{"@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":"2022-03-10","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1936-08-31","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0412552\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" IL S. Destroyer Attache\n\u25a0vhuvtn'Ci\/y. 1    ''^wmmm'mmmw'1   '\nT   '\"\", ^iwawF^wppp\n1 On!\nPlane on Spanish Coast\nw        ' ' i'-*e\nVOLUME 35\nFIVE CENTS A COPY\nNEL80N. BRi,\nCOLUMBIA, CANADA-MONDAY MORNINO, AUGUST SI. 1938\nNUMBER 113\nangry citizens GERMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH\niK,LLERS CONDEMNS NAZI PROGRAMS\nAFTER SHOOTING\nThree Killed When Go\nto Arrest Pair of\nBrothers\nLYNCHING TALK\nGRIPS THE POSSE\nCalifornia Town Was\nScene of Lynching\nYear Ago\nYREKA, Calif, Aug. 30 (AP)-A\ndeputy sheriff, a constable and a\nman described as Captain Seaborn,\na maritime officer, were shot tc\ndeath at Horse Creek, isolated\nmountain settlement 20 miles west\nof here, today, and a posse enforced\nby angry citizens began hunting\nJohn H Bright and Cole T. Bright,\nbrothers, as the killers.\nUndersheriff B. J. Neillon said\nSeaborn, a resident of Vallejo, Calif,\nfiled a complaint against the Bright\nbrothers and accompanied the two\nofficers, Deputy Sheriff Martin\nLange and Constable Joe Clark,\nwhen they left for Horse Creek to\nmake the arrests. The nature of the\ncomplaint was not known here.\nSeaborn and the officers came\nupon the brothers at g place outside the little gold mining town\nearly this morning.\nPassersby later found Lange shot\nbetween the eyes and said a rifle\nbarrel had been broken over his\nhead. Clark was shot through the\nback and Seaborn through the\nhead.\nA posse under Sheriff George\nChandler picked up the trail of the\nBright brothers several hours later.\nIt led toward the Oregon line about\n25 miles distant. Citizens joined the\nposse and talk of lynching spread.\nOnly I year ago an infuriated\nYreka mob lynched Clyde Johnson,\na rdbber, -for the \"killing* ef Chief ot\nPolice Frank Daw at Dunsmuir.\nLange, then in charge of the county\njail, was taken out of town by the\nmob before Johnson was seized.\nFall Assizes Are\nScheduled October\nFall sittings of the supreme court\nof British Columbia will, according to the current Issue of the\nB.C. Gazette, be held on the following dates In the Interior;\nNelson\u2014October 12.\nFernie\u2014October 15.\nCranbrook\u2014October 19.\nRevelstoke\u2014November 23.\nIn each case both criminal and\ncivil oases will be heard.\nNelson Woman Is\nHurt, Wenatchee\nWENATCHEE, Wash, Aug. 30\n(CP)^-Mn. W. A. McCade of Nelson, B.C., wts In hospital here\ntonight with spinal Injuries suffered yesterday when the car In\nwhich ahe was riding collided\nwith another machine containing\ntourist, from Alberta.\nHospital attendants said Mrs.\nMcCade's condition was not serious.\nTWEEDSMUIRS LEAVE\nVANCOUVER\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 30 (CP). -\nLord and Lady Tweedsmuir and\nmembers of the vice-regal party left\nhere tonight after a two-weeks' stay\nIn British Columbia. En route to\nOttawa the party plans to stop off\nat Banff and Lake Louise.\nCHILD DROWNS\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 30 (CP). -\nDorothy June Creelman, three-year-\nold daughter of Rev, and Mrs. R. C.\nCreelman of Vancouver, was drowned at Red Roofs, a summer resort\non Half Moon bay, according to\nword reaching here from Gibson's\nLanding.\nCRAFT ATTACKS THREE\nTIMES AND DROPS SIX\nBOMBS; ALL ARE WIDE\nDestroyer Returns the Fire But Misses; U, S.\nProtests to Madrid and the Rebels;\nAttack Believed \"Mistake\"\nWARNSGERMANY\nMAY FIND ITSELF\nIN A REVOLUTION\nPastoral Letter Is\nRead in Every\nChurch\nWARNS HITLER TO\nTREAD CAREFULLY\nNazi Outlook Founded\non \"Blood, Soil and\nRace\"\nBERLIN, Aug. 30 (AP). - The\nGerman Roman Catholic church\nwarned the Nazis today, in a pastoral letter read from all pulpits,\nthat Germany \"may go the way of\nSpain.\"\nThe letter condemned the Nazi\n\"world outlook,\" which it said was\nfounded on \"blood, soil and race.\"\nThc Spanish situation, the pastoral letter declared, speaks for itself, and therefore \"we prefer not\nto go into detail about the barbarous misdeeds which a fanaticized\nmob, whipped up through the lying\npromises of Russian emmlssaries,\nhave committed.'*\nThe lesson to be drawn from the\nSpanish strife, the church contended, was that a really united effort\nby the whole German people was\nnecessary to bulwark the country\nagainst Bolshevism.\nWARN8 HITLER\nTne letter\u00abrpre8\u00abe6vthetiopt tJlat\nChancellor Hitler would accomplish\nthis task, but warned him against\nalienating large sections of the\npeople by affronting their religious\nconvictions.\nIt said Germany did not need \"a\nfight against the Catholic church,\nbut peace and harmony with it in\norder to overcome the spiritual presuppositions of Bolshevism.\"\nRUMANIA HAS\nNEW CABINET\nBUCHAREST, Rumania, Aug. 30\n(API\u2014Premier George Tatarescu\ntoday plotted the governmental\ncourse of Rumania with a new cabinet quickly organized by him Saturday following the resignation of\nhis previous cabinet.\nTlie members of the new cabinet\nare: Premier\u2014George Tatarescu; interior\u2014 Demeter Juca; foreign affairs\u2014Victor Antonescu; finance\u2014\nMircea Cancicoff; justice\u2014Mircea\nDiuvara; agriculture\u2014Basil Sassu;\neducation\u2014Prof. Constantin An-\ngelescu; communications\u2014Richard\nFrasanovlci; defence\u2014Gen. Paul\nAngelescu; social welfare\u2014Ion Emil\nContinescu; commerce\u2014Valer Popp;\nlabor\u2014Prof. Ion Nistor; cooperatives\u2014 Michael Negura; culture-\nVictor Jamandi; minister without\nportfolio\u2014Ion Inculetz who is also\nvice-president of the cabinet.\n\"All Quiet\" Forest\nBranch Reports\n\"All quiet\" was the week-end\nreport of officials at foreit branch\ndistrict headquarters, Nelson, for\nthe week-end. Lack ot reports\nIndicated the fires now burning\nwere welt In hand, and that there\nhad been no serious new outbreaks\nSaturday and Sunday.\nCHILD DIES FROM INJURIES\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 30 (CP). \u2014\nSuffering a fractured skull and\nother injuries, Billy Walter, six-\nyear-old son of W. H. Walter, died\nin hospital early Saturday without\nregaining consciousness, bringing\nVancouver's traffic accident death\ntoll to 19 since the beginning of the\nyear.\nWOMAN BATTLES GRIZZLY WITH\nICE-AXE IN THE COAST RANGE\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 30 (CP)\u2014\nThe 6tory of an unarmed struggle\nwith an enraged mother grizzly bear\nprotecting her cubs in the mountain fastness of interior British Columbia, was related today by Mr.\nand Mrs. Don Munday, alpinists\nwho have returned from an exploration trip In the Coast range.\nAs they completed a hazardous\npassage through a 12-foot cleft in\nBearpaw canyon, Mount Silver-\nthrone, the Mundays related, they\nlooked down on a grizzly cub standing apparently alone.\nDiscarding their ice-axes, they\nfocussed their cameras on the cub\nbut before they could take a picture ,the roar of the mother grizzly distracted their attention.\nShe was standing on the same\nledge as they, 30 feet away.\nUnarmed, the Mundays began to\nyell, but the mother bear started her\nadvance. About a yard away she\nswerved off but came back a moment later more fiercely than ever.\nFinally Mrs. Munday succeeded\nin retrieving one of the ice-axes\nand, as the bear made a rush at\nMr. Munday causing him to trip,\nthc woman alpinist rushed at the\nbrute with up-raised axe and finally\ndrove it off.\nSilver Money for Mexico\nCoins Restored to Circulation and Notes\nto Be Redeemable in Silver\n(OAST CAFE IS\nPICKETED\nMEXICO CITY, Aug. 30 (AP)\u2014The Mexican government decided\ntonight to Increase the silver content of Its money because of the declining world price of sliver,\nA presidential decree restored to circulation silver coins demonetized\nin April, 1935, when the United States' huge silver purchased pushed\ni\">the world price so high the coins\nbrought more than their face value\nas bullion.\nChanges in the monetary tews had\ngiven the Bank of Mexico authority\nto issue notes of various denominations, redeemable at the bank in\nsilver coins.\nOne peso notes, introduced in\n1935, will be withdrawn, under the\nnew decree, and Mexicans must\nagain carry \"cartwheels,\" or big\nsilver pesos.\nFive-peso notes now in circulation\nwill be replaced by five-peso silver\ncertificates, redeemable, as will be\nnote issues of the Bank of Mexico,\nin silver coin or bar silver at 12\ngrams per peso.\nThe fractional currency of small\ner denominations will be replaced\nby silver and copper-nickel alloy\npieces, much smaller, lighter and\nmore convenient.\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 30 (CP). -\nFifteen waitresses and one waiter\ntonight continued to picket the front\nand rear of the Trocadero cafe.\nThey went on strike yesterday when\nthey claimed the owner of the west\nHastings street restaurant, Thomas\nStamatis, refused to allow them to\njoin a union affiliated with the\nTrades and Labor council. The\nstrikers said they also asked for an\nincrease of 1150 each per week\nwhich was also refused.\nThe strikers divided their pickets\ninto shifts, taking turns on the\npicket lines.\nNORWAY NOTTO\nBANISH TROTZKY\nOSLO, Norway, Aug. 30 (AP).-\nNorway's premier Indicated tonight\nhe would oppose a Soviet Russian\ndemand fdr the expulsion of \u00a3eon\nTrotzky.\nThe premier, Johann Nygaards-\nvold, told the Associated Press:\n\"It U beyond my comprehension\nhow anybody could argue in the\nway Russia does. We have treated\nthe Trotsky problem according to\nour viewpoint of Norway's interest.\nThere is nothing more to say about\nit.\"\nTrotzky, reported enraged by Norway's action in transforming him\nfrom an honored guest into a closely-guarded prisoner, remained indoors at his villa at Hoenefoss. Reinforced guards kept a host of curious hiotday-makers at a distance.\nCANADIAN CORPS\nATC.N.E.\nTORONTO, Aug. 30 (CP)\u2014The\nmen who made the beret famous,\nveterans of the Canadian Corps,\ntonight looked back on what was\nperhaps their greatest rally, excluding the Vimy pilgrimage, since they\nassembled in thousands for the\ncorps reunion two years ago.\nThey stormed the Canadian Nation exhibition yesterday ln their\nannual warriors' day parade and\nmarched into the grounds and before the reviewing stand at least\n15,000 strong.\nThey were reviewed by Sir Percy\nVincent, lord mayor of London,\nEngland, and Hon. Ian Mackenzie,\nCanadian minister of national defence.\nEmployer Must Pay\nExpenses of \"Wheel\"\nof Delivery Boys\nVICTORIA, Aug. 30 (CP)\u2014 A\nwage scale has been set for male\nand female employees of seed-packing establishments it was announced\nhere Saturday following a meeting\nof the board of industrial relations\nin Vancouver.\nThe board also made an addition\nto the male mercantile order, requiring that where a messenger boy\nfurnishes his own bicycle all reasonable costs in connection therewith\nmust be paid by the employer. This\nstep was found necessary to curb\na practice reported to the board that\nsome employers were compelling\ntheir delivery boys to furnish and\nbear the expense of maintaining\ntheir own bicycles in the employers\nservice. These new orders will become effective on September 3,\n1936.\nDistrict to Be Served\nby Alberta Auto Club\nVANCOUVER, B. C, Ayg. 30 -\n(CP)\u2014The southeastern-portion of\nBritish Columbia wlU'be served by\nthe Alberta Automobile club, it was\ndecided at a conference of representatives from the Alberta, Vancouver and Victoria Automobile\nclubs Saturday. A proposal to revive\na provincial Automobile club tn\nBritish Columbia was not acted\nupon for the present.\nMASLOFF HOME\nBLEWETT ROAD\nRAZED IH FIRE\nElderly Father, Deaf,\nEscapes Little\nto Spare\nPRESERVES BLOW\nUP LIKE SHELLS\nForestry and City Men\nOut When Glow Is\nSeen Here\n(OL. TURHER IS\nHURTINCRASH\nGALLUP, N.M., Aug. SO (AP).-\nCol. Roscoe Turner, speed pilot of\nwide note, was injured and his racing pl^ v^lly demolisjied when\nhe cracMnTnTSn we Zunf reservation, 65 milea south of here, this\nmorning.\nTurner, found resting at a Gallup\nhotel, said he would return to Los\nAngeles by train tonight\nThe racing pilot, who was flying\nto Long Island for the Bendix air\nraces, said his throttle broke, cutting\nout the engine and forcing him\ndown in thc rough country south\nof here.\nSpeaking from his hotel room, he\nsaid he did not know just what was\nthe \"matter with me,\" but that he\nthought he had \"some busted libs.\"\nFOUR KILLED IN\nHEAD-ON CRASH\nMICHIGAN CITY, Ind., Aug. 30\n(AP).\u2014Four persons were killed\nand six Injured gravely 10 miles\neast of here today when two auto-\nmobile* crashed head on as they\napproached the top of a hill. Police said both cars had been travelling at t high rate of speed.\nThe terrific Impact demolished\nboth automobiles.\nKILLED IN CRASH\nINTO MOTORBUS\nHome of Ed Masloff on ,ne Blewett road, a short distance from the\nGranite road, was completely destroyed by fire about 8:30 Sunday\nevening. Tinder dry, the five-room\nstructure burned rapidly, and within a short time of the outbreak the\nbrick and cement foundation only\nwas standing. Spectators reported\njars of jams and preserves in the\ncellar exploded wlht reports like\nshotgun shells. Outhouses also were\ndestroyed.\nMasloff and his family were away\nfor the week-end, and the house\nwas left in the care of his elderly\nand infirm father. Quite deaf, the\nold man did not know the house was\nburning until the flames were well-\nadvanced. He escaped with little\ntime to spare.\nMen from thc forest branch rushed out to the scene of the fire\nvrtien the j&ow of flames was set-\nto the west of the city, fearing a\nbush fire; and employees of the\ncity electrical department went out\nto protect the lines from the city\npower plant at Bonnington. The\nflames were close to the lines but\ndid not interrupt transmission of\npower to Nelson.\nCause of the fire was not known.\nIt was understood some insurance\nwas carried, but the amount and\nwhether it entirely covered the\nproperty could not be ascertained.\nNATAL MINER\nBREAKS A LEG\nMussolini Warns the World\nHe Can Mobilize 8,000,000 Men in \"a Few\nHours\"; Eternal Peace \"Absurdity\"\nWarns World\nAVELLINO, Italy, Aug, 30\u2014Premier Mussolini warned a rearming\nworld tonight he could mobilize 8,000,000 men \"In the course of a few\nhours and after a simple order.\"\nSpeaking from this centre of recent war games to his fighting men\nand his people, the dictator \"rejected\" what he called \"the absurdity of\neternal peace,\" declared his army*\nwas sharpened by its African victory, and proclaimed:\n\"Wc must be strong! We must be\nalways stronger! We must be so\nstrong that we can face any eventualities and look directly in the\neye whatever may befall!\"\nDESIRE PEACE\nII Duce stressed that Italy desired\nto live in peace and pledged \"our\nlasting, concrete, contribution to\nthe project of collaboration among\npeoples.\"\nBut he told the thousands who\ncheered him to the echo in Avelllno's\nmunicipal square that the world\nis in the throes ot an \"irresistible\"\nrearmament race.\nHe did not mention the six weeks'\ncivil war in Spain. But he did, just\nafter declaring Italy must reject\nthe idea of \"eternal\" peace\u2014\"foreign to our creed and to our temperament\"\u2014speak of \"certain political situations which now are in\nthe course of uncertain development.\"\nConsequently, he told the throng,\nItaly's watchword must be\n\"strength.\"\nThe armed forces of Italy (estimated by foreign experts recently at\n1,250,000 men) are more efficient\nthan ever \"not despite the African\nwar but as a consequence of the\nAfrican war,\" II Duce declared.\nNEW C.P.R. TRAIN\nHITS 103 M.P.H.\nPORTAGE LA PRAIRJE, Man.,\nAug. 30 (CP).\u2014The Canadian Paelflo railway's semi-streamlined\ntrain aped westward from here\ntoday after touching a speed of\n103 miles an hour on the run westward Into Winnipeg and 99.4 miles\nan hour on the M-mlle trip from\nWinnipeg to Portage La Prairie.\nThe train will be taken through to\nthe Pacific coait before going Into\nservice on the Calgary-Edmonton\nrun.\nNATAL, B.C, Aug. 30\u2014Tom\nKenda met with a serious mine\naccident on Friday morning when\nhe had the misfortune to have hli\nleg broken while working In the\nB. Seam mine of the Michel Col-\nlories.\nB. C. Fires Continue\non the Increase\nBOWMANVILLE, Ont., Aug. 30\n(CP)\u2014Three Rochester people were\nkilled and two injured near here\ntoday when their automobile collided head-on with a Colonial Coach\nlines autobuB. The dead are: Thomas\nBotting, 50; his wife, aged 48; and\na daughter, Betty, aged five.\nVICTORIA, Aug. 30 (CP).\u2014The\nIncrease In the number of fires In\nBritish Columbia Is continuing\nand to date there have been 132(1\noutbreaks reported. This was revealed In a report released Saturday from the foreitry branch.\nConditions are still somewhat\nhazardous although relief Is expected toon In the Interior. For the\nsame period last year there were\n875 flret reported and In 1934\nthere were 1315,\nPARENTS INFECTED WITH DEADLY\nGERM TO SECURE SERUM FOR SON\nCHICAGO, Aug. 30 (AP)-Dozens\nof offers of aid from over the Country poured in today on Mr. and\nMrs. Morris Levitt as they presented\na modern version of parental devotion by becoming human \"test\ntubes\" to develop a serum against\nthe dreaded streptococci infection\nthreatening the life of their seven-\nyear-old son, Philip.\nHow Philip contracted the malady is unknown. It was discovered\nwhen the boy underwent a physical\nexamination after his vitality began\nto lessen.\nDr. Morris Fishbein, editor of the\njournal of the American Medical\nassociation, said the special viridans\ntype of streptococci infection\u2014the\nboy's ailment\u2014was \"almost always\nfatal.\"\nThe only known antidote, he\nagreed, was the blood from a newly\nrecovered victim.\nIt was to supply this that the\nLevitts underwent inoculation with\nthe death dealing germs. They will\ncontinue to receive minute quanti\nties of the streptococci for two more\nweeks. Then thc serum from their\nblood will be introduced into Phil\nop's system to combat the infec\ntion if it is not too late.\nLINER QUEEN MARY BETTERS THE\nNORMAN DIE'S WEST-EAST RECORD\nLONDON, Aug. 30 (AP)-The Cunard-Whlte Star liner Queen\nMary passed Bishop's rock at 8:12 p.m. British Summer Time, tonight, beating the west-east record of the French liner Normandie\nby more than three hours.\nThe Queen Mary averaged 30.63 knots an hour, compared to\nthe Normandie's best average of 30.41 knots, made on hcr return\nfrom her maiden voyage to New York.\nThe British sea queen took three days, 23 hours and 57 minutes\nfor the trip from Ambrose light, off New York, to Bishop's rock,\non England's southwest coast. This was three hours and 31 minutes\nless than the Normandie's best time.\nCHOKES TO DEATH\nON LOVE LETTER\nCLUJ, Rumania, Aug. 30 (API-\nStephen Galogos, a farmer, died\nfrom a love letter.\nWhile visiting another man's wife,\nthe husband suddenly appeared.\nGalgos hastily swallowed the love\nletter the wife had given him. He\ndied, choking on it.\nWelcome Held Up,\nLord Mayor Asleep\nUpon His Arrival\nHAMILTON, Ont., Aug. 30 (CP)\n\u2014Mayor William Morrison and a\ncivic reception committee itood In\nrespectful silence today about the\nautomobile that brought Sir Percy\nVincent from Toronto. The Lord\nMayor of London was sound\nasleep.\nLady Vincent made signs he\nshould be undisturbed.\nThe committee and several hun.\ndred ipectatori wondered what to\ndo about It. Sir Percy solved the\nproblem by waking up.\nMin. Max.\nNELSON  51 85\nVictoria   51 63\nVancouver  50 72\nKamloops   54 78\nPrince George _ 46 68\nEsteVan Point  60 64\nPrince Rupert  52 60\nAtlin      60 \u2014\nDawson  50 66\nSeattle   58 74\nPortland   58 78\nSan Francisco  56 64\nSpokane   - 57 87\nLos Angeles  66 86\nPenticton  48 \u2014\nVernon    52 \u2014\nCalgary     54 72\nEdmonton     74 \u2014\nSwift Current  58 92\nPrince Albert  50 86\nSaskatoon     52 90\nQu'Appelle     52 82\nWinnipeg    42 74\nMoose Jaw  50 88\nNelson and vicinity \u2014 Fresh to\nstrong southerly winds, cloudy with\nlight rain. >\nDictator Mussolini*yesterday\nwarned the world he could mobil\nizc 8,000,000 men in a' \"few hours'\nand referred to \"eternal peace\" as\nan \"absurdity.\"\nATLANTIC HOP IS\nAGAIN DELAYED\nNEW YORK, Aug. 30 CAP)-Bad\nweather conditions over thc Atlantic ocean today forced another\npostponement of the scheduled\nMerrill- Richman \"commutation\nhop from New York to London\nand back. Dick Merrill, flying ace\nof a commercial air line, set five\np.m. E.D.T. tomorrow as a tentative\nhour for the takeoff from Floyd\nBennett field.\nPOPE RECEIVES\n30 ITALIANS\nCASTEL GANDOLFO, Italy, Aug.\n30 (APi\u2014Pope Pius XI urged a\ngroup of pilgrims tonight to pray\n\"lest the continued atrocities of men'\nresult in \"a grave affliction for God\nless humanity.\"\nSpeaking to 30 Italians who came\nto pay him homage, the pope, weakened by worry over the Spanish war,\nthanked them for coming to tee\n\"the father who not only grows\nolder but is, indeed, old.\"\nHis 79 years, ho said, \"are an imposing number and provoke many\npreoccupations.\"\nLOYALISTS GET A\nSEVERE SETBACK\nAir Raids in the North;\nIrun Prepares for\nBombardment\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 30\u2014\nAP)\u2014Secretary of State Hull\nmade strong representation!\ntonight to the Spanish government and the rebel General\nFrancisco Franco after a plane\nhad dropped six bombs near the\nUnited States destroyer Kane\noff the Spanish coast this afternoon. The vessel returned\nthe fire without effect.\nThe Kane, en route from\nGibraltar to Bilbao, was attacked about 4 miles off the Spanish coast. Nine rounds from\nthe destroyer's anti-aircraft\nguns were fired at the bomber.\nThe plane, a tri-motored low\nwinged monoplane without\nidentifying marks, made three\nattacks on the destroyer, the\nstate department said. The\nbomber dropped two projectiles during its first attack.\nFifteen minutes later it returned\nand released a third bomb, and tha\ndestroyer fired two rounds trom its\nanti-aircraft gun.\nAlmost immediately the plane\nsoared over the vessel a third time,\ndropping three bombs, all of which\nwent wide.\nThe Kane continued to lire during thc bomber's retreat.\nThe state department made it plain\nrt dtd not regard the incident as a\ndeliberate attack on an American ,\nwar vessel. _\n(Continued on Page Eight)\nMARKETSAT\nA GLANCE\nBy The Canadian Preit*\nToronto and Montreal\u2014Industrial\nstocks higher.