick:.        \/\nopen a window-\nCrBT A<N*y mott\\\nZAHDER eUXXMN6-mE\nCAR WITH NOXIOUS\n&AS-\t\nFURNACE\nREPAIRS\nWith the approaching Fall now is the time to have\nyour furnace or heater overhauled and repaired\nor a new furnace installed by a man who knows.\nLet us figure on your repairs or tinsmith work.\nNELSON HARDWARE CO.\nWholesale and Retail Quality Hardware\nNelson B. C.\nEnvelopes\nFor any kind of business\nprinted in our own plant in Nelson at prices that compare with\nany'Eastern or Western houses.\nLet us quote you on your\nnext order...We guarantee material of stock and workmanship.\nPhone 144\nOur Salesman will give you\nPrices\nNelson Daily News\nJob Department\nBaker Street   :-:   Nelson, B. C.\n <\u00abo.\n(Sturdy School\nBoots for Boys\nLeckie Red Stitch;   ffQ CA\nI to 5i\/8 \u00abP0.UV\nLeckie Red Stitch;   *Q OC\nII to 13 *pj.L 0\nBoys' Special; ffO CC\n1 to 5 yL.VO\nR. Andrew St Co-\nLeader* in Footfashion\n*tl***\u00ab****+*****+\u00bbt**\u00ab+*\nPensions Review\nWilMTake Place\nNew Board to Act; Not Part\nof Ottawa Economy\nProgram\nThe new method of administering\nthe Pensions act as amended at the\nlast session of parliament as well\nas a statement by the minister,\nconcerning the government's policy\nIn ths matter of pensions, ls detailed by W. K. Esling. West Kootenay member. In a letter reoelved\nby the Nelaon branch of the Canadian legion. In bis letter. Mr.\nFaIIng says:\n\"Tbe new method of administering tbe Penalona act for Oreat Wsr\nveterans will be operative and tbe\nadministrative personel announced\nshortly. It will be remembered thst\nthe Audette commission, compoaed\nof representatives from various ex-\neervloe men's seaoclatlons auggeated\nseveral amendments dealing chiefly\nwith the tribunal. These amendments\nwere referred to a special committee\nof the bouse of commons, composed entirely of returned men, who\nwould hare a more sympathetic outlook on penalona matters,\nRETAIN APPEAL COl RT\n\"This committee hsd to deal wltb\nsuggestions from some associations\ntbat soldiers' tribunal be abolished.\nand from others tbst it be retained. Finally there came the happy\nsuggestion that the penalon board\nand the tribunal be merged In one\nadministrative organization. The new\nbody Is called the Canadian Pension\ncommlaalon. Tbls body will consist\nof not less thsn eight or more than\ntwelve members. It will be divided\ninto quorums of two members each\nwhich will travel from place to\nplace and receive applicants ln\nperson, reviewing their cases as the\nold tribunal did. The board of pensions commissioners ss at present\nexisting and also the tribunal are\ndone away with as separate bodies,\nbut the present soldiers' advocates\nand the pensions appeal court wlll\nbe retained.\n' \"This commission will make a\n\u25a0general review of all penalona cases\nJn the files of the Dominion government, although this will not be\nconsidered a psrt of tbe government's economy program.\n\"An amendment was passed which\ncarries out the accord entered Into\nbetween the government and the\nassociated veterana. Tbls ls that\nafter May 1. 1933, no new wlvea\nand new children will be added to\nthe list of dependent pensioners.\nTbe associated veterans were one\nln advocating thst through fraud.\nmisrepresentation or concealment of\nmaterial facts. The veterans' repre\nsentatlves told the committee that\nthey would assist the government\nIn every  possible  wsy  to  bring  to\nKASLO CITY IS\n40 YEARS OLD\nIncorporation to Be Celebrated at Institute\nFair\nKaslo is this month celebrating\nthe 40th anniversary of Ita Incorporation as a municipality.\nTbere has been dispute ss to the\nactual date of incorporation, which\nhas been settled by the Inspector of\nmunicipalities ss September 14, 1883.\nTo mark the event the Ksslo\nWomen's institute ls making speclsl\nefforts toward an unusually successful fall fair, which will take place\nFriday and Saturday, September\n15 and 16,\nIt is hoped to make arrangements\nfor a steamer excursion between\nKelson snd Kaslo at a Iow fare.\nMrs. Raper Returns\nto Johnson's Landing\nAfter Visit in Harrop\nJOHNSONS LANDING, B. C, Sept.\n6\u2014Rev. O. Kinney of Procter end\ndaughter Betty, were at the landing on Tuesday. In spite of the\nthreatening weather, there was a\ngood attendance at the school house\nIn the evening, when Mr. Kinney\ngave a most interesting address\non \"Treasure*\" and showed some\nof his excellent pictures.\nMrs. A. C. Raper arrived home\non Saturday's boat from Harrop,\nafter spending a week with her\ndaughter.\nMr. and Mrs. T. Roddls of Kaslo\nwere week-end visitors st Blrchdale.\nguests of Mr. and M>. Noel\nBsechus.\nMr. and Mia. Clrchle Greenlaw\nof Lardo Spent Sunday ln the\nsettlement.\nJack Raper has returned home\nafter vlaltlng Nelson, Harrop and\nKaslo.\nStanley Lake, w McNicol snd sons\nJim and Jack were Ksslo visitors on\nWednesday.\nlight   men   who   had   secured   pensions under these circumstances,\nNO  INJUSTICE\n\"In this connection the minister\npoints out that lt should be remembered the pension legislation\nhas been ln force for 17 years. It\nwlll be appreciated that during this\nperiod errora may have tccurred, particularly with regard to earlier\nawards and during the heavy work\nwhile demobilization was ln progress, as a result of which some\npersons sre ln receipt of more pension than they are properly entitled\nto, or are receiving additional pension for dependent* to Vhlch they\nare not properly entitled. It Is\nmerely to eliminate any Question\nof this kind that the review ls\nbeing carried out. The position of\nall legitimate pensioners will be\nmucn more satisfactory when lt Is\nestablished that the entire pension list Is sound. In this and ln\nany future reviews which msy be\nInstituted from time to time, It ls\ntbe government's Intention that no\nInjustice shall be perpetuated.\n\"An Important clause ln the new\nact Is that whleh provides that\npensions may not be cancelled sum\nmarlly wltbout providing the pensioner with the opportunity of t\nhearing.\n\" 'I desire to make It absolutely\nclear' \", said Dr. McClsren's statement, \"the review of pensions now\nunder way has no connection what\never with the question of economy\nor reduction ln public expenditure,\nThe government has no Intention\nof saving money at the expense of\nlegitimate pensions claims, but on\nthe contrary, ls anxious tbat ex-\nservice msn and their dependents,\nproperly entitled to pension, shall\nbe awarded pension to the full extent of the spirit and Intent of\nthe Pensions act. It ls not proposed\nthat there shalt be any deviation\nfrom this policy.' \"\nTHE NELSON DAILT NEWS, NELSON, B.C.\u2014WEDNESDAT MORNINO, SEPTEMBER \u00ab, 1688\nmoi nn\nNO FOREST FIRES\nON ACTIVE LIST\nNot since Prldiy, when .the weekly\nreports came to hand, has the forest\nbranch headquarters here heard anything about fires. Effects of the\nlightning visitation of early last\nweek have all disappeared, so fsr ss\nknown, and no active fires in the\nKootenay territory are known of\nhere.\nFishermen Land\nSalmon at Procter\nPROCTER, R. c. sept, ft-\u2014Honoring Mrs. W. Bowden of New Westminster and Mlss Franoea McHardy\nof Nelaon. Mrs. W. R. Jarvis entertained at the tea hour Saturday\nwhen her invited gueste were, Mrs.\nA. S. Ritchie, Mrs. C. P. McHardy\nand Mlss Eva McHardy of Nelson,\nMrs. W. a. Ward, Mrs. E. Brasch,\nMrs. 8. Ashby of Harrop, Mrs. J.\nBlchan, Mrs. G. Robinson, Mrs. J.\nRobinson of Canal Flats. Mlss\nAgnew of Lethbridge. Mrs. J. P.\nBourne, Mrs. A. Gallup, Mrs, A.\nMajor, Mrs. M. Major, Mrs. G.\nKinney,  and  Mrs.  J.  Hurst.\nMrs. W. Bowden, who has been\nthe guest of her brother and sister-\nin-law, Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Ritchie,\nleft Monday for her homo' In New\nWestminster.\nMrs. E. MacLennan and son Walter have returned from spending\nthe summer holidays at Mrs. Mao\nLennan's  home  in   Vancouver.\nMrs. G. Robinson has as her\nguesta her son and daughteMnlaw,\nMr. and Mrs. J. Robinson of Canal\nFlats.\nNick Dosenberger of Sunshine\nBay was a Neleon visitor on Saturday.\nMr. and Mrs. D. Melntoah have\narrived from Vancouver to take\nup residence. Mr. Mcintosh Li principal   of   Procter   Superior  echool.\nMrs. J. Black and Mlss Evelyn\nRolston of Vancouver are spending\na week here the guests of Mrs.\nE. MacLennan.\nMr. and Mrs. E. Braach spent the\nweekend In Nelson guests of Mr.\nand Mrs. J. R-yan, Vancouver street.\nMrs. O. Johnson was a Nelson\nshopper   on   Saturday.\nMlss Annie MacKinnon, who ls\ntn training st the Vancouver General hospital, arrived Monday to\nspend a month's vacation at her\nhome  here.\nH. Johnson was a Nelson visitor\ncn   Seturday.\nMrs. T. Hlnton and sons Geoffrey\nand Robert left for their home ln\nTrail Saturday alter spending the\ncummer   camping   in   Procter.\nMrs. J. Donaldcon of Nelson Is\nvisiting here, the guests of her son\nsnd daughter-ln-law, Mr. and Mrs.\nBert Donaldson.\nMrs. Barry Hoskln of Nelson was\na  Procter   visitor  on   Bunday.\nMr. and Mrs. R. Vallance and\neons have returned to their homes\nin Trail after spending a week at\nthe Outlet hotel.\nMr. and Mrs. Andy Craft and\ndaughter spent the weekend at\ntheir  summer  csmp  here.\nWilliam Muir of Nelson spent\nthe weekend fishing. He caught\n10  trout.\nRev. Clyde Harvey has returned\nfrom a month's extended visit\nthrough   the  Windermere  district.\nMrs. A. Gallup has taken up residence at the Outlet hotel.\nMrs. A. E. Clibborn and Mlss Ruth\nOoodwln of Victoria were visitors\nat the  Outlet hotel.\nC. G. LoveJoy and Andy Craft\nor Nelson caught a 11 vi and HVi\npound salmon and 15 trout over the\nweekend.\nB. Lawson and W. Hlpperson of\nNelson were up fishing over the\nweekend.\nMr. and Mrs. R. H. tnll of Nelson   caught  a   10  pound  salmon.\nMrs. T. Williams was a Nelson\nvisitor   on    Saturday.\nGeorge MacLean spent Sunday at\nhla home here from  cranbrook.\nP. Alchonse of Procter caught a\n10'i   pound   salmon   reoently.\nJ. Blchan and nephew Harold\nMerrlfield apent tbe weekend at\ntheir boms here from  Nelson.\nMra, W. R. Baxendale and Mlss\nAudrey Baxendale of Trail, who\nhave spent tbe summer at their\ncottage  here,  have returned.\nC. W. Talllss of Balfour hss left\nfor the Okanagan where he nas\nEccepted  a position.\nBeauty that Allures\nu tht beauty of a toft, smooth skin\n\u2014safeguarded bi tbit secret lotion-\nHit blend of olivt and palm oils,\nONE thing all men admire in any woman.\nYou may be blonde ot brunette, uli or\npetite\u2014tt attract, you must have a lovely\ncomplexion I Women -who know the allure\nof t faultless akin bathe with Palmolive.\nThey know la secret blend of cosmetic oils\nof olive and palm makes Palmolive matchless\nin its power to foster skin beauty.\nMorning and night, give yourself this home\nbeauty treatment: Massage a creamy lather\nof Palmolive Soap and warm water gently\ninto the pores of the face, throat apd\nshoulders. Rinse thoroughly. Dry carefully.\nIt will keep your skin fresh, young and lovely.\nBuy 3 cakes of Palmolive today. Use them\nregularly, faithfully, as directed above. See\nwhat happens! You can have t softer,\nlovelier, younger skin.\nKeep tbat Schoolgirl Complexion\n\u25a0 \\\n~~~~M\nWE'RE D. FOOLS\nSAYS MINISTER\nRev. T.J.S. Ferguson Is\nPeace Advocate to\nRotarians\n\"We are damned fools before, we\nstart,'* Rev. T. J. 8. Ferguson told\nths Rotary club of Nelson Tuesdsy,\nwith reference to meeting the nation's problems in the spirit of the\nsaying that \"man ls a fighting animal.\"\n\"We are paying $53,000,000 a year\non our debt, and are fools,\" he said\nIn another connection.\nSpeaking under the auspices of\nthe club's fellowship committee,\nheaded by J. T. Andrews, Mr. Ferguson took \"Fellowship\" as his theme,\nsnd soon arrived at the aspects of\nfellowship ln tbe mass, and of\nwhen concerted to evil objects as\nwell as to good ones.\n'The inexcusable lies that are\ntaught ln the schools, such as the\nglory of Waterloo\u2014we must get rid\nof them,\" he declared. \"We only\nsend out a child to create Hell\u2014\nunless he haa fn Inward vision.\n\"Man Is made for fellowship; war\nla separation,\" be asserted, as he\nurged realisation of Christ's dream\nof peace and good wtU and Justice.\n\"It all depends on how you use\nyour national fellowship. \"If It ls\nto be, 'Canada and the Empire over\naU,'\u2014'Germany over all?'\" he whispered, leaving his question unfinished. \"Today we are Just on the\nthreshold of snother war,\" he commented.\nAdvising agslnst discouragement\nbecause the world disarmament conference and the world economic conference bad not accomplished their\nobjects, the speaker held that lt was\na great step forward that such conferences hsd ever been convened.\nWAR   FEAR   PERSISTS\n\"We are drenched with feer from\nthe late war,\" he contended, \"we\nare hanging on to armaments and\nto tariffs.