{"@context":{"@language":"en","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2022-03-16","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1936-09-05","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0412364\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":"  \u2022\u2022**\u00ab* ~.4sww:miwitt-^*~-L -\nCorn Soars at Chicago; Gains\nMarked Up at Winnipeg\n-Pa&e Eleven \/*?$)** \u00bb\u25a0\n\"*\"\"-\" \"-\"\"\n\\Cf3p\nYanks Win to Boost Lead; Cubs\nBetter Their Position\n\u2014Pa&e Nine\nVOLUME 35\nF1VI CENTS A\nNILSON, BRITISH COLUMBIA. CANADA-SATURDAY MORNINO. SEPT. 6, 193S\nNUMBER 111\nSTORMS Aa>D TO PERILSi FACING WOMAN\nON THE WESTWARD ATLANTIC FLIGHT\nMINERS' STRIKE\nIN WALES SEEMS\nSURE NEXT WEEK\nNegotiations Reach a\nStandstill; Stay-down\nStrikes Spread\n120,000 MINERS\nTHREATEN STRIKE\nIrun and\nRebels; Italy\nTaken by\nWalk-Out Threatens\nto Cripple Whole\nMining Area\nLONDON, Sept. < (Cp Cable) .-\nNegotlstions to avert a threatened\nstrike ot 120,000 South Wales coal\nminers were at a standstill tonight\nand stay-down strikes spread as an\noutgrowth ot a dispute between a\ncompany and a miners union.\nCapt H. F. Crooksi.ank, minister\nfor mines, heard the views ol two\nrival unions\u2014the South Wales Miners federation and the South Wales\nMinen Industrial union\u2014and conferred with Sir Samuel Instone,\nhead of Instone tc Co., owners of\nthe Bedwas colliery.\nThe miners say they will walk\nout Monday unless the dispute between the Bedwas colliery and its\nemployees ls settled.\n(Continued on Page Twelve)\nMARKETS AT\neflsv ^paWwspfW *<ejnp|\nBy ths Canadian Press\nToronto and Montreal\u2014Industrial\nstocks lower.\nToronto mines-Lower.\nNew York\u2014Stocks cloaed higher.\nWinnipeg\u2014Wheat up lVSi centa to\na cent\nLondon \u2014 Bar silver unchanged;\nother metals higher.\nNew York\u2014Bar silver, lead and\nzinc unchanged; export copper\nhigher.\nMontreal\u2014Silver lower.\nNew York \u2014 Cotton and coffee\nhigher; rubber lower and sugar unchanged.\nNew York\u2014Canadian dollar unchanged at par.\nCranbrook Man\nVictim of Hit\nand Run Driver\nCRANBROOK, B.C. - William\nPritchard, who was struck by a\nhit-and-run driver Tuesday evening\non the main highway near Wardner ls still'confined to his bed. Mr.\nPritchard was returning from Pincher Creek with his daughter and\nhad turned to the side of the road to\nfix a flat tire. The lights of his\ncar were burning, and he was standing by the wheel when a passing\ncar, a green sedan, struck him and\nknocked him to the ground. The\ncar did not stop, but proceeded toward Cranbrook and owing to the\ndarkness the licence number could\nnot be obtained.\nThe Incident was reported to the\npolice In Wardner and Cranbrook\nhut the driver of the car has not yet\nbeen found.\nR, N. W. P. VETERAN DIES\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 4 (CP) -\nRanks of the surviving members ot\nthe original Royal North West\nMounted police have been diminished by the death of John Albert\nSutherland. He died in hospital yesterday at the age of 86.\nFIERCE BATTLES\nRAGE IN SPAIN;\nNEW GOV'T. NOW\nBehobia Also Taken;\nTide Turns in the\nRebel's Favor\nHAVAS REPORTER\nIN THICK OF IT\n100,000 Stage Parade\nin Paris, Supporting\nthe Loyalists\nBy The Associated Press\n8panlsh rebels celebrated a\nbloody victory In capturing flaming Irun last night, while alarmed\nleaders set up a new extremist-\nSocialist cabinet containing Communists to \"gain maximum weight\nwith the working classes.\"\nAs the tide of the Spanish war\nIn the north seemed to turn In favor of the Fascist rebels It was reported Italy had dispatched additional war veaaeli to Barcelona to\n\"protect\" her nationals. French authorities decided, to send   refu-\nrejoin tM ranks of their* comrades\nat Barcelona.\nTWO CITIES IN FLAMU\nHENDAYE (on the franco-Span\nish frontier), Sept. 4 (By Jean Fon'\ntenoy)\u2014(CP Havas)\u2014The cities of\nIrun and Fuentarabla were In flames\ntonight as retreating Loyalists fired\nhouses before the victorious rebel\nadvance.\nIT IS HARVEST TIME ON THE CRESTON FLATS\nVi.\nHere ls the way they harvest the wheat on\nthe Creston flats and Reclamation Farm. Numerous combines have been at work in the past two\nweeks getting out the early and fall wheat Grade\nhas been.mostly No. 2 northern, according to\nCreston reports. Two men run the machinery that\nformerly took large threshing crews. While thc\nweather has been good these machines have been\nrunning steadily from daylight until dark.\u2014Staff\nPhoto.    -\n(Continued on Page Two)\nSTUDENT NURSES\nMISSING IN U. S.\nMONTPELIER, Vt., Sept 4 (AP)\nA determined hunt for two Vermont\nstudent nurses\u2014missing since their\n\"night off\" Wednesday\u2014was spurred tonight by Police Chief George\nConnor's declaration \"only force\ncould keep them from their duties.\"\nThe search widened\u2014north to the\nCanadian border, south through the\nGreen mountains and picturesque\nBerkshire hills and ln the cities of\nsouthern New England, west to New\nYork state, and east along the Atlantic seaboard.\nLeila Glnett, 21, of St. Albans,\nVI., and her hospital classmate, 21-\nyear-old Lorena Hills of Williams-\ntown, Mass., rode away from Heaton\nhospital here Wednesday, accompanied by two men in an automobile\nbearing New York registration\nplates.\nThief Acquitted of\nReceiving Stolen\nGoods\n\u2022I'M OOING\"-AND HE DIES\nPRESCOTT, Ariz. (AP).-Edwsrd\nMcGlnley, who claimed to be 108\nyears old and attributed his longevity to his daily \"nip\" of hard liquor,\ntook his daily walk Friday, then\nannounced, \"Well, I'm going.\" A\nfew minutes later he was dead.\nVANCOUVER, Sept 4 (CP)-Al-\nIan J. Cameron took the witness\nstand in county court today, admitted stealing articles from an\nautomobile and was thereby acquitted on a charge of having received the stolen articles in question.\nUnder a recent court of appeal\ndecision a thief cannot be also the\nreceiver of stolen goods.\nCrown Prosecutor W. S. Owen\nsaid he was prepared to charge Cameron with theft of other articles taken from a Seattle automobile.\nCounty Court Judge C. J. Lennox\nadjourned court to decide whether\nfurther charges could be laid.\nNEW QUEBEC PREMIER FIRES EVERY\nMONTREAL PROVINCIAL POLICEMAN\nMONTREAL, Sept. 4 (CP).-One\nhundred and fifty police badges and\n150 police revolvers were plied\nhigh tonight ln the offices of the\nMontreal division of the provincial\npolice force here and a lone switchboard operator was sole custodian\no\" the division's headquarters.\nFor all members of Montreal division of the force\u2014from Chief\nMaurice Lalonde to the newest\nrookie \u2014 were dismissed today by\nPremier Duplessis and there wasn't\nan officer on duty.    -\nBy six o'clock thia evening the\nmen had been informed of the\ngovernment's action and had vacated headquarters. They piled their\nrevolvers and police badges on their\ndesks.\nThere wasn't a prisoner tn the\nprovincial cells either. The dismissed force transferred them to the\ncity jail.\nThe switchboard operator \u2014 he\nanswered calls as usual and referred\nthe cues to the city police. < -\nCash Box Taken at Junior High; Desks Are\nRaided in Both; Little Damage Done\nNelaon Junior high and Hume\nschools were broken into and money\ntotalling about $30 stolen from the\nJunior high, while small change was\ntaken at the Hume, Wednesday and\nThursday nights respectively.\nAt the junior high entry was effected through a window in the domestic science room, the intruders\napparently, slipping back the catch.\nThe cash box in the office waj stolen\nand other cash waa taken from two\nteacher's desks.\nThe amount obtained at the Hume\nschool wast not definitely known,\nconsisting of small change obtained\nin various desks, entry at this\nschool was made through a door\nopening on a fire escape, a pane of\nglass being removed and the bar\nlocking the door being pushed back.\nIn each case the intruders searched through desks, breaking open\nlocked drawers where necessary.\nLittle other damage was done.\nUnited Mine Workers\nAre Suspended\nWASHINGTON, Sept. 4 (AP) -\nThe American labor movement was\nsplit into two bitter faction tonight\nwhen suspension from the American\nFederation of Labor was calmly accepted by John L. Hewis, president\nof the United Mine Workers, on behalf of his own and nine other \"rebel\" unions.\nThe suspension, for \"insurrection\"\nand \"rebellion\" was ordered to take\neffect tomorrow.\nWhether suspension will lead to\nformation of a new labor movement,\nrival to the A. F. of L. was a question\non the tongue of labor men throughout the country.\nDUNSMUIR  HEALTH\nCOMMISIONER\nVICTORIA, Sept. 4 (CP)-With\nthe appointment of John Dunsmuir,\nmanaging director of MacKenzie,\nWhite It Dunsmuir, Vancouver, as\nrepresentative of employers, Hon.\nG. M. Weir this morning announced\ncompletion of the personnel of the\nBritish Columbia health commission.\nOther members of the board are Dr.\nAllan Peebles, chairman; Dr. F.\nM. Bryant, representative of the\nmedical interests and vice-chairman,\nand Percy Bengough, employees'\nrepresentative.\nHURT IN PLANE CRASH\nCROWN POINT, NJH, Sept. 4\n(AP)\u2014Ben O. Howard and hla wife\nflying Howard's cabin Monoplane in\nthe Bendix transcontinental air race\nfrom New York to Loe Angeles,\ncrashed In a forced landing 40 miles\nnorth of here about noon today.\nBoth suffered compound-fractures\nof both lege.     * : -\nOCEAN FLIERS MARK TIME\nCROYDON AIRDROME, England,\n(AP).\u2014Harry Richman and Dick\nMerrill, with a record for the fastest\nwest-east Atlantic crossing, await\nfavorable weather for a return\nflight to New-York. \"We probably\nwill be here for. tw6 or three more\n\"days,\" i Richman, the Broadway\ncrooner, said.'. .\nJapan Warns China;\nRussia Warns Japan\nTOKYO (AP). - Japan Friday\nmade and received protests over\nincidents reported on its borders,\nIt drafted an eight-point demand\nto the Chinese government tor settlement ot the Changtu incident and\nfor control of anti-Japanese acts in\nChina,\nIts charge d'affaires at Moscow\nreceived a stem, warning from the\nSoviet .that Japanese-Manchurlan\nsoldiers were endangering peace by\nalleged border violations.\nThe Chengtu . incident involved\nthe reported killing of two Japanese\nAugust 24 by a Chinese mob protesting reopening of a Japanese consulate in Chengtu, in Szechuan province.\nBack ot the forest tire season\nappears broken with rains general\nthroughout the southern interior\nduring the past week. The great\nimprovement in conditions is reflected in the weekly summary of\ntires as compiled by district headquarters of the forest branch at\nNelson, which show only 18) fires\nburning and the same number of\nnew outbreaks In the week.\nOutbreaks of the week were mostly from lightning fires and other\nsources upon which forest branch\ncrews \"Jumped\" quickly, and in al-\n| most all oases the (lames failed to\ngan'tppreaeBte heart-Trey, - '    \u201e\n\u25a0 * A\u2014-m \u25a0'     . \u2022\n(Continued on Page Twelve)\nDRAPER HOPES LABOR DAY NEXT\nYEAR WILLSEE BETTER TIMES\nHopes Workers Will Have Better Outlook and\nFear of Unemployment Will Be Less\nOTTAWA, Sept. 4 (CP)-In Canada the trade union movement\nhad always supported constitutional democracy, and there was no\nbetter occasion than Labor day for\nreiterating the convictions ot the\norganisation on the subject, declared P. M. Draper, president of the\nTrades and Labor Congress of Canada, in his annual Labor day message.\n\"Labor day, 193d, comes at a time\nwhen conditions are still decidedly\nunsettled for: the wage-earners of\nCanada,\" Mr. Draper said. \"There\nhss been some Improvement In employment, it is true, and one earnestly hopes that the trend upward\nmay continue and increase in rapidity, if at all possible,\n'The spirit with which Canadian\nworkers have met their misfortunes\nof the '30s has been of the best,\nbut after the severe testing it has\nhad, surely it should be their lot to\nhave some easing ot their burden.\n\"Unemployment, underemployment and depression wage rates have\ntoo long held down the legitimate\naspirations of the wage earners of\nour country, and their faith in the\nfuture deserves Its reward without\nlonger delay.\n\"As the Trades and Labor Congress ot Canada haa insisted for six\nyears, there hu been more complacency regarding unemployment than\nwas good-for our welfare. As a people we were too-much inclined to\nthink that things would right themselves and that there was nothing\nthat we could do to aid ln recovery\nexcept to carry\" on * aome public\nworks and pay relief. Latterly, we\nhave experienced some change ot\nfeelings in the matter.\nMUST AID RECOVERY\n\"We have begun to see that we\nmust aid recovery\/and not be mere-\n(Continued on Page Twelve)\nTo Visit Nelson\nami Kootenai\nPREMIER PATTULLO\nVICTORIA, Sept. 4 (CP)-On a\n10-day tour which will take him to\nall principal points of the Kootenay\nand Okanagan ridings, Premier\nPattullo will leave Vancouver next\nWednesday.\nDuring his trip he will pay short\nvisits to some ot his constituents\nwhile other centres he will visit\ntwice on lhe return- trip.-He will be\naccompanied by his private secretary, Ben Hethey.\nThe itinerary of the trip Includes\nthe following points of call: Kamloops, Vernon, Kelowna, Penticton,\nOliver, Grand Forks, Trail, Nelson,\nSlocan City, Kaslo, Fraser's Landing,\nCreston, Cranbrook, Radium Hot\nSprings, Golden, Revelstoke, Salmon\nAnn and Armstrong.       ^\nBACK Of EIRE\nSEASON SEEMS\n10 BE BROKEN\nWeekly Summary Says\n18 Outbreaks and\n18 Burning\nCAMPFIRE CAUSE\nWORST OUTBREAK\nTen Acres at Premier\n\u2022Lake Burn; Rains\nGeneral\nONE KILLED AS\nWOMAN WINS IN\nAIRPLANE RACE\nLOS ANGELES, Sept. 4 <AP)-\nWith one of the contestants injured\nin the crash of his plane in New\nMexico and another killed, Mrs.\nLouise Thaden today won the \u00bb15,-\n000 Bendix trophy race from New\nYork to the national air races here,\nHer victory was worth $8000 to\nMrs. Thaden.\nMrs. Thaden was accompanied by\nMiss Blanche Noyes of Los Angeles\non the hazardous man-killing flight\nfrom ocean to ocean, Their time was\n14 hours and 54 minutes.\nThis is three hours and 24 minutes more than the east-west record\nof 11 hours, 30 minutes which Col.\nRoscoe Turner set in 193b, but is thc\nbest transcontinental time ever\nmade by a woman.\nL. C. Faulkner est, San Diego was\nfatally injured in a parachute plunge\nof several hundred feet as a gale\nflattened his parachute. He died\nshortly after being) removed to a\nhospital.\nDummy Mistaken\nfor Hit-and-Run\nVictim at Coast\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B. C, Sept.\n4 (CP)\u2014An: unidentified \"body.\"\npicked up from the'Marine drivejiy\na startled motorist; rested in police\nstation here today as authorities\ninvestigated its origin.\nPercy Ludbrook of New Westminster saw the \"body\" on the road\nlast night, lying ln :a pool of oil. He\nimmediately assumed it was the victim of a hit-and-run driver and\nrushed to it. He found that it was a\ndummy, carefully fashioned to represent a human torsi. It was dressed\nand shoes were found to the \"feet.\"\nPolice were working on the theory\nlt was the work of bandits who\nplanted it on the road in the hope a\nmotorist would stop to investigate\nwhen they would hold him up and\nrob him.\nCRANBROOK, B.C.-The automobile of William Smith of the Victoria hotel, which was stolen on\nWednesday night has not yet been\n.recovered. Mr. Smith parked the\nJ**'on Norbufjravenue uj'^ont of\nthe city auditorium about 8 o'clock\nin the evening. He returned to get\nit about 11:30 and it was gone. He\nImmediately reported the theft to\nthe provincial police who searched\nevery highway ln the district, but\nthe person who took the car apparently had two or three hours to get\naway. I\nThe car was a blue 1928 Chevrolet\ntouring car, B.C. licence 44\u2014875.\n\"GADGET\" BEAT8 CARBON\nMONOXIDE\nWINNIPEG. Sept. 4 (CP)-Per-\nfection of a \"gadget\" which its inventor claims will transform deadly\ncarbon monoxide fumes Into harmless gss was announced here today\nby John Forbes, Winnipeg garage-\nman. The \"gadget\" consists of a\nsmall can of solidified chemical,\nattached to the engine coil tt is connected with the Intake manifold to\ncounteract .generation of. monoxide\nand transform it into carbon dioxide.\nTHREE MORE MILL8 CLOSE\nMINNEAPOLIS, Sept. 4 (AP).-\nThe flout milling Industry here was\ntied up completely tonight after\nstrike picketing resulted in the closing of the planta of three concerns,\nwhich had continued operation, r\nMrs. Markham Alone in the\nPlane Without Radio; Hopes\nReach New York in 24 Hours\nAttempts Feat No Woman and Few Men Have\nAccomplished; Gale, Rain and Fog\nAwait Her at Newfoundland\nINCREASE RATES\nFOR ANNUITIES\nOTTAWA, Sept. 4 (CP)-An\nIncrease of 15 per cent In rates\ncharged for all government annuities, was announced tonight by\nHon. Norman Rogers, minister of\nlabor. This Increase will go Into\neffect tomorrow, and will be effective until new tables of rates\nare adopted.\nThe minister Issued a statement\nexplaining the decision to advance\nthe rates for the time being at\nleast A senate committee had recommended increased rates, and\nactuarial experts had expressed\nthe opinion present rates were too\nlow,\nAUTO STOLEN\nAl CRANBROOK\nARABS ATTACK\nBRITONS\nLONDON, Sept. 5 (Saturday)-\n(AP)\u2014-Arabs from Iraq and Syria\nInvaded Palestine and attacked\nBritish troops, a Dally Herald dispatch said today, while the war\noffice called up reservists to free\nregular troops as possible reinforcements In the holy land,\nThe Dally Telegraph said It understood about 10.000 men will\nleave Aldershot Sept. 11 tor Palestine. This will bring the total\nforce In the mandated territory to\n17,000, \"sufficient to allow the Imposition of martial law,\" the newspaper said, \"although It Is hoped\nthis will be unnecessary.\"\nDuplessis to Be at\nOttawa Today\nOTTAWA, Sept. 4 (CP)-Dominion-provincial relief agreements\nwere much K> the forefront in conferences here this week and will\ncontinue tomorrow when the head\nof Quebec's new administration,\nPremier Maurice Duplessis, arrives\nto open negotiations for the first\ntime In that capacity.\nHon. Charles Cockroft, provincial\ntreasurer, and other officials of Alberta's Social Credit government,\nhave been here several weeks on\ndrought relief, premier John Bracken of.Manitoba, also fresh from a\nprovincial election, has been here\nseveral days on relief and other\nmatters.\nHELD FOR BEATING ACTRESS\nBEVERLY HILLS, Calif, Sept. 4\n(AP).\u2014Lewis Alfred O'Brien, accused of beating Mrs. Ruby Grayson,\nBritish film actress, during a burglary of her home, was ordered held\nunder $20,000 bond today Bfter arraignment In justice court. The actress Bigned complaints charging\nO'Brien with burglary, attempted\nmurder and attempted criminal attack.\nHAS LITTLE OF\nFOOD AND DRINK\nPlane Is Light; News\nof Progress Only\nFrom Ships\nBy the Canadian Praia\nMore than 10 hours after Mra.\nBeryl Markham took off from har\nnative England In an attempt to\nbe the first woman to fly the hazardous Atlantic east to west, mid*\nnight passed without definite\nword of her progress.\nGusty winds, rain and fog lay\nahead when the blond, good-looking society matron soared away\nfrom Abingdon airdrome, Berkshire, In a turquoise blue stock\nplane at 8:50 p.m. Friday (10:50\na.m. M8T). She aald ahe hoped to\nmake the 3460-mile flight to New\nYork within 20 to 24 hours,\n(Copyright, 1938, by the Associated\nPress)\nABINGDON AIRDROME, Berk-\nshire, England, Sept, 4. \u2014 Mrs.\nBeryl Markham, 33-year-old mother, tonight flew over tha squally\nAtlantic ocean In her attempt to\nbe tha first woman ta fly from\nEngland to New York.\nThe attractive society woman\nleft her seven-year-old aan at\nhome and took off from the Royal\nAlrforce airdrome here at 8:60\np.m. (9:50 a.m., Pacific standard\ntime) In the face of forecasts of a\ngusty ocean.\n. She said she hoped to ba In New\nYork In 20 or 24* hours. '\nShe faced bad weather almost\nfrom the outset.\ni Latest weather reports from Ireland predicted showers and murky\nlight during the long summer twilight which ordinarily would have\naided her.\nSTORM NOT ON ROUTE\nThe only reassuring word came\nfrom the air ministry which reported that although there would\nbe headwinds and rain squalls, a\nstorm area 600 miles off tbe American coast was not on her projected\ncourse. *'\nHer turquoise-blue plane, a\nstock model, carried 260 gallons\nof gasoline and no radio equipment.\n(Continued on Page Two!   ' Y \\\\\nVancouver  jj4\nKamloops   **\nPrince George .\nEstevan Point .\nPrince Rupert.\nAtlin\t\nDawson, Y-T....\nSeattle \t\nPortland, Ore..\nSpokane\nSan Francisco \u25a0\nPedtlcton  \t\nVernon\t\nGrand:Forks ..\nKaslo\t\nCranbrook\t\nCalgary      , .\nEdmonton - \u2014\u25a0,\u2022\u25a0\u2014 *\nSwift Current \u00ab*.*\nPrince Albert ..\nSaskatoon   *\nQu'Appelle - \u00b0*>\nWinnipeg   \u2014 \u00bb'\nMoose Jaw  \u2022- w\nForecast for Nelson and Vicinity!\nLight winds, partly cloudy iiqV\nmoderately, warm.\n~\u2014' mm\nALBERTA TAKES UP CAMPAIGN FOR M\nSILVER DOLLARS IN THE DOMINION\nEDMONTON, Sept. 4 (CP).-The\nmovement seeking greater circulation of silver dollars has spread to\nAlberta. The campaign is expected\nto bring greater quantities of the\nwhite metal from Great Bear lake\ninto use.\nCharles E- Garnett, a director of\nthe Alberta and Northwest Chamber ot Mines, has fashioned the\ncampaign along the lines of a aha*\nilar movement ln British Columbia.\nMr. Garnett also hopes to have jewelry manufacturers market ash\ntrays, paper weights and other ar\"\ntides stamped with \"Great Bear\nLake Silver.\"\nThe cartwheel currency campaign\nbrought results here today With\nstores issuing a large portion of\nchange in silver dollars.    ,\"\nMa'tMM.'Km'rr\"\"**^*''^''\nMmmutmUim\n__^_g\n\u25a0asiftrt. net, lirsii'i i sHufn\n\t\n r\nPAGE TWO .in am..\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, I.C-8ATURDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 8.19M \u2022\nMORE ABOUT\nMRS. MARKHAM\n(Csntlnusd From Page One)\nThus, the only news of her progress over the ocean must come\nfrom ships at sea which might sight\nher plane, marked \"VP-KCC.\"\nHer takeoff was unostentatious,\n-pith only. I 'ew triends on the field\n\u2014mi  \u2014\nMunn Fiiium nut maka\nBurtaaa Battarlaa famoui far\nLent Ufa and Satiafactory Sarvlci\nf, imulatad Ch\/oma protactad Calls\n1. S,amle\u201eZlneCan.\n3. Standard\"fl.M.A.\" Plug-In loakatl\nBURGESS DRV CELLS LTD.\nto lii'i iivr \"iCl^u c:i iir:r Wsz::tluiSti\nventure In her comparatively light\nship named \"The Messenger\".\nIn the ship's cabiji was a Jug of\nblack coffee and a package of fruit\nand nuta\u2014her only food and drink.\nBefore she took off she told frlend,\nshe expected to average about IM\nmiles ip hour on the projected 3490-\nmile flight. '\nMri, Markham tonlflht was tl-\nliylrif Whit pe wornan\u2014and fsw\nmen\u2014have accomplished.\nBAD WEATHER\nST. JpHN'B, Nfld., Sept.t (CF),-\nA northeast gale, rain and fog here\nconfronted the British woman flier,\nMrs. Beryl Markham, (lying westward from Ablngton, England, tonight. Her route would carry her\nover the southeast tip of this island.\nCape Race reported an easterly\nwind and rain.\nAt Harbor Price, 27 miles to the\nnorthwest, a gale was blowing, with\nthe forecast for tomorrow predicting continued gales. Visibility wis\nbar], government reports said.\nNo reports came from steamers on\nthe great circle that the plant had\nbeen sighted.\nWEEKLY PUBLISHERS AT C.N.E,\nTORONTO, Sept. 4 (CP)- The\nmen who chonicle the weekly events\nof their communities in Ontario's\nweekly newspapers came to Toronto today to see the Canadian National exhibition. Along with members of the Provincial Daily Press,\nthe Country Editors were guests of\nthe ftir on press day, a day set aside\nesch year tor the entertainment, of\nnewspapermen.\n\u2022\u2022Oood in tourist steepen on piymept of regular\nberth rate.\n\u2022Good In standard sleeper on payment of regular\nberth rate.\nChildren 9 years and under 11, half firs.\nCorrespondingly low farts to other point! not\nihown abovt,\nFull particular* from your ntareat ticket agtnt.\nNIMRODS WAIT\nFOR OPENING\nFALL HUNTING\nS\u00abpt\u00abmb\u00abr 15 Starts\nHunting Big Game\nand Birds\nGOAT AND BEAR\nALREADY OPEN\n.rue-\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON, B.C., HOTELS\n=\n*ua=\n\"Flnut In thi Interior\"\nHUME HOTEL\nfree Bui Service Geo. Benwell, Prop.\nBREAKFAST 30c ind UP\nLunches 40c to 50c Dinner 40* to We\nROTARY ANO GYRO HBADQUARTEB8\nTELEPHONE 7B7        NELSON, B.C.        482 VERNON ST.\nas\nHUME\u2014L. Morehouse, frail; J. B.\nWhalen, Medicine Hat; 3. H. Pills-\nbury, H. D. Douglas, J. W. Reynolds,\nJ. Pask, K. Jones, Vancouver; Mrs.\nHouch, Chicago; J. M Harris Sandon, 3. B. Smith, Blairemdre, Alta.;\nS. P. Goodland, Winnipeg; 0. C.\nPhlnney, St. John; E. H. Quainton,\nVictoria; W. R. Lawrence, Penticton;\nW. B. Johnstone, Silverton; R. J.\nManny, Spokane; D. J. McAlmon,\nPenticton.\nTHE SAVOY HOTEL\n\"Where the Guett is King\"\nMODERN SAMPLE ROOMS\n\/ully Licenced\n124 Baker St.       W. K. Clark, Prop.       Nelson, B. C.\nShorter Season Ducks,\nGeese; One Day\nPartridge\nSouthern interior nlmrods have\nbeen digging into closet corners and\nbringing down rifles and shotgus\nthat have hung on walls gathering\ndust for nearly a year and are slew-\ning and oiling them In preparation\nfor the opening of the hunting season less than \u2022 fortnight distant\nThe mountain goat and bear Ill-\nsons have already opened, but comparatively little hunting his been\ndone io far. On September 19 the\ngrouse, deer, duck ind geese seasons open and hunting will begin\nIn earnest then..\nThe seasons and limits, except In\nthe case of waterfowl, are little\nchanged compared with last year.\nShorter season and lower bag limit\nhave been applied, however, for\nducks and geese.\nFOUR DAYS FOR PHEA8ANT8\nFour days of pheasant shooting,\nfrom October 14 to October 18, ire\nprovided this y*ar in Nelson-Creston\nand Grand Forks-Greenwood electoral districts. No more than two\nmay be shot by each hunter daily,\nOne day of partridge shooting in\nNelson-Creston '\"Uns* sou* of Sn\neast-west Up* through Kootenay\nLanding is provided en October 18,\nwith a bag limit of four.\nMoose and elk regulations in the\nsouthern interior apply to Columbia\nriding east ef the Columbia river,\nto Fernie electoral district, and to\nthat section of the Slmllkamean apd\nSouth Okanagan electoral districts,\neast of th* Okanagan Jake and river,\nfor It Is only In these areas thit the\nforegoing animals may be hunted.\nIn all eases except mountain goat\nonly the males may be legally shot,\nsnd In all eases the game must be\nOver a year old.\nGame seasons are:\nBig game-^\nMoose \u2014 September 19 to Octo*\nber 31.\nCaribou-T-October 1 to October Jl.\nElk\u2014September 19 to October SI.\nMountain sheep\u2014September 1 to\nNovember 19.\nMountain goiMBeplember j (a\nDecember 19 (except Grand Forks-\nGreenwood).\nBea*-~Septomber I to June 90.\nPeer\u2014September IS to December 19.\nGAME BIRDS\nBlue and Franklin grouse-September 19 to October IS.\nWillow or ruffed grouse-September IB to September 30.\nPheaiinta\u2014October IB to Novem*\nber 19 in th* Okanagan valley; October 14 to October 11 In Nelson*\nCriston south of an eait-weet Un*\nthrough Kootenay Landing, and In\nGrand Forki-Grc*nwood, eist of i\nnorth-south line through Eholt\nPirlridge\u2014Octobir 18 in Nelson-\nCreston, south of a line through\nKootenay Landing; October IB to\nOctober 31 in the Okanagan.\nWATERFOWL\nDuckl, geese and coott\u2014September J9 to November IB.\nWilson or Jack snip*\u2014September\nIB to December IB in the Nelson-\nCreston and Kaslo-Slocan electoral\ndistricts.\nClosed season on wood ducks con.\ntlnues until January 81,1939.\nNo hunter may have in his poi-\nsession at any one time more than\ntwo days' bag limit.   Use of live\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nP. L. KAPAK, Proprietor\nCommercial, Tourist and Family Trade Solicited.\nFree Bus meets oil Greyhound arrivals.\nFrai Parking NELSON, B.C. Phone 234\niecoyi li prohibited, as ls baiting.