\nToronto  Mines \u2014 Golds down;'\nother groups up-\nNew York\u2014Stocks closed higher.\nWinnipeg\u2014Wheat up % to -A cent.\nLondon\u2014Bar silver higher; other\nmetals unchanged.\nNew York\u2014Bar silver and other\nmetals unchanged.\nMontreal\u2014Silver steady.\nNew York\u2014Cotton lower.\nNew York\u2014Canadian dollar unchanged at par, (i     * *\nU.B.C. to Have Phi\nKappa Sigma Chapter\nHERSHEY, Pa., Aug. 30 (AP).\u2014\nDelegates to lhe convention of Phi\nKappa Sigma, national social fraternity, voted to admit a chapter\nfrom tlie University of Britisli Columbia, Saturday.\nPROBE STABBING AFFRAY\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 30 (CP). \u2014\nPolice today were in the midst of\nan investigation into a stabbing affray at a Kecfcr street house late\nFriday night in which James Shaw\nand jess Parsons received minor\nknife wounds.\n1935 MARRIAGES HEAR RECORD IN\nCANADA; BIRTH RATE IN DECLINE\nMaternal Death-Rate Is Down to 4.9 Per\n1000; Marriages Total 76,883\nOTTAWA, Aug. 30 (CP)-A slight\ndecline was shown In live births in\nCanada during 1935 at 221,226, a rate\nof 20.2 per 1000 population compared witli 221,303 and a rate of 20.5 in\n1934, the Dominion bureau of statistics reported today.\nIllegitimate births in 1935 .numbered 8327, a rate of 3.8 per cent\nof all live births against 8070 and\na proportion of 3.8 per cent in 1934.\nStill births totalled 6444 or 2.8 per\ncent of all births, compared wilh\n6452 in 1934 with thc same percentage.\nExclusive of still births, there\nwere 105,511 deaths during 1935,\na rale o( 9.6 per 1000 population\nagainst 101,582 and a rale of 9.4 the\nprevious year.\nDeaths under one year numbered\n15,723, a rote of 71 per 1000 births\nagainst 15,870 and a rate of 72 in\n1934.     ...\nMaternal deaths totalled 1093,\na reduction from the* preceding,\nyear, when there were 1167 deathi.\nThe maternal death rate of 1938V\nwas 4.9 per 1000 live births com-\npared with S3 In 1934,\nThe natural increase in the population of Canada in 1935 amounted\nto 115,715 against 119,721 In the preceding year. The rate of natural Increase, 10.6 per 1000, was the lowest\nduring the period commencing with\n1926 for which statistics are available.\nThe marriages of 1935 numbering\n76,883 showed an increase of 3791\nfrom the preceding year. The 1935\nfigure1 closely approached the total\nof 77,288 for the year 1929, peak\nyear for marriages in Canada, but\nthe marriage rate of 1935 was only\nseven per thousand population as\nagainst 7.7 in 1929.\n\u00bb\n______________________________\n.-\u2014^__\n\u25a0\u25a0---_-_-_-_\u25a0\n\u25a0bM\n .\nMat two \u2022\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B.C-MONDAY MORNING. AUGUST 11. 193*\n(. H. STARK IS\nGOLF WINNER\n_ H. Stark wss the Sunday sweep\nwinner at the Nelson Colt and\nCountry club course when he turned\nin a 73-13 or a net ol 59. Gordon\nSpynon placed second with 85-22 or\n1 net of 63. Mr. Stark won two\nballs and Mr. Eoynon a ball and\ntwo packages ot tees. Their scores\nwets* Vic Owen 93-18 lor 75; W.\nV.*;*.:r: 101-1*3 fo.' TC; 1). llc-iey 1)1-\n18 for 83; Harold Lakes 80-15 tor 85\nand Jamet Allan 72-8 lor 64.\nNELSON LADS HAVE\nAUTOGRAPHS FROM\nMAX BAER'S PEN\nJohnny Holland, son ol Mr. and\nMrs. Joseph Holland, and Johnny\nWade, son ot Mr. and Mrs. Dave\nWade, are proud possessors ol programs autographed by Max Baer,\nformer world's heavyweight champion, who was in Trail last week.\nPHILIP M13RR1S OFFERS\nALLY MILD\nIBACCO FOR\nCII\u00abiMS-A NEW\nFINE CUT\nGuide for Travellers\nHAROLD LAKES SINKS GOLF BALL\nWITH ONE SHOT BUT THE SCORE\nCARDS READS THREE FORTHE HOLE\nWhen is a hole-ln-one on a goll\ncourse not a hole-in-one?  That is a\nquestion that bobbed up on the Nelson Golf and Country club course\non Sunday and Harold Lakes was\nthe  cause   of   all   the  questions.\nCharles Blunt, club pro, declared\nthe situation to be \"very unusual\nand a point ol interest to all golfers.\"\nMr. Lakes was playing Sunday\nand was Bt the fourth, hole.   Hli\ntee shot appeared to carry out of\nbounds, so he played his teoond\nfrom the tae.   Upon arriving at\nthe green he found hit first ball\nhid rolled back In boundi, but\u2014\nlo and behold\u2014his tecond tee thot\nhid dropped Into tht cup\u2014a hole-\nln-one.\nNELSON, B.C., HOTELS\n\"Finest In the Interior\"\nHUME HOTEL\n\u2022free Bus Scrvico Geo. Benwell, Prop.\nBREAKFAST 30c and UP\nLUNCHEON 40c to Ho DINNER 40c to 65o\nROTARY AND GYRO HEADQUARTERS\nTELEPHONE 787 NELSON. B.C. 423 VERNON ST.\nHUME \u2014 J. S. Robertson, A. E.\nKraft, Rossland; R. H. Golden, H. L.\nGeisey, E. Lavigne, R. Brown, Spokane; C. S. Fowler, Reno mine; B. C.\nJohnston, W. H. Trotter, H. S. Dixon,\nh. Lubett, Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Thompson, E. B. Westby, W. O. Dobson, A.\nG. Kirkpatrick, Vancouver; J. B.\nWhalen, H. Coursey, Medicine Hat;\nH. Laundy, Miss K. Fowler, Nakusp;\nL. K. Hess, G. E. McCullough, G\nBarclay, J. R. Samuels, A. G. Low,\nJ. H. Coward, A. M. Dennlngs, Calgary; E. A. Webster, Staveley, Alta.;\nA. E. Clark, H. Dawson, Kelowna;\nlt. G. Holmes, Seattle; J. E. Mlard,\nFernie; Miss E. E. Clever, New Denver; Miss I. E. MacGregor, Kamloops; Mrs. A. Young, Revelstoke:\nW. A. Gourley, J. B. Tait, New\nWestminster; W. F. Percival, W. R.\nLawrence, H. G. Yearly, Penticton;\nW. K, Roner.\nUnfortunately Mr. Lakes could\nnot count a hole-in-one because of\nthc rules. These rules state that a\nplayer shall continue to play his\nfirst ball if it is found in bounds.\nThus the score card did not show a\nhole-ln-one.\nAnother view ol the case is that\na player may at any time call his\nball unplayable, accepting a penalty\nol a stroke and distance. Taking\nthis stand Mr. Lakes called the tee\nshot he holed out his third stroke,\ngiving him a three. Had tne first\nball \"he deemed unplayable\" been\n\"out of bounds\" he would have\ncarded a two lor the hole.\nSuspended Sentence\nfor Theft of Half\na Dollar at Trail\nTRAIL, B.C., Aug. 30\u2014 Pleading\nguilty to stealing 50 cents from the\nCanadian Express office, John Hlabi\nwas given 12 months suspended sentence by Magistrate Noble Binns in\ncity police court Saturday,\nThe arrest was made by Constable\nMayzes on description given by express office officials.   \u25a0\nTHE SAVOY HOTEL\n\"Where the Guest Is King\"\nMODERN SAMPLE ROOMS\nFully  Licenced\n124 Baker St.     W. K. Clark, Prop.      Nelson, B. C.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nP. L. KAPAK, Proprietor\nCommercial, Tourist and Family Trade Solicited.\nFree Bus meets all Greyhound arrivals.\nPros Parking NELSON, B.C. Phone 234\nOccidental Hotel\n708 Vernon St Phone 897\nH. WASSICK, Prop.\nSPECIAL   MONTHLY    RATES\nGood Comfortable Rooms\nFully Licenced\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcome Awaits You\nJAS. A. MADDEN   Prop.\nCompletely Remodelled\nHot and Cold Water\nIn tht HEART ot the City\nPHONE 88       808 WARD ST\nEDGEWOOD, B. C, HOTELS\nARROW LAKES HOTEL\nE. NIEDERMAN,\nProprietor\nComfortable Rooms\n. Good Meili\nEDGEWOOD. B.C.\nLogical Stopping\nPlace on the\nRoad to Vernon\nSPOKANE, WASH., HOTELS\nWhen in SPOKANE You Will Enjoy Staying at the\nHotel Volney\n410\nRiverside Ave.\nSpokane,\nWashington\nOpposite the Paulsen Building\nEVERY COURTESY SHOWN OUR CANADIAN GUESTS\n[\nSTANFORD Hotel, Spokane\nst SPRAOUE and MADISON   B^gffffV&i,,\nTRANSPORTATION - Passenger and Freight\nVsn\nHOLIDAY IN THE OKANAGAN\nVIA GREYHOUND LINES\nNelson to Penticton, Kelowna, and Vernon,\n$8.00 one way, $14.40 return.\nWeek-end\u2014good from Friday until Monday,\n$10.00 return.\nINTERIOR CREYHOUND LINES, LTD., Penticton, B.C.\nSea Yeur Loctl Qreyhpund Agent\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE NELSON TWICE DAILY\n5 a.m. and 10:30 a.m. Except Sunday\nTrail\u2014Phone 135 Phone 35\u2014Nelion\nTrail Livery Co.\nM. H. MclVOR, Prop.\nEight New Teachers\nfor Trail Schools\nTRAIL, B.C., Aug. 30.\u2014Eight new\nteachers are on the staffs of the\nCentral and High schools for the re\nopening Tuesday. At the former,\nmanual training for boys and domestic science for girls have been\nadded once more to the curriculum\nafter an absence ot several years.\nJohn W. Crossman will conduct the\nmanual training classes while Miss\nA. K. Taylor will be in charge of\ndomestic science.\nJohn G. Wallace has been appointed to the staff of the High\nschool.\nFive teachers have been appointed\nto the elementary school staffs to\nfill vacancies by resignations. They\nare Miss E. Avery, Miss J. S. Pearson, Miss E. M. Gansner, Miss Elizabeth Kendall and Miss P. E. L.\nDavies.\nGreat hritaln ls using airplanes to\nadvertise safe, auto driving, by\nequipping planes with signs.\nSPECIAL\nRound Trip Fares\nfor the\nVancouver\nExhibition\nGood Going Aug. 24 to Sept. 6\nFinal Return Limit Sept. 10\nNELSON-VANCOUVER\nand Return\nCoach $11.45   First    $17.10\nClass .    1 i Class .   11\nChildren 5 and under 12 half fare\nPor Further Information\nAtk your local agent or\nN. J. LOWES\nCity Ticket Agent\nBaker and Ward Sti. Phone 203, Nelion.\nQtttedlm Oncifftc\nlOUl\nFARES\nS3\nSUMMER EXCURSIONS\nOn Sale May 15 to Oct. 15\nVisit  Banff and Lake Louite en route\nFinal Return Limit, October 31\nROUND TRIP FARES       uSto tSS\nWinnipeg ---$ 12.00 \t\nToronto 108.20        $103.35\nOttawa      123.50 114.00\nMontreal 12\u00b0.II\". 117.75\nEuebeo 138.35 124.85\n\u25a0int John 147.90 139.15\nIlalifa,      153.45 111.15\nMlnneapoll.     12.00 \t\nSt. Paul     72.00 \t\nChicago      86.00 \t\nDetroit, via Chicago - . - -   101.70 90.30\nDetroit, via Toronto \u25a0 - . -   108.20 103,35\nNow York 135.15 124.40\nBoston 142.25 131.48\nCorrespondingly low fares to other destinations.\nEnquire about Coach and Intermediate Fares.\nRoutings may be arranged tin Canadian Pacific '\nllrt-at Lakes Stetmehip. June 24 to Sept. 19. t\nAsk th* Ticket Agent\n(jGMjtuium (faafflc\nSTAR OF THE AIR\nn\nJUNIOR HIGH AT\nIBERLEY\nMusic Included in B.C.\nJunior Matric This\nSeason\nMELA GOODELLE\nOne of radio's outstanding beauties, Niela Goodelle, also has a charming voice, aa you who listen to her on network programs know.\nSocial News\nof Rossland\nROSSLAND, B. C, Aug. 28-One\nof the prettiest showers of thc\nseason was the one given in Knights\nof Pythias hall by Mrs. Mary Berg,\nMrs. Isaac Johnson and Mrs. John\nHermans in honor of Mr. and Mrs.\nHugo Beckman, Mrs. Beckman being\nformerly Miss Ada Lins. The hall\nwas one mass of flowers which came\nfrom the gardens of Mrs. Victor\nBonde, Mrs. G. Becltman and Mrs.\nH. Griswold. Maxine Hanna and\nAudrey Lins, amid great applause,\nbrought in the gifts In a \"Mystery\nShip,\" decorated with black, red\nand white streamers. Guitar solos\nand songs by Leonard Lins and Bill\nThompson were much enjoyed.\nMusic for dancing was supplied by\nAlfred Zlmmer, Gordon McLaren,\nFloyd Birch, Mark Birch, Gunnar\nErickson and Joseph Killough. Supper was served at midnight. Those\npresent were: Mr. and Mrs. Jones\nof Vancouver, Ernie Birch, Oscar\nAnderson, Emil Srankholm, Eric Olsen, Miss Ida Laface, Mrs. Samuelson, Mrs. Lyod, Mrs. Bradshaw, Mrs.\nA. Johnson, Misses Florence Palmquist, Madeline L'Ecluse, Barbara\nBeckman, Ena Nord, Mae Nord, Eda\nVetere, Delphine Vetere, Mildred\nNyman, Jean Buick, Beth Buick,\nMargaret McLeod, Eilcn Berg, Elsie\nParker, Margaret Leonard, Verna\nLins, Audrey Lins, Olive Johnson.\nAlice Johnson, Dorothy Laface.\nNorma Laface, Eleanor Tomich,\nMaraldo Hermans, Irene Hermans,\nEileen Hermans, Gordon McLaren,\nMr. and Mrs. Isaac Johnson, Helmer\nHansen, Len Brown, Mr. and Mrs.\nJohn Vetere, Mrs. Beckman, Mr.\nGlover, H. Samuelson, Gordon Donnelly, Bud Fulton, William Adams,\nStanley Hutchinson, Mr. and Mrs.\nVictor Bonde, David Crawford, Mr.\nand Mrs. Mark Birch, Mr. and Mrs.\nFloyd Birch, Mr. and Mrs. C. A.\nHensen, Herman Bensen, Mr. and\nMrs. Bert Fulton, Mr. and Mrs. S.\nJohnson, Mr. and Mrs. Elward Johnson. Mr. and Mrs. S. Palmquist, Mr.\nand Mrs. F. Parker, Mrs. C. Jones,\nMr. and Mrs. Hermans, Mr. and Mrs.\nD. McMartln, Mrs. Marshall, Mr. and\nMrs. M. Grubscic, Mr. and Mrs. L.\nBeckman, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Albo, Mr. and Mrs. L. Laface, Mr. and\nMrs. M. Woogman, E. Kay, A. Nord,\nJ. Tomich, Hilbert Holm, Alvin\nJohnson, J. T. Armstrong, Hilberl\nHansen, Claude Phillips, John Clare,\nF. McKenzle, C. A. Hanna, Mrs. F.\nL'Ecluse. Misses Maxine and June\nHanna, Bill Thompson, John Flato,\nMr. and Mrs. Gunnar Erickson, Mrs.\nC. La ton, Misses Queenie and Eileen\nLloyd, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Laface,\nH. S. Taylor, Sonny Lins, Ronald\nGriswold, Lon Hardy, Albert Berg,\nRoy Jones, Mrs. Axel Johnson, Albert Zimmer, Ludo Hermans, Bud\nFried and Fred Hermans.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. L. J. Lutz and family, Mrs.\nF. V. Weid of this city and their\nfather, A. Yurkowski of Round Hill,\nAlta., left Friday morning to visit\nMr. and Mrs. J. J. Weid at Renata.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nLaurie Nicholson left Friday\nmorning for a holiday at the coast.\nOn the return trip he will visit his\nsister at Tranquille.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\u2022\nMrs. W. F. McNeil left Friday\nmorning to spend the next 10 days\nat her summer home in Deer Park.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMayor and Mrs. William Arrow-\nsmith and son, Ralph, have returned\nfrom a holiday at Kaslo.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. Oswald MacDougall Is spending the day In Trail.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. Isaac Glover and son David,\nand Miss Dora Millett are enjoying\na holiday In Spokane.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMiss Grace Newman has returned\nto Kltlmat to resume her duties in\nthe Indian school at that place.\nBLUE BOOT WIN*\nSEATTLE, Aug. 30 (AP)-Clip-\nplng a second off the track record,\nBlue Boot won the $10,000 added\nLongacre mile handicap here today\nin 1-33 3-5. Primulus was second and\nMaj. A. C. Taylor's highly regarded\nIndian Broom from Vancouver B.\nC. third. Blue boot paid $8.70, $4.20\nand $2.10 on a two dollar ticket. Primulus paid $8.00 and. $2.20, and\nIndian Broom $2.10.\nOLD COUNTRY\nSOCCER\nVICTORIA, Aug. 30 (CP).-An Increase in attendance at BriUsh Columbia school ln the coming term\nwhich opens Tuesday Is expected to\nresult from the opening of 11 additional schools in the province, it is\nlearned from the department of education.\nAt the close of the 1935-J8 term\nthere were 116,722 pupils registered,\nwhich represented a slight decrease\nln attendance at city schools but an\nincrease in rural schools. The increase at tlie rural institutions, however, was less than the decrease in\nthe cities.\nFive new junior High schools will\nbe opened at Powell River, New\nWestminster North Saanlch, Duncan and Kimberley. This will make\na total ot 15 junior High schools in\nthe province.\nThe Wellington school has been\nraised to the status of a superior\nschool and suoerlor schools at Ml-\nchel-Natel and Blakeburn have been\nra'sed to High schools.\nIn the junior matriculation curriculum this year music will be\nmade optional for the first time and\nwill be credited at examinations\nThe studies offered will be violin\nand piano with theory.\nI  Buy\nFINK'S fine\nFURNITURE\nOn the Deferred\nPayment Plan.\nENGLISH  LEAGUE\nFirst Division:\nArsenal 3, Everton 2.\nBirmingham 2, Portsmouth 1.\nBrentford 2, Bolton Wanderers 2.\nGrimsby 0, Charlton I.\nLeeds 2, Chelsea 3.\nLiverpool 2, Stoke 1.\nManchester   United   1,  Wolverhampton 1.\nMiddlesbrough    2,    Manchester\nCity 0.\nPreston 1, Huddersfield 1.\nSheffield Wednesday 2, Sunderland 0.\nBromwlch 1, Derby County 3.\nENGLISH LEAGUE\nSecond Division\nBradford 2, Bradford City 1.\nBurnely 3, Notts Forest 0.\nBury 1, Blackburn 1.\nDoncaster 1, Plymouth 2.\nLeicester 1, Blackpool 2.\nNew Castle 0, Barnsley 1.\nNorwich 1. Sheffield United 2.\nSouthampton 3, Chesterfield 2.\nSwansea 1, Aston 2.\nWestham 2, Tottenham 1.\nTHIRD DIVISION; Southern\nAldershot 1, Bournemouth 3.\nBristol City 3, Queens Park 2.\nClaDton 1, Crystal 1.\nGillingham 1, Brighton 0\nLuton 1, Southend 0.\nMillwall J, Bristol Rovers 2.\nNewport 1, Watford 3.   .\nNotts County 3, Exeter 1.\nSwindon 2, Northampton 0.\nTornuay 2, Reading 2.\nWeilhall 1, Cardiff 0.\nTHIRD DIVISION; Northern\n.Acerlngton 1. Lincoln 2.\nChester 4, Wresham 1.\nCrewe 2, Rochdale 2.\nHalifax 1. York 2.\nMansfield Town 2. Barrow 1.\nOldham 3, New Brighton 1.\nPortvale 1, Hull 3.\nRotherham 3, Gateshead 0.\nSouthport 1, Hartlepools 1.\nStockport 3. Darlington 3.\nTranmere 5, Carlisle 1.\nSCOTTISH\nFirst Division\nAberdeen 4, Falkirk 0.\nAlbion 1, Celtic 3.\nClyde 1, Dundee 2.\nHamilton I, Arbroath 4.\nHearts 2, Mirren 1.\nKilmarnock 1, Patrick 0.\nQueen of South 1, LanarkO.\nQueens Park 0, Dunfermline 2.\nRangers 4. Hibernians 0.\nJohnston 1. Motherwell 3.\nSECOND   DIVISION\nCowdenbeath 2. Bernards 0.\nDundee 2, Ralth 4\nFife 3, Kings Park 0.\nStirling 2, Ayr 0.\nEdinburgh 1, Brechin 4.\nForfar 2, Morton 2.\n,Leith 1. Airdrieonlans 1.\nMontrose 1. Alloa 1.\nStenhousemulr 4, Dumbarton 1.\nSOLD  BISHOP'S WIFE BROOCH\nCHRIST JESUS\"\nLESSON-SERMON\nSUBJECT SUNDAY\n\"Christ Jesus\" was the subject ot\nthe Lesson-Sermon in First Church\nof Christ, Scientist, on Sunday.\nThe Golden Text wss: \"God sent\nnot his Son into the world to con*\ndemn the world; but that the world\nthrough him might be saved\" Uohn\n17).\nAmong the citations which comprised the Lesson-Sermon was the\nfollowing trom the Bible: \"And\nwhen he had called unto him hit\ntwelve disciples, he gave them power\nagainst unclean spirits, to cast them\nout, and to heal all manner of sickness and all manner of disease\"\n(Matthew 10:1).\nThe Lesson-Sermon also Included\nthe following passage from the\nChristian Science textbook, \"Science\napd Health With Key to the Scriptures\" by Mary Baker Eddy: \"Jesus\nestablished in the Christian en the\nprecedent for all Christianity, theology, and healing. Christians ere\nunder as direct orders now, as they\nwere then, to be Christlike, to possess the Christ-spirit, to follow the\nChrist-example, and to heel the tick\nas well as the sinning.\"\nLONDON (CP)-Pleading his\nmind was wavering a laborer who\nsaid he found and' sold for $13 a\nbrooch worth $7509 belonging to\nthe wife of the Bishop of Birmingham, was discharged when he appeared in court accused of theft\nCricket Scores\nLONDON, Aug. SO (CP Cetwe)^-\nClosing scores in English first-clssa\ncricket matches started Saturday\nfollow:\nMiddlesex 280 (Hendren IM) Surrey 98 for seven wickets.\nLeicestershire 151 (Copson four\nfor 34); Derbyshire 104 for one.\nWorcestershire 319; Essex 41 tor\nthree.\nLancashire 379 for seven (Wash-\nbrook 103); vs Somerset\nNottinghamshire 200; Gloucestershire 107 for three.\nHampshire 174; Yorkshire 45 for\ntwo.\nM.C.C. 98 (Watt four tor SO); Kent\n165 for four.\nIndia 309 (Dilawar Husslan 12]);\nvs Sussex.\nVancouver Driver\nPlunges Off Road \\\nEdgewood Avenue\nCar driven by W. H. Trotter ol\nVancouver crossed the sidewalk and\nplunged over the bank on Edgewood\navenue near the hosoltal Saturday\nnight, turning over. Trotter escaped\nwith minor injuries.\nSVBVRBAN HOUSE POPULAR\nAmerican suburban type horns with attached garage, containing six  roomi, perch and bath; coiling from\n$5500 to $0000.\nDuring the last decade the American-suburban\ntype of house, pictured here, has come into great\npopularity. It combines a bit of the English and of\nthe colonial with pleasing results.\nIt contains six sizable rooms and an attached\ngarage, a feature many horile owners are looking\nfor these days. The entrance is authentically col\nonial, as Is the stairway which beautifies one end\nof the living room.\nIt Is suggested that the brick walls should be\nbrown with white trimming and green shingle roof.\nThe house is sufficiently compact to find place on\na 50-foot lot\nIt It estimated that this house may be built lor\nabout $5500 to $6000.\n___^\n1\n^\u2014__\u00ab\n.\n   I\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B.C-MONDAY  MORNING. AUGUST 31. 1936\n- PAGE THRU\nHickory Garments\nfor Gentle Control and Easy Freedom\nTWO-WAY STRETCH ELASTIC GIRDLES OR COMBINATIONS\u2014Peach or white .... $1.00 and $2.95\nNAMSIE LASTEX COMBINATION     $1.95\nPANTIE GIRDLES\u2014White or peach      $1.00\nJERMAN HUNT'S\nDRY GOODS AND READY-TO-WEAR\nPhone 200 Baker St.\nSOCIAL HAPPENINGS\nIN NELSON CITY\nThis column is conducted by Mrs. M A- Vigneux All new. of a\nsocial nature including receptions, private entertainments, peibotial\nItems, marriages, etc. will appear in this column. Telephone Mn.\nVigntux at her home. 519 Silica street\nA quiet and pretty wedding was Miss Addie Irvine, and her niece,\nsolemnized at St. Saviour's Pro Ca-  Mrs. C. T. Sanford, both of Berke-\nthedral   Saturday   morning   at   7 \u25a0 ley,  Calif.,  the  latter   nee  Carrie\no'clock when Ven Archdeacon Fred {McKay, an ex-resident of Nelson\nH. Graham united in marriage Helen\ncouver from where she leaves to\nspend a year abroad, traveling via\nthe Panama canal.\n\\ Mrs. E. Ferguson, who spent the\n) summer at Willow Point, has re-\ni turned to her home 618 Silica street.\n| Mr. and Mrs. Frank Buckle and\nMr. and Mrs. Russell E. Witter of\nthe Queen mine, Salmo, have returned from a vacation at Jasper\npark lodge.\nDr, and Mrs. H. II. McKenzie and\ntheir son have taken up residence\nat their home, 504 Carbonate street,\nFrances, second daughter of Mr. and I    H. Ha^es of Crescent Bay spent i f$L2*\u2122% Fit\u2122\u2122\" \" \"\"''\nMrs. George Schupe of Nelson, to I Saturday in Ihe city. I W'\"0W Po,nt .T .\nWilliam Foster, eldest son of Mr. and ! ...\ni Mrs. H. V. Armson of Vancouver, i    Mrs.   Nelson   Peterson   of   Ymir\nEntering the church on the arm of, visited Nelson Saturday.\nher father to the strains of Lohen- \u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nHeadquarters for\nQUALITY MEATS,\nFOODS,  FRUITS\nand VEGETABLES\nPHONES 865\u2014866\nSAFEWAY   STORES,   LIMITED\nMrs. E. R. Redpath of Vancouver\nis In Nelson for a few days, a guest\nof her daughter, Mrs. J. T. Lawrie,\ngrin's wedding  march,  played  by j   Mrs. P. E. Burroughs, who has spent'   erraCe \u25a0*PartlJ\"*n,,s'>\nMrs. G. K. Ashby, the bride looked | lw0 weeks in Nelson, a guest of her !    Mrs s c , y   , , s ,.\ncharming in white taffeta fashioned  parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. T. Horswill, \\ _._['\u25a0 i\u201e Son shoonfn*\non Princess lines with white silk ; leaves this morning for her home in \\ Urday ln Nels.   ,ihJPP,n\u00ab*\nturban   and   accessories   to  match j Penticton.\nShe carried a  shower bouquet  of \u2022   *   \u2022\nwhite roses.   She was attended by j    Mr. and Mrs. Gray Lawrence, Vic-\nher    sister.    Miss    Brownie   June , toria street, are taking up residence\nSchupe, who looked very smart in | in the Terrace apartments tuday,\npink organdie, carrying a bouquet of ] \u2022   *   *\nCharles Pritchard has returned\nthe Pend d'Oreille valley Saturday The groom was supported by Frank j from Vancouver where he attended\nmorning    He was 43 years of age.   Pomeroy  of  Castlegar.    After  the , summer session at the University of\n' , ceremony a wedding breakfast was : British Columbia\nHe is survived by his widow and one\nHarold Saunderson\noi Trail Is Dead\nTRAIL. B.C., Aug. 30.\u2014Victim of\nheart disease, Harold Saunderson,\nformer Trail city employee, died in ! pink roses, blended with sweet pea:\nR. L. McBride, Hoover street, has\nreturned from Spokane\nHenry Stewart who attended summer session at the University of\nBritish Columbia, leaves today to\nresume his duties as teacher at\nSlocan City,\nMrs. Rogers and son uf South Slocan  visited Nelson Saturday.\nyoung child.\nSaunderson resigned from the city\nstaff throe years ago and went to the\ncoast for treatment. He returned a\nshort time ago.\n|    Mr. and Mrs, P. C. Richards, who\ni spent thc summer at the coast, are\n| returning  today   to  take  up   residence at 717 Josephine street.\nMr. and Mrs. George A. Hunter,\nserved at the home of the bride's\nparents on  Josephine street.    The j    Mrs. H. T. Hartin of Kaslo spent\ntable was tastefully decorated with ! Saturday in Nelson.\nwhite tapers and silver sconces and | *   *   *\nunder a white floral wedding bell j    Mr. and Mrs. A, C. Wade, who\na beautiful three-tier wedding cake j spent   two   weeks   visiting   at  the\ncentered the table.    Those present j home of their son and daughter-m-\nwere   members   of   the   immediate ; law, Mr. and Mrs. S. P. Wade, Vic- ' wn0 spent thc summer\"at their north\nfamily,  Mrs.   Ashby  and  thc  Ven \u25a0 toria street, have returned to Medi- , sn0re  homo   have  taken  up  resi-\nArchdeacon Fred H. Graham, who - cine Hat. dence  in   their   Edgewood   avenue\nproposed a toast to the bride and \"   *   * j home.\ngroom.   Thc bride chose for going ;    Mr, and Mrs. Thomas Duncan of \u2022    *   *\naway a navy blue crepe dress with \u25a0 Vancouver, who were guests at the\nwhite accessories. After their honey-   summer home of Mr. and Mrs A. T,\nmoon  Mr.  and   Mis.  Armson   will   Horswill   at  Cedar   Point,  also  at\n)$Tjnfo&t(#Tb*ii dtfmjwtte.\nINCORPORATED   2-- MAY 1870.\nMEN'S\nBETTER\nSUITS\nNavy Blue Serge\nWhat the\nChildren Want!\nOurs are the shoes that\nare makin; a big hit\nwith the children \u2014\nand the mothers! They\nhave style, they wear\nlike iron, and, best of\nall, they're good for\ngrowing feet!\n$2.00 and $4,00\nH-.'i-lbut shoes for girls\nand Thurston kicker\ntoe shoes for boys\u2014in\nsnappy stylings and\nlong wearing lasts.\nThese models are built\nto stand up under\ntough \"kickabout\" and\nhold their dressy shape\n-ind finish,\nR. ANDREW & Co.\nLEADERS IN FU0TFASU10N\ntake up residence in Rossland.\nMi. and Mrs, Waldo Ferguson\nhave returned to their home, 912\nCarbonate street, from summering at\nWillow Point.\nMrs. McLaughlin of Crawford Bay\nvisited town at the week-end.\n.Waneta at the home of Mrs. Duncan's  mother, Mrs.  C.  H. Duncan,\nMrs. C. H. Duncan and hcr son,\nW. A. Duncan, of Waneta were visitors in Nelson.\nMrs. Herbert Grutchfield and her\nleft yesterday for Banff, en route to ! young daughter  have  returned  to\nthc coast.\nMr. and Mrs. Donald Edwards.\n717 Josephine street, ha He taken up\nresidence at 40!) Kail street.\nMt. and Mrs. T. S. Jerome, Vienna street, had jis Iheir week-end\nlies. Beverlev Benson of Trail.\nMr. and Mrs. J, Long. Hendryx\nstreet, have as their guest Mrs\nCatherine Bedbury of Seattle, who\ni will also visit hcr sister, Mrs. J. A\nMiller, Latimer street,\nSalmo after visiting Mrs, Grutch\nfield's parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. W.\nStubbs,   Nelson   avenue.   Fairview.\n\u00bb    *   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs, A. J. Cornish. 424\nLatimer street, have returned from\nspending two months at Queens Bay,\nMr. and Mrs. B. N. Quimette of\nMullin.   Ida.,   have   returned   after\na few days visit at the home of the\n*   \"   \u2022 i latter's   brother   and   sister-in-law,\nMiss C. Reyden has left to resume I Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Bunyan, Silica\nof Nelson, now residing at Ellens- ; her dutics as teacher at Johnson's I street.\nMi-\nul Mis. W. Biner, formerly\nSmart\nfor the\nschoolroon\nburg,  Wash.,   i>pent   the   week-end\nvisiting Nelson friends.\nMr. and Mrs, George Helbecque\nand family of Bonnington. who were\non a motor trip to Wallace. Idaho,\nand Spokane, have returned, having\nbeen called through the illness of\nthe former's father. George Helbecque. who is a patient at Kootenay Lake General hospital.\nLanding after spending her vacation\nat tho home of hcr parents. Mr. and\nMrs. W. Reyden. Selwyn street.\nMrs. Gordon Halle! 1 of Longbeach\nleft   yesterday   morning   for   Van-\nH. Foster of Procter visited Nelson\nSaturday,\nMr.   and   Mrs.   P.   Patmore   and\ndaughter, who have spent a month\nON THE AIR TONIGHT\nE. W. Kopecki uf Rossland vi\nNelson over the week-end.\nitni\nCANADIAN RADIO t 8:30   Sports  broadcast;   10:30  Pete\nCOMMISSION  NETWORK       i Cowan's old timers; 11:00 Slumber\nCKOV  CJCJ CJCA  CHWK CFQC   Hour; 11:15 News Flashe:\n11:30 B.\nFine imported British woolens made to the BAYS\nhigh standard of quality and giving you dollars in\nsavings. Expertly tailored and perfect fitting. A\nreal suit for semi-dress occa-\nsions and evening wear V^P_r__*5\u00ae\nPRICED  \t\n24\nMEN'S NEW FALL HATS\nSnap brims with the latest up to the minute crowns\nDark greys, powder blue and other fall d\u00bb0 Q(\"\nshades. Sizes 6% to 7%. EACH $d.JJ\nJACK AND JILL SCHOOL SHOES\nFOR BOYS AND GIRLS\nWidths   C        12'. to 3. Widths B. C\n\u00abpZ.\/J)    pair Ipj.UU\nPatent Straps, Black Oxfords and Brown Oxfords\n5 to!\nPAIR\n$2.25\n8'\/2    to\nand E\nPAIR  . .\n)ack and Jill Shoes are noted for their splendid wear and appearance. Properly fitted\nwith visable fitters\u2014there is no danger of crippled toes.\nGROWING GIRLS' BLACK SCHOOL SHOES\nheels. Flat or mi li-\n$2-95\nBlack calf uppers and solid leather soles and rubbe\ntary heels. Widths B C D E. Sizes 3 to 8.\nPAIR   \t\n030\n690\nShopper;\neluded Mint Ymir.\nin   town  Saturday  in-\niind Mrs. William Clsrk\n730\nCFJC\n780       840    C. Rangers orchestra.\nCFCN\nKASLO COTTAGE\nIS BURNED\nMrs. George McKay of Trail spent\nthe week-end in town al the home\nof lier father, Gregoire Choquette,\nLatimer street.\nCJAT\n010\n5:00\nJohn;\nion to;\n1030 k CFCN 293.1 m\nCalgary 10,000 w\n5:00 Cecil and Sally, E.T. 5:30\nTreasure Chest; 5:45 Words and Music, E.T.; 6:15 Rajput, E.T.; 6:30 Red\nHead Family; 7:00 Peacock Court\n7:15 The Rhythmic Age; 8:15 House\nof  Peter McGregor: 8:30 Through\nKASLO. B.C.\u2014Fire of unknown\nCFAC   CJOC   CKY   CKCK\n930        950        960        1010\nCRCV\n1100\nThe   Fanfare   orchestra,  St.\n5:30 Tribute to a Sony, To-\n6:00  With   Banners  Flying,\ndir.   Guiseppe   Agostini,   Montreal I Hollywood Lens 9:00 News Flashes;\nd Watson of Appledale j l0   _   __   _..-  6:30   Louise   Guen- j 9:*5   Yodelling   Ranger;   9:30   Scr-\n\u25a0ity yesterday. ! ei|e an(j his orchestra from Que-  enader; Other periods: Records.\n\u25a0 bee;  6:45 CP News  and Weather,\nin Nelson Saturday in- | Tor. q.M jascha Galperin's orch..\n'  Lake Louise; 7:30 News, Vancouver\n(B.C. Net); Lullaby Lagoon Toroii- j\nto (BC. 7:45); 8:00 Youngbloods of\nBeaver Bend, dramatic serial .Win-1\nnipeg: 8:30 Lakchcad Melody, organ,\nvocal recital. Ft. William; 8:45 Book j\nReview. James Stuart Wood, Prince\nAlbert; 9:00 Old Time Frolic. Sas-1\nkatoon;  9:30 Knights of Gladness. ]\nDo Not Let\nInexperience\nHold You Back\nMrs. Alfi\nvisited the\nShopped\neluded J. Davis of South Slocan\nMiss Margo Magee, who leaches\nat. Canyon City, has returned from\nVancouver, where she attended\nsummer session al the University of\nB.C.\nMrs. F.li Sutcliffe and her daughter.  Miss  Ethel Sutcliffe, Victoria i direction   John   Bowman,   Edmoi\nstreet,   have   returned   from   two ! ton (not JRCV); 10:00 News, Van-\nweeks at Vancouver and Victoria.    ! couver (B.C. Net): 10:15 Jack Williamson's   orch.,   Vancouver   (B.C.\nMrs. J. Fred Hume has as her j Net).\nCuests at  her  North  Shore home, I \t\nKillamey-ori-lhe-Lake,   her   sister'      N.B.C.-KPO RED NETWORK\n    |     KHQ   KGW   KFI   KPO   KOMO\n590      620    640     680      920\n5:00 Visiting with Captain Dobbs;\n5:30   Blue   Prelude;   6:00   Lullaby\nLady, or., dir. Morgan L. Eastman:\n7:00 Amos 'n' Andy; 7:15 Lum and\nAbner;  7:30  Margaret  Speaks, W\nDaly's  orch.;  8:00  Fibber   McGee\nand  Molly, comedy;   8:30  Richard\nHimber's  orch.;  9:00   Drama;  9:30\nAlfred Barr's orchestra; 10:00 News\nFlashes, Sam Hayes: 10:15 Southern\nI Harmony  Four;   10:30  Xavier Cu-\n, gat's orchestra; 11:00 Henry King's\n! orchestra;   11:30   Reveries,   instru-\nI mentalists.\nSHORT WAVE PROGRAMS\nPacific Standard Time\nBRITISH EMPIRE\nTranBmisilon 6\nholidaying at Cedar Point, return to\ntheir homc at Cranbrook today.\nShoppers in the city Saturday\nincluded Mr. and Mrs. W. Sutherland of Winlaw.\nColonel and Mrs. John Murray of\nSouth Slocan spent Saturday in\ntown.\nMonty Morley who attended summer session at University of British Columbia at Vancouver has re.\norigin totally destroyed the cottage, Mr. McLean had not been at home\nwith the contents, of Lachlan Mc- j for two weeks, having been working\nLean. The house was situated near j at his property up South fork, the\nthe new road being built to the city I Revenue. He arrived in town just\npower plant, just off Fifth street, j after the fire occurred at about 12\nLoss has not yet been ascertained.! o'clock noon Thursday.\nThe following freauenclei will be j turned to resume his duties on thc\nused: GSF 15.14 Mm (19.82 m.);\nGSC  9.58   Mc\u00bb.   (31.32  m.).\nBusiness College\nTraining Will\nPlace You Properly\nNelson Business College\nIndividual Tuition \u2014 Commence Any Time\nSHORTHAND -   TYPEWRITING \u2014  BOOKKEEPING - PENMANSHIP \u2014 COMMERCIAL SPELLING - COMMERCIAL ARITHMETIC -- COMMERCIAL ENGLISH\nCOMMERCIAL LAW   - FILING AND GENERAL OFFICE PROCEDURE\nAfter full graduation, students may remain at the College without charge until a\n' situation  is obtained.\nNew Term Commences Tuesday, September 1st, 1936.\nBOX 14 NELSON, B.C. PHONE 603\nN.B.C.-KGO BLUE NETWORK\nKGO KJR KEX KECA KGA\n790 970 1180 1430 1470\n5:00 Beaux Arts trio, instrumental.\n5:30 Carefree Carnival; 6:15 News for\nthe Voters; 6:45 Jolly Coburn's orch.;\n7:00 Tony Russell, singer; 7:15 Stanford U. program; 7:30 Al Donohue's\norch.; 8:00 Shandor, violinist; 8:08\nHenry Busse's orch.; 8:15 Watanabe\nand Williams; 8:30 Herman Middleman's orch.; 8:45 Kenneth Spencer,\nbasso; 9:00 Dedication of new KECA\ntransmitter; 9:30 Yesterday's Music, Robert Stevens, tenor; 10:00\nRaunv Wilde's orch.; 10:30 Jimmy\nGrier's orch.; 11:00 Paul Carson,\norganist.\nC.B.S.-DON LEE NETWORK\nKVI KFRC KOIN KSL KOL\n570 610 940 1130 1270\n5:00 Radio Theater, dir. Cecil De\nMille; 6:00 Wayne King's orch.; 6:30\nMarch of Time; 7:00 Clyde Lucas'\norch.; 7:15 Renfrew of the Mounted,\nserial; 7:30 One Night Stands\nwith Pick and Pat; 8:00 Jan Garber's orch.; 8:30 Hawaii Calls; 9:00\nNocturn with Franklyn McCormack,\n9:15 Austin Mack's orchestra; 9:30\nJoseph Chernavsky' sorchestra; 10:00\nGaylor Carter, organist; 10:30 Jan\nGarber's orch.; 11:00 Benny Goodman's orch.; Fireside Hour, KSL:\n11:30 Gaylord Carter, organist.\nINTERNA-KNAL\n6:00 Big Ben. \"Down to the Sea\nin Ships; Sea Harvests (6).\" R. H.\nMares; 6:21 Chamber Music. London String Trio. Jean Pougnet\niviflin). William Primrose (viola).\nAnthony Pini (violincello). Vera\nRae-Stevens icontralto). 7:05 BBC\nDance Orch., dir. Henry Hall. 7:40\nNews and announcements.\nLONDON-3 p.m. A program ol\nlight Welsh music. GSP, 19.6 m.,\n15.31 meg.; GSD, 25.5 nv, 11,75 meg.;\nGSC, 31.3 m., 9.58 meg.\nROME\u20143 p.m. News in English.\nProgram by the Federation of Business and Professional Women. Old\narias by composers of the 18th and\n19th century. Concert. 2RO's \"Mail\nBog.\" 2RO, 31.1 m., 9.63 meg.\nMOSCOW\u20144 p.m.\u2014News and reviews from Soviet capitol. RNE,\n31.5 m\u201e 9.4 meg.\nPARIS \u2014 4:15 p.m. Theatrical\nbroadcast. TPA-4, 25.6 m., 11.72 meg.\nMADRID \u2014 4:30 p.m. Flamenco\nmusic. EAQ. 30.5 m., 9.87 meg.\nBERLIN-5:45 p.m. \"La Follia\" by\nCorelli. DJD, 25.4 m., 11.77 meg.\nTOKYO-9:30 p.m. Popular Sa-\nmisen songs by geisha singers. ^VH,\nNazaki. 20.5 m., 14.6 meg.\nteaching staff of Central school,\n\u2022 *      0\nGeorge Shaw df Trail spent the\nweek-end visiting friends in Nelson.\n\u00bb   *   *\nMrs. J. McLeod of Procter visited\ntown Saturday.\nMr. and Mrs. Robert A. Horswill\nand Dr. and Mrs. D. W. Wilkinson ;\nhave returned from Gold Hill, where\nthey were guests of Mrs. E. Read\nfor 10 days.\nMrs. C. H. Cooper, Silica street,\nentertained at an informal tea in\nhonor of Mrs. H. McArthur, who\nleaves tomorrow for her new home\nat Kamloops. The hostess was assisted by Mrs. W. R. Gibbon, who\npoured, and Mrs. Anthony Banks,\nwho served. Vari-colored asters\nmade a dainty center for the tea\ntable. Mrs. Cooper's invited guests\nwere Mrs. McArthur, Mrs. Charles\nH. Stark, Mrs. George H. Taylor,\nMrs. R. R. Horner, Mrs. W. M. Myers, Mrs. John McPhail. Mrs. J. W.\nClark, Mrs. F. A. Jewctt, Mrs. Banks\nand Mrs. Gibbon.\n\u2022 z*   \u2022\nJ. Halcrow, who teaches at Quesnel Flats, has returned from attending summer session at University of\nBritish Columbia.\nGIRLS!..\nHere Is Your\nOpportunity for Great\nSuccess at Very\nLow Cosi\nYou can learn the Madame Patenaude's\nSystem of Beauty Culture the approved\nFrench method which has won distinction\nthroughout the world. Mrs. Hepburn, with\nover 19 years' experience in Canada and\nthc United States, and her capable staff of\ninstructors, assures students of a smart training in this most modern method of Beaut;\nCulture.\nAmerican and Non-B.C. graduates have found our\n\"Brush-up\" course saved them money and time in obtaining a British Columbia operator's licence\nHeai   Our  Interesting Program  Featuring  GERALD   ItlLEY,\nIrish Tenor- CKWX Fridays al 1:15 p.m.\nBOB   INN Hairdressing School\nProprietress\u2014Mrs. A. E. Hepburn, Giadu\nof Beauty Culture, and 'itll'Jicri al Mor\nCulture.\n751 Granville Street\ntc of Schultz School\ni.-  School  of  Beautv\nVancouver, B C.\nMrs. Kemp, manageress, will be in Nelson on Sept. 1st,\n2nd and 3rd and will be glad to interview prospective\nstudents. Names can be left at Nelson Daily News\nBox No. B.\n, -vv^rAVs*SN^\u00bbs^AAA^vys^Av^^A\/vv^^\/^A^^^vv^*v^^y\u2022 -s^wv \u2022\/\nRECIPES\nMENUS\n\u2022nd\nHINTS\nBv\nMri.\nMarv\nMorton\nGood\nHousekeeping\n600 k CJOR 499.7 m\nVancouver 500 w\n5:00 News flashes, 5:15 Big Brother Bill; 6:15 News Report 7:00 Safety\nLeague; 7:30 Financial Talk; 7:45\nBernard Braden, songs: f:()0 Cariboo\nBy MRS. MARY MORTON\nMenu Hint\nCreamed Potatoes\nLettuce With Simple Dressing\nSpinach\nPineapple Cake Milk\nTea or Coffee\nThis menu is for school age children, for whom I would not ordinarily recommend cake. But this\ncake is a special treat, and is not\nrich.\nToday's Reclpei\nPINEAPPLE CAKE. - One-half\ncup butter, one cup sugar, two egg\nyolks, two-thirds cup pineapple\nJuice, two cups cake flour, three\nteaspoons baking powder, one-\nfourth teaspoon salt. Cream butter,\nadd sugar gradually, creaming the\nwhile. Add beaten egg yolks and\nblend thoroughly.    Add pineapple\nI Cowboys;   8:15   Ronnie   Matthews;  juice alternately with dry ingredi\nents sifted together. Turn into a j\ngreased and shallow pan and bake i\nin a moderate oven, 350 degrees, for \\\nabout 40 minutes.   Cool and frost.    !\nPINEAPPLE FROSTING - Two\ncups granulated sugar, one-half cup\ncold water, three egg whites, dash\nsalt, one-fourth teaspoon cream of\ntartar, one-half cup crunched and\nwell drained pineapple, one teaspoon vanilla. Make a syrup of sugar and water, boiling them to the\nlong thread stage or 240 degrees.\nPour slowly onto egg whites, beaten\nstiff, with salt and cream of tartar,\nBeat the frosting with a rotary beater until it is stiff. Add well drained\npineapple, and vanilla. The pineapple must be well drained and it\nmust not be added until the frosting is quite stiff; otherwise it may\nbecome too thin.\nChange of\nMilk Delivery\nTime\nStarting Tuesday, September 1st. 1936, we will again\nrevert to our regular fall and winter schedule of daytime milk deliveries.\nThe regular delivery will be made on Tuesday morning, and again later in the day we will make our first\ndelivery on the new schedule\nIf you do not require vour regular quantity on either\nof these Tuesday deliveries, please phone 900 or\nleave a note for your delivery man\nCurlew Creamery\n\u2014i\nMi\n PAGE FOUR\nJMaott Sailg Km*\nEstablished April, 22, 1902.\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper\nALL THE NEWS WHILE IT IS NEWS\nPublished every morning except Sunday by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n210   Baker   Street   Nelson,   British Columbia.\nBETWEEN\nNELSON DAILY NIW8. NILSON. B.C-MONDAY MORNINO, AUGUST Si, 19M\ndonkey during tbe donkey ball game I\ni\nJ.B\u00a3\nPhone 144, Private Exchange Connecting All Departments.\nMember   of   the   Audit   Bureau   of   Circulations   and\nThe   Canadian   Press   Leased   Wire    News    Service.\nMONDAY, AUGUST 31,1936\nA NEW KILLING DEVICE\nBy all accounts, fire, not poison gas, will be the great\ndanger for cities subjected to air raids in a future war. This,\nat any rate, is the view of Prof. J. Enrique Zanetti of the department of chemistry, Columbia University,\nWriting on the \"progress\" of events in the field of warlike invention, Prof. Zanetti draws attention to a newly\ndeveloped incendiary bomb made of \"thermite.\" Thermite,\nhe explains, is a mixture of iron oxide and either powdered\naluminum or magnesium. When heated, a violent chemical\nreaction begins in which the aluminum or magnesium is\noxidized, while the iron is set free in an incandescent molten\nstate. A temperature of 5400 degrees Fahrenheit is reached.\nA single two-ton bombing plane could carry 2000 of\nthese incendiary charges, and if only one in a hundred\nreached its mark, it would mean that one plane could start\ntwenty fires in a city in a few minutes. Gas dissipates, and\nthe fires spread. Tn such circumstances a fire brigade\nwould be able to do nothing.\nOf course, the professor hastens to add, nothing like\nthat could happen over here. America is not Europe. That\nis true. It is also true that New York and Montreal could\nnot be very handily reached from a European aircraft\nstation. But the moment the \"next war\" comes there will be\nplanes aplenty designed to cross the Atlantic if need be.\nMoney would be no object, then. Besides, there are aircraft\ncarriers capable,of deep sea sailing. Anyhow, Prof. Zanetti's\nmorsel of information is passed on for what it is worth.\nIf continental Europe is a series of open powder kegs;\nBritain creditably refrains from scratching matches.\nEven before Barnum's profile went on money, Father\nCoughlin and others had applied the circus idea to the\ncurrency problem.\nDown ln Lakeside park and on\nother beaches in the district they\nhave been playing the \"Goofy\ngame\". It provides hours of amusement.\n\"Like as not a man you met only\nonce, and then didn't like, will come\nup to you and with that certain gay\npersuasion that all the addicts have,\nwill stand in front of you, say 'Look\"\nand then:\u2014\n\"His right thumb and forefinger\nround a circle. The fingers of the\nleft hand flutter beneath the circle\nGUESS AT THI8 ONE\n\"What's it mean?\" he will bellow\nYou give up, of course.\n*' 'Moon Over Miami,' he screams.\n\"You catch on and become a convert. Almost everybody does, for\nyou are limited only by your imagination and your agility as a contortionist. You like this fellow you\ndidn't like, now, and you say to\nhim, 'Look!' and:\u2014\n\"You tap your forehead. You\ngrasp one ear and pretend lo turn\nit vigorously. Out pops your tongue.\n. \" 'What is it?' you \u00bbsk.\n\"The feUow gives up, and in high\ndelight you yell gayly: 'Cash register.'\n\"Juniors all over the five boroughs are coming home from school\nand saying: 'Hey, Ma! Look!'\nThey sweep the right arm in a\nwide circle, snapping fingers at\nevery half of a circle.\n\" 'Broken record,' Junior jubilantly has to explain, and Ma, getting\nthe spirit of the thing\u2014awful contagious, it is\u2014laughs like everything and can't wait for Pa to get\nhome. She's there in the hall as\nsoon as he opens the door; nearly\nbowls him over with a crazy shout\nof T.ook it,' then:\u2014\n\"She stands still, lifting one foot\nafter another, pointing maddeningly\nlhe while at her wristwatch. 'What's\nIt mean?' she demands.\n\"Pa, scared, says for heaven's sake\nlie hasn't any idea.\n\"'The March of Time!' screams\nMa, and she and Junior let themselves go, laughing, but before they\nknow it, Pa has one of his own. His\nlips move, rapidly, silently; he\nstrikes left arm a hefty blow, seems\nto throw the left arm away. What's\nit mean? Disarmament!\"\n*   \u2022   \u2022\nROUND ABOUT\nHere  and  there\u2014Arthur   Oliver\nSaturday night\u2014Walter Duckworth\nwho manipulated a mule pretty well\n\u2014showing the imprint of a mule's\nfoot on his chest\u2014Lewis Johnstone\nin from Salmo\u2014and talking about\nevents of the day\u2014especially the\ntangle between the nations of thc\nworld today\u2014Sid Matheson hiking\nhomeward with a sack loaded with\nspring chicken\u2014All were dead ones\n\u2014Chief of Police Alex Stewar* trying to ride a donkey and hold on to\nhis stiff straw hat at the same time\n\u2014Jock Hawkins of Bonnington discussing fishing, bandsmen and what\nhave you\u2014Davie Richardson asking\nafter my health \u2014 Buck Kinahan\nJust in off the road\u2014Maurice Major\nbeing invited to take part in a\ncricket game\u2014Dan Tattrie taking in\nthe sights\u2014\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nPRIDE OF PLACE\nOverheard at a super-super-cinema-de-luxe, where they lave tiny\npage boys, garbed in elaborate little fancy dresses, who are supposed\nto live up to the very highest cinema-cathedra ideals.