\"\nWhile asserting thst tbe expression, \"Man ls a fighting animal,\"\nwas a denial of God, Mr. Ferguson\nsaid fighting was all right if directed to spreading peace and good\nwill and fellowship, the supreme\nfellowship  of the Holy Spirit.\nCranbrook School\nStaff Reduced\nORANBROOK, B. C, Bept. 5-\nSchools opened on Monday. The\noentral public school wlll carry on\nwith two fewer teachera thsn lsst\nyear, making somewhat heavy claases for the stsff. The resignation of\nMlss Mabel Parker and the granting of leave of absence to Jack\nWallaoe made the reductions. Mlss\nVivian Kummer of the central\nstaff is exchanging for the year\nwith Mlas Hill of Vanoouver, otherwise the staff remains the same,\nwith Mlss Woodland as principal,\nassisted by Mlss Muriel Baxter, Mlss\nElsie Wilby. Mlss Marlon Flett, Mlas\nGertrude Patmore, Miss Jean Glen\ndenning, Mlas Mabel Stender, Mlss\nJean Flett, Miss Kathleen Murphy.\nMlss Bdlth HIU, Mlss Simone Bour-\ngeolse, Mlss Bessie Robertson, Mlss\nEllen B. paterson and Mlss Laura\nHenderson.\nMlss Ethel Bpeers will continue\nsa teacher of Kootensy Orchards\nschool. The Bouth wsrd school wlll\nremain closed.\nThe teaching staff of the high\nschool ls unchanged with George\nC. Barclay principal and W. W.\nBride, A. L. McPhee, E. Davles, C\nHillary. Mlu May Maltman and\nMlss Lylltan Jackson.\nAt the business college Mrs. F. M\nPurvis continues as principal.\nManual training will continue\nwltb  J.  S.  Manson  aa  Instructor\nMiss Dot Spence will be a teacher\nIn Moyle achool for the coming\nyear.\nMlss Norma Surtees. who wss a\nteacher In the Sinclair Springs\nschool last year will teach in tho\nRevelstoke district for the comlns\nyear.\nMrs. T. S- Weir and baby of\nInvermere have been visiting with\nMrs. Weir's parents. Mr. and Mrs.\nM. A. Beale.\nMlss Marlon Mllea left to tske up\nduttea as achool nurse In Kelowna.\nMrs- E. B. Horns and family have\nreturned   from   Boswall.\nMr. and Mrs. F. M. MacPherson\nand sons, Marshall and Alan, via-\nMen Invermere where Mr. MacPherson opened the annual fall fair.\nMr. and Mrs. A. J. Gibbs have\nreturned from Winnipeg and other\nprairie cities.\nMrs. H. A. McKowan and Mlss\nDorothy McKowan returned Sunday\nfrom  Calgary.\nP. Ruasel. C. West, R. Geddes and\nF. Brown spent the weekend visiting\nat Mr. R.awl's home ln Golden,\nslso taking In Banff, Lake Louise\nsnd other points in the national\nparks.\nAn 18-foot canoe, made of aluminum alloy, has been built to carry\na load of 700 pounds. It weighs\nonly SB pounds snd has amazing\napeed.\nSociety\nThis column ta conducted by\nMrs. H. Madden. AU news of a\nsocial nature, including receptions, privste entertainments,\npersonal Items, msrrlages, etc.,\nwill  sppear In  this  column.\nSt. Saviour's pro-cathedral, adorned with late summer flowers and\ngreenery msde a picturesque setting\nyesterdsy when Frances Louise\nRutherford, daughter of Mr. and\nMrs. W. M. Cunllffe of Nelson, was\nunited in marrlsge to Henry Duncan\nMcLaren, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. F.\nMcLaren of Ancaster, Ont. Ven.\nArchdeacon F- H* Oraham officiated\nat the service. The attractive bride,\nwho was given in marriage by her\nfather, waa exquisitely gowned in\nan empire creation of Ivory aatln.\nthe full skirt fslling Into a long\ntrain. Her veil of Brussels lace and\ntulle was held In place by a wreath\nof orange blossoms snd she carried\na beautiful bouquet of pale pink\nbutterfly roses and lilies of the\nvalley, her enly ornament being a\nstring of pearls, tbe gift of the\ne^toni, Mra. C. H. Hamilton as\nmatron of honor, wore a bud pink\nlace gown and large hat of the same\nshade with trimming of pa!e tour-\nquolae, mauve and pink ribbon.. The\nbridesmaid, Mlss lie no Kerr, was\ngowned ln a pastel blue chiffon frock\nwith hat to match. Both the matron\nof honor and the bridesmaid carried\nbouquets of sweet peas, blue lace\nflowers, sunshine asters and plu*\nmum. The bride's mother, Mrs. W.\nM. cunllffe wore a lop its blue\nrough crepe gown with sUver thread\ntrimming and hat to match and a\ncorssge bouquet of Templar roses.\nJames L. Cunllffe, brother of the\nbride, was groomsman and the\nushers C. H. Hamilton and T. R.\nWilson. FoUowlng the ceremony s\nreception was held at the home of\nthe bride's parenta. Ths invited\nguests included Mr. and Mrs, J. D.\nKerr, Mr. and Mrs. c II Hamilton,\nMr. snd Mrs. Bruce R. Warden, Mr,\nsnd Mrs. John 01 troy, Ven. Archdeacon and Mrs. F. H. Graham, Mr.\nand Mrs. John Cartmel, Mr. and\nMrs. L. V. Rogers, Mr. and Mrs. C.\nW. Appleyard, Mr. and Mrs. James\nO'Shea, Mrs. Gordon Hallett, Mr.\nand Mrs. Hugh W. Robertson, Mr.\nand Mrs. Leslie Craufurd. Miss Ruth\nCraufurd, Mr. and Mrs. R. w. Hlnton, Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Wragge, F.\nC. Whltehouse, Mr. and Mrs. A. L.\nMcCulloch, John Fraser, Mr* snd\nMrs. P. a. Morey. Mrs. Jack Olbson.\nMrs. W. Waldle, Mlas Jean Waldle.\nMlss Gale Taylor, C. Taylor, Mtss\nAlleen Mansfield, Mlss Jean Hunter,\nMr. snd Mrs. Reginald DUl, Miss\nHelen Murphy. Mr. and Mrs. W. M.\nWalker, Mrs. Peters, Mr. and Mrs,\nE. E. L. Dewdney. Mlss Eve Dewdney, Capt. and Mrs. B. T. O'Grady,\nMr. and Mrs. F- Paddary, Mrs. E. G.\nSmythe, Mr. and Mrs. Cuthbert,\nDr. snd Mrs. L. E- Borden, Mr and\nMrs. Harry Horton, Dr. and Mrs.\nH. H. MacKenzle, Mrs. Jsmes Johnstone, Mtss Alia Johnstone, Thomss\nJohnstone, Mlss Rene Kerr, Miss\nBetty Warden. Alan Gllroy Mlas\nDorothea Graham, Mr. and Mrs. W.\nE. Keyt, Mr. apd Mrs. Frank J*\nMeagher, Mr. snd Mrs. Paul Lincoln,\nMrs. H. C. L. Lindsay, Mr. and Mrs.\nC. D. Blackwood, Mr. and Mrs. T. H\nBourque, Mlss Mildred Irvine,, Mr.\nand Mrs. James Brydon. Mr. snd\nMrs. George Johnstone, Mr. and\nMrs. Hsrold Lakes. Mrs. Alex. Lelth,\nMr. and Mrs, James McGregor, Mrs,\nRedmond Qualn of Ottawa, Mlss\nCameron, John Cameron, Mr. and\nMrs. W* R. Orubbe. Miss Margot\nBlaylock. Mlss Molly Green, Mr, and\nMrs. WUllsm Hunter of Trail, T. R.\nWilson, Alfred Noxon and Felix\nSchroeder. Mr. and Mrs. McLaren\nleft by motor for a wedding trip to\nBanff, the bride wearing a green\ntweed tttt, green felt rlat to match\nand sablo furs.\nOf exceptional Interest in university circles Is the announcement by\nMr. and Mrs. A. R. swanson of\nKimberley, of the marriage of their\nelder daughter, Marlon Louise to\nAlbert S. Whiteley. son of Mrs.\nWhiteley and the late Captain\nWhiteley of Victoria. The marriage\ntook place,ln Ottawa, September 2.\nMr. and Mrs. Whiteley will be at\nhome after October 1 at 305 Bes-\nserer street, Ottawa. Mrs. Whiteley\ntaught ln the Nelson high school\nduring the past two terms.\nClifford   McKlnnon   has   left   on\na  business trip  for  Vancouver.\nsee\nJ. Sutcliffe and son of Rlondel\nwere   recent   visitors   in   Nelson.\nAlvln Sanderson of New Denver\nhas been spending a few days In\ntown.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss E. McKlnnon haa left to\nresume her duties ss principal of\nthe Shoreacres school.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMlss Peggy Austin of Ksslo, who\nhas been visiting tn Nelson for the\npsst week at the home on Victoria\nstreet of Mra. F. McKinnon. has\nreturned  home.\n\u2022 *   *\nMr. and Mrs. W. Brown and family, who bave been spending the\nholldsys st their summer home st,\nCrescent Bay, have returned to\ntown.\nsee\nA quiet wedding wta solemnised\nst 2:30 Tuesday afternoon at the\nhome of Mr. and Mrs. A. Campbell,\nTerrace apartments, when Ida E.\nSmith of Balfour became the bride\nCLrMeagher'sSd\n607 Baker St, Phone 200\nSTORE NEWS\nStore Remains Open Today Until 6 O'Clock\nAll Day Surprises\nWomen's\nKid Gloves\nFrench  kid gloves in a range of\nstlyes. All sizes but not in every\nstyle. Values to $3.75 thc pair.\nSPECIAL, THE PAIR .... fl.95\nPrinted Broadcloth\nWabasso broadcloth in a range of\npatterns. All fast colors.\n4 YARDS FOR   $1.00\nPullon Sweaters\nMade of botany wool yarns in assorted styles and colors. Sizes 34\nto 40. Regular vaules to $3.00 each.\nSALE PRICE, EACH  ....  $1.95\nWool Santoi\n36-inch   dress   goods   suitable   for\nchildren's dresses. All colors.\nTHE YARD  75<*\nWomen's Skirts\nTwo dozen women's skirte in par*\nwool materials. All wanted colon.\nSizes to 20. Regular values to $4.50\neach.\nSALE PRICE, EACH  ....  $2.98\nSupersilk\nHosiery\nA regular $1.65\nhose in service\nweight. All shades.\nSizes 8Vj to 10.\nTHE PAIR $1.25\nFlannelette\n36-inch flannelette of good quality.\nStriped or plain.\n4 YARDS -FOR   $1.00\nLinen\nCloths\n.'2-inch cloths in linen. Colored borders. All first class quality.\nEACH       69*\nPOOLE BANKRUPT SALE\nSTILL GOING STRONG\nPLENTY OF BARGAINS LEFT\nSave on School Supplies, in Fact Everything.9\nM. L. GREENE\nPure Food Market\nSPECIALS FOR WEDNESDAY\nOpen AH Day\nSpecial Rolled Boneless\nHams. Whole or Half-\ngood value; OA^\nLb  LV\nFresh Pork Steaks;   ir?\nLb    13\nFreah VeaJ Steaks;     1C<\nFresh Pork Tender- OC^\nloin;  Ib  UO\nFresh Beef Tender-   OC*\nloin; lb.   OO\nFresh Pork Kidneys; 1A*f>\nFresh Calvc's OA*\nTongues; Ib.   fa\u00bb\"\nFresh Boneless Stew- 1Ac\ning. Beef; lb. IU\nFresh Veal and IAI\nLamb Stew; |b.    .   IU\nCleanliness\nService\nQuality\nBurns & Co., Ltd.\nPHONE 50\nof Malcolm M&cKay of Procter. Rev. \u25a0\nJamw Youngson of the Presbyterian <\nohurch performed the ceremony. Mr*.\nJ. A* Houston or FTaaerii Landing\nanl Alex campbet were witnesses.\nFollowing the ceremony a wedding\nbreakfast was enjoyed wtth Mtss\nMargaret Campbell acting as hostess.\nThe couple will reside at Procter\nwhere Mr. MacKay has been a resident for some years, being employed\non the lake steamers.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMlsa Roberta Kirby left yesterday\nfor Shoreacres. whero the will take\nup   duties  as   teacher.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMica Margaret McDonald of Kaslo\npassed through the city yesterday\nto tike up duties as principal of\nthe  Brilliant  school.\nJ. Grafton of Rossland la In Nelaon.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022 *\nMlsa Eileen Horswill left yesterday for Brilliant to Uke up duties\nas   teacher.\nI   \u2022   \u2022\nMlsa Lillian Cookson haa returned\nhome after spending two weeks In I\nErlckson. the guest of Mlss Betty i\nKemp.\nAlderman W. R. Campion left the\ncity yesterdsy for a visit to Mar-\nkinch,  Sask.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nA, Ling was a visitor to Nelson\nyesterday  from  Balfour.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs.  n.  E,  Gray  and   father.   Mr,\nMurdin. Wt  yesterday on a trip to\nGladstone,   Man.\nMlss Prances McHardy left* yes-\ntcrduv for Robson to take up dutlea\nas schcol  tescher.\nMlss Esther Scott, of  Portland  ar-\nrived  in  Nelson yesterday  by motor\nto spend two weeka with her sister I\ni-nd   brother-in-law,   Mr.   and   Mrs.\nChnrles Madden.\nE, C. Wagge left todsy on a trip\nto  Toronto,  Ont.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nThomas Cookson Jr. has returned!\nhome after spending a month with '\nhis sister and brother-in-law, Mr.\nand Mrs. W. A. Kemp of Trail.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nC. D. Jarvis of Procter was a city\nvisitor yesterday.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMlsa Margaret Jestley of Tadanac\nIs a visitor in Nelson at the home\nof Mr. and  Mrs. Harry Burns.\nMrs. J. H. Smeaton and children.\nFlorence. James and Donald, who\nhave been visiting with Mrs. Smea-\nton*s mother, Mrs. E. Hanson, Innes\nstreet, left Saturday morning for\nToronto, where the children will i\nenter college. Mrs. Smeaton will\nssll for Rio de Janeiro. Brazil, on j\nSeptember 26, after a month's visit\nhere.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nFred Jeffrey, who has been on a |\ntrip t-o the Okanagan, his returned :\nMr. ShuMy wis''a visitor to town\nyesterdiy from Shuttys Bench\n\u2022 \u2022   *\np. n. Black, mining man. has\nreturned to Vancouver after % brief!\nVlalt to  Nelson\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr.   and   Mrs.   A.   C.   Cawley   of\nSalmo were reoent visitors ln town.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. A. W. Rash and children\nhave returned to town after a trip\nto Wenatchee.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. nnd Mrs. Henry Swoboda of\nBpoknne   nnd   Prance*   nnd   Georgle\nSwoboda of Hollywood, who Have\nbeen spending the paat week the\ngueats of Mr. and Mrs. Prank\nGoucher, leav* this morning for\nTrail, where they will be the guosts\nof Mr. and Mrs. verzuh.\n\u2022 *   i\nMiw  Dorothy  Ollchrlst.   who   has\nbeen spending the summer holidays\nat Ruskln, has returned  to Nelsen.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nw. McCreath of Longbeach was a\nguest  ln  town  Tuesday. *\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nFred   Irwin,  who has  been  on  a\ntrip to th* Okanagan, has returned\nhome.