\nGAME LIMIT*\nGame limits follows\nBig garner-Moose, caribou, elk and\nmountain shetp, on* male in each\nease; mountain goat, two, either sex;\nbeir, (wo grlsily, three others; deer,\ntwo males.\nBirds-Grouse, six of on* spwlei\nor 13 of all species daily, SO In the\naggregate in the ie*\u00abon; pheasants,\ntwo dally, 13 ln the season; partridge, |n Nelion-Creston, two, md\nln Okanagan four daily, 11 In sea-\nion.\nWaterfowl-Duckl, 13 per day in,\nthe aggregate and III for the sag-\nson; geese, five per day In the aggregate md BO fer the leeson; Wilson ar Jack snip*, SB par day and\nISO in the season.\nI.,., in mssoemm mramama,\nMORE ABOUT\nSPANISH\n(Contlnuod From Pt|a Om)\nThree loyalist* itill hild the\nInternational bridgehead linking\nImn and Hendaye with' a tingle\nmachine gun, but they were ex-\nSected to abandon their post during\nie night md cross into France.\nThe government destroyer whleb\nhad been trying to protest jriMntW\nable abandoned itt position and\nneed t* the defence of Mn Sebastian, objective of the insurgent\ntroops.\nTh\u00ab bloodiest fighting of the wtr\nwas crowned with a rebel triumph\ntonight as General Francisco Franco's Maori and Legionnaires \"mopped up\" the last resistance Of fill*'\nIng iron-\nWith the fall ei ftiw, f_ *\u00bbtt<\nway to S\u00abn Sebastian, chief rebel\nobjective In tha pOrthWUt, wig <__\nto th* insurgent troops after the\nfourth day of their \"wpWrM\" \u00ab\u00bb\nfenilvi.\nLOSE TWO OTHIH. OITIM\nhobi?grA^rtd\u00ab\u00bbrWi4. Jl^rur.-\nSan Mircltl highway and then practically ill of Irun.\nAi flliw f\u00bbll that Kratoiri \u00bbl*y\nbland lim \u00bb hwsfniMWl Hf*\ntrim whlih th* MMM heft* Wtt\nup In tmokt, Fltrtt fighting VfM\nttiil going \u00bbn at 1* M-Ws\"'*\ntoward Sm \u2022ihartlwi *_f\\ thi\nrebel grip hid bttn prart eilly\ncomplete ilnts th* alty hill wsi\ntelstd at JUS p,m.\nAlmost iimultoneeuiJy with tha\ncapture of Behobia the main rebel\nforce, supported by irmored cars,\niwept up lb* highway toward Irun\n\u25a0nd the Loyiliit mlitepee withered\nbefore it\nThe spearhead of the advance\u2014\nturbaned Moon md MglonpMrei\n-pushed on into the city.\nThli \u00aborr*ii*ndir*t midi a pir-\nllous vlilt to th* Leyillst miehlne\ngun i-iit at IrldgihMd, with Iti\nthru Hit difindiri Itlll hold-\nIns m\u00bb. In th* whwtfliidi aspe-\n\u2022III, rebel soldiers Ity flit on\ntheir facM, *tnld te idvini* under thl (Ire if th* ll\"* SU\"* ,u\u00bb\nth* grlmy.fiud LoyaHita found\ntimi to bt \"inwrvliwid\", snd thilr\nahlif dMlr* ii*m*d t* as to lit\ntheir picture In th* piptrt,\nHolding up their jniscot, a frightened rabbit, and smllins boyishly,\nthey posed cilmly for a earaera shot\nunder the menace of rebel rlfltt.-\n(Copyrlght, IMS, \u00bb>y H\u00bbvtf News\nAgency.)\nTHREE CRUISERS BAIL\nHOME, B\u00abVt \u00ab (Af),r\u00ab\u00abllahl\u00bb\nsourcei said tonight tJat thre* 1000-\nton cruisers had s*il*d tor Spain\ntoday in th* wlke of th* 10,000-ton\ncruller pole heading fc* BarMlon*.\nThai* tourcei aald th* w*r vei-\nsels tailed with all poliiWi Hcncy,\ntherefore lt w*s wiumed no official announcement would be forthcoming.\nIt wii eattmitod thit Italy now\nhas 29 naval units In or near Spanish waters, the majority pf which\nare last auxiliary craft hovering\nnear bigger ships already statione.\"\nat Spanish ports, with the cruiser\nr*ola nearing Barcelona, *n Italian\npress ministry spokesman said tonight the government \"hopes there\nwill be no need to intervene in\nSpain.'*\nItaly, Im laid, may hivi to take\nactive steps to protect her nationals,\nif thi Spanish authorities are unable to do so anj another Italian\ndeath results from thi Spanish civil\n'. -r.\nOccidental Hotel\n705 Vernon St. Phona BI7L\nH. WASSICK, Prop,\nSPECIAL MONTHLY RATES\nGood Comfortable Hopms\nFully Licenced\neemm\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcome Awaits You\nJAS. A. MADDEN, Prop.\nCompletely  Remodelled\nHot  ind   Cold   Water\nIn tht HEART of thi City\nPHONE BS SOB WARD ST.\n6 1 $ 9 10 II 12\nII 14 II If 17 l| It\ntO 11 11 Jl 14 25 2<\nVT 18 \u00ab 10\u00a3g&\nEDGEWOOD, B.C.; HOTELS\n[\nARROW LAKES HOTEL\nI. NIEDERMAN,\nFriprleter\nComfortsble Rotmi\nGood Mills\nEDQEWOOD,\nLoolcal  Stopping\nPlact on tht\nRoad to Varnin\nB.C, 1\nilng  I\nSPOKANE, WASH., HOTELS\nWhen In SPOKANE Yon Will Enjoy Staying at ths .\nHotel Volney \u201e%'.,-.\n410\nRiverside Ave.\nOpposite thl Paulsen Building\nEVERY COURTESY SHOWN OUR CANADIAN QUESTS\n[\nSTANFORD Hotel, Spokane\nat SPRACUE and MADISON\nNice Clean Rooms\nRtnionable\u2014 Free ParKlng\nREAD THE\n'Classified'\nEVERY DAY OF THE\nMONTH\nMohawk\nSteamCoal\nThi  perfect full fir thl hitting\nplant,\nLump, ton  tW.OO\nMine Run, ton $9,00\nWst Wash, ten .... 87.00\nStocker, ten ?7.00\nPhone701\nFAIRVIEW\n\u25a0FUEL CO-\n\u25a0 J*-\" \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0 IessMlsWWWWy.M \u00bbm\nConfidence\nImmediately\nInspired\nwhen ypu \u00bbr$ fitted, with s\n\"FISH8RMADE\" Health Support.\nMist R. |. Houston (Reg. Nurse),\ns \u00ab\u00abofni\u00bbed authority en hsslth\nand wmfort in eorsetry, will be\nIn eur Corstt pspartmsnt all day\n' today snd will tell you how\n\"PISHERMADE\" Heelth Supports\ngive the desired Medical Uplift to\ntht Abdominal Organs, coupled\nwith Sacro-lllic* and Back Support. There is no chirge for Miss\nHouston's services.\nThe Cora et Department\nReady-to.Wear\nChildren's Wear\nPHONE\n7J\n\u2022URNS\nBLOCK\nI7\u00bb7\nSlocan City's\nMayor Honored\nM\u00bb.*fpYl5rtrt ftvlay eywirig, thi\noecisien NKf Ms \u00bbU;tM*y.\njlafreihmenti W*TS MTV**\nVincwver for a month, returnedi to\nmn w v**?h*f el *s pn,n*nr\ngrides.\nhire \u00bbundw sftor ff^l*'\nlummw n Vmeouver, Mr. Jwnn*\nwlUresume his dutlei ai principal\nof th* niown pubUc s\u00b0h\u00b0v>*\nMri. 9. J. Pinchbeck of Trill mo\"\nyoung daughter are vliiting Mr\u00bb.\nPlnchheek'i pirents, Mr. end Mri,\nA. Hurst.\nMrs. J. P. Sutherland left Wednesday far Reeky Mountain House,\nAlta., when lhe will ipend a 'ew\nweeks vliiting relatival,\nMiw E. Carrie of Nelwa hai accepted thl position as principal of\nthe Slocan high school\nI0AN TELLS OF\nlAtUYPAYS\nVAWJWCW, St.4 ICf), -r\nSuent f\u00abrm w m irmohilr b\u00abtw\u00bb*n\nsil*m ol is Sourdoughi' mm-\ntion tonight snd told hew \u00aba *rr\u00abt-\nM fill Woehr, <ir\u00bb\u00bb h*d\u00ab\u00bbn st\ntht ViW ssi i.\u2022* to Mmta\nhf**kt\u00bbs up \u00ab* ''|rv\u00bbs\u00bbr *w\u00abr\n\"- Iff ths day* of ** P-4 Wh\nNEW CABINET\nMADRID, S*pt. 4 (aiy H- ft Knob-\nlaughl-Coromuniiti wife Included\nfor thi fint Ome In \u2022 Spinish wb-\nInet formed tonight to rally the\nsupport of the working claim in\nthe war crisis.\nAlirmid by thi \"gnvi iltuitlen\n\u2022f thl civil wtr,\" Prnldint Mln-\nutl Aiana called \u00ab5-y\u00ab\u00abr-old Frtn-\nclaco Large Oabillire, \u2022 powtrful\nSocltllat-txtremlat   leader  since\nth* overthrow of th* monarchy In\n1331, te term a new csblritt,\nUr.-o Clbillero became premier\nand minliter of wir. Joie Olfil Pei*-\nlite, the retiming prime minliter,\nremiinid In tb* cajlnit without\nportfolio.\nSix of the it mlnistrlei were\nheaded by Socialists and two by\nCommunists.\nFRENCH DIMANO AID\nFOR MADRID\nPARIS, Sept. 4 (AP'.-More than\n)00,DOO marching Parisians voctter\nouily demanding \"gun* md plinei\nfor Spun,\" tonight added te th*\npressure on th* French govtrnmtnt\nto lift Hs arms embirso agllmt\nSpain.\nCommunists exhorted Ml Social\"\nUt supporters ot Premier Ulum to\ncombine forces with them In I de\nmand thl governmen withdraw It*\n\"blockldl\" against thl Spanish popular front.\nMaurice Thorn, Communist laid-\n\u2022r and center of the man meeting,\ncharged \"foreign Fascists ar* con-\ntinning to ami the Spanish rebels\"\nand insisted prance abandon iti\n\"hands off\" policy in Spain.\nTV\nSgin u itui tr\u00bbeklrig down grte\".\ninril* tl detective Impecuir ,t t\u00bbt|y\nbridge, Alt*.\nJ'tt's Urtt coup fim* whep\nreunites\noth\u00bbr mfmWi'ertht'^Soapy1\nSmith gang hid been dispersed by\nvigilantes at Skagvay.\nAite,\nltr\u00ab coup earn* wltm he\nup \u2022rephjF who eroiied\ni Vukon (from Aluka ifter\n\u201emhir.    Af    aha    \"snnnv1'\nWEIR GOING CAST\nVICTORIA, Sept 4 (CP'-Hon\n0. M. Weir, provincial leeretary,\nwill leave Victoria Monday or Tuei-\ndiy for the eest, where he will dis-\ncusi with federal authoritioj matters relatini to Pominlon wirdi in\nKssondal* mental borne, adult (duration, Inter-provincial agreements,\nmunicipal superannuation ind phy\nIleal and recreational education.\nTZturday\nTaWft Specials\n\u00bb\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0      \u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\"en- I if     i i \u25a0\u25a0\u2014\u2022-f\u2014-fi--*-*\u2014c    ii      i   g      \u25a0\u25a0*\nGolden Fleece Wool\nI-SI, balls. All color*. Sp.eiil, ball  10*\nMonavch feotch Fingering\nItseisl, lb 7fU\u00ab\nSTUPID FLANNELETTES\n36 inches wide. Cood quality. Special, yard .... 25*\nWabasso Pillow Cotton\n42 inchei wide. Spulal, | yardi  J1.00\nWABASSO SHEETING\nHeivy quality, 86 inches wid*. Special, yartj ,,, 0|#\nTEA TOWELING\nPur* linen. Special, 4 yards  s)t.00\nFLORAL PILLOW TICKING\nFeather proef. 32 inchei wide. Special, yard .... 30f*\nPRINTED BROADCLOTHS\nSp.clal, 6 yardi  1*1.00\nHorrockses'\nFlannelette\nWhite only. 27 Inches.\n10 yards 9X69\nViyeUa\nWool\nSpecial, 2 balls for. SS*\nKENWOOD BED COVERS\nA|l pure wool blankets with satin binding, A very soft\nquality. 60x84. Colon rose, blue, mauve, (PC AA\n\u00bbsld. PRICI, SACH *3.UU\n\u25a0TTftllT'C furniture\nrinik a drygoods\nphone\nS53\ntAGU\nBLOCK\nGRAY AGAIN IS\nSENIOR CHAMP\nOTTAWA, Sept. 4 (CP)- For the\nnext y**r ,th* Sbaughnewy cup,\nemblematic of th* Canadian Senior*'\ngolf association championship, will\nbe In the possession of Robert M.\nGray, Toronto Ilosedale player, who\npnvlously h*ld the UU* In 1\u00bbM. The\nqUM* city veteran, toured th* Royal\nOttawa Golf elub course In 78\nstrokes today, liven over par, to\ncarry off low gross honors with *\n36-hole total of ISO,\nR. C. Smith of Beaconsfleld. Montreal, second alter thl opening 18\nholes with seven strikes back pf Uie\npiQe-sitter, today cut tbri* itrokes\noff Gray's margaln to clinch lecond\nhonors.\n.\u25a0I.i  i .     j,\nMotqulto'j* spread malaria by\nsucking blood from sn Infected human being and later transferring\nthe malaria parasite to th* blood of\nanother person who gets bitten.\nDJgUlll**\nFall Reopening of Private Schools and Colleges\nfor Bays\nLIONS GATE SCHOOL\nA Boarding and Day School for Boyi\n1185 Harweod Street, Vancouver, B.C.\nReopens September 9\nEducation under happy and healthful conditions.\nFer full particulars write thl Headmaster.\nSt Michael's School\nVERNON, B.C.\nA Boarding School for Girli\n.Situate it an elevation of 1600 feet on the ouUkirti of Vernon In\nthi Okenigan Valley well-known for iti dry and healthy climate.\nUsual curriculum for Government examinations up to ana\nincluding Senior MatricUlaUon.\nComplete provision for iiunmer end winter sporti In Ideal\nSpecial attention given by experienced Matron to delicat*\nchildren. fn% M0D\u201eAT|\nFir full paijleulirtipplyto MIIS0HIIVEH8, Prlndpil\nrrrri Tr-rrri   In i   ml tiiiini^\nBRENTWOOD COLLEGE\n15 Miles From Victoria, B.C.\nLocated by the sea on thl loveliest put Of Vancouver Island\nBoarding School for Boyi\nAsm 11 to is.\nGRADES VII to SENIOR MATRICULATION\nNext Tvm Opens September 9th\n\"for Ptrtlcultrt Apply to\nM. H. ELLIS, Headmaster\nIMNTWOOD COILIGI, Vlctorli, |.C.    .\u201e\nuni i    i   -n 1 1 *~;\nST\u00ab CLARE\nResidential and Day School for Girli\n1020 Wolf* Av*., Shaughnsssy Height*. Vsneowver, I. C.\nLarge Staff of Highly Qualified Teachers\nAUTUMN TERM OPINS SgPTgMBSR S\nWrite to: Principal ALICE M. KEENLEYSIDE, M.A.\nand Qirls\nOkinagan School Principal\nMoves to Vancouver\nW. J. Bennett formerly principal\nof the Chesterfield School for Boyi\nat Xelowna ii now Vice-principal of\nthe IJoni Gite School for Boyi in\nVtncouver. '\"\nST. MARINA\nHIS Burnaby St.\nVANCOUVER, I.C.\nResidential md day school\nfor girls. Prlmiry to mitncu-\nlaUon. Music, driwlng, physical culture ind games.\nWrlti tl thl Principal;\nMISS M. .. SEYMOUR\nBoarderi rttum Sip'   '\nSchool reopens\nfasismaspsx k founded ih* \u25a0\u2014-~~*~\nCROfTOII HOUSE ZS *\nIglrC\nN B0IRIIHG im MV SCHOOL fOR GIRLS\nGOOD MUSIC. ART, ELOCUTION, DANCING,\nGAMES, GYMNASTICS AND RIDING,\nFor Pioip ictui\nwilt, lo th. HMdmiiU.-a . , , MI5S GORDON,\nCourses from\nKindergarten\nse\nMatrieub (tor*\n.1 . ma. pw.miw amaa\nDUFFUS\nSCHOOL OF BUSINESS\nENROLL NOW\nSeymour end Pender VANCOUViR, IX.\nSt Anthony's College\n949 W. 27th Ave., Vsnsouvsr, I. C\nConduct\u00bbd by the Slsteri of thl Soclity\nA Boarding and Day School for Girli\nPrimary Grade to Senior Matriculation. Course arranged\nfor those specializing in music. Studies. Music, Singing.\nGames under direction of highly qualified and experienced teachers.\nNIQHT SUPERVISOR\n\u2022oirdir* return Widntlday, September 9.\nClttsts resume Thursdty, September 10\nFor Proipectua write to thc Sifttr In Charg\"\n.i^,. .i:,..^.^!.\n ii\n1 \"\"   \"IJ'W-sp\nlG5l\nICHURCHES\nnf (Eanaha\n&i. $anl'-s anh irinttg\nIntuit frrntrr\nPublic Worship, conducted by\nRev. J. A. Donnell, in Trinity\nChurch at 11 a.m. and in St.\nPaul's at 7:30 p.m. Sermon\nsubjects:\nMorning:\ntion.\"\nEvening\u2014Tlie\nLabor Day\"\n'The Church's Func-\nBest   Use   of\nThe Trinity Women's association will meet in Trinity Church\nparlor on Tuesday at 3 p.m.\nHirst\n\u25a0fJrpflhijtpriatt\nflUittrdf\nRev. James M. Ritchie, M.A.,\nMinister\n10 ajn\u2014The Sabbath School\nwill reopen this Sunday and we\nhope for a full attendance of\nformer pupils and beginners.\n11 a.m.\u2014Public Worship.\n7:30 p.m. \u2014 Evening Service.\nThe address will be the first in a\nseries of the Life and Work of\nSt. PauL\nRollheiser Heads\nGoldfields Cons.\nCRANBROOK, B.C.-The directors of the Kimberley Goldfields\nConsolidated Ltd, elected their officers at a recent meeting. President,\nJ. J. Rollheiser; vice-president, J.\nH. Parkin; managing director, H.\nSpence; secretary, A. McGrath.\nWork was resumed on the property\nduring the week.\nSCIATICA\n\"Wu unable %o deep or \u2022tend up from aoU-tica.\nfrom tbe fint dote of T-R-C's I got relief; now\nwary tr-MO hia f oae.\"\u2014J. C. Bittern!, Gtio*-\naoque, Ont. T-Il-C'a will bring you quick\nrplifjf by driring the p\u00abn-c**usii.g totine out of\nytrtf-tt^JDo^lti^iirrugi^ m\nT-B-C'i (Templnon'i flhiumitic Cipiulei)\nWmt Glljurrli nf\n(EJirtBt fcrnntiat\n209 BAKER STREET\nA Branch of The Mother Church.\nThe First Church of Christ,\nScientist,  in  Boston,  Mass.\nSunday School 9:45 a.m.\nSunday Service 11 a.m.\nSubject Lesson-Sermon\n\"MAN\"\nWednesday Testimonial Meeting\n\u2022 8 p.m.\nFREE   READING   ROOM   IN\nCHURCH  BUILDING-\nAll Cordially Welcome\n\u00a9l|\u00bb? Valuation\nArtmj\nAdjutant and Mrs. Hammond\nSUNDAY SERVICES\n11 a.m. and 7:30 p.m.\nNAKUSP PLANS\nFORLABORDAY\nNAKUSP, B.C-The Nakusp Recreation association is making arrangements 'for a sports day and\ndance in Nakusp, Labor day.\nA baseball game, Nakusp vs. Burton, is scheduled and the New Denver Knights of Pythias softball team\nwill play Nakusp. An interesting\nprogram of children's sports has also\nbeen drawn up.\nU. S. A. Rotarians\nand Femieites\nGoing Cranbrook\nCRANBROOK, B.C.-At the regular weekly meeting of the city Rotary club plans were made for the\ncoming international meeting to be\nheld here on Sept. 14 when Kalispel\nand Fernie members will be here.\nA committee of E. S. Jones, C. J.\nLittle, and M. McCrindle were appointed to entertain the visiting Rotary golfers. Mrs. F. B. Miles, Mrs.\nM. A. Beale, Mrs. R. Pascuzzo and\nMrs. F. Scott were appointed a\nladies' committee.\nThe Kalispel club are expected to\nbring their 30-piecc children's band\nand give an open air Concert in the\nRotary park.\n-  NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.-SATURDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 5. 1936\n-PAGE THREE\nNEW FRUITVALE\nSCHOOL STARTED\nTwo Rooms Will Be\nConnected With\nOld School\nFRUITVALE, B.C.-Work on the\nnew addition to the Fruitvale public\nschool has commenced. C. Gibbons,\ncontractor ot Rossland, is in charge.\nSeveral men of Rossland and Fruitvale, with T. Grieves' team are excavating the basement.\nThe addition will consist of two\nclass rooms, 24 by 33 feet, and 15\nby 22 feet. This will be connected\nto the present building by a hallway containing cloak rooms, toilets\nand a staircase to the basement.\nIn the large concrete basement\nwill be installed a central heating\nplant to replace the old system now\nbeing used. The school when finished will be modern and fully\nequipped for high school work.\nThe Fruitvale school opened on\nTuesday with R. Sprinkling as principal, Miss E. M. Hirst as junior\nteacher, and Misa Ingram and Mr.\nPage for intermediary grades.\nHon. R. Randolph\nBruce Expected\nHome End Month\nINVERMERE, B.C.\u2014 The dowager Marchioness of Reading, the\nMarquis of Reading and Lady\nReading touring Canada from coast\nto coast were recent guests at\nOliver's hotel, Sinclair Springs. The\nlate Marquis will be' remembered\nas Sir Rufus Isaacs, lord chief\njustice of England. He was created\nMarquis for services as Viceroy of\nIndia. The late Marquis also gave\nvaluable service during the war.\nMrs. G. D. Davidson, sister of\nMrs. A. M. Hamilton, has returned\nhome to Calgary.\nPeter Cowan Ferguson will superintend the instruction of the different grades in Windermere public school this term. About forty\npupils are enrolled.\nMiss Rutherford and Miss M.\nLake have been visiting at the\ncoast.\nFriends of Miss Roza Pratt will\nbe interested to know that she has\nbeen visiting a brother in Winder\nmere, England.\nHon. R. Randolph Bruce, Canadian minister to Japan, is expected\nin Invermere, also Mrs. Bruce,\nabout September 25.\nOne of Nelson's Early Risers\nAny summer morning, shortly after daybreak, you can meet William\n(Bill) Heasell on Baker street. For years this city public works employee\nhas had the duties of making Baker street presentable each day for the\ncitizens. A staff photographer was up early to catch Bill handling the\nhose near the corner op Baker and Stanley streets\u2014Staff Photo.\nSocial News\nof Rossland\nROSSLAND, B.C, Sept. 4\u2014Mrs.\nPrimo Cabianca, of Trail, formerly\nMiss Edith Leface of this city, was\nguest of honor at a miscellaneous\nshower, given at the home of her\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Laface,\nwith Misses Dorothy Laface, Normn\nLaface and Eda Vetere as hostesses.\nThe rooms were attractively decorated with pink and white streamers, and a large basket trimmed in\npink and white was heaped high\nwith gifts. Refreshments were\nserved, after the evening had been\npassed with cards. Those present\nwere Mrs. Bert Fulton, Mrs. Gus\nBeckmah, Mrs. William Wright, Mrs.\nS. Beckman, Mrs. P. Corrado, Mrs.\nT. Vetere, Mrs. Joseph Albo, Mrs.\nFrank Speno, Mrs. Nick Laface, Mrs.\nAlfred Albo, Mrs. R. Samuelson,\nMrs. H. Samuelson, Mrs. Frank\nHunt. Mrs. S. Wilson, Mrs. Goplin,\nMrs. R. Reading, Mrs. William Zan-\nnussi. Miss Emilia Cozzetto, Elinor\nTomich, Kate Tomich, Florence Corrado, Genevieve Hanna, Dorothy\nKingsley, Eda Vetere. Delphine Vetere, Constance Eccles, Norma Laface, Dorothy Laface, Betty Jean Laface, Lilian Buick and the guest of\nhonor.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMrs. William Wright left Thursday for Clyde, Alta., where she will\nspend a month with her parents.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMr. and Mrs. G. Marzocco have returned to their home in Trail, after\nspending some time in Rossland,\nguests of Mrs. Marzocco's parents,\nMr. and Mrs. P. Cozetto.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nRalph Stefane and daughter Jean\nof Trail spent a few days in Rossland with Mrs. J. Cozetto.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nS. S. Jarvis left Wednesday for\nthe coast.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. William Hoyt and\nson, of Oakland, Calif, who were\nvisiting at Deer Park with Mrs.\nHoyt's aunt, Mrs. W. F. McNeill, left\nThursday to visit relatives of Mr.\nHoyt 1n Montana, en route to their\n^l)nhm^%^ dtfJtqmtt^\nINCORPORATE\"* 2\"\"* MAY 1670.\nItfri\nSTORE CLOSED MONDAY\nSHOP TODAY\nPeroxide   15c\nVaseline Jelly  IV-\nAbsorbent Cotton     I r>\u00ab\nSterilized  Gauxe     15<*\nSenna Pods ,  15<\"\nAlum, 2 for   15\u00abi\nBoracic Acid, 2 for  15e*>\nPowdered Borax, 2 for ........ 15t?\nBex Beakers  \u00ab5c\nAdhesive Tape  15<i\nTerry Washcloths  15-**\nSulphur, 2 for   15e>\nEpsom Salts, 2 for  1 lis*\nPebeco Tooth Powder  15-**)\n\/i^K COSMETICS\nLemon and Almond Hand Lotion . 15r>\nHinds Honey and Almond Cream . 15-'\nCold and Vanishing Cream  15C\nLemon Cleansing Cream   151\nAssorted Perfumes  \u25a0 5<*\nPine Tar Shampoo   15<:\nCocoanut Oil   '5c\nLady Esther Face Powder  l&ti\nWoodbury's Face Creams   151\nPackers Tar Soap  15e*>\nBourjois Rouge  15e*>\nEyebrow Pencils  15<*>\nX-Baxin Depilatory Cream  15e*>\nMoonglow Nail Polish  15r>\nHollywood Wave Set  15c*\nHenna and Camolilo Shampoo ... 15r*\ntVCKf\nITEM\nhome. Mrs. Hoyt was formerly Miss\nLilian Blackburn, she having made\nher home with Mr. and Mrs. McNeill in this city some years ago.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nHarold Fourt has returned from a\nvisit to Kaslo.\ns   *   *\nW. K. Esling, M.P, left Thursday\nfor Spokane.\n\u2022 .      0\nMr. and Mrs. D. B. Jones and children have been visiting in Kaslo.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nJ. N. Cran, manager of the local\nBank of Montreal, left Thursday\nHarvey Is Ruler of\nTrail Elk's Lodge\n'TRAIL, B-C, Sept. 3. \u2014 Trail\nLodge No. 50 B.r\/.O.E, Thursday\nnight filled thc vacancies in thc\nmorning tor the  coast  via  Great\nNorthern.\nroster of officers, Charles Harvey\nbeing elected exalted ruler in succession to W. Evans who is moving\naway from Trail next week; R.\nRobicliaud being elected esteemed\nleading knight; and Sam Biagoni\nbeing elected trustee.\nit was announced tnat the funeral\nof the late Charles Gibb, victim of\nThursday morning's motorcycle\ncrash on the Schofield highway,\nwould be held Saturday ^nder the\nauspices of this lodge.    *\nUse the Want Ads\u2014It Pays\n19th Annual NELSON FALL\nFAIR\nSEPTEMBER 16th. - 17th. - 18th. 1936\nin\nNelson's New Civic Centre\nFREE ATTRACTIONS\nEight Big Vaudeville Acts\nBimbo and\nPopeye\nBolo the Clown   Flying Double Trapeze\nPatt Sisters-Cradle Act\nBimbo and Popeye\u2014Canine Wonders\nPatrick-The Novelty Roller Skater If\nDainty Vera-The Spanish Webb Act        $tj\nJardine and Raul\u2014Sensational Dancers      I\nStatue Act of Classical Poses\nTwice Daily\u2014Afternoon and Evening |\nLet's Qol Reduced Rates on All Transportation lines | mmmm \u201emi|\nJIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII'MIIIIIIII^\nff| All the Fun j\n#|     of the    |\n* I   Midway   I\n\u2022 j With I\n1 Modern \u00a7\n1     Rides\nThrough an oversight thc following was omitted from the Prise List,\nbut will be in effect.\n8CORE FOR HONEY\nExtracted honey\u2014Color, 25; brightness 25; density 35; flavor 15. Total 100.\nSection Honey\u2014Absence of pop holes, 25; uniformity of cells, 15; cleanliness, 35; thinness of cappings, 10; flavor, 15. Total, 100.\nClass: 1st       2nd.\n1\u2014 Best Display of Honey in jars by amateur $2.00 $1.00 $ .50\n2.\u2014Best Display of Honey in Jars by professional  2.00   1.00      .50\n3\u2014Best Display of 6 Combs Honey by amateur    2.00   1.00     .50\n4\u2014Best Display of 6 Combs Honey by professional 2.00   1.00     .50\nu-iui\u00bbi-iiiiiiii iiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiniiiiiiHiiy\nI     GET YOUR PRIZE LIST NOW      |\nI  ENTRIES CLOSE   |\nI SATURDAY, SEPT. 12th. f\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.\nA**     *   *.\nThli advertisement ii made possible by the kind cooperation and assistance from the following business bouses: W. W. Powell Co., Ltd., B. 6*. K. Milling Co., Nelson Transfer Co., Kootenay Breweries, Palm Dairies, Limited,\nWeit Transfer Co., Hume Hotel, Hudson's Bay Co., Newi Publilhing Co., National Fruit Co., Ellison Milling and Elevator Co., Macdonalds Consolidated, Wood, Vallance Hardware Co., F. W. Woolworth Co., Savoy Hotel, Burns\nfir Co., Ntlton Iron Works Ltd., K. H. Crtnfell, Emory's Ltd., Mann, Rutherford Co.\n- -T-\u2014  \u2022-,*V-\nm\n.tttAauaJMrn A iifiiMiiiMtMimdi lnkti^m^imaM\u00a3^SLm.\n    -\n\u2014\t\n \u25a0 * \u25a0 \u25a0\"   ',\"*..\n. .   . \u25a0\u00bb\u25a0*.\u25a0\u25a0>\u2022\u25a0. MM\nPAGE POUR\njesiMo.\n.,.*\ntilthum Sailij Sfwwa\nEstablished April, 22, 1902.\nBritith Columbia's Mott Interesting Newspaper\nALL THE NEWS WHILE It IS NEWS\nPublished every morning except Sundiy by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY L1M1TID,\n.   IN  Baker   Street,  Nelson,   Britilh Columbia.\nPhone 144, Private Exchange Connecting All Departments.\n\u25a0 1\nMember   of   th*   Audit   Bureau   of   Circulations   and\nThe    Canadian    Press    Leased    Wlr*    News    Service.\nSATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1986\nGROWERS MUST DEPEND ON THEIR\nOWN EFFORTS\nOut of the welter of argument since the supreme\ncourt prof erred the opinion that the Marketing act was\nbeyond the powers of Canada's parliament, comes oii\u00ab\nClear conclusion in respect of British Columbia's tree fruit\ngrowers\u2014before their 1937 crop begins to roll, they must,\nof themselves, organize a firm plan for the marketing of\ntheir products, says Country Life in B.C. It may not be\nsaid with confidence that any sign or evidence exists that\nOttawa will take action to provide for compulsion in a\nnew marketing act. The official pronouncement from\nOttawa is that any marketing legislation definitely will\nHot contain the compulsory feature. True, Hon. J. G.\nGardiner, the minister of agriculture, has said that he can\nsee that voluntary cooperation in marketing has its weaknesses but not much hope can be attached to this confession.\nBritish. Columbia growers have been jarred out, of\nany romantic confidence in \"voluntary cooperation\" by\nsmashed cucumber and tomato markets this summer.\nImagine trying to grow tomatoes at 20 cents a case, with\n11 ceirto out of this for the case, leaving 9 cents to the\ngrower out of which he has to pay hauling to the. shipper,\npicking, packing, cultivation and other charges. Prices for\ncucumbers were forced down to corresponding levels.\nHad it not been for the level-headed policy of the British Columbia government in passing marketing legislation\nwhich would enable growers' boards to function for selling\nwithin the province, the vegetable industry would have been\nruined completely this year.\nWhat will happen to the tree fruit industry depends on\nthegrowers themselves, says the Okanagan publication. If\nthey support solidly the stop-gap plan for handling this\nyear's crop, they will get by because they will have the\nassistance of at least 90 per cent of the shippers, including\nthe largest.\nBut it is admittedly a stop-gap scheme to wfikh there\nis no alternative.\nEvery grower has a 100 per cent stake in the business\nof marketing. No longer can he afford to stop at the stage\nwhen the apples are picked and ready for market, He must\nhave a voice in the marketing operation or he will be subject to the evils which existed before the Marketing act\nwas passed in 1934 and which precipitated the cent-a-pound\ncampaign.\nNaturally the growers must ascertain what Ottawa\nand what the privy council will do but they will be well\nadvised to start right now on the premises that no support\nwill be forthcoming from these quarters and that they\nmust look to themselves and such aid as the B.C. government finds it in its power to extend, for the building up of a\nstable marketing plan.