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Pears Mo ve Out v'c T c\"' A \u2022 c ^\nofKootenays r\n\u2014Pa_eNine t\u2014- \\s   ^,\nIgutt Sails\nq3>\nMarvin Nelson Winner of\nToronto Swim\n\u2014.Pase Seven\nVOLUME II\nNELSON,  BRITISH COLUMBIA. CANADA-SATURDAY   MORNING,  SEPT. 1,  1934\nFIVE CENTS A COPY\nMMBKII    IU\nHUEY LONG LEADS TROOPS INTO CITY\nEnglish Stock Broker Sees\nAnother Wall Street Boom\nMajor L. L. B. Angas Has Predicted 4 Out\nof 5 Market Rises\nMAJOR L, L. B. ANGAS\nBy LEONARD ARNOLD\n(Central Praia Canadian Writer)\nNEW YORK, Aug. 31,-When a\nman has been right four times out\nof five guesses, people are bound to\ngive heed to him, even if he ts a\nstock broker. And when he predicts\na boom in the stock market at a\ntime when every other gucsser is so\nmuddled and despondent that he\ncan't even articulate, his appeal is\nenormous.\nMajor Lawrence Lee Bagley Angas, an English stock broker, has\nbeen credited\u2014rightly or wrongly\u2014\nwith causing a good-sized flurry in\nWaU street, sending prices up and\ncausing a buying wave with his $1.50\npamphlet, \"The Coming American\nBoom.\" Wall street, and to a milder\ndegree, the Canadian exchanges, are\na bit excited over his predictions and\nhis tip to buy stocks now, buy common stocks, and buy \"rubbish\" preferably.\nDIRECT IMPETUS\nA conservative economist on Wall\nstreet, who has an international reputation but whose name must be undisclosed here, told this correspond-\nend that there Is no doubt that Angas' boom booklet was directly responsible for the market buying and\nupward run during the last few days.\nThis economist had a great deal\nmore to say concerning Major Angas' prognostications with regard to\nAmerican recovery. He pointed oijt,\nand here he lines up with most of\nthe financial rovicwers, that Angas\nmay be right about a market boom\n\u2014indeed, might even caus-i one\u2014\nbut that he is hnrdly correct regarding a recovery. And there is, obviously, a wide difference between\nboom and recovery.\nAnother observer, however, sees\nIt the other way around, and none of\nthem, of course, cen be refuted for\nsome time to come.\nCHEAPER MON.Y\nBoiling down til that Angaa nys\namounts to this: Confronted by the\nstonewall resistance of the banks\nand big money men, the United\nStates set out to make money ao\ncheap that there would be perforce\na loosening up of credit which would\nstart the business wheels turning\nand rattling out the good times\nmedley once again.\nAngas says: \"Business confidence\nIs largely engendered by causing\nlack of confidence in money.\" He\nexplains that it money is cheap,\npeople will lend and buy and trade\ntheir money for goods.\nAngas is concerned primarily with\nthe stock market. He says so. His\nbooklet is a market wise proposition\npure and simple. It is a tip sheet.\nHe backs up his tip with economic\nreasons, as summed up In predicting\nthe release of credit through the\ncheap money process, and he seems\nquite convincing\u2014especially to the\npsychologically parched and despondent speculator.\nFOUR-YEAR RISE\nHe even says that the boom will\nnot last\u2014that like all booms, it will\ncome down as fast as lt goes up. He\nsays the rise, with minor fluctuations, will last about four years.\nWell\u2014he has been right four\ntimes out of five so far: He predicted\nin previous pamphlets, the English\nbdom (which came about); the collapse of rubber (which came about);\nthe rise in gold shares (and they\ndid); the upswing in Wall street in\n1933 (right again! and the collapse\nin gold (which did not come, due to\nRoosevelt's devaluing the dollar).\nRight or wrong, Wall street loves\nit. It's brought some business. One\nhouse distributed 2500 copies and\nthe orders to buy stocks poured in.\nFROST HITS OAT\nCROP ON PRAIRIE\nThreshing (ieneral in Manitoba, Saskatchewan and\nPart of Alberta\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 31\u2014Perfect, harvesting weather over the week Just\npast hw completed wheat cutting for\nthe province of Manitoba and left\nSaskatchewan with 85 per cent of Its\nwheat aqd 80 per cent of grains .rut\nwith Alberta reporting 0 per cent\nwheat and 65 per cent coarse grains\nready for threshing. The Canadian\nPacific railway's agricultural department also reporls threshing operations general in Manitoba and Saskatchewan and all but the northern\nportions of Alberta.\nTJnusually cool weather throughout\nwestern Canada during the latter\npart of last week has been followed\nby fair warm days during the last\nweek of August which have advanced\nfield operations considerably, says the\nreport issued today.' Early frosts last\nweek damaged late oats tn northern\nSaskatchewan and uncut wheat and\nlate grains lu north central Alberta,\nsome points reporting yield reduced 2\nto 6 bushels per acre and from one to\nthree grades in quality.\nAs In former dry years, there is\ngreat variation in yields although up\nto present quality has been -satlsfac-\ntory. Pasturage and fodder supplies\nhave auffered and in southern Saskatchewan and parts of Alberta heavy\nrainfall is needed to improve the winter outlook and lor fall cultivation.\nBritish Columbia's apple crop still\ngives great promise and heavy movement of stone fruits, pears and prunes\ncontinues. Vegetable crops are doing\nweU and the third crop of alfalfa Is\nbeing cut. Rain Is needed for crops\nnot under Irrigation.\nMyers' Cor Stolen\nand Wrecked\nW, M. Myers' car was stolen from\nin front of his residence at 923 Silica\nstreet some time Wednesday night or\nearly Thursday morning, and 11 was\nlater found wrecked about half a\nmile from Nelson on the Ymlr road.\nThe car went over the bank and suffered damages from the rocks it\ncontacted.\nFoundry-Reopens\nat Coast\nBeatty Expresses Hope for an\nEarly Amalgamation of Lines\nNo Plans Yet\nLine Changes\na\nBut Few Men Would\nBe Put Out by the\nAmalgamation\nNO DECISION ON\nVANCOUVER HOTEL\nVANCOUVER, Au(f. 31 (CP).-\nThc Wallace Foundry Co., Ltd.,\nplant on Granville Island, here producing steel, iron, brass and bronze\ncastings, has been reopened. At\npresent it is employing 18 men but,\nas conditions improve, officials expect employment will be provided\nfor between 30 and 80 men.\nBusiness Improvement\nNoted; Cheap Fares\nWill Continue\nVAW0OC7BR, Aur. \u00bb1 \u00ab~)\u2014>'l\n\u00bbm very hopeful that unification\nfor the purpose of administration\nof the Canadian National and the\nCanadian Ptclfle railways wlll he\nbrought about,\" President E. W.\nBeatty of the Canadian Pacific tald\nln t statement here tonight.\nThe atatement was ln the form\nof replies to questions which had\nbeen telegraphed to him aa be approached Vancouver, prior to his\narrival here thla evening.\n\"Tht extent of the burden en\nthe country of the present tltuttlon and realisation of ttt unnecessary character la gradually extending, at well at realltatlon of\nthe danger of drifting,\" the written\nreply added.\n\"I htvt advocated private operation for the combined system aa\noffering the bett opportunity for\nefficiency tnd economv In admln-\nutratton tnd freedom from political\nlnterterenot.\nCOOPERATION\n\"Measures of co-operation between\nthe Ctnadlan National tnd the Canadian Pacific an proceeding Is\naccordance with the terma of tbe\nstatute, tnd eo far tt I htve observed they have been prosecuted\nwith  utmost  good  faith.\n(Continued on Page Two)\nMEETS\nHIS ASSISTANT\nDistrict Engineer Sees\nStevens on Way\nThrough\nE. S. Jones, district public works\nengineer for the Kootenay, had his\nfirst conference with his new assistant engineer for Nelson-Creston\nriding, H. W. Stevens, Friday, when\npassing through from Pentlcton to\nestablish his family at Cranbrook.\nArriving by motor with some of\nthe children, Mr. Jones Intended to\ncatch the last main lake ferry and\nmake Cranbrook the same night, '.ut\nhe spent so much time in his conference with Mr. Stevens that he\nhad to remain over. Mrs. Jones and\nthe other children were due to\npass through by Saturday's early\ntrain.\nRETURNS TUESDAY\nIn the short interval since his\ntransfer here from the Okanagan,\nwhere for three months he was assistant engineer under the reorganization, following his lengthy service\nas district engineer at Kamloops,\nMr. Jones has made a general inspection of much of the East Kootenay, including the Windermere\nvalley section, and will be here\nTuesday to start his first inspection of the West Kootenay ridings.\nMr. Stevens, who succeeds G. C.\nMackay, who recently resigned as\nassistant engineer for the Nelson-\nCreston riding, arrived earlier ln\nIhe week from Lillooet, where he\nwas assistant engineer for the past\nthree months. Previously he was\nstationed at Courtenay, on Vancouver Island, for four years, as assistant engineer. Several years ago he\nwas asssitant engineer at Fernie for\na short time, under the district engineer for East Kootenay.\nNaptha Ends the\nRoosevelt Painting\nTAMIYTOWN, NY.. Aug. 31 (API.\n\u2014The lampoon of the \"new deal\"\nunder President Roosevelt, drawn\nby the mysterious \"Jeremiah I'\"\nwaa ruined today by an unnaturalized Russian who tossed naptha,\nwhich burst Into flames, on the\npainting.\n\"I did not like the idea of holding up tho Roosevelt family to ridicule,\" said John Thompson, sentenced to six montht ln Westchester\npenitentiary after his arrest for\nruining the picture wbleh bung ln\nthe Westchester Institute of fine\nart*.\nBennett Leaves\nOttawa on Way\nto League Meet\nOTTAWA, Aug. 31 (CP).-Off for!\na six weeks respite from the routine\ndemands of office, Prime Minister\nR. B. Bennett left Ottawa tonight\nwearied from the excessive activities of the past week preparatory to\nhis long absence. He will head the\nCanadian delegation at the League\nof Nations assembly opening in\nGeneva September 10, after which\nhe will transact some affairs for\nthe Dominion in Paris and London.\nHe will sail from Quebec on the\nDuchess of Bedford in the morning.\nTruce Looms\nin Chaco War\nBy  PADI   SACNDtHS\n(Associated Press Staff Wftter).\nBUENOS AIRE, Aug. 31 (AP).-\nA truce In the Chaco l_r teemed\nnear tonight, after four years of\nbitter, bloody Jungle fighting.\nParaguay had accepted and Bolivia waa considering the propoeal\nmade by three big friendly nations,\nArgentina. Brazil and the united\nStates, to eeaae hostilities while\nterma for peaoe are discussed at\nBuenos Aires.\nDOOR-TO-DOOR\nSALESMEN GET\nillll 11 \u25a0 11 \u25a0 11 > i \u25a0 111 \u25a0 i\u00bb\u25a0 \u25a0 111 r 11111 il\nDUNCAN, FORMER\nMARKETS HEAD,\nIS DEAD\nFirms Employing Men\nin East Must Pay\nB. C. Standards\nWORTH HIRING\nWORTH PAYING\nWill End Lot of Poor\nPay Commision Posts\nin the Province\nCougar Bounty\nOkayed in B*C.\nDeer Tag Law Cones Into\nEffect; Killed Animals\n,       Musi Bear a Tag\nVICTORIA. Auf. II (CP).\u2014FttU\nconsideration wli given to representation! by eastern Canadian\nfirms wboM products are handled\nln British Columbia before a definite ruling was given that the\norder railing for a *15 minimum\nwage for door-to-door salesmen\nshould stand, Hon. G. 8. rear-\nson, minister of labor, anounced\ntoday.\nMr. Pearson declared all canvassers representing firms which\nsend salesmen on the road must\npay the men a minimum of $13\nper week regardless of any commission arrangement under the\nmercantile wage orders of the\nprorlnclal board of Industrial relations.\nVICTORIA, Aug. 31 {CP)\u2014 WlUlam\nWallace Duncjn, former British Columbia markets commissioner, died\nhere suddenly today.\nBorn In seaforth, Ontar, Mr. Duncan Joined the' staff of the Canadian pacific railway company as\na civil engineer, being stationed at\nGuelph, Ont.\nLater he resigned and moved to\nCalgary where he entered the contracting business. He came here In\n1914.\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUHIIHII\n86 FIGHT THE\nMOYIE FLAMES\nIrishman's Creek Fire\nTroublesome; Others\nAre in Hand\nWOOL WORKERS\nTO JOIN IN HUGE\nU.SA WALKOUT\nGeneral Strike Order\nInvolves 100,000\nAdditional Folk\nStarts Drive\nInto Orleans\nOust Mayor\nReporters Charged by\nTroopS and Camera\nIs Broken\nSIRENS TELL OF\nTROOPS' ARRIVAL\nJOIN COTTON\nTEXTILE STRIKE\nVICTOBIA, Aug. II (CP'.-An-\nnouncemtnt that bountlei of ten\ndolltn on couims and tin dollars\non wolvw will be ptld la British\nColumbit to tny porno licenced to\ncarry Ilrearms or toy Indian, on\nproof of the kill belnt presented\nto the game department Is made\ntoday ln an order over the signature\nof Hon. Gordon M, Sloan, attorney-\nleneral.\nThe order ipectfles the bounty\nwlll not be paid for tny animals\nlets thtn one week old when killed.\nThe pelt of the animal must be\nproduced with an application for tho\nbounty within alx months after the\ndate on which lt wu killed.\nDetails of the game tag regulations regarding deer under which\nhuntew are required to affix a seal\nto animals killed, with the object\nof a tally being kept on the number\nkilled during the season, were announced ln an ordar issued by Attorney-General Sloan.\n(Continued on Paga Two)\nBRITAIN OPPOSES\nANY ALLIANCES\nAction With Russia and the\nLeague Not Intended as\nThrust at Japanese\nLONDON, Aug. 31 (CP)\u2014Great Britain does not fear her new advocacy\nof Russian membership In the league\nof nations will endanger her traditional friendship with Japan.\nA well qualified Interpreter of the\ngovernment's policies said tonight the\ntrl-power drive for the Soviets' admission to the league launched by\nGreat Britain, Prance and Italy \"hae\nnothing to do with tbe far eastern\nsituation.\"\nBritain's determination ever since\nthe great war to oppose alliances on\nthe European continent dictated her\naction in taking an aggressive stand\nfor Russia's membership, he explained.\nBear Sniffs at Dynamite, Turns\nSomersault, and Then Disappears\nPIONEER  MINISTER  DIES\nWOODSTOCK, Ont. Aug. 31\n(CP).-Rev. William Ottewell of\nLondon, who served more than half\na century in the ministry of the\nMethodist church, died today at his\nhome near Otterville. He was 72\nyears old.\nfBut Prospectors Save Their\nLives by an Engenuous\nMethod\nCM Officials\nPraise Grant Hall\nVICTORIA, Aug. SI (CP)\u2014High\ntribute to the late Grant Hall, senior\nvice-president of the Canadian Pacific railway, was paid here today by\n8. J. Hungerford, president of the\nCanadian National railways, and Hon.\nC. P. Fuller ton, chairman of the\nboard of trustees, who spoke at a\nluncheon tendered them by the Victoria chamber of commerce.\nMr. Hungerford said ho, had known\nMr. Hall since 1887 and had worked\nwith him as a colleague and later In\ncompetition with him. He had always\nfound htm one with whom lt was a\npleasure to cooperate. He was an\nable railroad man. of sterling character, and had many friends. There\nwere not many Grant Halls today,\nhe aald.\nMr. Pullerton associated himself\nwith the tribute expressed by t'~.\nHungerford. He said he had known\nGrant Hall for more than 40 years\nand his death was a great loss, not\nonly to the Canadian Pacific railway\nbut also to Canada.\nLILLOOET, B.C., Aug. 31 (CP).\u2014\nSomewhere ln the bush country\nsurrounding this mining community\na mother bear Is nursing a sore\nmuzzle and a determination to give\nall prospectors a wide berth, parti-\ncularly ones with dynamite.\nCharlie Scott and his son, Tommy,\nprospectors, were walking along '\nridge when they met the mother\nbear and two cubs. They made for\nthe two nearest trees, while cubs\nscrambled up a third.\nSnarling annoyance the old bear\nstarted to climb the tree Tommy\nwaa perched In but he kept up a\nsteady shaking which tumbled the\nanimal down a half dozen times.\nMeantime, Charlie had no gun\nbut he did have some dynamite,\nbreaking off a two-inch piece he\nmade a charge and threw It. The\nfuse went out.\nThe bear couldn't get up and\nthe men couldn't get down and\nCharlie tried anotber charge- The\nbear, having seen the first one go\nout, sniffed lt curiously.\nAs she nosed It the second time\u2014\nbang\u2014and mother bear turned a\nbackward somersault and went down\nthe ridge ln a cloud of gravel and\ndust.\nThe men waited until they heard\ntbe bear's growls of rage and pain\nrecede far down the canyon, then\ndescended and hurried off In the\nopposite direction. i\nThey don't know what? happened\nto the  cubs.\nThe Uttle Moyle flw, which hw\nspread to irishman's creek, Is the\nonly blaze in the east Kootenay that\nts causing much trouble at present.\nA crew of 86 men Is attempting to\ncut lt off the slope now as lt Is\nstarting to come down the mountain.\nA report fom Moyle Prlday atated\ntha the fire was ln the white pine\ntimber owned by the C. P. R. along\nEnglishman creek and that the Wilkinson homestead had burned.\nElsewhere in the forestry district\nfire fighters had another successful\nday.\nDespite winds thtt reached the\nproportion of a gale Thuraday night\nufirt early Frldiff mornli^. the, invermere fire was held and a new\noutbreak on Midas creek was put\nout. A half an hour's ratn neat\npernle helped fighters ln that vicinity and fire conditions there are excellent.\nProm Grand Porks cornea the report that the Poenlx fire Is out,\nthe Doukhobor fire west of the city,\nquiet, and the pourth of July creek\nfire controlled again where lt jumped tbe fire guard. The crew la non\nreduced to a patrol. The Rock creek\nfire is also quiet.\nA new outbreak occurred near Mcculloch station and the c. P. R-\nmen are fighting lt where tt Is\nbordering on the track. The forestry\nmen ire at the north of the fire\ntrying to keep lt out of the Kelowna water shed- It Is burning\nbriskly.\nIn the immediate vicinity of Nelson fires are quiet.\nCANADIAN BORN\nJAPS ARE WORRY\nGo to Japan, Unable Speak\nJapanese, and Have a\nDifficult Time\nC.CF. Party In B.C. Votes to Join\nForces With the Socialist's Party\nVANCOUVER. Aug, 31 (CP).\u2014Delegates to the second annual conference of the Associated Cooperative Commomvlath cluBs of British Columbia, today approved proposals to merge i\/.c C.CF. and the Socialist\nparty of Canada.\nThe proposed amalgamation will be considered at the opening session\nof the affiliated C.CF. clubs tomorrow.\n\"It will be the soundest move the C.CF, parly has yet made,\" President W. A. Prltchard of the British Columbia association declared in\nstressing the importance of merging.\nSecretary A. D. Gordon stated the associated clubs in the province\nnow have a membership of 6700.\nVICTORIA. Aug. 31 (CP) .-Problems of Japanese born in Canada\nand the United States who, after\ntheir education on this continent\nhas been completed, go to Japan to\nfind employment, were discussed\nhere today by Miss Mary L. Bollert,\ndean of women at the University\nof British Columbia, on her return\nfrom Tokio and Honolulu.\nMiss Bollert left here in June,\nwith other deans of women from\nNorth America, at th.- Invitation of\nthe Japanese foreign office, to attend a conference in Tokio for the\npromotion of cultural relations between Japan and North America.\nShe was the only Canadian delegate.\n\"It seems the Japanese born on\n\u25a0this continent speak very bad Japanese and are counted illiterate\nwhen they return to their own\ncountry.\" Miss Bollert said. \"As a\nresult they are not wanted. They\nreturn to find a foreign country.\nThey arc unaccustomed to conditions there and are a great source\nnf anxiety to the Y.M.C.A. and the\nY.W.CA.\n\"They are also Inclined to antagonize, unconsciously perhaps, their\n[ fellow Japanese by \"airing\" their\n1 English in the street cars and other\npublic places.\n\"We were invited over there to\nsee these problems and were asked\nto study them. It .ras thought that\nwe, who have so much to do with\nthe education of Japanese in this\ncountry, would perhaps have some\nsolution.\"\nMiss Bollert also attended the International meeting of the Pan-Pacific Women's association at Honolulu.\nBeaver Stops C. P.\nTelegraph Service\nSUDBURY, Ont., Aug. 31 (CP).\u2014\nA beaver put Canadian Pacific railway telegraph lines out of commission today when a 70 foot pine\ntree lt had felled at mileage 71.\ndestroyed the wires. Three hours\nwfirk by the wire crew was required\nto restore  29  broken  circuit!.\n<\nSilk and Rayon Crews\nUnder Orders Stand\nby for Calls\nBy DONALD CAMERON\n(Associated Press Staff Writer),\nWASHINOTON, Aug. 31 (AP).\u2014\nThe general strike order for the\nhuge United States cotton textile\nIndustry spread tonight to encompass 100,000 woollen and worsted workers, further deflating\nfederal efforts for an llth hoar\npeace pact.\nThe possibility mounted tonight\nthat the entire textile Industry\nmight be Included ln the walkout\nplan by the time the cotton\nworkers aero hour arrives at 11:30\ntomorrow night,\n(Continued on Page Two)\nEY.\n\"Kingfish\" Put Whole\nCity Into a State\nof Excitement\nLAID AT REST\nMany Friends, Fellow\nWorkers and Lodge\nBrothers Attend\nA large number of friends, follow\nworkers and lodge brothers attended\nthe funeral services of Edward Young\nBrake at St. Saviour's church Friday\nafternoon when the Nelson railroader\nwas carried to his last rest. The funeral services were conducted by Ven.\nArchdeacon Pred H. Graham, both\nat the church and the graveside.\nMembers of the I.O.O.F. attended\nunder the guidance of J. Draper, noble\ngrand.\nThere were many beautiful floral\nofferings,\nPallbearers were P. Ewing, E. Arm-\nshaw, P. T. Andrews, A. Wlgg, J. Armstrong, O. A. Meers, J. P. Morgan, P.\nHartwlg, and honorary pallbearers\nwere P. C. Sharpe and C. E. Mansfield.\nMarkets at\na Glance\nToronto and Montreal Industrials-\nIrregular lower.\nToronto mines\u2014Irregularly higher.\nNew York stocks\u2014Steady.\nWinnipeg wheat\u2014Higher.\nLondon\u2014Bar sliver and tin higher;\ncopper unchanged; lead and sine\nlower.\nNew York\u2014Bar silver, tin and lead\nunchanged;  copper and zinc lower.\nNew York\u2014Coffee higher; sugar\nlower;  cotton and rubber trendless.\nNew York\u2014Canadian dollar unchanged at l.02'i.\nNEW ORLEANS. Au*. 31 {AP)\u2014\nSweeping Into the city with armed\ntroops who used violence to clear a\npath, senator Huey p. Long set out\ntonlght under a proclamation of\nmartial law to Investigate his political enemies\u2014 thi heads of the municipal government.\nAn automobile cavalcade with\nshrieking Mrcns brought the senator\n[roin Baton Rouge, where Governor\nO. K. Allen had Issued an order\ncalling the mllltla Into active service to protect the legislative investigating committee.\nThrough the streets the cars Sped.\nThey roared along Audubon boulevard, where Long\u2014the state's political dictator\u2014has a palatial residence.\nIn front of the house the soldiers saw Frank Allen, night city\neditor of the New Orleans Tlmes-\nPicayune, and E. E. Agnelly, a\nphotographer for the paper.\nWith drawn guns the troops charged the two men. They grabbed Ag-\nnelly's camera, tore away some of\nhis clothes, and thiew him Into\na truck.\n\"KEEP CLEAR\"\nOther troops Hind Allen, in 19\nminutes they freed him with a warning for all newspapermen to \"keep\nclear.\"\nAgnelly wan held for a half hour\narut then ordered to leave the\nneighborhood.\nLong rushed Into his home. Quickly a line of soldiers, armed with\nmachine guna and rifles, was spread\naround It. two boxes of ammunition and additional guna were carried into the house.\n-'robe ax osres\nMembers of the Inquiry committee, approved hy the legislature\nearly this month, met at a downtown hotel to await Instructions\nfrom the \"Kingfish\". Long said th\u00ab\ninvestigation would start at once.\nCrowds of citizens gathered on\nstreet corners. The entire city was\nin a state of excttment. More national guardsmen, some reports said,\nwere to be brought here from other\ncommunities.\nTroops have been quartered In the\nbarracks since the governor's original\nproclamation ordering them to holo;\nthe city registration office, centre\nof the fight between the Long forces\nand Mayor T. Semmea Walsmley.\nSenator Long declared he would\nhave Mayor WHimsley out of off let\nIn 30 days. There were niough witnesses, he said, to convict the whole\ncity administration of misconduct\nIn office because of alleged associations with the underworld.\nGOLFING PAIR TO\nVISIT AUSTRALIA\nNEW YORK, Aug. 31 (AP>\u2014Gene\nSarazen* and Joe Klrkwood the\nprofessional golfing tourists, have\ncompleted plans to visit Australia\nana New Zealand this autumn and,\nwinter. They leave New York Monday for Chicago, then play a short\nseries of exhibition matches in Canada, from Winnipeg to Vancouver,\nbefore sailing Sept. 12 for the Antipodes by way of Honolulu.\nA month later they wlll be reinforced by a half dozen professional\nassociates In seeking au trallan open\nchampionship honors, cratg Wood.\nPaul Runyan, Densmore Shute,\nJohnny Revolts, Harry Cooper and\nKy Laffoon are booked to leave the\nweet coast Oct, 12 for Sydney.\nDavis Winner\nof Air Race\nCLEVELAND, Aug. 31 (AP). -\nFlying part ot the time at a epced\nof 270 miles an hour. Douglas Davis\nof Atlanta, Ga., today won the\ntranscontinental race from Burband.\nCalif., to Cleveland, toa ture event\nof the opening program of ths 1934\nnational  air  races.\nBut despite his speed Davis fell\nshort of the Los Angeles to Cleveland record set by Jimmy Hatzllp\nin 1932. Davis took nine hours, 26\nminutes and 41 seconds for the trip\nfrom Burbank. Haizllp made tho\nflight from Los An?eles in eight\nhours ,19 minutes and 46 second,?.\nGO INTO MATTER\nOF DROUGHT UPON\nPRAIRIE SECTION\nOTTAWA, Aug. 31 (CP). \u2014 The\npressing problerft of drought relief\nln the prairie provinces, particulars\nIn Saskatchewan, will be taken up\nat a conference tomorrow between\nHon. Robert. Weir, minister of agriculture, and the ministers of agriculture for Saskatchewan anfl Manitoba, lt was learned today.\nNelson Net Players\nTake Tourney Path\nNelson's tennis contingent Icavea-\nthls morning for Trail to take part lu\nthe annual West Kootenay tennis\ntournament which takes place tn Trail\nfor th\" first time. Play begins today\nand the fluids wlll be completed Monday.\nTrail has reconditioned the Tadanac courts and has made extensive\nplans to mjke the annual tournament a success.\nIt Is expected about 30 will go from\nhere.\nTowns Go Dark\nWhen Beaver Fells\nTree Across Lines\nMACLEOD, Alta., Aug. 31 (OP).\n-Disruption of electric pewer to\nhalf a dozen towns in southern Alberta Tuesday night today was\nblamed on a beaver .family. A tree\none of the family gnawed down\nfell across a transmission line at\nWillow Creek, and broke it. The\ntown's 1\/hts lighted again at 6:\u00bb\nWednesday morning.\ni\n PAQI TEN\nj-mmtm\n\u2022THI NILSON DAILY NEWS, NILION. B.C-^JATUROAY MORNINO, MW. 1. Wi\nSCHOOL\nTEXT BOOKS\nOur Itock thli yur ll larjir than\n\u2022ver.  We ere telling theu on \u2022\nstrictly   CASH   BASIS   at   thi\nloweit poulble pricei.\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug Co.\nOorn or maize la believed to ban\nanimated ln the hlthltnda of Mexico, elnoe that lt the bome of the\nwild grew teoalnte, the only plant\nknown to crota with com.\nAfter eaven yeare oj litigation, the\nV. i. government recently won a\n\u2022priority caee on a patent for a pro-\ncaaa for removing poltonoua aprty\nreektuea from plants and vegetablea.\nand thle patent la now free for any\none'a ute.\nThe meat trom which aoup oaa baen\nmade become! rather taateleat, but lt\nttlll contalnt moet of lta nourishment. Therefore, lt may be uaed ln\nhuh, meat plea and ragout*, where\nthe flavor of vegetablea and aeaaon-\nIng compensates for the lack of meat\nflavour.\u2014Beef, How to Choose and\nOook lt, Dominion Department of\nAgriculture bulletin.\nFOR RENT\n2 unfurnished suites, 5 rooma and\n3 rooms; also furnished suites.\nThese   suites   are -toi   excellent\ncondition, lnspecton invited.\nKERR APARTMENTS\nJ.A.C. Laughton, R.O.\nOPTOMETRIST\u2014OPTICUS\nInllt ZOS. Medical Arts Building\nLUMBER\nWe are now operating the\nTAGHUM PLANING MILL\nand are carrying a full stock of\nseasoned lumber.\nWE DELIVER ANYWHERE\nPhone 53\nBURNS\nNext Capitol\n518 Ward St.\nLABOR DAY\nCALEDONIAN SPORTS\nand TRACK MEET\nGrand Parade of Highland Dancers and Pipers\nled by Nelson Pipe Band, Starting From. Eagle\nHall at 9 a.m. Sharp.\nCOME TO NELSON FOR THE BEST\nDAY'S SPORT EVENT OF THE YEAR\nGRAND FINALE DANCE\nEAGLE'S HALL AT 9 P.M.\nMUSIC BY TROUBADOURS DANCE BAND\n,a>ffi M6TW\u00ab WONDi^N.\n*\/ Am\nPOVYN And\nGOlHt*\ni-rt\u00abs ou>\n1*4\n*S\nid*\n-bt\n\\p.\n$_\u00a3'00 jo*B6ld\nLAMP or L ANTE R>.\nfflAM* Poleman\n... that's the big value\nyou are offered for a\nlimited time. Your old\nlamp or lantern (any\nkind or condition)  is\n-worth $2 on the purchase of a new Colc-\n\" man... any model you\n. want.\nWith a Coleman you\ncan have the finest light\nfor \\i a night   Up to\n300 candlepower oi pure\nwhite brilliance. Easy to use.. .clean.. .sale.. .dependable.\nAND NOW ...You can get a Coleman\nior as little as $7.50 and your old lamp.\nSEE THEMI... Well be glad to ihow you all about theie\nsplendid lights that make and bum their own gaa. Com* Inl\nWood, Vallance\nHARDWARE CO. LTD.\nBeetroot and currant colored Jewelry\nlt tba latest fad tor octtuma pretties.\nSoft, tquathy bags of quilted red\nleather are new.and very tmart with\nthe white ault.\nSaturday\nSpecials\nEconomy Package Kotcx\n48 to package ... 8flff\n1 pkt. Listerine Paste:\n1 Tooth Brush\n75c Value for  49<*\n1 Gillette Razor With\nFive Blades    *Vbt\nClapp's Baby Soups:\n2 for   25*?\n$1.25 Malt Extract and\nCod Liver Oil  89<>\nliath Soap: 6 for . 39\u00bb?\n*')0c Mag Lac Tooth\nPaste    38**\nNeko Germicidal\nSoap   25<*\nP JEWRY'S\nPHARMACY\nPhone 23\nBox 505\nAUSSIE MATCH\nENDS IN DRAW\nCANTERBURY, England, Aug. 81\n(CP cable)\u2014The match between the\ntouring Australian cricketers and\nent, latt of the vlslton' engagement!\nwith flrtt-clsss county elevent. ended\nIn a draw today after continual Interruption by rain.\nThe scores: -Kent 21 for two, declared, and 7*1 for seven (Fleetwood-\nSmith four for 30); Australians 197\nfor one, declared (McCabe 108. Pons-\nford 82 not out).\nThe Auatlet ttlll have four exhibition fixtures before returning with\nthe aehet, captured ln the five test\nmatchet.\n\u25a0SEE'\nVIC GRAVES\nMaster  Plumber\nFor Modern Plumbing\nOM. City Hall        Phone 816\nAT MODERATE PRICES\nFriendship's Road\nFriendship is a chain of\ngold.\nShaped in God'i all perfect\nmold, , ]\nEach link a smile, a laugh,\nI tear,\nA grip ot ue hind, i won ;:\nof cheer;\nAs steadfast as the ages\nttu,\nBinding   closer   loul   to .\u25a0\nsoul;\nNo matter how far, or how ;\nheavy the load,\nSweet is the Journey on ;:\nFRIENDSHIP ROAD. }\nAllen's Art Shoppe\n\"A Greeting Card for Ever*\nOccasion\"\n\"tWlhmsTXS<l\nNelson Business College\nCOMPLETE COMMERCIAL COURSE\nNew Term Commences Tuesday, Sept. 4\nP.O. Box 14\nI'hone 603\nPure Food\nMarket\nPhone 50\nFree Delivery\nEXTRA SPECIALS FOR SATURDAY\nGOVERNMENT INSPECTED MEATS\nTender Boiling\nBeef: lb \t\nTender Pot\nRoasts: lb. ..