\nTwo little pages fell into Bn av-\nguraent the other day, and one\nsaid: \"Yus. an' 'owd yer like to\n'ave a sock in the jaw, eh?\"\nWith that one oi the adult flunkeys turned on them severely: \"You\nforget you are in uniform,\" he said\nsolemnly.\nADVANCE WEATHER BULLETIN\nFor Western and Central Canada,\nembracing British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba and\nOntario.\nTues., Sept. 1\u2014Mild disturbance\nwith showery rains drifts south-\ncast about great lakes of Manitoba;\nnorthwest clear; warm, but turning\ncooler.\nWed., Sept. 2\u2014Some clouds and\nlight rains about southwest and mid\nsouthern sections, but the weather ls\nnow generally clearer and cooler in\nmost of the central provinces.\nThur., Sept. 3\u2014Except about the\nsouthwest portions of central provinces weather now much clearer\nand considerably cooler, as the light\nrain disturbance passes on lo thc\nsoutheast.\nFrl., Sept. 4~This is about central\ndate for a clear, cold spell, temperatures ranging below normal in most\nsections; some clouds in southwest\ncentral regions.\nSat., Sept. 6\u2014A few scattering rain\nclouds in central provinces, but most\nof country clear; cool, but changing\nto slightly warmer.\nSun., Sept. 0\u2014Some disturbance\nwith a few light rains and variable\nwinds in southeast portions of central provinces; cool, but turning\nwarmer.\nTHE DOCTOR\nSAYS\nLOGAN  CLENDENING,  M.D.\nGreece is thc latest country to set up a dictatorship.\nSoon free institutions will be a thing of the past in most\nof the countries of Europe.\nCONTRACT\nBRIDGE\nBy E. V. SHEPARD\n'Teacher of Teachers\"\nNORTH   SHOULD   HAVE   INQUIRED\nSometimes a pair make s considerable gain in a duplicate game,\nby an error of an adversary, as was\nthe case with one pair the other evening, in a 7-table game. My partner. Miss Esther Keech, and I were\nthe lucky pair, playing East and\nWest. The deal is shown below.\n\u2666 AQ7I\n4 J 10 81\na) 10 9 611\n4 K J 10 2\nt} A QUI\n\u2666 K53\n+ A\u00bb\nrV.\ns.\nA864\n\u00ab K J 10 6\n3\n\u2666 AQI\n*K J\n\u2666 95\n\u00ab7Bt\n4964\n4QT482\nBidding went at our table: West.\n1 Heart; East 3 Hearts, calling for\n\"feature showing\"; West 4 Clubs,\nmerely stating lhat I held the Ace\nof the suit; East, 4 Diamonds, also\nto show the Ace, hoping that I\nmight also have the Ace of spades,\nwith sufficient fit of hands to justify at least a small slam contract;\nWest, 4 Hearts, stating that no more\nAces were held. Had East then\nshown the Ace of spades, by bidding\n4 Spades, I would have called 5\nDiamonds, and'we could have sailed\nto 6 Hearts, and made that, as one\nspade trick would have been the\npossible limit of loss, and lhat only\nin case we lost on the single finesse.\nEvery table except our own made\njust 5-odd, and that should have\nbeen the case at our table, except\nfor a mistaken idea of North that\nour side held two suiters\u2014West having clubs and hearts, while East had\ndiamonds and hearts. It looked to\nNorth like an excellent chance to\nsteal two or more tricks in spades,\nso he led his Ace of that suit, followed by a lower spade. That gave us\none trick more than any other East\nand West pair could male, giving\nus 6 match points on the hand, while\nthc six remaining pairs playing a\nsimilar call had lo take only 21c\nmatch poii-ts each.\nOf course, \"feature showing\" or\n\"die bidding\", as it sometimes ls\nCalled, Is so well known and so\nWidely used, and has been for tlie\npast 16 years, dating back tc auction bridge days, that It Is remarkable that a seasoned player failed\nto realize what was taking place\nTo make certain, if in doubt, he had\nonly to ask one of us what our bids\nmeant.\nThe Laws of Contract Bridge,\npages 29 and 30, fully provide for\nsuch  eases.    It  provides that an\nWALKING  18 HEALTHFUL AS\nFORM   OF  EXERCISE\nWalking\u2014merely walking\u2014as a\nform of exercise, has gone out in\nthese modern times, when on any\ncountry lane an automobile is liable\nto whiz around the corner and pass\nover the middle of the road pedestrian like a Juggernaut. The only\nplaces left for the pedestrian are\nthe city streets and the golf courses.\nWalking the city street, however,\nis a good form of exercise. Those\nwho lake educational trips this\nsummer will find that walking the\nstreets of London or Paris, or Boston\nor New York is the best way to see\nthe sights, also best for the health\nof thc sightseer.\nA conscientious pedestrian sightseer in London can cover 16 to 20\nmiles a day, and hardly feel It until\nit is all over.\nThen we have ln. this country\ntwo\u2014no, three\u2014fairs to attend this\nyear\u2014the San Diego and Texas Centennials, and the Great Lakes exposition in Cleveland, and you have\ndiscussing various breeds of cats >\u00b0 w*lk P1\"**to see ,llem*\nand their care\u2014Dave Wade proud\nof the fact his son Johnny has an\nautographed program from Max\nBaer\u2014Chief Angus A. McDonald\nof the Trail fire department spending a few hours in Nelson\u2014Fred\nTruscott was with him\u2014Fred is\njust home from a holiday at Christina lake\u2014Dr. H. H. MacKenzie taking a nasty fall from the back of a\nThe physical culture hygienist\nmakes a great deal out of exactly\nhow you should walk. Personally I\ndo not think there is very much in\nall these strict admonitions. I do not\nbelieve that there is only one right\nway lo walk, any more than I believe there, is any one right way to\nstand. All thc talk about how bad\nposture   presses   on   your   lungs\nWeek Aug. 31 to Sept. 6, 1936, in\ncentral provinces begins with a few\nlight rains and temperatures somewhat above the seasonal normal, yet\nIn general this is a fairly clear week\nwith temperatures slowly declining\nuntil past mid week, when rather\ncolder weather than usual is to be\nexpected. But around last days some\ncloudy and showery conditions come\non, causing temperatures to vary\nconsiderably, or in general to rise\nto somewhere near normal. Only a\nfew scattering rains, carrying less\nthan normal moisture.\nIn these regions the first week\nin September will probably bring\non a decided drop in temperatures,\naccompanied by a few light rains in\nsouthwest and along southern border sections, but in north and northwest of central provinces this cold\nspell might be severe enough to\ncause frosts at night around September 4 to 6, although the general\nforecast Indicates that all throughout this month temperatures should\nrange only a few degrees above or\nbelow normal. Thus, for example,\nthe mean normal temperature for\nWinnipeg is between 50 and 60, and\nthe forecasting would seem to indicate that the mean for most of thc\ndays of this month ought to be confined within that range.\n* Today's\nGarden-Graph\nBy DEAN HALLWAY\nCrspurirjrtt, t\u00bbM,\nCentral Preu Auedtttn, let.\nu\nAUNT HET\nROBERT QU1LLEN\nand distorts your abdominal viscera\nand leads to disease is mostly bunk,\nin my opinion.\nIn fact, a loo rigid insistence on\na certain way of walking is apt to\nlead more to ill health than good.\nBecause if you walk a certain way\nthat teacher says is wrong, you\nusually can't help it, and you are\nconstantly worried for fear you are\ninjuring yourself by your method,\nand hence you don't walk at all.\nWALK REGULARLY\nBetter to walk regularly, even in\ndefiance of all the postural rules,\nthan sit idly by.\nFor comfortable, healthy walking for most people a low-heeled,\nbroad-toed'shoe is essentia], and yet\nthere are women who have become\nused to high heels who are perfectly\nmiserable in low heels. Nor are\nthey doing any harm to themselves\nin walking in high heels.\nThe idea so frequently emphasized by postural hygienists that\nyou should walk with toes straight\nahead is another bugaboo I should\nlike to rout.\nIf you are built so you naturally\ntoe out, go ahead and toe out. It\nwould be tlie most unhealthy thing\nin the world for you to toe In.\nIf you will glance around any\ngolf course you will find plenty\nof players who are having a healthy\nand happy time in spite of the fact\nthat they toe out when they walk.\nThe easiest walk for long\nstretches, and probably the one\nthat gels most exercise because it\ngoes with more speed, is the infantry walk\u2014chin up, a regular long\nstride from the ball of one foot to\nthe heel of the other, with the arms\nswinging through a long arc in\nrhythmic unison to the stride. As\nthe English drill sergeant says: \"Let\nthe 'and 'ang like a dead 'and.\"\nQUE8TIONS FROM READER8\nW. D.: \"What causes leg pains,\ntired feeling, and weakness about\nthe knees?\"\nAnswer: Nervousness in 90 per\ncent of cases. Sometimes changes\nin the leg arteries. Sometimes muscular rheumatsim.\nw\npiucueD By\n\u2022SWEARS\nfi$l\ncOrot-JSLAWT\nVldn-bHW\nKNIFE .-MAKE-\nCUT ABOVE\njoint\n* \u2014>\u25a0\n<\u00a3\nRIGHT AND WRONG WAY\nTO CUT DAHLIAS\nWhile most flowers arc cut in\nthe bud stage or before they have\nreached full bloom, this is not true\nof dahlias, for this flower will last\nlonger if it is cut when fully opened\nDahlias should be cut early in the\n\"Sandy says he enjoys a radio sermon better because he dont have to\ndress up for it, but that ain't the\nreason. A radio don't have any\ncollection plate.\"\nmorning or in the evening, but\nnever during the heat of the day.\nThe stems being hollow crush\neasily, and therefore should be cut\nonly with a sharp knife or shears.\nIf cut with ordinary scissors or a\ndull knife, the pithy stem becomes\npinched, as shown in Fig. 1 of the\nabove Garden-Graph. This hampers the shoot in taking in water.\nThe right way to cut a dahlia stalk\nls shown in Fig. 2. Cut on a slant\nwith a sharp knife or sheers. This\nresults in more area for contact\nwith the water, thus permitting the\ncells to absorb a larger quantity\nof water, with the result that the\nflower will last longer.\nCOAL HEAT COSTS IES5 '\nWe Have a Coal lor Every\nHeating Plant!\nSave money by buying a coal that li mott suitable for your\nparticular type of heating plant. We have juit thit coal In\nour bins.\nGait Lump - Gait Nut\nAcme Kleenburn\nNewcastle Lump and\nStocker Coal\nThree Hills Lump\nCrows Nest Lump\nCrows Nest Egg\nCrows Nest Stocker Coal\nCrows Nest Blacksmith\nCoal\nCanmore Briquettes\nPetroleum Coke\nWest Transfer Co.\nPHONE 33\nEstablished 1899\nunusual convention should be explained to opponents fully. It also\nprovides that any player may inquire thc meaning of any convention that is strange to him. If desired, tlie one using the strange convention may be asked to leave tlie\ntable, while his partner states bis\ninterpretation of the convention's\nmeaning. North should have invoked this rule when in doubt.\n|   10 YEARS AGO   I\nI From Nelson Dally News Files!\n$ *\n(August 31.1926)\nRev. 1. H. Wright of Trinity United church, and Mrs. Wright, were\nthc recipients last night, at a reception in their honor in the church\nparlors of a silver tea set. J. H. D,\nBenson read thc presentation address, on behalf of tlie congregation, and Mrs. A. W. Nagle made the\npresentation. Mr. and Mrs, Wright\nleave tonight for Vancouver, where\nMr. Wright will take charge of\nRiverview church.\nRev. C. H. Shortt has left for his\nhome in Vancouver after conducting services in St. Saviour's church\nfor two months.\n\u2022 *   *\nMiss Kathleen Irving, who was a\npatient in Kootenay Lake Qeneral\nhospital for a few days, has sufficiently recovered from injuries received in a motor accident to return\nto her home.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. R. C. St. Clair and\nyoung daughter left August 29 for\nVictoria to reside. Mr. St. Clair has\nbeen transferred there.\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nBy Ceo. McManui\nOH-ITS SO HOT IH\nTHE CITY-HE DECIDED TD60 TO\nTHE ELITE BEACH\nCUJS-NOUKNOW,\nHE 15 A DIRECTOR\nIN THAT EXCUJSNE\nCLUB-\nTILUE THE TOILER\nSy Rust WeitovM\n|   20 YEARS AGO   I\nI From Nelson Dally News Files I\n0         <S>\n(August 31,1916)\nFrom Spokane lo Nelson in 11\nhours and 18 minutes was the good\ntime made by Arthur Lakes, Jr., and\nparty by motor yesterday. In the\nparty were Miss Flossie Johnstone,\nMrs. N. F. Shaw and F. H. Skecls.\nThe time allows for stops. The car\nwas a new one.\n,     9     ,\nBorn, to Mr. and Mrs. Townsend,\n317 Robson street, a daughter.\n\u2022   *   .\nPte. T. H. McAllisler of the 198th\nbattalion, formerly of the teaching\nstaff of the Nelson public school,\nis spending his leave of absence\nfrom Camp Hughes In Nelson. He\nwill teach school today at Taghum,\nas a substitute for Miss Annable,\nwho is not well.\nW. H. Leno, who has for the past\nfive years been employed in the Canadian Pacific Railway company's\nstores department In Nelson, has enlisted with the 6th field company\nCanadian engineers and will leave\ntomorrow fnr North Vancouver to\njoin thc unit.   ,\u25a0\u25a0\u2014\nSMELL, THAT\nMAKES \\1 CttfyS\ni been on this\n1 Blasted iS*-and,\nOH. ME\n\u2014^\u2014___\n ~\niimm\u00bbm< .,   . . wtwmm\n^mm^^mmim nm-m i lhui. .\u00bb.\n1&5\nPOLOISTS ABROAD\nAction photo from  Hurllngham, England, during United\nStatei-Brltlih polo match, won by United Statei.\nii   PAGE FIVE\n750,000 SWELTER IN HEAT AS\nENGLISH SOCCER PUY STARTS\nThe Wednesday, Derby, Charlton, Aston Villa\nManchester and Arsenal All Win\nLONDON, Aug. 30 (CP Cable) .\u2014\nSizzling heat tailed to dampen the\nurdor of soccer enthusiasts and 750,-\n000 sweltering spectators watched\nthe 44 matches that marked the\nopening of the English football season Saturday. With the thermometer\nregistering 80 degrees in the shade\npolice and club officials were kept\nbusy with fainting cases.\nSeemingly unaffected by the intense heat, the perspiring players\nmaintained a high standard of play\nand games were generally fast and\nexciting despite hard grounds that\nmade it extremely difficult to control the ball.\nChief interest lay in Aston Villa's\nfirst appearance in the second division.   Never before in the club's\nlong history has the team appeared\noutside the premier league and the\ngalaxy of stars that failed to avert\nrelegation at the end of last season\ndrew a capacity crowd of 30,080, to\nSwansea Town's limited enclosure.\nThe Villanj won a fast game 2-1.\nBlackburn Rovers, who also left\nthe first division for the first time\nwith Aston Villa, were held to a 1-1\ndraw at Bury.\nSunderland, champion of the\nleague last aeason, proved no match\nfor The Wednesday at Sheffield,\nlosing 2-0.\nCharlton Athletic and Manchester\nUnited, promoted to the first division, made an impressive debut.\nPrior's goal gave Charlton a fine\nvictory. The Mancunians, playing\nat home before 45,000 spectators,\nheld Wolverhampton Wanderers to\na 1-1 draw. Bamford opened the\ncount for the home team and Ashall\nreplied for the Wolves.\nDerby County set a terrific pace\nagainst West Bromwlch Albion. Napier netted after eight minutes and\nBowers and Stockhill made it 3-0\nbefore half time. Play slowed down\nlater and Richardson reduced the\nlead three minutes from the end.\nForty-five thousand saw Arsenal\ndefeat Everton 3-2 at Highbury. In\na superb first half James tallied for\nthe Gunners and Dean equalized\nsoon after. Sparkling forward play\nfeatured the second 45 minutes, both\ngoalkeepers, being severely tested.\nHapgood and Bowden put Arsenal\nfurther ahead, Stevenson getting another for the toffee-makers.\nGlanls Five Full\nGames Head\n\u25a0-\"\u201e \u25a0>\u2022\u25a0\nGRIP\nGUTTA PERCHA\nWholesale Distributors\nWOOD,\nVALLANCE\nHardware Co., Ltd.\nNelson, B.C.\nChicago Cubs Drop to\nThird Place\nMotor\nTune-Up\nThat\nSatisfies\nHendricks,\nWhaley it*\n\"Satisfaction Is Our Aim\"\nSale*  jLfrSfc'M Service\nPhone 43 Josephine St.\nCHICAC-O, Aug. 30 (AP) .-Riding\non Carl Hubbell's talented left arm,\nand little Mel Ott's bat, New York\nGiants whipped Chicago Cubs in\nboth games ot their \"crucial\" double-\nheader today, 6-1 and 8-6, to shove\nthe 1935 champions back into third\nplace in the National league before\nthe biggest crowd of the home sea-\ncon, 45,401.\nThe triumphs, the first one Hub-\nbell's 20th victory of the soason and\nhis 10th in succession, and the second a story-book affair, won at the\nlast minute by Ott's 28th home run\not the campaign with two men on,\nsent the Giants five full games\nahead of the Cubs.\nFirst game:\nNew York 020 001 012- 6 12   2\nChicago  000 000 001- 1   7   0\nHubbell and Mancuso; Lee, Bryant and Hartnett\nSecond game:\nNew York 020 001 203- 8 15   2\nChicago   201 111 000 6 Jl   1\nSchumacher, Gumbert, Coffman\nand Mancuso; French and Hartnett.\nST. LOUIS SLIPS\nST. LOUIS, Aug. 30 (AP).-St,\nLouis divided a doubleheader with\nBrooklyn today ond lost ground to\nNew York Giants in the National\nleague race.\nAfter the Cards won the first 6-3,\na misjudged fly by Chick Fullls in\nthe 13th inning of thc second allowed George Watkins' blow to go lor\nthree bases and drive in Buddy\nHassett with tho needed run to give\nthe Dodgers a 3-2 victory.\nFirst game:\nBrooklyn 000 000 300- 5  7  0\nSt. Louis 010 320 OOx- 6 10   1\nBrandt, Baker and Phelps; J. Dean\nand Ogrodowski.\nSecond game:\nBrooklyn   001 000 100 000 1\u20143 12 2\nSt. Louis .. 100 000 100 000 0-2 7 2\nMungo and Berres; Winford and\nDavis.\nPIRATES TAKE TWO\nPITTSBURGH, Aug. 30 (AP).-\nThe Pirates won both games of a\ndoubleheader from Boston Bees today before a sparse crowd of 8000,\ntaking the first 4-2 and the second\n3-1.\nFirst game:\nBoston       000 100 001- 2   8   1\nPittsburgh      200 001 lOx- 4 11   0\nChaplin and Lopez; Swift and\n1'addci).\nSecond game:\nBoston   010 000 000- 1   7   2\nPittsburgh  ... 000 300 OOx\u2014 3   8   1\nSmith, Reh and Mueller; Blanton\nrC0STUElf\nIILOER\n<\u00a3 PLAIN OR\n'J\u00b0*\u00b0u~7_~__  C\u00b0RK tip\nSviotu U FRESH' <fiul1''\nBRITISH\nCONSOLS\nRowing - Tennis - Soccer - Baseball - Boxing - Wrestling\nmm\ntea\nLacrosse - Golf - Track - Swimming - Horse Racing - Soft Ball\n-I5*-\"\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C-MONDAY MORNINO. AUGUST 31. 1938\n-PAGE FIVE\nThey're Setting the Pace in West Kootenay Boxla\n-**\u25a0   ' *'  '''*11F \u25a0  \u25a0   -' %     \u2022 'soasSMO-   ' \u25a0  \u25a0-;\u25a0.\n4* -'V7.\nCANVAS\nBoats tn the Hearst regatta on San Francisco bay spread canvas at\nthey start race for trophies\nFIVE TEAMS BUNCHED AT TOP IN\nTHE SCOTTISH FOOTBALL LEAGUE\nAberdeen, Rangers and Motherwell Are Still\nUnbeaten; Hearts and Celtic Pressing\nTRAIL-NELSON\nBOXLA SLATED\nHERE TONIGHT\nNelson Not to Permit\nUnregistered Men\nto Play\nTrail lacrosse team comes to Nelson tonight to tangle with the lake\ncity squad at the Civic Centre arena\nin the first game of the extended\nSeries ot the West Kootenay boxla\nloop. The extended schedule as\ngiven to Murray Clark, Nelson manager in a telephone conversation\nwith' league officials at Trail, gives\nNelson two more home games\u2014tonight against Trail and September\n8 against Rossland.\nManager Clark has informed the\nTrail club that the Nelson club\nwould not agree to either Trail or\nRossland using players who were\nnot properly registered. Some time\nago the players of all three league\nteams were registered with the B.\nC. association.\nThe extended schedule received\nby the Nelson manager follows:\nAugust 31\u2014Trail at Nelson.\nSeptember 2\u2014Nelson at Rossland.\nSeptember 4\u2014Rossland at Trail.\nSeptember 7\u2014Trail at Rossland.\nSeptember 9\u2014Rossland at Nelson.\nSeptember 11\u2014Nelson at Trail.\nResults\n\u2014is \u00a9\t\nSaturday\nNATIONAL\nNew York 4, Pittsburgh 7.\nPhiladelphia 0, St. Louis 4.\nBoston 6, Chicago 4.\nBrooklyn 2, Cincinnati 12.\nAMERICAN\nDetroit 4, New York 6.\nCleveland 13-3, Philadelphia 2-5.\nChicago 5, Washington 4.\nPACIFIC COAST\nSacramento 2, Missions 5.\nOakland 5, San Diego 7.\nINTERNATIONAL\nMontreal 3-4, Toronto 8-0.\nBuffalo 6, Rochester 7.\nASSOCIATION\nIndianapolis 5, Columbus 8.\nMilwaukee 5, SL Paul 6.\nKansas City 5, Minneapolis 10.\nLouisville 5-2, Toledo 9-1.\nSunday\nINTERNATIONAL\nBuffalo 3-10, Rochester 6-6.\nSyracuse 3-1, Albany 0-2.\nNewark 4-6, Baltimore 3-2.\nToronto 2-2, Montreal 4-5.\nPACIFIC COA8T\nSacramento 14-0, Missions 8-2.\nSan Francisco 5-10, Portland 6-3.\nOakland 9-4, San Diego 1-3.\nLos Angeles 7-3, Seattle 6-4.\nASSOCIATION\nLouisville 8-3, Toledo 7-5.\nIndianapolis  14-3, Columbus 6-0,\nKansas Cily 3-2, Minneapolis 1-7.\nMilwaukee 5-6, St. Paul 7-7.\nand Todd.\nDOUBLE WIN FOR REDS\nCINCINNATI, Aug. 30 (AP). -\nEighth inning rallies by Cincinnati\nReds sent them to a double victory\nover Philadelphia today by scores\nof 6-8 and 4-3,\nFirst game:\nPhiladelphia - 000 030 00O- 3 10  3\nCincinnati       110 000 13x\u2014 6 12   i\nBowman and Grace; Derringer\nand Lombardi, Campbell.\nSecond game:\nPhiladelphia .. 000 000 300- 3   6   0\nCincinnati       010 001 02x- 4 II   1\nPasseau. Kowalik and Atwood;\nHallahan, Davis and Campbell.\nLeading the second half of the West Kootenay\nLacrosse league by a wide margin, the Nelson club\nis all set to turn on the pressure against Trail\ntonight to retain the second-half title they figured\nwas theirs until the schedule was extended. The\nfirst game ot the extended schedule is billed for\nthe civic centre arena tonight, and while Nelson has\nso far in the second half taken the measure of the\nsmelter city squad, Trail's victory over Rossland\nFriday night with its team back at full strength\nhas interrupted the stride of the dopesters. Pictured\nabove is the Nelson team, back row, left to right, Wil-\nlian Freno, assistant coach and referee; Glen Vickers, \"Red\" Carr, George Gellnai, Leo Atwell, Stanley Horswill, Gordon Fleet, William Vance, Max\nDesBrisay and Murray Clark, manager and coach.\nFront row: Douglas Hall, trainer, Dave Gibbons,\nPete Bonneville, Stew Patterson, Jackie Bishop,\nGus Wick and Bill Townsend.\u2014Photo by Geo. A.\nMeeres.\nYANKEES ABOUT\n(INCH PENNANT\nBeat Chicago Twice\nto Go 16 Games\nAhead\nNEW YORK Aug. 30 (AP)\u2014The\nYankees all but sewed up the American league pennant today as they\ndowned Chicago White Sox in both\nends of a doubleheader to shoot 16\nfull gamei in front of the rest of the\nloop.\nBump Hadley, the league's leading pitcher, won his 12th game of\nthe season in the opener as the\nYanks took an 8-1 decision. Monte\nPearson won his I7th in thc nightcap by a 4-1 margin, although boUi\nhe and Vernon Kennedy pitched\nthree-hit ball.\nFirst game:\nChicago     1   ?   