\nFRUITVALE ON THE MAP\nFruitvale, commonly known these days as a suburb\nof the smelter city of Trail, is another Kootenay settlement coming into its own. Work is going ahead at present on an enlargement to the Fruitvale school and work\nwill start shortly on the extension of a poVer line from\nEast Trail to serve the Fruitvale community. Fruitvale\nis one of the pioneer settlements of the district and has\nboasted some excellent ranches and gardens. It was but\na few yeare back that Fruitvale boasted one of the finest\nsmaller annual fairs in the district. Logging and lumbering have played their part in this thriving community.\nFruitvale school, owing to influx of numerous Trail\nsmelter workers who have built homes there, has outgrown\nits usefulness and a two-room addition is being built.\nEvery modern convenience is included and Fruitvale school\nwhen completed, will rank with the best, in the Kootenays.\nExtension of electricd service to the community\nwill light up the Fruitvale valley. Progressiveness such\nas this is admired by all Kootenay people. May Fruitvale\ncontinue to grow and prosper.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, E.C-SATURDAY MORNINO. SEPTEMBER 5, IMS\nBETWEEN\nJ.B.C\nDown in Longview, Wash., a man was sent to jail for\na year and fined $1000 additional for shooting a deer out\nof season. The hunter parted with a lot of dough to get\nhis deer.\n\u2022 Nelson board of trade menjbers propose taking Premier T. D. Pattullo for a drive over some of the district\nroads. It would be a worse shakeup than could occur\nin any B.C. cabinet.\n, Kootenay mining has again scored a hit at the Vancouver exhibition. Numerous awards have come this way\nin competition with the best the province has. to offer.\nPerrier mine is to have a small mill in operation\nshortly. Another step forward in mining in the Nelson\ndistrict.\n\"The Southampton-Cape town steamship record has\n|een lowered by over a day after 43 years. Perseverance\nalways wins.    -\"\nTOM WILSON VS.\nJOE CANS\nYesterday was somewhat of a\niportimin't day for yours truly. To\nbegin with T. R. Wilson phoned\nto say we had two mistakes in\nour report of the Joe Gans-Battling\nNelson fight at Goldfields 30 years\nago. The battle, says Tom, was for\nthe lightweight title and the referee\none by name of Sileri. Anyway\nTom was at that battle which took\nplace under a blistering sun. Tom\nhalted the work he waa doing-\nmixing his pipe tobacco \u2014 long\nenough to tell me the battle finished Gans. Tom tells me Gans, before the'Nelson fight, had trouble\nmaking the weight. Then it was\nfound\" he had to weigh in minus\nshorts and shoes. Gans spent some\ntime under a turkish bath to make\nthe weight. It was a thrilling battle. Gans died of T.B.\n* .   .\nBOXING TO\nBASESALL\nAnd then later I ran itito a lot of\nbaseball boys and fans. \"Chum\"\nArcure who follows baseball like\na business was holding forth. He\nhad all the dope on Hubbell, Brandt,\nDizzy J)ean and what have you?\nThe boys were talking about the\ndays they used to go to Kaslo to\nshag foul balls for the junior teams.\n\"Chum\" was telling me \"Ike\"\nIsaacson, who pitched for Nelson,\nwai going tops 111 summer at Edmonton and will be getUng a tryout\nin the Pacific coast race next season. He has a record of pitching in\nseven games of seven played by his\nclub.\n* 0      *\nNOW A LITTLE GOLFING\nAnd then I ran into Syd EUt-T,\nsuperintendent at the Reno mine,\nwho was in town on business. Syd\nwas on his way to the golf links.\nHe's Just a beginner but he gets a\nkick out of the game. Syd tells me\nhe may go to New Denver for the\nholiday\u2014if the clover is not too long\non the Denver course. Incidentally\nhe declared they had run into a new\nvein by diamond drill on the Reno\nand hope to extend .a tunnel 500\nfeet to tap it. ProducUon keeps up\nwith something over $76,300 fc*\nAugust running a little over $20 pet\nton. He teUs me Jules Cohen li\ndoing well at the mine Recreation\nhall and .the miners all keep their\nhair cut and their beards trimmed.\nOn a recent trip to Vancouver Syd\nlooked up C. P. (Colonel) Perry,\naccountant at the Reno, who has undergone several operations upon\nhla leg this summer. \"Colonel\" is\non the mend and full of pep again.\nHe wished to be remembered to\nNelson friends.\n* \u2022   *\n' And I noticed elsewhere\u2014That\nAce Rash wears both suspenders\nand a belt on his trousers\u2014Taking\nno chances\u2014Pat Sheran smokes a\nsort of square-bowl pipe\u2014George\nFleming likes to smoke his cigars\nright down to'the very end\u2014at least\nihe one he was smoking yesterday\nwas nearly down to nothing\u2014Jim-\nrale Gordon is becoming more active\u2014probably a sign of the ifp-\nproachlng hockey season\u2014Noticed\nhim in aU sections of the city first\ntalking with A. G, Lambert then\nwith Bob Andrew and then with\nCon Cummins\u2014Frank McClement\nwis out B>r an auto ride\u2014and I\nguest that is no thrill for him\u2014and\nthen who should I run into but\nPaul Waper of Christina lake-Paul\nls a basso prof undo in the lake orchestra\u2014Then M. Harrlion entered a\nlocal ice cream parlor probably to\ncool off\u2014He's from the Lardeau\ncountry\u2014Leo Atwell was throwing\ntomatoes into a bag with great control\u2014much better control than he\nhas when passing a lacrosse ball-\nJack Cuthbert, also from Christina\npaid the city a visit\u2014John Sher-\nCONTRACT\nBRIDGE\nBy E; V. SHEPAftD\n\"Teacher of Teachers\"\nAUNT HET\nBy ROBERT QU1U.I\n1.EN\n\"Henry ain't Important or especially smart. He just keeps his mouth\nshut, and that's so unusual it makes\nfolks think he's a wonder.\"\nRATIONAL USE OF RULES\nThree diys ago we showed *\nhand played at no trumps. Declarer failed to fulfill hit game con'\ntract solely because he thought .hat\nwinning the tint and third trlcki\not * stopped suit wu I precise\nequivalent of winning the lecond\nand third trlcki. Today we have\nanother no trump holding capable\nof going game. Its holder failed to\nfulfill hli contract solely because\nhe misused nil stoppers to an adversely bid suit. Using ona'i head\nwisely li safer thin adhering to\nthe letter of what one believes to\nbe the correct rule to follow.\n*>Q\u00bb8    '\nfitLU\n\u2666 JSST\n*>18      ..\n\u2666 <\u00bb      m \u00abUKU\n-axis   \\S   \u00ab\u25a0 Jaqsj\n\u2666 AQ87L&J  +0 4 3\n4W10TI\nf'lM\n4)101\nit J101\nBidding went.* West, 1-Chlb;\nNorth, 1-Heart; East, 1-Spade; Welt,\n1-No Trump; Bait, 2-Diamonds;\nWest, 2-No Trumps; East, 3-No\nTrumps.\nlhe opening lead was the 2 of\nHearts. Dummy played low and\nSouth put up the J. He was allowed to hold the trick. The 6 of\nHearts was led and allowed to run\nto dummy's 10. North's Q wop the\nsecond defensive trick. North was\nnot fool enough to lead up to declarer's Hurt tenace. He led the\nQ of Spades. Dummy's K won. the\n9 of Clubs was led. South's t forced\ndeclarer's Q. Declarer ran off three\nDiamond tricks, but the suit failed\nto break. S. ath let go one of his\nSpades, snd retain his last Heart.\nThe holdings were as shown below.\nUnless Clubs b--ke, declarer saw\nno possibility of win'ning the four\nadded tricks he required for game.\nHe led a low Club and allowed\nSouth's io to hold. South led his\nlast Heart, which declarer's Ace\nwon. Dummy's last Diamond wai\ndiscarded\/Declarer led off hii Ace\nof Clubs, only to have North let go\na Spade. The only remaining trick\nwhich declarer could win was the\nAce of Spades, giving him only\neight tricks total, and putting down\nthe contract * trick.\nTo go game should have been\nsimple for West. All he had to do\nwas to win tbe first Heart led with\nhis ACC, then lead back a low Heart.\nIf North failed to take the trick\nwith * high honor, dummy's 10\nwould have won. Two Spade tricks,\ntwo Heart tricks, three Diamond\ntricks and two Club tricks would\nthen have given West game. If\nNorth took hi* Heart trick, still\ndeclarer could have gone game by\nagain leading that suit\nbinin was reclining easily on one\nof George Lambert's office chairs\u2014\nOh, heck!\u2014\n*   \u2022   \u2022\nSTOP ME IP YOU'VE\nHEARD THIS ONE....\n\"Well, dear,\" said Mr. Blair, after\ntea had been cleared away, \"what\nare you   planning to do tonight?\"\nMrs. Blair shrugged her shoulders.\n\"Nothing special,\" she replied. \"1*11\nprobably write a letter or two, read,\nlisten to thc radio, and so on.\"\n\"I see,\" he replied. \"When you\ncome to the so on, don't forget my\nshirt buttons.\"\nSONG\nLove within the lover's breast\nBurns like Hesper In the west,\nO'er the, ashes of the sun,\nTill the day and night are done;\nThen when dawn drives up her\ncar\u2014\nLo! It is the morning star.\nLove! thy love pours down on mine\nAs the sunlight on the .vine,   .   .\nAs the snow-rill on the vale,\nAs the salt breeze in the sail;\nAs the song unto the bird,\nOn my lips thy name is heard.\nAs a dewdrop on the rose\nIn thy heart my passion glows,\nAs a skylark to the sky\nUp into thy breast I fly;\nAs a sea-shell of the sea\nEver shall I sing of thee.\n\u2014GEORGE MEREDITH.\n10 YEARS AGO\nFrom Nelson Dally Newt Flits\n(SEPT. B, 1926)\nE. W. Beatty, ICC, president of\nthe C. P. R., paid a short visit to\nNelion after an Inspection ot the\nTrail smelter ind th* Bonnington\npower and light plants.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nE. Oliver of Trill is a guest it the\nHume.\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nTh* diitrlct nunc, Min Olive\nGarrwood, wai welcomed In Procter\nyeiterday.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nMill Mary Midden of Nelion re\nturned from Trail Friday.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nTb* marriage oi Mlts Ethel Kitto\npf Nelson to Charles Appleby of\nKelowna took place ln Penticton\nSaturday afternoon.\n\u2022 t  \u2022\nL. H. Choquette ahd hli brother\nand sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrt, Arthur Choquette, left for Spokane\nSaturday to visit their uncle and\naunt, Mr. and Mrs. N. Choquette.\n\u2022 *  \u2022\nS. Munro left tor Salmo where\nhe Will take over the post of principal\n20 YEARS AGO\nFrom Nelson Dally Newt Files\n'   (SEPT. S, ISIS)\nH. A. Johnion of Rossland is it\nthe queen's hotel.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00bb\nLieut ind Mrs. Basil Aylmer ol\nQueen's Bay are guests at the Strath-\ncont.\n. .  .  .\nNelion defeated Trail In a close\nfootball game yesterday which was\npart of the Labor day celebrations.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMrs. H. G. Slater and family of\nNelson spent the week-end in Robson as guests ot her sister, Miss Allison.\n\u00ab   \u2022   \u00bb\nJ. G. Bunyan returned here after\na week's vacation at the coast.\n\u2022 9   -9\nMr. and Mrs. Harold Aune of\nSandon are guests at the Strath-\ncona.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nR. A. Howe ot Nelion Is one of\nthe tlve British Columbia men reported wounded in the casualty list\nfrom Ottawa.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMin Constantino Cllbbom and\nHarold S. Goodwin of Crawford\nBay were married yesterday in a\nnovel wedding on the beach at\nKootenay Bay.\nI   30 YEARS AGO\n! From Nelion Daily News Filet\n*- ; . \u25a0\u2014<*>\n(SEPT, 6, 1S0S) ':,)\nGovernor-general Earl and Lady\nGrey will arrive ln Nelson at noon.\nThe party will leave for the Boundary and Rossland tomorrow.\n\u00ab   \u2022   \u2022\nClarence Stelle, an employee of\nthe B. C. Copper company, was electrocuted today while adjusting some\nwires at the smelter in Grand Forks.\nDirectors of the coming Nelson\nfair met yesterday in the, association's otfice on Baker atreet Fred\nStarkey, managing director, presided. C. 0. Broadwood, C. W. Busk,\nJ. Hyslop, A. Shannon, W. S. Pearcy,\nT. Morley and J. A. Irving were\namong those present\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nA*) accident occurred in Grand\nForks Saturday by which Joseph\nSimpton lost his life while attempting to ford the Kettle river,\nt   \u2022   *\nTbe G. N. steamer International\nwas at the city' whorl yesterday,\nlooking spic and span after her\noverhaul by 0. Hale of Nelson. The\nboat will replace the Kaslo on the\nNclson-Koslo run while.the Kaslo\nIs in for repairs.\n\u2022 \u2666      9\nThe Hume school will reopen to\nday under charge of Miss Evelyn\nBate. The pupils will join ln with\nthl other schools in the yice-regal\nreception.\n**,.'\u25a0\nO. H. Burden of Crawford Bay is\not the Grind Central.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nThe small vote polled on the $50,-\n000 power debenture bylaw was a\nsubject of local comment. No one\nappeared to know about the voting,\nand only 100 voters turned up.\nTHE DOCTOR\nSAYS\nLOGAN  CLENDENINQ,  MD.\nBreakfait is, for most people, the\nbest balahced meal of the day. There\nis fruit of some kind, providing\nroughage, quickly utilizable energy\nin the sugar, minerals and vitamins.\nThere ls often a cereal with vegetable protein, more vitamins, and If\nsugar and cream are added, more\nenergy. If not cereal, bacon and eggs\nand toast, which provide plenty ot\nlife-giving material. There is milk\nor cofee, which furnish fluids and\nnutriment or stimulation as the case\nmay be\nThere is hardly any fruit that ls\nnot valuable, but it may be comforting to know their different properties.\nThe hurrible prune has always\nbeen a favoflte* breakfast dish. And\nalthough it may get monotonous,\nand although H may bear the burden of the eternal1 boarding house\njoke, scientific research has proved\nthat it deserves it*-well, if not pop\nularlty\u2014continued patronage.\nIt is always well to have some\nsort- of laxative food, at breakfast.\nPrunes have been generally praised\non this account by their admirers,\nNow comes the. department of\npharmacology of the University of\nCalifornia to show that they contain a chemical substance of some\nsort which has decided laxative\nqualities. It is soluble in water and\ncan be extracted from the pulp,\nthe skin, and even the pits.\nESPECIAL LAXATIVE\nPRINCIPLE\nIn ather words, it is not only the\nfiber or cellulose or roughage of\nthe prune which aids in evacuation,\nbut also an especial laxatiye principle which would be present in\nprune juice alone, entirely apart\nfrom the fibrous body of the fruit\nThe prune ie also a blood builder.\nAn important discovery of recent\nyears is that copper, as well as iroil,\nis helpful in stimulating the formation of blood. Not only stimulating\nthe formation, but as lt is present\nln blood, also in adding to blood\nvolume. The Idea was first suggested\nby Italian physicians over 75 years\nago, but was neglected until chemists at the University of Wisconsin\nagain brought it to our attention.\nFortunately in nature, copper and\niron are almost inseparable.\nPrunes contain vitamins_A, B and\nQ. They do not contain the vitamin\nC for which oranges, tomatoes and\ngrapefruit are valued, and for that\nreason a monotonous prune-for-\nbreakfast diet should be varied to\nmake way for the vitamin C fruits.\nAs to other food qualities, prunes\ncarry all of the essential salts and\nmetals needed by the body. Calcium,\nmagnesium, potassium, sodium, sulphur, chlorine, phosphorus, manganese and, as has been said, iron\nand copper.\nThey have good energy potentialities, furnishing in their high content\nof quickly assimilable sugars, plenty\nof \"pep\" for the mornong's work.\nThey reduce to an alkaline ash,\nthus, helping to keep the body neutral. They put you over on the alkaline slie, rather than the acid side.\nNo wonder they have waved so\nlong.\nVERSE\nDIVORCE FROM CRIMINAL\nBLOEMFONTEIN; South Africa\n(CP) \u2014 On the ground her husband\nwas an habitual criminal Mrs. Pet-\nrus Hattingh was given a divorce,\nthe first on such grounds in the local courts.\nHOPPERS  EAT PLANE\nFINDLAY, Ohio, (CP) -A model\nairplane from the airport here landed 10 miles away and had Its wings\nand tall surfaces eaten by grasshoppers.\nA  PET PIGEON\nWe have a pigeon colored white,\nAnd to us he's a great delight,\nWho comes for fondling,  day  or\nnight\nWhen'er we call,\nAnd of our many pets he's quite\nThe lord of all.\nBut though two wings he can beat\nHe does much prefer to use his feet,\nTo down the yard or on a seat\nHe's e'er in view.\nAt most from our low roof he'll\ngreet\nYou with a \"coo\".\nAnd down from there he'll quickly\ncome\nTo rest on your finger or thumb,\nAnd when with glee he for a crumb\nHas made a peck\nThen from your shoulder he will\ndrum\nUpon your neck.\nOur little cage-bird doesn't fail\nHim with sweet warblings to regale;\nThe cat purrs; and a high pitched\nhail\nThe bantam cock\nGives him; and a wig-wagging tail\nHas our dog Jock.\nAnd oft he nestles by the side\nOf Jock, and fear does not abide\nIn him, and the he struts with pride\nAnd seems to know\nHis  body  will no feast provide\u2014\nWe love him so.\nT. E. Biddlecomb\n351 Powell Street,\nVancouver.\nSTAMP CORNER'\nBy JAMES MONTAGNE*\nTwo recent stamps from the pioneer set of Russia, showing one boy\ntelling another not to tamper with mall boxes and not to throw stones it\ntelegraph line insulators; center, the last stamp trom Abyssinia, a surcharge of the 1031 issue.\n  *\u00bb-\nIllustrated below are two recent\nissues from France commemorating\nthe composer of France's national\nanthem.\nOne hundred years ago Rouget\nde Lisle, composer of the French national anthem, La Marseillaise,\npassed away in Paris. France honors hte memory this year with these\ntwo stamps, commemorating the\nsong he wrote in 1792.\u2014Stamps courtesy philatelic department, T. Eaton\nCo. Ltd., Toronto.\nTodays\nGarden-Graph\nBy DEAN HALL1DAY\nCopirrfpM, IMS,\nCentral Press Association, 'no.\nCUT ROOT\n1 'INTO\nsecnoMs\n2 INCHES\nL0N6\nPoppiet From Root Cuttings\nIf you want to increase your\nplantings of Oriental poppies thle\nis thc time to do it During August\nthe Oriental poppy can be propagated by various methods, by seed,\nby division of the root or by root\ncuttings. If undertaken at this time\nthe new plants will have time to\nbecome well established before the\ngrowing season ends.\nAs shown in Fig. 1 of the above\nGarden-Graph, multiplication of\npoppies by \"root cuttings\" calls for\ncutting a poppy root into sections\ntwo irfthes long. Then, as shown\nin Fig. 2, plant these root sections\nin flats and cover with two inches\nof soil. The soil should be a mixture, half and half, of sand and\nloam. Place the flats near a window\nin the basement until growth starts.\nDEMANDED SACRIFICE\nLADYSMITH, South Africa, (CP)\n\u2014 Witch doctors had instructed him\nto burn two children as a sacrifice,\nsaid a young native, fined $50 or\nthree months hard labor for firing\nsome deserted huts.\nBRITISH PUNCTUALITY\nA return issued from Euston\nshows thlt out ot i total of 274,098\nexpress and local passenger trains\non the London, Midland and Scottish Railway within a recent four-\nweek period, no fewer than 262,988,\nor 98 per cent arrived at their\ndestination punctually. Th* figure\nof 93 per cent, for express trains\nis the highest achieved since the\nformation of the railway, while ln\none particular area, the Central\nDivision, which coven a large portion of the densely populater parts\nof Lancashire, Cheshire and Yorkshire, 100 per cent, wis reached on\nfour consecutive dayi.\n\u2014(Engineering.)\nCaigsry CUSHION SOCKET Uf\n..\u201e_    SVHNLY    dli-\ntr.but\u00abi ottr \u00abttn .fur-\n(act.     EMmlnttM    pr*t-\nsurt on protrudln* bonji,\nCT-Tutl\nssT-'as^ir.\nNot in sir cuihloo.\nO.lg.rr PELVIC MLT Ut\nntrktt\nla wrltlnit tee IlliutrmtW Itt-\nerature, gin particulars ot sin-\nnutation.\nCALQARY  ARTIFICIAL Mm\nrACTORY\nSOS Flrrt St. E.. CtHtry. ARa.\nHandy Material\nfor Handy Men\nUm Cottonwood Panelt\nfor. Improving y\u00bbUf\nhom*. Nelson Pineli\ncan be tttlntd. painted\nor kiliomlntd.\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Co., Ltd.\nDistrict Distributor*\n\"Build B.C. Payrolls\"\nBabies\nProve It;\nThat's\nEnough\nThere reilly li no higher evidence of the special virtue of\nPacific Milk than this help it\nis to bablei, often, too, when\ntiny stomachs are distressed and\nth* babies are ill. Time ind\nagain doctors recommend lt\nHere ls proof pf quality even\nfor the matured judgment\nPacific Milk\nIrradiated  and  Packed  In  Fraier\nValley\nZigzag lightning, as drawn in old-\nfashioned pictures, docs not exist.\nWOMEN PILOTS SKILFUL\nREADING, Eng. (CP'-Mrs. I.\nFisher of Bournemouth and Miss\nR. Moore of Brooklands tied with\n82 out of a 100 in thc best pilot competition in which 11 women showecj\nremarkable flying skill.\nConsider the\nFuture\nWith the return of normil\ntimes, will come a rise ln\nprices of both labor Ind\nmaterial.\nAvail yourtelf of todtyl\nlow prices.\nModernize Now\nand Save!\nConsult tu for all your\nrequirements!\nKOOTENAY\nPLUMBINC 6* HEATINC\nCOMPANY. LIMITED\nPhone 666\nP.O. Box 646    313 Biker tt\n,',^W^iV'.Mtf^L,lj^-^i-^\n\u2022 \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\n \\05i\na\nTHE STORE OF SERVICE AND QUALITY FOR 38 YEARS \u00a39\n>-\ntt\nO\nh\nVI\nQ\nZ\n<\nX\nu\nu\nui\ntt\no\nh\nZ\n(j\u00ab\nZ\n*7\u00bb\nio\n<\n0.\nu\nWE ARE\nHOW\nSMOKING\nSTAND\n$9.50 Walnut Smoking\nStand with complete fittings. Cigarette Jar, Alh\nTray and Match-Box holder and Drawtr for cigars,\nplpt, tobacco, tte. (J*> M\nClosing out price 93*W\nCedar Chest\n\\ splendid grade walnut\n\u25a0edar lined chest. Thlt\nchest always stilt tt 815.\nDuring thlt closing out sale\nand while they C|A OC\nDown Filled\nComforters\n38.98 lovely new down\nfilled comforters \u2014lovely\nntw materials, stttlnt finish. Closing out _*,\"l (Cg\nCoffee Table\n810 burl wilnut coffee\ntable\u2014This Is htnd polished, good looking, carefully\nmatched wilnut. Hetvy\nconstruction. C_C   ___\nClosing out tt .... 9^*13\n$1.50 Inlaid\nLinoleum\nAt this olosing out silt you\nctn take your choice of the\nentire stock\u2014Including the\nntw marble tnd fancy tilt\neffects tnd fashionable\nmarble blocks. Salt prlee,\nper square CI  IP\nyard  , 9**-3\nEnd Table\nWalnut tnd table. Thlt It a\nsturdy well constructed,\nmatched walnut table.\nClosing out\nprlet \t\nSl.65\nDynamic Money-Saving Climax to 38 Years' Faithful Service\nBEGINS TUESDAY^'a.m.\nComes the history-making news \u2014 that after 38 years of an honorable and prosperous\nMercantile career\u2014nearly two score years of such service as merchants seldom render\ntheir public\u2014after 38 years, possessing proudly the respect and esteem of their great\nclientele and following, THE STANDARD FURNITURE CO. OF NELSON, B.C. REGRETFULLY ANNOUNCES TODAY THEIR ULTIMATE DECISION AND DETERMINATION |\nOF RETIRING FROM BUSINESS. Nothing the writer of this Retiring-From-Business announcement might say or write could add or subtract one iota from the,deep respect and\nhigh regard in which the Stnadard Furniture associates are held at home and abroad.\nTo their public they have served so faithfully\u2014the great army of patrons whose patronage they appreciate and value so highly\u2014and to whom they extend their warmest, most\nsincere and hearty thanks today for their liberal patronage during their business life.\nThe Standard Furniture Co. by passing out of Nelson's busy business life is writing THE\nLAST CHAPTER IN AN HONORABLE AND PLEASANT CAREER.\nChesterfield Suite\nFour Pieces $89.50\nValue\nChesterfield tnd two chairs. Steel spring\nconstruction. Steel spring filled cushions\nand til other upholstered parts\u2014the upholstering Is t hetvy raised figured tapestry\u2014reversible. Resilient cushions\u2014one\ngenuine walnut end ttbl.e OKI CO\ncome etrly. Closing out price  9V**3V\n1\nu\n\u25a0o\nJ\nui\nui\na.\nH*\nX\nUI\nh\n<\n>-\nZi\n<\nO\nh\nui\nX\nNOTICE TO THE PUBLIC\nWe hive Just t limited number of chesterfield, dining room and bedroom eultet, rugs, etc., In ttock.\nWhen they are told\u2014there will be no more tt tny price\u2014Thlt li positively a retiring from business\nttle.\nTHIS CLOSING OUT SALE\nIS FCR f * SH\nNOTICE TO THE PUBLIC\nWe reserve the right to close this sale without notice\u2014providing the stock It told out In bulk lots.\nFurniture merchants will find It to thtir advantage to participate In thlt closing out sale.\nWalnut Bedroom Suite\n(188. The smartest new walnut five-piece\nbedroom suite\u2014vanity has full length bevel\nplate mirror. Suite Includes vanity, dresser,\nchest of drawers, bed and bench, ivory\nhandles on dresser, vtnlty tnd chest\u2014the\nentire ensemble is extremely artistic and\nmodern\u2014all lovers of beautiful furniture\nwill want to see this suite\u2014 CQJ_ en\nClosing out price w*J\"\nBedroom Suite\n5 PIECES\n1140.50. Very new mahogany bedroom suite.\nDresser, vanity, chest of drawers, bed tnd\nbench. The dreiier tnd vanity have large\nbevel plate mirrors\u2014the bench Is upholstered In a special material\u2014the chest hat\nlarge roomy drawers. The entire ensemble will please you. \"J7Q OC\nClosing out price 9\/7*7-*\nBEDROOM\nSUITE\n5 PIECES\n$295. Super quality In the most\ncarefully selected matched\nwalnut\u2014thlt It one of the\nmost grtceful ttretmline en-\ntemblet ever pltced on our\nfloor. The dresser, vtnlty tnd\nUrge chett of drtwert hive\nthe most modern artistic\nhandles\u2014large round mirrors.\nDeep drawers, large compartments. Thit gorgeout tuite Is\nthe latt word In the furniture\nartists design  for  1936. The\nround vanity mirror Is three\nfeet In diameter, the dresser\nIs 28 In. in diameter\u2014\n\u00bb $2\u00ab.75\nDRAPERIES\nWa Ara Closing Out Every Yard\nPRINTED LINEN \u2014 For Chesterfields\nand Chair\u2014Loose coven. 65c       *>Q*t\nvalue at, Yd +7*\nSILK RAYON\u2014All-over Curttlnettes,\n45c value. 36-inch. \"T71\/.1*\nClosing Out, Yd *\/ rVv\n65c silk rayons, plain net, 42-ln. Ma*\nwide. Cloting out price, yd  37r\n46c silk rayons, 36 In wide. A good *>Q|t\nchoice. Closing out-price, yd s,7t\nBUNGALOW NET BEIGE-They tell\nregular it 35c per yard, 36.In wide, jnA\nClosing out it yd  *7t\nMARQUISETTE\u20143D to 40ln. Your choice\nof thlt greet lot of marquisettes, all colon to choose from. \u00ab\u00abfft CCA\nClosing out price, yd.   *\/r   to 33t\nHOMESPUN Beautiful new homespuns\nyou can select with a free hand it cloting\nout prices. Regular price 75c to $2.25\nper yard. Closing out prices, yd.\u2014\nm to $1.39\nCRETONNES\u201436 to 46-ln. These cretonnes sell regular from 25c to $1.00 per\nyard. You have a choice of all colors\nand shades. Closing out at, yd.\u2014\nty-.lty\nSHADOW CLOTH-36 to 48-ln. This big\nassortment of new shadow cloth tells\nregultr pricei (5c to $1,00. Closing out\nprice per ytrd\u2014\n39* to \u00ab0{!\nCASEMENT CLOTH- 4*.-ln. wide-rose,\nblue and natural. Closing out       AttA\nat yd 97*\nSILK RAYON-Lovely new silk rayons\nfor side drapes, 40-ln. wide. TOft\nClosing out at, yd iTt\n$25 Breakfast Table\nand 4 Chairs\nSlightly tcratched. A lovely tet. cretm\nand green finish. Cloting     t>|\/I OC\nScotch Linoleum\nPrinted\nHetvy duty tnd you have a number of\ngood pattern! to choote from\u2014Including mtny remntntt\u2014In different pit-\nterm and length!\u2014Cloting out gfA\nit per yird of It\nRexo'eum Remnants\nOne good lot of rexoleum floor oilcloth\nremnants. They all go at closing ]M\nout prlee, per yard 3sr\nTEA WAGON\n$32.50 Butt Walnut tea wagon. This Is a\nlovely hand polished wtgon with trty,\ncutlery, drtwert, wooden wheelt, rubber tires\u2014this wsgon Is worth $32.50, hut\nwe are closing out and the cloting\nout price It all *J*\"7 7C\nyou pay   9*1*13\n(Kant Sag)   CHESTERFIELD AND TWO LARGE CHAIRS\n$176.50 Chesterfield and two\nlarge chain \u2014 rustless tteel\niprlng construction \u2014covered\nwith very hetvy canvat webbing\u2014the canvas Ii htld In t\nvice of flexible steel springs.\nThe upholstering Is a plain\nheavy corded tapestry\u2014cushions reversible to a lovely\nflowered tapestry\u2014two tide\narm pillows completei thlt\nbeautiful living room ensemble. Closing     CQQ Cr,\nWindow\nShades\nOdd lots. These sell\nregularly from 90c to\n$225. Your choice of\ncolor,. ^jjj\n$176.00 three-piece art-modern-streamline chesterfield suite\u2014this marveloua ensemble It upholstered In a rich cruthed, corded jacquard. The beit tteel iprlng\nconstruction. A large gorgeoui art modern chesterfield and two art modern chain\nThlt It one of the manufacturers art-masterpieces for 1936.\nCluing out price\t\n$99.50 =\nFrench Oriental Rugs\n$18 Imported French Oriental Rugs\u2014\ntlte 3-10 x 6 ft Elegant new oriental\ncolorings, the pitttrnt are woven\nthrough tht back\u2014at $18 they were marvelous valuei\u2014 till OS\nClosing out at V**.