\nChoice Veal Stew:\nLb\t\nPrime Rib Rolled:\nLb\t\nSpring Lamb\nShoulder: lb\t\nChoice Creamery\nButter: 2 lbs. for\n.... y\n8r\n2D\"\n14'\n45f\nChoice Mutton\nStew: lb\t\nLoin Mutton\nRoasts: lb\t\nChoice Legs Mutton: 1Q\u00a3\nLb   10\nFresh Killed Fowl:   Ifi-p\nGrade C Eggs: Ofte)\nDoz  Lv\nMilk Fed Fowl:\nLb\t\nr\n15*\n2?\nQuality\nCleanliness\nService\nBURNS tk Co., Ltd.\nNELSON, B.C.\nToo Late to Classify\nFOUR   ROOM   BUNGALOW.   PORK-\nIthtd, 116 per month. Apply Flam-\nCat'\nlng't\nthin   camp.\n(387\u00bb)\nPARTLY FURMSHID HOOSE ClOSI\nto ichool. Phone 68SL1.\nROOM  AND  BOARD,\nate street.\n(8878)\n610 CARBON-\n(3876)\n110 A MONTH. 3 ROOM HOUSI, 2\nlott. aho 3 room house with cloted\nln eleeplng porch, 18 month. Mrt.\nHall. 8th atreet, Oordon Road.\n13874)\nNEWS OF Tl DAY\nBrltlth Mall, periodical!, MBftiinee.\nWUllama Newa Stand. (3841)\nSt. Satioure church Sunday ichool\nwlll open Sept. tth at 945 a.m.\n(8881)\nPROMPT,   COURTEOUS   SERVICE,\nPHONE 88 B.B. TAXI * BAOOAGE.\n(8884)\nHIGH G.UAUTYAND PRICE\nTHM-STAIR-AND BUSINESS\nCOURTISTYaUITE RARE \\\\\nTHE high quality of our lumber\n1 and the falrniu of our pricet\nara well aatabllihed facta and\nour patrom are pleated to know\nthat our courtety hai hot \u25a0 tingle\nknot or flaw In It\nLAMBERT\nLUMBER, LTD.\nPHONE 82\nHORNER'S\nGROCERY\nWEEKEND\nSPECIALS\nPEANUT BUTTER\nButternut Brand\n2s  Tin 2St\n4s   Tin 530\nBaker's Cocoa:\n'\/i-lb. tin\t\nl.urhus Jelly\nPowders: 3 for\nLemon and Lavender\nSoap\t\nButter: Meadow vale\nBrand; lb. \t\nGrapes: Concord;      HOC\nBasket    I*\n14*\n25'\n...5'\n24\"\nORANGES\nMedium size .. Doz. 321\nLarge size .... Doz. 50*\u00a3\nEating Pears:\n7 lbs\t\nTomatoes:\nBasket \t\nCanteloupe: Large\nsize; each \t\nApples: Wealthy and\nGravenstein;\nPeaches: OC*\u00a3\nBasket   LO\nPeaches: Elbertas Preserv\ning;\nNo. 2 \t\n25f\n15*\nir\n25\"\n$05\nPHONE 121\nOpp. Capitol Theatre\nFor the Thrill of Your Life, Attend the\nNELSON LAUNCH CLUB'S\nAnnual Boat Regatta\nLABOR DAT, Sept. 3\nA complete program of races for all  classes of inboards and outboards.\nSpectacular ski and surfboard riding during the program.\nFIRST RACE STARTS AT 11 A.M.\nAmple seating accomodation\nat the Launch Club float.\nAttend the monster Regatta Dance at the\nMarquis waterfront pavillion in the evening.\nADMISSION TO CITY WHARF 25c; TO LAUNCH CLUB 50c\nAll racet itart and finish In front of Launch Club float\nLabor   Day   danoe,\ntember tblrd.\nBalmo,   Sap*.\n(8871)\n9 persons want trantportttlon to\nSpokane, p. O. Boi 58, Nelton.\n(8834)\nWANTID:    PLUMS    AND   BLACKBERRIES. MCDONALD MM  CO.\n(8880)\nDAPTIST   CHURCH\nTbe putor wlll conduct botb tervlcet. (3808)\nWlll'a Fine  cut tob.  73c  1-3 lb.\ntin at Valentlnet. (3883)\nAIKBWORTH   HOT   SPRINGS\nFurnlahed  tlz  room   houee,  rent\nby day, wetk or  month.      (38581\nWhen you want a Tail rldt In a\nBulck phone 88, Nelton Tranafer\nCo.,   Ltd. (8888)\nI. O O, F. meeta and Monday ln\nSept., In Odd Fellowt Hall. AU 'letting membera cordially Invited.\n(8847)\nNELSON    BUSINESS    COLLEGE\nNew term commencet Tnetday, September Ith. (3707)\nDANCE\nTonlfht. 0-13, Melody Miken\nEAGLE   HALL\n(38551\nSPEND   LABOR   DAT\nAlnaworth Hot Springt. Swimming,\nPithing, Oood Diner! tnd Dance at\nnight. (3887)\nMRS. HAGGARTY OPENS HER\nVOCAL STUDIO TUESDAY. PRIVATE LESSONS, ALSO CUSS LESSONS.   PHONE   218. (3888)\nFOR FURNITURE REPAIRING.\nUPHOLSTERING, DRAPERIES,\nCUSHIONS, SLIP COVERS, CALL\nA. TERRILL. PHONE 435R1.    (38771\nINDIES SOFTBALL \u2014 Kootenay\ncnampionthlp, cretton n. Nelton,\nRecreation grounds, Saturday, 2 p.m.,\nand S p.m. Sunday, 10.30 a.m. (3838)\nBOSTON HAT WORKS and shoe\nshine. Hat! expertly cleaned and\nblocked to look like new. Olve ut\ni trial Ladles hats cleaned. 808\nBaker It. (8870)\nSTART LABOR DAY IN A BIO\nWAY BY COMING TO THE MIDNIGHT FROLIC, EAGLE HALL, 12.01\nMONDAY. OOOD ORCHESTRA. USUAL PRICES. (8878)\nThe prize, tor Nelaon AAA. track\nmeet, Highland dancing and piping\ncompetition!, are on display In\nColllnaeon't jewelry store window.\nSee Them. (8887)\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nMorrison\u2014John, of 518 Kootenay\navenue, Falrvlew, Nelaon, age 88\nyeara, paaaed away Thuraday. Body\nwill teat at Somen' Funeral home\nwhere tervlcet will be held Sundty, Sept. 3 at 3 p.m., Rev. McClean officiating, (3873)\nWhan  you  atk  for  Pico  Powder\nuy  Day  Dream\nMad* from flmit and  purart Ingredient!\u2014in all ihadei\nSmythe's Pharmacy\nPreicrlptloni Our Speciality\nPHONE 1\nAUCTION\n720 MILL STREET\nWEDNESDAY, SEPT. \u00bb-2 P.M.\nFavored with Initruotlom from\nMn. W. J. Gerbracht I wlll offer\nthe following: McCLARY BLUE\nENAMEL COMBINATION GAS\nand COAL RANGE, KOHLER\nCHESTERFIELD SUITE, BRUNSWICK COMBINATION CONSOLE RADIO, Garden Hote and\nToolt, Sealan, Kitchen Table and\nChain, Chlnaware, Llmoget Dinner Set, Fumed Oak Dining\nRoom Suite, Booki, Book Case,\nCarpati, Chain, Radio Stool, Silverware, Cut Glassware, Magazine Rack, Table Lampt, Library\nTablet, Plcturei, Hall Tree,\nHoover Vacuum Cleaner, Iron\nBed, Ottermoor Mattreai, Slm-\nmom Bed, Reitmore Mattrett,\nBedroom Furniture, etc., etc. All\ngoodt In exceptionally good condition. G. HORSTEAD,\nTerms: CASH Auctioneer.\nGoodt on view morning of tale\nON SALE\nTODAY\nQolden\nHarvest\nBeer\nin Bottles\nA Beer of\nQiiality\nBe Sure and Order\na Case Today\nSupply Limited\nKOOTENAY\nBREWERIES ITO\nSb'tewiAA and\ntootlUrs\nUHl'iIW-Mmif\nThii advertisement la not published\nor displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or by the Government of\nBritish Columbia\n\"Go'*\u00ae1\nREVOLUTIONARY DISCOVERY\nEnds Need for Separate Garten\nBy thowanoi, mm tnt gMng vp ttM okhmm\ngarter. Thay 're adopting Holeproof i ram im.\nvelopmnt\u2014Atitogart Hm aoda with ImMwi-\nIn Lo*\u00bbx topi. SnoggerrW No blndlngl No\nhmlng with separate garten. Gsan garten\n\u2022vary flm* locks ar* laundered\nGet your feet Into a pair oi Holeproof\nAvtogarts now. Smart spring ityko.,. regular length or Autogart ihort..,\nPeaetrntAmmrttl\nky letter ft. lc i\nJaU., I\nOLIPROOP\nAUTOGART\nSOCKS\n75c and $1.00\nJJmory's '[^imited\nLadies, Why Take a Chancel\nIf you desire the best Permanent available ask those\nladies that have one of our\nFrench LA FIGARO Perm-\nanents. They arc given in\nperfect safety and comfort\nand with intelligent understanding of the characteristics'of your hair in any style\nyou desire.\nIf you seek undeniable excellence as to individual design and\nsoft, natural appearing and lasting effects, select our\nLA FIGARO PERMANENT\nROSE BEAUTY PARLORS\nPHONE 317\nCITY DRUG CO.\nFOR SCHOOL OPENING we\noffer all gradei Jutt what the\nteacher ordered. A freih itock,\ncomplete In every detail, of\nscribblen, loose leaf booki,\npalntt and brushes, pencil! and\npent, etc., all at pricei that wlll\nplease Dad.\nFOR THE HOLIDAY wa have\neverything the party wlll require . . . from the finest fishing tackle to sunburn lotion,\nIncluding Thermos Bottlet and\nKits, Kodaks, Kodak Film In\nall tizet, and finishing tervice\nthat it tecond to none.\nYour Correct Weight Free Anytimel\nCITY DRUG & STATIONERY CO.\nPHONE 34\nWe Deliver\nBOX 1083\n*%__.$!_*,**\"    Mali order, given\nprompt attention\nNelson't Dlsprnslnc\nChemist*\nHluifnificent\nGary Cooper    Marlon Divlll\nCotrtiopolltan Magazlne'i In\nThrilling Spy Story     'OPERATOR IV L\nOUR GANG KIDS     0-0     TRAVELOGUE    0-0     NEWS \"\\\n r\nPAGE TWO\nHALL TELLS 9F\nAt Night Heard the\nGreat Ice Field\nGroaning\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 31 (CP).-\nFirst to ascend mighty Mount Robaon, 12.972 feet, since 1930, Henry\n' S. Hali of Boston and his Swiss\nguide, Hans Fuhrer, returned here\ntoday from the scene of their conquest\nIn climbing the highest mountain\ni in the Canadian Rockies, the pair\nproved a theory long held by Fuhrer\nthat the dangerous second ice-fall\ncan be circumnavigated rather than\nassaulted Direct. Both said that seasonal condiUons and momentary\nfavorable weather gave them a\n\"break.\"\nOn the glacier approach to the\nsummit ridge there arc two ice falls,\neach of which have given trouble\nto climbers since Col. W. W. Foster\nand Conrad Kain first ascended the\npeak in 1913 after a \"prodigious\"\ntask of cutting ice steps.\nBy working to the extreme west\nend of the second ice fall, Hall and\nFuhrer were able to go under a\naeries of snow bulges, grottos made\nbeautiful by weird icicle effects.\nand attack the main summit ridge.\nAt one place the snow ridge was so\nnarrow they were forced down some\nniggle up\nfarther along. In one spot, Hail said,\nhe was not sure he would be able\nto follow his guide.\nThey made camp at the timber-\nline and began the : -tual ascent at\n2 ajn., Wednesday. They reached\nthe summit at 3 p.m. after 19 hours\nclimbing.\nThey began to descend at 4 p.m.\nand reached the bottom of the second ice fall at dark. On dangerous\nrock and ice they sat there until\ndaylight It wu bitterly cold, they\nsaid, and a pair of socks put on a\nrock to dry, froze stiff as boards.\nRobson ice is \"noisy\" and during\nthe night they could hear the great\nice field groaning and grinding. Tce\nfalls and small avalanches roared\ndown and stray rocks crashed into\nunsounded depths. DayUght was a\nwelcome arrival, the mountaineers\nsaid.\n\u25a0THE NILSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. >.C\u2014SATURDAY MORNING, SEPT. 1. 1M4 \u2022\nMAGISTRATE POTTS REFUSES DISMISS\nPLANTA CASE AND RINDS HIM OVER\nfruitless.\nConfronted by a flat refusal by\nmanufacturers to dlacust tht Issues with tha board and tht union's oommltttt, Oarriaon kept ln\ncloae touch wtth Oeorge A. Bloen,\nhead of the Cotton Textile Institute, and labor representative**.. There\nappeared no preaent prospect of altering Industry's stand.\nREAD AND\nUwtemm-im-kAs\nWANT-ADS\nMORE ABOUT\nW%t STRIKE\n(Continued From Page Ona)\nFormer orders for the woollen and\nworsted strike were dispatched late\ntoday after Arthur Besse, chairman\nof the wool code authority, curtly\nrejected labor's reaueet for conference with representatives of the Industry.\nntnvi; MEET CTIIOH\nPeter Van Horn, chairman of the\nsilk code authority, generally was\nexpected to follow the ltad of cotton and wool manufacturers ln refusing to meet the union.\nBilk and rayon workers still were\nunder Instructions to stand by.\nShould they Join up more than\n700.000 workers would be under\nstrike orders.\nChairman Lloyd Oarrlson and his\nassociates on tbt national labor\nrelations board tonltht continued\nhoping against hope that aome baala\nof settlement or compromise might\nbe found. All conceded, however,\nthot   efforts   thus   far   have   been\nMORE ABOUT\nBEATTY\nGuide for Travellers\nNelson, B. C, Hotels\n\"Finest in the Interior\"\nThe HUME HOTEL\nPHONE 787\nBreakfast 25c to 60c\nLuncheon 35c to 50c-Dinner 35c and 65c\nRotary and Gyro Headquarters\nFree Bus Se-rvlce Nelson B.C. George Benwell. Prop.\n'HUME: A. J. ironsides, E. S.\nJones and children. Cranbrook; C.\nHansen, Reno; M. McDoneil, Rossland; A. Anderson, Medicine Hat;\nMiss D. Anderson, Miss G. M.\nSmith, A. J. Davis, E. Sutton. Van\ncouver; Mrs. J, B. Smith, New Denver; P. D. Campbell, Saskatoon;\nP. B. Farland and wife, C. A. Yule,\nW. R, Lawrence, E. Gamson, Pen-\ntlcton; D. McDoneil, Rossland.\n^The Savoy Hotel\n\"Where the Guest Is King\"\nNelson's Newest and Finest Hotel.\nMany Rooms With Private\nBaths or Showers.\nJ. A. KERR, Prop.\n124 BAKER ST. '    PHONE 19\nNELSON, B.C.\nSAVOY: C. W. Hlslop, Calgary;\nMrs. R. W. Welton and son, Harry\nC. Davidson, Tom Blackman, Trail;\nWm. E. Ryall, Winnipeg: R. Madison. G. Johnson, W. Goodhue, Eric;\nT. Talbot, Salmo; R. H. Russell. St.\nPaul; Mac Watson, M. E. Micharly,\nM. Reed, Kimberley; L. J. Smith,\nVictoria; Mr. and Mrs. Smith, Vernon; J. C. Uhtoff, Crawford Bay;\nMrs. C. R. Reynolds, Creston; G. C.\nTaylor. H. McDonald, J. Swanson,\nW. Field, R. Douglas, Vancouver.\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcome Awaits You\nJA8.  E.  MADDEN\nCompletely   Remodelled\nHot and  Coin   water\nIn  the  HEART  ot the  City\nNew Grand Hotel\nP.   L.   KAI'AK.   I'rop.\nWeekly and Monthly Kates\nHot  and   cold   Water\nSingle 80c up     Double (1.S0 tip\nRooms (to \u25a0 Month and Op\nOccidental Hotel\n70S Vernon St. Phone S87L\nH.   WASSICK\nSPECIAL MONTHLY  RATES\nGood Comfortable Rooms\nMiners' Hcadiuarters\nQUEEN'S HOTEL\nA.   LAPOINTE,   rmi*.\nRooms from He to $1.60\nMonthly $10 and up.\nSteam heated and hot and cold\nwater In every  room\n605 Baker St. Phone HI\nVancouver, B. C, Hotels\nNEWLY \"VO0*  VANWUVth  HO^> ^7~\nRENOVATED Dlllf 61*111 HOtOl     ELEVATOR\nA. Paterton, late of Coleman, Alta- Prop.  900 ScymourSt., Vancouver\nSuites with private baths.   Also housekeeping roomt tnd suites.\n-\u2022* AatatSaa   U_\u00bb*_-l   REASONABLE\nROOMS        AUStltl  HOtel RATES\nE, A. Greenwood\u2014Manager \u2014 1221 Gr>n*\/ilte St., Vincouver, Vc.\nTRANSPORTATION-Freight and Passenger\nLabor Day Round-Trip Excursions\nFIVE-DAY ROUND-TRIP EXCURSION AT FARE\nAND  ONE  QUARTER\nTickets on sale August 31st, September lit. 2nd, 3rd, 1934.\nReturn limit September 4th, 1934,\nTWO ONE-DAY ROUND TRIP EXCURSIONS AT\nREGULAR  ONE-WAY  FARE\n(A)\u2014Tickets on tale September 2nd, 1934.   Return limit midnight,\nStptember 2nd, 1934.\n(B)\u2014Tickett on tale September 3rd, 1934.   Return limit midnight,\nSeptember 3rd, 1934. ,\nFor further Information see j-our local Greyhound Agent.\nCentral Canadian Greyhound Lines, Ltd.\nPHONE M0           NELSON DEPOT           MS BAKER \u00abT.\nNELSON - TRAIL *m ROSSLAND\nFREIGHT LINE    L\"vJnJ \"\u2022'**\u25a0*\nSt  9  t.Tfi*\nJ. C. \"SCOTTY\" MUlfyprop.\nDaily   Truck\nBtrvlct\nPhone\nNelson\n\u2022. 77\nPROMPT    EFFICIENT    SERVICE\nAT   ALL   TIMES\nPhone\nTrail\n13 or 191\nContlnutd From Paga Ont)\nSome economies have already bten\neffected; tome art under consideration and still othert will follow\nthe conclusion of work now In hand.\nObviously there lt a limit to tha\neconomies which such measures can\naccomplish so long as each railway\nhas to maintain lta competitive in-\ndependence.\nDISCUSS ABANDONMENT\n\"Possible abandonment ot lines\nln certain territories is being explored by committees established for\nthat purpose. No declalon haa been\nreached aa to pooling arrangements\nbetween Kamloops and Vancouver\nnor ln the matter of dealing with\nthe future of the Vanoouver hotel\nBoth are under consideration by\ntbe two companies.\"\nThe reference to the Vancouver\nhotel referred to the poetlbtllty of\nthe companies co-operating to use\nthe preaent unfinished Canadian\nNational hotel and finding aome\nother ust tor tht Vancouver.\n\"Efficiency ln public services\ncan certainly be maintained even\nln the absence of oompttltlon,\nhaa bsen proved ln many services\nln Canada where railways are not\nin direct competition,\" tbe presl\ndent's statement said. \"In addition\nsome measure of competition from\nwater carriers, trucks and buses will\nalways be preaent.\"\nHe wat aaked In what directions\ncould $60,000,000 bt taved through\namalgamation aa Intimated by btm\nln prevloua utterances.\n\"Savlnga from unification an !i\nthree principal itema,\" be replied\n\"Abandonment of unnecessary mile*\nage; consolidation of traffic due to\nelimination of duplicate train service and use of moet favorable\nroutes for tht combined operations;\nand reduction in unit costs below\nthat possible lf railways are separately operated.\nNO   SERIOUS   INCREASE\n\"The number ot men thrown out\not work, lt any, would depend on\nthe working out of the details of\noperation, but ln my Judgment unemployment would not be seriously\nlncreaaed under unification If, es\nwould be the case, the work were\nproceeded with gradually and considerately. Employees should not be\npenalized and need have no fear\nof being unfairly treated.\"\n\"Our experience In the past amply\nJustifies continuance of the poller\nof oent-a-mlle excursions,\" Mr. Beatty tald.\nThe Canadian Pacific was carefully watching development of\nstreamline air-conditioned tralna in\nthe United States, but did not contemplate their introduction until investigations ln the United States\nhad given accurate data upon which\nto proceed.\nBUSINESS BETTER\n\"Business throughout Canada is\ngenerally better than a year ago,\"\nhe said, \"and with a fair crop movement railways should finish the\nyear with better net earnings. It it\nnot to be expected that the percentage of improvement will be continued, as we are reaching the period when the first upturn in business took place in 1933.\n\"The crop situation, I think, will\nimprove, and while nO accurate estimate can be made until the outturns are known, it is, in my Judgment, more than likely that estimates recently made will be slightly\nincreased.\nTOURIST TRADE BETTER\n\"There has been a distinct improvement in tourist traffic in British Columbia this year and I see no\nreason why it should not recur. All\nthat is necessary is increased confidence among the citizens of Canada and the United States and, in\nspite of uncertainties which exist\nin many quarters I am disposed to\nthink that thit confidence will\nstrengthen as months pass.\"\nHe was asked if in nit statement\nof August 8 he said there was need\nto build more railways, he had any\npaticular territory in mind.\n\"I did not have any particular\nterritory in mind,\" he replied, \"save\nthe undeveloped north and the possibility of new areas requiring railway transportation because of mineral or other discoveries. Construction of the Peace River outlet will\nno doubt receive consideration as\nsoon as financing is possible, but\nat the moment both the government\nand the Canadian Pacific are carefully scrutinising both present-day\nexpenditures at well as future commitments.\nWANT 8AFE PASSAGE\n\"With our present burden of railway investmenL plans for extensions will. I thing, depend upon general improvement in railway revenues, in the light of necessities\nwhich arise. What I thing is necessary is that we should by economies put our finances In such a position that necessary extensions may\nbe made without unduly burdening\nthe country. We should not be deprived of future necessary extensions or modernization of our railway facilities because we can not\nafford them.\nMr. Beatty was also aaked, \"Whtt\nobjections, if any, has the CP.R.\nto present plant for the Lion's Otte\nbridge?\"\nHe replied: \"The company hts\nnothing to tdd to representations\nIt made at the hearing in Ottawt\nwhen the application for approval\nof tbe plans of the First Narrows\nbridge was made. Its only interest Is\nthe safe navigation of British Columbia's greatest port\u2014the port of\nVancouver.'*\nTravelling In the president's party\nart D. C. Coleman, Winnipeg, vlce-\nfiresident in charge of western\nInes; W. N. Tiller. K.C, director,\nToronto; R. S. McLaughlin, director.\nOshswa, Ont: R. H. McMaiter, director; C H. Carlltle, Toronto but-\ninessman; H. J. Main, general superintendent. Winnipeg; and C. A.\nj Cotterell, general superintendent.\nVancouver,  who  is  accompanying\n* the aarty through British Columbia.\nSenator Released on Surety\nof $500; Must Answer\nAny Charge Preferred\nNANAIMO, B.C., Aug. 31 tCP).-\nRefusing to take the responsibility\nupon himsey to dismiss the case,\nStipendiary Magistrate C H. B.\nPotts today bou*d over Senator A.\nE. Planta to answer any charge preferred against him. The hearing was\na sequel to a charge of unlawful\nconversion of 8300 received from\nMrs. M. Cottle on terms requiring\nhla to pay the same to W. H. Jones,\nexecutor of the estate of the late\nHenry Crewe. He was released on\none surety of 8500. The senator was\nrepresented by Charles Locke, K.C,\nof Vancouver, A. Leighton appeared\nfor the crown.\n\"It is rather evident,\" said counsel, \"what has happened in this\ncase, criminal proceedings are being used to collect a debt after the\ncompany has gone into bankruptcy\nafter a claim has been filed with\nthe trustee of the company in bankruptcy, and after the president of\nthe company says that he will do,\npersonally, all in his power to meet\nihe company's obligations. Therf is\nno evidence to suggest that the accused got five cents of that money.\nDocuments show it was received by\nthe company and that interest was\npaid by the company.\"\nMrs, M. Cottle told of her dealings\nwith accused some years ago, re the\nsale of some property at Departure\nBay to pay a mortgage on her present home. She admitted her home\nwas sold by a salesman from A. E.\nPlanta, Ltd., and that all business\nwas done in the company's office\nwith accused. \"I have not brought\nany charges against Mr. Planta, I've\nnothing t| bring against him. I got\nmy title, money and receipts and\nam satisfied,\" declared the witness.\nKIMBERLEY GIRLS\nHOME FROM HIKE\nBraved    Wilderness;    They\nHighly Praise Treatment\nin Nelson\nA Brow Piper\nKIMBERLEY. Aug. 31\u2014Doris Dakln,\nMarguerite Dakln and Mabel McKay\narrived home hale and hearty trom\nthetr long ride- Marguerite stayed\novtr the week-end with her brother\nln Moyle.\nThey traveled early and ln tht evenings, retting during the heat of\nthe day. The horses were somewhat\nfagged when they reached home but\nthe girls were still going strong.\nThey had a wonderful time ln\nNelson. Everyone was vary good to\nthem. Mrs. Jarret supplied them with\na sleeping porch and fruit In plenty.\nAfter the hardships of the trail, Nel-\nseemed like the promised land,\nflowing with milk and honey. Everywhere they were received with kindness and one of the flneet things\nabout the trip waa the lovely people\nthey met and the good tlmea they\nhad wtth them.\nGoing back, they got supplies and\nstarted back to meet the shepherd.\nA truck took tbem within eight miles\nso they decided to walk.\nIt wss a hot day and Marguerite\ncarried a sack of flour that sifted\ndown and made dough between her\nshoulders, under the pack.\nThey met tbe shepherd out of supplies, except for a sheep that bad\ncommitted suicide by Jumping a sharp\nsnag* This vrat the only aheep lott.\nDon Dakln and Roy McLelsb. who\nhad gone through on foot aa far at\nCrawford Bay ln search ot the girls\nhad taken back sugar and butter for\nhtm.\nMr. Eppard, the shepherd, was cheerful, through the worst, over the summit and two miles down the other\nside. He had gotten along ao well\nthat he told the girls, \"I believe If I\ntell In the river I would float upstream.\" Mre. Eppard too waa happy\nand hopeful aa she had been all\nthrough.\nWhen tha girls reached the lower\nend of Moyle lake they met Mr. Eppard wtth the team. and covered\nwagon on his way around by Creston.\nHis sheep were through and ln good\npasture near Crawford Bay with his\nwife and boy and dogs on guard. Mr.\nEppard spoke of the office cabin his\nfamily and the girls had had to \"rob\"\nwhen all their food waa gone. A\ntrapper complained about thla and\nMr. Eppard went back to Cranbrook\nand the government office gave him\nthe money to pay the trapper. \"All's\nwell that ends well.\"\nLANCASHREIS\nCRICKET CHAMP\nHave Good Lead as County\nSchedule Comes to\nand End\nBILLY ARMSTRONG\nOne of the outstanding competi\ntors at the Highland dancing and\npiping competition which is being\nheld here on Monday in conjunction with the big track and field\nmeet is Billy Armstrong of Vancouver, above. The Vancouver lad\nwho is only IS years of age, has won\na reputation as the foremost of\nCanada's youngest generation of\npipers, and whom the picture re-\nEroducod above shows with the\nandsome set of bagpipes, valued\nat (100, and awarded to him as winner of the grand aggregate prize for\nthe playing of Highland marches,\nstrathspeys and reels at a piping\ncontest sponsored recently by the\nVancouver Gaelic society. Fifteen\nyears of age last August, Billy has\nwon during his brief piping career\n97 prizes, 64 firsts, 19 seconds, 13\nthirds and one fourth, frequently\ncompeting against pipers Of all agee\nat points as far distant as Edmonton, Alberta and Seattle, Wash\n.Winning the championship of Canada for boys under 16 at Banff\nfour years ago, he has held this\ntitle ever since.\nDOG DISTURBS\nTHIS BURGLAR\nA burglar entered the home ol\nT. F. Payne, Hoover street, Thursday, but ieft when' apparently\nfrightened by a dog without taking\nanything. Police are investigating.\nYMIR NOTES\nTMIR. Aug. 81\u2014Mr. and Mre. Clarence Mclsaac, their son Lortng and\nBelle and Jack Kublskl wert Nelson\nvisitors.\nYmlr Women's Institute library wu\nopen under supervision of Mrs. Edith\ngllle.\nMre. Grece Orant haa aa her guest\nher sister, Mrs. Wilder, from the\nstates.\nMrs. Edward Emllson haa aa her\nguests, her dsughter, Mre. McMann\nand children from Kellogg, Idaho.\nMr. and Mrs. G. Le Roy were Nelson visitors.\nMrs. Joe Kublskl hat returned to\nher home In Ymlr after visiting ber\nmother for several montha tn Manitoba.\nMiss Elisabeth Clark had aa her\nguest, Mrs. Haggarty of Nelton.\nMrs. H. Stevens and children were\nSalmo visitors.\nMORE ABOUT\nB. C. WAG!\n\"Tbt board recognizes aome units\nIn the mercantile Industry may htve\nto readjust methods applying to\noommlsslon stlesmen but cannot\naat any good reason to change ttlt\nordtr,\" be commented.\nSOME  COMPLAINTS\n\"Thttt htve been complaints from\ntbt tut in which thty claim this\nelaat of employee Is exempt trom\nminimum wage relations ln tbt\nUnited SUtes. Wt takt tht poll-\nton. however, that a man worth employing is worth paying. The board\noannot hope to satisfy everybody but\nlt It acting Jn wbtt lt belltvet to\nbt a spirit of Justice and fairness.'\nTht minuter tald that, while there\nhave been protests from aome firms,\nothert using door-to-door salesman\ntn marketing household conunod*\nttlea havt expressed willingness to\nconform with tbe order.\nSTOP COMMISSION WORK\nIn eome quarters lt is welcomed\nu a step which will put a stop\nto tbe alleged practice of placing\nany man that apples on the road\non a commission basis.\nThe new order, Mr. peareon uld,\nla expected to glvt a living wage\nfor those salesmen employed by\nfirms under the new plan although\nlt may eliminate those who put In\ndays of canvassing with Uttla or\nno benefit to themselves.\nOne large corporation hu advised\nthe minister that, ln future, lt wlll\ngive prospective salesmen a short\ncourse ln salesmanship to select\ncapable men*and wlll thtn place\ntbem on the road tt the specified\nminimum wage.\n31SL0TT\nt-     IU TUT [llll\nSOFTBALL GIRLS\nREADY TOR TODAY\nNelson Girls Returning to the\nCity; Creston Plays\nThem Twice Today\nSoftball players havt been nocking\nback to Nelson during tbe lut 48\nhoun ln preparation for the best\ntwo Out of three game series between\ntbe Creaton ladles' team and the local\nrep tetm thla afternoon and Bunday,\nBaturdif's games tre called tor 3\npm. and 5 pm., while the Sunday\nmorning gtme, which wlll be played\nIrrespective of the results of Saturday's games, wtll be played at 10:80\nIn the morning.\nYesterday tfternoon Helen Ling and\nRosa Stewart, who will bear tbe\nbrunt of tbe mound duty tor tbt\nlocals, returned to Nelaon tfter spending tbt holldaya at Balfour. Botb\nhavt bten getting ln oonalderable\npractice along with Agnes Stewart,\nwbo wu also at Balfour and memben\nof tbe Balfour Bronx, and ara tn\ngood ahape for the Kootenay title\nseries.\nAgnes Stewtrt and Jean Paterton\nreturned to tbe city Wedneaday afternoon. Aria Stare and Haiti Spina will\nbe In late tonight and othen wbo\nart missing reported to bt on thetr\nway to Nelson.\nPresent plans call for Helen Ling\nto pitch part of all three garnet and\ntht will itart tht ftnt gamt on Saturday tfternoon but wlll be given plenty\nof relief by Rota Stewart and probably Jean Spiers. Aria Saare wlll\nbe In ber usual potltlon behind tht\nplate tn tht tint gamt but Jean\nPaterson and Pauline Sttngherlln,\nmay be called tn to relieve ber ln\npart of the other games.\nBarring lut minute changes the\nlocals wlU line up u foUows: Jeanette LePage, flnt bate, Dorothy Tltt-\nworth tecond base, Haul Spiers or\nJune King Shortstop, Clara Talberg\nor Pauline Stangherlln third bate,\nAlice Dunn, Jean Spiers. Edna McKensle, Agnea Stewart and Pauline\nStangherlln, outfielders. Lena LePage,\nPeggy Olbbon and Lillian McDonald\nwlll be used part time.\nClara Talberg wilt probably plsy\nfirst baat one of the games and Jean\nPaterson third. Should Eva Bmlth\nand Elaine Beeston return u expected they will be used lt thetr condition  warrants tt.\nIN THE FINAL\nLott Upsets Shields in\nGrass Court Tennis\nPlay at Rye, N.Y.\nRYE, N. Y.. Aug. \u00ab1 (AP)-Oeorgt\nLott, Jr., of Chicago, veteran United\nBtatea Davla eup doubles player,\nand Prank C. Parker, youthful sensation from Spring Lake, n j , wlll\nmttt for tbe 19th time ln two yeare\nSunday when tbey club In the\nfinal round for the cistern United\nStatet grttt courts tennis championship.\nLott upset jrank shields, the first\nranking player of the country tnd\nDavla cup singles representative, 4-6,\n0-3, 8-6 to enter tbe title round today. Parker humbled the intercollegiate tltleholder, Gene Mako of\nLos Angelee, ln straight atta, t-l,\n\u2022-\u00bb*\nThe two perennial rivals an all-\nsquare, each having won seven of\ntbt 14 matches.\nTht women's singles final, wblcb\nwill ba played tomorrow, became an\nall-English affair when Katberlne\nStammers turned back Baroness\nMaud Levi of Mlnden, Nav.. while\nFreda James was whipping her\nteammate, Betty Nuthall. Mlaa Stammers won t-l, 0-4, 7-9 and Miss\nJames 3-t, 7-9, t-l.\n\"RACKETFAILS\nBut Vancouver Youth Had\nIngenious Method of\nMaking Money\nVANCOOVBR, Aug. Si (CP)\u2014An\nunidentified youth wu at large today\nafter bit attempt to itart a ntw and\nnovel crime \"racket\" ln Vancouver\nhad failed.\nThe youth appeared at a downtown\nclothing ttort yetterday and obtained\na box of tbt typt uaad for cafrytng\nsuits, Lattr bt turned lt over at the\nfront of tbt same store to a messenger boy, whom he instructed to\ndeliver tht box to A. Ntlton it tbe\nHotel Georgia md collect 131.80 btfore leaving lt.\nOn retching tha hotal, the messenger found Nelton wu out and the\nhotel management refused to pay tbe\nmoney demanded. Tbl messenger returnid to the ttort, and being unable to locate tba youth wbo gavt\nhim tbt box. tumid lt over to the\nmanager. Wben opened, the box waa\nfound to contain an old ooat and\nnewspapers.\nFolios believed tbl youth obtained\nNelson's name from tbe hotel register\nand, knowing the guest wu not ln\nat the time, tent tht box to the hotel\nln the hopt the management would\nmake payment for the guest.\nPROCTER-\nLARDEAU\nSERVICE\nSteamer service between Procter and Lardeau will be operated on\nMonday, September 17,\ninstead of Saturday,\nSeptember 15. *\nN. J. LOWES\nC.T.A\u201e Ntlton, B.C.\nICHURCHESi\n3flrat OUjttrrlt of\n(Ehrust fcrfenitat\n209 BAKER STRUT\nA branch of the Mother Church,\nThe   First   Church   of   Christ\nScientist tn Boston, Mast.\nSunday School 9:43 a.m.\nSunday Service 11 a.m.\nSubject Lesson-Sermon\n\"CHRIST JESUS*\nWednesday Testimonial Meeting\n8 pjn.\nFREE READING ROOM IN\nCHURCH   BUILDING\u2014\nAll Cordially Welcome\n\u2022llttum ^prtrtrpB\nit. -Paul* anil Irinttg\nRev. T. J. S. Ferguson, BA.