1\nNew York    8 16   1\nLyons and Sewell; Hadley and\nDickey.\nSecond game:\nChicago     13   1\nNew York   *  3  1\nKennedy, Slratton and Sewell;\nPearson and Glenn.\nRED SOX WIN TWO\nBOSTON, Aug. 30 (AP)-The Red\nSox gave Bob Feller, Cleveland 17-\nyear-old rookie strikeout star, a\nlusty cuffing today while sweeping\na doubleheader with tho Indians\nbefore a crowd of 21,000.\nWes Ferrell chalked up his 17th\nvictory of the season when the Red\nsockers took the first game 3-2, and\nRube Walberg held the Indians to\nthree hits while his mates won the\nsecond 5-1.\nFirst game:\nCleveland     2   7   2\nBoston     3  >  2\nHildebrand and Sullivan; W. Ferrell and R. Ferrell.\nSecond game:\nCleveland     1   3   1\nBoston     5   8   0\nFeller, Lee, Hudlin and George;\nWalberg and Berg.\nTIGER8 HELD EVEN\nPHILADELPHIA, Aug. 30 CAP)-\nThe Athletics and Detroit Tigers divided a doubleheader today, the\nMacks winning the first game 5-4 in\n12 innings and Detroit taking the\nsecond 3-2.\nFirst game:\nDetroit     4   8   2\nPhiladelphia      5 15   1\nAuker and Myatt; Fink and Hayes.\nSecond game:\nDetroit       3   7   0\nPhiladelphia  ..       2   6   2\nBridges and Hayworth; Liscnbee\nand Hayes.\nWASHINGTON WINS TWO\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 30 (AP)-\nBen Chapman's big bat brought\nWashington victory today in both\nends of a doubleheader with. St.\nLouis. The Senators won the tot\n5-4 and took the nightcap 7-4.\nIn each game Chapman drove in\nthc winning run. Four-base blows\nwere slugged out by Harlan Clift of\nthe Browns in the first game and\nRalph Kress of Washington in the\nnightcap.\nSt. Louis    4 12   1\nWashington     5 11   1\nAndrews and Giuliani; Cascarella,\nAppleton and Millies.\nSecond game:\nSt. Louis     4   8   2\nWashington        7   8   1\nJackuckL Thomas and Giuliani;\nNewsom aid Millies.\nGOLF\nby\nALIX MORRISON\nPitch-and-putt courses arc still\npopular. At least the one operated\nby the park commission at Jones\nBeach, L.I., is, fat* on July 4, 426\npeople played over the short 18.\nAverage attendance for a Saturday\nor Sunday is 350 players..\nThe New York commission has\ndone many fine things like this for\ngolfers in the state.\nAt Jones Beach you can rent a\nmashie, putter, ball and a pair of\nsoft-soled shoes for 50 cents per\nround. All the holes arc par three's,\nthe longest being 60 yards.\nThere are water braids and sand\ntraps to keep you from Just rolling\nthe ball around. In fact, some of\nthc tee shots call for plenty of skill\nin Uie way ot lofting the ball and\ngiving it enough backspin to hold\nthe small greens.\nMen, women, children, players of\nall ages enjoy this course. It isn't\nwhat used to be called miniature\ngolf, this is a regular course en a\nsmall scale and it helps your game\nno end.\nHORTON WINNER\nOF HcBRIDE CUP\nCarries Game to the\n19th Hole Against\nFotheringham\nR. E. Horton won the McBride\ncup at the course of the Nelson\nGolf & Country clnb on Sunday. He\nwon from W. Fotheringham and\nthe battle was carried to the 19th\nhole before it was decided. Charles\nH. Stark won from Paul Lincoln\nin the finals of the Consolation\nflight of the McBride cup.\nA feature of the Horton-Fother-\ningham match was the comeback\nmade by Mr. Horton. He was dormie\nthree at the seventh tee on the second round and then he won every\nhole to take the match to the 19th\nwhere he won.\nIn his match with Mr. Lincoln, Mr.\nStark played steady golf never\nleaving an opening.\nRugby League\nLONDON, Aug. 30 (CP Cable).-\nOpening games In the English rugby\nleague Saturday resulted as follows:\nBarrow 23; Halifax 2.\nBramley 16; Streatham and Mlt-\ncham 25.\nBroughton Rapgers 10; Warrington 7.\nDrewsbury 4; Bradford Northern 7.\nFeatherstone 43; Newcastle 20.\nHuddersfield 19; Hull 5.\nHull-Kingston 10; Leeds 22.\nHunslet 5; Castlcford 2.\nKeighley 11; Wakefield Trinity 25.\nRochdale Hornets 11; Leigh 5.\nSt. Helens Rees 16; Salford 7.\nSwinton 14; Batlcy 11.\nWidnes 28; St. Helens 0.\nWigan 17; Oldham 11.\nYork 16; Liverpool Stanley B.\nAllan Cup Is on\nDisplay at Trail\nTRAIL, B.C., Aug. JO.^The famous Allan cup, property this season ot the Kimberley Dynamiters,\nIs in Trail. It is on display ln the\nwindows of the Company store together with a picture of the popular\nDynamiters and a chart Bhowing the\ntrail of the Allan cup.\nThc historic old hockey mug was\nbrought to Trail through the efforts\nof Lloyd Crowe who until last season was for a number of yeais\npresident of the Kimberley Dynamiters Hockey club.\n3c\\ttir\\$\ncoders\n\u2014\u2014\u2014\u00a9\u2014.\nErnie Lombardi, Cincinnati Red'l\ncatcher, climaxed a month-long batting drive yesterday by getting two\nhits In four times at bat to take over\nthird place in thc National league\nhitting race.\nThe American league trio bunched up, as Lou Gehrig of the Yankees, in the number two spot, and\nLuke Appling of the White Sox,\nthird, picked up ground on Earl\nAverill of the Indians.\nThe standings (three leading hitters in each league):\nG AB R H Pet\nAverill, Indians 126 511 103 193 ,3V\nGehrig, Yanks 128 480 145 181 .377\nAppling, W. S. 114 435 90 161 .370\nMedwick, Cards 127 525 93 194 .370\nP. Waner, Pir. 121 478 80 183 .362\nLombardi, Reds 98 305   33 109 .358\nIRISH SOCCER\nBELFAST, Aug. 30 (CP Cable)\u2014\nIrish football league games played\nSaturday resulted as follows:\nGlentoran 4, Derry City 5.\nLinfield 2, Cllftonville 0.\nLame 2, Distillery 1.\nArds 6, Ballymena 1.\nPortadown I, Celtic 1.\nColcrainc 1, Glenavon 1.\nNewry Town 5, Bangor 1.\nBOXINO TRAINER DIES\nNANAIMO, B.C., Aug. 30 (CP)-\nPeter Wallace Morrison, 61, veteran\nof the Yukon gold rush of '98 but\nbelter known along thc Pacific\ncoast as a boxing and wrestling\ntrainer, died today at the home of\nbis brother, Arthur, city clerk at\nLadysmith districts Of Vancbuver\nIsland for the past 20 yean.\nCALGARY BRONKS WIN\nCALGARY, Aug. 30 (CP)-Flrst\nyear men, just up from thc junior\nranks, led Calgary Bronks to a 25-0\nwin over Lethbridge Lancers in an\nAlberta rugby football league game\nhere Saturday. Of four touchdowns\nfor Carl Cronin's squad the youngsters scored three.\nGLASGOW, Aug. 30 (CP Cable)-\nFive teams are setting a fast pace\nin the Scottish Football league this\nseason and only two points divide\nthem. Saturday's games saw Aberdeen, Rangers and Motherwell,\nmaintain their unbeaten records to\nshare top place while Hearts kept\nin step with a victory and Celtic\nstraddled Hamilton Academicals to\ntake fifth place in the table.\nCeltic played Albion Rovers at\nCoatbridge and won 3-1 but the\nhome team put up a terrific struggle. Fagcn played a hero's part at\ncentre forward against the Rovers\nrobust defence and netted the goal\nthat gave tho champions the lead at\nhalftime. Dudley equalized after\nthe cross-over but Crum put his\nteam ahead. The Celts made cure of\nvictory when Patterson converted a\nremarkable penalty kick. Thc ball\nnil one post and rebounded to thc\nother before entering the nel.\nArmstrong notched two of Aberdeen's four  goals by  which the\nDons defeated Falkirk. Tbe others\nwere scored by Beynon and Strauss.\nRangers defeated Hibernians by a\nsimilar count. McPhail and Smith\nput the Scottish cup-holders two up\nat half-time. In the second half the\nRangers had much the better of tha\nexchanges, Main and Smith putting\nthem four up,\nMotherwell had a tougher battle.\nagainst St. Johnstone at Mulrton\nPark but ran out winner 3-1. The\nhome team had hard luck ln losing\nBeattie, its centre-forward, through\ninjury. He was hurt in the closing\nminutes of the game. McFadyen got\ntwo of Motherwell's goals and Bremner the other. Nicholson sent in the\nSaints'  lone counter.\nThe day's surprises wera provided by Arbroath and Dunfermline. Arbroath upset the strong\nHamilton Academicals 4-1 at Hamilton and Dunfermline won Its\nfirst victory of the taaaon by\ndowning Quean's Park at Hampden Park 2-0.\nHoiive.Runs\n --\u00a9-A*\u2014\nBy Tha Auoclated Pren\nYesterday's homers: Cavarretta,\nCubs, 2; Ott, Moore, Lleber, Giants;\nBrubaker, Pirates; Thompson, Bees;\nCamilli, Phillies; J. Martin, Cardinals; Dickey, Selkirk, Yankees;\nJohnson, Athletics; Kress, Senators;\nClift, Browns, one each.\nThe leaders: Gehrig, Yankees, 42;\nTrosky, Indians, 36; Foxx, Red Sox,\n36; Ott, Giants, 28; Di-Magglo, Yankees, 24; Camilli, Phillies, 22; Klein,\nPhillies, 22; Averill, Indians, 22;\nBerger, Bees, 22; Goslin, Tigers, 22.\nLeague totals: American 653; National 518. Total 1171.\nGRANVILLE WINS\nAT SARATOGA\nSARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y., Aug.\n30 (AP).\u2014Granville, three-year-old\nson of Gallant Fox, has carved another notch in the turf trail biased\nby his famous daddy six years ago.\nHe soundly whipped the great Discovery In the 57th running of the\nSaratoga cup Saturday.\nMuch as the Fox won the distance\nclassic in 1930, so did Granville, flying William Woodward's silks, take\nthe measure of the handicap king\nfrom Alfred Gwynne Vanderbilt'!\nstable, in the gruelling mile and\nthree-quarters test.\nSHOUTING FROM\nTHE HOUSETOPS\nNothing but Values!\nA DECIDED\nAND\nDECISIVE\nDRIVE\nTO CLEAR OUT\nTHESE GOODS!\nQuantities \u00bbn limited. We urge you to\nshop early! Unquestionably! Here lithe\nhome of Low Prices\nand Quality Coods.\nAttend to what we\nsay and learn to your\nadvantage by buying\nhere today.\nBOYS' HEAVY\nWHIPCORD BREECHES\nDouble stitched. Reinforced at the points of\nwear in heavy whipcord\ncloth. Siies to 16 years,\nSALE,\nPER PAIR\n$1.49\nPyjamas\nMen's Fine Quality Broadcloth PYJAMAS. Roomily\ntailored to assure a restful sleep. In stripes or\nplain. All sixes. (JJI OQ\nNOW, EACH\nBoys' newest honey comb\nAll Wool SWEATERS \u2014\nCrew neck. Sixes to 34.\nSALE,\nPER PAIR .\n98c\nMen's  Latest  Telescope\nCrown   FELT   HATS   in\ngreys  and  fawns.   New\ncord band. SALE    QO\nPRICE, EACH ... *\"5C\nCHARLES MORRIS1\nBIG     CAT V    BAKER\nFIRST     9A-LlJEl    STREET\n\u25a0H\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Covernment of British Columbia.\n \u2014H\u00a3d^itt\n\u2014\u2014___\u25a0,\nm\u2014\n \u00bbAGE SIX\nt:tl rCH DM'.*.* MEW, MRtC\", e.G^-MOr*?\".* *10Rr\u00abNG, AUGUST SI. 193.\nIkfAt* t\\ BARGAIN FORYOU *v* rt. CLASSIFIEDS; JWrt-W\nMOORE TAKES\nAGGREGATE IN\nTRAIL SHOOT\nRosslander High in B\nClass; Nelson Men\nShoot Off C\nMOORE DEFEATS\nDR. LEONARD RUN\n\u25a0' TRAIL, B.C., Aug. 30-Alex Moore\nof Tadanac copped tlie Class A.\nhigh aggregate of the Trail Trap and\nSkeet club's first tournament under affiliation with tlie Canadian\nAmateur Trap association and held\nop the club's field here Sunday. E.\nNesbitt, Rossland. captured high\naggregate in Class B while Murray\n. Clark and George Benwell, both of\nNelson, tied for high aggregate in\nClass C, Benwell winning in thc\nefioot-off.\n' \u2022 Dr. W. Leonard and A. Moore\n\"Wth of Trail, tied for high run with\n19 birds, Moore winning in the\nshoot-off to take President Archie\nMacdonald's cup. Low run went to\nthe president.\n- Weather was ideal when the tourney got under way to a fine start\nat 9 a.m., and conditions remained\nfavorable throughout the day. Every\n\u2022vent was run off in rapid-fire succession and there was barely time\nto complete the shoot-offs before\ndusk. There were 40 participants in\nthe tournament and all were in accord in acclaiming it a most successful one.\n' The results follow:\n' Jack rabbit, 10 targets\u2014H. Wade,\nHossland, H. Swedberg, Trail, Dr. W.\nLeonard, Trail, C. D. Blackwood,\nKelson, tied for first, eight targets,\nprize divided; A. Moore, Trail, H.\nB. Horton, Nelson, James .Robertson,\nRossland, Frank Thomas, tied for\naecond, seven targets; R. G. Boyle,\nRossland, E. W. Hazlewood, Trail.\n3. Tonelli, Trail, and R. Benthum,\nVancouver, tied for third, six bird*'.\nTrap, 15 birds:\nClass A\u2014A. Moore, Tadanac, first,\n(14); a Swedberg, Trail, Dr. W.\nLeonard, Trail and H. Wade, Rossland, tied for second (12). In the\nshoot-off for second Dr. Leonard\n-Was second and H. Wade third.\nClass B\u2014H. B. Horton, Nelson,\nlirst (14); C. D. Blackwood, Nelson,\nlecond (13); Fred Lund, Rossland,\nI. Kull, Nelson and E. Nesbitt, Rossland, tied for third (11). In the shoot-\noff Nesbitt took third place.\nClass C\u2014Arnold Lauriente, Trail,\nlirst (9), J. Tonelli, Trail and J.\nMcLean, Nelson, tied for second. Tonelli defaulted second place to McLean, automatically receiving third.\nTrap, 25 birds'.\nClass A\u2014Dr. W. Leonard, Trail,\nfirst (24), A. Moore, Tadanac, second\n(23), H. Swedberg, Trail, third (20).\nClass B\u2014C. R. Nesbitt, Rossland,\nlirst (22); E. Nesbitt. Rossland, second (221; C. D. Blackwood, Nelson,\nthird (21).\nClass C\u2014Murray Clark, Nelson,\nfirst (15); George Benwell. Nelson,\nsecond (12); Johnny McLean, Nelson, third (10).\nTrap. 25-bird handicap 116 to 20\nyards):\nE. Nesbitt, Rossland (18 yards),\nlirst (24); H. Wade, Rossland (19\nyards), second (23); H. B. Horton,\nNelson  (18 yards), third  (21); H.\nSwedberg, Trail (19 yards), lourth\n(20).\nTeam shoot, 125 birds:\nR. G. Boyle, C. Butcher, C. Michaely, E. Nesbitt and H. Wade, Rossland, first (93); A. Moore, H. Swedberg, A. Macdonald, F. Thomas and\nDr. W. Leonard, Trail, second (86);\nLaird, C. D. Blackwood, Fred\nWaters, and Walter Duckworth, Nelson, third (82).\nTrap doubles:\nH. B. Horton, Nelson, first; Roy\nStephens, Rossland, second; Hank\nSwedberg, Trail, and C. Butcher,\nRossland, third; Dr. W. Leonard,\nTrail, fourth.\nSkeet:\nC. Butcher, Rossland, first; D.\nW. Leonard, Trail, second; Walter\nDuckworth, Nelson, third.\nLadies' trap, 15 birds:\nMrs. W. Leonard, Trail, and Miss\nToots Houston, Nelson, tied for first\nplace with five birds, Mrs. Leonard\nwinning first in thc shoot-off; Miss\nLena Howe, Nelson, third.\nHALEYS UKELY\nPUT ON TRACK\nDUEL, NELSON\nCranbrook, Trail Men\nHave Argument\nto Settle\nove isrit Importan\n-ST Louise Jerrold\n*gijwfffcaiA___>_fcwe____w_Mffig__h\nsjummum\n\u25a0*~'itt?^\u00a3?Xl\u00a3\u00a3G&&\n\u00ab\u00abS\u00bbM\u00ab$SSWWW\u00bbMWS&SSSSS33a\u00bb3S333S3S*,\nGolfers Qualify\nfor Labor Day\nBaffles, Nelson\nI Numerous Nelson golfers spent\nI Sunday qualifying for the Labor\nday tournaments, the Leith cup for\nI competition among the men players\nand the Gosnell cup up for ladies'\nplay.\nThere are yet three days in which\ngolfers may qualify.\nThe following is a list of qualifiers\nto date:\nH. W. Seamon 88; B. Townshend\n80, James Allan 72; E. G. Chapman\n89; Vic Owen 87; C. G. Hogarth 100:\nJ. D. Kerr 80; W. W. Ferguson 101;\nW. J. Waters 104; O. G. Gallaher\n101; Gordon Roynon 85; B. Marley\n91; Ken McBride 86; Danny Stack\n71; H. Lakes 80; W. R. Dunwoody\n83; Charles H. Stark 75; Dr. T. H.\nBourque 76; R. E. Horton 99; L. A.\nMcPhail 81; Robert Watson 72.\nCubs Win Opening\nPlayoff Trail\nTRAIL, B.C., Aug. 30. \u2014 Curly's\nKootenay Cubs, champions of the\nfirst half of the Trail District Softball league, chalked up their first\nwin in the second half playoffs when\nthey defeated Tonelli's Aces 6-0 in\nthe first of a two-out-of-three series\nat Victoria park Sunday.\nCubs played an excellent game in\nthe field, a double play being pulled\noff by Angerelli and E\u00bbne, catching\na man going home and putting one\n! out at first. Three-base hits were\npoled out by Lund of the Aces and\nDame and Nello Angerelli uf the\nCubs. McNiven snagged a two-\nbagger for Aces while Martin. M.\nAngerelli and Matovich got doubles\nfor the Cubs, Matovich being credited with two of them.\nNelson is going to have one of\ntlie finest Labor Day track meets\nsince the Highland Games were instituted in this city, if entries continue to come in as they have to\ndate. Cranbrook will send four athletes to Nelson; Trail stars have\nassured officials of the games that\nthey will be on hand; Nelson track\nand field men have been training\nseriously for thc sports; and Kini-\nberly entries arc expected daily.\nTrack followers here are anticipating a duel between the Haleys\nof Trail and Cranbrook. At Fernie\ntins spring Maurice Haley of Cranbrook beat Pat and Paul Haley of\n'.(rail in the 100 yards and Paul in\ntlie 220. The 100 yards was pro-\nleslcd, Trail officials claiming an\nunfair start, but the result stood\nand Pet challenged Maurice to a\nspecial race at the conclusion of the\nmeet, Maurice was willing, but both\nwere too tired when thc time came\nand they did not run again. Thc\narugment may therefore be settled\nin Nelson.\nALMOST A RECORD\nCranbrook is also sending to Nelson Ed Wood, thc lad wno pole\nvaulted 11 feet to break a tie, but\nwho could not be credited with\nbreaking thc mark Art Forrest ot\n'.rail set some years ago because he\nhad failed to make 10 feet 8 inches.\nWhen two vaullers failed at tins\nheight the bar was raised instead\nof being dropped.\nMurray Wheaton, winner of the\nhalf and mile runs at Fernie ana\none of tne smoothest distance men\nin the interior, is thc third Cranbrook entrant.\nThe fourth Cranbrook entrant is\nMyrtle Gummer, the lass who, at\nFernie, broke the girls' high jump\nrecord set by Ruoy Andrews of\nKimberley, later Canadian junior\ntitleholder, and estaohshed a new\nKootenay girls' mark of four feet,\n10 inches.\nWood is entered for thc 100 yards;\nHaley for the 100 and 200 yards;\nand Wheaton for the 880, mile and\nthree-mile runs. All three are also\nentered for the relay, hoping to\npick up a fourth to make their team.\nMiss Gummer will compete in the\n100 yards and girls' high jump, and\nif she can find a place on any girls'\nteam needing a fourth runner, will\nj enter tlie quarter-mile relay.\nFairview Girl\na Fire Heroine\nGREENSBORO, N.C., Aug. 30\n(API-Tho United States open golf\ntrophy\u2014a silver cup carrying thc\nnames of golfdom's immortals\u2014was\nlost Saturday in the ruins of a fire.\nThe famous cup was brought to\nGreensboro after Tony Manero.\nSedgefield pro, won the 1936 title,\nand it was on exhibition at jewelry\nstore which was destroyed. Hope\nwas expressed the trophy could be\nfound and restored.\nQuick Action Factor\nin Saving Three\nHouses\nSOCIAL AND PERSONAL\nNEWS OF TRAIL\nThis column is in charge ol Mry. Glenn Quayle of Trail. All\nevents of a social nature of interest in Trail and Tadanac will appear\nin this column. Mrs. Quayle will be glad io have any such news\ntelephoned to her at her homc in Trail.\nTRAIL, B.C., Aug. 30-Solemnized\nSaturday afternoon, August 29, in\nKnox United church, was the wed*\nding of Anne Patricia, younger\ndaughter of Mr. and Mis. J. A. MacKinnon of Trail, to Elliott George\nNicholson Player of Trail, youngest\nson of Mr. and Mrs. G. P. Player of\nVictoria, Rev. C, H. Daly of Rossland officiating. Miss Jean MacKinnon, sister of the bride, was\nattendant aud T. A. Rice supported\nthe groom. Presiding at thc oifjan\nwas Miss Cynthia Docksteader, J. II.\nCurtis and A. G. MacKinnon performing the duties of ushers. Thc\nbride, who was given in marriage\nby her father, wore a gown of white\nsuede lace with high neckline and\nlong, close fitting sleeves. The\nbeautifully fitted skirt terminated\nin a train. Her veil, worn holo style,\nwas held in place by a spray of\norange blossoms and she carried ;i\nshower bouquet of pale pink rose?\nand white sweet pea:;. The bridesmaid was attired in a smart model\ngown of coral chiffon with which\nwas uuru a three-quarter length\ncape. The bodice of the gown was\nshirred and framing lhe neckline\nw'as a band of handmade chiffon\nflowers. Accessories included a\nlarge picture hat of pale blue straw\nwitli coral trimming, pale blue sandals and gloves. She carried a bhoaf\nof matching gladioli and larkspur.\nFollowing the ceremony a reception\nwa? held at the home of the bride's\nbrother-in-law and sister. Mr. nnd\nMrs. P. F. Mclntyre, Tadanar. The\nbride was asfisted in receiving by\nher mother, who wore a gown of\ncopper toned lace with matching\nJacket and black accessories. Her\ncorsage was of talisman roses. Mrs\nPlayer, also assisting in receiving,\nwas attired in sapphire blue cut\nvelvet with hat of darker blue and\nwore a corsage of pink roses.   Mrs,\nj Mclntyrc's dress was of midnight\nj blue chiffon and she wore a large\nlhat o( pink straw. Mrs. Charles\n: Dodimead, sister of the bride, se-\n; lected a gown of pink and white\n! chiffon with large black hat. Mrs.\nI W. A. Porteous and Mrs. M. Davidson presided at thc lea tabic. Later\n| in thc day Mr. and Mrs. Player left\n] for Spokane on route to California,\nI the bride wearing a peach wool suit\nj wilh navy blue accessories and top\ncoat. Al the completion of the trin\n| they will return to Trail to take up\n1 residence in the Columbia apartments.\ni Mrs. A. Lauriente. Victoria street,\n, has been removed to her home from\nthe Trail-Tadanac hospital.\nOn Ww occasion of her *-ixlh birth-\n1 day anniversary, Elcanore Quayle\n' was guest of honor at a children's\nI party given by her mother, Mrs\n| Glenn Quayle. Centering the rc-\nI freshment table was a tiered birth-\ni day cake with six lighted candles.\nj Decorations were in pink, guest\nI favors including balloons and candy\nI Accompanied by Miss Joyce Bishop\ni the children attended a matinee, rc-\n! turning later for refreshments, As-\n| sisling the hosless in serving were\ni Mrs. ft W. Ferguson and Miss Joyce\ni Bishop, The invited guests were\nI Patsy Ann Morgan, Marian Rus-\nj sell, Lois Russeli, Marian Wyatt,\nShirley Cosgrove, Denny Miles, Dor-\njothy Swedberg, Daunine Kemp, Do-\ni lores Burger. Tommy Lauriente\nBuddy Levesqu?, Son^v Levesque\nNorman Best, Kenny Wilson and\nj Archie McTeer.\nMr. and Mrs. H. Anderson and\nj niece, Dorothy Swedbeq*. motored\nto T.^hum Saturday where they\nj were guests of Mr. and Mrs. A. Le?f,\nj returning Sunday evening to Trail.\n|    A   fire   traceable   to   hot   ashes.\ni which   might   have   wiped   out   a\nj group of three houses as tho lower\nend of First street, Fairview,  but\nlor the quick action of Miss Louise\nI Milburn.   17,   broke   out   at   3:30\n| o'clock Sunday afterpoon. but was\n| extinguished   by   the   fire   depart-\nj ment after it had burned a hole in\nthe   end   of   the  five-room   house\nI occupied by  Mr.  and Mrs.  Henry\ni Hermann.\nMiss Milburn, from the uppermost\nof the three houses, saw flames start\nI fro mthe fence between \"Blondy1'\n[ Blondin's place and Mr. Hermanns\nj the lowest of the three houses, and\nstart licking up the end wall of the\nj Hermann house. Subsequently hot\nashes were found deposited in the\n; Blondin yard against the fence.