\"**\nFrench Oriental Rugs\nThese rugs sell regular at $47.50 and ara \"\nvery cheap at that price, tize 6 x 8-4.\nPatterns are woven through the back\u2014\njust come in and see these    &VI Qt?\nnew orientals. Closing out at 9**l*73\n$10 Tea Wagon\nHard wood tea wtgon, rubbtr wheelt\u2014\ntnd  shelf\u2014good  size. ty_* AC\nClosing out at 93**l3\n$178.50 9-Piece Walnut\nDining Room Suite\n60-Inch buffet, 52-Inch refractory extension\ntable, chlm cabinet with illver drawers,\narmchair and five leather slip teat chairs\u2014\nThli li a new natural wtlnut of the highest\nquality\u2014expert detail conttruction through-\n:urf0,.!n' : $*\"-75\n$227.50 9-Piece\nOld English Oak\nDining Room Suite\n66-inchi buffet, 54-lnch extension ttble\u2014\nlarge china cabinet with illver drtwer. One\narm chair and five slip leather teat chain\u2014\nThli Is in elegtnt ensemble for tome ont,\nand tht doting out price Of CT CA\nIt all you pay 9*3l*J*\nCLOSING OUT EVERY RUG IN THE STORE!\nBARRYMORE AXMINSTER RUGS\nOF THE VERY FINEST QUALITY\n8mirt new rugi for any room\u2014thete famoui Barrymore Rugi are Internationally famous\nfor hard wearing qualities and beautiful designs\u2014woven from fine quality yarns with\na deep soft velvety pile to Insure lasting tervice.\n818.00      834.50      838.50      842.50\n4-6 x 7-6 6-9x9        9 x 10-6 9 x 12\n$8.95        $17.95       $24.95       $27.95\n$149.50\nDining Room Suite\nBirch walnut, 9-plecet, 52-Inch refractory\nextension table, 54-Inch buffet tnd\nlarge china cabinet with illver drtwer.\nOne arm-chair tnd five slip leather\nchairs\u2014expert detail cabinet tjflQ CO\nworkmtnthlp. Cloilngouttt 907*7,r\nWALNUT DESK\nThlt handsome walnut desk sells regultr\nat $21.60. it't a new design and well\nworth the above price\u2014 CI I Cf)\nCloting out at 9****w\nBABY CARRIAGE\nSteel frame conttruction baby carriage\nwith  hood.  Ball   bearing  wheels  with\nrubber  tires\u2014cravenetted   body,  $18.50\nvalue.\nClosing out price\t\nW95\nNELSON\nB.C.\nTHE STORfc OF SERVICE AND QUALITY FOR 38 YEARS\nLloydloom Living\nRoom Suites\nThree pieces\u2014settee and two chairs-\nupholstered In.a fine special material.\n8teel spring resilient cushions. Rocker-\nchair tnd settee. **2\"2 7C\nClosing out at Y-\u2014IJ\nX\nIU\nX\nI-\nBLANKETS\nOur new and complete Fall Stock Is on\nthe thelvet and never finer. We are\nClosing Out right nowl\n$6.50 KENWOOD BLANKETS\nSize 60x80, Green, Rose, Tan, Lavender,\nall wool. &AA1\nClosing Out at V*\"**\n$9.50 WHITE KENWOOD\nBLANKETS\nAll wool, site 60x84, colored C(L QC\nborders.   Closing Out it  V****J\n$9.50 KENWOOD REVERSIBLE\nBLANKETS\nRose and Green, Green and Gold. Ron\ntnd Qold, Rose and Blue, Green and\nLavender. fHA1.\nClosing Out it .. *****\nEnglish Carriage\nThis $28.50 English baby carriage it tht\n\"tops\" with hood\u2014iteel frame conttruction\u2014steel tprlngi\u2014white tlrei and the\nvery newest 1936 model. Just step In\nand tee this outstanding baby carriage\n\u25a0\"''*\"-\u2022 $18.25\nClosing out price  ofmonmj\n:....W,.u^\u00bb<^.t,^^-,.,^t^,:.-.iw.^\n^..\u25a0* ^..n.n' \u201e       ,..\u201e\u201e,\u201e,\u201e- \u25a0t,m____^^m^H^m\n\t\n\u25a0liss-s-Mshslilllisl'W\n-\n \u00bbMI\nfev CoW\n\u2022IX-\n-Ht?\naat.us,,,,\nfm NElSON DAILY NEWS. NILSON. B.C-SATURDAY MORNINO, \u2022IPTIMsWR 6, 1M\u00bb     ni.. I mIh** i * \u00ab\u25a0\nA push-button top ot telephone i\nhaa been developed- This ll an implement of* the ;<U\u00abi system\nb\u2014^--saasiiii i.J !\u25a0    *    .\n6011117 SLEEP\nMimiUPT UMDir\n-WvUNI      -WW\nWksaanli4fU\nitem tt a ml n\nleatv aad awake\nleheshtd,   ret\nfalk.-Vt-J.ti-.\nWMtsrturae'br\nCOOKING AND\nBAKING SHOW\nAT KIMBERLEY\nttt-aneitwdMtkb. 1U( atpk. oVyt\n~\u00ab<w4ke4-srh^Mras4->aufle-nsk\n\u00bb\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab-h\u00abiiiH\"Wrest \"Try iWsKidn.;\nKV stW a friend - \"it mty b. your\nfasW*. I'm flid 1 followed his .diitt ss\nMwl'msleepintliketlop-thinleito    III\nDodd'sKidney Pills\nKIMMRtCT, J-C.-Tbe Women's associat ion groups of the United\nchurch held an interesting session\nin the elwreh on Thunday afternoon. It took the form of a cooking\ndemonstration with Min Riley and\ni helper on the state.\nMiss Riley gave a tine-demonslra-\nion .doing the work and baking\n\/.here the audience could see every\nnove. She waa an interesting talker\nbread, apple crumblycrust. antf u\ndelicious steak and: onion dish. She\nmade a sandwich spread and served\ntea, snd the cake she hail baked, and\nalt In little over two hours. The\nchurch vas full and the audience\npleased with it aU. The ltdies carried, note hooka and wrote lhe recipes a* Miss Riley gave them. *\nThe finished dishes snd samples\nof western goods were used as\nprizes for holders of lucky tickets.\nWinners of prizes were: Mrs. J.\nNiven, \"Mrs. Moll, Mrs. A. E. Jure,\nMrs. Low. Mrs. II. S. Andrews, Mrs.\nC. H. Phillips, Mrs. Clerf, Mrs. J.\nGlandville, Mrs. Beduz, Mrs. Cav-\nenagh, Mrs. B. Dickens and Mrs.\nAngrave.\nThe Woman's association made a\nprofit from the afternoon and all\nhad a good time. A real success.\nOne o| Miss Riley's sayings, \"Face\nwith a fund ol happy stories. She iTowder way catch a man but It takes\nbak\u00abl a FeathKweiiljt cake, piun* bakiat* powder to hold him-\nTHE BODY BUILDER\nFor children and adults alike, there ls no finer\nfood\u2014Milk stimulates and refreshes besides;\nsupplying every known type of nourishment\nrich pasteurized\nthat yoilr body needs\u2014Drink three galsses of\n. . , Each day and enjoy real health\nCURLEW MILK\nPhone 900\nDtily Delivery\nwmmmm\n\u25a0sat\nPALM DAIRIES LTD,\nYahk Lady Visits\nCranbrook\nYAHK, B.C.-Mrs. George Pearson motored to Cranbrook Saturday, accompanied by Mr. and Mrs.\nA. Erickson and sons and Jean Anderson.\nHoward Parker left Friday for\nTrail to resume his duties en the\nschool teaching staff.\nOscar Fredericteon of Perry\nCreek Is a visitor in town.\nMr. and Mrs. C. E. Pavideon returned Tuesday from Nelson te their\nhome near here.\nMrs. Charles Hellgren and chit\n\u25a0\nBoundary Miss In Training at Victcsrio.(\\n\\i,\\(_ (|)||p|g\nVisit Cranbrook\n'\u25a0\"WJfJ\nCRANBROOK, B.C.\u2014R. Warren ls\napendiftg a M-day vacation at Wen-\ntschee.\nMr. and Mra. R. podgson pf North\nBay, Ont., were recent guests of Mr.\n_A Mrs. W. Hall.\nPr. M. Large of Kelowna is vtstl-\nhjg his parents, Dr. and Mrs. H. L.\nlarge.\nDdiss Laura Henderson, who spent\nthe summer months with her parents at Duncan, has returned to the\ncity.\nMistf* Gwen John has returned to\nthe city*#fter visiting friends ln-Van-\neeuver far the past three waeke.\nLawrence Gillis hae left tor V.lc-\nRECIPE8\nMENUS\nami\nHINTS\nGood\nHousekeeping\nMlfs Geraldine Gowans, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Gowans\nof Grand Forks, who is a nurse-in-training at the Jubilee hospital in\nVictoria- Her father is a well known railroad man and sports follower in\nthe boundary country\u2014Photo by Hughes Studio in Trail.\ndren ot Kimberley are guests at the\nhome of Mr. and Mrs. Algot Johnson.\nMrs. Barney Berg and children\nof Kimberley are guests at the home\nof Mrs. Berg's parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nK. Sandnrss.\nMr. and M\". George Walt had as\ntheir guest Sunday Mr. Walt's sifter,\nMiss Rose Walt, of Red Deer, Alta.\nJock' Wardrope, Carl Anderson\nand Bert Revens of Lumberton\nspent Sunday here.\nCharlie Mah Ming, proprietor of\na local cafe, left Monday to visit\nrelatives at Hong Kong,\n^ssssssssss\nCanadian Women\nDEMAND\nAnother  \\$\\W.\nSOLID  N\nTRAINLOAO;\/',,,\nf\nYOUR BEATTY\nFROM THIS\nSHIPMENT\nft\n\u2022,*-S\n\/__\nN\u2122\nWashers ^Ironers\n\\\nVT\\\n\u2022L...JJS\nTTflH|\n#\n500,000\nCANADIAN\nWOMEN \u00ab*c\nBEATTY\nWASHERS\nOn Sept. lit, another trainload of Beatty\nElectric Washers, Ironera (tnd ether appliances wai shipped from our Fergus factories\ndirect to Beatty dealers, customers tnd stores\nin Eastern Canada. Beatty Washers hive\nalways been far in the lead in Canada tnd\nthe Britilh Empire. They lead because Bettty\nWashing action gets clothei cleaner, t better\ncolour, in leu time and is easier on clothei.\nThey lead because Beatty Washers ire sold\ndirect to the consumer from Beatty factory\nbranchci everywhere... prices are lower,\nterms more reasonable and lervlce more\ndependable. '\n500,000 Canadian housewives use Beatty\nwashers... get a Beatty and you will be just\nis pleased ta they ... half a million women\nctn't be wrong.\nmmm\nOVER\n'H A HUNDRED)\nCARLOADS\nSHIPPED\nSEPT. 1ST\nBEATTY\nELECTRICAL APPLIANCES\nLIFT THE.\nBURDEN\nFROM\nWEARY\nSHOULDERS\nMr\n3109.00\nNELSON FACTORY BRANCH\nPhone 91 Nelson B.C., 306Bakei\nWEEK-END RADIO\nSATURDAY NIGHT\nCANADIAN RADIO\neOMMISSIQlf NETWORK\n5:00 Program to> be anounced,\nfrom New York; 5:S0\\Let's go to thc\nMusic hall, dir., George \"Young, Toronto; \u00ab:00 Musical Meriv-Go-Round,\nToronto; 6:30 Lloyd HUAtley's orch.,\nMontreal; 6:45 CanaoYan Press\nNews and Weather forecast. Toronto; 7:00 Across the Poiyler, N.B.\nC; 7:30 Hews, Vancouver, (ft C. Net)\nMarkowsky's orchestra; 8A|0 The\nSport Week, trom Letbbrldga,; 8:15\nFreshmen and Freshettea, Rsyuna;\n8:30 Mart Kenney and Seven w est-\nern Gentlemen, Vancouver; &,:00\nJascha Galperln's erehestra, LaV\nLouise; 9:30 Bob Lyon's orch., Vancouver; 10:00 News Reporter, VanJ\ncouver, (B.C Net); 10:15 Stan Pat-'\nton's orch., Vancouver.\nN.B.C.-KPO RED NETWORK\nKHQ  KGW  KFI  KPO  KOMO\n590 620 640 680 820\np:00 Jamboree, variety show; 5:30\nChateau, Smith Ballew, m.c, Victor\nYoung's orch.; 6:30 Stringtime, dir.\nJack Meakin; 7:00 National Barn\nPanes, variety, 8:00 Henry Ring'?\norch,; 8:30 Charles Stenross' orch.\n9:00 Fletcher Henderson's orch.; 9:30\nAlfred Bart's orch.; 10:00 ^d-Jie Fitz<\nPatrick jr., and orch.; 10:30. Tom\nBrown's orch.; 11:00 Jack Meakin's\norch.; 11:30 Ran Wilde's orch.\nN.B.C.-KGO BLUE NETWORK\nKGO KJR KEX KECA KGA\n790   970     1180     1430     1470\n5:00 To be announced; 5:45 Music\nBox, dir. Joseph. Honti; 6:45 J|mn*y\nLunceford's oreheatra; 7:00 Riley\nand Farley's orch.; 7:30 Al Dono-\nhue's orchestra; 8:00 Lou Bripg'5\norchestra; 8:30 Xavier Cugat's orch.;\n9:00 Kings Jesters' orchestra; 9:15\nGentlemen of Rhythm; 9:30 Jack\nRussell's orchestra; 10:00 Sterling\nYoung's orchestra; 10:30 Jimmie\nGrier's orch.; 11:00 Charles Runyan,\norganist.\ntoria where he will attend the normal school.\nMr. and Mn. A. M. Steele and\nfamily have returned from Vancouver where they were visiting relative '\nMr. and Mre. H. Blinston ahd fam-\nly have left for Dutch Creek where\nthey will reside.\nMrs. H. A. McKowan was tea\nhost\u00abs at the Golf club on Wednesday afternoon.\nMrs. K. D. McKay has returned\nalter visiting relatives at Moose\nJaw and Regina.\nMrs. A. E. Bowley, Miss Hazel\nand Miss Joan Bowley have returned from Drumheller, where\nthey were thejguests of Mr. and Mrs.\nJack Moffatt.'\nMr. and Mrs. R. S. Jarvis and .eon\nBobby have returned after visiting\nin Vancouver for the past \"ponth.\nSister John Gabriel, director of\nnursing school for the Sisters' of\nProvidence of Charity ln Canada\nand the United States is visiting in\nCranbrook.\nMr. end Mrs. A. B. Smith have\nbeen spending the past few days in\nInvermere, attending tlie fall lair.\nMr. and Mrs. P. A. McGrath were\ncity visitor* for a few days thia\nweek.\nMENU  HINT   -v....\nNew England Beef Stew\nSliced  Tomatoes\nApple Pie Cheese\nTea or Coffee\nSimple menu, eh, what? And easy\nto make. Do you do aa I do? Make\nepough pie crust for several pies,\nsay one apple pie with two crusts,\none or two shells? It keeps for some\ntime in the refrigerator, and It is\nnice to know you have the makings\nof dessert at hand in case of unexpected company or for the family\nmeal.\nBABOON  POLICIES 8PION  KOP\nCAPE TOWN - (CP) - Spion\nKop, known for one .of the fiercest battles in the Boer war, is now\nguarded by a lone baboon harbored by farmers to scare away stock\nthieves.\n*\nTODAY'S RECIPEA    .,\nNEW ENGLAND BEEF- STEWS'1: pounds beef, 1 small onion,\nchopped; 1' turnip,- diced; 8 carrots,\ndiced; water, 5 potatoes, Vt cup\nflour, 2 tablespoons fat, salt end pepper, dumplings. Have beef cut into\nsmall pieces for atewlng. Dredge\nwith flour and seasonings and brown\nin fat with chopped onion. Cover\nmeat and onions with water and\nsimmer 2 or 3 hours (or until meat\nis tender). Half an hour before\nserving ndd other vegetables, 16\nminutes later odd dumplings.\nPURITY\nFLOUR\n.   MAKMfjJSJi BREAD\nFAIRVIEW CO-OPERATIVE STORES\nSPECIALS\nGROCERIES\nCurlew   BuX'er\u2014\nIb i,\t\nAssorted  Blsasilts\nLb ......7......\nSugar\u2014\n10 lbs om\t\nCerto\u2014\nBottle .\nCoffei\n-\u2022-V\"\nC.B.S.DON LEE NETWORK\nKVI KPRC KOIN KSL KOL\n670 610 940 1130 1270\n8:00 Bruna Castagna, contralto;\nLarry Kent's orch., KVI; 5:30\nSalon Moderne; 6:00 Your Hit parade, Harry Salter's orchestra; 7:00\nArtie Shaw's orch.; 7:30 Hal Kemp's\norch,; 8:00 Jan Garber's orch.; 8:30\nBenny Goodman's orch.i 9:00 Eddie\nHouse, organist; 9:15 Harry Lewis'\norchestra; 8:30 Jan Garber's orch.;\n10:00 Everett Hoagland's orch.; }0:45\nCole McElroy's orch.; 11:00 Benny-\nGoodman's orch.; 11:30 Larry Kent's\norch.\nSUNDAY NIGHT\nC.R.C. NETWORK\nJ.00 Band of H. M. Grenadier\nGuards. Montreal; 2:30 Dr. H. L\nStewart\u2014Reviews the News, Halifax; 2:45 Presenting Paul de Marky,\npianist, Montreal; 8:00 Crinolines,\nstring group, Toronto; 3:00 Le Ville\nMaison, Montreal; 4:00 America\nDances, dir. Lud Gluskin, CBS-N.Y.;\n4:30 Lodge Musicale; 5:00 Little\nSymphony, Emile Larochelle, tenor,\nQuebec; 5:30 Mart Kenney's orchestra, Banff; 6:00 Mirror of Melody, soloists, Toronto; 6:30\nChasing Shadows, pianists, Calgary;\n6:45 Canadian Press News and the\nWeather, Toronto; 7:00 Atlantio\nNocturne, Halifax; 7:30 Blue Pacific) Moonlight, Vancouver; I;60\nNews, from Vancouver; Live, Laugh\nand Love, Winnipeg, B. C. 8:15;\n8:30 Driftwood, Allen Caron, organist, Winnipeg; 9:00 In the old\nchateau, string quartet, Winnipeg,\nnot CRCV; 10:00 News (B.C. Net);\n\"Radio New,\" anniversary program,\nVancouver.\nN.B.C.-KPO RED NETWORK\n9:00 Manhattan Merry Go Round,\nAndy Sanella's orch.; 5:30 Album of\nFamiliar Music, Gustave Haen?-\nchen's orch,; 6:00 To be announced;\n7:00 Morin Sisters and the Ranch\nBoys; 7:30 Tim and Irene, Don Wilson, m.c.. Don Voorhee's orchestra;\n8:00 Bobby Hayc's orch.; Williams\nSisters, vocal trio, (KPO); 8:15 Night\nEditor, Hal Burdlck; 8:30 One Man's\nFamily, Carlton Morse drama; 9:00\nJohn Nesbitt's Passing Parade; 9:16\nSiring Time dir. Louis Ford; 9:30\nJack Russell's orch.; 10:00 News\nFlashes, Sam Hayes reporter; 10:15\nThe Bridge to Dreamland, Paul\nCarson, organist; 11:00 Beaux Arts\nTrio, Instrumental; 11:30 Jack Meakin's Music.\nN.B.C.-KGO BLUE NETWORK\n5:00 Walter Wlnchell, Broadway\ngossip; 5:11 Paul Whitwan's mu6'\nleal varieties; 6:00 Twilight Hour;\n6:30 Dreams of Long Age, Ethel\nParks Richardson; 7:00 Twin City\nFoursome, male quartet; 7:10 News\nFlashes; 7:15 Ensemble, instrumental; 7:30 Leon \"Navarro's oreh.; 8:00\nRudy Selger's orch.; 8:30 Eddie\nFitspatrjek's orch.; 9:00 Fletcher\nHenderson's orch.; 9:30 Reader's\nGuide, J. II. Jackson; 10:00 Tom\nBrown's orch; 10:30 Sterling Ynung'l\norch.; 11:00 Charles Runyan, organ-\n(It.        - \u2014    \u2014^\n'es\u2014M\nJar\u00bb   -\t\nTomatoes\u2014\nbasket   \t\nWashing Powder\u2014\nR. C. pkg\t\nToilet Tissue\u2014\nPurex, 6 rolls\t\nAsk for other spedsali\nFree Delivery \u2014 Phone\n201\nty\nm\n10.\n146\nuntil,  |,i   ;;,)ifrfifip\nMEATS\nSaturday Morning Specials\nty\nty\nRolled Pot Roasts-\nLb J\t\nRolled Oven Roasts\nvb-\nZeal Roasts\u2014\nLb. _\nBaby Beef Roasts-\nLbs      ^\nAll Day Specials\nPot Roasts an J,\nLb  WI* am\nChoice Veal       *_*a\nsteek~Lt> *\u2022*\u00bb\u2022 em\nGood Oven Roasts\ny>\t\nRolled Prime Rlb*h-\nLb. \u201e ;\t\nty\nty\nty\nm\n\u2014\nBON TON MKT.\nPHONE 292\nFREE DELIVERY\n\u25a0\u25a0\"\u2014*\u25a0\u2014\u25a0\" * w.\u2014\\7n % '\u25a0 v%.cttJi.'T-.\"< 'V-!'\u2022'\"\"\"\u2022*\"\u25a0\u25a0-  \"' t'i?-ii***i'gIivr^*'\"'\u00abiii'*5*\u00bb\u00bbwuB^^\nChoice Meats for Less\nSirloin\nIt*. ...\nand T-Bono\nRoasti,\n. ao*7\nSirfojn and T-Bone Steak,\nlb 90**\nChoice Reund Steak,\n2 (M. \u2022 \u2022 .9.  35*\nRolled Print Ribs, Ib. 20*\nRump Roasts, Ib 15*\nThick Rib Roaiti, Ib. 14*\nBlade Roaiti, Ib 10*\nRound Bono Roaiti, Ib. 10*\nBulk Lard, 2 Ibi. for 25*\nGood Veal Roasts, Ib. . 12*\nVcU Rump Roaiti, lb. 15*\nSirloin Veal Roasti, lb, 20*\nFillet Veal Roasts, Ib. 20*\nBonelen Lean Beef, lb. 10*\nMinced Beef, } lbl. for 25*\nLegs Lamb, lb, .....23-*\nShoulderi Lamb, Rolled on\nRtqiMtt, lb 14*\nChelu Fowl, Ib.\n20*\nOVERWAITEA Ud.\nSPECIALS\nSATURDAr-TUISDAY\nPHONe* 707\nPree Delivery In City Only\nFreight paid en orders $10 and over\nMcDonalds marmalade  4-ib. tin 47*\nr.&CSOAP 3 for 10*\nRED BIRD MATCHES  Pkt. 25*\nBUTTER\nFirst Grade,\nAlberta\t\n3 lbs. 95*\nCHOICE PEAS\u2014Siie 4i Tin 10*\nOLD DUTCH CLEANSER   3 tini for 25*\nMASONJARS\nWide mouth,\nquarts \t\nDoz. $1.65\nMUFFETS\u2014Good for children    Pkt. 11*\nLARGE LEMONS\u20143001 Doi. 42*\nPEACHES\nFreestone\nElberta \t\nCrate $1.59\nORANGES\u2014 Sweet and juicy 2 dox. 59*\nCHOICE CANTALOUPES Each    5*\nCELERY?\nbunches\nw*\nPURE OKANACAN CIDER VINEGAR Cal. 75*\nMAGIC BAKING POWDER  2'\/z-lb. tin 65*\nCHLORINATED LIME   Tin U*\nLIBBY'S PORK AND BEANS 28-oi. tin 15*\nLARCE HEAD LETTUCE 2 for 15*\nEGGS\u2014 Grade A-large   Dox. 40*\nFRESH FRUIT AND VEGETABLES\n  si -\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0   \u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\n -mm-\n ,\n_\n\u25a0 i \u25a0 M \u25a0 i'      \u2022\u25a0\u25a0!.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u00bb\u25a0\u25a0'\nt\u00abJH\n\u25a0\u25a0\n FERNIE SCHOOL STUDENTS FIND\nNEW QUARTERS, NEW TEACHERS\nAND NEW COURSES WHEN RETURN\nFESNIJ5, B.C.\u2014Pupils returning\nte school thia week found themselves almost in a new world. New\ndepartment!, new courses, new\nteachers confronted them on every\nhand. Tbe old, familiar division into\npublic and high schools has given\nway to the new organisation into\nelementary, Junior high and senior\nhigh schools. The home economics\ndepartment, closed several years ago\nbecause of the depression, was again\nopen with Mies Marjean McClure\nof Kimberley in charge. A hope of\nformer years wai realized in the\npresence of a physical education instructor Id the person of A. J. McLuckie, who with his wife, came\nfrom Vancouver. A. Cobus, formerly\nof the Fernie school stall, and principal at Erickson tor the pest two\nyears, is back again, this time in\ncharge of the newly-organized commercial department. Miss Norma\nDouglas of the high school staff is\nspending a large part of her time\non music.\nThe feraaer elementary manual\nButcherteria News\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.-SATURDAY MORNINO. SEPTEMBER 5.1*M\nroS\u00b0l\n-PAGE  SEVEN\nPHONES 527\u2014528\nT. S.  SHORTHOUSE\nFREE DELIVERY\nBetter Meats for Lets\nSATURDAY AND TUESDAY\nJuicy Roasts\nSTEER BEEF\nKTROASTS:8wd10c\nROLLED ROASTS:     OQr\nRUMP ROASTS\nLb. .\t\nROUND ROASTS:     17.\n14c\nYOUNG LAMB\nSHOULDERS: Lean;    17.\nIf ^'\"\"\"'25c\nMILK FED VEAL\n[lLLiT.ROASTS!....20c\nRUMP ROASTS\nLb\t\nCOOD OVEN 10.\nROASTS: Ib l*^-*\n16c\nLEAN PORK\nROASTS: Ib.\n22c\nCreamery   Butter:\nButtercup Brand,\nLb. _.\u201e \u2014\t\nBelling Fowl:\nLb.\nty\nTender Steaks\nBEEF SIRLOIN\nSTEAKS: lb. ,\nBEEF ROUND\nSTEAKS: Ib. ..\nLOIN VEAL\nSTEAKS: Ib. .\nSHOULDER VEAL     OC.\nSTEAKS: 2 Ibi Lot\nLEAN LAMB\nSTEAKS: Ib. .\nLEAN PORK\nSTEAKS: Ib. .\n23c\n17c\n20c\n22c\n24c\nGoods Stews-Boiling\nLEAN BEEF, LEAN VEAL,\ntr..uM\" Wc\ntraining department hu given way\nto industrial arts for tbe junior high\nand technical arts for the senior\nhigh. C. V. Stainsby, -who opened the\ndepertment nine years ago, tarsi who\nhas been on the high school staff\nfor the last four \"years, has resumed\ncharge of these departments.\nOther new members of the staff\ninclude Miss Catherine A. McLeod\nof North Vancouver and Miss Kath-\nerine B. Youdall of Victoria.\nIn the elementary school Miss N.\nNicolctti has taken over the work\nof Miss Martha Anderson who is on\na year's leave of absence to take a\ncourse in handcrafta a* Oslo, Norway. Miss Kathryu Gates is substituting for Miss Elsie Barton, who\nhas not yet returned from a summer\ntrip to jurope.\nOther teachers in the senior high\ninclude K. F. Alexander, Miss Marion Mangan, Wi*\u00bb Alice Wilson\nand Ivor .Griffiths; in the junior\nhigh Walter Barclay and Miss May\nTully; In the elementary Leori push-\ncall and Misses Dorothy, Dicken,\nLouise Reynolds, Edna 'Wallace,\nEmma Chubra, Elsie Ferguson and\nIsabel Dicken. A. L. McPhee is supervising principal of all three\nschools.\nA new building is being erected\nacross the street from central school\nto house the technical and home\neconomics departments and the\ngymnasium. The \"new building will\nnot be jsady to occupancy until\nlater in the fall. In the meantime all\ndepartments are functioning despite\ncrowded quarters and pupils are\ntrying to take in all the new courses\nregardless \u00abi the limitations of the\ntime-table\/'\nMINCED BEEF:\n2 Ibi.\t\n19c\nBREAKFAST\nSAUSACE: lb.\n12c\nROASTING AND FRYING\nfrCKlNS- 30c\nBreakfast Bacon: Mat\nsliced, Ib 3*Y\nMild Alberta Cheese:\nper Ib _\t\n*#\nSOCIAL HAPPENINGS\nIN NELSON CITY\n\u00ab\u25a0 lewse-n ii i 1-iPU-** i\nTills column Ja conducted by Mrs. M- A. Vigneux. AU oen*! of a\nsocial nature Including reception* private entertsdomeota, personal\nitems, marriages, etc, will appear in thia column. Telephone Mrs.\nVigneux at her home. M\u00bb Sjlic\u00bb j *\ni an, in\nMr. .end Mrs. James McGregor\nentertained at a delightful buffet\nsupper at their bouse boat home on\nthe North Shore in honor of Miss\nHuth Crauiord and Robert Waldie,\nwho will be married in Nelson in a\nfortnight. Invited guests were Miss\nCrauford, Mr. Waldie, Mr. and Mrs.\nVictor Owen, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred\nM. Noxon, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Waldie\nof Kimberley, Miss Jean Gilker,\nMiss Irene Edmondson, Miss Aileen\nMensfiele*,   Miss   Alia   Johnstone,\nMrs. Walter Ridley of London, England, Thomas Johnstone, Mr. and\nMrs. George Lee Warner, Mr. and\nMrs. Reginald H. Dill, Miss Cora\nBerrat, Pr. P. W. McJCay, Pirk Reed,\nMr. and Mrs. Fred Weir, Mr. and\nMrs. Harold Lakes end Mn. Henry\nMcLaren of Ottawa.\n\u2022  \u00bb  \u00bb\nD. B. Millar of Crawford Bay visited the city yesterday.\nCHILO FALLS FROM TRAIN\nSHEFFIELD, England, (CP) -\nThe'three-year-old son of Mr. and\nMrs. J. C. Pearce of this city fell\nfrom a train in Totley tunnel but\nwas uninjured except for bruises\nahd shock.\nA Hungarian scientist, working\nin Hamburg, Germany, hae demonstrated that zenioi, mixed with water, will produce steam at a temperature so much below ordinary\nwater that Germany could effect a\ncoal saving of $850,000,000 a year in\ngeneration of steam.\nJohn II. Hoskin of Balfour was\namong city shoppers yesterday.\n\u00bb   \u00bb   \u2022\nMrs. R. Jerome apd daughter, Mrs.\nD. Campbell, of Bonnington, have\nleft for a few weeks' vacation at the\ncoast.\n\u00bb   \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. M. M. Butorac of\nTrail visited Nelson Thursday.\n.    .    9\nMiss Ella McDonell, who spent\nseveral months at North Bend, a\nguest of her brother-in-law Bnd\nj sister, Mr. and Mrs. Duncan McDougall, has returned and is now a\nguest of her brother and sister-in-\nlaw, Mr. and Mrs. A. J. McPonell,\nat their Willow Point home.\n\u00bb  *  *\nW. G. Lowenthal Norrie of Vancouver has returned after a brief\nvisit in Nelson and district,\n.    .    9\nCaptain and Mrs. P. Harlrldge of\nBalfour spent yes'erday in Nelson.\nThey leave this momlng with Mr.\nmm\nSprinters...\nLook over our display of running spikes\nbefore the big race on Labor Day. We\nhave a complete range of sizes, at\t\n\u2666a\n.5S\nR. ANDREW & CO.\nLEADERS IN FOOTFASHION\nend Mrs. Charles J*. McHardy 4*4'\nson, Wilmer, on a week-end motor\ntrip to Spokane.\n\u2022 \u2666  \u2022\nUr. nd Mn. C. B. Sharp and\ndaughter, Beatrice, have left to visit\nin Spokane.\n\u2022 \u00bb  \u2022\nAlex Finlayson of Procter left\nyesterday to spend two weeks at\ntbe coast.\n\u2022 .   \u2022\nNorman Bolton lift yesterday for\nVancouver after visiting Nelson and\nTrail.\n\u2022 *  \u2022\nMiy. 3. H. Wensley of Crescent\nBay visited town yesterday.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMiss June Baddeley, who spent\nthe holidays at the home of her\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. Maitland\nHarrison at Howser, also with her\ngrandparents, Mr. and Mrs. G. Noel\nBrown, at Cora Linn, has returned\nto St. Joseph to resume her studies.\nt  *  *\nMrs. H. W. Simmons of Sitcum\nCreek visited Nelson yesterdsy.\ne   .   e\nMiss Rebecca McKinnon left yesterday to visit tor two weeks at the\ncoast.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nMrs. H. M. Dronsfield, Second\nstreet, Fairview, left yesterday\nmorning to spend a few days in\nSpokane.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nMiss Rose Hartwig of the staff .of\nthe Vulcan hospital at Vulcan, Alta,\nis visiting at the home of Mr. and\nMrB. Ross Riley, Houston street\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMrs. Johnston and ber children,\nGirlie and Gilbert, returned yesterday from \u2022 few weeks' visit in\nEdgewood and diitrlct\nDr. W. H. Grey of Colville, Willi.,\nwent to Edmonton y^terdey.\n\u00bb   e   .\nShoppers in town yesterday included Mrs. Thomas Brenilson of\nBalfour, who was a guest of her\nrelative, Mrs. Mary Kerr, Kerr\napartments.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. A. Waters has left to visit\nHigh, River, Alta. She was accompanied by her sister, who has visited\nher for a month.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nH. Gustafson of Perry Siding visited town yesterday,\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00bb\nJames Eccles, Gore street, left\nyesterday for Vancouver. He will\nbe accompanied home by Mrs. Eccles\nwho has been in hospital for a few\nweeks.\n\u2022' i ' .  . e\nMiss Evelyn Hutchison, recant\ngraduate of the Royal Columbian\nhospital, New Westminster, was a\nSATURDAY IS THE LAST DAY OF\nPROMOTION DAYS\nDO-NOT MISS THE5E EXTRA VALUES!\nwememmemmem\nHosiery\nValues\nChiffon end semi'serv-\nice ringlets and full-\nfashioned. New fall\nshades. All size*, gfl.\nPrtmotion Days WC\n2 pairs ? 1.35\nCREPE HOSE\nBeautiful quality fashioned. All perfect new\nshades. Sites 8Vz to\n10%. Promotion\nDays, PAIR ...\nSLIPS\nIn lace trimmed Vitootuede and Angelskln. White and\ntee rote. Small, medium, large. QA\nPROMOTION DAYS OUC\nCELASUEDE VESTS AND BLOOMERS\nThey will last two and three times longer man cheaper\nthings, and cost leet on Promotion Days. CO-\nGARMENT   ovt\nA great assortment of quality house\ndresses. Made of sun tan and tub\nfast prints. AH sizes.\nPROMOTION SPfCIALS\t\n$1-59\nA New Shipment of\nMILLINERY\nHos just Arrived!\nJERMAN HUNTS\nPRY GOODS ANO R{APY.T0-WEAR\nPhon* 200 faker St.\nI^^ff^^^i^ X\u00bblie^l^^\n't'\u00bb I\"\" I'll\" so.\nNelson vjajtor Thwriay, en route to\nvisit her parents at rerjile.\n.    9    f\n' Mr. and Mrs. T. W. Dodd of Tarrys\nvisited Nelion yestenjey.\nMr. and Mrs. Tupper have returned from their honeymoon spent\nat the coast cities. They have taken\nup residence In the Allan hotel,\nBaker street.\n*    .    9\nDuncan Carter of Robson spent\nyesterday in town.\nMr. and Mrs. G. G.\nvisitors from Saliho -jrWepdey,\nFLOUR\nAIRWAY\n98-lb.iock ._\u201e. $5.25\n4Mb. lack ._-,.\u201e- $1.69\n24.1b. sack \u201e 89c\n\u00a7m i way Stores\nPHONE 865-866 FREE DELIVERY\nPrices Effective)\nSATURDAY AND TUiSDAY-Stpt. 5-S\n\u2014\u25a0\nI. C. CRANULATID\n10 Ibi   62c\n3 lbl. BROWN . 19c\n2 |bi. ICING 17c\nPRODUCE DEPARTMENT\nPcaiclics rtttiito^iirtei, 91*59\nTomatoes ZSc\nCantaloupes.\u00bb 25c\nBananas <-:-\u2022 25c\nTomatoes 10c\nPEACHE^TrlHmph Basket 19c\nVEGETABLE MARROW ..    14,. Sc\nWATERMELON  Lb. 5c\nONIONS-Okanagan  8 lbs. 25e\nAPPLES  10 lbs. 25c\n1 . .\nSALAD DRESSING\u20148-01. tumbler  Each 22?