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nE.   Daly  waa   a  reoent  visitor   ln\ntown from Ymlr.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Charlea Hufty hare\nreturned home after a visit in New\nDenver.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nAnthony  Madden  of  Slocan   City,\nwho has been spending a few daya\nin  Nelson,  left  for hom* yeaterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nS.   T_eno   ls   a   guest   In   Nelson\nfrom Three  Porks.\n\u2022 t   \u2022\nGeorge   Gill   was  a  reoent   visitor\nj In   town   from   Ymlr.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMr.   and   Mrs.   C.   Howarth   sad\nfamily of Nakusp are apendlng a\nfew days in town.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nColonel S. Ooode waa a visitor tn\ntown yesterday  from  Bonnlngton.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nE   Oliver   of   Trail   was   a   guest\nIo  Nelsgn  Tuesday.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nOsmond  Roper of Grand Porks ta\nspending a few days visiting ln\ntown.\nsee\nMrs.   r.   Halliwell   of   TraU   has\narrived  in  Nelson  to be the  guest\nof Miss Helen Murphy for 10 dsjs\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. A. P. Mitchell announce the engagement of their-\nonly daughter. Doris Kathleen, to\nRupert Cecil, second son of Mr. and\nMra. B. Skelton of Victoria, t he\nmarriage to take place at Robeon on\nOctober 4.\nCREW BUILDING\nROAD TO THE TWO\nSTAR MINE, YMIR\nYMIR.   B.   C\u00ab   Sept.   6*\u2014Mrs.   6,\nBall returned to her home trom\nSlamo on Friday evening after being the guest of Mr. and Mrs. H. H.\nPerkins.\nMrs. E. M. Ollle has been on\nthe  sick  list.\nMra. H, Stevens and children were\nNelson   visitors   on   Saturday. '\nPrank Phi.Ups. foreman of th*\nKootenay Belle mine at Salmo, wu\na Ymlr visitor on Saturday.\nMlss Eileen GUI* left for Seattle\non Saturday where she will be tb*\nguest of ber alster Mlas Gladys\nGllle. Mlaa Ollle was accompanied\nby her mothsr Mrs. James Gllle\naa far as Spokane.\nThe Two star mine has quit*\na crew forking on the road to\nt_he mine. Mr. Trltea of Vancouve;\nwas  a  reoent  visitor  to  th* mine.\nMr. and Mrs. it. are nre Anderson\nhad as their dinner guests on Sundsy. Mr. and Mrs. C. Mclsaac, Mrs.\n8. BaU, Joe Kublskl. Ben Foot,\nJack Foot of Kamloops, Charles\nKublskl, Joo Cleveland snd Jamea\nPrank   of   lUmloope.\nVassar's Cash Meat Market\nGOOD BUYING FOR WEDNESDAY\nAND THURSDAY\nBeef, Choice Round 1 Ct*\nSteak; per Ib    lv\nBeef, Good Tot Roast; Ot*\nPer lb      0\nBeef, Rump Roast;    1 Ct\nPer lb    IO\nBeef, Tenderloin;      Oht-\nPer lb.   JU\nBeef, Lean Boneless 1Qr\nStewing; 2 lbs    ttt\nPork Spare Ribs;\n3 lbs\t\nPork Steaks, Lean;\n2 lbs. for \t\nLamb Chops;\nPer Ib\t\nVeal Chops;\nPer lb\t\n25'\n29'\n17'\n15'\nSmall Red Salmon;\nPer lb\t\nBaby Beef Liver,\nsliced; 2 lbs\t\nFresh Eggs, Large\nExtras; 2 doz. .....\nSwift's Spread-Easy\nCheese; j. Ib.. each\nTomato Sausage, small;\nPork Sausage, small; fresh\nmade; OC<\n2 lbs _  OD\n25'\n15*\nReal Calf Liver; OW\nPer lb  \u00a3\u00ab\u2022\u00bb\nBreakfast Sausage; ]M\nPer lb.  1\"\nWe Deliver at These Prices.\u2014Phone 862\nOur Market Will Be Open All Day Wednesday.\n HOI\n-THE NELSON DAILY NEWI, NELSON, &C.\u2014WEDNESDAT MOBNINO, (EPTEMBEB I, IIM\nPRICES DRAG\nAT NEW YORK\nSliding Commodity Marts\nProvide Unfavorable\nBackground\nBy JOHN  L. COOLEY\nAssociated  Press Flnsnelal   Wtlter\nNEW YORK. Sept. ft   (AP)\u2014Declining   commodity   markets   provided  an   unfavorable  background\nKor atocks today and prices dragged lower In quiet trading.\nWith wheat heavy and ootton Influenced by private estimates placing\nthe   crop   shove   the   government's\nAugust   1    forecast,   stocks   droned\nthrough   the   first   few   hours   with\nslight   changes,    mostly   recessions.\nToward the c^cee, however, offerings\nincreased     and     quotations     gsve\ngrpund   readily,   Just   as   they   had\nadvanced tn the  final minutes last\nFrldsy. Net losses of  1  to 4 points\nor    fiore    were    plentiful.    Volume\ntotalled   1,253.040  aharea.\nOold mining Issues were fairly\n{Irm at times. Chemicals bogged\ndown. Farm Implements sympathised with grain markets, while\nrails and wet Shares skidded.\nNewa over the holiday appeared\nto hava provided few. If any, fresh\nc}ues m to probab.e fall business\ntrends. Early September is normally\na time for cheerfulness, since trade\nbegins to anticipate the larger requirements of the autumn season,\nand considerable optimism hM been\nexpreeaed over prospects for this\nyear, a unique factor, of course,\nenters the situation In the figure\nof the NRA wltb Its rising production costs and uncertainty u to\nhow much consumer buying can be\nexpanded.\nWheat Off Despite\nLarger Exports\nBy John p. Borr.HAN\nAMorlated Press Market Editor\nCHICAOO, Sept. 5 (AP)\u2014 Despite\nexport business In wheat from\nCanada, grain values ran rapidly\ndown bllt today, and at one time\nshowed 3-4 cents a bushel loss.\nHeaping up of pressure from three\ndays' accumulation of hedging ssles\nby rural holders both In Cansds\nand United states proved to be more\nthan the wheat market could withstand. An additional weight on\nvalues came from 3,673.000 bushels\nIncreaM of the United States wheat\nvisible supply total.\nWbeat closed unsettled et a moderate rally, IH to 3 oents under\nFriday's   finish.\nSILVER FUTURES\nNEW TOBK, Sect. I (API\u2014silver\nfutures cloeed ateady: aalea 3.450.000\nounces. Sept. 87.18. Oct. 87.S5N, Dee\nIMJ, Jan. 38B, March 38.S0N, May\nIBN.\nB\u2014Bid: N\u2014Nominal.\nVANCOUVER LIST\nMINER                            Bid Aak\nBralorne      1000 1010\nBig  Mlaaourl   18 .33\nBearer BUrer 06>i .08%\nBridge B. Con 88 .87\nBridge R. Ex.- Ln.t aale at .48\nGeorge Copper 30\nOold   Belt    SS .88\nOeorgla  Rlrer MH OS\nOolconda     81 .88\nOrandvlew     04 .08\nInt. c. st c      .18\nKootenay Florence .     .01% . ,ta\nLucky   Jim         .04 .08\nMeridian          .4714 .48\nMorning Star\u2014Laet aale at .37\nNational  Bllrer  ....     .06% .06%\nNoble Fire    11% .13\nFend Orellle       1.18 1.18\nPioneer Oold     13.35 13.76\nPorter  Idaho    0814 .10\nPremier       1.37 1.80\nReevea MacDonald .     .30\nReno  Oold        1.35 138\nRuth  Hope 03 .03\nSllvercrest    03V .04\nSunloch    35\nWellington     01 % .03%\nWhitewater          .07% .09\nOILS\nA.  P.   oonaolldatad          38\nc. and B. Landa     1.S6\n. Commonwealth     10\nDalhouale     73\nlaatcraet          Jl\nFreehold      134\nHargal      104\nHome   Oil         3.15\nMcDougall   Segur   Ea 064\nMcDougall Begur New       .07\nMayland         1.34\nMercury      714\nMcLeod     SO\nOkalta   Com 10\nRoyalite      1880\nSterling   Pacific           .45\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nDOW JONES AVERAGES\n30 industrials   100.22 off 8.44\n20 rails   .....'    50.42 off 2.14\n20 utilities    29.88 off   .98\nGOLDS GAIN BUT\nOTHER ISSUES OFF\nTORONTO. Sept. A (CP)-Stocks\nwere sold In volume bordering on a\nmillion shares today on tbe Standard exchange but there was nothing ln Che price action to suggest\nan Immediate start of the bull market freely predicted for the opening\nof ths fall sesson. Leading gold\nshares beld on to their gains well\nbut weakness predominated over the\nrest of the board.\nMclntyre finished 1.50 higher at\n37.50, Dome up #1 at I3B. Pioneer\nup 10 at 13.35, Teck up 6 at 0.60\nand Bralorne up 50 at 10.50. Reno\ndropped 17 oents to 1.35 while McVlttle advanced 7 to 1.03.\nSUver shares closed lower wltb\nexception of Castle, up 3 to 47.\nEldorado lost la to 4.10, Mining\ncorporation 1 and Nlplasing 15. The\nlesders led the decline, Nickel losing 60 snd Norsnda 30 while Falconbrldge was down 4 snd Base\nMetals corporation unchanged at $3.\nOil shares turned tn a fair sprinkling of gains.\nINTERLISTED\nSHARES OFF\nTORONTO, Sept. 8 (CP)\u2014 The\ntrend waa downward ln today'a aeaalon of the Toronto atock exchange,\nmuch to the aurprlae ol market\naeera wbo had predicted expanding\nand buoyant marketa with the end\nol the Auguat holiday aeaaon. Only\n16.500 aharea changed handa.\nAU interllated aharea. dlaUllery.\noil, utility and many food atocka\ncloaed lower. Nickel eaaed to 31.10,\ndown 65 cente, Smeltera loat 1 to\n133, Brazilian 4 to 144, Ford ol\nCanada a point to 15 and CP_R.\nflnlahed at 1T%, off 4.\nDUtlllery aharea moved alowly and\nWalkera common cloaed off 3 at 48,\nDlatlllera Seagram down 1 to 37.\nInduatrlal Alcohol oft 4 to 1714\nand Brewera and Dlatlllera dropped\n15 to 3.55. Brewery atocka followed\nthe dlatlllery group, Canada Malting\ntaking a lose of % to 834. Canada\nBud 4 to 114 and Brewing corporation 4 to 8.\nAlberta Farmers\nSelling Horses\nRefused Admittance Into the\nU.S.A.; Constable Jupp\nGoes to Yahk\nWINNIPBO.   Sept.   s    (CP):   Future*  quotatlona:\ni  Open   High   Low cloee\nWheat\nOot     714     714 704 704\nDtc _   784     784 73 71\nMay    784      714 774 774\nOata\nOct    384     384 374 37%\nDec    88 39 384 384\nHay    404     40% 404 404\nBarley\nOct _   43 434 414 414\nDec     444      444 434 434\nMay        48 48 474 474\nnu\nOct  14S       1454 1444 1454\nDec  145       146 145 1454\nMay      153       1834 153 133\nRye\nOet _    554      554 534 584\nDec    SB 584 554 664\nMay    _   .   634     684 \u00ab\u00b04 804\nCaah prlcea:\nWheat: No. 1 hard 714, No. 1 nor.\n69:   No.   3   Nor,   67:   No.     8 Nor,\n884:   No. 4 Nor, 63: No   8. 884:\nNo. 6, 554*. feed 634; track, 894:\nNo. 1 durum 674-\nMETAL MARKETS\nNBW YORK, Sept. S (AP)\u2014Oopper\nquiet: electrolytic apot and future\n9  aaked.\nTin. firm, apot and nearby 45.87:\nfuture 46.95.\nIron quiet: No. 3 f.o.b. eaatern\nPennsylvania 17.60: Buffalo 17.60:\nAlabama 14.00.\nLead ateady: apot New Tork 4.50;\nEaat St. Loula 4.35.\nZ|nc ateady; Eaat St. Loula apot\nand future 4.67 to 4.70.\nAntimony, apot 6.67.\n(Julckallver 68.00 to 65.00.\nBar ailver,  4  higher at 37.\nAt London:\nCopper, atandard apot \u00a336; future\n\u00a337 7s 6d: electrolytic apot \u00a339 10a;\nfuture \u00a340.\nTin. apot \u00a3319 3a 6d;  futur* \u00a3319.\nLead, apot \u00a313 5a; future \u00a313  10a.\nZinc, apot \u00a317 3a 6d; future \u00a317\n7a 6d.\nBar ailver, firm, 1-16 higher at\n18 3-16d.\nHEDGING SENDS\nWHEAT LOWER\nWINNIPBO, Sept. 5 (CP)\u2014Urge-\nscale export buslneu was Irmuffi-\nclent to absorb hesvy hedging pressure from elevator com pan lea on\nthe grain exchange today and prices\nslipped off to close 14 to yA oent\nunder Friday's finish.\nAccumulation of wheat at country\npoints over the weekend resulted In\nheavy aelllng by elevator Interests.\nand though export business since\nthe close of the market Friday was\nestimated at 3,000,000 bushels, prices\nended only a little above the pegged\nlevels.\nOctober wheat flnlahed 70Vi cents,\nDecember st 73 snd May at 71%\ncents. An advance of about one oent\nwas made In tbe opening minutes\nbut the gain was soon lost sa selling\npressure quickly developed.\nVANCOUVER SALES\nTAHK, B. C, Sept. 6\u2014Mr. and\nMra. W. Marsden and daughter, Mlaa\nMae Marsden of Cranbrook were\nvlaltora at the home of Mm. Len.\nRenwlck.\nMlaa Hop* Mclnnla returned from\nCranbrook Friday after vUltlng her\nsister, Ml\/sa Margaret Mclnnla.\nMies Agnea Johnaon returned to\nher home ln Canyon on Prlday after\nspending two weeka as the gueat of\nMr.   and   Mrs.   Axel   Erlckaon.\nMra. Alex Ratteray and daughter\nJean  left for Spokane Friday.\nconstable Jupp of Cranbrook waa\nIn town Friday. Mr. Jupp will Ukc\nup dutlea In Yahk permanently\nMonday, aa Constable V. N. Palmer la to be atatloned at Penticton\nMlaa Donalda Walker waa a Cranbrook vlaltor where ahe wrote her\nalgebra  examination.\nTwo Alberta farmera wero In town\nFriday disposing of a number of\naaddle and work horse*. Theae men\nwere going to realde In the United\nStatea but wera unable to obtain\nresidence there, so they returned\nto B. C. and ara aelllng their horses\non  the  return   trip.\nMra. Ray Burllngham and son\nHerb returned from Cranbrook Baturday after visiting Mr. and Mre.\nSam   Shaw.\nMra. Jamea viler*, and aon Harry\nErskine. Mra. Bert Setler and daughters and Mlaaea Helen McOrath and\nHelen Mclnnis, Alan Verch and\nCyril Radford were motorists to\nCranbrook   Saturday.\nMlsa Sybil Wllkle haa returned\nfrom her home ln Vanoouver to\ntake up her dutlea ae teacher of\ndlvlaion in of the Tahk public\nachool.\nMlaa Donalda Walker and Captain\nHiggins and Mr. I_a_senby were mo-\ntorlate  to  Kimberley  Friday.\nMlsa Viola Shouldlce left for\nCanal Flat on Saturday where she\nwill  be employed.\nErneet and Leonard Walker returned to 'their home ln Klmberly\non Friday after apendlng the aummer holidays with their grandparents. Mr. snd Mrs. E. A. Lythgoe.