\n, Swiftly connecting a hose. Miss\n\u25a0 Milburn starled work on thc burn-\nj ing house, calling to a passer-by lo\n\\ turn in an alarm. This held the\ns flames in check till the speedy ar-\n; rival of the fire department, when\n1 lhe firemen, under Assistant Chief\nAlex. Dingwall, with a hose laid\nalong First street from the hydrant\non Behnsen, drowned out the fire,\nFairview residents who were at the\nscene were of opinion that but for\nMiss Milburn's quick rcsourceful-\nj ness .lhe fire might have got a start\n! that would have damaged if not de-\n1 stroyed Hie entire group of houses,\nwhich stand close together.\nA couple of hours earlier lhe fire\ni department dealt with a blaze in\n: sawdust and dry grass to the west\n' of thc W. W. Powell company match\nI block plant, of undetermined origin,\nj It was not in proximity to the plant,\n1 and was put out without damage\nj having occurred.\nTrail Takes the\nOpener. Soccer\nTRAIL, B.C., Aug. 30.\u2014Trail took\nhe first game of a two-out-of-three\nWest Kootenay soccer title series\n*rom Rossland at Butl-r p3rk Sunday by a score of 2-1. The vis'tors\nwont into the bad in the first half\non Joe Ward's goal, but after the\ninterval goals by Tommy Laurie and\nArt Jrckson equalized the score and\ngave the home team the win.\nUse the Want Ads\u2014It Pays!\nGa)' Elwell, check girl in a\nprominent Detroit club, meets\na number of social elite when\nshe fills in at a dinner party\nat the request of Dr. Wilson, a\nclub member. One of them is\nBreck Carter. Gay has a date\nwith him but leaves him in a\nhuff when he becomes intoxicated and too attentive. Gay is\nattracted by Wayne Adams but\nhe has shown little interest in\nher. She goes to the opening of\na new night club with Christian\nScott,   elderly   millionaire.   At\nRose Heath Gay meets Wayne\nAdams and they stroll on the\nterrace for a talk Gay is thrilled when Wayne kisses her. The\nnext day she goes out for supper  between  double  shifts  at\nthe checkroom.\n(Now go on with the itory)\nCHAPTER  15\nIn thc midst of her double shift\nfor Jean's sake the notion had come\nto Gay, to have tea at Tabb's. She\nwasn't   particularly   hungry;   any\nlittle   nibble   of   food   would   be\nenough. And it would be such fun\nto see what Tabb's was like. She'd\nheard several guests at the Pontchartrain speak of it. Peggy Pennell had given a lunch here a few\ndays ago. And now here she was,\nGay Elwell, just as grand as any of\nthem!\nShe sat back and looked around.\nIt was pretty \u2014 not garish and\nstartling like Rose Heath, but\ndaintier. All maple, and green-\nflowered chintz, and sparkling glass.\nThen Gay noticed a man coming\nacross the room toward her, with a\nbroad smile on his ugly, clever face.\nAs he reached the table, she recognized him. He was Mark Vance,\nthe artist whom she'd met at the\nWilson dinner party.\n\"Hello, Miss Elwell. Mind if I\nsit   with  you?\"\ni Without waiting for an answer,\nhe swung round to the head waitress. \"Set another place here, will\n| you?\" He dragged up a chair and\nlounged into it. as the waitress\nappeared, bringing Gay's order of\ntoast and tea.\n\"What will you have, sir?\"\n\"Scrambled eggs. Sausages. And\ncoffee.\" He spoke to Gay. \"You\nwon't mind if I eat and run? I've\nbeen working hard all day. and I'm\njust grabbing a bite. Dinner engagement at eight.\"\nHe lit a cigarette. \"Some millionaire grocer wants his wife's portrait painted. At least, my wife\nhas decided that ho wants it done,\nand tonight is tho night she makes\nup his mind for him.\" He laughed j\nand winked. \"My wife's my busi-\nness manager;\" . ,\nGay smiled across the little tabic.\n\"Your wife must he clever.\"\n\"She is. Charlotte's darn clever.\"\nHe broke off suddenly. \"Lord, but\nyour head and throat are well modeled. How'd you like to pose lor mc,\nsome day?\"\n\"Sure. I know all about that.\nBut after hours\u2014\" Vance studied\nher face. \"Look here, Miss Elwell.\nI've just signed a contract to illus-1\ntrate a short story for the 'Metropolis'. From what little I've read\nso far, the heroine's exactly your\ntype. Young. Blonde. Fairly intelligent. The more I look at you, the\nmore I want you for those illustrations.   How about it?\"\nGay was much intrigued. Td be\nawfully glad to earn some extra\nmoney. But I haven't had any experience, posing. And I could only\ncome when my regular work at the\nclub was finished. If that would\ndo-\"\n\"Suits me fine.\"\nThe waitress had come back,\nbringing Vance's order, and he commenced eating. Between mouthfuls,\nhe told Gay something of a model's\nwork, and the pay she'd receive.\n\"Ordinarily, I wouldn't consider\nan amateur, but you're naturally\ngraceful and you seem bright enough\nin the head. 1 watched you that\nevening when Johnny Wilson had\nyou up to dinner.\"\nHe chuckled. \"Remember all my\nlovely speeches about your New\nYork sophistication? And by the\nway, it gave me a great kick the\nway you mowed the boys down.\nI'll bet you made some heavy dates\nthai night\u2014and later?\"\nGay lowered her eyes.   \"One or\ntwo.\"\n\"The little aviator boy?\"\n\"Maybe.\"\n\"And how about our engineer\nfriend? You certainly knocked him\nfor a loop!\"\nGay's smile vanished. \"You mean\nMr. Adams? He doesn'l like me at\nall.\"\n\"The dickens you say. Why, he\nwas thc hardest hit of all. Couldn't\ntake his eyes off you!\"\n\"Oh, no. You're wrong there, Mr.\nVance.\"\nBut the artists words brought a\nquick thrill. Did Wayne really like\nher? If he did. then perhaps she\nneedn't have that horrible feeling of\nembarrassment \u2014 that dreedful\nshame of having kissed him thc\nother night at Rose Heath, out by\nthe duck pond.\nShe hated lo remember that incident, so completely surprising to\nherself, as it must have been to\nWayne, also. Whet could he have\nthought of her? If only he'd said\nsomething \u2014 done something\u2014after\nit happen-'ed! But no. He had simply looked at her in total amazement, and then, in silence, they had\nreturned to the dining room. After\nthat, for the brief rem-iind-r of the\nevening, they hadn't had another\nmoment alone together.\n\"So that's all set.\"\nGay directed her attention to her\ncompanion across the tabic.\n\"I beg your pardon,\" she cried\ncontritely. \"I'm afraid I wasn't\nlistening.\nMark Vance grinned good-naturedly. \"I'm your future boss,\nyoung lady. You'd better snap to\nit, when I speak. I said, it's all\nsettled. You're to pose for me al\nmy studio, commencing next week\nsometime. I'll let you know when\nI need you. Let me have your telephone number, while 1 think of it.\"\nGay was watching Mark scrawl\nher address on a card when a\nfamiliar voice sounded in her ears.\nShe looked up to see Wayne Adams standing beside their table.\n\"Hello, Mark,\" he was saying.\n\"Does your wife know about these\ngoings-on?\"\nThe artist rose, hand extended.\n\"Well, for Pete's sake. Hello, Ad.\nWhere'd you drop from? You\nknow Miss Elwell, of course?\"\n\"Rather.\" Wayne smiled at Gay,\nwhile he pulled a chair from an\nadjacent table. \"Sit down. Mark. I\nhappened to be passing, and when\nI looked in and saw you having tea\nwith my girl\u2014\"\n\"Your girl? How do you get that\nway? You haven't a chance with\nthis woman. I've got her dated up\nso far ahead, she won't have a minute for you other boys. Isn't that\nright, Gay?\"\nGay affected a nochalance she\nwas far from feeling. She propped\nher chin on her hand, and glanced\nfrom one to the other.\n\"You're both so nice,\" she declared, sweetly, \"it's hard to choose\nbetween you.\"\n\"Take me,\" Wayne insisted. \"This\nMark Vance isn't worth your while.\nLook at him! Hair getting thin on\ntop. Ugly as a mud fence. Married!\"\n\"But he's an artist.\" Gay argued.\n\"That's romantic. He has a studio,\ntoo. And all my life I've wanted to\nsee a real studio, with tiger rugs\non the floor, and Russian samovars,\nand paintings\u2014\"\nWayne interrupted, \"I'll bet you\n$50 to a lead nickel, he doesn't\neven know what a samovar is. And\nfor that matter, thc apartment I've\njust leased has more samovars and\ntiger rugs than you could shake a\nstick at.\" His voice deepened into\nsarcasm. \"You really ought to come\nover some timei\"\nVance gulped down ihe last of\nhis coffee.\n\"Look here, you two, this has\nbeen a lot of fun, but I must be\non my way. Hate to seem rude\u2014\"\nHo grabbed up the checks for his\nown and Gay's food, and reached\nfor his hat.\nGay protested. \"Please leave my\ncheck. There's no reason why you\nshould pay it.\"\n\"Be yourself, child.\" The artist\nbent on her his pleasant smile. \"Ton\nbad if I can't buy a cup of tea for\na pretty girl once in a while. So\nlong!\"\nGay was secretly amused to see\nthe expression of blank surprise on\nWayne's face, as the other man departed. It was so obvious that he'd\nthought she and Mark had come in\nto Tabb's together. But she said\nnothing.\n\"Mark's a fine chap.\" Wayne commented. \"I met him several yean\nago in New York, and it was nice to\nrun into him again, here in Detroit.\"\n\"He's a lamb,\" Gay agreed. \"And\nhis wife seems charming, too.\"\nFor several moments they discussed the Vances. talking quickly\nto overcome the shyness that had\narisen when they found themselves\nalone. Both were remembering the\nl2st time together: the quaint bridge\nover the duck pond, the drunken\nstranger, and that breathless moment when Gay had walked into\nWayne's arms and given herself up\ncompletely to his kiss.\nThe tea room was almost empty,\nby now. Nearly everyone had left,\nand only a few people remained\nsitting at the small maple tables. A\nhaze of cigarette smoke drifted\nthrough the quiet air. Up on the\nbalcony, a phonograph was playing,\nvery softly, the plaintive \"Mood\nIndigo\" of Duke Ellington's orchestra. Tea hour was over, and the\ndinner crowd had not yet arrived.\nThere was something enchanting\nabout this quiet intimacy: the purple dusk outside, thc soft-shaded\nlights and haunting music within.\n\"That excitement, the other evening,\" Wayne commenced, abruptly. \"It was all, well\u2014rather startling,\nwasn't it? That drunk coming up to\nus, and all thc rest. I didn't get a\nchance to tell you how sorry I was,\nthat you couldn't accept my invitation for tonight. Funny, I should\nrun into you here. When I saw you\nwith Mark, I thought perhaps he\nwas the big heart interest, for whom\nyou'd turned me down.\"\nHe paused ,as# the waitress approached their table and offered a\nmenu.\n\"Want something more, Gay? I\nbelieve I'll just have coffee\u2014I'm\ndue for dinner at the Pontchartrain, in a little while.\"\nWhen the waitress had left, he-\nresumed, \"My house-warming party\nis called off, for the time being.\nMost of the people I wanted to invite had already planned a dinner\ndance for Miss Randolph, for tonight. She sails for Paris, Saturday.\"\n\"I knew that,\" Gay nodded.\n\"I've been asked to this dinner,\nbut I could easily get out of it.\nLook here, Gay. Why can't wt\nboth play h ;key from our respective dates, and have dinner together, just the two of us? Grace\nLarrin ore and I discovered a little\nplace over in Canada, the other\nnight, where they have a not-too-\nbad orchestra. How about It?\"\n(To Be Continued)  ,\nNrhnm SJailij NruiB\nMember ot the Canadian Daily\nNewspapers Association\nLIVESTOCK FOR SALE\nDOCS\nTELEPHONE 144\nPrivate Exehanae eonnectlnci to\nall DenartmentB\nSubscription   Rates\nSingle copy $   .0a\nBv carrier   per week 2b\nBy carrier pei vear 13 00\nBy mail in Canada, to subscribers tivini* outside renulai\ncarrier areas pel month 60c;\nIhree months SI 80. six months\nS300. one veai  $600.\nUnited States and Great Britain, ina month 75c. six months,\n$4 00  one vear  $7 50\nForeign countries other than\nU S. same as above plus any\nextra postage\n6 YEAR OLD TB TESTED PURE-\nbred Jersey cow. Freshen in April.\nApply Box 2310. Daily News.\n(2310)\nYOUNG AYRSHIRiniOLSTEIN\ncow (fresh), good milker. Wm\nMuirhead, R.R.1 Nelson.      (2168)\n6 WKS. OLD PIGS $5 EACH. ALSO\nHeifer, newly freshened. Ayrshire.\nCrulckshank, Erie. (2.106)\nREGISTERED ENGLISH SPRING-\ner Spaniels. Champion Aristocrat\nof Avandale tc Springbok of Ware\nbreeding. Also registered Airedales Champion Rockley King tc\nOorang Strain. Whatsham Ken-\nnels, Needles, B.C. (2224)\nFOR SALE-WlRE~HAIRED TER-\nrier puppies. Imported registered\nstock. Ph 110. Hardings Kennels,\nBox 558, Nelson. (2248)\nScotties: Fine pedigrees. Reasonable.\nArdendale Kennels, Colville, Wash.\n(2331)\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nWANTED-ORDERS FOR SAWING\ncord wood. Ph. 606L2. (2332)\nFARM LANDS\nUSED CARS\nWUl) FARM LANDS FDR SAl.t\non easy teims in Alberta and\nSaskatchewan Write for full in\nformation to 008 Dept ot Natural\nResources C.P.R. Calgary Alta\n(1986)\nFOR SALE-$225. CHEV. 6-CYL. 79\nCoach. New paint job, new rubber, good condition. Would consider light delivery as part pay-'\nment. Box No. 2365, Daily News.\n(2365)\nAdvertising Rotes        for sale or rent\n1Ic a Line\nMinimum 2 Lines\n2 lines once             $ 22\n3 lines once      -       23\n4 lines once      44\n2 lines 6 times 88\n3 lines 6 times    1 32\n4 lines 6 times        110\n2 lines 1 month      2 86\nI    3 lines   1 month           4 29\n]    4 lines   I monm 5 72\nAll above less 10% for prompt\n0 ROOM HOUSE.    3 BEDROOMS\nFurnace. Apply 702 Latimer St\n(2065)\n>        LOST AND FOUND\nI LOST WEDNESDAY. SET OF CAR\nI    tools near Harrop. Finder return\nto   Mrj.   D.   H.   Ferguson,  R.R.1,\nNelson. (23641\nHOUSES WANTED\npayment\n5 ROOM HOUSE. MODERATE\nrent reliable tenants. Box 2280\nDaily News. (2280)\nWANTED TO BUY-3 OR 4 ROOM\nhouse on large lot with fruit trees\nBox 2326. Daily News. (2326)\nROOM AND BOARD\nPERSONAL\nMEN! GET VIGOR AT ONCE! NEW\nOstrex Tonic Tablets contain raw\noyster invlgorators and othei\nstimulants One dose peps up organs, glands If not delighted,\nmakei refunds few cents paid\nCall, write. Mann-Rutherford Co\n 09791\nUGH EST QUALITY RUBBER\ngoods 25 latex assortment for SI\nOrder direct and be sure of best\nPacked plain Free catalogue National Importer, 812-Centre St.\nCalgary. Alia. ^(1981)\nBARENTS' INFORMAtiON CLIN\"-\nic. Write Constance Smedley, 603\nW. Hastings, Vancouver, B.C.\n (2242)\nFOR SALE\nTHE BEST AND LARGEST COL-\nlection of reconditioned treadle\nand portable electric Singer Sewing machines ever shown in Nelson, at bargain prices, easy terms,\nCall and get yours while they last\nEvery machine guaranteed. Singei\nSewing Machine Co. (2333)\noMTt.T In. used recondT-\ntioned pipe. 5 cents per ft Large\nstock in all sizes up to 12 in. for\nimmediate shipment. New and\nused boilers, tubes, fittings, valves,\netc Write Swarti Pipe Yard, 220\nEast 1st. Ave.. Vancouver. BC.\n(1930)\nSMALL    COOK\"~SfOVE,    BEDS,\netc. Ph 755L or call at 911 Edge-\nwood Ave. (2339)\nPWAND~ntflN(*s\nTANAD1AN JUNK Company   Ltd\n150 Prior St.       Vancouver. B  C\n(2066)\nBOARD & ROOM IN COMFORT-\nable home, suit teachers or business men. 704 Baker St. or Phone\n392R. (2285)\nwanWd^6upuToT~scho(7l\ngirls. 312 Observatory Ph. 409R2.\n(2304)\n; WELL BRED LARGE BLACK PFR-\nj    sian cat. Return 212 Vernon. Reward. (2359)\nLOST - 2 v^eks^gSTwhite\nSpitz dog. 5 months old. Apply\nBox 2315. Daily Newn. (2315)\nTo Finders\nj    If yeu find a cat or dog. a poc-\n'.cetbuok jewelry or fur oi any-\nI    thing else of  value telephone\nThe   Daily   Newa   A   \"Found\"\nAd will be Inserted without cost\nj    to you We will collect from the\nowner\nBUY OR SELL WITH A WANT AD.\nTHE  BUYER  AND SELLER\nOF   THE   KOOTENAVS\nBusiness and Professional\nDirectory\nAssayers\nInvestments\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. (2032)\nGRENVILLE H GRIMWOOD\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist. 618\nBaker street. Nelson. B.C. P.O\nBox No 276. Representing Ship\npersinlerest otJTrail. BX*.   (2033)\nChiropractors\nLIVING PROTECTION\nINVESTORS SYNDICATE\nFA, STUART.  BOX 389\n(2049)\nMachinists\nJ. P.. McMIl.LAN, D. C, PALMER\ngraduate. McCulloch Blk . Nelson\nj _ (2034)\ni E. M. WARREN. D.C. Gilker BIkT\nj    Nelson, B.C. Ph 115-755L,     (2035)\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nFor all Classes of Metal Work. Lathe\nWork. Drilling. Boring and Grinding.   Motor   Rewinding,   Acetylene\nWelding\nTelephone 593     324 Vernon Street\n(2050)\nMaternity Homei\nElectrical\n280 ROSS SPORTING RIFLE. Excellent condition. Cheap for cash.\nBox 273 City, Ph. 708-Y. (2330)\n(JR SALE\"^7lMRRELS~KEiJS\nsugar sacks liners McDonald Jan-\nCo.,Jitd., NejsonJ_B:C.__     (2067)\nHOUSE FURNITURE~1308\"\"Fairst\nPh. 311R2. .      (2306)\nNEW AND REBUILT MOTORS\nGenerators, etc.. in all sizes.\nIMMEDIATE   DELIVERY.   WRITE\n(iROSSMAN L-iLECTRICAL\nMACHINERY   nO.,   I TD.\nI 61 Alexander St.    Vancouver B C\n(2036)\nI j7f. \"COATES. Tlie Electric Store\n1        Supplies and Installations\nI Phone 766. P.O. Box 1065\n(2037)\nELIZABETH PEEL\nMATERNITY HOME\nStrictly Private. Confidential Physician in attendance. Ph. Broad 3078,\nW-1324 Broadway, Spokane. Wash.\n(2051)\nMysticism\nSCIENTIFIC INSTRUCTIONS IN\nHigh Spiritual Mastery. Clara\nStocker, Cascade, B.C. (2090)\nNotaries\nI D. J. ROBERTSON. NOTARY PUB-\ni lie. Office 305 Victoria St.. Nelson.\n| \u25a0 (2052)\nPatents\nEngineers and Surveyors\nELECTRIC REFRIGERATOR AND\nradio. Phone 219. (2367)\nPOULTRY AND ECCS\nWANTED-ABOUT 20 SCW LEG-\nhorn pullets. Al stock. Box 2369,\nDaily News. (2369)\nI. TlOCk PULLETS. 4~ MONTHS.\nRixen, P.O. Box 808 or Ph. 328L3\n(2312)\nE. L WARBURTON. AGENT. NEL-\nj    son. B.C. Ph. 53. Res. 239   PO\ni    Box 668 Oils. etc.. Mine Machin-\nj    ery and Equipment, Steam Coals.\n(2038)\nH. D DAWSON Nelson. B.C.\nMine Surveys and Reports\n(2039)\nFOR SALE OR EXCHANGE\nBOYD C AFFLECK, Fruitvale. B C\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor\nReg. Professional Civil Engineer\n(2040)\nFlorists\nAN OFFER TO EVERY INVENT-\nor, list of wanted inventions and\nfull information sent free. Tho\nRamsay Company, World Patent\nAttorneys. 273 Bank St., Ottawa.\n(2053)\nPhotography\n\"OR SALE. DUAL WHEEL TRAIL-\ner, straight axle, or trade for hoist\nand dump body. Apply Box 2313.\nDaily News. (2313)\nCARNATION FLOWER SHOP\nPhone 215 All kinds of cut flowers,\nwreaths, sprays _ etc. Phone 215\nMrs. Hagarty. Box 29. (2042)\nFOR RENT, HOUSES.\nAPARTMENTS, ETC.\n.:URN. SUITES, KERR\n Apts $30 and Up      (2018)\n.\u2022' U R N I SH ED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms  for  rent   Annable  Bl\"rk\n(2020)\nInsurance and Real Estate\nROOMS IN PRIVATE HOME NEAR\nA^djtorium. Ph. 573L. (2355)\nI'KHHAl E APTS BT-uiFiTiTr^p^m\nfrigidaire equipped suites.   (2019)\nONE FURNISHED ROOM. 718 SIL-\nica St. (2314)\nHELP WANTED\nWANTED EXPERIENCED HOUSE-\nkeeper, family ot three. References. Box 2325, Daily News.\n(2325)\nVOMAN FOR \"GENERAL HOUSE-\nwork Able to cook. Mornings\nonly. Box 2341, Daily News. (23411\n)OM & BOARD IN EXCHANGE\nfor light housework. Ph. 489R or\nP.O. Box 479. Nelson. (2338)\n.\/ANTED - EXPERIENCED GIRL\nfor general housework. Mrs E. A.\nMann. (2344)\nWOMA^RGiRTfWANTEDrA?\nply 524 Latimer. (2166)\nROBERTSON REALTY CO.. LTD\nReal Estate. Insurance. Rentals,\nBaker St. (2043)\nR. W. DAWSON. Real Estate. Insurance. Rentals. Next Hipperson\nHardware. Baker St. (2044)\nC, D. BLACKWOOD. Insurance of\nevery description. Real Est Ph 99.\n(20451\nrf E. DILL. AUTO AND FIRE IN-\nsurance, Real Estate. 508 Ward St\n(2046)\nj. E.ANNABLE, nEA\"L~ESTATE.\nRentals, Insurance. Annable Blk\n(2047)\nLIFE, FIRE, AUTOMOBILE INSim-\nance. P. E. Poulin, Ph. 70   (2048)\nCHAS F MeHARDY. INSURANCE,\nReal Estate. Ph. 135. (2061)\nPhone\nJean Robertson\n144\nFor the NELSON DAILY\nNEWS CLASSIFIED\nSERVICE\nPREMIUM CERTIFICATES ON\nvaluable merchandise given with\nfilms developed, including ono\nprint from each negative. 25c.\nExtra prints, eight for 25c. Saskatchewan Photo Supply, Saskatoon.\n (2054)\nFILMS DEVELOPED AND PRINT^\ned. any size. 25c. Reprints, eight\nfor 25c. Deckled edge prints Valuable coupon. \"Better prints at\nlower cost.\" KRYSTAL PHOTOS,\nWilkie, Sask. (2055)\nSanitariums\nCHRONIC DISEASES MIND AND\nbody. Dr. Aldrich, Spokane, E.\n4504 Frederick. (2056)\nSash Factory\nLAWSON'S   SASH   FACTORY.\nHardwood merchant, 217 Baker st.\n(2057)\nSecond Hand Stores\n7-TUBE ROGER RADIO $15.   ARK\nStore. (2058)\nWatch Repairing\nH H SUTHERLAND\nWatchmaker and Jeweller\nNew Rutledge block. Baker St.. Nelson. Watches. Clocks. Jewelry Repaired. \"When Sutherland repairs\nyour watch it is on time all the time\"\n(2077)\nSPECIALIST. REASONABLE. Work\nguaranteed. P. Boyle, Vernon St.\n(2059)\nWigs and Toupees\nLADIES' AND GENTLEMEN'S wigs\nand toupees, etc. Free illustrated\nCatalogue. Over 20 years ln B.C.\nWe buy cut hnir. Hanson Hair\nGoods Co. P.O. Box 601, Vancouver. B.C. (2060)\nNELSON (\nSHOPPING AND AMUSEMENT CENTER\n .  OF THE INTERIOR\n____________________\n_\n__-\n\u25a0M_-_-_______________|\n PEACHES MAKE\nAPPEARANCE ON\nNELSON MARKET\nPears, Crab Apples\nand Watermelon\nSell Readily\nTOMATOES TAKE\nDROP IN PRICE\nExcellent Celery Is\nFast Seller; Eggs\nAre Scarce\nPeaches, pears, crab apples and\nwatermelon appeared on the Nelson\n\"Vernon street market Saturday.\nPears were bringing 15 cents a basket and peaches 25 cents a basket.\nCrabapples sold at seven pounds for\n$5 centa and Kootenay grown watermelon sold at 4 cents a pound.\nA feature of the market was the\nlarge supply of tomatoes which\nwere selling cheaper at eight pounds\n(or 2t cents.\nThere was a scsrcity of new laid\neggs but the meat variety was large.\nSome of the nicest celery to yet\nappear sold readily. There were\nlew price changes. Business was\nbrisk.\nFRUITS\nDuchess Apples, 8 lbs. -  JJ5\nWealthy apples, 8 lbs 2t\nTransparent apples, 8 lbs..    .25\nBed Astrakhan apples, 7 lbs,  .25\nJjsetl grapes, lb 15\nHuckleberries, 3 lbs  .25\nPeach-plums, 6 lbs. _ - 25\npears, basket  .15\nPeaches   25\nCrabapples, 7 pounds _ 2.\nWatermelon, pound -.-- .04\nVEGETABLES\nGreen peppers, lb. .05\nTurnips, bunch       - 05\nOnions, 3 bunches - 10\nCarrots, 3 bunches   10\nI^eeks, bunch          j05\nGreen beans, 3 lbs.  _.. .25\nScarlet runner beans, 3 lbs. ...... .25\nChinese beans, 3 lbs    .25\nWax beans, 4 lbs   J5\nBroad beans, lb.   .05\nCorn, dozen       26\nTomatoes, 8 lbs imAtt   *25\nSwiss chard, head ^H 05\nCelery, bunch     fJJ\/-    .1.0\nKohl rabbi, head M     -0B\nCucumbers, 3 for  Ssu T5\nEgg plants, cacli     \u25a0tV^\"'\nGarlic, lb WF .V.\nRadishes, bunch  S\"F1- .05\nLettuce, 3 heads .10\nNew cabbage, head .05, .10 and .15\nSavoy cabbage, head,   .05 and .10\nCauliflower, eacb 05 and .10\nParsley, bunch    .     05\nNew potatoes, 12 lbs .25\nRhubarb, 7 lbs 25\nBeets, 3 bunches  .10\nMarrow      _   ..  _ .10 and 15\nPickling cucumbers, 3 doz 25\nDill, bunch  .05\nSage, bunch  .05\nMint, bunch 05\nMEAT8\nBeef, lb   05 to .2C\nVeal, lb  15 to .25\nVeal, lb .__ .06 to .20\n\u2022Lamb, lb.  10 to .25\nBacon, lb 25 to .30\nRabbit, lb  25\nSpring chicken, lb. _ .35\n\u2022Liver, lb. 12\nDrippings lb        _ .05\nSausage, lb   _. .10 and .20\nBologna, lb   15\nEGGS\nGrade A large, dozen  . - 40\nGrade A medium, dozen  .35\nDAIRY PRODUCTS\nButter, lb 30\nCream, pint 30\nCurds, lb.    _  .10\nCottage cheese, lb  10\nPrime cheese, lb  .35\nGoat cheese, lb _ 25\nNew cheese, lb.      .20\nCUT FLOWERS\nEverlasting flowers, bunch     10\nGladioli, bunch  10 and .15\nSnapdragons, bunch 10\nSweet peas, bunch 10\nAsters, 2 bunches     25\nChrysanthemums, bunch ...._ 15\nZinnias, bunch  15\nAuthorized Capital\nVirgo Placer Mines\nRevelstoke $10,000\nRegistered office of the newly-Incorporated Virgo Placer Mines, Ur\nmlted, is at the office of E. A. Boyle,\nsolicitor, Revelstoke. Authorized\ncapital, according to the current issue of the B.C. Gaiette, Is 110,000,\ndivided into 10,000 shares ol $1 each.\nWINNIPEG FIRM\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 30 (CP)-Firm-\nness ruled in the wheat market\nSaturday. Supported by good \"resting\" orders, futures prices on the\nWinnipeg grain exchange closed HI\nH cent higher, October at .96, December WVt and May VI.\nFractionally lower at the opening,\nvalues quickly rallied to hold jt>\nthe upside for the remainder of the\nsession.-\nCheaper Danublan offers was a\ndepressing market factor ln early\ndealings.\nFractional advances were registered in the cash grains. Coarse\ngrains prices followed wheat.\nBONDS ADVANCE\nNEW YORK, Aug. 30 (API-Railroad issues were in demand in the\nbond market again Saturday, advancing enough to lift the group\naverage to a new high for the third\nconsecutive session.\nThe Associated Press average of\n20 railroad bonds advanced .1 of a\npoint to 84.7, a new high for the year\nand the third peak registered by the\ngroup in as many days. The averages of other major divisions were\n.1 of a point higher to .1 of a point\nlower.\nTransfers of $5,325,000, par value,\nwere a little better than the usual\nSaturday turnover due almost entirely to the contlnu d interest in\nrailroad issues, a number of which\nenjoyed a broad demand. Soles a\nweek ago totaled $3,592,000.\nGOLDS HIGHER\nTORONTO, Aug. 30 (CP)-Spotty\nselling in the golds pushed the index for that group still lower on the\nToronto exchange, mining section,\nSaturday.\nFrancoeur lost 10 cents at 1.68.\nRecessions of 3 to 5 cents were\nboarded for Bralorne, Preston, Teck\nHughes, San Antonio and Ventures.\nPremier eased 7 cents. Lake Shore\nImproved V,.\nBidgood-KIrkland was up 14 cents.\nWinnioeq Grain\nWHEAT:\nOct ...\nDec\t\nMay\nOATS:\n,Oct. .\nDec\t\nMay\nI    BARLEY:\nOpen  High  Low  Close\n95%\n94%\nKV,\n44%\n42%\n43%\n96%\n95%\n21V,\n45%\n43%\n44\n54%\n52%\n52%\n167%\n166%\n66%\n65%\n65%\nOcL       53%\nI Dec     51%\nMay 51%\nFLAX:\nI Oct .. .   166%\n'Dec. 166%\nI    RYE:\n,Oct      66%\nDec      64%\nMay    ..    64%\nCASH WHEAT:\nNo. 1 hard 97; No. 1 Nor. 96; No. 2\nNor. 94%; No. 3 Nor. 91%; No. 4 Nor.\n88%; No. 5 and 6 wheat 84%; feed\n68; No. 1 Garnet 91; No. 2 Garnet 90;\nDurum 104; No. 4 Spcl 79%; No. 5\nSpcl 75; No. 6 Spcl 72; track 96.\n95%\n94%\n96%\n44H\n42%\n43%\n53%\n51%\n51%\n168%\n166%\nM'\/i\n64\n64%\n96\n95%\n97\n44%\n42%\n43%\n53%\n51%\n51%\n167%\n166%\n66%\n65%\n65%\nTO REDEEM C.N.R. BONDS\nOTTAWA, Aug. 30 (CP)-Hon.\nCharles Dunning, minister of finance, announced Saturday provision had been made out of Dominion government CBSh balances\nfor redemption of $24,220,860 of Dominion guaranteed C.N.R. bonds in\nNew York. The government had accumulated funds in New York for\nthat purpose and has made a loan\nto the company to meet its obligations.\nB11 III\n\\_*m\nicW\nNELSON DAILY NIWS, NILSON. B.C-MONDAY MORNINO, AUGUST SI, 19J6\nand Mining News\nCHICAGO BETTER\nCHICAGO, Aug. 30 (AP)-The\ngrain market staled a mild recovery Saturday, wiping ott gome of\nthe price losses that occurred during Friday's break.\nWheat values advanced about 2\ncents a bushel at times while corn\ngained 2 to mors than 3 cents from\nearly lows >t one stage. Short covering was in evidence.\nMaximum gains scored for wheat\nafter midsession were not held and\nthe market closed % at l%c higher\ncompered with yesterday's finish.\nSeptember $109% at 1.09%. December $1.08% at IM, May $1.07% at\n1.07%. The rally shown in corn also\nwas shaded belore the end, the market closing %c off to l%c higher,\nSeptember $1.06% at 1.06%, December 93% at 94%c, May 89% at 89%c.\nOats gained % at %c, December\n42% at 43c, rye % at lc, and barley\nlost 2 at 4c. Provisions ranged 3\ncents off to 5 up.\nCOAST IS ACTIVE\nVANCOUVER, Aug. $0 (CP). -\nTrading was moderately active with\ngains and losses about evenly divided on the short Saturday session\nof the Vancouver stock exchange.\nTransactions totalled 94,436 shares.\nBig Missouri topped the gold list\nclosing up 8 eents at 63. Bralorne\nadded 5 at 7.85, Vidette was up 2 at\n1.27 and He-tley Amalcameted firmed 1% at 20. Pioneer lost 5 at 8.05,\nPremier drooped 4 at 3.03 and Reno\n2 at l.'l. Minto was down 1% at 33\nwhile Wayside eased a fraction at\n9%.\nHead Office of N.B.C.\nCompany at Nelson\nN.B.C. Mining Co., Ltd., notice of\nthe incorporation of which is given\nln the current Issue of the B.C.\nGazette, has an authorized capital\nof $300,000, divided into 600,000\nshares of 50 cents each. Registered\noffice of the company is at 601%\nBaker street\nVancouver Sales\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 30 (CP). -\nMining shares sold on the Vancouver\nstock exchange yesterday:\nListed: Big Miss 8400, Bralorne\n40, B R X 2000, Dentonia 500, Island\nMount 200, Koot Belle 200, Mak Siccar 2000, Minto 5000, Morning Star\n1000, National Sil 5000, Pioneer 125,\nPremier 1750, Reno 300, Salmon\n2000, Vidette 300, Wayside 4100.\nCurb: B C Nickel 500, B R Mount\n1000, Congress 1000, Federal 1200,\nGold Mount 10,100, Grange 1000,\nGrull Wihk 2500, Hedley Amal 5400,\nHome 500, Meridian 700, Nicola 21,-\n000, Pilot 500, Reliance 6000, Reward\n2500, Rufus Arg 5000, Wesko 500.\nMetal Markets\nNEW YORK, Aug. 30 (API-Metals nominally unchanged. The London stock exchange was closed\nSaturday. Bar Silver steadier, 1-16\nhigher at 19 9-16*1.\nCANADIAN DOLLAR AT PAR\nNEW YORK, Aug. 30 (CP) -\nPounds sterling lost 3-18 cent to\n$5X13 1-16 on the foreign exchange\nmarket Saturday. The Canadian\ndollar was unchanged at par. The\nFrench gold franc at 6.58% was unchanged.\nREFUSE TO ALLOW WEDDING\nLONDON (CP)-A girl applied\nat Tower Bridge Police Court for a\nsummons against her parents lor\nrefusal to consent to her marriage.\nThe application was refused when\nthe girl said she was 15 years old.\nFalconer Comptroller\nof Powell River Co.\nPOWELL RIVER, B.C., Aug. 30\n(CP)\u2014Harold S. Foley, executive\nvice-president of the Powell River\nCo., Ltd., announced Saturday that\nJ. Falconer, manager of the company's pulp and paper mill here,\nhad been appointed comptroller of\nthe company in Vancouver.\nD. A. Evans, recently appointed\nassistant manager here, will succeed Mr, Falconer.\nThe announcement followed the\nresignation last week of A. E. McMaster, vice-president and general\nmanager.\nThe changes are effective next\nTuesday.\nDow-Jones Averages\n30 industrials .\n20  rails  \t\n20 utilities ......\n40 bonds\t\nHigh\n.... 167.22\n    55.17\n....   34.78\nLow\n166.34\n54.19\n34.51\nClose Change\n166.91- up .13\n55.01\u2014up .91\n34.70-up .08\n104.W\u2014up   .09\nMontreal Silver Quotations\nMONTREAL, Aug. 30 (CP)\u2014Silver futures closed steady Saturday,\nunchanged to five points off. No sales. Bids: Sept 44.40; Dec. 44.40; March\n44.35; May 44.35.\nMontreal Stock Prices\nWHITE OWL\nIN**wSHAPI\u00ab\n\u2022NyiNCIBLI\n\u2022WirSHMllAI-\n*T-**\"\nAss'd Breweries    9%\nBell Telephone  149%\nBrazilian ..    - 12%\nB C Power A  29%\nBruck Silk  8\nBuild   Prod     43\nCanada Bronze   38\nCan Car Fdy     8%\nCanada Cem\u00abnt   8%\nCan Cement Pfd _  82\nCan Celanese -  26%\nCan Ind AI A -  7%\nCan Ind Al B  6\nCan Pac Rail  - 12\nCan  Steamers      1.58\nCockshutt    5%\nCon Min tc S  54%\nDominion Bridge  43%\nDominion Glass  110\nDominion Text :   66\nDryden Paper _ 6H\nGn St Wares    3%\nChas Gurd    Ctt\nHamilton Br  4%\nImperial Oil   20%\nInt Nickel     53%\nMassey Harris    4\nMcColI Frontenac   14\nMontreal Power  32%\nNat Steel Car   13%\n43\n210\nNat Brewing \t\nOgilvie _.\nPower Corp  14%\nQuebec   _.._    19%\nShawinlgan   20\nSherwin Wms     18%\nSouth Can Power  11%\nSteel ol Can\nCURBS\n8 C Packing \t\nBrew tc Dist  \u2014\nB A OU  \t\nCanada Dredge \t\nCnnad .Malting \t\nCanada Wineries  _\nDominion Stores\t\nPort Can A \t\nImp Tob Can  \t\nInU Petrol     \t\nMitchell Robt _\t\nPrice Bros  _\nPage Hersey\t\nBANKS\nCanada  \t\nCanadlen    \t\n68%\n9%\n.83\n23\n46\n32%\n2%\n0%\n20%\n13%\n34\n6\n4%\n87\n57\n138\nCommerce _ 159\nDominion  208\nMontreal 200\nNova Scotia  _ _ 279\nRoyll 179\nToronto   222\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nBankfleld\t\nBase Metals\t\nBear Exploration.\nBig Missouri\t\nBobjo -....\nBralorne ...... \u2014\nBRX\t\nBuf Ankerite \t\nCan Malartic \t\nCariboo Gold \t\nCasUe Troth\t\nCentral Man\t\nCentral Pat\t\nChlbougamou -._.\nConlagas\t\nConarium\t\nListed\nA P Cons . ....I\t\nAmalOU\t\nBig Miss      \t\nB C Packers New.\nBralorne Mlnea L.\nBrew tt Dist\t\nBrit Dom OU\nBridge River Con .\nB R X G Mines .\nCariboo Gold Q .\nC & E Corp    _ :.\nCoast Brew    \t\nCoast Brew Rts ....\nCommonwealth ....\nDentonia Mines ...\nGold Belt M Ltd ....\nHargal OO .. -\t\nHome Oil    \t\nInter Coal\t\nIsl Mount M Ltd .\nKoot Belle Gold .\nMak Siccar Gold\nMcD Segur Ex\t\nMcLeod Oil New ..\nMinto Gold \t\nModel Oil      \t\nMorn Star Gold ....\nNational Silver ... -\nPioneer Gold \t\nPremier Gold\t\nPrem Bord Gold\nQuatsino Cop Gold\nReeves Mac Mines\nSally Mines\nSalmon Gold\nS Creek Gold M ...\nTaylor Bridge ....\nVanalta Ltd \t\nVidette Gold    \t\nWayside Gold\nWellington OU&G\nCURB\nAlexandria Gold...\nAnaconda OU  -\nBaltac Oil\t\nBeaver SU\t\nB C Nickel\t\nCan Rand Gold...\nCalmont OU     _\nCongress Gold \t\nCork Prov Mines.\nCotton Belt Mines\nCrows Nest Oils....\nDalhousie Mines\nDalhousie Oils \t\nDictator G Mines.\nDunwell Mines .....\nEast Crest OU \u2014\nFairview Amal\t\nFawn Mining\t\nFederal Gold\t\nBid\n.13\n.11\n.63\n9.00\n7.65\n.93%\n.14%\n.05\nMV,\n1.95\n1.40\n13.25\n8.00\n.06\n.18\n.21\n.09\n.90\n.21\n1.24\n.73\n.02\"*'\n.08%\n.27\n.33\n22\n.01%\n.03\n8.05\n303\nm%\n.01%\n.06\n.09%\n.11%\n.80\n.09\n.05\n1.27\n.04%\nMVt\nm\n23V,\n.10\n.10\n.12\n.00%\nM\n.01%\n.03\n.07%\n.05\n.65\nMV,\nAsk\n.15\n.12\n.64\n7.70\n1.00\n.17\n.06\n.12\n2.00\n1.48\n13.50\n8.35\n.19\n\u25a025\n.10\n1.00\n120\n.74\n.03%\n.08%\n20\n.34\n23\n.02\n.03%\n8.20\n3.08\n.01\n.02\n.10%\n.12\n.82\n.11\nJ\u00bbH\n1.30\n.10\n.08\n.05%\n.05\n.03%\n.02%\n.35\n.08\n.11%\n.11\n.00%\n.02\n.12%\n.01\n.60\n.04\n.06\n.70\n.04%\nListed\nBid\nAsk\nFreehold OU\t\nm\nat\nGlacier Creek   \t\nM\n\u2014\nGolconda Lead\t\nDt\n.11\nGold M Mines .\t\n.12\n.12%\nGeo Enterprise ...\n.02%\n.04\nGeo Riv G Mines\n\u2014\n.01%\nGrandview Mines\n.02\n.03\nGrange Mines\t\nJ01%\n.02%\nGr Kihksne Gold.\n.11%\n.12\nHedley Amal Gold\nJO\nJl\nHedley Sterl Gold\n\u2014\n.03\nH Sarcee OU\t\n.13\n.14\nHome Gold\t\n.02%\n.03\nIndian Mines\t\nJ01%\nJ02%\nInter Nickel\t\n.07%\n.09\nIndependence M.\n.00%\njOOK\nKoot Flo Mining .\n.00%\n.01\nKoot King Mining\n.00%\n.01\nLakeview Mlnea\n\u2014\n.00%\nLucky Jim L tt Z.\n.01\n.02\nMadison Oil\t\n.01\nmvt\nMar Jon Oil\t\n.17%\n.18\nMercury OU \t\n.10%\n.11%\nMeridian Min Co..\n.08\n.09\nMerland OU\t\n.11%\n.13\nMcGillivray Coal..\n.18\n20\nM1U City OU\t\n.10\n\u2014\nMorton Wolsey M-\n.00%\n.00*\nM.irmot Metals\n.00%\n.00%\nNicola Min Metals\n.13%\n.14\nNoble Five Mines-\n.02\n.03%\nNordon OU    ......\n.11\n\u2014\nOkalta OUs Com .\n.15%\n.16%\nPacolta\t\n.05%\n.06\nPend Or Mines    ..\n.75\n.80\nPUot Gold Mines ..\n.06\n.06%\nPorter Idaho Min..\n.03\n.04\nQuesnelle Q\t\n.05%\n\u2014\nRanchmen's\t\nM\n30\nReliance Gold . ..\nMVt\n.05%\nRelief Arl Mines -\n32%\nM\nReward Mining\t\nMVs\n.07\nRoyalite OU ....\n27.00\n29.00\nRufus Arg Mines .\n.01*\n.01%\nSilbak Premier . ..\n2.60\n175\nSilvercrest Mines-\n\u2014\n.06\nSilverado Con\t\n.02%\n\u2014\nSilversmith   Mines\n.00%\n\u2014\nSouthwest Petrol -\n.15\n.25\nSunloch Mines \t\n.15\n\u2014\nTaylor Windfall ...\n.14\n\u2014\nUDL\n.75\nSO\nUnited Emp Gold.\n.02\nD3\nUnited OU\t\njM\n.07\nViking Gold\t\nMV,\n.02\nVulcan OU\t\n.40\n\u2014\nWaterloo Mines ...\n.02%\n03\nWsv Tangier   \t\nJ\u00bbH\n.00 V.\nWeUington Mines.\n\u2014\n.01\nWesko Mines Ltd..\n.24\n.25\nYmlr Yankee Girl..\n.43%\n\u2014\nToronto Stock Quotations\nConsolidated M A; S\t\nDom Explor \t\nEldorado \t\nFalconbridge\t\nGod's Lake -\u2014\u2014..-\nGold Belt \t\nGranada  \t\nHardrock\t\nHolUnger  \t\nHowey \t\nHudson Bay \t\nInter Nickel \t\nJ M Con       \t\nKlrkland Lake\t\nLake Maron \t\nLakeshore     \t\nLitUe Long Lac _..\nMacassa   ........\nMaple Leal\t\nMalroblc    -   \t\nMcLeod Cockshutt\t\nMclntyre         ......\nMcK R L Gold\t\nMcVittle Gr\nMcWatter Gold\t\nMining CorporaUon\t\nNipissing  _\t\nNoranda \t\nParkhill  _\t\nPaymsster\t\nPend Oreille \t\nPickle Crow \u201e.\nPioneer . -  \t\n.70\n2*\nM\n.58%\n.24%\n7.65\n.12%\n8.00\n1.14\n1.90\n1.40\n.29\n4.00\n1.75\n3.15\n2.05\n54.75\n.04%\n.93\n9.50\n1.01\n.20\n.32\n2.78\n14.00\n.84%\n24 JO\n53.87\n.63\n.63\n.11%\n57 JO\n5.80\n4.20\n.23%\n.04N\n3.75\n42.00\n1.80\n.21\n1.42\n1.67\n2.43\n63.25\n.25\n.93\n.75\n6.80\n8.00\nPremier Gold     SOT\nReno  1     134\nSan Antonio \u201e     1.65\nSheep Creek _____     M\nSherritt Gordon     Ml\nSiscoe       4.45\nSmelter G  .\u2014     M\nStad8cona       .62\nSt Anthony  ,     2i\nSudbury Basin     4.65\nSullivan   ,     1.97\nSylvanite            3.22\nTeck Hughes     5.95\nTobum \u2022     1*36\nTowagamac      .92\nTreadweU       JO\nVentures      2.12\nWayside  \u2014       40\nWhite Eagle       .03%\nWright Hargreaves      8.00\nOILS\nAJax ..'.        .41\nBritish American OU    24.37\nC It E CorporaUon     1.4S\nChemical Research      .90\nDalhousie       .52\nHome    -   _     S2\nImperial  ,    20.75\nInter Pete     34-5\nNordon - ._ _.     .12\nRoyalite     _        27.50\nINDUSTRIALS\nBeatty Bros     _-,.._     9\nBeU Telephone   150\nBrazUian         12%\nBrew tt Dlst   .95\nCan Bread _     5%\nCanada Car te Foundry      8%\nCanada Cement      6%\nCanada Dredge     46%\nCanada Malting    32\nCPR..  _        12\nConsolidated Smelters    54%\nDominion Bridge      43\nDominion Stores -    10\nDist Seagrams    _  25%\nFord Canada A   20*\nGoodyear Tire      80\nHiram Walker    38*\nQuotations on Wall Street\nHigh\nAm Can  121\nAm For Pow .... 7*\nAm Ma & Fdy.. 25%\nAm Smelt & Re 83*\nAm Telephone 174%\nAmer Tobacco   102%\nAnaconda     39\nAtchison    83\nAviation Corp     6*\nBaldwin     8%\nBait It Ohio .... 23*\nBendix Aviation 28*\nBeth Steel      67*\nCan Pacific .. 12%\nCerro De Pasco 53%\nChes te Ohio ....   66%\nChrysler   114%\nCorn Prod     K\nC Wright Pld 6*\nDupont .... 156*\nEl Pow It Ll ....   15%\nErie     16*\nFord English ....    t\nFord ol Can ....  21\nFirst Nat Stores  47\nFreeport Texas 25%\nGeneral Electric  47%\nGeneral Foods..   38%\nGeneral Motors   66*\nGold Dust     14%\nGoodrich      24*\nGranby      3*\nGrt Nor Pld . .  41%\nGrt West Sugar  36*\nHudson Motors   16*\nInter Nickel       54\nInter Tel tt Tel  12*\nJewel Tea       87%\nKenn  Copper     47%\nktresge S S       27\nKroeijger Gro     20%\nLow\n121\n7%\n24%\n83%\n174*\n102%\n38*\n81%\n6%\n3%\n23\n28\n66*\n11*\n53%\n66\n113*\n68%\n6*\n158*\n19*\n16%\n8\n21\n47\n25%\n46%\n38%\n65%\n14\n24%\n3%\n41\n36%\n16%\n53%\n12%\n87%\n47\",\n27\n20%\nClose\n121\n7%\n25%\n83%\n174%\n102%\n38-rt\n92%\n5%\n3%\n23%\n28%\n67%\n12\n53%\n66%\n114%\n69\n6%\n156%\n15%\n16%\n8\n21\n47\n25%\n47%\n38%\n66%\n14%\n24%\nMack Truck .... 37*\nMilwaukee Ptd 1*\nMont Ward     47\nNash Motors\nNat Dairy Prod\nN Pow _ Ll\nN Y Central\nPac Gas k El . 38*\nPackard Motors 11%\nPenn R R ..\nPhillips Pete\nPure Oil     17%\nRadio Corp   11%\nRadio Keith Or    6%\nRem Rand    17*\nSafeway Stores  29%\n16%\n28\n. 12*\n44\n39\n42%\nNew Denverile\nIs Visitor af\nCranbrook Home\nCRANBROOK. B.C. - Constable\nand Mrs. C. A. Bellhouse have left\nfor Canal Plat where they will reside. Constable Bellhouse is taking over the Canal Flat division of\nthe provincial police department.\nMiss Mable Earhart, who has\nspent the past two weeks visiting\nMiss Delia Baxter, has returned to\nher home ln Boston.\nAngus McPhee, who has been\nattending the summer school tn\nVancouver was a city visitor during\nthe week, the guest of Mr. and Mrs.\nT. A. Moore, one his return to\nFernie,,\nMiss Isobel Mack ot the nursing\nstaff of the New Denver hospital,\nis visiting Mr. and Mrs. R. Bartholomew tor two months.\nMiss Zoe Brown-Clayton, who has\nbeen the guest of Miss Nancy Miles\nfor the put few days, returned Friday to her home at Kelowna.\nN. Wasson has returned to Edmonton alter visiting his mother here\nfor the past two weeks.\nMrs. Ward, Miss Bridget and Miss\nMadeline Ward of Kimberley were\ncity visitors during the week.\nG. C. Barclay, principal ot the\nhigh school here, has returned to\nthe city after spending the summer\ntn Vancouver.\nMra. H. Bartholomew, Miss Eva\nand Miss Mary Bartholomew returned at the end of the week from\nCalgary, where they were vlslUng\ntriends.\nMr. and Mrs. F. C. Scott and\nfamily are spending their vacaUon\nvisiting triends and relatives in\nBrandon and Saskatoon.\nMiss Beleky ol Vancouver has\narrived ln the city and will take\nthe nosltion ot Instructress at the\nSt Eugene training school.\nMiss Jean Newton ot Wilmer is\na city visitor, the guest ot Miss\nLaura Hall.\nMr, and Mrs. Murray McFarlane\nare spending the week st Garbutt\nand Allan Lake.\nMrs. A. E. Leigh and children\nhave returned to the city after\nspending the past few weeks in Vancouver.\nMrs. E. Davies and daughters.\nMildred and Dorothy, returned from\nRevelstoke Wednesday, where they\nwere the guests ol Mrs. Bartholomew.\nMr. and Mrs. A. Ham and daughter, Mary Joy. have returned to\ntheir home at Silverton, alter visit\ning A. C Bowness lor thc past three\nweeks.\nMr. and Mrs. V. Brown have returned to the city alter vlslUng\ntriends In Edmonton.\nMiss Mary Grant, who spent the\nsummer months in Vancouver, has\nreturned to the city.\nMrs. Baxter and Miss Muriel\nBaxter, who have spent the summer\nmonths ln the east, returned to the\ncity Friday morning.\nArnold McGrath, who has been a\ncity visitor tor the past week, returned Thursday to Canal Flat.\nMiss Helen Sutherland of Kimberley was a city visitor Wednesday, the guest of Miss Barbara Fink.\nRevelstoke Firm Is\nIncorporated\nOrganized to take over the business ot E. G. Burrldge te Son ot\nRevelstoke as a going concern, the\nfirm E. G. Burrldge tc Sons Ltd.,\nhas been Incorporated under the\nprovincial Companies act\nThe new company has an authorized capital of $10,000, divided Into\n10,000 shares of $1 each. Registered\noffice Is at the comer of Orion avenue and Third street, Revelstoke.\n18%\n31%\n43%\nShell Union\nS Cal Edison\nSouth Pacific\nStan Oil ol Cal 35%\nStan Oil ot ind 37*\nStan OU ot N J 68*\nStewart Warner 19*\nStudebaker  li*\nTexas Cofp    . 87*\nTexas Gulf Sul 38*\nTlmken Roller 64*\nUnder Type   .\nUnion Carbide\nUn Oil ot Cal 21\nUnited Aircraft 25*\nUnited Bisctlit 36%\n79%\n96%\n3%; Union Pacific\n41%\n36%\n16%\n54\n12%\n87%\n47%\n27\n20%\n144\n54*\n30%\n70%\nU S Pipe\nU S Rubber\nU S Steel\nVanadium Steel 28*\nWarner Bros . 13*\nWest Electric 139*\nWestern  Union 88%\nWoolworth     ... 54*\nYellow Truck . 19*\n37* 37*\n1*      1*\n45* 47\n18% 16%\n27* 28\n12 12*\n42* 43*\n38* 38*\n11% 11*\n38* 38*\n41* 42*\n16* 16*\n10* 11*\n6*      6%\n17% 17*\n29* 29*\n19% 18%\n31* 31*\n42* 43\n35% 35*\n37* S7*\n63* 63*\n18* 18%\n13* 13%\n31% 37*\n34* \u00bb*\n64* 64%\n71% 79*\n96 96\nSO* II\n29 28*\n26* 26*\n143 143\n54* 54%\n30 30*\n\u00ab9* 70*\n23* 23*\n13* 13*\n138* 139%\n87* 88%\nM* 54%\n19* M\nMontreal Gains\nMONTREAL, Aug. 30 (CP)-Sel-\nected issues moved higher in Saturday's stock market\nBrokers said buying of Brazilian\nwas based on anticipation of a dividend declaration. The price advanced * to 12%.\nMontreal Power -Jumped nearly a\npoint\nDemand for Seagrams was traced\nalso to reports a dividend was anticipated. The stock Jumped 1%\npoints to 26*.\nExchange Rates\nNEW YORK, Aug. 30 (CP)-Ster-\nling exchange easy at $8.02 1-16 lor\n60-day bills and at $5.03 1-16 lor\ndemand.\nCanadian dollars: Saturday par,\nFriday par, week ago 1-32 dls.\nFranc 6.50* cents.\nLire 7.81 cents.\nPOUND EASES\nPioneer Kasloite\nHas a Birthday\nF. E. Archer, many times mayor\nol the city ol Kaslo, who celebrated\nhis 77th birthday anniversary on\nAugust 21. Mr. Archer is well\nknown in the Kootenay country,\nespecially among the old timers. He\nis still in business in the lake city.\nOn the occasion of his birthday anniversary he was honored at a surprise party given by Kaslo friends.\nRAILS TO FORE\nNEW YORK, Aug. 30 (AP).-The\nrails, slowing down only briefly for\nprofit-taking grades, rolled up another Impressive advance in Saturday's brief stock market session.\nBuying forces, buoyed by earnings\nstatements and signs of sharply expanding passenger and freight traffic, climbed aboard carriers in the\nfinal hour and rode them for gains\nol fracUons to two or more points.\nThe Associated Press average of\n60 stocks was up .2 of a point at 69.\nThat for the rails advanced .8, while\nthe industrials were unchanged and\nthe utilities average was ahead .1.\nTransfers totalled 618,350 shares,\nagainst 431,830 last Saturday.\n\u2014 r*f*F, SFVFI\nMONTREAL. Aug. SO (CPV-\nPound sterling eased * cent to\n$5.03 on Montreal foreign extremes Saturday, the French franc\nat 6.58 cents and the United States\ndollar at ptr were unchanged.\nBAR QOLD TWO CENTS\nMONTRIAL, Aug. 30 (CP)-Bar\ngold in London down two cents at\n$33.77 an ounce in Canadian funds;\n138s 2%d in British. The lixed $35\nWashington price amounted to $35\nwith the United States dollar at\npar.\nCastlegar Ferry on\nFall Schedule Sept. 1\nTRAIL, B.C., Aug. 30,-Full 24-\nhour service of Castlegar ferry will\ncease at midnight, August 31, according to an announcement here\nSaturday by officials of the provincial department of public works.\nUsual fall service, from 7 a.m. to 12\no'clock midnight, will be resumed.\nOut of consideration for the large\nnumber of motorists expected on\nthe long holiday week-end next\nweek, the ferry will operate continuously from 7 a.m. September 7\nto 12 o'clock midnight, September 8.