\nSALT\u2014Windsor  7-lb. nek IB?\nRID ARROW SODAS Pkg. 19?\nMACARONI\u2014Ready Cut   2 Ibi. 16?\nTEA\u2014Exeello Orange Pekoe  Lb. 49?\nCOCOA\u2014Cowan's Lb, 35^\nBORDEN'S CHOCOLATE MALTED MILK .. Tin 35?\nMAGIC BAKINC POWDER 12-ox. tin 23?\nMAGIC BAKINC POWDER ., 2>\/2-lb. tin 65*\nROWNTRSE'S BAKINC CHOCOLATE .... Cake 18?\nIELLO\u2014Aiierte<i 4 pkgi. 27?\nMATCHES-Owl 3,bo* pkg. 35?\nVANILLA\u2014Ei-ipreii Pure 2-oi. bottle 17?\nROYAL CROWN LYE 2 tint 33?\nCLOTHESPINS 3 doi. 13?\nEUREKA BLEACH 2 bottIff 25*\nLIQUID AMMONIA   2 bottlei 25?\nCHIPSO-Large Pkg. 20?\nV|NICAR~CWtr   G\u00bbJ. 05?\nCORN STARCH   Pkg ll?\nPLY COILS 6 for 10?\nROMAN MEAL  Pkg 33?\nCORN PUKES 3 pkgi. 25?\nROBINHOOD\nOATS\nNon Premium\nPkg  19c\nWALNUTS\nQuarters\nLb 29c\nRAISINS\nSeedless\n2 Ibi. 25c\nMILK\nTill All Brinds\n6 tins   49c\nBUTTER\nHighway 1st Greg's\n3 lbs  95c\nPUREX TISSUE\n4 relit  29c\nPALMOLIVE\nSOAP\n6 bars 28c\nDUTCH\nCLEANSER\n3 tins ...\u25a0\u25a0.\u25a0 25c\nJewell Shortening\n2 Ibi. 32c\nBrookfield Buffer\n2 Ibi. \u2014 65c\nGolden Loaf\nCheese\nHu that rich creamy flavor\nLb.\n28c\nQUALITY MEATS\nFREE DELIVERY\nPHONE 865\n\"EXTRA SPECIAL\"\nROLLED PRIME RIB BEEF ROASTS:\nPer Ib\t\nTENDER BEEF POT ROASTS;\nPer Ib\t\nTENDER BEEF RUMP ROASTS;\nPer lb\t\n17c\n10c\n15c\nSPRINC LAMB\nLEGS: per lb. ..\nSPRINC LAMB\nSHOULDERS: Ib.\nSMOULDER VEAL\nROASTS: per Ib.\nTENDER ROUND\nSTEAKS: 2 lbs. for\u00ab\nMILD CURED COTTAGE\nROLLS: tie.\nPf r Ib IOC\nMILD CURED       1Q\u201e\nPICNICS: per lb. . WC\n23c\n14c\n14c\n35c\n25c\n24c\n16c\nPORK WIN\nROASTS: per lb.\nPPRKUC\nROASTS: per Ib.\nRUMP VEAL\nROASTS: per lb..\nTENDER SIRLOIN   k\\_\\\nSTEAKS: 2 Ibi. for $>C\nCOMBINATION\nSPfCIAL\nlib. PORK SAUSACE and\nVi Ib. SLICED SIDE\nBACON: OC\u201e\nBoth for JJl\nALL-IRAN\u2014L*rff \t\nWHEAT PUFFS-Cello\t\nSAUSAGE-Campfire  \t\nKIPPERED SNACKS\t\nSOUP\u2014Libby's Assorted\t\nTOMATO JUICE\u2014Aylmer IOVi-01,\nPEAS-Broder, Sieve 5\t\nCORN-Aylmer Whiff\t\nCUT CREEN BEANS\t\nH0NIY*~I.C.P\u00bbre\t\nlAM-McDonald'i Assorted\t\nKETCHUP-Aylmer .\t\nPICKLES\u2014Polly Prim\t\n   Pkg. 20?\n.... 2 pkgi. 25?\n  Tin 23?\n..... 4t.ni Sl3?\n 4 tins 35?\n.... 4 tins 85?\n 2 tins 23?\n 2 tins 25?\n 2 tini 23?\n,... 4-lb. tin 59c)\n... 4-lb. tin 50?\nU-oi. bottle 15?\n26-oi. bottle 29?\nMrs. A. M. Sturgw, Medical Arts\napartments, has returned from a\nmonth's visit in Vancouver and Bralorne. In the latter place she visited\nglf son ind e>t\"jhter-in-lew, Mr.\nend Mrs. Tbop-ai Sturgeis.\n\u2022 .  I\nT. P. Edgar wu ln town trom Vallican yesterday.\nt  \u2022  \u2022\nJ. Bowling ot Trail spent yesterday in Ke)s6n.\n\u2022 \u2022  *\nH. D. Bead ot Brie visited the city\nyesterday.\n\u2022 1  *\nWit. S. Glllett has left for lethbridge, Alta., to visit her son, George\nGitlett.\n\u2022 \u00bb   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. A. G. Hansen and\ntwo ions have left lor Lethbridge.\nAlta., to visit Mrs. Hansen's brother,\nQeorge Glllett,\n\u2022 \u00bb  \u2022\nSandy Nord left recently to teach\nschool at Hounds, near Lake Co-\nwichan.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. ind Mrs. Jobs Harris of Sun-\ndon sre city visiton for | tew days.\nNakusp Hi Entertain\nLake Institutes\nN*t*HEP,  \u00bb%*(*\u00bb   Won*-\nen'e Institute met Tuesday with the\nviceipresidenl, Mrs. J. Dolman, in\nthe .chair.\n-Arrwflffl-en\"* war* P*\u00bbde *\u00ab* Ht\n\u25a0jl>teri|w\u00bbwnt to which the members of sister institutes from lake\npoints will be invited.\nA tag day in aid qt the Salvation\nArmy was also planned.\nTwo new directors wire ap-\n,   pointed frMowlnj- the acceptance of\nthe resignation of two iapnbers \"who\nare leaving town. Those elected were '\nMrs. J. prrent and trjni. % m. Jfclr-;\nridge.\nPlfjing the propim period ffkjp.\nG. 9. flonjey and\u00ab\u00bb Anit*. Wiley played a pianoforte duet. \"Mrs. I.\nMotherwell was the tea hostess.\nMiss Rodger? of Toronto was\namong visitors is town, a guest at\nthe Leland. 8\nK. Klyme from London, Eng.,\nvisited in Nakusp for several days.\nMr. and Mrs. 3. G. Mertiy of\nNelson were visitors in Nakusp\nMonday.\nDoN Cookies\nFresh\n2 lbs 7...49e\nCOFEEJ\nExeello Freih Ground\nLb. 35c\n_L\nWe Reierve the Right to Limit Quantities\nSAFEWAY STORES LIMITED\n\u2014\nLowerys\nGroceteria\nat\nPhoni 401      rre\u00bb (Jlty *?e||very\nSOAP-Klrks Castile, *\u00bbr\nhard water, 4 cakes\n\u25a0l|T0Uf<\nor nice brown\nkt\ni^l&P(^fHT^\"(Mx'\nflavors I none pkt. fer\t\nMIRACLE Y\u20acAST,-For\nm\n K\nBUTTER-\nPI\nInt grade, S lbs..\nm\nCORN STARCH-\nTAWoiA^MP|nute^\np\u00abr pkt .\nFor--\nOCOA-Flne quality\nDutch, ptr lb\t\nPINEAPPLE JUICE-\nt\u00abll tint, 2 fer\t\nty\nty\nty\n35*\nSUGAR-Flne B. C.\ngranulated, 10 lbs..\nC     ty\nTODDY\u2014For hot or\ncold drink, 16-oz. tin   .\nBROWN fUGAR-Med-\nlum, yellow, &\/. lb'\t\nCOFFEE-Blue\nRibbon, 1 lb. tin \t\n\u2022ALT\u00bb-\n1 lb. bags  \t\nitt\nty\nm\nty\nNABOR TEA-\nper lb. ;-\t\nty\nCELERY,-\npir Ib  \t\nCAULIFLOWER-\nririb \u2014 \nETTUCt?-*\neach         .. .\nTOMATOES^retrl or\nripi, par lb.\t\nPIACHft\u2014Last time\natthli price, per crate ..\n M\n 9U\n \u00bb\n X\n$149\n\u2014\u2014\n\u2014\u2022\nHORSWILLS\nSaturday and Monday\n^TBsn^^l^TV.i-yr.^^ B t.ialMl.rt!r,KTT\"S,l;\"l,,*-:r ,,\u25a0.-;\u25a0 -\nPEAi-Columbia, Sieve S's  2 cam 25?\nWAI-WWWte 2 eens Mt\nCORN FLAKES-Kellogg'i  3 for 25?\nRICE KRISPIES , 2 Iw 33?\nCHIPSO7.  Pkg. 82?\nKETCHUP-Heinx Urge bottles 2 for 46?\nPORK AND BIANS-Hemx 3 for 29?\nCORNSTARCH Pkg. ll*\nPASTRY FLOUR\u2014Mofifrgh Ti  34?\nSOAP P. OC 6 eakei 33?\nGRAHAM WAFERS\u2014Cello pkg Pkg. 2J ?\nSARDINES-lruMwIek  4 fw 18?\nIUn|R-^;ingbr\u00abJk     J Km. M#\nCHEiSE-Canadian    Lb. 22?\nCA6BAQC-\nLb\t\nSQUASH-\n\u2022Lb. .._.\t\nMARROW--\nLb -\t\nCARROTS-\nlarge, bunch \t\nCAULIFLOWER-\nt Ib\t\n4t\nto\nM\nW\nty\nCELERY-\n2 lbs.\t\nPEACHE8--\nbisket \t\nPEARS-\nbisklt\t\nPLUMt\u2014\nbasket \t\nTOMATOE8-\n7 lbs\t\nty\nty\nty\nty\nty\nHorswill Bros.\nPHONE 235\nFREE DELIVERY\n\u00bb\n*\u2014s\nWE\nDELIVER\nFREE\nPHONES\nSI1\n832\nVASSARS'\nCASH MEAT MARKET\nGOOD BUYING FOR SATURDAY\nChoice Steer\nBeef\n.. 15-?\n..    8?\nRolled Rib Roait,\nIb. 20?\n.. 11?\nThick Rib Roait, Ib\n. 14?\nBoiling Beef, 4 Ibi.\n.. 86?\nLegs Real Lambs, Ib. 23?\nLamb Shoulders, Ib. . 13?\nLamb Chops, Ib  18?\nVeal Fillet Roast, lb. 20?\nVeal Oven Roast, Ib. . 12?\nVeal Steaks, 2 Ibi. .. 25?\nPerk Oven Roait, lb. 18?\nPork Leg Roast, lb. . 23?\nSmoked Picnics, Ib. . 20?\nFreih Red Salmon, Ib. 22?\nPork Tenderloins,   lb. 30?\nCreamery Butter, Thistle\nBrand, With Meat Order.\n2 lbs  51?\nEggs, Local A-large,\ndox 38?\nSwift's Breakfast Bacon,\nFresh Sliced, Ib. .... 33?\nMushrooms, Fresh from\nVancouver,   Ib 40?\nBoiling Fowl, Local Fresh\nKilled, Ib 22?\nFry Chicken, Freih Killed,\nlb\". ...JW\nHamburger, Freih made,\n3 lbs ..:.!\u00bb-*\nBreakfait Sausage, Small,\nIb ..*>*\nPure Lard. 2 lbs 35?\nlellled Veal, Ib 25?\nCheese, Mild Ontario,\nIb *4f\na*\n\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\nuUMngy^iuugj\n^^\n!_______\n PAGE   EK-.HT-\n. -.r.-'ATurr\nEPTEM3ER 5. 1.\"\nWILLIAM DONNELLY, TRAIL BAND\nMASTER, GETS GAY SENDOFF AT\nSMOKER; WARD SPEAKS ON VIMY\n.Conducts Legion Band\nLast Times; -Parting\nGifts Are Made\nLED BAND TO 8\nFIRST AWARDS\nHarry Ward Tells of\nReception of Vimy\nPilgrims, France     \\\nTRAIL, B.C., Sept. 4.\u2014Few more\nenviable sendoffi have been recorded than the one William Donnelly, veteran bandmaiter of Trail\nCanadian Legion band, was given\nhere Friday night at a mammoth\nsmoker at the Memorial hall, -\nwhen lie was guest of honor of\n; Trail Branch No: 11 of the Canadian Legion and wat the recipient\nof parting gifts from both band and\nLegion. Trail's Italian branch of\nthe Legion, No. 132, tnd Roiiland\nbranch No. 14 alio associating In\nthe function.\nAn associate guest of honor was\nHarry D. Wsrd, D.C.M., of the\nRossland branch, who laid Trail's\nI wreath on the great Vimy memorial and who made an Interesting\naddress on the Vimy tour it he\nCONDUCTS FOR LAST TIME\nI Bandmaiter Donnelly conducted\n.the band for the last time, giving\nleveral splendid concert numbers.\nNumerous soloists, voctl ind instrumental, alto took part In the\nprogram, which was presided over\nfly Acting President Charles Mid-\ndieton of Trail branch. Seated\n.with him were Pete Rinaldl, president of the Italian branch, and J.\nD. Cooper, president of the Ron-\nland branch.\nThe smoker opened with a silent\nJoast to the fallen and \"0 Canada\",\n\u25a0fter which the general program in\n(which thc band led off with \"Colonel\nBogey\" march was taken up, as\ncrackers and cheese, smokes and\nliquid refreshments circulated. A\nracy and interesting account of the\n\"Vimy pilgrimage came next, Mr.\nWard referring to the great sendoff\ngiven the 6000 pilgrims at Montreal to thc auspicious trip across,\nend to thc arrival at Antwerp for\nthc couple of days of touring that\npreceded the ceremony.\nThe landing was on the early\nmorning of July 25 and in a few\nhours thc pilgrims were racing in\nbusses through thc war zone in thc\nArras sector, seeing the battlefield,\nor through the billet cities, according to choice. Mr. Ward's choice\nwas the battlefields area and he saw\nmany familiar places behind thc\nlines such as thc old toothed St.\nEloy tower. There were also the\nSomine, where he saw the Canadian\nmemorial ol Courcclette; Cambrai\nand other points.\nIN8PECT TRENCHES\nThe iext morning from Lille-they\natarted'for Vimy Ridge, by.another\nroute, arriving at noon and inspecting lhe Vimy trench system, a concrete replica of the old sandbag\n.trenches. \u25a0 \u25a0\nDescribing thc scene at Utc.marble\nmemorial where thc enormous\nthrongs of the public were held in\ncheck by French troops, lie mentioned the actions of King Edward\nand stated that wl*eji it came to\nplacing the wreaths the men had to\ncarry them over their' heads as Ihey\n[worked their way through the\n,throngs.v The final day, July 27,\nwas devoted to the Ypres sector and\nthe now beautiful city of Ypres,\ncompletely restored.\nSailing from Dieppe and Havre\nftl.e Canadians next went \"to London\nfor the cenotaph, which he briefly\ndescribed. London, he said, looked\nabout the same as In the war with a\nfew new buildings ut minus the\nhaki. He missed, the King's champagne at Buckingham palar? through\n(hearing that Iherc was only only\n\u25a0to be tea and cake, but got a souvenir in the shape of Canon Scott's\nsignature on his invitauon.\n\u25a0 The most interesting part of Mr.\n\"Ward's story related to thc subsequent French tour when thc various\ncities visited entertained the 3000 to\n4000 Canadian who took it in the\ngrand manner. Havre took u couple\nOf days and the French ex-servicemen gave the Canadian a wonderful\nwelcome at the station which was\nrepeated later by the municipal\nauthorities at a great banquet. Ver-\nsaille took another day. The city ol\nBlois. Amblois and Rouen all did\nihe' same, the public going wild,\nwhile there were stale and municipal banquets and turnouts by the\nFrench veterans. At Ihe Blois banquet Paul Boncour, former premier,\nwas a speaker and at many of them\nthe highest dignitaries attended. At\nParis and the other cities thc women of France arranged for fret-\nbillet, the government paid for the\ntransportation, and thc municipalities furnished lhe banquets. Things\nwere so nice for them that he baled\nto leave. Mr. Ward admitted, and if\nhe had had a few more hundred\ndollars he wuuld have been there\nyet.\nWIRED FOR MR. DONNELLY\nAfter a couple ot general numbers\nwere enjoyed Banksman William\nRamsay gat \u201e some inner history ol\nthe band, recalling that ebon!\" eight\nyears agu tne Elks band, as it then\nwas, figured it mi^nt help mm cal\nstandards in 'lY.nl by looking around\nfc.\" a conductor. He did not recall\nwhether tlie band actually advertised or .rot. but it came io knowledge that there was living in n-\ncouver :, liumer conductor of 'he\nClydebank band, a band that had\nmade itself known throughout Scotland. !!\u2022 v.ireu Mr. Dorin'slly to\n.coine to Trail and he did not be-\nWllllam Donelly, master of the\nTrail Canadian Legion band.\nlieve there was a person in Trail\ntoday who regretted that step having been ta en. .        .\nMentioning Conductor Donnelly's\nadvent in Trail, his first practice\nand the various idiosyncrasies which\nthe band, after a while learned to\ninterpret, and the changing of the\nname to the City band, and later\nt the Legion band, Mr. Ramsay\nsaid that then the Kootenay musical\nfestival came along and Mr. Donnelly showed that he could take\nthe Trail band anywhere and also\ntake it to the top.\nThe regrettable thing was that he\nwas now leaving the band and Trail.\nBut having earned his living since\nhe was eleven he now required a\nwell-earned rest. His band sefvice\nspoke for itself. As his physical condition was well over the average\nfor a man ol h's age thc band could\nfigure he would come back some\ntime for a visit. He suggested that\nyounger men could profit by Mr.\nDonnelly's example. Mr. Ramsay\nalso thanked the Legion warmly\nfor lis splendid support.\nPRESENTED  WITH  PURSE\nCalled to the front. Conductor\nDonnelly was' asked to accept a\ngift as a token of the very great\nesteem, gratitude and respect entertained for.him by thc band.\nAccepting thc gift, which was a\nhandsome purse containing a sum\nof money, the veteran conductor\nsaid he Was no spcechmaker but\nmust thank the band very much for\nits remembrance. He had been\n' sanding\" since thc age of 18 and\nwas* anxious now to retire.\nif, however, his\" successor should\nbe a young men and should he be\ncalled to the colors he would return\nand lead the band again. He had\nwanted lo remain a little longer,\nuntil his successor was chosen, but\nhad to leave at once if he was to\nenjoy thc Vancouver contest opening Monday, on which he had set\nhis he*i*t. Notnmg would have given\nhim greater pleasure than to have\ntaken the band to-that contest but\nunfortunately it got cold feel.\nAlter the applause had subsided\nA. H. Hugill was called on to speak\non behalf of Trail branch of the\nLegion. He declared Mr. Donnelly\nto be one of the finest citizens any\ncommunity could produce, earnest,\nzealous and conscientious, and giving his tremendous talent for the\npublic good,\n\"You have been a credit not only\nto the city of Trail but also to the\ntown and lhe land that gave you\nbirth,'' he declared to Mr. Donnelly,\nconveying lo him . tne Legion's\nthanks and best wishes, and personally wishing him God's blessing\nand good luck as .ic presented the\nLegion's gift, a set of pipes and\ntobacco pouch with silver mounting.\nThis was the signal for \"For He's\na Jolly Good  Fellow.\"\n\"I thank you very much from thc\nbottom of my heart, and one and\nall,\" said Mr. Donnelly, expressing\nin conclusion the hope that the new\nbandmaster would include British\nairs in the band's repertoire \"and\nstill keep the old flag flying,\" point-\nto the Union Jack as he spoke.\n'1 he banc then rose and sang\n\"Farewell\". Mr. Donnelly picking\nup his balon and coiiuiicting, and\nthen proceeding with \"lhe Sons of\nBritannia.\"\nLater m the extended program\nPresident G. P. Cooper ot Rossland\nspoke appreciably 0f Mr. Donnelly\nand Charles Miles, former bandmaster, of Trail and Rossland bands,\nalso made a farewell speech, Several of the musical pieces were\nchosen specially with reference to\nhim.\nCONDUCTED IN ALBERT HALL\nWilham Donnelly was born at\nDenny, Stirlingshire, Scotland, and\nstarted \"banding\" al the age o[ IB,\nplaying a cornet in the Denny band.\nAs he is now 68, his band career has\ncovered thc unique span of 50 years.\nFour or five years after his debut\nas a bandsman, young Donnelly\nmoved to Clydebank, in 1891, and\nwas one of the promoters in start-\nin gthc Clydebank borough band.\nTwo years later he became bandmaster of it .and occupied that position 20 years. Including his own\nsuccesses, the Slydebank borough\nband has won the championship of\nScotland 14 limes, the crack bands\nof Scotland competing annually for\nthis honor at the Waverley Market,\nEdinburgh.\nOne of the highlights of Mr. Donnelly's carper .was when he conducted his Clydebank band in Albert hall, London, during the South\nAfrican war. at a benefit for thc\nRed Cross, the nation's elite composing the audience at a guinea admission. Two of the items on thc\nprogram were. the massed bands\nunder the baton of Sir Arthur Sullivan. At- the great pipe organ Dr.\nPearce was seated, and in front of\nhim the Grenadier Guards band was\ndeployed. Five other bands, the\nClydebank bang being Scotland's\nrepresentatives amnog them filled\nup th? front of the great platform.\nAnother item was the singing of\n\"The Lost Chord,\" Sir Arthur's composition, by Mme. Clara. Butt, the\nmassed bands joining In the last\nverse. When the audience encored\nwildly, Mme. Butt in taking it joined\nSir Arthur with her, leading oul\nthe venerable white-haired man to\nshare thc bow. This was one of four\nor five times Mr. Donnelly had\nthe Clydebank, band in London,\nWhile at Clydebank he also conducted a lot of quartets, composed\nof his bandsmen, and was very successful-ill the Scottish competitions.\nThroughout bis band career Mr.\nDonnelly has been dependent on\nhis tradfe for his living, being a brass\nmoulder. The post-war depression\nwas responsible for his pulling up\nstakes in the old country and coming to Canada.\nTRAIL CAffEER\nAfter four years in Vancouver, he\nhad the'opportunity of taking charge\nof the Elks band here, which later\nbecame.the Trail City band, and is\nnow lhe Trail Canadian Legion\nband. Beside the great service the\nband has given the citizens of Trail\nit has taken part in nine different\nband competitions under Mr. Donnelly's conductorship, seven of them\nat the Kootenay Music Festivals in\nNelson and Trail, and two of them at\nthe Oakanagan Music Festivals at\nKelowna, and has won eight firsts\nand one second.\nAt these festivals, one distinguished adjudicator after another has\nmade reference to the finished work\nof the band, and has given credit to\nthe work of thc bandmaster, and\nto his obviously ripe experience in\nconcert competition.\nHaving arrived at 68 years of age,\nMr. Donnelly had decided the time\nhas come for him to retire. Here he\nhas been residing with his daughter,\nMrs. P. Clayton ,in East Trail.\nHe leaves Saturday morning fc*\nVancouver, to reside with othe:'\ndaughters, Mrs. J. Foley and Miss E,\nDonnelly. \"\nLIFE SAVING\nTESTSTODAY\nAT-LAKESIDE\nExamination for life .saving certificates of ihe'junior class conducted at Lakeside park by Miss Boomer, will take place at the park this\nmorning al 10 .o'clock, weather permitting.\nDRAWS MADE\nFOR KOOTENAY\nTENNIS, TRAIL\nTRAIL, B.C., Sept. 4-Draws for\nplay Saturday, and Sunday in the\nannual championships of the Koo-\n1 tenay Tennis association were made\nFriday night as follows:\nTADANAC   COURTS\n!    10:30 a.m. N. Murray vs R. Crowe;\n| Miss L. Blaylock vs Miss B. Dia-\n. mond; Mrs. W. Brown vs Miss B.\nBingay; Miss Shiela Stewart, Nelson,\nvs. Miss J. Diamond.\ni    1:00   p.m.-T.   H.   Weldon  vs  J.\ni Perinc, Seattle; N. Murray vs J.\nMcDonell, Rossland;. J. Dowling,\nGrand Forks, vs. T. Fraser; James\nSalter vs. J. A. Stewart, Nelson; A.\nM. Chesser vs. W. Perine, Seattle.\n2:00, p.m, -Mrs. A. M. Chesser vs.\nMiss K. Nisbe'l, 'Nelson; Miss B.\nWright vs.' Miss B. Diamond; J.\nC. West vs. R. A. D, West. Castlegar; W. O. Williams and Mrs. T. H.\nWeldon vs. T. Romano and Miss P.\nGelinas, Nelson;. S. Angus vs. H.\nMinnion, Rossland.\n3:00 p.m.\u2014E. Atwood and P. Tjebbes, Grand Forks vs. G. Murray Jr\u201e\nand A. M. Chesser; N. Murray and\nT. Fraser vs. B. Clark and F. Clark;\nJ. Perine nnd'W', Perine, Seattle,\nvs. G. Murray and Jack Murray.\n4:00 p.m.\u2014J. Salter and S. Angus\nvs. R. A. D. West' arid Dr. L. Gay-\nton, Castlegar; G. Murray Jr., vs. L.\nEvans; W. O. Williams and G. Hamson vs. J. Dowling and H. Minnion,\nRossland.\nTRAIL MEMORIAL COURT8\n1:00 p.m.\u2014H. H. Shaw, Vancouver,\nvs. E. Atwood; N. Rhodes vs. S. McCatty;   E.   Hajey, vs.   P.  Tjebbes,\nGrand Forks.\n2:00 p.m.\u2014Miss B. Ringwood vs.\ni Miss J. Diamond.\ni 4:00 p.m.\u2014T. Romano vs. J. Campbell.\n:    Sunday morning draws:\nITADANAC  COURTS\n|    7 a.m.-C. W. garrison vs. A. Eld-\nj ridge; L. Simpson vs. P. Dewdney;\nR. Stuart vs. N. German; A. Dod-\nson vs. D. Odman. Seattle; B. Od-\nmau. Seattle, vs. P. Jones.\nMEMORIAL COURTS\n7 p.m.\u2014D. BeU vs. L. Williams:\nR. Webb vs. G. Winters, Grand\nForks; F. Phillips vs. A. Aherns.\n. Out of town players in lhe above\nschedule who, may 4not have arrived on lime for play will not be\nscratched. Players are asked, however, to photic No, 72 at the Tadanac\ncourts upon arrival.\nHeid at Forks for\nTrail Board Bill\nTRAIL. Sept. 4\u2014It did nol take\nTrail's city police long to locate\nHarold Brothers, when the proprietor of thc.Fior d'ltalia laid a, complaint regarding a board bill Friday\nforenoon. If was found that Brothers\nand his' wife had left for Grand\nForks, with a westbound motorist,\nand when thc car reached Grand\nForks at noon, Corporal Hooker was\nwatting for it with a warrant for\nBrothers. Brothers will be returned\nto Trail Saturday. He is charged\nwith beating a board bill of $48.\nTRAIL DEFEATS\nROSSLAND 12-9\nBOX LACROSSE\nMiners Drop Further\nBehind League\nLeaders\nTRAIL WOMAN IS\nFINED FOR THEFT\nTRAIL, B.C., Sept. 4\u2014Trail's rug\ncase,: in wjaich Mrs; Sam Reid was\ncharged with stealing, a rug, the\nproperty of Alex* Fergus, concluded\nlate Friday after the accused had\nretained A. G. Cameron to conduct\nthe last phase *of -her defence.\nJohn Holoboff. from whom she\nstaled she had purchased the rug,\ntold the court be did. not know her\nand had had no dealings with lier.\nActing Magistrate Donald MacDonald convicted, hcr on the theft\ncharge and fined her $50 and costs,\nor 30 days. She paid the, fine.\nT\u00ae Puf Up Frame\n# Scout Building\nWith timbers cut by a \"gang\" on\nWednesday afternoon, volunteer\nworkers are: expected'this weekend to complete the frame and at\nleast part of the roof of the big\nScout dining hall at Camp Busk,\nKokanee, during the week-end.\nIt is understood a large number\nwill be at the Scout camp for the\nholiday, and that little work will\nneed to be done on the buildihg\nwhen they \"knock off Monday.\n| Dolores Cheskam Is\nDead at Rossland\nROSSLANO, B.C., Sept. 4.-Do-\nlores Shirley Chesham. aged five\ndaughter of M'*.  and  Mrs. Ernest\n, Chesham. passed away this morning after a short illness. She is sur-\ni vived by her parents and a small\ni brother. Billy.\nRamsden Remanded\nFor Week Owing to\nCondition of Koski\nH.   D,   Ramsden,   charged   with\ndriving lo the common danger, was\nremanded  a  week  by  Stipendiary\n: Magistrate John Cartmel Friday, the\nI adjournment being taken owing to\nlhe serious condition of Voitu Koskv\ninjured when thc Ramsden car turn-\ni ed over on the way io Harrop.\n.Scientists have found lhat dr>\ncarbon-dioxide ice identifies real\npearls and diamonds by making the\ntrue gems rattle when touching\nthem.\nTRAIL, B.C., Sept. 4\u2014Displaying\n; a fine combination attack and tight\n! defensive play. Trail senior box la-\n1 crossc team turned back Rossland\ni by a score of 12-9 here tonight. Thc\n| Trail win dropped Rossland farther\nbehind  thc  league-leading  Nelson\nsquad and brought Trail a notch\nj closer to second place.\n'    Trail took the lead from the start\n; and was never headed. Both teams\nstuck strictly to lacrosse and only\n23 minutes in penalties were handed out. Trail drew 15 and Rossland\n[ eight.\ni Wilson opened the scoring 25\n' seconds after lhe face-off and\n! Walmsley evened it up when he\nj took Ezart's pass 20 seconds later.\n1 Sambrook put Trail in the lead\n[ again at 9:05, and Wilson stretched\nthe lead to two at 9:45. Fraser came\ni through with a brace of goals in the\nlast two minutes to give Trail a\n5-1 lead at the interval.\nj Ezart broke through for a quick\nI score just after the start of thc sec-\nI ond but Mathews balanced this\nwith another Trail goal a few sec-\nI onds later. Walmslcy and Smith\nj each countered, and Mathews got\nI one of the best goals of the evening\nI when he went through the entire\nj Rossland team to tally. Gripich near-\nj ly added another when he took a\nI long pass but was outguessed by\nI Gedinski.\n| DUMPS BAILEY\nFraser scored 38 seconds after the\nI third period got under way. Snow-\n| den drew a five-minute penalty\nwhen ho dumped Bailey, sending\nthc chunky Rossland defence man\nspinning to thc boards. Kendall got\ntwo minutes for hitting the same\nplayer on the head and then Bailey\nhimself drew two for slashing. Ezart\nand Cheyne goLtwo quick goals ^in-\nassisted. Kendall took a beautiful\npass from Wilson and beat Gedinski\nto make the score 10-6. Walmsley\nand Neil scored two goals in thc\n\u2022 last 45 seconds to put Rossland right\nback in the fight again.\nWalmslcy and Bailey drew penalties   as  the  final  quarter  opened.\nTrail put on the pressure but could\nnot score. With  both teams  back\nat full strength Ezart took Bailey's\npass to beal Leroy at 6:10. making\nj thc score 10-9. Temple made it 11-9\nI when   he   scored  on   Stephenson's\npass and Wilson put the game on\nice when he tallied on a pass from\nFraser. Rossland pressed hard after\nthat but could not score again.\nLen Wilson, returning lo the game\nafter a leng;iiy Icyoff, v;:s the\nstandout for lhe Trail team, scoring\nthree goals and getting two assists.\nHis team mate. Fraser, played a nice\ngame, making three goals and being\ncredited with one assist.\nEzart was Rossland's leading scorer with three goals and one assist.\nWalmsley also tallied three times.\nThc penalty list follows:\nFirst period \u2014 Mathews, Sniilh,\nSimcock.\nSecond period\u2014Latham.\nThird period\u2014Snowden (5), Kc'i-\ndall. Bailey. Fraser.\nFourth period \u2014Walmsley, Bailey.\nTeams:\nRossland\u2014Gedinski, goal; fiailey,\nSimcock, Delicti, defence; Walmsley,\nNeil, rovers; Egart, Cheyne, Forrest,\nCoutoure, Ostokroff, Ogden, Spencer,  forwards.\nTrail\u2014LeRoy, goal; Kendall, Latham, Snowden, Stephenson, defence; Cronie, Gripich, rovers; Wilson, Sambrook, Fraser, Mathews,\nTemple, Smith, forwards.\nReferee\u2014-\"Curly\" Whcatley. Judge\nof play\u2014Bob Gifford.\nWHEELER, BALL v\nTO MEET LAWN\nSOWLING FINAL\n*'\u25a0\n' Jim Ball and F. E. Wheeler skipped \"their rinks into thc final of tho\nE. Y. Brake memorial trophy competition for mixedrinks in matches\nat thc Nelson Lawn bowling club's\ngreen Friday night. Ball defeating\nN. B. Bradley 14-10 and Wheeler\ntrimming E. W. Penwill, 20-12. Pen-\nwill's rink was short a hand.\nTlie final of lhe Drake competition is scheduled for Sunday afternoon. * *\nRinks were:\nE. W. Penwill, Mrs. J. Draper, F.\nGeder.\nF. E. Wheeler. Mrs. A. Lane, Belt\nAllen. Mrs. W. Calbick.\nN. B. Bradley. Miss G. Laughton,\nC. F, Davis. J. Graham.\nJ .Ball, Mrs. J. Ball. C. 1. Archibald, Miss B. Johnson.\nMrs. Radcllffe\nWins Dismissal A Big Week-End\non Arson Count    Trail Bantams\nCharge of arson against lis. Anna\nBelle Radcllffe was dismissed by\nJudge W. A. Nisbet m county court\nr'riday.\nJohn Tiichaofl. who testified for\nthe authorities at the fire marshal's\ninquiry into a fire at Mrs. Radcliffe's\nhomc in the slocan valley, this fire\nbr ng Uie basis of the arson charge,\nwas called by the defence Friday.\nThe trial, which opened before the\nsummer reces6of county coui, and\nwas repeatedly adjourned owing to\ntne illness of Richard Storbo, a\ncrown witness, was concerned up\nto Friday with presentation of prosecution evidence and defence cross-\nexamination.\nC. B. Garland of O'Shea & Garland conducted the prosecution. The\ndefence w**s in the hands cf Sherwood Herchmer. K.C'.. of Herchmer\n& Mitchell. Fernie, and W. W. Ferguson ot Weison.\nKobson's State Is\nStill Precarious\nTRAIL. B \u00a3., Sept. 4-Thomas J.\nHobson, who was seriously injured\niu the motorcycle crash at midnight\nWednesday night on Schofield highway when Charles Gibb of Rossland\nwas killed, was reported Friday as\nresting as easily as could he expected. His condition was still precarious.