\nFlorence Mclnnla returned to her\nhome here, after ependlng a vacation at the home of Mr. and Mrs.\nH.   Renatrom   at   Wardner.\nMr. and Mrs. Herb Roberteon and\nfamily of canal Flat are vlaltlng\nMrs. Robertson's parents. Mr. and\nMrs. Frank Allan.\nVANCOUVER.  Sept.  5.   \u2014  Mining\naharea sold on  the Vancouver atock\nexchange  today:\nLISTED\nBeaver Silver. 4800.\nBralorne.  647.\nBralorne Fract,   18-6.\nBridge R. Con, 600.\nOeorgla River.   10.600.\nOrandvlew, iooo.\nMeridian,   8300.\nNat.  SUver.   1000.\nPioneer,   10.\nPremier B,  8000.\nPremier   O,   3100.\nReno.  10.000.\nUNLISTED\nBig  Mlaaourl.   1300.\nKootenay   Florenoe.   700.\nLucky   Jim,   1000.\nNoble   Ftve.   3000.\nPend   Orellle   100.\nPorter   Idaho,   500.\nSllvercrest.  5000.\nSilverado.   1500.\nSunloch, 36.\nWhitewater,   IOOO.\n(I Kit\nBig   Blllle,   3000.\nBridge   R.   Ex,   3000.\nBayvlew.  6000.\nCariboo, 3855.\ncork Prov, lo.ooo\nDalhouale.   IOOO.\nDunwell,   1300.\nIndependence, 3000.\nMorning Star, S400.\nNative   Sons,   6500.\nNicola.   14.100.\nReward.  1100.\nsnowflake, 400.\nWaverley. 104,750.\nWayside. 7600.\nWhite  Eagle.  9400.\nGROWERS NOW\nMARKING TIME\nThe Associated Orowers Is now\nmarking time until tbe Wealthies\nare jeady for export. Karly apples\nhave been cleaned up and tbe peach\nmovement is about over. The plum\ncrop was practically a Jam-factory\nproposition outside of a few sold\nlocally. Imported frulta, oranges,\nlemons, grspefrult, etc., are moving\nslowly.\nThis year growers received a fair\nprice for their raspberries but strawberry returns were not over encouraging.\nCHEESE PRICES\nUP AT MONTREAL\nMONTREAL, Sept. 5 (CP)\u2014Cheese\nprices on the Montreal dairy and\nproduce market advanced ft to Vt\ncent a pound today. Ontario white\ncheese became 10 to 10-V* cents s\npound wltb Ontario colored at\naround ioy4 to lovb oents. Quebecs\nremained % cent under the Ontario\nlevels. Dealera attribute the strength\nln cheese to Improved demand from\nEngland. Receipts totalled 044 boxes.\nThe butter market held steady at\nlast week's closing levels, No. 1\nbeing quoted st 17% to IB cents a\npound for carlots or lees. A total\nof 101 boxes wss offered for sale.\nOraded shipments In carlots or\nless of eggs held steady at 31 to 33\ncents a doaen for extras, 17 to 18\ncents for firsts and 14 tb ifi cents\nfor seconds. Receipts were 1348\ncaaes.\nNew Quebec potatoes weakened to\nsell at 75 to 80 cents per 80-pound\nbag, off five cents from Saturday.\nH.   e.   STEVENSON \u2014 Electric   and\n_ acetylene welding; steel works.\nFRIOIDAIRJB\nBALES   AND   SERVICE\nPhone 838.      J. TALBOT.     Box 385.\nBRITISH MONEYS\nHOLD GROUND\nNEW TORK, Sept. 5 (CP)\u2014British\ncurrencies beld their ground ln foreign exchsnge transections today although ear: y advances were not\nheld.\nThe pound closed at 14.56 V up\ntwo cents net. The Canadian dollar\nclosed unchsnged at 95 Vi cents. Tlie\nfinal rate represented a premium on\nUnited Statee funds of SW per cent.\nThe Frence franc was weak, closing at 5.65% oents. down ,04'i of a\ncent.\nNEW YORK STOCKS\nEXCHANGES\nMONTREAL. Sept. A (CP.\u2014British\nand fonlgn exchange ln relation to\nthe Canadian dollar, as complied by\nthe Royal Bank of Canada, closed\ntoday ae follpwa:\nArgentina,    peso    3844D\nAustralia,   pound   *. -.  3.8054A\nAustria, schilling  \u2014* 1730U\nBelgium, beige   3U3D\nBrull,   mllrels    _ 087OU\nBulgsrla,  lev   0157D\nChina, Hongkong  dollara  3435A\nCzecbotV>vakl*a,   crown    O450A\nDenmark, krone  M     3150A\nFinland, flnmark  _ 0335U\nPrance, franc      .O503D\nOermany, relchsmark  3608D\nOreat Britain, pound   4.7830A\nOreece,   drachma -.._ 008-8A\nHolland, florin     8095D\nHungary, pengo -      J674U\nIndia,   rupee    \u2014.   .3854A\nItaly,   lire    0797D\nJapan,   yen    3833U\nJugoslavia, dinar 0330U\nNew* Zealand, pound  _. 8.8307A\nNorway,   krone    3413A\nPoland, zioU   1730U\nRoumania,  leu   00B7U\nSouth   Alrlca,   pound     4.7331A\nSpain, peseta  1384D\nSweden,   krone        .34 75 A\nSwltaerland,   franc    3931D\nUnited States, dollar,  4%   per cent\npremium .u\nMINNEAPOLIS GRAIN\nJUNIOR PRACTICE\nTHIS MORNING\nAlthough the date for the fifth\nand final game or the West Kootensy Junior baaeball ehamplonahlp\nseries haa not been definitely set\nyet, the local team Intends to be\nIn the beat of ahape and a full\nturnout of all the playera la requested for Wedneaday morning at\n9:30. Tt la hoped to play the game\nat the recreation grounds on Bunday afternoon. Thla date had been\nallotted to the eenlor baaeball club\nbut It ta expected that the senior\nteam will turn over the date to\nthe Juniors ao aa to get the aerlea\norer before the -weather turna too\ncold A large number of fans have\nsignified their Intention of coming\nover from Trail.\nMINNEAPOLIS,   Sept.   I    (AP)    \u2014\nI Plour unchanged, carload lota fam*\nj lly patents 7.40 to 7 50 a barrel ln\nI 98-pound   cotton   sacka.   Shlpmenta\n63.3S4. Pure bran  14.90 to 16.00.\nWheat: No. 1  northern 86 to 87;\nNo. 1 -ed durum 75 % to 76%; Sept.\n83: Dec. 85: May sty,.\nCorn*. No. 3 yellow 4. to 43.\nOata: No. 3 white 34V..\nFlu:   No.   1,   185S   to   1901,4.\nAllegheny      tM\nAl    Chemical   .. 139',\nAm  Can    9214\nAm   Por   Pow 14%\nAm   loe     10',\nAm Ma & Pdy 18V,\nAm Smelt & Re 39%\nAm   Telephone 127*.\nAm Tobacoo .... 99\nAnaqonda       18\nAuburn   Mo   _.. tl\nAtehlaon  67%\nBaldwin     _. 14\nBait ts Ohio .... 33',\nBendlx   Aria   .... 18',\nBeth    Steel    .... 4014\nCan   Pacific   .... 17\nCanada   Dry   .... 81\nOerro  de  paaoo 3614\nOhea   &   Ohio 47'.\nChryaler    _  45\nOom 8c South .. 3H\nCon   Oaa   N   T 49 V,\nCorn    Prod    .... 87\nC   Wright   Pfd \u2014\nDupont     8114\nEastman   Kodak 84\",\nErie      2314\nElec Pow &'Light   9*),\nPord   Eng     \u2014\nPort of Can ... \u2014\nPlrat Na Storea 65 %\nFreeport Tex ... 43%\nOen   Motora   .... 34\nOen   Electric   .... 24%\nOen   roods     36%\nGoodrich     ISH\nOranby     1H4\nOrt North Pfd 28%\nOold    Dust    .... 22%\nGrt West Sugar 85\nHoare Sound ... 28*4\nHudson  Mo   15'i,\nIna   copper   ... 7\nInt   Nlcltel   ...... 20%\nInt Tel At Tel .. 17%\nKenn   copper   .. 11*,\nKresge   8   S   .... 12%\nKroegger A Toll 27*%\nMack   Truck  .... 87%\nNaah   Motora   .. 23%\nNa Dairy Prod 19\nN   Pow  ts  Ll   _ \u2014\nN   7   Central    . 61%\nPac Oaa * Elec 24%\nPackard   Mo   .... 8%\nPenn R R   87%\nPhillips Pete ... 17\nRadio   Corp   .... 9%\nRadio Keith Or 3%\nRem Rand    9%\nRock laiand   8%\nSafeway  Storea 61%\nS LouU It S p 5\nShell   Union   .... 9%\nS   Cal   Edlaon 20%\nSouth    Faclflc 30%\nStand Oil of Cal 41\nStan Oil of Ind _-\nStand Oil of N J 41%\nStew   Warner 8%\nStudebaker   6%\nTexaa   Corp   .... 27%\nTex Oulf Sul .... 32\nTlnkln   Roller... 31%\nUnion   Carbide 48%\nUn   Oil   Of   Cal 21%\nUnited   Aircraft 38%\nUnion Pacific .... 197\nU    B    Rubber 19\nUnited    Biscuit 33%\nu S Steel   85%\nWest   Electric 46%\nWrigley     82%\nVanadium   Steel 26%\nMilwaukee Pfd 8%\nPure    Oil      11%\nu  S  Pipe     18%\n6 8\n131%    138\n90\n13%\n10%\n37%\n126%\n90%\n17%\n58%\n05%\n13%\n38%\n17%\n39\n18%\n29%\n34%\n46%\n43%\n3%\n47%\n85%\n78%\n83\n21%\n\u00bb%\n90\n18%\n10%\n18\n37%\n126%\n91\n17%\n68%\n85%\n13%\n34\n17%\n39\n16%\n29%\n34%\n46%\n43%\n3%\n47%\n86%\n3%\n79\n83\n32\n\u2022 %\n8%\n14\n55%\n43\n32%\n24%\n37%\n16%\n11%\n28\n22%\n34\n28%\n14%\n8%\n20\n18%\n21\n12%\n26%\nST\n22%\n18%\n14%\n48\n23\n5%\n36%\n16%\n9\n~*\/s\n9%\n6%\n51%\n5\n9%\n20\n29%\n39%\n31\n40%\n8%\n6%\n36%\n30%\n39%\n46\n21%\n37\n125%    125%\n18%      18%\n6514\n42%\n32%\n24\n37%\n16%\n37\n22%\n'84\n14%\n\u00ab%\n30\n16%\n21\n12%\n26%\n87\n22%\n18%\n48\n23\n5%\n38%\n16%\n9\n9%\n8%\n61%\nB%\n20\n29%\n39%\n40%\n8%\n26%\n30%\n39%\n45%\n21\n37\nWiraw.l    \u00ab___\"_*-_r<v>\u00bb   _\u25a0\u2014'\u2022 \u2022\u00bb_\u2014____.   -\u25a0    \u2022\u2014_  _-\nH-W-mut-mnTiH\n\u2022May We Serve You?'\nR.   H    MABER.   Tlnsmtthlng,   Fur-\nnace Repalra, Roofing, Phone 686.\nPlumbing aud Heating. Installatlooa\nand euppllea. Work ouaranteed.\nPhone   Jullua  Relsterer  at  6591-1.\nK. Is T. Auto Repair Shop. Bx-\npert workmanahlp.  low  Rates.\nFor   cleaning,   pressing,   alterations,\nTHE   WAriBROBE,  417   Hall   St.\nCAPITOL    BEAUTY    SHOPPE.    El-\npert   Marcelling.   Phone   18.\nPrompt    Service    \u2014   Watch.   Clock\nrepalra   -   NOXON'S   JEWELERS.\nPura   remodelled,   repaired   and   re.\nlined.   Mra.   Falrhead.   Ph.   246 L2.\nSHORTY'B    AUTO    REPAIR    StfOP\nfor Dependable Repalra.\t\nFor amart Permanent Waving \u2014\nTHBLMA8 BEAUTY PARLORS.\t\nPho.ie 35 for-Taxi\u2014Safe. Reliable\nBuick Cara. NELSON TRANSFER\nCo.,  Limited.              \t\nFAIRVIEW SERVICE STATION. Qua.\nOU, Oreaalng Waahlng. coile batterlea. Dominion tires and tubea.\nWe wlll eerve you. Phone 605.\n\u2022May We Serve You?*\n(Continued)\nRadio   Repalra,   InataUatlona,   Tuba\ntasting. SpOT-WAY MUSIC. Ph686.\nPA. NT IN 6'Alto  __A_-_JOM-MN(l\ntt       U.K..       ___*__._.     nflAT.\nC.   MUler,   PhoBs  790L.\n___\nSPENCER\nBCOKATlNO\nReliable Auto Repalr\u00bb--With ijgdarn\nequipment, NtLSON TRANSFER.\nAVENUE SEfeVIOk, .OH Oil. Waahlng, Oreaalng. eta. Drive In today\nOEO. A. _-_-_RES--For Oood Photo-\naranha\u2014Aak anybody\u2014Phone 46.\nJT-!1. COA*IB-_-*\u00bbegl_tBred professional   Electrical   Engineer.   Con-\n_tractlng,_SuppUeaJ_ Phone  786.\nExpert Watch, clock\" and Jewellery\nRepalra. our work la satisfying,\nservloe prompt. E. COLLINSON,\nP.O. Drawer 1102, Nelaon, B.C\nAuto parte tor all  Cara  -  KRAJT\nAUTO   WRECKAGE\nNelaon Dally Newa job Department\nfor all klnda of commercial printing. PhonalM\nTrucking  and   Haulage\u2014Phone  6*3\nCentral Transfer.  Prompt Servloe.\n\\jKii\u201eai    .,__\u00ab.._>.    . .\u00ab-___-   -.-- \u2014\u2014\nMacGregor B r o a . .PfoWgrapha,\nFllma developed, prlnted.BoiJWl.\nSTANDARD ELECTRIC. Phone 838\nfor Electrical, Wiring, Contracting,\nInataUatlona. Reaaonabla natea.\nSMELTERS LOSES\n31-2 POINTS\nMONTREAL, Sept. 8 (CP)-With a\nhesitant tone prevailing throughout\nthe aeaslon, Montreal atock exchange\nlistings dipped downward during\ntoday'a trading.\nInterllated Issues were all down\nfractionally with Brazilian Traction\nat 14%, Canadian Pacific railway\nat 17% and Montreal Powar at\n37% all loelng %. International\nNickel declined 80 cents st 21.10.\nPaper lasuea showed strength ln\ncontrast to the general trend, Dryden Paper gaining % at 7% whUe\nSt. Lawrence Paper preferred moved\nup a point at 23.\nConsolidated Smelters loat 8%\npoints at 131 while Canadian General -Electric preferred waa down\n1% polnta and Royal Bank two\npoints.\nTORONTO STOCKS\nAconda    _ _.\nArno    _ \u2014\t\nAJa\u00bb     \u201e\t\nAmulet     _ __\nAmity     _\nA P Conaolldated ..\nAasoclate-d   \t\nArea   \t\nBald-win     _\t\nBaltic   Oil    -\t\nBase  MeUla  \t\nBarry    Hollinger\nBobjo     _\t\nBig Missouri  \u2014\nBunkerhlU \t\nCalmont    \t\nC and E Landa \t\nCentral  Manitoba\nChemical  Research\nClerlcy   \t\nConlagaa     _\t\nConarlum   \t\nDome     ....\nDalhouale    _\t\nEaatcest   \t\nEldorado    \t\nFalconbrldge    - _.\nOoodflah \t\nGranada\nHome    OU     -\t\nHarker Oold  -._,\nHowey     _\t\nHollinger   \t\nHudson   Bay\t\nInternational   Nickel\nKeeley    \t\nKlrkland   Uke\t\nLake  Shore   \t\nMacaasa     ....\nMandy   \t\nManitoba  Bsaln  \t\nMalsrtlc\t\nMclntyre    _\t\nMcVlttle     -\t\nMcWatters    _ _\nMlnlnrj Corp  _\t\nMaylaAd     -.\nMurphy    \t\nNewbec     \t\nNlplasing    \t\nNoranda\n._ .01V.\n... .07%\n... 1.42\n... .66\n... .04%\n... .27\n... .35\n... .06\n... .01\n... .10\n_ 1.98\n... .09%\n... .26%\n... .20\n... .07\n.. .18\n... 1.60\n... .08%\n... 1.31\n... .03\n... 1-10\n... .80\n... 34.00\n... .71\n... JO\n... 4.00\n... 3X16\n._ .11%\n... .90\n... 3.22\n... .03%\n... SH'.,\n... 10.SD\n... 10.65\n... 21.20\n... .50\n.35\n46.00\n 88\nPOUND STERLING\nOFF AT MONTREAL\nMONTREAL. Sept. 6 (OP)\u2014Altar\nrecording a aharp advance at the\nopening, the pound aterllng fell off\nIn late trading on Montreal foreign\nexchanges today but cloaed the day\nat M.78% where It waa up I 3-16\ncenta.\nThe United statea dollar cloaed\nat a premium of 4% per cent, unchanged. Tha Fwnch franc declined\n.08 of a cent at 6.92 cents.\nBonds Drift Lower\nNEW YORK, Sept. 5 (AP)\u2014While\ntrading volume picked up a llttle\nln the bond market totSky, there was\nllttle enthullaem for tbe advance\naud prlcea generally drifted to lower\nlevel*.\nSecondary bonda were inclined to\nemulate atocka. prime Investment\nIssues, however, held to a narrow\nmovement. A number of higher\ngrade maturities advanoed fractionally, but the demand here waa amall.\nforeign obligation* were Irregular.