\nMinister\n* 10 ajn.\u2014Sunday  School\n11 a.m.\u2014St. Paul's Church:\nTheme \u2014 Labour \u2014 \"Why\natand Ye Idle?\"\nTrombone tolo\u2014Mr. A. Barrett of Trail.\nDuet\u2014Messrs. Coleman and\nBeattle.\n7:30 pjn.\u2014Trinity Church:\nTheme \u2014 \"Choosing One's\nLife Work.\"\nYoung people specially invited.\nPor tbe tint tix monthi ot 1034,\nCanada exported to the London (England) market the following canned\nfruits\u201471,733 caaea ot peare: 14,389\ncaaea ot loganberries; 3,883 cases of\npeaches, and 40,864 cases ot canned\napplet.\nSTEAMER\nTRIP\non\nKootenay Loire\nSunday, Sept. 2\nto\nProcter-Ainsworth\nand Kaslo\nLeave Nelson Wharf\n10 A.M.\nArrive Back at\n9:45 P.M.\nReturn Fares:\nin**, 91.00 and 11.50\nCHILDREN HALF FARE\nNO PASSES\nENJOY SUNDAY STEAMER\nTRIPS WHILE THEY LA8T\nPurchue tickets In advanot at\nCity  Tlckat  Office\u2014   Baker\nand Ward StreeU\nCANADIAN\nPACIFIC\nWV\u00bb'\nLONDON, Aug. 31 (CP cable).-\nThe first-class county cricket season came to an end in England today, with Lancashire the champion\ncounty. Yorkshire, champions for\nthree years, were considerably behind tt the end of the 30-match\nschedule.\nAlthough they were idle In the\nlast series, Lancashire had an insurmountable lead, winding up\nwith 257 points for an average of\nS7.ll. Sussex had 243 points for an\naverage of 54.00. Yorkshire and\nKent each wound up v. ith 225 points.\nResults of closing matches:\nHampshire and Worcestershire\ndrew at Portsmouth^ Hampshire 289\nfor nine declared; Worcestershire\n187 for seven (Boyes four for S7).\nSussex defeated Yorkshire on the\nfirst inningt it Hove. Yorkshire\n263 and 225 for eight, declared (Barber 74); Sussex 288 -toi 13 for one\n(Tate 77, Smallej five for 87).\nDerbyshire won over LeicesWr-\nthlre by 42 runt at Chesterfield.\nDerby 181 and 2M (Marlow four for\n50); Leicestershire 189 and 179.\nMiddlesex defeated Nottinghamshire on the flnt innings at Lord's.\nNotts 219 and 252 for five, declared\n(Hardstaffe 80 and 84, Voce 55,\nSims five for 67, Walker 111); Middlesex 238 and 64 for thaee (Voce\nfour for 83, Hearne 50, Simt 50).\nSurrey defeated Glamorgan on\nthe first innings at Cardiff. Glam-\n22oa\"(Gregory 5\u00ab, ciayTe'ven^for  This advertisement Ts not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the Government oi British Columbia\n16 oz. 91.80\n25 oz. ?2.65\nHIRAM\nVV\/iLIYLiv*j _.\u201e_-_\nWHISKY\n (M5\\\nTHI NELSON DAILY NEWS. NEUON. B.C-SATURDAY MORNINO. SEPT. 1, KM\nCOLLEGES\n\\SCHOOLS\nFor BOYS and GIRLS\nParents, ConsultThis Column\n1892    Columbian College    1934\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B.C.\nA RESIDENTIAL ANO DAY SCHOOL FOR GIRLS\nAcademic Couriei to Senior Matriculation\nKindergarten and Junior School\nCommercial and Secretarial Courses\nMuilc, Piano and Vocal - Art and Elocution \u2014 Home Economics\nHlgheit honon In Senior Mitrleulatlon received by one of our\nitudenti at recent Provincial  Examination\nCollege Opening Thursday, Sept. 6, 1934.\nCalendar\nSent on Application\nA. E. ETHERINGTON,\nBursar and Registrar\nCHESTERFIELD\nNorth Vancouver, B. C.\nOLDEST BOARDING SCHOOL FOR BOYS IN B.C.\nEndeavors to bring out and develop each boy's natural abilities In\n\u2022very way. Write to the Principal for illustrated prospectus.\nSCHOOL RE-OPENS ON SEPTEMBER 10TH.\nDUFFUS\nSchool of\nBusiness Ltd.\n\"The School That Gets Results\"\nSeymour and Pender Sts., Vancouver, B. C.\n-WRITE FOR  PROSPECTUS-\nQueen .Margaret's\nSchool\nDuncan, Vancouve'r Island, B. C.\nBoarding ichool for girl- Beginneri to matriculation.\nBeautiful country, .healthy Htuation, large playing\nfield!, with own chapel and swimming pool. Happy\nhome atmosphere. Fully qualified staff. Church of\nEngland\nPrincipal!:\nMlu N. C. Danny, A.R.R.C, - Mln D. R. Geoghe-jin, B.A.\nWRITE FOR PROSPECTUS\nSt. Ann's Academy\nVictoria, B. C.\nRESIDENTIAL AND DAY SCHOOL FOR GIRLS\nPrimary School for Younger Children\nBoyi Admitted to Gradea 1 and 2\nCourse* of study Include Primary, Grammar and Academic Couiiei,\nleading to Normal and University Entrance\nSPECIAL DEPARTMENTS\nJUM'   DEPARTMENT-Chlna   Painting,   Oil   and   Water-color\n\u2122 Painting.\nMUSIC PUPILS prepared for the ROYAL ACADEMY and TORONTO CONSERVATORY Examinationi.\nCOMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT provides SECRETARIAL COURSE\nfor Matriculation. Course! embrace Shorthand, Typing. Bookkeeping, Filing and Office Appliance! Courses. Second-year\nHigh School Grade Entrants lowest standard accepted. Provincial and Federal Civil Service Examinations successfully\npassed.\nTERMS REASONABLE       -       WRITE TO THE PRINCIPAL\nLEARN\nDesigning, Pattern-Drafting, Dressmaking, Ladies'\nTailoring, Smocking, etc.\nAcademy of Useful Arts\noffers:\nA training essential to all women.\nA means of earning a living.\nOpportunity in an uncrowded field.\nMiss F. R. Adams, Principal\nThree Gables Hotel\u2014Penticton, B. C.\nWRITE FOR SYLLABUS\nBranch School of tha Vancouver Academy of Uieful AU\nTANCOUVEB  BOARD  OF   SCHOOL  TRUSTEES\nVANCOUVER\nSCHOOL OF ART\n590   HAMILTON   ST,\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\nDIPLOMA\nCOURSES\nDAY AND\nEVENING\nCLASSES:\nDRAWING\nPAINTING\nniatCToa\nCHARLES H. SCOTT\nWt. oil\nDESIGN\nPOTTERY\nMODELLING\nLETTERING\nCOMMERCIAL\nART\nCRAFTS\nDIRECTOR\nOPENING SEPTEMBER 10th       Free Prospectus\nSt.Ann'i Academy\nKamloops, B.C.\nSELECT RESIDENTIAL\nSCHOOL FOR GIRLS AND\nYOUNG LADIES\nIn tht City of Sumhlna\nLocation (deal; climate unexcelled. Primary, Grammar,\nCommercial and High School\nDepartment!. Music course\nleads to degree! in Royal\nAcademy and Trinity College\nof London, and to Toronto\nConservatory ot Music.\nWrite for Catalogue to\nSISTER SUPERIOR\nOstheAirTcHit\nCANADIAN  RADIO\nCOMMISSION  NETWORK\nTHE GRAMMAR\nSCHOOL\nDUNCAN,\nVancouver Uland, B.C.\nRESIDENTIAL AND DAY\nSCHOOL FOR BOYS\nEitabllihed 1926\nCurriculum it laid down by\nthe Department of Education\nTerm Commences\nSept. 12\nEighteen acre! of playing\n'jeldi. Healthy surroundings.\nModern equipment Experienced masters. Rugby football, cricket, gym, boxing etc.\nModerate Fees. For Proipec-\ntui, wrlti to the Headmaiter\nSt. Margaret's\nSchool\nVICTORIA, B. C.\nRESIDENTIAL AND DAY\nSCHOOL  FOR  GIRLS\nKindergarten to Senior\nMatriculation\nSpecial Course! Arranged\nIf Deiired\nExperienced Graduate Staff\nMusic, Art, Elocution,\nDancing,  Riding,  Swiiming\nTramportatlon for Small\nChildren\nAUTUMN TERM STARTS\nSEPT. 12TH\nWrite for Prospectua to\nHeadmlitreii:\nMRS. N. E. DUNCAN, B.A.\nBrentwood\nCollege\n(NEAR) VICTORIA\nRESIDENTIAL\nSCHOOL FOR BOYS\nAgu 12 to 18\nGrades VII to XII and\nSenior Matriculation\nMODERATE TEES\nNext term opens on Sept. 13.\nTot particulars, writ*\nM. H. ELLIS, B.A. (Oxon.)\nHeadmaiter\nAT VICTORIA, B. C.\nSt. MicKael's\nSchool\nVERNON, B. C.\nBoarding School\nfor Girls\nIn the Sunny Okanagan\nValley\nHighly  qualified\nstaff\nGrades 1 to 12 inclusive\nRe-opens Sept 6th\nWrite to the Principal.\nPITMAN'S\nDay and Night\nSchool\nENROLL NOW-FALL TERM   i\nStudent! may enter at any\ntime\nComplete Secretarial and\nBookkeeping Couriei, Public\nand High School Subject!\nIndividual  Attention\nNIGHT SCHOOL RATES:\n$3.50 Month\nWrite to\nEVELINE A. C. RICHARDS,\nPrincipal\nCor. Granville and Broadway\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\nMAT\n91(1\ncr<ic\n1330\n(Frequency Chances)\nCKOV    CJCA    CHVTK    CMC\nUO        730        110        MO\nCRY      CKCK    CFCN    CBCV\nMO        1010      1030      1100\nS BS Can. Preaa Newi\n0 00 Acadian Serenade\n9 \"to Bert Anitlce'i Mountain Boyi\n7:00 Charlet Dornberger'a Orch.\n7:30 Newt and Weather Forecatt\n7:38 Paul Wnlteman't Orch.\n8:00 Melody Moodt\n8:30 Newt\n8:30 Mtrt Kenny's Orch.\nN.B.C.-KCiO NETWORK\nKHQ   KOW   KM   KOO   KOMO   Kit\n9M      630      610      700      030      970\n6:00 Knight's Cuckoo Club\n6:16 Dandlet of Yetterdty\n6:30 National Barn Dance\n7:30 Whitman's Saturday Night\nPa-ty (KPO to network I\n7:30 Mualcal Treature Chett (KGO)\n8:19 Carefree Carnival\n8:18 Tom Oerun't Orch. (KOO)\n9:00 Orchettra\n9:00 Doodlebug Orchettra (KOO)\n9:30 Tom Coakley'i Orch.\n10:00 Emil p.ilak'i Orch.\n10:00 Blue Moonlight\n10.30 Hal Draytone Orch.\n10:65 Preae-Radlo Newt\n11:00 Orchettra (KOO)\n11:00 Oua Arnhrlm't Orch.\n11:30 Btrt Woodyard't Orch. Portland\nLEADERS Un\u00b0F\nLAP9R TO GO\nrarjDHi\nPAGE  THREE\nDeliver Labor Day\nMessages at\nOttawa\nTOM MOORE SPEAKS\nOF STEVENS PROBE\nR. Mosher and\nM. Draper Also\nSpeakers\nC.RR.-DON LEE,NETWORK\nKVI    KPRC    KOIN    KSL    KOL\n5\"0       610 940       1130    1370\n6:00 Saturday Revue\n6:30 Elder Mlchaux\n7:00 Sylvia Proot, tongs\n7:15 O'en Oray't Orch.\n7:16 The Bridge Builder (DL)\n7:46-11:30 Orcheitra\nSUNDAY NETWORKS\nCBC\n6:55 Can. Pren Newt\n6:00 Within the Abbey\n6:30 Canadian Capers\n7:00 Oalete Lyrlque, Quebec\n7:80 Newt nnd Weather Forecast\n7:38 Atlantic Nocturne\n8:00 Bunaet Nocturne\n6:30 News\n8:45 Violet Barlow, toprano\n9:00 Daphne Carapatt, violinist\n9:15 Cynthia Docktteader, pianist\n9:30 Ira Swarte. pianist,\nn.&c.-kgo\n6:00 Ball of Fame\n6:30 Canadian Oapert\n7:00 Wendell Hall, songs\n7:16 Mme. Schumann-Helnk\n7:30 Interlude (KPO to Network)\n7:30 Joaef Hornlk't Program (KOO)\n7:46 Charlet Davit' Or. (KPO to net.)\n8:00 Eddie Duchln't Orch.\n8:15 flues Columbo\n8:30 Hollywood on tile Air\n9:00 Al Cavallla Orch.\n9:30 Readers' Oulde\n10:00 Newt Flathet\n10:15 Paul Carton, organlat\n11:00 Prett-Radlo\nCB.S.-DON LEE\n6:00 Wayne Klng'i Orch.\n6:30 Americana, dlr. Ferde Orofe\n7:00 Little Jack Little's Orch.\n7:00 The Merrymakers   (DL)\n7:30 Olen Oray't Orch.\n8:00 Red Nlchol't Orch.\n8:00 The Hl-Jluka  (DL)\n8:30 Orchestras\nFAIL FIND TRACE\nOF COLUMBUS MAN\nCOLUMBUB, Ohio, Aug. 31 (AP)\u2014P.\nt. Lumley, father of Dr. P. H. Lumley,\n37-year-old missing Ohio state university facility msmber, expressed Increasing concern for the safety of his\nson today aa another day went by\nwithout result ln the search.\nDr. Lumley haa not been seen since\nAugust 13 when he left Glacier natlont park, Mont., for unknown destination.\n\"Do you suppose the Royal Canadian Mounted police are helping? Have\nyou heard anything from the border\ntowns ln Canada? I wonder how extensive a search Is being' made. It\ncertainly is peculiar.\"\nThose were the elder Lumley's\ncomments.\n\"The park superintendent told me\nln a telegram yesterday that 25 men\nwere out,\" he added.\nThe last word received, the father\nsaid, was a note written from Goat-\nhaunt Camp, where the younger Lumley separated from his companion on\na tour, R B. Owen of Cambridge,\nMass. He was,unable to find the note\nnow, the father said, but \"It must\nhave arrived about the 13th or Uth\nof August. It said he would be home\nthe 37th and wt didn't become concerned for be was at a point where\nit was difficult to get mail out. Besides he's been sll around the world\nand we presumed he knew how to\ntake care of himself.\"\nThe postal card Invitation from\nMrs. P. E. Lumley asking ber son to\ncome to Banff, Alta., the father dismissed as of no value In the search.\n\"That was written early in July and\nMra. Lumley didn't expect to stay,\"\nhe said. \"She is home now; haa been\nsince August 1. She went with our\n-son to Many Olacler, then she went\non to Canada. Bhe enjoyed the country there so much that she merely\nwrote our son and said, 'Tou ought\nnot to mlsa this.'\"\nEmpress Brings\nCongress Women\nVICTORIA, Aug. 31 (CP)\u2014Three\nmembers of the Canadian delegation\nof tho International conference of\nthe Pan-Pacific Women's association\nat Honolulu returned to Canada today\naboard the liner Empress of Asia.\nThey are the Canadian chairman,\nMiss Mary L. Bollert of Vancouver,\ndean of women at the University of\nBritish Columbia; Miss Plorence Dodd,\nEdmonton, dean of women at the\nUniversity of Alberta; and Mrs. E. B.\nPrice. Vancouver, president of the\nCanadian Women's Press club.\nDr. Anne Seesholtz nf New Tork,\nexecutive secretary of the council for\ntbe Home Mission of America, member of the United States delegation\nto the conference, was also a passenger.\nAshes Faliino in\nNelson From Fire\nAshes from the big fires ln the East\nand West Kootenay and the Boundary country continue to fall around\nNelson. They have been noticeable\nfor several days and tome of them\nare of fair alft.\nOTTAWA, Aug. 31 tCPl.-Directing attention to the continued unemployment of thousands of would-\nbe workers, Canadian labor leaders\nin their Labor Day messages em-\nphastw their demand for reconstruction of the country's economic\nsystem.\nRevelations of the Stevens committee Investigation are brought out\nas Indicating the necessity for strong\ncorrective measures for the protection of the worker and consumer.\nNeed for further organization ol\nworkers' associations and better direction of their activities is stressed.\nShortening of hours of labor to\nspread available work and Increase\nof wagea to give purchasing power\nare sgaln advocated as essential to\nthe Improvement of conditions.\nMOORE'S   MESSAGE\nThe message of Tom Moore, president of the Trades and Labor council  of  Canada follows:\n\"Another year of trial and sacrifice has failed to weaken the spirit\nof our movement. This Labor Day,\nln the past, will find the organised workers, with unconquerable\nwill and undiminished vigor, proclaiming anew their principles and\ndemonstrating a determluaton to\ncarry forward the struggle for econ-\nomc  freedom and social  Justice.\n\"The exposures of the parliament,'\nary probe respecting price spreads,\netc., has shocked the public conscience and served to make plain\nthat Labor's protests against protfit-\neertng and exploitation were only\ntoo weU founded. It has also emphasized to all workers that trade\nunion organisation Is their best\nprotection against such abuses.\n\"The stubborn opposition of governments and employers to reduce\nhours of labor and the continuance\nof policltlea of retrenchment and\neconomy, almost solely st the expense of the psy envelope, is retarding progress toward recovery ai\nIs demonstrated by the deplorable\nfact that over one million of our\npopulation are still dependent upon\npublic funds for the bare necessities\nof life. With such conditions existing it Is asinine to ignore that\nunemployment still remains the\ngreatest problem with which thla\ncountry haa to deal.\nNO LIGHT TABS\n\"The rebuilding of our economic\nlife on a sounder basis is no light\ntask but is one that brooks of no\ndelay. The e.Ttent to which this will\nrestore s measure of happiness and\ncontentment in the homea of the\nvictims of unemployment will depend largely upon the Influence that\nlabor can exercise in the shaping\nof the country's future policies. On\nevery hand there are clear Indications that . wage earners realize\nthis responsibility and that the\nsure road to success Is by organization.\n\"Ubor Day. 1934, finds organized\nlabor once more on the forward\nmarch, determined to abolish the\nprevailing system of destruction and\nwaste and to use every constitutional means at command to secure the\nright to participate ln the enjoyment of thoae things, which, by\ntheir labor, and with the aid of\nmodern machinery are today produced In such abundance.\"\nMOSH1 KS  TALK\nA R. Mosher. president of the\nAll-Canadian Congress of Labor aaya:\n\"During the past five years of depression, privation and mass misery,\nthe workera of Canada have been\namazingly patient and hopeful. Their\nattitude has gone far to establish\nthe truth of the poet's observation\nthat 'hope springs eternal ln the\nhuman breast.* and their patience\nbas almost, lf .not quite, reached\nthe point where it ceases to be a\nvirtue.\n'They have\" hoped that the controllers of Industry and finance, the\nchief beneficiaries of the present\neconomic system, would find some\nway of stimulating business and\nmaking it possible for the great\narmy of the unemployed to obtain a livelihood. They have hoped that, implementing their election program, those entrusted with\nthe government of the country\ncould and would do something to\nlead tbe people out or the wilderness  of  depression.\n\"These hopes have not been real\nIzed. Unemployment Is still sappliu\nthe morale of hundreds of thousands of would-be workers, and the\nfear of economic Insecurity haunts\nthe homes of those who are still\nfortunate enough to have a Job.\nThe shocking revelations of the\nStevens committee have thrown\nstrong light into the dark places\nof competitive business, indicating\nthat both workers and consumers\nare ground between the millstones\nof profit and greed.\n\"Obnoxiously the hours of labor\nmust be shortened to spread the\navailable work, and wages must be\nIncreased to make purchasing power\navailable and provide a market for\nthe goods produced, but not a single\nstep in that direction has been taken except under pressure exerted\nby the organized workers themselves.\n\"I bave no destire to destroy the\nhope of better <nya to come, hut\nrather to point -out the only method, in my opinion, by which that\nhope may be realized. The present\neconomic system, operated by Its\nmost capable and intelligent defenders, has failed to make available to the people the plenty which\nlt Is capable of producing. Some\nway must be found by which, without reducing tbe production of material requirements, to bring about\nan equitable distribution to all the\npeople. No economic system la sacrosanct; no economic system has\nany right to survive after Its usefulness Is ended. Capitalism is on\ntrial.\n\"The workers of Canada arc be-\nIS\nBIG MY IN\nDBIW.ni\nGrowers Affected to\nMove to Secure\nWater\nMEETING IS HELD\nTO DISCUSS PLAN\nMayor George A. Wcnige of London, Ont., who has been carrying on\na war against slot machine operators\nand horse racing gamblers who he\nsays are directed in the western\nOntario city by tho Capone gang\ninterests, i-s opening an investigation of his own into the John S.\nLabfi! kidnapping, which he believes was instigated by the same\ninterest*. His views are not shared\nby police already investigating the\ncase, Rumors state that Mr. Wenige\nhas named a police officer as mixed\nup in the kidnap plot.\ncoming more and more conscious of\nthe absurdity of privation ln the\nmidst of plenty, Through their unions they are endeavoring not only\nto protect their right to a decent\nliving, but also to attain some\nmethod by which work, product, and\nleisure may be equitably shared,\nand the curse of poverty be lifted\nforever from the masses of mankind.\"\nDRAPER   SPEAKS\nP. M. Draper, secretary-treasurer\nof the Trades and Labor Congress\nsaid the parliamentary enquiry disclosed that lack of workers' organization and dire working conditions\ngo hand in hand. Mr. Draper continued : '\n\"The lesson to be learned la that\ngovernmental regulation of industrial conditions, brought about\nthrough a public opinion which tbe\nwOfkers themselves help to shape,\nIs sound in Its proper sphere, hut\nlt is not a substitute ln any sense\nfor the properly directed actlvlttos\nof workers' organizations.\n\"Herein lies the duty of all workers in Canada, to organize the unorganized. The ' proper maintenance\nof living standards, a more truly\nsocial economic organization, depends largely upon further organ-\nIzatldh of the workers and that\ngospel must be preached by labor\nIn season and out of season. No\ntruth has been more amply demonstrated In recent years. Unity, liberty and freedom of speech are\nfundamental factors to cultural development, social progress and the\npursuit of happiness. Labor has always stood for liberty and unity,\nconsequently Irrevocably hostile to\nall dlctatorshlpa, whether they be\nof the proletariat, the oligarch, the\nnazl or the  fascist types.\n\"Labor accepts the 4octrlno that\nno matter how great the errors\nof democracy, the errors of the dictators, political, military and administrative, have involved the world\nin farm more grave and dire con3c-\nTo interview Putnam\nand Water Rights\nOfficial\nCRESTON, Aug. 31- Practically\nevery grower In the area from the\nSchade corner through to the Marahall place, near Alice Siding achool,\nwaa out. for a meeting at the Compton packing shed to dcvlac waya Bnd\nmeana ot getting a aupply of Irrigation water for that particular district.\nThe chair waa occupied hy Jamea\nCompton. with Jl. W, Payne acting ae\naecr*tary. Mr. Compton briefly outlined the piirpon for which the meeting was called, and observed that In\nview of the dry season at present\nprevailing, and ot prevloua years when\nwater could have been uaed to advantage, there waa little need to dwell\non the necesalty of the move to secure\na water aupply.\nVarious plana to secure relief were\naubmltted. Reference waa made to\ntho overflow from the Ooat Mountain Waterworks compsny supply\nnear the CP.R. reservoir on tha\nmountain, and there wne also the\npresent surplus from the East Cres-\nton system from Arrow creek, both\nof which would combine domestic\nwith Irrigation supplies.\nGOAT RIVER\nTho most likely aource of aupply,\nhowever, waa the old Ooat river channel. With the putting ln of leu than\n500 feet of pipe lt would be possible\nto pump from this stream Into a\nreservoir on the P. W. Aah ranch,\nwhich enjoyed the hlghcat convenient elevation In the whole district,\nand would provide a gravity flow\nto all places ln the proposed district,\nwith possibly two exceptions.\nPossible sources of supply featured\nthe evening's discussion. Financing\nsuch a project was not seriously put\nforward the feeling being that until\nan estimate had been secured lt was\nuseless to talk cost. In the area to be\nserved It was estimated there waa\nbatmen 400 and 500 acres. The meeting was Informed that lt a pumping\nsystem were put ln the water rights\nnorf held by Jamea Compton and W.\nA. Pease would be turned over to\nthe district for a domestic system if\nsuch could also be Installed.\nThe outcome of the meeting wai\nthe adoption of a reaolutlon that T.\nStmlatcr, N. Schade, Oeorge Nickel\nand t. W. Payne be named a committee to Interview P. Putnam, M.P.P.,\nand also to arrange, If possible, for\nMr. Blaine, the provincial water rights\nbranch engineer at Nelson, to make a\npreliminary survey and submit a report as to probable cost, and eo on.\nWhen this Is done another meeting\nwill be called to further discuss tbe\nproject.\nquences. culminating tn making of\nmoat of the European nations a\nvast armed camp now engaged ln a\nrace lu the manufacture of the\nmost deadly and destructive air and\nland Implementa of war, aimed at\nthe annihilation of humanity.\n\"Once again Oreat Britain with\nher virile free Institutions, notably\nhe\u00bb great labor movement, shore\ngreater progress towards a return to\nnomnl conditions than all other\ncountries across the Atlantic.\"\nGovernment plant- explorera are\nseeking varieties of drought-resistant\npasture grasses on the ed-je of Asia's\nGo-M Desert.\nControversy Rages Over Painting of\nthe Annunciation\"\n\"Annunciation,\" an oil painting on\ndisplay at the art gillery of the\nCanadian National exhibition at\nToronto, has evoked a heated controversy between artists and clergy.\nThere has already been one storm\nof protests aroused over the painting when it was displayed in England. The work of Walter Evans,\nthe picture depicts the Virgin Mary\nclad ln blue pyjamas and an aviator\nin bright yellow. Critics claim the\npicture is in bad taste since it portrays the Annunciation, one of the\nmost sacred mysteries of Christianity wherein the Virpi'i Mary was\ntold of the coming ot Christ by a\nmessenger angel. The artist denies\nhis work is in bad taste.\nOUR\nCREATES!\nD\nO\nL\nL\nA\nR\nD\nA\nY\nS\nSATURDAY\nand\nTUESDAY\nRemember\nMonday Is\nLabor Day\nStore Closed\nAllDav\t\nDo Your\nWeek-end\nShoprin? Early\n r\nPAGE FOUR\n-THE NELION DAILY NEW*. NELION. B.C--\u00bbATUI*IDAY MORNINO, IIPT. 1, UM\nHGLPJ.YMU.\nDROPS m\nDURING 1933\nMore People Working\nBut Wages Are\nSmaller\nNEW LEGISLATION\nFOR THE WORKERS\nMinimum Wage Act\nand Orders\nPrinted\n\/he total pay-roll (or British Columbia during 1933 amounted to\ng\u00bb,126,653.28, a reduction nt $3,-\n930,420.72 trom 1932, according to\nthe report issued by Adam Bell, the\ndeputy minister of labor. The year\n1933 was a particularly arduous one\nfor the department the report continues, conditions tending to multiply its problems.\nSince 1929 the industrial pay-roll\nlias shown a gradual decline which\nwas further accentuated In 1933.\nThe decline in the industrial payroll is consequently reflected in reduced earnings of wage earners,\nwhile, at the same time, the average working hours of employees\nin industry show a decrease. The decrease in the payroll for 1933 is due\nentirely to wage reductions as there\nwere more people employed in 1933\nthan in the previous year.\nWAGES AND\nPURCHASING-POWER\n\"With each succeeding year of\nthe slump it has become abundantly\nclear,\" the report continues, \"that\nreduced earnings of those in employment have not had the effect\nOf causing even a slight improvement In business conditions, but, on\nthe other hand, has resulted in\nfurther restriction of output.\n\"Comparing 1929 with 1933, the\naverage number employed per\nmonth decreased 41 per cent, and\n\"to the same period the amounts paid\nto wage-earners decreased 57 per\ncent.\n\"A study of the statistical section\nOt this report reveals in many ways\nthe seriousness of the times through\nwhich we are passing.\n\"During the year 1929, $145,120.-\n125.98 was paid in salaries and\nwages by the firms reporting to this\ndepartment, and for the year 1933\nthe amount decreased to $68,028,-\n414.61.\n\"The 106,012 adult male employees\nreported during the week of employment of the greatest number in\n1B29 earned an average of $29.20,\nWhile In 1933 the number of adult\nmales reported for the same period\nnumbered 61,891 at an average of\n$22.30; thus each of the 61,891 employed were in receipt of $6.90 less\nthan the average-weekly wage paid\nduring 1929, and (he remaining 41,-\n121 adult males were out of employment and, In all probability,\nforced to apply for relief.\n\"The average weekly wage shown\nIbove is for the week of employment qf the greatest number, the\ndepartment having no means of ascertaining the annual earnings of\nany employee.\n\"Recent developments have made\nIt clear that, of the many measures\nproposed to bring back better business conditions, the process of wage\nreduction as a means of reducing\n8reduction costs is being gradually\nlscarded.\n\"It would be a quicker route to\nUltimate recovery to consider the\nquestion of overhead charges, which\nhave become so large a part of the\ntotal cost of production.\n\"The opinion of those who arc*\nresponsible   for   the   payment   of\nwages is undergoing a change, and\nthe belief that high wages was one\nI of the principal causes of our pres-\nIcnt condition is rapidly disappear-\nling.  The  tendency  of  many  cm-\nployers in recent months to increase\nwages would appear as though it\nwas now being realized that increased purchasing-power is the\nvery center of any industrial recovery.\nSTRIKES\n\"Recognized by all as a waste of\nenergy, the strike method of settling\na dispute should only be used when\nall other means of conciliation fail.\n\"Unfortunately, we have a section of our workers who believe\nthat, in order to be successful the\nmen should walk off the job the\nmoment new demands are presented. We have instances, during the\nlast few months, when men have\nwalked off the job and did not have\nenough wages due them to pay\ntransportation to their homes.\n\"Trade unions of long standing realize the futility of a strike until all\nother avenues of mediation have\nfailed.\nAPPRENTICE!\n\"The continued decrease in the\nnumber of apprentices, as reported\nin our statistical section, is a matter\nwhich should engage attention of\nemployers' organizations and those\nhaving the interest of the youth of\nour province at heart.\n\"During 1927 there were 1554 sp-\nprentices recorded; in 1929 they\nnumbered 1676, and this number\nhad decreased to 621 in 1933, a drop\nof approj\/mately 63 per cent from\nthe peak year.\nNEW LEGISLATION\n\"At no previous session of the\nlegislature has so much legislation\nbenefiting the workers been passed\nas wu done at tht-scjsion held in\n1934. \"^\n'\"Interpretation act.'\u2014Section 24,\nclause 18, was amended by including\nthe day immediately following\nChristmas day (Boxing day) as a\nlegal holiday.\n\"'Male Minimum Wage act.' \u2014\nSince the above act came Into force\nthe board of industrial relations-\ncomposed of the following members: Adam Bell, deputy minister\nof labor, chairman, Helen Gregory\nMacGill, William Alexander Carrothers, James Thomson, and Christopher John McDowell\u2014have been\nappointed; several sessions have\ntaken place, and four orders made:\nOrder No. 1. covering the logging\nindustry, and order No. 2, covering\nthe sawmill industry, effective April\n27, 1934; order No. 2a, affecting tie-\ncutting operations, and order No. 6,\nrelating to the occupation of taxicab\ndrivers.\n\"Since the formation of the above\nboard, Mrs. Helen Gregory MacGill\nhas been made a judge of the ju*\nvenile court and tendered her reslg*\nnation. Mrs. Fraudena Zaton has\nbeen named to fill the vacancy\nthereby created.\n\"The act and orders are printed\nbelow:\u2014\n\"MALE MINIMUM WAGE ACT.\"\n24 George V.\nCHAP. 47.\nAn Act to amend and consolidate\nthe \"Mais Minimum Wage Act\"\n(Assented to 29th March, 1934.)\nHis Majesty, by and with the\nadvice and consent of the Legislative Assembly of the Province of\nBritish Columbia, enacts as follows:\u2014\n1. This Act may be cited as the\n\"Male Minimum Wage Act.\"\n2. In this Act, unless the context otherwise requires:\u2014\n\"Board\" means any adult male\nperson who is in receipt of\nor entitled to any compensation for labour or services\n[.\u2022.\u2022formed for another:\n\"Employer\" includes every\nperson, \"firm, corporation,\nagent, manager, representative, contractor, sub-contractor, or other person having control or direction of,\nor responsible, directly or\nindirectly, for the wages of,\nany employee:\n\"Minimum wage\" means the\namount of wages fixed by\nthe Board under this Act:\n\"Wage\" or \"wages\" includes\nany compensation for labour\no,' services, measured by\ntime, piece, or otherwise.\n1929, e. 43, s. 1.\n3. (1) Subject to subsection (2),\nthis act shall apply to all em-\nfiloyees in any industry, business,\nrade, or occupation, and to their\nemployers.\n(2.) This Act shall not apply in\nrespect of farm-labourers or domestic servants. (New.)\n4. (1.) For the purpose of the\nadministration of this Act, there\nshall be a Board known as the\n\"Board of Industrial Relations,\"\nHoliday Time\nIs Ice Cream\nTime!\nOn Labor Uay and on\nevery other day \u2014 serve\nthe most popular of all\ndesserts.\nCurlew\nIce Cream\nIts rich, creamy flavor just\ncan't be resisted!\nAt All Curlew Dealers\nIn Cones\u2014In Bricks\u2014In Bulk\nIn Any Fashion\u2014It's Delicious!