\nA scientist in Russia has recently\ndiscovered a process of making artificial suede leatherirubber for thc\nmanufactufe of shoes.\nTRAIL. B.C., Sepl. 4. - Trail's\nbantam ball-tossers will perform\nIwice diiting Ihe Labor Day weekend.\nSunday afternoon at 3 o'clock\nRothery's Cubs and Rube s Giants\nwill meet at Butler park in the second game of the playoff series lo\ndecide which will have the honor\nof playing thc league leaders, the\nEast Trail Beavers, for the Trail\nbantam'title'. The Cubs are a game\nup through last Wednesday's win.\nIf the Giants should even the series\nSunday, lhe deciding game will b\"-\nplayed next Wednesday.\nMond&y the Trail bantams will go\nto Rossland, for the Labor day parade and program for .the benefit\nof the children's ward in liie Mater\nMisericordiae hospital, and at 2:30\non the Rossland diamond the Beavers will play an exhibition g\"im->\nagainst an all-star tram from tho\nCubs and Giants.\nTrail Cubs Off to\nFerwe Tournament\nTRAIL, B.C.. Sept. 1. - Cully's\nCubs, champions of lhe Trail District Softball league, will leave Sunday morning for Fernie. in two cars,\nchaperoned b.v Coach Steve Matovich. Thc Trail boys are entered in\nthe men's softball tournament qt\nthe Fernie Labor Day sports.' in\nwhich six to eight learns, includinp\none from Lethbridge,, are expected\nto compete. -.\n..... .*.,,* \u2022:, ;..\n. ,Vl'.VW*i,1rf>fc,\n VAROFF OVER\nGeorge Varoff at the top of his vault during the recent\nWorld Labor track meet at Randall's Island, N.Y.\nBOWLING DRAWS\nIN FOR MONDAY\nSingles Play to Be\nFinished\nDraws for play in the men's singles competition for the Daily News\ncup at the Nelson Lawn Bowling\nclub on Monday were made as follows:\n1:30\u2014E. W. Penwill vs. J. Ball;\nW. Custance vs. E. L. Wright; N. J.\nLowes vs W. Calbick; R. Jones vs.\nA. Bennett; F. E. Wheeler vs. N. B.\nBradley; P. S. Coulter vs. G. A.\nMeeres.\n2:30\u2014C. F. Davis vs. D. Laughton;\nT. McMillan vs. H. H. Sutherland;\n3. S. Goulding vs. J. Draper; H. H.\nKingzett vs. A. Lane; F. Gedder vs.\nJ. P. Morgan; J. Armstrong vs. R. A.\nAldersmith.\nJ. Read drew a bye in the first\nround. The second round will start\nat 3:30, the third round at 4:30 and\nthe finals will start at 6 o'clock.\nMembers are asked to be on hand\nas the play will start sharp at 1:30,\nor if unable to play on the date set,\nto try and get the game in before\nthat tisie, otherwise games will be\ndefaulted. Games are to be for 15\npoints, finals 21 ends. Referees must\nbe used in the finals.\nINDIAGETSDRAW\nWITH ENGLAND\nLONDON, Sept. 4 (CP Cable)-\nAn England eleven and India drew\nin a free-hitting, three-day cricket\nmatch at Folkestone, concluded today. The Englishmen posted innings of 377 runs and 213 for three\nwickets, declared while the tourists\npounded out Innings of 372 and 152\nruns for one wicket.\nS. Wazir AH was the individual\nbatting star of the contest, compiling\na 155-not-out and Leslie Ames, starry Kent batsman, followed with\n107. ,\nYorkshire drubbed an M.C.C. team\nby an innings and 95 runs in the\nother game. Batting first the York-\nshircmen amassed 441 runs against\n186. M.C.C. followed on and could\nnot muster 160.\nSeasons Furbearing\nAnimals Unchanged\nOpen seasons for fur-bearing animals are the same this season as last,\naccording to game department officials. They are:  '\nBeaver and muskrats\u2014March 1 to\nApril 30.\nOtter-March 1 to April 30.\nAll other fur-bearing animals-\nNovember 1 to February 28.\nFOR A\nGOOD\nGREASE\nJOB\nSfeE\nHendricks,\nWhaley Ltd\n\"Satisfaction Is Our Aim\"\nPhone\n43\nNelson,\nB.C.\n119 Josephine Street\nmm\nEU\nAnother Holiday and\na good time to take\nthe wife or family\nout for dinner . . .\nSo, if you are looking for really good\nfoods served in fine\nstyle, let us suggest\nthe\nGolden Gate\nCafe\nGOLF\nby\nALEX MORRISON\n-I'M WITH CLUBHSAP IN\nRoW Of BAUU-\nm_\nWhen you realize that most faults\noriginate in the starting position, it\nbecomes important to look over the\nthings that put you on or off the\ntrack.\nMany players get into the wrong\nposition as they try to line up for\nthe shot. Under the heading of aiming you can find countless tricks\nthat do great damage to the swing.\nOne stunt that seems common is\nthat of keeping the clubhead on the\nground back of the ball too long.\nThis delay causes tension to grip\nyour leg and arm muscles. You may\nnot realize that you have tightened\nup as you stand over the ball, and\nyou may not feel it until you start\nyour downswing but by the time\nyou have hit the ball the jumps\nwill tell.\nThe best way to overcome this\ntightening up is by avoiding any\ndelay after you have aimed. Aim\nor line up your clubface in this\nway: Place the clubhead on the\nground in front of the ball with\nthe clubface at right angles to the\ndesired line of play. Adjust your\nfeet and body until a comfortable\nposition has been acquired. After\na preliminary waggle, let the clubhead touch the ground lightly and\nbriefly just behind the ball, and\ntake off.\nFine Prizes for\nLabor Day Sport\nPiping, Dancing, Field\nEvent Winners Will\nBe Well Rewarded\nParticipators in the sporting\nevents on Labor day sponsored by\nthe Clan McLeary and the Kootenay Kiltie band will be well rewarded for their efforts by many\nbeautiful and useful prizes.\nThe prizes are displayed in a local\nstore window on Baker street. A\npicture of the Kiltie band and Highland dancers of last year graces the\ncenter of the display. This is flanked\non the left by a large black and\nsilver vase which will go to the lady\nwinner of the broad jump and a\npedestal on which is placed the\nmen's high aggregate cup, the ladies'\nhigh aggregate cup and open high\naggregate cup. On the right of the\npicture is the Safeway challenge\ncup and another pedestal on which\nthe four silver cups for the winners\nof the Highland dancing events are\nplaced. In front of these cups are\nseveral bronze medals to be awarded for piping and dancing. The\nfront of the window is taken up with\nmany prizes to go to the lucky winners of various men's and ladles'\nevents. Some of the more notice-,\nable awards are the sterling silver\nand gold signet ring, which is the\nthird prize for the men's open three-\nmile race, a cut glass bowl for the\nladies' 100 yard dash, and a silver\ncenter which is the prize for the\none-mile bicycle event.\n3eitii\\A\njeaders\n e\t\nBy The Associated Press\nLou Gehrig's hitting slump carried\nthe Yankee slugger below the .370\nmark in the batting race yesterday\nfor the first time in two weeks. He\nwent hitless in four times at bat to\ndrop three percentage points to .368,\nbut managed to hold onto second\nplace behind Earl Averill of the\nIndians in the American league trio\nof baseball's batting \"big six.\" Ducky\nMedwick of the Cardinals, idle yesterday, increased his lead as Paul\nWaner of the Pirates and Frank\nDemaree ot the Cubs both lost\nground.\nThe standings (three leading hitters in each league):\nG AB R H Pet,\nAverill, Inds .... 129 525 111 197 .375\nGehrig, Yks ... 132 492 147 181 .368\nMedwick, Cds .. 129 533 96 195 .368\nAppling, WS .... 117 444 92 162 .365\nP. Waner, Pts .. 125 492 80 176 .358\nDemaree, C  131 520   80 185 .356\nSTRIKERS KILLED\nPONDICHERRY, India, (CP) -\nTwo laborers were killed and several Injured when police fired on a\nmob detaining authorities of a mill\nwhose employees were on strike.\ni Rowing - Tennis - Soccer - Baseball - Boxing -Wrestling\nJfeuiH\nLacrosse - Golf - Track - Swimming - Horse Racing - Soft Ball\n m.\n^PAGE NINE \u25a0\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C-SATURDAY MORNINO. SEPTEMBER 5,1936\n.P*Oi NINE\nYANKS WIN TO\nBOOST LEAD\nL Pet\n43 .672\n60 .538\n63 .526\n63 .523\n63 .51)\nW\nNew York     88\nCleveland   70\nDetroit  70\nWashington 69\nChicago    68\nBoston     66   67   .496\nSt. Louis  48   82   .389\nPhiladelphia   47   85   .356\n9 TO 6 FOR YANKS\nBOSTON, Sept. 4 (AP)-While\nthe batting slumps of Lou Gehrig\nand Joe DiMaggio sent them through\nanother hitless day today, there\nwas nothing wrong with Tony Laz-\nzeri's hitting eye, and so the New\nYork Yankees trounced the Red\nSox 9 to 6 in their series opener.\nLazzeri connected with one of\nFritz Ostcrmucllcr's slants In the\nfourth inning with two men on base\nand drove out his 13th homer ot the\nseason to account for three runs, the\nmargin by which the Sox were\ndowned.\nThe victory boosted the Yanks'\nleague lead to 17Vi games over the\nidle second-place Cleveland Indians.\nNew York     9   8   0\nBoston  6 11   3\nMurphy, Malone and Glenn; Ostermueller, Wilson and R. Ferrell.\nWASHINGTON, Sept. 4 (API-\nBuck Newsom pitched the Senators\nInto sole possession of fourth place\nin the American league today, holding the Athletics to nine hits for a\n7 to 3 victory in the opener of the\ncurrent series.\nThe win, Newsom's 18th of the\nseason, put the Nate a half game in\nfront of the idle Chicago White\nSox, with whom they were tied for\nfourth place yesterday.\nPhiladelphia      3   9   0\nWashington    7 14   1\nLisenbee.Ttoss, Flythe and Hayes;\nNewsom and Millies.\n(Only two National games scheduled.)\nTHEY GO PLACES IN A HURRY\nNelson's fast girls' relay team will be seen ln action Labor day. Just\nwhat opposition will offer is not certain but whatever it is, the girls pictured above will take a lot of beating. Left to right they are: Edna Gormley, Bertha Moir, Helen Wlgg and Doreen Long.\u2014Progress Studio, Trail.\nTWO CANADIANS\nWIN IN TENNIS\nPerry and Budge Also\nAdvance in U. S.\nKUNES TO DEFEND\nHIS TITLE\nTORONTO, Sept. 4 (CP)-Never\na big winner before 1935 and certainly a consistent loser this year,\nyoung Gene Kunes of Norristown,\nPa., will come to town next week\nto defend his Canadian open golf\ntitle over the pay-as-you-go St. Andrews course.\nLike many another In the list of\ncandidates, Kunes will be a 15-to-\none-shot when he seta out Thursday in the 72-hole test against the\nbest professionals and amateurs in\nCanada and the United States.\nREMEMBER WHIN?\nBy the Canadian Press\nFive yeara ag*Q Way Francis Out-\nmet, veteran Bostonian, won the\namateur gelt Ittta'of the United\nStates for the second time in 17\nyeara. In winning the title for the\nfirst time since 1911, Oulmet defeated Alfred J. Westland, 6 and 6,\nduplicating the margin by which\nhe won the 1914 final from Jerome\nD. Trovers..     ,\nFOREST HILLS, N.Y., Sept. 4\n(AP)\u2014(By Scotty Reston, Associated Press sports writer)\u2014Dorothy\nBundy, 20-ycar-old daughter of May\nSutton who won the title in 1907,\ntoday eliminated Mrs. Sarah Palfrey Fabyan of Cambridge, Mass.,\nsecond ranking player In the United States, from the women's tennis\nchampionships, 2-6, 6-3, 8-6, 6-4, as\nmost favorites advanced.\nFftd Perry of England and Don\nBudge of Oakland, Calif., favorites\nin the men's championship, both\nwon their matches. Perry beat\nErnest Sutter, United States intercollegiate champion, 8-6,6-2,6-1, and\nBudge eliminated Gardner Mulloy\not Miami, 4-6, 6-2, 6-0, \u00ab-l.\nTwo of the Canadians entered In\nthe toumey survived, while one(\nLaird Watt of Montreal, bowed to\nPierre Pellzza, French player, 1-6,\n6-2,6-3,6-3 in a second round match.\nRobert Murray, Watt's Montreal\ndoubles partner, advanced to the\nthird round of the men's singles,\ndefeating Arthur W. MacPherson of\nNew York, 8-1, 6-4, 6-3.\nMiss Jean Burritt of Toronto, thc\nDominion's only woman entrant,\nwon her first round match with\nJeanne Van Den Bosch, Dutch star.\nThe scores were 6-2, 3-6, 8-4.\nLight-Heavy Title\nMatch for London\nNEW YORK, Sept. 4 (AP). -\nNegotiations were closed today\nfor a world llght-heavywelght\nboxing title match between John\nHenry Lewis of Pittsburgh, Pa.,\nthe champion, and Len Harvey,\nholder of thi British title, to be\nheld In Wewbley stadium, London,\nNov. 3.\nCUBS ONLY 4%\nGAMES BEHIND\nPet.\n.617\n.586\n.580\n.519\n.492\n.453\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nW L\nNew York  79 49\nSL  Louis   75 53\nChicago  76 55\nPittsburgh  68 63\nCincinnati  63 65\nBoston 58 70\nBrooklyn  52 75   .409\nPhiladelphia 43 84   .339\nCUBS BEAT PIRATES, 8-0\nPITTSBURGH, SepL 4 *AP)-The\nthird-place Chicago Cubs picked up\nhalf a game on the national pacesetters today by trouncing the Pirates 8 to 0 behind Larry French's\nseven-hit pitching.\nWith the league-leading Giants\nand second place Cardinals Idle,\nthe victory left the Cubs IV, games\nback of the New Yorkers and half\na game away trom the gas house\ngang.\nThe victory was French's 17th of\nthe season. He was opposed at the\nstart by Bill Swift, but Mace Brown\nwas called on to finish after he had\ngiven a dozen hits in the less than\neight innings he worked.\nEthan Allen, with a double and\ntwo singles, and Billy Herman with\ntwo singles which drove in three\nruns, led the 14-hit batting attack\nthe Cubs fired at Swift and Brown.\nChicago  8 14   2\nPittsburgh   0   7   0\nFrench and Hartnett; Swift,\nBrown and Padden.\n(Only National game scheduled.)\nJf Ih\n~\"T\"\nNOT A FLYING FISH\n*-:   'iA>\n\u2014\u2022 \u2014\nSuggestive of Mandalay Is this picture of Gloria Eckart\nof Chicago, one of the Olympic diving gals.\nGrand Forks Tennis\nPlayers Practicing\nfor Trail Toumey\nAmong Grand Forks tennis players who will compete in the Kootenay title tournament at Trail over\nthe coming week-end are Keith Plncott, Guy Winter, Jack Dowling, P.\nTjebbes and Eric Atwood, according\nto the Grand Forks Gazette. They\nhave been practicing steadily tor\nthe tournament.\nSHOP THE CLASSIFIED WAY\nHonveRims\n -\u00ae \u25a0\u25a0v  \u2014\nBy The Associated Press\nYesterday's  homers:  Foxx,  Red\nSox; Lazzeri, Yankees, one each.\nThe leaders: Gehrig, Yankees, 42;\nFoxx, Red Sox, 36; Trosky, Indians,\n36; Ott, Giants, 28; Di-Magglo, Yankees, 25; Averill, Indians, 23.\nLeague totals: American 684, National 521, total 1185.\nGETS CENTURY IN\n68 MINUTES\nRoper of Grand Forks\nStrong Distance Runs\nGeorge Roper. Grand Forks entry\nin the mile and three-mile runs at\nthe Nelson Highland games Labor\nday, has been one ot the outstanding distance runners of the interior\nand is expected to be one of the\nstrongest contestants in these events\nMonday.\nFOLKESTONE, England, Sept. 4\n(CP Cable)\u2014Smashing out a century ln 68 minutes, Leslie Ames,\n31-year-old international cricketer,\ntoday won the Lawrence trophy\nand a check for $525 tor hitting the\nquickest hundred of the year in first\nclass English cricket.\nIncluded on the lineup ln an\nEnglish eleven against India, thc\nveteran passed the three-figure\nmark by seven runs which included\none six and 13 fours.\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nInsist on \"CRANrS BEST PROCURABLE\"-The Original\nFor Sab at Vsaistn em \u00abr*t Ml \"Msil OteW tot,\" liquor\nControl Bond, SU BMttJ Stmt. Vincouter, B.C.\nI aisnntM   _J,\n\/GRANTS,\n\/ BEST PROCURABLE f\n(SCOTCH WHISK!\n1 -AGED       \/\n\\ OF RARE\n4     MELLOWNESS\n\"KT PROCURABtf\n,,-,. BottM at nsnatoed fey \"Willlsm\nb\\\"\" Gnnt & Sons Li milt d, GlmfMdlch orsi\nft; BilvenifrOlanllvtt  nlntlllrrta,  Duff-\nI*.;\" town & Glasgow, Scotland.\nNEW\nLOW PRICE\nte&rk1\nThia advertisement la not published or displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or tbe Government of British Columbia.\nSaturday it the end of a mott talked of uie in Nelion,\nbecause the interest of every economy minded person\nhai been centered upon Charles Morris through hli deep\nprice cutting accompanied by quality. Today we intend\nto make it even greater than the past. We have again\nslashed prices for the last day. Jump at thii chance\u2014\nIT'S THE END!\nTHIS BIG\nTODAY-SATURDAY B\u00aby Now\nJOURNEY HITHER TODAY TO THE BENEFIT OF YOUR POCKETBOOK.\nJuvenile Needs Priced for\nSlim Purses\nBoy's AU Wool\nV-Neck\nSweaters\nAll wool V-neck sweaters.\nFine ribbed, knit close fining\nwaist and wrist Thsy art positively all wool. In solid colors\nonly. Sites to 34. Regular $1.25.\nEACH\n69c\nBoys*\nWindbreakers\nIn heavy Woollen cloth, but-\nton ityle with collar. All slut\nto 34, regular J2.50. NOW\nEACH\n$1.49\nBoys* Woollen\nCombs\nIt consists ef Watson's, British\nmake, and others In cathmer-\nItte or medium weight, mottled woollen combinationi.\nWith flapping over double\nchest (hart sleeves, knee\nlength legs. Valuee te \u00bb2.S0.\n.line te 11 yean Clearing at,\nPER SUIT\n79c\nBoys* Breeches\nShirts, Shoes\nReduced to clear out un the\nSat**t*ay.\nMEN'S COMBINATIONS\nMen'i Heavy Quality Silver Fleece Lined Combination!. They are of wonderful quality,.\nlined With such a soft, fluffy fleece, ft *J    At\\\nSixes to 44. \" \u25a0 ***\nSATURDAY ONLY, PER SUIT ....      \u2014\nMen's Smart Fall Tweed Caps\nAll silk lined with unbreakable peaks. Every wanted\nityle including the new pleated and\nstreamlined caps. All colon and lisetl\nto 7V2. Valuei to $1.50.\nSATURDAY ONLY, EACH ....\n7Qe\nCHARLES MORRIS\nBAKER STREET\nNELSON, B. C.\nMen's Demlty\nHatchway\nCombination\nUnderwear,   all   sizes,   final\nclearance, PER SUIT\n69c\nBoys' AU Wool\nJumbo\nSweaters\nCoat stylt, with large shawl\ncollars. Eight only to go at\nEACH\n$1-39\n14 Only Men's\nSilvertone Felt\nHats\nNew fill styles In brown, grey\nor blue. All sites. They can't\nlast long at EACH\n$1.98\nMen's Fine\nDress Sox\nIn assorted new patterns. Values to 36c, final wind-up price\nPER PAIR\n19c\n*  -__^__\n\u2022jAffirtfitf iite!ili'niiiir7\nsjitriMisti \u2022 -   .\n .\n NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C-SATURDAY MORNING. SEPTEMBER S. 1936\nIkvuh c, BARGAIN IOR YOU *\u00ab *fc ClMtimOl, Xvu\/t\/um.'\nMmix Satin NrnM | Classified\nMembct ol the Canadian Dally\nNewspapers Association\nTELEPHOr-E 144\nPrivate Exchanae connecting to\nill Oeosrtments\nSubscription   Rates\nSingle copy S   -Ob\nBv carrier   per week .2.\nBv carrier oer vear 13 UO\nBy mall in Canada, lo subscribers living outside regular\ncarrier areas, pel mouth. KOc;\nthree months $1.80. six months.\nMOO: one vear. $6.00.\nUnited States and Great Britain, one month 75c; six months,\n$4 00: one vear $7 50.\nForeign countries, other than\nU.S.. same as above plus any\nextra postage.\nAdvertising Rotes\nlie a Line\nMinimum 2 Lines\n- lines, once        5 .22\n3 lines, once  33\n4 lines once        .44\n2 lines li lin.es 88\n3 lines ti limes   132\n4 lines li limes     lit\n1 line*   I month     2-86\n3 lines  1 mouth   4.29\n4 lines. 1 month   5.72\nMl abov: less 10'.'-. for prompt\noavment\n\"T\nkLove isrit Importan\n\u00a5 Louise Jerrold\nrmniftHTi.\"-. M'-i*n\nCHAPTER 20\nTim smiled when Gay said, \"Love\nisn't important.\" \"How young yon\nsound! But have it your own way\nadmire   Mis;;\nany   woman\nSome women just aren't the home- j I've met in Detroit. I'll bo willing\nto help you\nidly to Gay's mind. Impulsively she\nleaned forward, and linked her hand\ninto Tim's.\n\"I like you\u2014arid  1\nRandolph   more   than\nLECAL NOTICES\nIN THE SUPREME COURT OF\nBRITISH COLUMBIA IN THE\nMATTER OF THE NOTARIES ACT\nAND IN THE MATTER OF THE\nAPPLICATION.OF VIVIAN MURCHISON VAN OF THE CITY OF\nROSSLAND, PROVINCE OF BRITISH COLUMBIA.\n. TAKE NOTICE that the application of the above named Vivian Murchison Van lor enrollment as Notary Public pursuant to Section 5\nol the Notaries Act will be heard at\nthe Court House. City of Nelson.\nProvince of British Columbia, on\nMonday, the 12th day of October,\nA.D. 1936 at the hour of 11 o'clock\nin the forenoon or so soon thereafter\nas the application may be heard by\nthe presiding Justice.\nAND FURTHER TAKE NOTICE\nthat any person intending to oppose\nsuch application must serve notice\nof such Intention upon the applicant and file a copy of such notice\nin the office of lhe District Registrar\nof thc Supreme Court, City of Nelson, Province of British Columbia.\nDATED AT NELSON. British Columbia, ttiis 4th Day of September,\nA.D. 1936.\nSigned\nW. J. STURGEON,\nDistrict Registrar.\n(2524)\nBIRTHS\nFOR SALE\nto do anything I can,\nIwo get  married.''\nand-fireside type. Eleanor is. She\nloves children, and she loves making a home. When we get married\n\u2014\" he paused.\n\"When!\" he repeated bitterly. \"I\nwant sons and daughters of my own\n\u2014and here's Eleanor wasting tlie\nbest years of both our lives\u2014putting\nme off month after month\u2014telling\nme she loves me, but that I must\nwait. Wait for what? It's her damnable family pride! She's jealous of\nthe Randolph family reputation!\"\nHe demanded with a sudden\nfierceness that startled Gay almost\nout'of her chair. \"You're jealous.\nall-you women, aren't you?\"\n\"Why, y-yes, I suppose so.\"\n\"Then why can't I make Eleanor\nJealous of me? She's too sure of me.\nKnows I'm not really serious when\nI take up with some little\u2014\" He\npaused, his eyes darting toward\nGay. \"Listen. I have an idea! While\nshe's away on this Paris buying\ntrip, and the North Cape after that\n\u2014let us play around' together. I\nmean-tl'H pretend I'm really falling\nfor you in a big way. We'll play it\nup strong!.\"\nHis voice quickened with enthusiasm. \"It's not a bad hunch. 1\nknow exactly what everyone will\nsay\u2014just another case of a middle-\naged man falling head over heels in\nlove with a beautiful working girl.\"\nHe chuckled. \"We might even pretend we're engaged\u2014planning an\nelopement. Of course. Some of Eleanor's good friends will hurry and\nlet her know she's in danger of\nlosing, me complete!*. Gel ihe\nIdea?\"\nGay laughen, incredulously. \"I'ls\nimpossible, Tim. Too melodramatic!\",,\nHe cried. \"Let's give it a Iry, anyway, Make, it a regular business\ncontract. Name your price.\"\nGay shook Iky hor.d. \"It isn't a\nquestion  of' money.\nThe\"   the   memory   of   Eleanor\u25a0\nRandolph's friendly confidence in a I    Mark arrived\ncheek girl's honesty, in spile of un- ! ped  out from\nfavorable evidence, came back viv\nappearance us\nWhist and Dance\nHeld at Fruilvaie\nClay made her first\nai list's model on the Tuesday following that momentous visit at Tim\nKeenan's country estate. She found\nposing in some ways easier, aud in\nsome ways far more difficult, than\nshe had anticipated.\nThe studio vas a big. barn-like\nroom which Mark  Vance had recently rented, on  the top floor of\nan  old   house .on   Rowena   street.\nMuch  to Gay's disappointment,  it\ndisplayed no tiger rugs, oil paintings, or Russian samovars; It was\nnothing but a wide expanse of un-\nI carpeted floor space,  with a very\nj untidy  kitchenette  in  the  far al-\nI cove, a huge glass skylight above.\nI and   no  furniture   except   two  or\n1 three battered chairs,  a  screen, a\n' model's platform, and the easel, at\nI which the artist worked.  Nothing\nmore different from Gay's romantic conception of au artist's studio\ncould possibly  be  imagined.\nWhen she arrived promptly at it\no'clock in the afternoon, Mrs. Vance\n' opened thc door.\n\"Come right  in. Gay.\" she said,\ni cordially. \"Mark's not here yet, but\nI he'll be along any minute.\" She led\nI the way inlo the huge, bare rcom,\n\"You're lo undress  in   the  corner\n. there, behind the screen, and put\non those balling things Mark wants\nyon lo pose in.\"\nWhile Gay was stepping oul ol\nher clothes behind lhe tattered\nscreen, Mrs. Vance kept up a rapid\nconversation.\n\"This silly story Mark's illustrat'\ning is set in Palm Beach. 1 believe.\nYou're supposed to be lulling in the\nlovely white sand, daydreaming.\nHeaven only knows how you'll\nmanage to loll on that hard platform, but maybe wc can dig up an\nold quilt or something for you to\nj lie on. I hope you don't collect too\nmany splinters'\"\n\u25a0loon, and Gay step-\nbehind thc screen\nfeeling rathe'* self-conscious. She\nhad wound a bright red bandanna\nabout her hair, and\nLipsett\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. E. J.\nLipsett at Trail-Tadanac hospital,\nSeptember 1. a daughter.\n\"Smith\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. Harry\nSmith (nee Sara Logan). Fourth\navenue, East Trail, at Trail-Tadanac\nhospital, September 2. a son.\nPIPE & FITTINGS ETC. -\n30.0UII It. 1\" used Pipe 5c per ft.;\n7000 ft. V\/t\" Pipe, 7c per ft Full\nline new and used Galv. & Black\nPipe It Fittings, aU sites at reasonable prices\u2014Extra heavy slate\nsurface Roofing with nails & Cement (about 80 lbs. per roll) $2.50-\nGuaranteed Paint of good quality\nfor all purposes, white, cream.\ngrey & green, $2.25 per gallon-\nNew and used Belting\u2014Plumbing Supplles.-Steel tc C. I. Pulleys-Wire Rope\u2014Poultry Netting.\n\u2014Galv. Iron \u2014 Barbed Wire-\nGrain & Potato Sacks\u2014Canvas-\nDoors tc Windows.\u2014Hose\u2014Merchandise & Equipment ot all descriptions\u2014Enquiries solicited.\nB. C. JUNK OO.\n135 Powell St. Vancouver, B. C.\n(2516)\nPERSONAL\nMEN! GET VIGOR AT ONCE! NEW\nOstiex Touic Tablets contain raw\noyster iuvigorators and other\nstimulants One dose peps up organs, glands. If not delighted\nmaker refunds few cents, paid\nCall, write, Mann-Rutherford Co\n(2421)\nH iGHEST QUALITY RUBBER\ngoods 25 late:: assortment for $1\nOrder direct and be sure of best\nPacked plain Free catalogue National Importer. 812-Centre St.\nCalgary. Alia. (2422)\nPRIVATE \"HOME\"\" KINDERGART-\nens pay. We start you. Thc Canadian Kindergarten Institute. Winnipeg. -\\. (2512)\nPARENTS* INFORMATION \"CLIN-\nic. Write Constance Smedley, 003\nW. Hastings, Vancouver. B.C.\n(2242)\nLAUNCHES AND BOATS\nMOTOR LAUNCH. GOOD CONDI-\ntion. Cheap for cash. Apply Capt.\nF. I.. On*. P.O. Box 722. Nelson.\n(24801\nEXCELLENT 23 AC. 6 CULTIVAT-\ncd, irrigated, fenced, 50 bearing\nfruit trees, 5 room house, outbuildings, $2150. Also 5V4 ac. cultivated, 70 bearing fruit trees, 4\nroom house, outbuildings. Price\n$800. easy terms. H. E. Dill, 508\nWard St. 12517)\n50])06\"\"F-T. 1 IN. USED RECONDI-\ntioned pipe, 5 cents per ft Large\nstock In all sizes up to 12 ln. for\nimmediate shipment. New and\nused boilers, tubes, fittings, valves,\netc. Write Swartz Pipe Yard, 220\nEast 1st. Ave., Vancouver, BC.\n  (2424)\nfPIPELESS'FURNACE, 1 5 FOOT\nshow case, counter top, 1 small\ncook stove, cast iron soil pipe and\nfittings.    1  china wall basin,    1\n20x32 flat rim sink. W. G. Hunter,\nPh.453R, (2440)\nLEG    BANDS    FOR    POULTRY\nPratt's Poultry Regulator. Pralt's\nLice Powder, Cod Liver Oil, \"B\n& K\" Laying Mash.   The Brack-\nman-Ker Millg. Co. Ltd.      (2520)\nRECONDITIONED  COOK  STOVE\nfrom $10 and up. 'file Ark^tore.\n(2390)\nFOR RENT, HOUSES,\nAPARTMENTS. ETC.\nLIVESTOCK FOR SALE\nFURN. SUITES, KERR\n* Apts. $30 and Up     (2427)\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms for rent Annable Block\n(2428)\n7 ROOM HOUSE AFTER SEPT. 16,\n706 Victoria. Telephone 286. (2438)\nTEH RACE APTS Beautiful msJdern\nfrigidaire equipped suites.   (2429)\nFURNISHED SUITE FOR 6 MOS.\nApply P. E. Poulin. (2382)\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms. Apply 524 Latimer.  (2439)\nFURNISHEETROOM. PHONE 377L.\n309 Carbonate St. (2494)\nFOR RENT - ONE BEDROOM IN\nprivate home. Call 387R1.    (2396)\nRABBITRY  SELLING  OUT  ALL\nbreeding  stock,  Flemish  Giants\n' and Belgian Hares. P.O. Box 135.\nNelson. (2497)\n0 HEAVY HORSES FROM 1400\"TO\n1700. Ages 6-9. Priced for quick\nsale. Abey's Ranch, Mirror Lake,\n(2453)\nTEAM   350ir~LBS~CHEA\"P~FOR\nquick sale. At Forch Ranch, Eric.\n(2448)\nYOUNG COW, JUST FRESHENED.\nQuiet. Good milker. Russel. Salmo.\n(2399)\nSALESMEN WANTED\nFARM LANDS\nBusiness and Professional\nDirectory\nAssayers\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst, Assayer. Chemist, Chemical and Metallurgical Engineer\nSampling agents at Trail and Tacoma smelters, 301-305 Josephine\nSt., Nelson. B.C. (2455)\n\" GRENVILLE H GRIMWOOD-\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist. 618\nBaker street, Nelson, B.C.   PO.\nBox No. 276. Representing Shippers interest at Trail, B.C.   (2456)\nAufomobilc Radiator Repairs\nNELSON RADIATOR WORKS\nfor expert repairs\nPhone 686 604'*. Baker St.\n ' (24571\nChiropractors\nInvestments\nLIVING PROTECTION\nINVESTORS SYNDICATE\nF.A.STUART.   BOX 380\n(2472)\nMachinists\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nFor all Classes of Metal Work. Latba\nWork. Drilling. Boring and Grinding.  