\nMONTREAL STOCKS\n23%\n53%\n44%\n25%\n8%\n10%\n17\n33%\n63%\n44%\n52%\n25%\n\u2022%\n10%\n17\nNorthern   Csnada  \t\nPeterson Cobalt \t\nPend    Orellle     \u2014\nPremier Oold \t\nSan* -Antonio   \t\nSherritt    Gordon    _\nSudbury Baaln \t\n81acoe     \t\nSt.  Anthony  \t\n8t*darfna    \t\nTech   Hughea   ....\nTowagamac\t\nThompson   cadallac\nTreadwell     \t\nVentures    _   \t\nWright.  Hargreavea   .\nWalte  Ackerman  \t\n. .02%\n. .45\n. 37.00\n. .99\n. .75\n. 3.01\n. 1.35\n. .01%\n. .0.1\n. 9.10\n. 85.0.1\nM\n. .02\n. 1.15\n. 1.37\n.    106\n1.35\n.    1.64\n.    1.45\n.     .40\n.04\n6.65\n. .52\n. .16\n. 1.60\n.    1.11\"\n7.50\n2.10\nBell   Telephone *  IU\nBraalllan Tit power   14%\nB   C   Power   \"A\"    - '*%\nCanadian  car ts  TOuodry  .... 8%\nCanadian cement   7%\nCan Induatrlal Aloohol   11\nC    P    R  l'*Vs\nDominion Bridge  _\u2022\u2022\u25a0\u25a0 30%\nDominion   Textile     \u00ab8%\nLake of The  Wooda  _  1*\nMaaaey   Harrla     \u2022%\nNational    Brewerlee      -  26\nNational   Steel   Car      11\nOgllvle    Milling     -  185\nPower   corporation    \u2014 9\nPrice  Broa   __ \u2014 -M\nQuebec   Power      It\nWinnipeg Railway   1\nCURD\nAssociated   Brawerlee    13\nB   A   Oil    _  \"ft\nCanada   Malting     33g\nDistillers   Seagram     IT\nImperial Oil     14%\nImperial Tobacoo Can  10%\nInt.   Petro     1~\".\nMcCoil   Frontenac  _\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 1\"\nNoranda      34.05\nPage   Heraey    _.  66\nWalker Good pfd   \u00bb\nMISCELLANEOUS\nCanada Dredge  _\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u2022 IT\nConaolldated   Bakera    _  13\nCanada   Gypsum          *\nDominion Storea  _  It\nPord of Canada \"A\"    16\nLoblaw Groc. \"A\"  - 16\nLEGAL NOTICES\n\"OOVERNMENT LIQUOR ACT\"\nNOTICE    OF    APPLICATION     FOR\nCONSENT TO TRANSFER OF\nBEER LICENCE\nNOTICE IB HEREBY GIVEN that,\non the 16th day of September next,\nthe underelgned lntenda to apply to\nthe Liquor Control Board for con-\naent to tranafer of Beer Licence\nNumber 3890 and laaued ln respect\nof premlees being part of a building\nknown aa the \"Madden Hotel\", elt-\nuated at 507-0 Ward Street ln the\nCity of Nelaon, Britiah Columbia,\nupon the lands described aa Lot One\n(1), Block Five (6). Official Plan,\nCity ot Nelaon, from Ell Johnson\nto Floyd M. Barnett of Nelson, British Columbls, the tranaferee.\nDATED at Nelaon, British Colum-\nbla. this 16th day of Auguat. A.D..\n1M3' FLOYD   M.   BARNETT,\nApplicant and Tranaferee.\n\"*\u25a0 (80901\nPERSONAL\n(5)\nWILL THE PARTY WHO WAS SEEN\ntaking lady'a wrlat watch and\nclothing from the bathing house\nat lAkealde Park on Friday kindly\nreturn to 314 Mill St. and avoid\ntrouble. <83\"'\ndpSlng-School of Beauty culture.\nIdeal  Beauty  Shoppe. Penticton,\n(8184)\nDEALERS IN HIDES AND SCRAP\nmetals.  S. Pearl, 411   HaU  ET\nUELr   WANTED\n(10)\nWANTED\u2014RELIABLE     OIRL     FOR\nhousework.   Box  8345  Dally  News.\n(8345)\nSITUATIONS   WANTEU\n(11)\nEXPERIENCED OIRL DESIRES\nposition aa seamstress, housemaid\n5T waitress. Phone 387L.      (8309)\nFURNISHED   BOOMS fUB BENT (15)\nLIGHT   HOUSEKEEPING   ROOMS\u2014\nSpecial rata  for studente.  BtratJ-\noona hotel.  (82391\nGEOHT    HOUSEKiEPlNG    ROOMSr-\nKltchenette. Wardale, 609 MUM*.\nFURN.    OR    UNFURN.    Al-TB.    BY\nweek or month. Medical Arts Bldg.\nFURNISHED    HOUSEKEEPING\nRooma. Hot and oold water. E.W.C.\nTERRACE APTS\u2014Beautlful Modern\nFrlgldalre_equlpped_euijes._(8272)\nFURNISHED SUITE. 507 CARBON-\nate   \u00bbtreet._Phone   390R. (8373)\nFURNISHED I5O0MS, 507 SILICA.\nPhone   440X. (-3161\nBOOM  AM> BOABD (Jl)\nROOM    AND    BOARD    FOR    HIOH\nSchool students near achools. Mrs.\nLong. 605 Latimer St. or Box 132.\nCity. (IBM)\n5boM~AN5 BOARD FOR SCHOOL\nboys or teachers. Nesr the schools.\nPhoneMMt.  or  Box  975.   (82901\nBOOMS fOK BENT (IM\nAPARTMENT UNFURNISHED OVER\nStore.   J.   W.   Oallagher.   Nelson^\n(8093)\nFTONISHED_ROOM_FOR~GENTI__-\nman. Close In. phone *\"R*(83..,\nH0USE6 WANTED\n(20)\nWANTED TO RENT, SMALL HOUBR\nfurnished, muat be reasonable.\nBox 6265, Daily News._ '\u00ab____*_*\nSMALL UNFURNISHED MODEM*\nhouse. Full partlculara to Bos\n8342   Dally   Newa.     '8342)\nFOR RENT\n(tl)\nSAU- OR RENT-.-ROOM BUNOA-\nlow. 3 corner lots. 822 Nelaon\nAve., also 4*room Stucco Bungalow (new) 2 lots, 3 blocks from\npark.  Phone   718 X.  evenings.\nFOR RENT\u2014HOUSES, FUTut-Btlku\nand unfurnlahed. at reaaonabla\nrates. Phone D. Magllo, 808L.\n (6326)\ne-SbOM \"houSe, i block prom\nschool. Apply 807 SUIca St. or\nPhone 440X.  (8308)\nMODERN HOUSE. 3 BEDROOMS. G.\nH.   Fraaer.  Phone  683 Rl.     (8338)\nMISCELLANEOUS  FOB SALE      (37)\nNew and Used Black and\nGalvanized Pipe and\nFittings, Boilers, Engines, Pumps, Rails, Pulleys, Belting, Shafting,\nBearings, Gears, Sprock*\nets. Wire and Manila\nRope.\nEnquiries Solicited\nCanadian Junk Co., Ltd.\n250 prior St.       Vancouver, B.C.\n(8376)\n100,000 FEET SECOND HAND Rp\nconditioned pipe, suitable for all\npurpoaea. All sizes. Write to\nSwartz Pipe Yard, 220, let Ave.,\nVancouver, B   C. (8269*)\nELECTRIC  SEWING   MACHINE,  Vfc\nbrary table model, like new. Whlta\nRotary. Mre. Foggo. 284R, or 61IX.\n (MM)\nNOT-WEIMER PIANO\", LOW PRICE\nfor Immediate aale. also rowboat,\n110. phone 534 or T18X.   _(8340)\nJEWELL FURNACETTE IN GOOD\ncondition.   Phone   568 R.      (8341)\nLOST   AND   POUND\n(H)\nLOST\u2014GOLD DRAOON BROOCH IN\nNeleon. Reward, phone 698 Ll\n(8398)\nPROPERTY   1QB   SALB\nTWO BEAUTIFUL LOTS FOR SALE,\nyoung fruit treea and garden. Ap-\nply   Box   230,   Nelaon, (830T)\nPROPERTY  WANTED\n(33)\nWANTED   TO   RENT   ON   SHARES.\nfarm  with  hens. oows.  pigs,  near\nNelson.  Man   and   wife  with  bast\nreferences.  Box  8104,  Daily  News.\n(8104)\n.IT0.M0BH.ES  FOB SALE\n(II)'\nA  REAL   SNAP\u20141931   DESOTO  8E-\ndan. Phone 364 L3\u201e Box \u2022*6T-\nF1KMTIRE   rOB   SALE\n(46)\nDOMINION LIVESTOCK\nLONDON CLOSE\nLONDON, Sept 3 (API\u2014Closing:\nBrazilian Traction 815%: c P R\n\u202218%; General Motors \u00a33T; Hydro\nElec 18%: Intl Nickel 132%; Intl\nTel t. Ttl 119; U S Steel \u00bb60;\nAnglo Dutch 16s 3d: Anglo Peralan\n(3%*. Brlt Amn Tobaoco \u00a35%: Brlt\nCelanese 16s 3d; Bwana M'Kubwa\n\u25a06s Dd; carreras Ord \"A\" \u00a38: Court-\naulds [2; De Beers \u00a36%: Dlatlllera\n88a; Dunlop Rubber 35s; Electrical\nts M Ind Ord 14s 6d: Ford Ltd 24s\n6d; Hudaon Bay 26e 9d; Imperial\nChemical 29a l%d: Imperial Tobacco lOTs Ml Mining Truat Ltd\n6s 3d; Rand Mines \u00a38%; Rhodealan\nAnglo Amn ITa 6d: Rhokana Copper\n\u00a38%; Crowns \u00a39%; Springs \u00a35%;\nEast Oeduld \u00a36%; Royal Dutch\n\u00a323%: Shell T is T \u00a32%: Vickers\n8a; Woolworth 88s; British 3% per\noent consols \u00a373%: British 3% per\ncent war loan \u00a3100; British funding\n4*  1960-90 \u00a3111%.\nWINNIPEG, Sept. 6 (CP)\u2014Dominion liveatock quotations follow: Receipts 1235 cattle. 346 calvea. 650\nhoga, 500 aheep.\nSteera, up to 1050 Iba.: Good and\nchoice 63 to 13.50; over 1050 lbe,\ngood and  choloe. 82.75  to 83.50.\nHeifera: Oood and choice, 13.73\nto  13.50.\nFed calvea: Oood and choloe, 84.80\nto 85.50.   .\nCowa: Oood 81.50 to \u00bb1.75.\nBulla: Oood \u00bb!_35 to 81.60.\nStocker and feeder ateera: Good\n41.75 to 82.26.\nVeal calvea: Good and choice\n13.60 to 64.60.\nHoga: Select bacon \u00bb1 per head\nI premium; bacon 86.75; butchera 81\n| per head dlacount; heavy 88.25;\ni extra heavy 64.50; llghta and feedera\n] 64.80 to 86.40; sows 84.60.\nLambs: Oood handywelght 65.\nSheep: Oood heavlea 61.2510 61.50.\nEGG MARKETS\nOTTAWA, Sept. 6 (OP)\u2014A generally quiet tone waa reported from\nCanadian   egg   marketa  today.\nToronto\u2014Market quiet. Graded\nsh.pmcnts trom Ontario sold on apot\nto distributors at extras 20%. firsts\n17%. seconds H3%.\nMontres\u2014Recelpta 1348 caaea oompared with 1064 casea for corree-\npondlng day lut year. Market quiet.\nGraded Ontario ehlpmente sold on\napot to distributors at extraa 22 to\n23, flrata IT to 16, aeconda 13%\nto 14.\nSaint John\u2014Extras 19, flrata 16,\n.crouds 11.\nHalifax\u2014Extraa IB to 30, firsts 14\nto 16, seconds 11 to 13.\nLIVESTOCK   rOBSALE _ (\u00bb\u00bb>\nYOUNG HOLSTEm COW FOR BALE\ncheap.  Good  milker. Roy Kellogg,\nTaghum.      I*31-'\nScotland Uses More\nCanadian Bacon\nOTTAWA. Sept. 5 (OP)\u2014 Importa\nof Canadian bacon by Sootland in\nthe firnt alx montha of 1983 totalled\n3270 cwt., compared with 91 cwt.\nfor tha correapoP-Ung period of laat\nyear, aaya a report laaued. today by\nthe Dominion bureau of atatiatlcs.\nImport of hama waa 6946 cwt. aa\nagalnat 733.\nTORONTO INDUSTRIALS\nORAY SATIN FINISH BEDROOM\naulte, perfect condition, cheap.\nApply Mrs. O. B. Matthew. 905\nEdgewood avenue. (6281)\nCLASSIFIED   DISPLAY\nBell Telephone - _ -\t\nBeatty   Broa     -\nBrazilian     - _ \u2014\nB A Oil _ \t\nCanada    Dredge\t\nCanada   Bread     -\nCanada   Gypsum    \t\nCanada   Malting    \t\nConaolldated Bakerlea  \u2014\nConaolldated  Mining  \t\nDlatlllera Seagrams  ....\u2014\nDominion  Storea   \t\nFord of Canada \"A\" _\t\nGoodyear  \t\nHiram   Walker    -\nImperial OU  \t\nImperial   Tobacco   \t\nInduatrlal Alcohol \"A\"\t\nInternational Nickel \t\nInternational  Pete    -\t\nLoblaw \"A\" \t\nMassey   Harrla    _-\t\nNoranda     _ \u2014____\u2014\nOnt Equity  Life  \t\nPage   Hersey    - -\t\nService   Stations   \u2014.\t\nStandard  Paving  \t\n. 112\n.   10\n.    14%\n.    14%\n.    17\n6\n.     4%\n.   33%\n.   12\n. 133\n.   27\n.   22\n.    15\n. 100\n.   15\n.    14%\n.    10%\n.   17%\n21.10\n.   19\n.   16\n.     6%\n36.05\n.    10\n.   66\n8\n.     8%\nWE DO EVERYTHING IN\nPRINTINO\nBOOK B-NDOtO\nPAPER  RULINO\nComet stylei in Wedding Invitations, Announcements, and\nInvitation Carda.\nTHB DAILY NEWS\nJOB   PRINTING    DEPARTMENT\nPhona 144 Phone 141\nBusiness and Professional\nDirectory\t\nAccountants\nCANADA BONDS\nWINNIPBO,   Sept.   5   (CP)   \u2014Dominion of Canada bonda:\nWAR  LOAN\n6.    1937,    108.35;    100.25.\nVICTORY   LOAN\n5%.   1938,   100.00:   100.75.\n3%,   1934,   101.76;   102.26.\n6%,   1937,   109.25;   110.10.\nREFUNDING    LOAN\n5.    1948.    105.25:    106.26.\n4%,   1940,   10325,   103.25.\n4%,  1946.  101.60;   102.60.\nCONVERSION LOAN\n4%, 1966, 99.86; 10096.\n4%, 1967, 99.85; 100.86.\n4%, 1968, 100.25; 100.85.\n4%,   1969,   101.25;'   101.85.\nNATIONAL  SERVICE LOAN\n5, 1936,  103.76;   103.76.\n6, 1941.   105.36;   108.10.\n1932  LOAN\n4.   1936,   100,00;   100.75.\n4. 1962, 95.85: 96.75.\nCHAS. F. HUNTER. B, F\u201e INT. A. C.\nMunicipal and commercial Audita.\nP.O. Box 1191. Nelaon, B.C.    (8326)\nAssayers\nE W. WIDDbwSON. established 1900.\n305 Josephine St. Nelson, B.C. *\n (8327)\ngrenviiXe'h. ORIMWOOD. p. 0.\nBox 418,  Kaslo,  B.C. '8328)\nB. C. Land Surveyor\nR  O  LESLIE, B. C. L. 8. 302 KERR\nBlock. Nelaon. Phone 276L.    (83201\nChiropractors\nR. E. Gray, D.C, Ph.C, Oliker Blook.\n (63301\nJ. R. MACMILLAN. DR. OF CHI-tO-\npractlc, Aberdeen Blk, Ph. 212.\n 163311\nMITTUN AND GEDDB8, X-RAY and\nMCM, Cranbrook and Trail, (1833)\n Florists\t\nJOHNSON'S   GREENHOU6BS,   Phono\"\n342.   Cut   llowera.   potted   plants,\n_and_floraI_dcalgna. i8333i\nKELSON FLOWER SHOPPE. FULL\nllne cut flowera at all tlmea. Floral   dealgna.   Phone   333.        (8834)\nInsurance and Real Estate\nR. W. DAWSON, Real Estate. In-\naurance, Rentala. Next Hlpperaon\nHardware,   Baker   street.       (83331\nMining Engineer\nH.  D.  DAWSON   \u2014   NELSON\nMININO ENGINEER\nB.C. LAND SURVEYOR\n(83361\nSash Factory\nLAWSON'S SA8H FACTORY. HARD-\nwood merchant, 217 Baker street.\n(8337)\nTILLIE THE TOILER:\nBy Wcstover\nSTOCKS \u2014 BONDS\nAuto anA Tire Insurance\nW. M. WALKER\nBOOM  lt,   K.W.C.   BLOCK Fl\nNELSON, B.C.\n[C'MOM, fiOSlE\n, VAIS'lt-S     OFF     f\n| TO    TSlP   THB    l\u2014\u2022*.\nI.ISHT FAMTA'STIC]\nMOV*) VOO'B-E\nMV NIC-B\nPOPPA MACl-\nAOAIM *-\"\n'vSHAf* TtU-T\npACKBT\n\"________h_7\nI VMHAT'S   -THIS  T-M*!\u00bblBt-ta MO(S_T,\n\u2014  MAStTRO.\n Ho.\n\u2014 THE NEUON DAILT NEWS, NELSON, B.C.\u2014WEDNESDAY MOBNINO, SEPTEMBER \u00ab, 1933 ,\n.porting News\nAPANESE DAViSStMTSKIDS-\nOUT OF FOREST HILLS PLAY\nut Foreign Contingent\nProgresses; Aussies\nNot Impressive\nBy  ALAN  OOULD\ntMO-cleted Treu Sports Editor\nFOREST RILLS, N.Y.. Sept. H\nAl-i\u2014On turf itlll ellppery and\ntltartlois, from weekend nine, .the\norelgn tennis contingent progreae-\nm sinusal Intact today Ihrouih the\nlecond round or the Vnlted stater,\nnen's singles championship at the\nIfeat Side club.\nThere was only one casualty In\nhe \"seeded\" rank* of the Invaders,\nElklrhl Itoh of the Japanese\n>btIs cup team skidded out of\nIla tournament.\nThe entire Australian continent, Including the great Jack\n!rawford. looked anything but\nnpresslve and Fred Ferry, Brl-\natn's Davis cup hero, and -Jlro\nlatoh. squat, hard-hitting No. 1\nIf the Japanese team, did not ap-\nre-ar to favor the slippery going.