\nCURLEW CREAMERY\nPALM DAIRIES LTD.\nBUTTER ICE CREAM MILK CREAM\nALL PERFECTLY PASTEURIZED PRODUCTS\nwhich shall consist of five members, of whom the Deputy Minister of Labour shall be one, and\nshall be Chairman of the Board,\nthe Chairman of the Economic\nCouncil constituted under the\n\"Economic Council Art,\" being an\nAct of the present session, shall be\none, and the other memben, of\nwhom one shall be a woman, shall\nbe appointed by and hold office\nduring the pleasure of the Lieutenant-Governor in Council.\n(2.) The presence of three members of the Board shall constitute\na quorum.\n(3.) The existing or continuing\nmembers of the Board shall have\nand may exercise all the powers,\nduties, and functions of the Board,\nnotwithstanding any vacancy in\ntbe membership thereof.\n(4.) The three appointive members of the board shall be paid such\nallowance as remuneration for\ntheir services and tor the expenses necessarily incurred in the\nperformance of their duties as\nmay be fixed by the regulations.\"\nTennis Starts\nThis Morning\nPlayers Must Be\non Time; Draws\nAre Made\nTRAIL, Aug. 11,-Thi largest\nWest Kootenay championship\ntournament entry ever staged In\nthis district wlll gst away at the\nTadanac and Mtmorlal courts at\nTadanac and Trail Saturday morning at 8 a.m.\nA total of 109 entries have been\nreceived. There arc 67 in the men's\nsingles as compared to 52 last year.\nThere will be 35 teams in the men's\ndoubles as compared to 26 in the\nlast tournament. Representatives\nfrom 12 outside points other than\nTrail and Tadanac are ready to\noffer present holders opposition.\nThe number of entrants and cities\nwhich they represent follow: Vancouver 3; Spokane 7; Sandpoint,\nIdaho, 4; Coleman 2; Grand Forks\n8; Castlegar 4; Kimberley I; Procter\n3; Seattle 1; Nelson 22; Trail 45;\nRossland 8; Cascade 1.\nMU8T BE ON TIME\nThe committee Friday night\nspecified that all entrants drawn\non Sunday morning must be at\ntha Tadanac courts according to\ntimes scheduled or their matches\nwlll ba scratched. This stipulation\nwas mada owing to the tremendous list of entries.\nDRAWS\nSaturday 8 a.m.\u2014Tadanac courts:\nC. Roughead vs. J. Diamond; H.\nRitchie vs. D. Williamson: E. Beau-\nlieu vs. N. Murray; R. Cran vs. R.\nTemple; R. Stewart vs. G. Murray\nJr.\nt a.m.\u2014Miss J. Ballard vs. Miss\nS. Stewart; Miss C. Ringwood vs.\nMiss L. Blaylock; Miss G. Diamond\nvs. Miss Hannay.\n10 a.m.\u2014Winners of Ritchie vs.\nWilliamson play winners of E.\nBeaulieu vs. N. Murray; winner\nof R. Cran vs. R. Temple plays\nwinner of R. Stewart vs. G. Murray Jr.; Mrs. G. Hamson vs. Miss J.\nTyson.\n11 a.m.\u2014S. L. Blaylock and Mr.\nBlaylock vs. Miss B. Wright and\nR. R. Hannay; Miss S. Stewart vs\nMrs. C. H. Wright; winner of B.\nHannay vs. J. Diamond plays winner of L. Blaylock vs. C. Ringwood;\nS. E. Angus vs. T. Malahoff.\n1 p.m\u2014R. Shone vs. W. Hunter;\nA. Godfrey vs. N. Murray; C. H.\nWalden vs. R. E. West; G. Freeman\nvs. Mrs. A. M. Chesser.\n2 p.m.\u2014E. Atwood vs. J. Campbell;\nC. Barlee vs. McDoneil; Mrs. W. A.\nHunter vs. Mrs. Godfrey; B. Harrison vs. J. Curtis; Miss P. Gellnas\nand T. Malahoff vs. Miu J. Diamond and J. Diamond.\nMEMORIAL HALL COURTI\n1 p.m.\u2014D. Matthews vs. H, Oxley:\nMiss I. Defoe and Mrs. McAndrew\nvs. Miss S. Stewart and Miss B.\nBingay; T. Romano and T. Malahoff\nvs. W. S. Kirkpatrick and T. Stanley.\n2 p.m.\u2014Miss I. Vickerton vs. Mrs.\nP. Halllwell; J. Thced vs. T. Tjeves.\nTADANAC COURTS\nSunday   Morning:\n7 a.m.\u2014A. M. Major vs. N. Lund:\nK. Coryell vs. N. German; J. West\nvs. C. Baker; R. Hicks vs. P. Dewdney; G. Winters vs. L. Simpson.\n8 a.m.\u2014S. E. Youlland vs. J.\nArgah; N. Rhodes vs. A. Remmell:\nJ. Matthews vs. R. Royland; S.\nRichard vs. E. Stromstead; J. Bailey\nvs. R, Marret.\nMEMORIAL COURTS\n7 am.\u2014G. D. Barwis vs. W. Avery;\nC. S. Price vs. T. Baker; E. Haley\nvs. G. Murray Jr.\n8 a.m.\u2014C. Perry vs. A. Mills: S.\nF. Kltchln vs. F. Phillips; T. Mc-\nCamm vs. G. Hanson,\nPRAIRIE FARMERS\nGET DEBT BREAK\nNew Legislation Is Effective\nToday Gives Three Prov-\ninces Some Protection\nOTTAWA, Aug. 31 (CP)\u2014Insolvent\nfsrmers In Alberta Saskatchewan and\nManitoba will tomorrow be ln a\nposition to take advantage of the\nDominion government's new legislation under which they will be privileged to compose their debts along\ntha lines of ordinary assignment\nprocedure without the odium ot\nbankruptcy Itself and without loss\nof their means of obtaining a livelihood.\nProclamation of the act wtth respect to tht three prairie province*\nbecomes effective tomorrow snd tt\nIs anticipated the measure wlll be\nproclaimed effective In Ontario and\nQuebec for Oct. 1.\nU. S. NOT NEGOTIATING\nOR REDUCTION DUTY\nON CANADIAN LIQUOR\nWASHINOTON, Aug. >1 (AP).\u2014\nThe United States government ts\nnot carrying on any negotiations\nwith the Canadian government for\nan agreement to reduce the Import\nduty on Canadian liquor, William\nPhillips,   acting  secretary   of   state,\nId, today.\nFlashes From the Wires\nWASHINGTON\u2014 Important finds\nof skeletons and othtr relics of prehistoric races found on Kodlak\nIsland   In   Alaska.\nperately to regain control of 50.000-\naare fin tn Selway forast along Pete\nKing creek In Oentral Idaho.\nLONDON\u2014Indications point to revamping of Salvation Army because\not charges dictatorship exists. No\nleader named yet.\nWASHINOTON \u2014 Creation of an\nalmost separate economic world for\nthousands now destitute planned by\nU. S. relief officials. Und ownership program being outlined.\nMULBOURNE \u2014 Premier Lyons\nmakes appeal to Lancashire to let\ngovernments of Britain and Australia\naettle trouble over new cotton duties.\nNIW YORK\u2014Benjamin franklin\nVara, accuaed as author of crank\nnote threatening life of Mrs. Roosevelt, wife of prealdent, committed\nto hospital for observation.\nSPOKANE \u2014 All strett cars and\nbusses taken off runs ss street\ncar strike continues. More trouble\nanticipated.\nAaeiaardstrand, Norway \u2014 Queen\nWUhelmlna of the Netherlands celebrates Mth birthday anniversary.\nSPOKANE-Pire fighters fight des-\nORWJON. Mo.\u2014Plve -pejaons were\nkilled in tht crash of a trl-motor\nRapid Air Transport plane, bound\nfrom Kantaa City to Omaha, on a\nroad near hare tonight. The passengers were Mra. Maude Schlffmacker,\nEdwardsvllle, Ket. Dallas Leutch.\nOmaha; W. W. Tnieleon, Omaha;\nPrank Mahan, Kaneaa City. The pilot ww C. M, Bontrager, Kansas\nCity.\nPEIPING. China \u2014 Reporte from\nHarbin today that Manchukuan\nbandits, after wricking the Chinese Eastern Railway train, had kidnapped three men, among them an\nAmerican cltlaen. eerved to emphasise the belief bera that banditry\ncontinues Mancbukuo's major problem.\nPEEKSKILL. NT. \u2014 New Tork\nCentral paatengtr train hlta rear\nend of special excursion train. Train-\nman J. 3. Tracy of Montreal killed\nand alx Injured.\nEDMONTON\u2014Alma Armstrong, 80,\nrx-waltress, named Captain Thonug\nWilliam Hlgglnaon, Insurance agent,\nas her attacker according to test!,\nmony of detective on stand st In-\nauest Into deatb ot girl from gunshot wounds.\nSocial Events\nof Trail City\nTRAIL, B. 0\u201e Aug. 31\u2014Mlsa Jean\nDlnsmore of Grand Porks haa returned home after spend'na two\nweeks ln Trail at the guest ot Mist\nurace Newman, East Trail.\nset\nMlsa Alice whitehead hss returned to her home st Moyle.\ntes\nMr. and Mrs. O. H. Nelson returned home Wedneidty evening front a\nmotor trip to Seattle and Portland.\nMr. and Mrs. WUUam Priest and\nfamily have taken up residence on\nOreen avenue.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Margaret Curtis, wbo has\nbeen the guest of Mrs. Catherine\nNelson and Mlse RuUy Nelson at\nRobson for the psst three weeks, haa\nreturned to Trsll.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nRobert Pettlgrtw bu returned to\nCorbin after being the gueat of\nTrail jrlends for a few days,\naaa\nMr. and Mrs. Al\u00ab\u00bb Kerr, who for\nthe latt three weeks havt been\nvacationing at Victoria bave re-\nturned to Trail. \u25a0\naaa\nW. B. McUndera and S. Bureau\nof Sandon are guests of frlenda in\nTrail this week.\nat*\nMr. and Mrt. waiter woodacre returned  recently  from Kulo where\ntbey tpent a holiday.\n.   ,   .\nMlaa Eunice pattenon and Eleanor\nQuayle hava returned from a weak'a\nholiday with Mlu Patterson's mother at Orand Forks.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMlu Catherine chaley. who haa\nbeen visiting tn Trail for two weeks,\nhu returned to her home at orand\nForks.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nBill Ruddy of Seattle returned\nhome yesterday from Trail, wbere he\nhad been for two weeks the guest\nof Mr. and Mrs. B. J. Walsh,\na - a a\nLen Negus motored to Qrand Forks\nyesterday for a short visit with\nfriends.\nsea\nAlderman J. A, Anderaon and\ndaughter Jessie have left for tht\ncout to spend a vacation,\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMUa Marie Hepworth, wbo recently returned from summer school\nat Vlctorl***, left yuterday for tha\nOkanagan. she will teach at North\nOkanagan school, near Vernon.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiu Belle Devlne la spending a\nholldsy at Spokane.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nJohn Robb of Portage la Prairie,\nwho haa been vlaltlng his brother-\nin-law and slater, Mr. and Mrs.\nT. Armstrong at willow Point, hu\narrived In Trail and taken up residence here,\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. snd Mrs. David Forrest ha*.*\nreturned from a motor trip to coast\ncltlee.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. w. J. Wagstaff hu been vacationing with relatives at Nakusp.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. J. Blchan of Procter la visiting friends In Trail for a few daya.\na        a* t a\nMrs.   A.   J.   McDoneil   and   aon\nArchie have returned tb willow point\nafter spending two days in Trail,\ntea.*\nMrs.   A.    C.    Graham,   who   hta\nbeen spending the' summer at Robson. hu been  ln Trail for. a few\ndsys. *\nt * a *a\nMr. and Mrs. J. Davids tnd dsughter  have  returned from a holiday\nat the cout. a,\nsat\nMrs. Thomu Sleep and young ton\nhave returned to Waneti from tha\nTrall-Tadanac hpspltal.\natt\nLorne Bradley, who wu the guest\nof Trail friends for stvertl days, re-\nturned Tuesday evening to his home\nnt NeUon.\na   a, t\nMr. snd Mrs. B. B. Smith snd\nson Phillip, accompanied by Mrs,\nGlenn Quayle. were visitors to Roulsnd yesterday.\n.   .   \u00bb\nMr.  and Mrs.  A,  J.  Dunnett of\nNelson visited Trsll friends Tuesday.\ntea\nMrs. F. C. B'ett, after visiting\nwith Trail friends for about a\nweek hu returned to_ her homt at\nKulo.\nFrance Sees the\nNeed of Faster\nDefence Planes\nPARIS. Aug. 31 (AP).\u2014An Invading tlr fle*!t will wipe Paris completely off the mip unless Frsnre\ngets futer fighting planes, the\nrrench air staff btlteved tonight.\nOfficials said tbe tour day's aerial\nmsneouvree. ending today, ahowed\nconclusively thtt tbt capital cannot, with present tfftcttvtt, bt defended agalnat air reldera, and emphasized sharply tha urgent need\nfor  speedier aircraft.\nA force of rebuilt pursuit planes\nfailed to match tha speed of heavily\nloaded bombers, comprising tht \"attacking fleet,\" the average apeed of\nwhich wat 140 mllu an hour\n14TAKETESTS\nIN LIFE SAVING\nMiss Gansner Puts Big\nClass Through- the\nRescue Work\nFourteen candidate for awards ln\nlife uvlng work, who had reoelved\ntheir training tn tha life uvlng\nclauw conducted by Mlu OUvlt\nDickson, swimming Instructress at\nLakeside park, where given thtlr ex*\namlnatlons and individual water\ntesta Friday afternoon by Mlu Elsa\nOansner, sn examiner for the Royal\nLife Saving tocltty of London, Bngland. Twelve of the candidates were\nfrom Nelaon, and two were from\nWillow Point. The general showing\nof tht claw wu very creditable, Mist\nOansner wld afterward.\nTht older candldatta wen seeking\nthe bronze medals and Intermediate\nor proficiency certificates, and tha\nyounger the elementary certificates,\nto which their age limited them.\nRESCUE STUNTS\nAfter answering tbe examiner's\nquisling on theory, doing resusclta.\ntlon work and then being put\nthrough their land drlllt, the can*\ndldates did their breut stroke and\nbackward leg atrokt qualifying twlmi,\nand thtn wtnt through their rescue stunts, some ot thtm compulsory, and others offering options.\nThe duck diving from the aurtact,\nto bring up objects from tht bottom, was ths lut stunt required.\nIn the cau of thou tn the elementary clau, leas theory wu required,\nand tht qualifying twlmt were abort.\ner.\nThe report of Mlw oansner wlll\nbe forwarded through tht British\nColumbia branch, and the medals\nand certificates conferred on those\nwho have been successful will presumably be publicly preunted by\nthe mayor at soma council suslon\nlatt In tht ytar.\nAlderman Row Fleming, of tht\nparka committee, waa prewnt at the\ntrlala.\nLow Water Is\nFish Barrier\nRedfish Collection\nLimited to Branches\nof Kokanee Creek\nOwing to the unprecedented low\nwater, the moutha of Six-Mile creek\nand Redfish creek are dry, and In-\nacoeulble to spswnlng redfish, and\nconsequently the collection of redfish eggs for tht Dominion fish\nhatchery at Nelaon wlll be confined\nthis uaaon to the three branches\nof Kokan.ee creek, H. C. Crawford,\nsuperintendent of Kootenay hatcheries,  stated Frldty.\nPreparatory work on the flah\ntraps waa begun last week, and now\ntha three traps are ln place, and\nSaturday Ralph Hale, wlll bt placed\nln charge ot them, and establish\ncsmp.\nNormally the run starts the lsst\nweek In August, though It takes\nUttle time to get really under wsy,\nand closes toward the end of September.\nMALES  COME  FIRST\nSo far only a few flah are showing up. this sdvance gttsrd, as\nusual, consisting of malts. The flrat\nof the females should be coming\nup early In the week, though the\nmales will predominate for some\ntime. Toward the end of the run\nthe females wlll predominate.\nA collection of about 1.360,000\neggs wlll be aimed at, about the\nnormal collection.\nThe redfish, or* silver trout, or\nKennerly's salmon, or fresh-water\nsockeye, ss lt Is variously called,\nla tha principal food of the large\nKamloops trout, and la propagated\nIn the flah hatcheries ln order to\nreplenish the food supply for this\nkind of game ln British Columbia,\nIt wurs Its red livery only during\nthe spawning reason, which com-\npletea Its life cycle, the fish dying\nafter   spawning.\nIts capture on the bars at the\nmouths of creeks It prohibited, for\nit is there only ln the spawning\nperiod. At tbe allver trout. It ia\nttken in deep water by tbt ordinary\ntrout lures.\nPACIFIC COAST\nLEAGUE\nMlMlom 0, Lot Angeles 6.\nPortUnd  7, Sacramento 8.\nSeattle  2, Oakland 4.\nSan Francisco 4;  HoJJywood 8.\nRossland Has\nWelcome for\nYoung Solons\nBoy Legislators Are\nHeard on World\nProblems\nTHE WEATHER\nBURNS, ESLING\nGIVE GREETING\nliquor Traffic, War\nAmong the Topics\nDiscussed\nROSSLAND, Aug. 81\u2014A good-aljed\ncrowd gathered In St. Andrews United church Friday evening to listen\nto ex-prtmler \"Jim\" Ferris and his\ncolleagues of the Older Boys Parliament, who are touring the province.\nR. R. Burns, mPP., of Trail, acted\nas chairman, wylng tbat as the\nyouth of today would be the government of tomorrow, ao the only hope\nof keeping Canada the brightest gem\nln tht crown of tht Brltlth Empire\nwas for ber young men to get acquainted wltb her problems and\nlearn bow to solve tbem.\nKSUNG POINTS TO WINNERS\nMr, Burna then called on W. K.\nEaling, M.P., who wld he considered\nlt a privilege to loin ln tbe welcome to the membera of the Boys\nParliament. The topic of discussion\nwas \"The problem of Touth in tht\nLight of Today.\" The youth of today had many problems, but he also\nhad many opportunities, even ln the\nsmaller towns. In thinking over\nthe boya who had gone out from\nRoealand. Mr. lallng recalled Dr.\nArthur DeMuth and Dr. Edward\nFunk, who had achieved such honors ln their profeulon, and Dr. Rusull Blsson, who wu following ln\ntheir steps. The girls similarly could\nthink of Mrs. Phyllis Gregory Turner, who hsd graduated from tht\nRowland public schools, won scholarship at the university of British\nColumbia and Bryn Mawr, studied\nabroad, and wu now ad economist\nln the employ of the tariff hoard\nat Ottawa, working out aome of\nthe hardest problems of the nation.\nAll theu had the same advantages\nwhich the rest of the Rouland boys\nand glrla had, but by means ot application and hard work they bad\niorged ahead.\nOllbert Kay, member from west\nKootenay, told of the object of the\nassembly, ln helping the boys to live\na four-square life, and Introduced\nthe vlaltora.\nHOYS SPEAK\nBert Pldder, leader of boys work\nIn Chalmert United cburch of Vancouver, expressed appreciation of\nthe wonderful welcome given to the\nparty by the people of Rouland,\nHe outlined the lift work which\neach of theu boys hsd chosen,\nand introduced Art Anderson, minister of devotional affairs.\nThe latter stated tbst ont ot tht\nbiggest problems which the youth of\ntoday were facing wu temperance.\n\"We hear much talk of personal\nliberty,\" said tht speaker, \"but Socrates wtd no msn \u00abu truly free\nwho waa tba slave of a habit.\" in\nthta day ot keeping competition,\nnot only between man and man, but\nbetween man and machine, a work*\ner muat be ln poaaewlon of all hla\nfaculties, He believe that when tha\nyouth of today acquired the Iran.\nchlse, tbey would hit tbe liquor\ntraftle a blow from which it would\nnever recover,\nLyle Turvey of Chilliwack took\nfor his topic \"Friendship\", and\nquoted Pythagoras as saying that\nfriendship waa ona soul in two\nbodlu. The gathering war clouds,\nthis speaker said, could only be teat.\ntered by the right thinking people\nof the world promoting Weals ol\nfriendship between the nations u\nwell u Individuals, Christ, the great\nexample, wm friend to saint and\nsinner alike, and the youth of the\nworld must follow Him.\n\"PHIEMEK\"  ON  BROTHERHOOD\nHearty applkuw greeted premier\nJim Ferris, who rou to speak along\nsimilar Unes. He said the brotherhood of man wat tbe great letson\nthe Christian church was trying to\nteach. Quoting from Paul,.the great\nInternationalist, \"We are all one\nbody,\" he uld aa each part of the\nbody contributed to the general well\nbeing, so each Individual had hla\ncontribution to make the state,\nPlato wu the great philosopher of\nantiquity, but his was a world where\nthe gulf between the hewer of wood\nand the arlatocrat could not be\nbridged. Paul, hlmulf a member ol\nthe ruling claw, taught the brotherhood of man. The British commonwealth of nations was the greatest\nstep forward In cooperative effort,\nWu lt too much to hope, he asked,\nthat one day there would be the\nUnited States of the world? For 116\nyesrs the 3000 miles of unguarded\nborderline between the United states\nand Canada had been setting an\nexample to the world.\n\"Whom will you choose\u2014Christ ol\nMars?\" concluded the speaker. \"W\u00ab\nhave outlawed war on paper, let ut\noutltw It ln reality. Oive Christ an\nopportunity ln our lives, and out of\ncaos He will bring peace, order and\nprosperity to our stricken world.\"\nSelection were given by a men's\nchoir, and a piano and orgsn rental\nby Mrs S. Slmcock and Louis Freeman.\nDUBLIN PRINTERS'\nSTRIKE WEAKENS\nDUBLIN. Aug. 31 (CP cable)\u2014The\noutlook for wttlement of the five\nweeks' printers strike which hu\nprevented publication of newspapers\nIn Dublin appeared more favorable\ntonight, following agreement Of the\nprinters to accept and set sll copy\nunreservedly.\nHitherto the newspaper minsters\nhave r'fufd to enter Into negotiation! pending the abandonment by\nthe printers of the \"censorship\"\nrights they htd claimed in regard\nto certain mattera.\nThe way appears open now, however, to direct negotiations on wages\nand conditions of work, and It Is\nexpected that dlacuulont, already\nopened, wlll ruult ln a uttlement\nnext week of a bule agreement\nwhich may be aubmltted to the conciliation tribunal for formal settlement of the dispute.\nTemperatures:\nNBLSON    \t\nVictoria    _.\nNanaimo     _.\nVsncouver    \t\nAtlln\t\nKamloopa   \t\nPrince George .\nPrince Rupert .\nEstevsn Point .\nSpoksne    \t\nPortland, On. \u25a0\nSeattle   \t\nSan Francisco .\nPentlcton   \t\nOrand  Forka ...\nCalgary   \t\nEdmonton    .......\nQu'Appellt   _\t\nVernon    \t\nWinnipeg   \t\nMoose Jaw \t\nSwift   Current\nMln.\n.... 45\n... to\n... M\n.... 12\n... 44\n.... SO\n.... SS\n.... S0\n.... 12\n... M\n.... SS\n.... 52\n... 80\n.... 45\n.... 46\n.... 36\n.... 34\n.... 38*\n.... 47\n46\n~9\n31\nDawaon    44\nPrince  Albert   30\nMax.\n\u20226\nei\nit\n71\nJ>3\n76\n64\n(50\n64\n82\nSO\n70\ne-\n82\n54\nM\n50\n54\n46\n54\n56\n56\nForecast for Nelson and Vicinity\u2014\nPartly cloudy and moderately warm\nwith showers or thunderstorms.\nTrail's Water\nSupply Sinks\nCity Will Need to\nLook for Further\nSource\nTRAIL, Aug. 31.\u2014Continued\ntreme dry weather is turning the\neyes of Kootenay municipalities to\ntheir respective water systems, and\nin a number of cases councils see\na neceulty for planned develop*\nment of their systems for the future.\nTrail is in the happiest position of\nany city in the district, due to the\nforesight of precious councils. Ex*\ntensive storage facilities built up in\nyears past have enabled the city to\ncarry on throughout an extremely\ndry summer without restricting\nsprinkling or otherwise endeavoring to conserve the water supply.\nBut even at that, the city hat in\nstorage at this time only three\nmonths' water, whereas ordinarily it\nhas six months'. II the dry weather\nshould continue tor another month\nor month and t half, Trail would\nface a serious situation, it is uid.\nRossland and Nelson havt tprlnk*\nling regulations in effect at this\ntime. Tadanac it taxing its pump\nIng system to capacity. So far Trail\nhas had only to warn against care*\nless wasting of water.\nWhile Trail can count itself for*\ntunate at this time, the situation\nalso offers a warning of which the\ncouncil might well take notice. Continued extension of gardening activities, both by the parks board\nand by individuals, will bring a\nheavier drain on the water supply.\nThe growth of the city and the repeated addition of new services will\nfurther tax the supply.\nTrail's waterworks system ll\ncapable of taking care of a popula*\ntion of 8000. The present popula*\ntlon of the city is 7573. This means\nthe city is rapidly nearing the limit\ncapacity of the present system and\nnew sources of supply must be investigated.\nThe present system consist! of\ntwo reservoirs at the west boundary\nof the city, Violin lake, and a large\nstorage dam between. There is also\na small storage tank on Gorge\ncreek, and an emergency connection with Tadanac.\nFrom the intake on Cambridge\ncreek an eight-inch steel main supplies a reservoir of 740,000 imperial\ngallons. This was installed in 1917\nand is situated on the west boundary\nof the city. In 1931 a new reservoir,\nadjoining the old one, was constructed with a capacity of 960,000\nimperial gallons. Tnls was part of\na relief program and brought the\ntotal storage in these two reservoirs to about 1,700,000 gallons, or\nsufficient to take care of the average summer consumption of the\npresent population for slightly more\nthan two days.\nSUPPLY FAILS\nCambridge creek falls during the\nmonths of July to October and in\nthe extreme cold of January. The\nnatural flow is augmented by a\nstorage reservoir of 22 million gallons about half way between the\nintake and Violin lake, popularly\nknown as the Cambridge creek\nstorage dam. This reservoir will\nhold roughly one month's requirements.\n> Violin lake is the chief storage\nbody. This lake drains southerly\ninto Washington state. There is a\ndam five feet high at the outlet\nwhich holds back much of the run*\noff and on June 12 of this year\nthere was 51 inches of water over\nthe floor of the old pumphouse.\nA 12-inch wood main has been\ninstalled five feet below the pump-\nhouse floor, and it runs 2700 feot into\nCambridge creek. This provides a\nreserve of approximately 90 million\ngallons, bnd during the present dry\nseason the supply has been exhausted by roughly JO million gallons.\nGOLFDRAWS\nARE LISTED\nLadies Start at 9:3C\nThis Morning; Men\nat 12:30\nThe West Kootenay golf championship play gets away at 9:30 this\nmorning when Mrs. B. Townshend\nand Mrs. J. O'Shea tee off in the\nladies' play. The championship\nflight of the men's play starts at\n12:30 p.m., when T. R. Wilson and\nC. H. Stark tee off.\nThe entry list gives promise for\na fine tournament and thert ara\nenough outside players to add color\nto it. Several are here from Kimbtrlty, ont from Cranbrook, one\nfrom Kaslo, one from Saskatoon and\nont from Victoria. Both tha\niLeith cup and the Oosnell cups are\nat stake, the former for the men\nand the latter for the women.\nOfficials last night urged that all\nplayers be on time for their matches\naa they pointed out that the tmoke\nwas cutting the playing time very\nshort these days and that if any\nholdups occurred It might seriously\naffect tht completion ot the tournament.\nThe men'i second flight commences at 1:30 p.m. and the fourth\nflight at 1:50 p.m.\nThe following are the draws and\nthe times:\nSATURDAY  MORNINO\nLadles:\n9:30 a.m.\u2014Mrs. B. Townshend vs.\nMrs. J. O'Shea.\n9:35 a.m.\u2014Mist M. McLeod vs,\nMrs. H. Rosling.\n9:40 a.m.-Mn. W. M. Curtliffe vs.\nMrs. R. L. McBride.\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Mrs. A. O. Mackay vs.\nMrs. L. S. Bradley.\n9:50 a.m.\u2014Mrs. G. W. Davis vs.\nMrs. L. V. Rogers.\n9:55 a.m.\u2014Mn, J. Cartmel tn. Mrs.\nD. L. Thompson.\n10:00 a.m.\u2014Mrs. Ray Shaw vs.\nMrs. A. E. Murphy.\n11:05 a.m.-Mn. J. J. Sklllicorn\nvs. Mrs. H. Lakes.\nMEN'S CHAMPIONSHIP\nFLIGHT\n12:30 p.m.\u2014T. R. Wilson vs. C. H.\nStark.\n12:55 p.m.\u2014T..H. Bourque vs. W.\nR. Grubbe.\n1:00 p.m.\u2014A. E. Walterg vs. C. W.\nAppleyard.\n1:05 pjn.\u2014J. D. Kerr vs. R. J.\nBourque.\n12:35 pjn.\u2014A. E. Murphy vi. T.\nG. Schroeder.\n12:50 p.m.\u2014Roy Pollard vs. L. V.\nRogers.\n12:40 pjn.\u2014B. Townshend vs. Hy\nC. Danison.\n12:40 p.m.\u2014L. S. Bradley vs. R.\nR. Large.\nMIN'S SECOND FLIGHT\n1:30 p.m.\u2014H. Lakes vs. J. A. Ting-\nland.\n1:25 pjn.\u2014P. D. Ctmpbell vs. T_\nA. McPhail.\n1:10 p.ra.-rA. Balrd vs. A. A. Lambert\n1:15 p.m.\u2014W. M. Cunllffe vi. John\nCartmel.\n1:35 p.m.\u2014D. L. Thompson vs.\nPaul Lincoln,\n1:40 pm\u2014H. R. Banks vi. A. L.\nMcCulloch.\n1:45 pjn.\u2014X. E. Guille vs. W.\nBlane.\n1:20 p.m.\u2014John Fraser vs. J. S.\nW. Clowes.\nMEN'S  FOURTH\nFLIGHT\n1:50 p.m.\u2014N. W. Burdett vs. A.\nW. Diebolt\n1:55 pjn.--C. H. Hamilton v?. D.\nA. York.\n2:00 p.m.\u2014James O'Shea vi. J. R.\nBuchanan.\n2:05 p.m.\u2014Guy Davis vi. Elmer\nHorton.\nBye\u2014W. Fotherlngham.\nOxford Group Hai a\nSuccessful Meeting\nEvidence that the work of the Oxford Group in Nelson Is gathering\nmomentum was seen Friday night\nin the interest shown at a meeting\nof this movement in Redeemer parish htll, Fairview.\nThe meeting wu led by Frank\nStuart, and the note sounded was\nthat of a \"Christ-Centered World\"\nthrough the medium of changed\nlives.\nTestimony was given by various\nNelson witnesses, as to change! in\n.their owft llvci since meeting the\ngroup.\nTrail Customs\n$7691 for July\nTRAIL, B.C., Aug. 31.\u2014Customs\nand excise receipts recorded at tht\nTrsll offlcee for tht month of Aug-\nust were 17,691.16, almost doublt\ntotsl receipts for the same month\nof 1933 when they amounted to\n14,031.11.\nTotals for the eight month periods of 1964 and 1933 ara 134.643.22\nsnd 117,633.11, an Increase for this\nyetr  to  date  ot  117,119.11.\nNOTICE!\nOwing to our recent fire this store will be closed\nfor a complete renovation until further notice.\nWATCH FOR OUR REOPENING\nANNOUNCEMENT\nat a future date when we will be showing a complete new stock of Fall Dresses, Coats and Milliner)'\nMilady's Fashion Shoppe\nMiss Georgina Brown, Mgr.\n qf-S\nSCHOOL\nDAYS-\nWILL SOON BE\nHERE\nWe are prepared to\nserve you with\nSTURDY SCHOOL\nBOOTS\nFor the\nBoys and Girls\nR. Andrew\n&Co.\nLeaders in Footfashion\nse\nLatest estimates of wool production\nfor the five principal exporting countries (Australia, Hew Zealand. South\nAfrica, Argentina and Uruguay) for\nthe 1933-34 season which has Just\nended (except ln South America)\npoint to a net decrease, greasy basis,\nof nearly 200 million pounds, or 9\nper cent, in comparison with the 1932-\n33 season. \u25a0\nCRESTON LIBS\nARE TO MEET\nTo Attend District\nGathering at\nCranbrook\nCRESTON, Aug. 11\u2014Cretton Liberal\naatoclaUon hat Jutt been notified to\nselect the district's quota ot delegates to attend a conference of Eaat\nKootenay Liberals at Cranbrook on\nSeptember IT, it which a federal ai-\ntoclttlon will be formed and a date\nselected for the convention to nominate a candidate to contest the\nriding. T It get-together will be ' S\np.m., and It la hoped to hire Tom\nReld, m.p , for New Weatmlntter, or\ntome other federal member, to addreu a rally ln the evening. Hitherto\nthe Creaton district hu been Kootenay Wett, but In the redistribution\naccomplished at Ottawa ln the 198S\nteuton all the territory through to\nKootenay lake wu transferred to\nKootenay Eut.\nJock McRobb Jr. and a friend from\nTrail, who have been here for a few\ndayi with the former's parenta, nave\nleft for the smelter city.\nMra. Jamu Bateman. got back thli\nwetk from a montht vltlt with old\nfriendi ln Calgary.\nMIm Edith Rent, Mln Fanny Lewis\nand Allan Speere have been at Cranbrook, writing off \"sups.\" ln connection with the midsummer departmental examinations ln grade 13.\nMlu Joyce Clayton It a vlaltor with\nher litter, Mrt. John Chapman at\nNelton.\nMri. Richmond of Cranbrook hat\nbeen on a vlalt with her altter, Mrs.\nHumble.\nMr. and Mrs. Robert Kerr of Midway and Mrs. McMillan and daughter of the ume town, wen visitors at\nthe Unltll church manse with Rev.\nand Mra. A. Walker, Mr. Walker ll a\nformer pastor of Oreenwood.\nMra. Clark and two children ot\n\u2014 THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B.C.--8ATURDAY MORNINO, SEPT. 1. 1934\nEdmonton are holidaying here with\nthe former*! parenta, Mr. and Mn. A\nF. Skalen.\nMlu Margaret Crlbb hu returned\nto her home tt Klmberley, after\nholiday hen, a guest of Mlu Charlotte WIUs.\nTret Hutcroft and Wallace Sin\nclalr, who left for Alberta, bavt\nlanded harvett work In the vicinity\nof High River.\nMr. and Mrt. Canute Anderson were\nnnewlng acquaintances st Cranbrook.\nMrs Frank Clarrett and daughter\nof Blake have bten on a visit with\nthi former't parenta, Mr. and Mn. F.\nA. LaBeltt.\nW. Rldd, who is In charge of planer\nmill operations at Waldo, wu home\nat the ranch, due the homecoming of\nhit nn WUUam from Edmonton.\nBOY SPEAKERS\nCOMING SOON\nJim Ferris, ex-Premier, Will\nBe Heard st Mass Meeting\nand at Rotary\nTueaday night of next week Jim\nFerrle, cx-premler of the boys' parliament of British Columbia with two\nother members of the parliament will\naddreu a mau meeting in St. Paul's\nUnited church.  