Motor  Rewinding,  Acetylene\nWelding ,\nTelephone 593     321 Vernon Street\n(2473)\nMaternity Homes\nEARNEST WORKER. CHRISTIAN\nman or woman to distribute religious literature in your community.\nSteady work. Good pay. Write\nBox 32, Toronto A. (2509)\nUSED CARS\nPIPE AND FITTINGS\nCANADIAN JUNK Company  Ltd\n250 Prior St       Vancouver. B   C\n(2425)\nFOR SALE\u2014$225. CHEV. 6-CYL. '29\nCoach. New paint job, new rubber, good condition. Would consider light delivery as part payment. Box No. 2365, Daily News.\n  (2365)\nWANTED, GOOD TRUCK WITHl\nor 3 yard hydraulic steel dump.\nBox 2500. Daily News. (2500)\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non easy terms In Alberta and\nSaskatchewan. Write for full Information to 908 Dept. of Natural\nResources. C.P.R. Calgary. Alia\n(2423i\nDOCS\nCAFE FOR SALE. GOOD Business. Well established. Cheap for\ncash. Sickness cause for sale. Box\n2519, Daily News. (2519)\nWANTED\nFOR SALE - BARRELS. KEGS\nsugar sacks liners. McDonald Jam\nCo.. Ltd., Nelson, B.C.      ^12426)\n2 FOUR-POSTER WALNUT TWIN j\nbeds. Call or phone Mrs. Geo. Russell, Vemon SI. (2452)\nROOM WANTED\nlady. Write Mrs.\nDel., Nelson.\nBY   ELDERLY\nI. Sparks, Gen.\n(2518)\nREGISTERED ENGLISH SPRING-\ner. Spaniels. Champion Aristocrat\nof Avandab & Springbok of Ware\nbreeding. Also registered Airedales Champion Rockley King St\nOorang Strain. Whatsham Keir\nnels, Needles, B.C. (2224)\nBELGJAN~P\"OLICE~~I'Ul'S~ FOR\nsale.   $7   males.   $3.50   females.\nReady now. Box 2507. Daily News.\n(2507i\nJ. r. McMillan, d. c, palmer\ngraduate. McCulloch Blk.. Nelson\n(24571\ne. m. Warren, d\"c. Bilker bC\nNelson, B.C. Ph. U5-755L.    124581\nELIZABETH PEEL\nMATERNITY HOME\nStrictly Private, Confidential Physician In attendance. Ph. Bruad 3078.\nW-1324 Broadway, Spokane, Wash.\n(2474)\nElectrical\nNEW AND REBUILT MOTORS\nGenerators, etc., in ull sizes.\nIMMEDIATE  DELIVERY.   WRITE\nQROSSMAN |?LECTR)CAL\nMystic!:*\nSCIENTIFIC INSTRUCTIONS IN\nHigh Spiiitual Mastery. Clara\nStocker, CascadcJl.C. (2090)\nPatents\nIfACHINERY   PO..\nTl)\n61 Alexander St.    Vancouver  ti (.'. |\n(24501\nJ. T. COATESrThe Electric\" Store-\nSupplies and Installations\nPhone 766. P.O. Box 10(15\n(24001\nAN OFFER TO EVERY INVENT-\nor, list of wanted Inventions and\nfull information sent free. The\nRamsay Company. World Patent\nAttorneys, 273 Bank St., Ottawa.\n(2475)\nPhotography\nEngineers and Surveyors\nCARDENINC AND NURSERY\nPRODUCTS\nBULBS-TULIPS, NARCISSI. LIL-\nies. Kootenay grown. Price reasonable. List free E. Evans, Poplar\nCreek P.O., B.C. (2146)\nELECTRIC REFRIGERATOR AND\nradio. Phone 218.   _       _ (2367)\nDRY  SLAB   WOOD  FOR-SALE\nPhone 434R1. ' (2492) ]\nPH. 350L2 i\n(2402)\nGOOD COOK STOVE,\nor P.O. Box 512. Nelson.\nHELP WANTED\nA LESSON FROM THE DEPRES\nsion- Be a civil servant\u2014Postman Customs Examiner Clerk\nStenographer, etc Free Booklei\n\"How to get a Government iob\nMCC. CivU Service School\nWinnipeg. (2513)\nFOR SALE OR RENT\n2 CORNER LOTS AND 2 STORY\nbuilding, suitable boarding house.\n20 rooms. Centrally located. $1400.\nCan be had furnished. Also two i\nstores, Procter. Will give Big Bargain to suitable buyer. Reply Box\n2414, Daily News. (2414)\n6 room\"\"house;\u20143Tedroom\"s\nFurnace. Apply 702 Latimer St.\n(2401)\nACENTS WANTED\nROOM AND BOARD\nAGENTS WANTED TO SELL SILK\nand leather neckties. Wc sell you\nat a price that allows you to make\n100% commission. Write today foi\nfree samples and particulars. Ontario Neckwear Company. Dept\n574. Toronto 8, Out. (2615)\nMALE INSTRUCTION\ninventor of an entirely new and\nrevolutionary type of airplane motor which, if it proved practical,\nwould bring him a fortune. That\nhe was the protege of Mrs. Grace\nLarrimore, who had met him two\nor three years ago in New York,\nand had since taken a great Interest;,,,,,,   ,,,,,, ,.,.,.,,,,,  ,,,,,,  ,,,,.\nin his career. ' B ARM B0Y* GO0D MILKER. BOX\n\"And  in  him,\" added  Charlotte\nWANTED-FARM HAND, EXPERI-\nenced milker. Abey's Ranch, Mi i-\nror Lake, B.C.        (24541\nWOMAN OR GIRL FOR HOUSE\"\nwork. Country home. Box 2400,\nDaily News. (24001\nROOM AND BOARD FOR HIGH\nschool girl in exchange for light\nservices. Box 2398, Daily News.\n(2398)\nROOMERS OR BOARDERS-IN\ncomfortable home. Apply 704 Baker. Phone mornings 392R!  (2504)\nR06'M_& BOARD IN COMFORT-\nable home. Ph. 702L. P.O. Box 374.\n(2397)\nMEN TO TAKE UP AIR CONDI-\ntioning and Electric Refrigeration\nand better themselves.. Must be\nmechanically inclined, willing to\ntrain in spare time to qualify.\nWrite Box 2510, Daily News.\n(2510)\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nE. L. WARBURTON. AGENT. NEL-\nsou,  B.C.  Ph. 53.  Res. 239   PO\nBox 668. Oils. etc.. Mine Machinery and Equipment, Steam Coals\nt (2461l\nH.D DAWSON Nelson, BC.\nMine Surveys aud Reports\n(24821\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, Frultvaje, E C\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor\nReg. Professional Civil Engineer\ni2463i\nFILMS DEVELOPED AND PRINT-\ned. any size. 25c. Lleprints. eight\nfor 25c. Deckled edge prints. Valuable coupon. \"Better prints at\nlower cost.\" KflYSTAL PHOTOS.\nWM-le, Sask. (2476i\nSamariums\nCHRONIC DISEASES MIND AND\nbody. Di. Aldilch. Spokane, E.\n4504 Frederick. '2477)\nSash Factory\nFlorists\nCARNATION FLOWER SHOP\nPhone 215. All kinds of cut flowers,\nwreaths, sprays & etc. Phone 215\nMrs. Hagarty. Box 29. (2464)\nInsurance and Real Estate\n2522, Daily News.\n(2522)\nVance   meaningly.   \"Grace   thinks\nhe's terribly attractive.\"\nIn  fact,  it  was  at  Mrs.   Larri-\nmore's suggestion that Wayne was\nnow trying to sell thc new Adams\nslid her feet I engine to one of thc big Michigan\nWomen's Institute\nSponsors Event\nFRUITVALE, B.C.- A whist drive\nand dance was held in the Fruit-\nvaje hall Friday under direction of\nthe Women's Institute, Seven tables\nwere played. High score prize for\nladles was won by Mrs. Ma-vds'ey\nand high score for men by J. Buchanan.\nSupper was served by the mem-\n-*Vrs and thc evening concluded with\ndancing.    A   Trail  orchestra   supplied the music.\nMiss Brcla Lindholm has left for\nVancouver.\nMrs. T. Charlton, who was visiting\nhei'e.\u00bb guest of her son-in-law and\ndaughter. Mr. and Mrs. T. Crowe,\nhas returned to her home in Nelson-\nMrs. McHalc and daughter. Kathleen, were visitors to Salmo Monday.\nMr.'and Mrs. R. Kidd were visitors\nlo Nelson Thursday.\nMr. and Mrs. B. E. Smith nnd two\nsons, who had resided here for some\ntime, have left to take up residence\nin Trail.\nF. Halifax of Trail spent Ihe\nweek-end here with his family. Mrs\nV. Halifax and family, who spent\nthe two months' holiday here, returned to Trail Monday.\nMr. and Mr*. H. C. Davis were\nvisitors to Spokane.\nR Carson of Trail was a weekend visitor here.\nMiss Mfldge Young, who spent a\nweek's vacation at Trail, has returned.\nMiss Audrey Maxwell, who was\nvisiting relatives here for a week,\nreturned to her home In Nelson Saturday.\nMrs,D. Murray, who was visltine,\nin Salmo for the week-end, returned\nMonday.\nMiss E. Stainthorpe has left to\nspend a few days with friends at\nTrail.\nMr. and Mrs. C. Nolan and family.\nwho spent the summer here, have\nreturned to Jrail.\nMrs. E. Sharp.\"who was visiting in\nNelson, has returned.\nMiss Inez Johnson left by motor J\nSaturday for points In Saskatchewan   eral   facts  about   Wayne  she  had\n\u00bb0 visit with friends. ] not known before. That he was th.\nBRINGING UP FATHER\ninto long, narro .   red slippers. As j motor companies.\nfor the bathing suit, Gay felt posi- j    \"Ad's   a   great  boy,\"   Mark   de-\ntive no one would wear such a cos- | clarcd. \"I'd bet my shirt on him.\ntume in public.  II  was white silk,; But  he'll  never make  a  business\nterribly   low   in   front,   with   two i man. Too temperamental. He's ner-\nstraps crossing like a child's sun-; vous,  right  now,  because   Charlie\nsuit in back, and going into brief.\nstraight panties at thc bottom.\n\"That's my own pet bathing cos-\n- tume,\" declared Mrs. Vance. \"I\nJ only wish I looked half as adorable\nI in it as you do.\" She glanced lo-\nI ward her husband. \"You were quite\nI right, Mark. She's exactly the type.''\n! The artist's manner was business-\nI like a? he spoke to Gay. \"Now. Miss\nI Elwell. before we start. I'd like to\ntell you that I'm one of those foolishly conscientious artists who try\nlo make their illustrations follow\nthe story. So If you'll listen to the\nfirst instalment of this yarn, you'll\nget the feel on the thing\u2014have some\nidea of the poses we'll want\". Charlotte, find the manuscript, will you.\nand read to her while I get set?\"\nObediently. Charlotte Vance read\naloud  from   the  type  script,   and\nGay learned that she was now Vivien Bennetl, a debutante, spending\nthe winter at  Palm  Beach.     She\nfound   the  first   pose   ridiculously\neasy. She lay on a folded blanket\nand crossed her legs with nonchal-\n| ant case, one red slipper braced on\nj thc floor, the other hanging loosely.\nshowing her pretty bare foot and\narched instep.\n\"Good girl! Hold il!\" Mark Vance\nflew to work, sketching with quick,\nvigorous strokes. .\nSimple at firsl. But not so simple\nto hold careless pose, that dreamy\nexpression, for half an hour at n\ntime. When Mrs. Vance looked a\nher watch and called \"Rest,\" Gay\nfound that one foot had gone to\nsleep, and her whole body ached\n. more   wearily   than   after   a   long\nSaturday night of checking. But\ni there were 10 precious minutes of\nrelaxation before she had to take\nlhe pose again, for which Gay was\nduly thankful.\nAt 6 o'clock Mark called a halt,\nand Mrs. Vance, who had been fixing coffee and sandwiches, summoned them  into  the kitchenette,\nwhere all three sat around eating\nand   chattering   together   in   what\nGay found a delightful intimacy.\nThe conversation turned after a\nwhile to the house-warming party\nWayne Adams was giving on Saturday night, and from lhat, to lhe\nhost himself.\nGay, listening interestedly while\ndrank her coffee, learned sev-\nPROPERTY FOR SALE\nFOR SALE-IN ONE OF THE BEST\ndistricts, 7 room modern house 11\nlots. All out buildings. Water an.*'\n!    lightJ^364Y2. .        (23851\n4 ~lot1T5~r66\"m~hous1:7bath\ni    Apply 212 Anderson St.      (23781\nand then waiting to sec which way\nI Ihey roll.'\nPennell can't make up his mind j That comment explained Wayiu*\nabout coming in on the deal. One I Mams to Gay wilh startling clear-\nday Jie says yes-next day, no. I nes\u00bb- Many things he'd said which\nThat sort of tiling drives a man j 'ia(t puzzled her deeply were now\ncrazy. It's like staking every cent \\ understood,\nyou have on a throw of thc dice,' ( To Be Continued)\nMOTORCYCLES\n$295 MOTORCYCLE\nANNOUNCEMENT\nThe Indian Factory |ias cut the\nprice of this machine $100.00 for\nan introductory offer to Canada. The lowest priced twin\nin the world and a real motorcycle. 70 miles an hour; 100\nmiles on a gallon of gas. Has\nall the big machine features.\nDry sump oiling, large battery\nand generator, new distributor\nignition and stream lined\nguards. Less than $101) down.\nSEVERAL GOOD USED\nMACHINES.\nPALMER RUTLEDGE\nTRAIL, B.C.\n(2514)\nEXPERIENCED MINE SAMPLER,\nfirst aid man, bookkeeper with\nreferences, desires position. State\nwages. Box 2371, Dally News.\n (2371)\nEXPERIENCED     HOUSEKEEPER\nwants work by hour, day or month.\nState wages. Box 2506, Dally News.\n(2506)\nEXPERIENCED\"\"' GIRL WANTS\ngeneral housework by hour, day or\nmonth. State wages. Box 2505.\nDaHy News. (2505)\n\\LL \"AROUND\"TXPERiENCED\ncook. Mining camp or hotel. Best\nof references. Box ,2408, Daily\nNews. (2408)\nWANTED-ORDERS FOR SAWING\ncord wood. Ph. 606L2. (2332)\nROBERTSON REALTY CO.. LTD.\nReal  Estate,  Insurance,  Rentals.\nJ3aker_St_ (2465)\nR. W. DAWSON. Real Estate, In-\nsurance. Rentals. Next Hipperson\nIlardwarc. Baker St. (2466)\nC. D. BlTCKWOODTliiaurancrof\nevery description. Real Est Ph. 99.\n      (2467)\nH. E. DILL, AUTO AND FIRE IN-\nsurance, Real Estate. 508 Ward St.\n(2468)\nJ. E. ANNABLE. REAL ESTATE.\nRentals, Insurance. Amiable Blk\n__(2469)\nLIFE, FTRE,AUTbMOBILE INSUR-\nance. P. E. Poulin. Ph. 70.    (2470)\nCHAS'XMcHARDY,'INSURANCE.\nReal Estate. Ph. 135. (2471)\nPhone\nJean Robertson\n144\nFor the NELSON DAILY\nNEWS CLASSIFIED\nSERVICE\nLAWSON'S   SASH    FACTORY.\nHardwood merciunt. 217 Baker st.\n(24781\nSecond Krnd Stores\nWE   BIT.'.   SELL   l:\nEXCHANGE\nfurniture, clc, The A\n'., Store.\n(2479)\nWatch Repairing\nH. E. L. HICKS\nI.B.M.\nInterior Watclrnpkcrs.\nNakusp, B.C.\nMainspring\n.. 75c\nMainspring & Cb'nn\nns      $1.50\nCleaning Oi lv\n1.00\nRepairs to Shell uirl Mct:il\nEyeglass Fra mrs\n50c up\nGUARANTEED\nYEAR\n \t\n12412)\nII. H. SUTHERLAND\nWatchmaker and Jeweller\nRutledge block. Baker St\u201e Nelson,\n\"When   Sutherland    repairs   your\nwatch It is on time ull thc time.\"\n(2481)\nSPECIALIST. REASONABLE. Work\nguaranteed. P. Boyle. Vernon St.\n(2482)\nWigs and Toupeei\nj LADIES' AND GENTLEMEN'S wigs\nand toupees, otc. Free illustrated\nj Catalogue. Over 20 years in B.C,\nWe buy cut hair. Hanson Hair\nI   Goods Co. P.O. Box 601, Vancou-\n!    ver. B.C. (2483)\nPOULTRY AND ECCS\nLIVE HENS WANTED. E. J. COOK. I\nNelson. B.C. (2417)\nNELSON\nSHOPPING AND AMUSEMENT CENTER\nOF THE INTERIOR\nBy Ceo. McManue\nIX) VOU WANT TD\nRUHVOUR EYE-\nSIQHT9SHUT UP-\nI'fA TALKING-WHEN\nI TELL VOU  TO\nWEAR VOUR GLASSES-1 fAEAN IT-DO\nYCU WANT TO RUIN\nVOUR\nEYES?\nI\" \"I\nBYfiOU-Y-lOONT\nNEED GLASSES TO\nPBCTTECT Wty EYES.\nI NEED A BASEBALL\nCATCHER'S fAASK-\nTHE CUMPS\nBy Cut Edion\nEASY THERE,\nOUD FELLOW \u2014\nRUNT DOESN'T MEAN\nFOR US TO BE\nFRIENDS\netTpnmui^'J^mM^uit^Mu^. ^-tt-mun\n\u201e;\u00bb,, .\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 j'1i:^^A;i^J.\"<\u00bb>^^e^Ah-ak^^*tJt\n\u25a0ssMssa---a*((aw\n 0\nlo New Reno Vein\nFirm to Instol o New\nElectric Compressor\nat the Mine\ninsiai\nr-\u00bb.N.\nReno mine, which ls at present\nI Operating an electric compressor\nand a diesel compressor will shortly\nInstal a second electrical compressor\np)ace of the diesel, according to\njl. Ellis, superintendent, who was\n: Nelson yesterdsy. He reports\n^ugust production about the same\nM lp July. A new vein hss been\nencountered by diamond drilling on\nthe north of the property, he reports,\nand it is the intention to drive a\n800-foot tunnel to tap the vein.\n' . Mr. Bills reports things humming\non Sheep Creak. At present a school\nIs being byilt, one room, to accommodate children in the various\ncamps. About 16 are awaiting school\nOpening. A teacher has been engaged.\nAt Reno mine proper there aro\nabout 12 families in their own quarters but none of the children are of\nschool age.\nIndustrials Off\nTORONTO, Sept. 4 (CP)-Selllng\nwas a little more pressing than\nbuying today on the Industrial share\nmarket and prices were scaled down\na little here and there. International\nNickel traded 7200 shares or 16 per\ncent ol the aggregate turnover. The\nclose was Vs down at 55%. The average for the list showed a 1 is of\nabout three-qmrteri ot a point in\nthe Index\nWestops Common was a feature\nof th\u00bb trading on a rise of % to a\nnew high it isvs.\nStrength w\u00ab\u00ab maintained In the\nCanaditn Car and Foundry issues,\ntb\u00ab common advancing to a new\nhigh at Ity. Prices were un also for\nDominion St*t! I* Coal \"B\", press-\ned metali and National steel Car.\nIn the building group losses predominated.\nSmall Crew Held ot\nDentonia Mini for\nDevelopment Work\nPentonla mine has been closed\nexcept for a small crew being kept\non development work, the Grand\nForks Gaiette reports. Most of the\nmembers of the crew are being\nsent to other projects under consideration by the company.\nPROFITS TAKEN\nMONTREAL, Sept 4 (Cf). -\nProfit-taking measures failed to halt\ntha current upswing ef Canadian\nCar Issues in today's stock market,\nNickel lost V\u00ab tt MVi. Noranda\ngained a small amount and Smelters\nremained even.\nSlight improvement wu shown by\nSt. Lawrence Paper Preferred at\n32%, Dryden at 7%, St. Lawrence\nCorp. 2% and the preferred at 11%.\nIn liquors, Seagrams firmed a little.\n...\nPOUND EASES\nMONTREAL, Sep*. \u2666 (CP).-\nPound starling eased Vs to $5 03\n21-52 on Montreal foreign exchanges\ntoday. The French franc at 6 58\nrent! ind the United States dollar\nat par were unchanged.\nWinnioea Grain\nWINNIPEG,  Sept. 4\n(CP).\"\ntures close:\nOpen\nHigh\nLow   i\nWHEAT\u2014\nOct.           97%\n98%\n081'\nDec           9614\n97%\n05%\nMav          97'A\nB944\n97'\/*\nOATS-\nOct    44\n444,\n43%\nDec. .        42*\n43\n42%\nMay     ...   43%\n43%\n43%\nBARLEY-\nOct.      ...   53%\n54%\n53 %\nDec.   ..      52*1\n53%\n52%\nMav           52%\n53'\/.\n52%\nFLAX-\nOct. _      168\n170\n168\nDec.         166\n168\n166\nMav    \u2014\n\u2014\n\u2014\nRYE-\nOct ,   - \u00ab8%\n137 %\n66%\nDec    64%\n88%\n64%\nMay    \u00ab5%\n68%\n63%\nClose\nNELSON PAIIY NEWS, NELSON. B.C-SATURDAY MORNINO. SEPTEMBER 1.1\u00bbM\nMarket and Mining\nNEW YORK GAINS\nNEW YORK, (Sept. 4 (AP).-\nHeavy industries took over the play\nin today's stock market with numerous Issues adding frictions to 1 pr\nmore poipta to their quoted values.\nAlthough pre-holiday apathy ruled\nduring the greater part of the session, Buyers were encouraged by\nearly strength of communications,\neircrafta and specialties. Profit-\ntaking reduced extreme genu near\nthe finish.\nThe Associated Press average of\n60 stocks held a gain of .4 of a point\nat 68J, and transfers totalled 1,174,-\n510 shares against 1,047,760 yesterday.\nDividends\nAcme Glove Works, Limited, common 12% eent\u00bb, preferred 1% per\ncent, payable Oct 1 w itoekboldtrs\nof Record Sept. 20.\nExchanges\nMontreal' Sept. 41 cp) .-British and foreign exchange closed\neasier.\nDenmark, krone, 2249.\nFrance, franc, Mtt. '\nGreet Britain, pound, 1.0388.\nHolland, florin. Jioo.\nIndia, rupee, .3110.\nNorway, krone, .2532.\nUnited States dollar, par.\n(Compiled by the Royal tank of\nCanada)-\nMONTRIAL PRODVCf\nMONTREAL, Sept 4 (CP).-But-\nter prices cased slightly en Canadian' commodity exchange produce\nsection today,\nButter spot-^lpie *\u00bb47\u00bb~H.\nWheat, No. 2 Nor. 1*8%; barley,\nNo. 3 C.W. (3%; oats, No. 1 feed 49;\nflour spring wheat patents 4; seconds\n8.60:   bakers   S.20;   winter  wheat,\nchoice 4.8Q-5; Whit* corn 6.50-7;\nBran, ton, 25.26; shorts 28.26; middlings 34.25.\nMoney\n21-32;\nClosing exchtnge rates:\nAt Montreal:  Pound 6.03\nU.S. dollar 1.00; franc 6.58.\nAt New York: Pound 6.03%; Canadian dollar 1.00; franc 6.58%.\nAt Paris: Pound 76.54 francs; U.S.\ndollar 15.19 francs; Canadian dollar\n15.18 francs.\nin gold: Pound lh M; u.s. dollar\n19.44 cents; Canadian dollar 59.48\neent*.\nMINES LOWER\nToronto Stock Quotations\n96 %\n98%\n44%\n42%\n43\u00bb\u00bb\n54%\n52%\nm\n170\n168\n170\n67\n65%\n\u00ab%\nCASH WHEAT-No. 1 hard \u00bb9%*\nNo. 1 nor. 98%; No. 2 nor, 86%; No.\n3 nor. 94; No, 4 nor. 60%; No, 8, 87;\nNo, 6. 86%; feed 72%; No. 1 garnet\n93; No. 2 garnet 83: No. 1 A.R.W. llj\nNo. 1 durum 1.06%; No, 2 special\n82; No. 5 special 77; No. 6 special\n75%; track 98; icretningi $11 per\ntor).\nGOLD DOWN THREE\nMONTREAL, Sept. 4 (CP)^-B\u00bbr\ngold in London down three cents at\n$34.76 an ounee in Canadian funds:\n138s %d in British. The fixed $35\nWashington price amounted to $36\nwith the United States dollar at par.\nBankfleld  - .- \u2022\u00bb\nBarry Hoilinger ..... - -W\nBa;e Metals        .-.,\u2022, - &\nBear Exploration -,-. \u2022\u201e-. \u25a0\u2022*\nBig Missouri - \u2022*>\nBobjo - - -\u2022 f\nBralorne ,.-- \u25a0\u25a0.\u2022\u2022\u2022- '\u25a0\"\nBRX   -\u2022- -- \u2022\u00ab\nBul Ankerite   \u2022\u25a0\"\nCan Malartic .\nCariboo Gold\nCastle Treth\t\nCentral Man ...\nCentral Pat\nChlbougemou\nCoast Copper\n1.15\n2.00\n1.48\n.31\n4.30\n1,62\n2.60\nPremier Oold \u2022,\u2014.,\u2014^-.-\u00bb\nReno -\nSan Antoplo \u201e.\u2122,\u00ab.m-~-..\nSheep Creek  .\t\nSherritt Cordon \u2022\u2014-\nSiscoe.      -\u201e\t\nSmelter O n\u2122\u2014r\u2014\nStadacona  ... ,\t\ngt Anthony .\u201e.,..\u201e,\u201e\u201e\u2022,\u00ab...\u2022,-.\nSudbury Sarin -,-,..-^.-\nSullivan  \t\nSylvanite\nConlagas''.    3.80\nConarium .. _     2.04\nConsolidated M * B -  MM\nDroit\nDominion Explorer\nEldortdo   \t\nFalconbridge \u2014\t\nGod's Lake \u25a0\u2022\u2022\u2022\t\nGold Belt -\t\nGranada  \t\nHardrock \u201e....\u201e.,-,.,\u2022\u2022\u2022.\nHoUinger  \t\nHowey\n87*28\nM%.\n1D4\n9.60\n1.03\n40\n.27\n14.25\n.87\n24.00\n55.50\n.62\nfeck Hughes \t\nTowagamac. ,\u00bb..,_\u201e,\u00ab,\nTreadwell  \t\nVentures    _.,.\nWaite Amulet mrmm\nWayside    \t\nWhit* Segle .,    J_t\n1.14\n1.23\n136\n.82\n1JS4\n4.86\nfit\n.68%\n.26\n4-76\n2.25\n3.25\n6.00\n.91\n31\n2.20\n1.55\n.10\nTOIONTO, Sept. 4 (CP)- Th*\nToronto mining market found the\ngoing a bit heavy today and narrow\nlosses were general at the close,\nHtavy selling in Francoeur resulted- in a decline of Ig cents and\nHard Rock lost 11 cents. Other issues down S to 7 eent were Arnt-\nflcld, Central Patricia, McLeod-\nCockshutt, Ban Antonio. Mining\nCorporation dipped to 2.53 and recovered to 2.65. O'Brien left 28 cents.\nPioneer held I gain of 18 cents.\nSullivan advanced to a new high\n\u2022t 2.30 and the close at 2.24 wu up\n(net\nCORN SHOOTS UP\nAT CHICAGO\nCHICAGO, SepL 4 (AP) .-Frenzied buying of September com that\nshot up the price 5% cents to $1.11%\na bushel, the sharpest advance\nscared by any grain future tince\nthe wild bull market oi July, 1833,\ngave all grains a strong ton* today\nNo. 1 white corn was quoted as\nhigh as $138 compared with $1.18%\nfor No. 1 hard wheat\nCorn closed at the day's highs, 2%\n-6% higher, Sept, 1.11-11%, Dec\nttVs-s-% Dee. 1.08%-10, May 1.08%;\nos-tg gained 1%-1%, Dec. 42%-%;\nry* IH\u2014IH: barley IH and provisions 10-15 centa.\nQuotations on Wall Street\nHigh\nAllied Chemical 231\njbMriean Can, 128%\nAmer For Pow 7\nAmerMaehisF 23%\nAmSmel&Rtf 86%\nAmer Telephon 177%\nAmerican Tob.. 101\nAnaconda - 39%\nAtcblion -  \u00bbH\nAuburn Motors 31%\nAviation Corp^\njaldwln \u2014\u25a0\u2014\n\u25a0ptlt It Ohio.....\nBendix Aviat..\nBeth Steel ._.\nCanadt Dry ...\nCan Pacific .....\nCerro De Pasco\nChe* & Ohio -\nChrysler \t\nCon Gai N Y....\nCorn Prods\t\nC Wright pfd.-\nJJupont 157%\nBait Kodak .._. 175%\nJl Pow It L... 15%\nGen Foods \u2014 39%\nGen Motors \u2014 67%\nGold Dust \u2014 14%\n5%\n3%\n243\u00bb\n29%\n683i\n15%\n12\n55%\n67%\n114%\n44%\n67%\n\u00abH\nLow\n229%\n124%\n6%\n23%\n83%\n176%\n100%\n38%\n81\".\n30%\n5%\n3%\n24\n29%\nCO''.\n15%\n11%\n54%\n66%\n113%\n44%\n07%\n6%\n156%\n174%\n15\n3B%\n66%\n13%\nClose\n229%\n126%\n7\n23%\n84\n176%\n100%\n38%\n82%\n31%\n8%\n3%\n24%\n29%\n68%\n18%\n11\".\n5'%\n67%\n114%\n44'',\n67%\n6%\n157%\n175\n15%\n39\n07%\n14%\nmx Credit\nW\\\nr\nErie    \u00bbH\nFord English .... 8%\nFord of Canada 22%\nFirst Nat Storei  47%\nFree Texas     25%\nGen Electric ....   47%\nGranby       3%\nGreat North pfd 41%\nGreat Wtst Sug   36\nHowe Sound    61%\nHudson  Motors  17%\nInter Nickel\nInter Tel it Tel\nKenn  Copper...\nKresge S S\t\nKroegger Groc.\nMack Truck\t\nMont Ward .....\nNtsh Motors ....\nNat Dairy Prod\nN Pow Ic L ....\nN Y Central ...\nPac Gas & EL.\nPackard Motors\nPenn R R \t\nPhillips Pete\nPure  Oil  \t\nRadio Com\nRadio Keith Or\nRem Rand     20%\nSafewav  Stores   29%\nShell Union    19\nS Cal Edison .... 31%\nStan Oil of Cal 35%\nSouth Pacific.\nStan Oil of Ind\nStan Oil ot N J\nStew Warner\nStudebaker    14\nTexas Corp     37%\nTexas Gulf Sul 38%\nTimken Roller.. 64%\nUnderwood T\u201e- 79%\nUnion Carbide.. 96%\nUn Oil of Cal...   21\nUn Aircraft     26\nUnited  Biscuit.   27%\nUn Pacific   140\nU S Pipe    54%\nU S Rubber    31%\nU S Steel ......   71\nVan Steel ._    24\nWarner Bros ...   13H\nWest Electric 142%\nWest Union     90%\nWoolworth  -   55\nWrlgley    69\nYellow Truck...  20%\n56%\n13\n47%\n27%\n20%\n40%\n49%\n17\n27%\n12%\n44%\n38%\n12%\n39%\n42%\n16%\n11\n7%\n43%\n37%\n62%\n20%\n17%\n8%\n22%\n47%\n25%\n46%\n3%\n41\n35%\n51\n17%\n55\n12%\n46%\n27%\n20%\n39%\n4R%\n16%\n27%\n12\n43%\n37%'\n12%\n39%\n41%\n16%\n10%\n6%\n19%\n29%\n18%\n31%\n35%\n42%\n37%\n61%\n20\n13%\n36%\n37%\n63%\n79\n96%\n20%\n25%\n27%\n139%\n54%\n30%\n69%\n23%\n13%\n139%\n87%\n54%\n65\n19%\n17%\n8%\n22%\n47%\n25%\n47\n3%\n41%\n36\n51%\n17%\n59%\n13\n47%\n27%\n20%\n40%\n45%\n17\n27%\n12%\n44%\n37%\n12%\n39%\n41%\n16%\n10%\n7\n20\n29%\n19\n31X4\n35%\n43%\n37%\n62\n20%\n14\n37\n37%\n64\n79\n96%\n20%\n25%\n27%\n140\n54%\n31%\n70%\n23%\n13%\n141%\n90%\n55\n65\n19%\nHudson Bay _\nInternational Nickel..\nJ M Con\t\nKirkland Lake  .80\nLake Maron. - .11%\nLakeshore  35.78\nLittle Long Lao _  tot\nMacassa  4.48\nMaple Leaf  _  3tVk\nMalrobic  . . -  -04%\nMeLeod Cockahutt   435\nMclntyre        \u201e\u201e..,..,.- 4238\nMeK R L Gold -  130\nMcVittie Or      30\nMcWatter Oold   1.45\nMining Corporation .. 2.60\nNlpisiing  2.48\nNoranda   8238\nParkhUl  _..- _  35\nPaymaster \u2014> - 1.05\nPend OrelUe  38\nPickle Crow -.-- \u00ab30\nPioneer   8.00\nWrlgn' Hargreaves\nOIL*\nAll*  .\t\nBritish Ameriwn OU\t\nC li B Corpor*tlon..,,\u2014.-.\nChemical Research \u2014\u00bb\nDalhousie \u2014\nHorn* \u2014.-.\nImperial  .  - \u2014\nInternational Petroleum .-\nNordon \u25a0\u2022; \u2014\t\nRoyalito      -.\u00bb,.,..\t\nINDUSTRIALS\nBestty Brot     \t\nBell Telephone -\t\nBrazilian         \t\nBrew It Dlst\t\nCanada Bread -\t\nCanada Car eV Foundry     \u00bb%\nCanada Cement - -\u25a0\u2022\u2022\u25a0   \u00abH\n1.09\n.45\n2837\n140\n30\n33\n31\n20.37\n33.75\n.11\n27.62\n...    (\n... 149\n...   12\n._     35\n8%\nBright Spots\nof the Week\nBy The Canadian rPen\nTORONTO\u2014Port of Toronto em\nturns and excise collections in three\nmonths ended August 31  totalled\n$13,835,562, an increase of 22 per\ncent ov\u00abr total for thi lame period\nof lest year.\nVancouver Loses\n- PAOI ILIVIN.\nWINDERMERE HAS A SUCCESSFUL\nFAIR; CHAMPIONS ARE DECLARED\nINVERMERE, B.C-Falr day for\nthe Windermere District Agricultural Association was indeed a fair\nday, warm md sunny, allowing\nfor summer attire sans the burden\nof coat or wrap. Thl Unity ln the\nmain building, ot vegetables, fruits,\nflowers, handwork and cookery was\na plentiful ono and looked very\ntempting lying on clean display\nboards and fresh moss, jome sleek\nand beautiful horses were noticed\nabout the fair grounds; ridden by\nmembers of both sexes. Horse event* are always a drawing card\nand an Interested throng watched\nthe different races.\nThe exhibits of tht schools of\nthe district were exceptionally fine.\nDrawings and sketches showed\nartistic and distinctive talent. The\nhandwork ot the girls section was\nbeautifully and nettly done. City\nwork showed orginallty tnd quaint\ncolor designs. The Indian section'. Joseph.\nboth at the fair end later at the\nHotel invermere.\nFrom the gardens of the district\nwere displayed mm gorgeous\nflowers, beauties.\nThe livestock section wu well\ntilled. Competition in all classes\nwas keen. A two year old heifer,\nproduct ot \"The Meadows\" ranch,\ncame in for special mention. Th*\nfair closed with a merry dene*\nand a general feeling Of satisfaction\nthat once again this event his\nproved a pleasure and tuccess to\nall those concerned. Gate receipts\nfar exceeded last year'* total.\nAnnual Cup Prizes is follows:\nDavid Spencer cup: Tom Hawks;\nBurn's and Company's cup. George\nWatt* w. D. Farmer's Initltute eup:\nTom Hawks; Thomas King cup:\nClara Noland; II.II. Steven* cup:\n(Juniors) Colvin Lake; Imperial\nBank cup: K. Marples; Nichol cup\ntor   Bead   work;   Mm,   Jerome\nVANCOtWER-Prellminary con-\ntract* let for construction of th*\nFirst Nwrows bridge to cost $8,-\n000,000 ind bt oorapl*t**d within two\nyears.\niAULT STE. MARIE, OnWuly\ntraffic through Sault ctntis totalled\n10,990,758 tons, an increase of 49 per\ncent over July of last year.\nVICTORIA-Publiclty commissioner\nreports 59 per cent increase In tour-\nlit trade in first seven monthi of\nthis year over 1935.\nCanada Dredge\nCanada Malting\t\ncpn. : -\u2022\u2022\nConsolidated Smelters.\nDominion Bridg* \t\nDominion Stor*i\t\nDistillers-Seagrams\t\nFord Canada A \u25a0\n46\n33\n11%\n53%\n42\n10%\n25%\n22%\nGoodyear Tire .  