\nITTSBIROHEB\nBATS   ITOH\nItoh, \"aeeded\" No. 7 ln the, foreign\ntt, wu eliminated by a former\noliege star, Dr. Duvie O'Loughlln\nf Pittsburgh, ln th* only upset of\nday that cut the field from 64\n. 31 tor the third round tomorrow.\nK. O'Loughlln, backing up a strong\n\u2022Woe with bsaellne steadiness,\nrlmmad th* young Japaneee by\n-3. 8-1. t-3.\nSatoh, one of the few top-notoli-\nra to hold a decision over Crawford\nbla  year, atruggled   with   another\n\u2022ennsylvenlaii, Hugh Lynch of Buck\nnils Fr'ls. before  pulling  out  his\nnatch at t-t. t-S, g-4.\n'RAWFORD   ERRATIC\n[ Crawford made his  first  appear-\nknee on the stadium turf  agalnat\npullus Seligson, united  Statea collegiate champion of   1628,  and  was\n\u25a0lightly erratic for two aeta before\npinning by scores of s-4, t-3, t-o.\nVivian McOrath, the curly-haired\nkuetralten whoae two-tutted back-\ntanj haa attracted mor* attention\n;ban any other stroke ln the tour-\nlament, had a battle with Wllmer\nlines, tall Columbia (S.C.) atar.\nlefore emerging on top ln one of\nb* longest contests of tb* day,\n\u20223, 5-7. 8-4. 8-4. McOratha unorthodox backhand waa not In very\n[ood working order.\n\u00abEW  YORKERS  BEATEN\nEton Turnbull and Adrian  Qulst.\n__rs.rallsn   doublea   mates,   likewise\nSound  tbe footing difficult.  Turn-\nfull squeezed  through  agalnat the\n\u2022tersn New Torker, J. Ollbert Hall,\n|_J, 7-S, 6-4, 6-4. while Qulst over-\nrune another seasoned New Torker,\n[fad Herndon, by 6-3, 3-6,  6-4, 8-3.\nPerry, who la favored to meet Ella-\nworth Vines, th* defending Cham*\nplon. In th* aaml-flnala, dropped his\nflrat aat with th* left-handed Robert Bryan of Chattanooga, Tenn.,\nbefore settling down to win by\naeon* ot 8-6, 6-S, 6-0, 6-3,\nTh* hom* guard, led by Vlnw end\nPrank X. Shields, giant New Yorker,\nmeanwhile had relatively llttl* difficulty. Th* champion disposed of\nRay Palmer Jr. ot Malba, NX, a\nhigh achool boy, 6,1. 6-3, 6-3, whll*\nshields whipped John O'Orady of\nNtw York, e-o, e-3. 6-4.\nOf the other top \"aeeded\" Americans. Wllmer Allison, cliff Sutter.\nFrankle Parker olid George lott, all\ncam* through In ttralgbt aeta.\nHOME RUN\nSTANDING\nHorn* runa yesterday-Foxx, Athletlca, 1; Oehrlg. Yankees, 1; Chapman. Tank***. 11 Crosetti, Yankees,\n1; Cramer, Athletlca, 1; Schulte.\nSenatora, 1.\nLeadera\u2014Foxi, Athletic*, 40: Ruth.\nYankees, 36; Berger, Braves, 35;\nKlein, Phllllea. 35; Gehrig, Yank-\nen,  39.\nLeagu* totala\u2014American 537. National  408;   total  045.\nBill Lee Goes to\nthe Chicago Cubs\nCHICAOO, Sept. t (AP)\u2014Chicago\nCub* today announced tb* purchase\nof BlU Le*. atar right handed pitcher from tbe Columbua club of the\nAmerican aaaoclatlon.\nBourne of McGill\nWins Italian Swim\nTURIN. Italy, Stpt. 5 (CP Cable).\n\u2014Munro* Bourne. McOlll University's swimmer, won the 50-metre\nfree ttylt event at th* International Unlveralty games ln tb* ntw\nMussolini stadium today. Hit timt\nwa*  -6.8  eeconds.\nIn th* 400-metre m* ttylt Sunday Bourne wa* fifth;\nMINOR LEAGUE\nBALL SCORES\nINTEBNATIONAL\nNewark  9-1;   Jersey  Olty  6-3.\nBaltlmon   1-1;   Albany  3-7.\nBuffalo 7*3; Toronto t-3.\nA method haa been developed for\nshredding wut* leather and pressing It Into sheets tbat oan b* used\nfor  many   purposes.\nBRINGING UP FATHER:\nBy Geo. McManus\nKIMBERLEY WINS SOFTBALL\nAT CRANBROOK SPORTS\nPet Parade Is Feature; Tortoise Captures Prize;\nMice to Saddle Horses Entered; Warren\nIs Victor in Marathon Race\nORANBROOK, B. C. aept. S\u2014\nSport* tn Cranbrook on labour day\nwsre under tne au*p!ces of Cranbrook Oyro club and were well attended. They opened with the pet\nparade ln the mornlnt and closed\nwith   a   danoe.\nThe pet parade which Included\nt representative array of Cranbrook\nkiddles' animals and birds, frcm\nmice- to paddle hows, was or widespread interest. At the head of\nthe parad* wm an excellent personification of Mahatma Ohandl, even\nto the loin cloth and accompanying\nsoat. The city flretruck and ladder\nwagon came next and were polished\nto a high degree. Tha Cranbrook\ncity band and the Legion bugle\nband also marched In parade and\nfurnished music. Dogs of all sizes\nand shapes, on leash or carried,\nwere followed by decorated wigons\ncontaining cats, bunnlee, bantams\nand everything that might be ctlled\nchild's pet. Decorated saddle\nhorses with their riders concluded\nttw entourage. Judges were Mrs. F.\nB. Miles. Mtt. M. A. Beale and A.\nB.  Smith. 9   *\nAt tht bell grounds softball\ntames, log sawing and chopping,\ntugs of war. a greasy pig contest\nand tht start and finish of the\nflvt mile marathon sponsored by\ntht Cranbrook Courier were wlt-\nhtastd.\nTht high Ught of the day's events\nwas tbe exhibition of high Jumping\nbefore tbt grand stand by D. McNaughton, Olympic high Jump\nchampion at Lot Angeles, now a\nmining engineer ln the district. Mr.\nMcNaughton went over the har with\neast that was a delight to\nwatch, clearing tht -pole by the\n'spread-eagle' method. The clowning of Oordon Hanna and Tom\nHogarth during this event and  the\nsoftball   games   kept   the   crowd   ln\na good humor.\nEXJOV   WATER   SPORTS\nIn thc afternoon water sports\ndrew crowds, the events being of a\nmore amusing nature than the\nchampionship events ln swimming\nand diving sponsored by the Oyroe\non July l. Canoe tilting, log rolling, biscuit, full dress, pipe, obstacle, balloon and three lagged\nraces, pillow fights, oomlc diving\nand a water polo match made a\nvaried and interesting program. The\nafternoon concluded with a big ftre\nhoae fight on the grounds back of\nthe crystal dtlry.\nKimberley emerged winner of the\nsoftball events, defeating Moyle ln\nthe first game and the Crsnbrook\nHoopsters with a 9-5 score ln the\nsecond  game.\nIn the pet parade those winning\nawards for their dogs were Myrtle\nJones, Ivy Oould, Margaret Briggs,\nLube Zelll. Jack Conroy, Irene Kami-all, and Billy Larson. Awards for\ncut* went to Stewart Macintosh,\nBilly Harrison, and Andrew Johnson. Prizes for saddle horses went\nto Jerry Wallace and BUly .fergie.\nSpecial prists went to K. BIggottlnl\nfor tht calves, to Mary Irickson\nfor rabbltt, to Prances Carver for\na tortoise tnd D. Wheaton for\nwhite rats.\nWILLIAMS   WINS   LOO\nROLLING\nIn the water sports Deanle Wallace tnd Hedley Baxter ctme first\nIn the canoe tilting. Alex Williams\nwon the log rolling contest. Bill\nCox and Hedley Baxter won the\nbiscuit ract. Hadley Baxter the\npillow fight, Billy Perglt and Bill\nCox the full dress parade. Bud Mor-\nrles the comlo diving, Bud Morris\nand Joe Froventano tht pipe race,\nAn-rclo Proaeniano the obstacle race,\nwith   Max   Bell   at  t   close  second,\nBill Cox and Joe Provenzano tha\nballoon race, and Hedley Baxter\nand Bill  cox the three-legged race.\nTht five-mile marathon wtt won\nby    Leigh ton    Warren,    an    Indian\nfrom  the  St,  Eugene mission  corn-\nsecond,\ning   in   some   distance   behind   as\nProceeds wlll go to defray expenses ln connection with the erection of the slides and other Improvements  tt   the  swimming  pool.\nFINAL GAME IN\nJR. SERIES;SUNDAY\nTrail  and   Nelson   Even  on\nBall Series to Date\nFERNIES NINE\nWINS TOURNEY\nBut Kimberley Wins $100\nSoccer Prize Labor\nDay\nSunday afternoon, September 10,\nhss been definitely set at the date\nfor the fifth tnd t'lnal game of the\nWest Kootenay charqpkmahlp series\nbetween the Trail and Nelson representative junior baseball teams. The\ngame wlll be played at the local\nRecreation grounds, the local team\nhaving won the tou to decide where\nthe odd game would be played. In\nthe two games played in Nelson the\nlocal nine has decisively defeated\ntht Trail club, and has lost two\nclose gamea played on the Trail diamond, although they have out hU\nthe Trail squad ln ever; ont ot\nthe four games.\nThe local nine will practloe every\nmorning' until the game, and t lull\nturnout of the players is requested\nfor this morning tt 9:30.\nPhil Edwards Asks\nfor Recognition for\n1000 Yards Record\nMONTHXAL, Bept. 5 (OP)\u2014Phil\nEdwards, McOlll unlvenlty runner\nand former Canadian Olympian, has\napplied for official recognition of\nhis world's record for the 1000\nyardt, run at Toronto last Saturday\nln a minutes  10 4-5 seconds.\nRecord books sT..ow the present\nofficial record to be 2 minutes II\n1-6 seconds, set by O. Bills, Oreat\nBritain, on September 7, 1939, In\nLondon.\nFERNM, B. C, SEPT. 6\u2014rint\nweather conditions assisted In making the Fernle Labor Day celebration\none of the largest and most successful held.\nCrowds of out-of-townera from\nIdaho, Montana, points In tht Crows\nNest Pass and from as ftr west\nm Creston saw the football and\nbaseball tournaments and witnessed\nfield and track events. The sports\nprogram was run off during t\ndsy warm and balmy if a little\nwindy.\nVisitors rrom many points alao\nmet at a well attended danoe ln\nVictoria hall  in the evening.\nThe final rounds of the tournaments were played Monday, preliminaries having been decided the day\nbtlore.\nThe home teams reached the semifinals ln football and baseball, tnd\nconceded the 9100 purse to Kimberley ln the soccer by 3 to l. But\nthey took first prize of 1100 in\nbaseball, relegating Belton, Montana\nto second with Its $78 prise, the\nscore being 13 to 6.\nTht softbtll tournament wtt\ncalled off for lack ot entries.\nJack Oonnlck of Pernle ctme flrtt\nIn both the men's 100 yard and the\n320 yards. Orant Hamilton was second In the 100 vards.\nDave McDonald ot Newgate camt\nln first in the half mile with\nPete Langl  of Pemle  arriving  next.\nMlss   Mamie   Atkinson   won   first\nprlae In the ladles'  100 yards,  and\nMlss Violet Jacublec waa second.\nHELTON  WINS\nBelton came out on top ln tht\nfirst round of the baseball with\na score of 10-7, Fernle Intermediates\nbeing lose. The game wat loose\nrnd erratic with Fernie In the lead.\nBelton  ran  up  seven  runt   ln  the\nfourth Inning. Fsrnle retaliated tying tht score but Belton finished\nup strong taking the honors.\nIn tht seoond Inning McOtrty of\nBelton wu knocked out whtn three\ninflelders tied up to ahtre the same\nPop fly. Bt recovered in time to\ncontinue ln  the gtme.\nFERNIB   WINS   1-1\nFsrnle Seniors walked away from\nMlohel ln tht second game to\nfinish easily with a score of 3 to 1.\nTht gamt wtt uneventful with\nFernle  steadily  Increasing the lead.\nPernle Seniors won the bssebsll\nfinal with eatt fom the Belton\naggregstlon with the score 13-6.\nrernle got twty toon arter the\nsecond Inning and Jutt kept adding\nto thtlr soore ttch succeeding frame\nBelton staged t llttlt comeback\nwhloh netted thtm two runs. They\nseemed to bt weak on the mound,\nhowever, as the local boys found\nllttle   difficulty   hitting.\nUmpire Pep Colton handled the\nthrows.\nTht lineups were tt follows:\nPern It\u2014-Galen-ski 3b; Frances as;\nStienert lb: Warrick p; LtBalle c;\nNoble 3b; Peters cf; Matfoll rf;\nHalko   lf.\nBelton\u2014McCarthy  ss;   Barton  3b;\nDes Rosters 3b; Kublct cf: Borst lb;\nBajak rf; Martin c;  Fisher If; Woj-\ndyle p.\nFERNIE   WINS\nThe semi-final of ths football\ntournament wtt won by Fernle 3\nto 1. The game was exceptional In\nthat It required an hour overtime\nto break t one-all tie.\nA ttrong croes-wlnd hampered the\nplay considerably. Heated remarks\nalmost developed into fights on two\noccasions. Melbourne of Coal Creek\ntallied ln the first half and Corlett\ntied fo* Pernle in the teoond.\nJtck Sweeney of Fernle broke the\ntie kicking the deciding goal, and\nOorlett followed with another aoon\nafter, lteferte Sweeney htndled the\nwhittle.\nTht latt whlatle of the football\nfinal found Klmbtrlty in tht lead\n3-1. The teams were well matched.\nboth gtttlng a gotl In the first half;\nBenntl toormg for Fernle on a\npenalty kick and O. McFarlane for\nKlmbtrlty. Kimberley got tbe edge\non tht local mtn with t goal\nby MoClay latt in the second half\nand dominated the play for the\niest of the game. McFarlane blasted\nFernle's hopes with m third thortly\nbefore tht  game  finished.\nThe lineups wert as follows:\nKlmbtrlty\u2014T. Hotchklss, W. Jones\ntnd  O.  jonss,  W.  Falls.   O.   Scott,\nYORKSHIRE IS\nCRICKET CHIP\nSussex Second, Kent Ii\nThird as Season\nCloses\nLONDON. Sept. S (CP Cable).\u2014\nFor ths eighth time In IS seruoni\nslnoe the war end the 17th Ume\nelnce 1883\u2014the flret occaalon the\ncounty obtained leading place in\nthe competition\u2014Yorkshire haa carried off the first cisse county\ncricket championship.\nWith the conclusion of the match\nbetween Essex and Suaeex. today,\nthe curtain was rung down ob\ncounty cricket for another aeaaon.\nbut the former's flrat Innings win\ndid not affect the standing of the\nleading clubs. Torkshlre last week\nmade eure of first plaoe In the\ntable with a total of SIH polnte and\na percentage of 70.00. Suaeex again\ntook eecond postltlon with Sll\npolnte and a percentage of 0..19.