At noon of the ume\nAlways Buy the Best\n-SA1AM\nTEA\n' Fresh from tht Gardens\"\nTU\nButcherteria News\nT. S. SHORTHOUSE *\nPHONES 527\u2014528 FREE DELIVERY\nSaturday and Tuesday Specials\nPrime Steer Beef\n80  100\nIS*\"*\nPOT ROA8TS-\nPir lb .....\nRUMP R0AST8-\nPer tb  \t\nOVEN R0AST5-\nPar ft \t\nCREAMERY BUTTER JM\n-J ftl W\nMilk Fed Veal\nIK\n120\nOVEN  R0AST8-\nPer ft . \t\nRUMP ROASTS\u2014\nPir ft  \t\nPOT ROASTS-\nPir ft  ,\t\nORADE B EGQS-\n2   doz.   \t\n550\nNo. 1 Young Lamb\n130\n*****\nSHOULDERS\u2014\nPer ft \t\nLEGS\u2014Whole;\nper ft \t\nLEAN STEW\u2014\n3 ftl.\nExtra Bargains\nBREAKFAST SAUSAGE   .mjt\nPir lb  *-**r\nLEAN MINCED STEAK- e,*_t\n3 tht. **3r\nLEAN BOILING BEEF- fU\ns fti. -*7r\nLAMB  CROQUETTES-  IM\nPer ft -m>s-\nFresh Poultry\nand Fish\nYOUNG ROASTING\nCHICKENS\u2014Fir ft\nYOUNG FRYING\nCHICKENS\u2014Per ft .\nFRE8H CODFISH-\nPer ft \t\nFRESH HALIBUT-\nPerft\t\nFRESH SALMON-\nFir ft\t\n**A*\nm\n180\n22*\n25*\nDelicatessen\nTASTY FOTTED MEAT- _t\\A\nPer   ft    **wr\nTASTY JELLIED VEAL   JAgt\n-Perth m-**y\nOLD ENGLISH PORK      __rl\nPIE8\u20144 for :., **m*Y\nSPOKANE  COTTAGE      2fi.fi\nCHEESE-Per ft *-*-***\nOLD ONTARIO CHEESE _gt*\n-Per ft      *-***-\nday they will ipeik to the Rotary\nclub. Thli Is tbe first Ume that Nelaon bu been privileged to hear aucb\nprominent young men discuss thl\nproblem! that confront the youth of\ntoday. Each of the boys It known over the province for hit outstanding\nability u a apeaker. Flam to make\nthla meeting one of the great treats of\nthe yetr aro being arranged by R.\nSmlllle, M.A., president of the Kootenay District Council which has to\ndo with the development of youth.\nALBERTACOUPLE\nAT KIMBERLEY\nKIMBERLEY, B.C., Aug. 31.\u2014Dr. W.\nBrewing, putor of St. Andrew*! Wet-\nley church of Vancouver, who visited\nhere two summen ago snd uld his\ntrip through the mine wss the high\ntpot of hit aummer, hat returned\nfrom a three montht trip through\nEurope. Charles Dakln la visiting at\nhla home In Vancouver.\nMr. and Mrt. R. Hemttock ot Hanna,\nAlta., an vlaltlng with Colin Chltholm\nand hla mother at the Townsite.\nMr. and Mrs. R. Rowland, Shirley\nand Olen of Coqultlam are visiting\nwith Dr. and Mrs. Rowland.\nMr. and Mn. Pat Oraham art\ntpendlng their holidays at Spokane.\nSeattle and Vancouver. They wlll be\naway two weeks. -\nRev. and Mrs. I. B. Neve are on a\ntwo week's holiday ln Vancouver,\nwhere they are attending the F.A.O.C.\nconference.\nMrs. F. H. Edmonds hu returned\nfrom a three months vacatlou in the\nUnited States. Mr. Edmonds met her\nin Calgary tnd they motored home.\nO. Bhaw of Trill It visiting his\ndaughter, Mrs. T. W, Matheson of\nChapman Camp.        f\nMlu Phyllis Bltynty tnd Mn. II.\nD. Evana are spending a holiday In\nCalgary.\nMrs. B. W. Smith returned to her\nhome in Medicine Htt after visiting\nher parents, Mr. and Mrt. Bert Colthorpe here.\nVisa Ethel Colthorpe hu returned\nfrom Victoria where she hss tpent\nsix weeks at summer school.\nMiss Ruth Swsnson hss returned\nfrom spending some months st U.B.C.\naummer school ln Vancouver.\nOeorge Jamea and Johnnie Hormtn\nhave left for a vacation at the cout.\nr|\nNEWS, NI\nOCl ETY\nThli column !i conducted by\nMrt. M. 1. Vlgneux. AU newt of a\n\u2022odal nature, including reception!.\nprivate entertainments, peraona!\nItema, marriaget, etc., will appear\ntn thii column. Telephone Mra\nVlgneux at her home. SID Silica\nitreet\nAt S o'clock Thurtdiy evening at\nSt. Faul'i United church Rev. T. J.\nS. Ferguaon unltad ln mtrritge Eileen\nMary, youngut daughter ot Elmer\nTit-worth and the late Mn. Tlteworth\not Nelton, and Albert Stanley Lane\nlate of Mscleod now residing In Ntlton. Attending the couple were the\nbrlde't titter. Mln Dorothy Tlteworth,\nand Eldon Waterer. After the cere-\nmon * which wu witnessed by the\nbrlde't father who gave ber in marriage, wen Mrs. B, T. Whiteside and\nJ. Tltsworth. Mr. and Mrs. Lane have\ntaken up residence In the Kerr apartments.\nFreceedlng Blake Allan's dancing\nparty Thursday night Mlu Fiances\nLincoln, Stanley itrwt, entertained\ndelightfully at dinner In honor of\nMlsa Ellis McLeod and Mlu Mollis\nHthin, both of Kamloops, when covert wen Itld for 14, Tht table wu\nlovely with lta center of peach colored\nsnapdragons tnd corresponding\nlighted tapers ln silver sconces. Mlu\nLincoln's invited guests were Mlu\nEllis, Mln Mehan, Mlu Msry Walker,\nMiu Sheila Stewart, Mlu Dorothy\nWheeler, Mlu Auth Allan, Peter\nDewdney, Blake Allan, Jtck Wlnlaw,\nHenry Stewart, Otwtld Harper, Jack^brlde in marriage.\nDiamond of Trail and 1. Whuler.\nPAGE FIVE\nsht hu accepted a poaition on tbl\ntuff of the Hollywood hotpital.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nRoy Kennedy of silverton who hu\nbaen a guut at the home on Oon\n\u2022treet of Mr. and Mn. Robert lunl-\nsou hu returned.\n\u2022 a   e\nMr. and Mri. J. M. Oordon, Kerr\ntptrtmente have taken up reaidence\nat tha corner of Mill tnd Jotephlne\nttneta.\n\u2022 \u2022   t\nVernon Retd of (rlt waa In thi\ncity yeeterday.\nI   a  9\nMr, and Mri, Pttterton of Trail\nwho han been holidaying for tomt\ntime ln Kaalo paaaed through Helton Thurtdiy en route home.\na   a \u25a0 e\nAnthony Madden who haa vlalted\nin Nelaon for the patt few dtyt returned yeeterday to slocan City,\ntai\nShoppert In the city yetterdty Included Mr. and Mrt. W. 0. Motley\nof Bonnlngton and their family.\n\u2022 s   i\nMrt. Charles Becker, Vancouver\nttreet haa left on a visit to relatival\nln Winnipeg and the prairie cities.\nCharlea wllaon of Sirdar wu In\nto\u00bbn yesterday.\nMn. J. L. Purdy of South Slocsn\nwas shopping in Nelton yeiterdiy.\n\u2022   \u2022   *\nRev. c. C. Jtnrow, united ln\nmarriage on August 31, cirollnt\nMiller of East Arrow Park and Fred\nHamann of Nelson. The oewmony\nwhich took place at Bt. Johns Luth-\nerltn church at 8 o'clock. The wit*\nneeses were Mlu Elsie Miller the\nbrlde'i slater of last Arrow Park\nand Siegfried Llmteher of Nelton.\nRev. E. Blberdorf of Trill gave the\nMn. I. O. Ntlton madt a dainty\nhoeteu on two occniont recently\nwhen ihe entertained at hir home\non Carbontte ttreet tt a tea snd\nbridge. For her floral decorations,\nMrt, Nelaon chow multi-colored\ngladioli and for her tea table center\nlarge bowl ot zlnlu. The Invited\nguests were Mn. W. J. E. Biker, Mrs.\nL. V. Rogers, Mn. Frederick C,\nSharps, Mrs. John Cartmel, Mrs.\nHugh W. Robertson, Mrs. w. M.\nWalker, Mrs. Harold Lakn, Mra. F.\nPeters, Mrs. I. E. L. Dewdney, Mrs.\nHarry H. B. Horton, Mn. L. E.\nBorden, Mn. Jules Corbett ot San\nFrancisco, Mrs. oulmstte of Mulls.\nIdaho. Mn. Douglu Thompton, of\nKlmberley, Mn. peeblea of Calgtry,\nMrs. P. 0. Morey, Mn. E. 0. Smyth.\nMrs. Joseph Sturgeon, Mn. wlllltm\nJ. Sturgeon, Mn, M J, Vlgniui,\nMn. W. T- Fotherlnghtm, Mn. J.\nFere; Cones, Mn. WUIltm Ttylor,\nMlu Marda Towgood of Bandon,\nMlu K Ethel Oray, Mn. 0. W.\nMacBey. of Trail, Mn. J. O. Bunyan, Mn. F. F. Paynt, Mrt. T. H.\nBourque, Mn. C. V. Qtgnon and\nMrt. Jaawa H. Osgnon of Trail.\n...\nUn. H. Bxter and daughter Row-\nmary of Kulo wen vltlton In\nthe city Tuaaday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nW. F. Warner of Spoksne dlvliion-\nal freight and paaunger agent of the\nChicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul tnd\nPacific railway wat a recent vliltor\nin town.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nW.   O.   c.   Lalntktll   leaves   thla\nmorning for onnd Forks.\nill\nMrt. H. K. MBVIty who haa bun\nthe guut of her brother-in-law and\nsister. Mr. tnd Mn. W. R. Orubbe\nfor a few weeka left yesterday for\nhtr home In Rivelstoke.\n\u2022 a   e\nMlu Dawn Sharp, Hoover street,\nwho visited for a few dayt at thi\ntummer plica of th* Mluu Betty\nand Joyce Ferguaon at gtg Mile\nhu returned,\n\u25a0  a  I\nMlaa Francea powler who hu apent\nthe past few weeka visiting her parents Mr. and Mn. 8. 8. Fowler, at\nRiondel left yesterday for Montreal.\n\u2022 \u00bb   \u2022\n0. A. Wut of Kulo wu is towa\nyesterdsy.\naaa\nMlu Busts Mackenzie, carbonate\nstreet, hu returned from an extended visit In eastern Canada.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMn. J. B. Smith tnd her dsughter of New Denver are Nelaon vUltors.\na i a\nMrs.   N.   M.   Cummins,   Vernon\natreet. his u her guests, her daughter, Mrt. Ernest Hacking of Rider-\nby and her aon Oeorgt.\ntea\nMr. and Mrs. Earl Fltapatrlek and\nchildren of Trail nturned yettar.\nday tfter a vltlt it the home on\nVictoria ttrut or the litter's parenta, Mr. and Mrs. w. A, Hufty,\nsee\nMiss M. A. Clements if Weyburn, Sask., who visited at the\nhome ot Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Pitts,\nMlu Connie Caln, Vernon ttreet\nhss left to spend her vtcttlon it\nthe home of her sister In Princeton.\n...\nVernon McDontld of the fetching\nstaff of tbe Bandon achool haa returned after a couple of weeka visit\nIn Nelton.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nO. Hlcka of Kamloops waa ln towa\nyesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. R. D. welch ot Vsncouver, who have bun on an extended motor trip to the eaatern ttttet\nand who alio attended the Chicago\nfair hava arrived in town to vlalt\nuntil Mondiy it the home of thl\nlatter\u00bb pirenta, Mr. ind Mn. W. J.\nHippenon, 134 Vernon itrwt. Thiy\nwill bl icconipanled home by Mrs.\nHippenon.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nFrank Fergle ws of Dr. ud Mn.\nW. A. Fergle of Cranbrook leavu\ntodiy after visiting for the put thm\nweek it the home on Billet itreet\not Mr. md Mn. o. Stuirt Mclntoth.\n...\nDouglaa Thompson of Klmberley\nIt expected here today to vlllt hla\nfamily who are apendlng the holiday! here. Hi will be a contestant\nln aha golf tournament over thi\nweek-end.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nMlu Nalda Firrler and btr aunt,\nMlu (nld Etter, are expected homt\ntonight from Vancouver, where they\nhave been for the put wwk.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nRev. W. C. Mawhlnniy bu returned from! Edmonton when hi attended a thru weeka echool of religion which took place In St. Jo-\nuph college.\n\u2022 .   *\nMr. and Mra O. 8. Mclntoth tit\nSilica strett hive u thetr week-end\ngueat Dick Large aon of Dr. and Mrs.\nH, L. Large of Cranbrook, who wlll\ntake part in tha week-end gou\ntournament.\ntea\nMra. Fotter hu returned trom\nNanalmo when ahe attended thi\nA, O. F. convention.\n14   1\nMlu Bdlth M. Aim of Kulo wu\na recent vliltor In tha city en rout*\nto teach achool ln a town n\u00abu\nQuunel.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr.   and  Mra.  F.  Helmt  of  thl\nSilver   Bear   Mine   at   South   Fork\nwen ahoppen ln tha city yetterdty,\ntte\nMra. H, I, Thaln, Falrvlew, bu\nreturned from a vlalt to her ion\nin Vuwouvir.\niaa\nMlu   Julia   Potosky,   Km  apartments,   who   hai   been   holidaying\nat the cout haa returned.\n...\nMra. Arthur Balrd, silica itreet\nand children Patricia and Bill havt\nnturned from tpendlng a month In\none of i-e Robertaon cottages at\nCrescent Bar. , _<_UH\n\u2022 \u2022   t\nMlu    Helen    Jeffs,    Oburvatory\nstnet, who has tpent the lut oouple\nof yun In etttern Canada reoently\narrived from woodttock, ont.\nkit\n9. U. Fields traveling freight ind\nhit left for New wutmintter, where pauenger   igent   of   the   Chlctgo.\n\u00a7AfEW\/lY\u00a7TORESf\nQuality Meat Values\nFREE DELIVERY\nPHONE 153\nPrime Rib Roasts Rolled Lb. 18e\nBoiling: Beef: Lean 5 Ibs. 251\nHamburger: Fresh .....'. 2 lbs. 11)-?\nBreakfast Sausage Lb. 10c\nBoneless Beef Stew 2 lbs. 19p\nPork Spare Ribs: Fresh .... 2 lbs. 23C\nRound Steak: Choice  2 lbs. 35o\nLamb Stew: Fresh 3 Ibs. 25<\nBaby Lamb Shoulders Lb. 13<>\nLean Salt Pork   Lb. 18*?\nPOT ROASTS\nNOTE: Then RoaiU art cut from\nGenulnt Steer Beef. \t\nlb. 8-9-lOc\nMilk Fed Veal\nVeal Steaks: Meaty 2 lbs. 25c\nVeal Chops: Tender 2 Ibs. 29<i\nVeal Leg Roasts: Choice Lb. 15<*\nRump and Loin Roasts  Lb. 17<-\nVeal Fillet Roasts   Lb. 20c\nVesl Stew: Meaty   3 lbs. 25C\nPure Pork Sausage Lb. 20?\nSwift's Weiners Lb. 22<>\nSwift's Picnics: No. 1   Lb, 20C\nSwift's Sliced Bacon   Lb. 39<\nCooked Cured Beef  Lb. 18*?\nRoast Pork\u2014Dressing Lb. 45<.\nSugar Cured Boneless Corned\nBeef   Lb. IB**\nDon't Foil lo Takt Advantage of the Great Grocery\nSavings at our THREE-DAY FOOD SALE\nWl   RteiRVI   TMI   RiaHT   TO   LIMIT   OUANTITIII\nDISTRIBUTION\n\u2022 APKWAY    ITOIII     UMIlin\nWITHOUT WASTE\n'Vt\n\\^m\nGood\t\nHousekeeping\nBy Circle No. 4 of\nSt Paui'i Ladles' Aid\nNob* hut tested ticlpei\nall) bl inurtea.     .     .\nPEANUT  MITTIT\n1 cups chopped petnuls.\n3 cups tugar.\nPut auger In frying pan. Stir over\nc'ow flra. It wlll lump then gradually\nwill melt. When pale coffee color and\nclear, add nuta and pour quickly on\nbutteretl tin. When cold break up ln\npieces.\nCOLLEGE CAK0T\n3 cups white sugsr.\n2 cups brown sugar,\n1 cup milk.\n1 eup corn ayrup.\nBoll 10 mlnutet.\nRemove from ttove, idd nuta and\nvanilla to taste. Beit until stiff and\npour on greased pan.   Cut In squares.\nloprsE\ni cupt brown sugtr.   .\ntt eupi corn tyrup.\nSmall piece butter.\n1 tla reindeer milk.\n>.', teaspoon vtnlllt. Stir all the\ntime while boiling. Tut In cold water\nwhen real hard In water remove from\nstove and pour out on buttered pan\ncut ln squires.\nDURITY\n*     FLOUR\nMAKES  BETTER   SREA.3\nSMART STUDENTS\nMUST BE HEALTHY\nSee thtt ye>ur child'\u00bbilr\u00abn|th ti built up by lervlng pltnty pf pure\nmilk at every meil.  We otter tha flnwt of milk-elth\u00abr nw or\nputturized\u2014with a dally houie to houie delivery.\nPHONE   116\nKOOTENAY VALLEY COOP.\nMILK PRODUCTS ASSN.\nMEAGHER & CO.\n607 BAKER ST.\nPHONE 200\nStore News\nSpecial for Saturday on both the Main Floor and the\nBasement. You will be sure to need one or more articles\nfrom the following list \u2014 and the prices are right!\nWhite Turkish Towels\nWhite Turkish towels. Good size.\nRegular price $1.00 the pair.\nSPECIAL, THE PAIR   4M\nPillow Slips\n42-in. fine quality cotton pillow slips.\nRegular *10c each.\nEACH   20-p\nFine Linen Cloths\nPure Irish linen cloths. John S.\nBrown's Shamrock brand.  Size\n72x90. Regular to ?6.75 each.\nSPECIAL, EACH     |4.58\nBasement Specials\nPure wool Cashmere hose. Sizes S\nand 9'\/\u00bb.\nTHE PAIR   ~d<\nLadies' Gloves\nChamoisette and wool knit gloves.\nBASEMENT SPECIAL AT,\nTHE PAIR   39?\nBlack Corduroy\n27-inch black corduroy.\nREAL BASEMENT SPECIAL AT, THE YARD\nB.C.MAYCCT\nWOMEN'S MEET\nVANCOUVER, Aug. Jl <CP).-\nCinida may be the meeting pltce of\nthe next tnennlil conference of the\nPan-Pacific Women'i aieoeietlon,\nmemben of the Cinidlan delegation reported on their arrival here\ntoday aboard the liner Empreu of\nAsia from Honolulu, when thl association concluded iti third conference last wetk.\nIn spite of the fact the new president ii Mrs. Tsune Gauntlett of\nJapan and there wai a warm Invitation from her country, Canada'i\ninvitation wai received tnthuiiai*\ntleally. Vancouver and Victoria art\nfavored eltiei but Banff or a bungalow camp in the Canadian Rockies\nwere mentioned as suitable placet.\nDefinite decision will be made by\na vota of the H member countrlei.\nIS monthi prior to the date of the\nnext meeting.\nThe lait conference wu attended\nby W overseas delegates from 10\ncountries bordering on the Pacific\nocean.\nMilwaukee,   St.   ptul   and   nclfio\nraii\u00abiy with heidquirteri In Bpoktni wat In town yeiterdiy.\n\u00bb   \u2022   \u2022\nMrt. Zrnett Xlnahan and ton Pat\ntnd Mike ot Trill arrived In town\nThurtdiy to vuit at the home on\nSilica ttreet of Mrs. mnk Boyd.\ntea\nMn. X. Shepherd of Corbin, 9. C\u201e\nIt tpendlng a few dtyi In Nelton,\nen route to vltlt her father la\nNikuip.\n\u2022 .   *\nMartin Dyke of Sttkatchewan la\nvlsltini relitlvet ln the city.\ntei\nIdwtrd Oraham of gloctn city\nwtt in town Thurtdiy.\n\u2022 #   \u2022\nMr. and Mn. E. Orthtm of Slo-\nean City were recent ihoppera In\ntown.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nOietr Appleton of Suiuhlm Bty\nwu In Nelion yeiterdty.\n\u2022 a   i\nMr. md Mrs. Harry Btevent of\nymlr ipent yetterdty In the elty.\n...\nMitt lisle Unberg ot Bpoktni left\nyetterdty tfter a couple of weeke vtcttlon it the home on High ttreet\nsf  her   cousins.   Mr. and  Mn.  W.\nWtldo rerguton.\n\u2022 \u2022   t\nMr. tnd Mrt. J. T. Domldton of\nStlmo tpent yeiterdiy In town.\n,   *   t\nMIm   Bile  Turner\ntth.,  la  tht  guest\nMcUin, Latimer street\n\u2022 \u25a0   \u2022\nMr, and Mrs. Jsmes Jtmleton ol\nRevelstoke trf visiting tlwlr wn\nChtrltt Barrett, SUlea ttreet.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMlu Miynt McPhail. glllci ttreet\nhu returned  from  vlaltlng friendi\nand relatlvet at the cout.\nlet\nMlw Elizabeth McKlnnon who bu\nbeen vlaltlng ln victoria and Vancouver hu returned.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMlu jun Fither of Camp Utter\nIt visiting her parents, Mr. tnd Mrt.\nW. Fither, Victoria itreet for a few\nin\na  \u2022  \u2022\nMlu Hellen Slotn, Vernon ttrut,\nhu  it  her  guutt,  Mlu  Ctmpbell\nand her brother of Ortnd Porks,\n...\nMr. tnd Mn. Din McKay and fari-\nlly of Ymlr ltft yetUrdty titer a\n10 dtyi vltlt it the home on Vic\norla itreet. of Mr. tnd Mrt. w\nPUher.\nif  Kentwlek,\nwish,,  la thi  gunt of Mlu Tina\nReport! from Mokow thew tMt\nthtre hu been coniidiribli difficulty\nIn the Fuulin production of ntrveit-\nIng machinery, particularly hlrvett.\ner comblnet, and thla hu had an effect on harveatlng irrtngtmtnti.\nThe flrtt centrtl heating plant In\nthe United States wu instilled In the\nExecutive Mansion during the administration of President Jamet Buchanan. 4\nMINIMUM FOR\nTHURSDAY 45\nThurtdiy night wu thl coolest\nin some time as the minimum wei\ndown to 49 degreei. The maxima\nwu lower aim than it hu bean ti\naome Ume, being at 85. A coniider:\nble portion of tne day wu cloue\nand Ihe heavy imoke combined\nmake it quite dark.\nREAL VALUES\nFor SATURDAY, TUESDAY,\nWEDNESDAY\nCHEESE\u2014Canadian Lb. 19<}\nBUTTER\u2014Creamery   2 lbs. 45?\nCII\/l AD   10 lbt. Gnnulittd and 2 lbe. king\u2014mmj,\nBVWAIl     \u25a0) deal to a ouitomir II**\nTEA\u2014Blue Ribbon Lb. AS*,\nCHOCOLATE ECLAIRS 2 Ibs. 45c\nFIG BARS 2 lbs. 33<;\nCELERY ;.... Bunch 10c\nSTRAWBERRIES-Fresh   Box 15<r\nCABBAGE Lb. 4c*\nGRAPES\u2014Concords Basket 75<>\nCAULIFLOWER Lb. 10c\nPEACHES   Baskst 25**\nCORN FLAKES 3 pkgs. 23c\nCOFFEE\u2014Special bulk  Lb. 2K<\nLARD-3-lb. pails Each tMXt)\nHorswill Bros.\nGrocers\nPhone 235\nFree Delivery\nWE\nDELIVER\nFREE\nVASSAR'S\nCASH MEAT MARKET\nPHONES\n831\n832\nGOOD BUYING FOR SATURDAY\nChoict Steer Beef\nRound Steak .... Lb. 15<*\nRump Roasts .... Lb. 150\nRolled Rib Roast: Lb. 181\nGood Pot Roast: Lb. St)\nBoiling Beef .... Lb. 5<?\nOven Roast  Lb. 12-g\nLamb Legs: \u2022)r)t*\nLb  LL\nLamb Chops: OC<\n2 lbs  00\nLamb Shoulders: 10<*\nLb  10\nVeal Fillet Roast: Oft*\nVesl Rump Roast:   \\kt\nLb   o-i\nVeal Oren Rout:     10*\nCreamery Butter With a\nMeat Order: OOO\nEggs: Large Local OM\nAs; Special, doz. .. 00\nLocal Fresh Killed 10tl\nFowl: lb  lo\nRoasting Chicken: OC4\nSwift's Breakfast \/IA<\nBacon: Sliced; lb... 4U\nBreakfast Sausage: 1*|U\nLb  IU\nHamburger: Fresh Or*j\nmade; 3 Ibs  LO\nSwift's Smoked *)**.\nPicnics: lb  Ll\nPure Lard: 0(W\n2 Ibs. Lo\nPork Spare Ribs: 1Ai\nHeinz Diil PJckiei:' 1\/V\n9 for   IV\nHead Cheese: Fresh 1ft\nMade; lb  1\u00abJ\nSwift's Weiners: 011\nLb  Lf-\n PAGE   SIX\nEstablished AprU 23, 1902.\n\"Interior of British Columbia's Family Newspaper\"\nALL THE NEWS WHILE IT IS NEWS\nPublished   every   morning  except   Sundsy  by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED,\n210   Baker   Street,   Nelson,   Britlah   Columbia.\nPhone 144, Private Exchange Connecting all Departments\nMember ot the Audit Bureau ot Circulations and\nThe Canadian Press Leased Wire News Service.\nSATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1934.\nPRINCE GEORGE'S ENGAGEMENT\nThe single state of three of King George's sons\nhas been a matter of wonderment ever since they\nreached the marrying age. For quite a long time there\nhave been rumors every now and then regarding their\nmatrimonial intentions. But so often did these prove\nto be unfounded that they came to be regarded largely as so much idle talk. At last, however, a definite\nannouncement in regard to one of them, the youngest\nmembers of the family, has been forthcoming. Prince\nGeorge is engaged to Princess Marina of Greece. He\nhas been a popular figure at home and throughout the\nempire, having traveled extensively in the dominions\nand in the crown colonies. From Alberta, to which he'\npaid a visit with the Prince of Wajes seven years ago\nthis coming month, many good wishes will go out to\nhim and his bride-to-be.\nAMERICA'S CUP AMENITIES\nThe prevailing amity between the challenger and\nthe would-be defenders for the America's cup races\nbeginning on September 15 is plain to be seen, The Endeavour's wheel-horse for try-outs, the Vanitie, is also\nused for the trials of defenders, the Yankee, the Weeta-\nmoe and the Rainbow.\nThere is no censorship on Vanitie's various showings in comparison with the four headliners. It is\ncommon property, an open basis of comparison, for\nwhat it is worth. What of merit or demerit is open\nto all of the contestants.\nThe tuning-up of Rainbow, the new American\nyacht, is developing her capacity. The Yankee's initial successes are being wiped out by the newest defender, whose choice will probably be finally announced\na week before the cup races start. Mr. Vanderbilt will\nnot be disappointed in pitting his captaincy prowess of\nhigh order against the same qualities which have made\nMr. Sopwith famous among British yacht skippers.\nThis combination gives an assurance of high interest\nin the fifteenth race for America's cup, when added to\ncompeting craft, the last word in what is known as\nthe sturdy \"J\" models as put together by English and\nAmerican designers.\nAnd while the Vanitie is in a different class, this\nwheel-horse herself was built as a cup contestant in\n1914, when the outbreak of the war made cup competitions a minor affair.\nThere is no diminution of healthy interest in this\nyear's fate of the America's cup, because of a sporting\ndesire to see the next race sailed in British waters. It\nis a healthy sign of the times in the wider field of improved Anglo-American relations.\nAN ATHLETE'S EXPERIENCE\nlw.\nJack Lovelock, Oxford's famous runner, has rather upset a theory to the effect that swimming affects\nrunners and reduces their speed. Lovelock has been\ntaking swimming lessons. He now has written to\nJ. Howcroft, a noted coach, to the following effect:\n\"A very brief and long overdue note, chiefly to\nthank you for the trouble you took in teaching me\nthe crawl. I can scarcely tell you how grateful I am\n'or not only has the crawl given me great fun and made\nmy swimming a pleasure instead of an effort, but I\nam convinced that it has done a great deal to improve\nmy running. It was you who first gave me the idea of\nelaxation and rhythmic breath control. The crawl\nJlws helped like the devil to make me relax in running,\n\u00a9 much so that I try to get in a short swim each day\ns part of my regular training.\"\nMost coaches believe that swimming does not mix\nith any other form of sport.   There is the conception\nhat it develops muscles that do not need development\nn that particular way for running, etc.   There is,\nlowever, the instance of Karl Schaefer, the world's\nhampion figure skater, who is also a noted swimmer,\nlid also other athletes who have profited in their\n^hosen sports by taking swimming exercise.   The fact\nthat swimming, one of the most healthful of exer-\nises, demands a greater conscious appreciation of\nelaxation and breath control than any other exer-\nise.   Jack Lovelock has hit upon the proper com-\nination of the exercises of swimming and running.\nAUNT HET\n[k.       what to expect. BcaMo-\n^ailn' when a v. % 'an starts off\njayln' lt ain't her habit to talk\n|t people.\"\n20 YEARS AGO\n(From Nelson Daily News of Sept. 1,\n1914)\nA large gathering of men awaited\nthe opening of the armory here yeeterday for the enrollment of volunteers for a aecond contingent for overseas war serrlee. Organisation of\na provisional company la to go forward and drills are to be held.\nFreight rate reductions, as provided in the decision of the board of\nrailway commissioners, go into effect\ntoday. An example of the benefit to\nthla dlatrlct ln the reduction In the\nrate on coal which la to be aeen ln\nthe new charge from Fernie to Nelson. The new rate is $1.70 compared\nto P2.A*. Similar reductions go Into\nforce throughout the entire weat.\nBetween\nYou and\nMe\nB?J.B.C\nINTRODUCING BOUCHETTE\nDown in Vancouver they have t\ncouple of newspaper columnists\nwho have a public in all sections\nol the province. I mention Jimmie\nButterfleld of the Province and Bob\nBouchette of the Sun. James is\nhigh-hatting it with the Lords and\nLadies across the ocean just now\nand Bob is carrying on in his usual\nmanner. I have known this latter\nchap tor some time but not as intimately as I do now. You see I\nplayed bridge with the Sun's star\nreporter and columnist and you\nlearn a lot about a fellow over the\nbridge table, or any other table.\nBob is an expert at the game, that\nIs, he will past In a crowd of average bridge players, but he's not so\nhot on scoring. However, I have one\nthing on him. When it came to the\nprizes I had to cut cards with Bob.\nHe cut a king. I called an ace and\ncut it.\n\u00ab   .   *\nVERSATILE AND TALKATIVE\nThis Bouchette feUow is versatile\nto a great degree. He Is an excellent\nconversationalist and likes to talk.\nNaturally he has a French-Canadian\ntouch to his speech and his black\nmoustache and wavey hair brand\nhim of the old Canada stock. I\nwould like to get Bob Bouchette\nand Gene Poulin together. There\nwould, be hands a-tlying and tongues\na-wagging. Conversant with any\nsubject one wishes to choose Bob\nalso has that ready wit which is\nso necessary in getting his stuff\nacross In the newspapers.\n\u2022 \u00ab   .\nBOUCHETTE A PLAYBOy\nHe is a lover of good sport and a\nbicyclist ot no mean ability. Seeing\nhim perched atop a bicycle seat on\na trip around Stanley park's famed\nand beautiful drive one would never\ndream that such a diminutive and\nmischievious chap had such an ac-\ncumlaUon of adjectives, synonyms\nand antonyms, together with a wonderful smattering of world affairs\nand historical events, tucked under\nhis hatless head. Bouchette is a playboy. He admits that his publisher,\nMr. Cromie, has said that \"Bouchette will never grow up.\" Bob\nsays he does not care to grow up.\n...\nLET BOB MAKE A* 8PEECH\nIf I were calling upon this somewhat sarcastic paragrapher for a\nspeech, I would name the subject,\n\"Canada and Its Sectionalism.\"\nHe'd talk for hours upon it As a\nsecond subject I would select that\nof \"Music, Emotions and Interpretations.\" I don't know definitely if he\nis a musician. He may not be able\nto play a mouth organ, but he would\nlead one to believe he knows something about it. As a third subject I\ncould call upon Bob to speak upon\n\"Margaret's and Bob's Babies.\" He'll\ntalk tor hours upon that. But heck,\nI can do the same about my family.\n,   .   ,\nTHE PUBLIC AIMS TO AID HIM\nSitUng with Bouchette down\ntown where he is known, if not\npersonally, but by sight by thousands of Vancouverites, I got a huge\n\"kick\" in the way people, his readers, greet him. They walked out\not their way to say, \"Hello Bob.\"\nThey stopped him to give him ideas\nfor his column. They offered to buy\nhim a beer. They told stories about\nhim which I did not believe. Bob\nwas polite with one and all but\nbored to death at times. I sat back\nand listened and chuckled, for you\nsee dear readers, while not as\nfamous or as well known as Bouchette, this little column conducted\nby J. B. C. has got me into numerous similar situations in the Koot-\nenays. I have come to the conclusions that all colmunists, or would-\nbe column scribblers, go through\nthe same tortures heaped upon their\nunsuspecting personages by ardent,\nand may I say, enthusiastic readers\nwho are always wiUing to help a\nfellow out ln some literary way.\nGod bless their kindly gestures.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nDO COLUMN WRITERS DIFFER?\nAt that 1 was happy to have an\nouting with Bouchette. I learned\nsome new stories that are not printable. I found out that he believed\nln Vancouver only as a place to earn\na living and hang his hat. He would\njust as soon be elsewhere under\nsimilar circumstances. But he writes\nthousands of words boosting Vancouver. Well that's no crime. There\nare only one or two differences between this man and myself. He\nwrites real columns. I do not profess\nto do so. He gets his picture in his\ncolun.i. This leads to his identity\nbeing detected wherever he may be\nand under whatever circumstance\nor condition he may be in at the\ntime. I don't have to go through all\nthat. I haven't had my face In the\npapers yet. I can get by almost anywhere in a strange part of the\ncountry. He sometimes misses meals\nand Arrives home in the wee small\nhours. Well there Is something mutual in that. He has creditors. 3o\nhave I. He telephones home that he\nis detained at the office and calls\nfor \"Mrs. B.\" 1 do that at times and\ncall for \"Mrs. J. B. C.\" He's temperamental. Well, so am I and I'm\nnot a musician either. But after\nall he Is not such a bad type to\nknow. You can take what Bouchette says with a grain of salt.\nThat's more than a lot of the readers of this column do at times.\n...\nA \"CECRET CERVICE CYCLIST\"\nBouchette belongs to \"Cecret\nCycling Corps Circumnavigating\nCoast Crossroads.\" So do I but I\nthink Bob Is a better Pedlar. You\ncan spell it otherwise if you so\ndesire. And dear readers Bouchette\nprefers to be called \"Bou-chette\"\nwhich rhymes with \"freshet.\" Ifp\njust can't take \"Boushay.\"\n30 YEARS AGO\n(From Nelson DaUy Hews of Sept. 1.\n1904)\nRussian and Japanese armies about\nLlao Tang are locked In a death struggle. The Japanese have 340.000 men\nand the Russians from 170,000 to 200,-\n000.\n\u2022' *    *\nA. J. Hlpperson has returned trom\nTrail where he finished a contract\nthat kept him busy since July 36.\n...\nChief of City Rollce W. \u00bb. Jarvls\nleaves tomorrow for a holiday in the\ncast.\nr\n\u2022THE NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C--8ATURDAY MOR.NINQ, SEPT. 1, UM\nARMAMENT IS NOT SECURITY\n\u2014World Union of Women, Geneva.\nTHE HIRING\nBy \"ETTRICK\"\nTo those of us In the Wert accuat\nomed to the more or leas haphazard,\nhappy go lucky methods of hiring\nfarm labor, where one tumbl*a out\nof a aide door pullman, in a small\nprairie town, and lf lucky drlveB away\nwith a farmer at 91-50 or 92.00 per day\nand hoard until the harvest la over,\naad then turned adrift again regard\nleas, the cannle Scotch way of hiring\nwould seem tedious and slow, but\nthere Is a dignity and tradition ln the\nuseage that makes the procedure\nrite of solemnity and beauty.