M\nHiram Walker \u2014 89\nLobUw A  ,  21%\nMissey Harris   4\nSteel of Canada  88%\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nThe\nConsolidated Mining & Smelling\nCompany of Canada, Limited\nTRAIL-BRITISH COLUMBIA\nMANUFACTURERS OF\nELEPHANT Brand\nCHEMICAL FERTILIZERS\nAmmonium Phoipharti \u2014 Sulphate of Ammonia\nSuperphosphates \u2014 CompleU Ftrtiliiori\nPRODUCERS AND REFINERS OF\nTadanac Brand Metali\nCOLD SILVER\nLEAD\nELECTROLYTIC    ,\nZINC CADMIUM\nBISMUTH\nLifted\nBid\nA P Com \u2014\n.13\nAmal Oil\t\n.13\n.61\nBralorne Mines ....\n7.90\nBrewers tc Dist ....\n1.00\nBritilh Dom OU ...\n.14\nBridge Riv Con\t\n.05\nBRX\n.12%\nCariboo Gold  .-\nWI\nC&Corp\t\n1.37\nCoast Breweries...\n13.00\n7.50\nCommon Oil \t\n.06\nDentonia Mines ...\n.16%\nGold Belt Mines ..\n.18\nHargal Oil    \t\n.10%\nHome Oil \t\n.90\nInter Coal\t\n.20\n1.22\nKoot Belle Gold ....\n.74\n.02%\nMcD Seg Ex ..    .\n.08%\n.19\n.29\nModel Oil -\n.22\nMorning Star G...\n.01%\nNational Silver \t\n.02%\nPioneer Gold ,.\t\n7.85\n3.18\n.00%\nQuatsino Copper _\n.01%\n1.19\n.09%\nSalmon Gold\t\n.11\nSheep Creek G \t\n\u2014\nSherrit Gordon\t\n1.50\n.10\nVtnalta Ltd   \t\n.05\nVidette Gold \t\n1.30\nWayside Gold\t\n.09%\nCURBS\n.04%\nAnaconda Oil \t\n.04*:'\n\u2014\nBayview Min \t\n.00%\nAsk\n.14\n.13%\n.62\n8.00\n.15\n.06\n.13\n1.95\n1.39\n13.50\n8.00\n.08\n.17\n.19\n.11\n.95\n.25\n1.25\n.78\n.09\n.30\n.30\n3i\n.01%\nEast Cr*\u00bbt OU      .07%\nEldorado Mlnea \u201e     \u2014\nFairview Amal      \u2014\nFawn Mining       \u2014\nFederal Oold \u2014-\nGeo Copper \t\nGolconda Lead\t\nGold Mount m,\nGeo Enterprise .....\nGeo River G\t\nGrandview M\t\nGrange Mines\t\nGrull Wlhksn* O -\nHedley Amal G . ,.\nHighwood Sar Oil\nHome Gold\t\nIndian Minei\t\nInter Gold \t\nIndependence M ..\nKoot Flo Min \t\nLucky Jim Lead ....\nMidison OU\t\nMar Jon OU\n.04%\n.20\n.09\n.11\n.01%\n.02\n.01 'i\n.14\n.19%\n.10%\n.02%\n.01%\n.00%\n.01\n.01%\n.18\nBRANTFORD, Ont.-*Cuit->mi r\u00bb\nturns for this port totall*d WW In\nAugust, a gain of 39 ptr cent over\nAugust last year.\nMercury Oil 11\nMeridian Mining       .08%\nMerland Oil      U%\nMcGiUivray Coal.\n\u25a0\u00b03% | Morton Wolsey\n\"*    ' Nicola Mlnea\t\nNoble Five\t\nNordon Oil\t\nOkalta Oils \t\nPacalta   \t\nPend OrelUe\t\nPilot Gold -.\nPilot Gold \t\nPorter Idaho M\nQuesnelle Q -\t\nRanchmen's \t\nReliance Gold ..\nRelief Arl \t\nReward Mining\nBeaver Silver      .02\nBC Nickel      M\nCalmont Oil HVi\nCongresi Oold 10%\nCork Prov M       \u2014\nCotton Belt Minea      \u2014\nCrowi Nest Olio 13%\nDalhousie Mines ..     -00%\nDalhousie Oila      JS1\nDeventsh OUs       .02%\nDictator Oold       -02%\nDunwell Mining....     .03%\n8.00\n320\n.01\n.02\n1,20\n.10%\n.12\n.82\n.11\n.09%\n1.35\n.10%\n.05\n.05\n.03\n.00%\n.02%\n.35\n.12\n.00%\n.02\n.15\n.01\n.18\n.00%\n.14\n.02\n.11\n.15\n.05%\n.82\n.06%\n.06%\n.04\n.06\n30\n.05%\n.34%\n.06%\nRoyallte OU   '.    37.00\nRufu* Argenta\nSilbak Premier ...\nSilvercrest Mines..\nSilversmith   Minei\nSlowflake Min \t\nTaylor WindfaU ....\nU DL     -\nUnited Empire .....\nUnited Oil \t\nViking Gold\t\nVulcan OU\t\nWaterloo Mines   .\nWtverley Tang ...\nWeiko Mines\nYmlr Yank G\t\n.01%\n.00%\n.00%\n.14\n.75\n.02%\n.06\n.01%\n.47\n.02%\n.00%\n.23%\n.45\n1.05\n.05\n.68\n.05\n.25\n.11\n.12\n.01%\n.03\n.02\n.14%\n.20%\n.12%\nJO\n.02%\n.09%\n.00%\n.00%\n.02\n.01%\n.19%\n.12\n.09\n.13\n20\n.00%\n.14%\n.02%\n.16%\n.06\n.85\n.07\n.07\n.04%\n.43\n, -06%\n.07\n28 00\n.02\n.05\n.01%\nFORT ERIE, Ont-Airplani min-\nuftcturlng company ber* Is running\nit full capacity turning out machinei\nfor Mexico and Cicchoslovikit.\nVANCOUVER - Idle mon thin\nfive years tb* Port M*llon Lumber\nt. Pulp mill hu b*en taken over\nby U.S. capitalists ud will he put\ninto operation within four monthi.\nWALI)AClBURO, Ont-Workhei\nstarted on construction of new factory for Schultx die-casting company of Canada.\nCalgary Livestock\nCALOARY, Sept. 4 (CP)- Receipts, Thunday, cattle 371; calves\n147; hogi 327; iheep two. Friday,\nto noon, catUe 232; calves M; hogi\n06; sheep 436.\nCattle steady; butcher steers, conv\nmon to medium, 2.25-8.00; heifers\n1.75-2.90; good veal calve* 3.0O-3.25.\nHogs steady; selects 8.89; bacons\n8.35; butchers 7.85.\nVANCOUVER, Sept 4 (CP) -\nBuying Interest was centered mostly\nIn the lower-priced gold issues of\nthe Vtncouver stock exchange today\nand stocks closed with loss** ot\ntrom fractions to six eents. Transfers totalled 182,247 shares.\nRig Missouri dropped g tt 61,\nBralorne lost ; at 7.90 and Minto\neased 2 at 29. One cant dtcilnea were\nmarked up In Cariboo Gold Quartz,\nGold Belt, and Kootenay BeUe.\nGrull Wlhksne continued active but\nclosed fractionally lower at 14 while\nNicola firmed % at 14. Pioneer advanced JO at 7.85, Premier added 3\nat 3.19 and Vidette gained 2 at 1.30.\nOther major gold* war* unchanged.\nVancouver Sales\nVANCOUVER, Sept 4 \u00ab3\u00bb). -\nMining \u00bbh*Mi gold on th* Vancouver stock exchange today:\nLilted: Rig Mis* 4850, Bralorne\n255, B R Con 600, Cariboo 200, Gold\nBelt 2000, Island Mount 900, Koot\nBelle 3800, Minto 24,100, National SU\nMOO, Pioneer 100, Premier 3888,\nReno 300, Sally 200, Salmon 2500,\nSheep Creek 7500, Vidette 1000, Way-\nlid* 2000.\nCurb: Alex 500, B C Nickel 2000,\nCongress 2000, Fawn 1000, Fairview\n759, Gold Mount 2700, Grange 1100,\nOral) Wihk 49,300, Hedley Amal\n8000, Inter Gold 2129, Meridian 900,\nNicola 14,500, Pilot 1200, Porter\nIdaho 2200, Reliance 1500, Relief Arl\n4860, Reward 500, Waterloo 1000,\nWeiko 80^)00, Ymlr V Girl 200.\ndid not have as many exhibits as\nin former years. Their bead work\nil always attractive, however, and\nsome very fine pieces were on\ndisplay. It would pe commendable\nto see the Indian section one of\nthe most inmportant exhibits of\nthis fair. The Indian band composed of residents from the various\nreserves in the district, under the\nleadership of Albert White gave\na splendid performance of music,\nOther special prizes: 1. Champion,\nA. J. T. Walker, H, H. Peters, Percy\nLake, Miss N. Lee, Moses Michel,\nCapt, Ogilvie-Wills, Donald Piggot,\nC. A. SUnficld, Frank Jones, t,\nEde, Willian Weir, Mrs, A. Newton.\nMrs. B. Grainger, Mrs. G. T. Robinson, Mrs. B, C. Featfiajd. Mrs. r.\nW. Michell, Betty Michell, Jtmes\nTbornston, Doreen Johniton, Marjorie Saunden, and Edgewdter\nFarmer's Institute.\nExamination li Made\nof Providence Mine\nGuy Rlegel of Spokane, who has\nbeen directing development of the\nYankee Boy mine at Orand Forks,\nexamined the Providence mine *t\nOreenwoocj in company wit,\\ Mickey\nMcKay accoraing to the Grand\nForks Gazette, which adds: \"It Is\nunderstood no action was taken.\"\nWINNIPEG GAINS\nOANADIAN\nDOLLAR STILL AT\nPAR\nNEW YORK, S*Bt 4 (AP)-Europ-\nesn gold currencies wire lower In\nterms of the United States dollar\ntoday.\nTh* French franc dipped back\n.00% of a cent to 9.58% cents. Dutch\nGuildtn dropped .04 of t cent and\nSwiss franca yielded .01 of a cent.\nTh* pound sterling eased % of a\ncent to \u00bb.03%. Tbe Canadian dollar\nwu unchanged it pir.\nVANCOUVBrl iUTTIR\nVANCOUVErTsIpt 4 <CP> -\nWholesal* butter quoUtions to retailers:\nCartons 80; Print* 29; Solids 28.\nEastern Sales\nTORONTO, Sept, 4 (CP).-Salei\nof 100 or more shares in trading on\nth* Toronto exchtnge industrials\nlection today: 150 Abitibi; 913 Bra-\nttl; 210 Brew C P; 57B B A Oil; 149\nCan In Ale; 700 C P R; 266 Cockshutt; 150 Con Smtlt; 849 Seagrams;\n1272 Ford A; 2150 Imp Tob; 7174\nNickel; 500 Int Util; 305 McC Front;\n411 H. Walkers; 5137 Westons.\nMONTREAL, Sept. 4 (CP)>-Seles\nof 100 or more shares ln trading on\nMontreal stock exchange today; 495\nBrazil; 22,290 Cdn Car; 1347 Cdn\nCar P; 190 Alcohol A; 205 C P R;\n200 Cockshutt; 135 Smelters; 905 H\nSmith; 4210 Imp Tob; 3033 Nickel;\n155 Maiiey; 258 MU Pow; 108 N\nBrew; 110 N Brew Pfd; 135 N SU\nCar; 183 Power Corp; 788 Que Pow.\nWINNIPEG, Sept 4 (CP)^W|U*\nprices in outatanding marked pointed upward, wheat scored substan- ,\ntisl gains in active trading on th*\nWinnipeg griln exchange today. C\u00bb\u00ab\nnadlan export totalled 1,000,000\nbushels.\nGlim ever one cent were shown\nwith th* October future quoted\nat 98 cent*. December wu pushed\nup to 88H-U and May climbed to\n28%-%.\nExchange Rates\nNEW YORK, S*pt 4 (CP).-Ster-\nling exchange easy at 89.02% for 60-\nday bills and at 16.03% for demand.\nCanadian dollars ptr.\nFrance 6.58% cent*.\nItaly 7.88% centi.\nUruguay 88.00 cents.\nTO IRICT W0RKMRN*8 HOMgS\nSUNDERLAND, England - (CP>-\nThe court of appeil has decided to\nallow the compulsory acquisition of\n102 acre* of land here for the erection of houses for working people.\nMILL  IXPL08ION\nBATLEY, England,-(CP).- A director ot the firm and six employees\nwere Injured when an economiser\nexploded in the woolen mill of G.\nH. Hint and Co., Ltd. here.\nVancouver Wheat\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 4 (CP) \u2014\nVancouver wheat cash pricse:\nStraight  Tough\nNo. 1 hard - \u00ab7%       85%\nNo. 1 nor  97 99\nNo. 2 nor 94%       92%\nNo. 3 nor  92 89%\nNo. 4 nor 90%       97%\nNo. 5 wheat  84 82%\nNo. 6 wheat  74%       71%\nFeed \u00ab7 64%\nMetal Markets\nNEW YORK, Sept 4 (AP).-Cor\nper quiet; electrolytic spot tnd future 9.75; export 9.78.\nTin firmer; spot and nearby 43.80\n-43.62%; future 43.00\u201443.12%.\nLead steady; ipot New York 4.60\n-65; East St Louis 4.49.\nZinc dull; Eaat St Louis spot and\nfutur* 438.\nQuicksilver 83.50-90.00.\nBar silver steady and unchanged\nat 44%.\nThis market will be closed until\nTuesday, September 8.\nAt London, closing:\nCopper, standard snot CIS 111 3d;\nelectrolytic, ipot, bid \u00a343; asked\n\u00a343 10s.\nTin, spot \u00a3188 5s; futur* \u00a3188 8s.\nLead, spot \u00a317 111 Id; futur*\n\u00a317 13s Od.\nZinc, spot \u00a313 8s Od; future \u00a311\n15s.\nBar silver eteady and unchanged\nat 19%d.\nMinneapolis Grain\nMINNEAPOLIS, Sept. 4 (AP)-\u2014\nWheat cash: No. 1 heavy dark northern spring, 60 lbs. 1.36%\u201413%;\nNo. 1 Red Durum 1.07%. Flour, car.\nload lots, per barrel ln 98-pound\ncotton sacks; family patents, 15\nhigher, 7.55-7.75; shipments 24,898.\nBran 23\u201423.50.\nLondon Close\nLONDON, Sept 4 (AP)-M3o*lng!\nBrazillan 311%; Britlih Am Tob\n122s 9d; Central Mining \u00a329%;\nCourtaulds 53s 7%d; De Been \u00a39%;\nEast Gedul \u00a310; Electric le M Ind.\nOrd. 22s 10%d; Mlnnlng Trust,Ltd.\n4s 6d; Rand Mines \u00a39\u00ab*; Rhod*-\nsian Anglo Am. 15\u00bb'9d; Rhokan*\nCorp. \u00a36%; Rio Tintos \u00a314; Springs\n38s 9d.\nBonds\u2014BriUsh 2% per cent Consols \u00a384%; British 3% per cent War\nLoan \u00a3107%; British funding 4*\n1960-90 \u00a3118%.\nThe BriUsh Empire has a popul*-\nUon of over 486 million.\nMontreal Silver Quotations\n\"ttttS 111 \u25a0-!\u25a0'\u25a0        SIISW\nMONTREAL, Sept. 4 (CP)\u2014SUver futurei cloied steady today, 18\npoints off to two up, Soles four contract*: Oct 2; March 2.\nOpen   High   Low   Close\nOct _ 44.72   44.72   44.72N\nMarch        44.70   44.99   44.99    44.72B\nDow-Jones Averages\ni 30 industrials ,\n20  rails  \t\n20 utilities \t\n40 bonds\t\n.03\n.06%\n.50\n.00%\n.24%\n.50\nTha Bridge Hirer Valley\nOFFERS  MANY  OPPORTUNITY\nFor Information on Properties and\nBusiness Chances Write the\nBridge River Bulletin-Fish Lake,, B. C.\nHigh\n167.82\n.   55.30\n.   38.27\nLow\n166.01\n84.75\n34.71\nClos* Change\n167414-up .80\n55.18\u2014up .30\n34.01-up .18\n104.49-up   J>3\nMontreal Stock Prices\nAss'd Brewerlei  10\nBCll Telephone   149%\nBrazilian  11%\nB C Power A   30%\nBruck Silk      8%\nBuild Prod - 43\nCanada Brome   89\nCan Car rdy     9%\nCanada Cemept  \u201e     6%\nCan Cement Pfd  86%\nCan Celanese  26%\nCan Ind Al A     7%\nCan Md Al B -    6\nCan Pac Rail  11%\nCan Steamers  1.88\nCockshutt       8%\nCOn M te S  - 84%\nDominion Bridge     42%\nDominion Glass 110\nDominion Tekt _  67\nDryden Paper . _.     7%\nGn St Wares   .     3%\nChai Ourd     \u2122..\u201e__   I\nHamilton Br      4%\nImperial Oil    20%\nInt Nickel  85%\nMassey Harris     4\nMcColI Erontentc _...-  14%\nMontreal Power  31%\nNat Steel Car  17\nNat Brewing   43%\nOgilvie   _  210\nPower Corp  18%\nQuebec    20%\nShawinlgan ..     20\nShtrwin Wms   18%\nSouth Can Power  11 %\nSteel of Ctn .... -  68%\nCURB*\nB C packing \u201e    8%\nBrew di Dllt     53\nB A Oil    22%\nCanada, Dredge _    48\nCanada MalUng\t\nDominion stores .\nFord Can A \t\nImperial Tob Can .\nInU Petrol\t\nMitchell Robt \t\nPrice Bros\t\nPage Hersey .\u2014\nBANKS\nCanada  _.\nCantdlen\nthe JWW*^\n..-s   <_\n''^E'-r\u00ab.   V\nHk- A\n^m I \u25a0'\n%\nCfVcfiii  M^\nJr^''\ni\n-    -y \"\u00abV\n\/\n\/mkw.         1\nV\nRsr'-miM    m\n_ .:\nl           ^tW$*:\n\"~\nfc^r^vSHS* *..\nA A.'H   ..\n^JjJB' '^gfy mi\nmmm I\n26V2oi.  ^j^piipi\nsys\nThe\nfine\n33\n10%\n21%\n13%\n34\n7\n4%\n89\n...    87%\n-  138\nCommtrc*  199\nHominlon  ._ 208\nImperial  204\nMontreal   \u201e 199%\nNova Scotia  _ 280\nRoyal  \u25a0 - IT*\nToronto  _ 222\nsame tine old whisky but\nnow in a new flat bottle-\nhandier, more convenient! it\nfits   the   pocket \u2014both   ways!\nJ-9HNN1E\nWAfcKER\nBom 1120\u2014\nStill going Siren\/\nRED LABEL\nOlder and better than ever\nDistlUed tnd Bottled by ourselves In Scotland.\nTTilj advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Boor* tr .\nby the Qowrnmmt of British. ColumMni \u2022 I\ng^^f^\n^^^l^y^u\n Pen and Pencil\nSett\n$2.50 tO\n$10.00\nMann* Rutherford\nDrug Go.\nThe pituitary gland which controls growth ls almost 100 times\nas large, in volume, ln a whale as\nln a human beipg.\n1\nTENNIS\nRACKETS\nRestrung\n25% DISCOUNT\nHOLLAND'S\nMORE ABOUT\nDRAPER'S HOPES\n(Continued Prom Page One)\nly would-be onlookers. The letting\nup of the National Employment\ncommission by the Dominion government, even if it only serves as\nevidence of a change in attitude In\nour approach to depression prob-\nL\nOpp, B. C. Telephone\nP. 0. Box 811\nAUCTION\n305 LATIMER ST.\nWed., Sept. 9th, at 2 p.m.\nFavored with instructions from\nMrs. M. Ritchie, I will offer thc\nfollowing:\u2014Lawn Mower. Hose,\nTools, Sealers, Kitchen Utensils,\nand Dishes, Verandah Chairs,\nPorch Curtains, Kitchen Table\nand Chairs, Lino Rugs, Drop-\nHead Sewing Machine, Service\nTable, Curtains, Dining Room\nFurniture, Rowing Machine Exerciser, Library Table, Chesterfield, Occasional Chairs, Victrola,\n9 x 12 Axminster, Tennis Racquets, Vacuum Cleaner, Steel\nBeds, Mattresses.\nG. HORSTEAD,\nTerms! Caih. Auttloneer.\nGoods on view morning of tale\nMONSTER LABOR DAT\nTRACK AND FIELD DAY\nHIGHLAND DANCING AN\nPIPING COMPETITION\nNELSON RECREATION GROUNDS\nGRAND STREET PARADE, 9 A.M.\nTrack Events Start 1:30 p.m. Sharp\nAdmission to Grounds 26c and 10c\nBIG DANCE\nNELSON CIVIC CENTRE\nTickets: Gents 76c; Ladles 60c\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B.C-SATURDAY MORNINO. SEPTEMBER 5. 193S\nlems, Is i fitting start. The human\ningenuity which hu given us machines to throw men out of jobs\nmust give us means to have our\npeople put in the way of being able'\nto earn their bread. W th thli change\nof public attitude, one must feel\nmore hopeful of the Immediate future.\n\"But we cannot think only of conditions at home, for affairs abroad\ncertainly influence our lives. Europe\ncontinues to set a mark in reaction\nwhich few though possible a very\ntew years ago, as country after\ncountry swings over to dictatorship. Human rights and civil liberties are wiped out in favor of extreme state worship. Political rights\nARTISTS'\nSUPPLIES\nWe carry a good line |\nof Winsor and Newton I\nOil and Water Colors. _\nBrushes, Palettes.\nAcademy Boards, Water Colors, and Pastel\nI Paper, Drawing Blocks.\nI etc.\nAllen's Art Shoppe\n\"A Greeting Card for Every\nOccasion\"\nreligious freedom and the rights of\nthe workers ar* trampled under\nfoot ln nations where previous generations thought they had secured\nthe rights of man for all time to\ncome.\n\"In Canada, as ln other parti of\nthe English-speaking world, we\nhave been happily free from then\nencroachments upon our liberty.\nThrough their unions workers\nshould work lor I continual\nstrengthening of the lines of liberty\nwe now enjoy. They should realize\nthat liberty for their neighbor means\nliberty for them, and that they cannot enjoy those rights they cherish\nunless others enjoy the same privileges.\n\"In conclusion, one may hope that\nanother year will serve to correct\nsome of our difficulties and that\nwhen Labor day returns once more\nthe workers in whose interest the\nday is celebrated will, with braver\nhearts and freer minds, be able to\nface the future, that the anxiety of\nJ.A.C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSuite 205 Medical Art, Bldg\nPHONE 81S\nfor better end promoter ierv-\nice In plumbing repiin and\nalteration!.\nVIC GRAVES\nmaster Plumber\nA Qood Suggestion\nDINE AT THE\nL.D.CAFE\nNelton't Finest Rtttaurant\nDURING\nTHE\nW&k-wd\n12-Inch Dry Mill Wood\n'.00\nDOUBLE \u00a3*\nLOAD      J\nBurns Coal & Cartage Co.\nPHONE 53\nPERMANENTS\nDiscriminating ladies seeking undeniable excellence\nboth as to individual design and soft, natural appearing\nand lasting effects, select our French\n\"LA FIGARO\" PERMANENT\nThere is none like it I\nOur parlor is equipped with the new Royal Chrome\nFurniture for your comfort and convenience.\nRose Beauty Parlors\nPHONE 317\nThe finest professional Beauty  Service  available\nat moderate Prices! ,\nVOU can't rtst your body while you\n* ttrain your eye,, Eyestrain from\ndim light tightens all your muscles tnd\ntires almost as much as heavy labor,\nIt your reading lamp bright enough?\n\u2022Do you read in the \"second best.\" light\nis your lighting spotty?\nCheck these points. It it really worth\nwhile These Soles lumps will help\ncorrect inadequate lighting. Thty are\nmade for Mty, comfortable seeing. Tht\nlow prices permit you to light tvtry\nroom adequately at slight cost.\njgLgX    LAMPS\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Ltd.\nWHOLESALE AND RETAIL HARDWARE\nPHONES 26 and 27\nMagnificent Self-expression\n\u2022 Aristocratic Stvle\n\u2022 Thoroughbred Quality\n\u2022 Democratic Price\nall in one name\nLANGEURNE\nCanada's most outstanding coat and suit\ncreations. New imported woollens of the\nfinest quality, trimmed with the richest\nfurs and tailored to perfection.\nSold exclusively by\nIn Your New Fall Coat and Suit\nLOOK FOR THE \"LANGBURNE\" LABEL\nThe Mark of Style plus Quality\nMORE ABOUT\nMINERS' STRIKE\n(Continued From Ptgt One)\nSome 880 Bedwas minen were\nreported to hive barricaded them-\nseives irt tbe pit yeiterday. At Tre-\nherbert 80 men have been underground for 70 hours. In three other\nmines 250 to 300 minen ire staying\nin tbe workings. The scene of tbe\ndispute Ilea in tbe tint rampart of\nhills 10 mil** north of Cardiff where\nthe Bedwas colliery pits are located. But a stoppage threatens o-er\nthe South Wales coalfield.\nThe rival trades unions are competing for tbe support of 124,000 colliery workers. The South Wales\na. ners federation has a membership of 90,000. The South Wales\nMiners Industrial union, founded at\nthe end of 1026 has a comparatlv \/\nsmall membership. Membership ln\nloss of employment, the severing of\nthe life-line so to speak, will have\ngrown gradually less.\"\nPREP\nA real skin cream tor removing\nSummer Tan and Freckles.,\nAT SMYTHE'S\nThe Prescription Druggist where\nyour Prescription receives undivid\ned attention.\nPhone 1\nROOFING\nEaves Troughs, etc.\nR. H. Maber\nPhone ttt     610 Koottnty 8t\n-The-\nSugar Bowl\nGrocery\nth* Industrial union, however, ll *\ncondition of employment et tbe\nBed wis pits.\nReturns to Trail\nFrom Appledale\nAPPLEDALE, B.C.-Alfred Troz-\nio, who was visiting Appledale for\nfive days, has returned to his home\nln Trail.\nG. Carr of Trail hu been a guest\nof O. Steele for a few days.\nL. Grodaki of Nelaon has returned\nto resume his duties es school teacher here.\nAmong those from Appledale attending tbe Monday night dance\nat Slocan City were: A. Trozzo. G.\nCarr, L. Grodski, E. Trozzo and Miss\nJ. Trozzo.\nG. McGregor ot Creston spent\nSunday at his home here.\nSPECIALS for 5th and 8th\nFruit Jars: Wide mouth *>f If g\nMason, qts. do*. 9**13\nFruit Jan: Dominion f__\\__tn\nor Economy, pte. doz... 9**V'\nVinegar:  Heinz Pun  Malt *>f\nWhite or Cider, gal - 9*\nJellies: Shlrrlffs (all flav- _*A\non) por. pkt  ...... Jr\nPeaches: For preterv- (Of tCO\nIn* (fint quality) crate 9***?\nPumpkin: In tint (large 'ttsA\n,iet) 2 for _ **?\nTomatoet:  (Large tins),       __m\n1 for .  9*\nSugar: (Granulated)      Cf t-C\n20 lbs. for _ V*\u00bb0\nPickles: (Sweet mixed)     9\u00a3ft\nlarge size  _   .._ 3Vt\nCoffee: (Chase * San-     9Q_t\nborns) per Ib.    _  3\u00b0T\nButter: (Curlew or Nu-    QCe*\nmaid) 3 lbs. for 7*T\nCoffat: (1 qt tellers) Nabob or\nMalkin*,\nper Jar \t\nOranges: (tweet ind Juicy) QCA\n40c size, t doz. _ 77.\nBiscuits; (freth shipment) __J_t_t\\\nassorted, Ib. . *3t\nICE CREAM* and REVELS\nty\nPhone 110\nWe shall appreciate your business\nFREE  DELIVERY\nJ. A. Irving\n&Co.\nGROCERIES\nPHONE 161\nEffective\nSATURDAY and TUESDAY\nI  I, \"=l\nCORN FLAKES- f J***\n2 pkgt. IOC\nCOFFEE\u2014Osogood, Blue OOa\nRibbon, Ib OOC\nPEANUT  BUTTER\u2014       (\\{\\_.\n2 Ib. tin  \u00a3_\\_lC\nHERRING  IN TOMATO C\\f\nSAUCE\u20142 tint \/J3C\nPORK A BEANS-Clark't ool\nW\/j-ox. 3 tint _ LlX,\nVINEGAR\u2014Heinz,        ~Tq~^\n1\u00ab-oz. bottle ...loC\nKETCHUP-Helnz 7p~\n2 bottlet ... \u2022 4DC\nPITTED DATE8- <*)0\u00ab\nFreth, 2 lbl itdZ\nFruit* and Vegetable!\nRA8PBERRIE8\u2014 tivZ.\n2 batkete    \u00a30C\nCANTALOUPES\u2014 Good ftp\nsize, 4 for uoV,\n\"\"CHJffZ         \" nT\nper baiket    Mu\\>\nPEAR8-     '.               ~~-\\Om\nper basket   J.J7C\nRED PEPPERS\u2014 -J J\u00bb\npor Ib ...xDC\nGREEN PEPPERS\u2014        t___\n2 lbs. _ ......IOC\nTOMATOES^ i IjT\nbasket  IOC\nLITT.U\u00ab*-' (U\nper htad ...   _ _.      OXj\nCARROTS^ i\/v~\n4 bunchei  JLi\/C\nONIONS-Plckllng, \u00ab K^.\n3 Ibt   JiDC\nSQUASH- l~\nHubbard, Ib... *C\nVegetable ivory, used to make\nbuttons and small ornaments, ls obtained from the white seeds ot the\ntagua palm,\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nFOR RENT, TWO OR TOUR ROOM\nfurnished cabins. Shardelow's Motor Court Nelson avenue. (2928)\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nTRACK MEET AT\nKIMBERLEY\nTRY \"GRADS\" CIGT. 10c and 26c\nsize AT VALENTINE'S. (2432)\nKIMBERLEY,. EC\u2014Wednesday,\nSepL 10, will see a big indoor track\nmeet at Klmberley.'s arena rinlt. All\nschools in the East Kootenay have\nbeen Invited to send contestants,\nOpen events will Include 100 and\n220-yard dashes, high and broad\njumps and pole vault.\nThe prizes for aggregates are:\nJunior boys, K.P. cup; Junior girls,\nE. D. Hall cup; senior boys, N.\nThompson cup; senior girls, medal.\nA silver medal will be awarded as\nfirst prize for each event and ribbons will be given tor secand and\nthird.\nEntries are being accepted by the\nsecretary until Saturday, Sept. 12.\nOfficers chosen to handle the meet\nare: Chairman, H. S. Andrews; secretary, J. Lukas.\nFinance committee: H. Stafford,\nJ. Geigerich, F. Levirs, A. Pattenon\nand N. W. Burdett\nGrounds-A. Watson, J. G. Douglass, A. A. Watkins, Corry McKay\nand W. R. Angus.\nJudges: F. Redding, J. Lukas, B.\nMontgomery, A. Patterson, W. Binnie, T. Ralph and J. H. Harrison.\nStarter: H. F. Stanton.\nTimekeepers: H. R. Banks, D.\nSutherland and E. Wadsworth.\nSEE THE NEW 1937 MAJESTICS\nAT PEEBLES. (2403)\nCALL   AT   PEEBLES  TO   SEE\nNEW 1937 PHILCOS. (2403)\nMcCall't and Tip Top Comics\nBISHOP'S NEWS STAND\n(2431)\nGET YOUR \"KODAK\" FILM AT\nVALENTINE'8. (2432)\nDon't forget Ainsworth Hot Springs\nHotel Dance Labour Day.      (2388)\nFor Rent\u2014Two room furnished\nsuite. Stirling Hotel. (2499)\nNEL80N\n93\nB.B. TAXI\nPHONE\nTRAIL\nM\n(2387)\nFor Chocolate  milk  phone 118,\n'KOOTENAY VALLEY\" Dairy.\n(2391)\nDANCE\u2014TONIGHT-DANCE\nIn Eagle Hall as Usual\n(2527)\nBig Labor Day Dance, Salmo, B.C.\nEveryone welcome. Under auspices\nof Pythian Sisters. (2S08)\nWill girl who left watch with lady\nat Lakeside Park last Sunday please\nphone 716L. (2921)\nSecond-hand Remington Standard\n14\" carriage. $25. Goos Stationery tt\nTypewriter. Phone 84. (2484)\nSea the grand array of prlzet for\nthe Labor Day celebration In\nSmythe'i Drug Store window. (2802)\nDon't fall <to attend the monster\nLabor Day dance In tho Nelton Civic\nCentre. Mutlo by 8-plece dance\nband. Gent, 75c, ladle* 60c.     (2802)\nMORE ABOUT\nFOREST FIRES\n(Continued From Pago Ont)\nMost serious fire of the week was\nat Premier lake in East Kootenay,\nwhere flames spread from a camp-\nfire to burn over 10 acres.\nForest branch statistics reveal\nnine new fires In East Kootenay\nand the same number in West Kootenay and Boundiry in the week.\nThere are 10 fires burning in the\neastern section of the district and\neight ln the western.\nThe number of outbreaks this season, made up of 226 in the eastern\nand 329 in the western part of the\ndistrict, a total of 555, is more than\ntwice as many es at the same time\nlast year, 259.\nNelson Women's Institute memben please note that meetings start\non Friday, Sept. 11. Watch for advertisement. (2501)\nThe Kootenay Muiic House will\nhave within the next w*ek a 82000\nmusical Instrument display. Come in\nfor a free demonstration.        (2438)\nASK YOUR DEALER FOR MCDONALD'S gUW TIP MARMALADE. A HOME PRODUCT.\n(2434)\nPEEBLES MOTORS, Original\nPHILCO dealen, now showing new\n1937 models. (2403)\nAuthentic style, steadfast quality,\nexclusive   fabrics \u2014 feature!   outstanding In JACK BOYCE clothes.\n(2377)\nFOR AWNING, UPHOLSTERY.\nDRAPERIE8 AND SLIP COVERS\nSEE A. TERRILL, 120 HIGH ST.\n(2511)\nTry tht R-7 Method for your fill\npermanent Special pricei thli month\nfor students and adults. CAPITOL\nBEAUTY SHOPPE. Ph. 18.      (2379)\nDANCE TONIGHT\u2014Willow Point\nAthletic club, Crystal hall. Margaret\nGraham's orch. Refreshments. 75c\ncouple. (2525)\nBlouses, originally $2.50 to $3.50,\nselling from 95c to $2.50; balance of\nsummer hats to go at 50c and 75c;\nhouse dresses 95c to $1.25. D. C.\nDRESS SHOPPE. (2626)\nSATURDAY'S  SPECIALS\nPlain or printed creoe dresses. Sizes\n14 to 44. Values to $4.95, d>1   QC\nGODFREYS'\n(2523)\nWEBBS MUSIC HOUSE, 20 yttrt\nIn Calgary. Now located at 806 Baker\nSt., Nelton. The largest and most\nvaried itock of music.il Instruments\nand supplies. Expert repairing. Tone\nrestored. Bowt rehalred at moderate\npricei for first-class work. All work\ndone on the premises. (2603)\nLABOR  DAY EXCURSION\nRound-trip,  fare   and   a  third.\nSept 4th. Return limit Sept. 8th.\n(2415;\nCREYHOUND LINES\nPhone 800\nNelson Depot 205  Baker St\n(2415)\nv\nOUR # ft\nSPECIALTY     -JV\nw\nJW Phone\nJ '\nFLEURY'S\nPHARMACY\nEvery Inch a drug ttori\nMedical Arlt Block\nA Kootenay Product\nof QUALITY\nKootenay\nRainbow\nBeer\nfeSiM]      T\u00bbk\u00ab home\na case\ntoday\nBorsalino\nFall Hats\n$g.50\nThe new mixtures for Fall\nare decidedly different\u2014\ndarker shades, wider\nbrims.\nOther Hati $3.50 Up\nEMORY'S\nLimited\nLAST TIMES TODAY\nContinuous  Performance\n1 till 11:30 p.m.\nKootenay\nBrewerie*\nLimited\nThis advertisement is\nnot published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the\nGovernment of British\nColumbia.\nTHE YEAR'S Bi\u00a9H\nLOVE-THRIU\nrm screens WRttcr\nSWEETHEARTS,\nPATSY KELLY\nBASIL RATHBONE\nMARJORIE GATESON\nAdded Attractions\nOur  Gang  Folllll 1938\nLittle   Dutch   Plate\nTimber Gianti\nParamount Ntw*\nCOMING LABOR DAY\nAND TUESDAY\nARROW\nSHIRTS\nin\nNew Fall Pattern!\n$2.00\nYour choice of the AROSET\ncollar or smart, button down\nstyle.\nGODFREYS'\n\u25a0    \u25a0 LIMITED\n\"CAMBRIDGE CLOTHES'*\n318 BAKER      PHONE 270\nLOAKEDIN\nGREATNESS AS THE\nFIRST WOMAN IN WHITER\nThe Heroic War Nurte \u25a0\nWho Renounced The\nMan She Loved. ., To\nLove   All   Mankind!\nAnother thrilling retl-life\nportrait from the producers of\n\"The Story of Louis Pasteur\"!\nKAY FMNCIS\nti FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE la\nWhite\n-\n\t\n m^m\nmi\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1936_09_05","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0412364","@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":"1936-09-05 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1936-09-05 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\/1.0412364"}