\nEastern Sales\nTORONTO, Aug. 30 (CP)-Sales\not 100 or more shares on the Toronto stock exchange, industrial section, Saturday includtd: 7695 Brazilian: 448 CPR; 5140 D C Seag; 530\nFord A; 1120 Nickel; 1719 H Walker;\n762 Imp Oil.\nMONTREAL, Aug. 30 (CP)-Sales\nof 100 or more shares on the Montreal stock exchange Saturday included: 2108 Brazilian; 515 Alcohol A; 175 CPR; 860 D Seag; 165 Imp\nTob; 570 Nickel.\nIndustrials Up\nTORONTO, Aug. 30 (CP).-Prices\non the Toronto industrial share market advanced Saturday to the highest level since April. The exchange\nindex advanced a point to 135.41.\nWalkers Common gained 1 to 39,\na new top since 1934. Distillers-Sea.\ngrams addedli.\nBrazilian advanced * to 12%,\nC.P.R. * to 12 and Nickel added Vt.\nSmelters was dormant.\nBuild Road (amp\nNear Invermere\nINVERMERE, B.C.-Rev. E. H.\nMaddocks, who has occupied the\nAnglican- pulpits' In this' district In\nthe absence of Rev. F. Stanford, the\nvicar, has returned,to his home in\nSaskatoon with his family. Rev. Mr.\nStanford returns to Invermere from\nthe coast on September 3.\nFather R. McGulnness ot Raymond, Alta., has been the guest of\nhis brother, Oswald McGulnness ol\nInvermere. Father McGulnness will\nin future be stationed at Banff,\nAlta.\nMr. and Mrs. C. B. Twlgg and\nMrs. R. B. Robinson of Creston are\nguests at the Invermere hotel.\nMrs. G. D. Davidson of Calgary\nIs staying with her sister, Mrs. A. M.\nHamilton of Invermere. Dr. M.\nCrawford of Winnipeg, another sister, is also with Mrs. Hamilton,\nMrs. Davies of Cranbrook is a\nguest of Mrs. Heath of Invermere.\nAthalmer's good, though unused\nschoolhouse, recently moved from\nthat town to Invermere, for purposes of accommodation, has set*\nUed down on Its new site, and is\nnow submitting to the art of a local\ncarpenter.\nPreparations are being made for\na nearly start on the road work on\nthis side of the Kingsgate-Radium\nhighway. Camps are under process\nof construction in the vicinity ol\nDutch Creek, and It is understood\nthat 25 men are at present employed,\nand more added, as the work progresses.\nSenator and Mrs. J. H. King motored through on August 22 from\nCranbrook to Golden, registering\nat the Invermere hotel.\nMr. and Mrs. Morland of London,\nEngland, making a tour of Canada,\nhave been guests at the Invermere\nhotel during August\nMrs. A. Ashworth has returned\nhome from an extended trip to eastern Canada.\nMr. Kenna and sister, Miss Kenna\nof New York, will be guests at tbe\nInvermere hotel during their stay\nin the district Mr. Kenna is interested in the Thunderblrd mine.\nSynopsis of Land Act\npre-emptions\nVACANT, unreserved, surveyed Crown\nlands may b\u00ab pre-empted by British\nsubjects over IS years of age. and by\naliens on declerlng Intention to beoomt\nBritish subjects, conditional upon resilience, occupation and improvement.\nFull Information concerning Pre-emptions ls given ln Bulletin No, 1. Land\nSeries, \"How to Pre-empt Land.\" copies ot\nwhich can be obtained free ot charge by\naddressing the Dapartmjnt of Lands, Victoria, B.C.: Burcft-j of Provincial Information, Victoria, or any Government Agent.\nH;*conis will bo granted covering only\nland suitable for agricultural purpoies\nwithin reascnabla distance of road, tehool\nand martcetmg facilities and which U not\ntlmbirland. i.e., carrying over 6.000 board\nfeet per acre east of the Coast Panf*o aad\n1,000 feet per acre west of Uiat Range.\nApplications for pre-emptions are to be\naddressed to tha Land Ccmmlcs'.cner of\nthe Land Rcccrdlng Division in which the\nland ep-lled fir is Blt-.at-d. on printed\nforms obtained Irom the Commissioner.\nPre-emptions must be occupied for five\nJ ears and Improvements made to value of\n10 per acr*, including clearing and cultivating at least five acres, before a Crown\nGrant can be received.\nPre-emptions carrying part time coBdt\u00ab\ntions of occupation are also granted.\nPURCHASE OB LEASE   .\nApplications are received for purchase\nof vacant and unreserved Crown lands,\nnot being timberland, for agricultural\npurposes. Minimum price of first-class\n(arcble) land ti $5 per acre, and second-\nclaes (erasing) land. M-fiO per fter*.\nFurther Information Is given tn Bulletin\nNo. io. Und Series, \"Purchase ud Lease\nof Crown Lands.\"\nAs a partial relief measure, reverted\nlands may he acquired by purchase In ten\nequal instalments, with the first payment\nsuspended for two years, provided taxes\nore paid when duo and Improvements ara\nmtde durintt the first two years of not\nless than 10-7*  of the appraised value.\nMill factory or industrial sites en\ntimber land, not exceeding \u00ab acres, may\nbe purchased or leased, the conditions\nincluding payment of stumpage.\nUnsurveyed areas, not exceeding 30\nacres, may b\u00ab leased as horaesites, conditional uson a dwelling beln-; erected In\nthe first year, title belns obtained after\nresidence and irmrovement conditions ara\nfulfilled and land has been surveyed.\nFor grazing end industrial purposes\nareas net ercsedlng 649 acres may be\nleased by one person or a company.\nUnder the Grazing Act the Province is\ndivided Into grazing districts and the\nrange administered under grazing regulations amended from time to time to meet\nvarying conditions. Annual gracing permits are issued based on certain monthly\nrates per head of stock. Priority In rasing privileges Is given to resident stock\nowners. Stock-owners may form associations for range manasoment. Free of\npartially free permits available for settlers,\ncampers and travellers, up to ten head.\nLIONS THRIVE IN RESERVE\nSKURUZA. South Africa (CP).-\nProtccted and unmolested the lions\n|n Kruger National park hove mul-\ntlDliea and, visitor* have seen from\n18 to 32 iii roving groups, *.\nSchool\nOUT-OF-TOWN PEOPLE \u2014 Have you a home in\ntown for your child yet? Read and use the\nCLASSIFIED COLUMN\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS\nCLASSIFIED\nhas a column to assist every one In need.\nDo you need a bike or books or have you something\nfor sale and need the cash?\nPHONE 144\nOut-of-town Readrrs\u2014Prompt attention given\nto Mail Orders.\n -MONDAY M\nTEXT\nBOOKS\nMust Be Sold for\nCASH ONLY\nWe have the largest stock of B. C. Text\nBooks east of Vancouver\nMann Rutherford Drug\nCompany\nDRUGGISTS AND STATIONERS\nECHO LAUGHTER\nDONKEY MATCH\nSoftball on Obstinate\nMountsiEntertains\nHundr_ds\nSPORTS COMEDY\nOF THE SEASON\nDonkeys Make Men\nLook Foolish in\nField\nJoe Belanger Is\nLaid Last Rest\nOld Timers Attend His\nFuneral; Found\nDead\nOld timer of the district, Joseph\nBelanger, who was found dead in a\nshack Wednesday, was burlec\" Saturday morning at the city cemetery.\nServices were held at the Church\nof Mary Immaculate.  Rev. J. C.\nPHONE  815\nfor better and promoter serv-\nlee In nlumblnq repalri and\nalteration!.\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nDRESSES\nand COATS\nDYED\nfor Fall Wear\nH. K. FOOT\nHigh Clan Dyer and Cleaner\nFAIRVIEW,   NELSON.   B.C.\nMcKenzie officiating, and at the\ngraveside.\nA number of old timers attended\nthe services, and the pallbearers\nwere Nap Mallette, J. Dumont,\nGeorge Lapointe, E. Merlo, L. Roberts and Andrew Dunn.\nBelanger, aged about 82, who had\nbeen in the district for 35 or 40\nyears, worked in various lumber\ncamps until he took up residence in\na shack on the waterfront, at the\nfoot of Elwyin street, Fairview,\nsome seven years ago.\nHis body was found in the shack\nWednesday afternoon, and lt was\nbelieved he had died during Tuesday night. He had no known relatives in the district.\nWhere Boundary People Enjoy Tl\nStores Busy as\nSupply Children\nSchool Opening\nNelson stores will be busy this\nweek supplying the wants of hundreds of youngsters starting school\nor returning to their studies. Schools\nthroughout the province will open\ntomorrow, September 1.\nText books, note books, scribblers,\npencils, pens and other supplies\nrequired, as well as clothing, lunch\nkiti and so on, feature window displays at this time.\nStainless steel was Invented almost simultaneously in Germany\nand in England, only about 25 years\nago.\nRetail Lumber\nLATH-SHINGLES\nMOULDINGS\nW. W. Powell Co., Ltd.\n\"The Home of Cood Lumber\"\nTelephone 176 Foot of Stanley St.\n8:15 TONIGHT-TONIGHT 8:15\nLeague Box\nLacrosse Game\nNELSON vs. TRAIL\nENTRANCE VERNON ST. DOORS ONLY\nDoon Open at 7:45\nADMISSION:   ADULTS   25c;   CHILDREN   10c\nRumors of earth shocks ln Nelson\nduring the week-end were not altogether without foundation. Inquiry\nestablished, however, it was not\nearthquakes but merely the echo of\nlaughter from the recreation\ngrounds. Hundreds of residents\nflocked to the grounds Saturday\nnight and again Sunday to see\nGyros and Kinsmen cross horns in\na game of donkey baseball, and\ncame away each time with many\nstories of the donkeys making donkeys of the players. There was hardly a minute lacking laughter.\nThe game was the sports comedy\nsensation of the year. All players,\nwith the exception of pitchers and\ncatchers, were mounted. It didn't\nmatter whether they climbed off,\nfell off, jumped off, or were thrown\noff in fielding the ball, but they\nhad to take the donkey with them\nwhen they chased hits, and they\nhad to remount to throw the ball in.\nSome of the boys made fine catches\naboard their mounts, and some of\nthem took extraordinary tumbles\ntrying to.\nMOUNT8 HAVE OWN IDEA\nBatters had to mount after they\nhad made their hits, and circle the\nbases mounted. If they were thrown\ntwice they were automatically out.\n\"Running the bases\" on donkeys\nwhich refused most of the time to\ndo more than walk, or which ahled\nat the white circles forming the\nbases and refused to put the required two feet on the base to be safe,\nprovided a good deal of the fun.\nWith no strikeouts, everyone, had\nto hit and everyone had to try at\nleast to mount and run the bases.\nSome of the boys picked donkeys\nthat had no Intention of carrying\nthem anywhere, and promptly unseated them. Others picked mounts\nthat started off with a good deal of\npromise and then suddenly lost interest and refused to go through\nwith the base-running.\nAmong the highlights'.\nAdo Diebolt's chaps, and his professionally styled action afield and\nafoot.\nEd Stromstead scoring a run\naboard the most casual donkey in\nthe outfit; and Gordon Bennett doing the same after being thrown between first and second base.\nJack Stark discovering that even\ntickling would not disturb a donkey's peace of mind.\nEXPERIMENTAL EVIDENCE\nChlel Alex Stewart demonstrating\nthe theory of the irresistible force\nand the immovable object; and\nconvincing the donkey that were one\nmeans of persuasion fails, another\nmethod may succeed.\nWil Bush rescuing his headgear\nfrom beneath his mount.\nAnd at any time, three or four\nfielders within apparent easy reach\nof the ball trying everything to get\nto it while three or four donkeys\npointed their tails to the compass\nand refused to move.\nIncidentally, each of the two\ngames, Saturday evening and Sunday afternoon, was a tie. The first\ngame was 1-1. There appeared to\nbe a difference of opinion as to\njust what the Sunday count was,\nbut it was somewhere between 1-1\nand 4-4, also a tie. A big crowd saw\neach game, spectators on foot and\nin cars thronging the grounds. The\nSaturday crowd was the biggest\nattendance at the Recreation\ngrounds in some years.\nThe donkeys were supplied by a\ntravelling outfit which transported the animals by truck and trailer.\nChristina Lake, about 15 miles east of Grand\nForks, is the summer resort for many boundary,\nTrail, Rossland and United States people. This is\na view of the diving float, shoot-lhc-shoot and\nother bathing facilities at Kingsley's. Summer cottages line the beach. Christina abounds in bass and\nKokanee.\nAll in Their Fluffs and Ruffles\n-          w \u2022 \u25a0%.\n7,7  7\n. . .       \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0 .\n\u25a0\"\"\u25a0'\n\u25a0w\"^\nW.7--        *                            , *;W?'\n__-____\u00a7t*>       t_K$?                          ^\n1\nex. Tyl-. .<>'     .\u00a3S_^_\n_\u00ab*'--M_-M    \u25a0\nj       i\n1 \u25a0   'V, tl\nm\n<_& '\u25a0\u2022\"\u25a0V- '.,;\u00a3*-\n- \u25a0-\u25a0'.\"\u2022 ..\u2022.:,.!-\"'\"\nAll dressed up in their fluffs and ruffles are Ellen, the elder, and\nAnnie, daughters of Mr. and Mrs. William Kilfedder of Kimberley.\nSPANISH\n\"Since both the government forces\nand the opposing forces in Spain\nin the friendliest spirit have made\nevery possible effort to avoid injury to American nationals and\nAmerican property,'' the department's statement said, *'it can only\nbe assumed that the attack on the\nUnited States destroyer Kane was\ndue to its identity having been\nmistaken by a plane of one faction for a vessel of the other.\"\nIsh government and the Spanish\nrebels.\nMclntyre said reports reaching the\npresident said the destroyer U.S.S.\nKane had not been hit and that it\nhad fired on the monoplane.\nThe president was described as\nclosely in touch with Washington\nby telephone. Further announcements concerning the incident are\nto come from the state department.\nAnnouncement\nON TUESDAY MORNING AT 9 A.M.\nTHE STOCK OF LADIES' WEAR OF THE     '\nBLANCHE SPECIALTY SHOPPE,\nBANKRUPT\nwill be offered for sale to the public at from 60 to\n70% of its cost value.\nThe sale will be held in the premises formerly occupied\nby the Blanche Specialty Shoppe, Baker Street.\nThe stock is a small one and there is not the variety\nof sizes, etc., that would be found in a larger stock.\nHowever, the stock must be sold and the price marked\non each article that will be offered you is from 30 to\n40 per cent less than it cost the Blanche Specialty\nShoppe when it was stocked.\nThere will be no misrepresentation in this sale, neither\nwill there be any other goods offered the public except\nthose that were in stock at the date of Bankruptcy.\nTHE DOORS WILL OPEN AND THE SALE START\n9 A.M. TUESDAY\u2014and will continue until all the\nstock has been sold.\nD. ST.DENIS, Trustee\nPRESIDENT IN TOUCH\nRAPID CITY, SD., Au* 3D (AP).\n\u2014Marvin H. Mclntyre, secretary to\nPresident R:osevelt, announced today lhat an American destroyer off\nthe coast of Spain had been bombed by an unidentified airplane, and\nthat diplomatic representations\nwould be made to both the Span-\nParade through the city Saturday\nnight of the big truck with its\nbroadcasting equipment and with\na number of the players mounted,\ndrew a crowd to Baker street which\ncame close to blocking traffic entirely.\nLOYALISTS SET BACK\nMADRID, Aug. 30 \u2014 (By H. E\nKnoblaugh), \u2014 With alrplanas on\nconstant patrol against new rebel\nair raids on M*drid, official government sources tonight admitted an\n\"important reverse\" in a decisive\nbattle at the south-western city of\n3ropesa.\nThe defeat, described as the most\nimportant since the Faacist insurgents took Merlda in their march\nfrom Bada>z toward Toledo and\nMadrid, was said by Julio Alvarez\ndel Vayo, Socialist leader, to have\ndriven the government forces back\nto Talavera on the road to Toledo.\nRecapture of the lost ground was\nexpected at any time, Del Vayo Insisted.\nIn Madrid itself, hi; bv air bombs\n48 hours before, anarchist and syndicalist leaders spoke out to halt\n\"monstrous\" acts by zealots within\ntheir own ranks.\u2014(Copyright, 1936,\nby Associated Press).\nPANTHERS LOSE\nIN TRAIL TILT\nBeloski, Trail Mound\nArtist Hurls a No-\nHit Battle\nWith young Beloski, Trail pitcher,\nhurling a nohit game, Trail's bantam baseball team defeated Nelaon\nPanthers at Trail Saturday by \u2022\nscore of 7-1. Beloski was In rare\nform and would have earned a\nshutout but for the fact his catcher\nthrew the ball wild to third base\nto give Nelson its lone score on an\nerror ln the sixth inning. Bud McLean and Pete Younger formed the\nbattery for Nelson and Trail ganged hits ta tuck the game away safely ln the third inning.\nAIR RAIDS IN NORTH\nHBNDAYii, Franco-Spahlsh border, Aug. 30 (AP).\u2014A wave of rebel\nair raids blasted government-held\ncities on tiie northern Spanish war\nfront today.\nScreaming sirens sant the inhabitants of long-besieged Irun to cover\nas a lone raider appeared over the\ntown. He dropped five bombs which\ncaused little damage.\nHowever, at Eibar, 20 miles from\nTolosa, two insurgent planes dropped 20 artillery shells converted into bombs, killing and wounding a\nnumber tf civilians.\nThe newspaper i'rente Popular\nsaid government troops h:d routed\na rebel column seeking to reinforce\nHuesca. Heavy casualties were reported.\nEVACUATE IRUN\nIRUN, Spain, Aug. 30 (AP). \u2014 A\nrebel threat to bombard this northern Spanish city by land, sea and\nair at dawn tomorrow caused authorities to begin tonight the evacuation of women and children.\nThe Fascist insurgents sent an\nultimatum demanding immediate\nsurrender unless the defenders were\nwilling to face a bombardment. The\nultimatum met a flat refusal.\nMore than 1000 women and children crossed the French border to\nHendaye, carrying their household\nbelongings, and 2000 more were expected to follow during the night.\nLoyalist authorities said the Fascists lined up more ;.ian 20 six-inch\nguns on hills commanding the city,\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nWanted\u2014Early Apples. McDonald\nJam Co. (2062)\nElectrical  supplies  and  repairs\nF. H. Smith, 313 Baker St. Ph. 666.\n(2016)\nCancelled\u2014Kinsmen Dance, Willow Point, Sept 5. (2337)\n\"Bert\" Peebles\nDies, Pasadena\nMr. and Mrs. R. A. Peebles have\nbeen advised of the death of their\nson, Robert Benjamin, at Pasadena,\nCalif., August 28.\nThe body is to be brought to Nelson for burial. Funeral arrangements will be announced later.\nBradley, Sutherland\nWin Bowling Doubles\nN. B. Bradley and H. Sutherland\ndefeated Bert Allen and H. H. Klngzett 28-8 at the Nelson Lawn Bowling club's greens Sunday in the\nopening match of the men's doubles\ncompetition.\nonly a little over a ' silt away. The\nbattleship Espana, the cruisers Almirante Cervera and Canaries and\nthe destroyer Velasco waited offshore.\nFALL\nSHIRTS\nThey're\n\u2022 Bright\n\u2022 Bold\n\u2022 Dark\n\u2022 Patterned\nWe have just received\nour new Fall Forsyth\nshirts. They are colorful\nand smartly patterned\nwith new collar styles!\n$2.00\nUP\nEMORY'S\nLimited\nCet Your |ob in the Classified I\nJ.A.C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSuite 205\nMedical Arts Bldg\nSMYTHE'S\nRED MITE KILLER\nwill clean your chicken h,oi;o_\nof all vermin,       _\nAt Smythe's\nPrescription  Druggist\nPhone 1\nTennis Racquets repaired while\nyou wait HOLLAND'S. (2014)\nFor the best Nelson girl athlete,\nLabor Day Sports cup, donated by\nJ. Argyle of City Drug. (MM)\nWe are specialists In the made-to-\nmeasure suit business. Fit absolutely\nguaranteed. JACK BOYCE.    (2239)\nLabor Day Sports\u2014Best all-round\nNelson Athlete, open events, wins\nthe handsome Safeway Cup.   (2334)\nSPANISH SENORITAS ENLIST TO DEFEND MADRID\nWhile the men of Madrid are ln the mountains\noutside the capital, barring the way to advancing\nrebels, their womenfolk have donned uniforms,\nlearned proficiency in firearms and have tyken\nover the job of keeping order in the capital '\u2022\u25a0 and\nhunting out Fascist snipers. This lot is shown during a rest period in a drill session. Tha instructor is\nat LEFT.\u2014Central Press Canadian Photo.\nParents are requested te register\nbeginners and new pupils at CENTRAL SCHOOL 9 o'clock tomorrow\nmorning and all pupils are to enroll\nat 1:30 p.m. All HUME SCHOOL\npupils are to enroll at 9 a.m.    (2368)\nKootenay Lake Hospital would\nwelcome any small gifts of fruit and\nvegetables. Many small gardens\nhave something wasting. Phone 868\nand will collect. (2382)\nCASTLEGAR FERRY\nThe 24 hour service^on the above\nferry will eease at midnight August 31st.\nThe usual fall service from 7 a.m\nto  12  midnight  will  be  resumed\nSeptember 1st until further notice\nTo handle the holiday traffic over\nLabour day, this ferry will operate\ncontinuously from 7 a.m. September\n7th to midnight September 8th.\nSigned,\nProvincial Public Works.\nRossland-Trail District.\n(2363)\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nBerry \u2014 Arthur William, passed\naway Thursday, Aui'mt 27. Body\nwill rest at Somers Funeral Home\nuntil 2 p.m. Monday, August 31,\nwhere services will be held, Rev.\nW. J. Silverwood officiating.   (2358)\nNelson to:.          O.W. R.T.\nCranbrook $ 4.20 S 7.80\nCalgary     10.50 18.90\nEdmonton    15.15 27.30\nWinnipeg \u201e   28.90 48.45\nCREYHOUND LINES\nPhone 800\nNelson  Depot  205 Baker  St.\n(2011)\nHEALTHY CHILDREN\nMUST HAVE\nCLEAN CLOTHES\nPHONE\n128\nNever let the M\ndicap of ancle]\nclothes hamr,\nhealth of your\nily. With sch(\nstarting again form\nthe money saving,\ndrudgery laving\nhabit of sending\nthe family wash to\nus, where it will be\nscientifically cleaned and delivered\nat a very modest\ncoif.\nPHONE\n128\nWASHING\u2014 IRONING\u2014DRY CLEANING\u2014REPAIRS\nWe Call We Deliver\nKootenay Steam Laundry\nEnlargements\nIf you like the picture In\nsnapshot size, you'll like it\neven enlarged. Our enlargements are carefully\ndone to bring out all\nbeauty and detail. Better\nyet, they're surprisingly\ninexpensive. Bring us your\nfavorite snaps and have\nthem done now.\nAllen's Art Shoppe\n\"A Greeting Card for Every\nOccasion\"\nSchool Opening\nBoys \"Slsman\" Boots.\nStrong, Rugged, Durable\n8 to 10V, 11 to 1314\n$2.25       $2.50\n1 to S.\npair\t\n. BOYS' OXFORDS\nGenuine   Welted   Soles.\nSizes 1 to 5!4.\npair   \t\nCHILDREN'S OXFORDS\nS to 7V4 8 to 1014\n$1.90       $2J5\n^: $2.50\nGODFREYS*\n\u25a0 '\u25a0 LIMITED\n\"CAMBRIDGE CLOTHES-\nSIB BAKER      PHONE 270\n$2.95\n$2.50\nComplete Shows at 2:00, 7:00, 8:40\nmstsstst&esxe&ss&x&MsssmsM&smtsswi\nHit Number One Showing at 2:00-7:00-9:57\n\"Sutter's Qold\"\nThe most glorious of all early Western epics!\nStarring\nEdward Arnold\nwith Lee Track Binnie Barnes\nHit Number Two Showing at 3:40-8:40\nCAROLE LOMBARD\nin Faith Baldwin's\n\"LOVE BEFORE BREAKFAST\"\nwith Preston Foster\ngS\u00ab3\u00bb\u00bb\u00bbW\u00bbWW\u00abS\u00abS$\u00abSSS3S\u00bbS\u00bbSS<*'-\n&S&X&S&XS$8S*\n______\n______\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1936_08_31","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0412552","@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":"1936-08-31 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1936-08-31 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\/1.0412552"}