\nOf courae farm laborers or hinds aa\nthey are named ln the Lowlands are\nhired from year to year. From November to November, permitting removals tn tbe time of the year when\nthere la least to do on the farm.\nMostly married men, this time of\nmoving gives them a chance to get\nthe produce of their gardens gathered and lets them get the new gardens set for the following year. It also lets the children start school near\nthe beginning of the term.\nBo many things enter ftito tha contract there. It is not Just a question\nof so much per day or week, but the\nhouse muat be considered, the size of\ntho garden, how many pigs, chickens\nand cows may be kept, and the prospect of employment for the family.\nOn many farms part of the wages are\npaid ln kind. So many rigs of potatoes and turnips. So many bolls of\nmeal and com.\nThere are aimo.t as many grades\nand castes as there are ln India. The\nploughman, the horseman, the cattleman and the shepherd are all specialists ln their own branch and are paid\naccordingly, and on many farms in\nthe hill district the shepherd Is the\nhighest paid and most valuable servant even ranking ahead of the steward or foreman.\nThe size of the workers' family is\nalso a consideration from the farmer's point of view, aa a ploughman\nwith a well grown family can be depended on to provide the extra labor\nfor the potato digging and the harvest and so the farmer does not need\nto provide for accommodation and\nboard for outside help at these periods.\nThese hlrlngs are supposed to take\nplace at the big hiring fairs that are\nheld during the summer ln tbe various country towns. The most famous ln the south being that of St. Bos-\nwells fair held at St. Boswells, and St.\nJames fair held at Kelso. There the\nfarmers and the help from all over\nthe district meet to discuss wages,\nand conditio..5, and there the coun-\ntn ts lor the year are made, but ln\nmost cat's the bargains have been\nmade, a month before. The families\nhaving made up their minds to\nBide or Gang.* and generally knowing where.\nOf courae there are always a number who wait until the fair in hope of\ngetting better wagea or a bigger house,\nor the few, and fortunately they are\nvery few, who because of incompetence or general cussednesa, find lt\nh. d to get and keep a place and so\ndrag from fair to fair until at last\nthry have to take work with some\ncross grained old farmer no one else\nwill work for, or else not hired, have\nto depend on odd Jobs until the next\nyear cornea round.\nBut auch is not the case on a farm\nfamed for good treatment and conditions. There the families stay on from\nyear to year happy and aatlsfled.\nSuch a one we have In mind at this\nhiring time. The farmers father and\ngrandfather, and their faither and\ngrandfather before them have ploughed and sowed and reaped those broad\nacres.\nThe ehepherds great grandfathers\nwandered through thoae green hills\nafter generations of black faced sheep.\nEven the dog Jed, a silent shadow at\nthe heels of the herd, is the dependent of a long line of famous sheep\ndogs.\nGood times, bad times, war and\nfamine have only knit closer together\nthe relations between the 'Fairm\nHoose' and the 'Falrm Hooses.*\n. A ploughman who has only been\nthere five or six years Is still a newcomer and a stranger.\nPicture It on a sunny July day. The\nfarm house, a big comfortable square\nstone building with slate roof li:s\nsheltered among wldespreadlng oaks\nand chestnut trees. Behind lies the\nkitchen garden and a small orchard.\nIn front sreeplng down to a hawthorn hedge that separates It from\nthe main highway is a lawn, that has\nbeen rolled and watered and shorn\nfor a hundred years. From the main\nroad runa a shy little hill road past\na deep pond where generations of the\nfarm children have sailed their boats,\nlearned to swim and fish for 'menants'\nand where when the frost holds sway\nthe words ttb\". tv -*\\ tM rnar of stones\nand the cries of the curlers.\nThen comes the steading, with 'ta\nsquare clean buildings, the byre, the\nstable, the closes for the cattle, the\ncart shed, and the big barn, and then\nthe atack yard, empty at present, but\nswe t and clean ready for the trcas'\nures of the field to be stored. Then\ncomes a field that has never known\ntbe kiss of a plough. Knee deep ln\nlush clover laden grass the workers'\ncows graze there, and there at evenings ln the summer come the lads\nand lassies, on their age old quest, to\nthe milking.\nThen comes a row of perhaps a doz.\nen or so houses low built of native\nGrey stone, with their slated roofs.\nEach with its little fenced In flower\ngarden ln front to the road and the\nlong strip of vegetable garden with\nthe pig hens at the foot behind, and\nalways everywhere pigeons, white fan\ntails, blue and red homers and strutting Jacoclns. On the other side of\nthe road tn splendid Isolation stands\nthe herds house, tts back to the hill\ncountry and the wide straw cover\nsheep folds that are such scenes of\nactivity ln February and March at\nthe lambing.\nOn every side lie the ftelds rapidly\nturning to a golden glow where the\noats, barley and wheat are ripening\nln the sun. The haying is past and\nthe great stacks stand like fragrant\ncastles ln the fields. It la the slack\ntime Just before the 'hatrat' when\nthe odd Jobs are being done. Tbe carta\nare being painted with the crudest of\nblue and red, yet lt blends ln the\nmellow sunshine. Binders are being\noverhauled and the harness looked\nto, while the big Clydea go lazy In\nth> partures. There Is no Idleness,\nyet there Is an air of leisurely breathing before the big labor of the harvest begins.\nIn the afternoon the 'Malster' has\nspoken to the steward, and the word\nhas gone round that this evening the\nworkers wlll be spoken to for the\ncoming year.\nIt Is an old farm, where the traditions, and customs have always been\nkept up, and so tonight the suppers\nand the milking are got over more cx<\npedloualy than usual.\nAlthough everything has been set'\ntied long ago there is an unusual air\nof expectency everywhere, for lt Is\nrumored that the herd la going to\nmove. Tonight there Is no meeting\nat the spring, everyone is at their own\nhouse. Tht guldman tending the\nyalrd, the guldwlfe sitting knitting at\nthe door, while the children play\naround the place a little more decorously than Is their wont. Only at the\nherds house Is the door shut and the\nyard empty.\nThe sun was beglhnlng to send Its\nlong shadows across the fields when\nthe malster came through the wicket\ngate opposite the pond, and stepped\nInto the road. He stood a minute gazing over the beauty of his land. Those\nfertile fields and then green hill pastures stretching up to where th-\nheaf - was already beginning to\nglow *.. all its royal purple on the\nhigher knolls, and away to where the\nblue line of the cheviots cut the gold\nsky. He could hear the singing of\nthe tevlot ln the glen as lt hurried to\nTweed and the gurgle of the burn ln\nthe cow field. He looked down the\ndusty road to the row of houses and\nlt seemed as lf he had suddenly grown\ntired. He knew them all so well. Tam,\na good man but hasty with horses.\nAlex a wizard with horses and cattle\nbut thrawn and Ul to get on with, and\nso on down the row till he came to\nthe herd. Bandy, Sandy the best herd\non Tevlot water, Bandy, whose father and grandfather had been herds\nhere before him. Sandy whom he remembered aa a laddie, going to school\nand starting to herd with his father,\nall his life he had known him, and\nnow Sandy waa going to leave. The\nold farmer's step lagged, he ir.d done\nthis so many years, and was growing\nweary. Jlmmle should have been doing this, Jimmy that two headed,\nbright eyed laddie ahould have been\ngoing down the row with a tow headed laddie of his own at hla aide, but\nJimmie was sleeping with so many\nmore border lads on the bloody slopes\nof Galllpoll.\nHe felt more tired. He could see\nagain the boy on the bicycle coming\nup the road. The orange colored envelope ln his hand. That orange colored envelope that held news that\nblotted out the sun and moon stars\nand made this fair land no more than\na deaert. Jlmmle, his Jlmmle would\nhave meen a middle aged man now\nwith\u2014Well, he must go on and the\nma'ster steadied himself and lighted\nhis pip?.\n(TO BE CONTINUED)\nThe Japanese wheat crop of this\nyear Is estimated at 44,491,150 bushels, so that the five-year p'an Instituted two years ago by the Jnanese\ngovernment to grow sufficient wheat\nfor domestic purposes seems to be almost attained ln the second year of\ntha attempt.\nCONTRACT\nBRIDGE\nBy E. V. Shepard\n-Teacher et Teaeken*\nA GOOD SHIFT\nA three no trumpa response to an\nopening bid Justifies showing a suit\nwhich no other response would make\nlegitimate, knowing that game must\nbe possible, either at one of the two\nsulta ahown or at no trumps. The\nshift afforda partner the opportunity\nto choose between the three possible\ncalls, aa Is nicely Illustrated by the\nhand today.\n\u2666 A54i\nf 10 2\n\u2666 Q 10$\naxfia\nao inn               at \u25a0\n\u00bbK Q98\nM.\n\u2022 76\n\u2666 A 65\n2   **\n\u2666 KJ9S\n410 6 4\ns.\nIt\n497 6\n4XIII\ntki Hi\n\u2666 4\n*AQI\nBidding went: South, one Hesrt;\nNorth, two no trumps, showing one of\ntwo things, something like three\nHearts to a Queen and better thRn\naverage honors held ln the hand, of\npoorer hearts and at least average\nhonors: South, three Spades, which he\nknows partner wlll not support upon\nfewer than four, Including an honor;\nNorth four Spades, ending the auction.\nThe hand was admirably played by\nSouth, obtaining maximum results.\nThe opening lead was the 10 of Clubs,\nwhich went to declarer's Ace. The\nthroe of trumps was led. West cover,\ned with the eight. Dummy's Ace won.\nThe six fell at declarer's right. Dun*.\nmy's 10 of hearts was led, finessed,\nand lost to West's Queen.\nThe return lead was the natural\none of the five of Clubs, as lt seemed\nas lf East held the missing Queen of\nClubs. The declarer won with that\ncard. To guard against accidents, and\ncounting upon the probability that\nthe missing trumps were held 2-1,\nSouth led the King of Spades, dropping all except the Queen without\nknowing which opponent held that\ntop trump.\nThe Ace of Hearts was led, Dummy\nruffed a low Heart. Dummy's King\nand Jack of Clubs were led. Upon the\nlast of those honors the declarer discarded his only Diamond. Of course\nthe holde- of the top trump could\nhave ruffed, but lt would have made\nthe same number of tricks which he\ndid anyway.\nAs West did not ruff, the declarer\nled a low Diamond and ruffed with\nhis nine. Dummy's last trump wss\nemployed to ruff next to last of\nclarer's Hearts, dropping West's King\not Hearts. South ruffed another of\ndummy's Diamonds, using his ' last\ntrump for that purpose. That was\nthe twelfth trick. South led his latt\nHeart, and West won the second defensive trick, by ruffing with his top\ntrump.\nAs may readily be teen, neither\nHearts nor no trumps would have\nbeen good calls. That three Spades,\nwhich few would dare bid on South's\nhand, worked wonders.\nWHAT  DO YOU THINK?\nAU letters to Uie editor must bt signed with the name of the\nwriter.   A nom de plume may be uaed for pubUctUon lf desired.\nMEN OF BRAINS?\nTbe Editor, Nelson Daily News,\nSir\u2014I hopa you will be kind enough to find room ln your paper for\nthis letter some time ln the near future. As I am dealing wltb some of\nthe things that the Hon. H. H. Steve, spoke on when he was In Nelson laat, and also with some Items\nthat I saw In the Dally News last\nweek, I would like this letter to get\nbefore tha public before they forget\nwhat I am writing about. The memory of the general public ia very short,\nas the provincial elections of the last\nfew months show very strikingly.\nI would like to have been at that\nmeeting when Mr. Stevens spoke. I\ncould, I feel sure, have aaked htm\nsome questions that he would have\nbeen hard put to anawer. That Is, tf\nhe answered them straight out, without any long winded evasions. You\ndon't think that an ordinary working stiff could trip up a man of\nbrains like Mr. Stevens? Is he a man\nof brains? Would the mesa that this\ncountry Is ln tend anyone to suppose that any of the members of the\npresent Dominion cabinet were men\nof brains? I think not.\nI would like to ask Mr. Stevens Just\nwhat his Marketing Act is going to\ndo. Is lt going to put money Into\nthe pockets of the consumer? If not\nwhere Is It going to help the producer?\nWhat these wise men of ours don't\nseem to be able to get through their\nhead*, is that as long as the consumer,\nthe buying public, the average working stiff, be he day-wage worker,\naalary worker or furmer, aa long as\nthese people are short of cash\u2014that\nIs buying power\u2014Just so long wlll\nthe producer be short of a market.\nAll the Marketing Acts and boards\nIn the world won't help the farmers\nof this country for one minute If they\ndo not raise tho price of farm produce.\nIf they raise the price of farm produce the consumer will be able to buy\nstill less and the farmer will be ln the\nsame hole aa he Is now.\nIf Mr. Btvena had spoken of cutting\nout the middleman\u2014the big produce-\nhandling companys\u2014I might think\nthat he was saying something, but he\ndid not, and I wouldn't believe him\nif be had, that would be Interfering\nwith Big Business and that Just can't\nbe done, not under this social system.\nAa for the great excess-profits probe\nthat the Dominion government pulled\noff\u2014and that hon. gentleman spoke\nof ao highly\u2014that's Just so much\naddltal expence for the taxpayers of\nthis country, and that's all.\nJust keep your eye on It, Mr. Editor,\nand Mr. General Public, and see If\nthey do anything to cut down the\nprofits of these big companies. Mr.\nStevena aald that they were handing\nthe whole thing over to a royal com-\nmlaslon I very much doubt that\nwe'll hear anything more about lt.\nI have yet to ltear of a royal commission either Publishing their findings or acting on them.\nIts for tha patch-work Socialism\nthat the \"Hon. H. H.\" and his par\nticular branch of tha lapotallatlc\nform of government are going to bring\nIn during the course of tha next five\nhundred years, wby even Mr. Stevens\nshould know that it would not work.\nThere are real economic reasons for\nthe failure of the old capitalistic\nmachine, and all the petty reforms\nthat Mr. Stevens and Mr. Bennett\nand our own \"Doubly Duff\"\u2014and all\nthe rest ot tbe well-payed servants\nof Sir Herbert Holt and tba rest of\nthe Big Fifty\u2014would dare to bring\ntn wmt help us ona step out of\nthe slough of ruin that we're sinking\ndeeper and deeper into all the time.\nAnd here ln British Columbia wa\nare to bring on prosperity by putting\n5000 families on the land. Five thousand city families on British Columbia stump farms. When the real farmers that are on farms already can't\nfind a market fo; what they growl\nCould anybody outside a home for\nthe blind, deaf, dumb and mentally\nmissing conceive of such an act of\ncroas stupidity? Could anybody? They\ncould\u2014ln the legislative halls of tha\nprovince of British Columbia.\nWe are going to' bring on lasting\nprosperity by developing our natural\nresources! Ho. And where are wo\ngoing to sell 'em? To a busted world\nthat's ln the same fix that wa'ra In?\nStarving In the midst of plenty because they cannot pay a profit on\nthat plenty.\nProducing for profit instead of for\nuse\u2014the road to degradation and wart\nJAS. T.  NIXON\nPerrys Siding. B.C., Aug. 91.\nThe general effect of the customs\nchanges ln the FIJI Islands Is to Increase the margin of preference to\nImports from Canada and other Empire countriea.\nTHE FEAR OF AILMENTS\nBY JAMES VV. BARTON, M.D.\nTravellers whose word wa can believe tell us that in varioua countries auch as Africa, and the South\nSea islands when a man learns\nthat he has been \"wished\" to death\nby soma one, he actually sickens\nand dies.\nA true story by Louis Becke, mentioned by Dr. Merrick Singleton,\nspeaks of the \"soul catchers\" of\nManaktkl island ln the South Pacific, A \"soul enarer\" waa a small\ncircle of cane about two Inches\nacross, with a fine network of fibre\nconstructed from the sides towards\nthe centre so as to leave a hole In\nthe middle large enough for a bee\nto crawl through, a man wishing\nto be revenged on an enemy would\nhang the snare from a tree In some\nplace where It, could be constantly\nwatched, scatter fragments of food\nbeneath It to attract Insects and\nawait developments, if a alngle tl)\ncrawled through the hole the enemy's soul waa ''snared\" and he was\nfated to die of a \"wasting\" sickness. Naturally when the news waa\nbrought to the victim that he was\ndoomed he beg:n to Imagine himself ill and ln all probability be\nwould die of a wasting illness because fright would upset all the\nbody process.\nIt is aald that this soul snaring\ncuatom la dying out with more en-\nltghtment of the natives, but It\nmust be admitted that there are\nmany In this civilized and en\nlightened ~\u00a3* who allow the fear of\ncertain ailments to actually causa a\nwasting disease that unless corrected ln time may actually causa\ndeath.\nThe fear of cancer, and of heart\ndisease has become a part of the\nvery life of some individuals and\nthey worry and waste away because\nof this fear. They are afraid to see\na physician because he may tell\ntham that they have the ailment of\nwhich they are afraid.\nNow it la possible that this \"fear\"\nhas been handed down ln the family, and ao the Individual la not altogether to blame tor lt. Oa the\nother hand the fear may bo due to\naome low Infection ln the system\u2014\nteeth, tonsils, constipation\u2014which\nhas taken the \"fight\" out of the\nindividual and left him a prey to\nfear.\nNaturally there is only one form\nof treatment for these fears, psychoses as they are called, and that la a\nthorough examination by the family physician.\nIf the feared condition \u2014 heart,\nlungs, kidney, stomach, bloodvessels\n\u2014doesn't exist, the fear can be\nbanished. If any organic condition\ndoes exist, early treatment and\nproper care, wlll prolong life.\nTEN YEARS AGO\n(From Nelson Dally News of Sept. 1,\n1924)\nMr. and Mrs. Clarence Shannon of\nWillow Point spent a few days ln\nNelson.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. W. A. Cameron of New\nDenver were vis'tors to Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nRoy Sharp and E. Murphy spent a\nfew days fishing at Orohman rapids.\n\u2022 a    \u2022\nMrs. McBeth was a guest of honor\nat the home of Mra. J. F. Croll when\n30 of her friends gathered to wish\nher farewell on the eve of her departure for the coast.\nSEEK FREE PUBLICITY\nA lot of good folks think that a\nnev\/spaper Is printed solely to offer a\nbillboard on which they may publish\ntheir Individual or collective Ideas\non this and the other thing. Now this\ntheory la all right up to the point\nwhere It conflicts with the Idea of\nwho pays the cost Of printing a newspaper. The advertisers and subscribers carry the load. But seekers for\nfree advertising and free publicity\ndon't care a hoot If they can catch an\noccasional newspaper asleep and get\nsome free space. A newspaper re-\ncel es enough propaganda to fill ever issue published. Theae publicity\nseekers don't contribute a dime to tbe\nexpense of printing a newspaper\u2014\nKlngavllle Reporter.\nPROBLEM FOR JEEVES\nP. G. Wodehorae, well known Brit-\nih author, has had a tax Hen filed\nagainst him ln the United States for\ne250.709\u20141133,826 original levy and\noenaltlea and interest of 1126.877.\nThla Is effective against the many\nroyalties he receives for the stories he\nsells across the line and his film\nright.   It looks aa If Jeeves   would\nhave to put on his thinking cap ln\ndead earnest to get the popular writer out of this attack on his bank account.\u2014Bran tford   Expositor.\nFOR DOORS\nB. C. Larch Panels\nare of beautiful\ngrain. They are\nhard and of smooth\nfinish.\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Co., Ltd.\nDistrict Distributors\nCUSHION SOCKET\nCOMFORT\nFOR OLD A NEW LIMN\nCaloirv Artificial Limb Factory\nCaloarv. Alta.\nRuptured!\nAfttr Handling Trusses many\nyears we have decided the\nUTTLE DOCTOR TRUSS\nIs the best on tha market, and Is the answer\nto all rupture sufferers. Neat, simple, efficient, no ateal to mat,\nno elastic, no pressure on the back or\nhips, no leg atrape,\nweight 6 oz. No matter how good your truss\nIs lf interested In the\nnewest and best, see\nthis one. Free demonstration. All\nwork done subject to your doctor's approval, unlimited free\nservice at any one of 200 Western Agents.\nWRITE TO\n5CHINDLER ARTIFICIAL\nLIMB CO.\n407 Sprague Ave., Spokane, Wash.\n\"BUILD B.C. PAYROLLS\"\nQuality\nMust Be\nAbove\nEverything\nWhile it Is ot the utmost importance to British Columbia to\nown as many payrolls and have\nhere as many hcadofficcs as possible, yet the quality ot the product is of still higher Importance,\nFrankly we urge your patronage\nof Pacific Milk but not on the\nground that it is locally owned\nand controlled but because it is\nacknowledged to have higher\nquality.\nPacific Milk\n'100% B.C. Owned and Controlled\"\nPLANT AT ABBOTSFORD\nModernize Your\nPlumbing Now-\nWhile Prices Art\nLow\nAre yoa content with\nobsolete plumbing fixtures? Do you feel that\nyou should apologize\nwhen friends call? Why\nnot modernize now?\nConsult us without\n,   obligation.\nKOOTENAY\nPlumbing & Heating\nCompany, Limited\nCAMP SUPPLIES\nWe are headquarters for\nMINERS* AND CAMPERS' SUPPLIES\nTENTS, PACK SACKS, SLEEPING ROBES,\nTHERMOS BOTTLES, CAMP COTS, CAMP\nCHAIRS, DRINKING CUPS, PICNIC SETS,\nETC, ETC.\nPRICES RIGHT\nNelson Hardware Co*\nWholesale and Retail Quality Hardware\nNELSON, B.C.\n \u00bb_3\nJACOBS AND PALFREY WIN\nTrack and Field - Fishing - Motor Boating - Boxing - Wrestling - Swimming - football\nHelen Jteobs, Sarah Ptlfrey bttt Ctrolln Btbcoek, Dorothy Andrut.       PAGE SEVEN\nlaila\n^tiw\nBaseball - Softball - Tennis - Lacrosse - Rowing - Golf - Lawn Bowling - Rugby, Etc.\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.-SATURDAY MORNING, SEPT. I, 1934\nMARVIN NELSON IS AGAIN THE\nWINNER OF BIG TORONTO SWIM\nOnly\nr>\u00abA  fit   C\/iw\/M\u00bb;fae    NBMOVS  TIME GOO!)\n\\jr\\*t aVOi   fe&      His time wm considered good In\nview of the cold water. Tor a time\ntoday Indefinite postponement of the\nPllinnP ,wlin WM r\u00b0ni'l<l',red when the water\nnunyc registered four degrees short of the\n62 stipulated In the entry forms.\nElwood Hughes, exhibition general\nmanager, however, hit on the scheme\nof calling off the swim snd then\nsubstituting another with Identical\nconditions, but with no hampering\nwater temperature condition. The\nswimmers agreed snd the race was\nstarted an hour late at noon. It had\nbeen postponed Wednesday and\nThursday.\nIt was estimated 75.000 persons\nsaw the swim but there was never\nmore than 40,000 lining the mile-long\ncourse at one time. All they could\nsee were swimmers' heads bobbing\nabout ln the water but thousands of\nthem stayed for the whole eight-\nhour show.\nto Finish Cold\nIS THIRD TIME\nHE HAS WON IT\nYoung, Garnbi, and\nBlogden Fail to\nFinish\nBy A. E. Bl ITORT)\nran ad lan  Press Staff Writer\nLAKE FRONT, Toronto, Aug. 31\n(CP)\u2014Marvin Nelson won the Csnsdlsn National exhibition marathon\nfor the third time tonight, notwithstanding an original field of, 90 long\ndistance natators who plunged Into\nley Lake Ontario ln search of IS000\nfirst money and the world championship.\nThe giant Ford Dodge. Iowa, swimmer crawled to wins In 1630 and 1033\nand Is the only one to have finished\non top more than once.\nNelson swam the 15 miles ln seven\nhours  snd   46   minutes,  slmost  48\nminutes more thsn he took in winning lsst year In 7 hours and 37\n\u00bbseconds.\n\"Singing Bill\" Ooll of New York\nfinished in second place, more than\nthree-quarters of a mile behind Neleon. His time was eight hours and 13\nminutes, 27 seconds.\nJohnny Cairo, young Italian of Toronto, unknown ln big time swimming circles, battled cold and exhaustion to finish ln. third place, one\nof the most startling upsets of the\nmarathon record.\nDan Eemblckt,'JEast Windsor, Ont.,\nathlete, came in fourth followed by\nBill Badlo of Corona. NT., who\ncrawled from the water after 10\no'clock, more than 10 hours after\nthe start.\nThe big Port Dodge natator has\nearned himself 190,000 In his three\nvictories, $10,000 ln 1030, 95000 lant\nyear snd I5O0O for his triumph today. No other swimmer haa ever captured the crown even twice and Nelson's three-time win marked him sb\nwithout a peer ln this field of athletics.\nNelson finished Just as strongly aa\nhs had swum all day. Re kept up\nhis steady stroke of 02 to the minute\nand when he pulled himself onto\nthe finish float showed no signs of\ndistress. He said the water was \"Just\nright.\" slthough it was cold all day,\nfluctuating between 56 and 60 degrees.\nNelson, wore a brosd smile sa\nphotographera went to work on him.\nHe told the news reel men he was\n\"a real Turin.\"\nNelson was the only one of the\nhalf doxen swim faiorltes to finish. George Young of Toronto and\nPhiladelphia, heavily backed to win\nbecause of the cold water, was\npulled out ln the sixth mile.\nn 1MB!  PULLED  OLT\nGianni Oambl of Italy, who had\nled until Young took command wm\npulled out before the 1931 winner,\nOeorge Blagden of Memphis, Tenn.,\nrIbo well thought of, went the way of\nthe rest of them who found Lake Ontario's water too tough.\nNelaon was coached by Johnny\nWalker, who has piloted more champions than anyone else.\nHe held back among the pack until the eighth mile when he moved\nup ahead of Johnny Cairo of Toronto.\nIn command at the time.\nThe champion was 15th at the first\nmile, llth at the second, eighth st\nthe third, fifth at, the fourth and\nfifth, and third at tha sixth. He\nthen moved up Into second place and\nafter Uklng the lead stayed on top.\nBURGESS\nsuSERRADI0\n..BATTERY,,\nYOU  WlU  ENJOY\nBETTER RECEPTION\nAND   HAVE   Mwt,    \u00abANH*l'*i  1*0  IKY\nIUSGESS   IGNITION   S ATIf Sll S\nBlJKGEJ!   CSV   dill,  LID,\n\u2022\"jm,l\u00ab   IATT[\u00bbV   (OMSaNV\nOur Trucks\nARE AT\nTour Service\nFOR\nCOAL ...\nWOOD ...\nSAND ...\nGRAVEL...\nPHONE 797\nRENWICKS\nTransfer\n\/\nAl Swaps a Couple\nof Golf Yarm\nThe \"Ninnahl\nMARVIN NELSON\nHs took $5000 and the Toronto\nmarathon swim for third time yesterday.\nSecond Place\nBILL GOLL\nBill Goll of New York,\nquarters of a mile behind.\nthree-\nAlso Swam\n\/#Sm*wt*A*m\nBy At DBMAMB\nOsbhy Harnett of tbe Cubs tells\nt good golf yarn on Loo warneke.\nThey were playing at the T\u00bbm\nO' shanter oolf club nesr Chicago\nand Wsrneke spent most of his time\nlu the rough. After the gime Gabby\nnuked Lon's caddy how he plsyed\n\"Well\", wld the boy, \"the rough\nJust naturally seems to be Mister\nwarneke's bome addreaa!\"\nGene Conley, rfabe Ruth's close\nfriend and golfing 'partner, recently\nhat* a chance to break \"eighty\" for\nthe first time st the North Shore\nCountry club near Chicago with two\nflvea needed on the 17th and 18th\nfor it 7(, Gene blew up and took\na 9 and 10 and then his partner\nadded Insult to Injury by accusing\nhim ot padding his score ln order\nto keep from lowering his club\nhandicap.\nGIANTS TAKE\nDODGERS, 2-1\nCards Move Into Tie\nin Second Place\nWith Cubs\nBROOKLYN. *t. Y., Aug. ll (AH\n\u2014New York Olants resumed their\npennant drive In the east today by\ndefeating Brooklyn Dodgers 2-1 in\nthe opener of a three gsme series.\nFred Flteslmmons allowed five hits\nln winning his 17th.game of the\nseason.\nNew  York    3   \u00bb   1\nBrooklyn    18   1\nFltj-slmmona and M'nnwo and Lopes, Berres,\nDIZZY DEAN SHINES\nCHICAGO. Aug. 31 (AP)\u2014Dlusy\nDean conquered his season's Jlns\ntodsy to win his 33rd victory of the\nseaaon and pitch St. Louis Cardinals\nInto a tie with Chicago Cubs for\nsecond place ln the National league\nstanding. Largely because of Desn's\npitching, the Cards won the opener\nof the series 3-1.\nSt.  Louis  ... ..'.    S   10   I\nChlcigo       1    6   I\nDean and Delancey: Tinnlnu,\nWeaver, Bush and Phelps, Hartnett\nOnly two gamea scheduled.\nmky\nGEORGE YOUNG\nPulled out at sixth mile\nGerrard Through\nas Maroon Boss\nMONTREAL. Aug. 31 (CP)-Msn-\nagement of the Montreal Maroona of\nthe National hockey league announced todsy that Eddie Oerard has\nresigned aa manager of the team. A\nsuccessor wlll be appointed within\na few days. .\nAmerican Association\nMlnn-pup-niir*\nnninr*1*\nGEORGE BLAGDEN\nCouldn't, lake It, either.\nROSS THUS\nOUT LOUD SAYS\nVancouver Boy Says\nIs Stronger, Faster\nThan Last Time\nCONFIDENT WILL\nDEFEAT MR. ROSS\nSays He Deserved Tie\nat Least in Last\nBattle\nBy  BOB  CAVAONARO\n(A.iMM-lated Press Sports Writer).\nORANGEBURG, NY., Aug. SI \u2014\n(AP). \u2014 Jimmy McLarnin took a\nbusman's holiday today and talked about the assault he wlll make\non Barney Roas's welterweight champlonahlp dynaaty nest Thuraday.\nThe 36-year-old Vancouver belter\nwas given the day off after going\nthrough a strenuous progrsm Thuredsy. It wasn't exactly , day nf\nrest because he arose st his cus*\ntomary hour\u2014seven a.m.\u2014and galloped over three miles of country\nroads with Trslner Charley Schoene-\nman.\nLater McLarnin  and  Schoenrnian\nset out on a 10-mile walk.\nNEVER  SO  YOUNG\n\"I never felt eo young In all my\nlife,\" said the young veteran of 10\nyears of ring warfare, aa he relaxed\nln hla cottage a half mile from\nOus Wilson's training camp.\nJimmy was reminded thst Ross\nnot only expects to retain the title\nhe lifted from Jimmy but anticipates doing It by a knockout.\n\"If Barney wants to think out\nloud, It's okay with me,\" he smiled.\n\"Barney's a great fighter but I'm\ngoing to prove I won the last tight.\nThe worst break I should have gotten was a draw.\"\nAT   DISADVANTAGE\nJimmy aald be was at a great\ndisadvantage when he met Ross lut\nMay. The two fighters had a private\nagreement that McLarnin was not\nto weigh more than 145 pounds.\nThe resonslblllty of complying with\nthe weight requirement preyed heavily on bis mind and he weighed\n-Vt pounds under the limit.\n\"I wasn't over-eondent in my laat\nfight,\" he declare. \"The trouble was\nhaving to make 148 pounds. We\nhave no such agreement this time\nand I'll be at leaat 146 pounds\nwhen we meet next Thuredsy night.\n\"I'll be stronger. Ill be a much\nfaster fighter, too, with a lot more\nendurance. I've changed my road\nwork. In the past I'd merely trot\nfor three or five miles. But for the\npast couple of weeks I've been alternating trotting with sprinting\nevery half mile.\"\nEVERYTHING READY\nFOR THE REGATTA\nLaunch Club Float Fixed Up;\nAlso* Judges Stand and\nLoud Speakers\nEverything Is in readiness for the\nNelson Launch club regatta to be\nstaged on Labor day here. Boat owners are working late at nights to get\ntheir boats ln ahape for the races\nand they stated that when the races\nbegin they wlll have tbelr enginea ln\ntip-top shape.