\nWith Kent In third plsce the three\nclubs finished in the same positions\nas last year.\nEssex made a remarkable recovery\nto flnlah fourth. Lalt year the\neastern county won only four games\nand cloaed the aeaaon In Uth position. The decline of Nottinghamshire and Surrey was another feature of this eummer's play. In 1932\nthese counties finished fourth and\nfifth respectively but today they ere\nplaced ninth and   lo'h\nOlamorgan failed to maJte any\nheadway and are at the bottom of\nthe standing. The weatern oounty\ngained major points In only one\ngame.\nJ. MeClay. D. Oold. D. Nicholson.\nG McFarlsno. J. McFarlane, H.\nLittler.\nFernle\u2014O. Wasnock. P. and H.\nCorrlgan, J, Btuurt. j. Oeorge, w.\nMartin, F. Dawaon, j. bweeney, Corlett, f. Bennet F. Atherton.\n38th Annual\nNELSON FAIR\nL\u20acT'S GO\nNELSON, B.C.\ntTTTmmrr*\nTHREE BIG DAYS\nSEPTEMBER 20-21-22 - 1933\nNELSON CITY BAND IN ATTENDANCE\nFree Attractions Twice Daily\n0#\nBIMBO\u2014the Hollywood Canine Wonder\nTOLA\u2014on the Flying Pereh\nLES ZERADOS-Aerial Wonders\nLOG CHOPPING-ROCK DRILLING-LOG SAWING\nREDUCED RATES\nan all\nRAILROAD LINES\nSEND FOR PRIZE LIST TO:\nRoss Fleming,\nPresident\nEntries Close Saturday,\nSeptember 16th\nG. Horstead\nSecretary\nP. O. Box 192 Neleon, B. c.\nPRICES\nSeason Tickets $1.00\nOeneral  Admission\nAdults 50c - Child. 15c\nThis Advertisement Is Paid For and Sponsored by the Following Nelso n Firms:\nWood, Vallance Hardware\nCo., Ltd.\nW. W. Powell Co., Ltd.\nNelson Transfer Co., Ltd.\nHudson's Bay Co.\nNelson Daily News\nKootenay Breweries Ltd.\nHipperson Hardware\nCo., Ltd.\nMacdonald's Consolidated\nLtd.\nSavoy Hotel\nHume Hotel\nMeagher & Co.\nF. W. Woolworth\nCo., Ltd.\n(iilker's\nWest Transfer Co.\nVassar's for Sausages\nEmory's Ltd.\nSafeway Stores, Ltd.\nNelson Hardware\nCo., Ltd.\nStandard Cafe\nR. Andrew & Co.\nL. D. Cafe\nPalm Dairies Ltd.\nL. H. Choquette\nBurns' Coal and\nCartage Co.\nHorswill Bros.\nGolden Gate Cafe\nRamsden's\nT. C. Cummins\nKootenay Music House\nA. H. Green Co., Ltd.\nJ. A. Irving Co.\nNational Fruit Co., Ltd.\nBurns & Co., Ltd.\nThe B & K Milling\nCo., Ltd.\n r.un ciobt\nSENATORS WIN\nDOUBLEHEADER\nYankees and Athletics Divide; Foxx Gets 40th\nHomer\nBOSTON, Sept. 19 (AP).\u2014Although\nout-hit In both gamea, the league-\nleading Washington senators todsy\ntook both ends of a double-header\nfrom Boston Red Sox.\nPlrst:\ntvuhington        5 10   -\nBoaton       1 11   _\nStewart. Ruaaell and Seweil:\nRhodes. Welland. Kline and Ferrell.\nSecond:\nWashington        9 10   0\nBoston        t 11   3\nWhitehill. RusseU. Crowder and\nBewell; Welch, Fullerton, Klein, Welland and Oooch.\nPOXX GETS  40TH  HOMEK\nPHILADELPHIA, Sept. 6 (AP).\u2014\nPhiladelphia Athletlca and New York\nYankees divided a dov*f'.e-header\ntoday with a mixed display of good\npitching and hard hitting that did\nnot get either team anywhere. The\nAa won the flrat 0-1. and the Yanks\nthe aecond. 0-0. to flnsh 9!i gsmes\nbehind Washington Senators. Jlmmle Foxx clouted his 40th homer\nof the year off Lefty Gomez In the\nsixth of the opener. Gehrig opened the Yankeea* firing In the nightcap with hla 23rd homer of tht\nseaaon. .\nFirst:\nNew York        1   \u00bb   1\nPhiladelphia         6   \u00bb   0\nGomez. MacFayden and Dickey;\nMahaffey and Cochrane.\nSecond:\nFew   York       \u00bb 13   ~\nPhiladelphia        \u00ab   \u00bb   3\nDevents and Dickey: Cain, Walberg, Coombs and Cochrane.\nVirginia Wins Again\nTHE NELSO* DAILT NEWS. NBLSON, B.C.\u2014WEDNESDAY MOW-TOO. BEFTEMBE* (I. IMS\nAbove are ahown the semi -finalists\nin the U-S. women'a golf trophy\n.-i.ee. Virginia van Wie holds the\nwomen's golf championship of the\nUnited  States   for  the eecond   suc\ncessive rear by virtue of her win\nover Helen Hicks of Long Island.\nShe won 4 and 3. Mlss van Wie\nentered the finals by beating  Enid\nWllaon of England decisively 6 and\n5. Mlss Hicks' victory over Maureen\nOrcutt in the semi-finals was 6\nand 4.\nWILL TRANSFER\nSAINTS' RELICS\nAn  apparatus   has  been   Invented      GENOA   Italy   <*-*\u00bb-TI\u00bbnJolJ\";\n.   .rr    .._._    ____. __. *.,     ma im    of    Saint.    Maurn    and     Sa nl\nwork.\nto catch cosmic ray. and make them m\u00ab\"n\u00bb of Saint Nttur. and Saint\nltteuter-0 wrested from the City or\nParen__o In the Adriatic by the con-\n1 querlng Genoese Commander Pagano\n; Doria. wlll be returned to their\nnative city shortly with Impressive\nrellclous  pomp.\nAUCTION  SALE\nThird St., Fairview\nImmediately Behind Hume School\n_ P.M. FRIDAY, SEPT. 8th\nFavored with Instructions from\nMrs. L. A. Leriger. I will offer\n(he following:\u2014 Garden Tools,\nS lots Garden Hose, I_awn Mower,\nRoller, Sealers, nine Kegs, Ladders, scales. Crocks. Fuller\nBrushes, Washer, Awnings, Kitchen Table and Chairs, Duties,\nUtensils, Oak Dining Room Furniture, Floor Lamp. Table Lamp',\n4-hole Fawcett Range, rlcturt-s,\nLino. Rugs, Brlck-llned Heater,\nCard Table, leather Upholstered\nDavenport. Easy Chairs, Hall\nRack. Curtains, Blinds, Bteel\nBeds, Mattreeses, Bedroom Furniture, Vacuum Cleaner. Violin,\nCanned Fruit, ff-tube De Forest\nCroaley Console Battery Radio, 1\npure bred Nubian Goat (about\nte freshen), Oarden Crop of\nVegetables, etc., etc.\nGoods on View Morning of Sale\nG. HORSTEAD,\nTERMS: Caah.        Auctioneer.\nFALL\nFAIR\nKaslo\nSEPT. 15-16\nCommemorating\nIncorporation of\nKASLO\nCITY\nOLD TIMERS\nSPECIALLY\nINVITED\nMembers of the , Doria family\nagreed to return the relics upon\ntbe repeated pleas of ecclesiastics.\nThey have held them as heirlooms\nfrom their military forebear for\nrix centuries.\nThe transportation of the remains\nto Parenzo will be by sea and\nunder navel escort. Religious authorities are planning to mske the\ntranafer an imposing marine procession with many stops at porta\non both the western and eastern\ncoasts of the Italian peninsula.\nOfflclala at psrenao. are preparing to receive the relics with all\nthe solemnity and devotion which\nthe long eought for return of the\ncity's cherished Balnfs demands.\nSt. Maurs. patrician of Parcnuo.\nwas one of the early Christians to\ncombat paganism In Austria. He\ncelebrated Chrlstlsn worship in the\ntriclinium of his fine palace, and\nwas ordained first Bishop of his\ncommunity. With his brother Eleu-\nterlo, he was martyred for his belief  In  the   third   century.\nDoria conquered Parenzo ln 1354\nduring the war between the Oenoe\nSe Republic and the Venetians. He\ntook the remains of the two Saints\nfrom their resting placo ln the\nBysanttne cathedral of Parenco.\nTransporting them to Oenoa In triumph he was greeted by popular\nrellRlous fervor and the bodies were\nplaoed In the Doria Chapel of the\nChurch   of  Our   Lady   of   the   Sens.\nv-sCJr \u2022\nPUBLIC ADDRESS\nDR. J. LYLE\nTELFORD\ne\nEAGLES' HALL\nTONIGHT, 8 P.M.\nALL  WELCOME\nThere they have been venerated ever\nsince by pious Genoese.\nRepeated prayers by the inhabitants of Parenao for the return 01\nthe relics fell on deaf ears until\n182? when the Bishop of Panenzo\nprevailed upon the Archbishop of\nOenoa to restore the' thigh bones\nof  the  two Saints.\nIn 1890 members of the Doria\nfamily signified willingness to restore the complete bodies .but\nParenzo was then under Austrian\ndomination and the decision was\nnot carried out.\nAfter Parenzo was taken over by\nItaly at the cloae of the Great\nwar her devouti again began the\ncampaign for the return of the\nrelics. The Doria lamlly finally\nagreed and. amid religious ceremonies, the high alter where the remains were kept was broken into\nand a white marble sarcophagus\nrichly decorated with the Doria\narms and Latin Inscriptions of the\nnames of the two Saints was repealed. The remains themselves were\nln a copper urn within the sarcophagus.\nJudge Was Millionaire\nBut Only in Roubles\nLONDON\u2014\"I was once a millionaire,\" remarked Lord Hanworth, the\nmaster of the Rolls, ln the Court\nof   Appeal   recently.\nHe qualified this by saying that\na friend of his In the Houw of\nCommons gave him a hundred 10,-\n000 Russian rouble notes.\n\"I asked him how far It would\ncarry me, and his reply was: Oh.\nabout a mile and a half on a\ntram.' which meant the notes were\nworth   l'^d.\"\nlord   Hanworth    added    that   he\nkept them for a time and  eventually  presented   them  to  the   British\nMuseum.\nTime\nOrder Given for Giant\nTurbine Installation\nGame With West\nIndies Is Drawn\nFOLKESTONE. England, Sept. 6\n(CP Cable) .\u2014The match between\nthe British West Indies and an England eleven which started last Saturday was today declared drawn.\nThe home players were at the wickets ln their second Innings when\nplay terminated and had scored 273\nruns for five wickets.\nThe English first innings was declared with the score at 383 for nine\nwicketa and in reply the touring\nplayera complied 858, highest eeore\never msde by a West Indies side tn\nEngland. Four centuries were made\nln  the   high   scoring   match.\nW. R. Hammond. English International player, led off with 133\nbut his total waa eclipsed by George\nHeadley, the great visiting batsman,\nwho hit up 187 runs. G. C. Grant.\ncaptain of the side, scored 118, r,id\nFrank Woolley, veteran English star,\ngot 136.\nBeer Is Kept Cold\nin Handy Syphon\nLEIPZIG.\u2014Cold, foaming beer ls\nassured in the hottest weather by\nIn the Ingenious use of syphons and\ncooling chamber ln a portable container. A cooling chamber charged\nwith Ice Is suspended. Inside a syphon protected by thick rubber insertion, so that It will defy extreme temperatures for days at a\ntime. The syphon is charged with\nbeer In a closed state by means\nof a specially designed hose directly connected with a tap or barrel.\nThe beer does not come ln contact\nwith the air while being filled and\ndevelops no froth.\nThe ingenious new container, suitable for household use or motor\ntrips, has been exhibited and demonstrated at the Leipzig fair.\nSend Us Your Orders for\nDOORS and WINDOWS\nLarge or small, and In any style, we can take care of your door\nand window requirements. Strongly made of durable materials,\nand moderate ln cost.\nPhone Vs Tour Order Now, and We Will Fill It Promptly\nA. H. GREEN CO. LTD.\n.01  FRONT   STREET FHONE   I'U\nLONDON\u2014A contract tor \u2022 105.000\ntw. turbo-gener.tlng plent. which\nwill be l.rge.t In the country, has\nbeen placed with the Metropolitan-\nVlciera Bectrlcel company for the\nBatteraea power station.\nThe hew plant, which la to coat\nCJ50.0O0 will be 40 per cent bluer\nthan any othrr operating or under\nconstruction In Britain.\nThe Deptlord Weat atatlon of the\nLondon Power company, which la\nalao equipped with Metropolltan-\nVlckera generating plant, la, according to a report of the electricity\ncommlaalonera, the most economical\nstation   In   the  oountry.\nToronto Cricketers\nRetain thc Trophy\nPattullo Meets His\nVancouver Troops\nTORONTO. Sept. 6 (CP).\u2014Toronto cricket club today retained the\nJohn Roes Roberteon trophy and\nCanadian ehamplonahlp by defeating Montreal West Indiana by an\nInninga and 195 runa.\nSTERLING WILL HEAD THE\nVANCOUVER COtUOE\nHALLIFAX. Bept. 5 (CP)\u2014Rev.\nBrother C. C. Sterling, aaaoclated\nwith Bt. Mary's oollege here since\nlt waa taktn over by the Irish\nChrlatlan Brothers' association ln\n1913. haa been appointed superior\nof the Vancouver college conducted\nby the organization.\nVANCOUVER. Sept. 5 (CPI\u2014Con-\nfcrencea preliminary to the election\ncampaign ere being held this week\nbetween T. D. Pattullo, Liberal\nleader, and party candidates at\nHotel Vancouver. Mr. Pattullo arrived today.\nNext week, he announced he will\nvisit northern constituencies.\nNew N. S. Premier\nTakes His Oath\nHALIFAX. Sept. 6 (CP)\u2014Hon.\nAngus Lewis Macdonald. former college professor who made economy\nthe foundation of his successful\ncampaign for a Liberal government\nIn Nova Scotia, waa sworn ln today\nwith his cabinet by Lieut.-Oovernor\nWalter Covert.\nCAMP MEMBER\nBREAKS WRIST\nGeorge Bernard Hurt When\nStumbles on Road Near\nKingsgale\nKINGSOATg ROAD CAMP. Sept.\n6\u2014Harry Smith and Ted KJanstead\nof the kitchen staff, spent Labor\nday  evening at  Klngsgate.\nGeorge Oenard met with an accident Sunday. While walking along\nthe highway.he stumbled and fractured the radial or large bone of\nthe left wrist. Dr. Henderson of\nOreston was summoned.\nJohn Johnson of Tahk. formerly\nof the New Hotel staff, visited the\ncsmp  Sunday.\nMr. and Mrs. Erlckson of Canyon\nCity were guests of Ralph Ring-\nstead who ls Mrs. Erlckson's brother.\nLarry Pleper left Friday to visit\nhts   family  at   Harrop.\nLeonard Porter, wbo has been on\nthe surveying staff with Mr. Brennan of Cranbrook, near Kimberley\nfor some time oompleted hts duties\nand returned to camp Friday accompanied by his brother Harold\nwho will be a member of tbls camp.