\nLaunch elub offlclala have been\nbuay fixing up the Launch club float\nwhich they estimate wlll seat 300\npeople. All races wlll sUrt and stop\nIn front of this float. They have also\nrigged up a Judges' atand and there\nwill be loud speakers installed to\nassist the fans In following each\nmove closely.\nFIVE NELSON GIRLS\nREADY FOR SPORTS\nUndergoing Extensive Training for Labor Day\nMeet\nPlve Nelion glrlt are undergoing\n\u2022xtenslve training for the big Labor\nday track and field meet here Monday,\nand Judging from their ihowlng in\npractice teutons, Nelton la going to\nmake a my,ch better thowlng In the\nfeminine section of the racet and\nJumping events then tn recent years.\nLettle fleet, Jean Rarrtny. Bertha\nMolr and Alice Ounn are all entered\nln the 100 yards dean and wlll compose the Nelson relay team agalnat\nthe fsst aggregation lineup by Trail.\nAria Baare Is the fifth entry and wlll\ncompete In the htgh and broad Jumpa.\nLettle Fleet and Alice Dunn are alto\nentered ln tbe high and broad Jumping events.\nOne of the mott promising of the\nlocal girl athletes is Bertha Molr,\n13-year-old youngster who many are\npredicting, aa the future British Columbia champion ln the 100-yard\ndash.\nINTERNATIONAL\nLEAGUE\nBuffalo  fl,   Montreal   b\nRochester 3, Toronto 3.\nPAGE SEVEN   The Rainbow, newest eup defence candidate, wine riee against nine.\n_-_-______-\u2022\u00bb_\nTrail Man and His Cap\nRAINBOW WILL\nDEFEND USA.\nYACHT CROWN\nHas Third Victory\nOver Yankee by\nSlim Margin\nFACES ENDEAVOUR\nON SEPTEMBER 15\nMillionaires Finance\nthe Rainbow With\nModern Devices\nh. S. Piper of Trail, B.C. (left)\nholding the Willingdon cup, trophy\nfor the men's handicap event in the\nannual tournament over Banff\nSprings hotel golf course. He defeated N. R. Des Brisay. V'innipeg,\nin the final match. Miss Jean _.\nMcMillan of Calgary (right) has\njust won the Associated Screen\nNews cup offered for women's\nhsndicap golf during golf week at\nBanff in the Canadian Rockies. She\ndefeated Miss Margaret Levi, New\nYork, J and 2. Below is the Spray\nriver, the first water hazard of the\nmile-high course.\nHOME RUNS IN\nBiG TIME\nBy the Associated Press\nHome runs yesterday\u2014 Hartnett,\nCuba laazerl, Yankees, one each.\nThe leaders\u2014Oehrlg, Yankees. IT.\nPoxx, Athletics, 38; Ott. Olants, Si:\nCollins, Cardinals, 30; Berger. Braves,\n30.\nLeague totals\u2014American 890, National US. Total 1188.\nLAZZERI CUTS\nTIGERS'LEAD\nSlams Homer to Move\nYankees Up in\nStanding\nNIW YORK, Aui. 31 (AP).\u2014Tony\nLeraerl swung hie wooden axe today and chopped a half game right\noff the lead Detroit Tigers hold\nover New York Yankees ln the\nAmerican league pennant race.\nThe one swing, a home run wallop ln the second Inning, decided\na mound duel between Charley (Red)\nBuffings, and Jack Ruaeel, sendln!\nthe Yanks off to their second\nstraight victory over Washington,\n3-1.\nTile Yankee victory, coupled with\nDetroit's Idleness, reduced the Tiger\nlead  to 4'i   games.\nWashington    '   \u2022   \u2022\u2022\nNew   York    3   \u00ab   0\nRussell, Thomas and Bolton:\nRuffing and Jorgens.\nSOX   BEATEN\nST. LOUIS. Aug. 31 (AP).\u2014St.\nLoula Browne took the openln.\ngame of the serlea from Chicago'!\nWhite Sox today, 3-3. with an llth\nInning  rally.\nChicago     3 10   0\nSt. Loula  ' 14   1\nTletje and Shea; Blaeholder. An-\ndrewa, Coffman and Qrube.\nOnly two games echeduled.\nFINAL CRICKET STANDING\nLONDON, Aug. 31\n(CP cable) .-The\nfinal county cricket c\nlamplon-\nship table for the season is as\nfollows:\nTeams:  , \u25a0           W\nL\nWFl\nLFI\nNR.\nPts.\nPct.\nLancashire  13\n3\n10\n4\n0\n257\n57.11\nSussex        12\n2\n7\n8\n1\n243\n54.00\nDerby        12\n6\n6\n3\n1    '\n223\n53.09\nWarwick     9\n4\n4\n4\n2\n175\n50.72\n\u2022Yorkshire     12\n7\nS\n4\n2\n225\n50.00\nKent   12\n7\n6\n5\n1)\n225\n50.00\nGloucestershire     . 12\n9\n2\n4\n2\n210\n48.27\nEssex         9\n4\n9\n9\n1\n191\n45.47\nNottinghamshire      8\n7\n7\n6\n0\n173\n41.19\nMiddlsex     8\n9\n7\n2\n2\n169\n40.23\nSurrey            6\n8\n9\n3\nn\n144\n36.92\nLeicestershire    6\n9\n3\n6\n0\n183\n34.16\n26.94\nGlamorganshire . .   3\n8\n5\nS\n3\n97\nHants    4\n11\nA\n5\n1\n104\n24.76\nSomerset       3\n10\n0\n11\n0\n78\n21.66\nWorcestershire     .3\n12\n8\n9\n1\ntl\n21.66\nNorthants    2\n17\n3\n2\n0\n51\n14.16\n'\u2014Champion county last season, average 70.00\niiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin\nFACTS OF SWIM\nBRIEFLY TOLD\nWins Handicap at\nCoast\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 31 (CP). -\nLancelot, vrtth the veteran Eddie\nTapUn up, came Irom behind with\na terrific burst of speed to nip\nMedallion and Parlsienne at the\nwire and win the handicap on today's program at Hastings park.\nMedallion finished second ond\nParlsienne third.\nApprentice Stucki added three\nmore winners to his string today besides piloting two seconds and a\nthird. He brought Nosegay home in\nfront in the sixth to set a new\ntrack record of 1.53 2-5 for the mile\nBaseball's Big Six\nHeinle Manush and Bill Terry exchanged places in the Big Six standing yesterday, Manush going into\nthird place, while Al Simmons\ndropped out of the sextet after a\nday in a fourth-place tie.\nManush collected two hits in four\ntimes up, sending his average up a\npoint to .356 while Terry's one blow\nIn four attempts lowered his mark\nby one point. Simmons also hit one\nout of four, dropping a point behind Charley Gehringer, the third\nAmerican league entry. Lou Gehrig\nand Mel Ott each went to the plate\nwithout getting a blow, dropping\ntwo points a piece.\nThe standings*.\nG AB R H Pet.\nP. Wancr. Pirts. 121 501 102 184 .367\nGehrig, Yanks 127 492 108 179 .364\nManush. Sens.. 116 461 78 165.358\nGchingcr. TiRF. 12(1 496 118 177 .357\nTtm, Giants 126 490 102 175 .357\nOtl, Giants        126 48(1 104 168 .360\nLAKE PRONT. Toronto, Aug.\n31 (CP)\u2014finishers ln today's\nCanadian Natlonil exhibition\nlfi-mlle swim, with their times\nand prlae money wer**:\n1\u2014Marvin Nelson, Fort Dodge,\nlows, 7:\u00ab\u00ab, 15000.\n2\u2014Bill Ooll, New York, 8:13.\n11500.\n3 \u2014 Johnny Cslro, Toronto,\n8:46:16 |700.\n4\u2014Dsn Demblckl, East Windsor, Ont., \u00bb:39:37, 1500.\n5\u2014Bill Sadlo, Corona, N. Y.,\n9:58:06, 120(1.\nSixth price of 1100 was not\nclaimed as only live finished,\nIllllllllllllU'lllllllllllllllllllllllimil: I\nGOLF\nFACTS\nNOT THEORIES!\nBY ALEX MORRISON\nVE\nERTICALf\nLS-f\nPosition\nBEST\nFOP\u2014\nbalance!\njaa\nPERRY PICKED\nRETAIN TITLE\nWood to Be Strongest\nThreat in Ranks of\nU.S.A. Players\nFOREST HILLS. N Y., Aug. 81\n(AP)\u2014Frederick J perry, British\nDavis cup hero and world's ranking\nNo. one tennis plsyer, wu made\nan outstanding favorite today to\ndefend successfully the united States\nmen's singles championship, starting tomorrow, deeplte aome evidence\not marked Improvement ln ths\nhomebread ranks.\nPerry's chief opposition may come\nfrom the giant Ctechoaloveklan,\nRoderick Menaei, second \"seeded\"\nInvading contender. Meniel la la\nthe opposite balf of the draw. Last\nvear f*erry beat Jack Crawford of\nAustralia to lift the title.\nSidney B. Wood, jr., of New York,\nalthough \"seeded\" only third among\nthe American Players, behind Frsnk\nX. Shields and Wllmer Allison, is\ngenerally picked by the \"rsllblrds\"\nto mske the strongest title bid of\nthe home guard.\nEngland's newest monster locomotive Is designed for spectacular power\nand speed In hill climbing.\nNEWPORT. B.I., Aug. il (CP)\u2014\nHarold vanderbilt't Rainbow was\ncbosen tonight as the defender of\nthe America's cup against tbe\nBritish challenger, t.o.M. gop-\nwKh's Endeavor,\nTbe International rlsm-ir gets\nunderway Sept. 15.\nRainbow's selections, announced\nby the New York Yacht club,\nctme after she had scored ber\nthird successive vtctory over Tankee of Boston, sailed by Charles\nFrancis Adams, former U. 8. navy\nsecretary, In the flnsl selection\ntrials.\nRainbow's third victory today wu\nby the slim margin of one second,\nthe closest finish ln the history ot\nracing so far u America's cup trial,\nflnsl or cup competition Is concerned.\nYankee had entered the final trials\na prime favorite for the nomination, due to her top heavy string\nof victories over Rainbow In the earlier aeries.\nHowever, bad luck took up lta\nabode over the Boeton boat after\nthe final series begun. Earlier th\nthe week abe waa forced to drop out\nwhile leading Rainbow by a mishap\nto ber rigging.\nRainbow waa financed by t group\nof millionaires, it, it bu been reported, and Is equipped with a metal\nmut, bending boom snd sll aorta\nof mechanical devloee. Four yesrs ago\nVanderhllt sailed Enterprise to victory over Shemroek V, the 1st* Sir\nThomu Upton's last green challenger.\nHAMILTON WINS\nOLASOOW, Aug. 31 (CP cable)\u2014\nHamilton Academicals defeated Alrdrleonlana 6-0 ln a twilight fixture\nof the Soottlah Soccer league, tint\ndivision tonight.\nHogs graded ln Canada during tbe\n33 weeks of 1934, up to August 9, totalled 1483,717, u against 1.B68.W1\nIn the corresponding period of 1983.\nGIVE THE\nLADIES A\nBREAK\nON LABOR DAY\nGive your wife or mother a real holiday for a\nchange with a delicious\ndinner at the Golden\nGate\u2014\nOur Chef promises one\nof his extra special holiday  dinners.  So  be  a\nsport \u2014 She'll really\nappreciate it.\nOS\nOLDEN\nATE CAFE\nECONOMY\nYOU pay no price-premium when you\nute Castrol, the world's finest motor\noil, In your car, because Castrol Is tha\nIOWEST-COST-PER-MILE motor oil sold\ntoday, long-lasting Castrol glvu you\nhundreds of miles of smooth running\naftar ordinary oils are \"worn out\"\u2014protects your car and your purse. Why not\ntry thlt superfine all-British ECONOMY\noil In your car now?\nNo matter how often I call for\nquestions following my lecture-demonstrations, there's alwaya some indlvidusl who grsbs me as I'm hurrying back to the theatre or my nest\nappointment, and he usually expects a lengthy answer.\nThe other day I wja asked what\nleg opsltlon I conaldered best for\nbalance, a alantlng position or a vertical one. Having time only for\na short answer I simply pointed to\na pillar supporting a beam In the\ncelling snd explained that the build-\ners found the vertical posltlona,\nnot the slanting one, best to support weight snd therefore the most\ndesirable for balance.\nI added that, like tho pillar, the\nIt. supportln*** most of the body\nweight should be \u00bb\u00bb nenr \u00bb vcrll-\ncal position m yeu cin keep It.\n^tMU**m     WAKEFIELD      \u00a3\\\n(ostrol\n\u2014Sold by\u2014\nSMEDLEY GARAGE CO., Nelson\nTRAIL GARAGE, TraU\nWESTERN AGENCIES LTD., Distributors, VANCOUVER\n \t\nIWe\n\u25a0THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C\u20148ATURDAY MORNINO, SEPT. 1. 1M4-\n% Cussif ied Section where buyer Neiler meet\nMember of the Canadian Daily\nNewspapers Association\nTELEPHONE 144\nPrivate Exchange connecting to\nill Departments\nII111II11 Ill III 11 IS I \u25a0 J111II1111 c\nCLASSIFIED\nADVERTISING\nRATES\nlie a lint\nMinimum 2 llnu\n2 lines, one*  $ il\n. lines, onu     ~3\n4 lints, once     .44\n2 lines, \u00ab times    M\n3 llnes,\u00abtlmes  1.32\n4 lines,\u00abtimet  1.76\n2 lints, 1 month  ZM\n3 llnet, 1 month  92*3\n4 lines, 1 month  6,72\nAll above less 16% for prompt\nptyment.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nSubscription Rates\nSingle copy  $  ,05\nBy carrier, per week _ 25\nBy carrier, -per year,      . 13.00\nBy mail in Canada, to subscribers living outside regular\ncarrier areas, per month, 60c:\nthree months, $1,80; six months,\n$3.00; one year, $8.00.\nUnited States and Great Britain, one month, 79c: six months,\n$4.00; one year, $7.50.\nForeign countries, ether than\nU.S., aame as above plug any\nextra postage.\nLEGAL\nIN THE MATTER OF THE BANKRUPTCY OF HARRY R. MAIN-\nDRE1.1, A ELMER A. TITStt'OITH.\nTRADING LNDER THE NAME OF\nIHE M. ti T. MARKET, NELSON,\nB.C.\nNOTICE TO CREDITORS OF FIRST\nNotice Is hereby given that Hsrry\nR. Maundrell and Elmer A. Tltsworth\ntrading under the name of the\nM lis T. Market. Nelson, B C. hsve\nbeen adjudged bankrupt on the 4th\nday of August. 19*14. and that the\nflrat meeting of creditors will be\nheld on the 8th day of September.\n1934. at the hour of 11 o'clock In\nthe forenoon at the Court House,\nNelaon, B. C.\nTo vote thereat, proofs of clalma\nand Proxies must be filed with me\nprior thereto.\nThose having claims against the\nEstate must file the same with the\nCustodian or the Trustee when appointed before distribution is made,\notherwise the proceeds of the instate will be distributed amont the\nparties entitled thereto without regard to such claims.\nDated at Slocan City. B. C, this\n38th dsy of August.  1934.\nD. ST. DENIS,\nCustodian.\nAddress  of custodian:\nBox 596 Nelsoh, B. C,\nor Blocan City, B. C. (3860'\nPersonal\nMARRY-INTRODUCTIONS BY PRI-\nvote letters. New ayatem, hundreds\nof lady membera. Farmer*, daughters, teachers, nuraes and wldowa\nwith property Many wealthy membera. Particulars 10c. Canadian\nCorrespondence Club. Bo*. 138. Cul-\n_gary, Alta.              13763)\nBEACH'S FORMULA. KILLS DAND-\nruff. trows hair rapidly: 1ars tl.\ntrial site 35c. Mall orders postpaid\nL. & B. Beach, scalp specialists\n733 Granville St. Vancouver,\n(3653)\nAN OFFER TO EVERY INVENTOR.\nUat of wanted Inventions and ful)\nformation sent tree Tbe Ramsay\nCompany, world Patent Attorneys\n373 Bsng Strest. Ottawa. Canada.\n(3612)\nPRIVATE HOME KINDEROARTENB\npay. We atart you. Tht Canadian\nKindergarten Inatitute, Dept. 13.\nWinnipeg. (8644)\nOENT DESIRES TRANSPORTATION\nto Macleod. Share expenses. Box\n3838, Dally News.   (3838)\nWEALTHY LADY WISHES TO\nmarry. Elite\u2014Box 95, Toledo, Ohio.\n138591\nEcwma Itch Piles Ulcers. Try Geo. Lee's\nChins Remedy st Hudson's Bay Co\n(3502)\nHelp Wanted\nTRUTH IN ADVERTISING\nThe Nelson Daily News endeavors to print only truthful classified advertising and will appreciate having its attention called\nto iny advertising not conforming to the highest standards of\nhonesty.\nOut-of-town subscribers ,vho\nwish to answer advertisemeijls\nin which only the telephone\nnumber of the advertiser is\ngiven, may mail their replies to\nthe Nelson Daily News, and they\nwill be communicated to the\nadvertiser.\nRoom and Board Agents Wanted\nROOM AND BOARD FOR HIGH\nschool tin In return for light\nservices. Apply 324 Observatory\n\u2022tract. i3037l\nTWO   OIRL   STUDENTS.    REASON-\nable rates,, near  High  school. 923\nCarbonate street or Box 775, Nelson\n13786)\nFOR   TWO   HIGH   SCHOOL   BOYS.\nnear    achool.     reasonable     rates.\nPhoue 632R. or Box 986. Nel'on.\n _         _ (3765)\nSCHOOL  GIRL.  EXCHANGE  LIGHT\nservices and cash for room, board.\nBox 3820. Dilly News. (38291\nROOM AND BOARD IN RETURN FOR\nlight service**. Apply Box 990. Nel-\naon or phone 792R3, i3810)\nWILL   BOARD   SCHOOL   OIRL.   \u00bb2\"\nper month. Good care. Box 3868,\nDally News. 138681\nFor Rent-Houses, Etc.\nLARGE CLEAN ROOM CLOSE IN.\nsuitable for housekeeping privileges,   very   reasonable.   Apply   615\n_Carbonate_Bt.   (3799)\nFOR   RENT\u2014DESIRABLE   5   ROOM\nbungalow,  newly renovated. Close\nIn. APPly Box 3808. Dally News.\n(3808)\nREUABLE MAN TO TAKE CARE\nstore route Distribute snd collect.\nNew Product, protected territory. I\nEarn excellent, weekly Income.\nBeriand Nut Co.. St. Paul, Minn.\n(38631\n7 ROOM HOUSE AND TWO FOUR\nroom houaea cloae ln. Apply D.\nMagllo.   Phone   808L, (3733)\nWOMEN WANTED TO BBW FOR US\nat home, sewing machine necessary. No selling. Ontario Neckwear\nCompany, Dept. 292, Toronto 8.\n ^__ _   (3846)\nMAN TO WORK ON DAIRY FARM!\nmust be good milker. |15 per mon.\nsnd bosrd. Box 3835, Dally News.\n(3825)\nEXPERIENCED GIRL. USED TO\nchildren, apply >i own hand wrlt-\nlllg. Box 1148, Nelaou, 13803)\nHOW TO GET A GOVERNMENT\nlob. jwe Booklet. The M. C. C.\nltd,, Winnipeg.    (38431\nr.\nKING COBRA\nByMARKCHAmiXG\nWho hu Uved for twenty-one year, ln the country\nthat he so graphically describes. '\nAll Gray's effort* to get tnt-p communication with tbe blind prisoner\nhad failed. After bis Jailer and the\nescort bad gone, be tried shouting to\nhim but there was no answer. There\nwas no response when he called \"Gal-\nbrilth!\" with all the force of his\nlungs.\nSome hours later he thought he\nheard the blind man crying out; but\nthe sound became merged with the\nlaughter of the hyenas and the noises\nof other wild beasts.\nOn the heap of filthy straw which\nserved him as a bed Colin Gray aat\nstaring Into the inky darkness, wondering how lt would all end.\nSuddenly be lifted his head\u2014listening.\nDown the stone-flagged passage\nwtre coming nailed sandals. Three\nmen. he Judged. This time he was\ngoing to know where they were Uklng him before hed consent to move\na step. If he were shot for lt\u2014well,\nhe'd be apared what poor Galbralth\nhsd endured.\nGroping for a metal dlah he had\nfnuM in a corner of the cell, and the\nedge of which he had started to rub\nto sharpness on the stone floor, he\ntook up his stand near the door.\n. As It was flung open, the light of\nthe torch dazzled dbdlm, and lt was\nsome moments before he could see\nthat the two guards wbo accompanied the assistant-keeper of The Cobra's beasts were leaning against the\nopposite wall of the corridor, their\nrifle butts resting upon the flags.\nEvidently, something to hla advantage must have, happened ln the world\noutside, for their attitude betokened\na peaceful mission.\nGray found hla attention drawn to\ntbe crippled, twisted torchbearer*\nSlowly the mpn'i eloquent gaze dropped to an orange he was holding.\n\"You are to be freed,\" be said. \"I\ngive you congratulations\u2014-and this.\nIt will refresh you.\"\nAs he handed htm ths orange, the\nJuice of it wet the Englishman's fingers, and he knew lt had been cut.\n\"Eat, lt\u2014 slowlyl\" aald the gaoler,\nstressing the lsst word. \"It Is not\ngood for the heslth to eat some fruits\nquickly!\"\nGray stretched himself. Wise ln\nthe ways of the east, he knew better\nthan to show too soon that he had\nunderstood. Nor did he ask any questions. Maybe the orange contained a\nkey or a phlel of poison. It certainly\nheld some secret.\n\"I would like to return your kindness. Although I know not wbere I\ngo,\" he went on, glancing at the orange aa he spoke the words, \"lf you\nwill come to me, wherever I be, I wlll\ngive you\u2014payment!\"\nThe cripple nodded. He had understood.\n\"Give the reward to my mother!\"\nhe said meajjLngly. \"I will tell ber. It\nwill mean more to her; for I eat not\ntruiM\"\nAnd turning, he started to lead the\nway to the upper air.\nArrorapanled only by the escort,\nGray was conducted to the great door\nof tbo palsce, where In the center of\nthe many-pillared hall, stood a raoun-\n,talnously fat roan dressed in a long\ngown of flowered white material. He\nwas apparently awaiting Oray's arrival, hla pudgy hands were folded\necross his paunch.\nPesp?etfully Obesity saluted the\nft-prlMner, r-nitlnlrlng btm with\ncroalt. Tilck eyes set ln cushions cf\nps-t fa'\n\"Of your ktndnfss r*** pleased to\nf\"*\\\\n-*> this worthl*ss slave!'' he ssld\nebs?qulouflr, and started to lead the\nway.\nBefore a floor, tn front of whl\u00ab\"h wss\na gigantic Nubian sentry holding a\nnalf*fl scimitar, jafflr halted\n\"B: r^i^d\" \u25a0' *nt\u00bbr\" .Jafflr was\nstill obsequious.\nThsy wsra now in a aet of apartments the prgeousnese of which\nGray hr.d never Imagined In this ancient walled pile of domes and minarets. ' Evidently tbe palace bad been\nbu'lt in the time of the crusadea\u2014\nanl under the influence of Moorish\nart\n\"My lord will br pleased to unrobe!\nThe Khan sahib has ordered that ev-\nf-yth ng vou n r-h shall be given to\ntw!\"   Au'l.   b^?inf!  profoundly,  the\nt h>rn,\n|l^m*'r\u00bbt\u00ab]y y-- fmjnd himself ileal\n\u00a3!\u25a0-- \u00ab -7t* *>*\u2022>*-<,_ tu* orange and took1\nout the folded, Juice-sodden paper,\nwith difficulty deciphering the writing.\n\"This ts from Diana Lindsay, daughter of the English Resident ln Labak.\nI am ln grave danger. Is a rescue\nforce in its wsy? Who are you?\nD.L.\"\nFor a moment the thought of Dl\nana's nearness held him spellbound.\nThen came reaction. The thought of\nthe host of formidable difficulties\nthat stood between his getting to her\nmade htm clench hie hands until\ntheir sinews cracked. Somehow he\nmust get an answer to her . . . Somehow he must help her I\nThe sound of Jafflr's slippers on\nthe marble pavent as he came to lead\nhim ceremoniously to the bath caused\nhim hastily to swallow the paper.\nThr eunuch's sstellltes worked\nswiftly and well. Even Jafflr the\nobese was moved to give his admiration to the transformation effected\nln Gray's appearance.\n\"Bring food for this prince among\nsahibni\" he called- Then addressing\nOray, he continued: \"Let the Presence aeat himself and eat.\"\nBut a new thing happened. The\neunuch struck his hands together\nnrrnlu. Gray raised his eyes. Towards\nhim was coming one of the most\nbeautiful girls be had ever seen.\nThe profusion of richly spiced\ndishes of quails boiled in goats' milk\nand stuffed wtth raisins, savory morsels of lambs' flesh cooked on skewers.\nand fragrant mangoea, the flesh of\nwhich melted like butter ln his\nmouth, soon appeased Gray's ravenous hungec. . . .\n\"My lord finds his slave pleasing!\"\nTbe girl's voice wss extraordinarily\nlike Dt ana's!\nThe Greek had sunk on her knees\nbefore Colin as he reclined on a large\ndivan tittered with silken cushions.\nThe attendants had Uken away the\ntable and Its many gold and silver\ndishes, and she and Gray were alone.\n\"You are Indeed beautiful!\" he\nanawered. \"What Is your name?\"\n\"Call me only 'She Who Loves'!\"\nanswered the girl softly. \"Por I do\nlove thee!\"\nSbe passed a caressing hand over\nGray's arm, her eyes wide with astonishment as she felt the swelling muscles beneath the silken sleeve.\n\"You do not know mel\" he am\nswered, laughing. \"How can you love\none you have never seen before?\"\nHe was thinking hard. How could\nhe answer Diana Lindsay's letter? . . .\n\"To sec you is to love you my lord!\"\nwent on the Greek. \"You are as the\ncrescent moon when it cuts the night:\nall tbe world looks st you whenever\nyou come. Wlll you not love me, O\nMoon of my Soul?\"\nPeaching out, Oray csressed her\nglossy black hair. '\n\"Dance for me,\" he said kindly\n\"But, first, give me to drink, for the\ndishes I have eaten bave made me\nthirsty.\"\nWith a supple moverpent the girl\nrose, and taking a flagpn of sherbet\nfrom out of tte bed of snow, she filled a cup slmost, to the brim and\nbrought it to htm\nSweet low music filled the lncenss-\nladen sir.\nRaising her srms above her head,\nthe girl moved slowly away from him\nlike a flower swayed by the wind.\nGradually the music quickened. A\nfar-away soft throbbing of drums wa?\nbeating . . or was ft his pulses?\nGray Mttblf knew nor cared He only\nwant\u00abd to s\u00bbe this beautiful woman\ndance!\nLonging\u2014the jo? of loving\u2014 the\nseductlou of tt\u2014the ecstecy of love\nreturned\u2014this girl danced them all.\nher eyes Ut with the desire that made\nher lithe beauty burn before him Ilka\nthe veritable flame of passion tbat lt\nwas.\nSomewhere a gong sounded softly\nThe dance ended, and with an Indescribable gracefulness she subsided\non to the- cushions beside him wltb\nUtUe nestling movements, like a bird\nsettling itself for rest.\n\"Love me,\" she murmured, slipping\na cool arm round his neck and stroking his face gently with her other\n\u2022**\u25a0**.,\nFor a moment he abandoned himself to the sensuousness of It all\u2014the\nsmooth warm*b of the dancing girl\nthrilling him to forgetfulness . . .\nWas lt not a dream\u2014everything that\nFor Sale\nFOR SALE \u2014 CABINET GRAND\npiano ln good condition. Genuine\nbargain Also Quebec heater. Dictator 1933 radio, bureau, stand\nlamps etc. 1009 Stanley St. 480R.\n<38_2\u00bb\nFOR SALE, AUSTRIAN MANNLICH-\ner. high power rifle with Goerz\nTelescope, m perfect condition.\n$78.00 Wallace,, Thrums, B. C.\n(3636)\nPHONB 669R1  FOR  YELLOW  FREE\nstone peaches and Bartlett pears.\n(3787)\nFOR SALE- BARRELS, KEGS\nsugar sacks, liners. McDonald Jam\nCo.,   Ltd. 43503)\nhad happened?\nThe beautiful Oreek stretched her\nlong alimness beside him, the little\ngolden bells on her wrists snd ankles\ntinkling musically, and laid a flushed cheek to his ... In vain he tried to\nlift himself, that he might push her\nfrom him . . .But hts limbs were\npowerless. His mind seemed to Inhabit a dead body. He could think\nclearly, but that was all.\nAgain and again sha kissed him, his\narms lying passive about her neck\nJust as she had placed them.\nYet through It all he knew, with\na strangely vlvld certainty, two\nthings: that the sadhu was fighting\nsojnc evil power on his behalf; and\nthat Diana Lindsay was looking down\nat Mm.\nBoth these things were, in fact, at\nthat moment happening.\n(TO BE CONTINUED!\nFURNISHED     HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms for rent. Annable Block.\nt3498>\nFURNISHED    ROOM.    ALSO    OAR-\nage. WHrdalr, 609 Mill street.\n(3800)\nFURN. OR UNFURN. APTS. BY\nweek or month. Medical Arts Bids.\n(3497)\nFUR     ROOMS.     STEAM     HEATED\nshower, terms mod. Can. Leplon.\n(3500)\nTO    RENT - FURNISHED    ROOM,\npiano, 624 Latimer street. (3872)\nTERRACE   APTS.   Beautiful   Modern\nFrlsldalro equipped suites. <349B)\nTWO    ROOM    FURNISHE_r~SUlTE\nfor rent Stirling Hotel. <3499)\nSEMI  FURNISHED  SUITER,  CHEAP,\nAshman   Apt.,   Baker   fit.     *3857)\nAOENTS WANTED TO SELL SILK\nneckties for us. We sell you st \u2022\nprice tbat allows vou to' make\n100-f- commission. Write tod3y for\nfree samples and particulars. Ontario Neckwear Company Dept. B69,\n_ Toronto_8, Opt.   i3848)\nWANTED FOR INTERIOR TOWNS\"\nmen anxious to earn a good Uvlng. \"You can do this.\" See for\nparticulars, or write L J. Deshar-\nnals, Cranbrook. B. C. (3881)\nProperty for Sale\nHouses\nfor Sale\n91OO0, $1350, $2400\nALL GOOD BUYS\nSmall Down Payment\nBalance as Rent\nC. W. Appleyard\n& Co.i Ltd.\nFIRE INSURANCE\nCITY PROPERTY\nNELSON, BRITISH COLUMBIA\n(3839)\nBUILDING LOTS IN ROSEMONT IN\nSelect residential area. Robertson-\nRealty  Co.. Ltd. (3864)\n500 LOTS IN YMIR TOWNSITE UO\nup Essv terms. Robertson Realty\nCo.,   Ltd. (3883)\nMAKE OUT YOUR-AD AND SEND\nIT IN ... DO IT NOW!\nFOR RESULTS ...\nFollow the arrow,\nit point? to\nVALUES!\nREAD  AND   USE\nNelson Daily News\n\"CLASSIFIED\"\nlargest in the Interior\nUSED MORE READ MORE\nMiscellaneous for Sale\nPhone 106\nFor\nCOAL\u2014WOOD-ICE\nFURNITURE MOVING\nOR STORING\nFREIGHT HAULING\nSAND AND GRAVEL\nROCK\nGENERAL TRANSFER\nWORK\nYou Call-We Haul\nWilliams' Transfer\n609 W\u00abrd St.-Nelson\n(8665)\nPIPE and FITTINGS\nModern plant, fully equipped for supplying pipe\nand fittings for steam,\nair, water or irrigation.\nVour enquiries solicited,\nCanadian Junk\nCo., Ltd.\n250 Prior St.\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\nGALVANIZED IRON PIPE AND FIT-\ntings. Belting**,, etc.\u2014New Wire\nNails Hi\" 1\u00a7 tt i*\/,\". 83*80 Per\n100 lbs FuU line ot new tnd used\nOtlv end Black Pip* and fittings\n*4 Oalv. new 6!ic, 1\" Black So.\n3* Black suitable for Irrigation and\nwater line 10c, other sizes low\nprlcea. new corrugated galv. Iron\nMOO per 100 square teet. Poultry\nwire netting 8 and 0 teet. Pull\n\u2022tttr*. of tteel epUt pulleys, Potato\nand grain sacks. Barbed wire. Wire\nRope, Canvas Doon, Windows\nRoofing Pelt, Garden and Air boee.\nBoon Chains. Merchandise snd\nEquipment of all descriptions. Enquiries  solicited.\nB.C. JUNK CO.\n135    PoweU    St,    Vsncouver,    B.C.\n  (.18491\n100,000 (eet good used pipe;\n\u2022II aires.\nLARGE STOCK PIPE\nFITTINGS, VALVES, ETC.\n***>      Enqulrlei   Solicited\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD\n220 E. 1st Ave, Vincouver, B.C.\n(3840)\nSALE\nLarge stock electrlo motors generators welders cheap.\nWrite to\u2014\nELECTRIC  CONTRACTING\n& MACHINERY CO.\nCalgary, Alta.\n(3881)\nGOOD CLEAN RAGH WANTED-AP*\nplv  Dally  News Office. -3368)\n Educational\nIP TOU HAVE TO TEACH YOUR\nchild at home use a course from\nthe progressive Educational Institute. 3236-7th St. W-, Calgary.\nAlta, All grades, (3842i\nMotorcycles\n'\"MOTORCYCLES'\"\nGood  Used  Buys\n1  Indlsn       \u00bbloooo\n1 Indlsu  .'...     138.00\nI Indian   (aa  new)   origins!\nprice  8875            895.00\n1 H.D. Twin two new tires      75.00\n1 H. p. and aldecar complete\noverhaul     300.00\n1  H. D    165.00\n1 Prencls Barnet      78.00\nPstts for H   D. and Indian\nPALMER   BtHLEUGE\nTrail\n(3848)\nClassified Ads bring\nquick results \u2014 try\none.\nNelson Daily News\nLost and Found\nLOST\u2014 PHOTOORAPHICAL   APPH\nancee st Pletcber Creek montl\nago. Plnder return to Balfout\nBeach mn. Reward, (Sinai\nTO FINDERS\nIt you ftnd a cat or a dog. t\npocketbook. Jewelry or fur or\nanything else of value, telephone\nThe Dally News. A \"Pound\" Ad\nwill be Inserted without coat to\nyou we wUI collect from Uu\nowner.\nLaunches and Boats\nWALTON'S BOAT FACTORY. BUTID-\nlng and Repairing. Launches, row-\nboats snd canoea for hire. Ress-\nonable rates. Phone 374X3. (8480'\nLAUNCH. ROW BOAT AND BOAT\nhouse for sale chesp. Apply Bo*t\n81, Procter, B. C.  (88681\nDogs\nLABRADOR RETRIEVER PUPPIES.\nImported Bsnchory strain. Proven\nwinners field Bnd bench. Registered cue. and priced to eell. Labrador Kennels, Nanoose Bay, B.C.\n    __ (3819'\nPURE   BRED   WIRE-HAIRED   POX\nterrier puppies, H. Harding, Nelson\n(37961\nBusiness and Professional Directory\nAccountants\nCHAS. P. HUNTER. S. P. A- \u00ab\u2022\nMunlclpsl and Commercial Audit*.\nP. O. Bog 1191. Nelaon. B. C.\n13939)\nAssayers\nE. W. WIDDOWSON. establlahed 1900.\n306 Josephine St.. Nelson. B O.\n(3630)\nGRENVILLB    H.    ORIMWOOD.    618\nB3k?r St., Nelson, Box 726.  (3531)\nKOOTENAY    LABORATORIES\nAssayers _ Chemists\nBoi  1343 Trail, B.C.\n.3833)\nBoat Livery\nBEST PETERBOROUGH OUTBOARD\nmotor tt row boats for hire by day\n\u2014Prank Seal, Balfour, B.C. (3633)\nChiropodists\nDr. Mildred slmonds Poot Speclsllst.\n406 Fernwell Bldg. Spokane, wash.\n (3534)\nChiropractors\nE.   M.   WARREN.   DC.   61]   BAKER\nSt. Office Phone 118. (3536)\nC.   HULTGREN,   D.W,   Ph.C,   Palmer\nGraduate. Mcculloch Blk. Ph. 818.\n  (3538)\nElectrical\nJ. P. COATES\u2014The  Electrlo Btore.\nSupplies and installations.\nPhone 763. P. O. Box 116.\n (3537)\nFlorists\nDAFFODILS. NARCISSUS ALL VAR-\ntetles grown at Cralgend, now on\nsale, from 38c to*60c a dozen, at\nthe NELSON FLOWER SHOPPE.\nPhono 233 or 389R3. (3838)\nJOHNSON'S GREENHOUSES. Phone\n342. Cut flowers potted plants.\nand floral dsslgns. (3639)\nHide  Dealers\nDEALERS IN HIDES. J.P   MORGAN,\n301 Baker St., Nelson, B.C.  13540)\nUSE   THE   CLASSIFIED    41)8.\nInsurance and Real Estate\nROB-RT80N RE ALT If CO- LTD,\nReal estate, Insurance, rentals\nAberdeen block, Baker St,  (3641)\nT. D. ROSLINO, 3 ROYAL BANK\nBldg. will finance vour Insurance\npremiums at low cost. (3542)\nR. W DAWSON, Real (state ln-\nsurance Rentals. Next Hlpperson\nHardware.   