\nGust Wllllama of Klngsgate was\na   caller   at   the   camp   Wednesday.\nFred Coffey visited Yahk over the\nweekend.\nJohn Czhesko was among those\nto spend the weekend In Cranbrook. . .   ,\nGeorge Wyatka spent the weekend\nIn   Cranbrook.\nThe csmp here has been receiving\nthe final touches, as to papering\nand other alterations tn preparation\nfor autumn and winter weather\nconditions.\nThis camp, now consists of about\n7o men and lt la expected that\nafter harvest operations on the\nprairie the crew wlll be materially\nIncreased.\nBabe Finds You\nCan't Beat the Races\nMargaret Martin\nDies at Nelson\nMargaret Helen, daughter of Mr.\nand Mrs. Marcus Martin, died at\nthe home of her parents early Tuesday morning after a prolonged Illness.\nMargaret was born ln Cranbrook\n19 years a?o and came to Nelson\nwith her parents about 18 years ago,\nShe attended Nelaon schools and\nwas active ln dramatics.\nB:sldes her parents Mlss Martin\nIs survived by two sisters, Catherine\nof Nelson and Mrs. A. H. Barker of\nVancouver, and one brother Alexander  (Sandy) Martin.\nAMERICANS WERE\nHERE IN FORCE\nON THE HOLIDAY\nHotels already tuiei with vlslton\nln attendance on the tennis and\ngolt tournaments or at the Labor\nday sports, had to turn away large\nnumben of American visitors, who,\nwithout reference to the special attractions, came up to Nelson from\nSpokane and other points across the\nline,  to  spend   the  holiday.\nIt ts said that the city Monday\nhad the largeat number of American visitors It hss had at any time\nthis season, or for a couple of\nseasons.\nYou can Beat\nrt \/Mce.BuT\nHOT The\nMaes\"\nBltt:\nRUTH\nQabeRuth\nWOiM I'OUK\n0T~TAI6HT\n\/9AQFS AM>\n7fr\u00a3N \/.osr\nfY\/SIttOKY\nPeHQIL\nfc&*L_*l\nfc'\njk J>JFW.4 fA\u00bb\nBy    AI    Demaree\n\"You can beat a race occassional^, but you can't beat the races.\"\nBabe Ruth remarked to me one\nday. \"I found that out years ago\nafter I had donated a quarter of\na million dollars toward Improving tbe breeding of race horses.\n\"You never can tell which horses\nare hopped up before a race. I\nfigure fifty per cent ol race horaes\nare doped. If an owner has a\nhorse in the running list and he\nand tbe trainer think his racing\ndays are near the end, they set\nhim for one good race. They fill\nhim to the gills with dope, and\nthen go out and  bet him heavy.\n'The only luck I ever had at a\nrace was when I had a certain\nlucky pencil that I marked my\nchoices with. I lost that pencil and\nhaven't bet on a horse race since.\"\nDIVIDENDS\nOoodyear Tire & Rubber Compsny\nof Canada, limited, preferred \\%\nper cent, payable October 2, record\nSeptember, 15.\nCanadian celanese, limited, 7 per\ncent cum. part, prev., quarter ending September 30. $1.76 per share,\npayable September 30, record September  IB.\nEdgewood Avenue\nOpened to Traffic\nKgewood avenue was opened to\ntraffic for the first time Tuesday\nsince the widening commenced and\nwork on the new suspension sidewalk on tbe outside of the street ls\nwell  under way.     a\nThe extent of the improvement\ncan be clearly seen by tbe lines\nwhere ihe old concrete ends. In the\nmiddle of the curve the street ls\n28 feet wide where lt was formerly\nonly 18. The curve is now the\neasiest obtainable and the slope of\nthe surface of the street more\nuniform.\nOn the outer edge a sturdy concrete curbing haa been constructed\nand to this wlll be attached the\nbrackets which wlll hold the sidewalk.\nWork la also nearlng completion\non the widening in front of the\nhospital.\nJohannesburg Station\nInstals Moslem Shrine\nJOHANNESBURG. South Africa,\u2014\nThe new railway station of this ctty\nis probably the only station in the\nBritish Empire, outside of India.\nequipped with a shrine for the\n\"faithful\"\nAn inner room has a praying mat\non the floor, and a shower bath\nhas been Installed so that the \"faithful\" who enters may perform his\nablutions before he enters to  pray.\nAs a result \"Allah Ho Akbar\"\n(\"God Is Oreat\") is now Intoned ln\nthe station before the pious Moslem\nleaves on a train Journey.\nSEATTLE. Sept. 6 (AP).\u2014Mark\nReed, well known lumberman and\nformer political power In this state,\ndied here today following a long\nIllness and an operation performed\nseveral days sgo.\nAt Huey's Long Island Waterloo\nWe WiU Allow You\n$1.50\nFOR YOUR OLD TOASTER\nON THE PRICE OF A NEW\n\u2022    General Electric Hotpoint Toaster\nFor a limited time only, we resents a big saving to you.\nwill pay you $1.50 for your \"^uS&jP *<*<l .v,Mjl' ,M' delighted wiih\npresent toaster, if you pur-     '~i*~*_rT \"lc attractive G*E  Hotpoint\nrha-sc  from  us a  (; cne ral HK|'\/l\/r3\u00bb Toaster. II toasts two slices\nElectric Hotpoint Toaster! [filif\/l\/O? \u00b0f ')read at once\u2014an(- offers\nNo strings to this offer\u2014the A.j^^attjl&m \"lc famousToa.-tover feature,\nliberal trade-in allowance rep- **** \"\"\u25a0\"-^P^ Bring your old toaster in today.\nWood, Vallance Hardware Co., Ltd.\n' No thought of fisticuffs troubled\nthe mind of Senator Huey Long of\nLouisiana when this picture, showing him with Mrs. Oene Buck ileft),\nMr. and Mrs. Edward Mulrooney,\nsnd Mlss Elaine Hyland (right),\nwas made at Sands Point, Ll., party,\nduring' which \u00a3he \"Klngflsh\" mysteriously received a bruised eye and\nminor abrasions. The senator, claiming he was \"ganged\", retreated ln\ngood order, as did Oeorge Washington before a superior force nesr\nthe aame spot.\nPRICE OF OOLD\nMONTREAL. Sept. 9 (CPI\u2014Price,\nof b.r gold in \/London today wu\n131.40 an ounce ln term* ot the Canadian dollar, baaed on the London\nprlca o! 130a 4d. and the quotation\nof aterllng ln Montreal at l..81*n.\nYeaterday the Canadian equivalent\nwu 131.25.\nI-ast Minute\nANNOUNCEMENTS\nPOSITION WANTED AS HOU8E-\nkeeper for widower or Batchelor.\nReferencea exchanged It necessary\nP.O.  Box  988  Nelaon. (8349)\nWANTED\u2014GOOD GIRL FORHOUSE-\nwork. Over  18. phone 807 L.\n(8393)\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nWanted\u2014Plums. Green Gages, early\nApplea and Huckleberries. McDonald\nJam. (8J70)\nTHE ARK\u2014Realisation aale com-\nmencea today. Everything at reduoed\nprloea. (8347,\nWhen you want a Tail ride In a\nBuick. Phone 33. Nelaon Transfer\nCo_ Ltd. (87J4)\nFor Rent \u2014 8 room house, comfortable. Apply C. Magllo, 63o Robson   atreet. (8346)\nPublic meeting '-auspices of C.C.P.,\nEagles* Hall. Wednesday Sept 6\nSpeaker. Dr. J. Lyle Telford. Vanoouver,   8   p.m. (8384)\nEntertainment-Plantation Songs.\nA talk, \"The Destruction of the\nWicked City- Everyone Invited.\nThursday.  8:30 p.m. Rite Hall.\n(8346)\nSCHOOL PIANO CLASSES now\nforming. PRIVATE and CLASS puplla prepared for Toronto Conservatory of Music examination In Piano\nand Theory phone Mlss Amelia\nHanna.   338 R. (8361)\nKOOTENAY LODGE No. 16\nAll Odd Fellowa and Rebikaha\nare earnestly requested to meet at\nIO.O.F. Hall. Today. Sept. 8th at\n3 o'clock to attend the funeral\nof our late Grand Master Brother\nW. T. Choate. (8318)\nThe Boswell fruit growers Invite\ntenders for packing about 8 care\nof Cox's Orange and Jonathan applea ready for export. Lowest or\nany tender not neoesaarlly accepted.\nFor full particulars apply Secretary.\nBoswell, B.C. Tenders to be In by\nSeptember   13th. (8314)\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nFuneral of tha late Margaret Martin will take place trom the family\nresidence, Hall Mines road, Thursday, 7th Inat., at 10 a.m.        (8348)\nFUNERAL  NOTICE\nHUNDEN\u2014Mra. Paul, age 30. died\nsuddenly at Tranquille on Monday.\nBody wlll rest at Somers Funersl\nHome Thursday. Funeral Friday at\nB a.m. from the ChOrch of Mary\nTmmaculite. Very Rev. Father, j. c.\nMcKenzle  officiating, (8380)\nNATAL NAN ENDS\nVISIT ATHARROP\nMrs. Fairbank and Mrs. McConnell Hostesses at\nCards\nHARROP. B, C. Sfpt, 5\u2014Very\nfine- displays of flowers from the\ngardens of S. o. Blaylock and\nMrs. w. Rutherford, Nelaon were\nadmired by the visitors at the West\nArm Pair thla week. The work of\narranging was artistically carried\nout by Mrs. B. A. Smith, Longbeach, who had as her assistants\nMrs. H. Leggatt and Mtss Wlnnifred\nHarrop. D. de Joung of Harrop\nhad an excellent aample of vegetables, fldwers and fruit on display also. Wth lie the whole of the\nflower section was greatly admired.\nmany comments were drawn from\nthe visitors on the wonderful showing of sweet peas, tlw blooms being  especially   fine  thts seaaon.\nE. C. Francis displayed from hla\nranch a sunflower measuring nineteen  Inches  ln diameter.\nMr. and Mrs. Rutherford were\namong thoss noticed at tbe fair.\nThe old tlmera, of course, remember when Mr. Rutherford was a\nland owner In our*dlstrict.\nAnother familiar face was A. McL.\nFletcher. A. McL. ahowed the same\nkindly Interest with the fair In\ngeneral and the pig ln particular,\nseeing that the little animal was\ncomfortable on Its journey to\nNelson.\nT. c. Porteous of Natal, visited\nhere Wednesday with his brother-\nin-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. H.\nFalrbank, leaving Thursjay morning on a trip to the coast.\nMr. and Mrs. W. 8. Ashby and\ndaughter, Mlss Joan Aahby spent\nthe weekend and holiday in Spokane.\nMlas Wlnnifred Harrop left Monday morning to resume duties on\nthe teaching staff at Invermere.\nMlss Dorothy Raper returned to\nher home at Johnsons Landing on\nSaturday.\nMlss Ida Galney left Friday morning for Spctkane after a visit nf\naeveral weeks with her parents,\nMr.  and  Mrs.  F.  Oalney.\nMrs. H. Falrbank and Mrs. W.\nJ. McConnell entertained at cards\nFriday evening at the home of the\nformer. Progressive whist was played,\nhonors for high soore being won by\nMiss Jessie Harrop and C. S. Price,\nconsolation awards going to Mrs. C.\nD.  Ogllvle  and  L. S.  Ogllvle.\nThose present Included Mr. and\nMrs. B- Harrop, Mr. and Mrs. C.\nD. Ogllvle. Mlss Wlnnifred Harrop,\nMlss Dorothy Raper, Mr. and Mrs.\nC. S. Prloe. Mr. and Mrs. J. Berry,\nMlss Jessie Harrop, Mlss Sadie Mclntoah. Mr. and Mrs. L* C. Piper.\nMr. and Mrs. W. D. Ogllvle, Mlss\nMuriel Harrop. r. c Stevenson.\nB. S. Creaaey, L. 8. Ogllvle, Mr.\nand Mrs. Falrbank and Mr. and Mrs.\nMcConnell.\nIt's the way they're\nstyled that earns these\nhats the distinction of\nultra smartness. New\nsoft color tones. They're\npriced at\n$3.50and $5.00\nEMORY'S\nLimited\nRochdale Victor in\n3rd Division Game\nLONDON. Sept. 5 (CP cable)\u2014\nRochdale defeated Hartlepool. United\n3-0 In an English Soccer league,\nthird division game today.\nFor Modern Plumbing\nat Moderate Prices\nSEE\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLl'MBER\nOpp. City Hall phone 813\nJ. A.C. Laughton, R.O.\nOPTOU-rrBIST\u2014OPTICIAN\n\u2022ult. 10S, Medical arts Building\nQUALITY\n18 THE MAIN THING!\nFor your next prescription try\nSmythe's Pharmacy\nWhere   Only  Merck.  Producta\nAre  Dispensed.\nPHONE   1\na***a*a*a*t.*.t.*.a*a.t.\nGREETING\nCARDS\t\nFOR   EVERY   OCCASION    \\\nWedding Cards, Anniversary Carda, Birthday Cards,\nSympathy Cards, Convalescent Cards, Bon - Voyage\nCards, Graduation Cards,\nBirth Announcement, and\nBirth Congratulation Cards,\nShower Cards and Ottt\nCards.\nCallen's Art Shoppe\nMedical Arts Building\n\"A Greeting Card for\nEvery Ocassion\"\n3 Days Commencing\nTODAY\nMATINEE 2 P.M.\nEXPECT GREATI\nTHINGS\nWhen You See\n\"HELL BELOW\"\nGlorious\nRomance!\nAgainst a\nBackground of\nUndreamed of\nThrills!\nand\nComedy, Too!\nwhen\nJIMMY DURANTE\nFIGHTS A\nKANGAROO\nIT'S A RIOT!\nwith ROBERT\nMONTGOMERY\nWalter Huston. Madge\nEvans, Jimmy Durante,\nEugene Pallette, Robert\nYoung\nand thousands in the cast\n(REGULAR PRICES).\nAND\n\"MOTHER  GOOSELAND\"\n(Cartoon)\nSCREEN SOUVENIRS\nCAP-BAY   LADIEi\nCONTEST CLOSES\nTOMORROW, 11 P.M.\n(SHOO Prize Value)\n,&\nIPUK.ARITY\n* 9 * *\neaee\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1933_09_06","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0404987","@language":"en"}],"Language":[{"@value":"English","@language":"en"}],"Latitude":[{"@value":"49.493333","@language":"en"}],"Longitude":[{"@value":"-117.295833","@language":"en"}],"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.","@language":"en"}],"Provider":[{"@value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","@language":"en"}],"Publisher":[{"@value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","@language":"en"}],"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","@language":"en"}],"SortDate":[{"@value":"1933-09-06 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1933-09-06 AD","@language":"en"}],"Source":[{"@value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","@language":"en"}],"Title":[{"@value":"The Daily News","@language":"en"}],"Type":[{"@value":"Text","@language":"en"}],"Translation":[{"@value":"","@language":"en"}],"@id":"doi:10.14288\/1.0404987"}