Baker   street.      (35431\nC.   D.   BLACKWOOD.   Insurance   of\n\u2022very description. Real Est. Ph 99.\n (36441\nH-  E.   DILL.  AUTO AND  FIRE  IN-\naurance. Real Estate. 608 Ward St.\n(36461\nJ.    E.    ANNABLE.    REAL    ESTATE,\nrentals, insurance. Annable block.\n (3848)\nCHAB.  P.  MCHARDY, INSURANCE\u2014\nReal   Estate\u2014Phone   138.      (8648)\nMachinists\nBKNNETT'B LIMITED\nFor all dieses of Metal work. Laths\nWork, Drilling, Boring and Grinding.\nMotor Rewinding Acetylene Welding.\nPhone 593.\n824 Vernon Street\n (Wt)\nEngineers and Surveyors\nA. H. GREEN CO.. LTD.. 816 WARD\nSt. phone 264- Nelson, B.C. (3680)\nP.  B.  PETEHB\nMining Engineer\nExamination operation and manage-\nment of mines and mineral '\nproperties. Rossland, B.C.\n(86611\nH. D. DAWSON-NELSON\nENGINEER AND SURVEYOR\n .  (3662)\nBoyd C. Affleck. Box 487, Nelton.\nLands. Mineral Claims. Waterworks\netc. Surveys, Plans and Estimates.\n (3697)\nSash Factory\nLAW80NS SASH FACTORY. HARD-\nwood merchant. 217 Baker atreet.\n(36531\nSecond Hand Stores\nWE   BUY.   BELL   AND   EXCHANGE\nmost   anything.  The  Ark.   135541\nNICE DINING TABLES, MRS. RAD-\ncllffes 617 Venbon St.        (3555)\nBRINGING UP FATHER'\nBy Geo. McManus\nTILLIE THE TOILER\nBy Westover\nTHE GUMPS\nGET YOUR RINGSIDE SEATS\nXTWO \\W6EKS PftOM MONDAY AMD\nTHIS TRIAU ISOM-WEUU IP MAMA\nOE STROSS THIWKS SMS CAN Q-ET\nflfAOOO.OOO. OUTOFMEVs\/PTHOUTA\nSTRUCrCrLS SHE'LW BE SADLY\nMISTAKEN- IT'S A TOUCrH\nftATTWE   \\\nKNOW'\nWMfel TOU TMIMK OF ALU\n'ME COURT COSTS ARID THE\nEXPENSE THAT CrOES WITH >T-\nTMB TIME SPENT AND*MY\nMONEY ALL BEISlfir TIED UP-\nAND THE LAWYERS PEE-\nI WONDER WHAT THAT WILL\nBE BEPORE I GET\nJTHROUCrH-\nI WONDER IP SHE'D TAKE HALT\nIP I PAID HER IN CASH-\n\\ SUPPOSE I'LL WIND UP BY\nBEINCr OUST BLAMED POOL\nENOUGH TO CrO OVER\nAND OPPER TO S\u00abTTLE- .\nt\n.1*4\n \u00b0iS\u00b0)\n-THI NILSON DAILY NIWS. NILSON. B.C.-SATURDAY MORNINO. 8IPT. 1. 1934-\nPA6I  NINI\nAPPLE EXPORT\nPLACED UNDER\nCONTROL BODY\nPears Also Will Be\nRegulated by\nBoard\nMarket and Mining News\nMetal Markets\nWEIR ANNOUNCES\nBOARD'S LINEUP\nLicences Obtainable\nat Kelowna for\nExport    \u2022\nOTTAWA, Aug. 31 (CP)\u2014Export of\nfresh apples and pears has been placed\nunder a control board of growers, It\nwas announced today by Mlnlater of\nAgriculture Robert Weir. The board\nwill regulate the flow and quality of\nfruits to foreign markets under authority of the new marketing act.\nThe following were appointed  to\nthe board: L. P. Burrows, Ottawa, who\nwill be chairman; Manning Ells, Port\nWilliams, N.8.; v. B. Leonard, Clar-\n|\u00bbnce, N.S.;  P. W. Hodgetta, Toronto,\nl\u00bbnd O. W. Hembllng, Oyama, B.C. Its\n|head office wlll be ln Ottawa.\nThe powera of the export board\nI wtll Include regulation of the move-\nIracnt of apples and pears to any\n\u25a0country and It may prohibit Trtilp-\nIment of any quantity, size or quality\nlot fruit. All fruit growers may be\n\u25a0 registered by the board and all ex-\nI porters wlll be required to obtain a\n1 licence.\nExport licences may bo obtained\n\u25a0 from the board at Its agencies at\niKentvllle, N.S.; Toronto and Kelowna,\n|B.C.\nUnder the plan, aa approved by the\nIfederal cabinet, the board may cover\nlite expenses by assessments against\nprult exports.  Under the Dominion\nMarketing act, penalties were provided for contravention of an order of a\nBocal board, such as the fruit export\noard.\niRIDGE RIVER\nUP AT COAST\ncads Strong Rally to CCIose\nWith an Advance\nof 13\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 31 (CP)\u2014Bridge\nliver Exploration led a strong rally\nbn the Vancouver stock exchange to-\npfty with a gain of 13 at 1.03. Trading\nwas strong. Sales totalled 378,942\nhares.\nBraiorne dropped to 14.75 ln the\nforenoon but closed at 15.10, a net\njaln of 20, Sunshine advanced 10 to\n5.30, Taylor Bridge gained 5 at 40,\n>ldge River Consolidated was up 3'\/i\nkt 14 'i and Dentonla at 58 and Vldette\nft 1.73 were each 3 higher. Issues up\n'actions to 2,centa Included Cariboo\nkt 1.61,  Oold  Belt at 36,  Meridian\nlat 11. Morning Star at 18'_, Nicola\n\u25a0 at 30,  Reno  at  94* Grange  at  24,\niMorgold  at 23 and Wayside at 1%.\nI Mlnto   was   active   and   gained   one\nlotnt at 25%.\nIALC0H0L RALLY\nHELPS MONTREAL\nMONTREAL, Aug. 31 (CPI\u2014Apart\nfrom th rally of the two Canadian\nIndustrial Alcohol issues late ln the\nday which sent them both fractionally higher, there waa little of Interest\nln today's session ,of the Montreal\nstock exchange.\nBank of Montreal was one point\nhigher at 195, and Royal Bank advanced two points at 156. Dominion\nTextile declined t full point at 84'..\nCanadian Industrial Alcohol A ended\nthe day at 8'\/,, up '\/,. The B stock\ngained *' at 7\u00bbj,.\nLondon Close\nLONDON, S\u00abg. 31 (AP)\u2014Cloalng:\nBrazilian Traction 110%, Canadian\nPacific (14, Int Nickel \u00bbas>i. ex-\ndividend, Brit Am Tob \u00a36',, Brit\nCelanese 10a 9d, Courtaulds 46s 41.d,\nDe Beers \u00a33\",. Distillers 88s Bd,\nDunlop Rubber 48s lO'.d, Hudson\nBay 23a Od, Imp Chem 37s, Imp Tob\n129s 7V4d. Rand Mines 17%, Rhokana\nCorp ttv,. Crowns \u00a313'*,, Springs\nIT-,. East Oeduld 18%, Rio Tlntos\n\u00a316\",. Royal Dutch \u00a33114.\nBonds\u2014Canadian 4 per cent loan\n1953-88, \u00a3106^. Brit 2>i per cent\nconsols \u00a380%, Brit *',; per cent war\nloan \u00a3104'i. Brit funding 4s 1960-00\n\u00a3116.\nMinneapolis Grain\nMINNEAPOLIS, Aug. 31 (CP) -\nPlour unchanged. Shipments 33.016.\nPure bran 33.00 to 33.60. Standard\nmiddlings 23_o to 34.00.\nWheat: Caah No. 1 northern 114%\nto 118%, No. 1 red durum 114 to 116.\nOld Sept. 111. new Sept. 111%, Dec.\nUO. May 109',\nCom, No. 3 yellow 78 to 78%.\nOaU, No. 3 white 63% to 83%.\nPlax. No. 1 193.\nNBW YORK, Au\u00bb. 81 (AP)\u2014Oopper\nquiet; electrolytic apot and future,\nblue eagle, 0.00.\nTin steady; spot and nearby and\nfuture 61 45 to 51.66.\nIron quiet, unchanged.\nLead steady; apot New York 9.76;\nEast Bl. Louis 3.60.\njlnc barely steady; East Bt. Louis\nspot and future 4.30.\nAluminum 20.00 to 33.80.\nAntimony, spot 8.76.\nBar silver steady, unchanged at\n49%.\nAt London\u2014Copper, standard spot\n\u00a338 3s Sd; future \u00a338 10s: electrolytic\nspot \u00a331 10s: future \u00a381 15s.\nTin, spot and future \u00a310 16a.\nZinc, spot and future \u00a313 12a 6d.\nBar allver firmer, 6-16 hlghW at\n31%d.\nBright Spots\nof the Week\nVICTORIA\u2014British Columbia's ex-\nport lumber shipments for July showed a 15 per cent Increase over June.\nVANOOUVER- British Columbia\nsalmon pack to date Is more than\n60,000 cases ahead of corresponding\nperiod In 1933.\nWINNIPBO\u2014Contract let for construction ot new 116,725 city water\nworks building.\nTORONTO\u2014W. R. Campbell of Ford\nMotor company says In Interview that\nFord buslneu this year had a volume\nof (20,000,000 compared with $8,000,-\n000 last year, an Increase of 160 per\ncent.   .\nPETERBOROUGH\u2014 Double shifts\nworking since July ln shipping and\nother departments of Canada Packers\nand additional factory space leased.\nOTTAWA\u2014Federal government authorizes expenditures totalled more\ntliaty 81,000,000 for projects ln Canada's national parks.\nTORONTO\u2014Imperial Bank of Canada to construct $1,000,000 head office building.\nMONTREAL\u2014 Canadian Northern\nPower corporation's earnings for July\nwere more tban $41,000 ahead of corresponding month of 1933.\nTORONTO\u2014Weatern hospital plana\n(670,000 addition.\nWINNIPEG\u2014God's Lake Oold Mines\nto erect 1500 horsepower hydro-electric plant on laland Lake river.\nTORONTO\u2014D. H. Grossman, president of the Canadian Automobile\nchamber of commerce says sales of\nthe Industry Increased 115 per cent\nfor this year.\nWALKERS SHOOTS\nUP AT TORONTO\nTORONTO. Aug. 31 (OP)\u2014Break-\nIng out ln the last half hour of trading a buying flurry ln tha \"wet\"\ngroup today saved the Industrial section of the Toronto stock exchange\nfrom closing its summer session ln\nthe doldrums.\nWalkers common ahot to 38 for a\nfull point gain. The preferred held\nsteady at lb%. Industrial Alcohol\nadvanced to 8*4 for an Increase of %\nand Distillers Seagrams waa pushed\nto 1614. over a point higher. Brewing\ncorporation shares wavered.\nU. S. DOLLAR IN\nADVANCE\nMONTRBAL. Aug. 81 (OP)\u2014 The\npound was again lower on Montreal\ncurrency exchanges today, the French\nfranc and the United States dollar\ncontinued their advance. Sterling was\noff 1 1-33 cents at $4.98 1-18. The\nfranc advanced .02 cent to 8.58 cants\nand the United Btatea dollar rose\n3-18 of 1 per cent at 2 1-16 per cent\ndiscount.\nCalgary Live Stock\nCALGARY, Aug. 31 (CP)\u2014Recelpte\nyesterday: 72 cattls, 38 calves. 1187\nhogs. Today 62 cattle, 840 boga and\n8 sheep.\nThe cattls market was moderately\nactive at unchanged prices. The hog\nmarket waa higher ln spots. Selects\n18.60 to 88.80, batons 88 to 88.10. and\nbutchers 67.80 to 67.60 off trucks.\nCattle\u2014Common to medium butcher ateera 6180 to 82.86, common to\nmedium butcher heifers 61.60 to 63.36.\nOood butcher cows 61.60. Oood veal\ncalves 62.6**, common calves 61.80\nto 62.28. Bologna bulla 61,16.\nVancouver Sales\nVANCOUVER, Aug. SI - Mlntn*\nsharea sold on the Vancouver stock\nexchange today:\nListed: Beaver S 5000; Bralome\n253; B R Con 16,950; Braiorne Tract\n1-8: Bridge R Ex 25.250; Cariboo\n935; Gold B 500; Meridian 31,200;\nMorning S 5500; Nat S 4000; Nicola\n5550; Pioneer 150; Prem 0 14.300;\nSally 160; Reno 3425; Taylor B 4800;\nWayside 4000.\nCurb: Bayvlew 2000; B C Nickel\n8200; Big Miss 450: Congress 6350;\nDentonia 7850; Dictator 4500; Dunwell 2200; Falrvlew 3200; Grange\n4800; Gold Mtn 200; Grull W 2900;\nHalda 2000; Hediey Amal 500; Hercules 15,000; Home 6600; Norgold\n8500; Pavilion 2000; Porter I 1200;\nReward 1200; Silvercrest 1500; Salmon 5000; Sunshine 100: Taylor W\n6700; United E 4500; Vldette 880;\nViking 2500; Waterloo 3200; Wa-\nverly 6750.\nExchange Rates\nNEW YORK, Aug. Jl (CPl. m\nSterling exchange heavy at $4.9BV,\nfor 60-day bills and at $4-914 for\ndemand.\nCanadian dollar 2 1-16 per cent\npremium.\nFrancs 6.69H cents.\nLire 8.70(4 cents.\nUruguay 82.00 cents.\nCanada exported 87 llvs cattls to\nHong Kong, China, for dairying purposes during the first three months of\n1034.\nDow Jones Averages\n30 industrials     92.86 up .10\n20 rails   36.17 up .05\n20 utilities    20.46 up .09\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nA P Consolidated\nAmal  OU   \t\nB C Pick \t\nBeaver  SUver  \t\nBradlan   \t\nBralome   \t\nBridge  R con \t\nB R X Oold  \t\nCariboo Oold Q \t\nC  and E Corp \t\nCoaat  Brew    \t\nCommonwealth  \t\nOold Belt -\t\npargal     \t\nInt   Coal\t\nHome Oil  .\nMak   Slccar\nMcDougal segur Ex\nMcLeod\t\nMercury \t\nMeridian *.,\t\nModel ,\t\nMornldg star  \t\nNational silver \t\nNicola \t\nOkalta  Com  \t\nPioneer\t\nPremier  Oold   \t\nPremier  Border  \t\nQuatalno\t\nBeno Oold   \t\nSally  Mlnea  \t\nSpoonef oil \t\nTaylor Bridge \t\nVanalU\t\nWayside     \t\nAlexandria   -\t\nAnaconda    -\t\nBaltae   \t\nBavvlew  \t\nB C Silver\t\nB C Nickel \t\nB R Mountain \t\nBig Missouri \t\nCan Rand  -',...\nCongress     \t\nCrows  Nest \t\nDalhouele   \t\nDentonia    \t\nDevenlsh\t\nHlghwood 8sros \t\nPacalta   \t\n.10\n\u25a007 Vi\n1340\nOS\n3.60\n15.60\n,14>4\n1.08\n1.61\n.78\n900\n1\n.04\n.13' j\nJl\n.02\",\nfl\n:!,\u00bb\n.21\nA**',\nMS\n.so\n.05 <t\n1280\n126\n.03\nI\n.28\nAO\n.12',\n.01 \u00a3\n.04\n.04\n.02\ni\u00ab\n.44\n.07\n.02\n.56\n.06\n\u00bbu     fl\n,10(4\n\u202206\n2.95\n1.V30\n.16\n1.05\n1.63\n.80\n9.75\n.40\nIM\n.80\n.35\n.13\n:19\n.04\nJl\n.07\n13.00\n1.37\nXII\n.03 i-i\n.43\n.14\nM\n.03\n.84\n.20\n.sr\n.46\n.07',.\nii\n.06\n.19\nSunshine        8.10\nOlacler Creek - 03'i\nDictator     .07\nDunwell       .32\nEaatcreat   _ lO'.i\nralrvlew  Amal  16\nPabyan     OO'i\nFreehold   ..    08\nOolconda      .34\nOold  Mountain    40\nOeo  River         .01\nOrandvlew    02\nOrange           -4\nOrull  Wlhkane       09\nHilda          .08\nHediey  Amal         -1\nHeileyi  8        \u2014\nHercules     04\nHome aold  l*'i\nIndian      -01\nJack walte 26\nKoot  Belle        .47\nUkcview         ,0I'4\nMadison \u201e 00',',\nMar Jon  10\nMerland     22\nMcOUllvray     08V4\nMill   City    10\nMlnto          -6(4\nMorton   wolsey         \u2014\nNoble Five .      ,07'i\nNorgold    33\nPavilion      .47\nPorter   Idaho    09\nReward      06\nRoyallte  14.00\nButus Argenta  01\nSalmon    18(4\nllvercrest        tsi\nSilversmith     10Vi\nSnowflake         01\nStandard  Oold        \u2014\nTaylor Wind       .42\nUnited   Empire    18\nUnited   Oil         \u2014\nVldette        1.7S\nVlklna         .07\nWaterloo     10(4\nWaterley   Tang    01\u00ab\nWellington 01 (4\nWhitewater           .05\n.08\n.25\n.17\n.00(4\n\u202208(4\n.38\n.46\n\u202201\",\n.26\n.10\n.on\n.33\n.12\n.06\n.16\n.33\n.49\n.01(4\n.12\n.24\n.29\n.OIU\n.07(4\n.25\n.48\n.09 >4\n\u202207(4\n14.25\n.01(4\n.16\n.11\n.01 Vi\n.15\n.44\n.20\n.05\n1.80\n\u202207(4\n.11\n.01(4\nToronto Stock Quotations\nAlexandria   ..... \t\nAlgoma\t\nAmity    _\t\nAsley Oobld \t\nK7 >MBFL=\nBear  Exploration  \t\nBig Missouri \t\nBoojo\t\nBradlan   \t\nBraiorne\t\nBrett Trethsway\t\nBridge  R Exploration\nBrownlee   \t\nBut can Oold \t\nBunker HUI   .. -\t\nCan   Klrkland   \t\nCan Malartlc \t\nCariboo oold Quarts\nCastle    Tretheway    ..\nCentral Manitoba \t\nCentral Patricia     IJO\nChlbougamou     14(4\nClerlcy     _        .04(4\nCoaat   Copper   ....\u2014     300\nColumarlo       .03\nConarlum    -...    1.40\nCons MAS   187.60\nDome    43.00\n\u25a00114\n.00(4\n.01%\n.46\n\u20221?\nS3\nS3\nJ!\n.3.60\n16.00\n.08\n.98\nh\n.01(4\n-8V4\n.73\n1.80\nif*\n.03(4\nt.50\n8JB1\n2.68\n.63\n1940\n1.81\n14.20\n4}*\n.07 Vi\n805\n86.50\n47.25\n.42\n.48\n185\n31\n1.66\n04(4\n3.63\n41.76\n|\u00bb\n.38\nPioneer oold    13JS0\npremier Oold     137\nReno          01(4\n8an Antonio      6.40\ntherrftt oordon  67\nIseoe        3.75\nDominion  Exploration  \t\nEldorado  \t\nFalconbrldga \t\nGod's last,  _\t\nOranada   \t\nHollinger    _.,\nHowey    \t\nHudaon Bay\t\nIntl Nickel \t\nKlrkland Lake .........\nLake  Maron   .*\u25a0\t\nLittle Long IM\t\nLake Shore \t\nMclntyre    \t\nMcVlttle orahamme\nMcwattera   Oold   \t\nMacaasa\t\nMaple Leaf\t\nMining Corn  \t\nMoffatt Hall \t\nNlplaslng\t\nNoranda\t\nParkhlll\t\nPend  Orellle   \t\nPaymaster\nSmelters oold  \t\nSouth Ttblemont \t\nStadacona   \t\nBt  Anthony   \t\nSudbury Basin\t\nSylvanlte -    \t\nTeck   Hughes   .._...___.\nTowagamao \t\nTreadweU\t\nVentures\t\nWslte Amulet\t\nWayside   \t\nWhite   Eagle\t\nWright   Hargreavea   \t\nOILS\nAcme     _\t\nAJax \t\nA P Conaolldated ..........\nAssociated    .....\nBrit  Amer  oil  \t\nBaltae   Oil   ....'.\t\nCalmont      _\t\nC and E Corp \t\nChemical Research \t\nDalhouale Oils \t\nHome   oil\n.34\n.09(4\n.35\n.51\n1.63\n2.90\n6.60\n]\n1.03\n-5\n.0714\n.30\n0.65\n.oon\n.09(5\n13.76\n1.31\n31\n.00\n.19(4\nBuntC        Ul.   ...\nomestead o and O\nImperial OU     14.60\nInternational   Pete    38.36\nLowery    L -      *30\nMerland\t\nNordon    \t\nOil   selections .. -..-..\nOlga \t\nRovallte    \u2014...\nSarnla\t\nWalnwrlght  \t\nIMHS1K1AI.S\nBeatty Bros A\nBeauhartiols\nBell Telephone\nBraslllan\nBrew as Dist\nCanada Bread\nCan Cement\nCan Car *  Foundry       \u00ab\u00bb\nCan Indue Al a   -     6(!\nCanada   Dredge       *>'\nCan   Pacific   RaUway\nCona Bakeries \t\nDist   Seagrams\n13(4\n|H\n_    15\nDominion  Stores     17%\nFord of Canada A   30(4\nOoodyear Tire  125\nHiram   Walker     38(4\nImperial Tobacco   11(4\nLoblaw   A     17*14\nMaaaey Harrla  4\nService Stations  -  1(4\nSteel of Canada  38\nQuotations on Wall Street\nAllegheny  ...    1\nAm Can \t\nAm   For  pow\nAm lta Jt Fdy\nAm smelt ft Be\nAm  Telephone\nAm Tobacco\t\nAnaconda\t\nActchlson  ....\nAuburn Mo ...\n\u00a7endlx  Av   \neth  steel  \t\nCan Dry    \t\nCan  Pacific  .. ..\nCerro de Pasco\nChes  _ Ohio .\nChryaler   .-\t\nCom _ south\nCon Oas N T\nom   Prod  . ,..\nWright Pfd\n1\u00ab4*\n36(4\nm\n13\nDupont\nMar  '\njest   Kodak\nElec Pow It li\nBrie    \t\nPWd   English   ..\nPord   of   Can\nFirst Na Stores\nFreeport   Tex   ..\nOen Electrlo \t\nOen Foods .. ..\nOen Motors .. .\nOold Dust \t\n8oodrich\nrt North Pfd\nOrt West Sugar\nBowe Sound _ .\nudaon Mo \t\nInt   Nickel\nInt Tel _ Ttl\nj*el  Tea  \t\nKenn Copper\nKresge It\n-l.lt\nKroegger _ Toll 38(4\nLehn  ti  Fink 15\nMack  Truck   ... 34\nMilwaukee Pfd      3V4\nMont ward   34(4\n14\n17\u00ab4\nNaah Motora\nNa Dairy Prod\nN Pow fc U ....\nN V Central\nPae Oaa Ar Elec\nPack Motora \t\npenn  R R  \t\nPhllllpe pete\t\nPure  Oil  \t\nRadio Corp .\nRadio Keith Or\nRem   Rand   \t\nRock   Island   ....\nSafeway Stores\nShell union      7\n8 Cal Edison .... 13'4\nSouth pacific . 18V4\nStan Oil of Cal 34\",\nStan Oil of N J 44V4\nStewart Warner\nStudebaker\n32\n15(4\n24 '4\n16(4\n\u00bb\nH\nTex Corp\nTex Oulf Sul\nTlmken Rollers\nUnder Type\nUn Carbide\nUn Oil of Cal\nUnited   Air    ...\nUnited Bla \t\nUn   Paclflo   ...\nU   S   Pipe\nU S Bubber ..\nU S Steel \t\nVan Steel\nwest Electric .\nwoolworth   .\nwrialey     ..\nTellow Truck\n6(4\n8(4\nas\n42\n15 (i\n14.\n23\n90\n19'4\nID'S\n34(i\n18\n33U\n48>i\n64\nJn\n28(4\n38(4\n16(4\nn\n33(4\n7%\n_5(4\n_8(4\nJH|\n13(4\n17(5\n34 V4\n44(4\nj,*.\n33\n34(4\n41(4\n13(4\n19\n16\n33'4\n17>4\n48(1\n38(4\n18\n34\n844\n3414\n14\n17\n\u2022 1\nfi\n7'i\n5'*,\n3V4\n8JI\n1*.\n47\n6(4\n13(4\n18\n34 V,\n44 >4\n6'i\nMontreal Stock Prices\nBell Telephone  116(4\nBrazilian  -  10(4\nB C Power A  36(4\nSC Power B      6\nulldtng Producta   21\nCan Car tt Foundry  _...     6(4\nCanada Cement     6V*.\ngan Cement Pfd   38V4\nan oen Electric  155\nCan Oypsum -      514\nCsn md AIA     BV4\nCsn lnd Al 8  _  .    7*\ncan  Pae Railway   _..  1*1(4\nCanada Steamers      1(4\nCockshutt   plow    _     6(4\nCon M * *  137(i\nDominion Bridge  _y_  31(4\nGen Steel Wane  _     3(4\nHamilton Bridge  \u2014     8\nBit Nldtel _  34(4\naasey Harrla   :    4\nMontreal   Power     33(4\nNational Rawing   MVS\nNational Bteel Car  14\npower  Corporation        914\nQuebec power       16\nsnawlnlgan       1814\nSouth Can Power  13\nSteel  of  Canada    33\n(I BBS\nAss'd   Breweries       10\nBrew & Dist  _       .70\nBrit Amer OU   13(4\nCanada   Dredge -  30(4\nCsn  Malting   81\nCan Vlckera ..         1(4\nCan   Wlnerlea         6(,\nCos-crave Brewing       8\nDlatiuera Seaeram  16\nDominion Tar     2VI\nHOrne   Oil     .90\nimperial OU   14V4\nImperial  Tob Can     11(4\nInternational Petrol  2814\nMcColl Frontenac   13(4\nMitchell   B*bt      5\nNoranda      41H\nPage  Hersey  68\nHANKS\nCsnadlenne     126\nCommerce      160\nDominion    _  168\nenperlsl    -   174\nontreal  194Vi\nNova sootla -  267\nRoyal     156\nToronto      303\nMISCELLANEOUS\nDominion      17(4\nFord of Canada A \u25a0\u2022\u2022-\u2022  30\nOoodyear   Tire     125\nLaura Secord . 65*4\nLOblaw   Groceries ... 17VS\nWest Can Flour     8(4\nBar Gold Makes\nAnother Advance\nAPPLES AND\nMONTREAL, Aug. 31 (OP) \u2014 Bv\ngold In London up nine cents to 134.40\ntr. ounce In Cansdlan funds; 140s\nU.-jd tn British funds. The filed 135\nWuhlngton price amounted to $34.30\nIn Canadian.\nEARLY GAINS AT\nWINNIPEG LOST\nWheat Closes With But a\nLittle Advance After\nHedging Sales\nWINNIPEQ. Aug. 31 (CP)\u2014Renewed bursts of hedging sales ln. late\ndeallngii swept away earlier hard-won\nadvances on the Winnipeg grain exchange today. Wheat futures prices\nclosed Vt* to Va cent higher. October\nst 8Pi, December 82*i and May\n*]-.\u2022*. to 86 >; cents.\nAided by unfavorable weather report! from all parts of the west and\nhigher prices at Liverpool, values had\nshown strength for most of the session. Generally, however, the market\ntoday wa% featureless.\nDemand for durums in cash grains\ncontinued good, but Interest ln other\ngrades of wheat was Indifferent.\nCoarse grains futures were dull, following the action of wheat.\nSuggest That B.C.\nBoard Be an Agent\nWould Eliminate Any of the\nConstitutional Trouble\nin Marketing Act       **\nVANCOOVER, Aug. 31 (CP)\u2014Ap-\npolntment of the British Columbia\nmarketing board aa agent ot the Dominion marketing board to eliminate\nconstitutional difficulties affecting\nthe administration of the Marketing\nact has been suggested to OtUwa by\nHon. K C. MacDonald, minister ot\nagriculture.\nMr. MacDonald declared here that\nthe provincial board could then act\non Its own authority ln provincial\nmattera and as agent of the Dominion\nboard ln lnterprovlnclal and export\nmatters.\nLegal authorities contended that,\nsin 1 the Dominion did not constitute\nthe provlncea but vu Itself constituted by them, lt cannot delegate\nauthority to the province to control\nproducts marketed within Its boundaries. They claimed the Dominion\nshould retain direct control over\nlicencing and regulation of til producta.\nSTERLING LESS\nTHAN $5 MARK\nNEW YORK, Aug. 81 (OP)\u2014Ster-\nUng today carried Its decline tn the\nlast nine days to 10H cents.\nClosing st \u00bb4.99>*, ln the foreign\nexch nge markets here today, the\npound shoved a loss of .'\/, cents.\nIt marked the first time the sterling\nrate had fallen below (6 since January.\nThe Canadian dollar yielded the\nsmallest fraction, closing at 3 1-16\nper cent premium agalnat J% yesterday. The French franc remained steady\nand unchanged at 6.89'\/,  cents.\nKootenay Gems to\nStart Next\nWeek\nCoast Exchange to\nClose Till Tuesday\nVANCODVTR, Aug. It (CP)-The\nVancouver stock exchange wlU be\neloaed Saturday. September I, and\nMondsy, September 3. on account ol\nthe holiday week-end.\nTht apple movement from tha Associated Growers at Nelaon haa started\nfor the year, stated W. M. Vance\nPrldsy, three cars having rolled already thla year.\nThe three cars have been Graven-\nsteins and Wealthles from the Arrow\nLakes district. A car of fancy Graven-\nsteins will roll from Queens Bay\nnext Tuesday for eaatern Canada.\nThis coming week wlll see great\nactivity In apple shipments and Kootenay Gems, especially from the Arrow\nLat cs will be moving.\nBartlett and Flemish Beauties are\nmoving In the pear class, In fair\nquantities.\nWALL STREET IN\nDULLEST OF DAYS\nPrc-Holiday Spirit and  Big\nStrike  in  Offing  Is\nCause\nBy FREDERICK GARDNER\n(Associated Press Financial Writer)\nNEW YORK, Aug. 31 (AP).\u2014The\nstock market flattened out Into a\nlifelea drift today as pre-holiday\nstagnation settled over financial\nquarters.\nWith the Labor day recess in the\noffing and a big textile strike looming, traders withdrew to the sidelines. One of the dullest monthi in\nthe memory of the present generation in WaU street came to an end\nappropriately in an almost motionless stock market.\nRallying power in stocks was\nfeeble despite four sessions of slow\ndecline.\nMcdonald heads\nlumber delegates\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 31 (CP)-*-J. H.\nMcDonald of New Westminster wlll\nhead the Britlah Coiunjpla lumber\nIntereata' trade extension committee\nto South Africa, lumbermen having\nselected him at a meeting here.\nOthtr membera ot the oommlttee\nare A. T. Robson of the Tlmbertand\nLumber company. New Westminster,\nand R. C. Cherry of the Sterling Lumber company, Vancouver, P, Z. Caver-\nhill, chief forester for British Columbia, wlll accompany the delegation\nas secretary.\nThe committee will leave for South\nAfrica September 19, travelling by\nwny of England.\nHOLLINGER GAINS\nON TORONTO LIST\nTORONTO, Aug. 31 (AP) .-Central Patricia's 4-point jump to 1.20\nlo set a new 1C34 high level ushered out the summer sesaion on the\nmining section of the Toronto exchange today as traders left the floor\nuntil resumption of activities Tuesday morning.\nHollinger scored a 5-point gain at\n19.50. Lake Shore fell to 56.00. down\n1.00. Dome pulled up to close at\n43.60. Teck Hughes fell back 10\npoints to 6.50. Mclntyre shot to\n47.25, up 50.\nGROWERS OF KOOTENAY SEEK PLACE\nONBOARD ADMINISTERING MARKETING\nSquires Named to Aet Tern-\nporarily; Executive Sessions in Nelson\nGrowers  of  the  Kootenaya  are\nattempting to secure representation\non the advisory committee which\nwlll administer the Marketing act\nIn British Columbia, and yesterday\nJ. J. Campbell of ttlllnw Point, G.\ns. Squires of Robson, and H. Fair-\nbank of Harrop. the Kootenay committee named to deal with marketing representation, discussed  pros\nand cons of the situation. Numerous other growers who were ln Nelson sat In on the meeting.\nKootenay growers, lt waa pointed\nout, had aaked and were promised\nrepresentation on the committee by\nthe Okanagan people. The purpose ot\nFriday's meeting was to remind the\nparent body of the Kootenay request.\nIt waa pointed out by growers that\nnumerous things vital to Kootenay\ngrowers would have to be dealt with\nunder the marketing scheme, and It\nwas Imperative thlt the district should\nhave representation so that first hand\nknowledge of oondltlona could be Imparted.\nC. 8. Squires waa named by tha\ncommittee to act In an advisory capacity until such time as the Kootenay growers have been Invited to\nname a permanent representative.\nWhen thla occurs, lt Is planned to call\na general gathering of Kootenay\ngrowers to name the representative.\nExchanges\nMONTREAL. Aug. 31 CCP1\u2014British snd foreign exchange in relation\nto the CanadUn dollar as compiled\nby the Royal Bank of Canada, closed\ntoday aa follows;\nArgentina, peso \u201e 2686\nAustralia, pound    3.8907\nAustria,   schilling        .188.1\nBelgium,   belga 2834\nBrsell, mllrels  . 0666\nChlni, Hong Kong dollara .3869\nChechoslovakia, cftwn       .0413\nDenmark, krone    -3187\nPrance,  fraao   -     0666\nGermany, reichsmark      -3&11\nOreat Britain, pound   4.8907\nSolland. florin   6729\nungary.  pengo   2966\nIndia, rupee     -722\nItaly,  lire 0868\nJapan, yen     .3933\nNew Zealand, pound  3.908H\nNorway,   krone     -2640\nPoland,   slotl    _ 1666\nSouth Africa, pound ..     4.8809\nSpain, peseta    .1859\nSweden   krone           ,3826\nSwitzerland,  franc .3247\nUnited States, dollar. 2 1-16 prr cent\ndiscount.\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG.   AU\u00ab.   SI    (CP)-ClO^\nIng futures quotations:\nOpen    High    Low     C(o\u00abe\n72 M,\n70*4\n70%\n78*!\n70 H\n71 Vi\n74\nCash prices:\nWheat: No. 1 hard 83%: No. 1\nnor. 80>i: No. 2 nor. 77*>; No. s\nnor .75%;  Nn. 4  nor. 73H;\nNo\".'6 6Hi; feed 64ft; No. I\ndurum 97V\u00ab: No. 1 A.R.W. 76H; track\n80%; screenings, per ton. 17.\nAmong the eight bills affecting agriculture which became law during\n1934 session of ths Dominion Parliament was sn act to amend the Canada\nGrain act. The changea ln thta act\nplace the statutory grades of No. 2\nMsnltoba Northern wheat on the\nsame basis as No. 1 Manitoba hard\nand No. 1 Manitoba Northern ln to\nfar aa milling quality Is concerned,\nand also empowera the Western\nStandard committee to deal with tht\ndlfferont varieties of grain which may\nbe developed from time to time, to\nthat they may be graded to the best\nmarketing advantage without interfering with the quality of the main\nCanadian standard grades.\nThere hss been more tomato puree,\ntomato sauce and ketchup, and tomato soup Imported Into the British\nIsles from Csnada than trom any other country during the first six montht\nof 1934.\nThe Irish Free State his decided\nthat ln addition to the present bonua\nof five dollar! per cwt. (112 poundi)\nto exporters of bacon, an additional\n96 cents ptr cwt. be given at an \"encouragement bounty\" to each exporter who haa exported two-fifths of hit\nsub-quota, and to the exporters who\nhave completely filled their sub-\nquotas a bounty of 11.44 per cwt. aa\nwell as the bounty of 48 cents per\ncwt. on the first two-flftha. With regard to live pigs, an Increase ot |2.40\nper ptg Is to be made on the present\n25 per cent bounty. *\\\nCHICAGO WHEAT\nREMAINS STEADY\nForecasts of Huge Crop Failure Fail to Boost the\nPrices\nBy   FRANK   Ml II,IN\nAsatxrlated Press Market Writer\nCHICAGO Aug. 81 (AP)\u2014Forecasts\nof private experts that the crop failure ln the United States this year\nwlll be without parallel ln history\nfailed to. stir the grain market out ot\nlta lethargy today, largely because\nthese predictions, though sensational,\nwere etpected.\nInstead, traders generally dlsrcgard-\nexcept to satisfy themselves that wlde-\ned the grain production estimates\nspread drought has seriously depleted\nthe United States' crop yield even\nsince August 1.\nWheat closed unchanged to 1 cent\nlower than yesterday's finish, September options showing the greatest loss.\nNew September ended at 11.02 to\n11.02'i,. off % to 1 cent. December\nnew finished at 11.03% to 11.03\",\nand May at 11.04% to 11.05.\nIS\nIN BIG JUMP\n47,495 for Week Is\nLargest This\nYear\nOTTAWA, Aug. 31 (CP)-C\u00bbr loading! during 1034 have been well above\n1933 loadings each week and, for the\nmajority of the time, above 1033 load-\nIngn, but the total of 48,320 cars\nfor ttie week ended August 36 was\nthe first to exceed the 1031 total\nwhich, for this week, was 47,496 cars,\nthe Dominion bureau of statistics\nstates. This wu the heaviest loading\nso far In 1934 and the Index number\nalso reached a peak at .76.66 as\nagainst the previous high of 77.46 In\nApril. For the week ended August 18\nlast, car loadings amounted to 43,828\ncars and for the week ended August\n23 last year the total was 41,887 cars.\nHeavy loading of grain ln the western division was an Important factor;\nthe Increase being 3939 cars over tha\nprevious week. Coal also Increased by\n352 cars In ttie western division, ore\nby 148 cars, merchandise by 104 cars\nand miscellaneous by 188 cars and\nthe total of 19,103 cars was up 4365\ncars.\nOatmeal-and-water drinks are being served free to horses ln Edinburgh, Scotland,\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting\nCompany of Canada, Limited\nTRAU. - BRITISH COLUMBIA\nManufacturers of\nLead-Zinc\u2014Cadmium Bismuth\nELEPHANT Brand\nChemical Fertilizers\nAmmonium Phosphates\u2014Sulphate of Ammonia\nSuperphosphates\u2014Complete Fertilizers\nProducers and Refiners of\nTADANAC Brand\nElectrolytic\nMINING\nCOMPANIES\nWrite Vs for Quotations\non\nSPECIAL RULED FORMS\nENVELOPES (all sizes)\nDAILY TIME SHEETS\nMILL COST SHEETS\nSYNOPTIC FORMS\nPAYROLL FORMS\nLETTERHEADS\nASSAY FORMS\nCOST SYSTEMS\nMINING CHARTS\nLEDGERS (all sites)\nLOOSE LEAF FORMS\nREQUISITION BOOKS\nMINE RECORD FORMS\nWe have the largest commercial printing establishment in the interior of British Columbia,\nincluding ruling and lithograph departments.\nWE CAN GIVE YOU\nIMMEDIATE SERVICE\nMittiti Baily JfouiB\n(Enmmprrtal f rinttno _jrpt.\nNELSON, B.C.\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1934_09_01","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0405243","@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":"1934-09-01 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1934-09-01 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\/1.0405243"}