{"@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":"2022-04-27","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1937-09-10","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0413314\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" l\"l_aK-\nBudge and Parker Advance; B.C.\nGirl in Semis of Golf\n\u2014Page Nine\nUBBABY\nVICTORIA, B.C^\ni^^iim^m^m^mm^mmmmi.\nII1M\nitocJc Markets and Wheat Pits\nShow Some Improvement\n\u2014Page Eleven\nrOLUME 36\nFIVE CENT8 PER COPY\n , 1 i    hiii\nNEL80N, BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA\u2014FRIDAY MORNINQ, SEPT. 10. 19S7.\nNUMBER 122\nJJ. B. C. M. toMeet, Nelson, '38;\nDistrict Mayors on Executive\nGoes to Coast\nFuture of Canada Assured\nif Leadership Is Provided\nSIR EDWARD\n\u2014Sir Edward Beattyf\nLeadership Ordinary\nMen and Women\nLacking, He Says\nBy JOHN DAUPH1NEE\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 9 (CP)-SJr\nEdward Beatty tonight said the future of Canada as\na nation was assured if business\nmen, professional\nworkers, educationists and ordinary solid citizens\nprovided leadership in developing\n\"a heritage of\nwealth and opportunity such as no\npeople of our\nnumbers have ever held in history.\"\nThe Canadian\nPacific railway\npresident, addressing the annual dinner of the Canadian chamber of commerce here, said\nCanada did provide its early settlers with some sources of wealth\nwhich could, for a time, be exploited carelessly, but that on the whole\nthe Dominion was a land where\nwealth could only be won by \"intelligent toil of men who are prepared to labor steadily, and to accumulate slowly.\"\nHe said the real problem facing\nCanadian citizens was whether their\nhuman assets were equal to opportunities facing them.\n\"I have argued before and I argue again that our political leaders\nare not the masters but the servants\nof the people,\" Sir Edward said,\n\"and that under Democratic institutions we cannot expect that political\nleaders will go very far ahead of\nwhat the voters want.\nLEADERSHIP OF ORDINARY\nFOLK IS LACKING\n\"If leadership has been lacking\nin this country it is another sort of\nleadership. The real leadership\nwhich we need is not that of outstanding national figures making\nresounding speeches which sweep\nthe country. It is the leadership of\nordinary men and women in their\nown small sphere....\n\"On the quality of this leadership\nwill depend the skill with which we\napply the toil of an intelligent and\ncourageous people to great natural\nwealth. I am as confident that the\nleadership will be found as that the\npeople are capable of following it,\nand that the wealth is there to be\nused.\"\nSir Edward said there was \"little\nto regret\" from the standpoint of the\nquality of Canadian population. He\nsaid it might take time to produce\na \"national type\", but the Dominion\nimmigation policy was hard to criticize, except that it was too rapid\nearly in this century.\n\"Had the original plan been followed and had the Canadian Pacific\nbeen left to, develop the west as\nrapidly as opportunity offered and\ncapital was available, there would\nhave been less hectic a period of\nimmigration from 1900 on,\" he said.\n\"Because the process of development was too rapid, we suffer some\nof the consequences today, (but)\ndespite all those who argue that\nwe must abandon large areas of the\nprairie provinces, I, for one, refuse\nto believe that we must or shall\ndo anything of the kind.\"\nSir Edward said Canadian hopes\nof economic recovery must be tempered by the inadequate supply\nof export wheat produced on the\nprairies this year, but that they\nshould \"still not be abandoned,\"\nCRANBROOK IAD,\nWILLIAM MUIR, IS\nOBJECT SEARCH\nWith Sister.III, Father\nDoubly Arikious to\nHear From Him\nProvincial police are searching\nthroughout the southern interior for\nWilliam Muir, Cranbrook lad who\nleft home in search of work in mid-\nAugust and who has not been heard\nfrom since. His sister in seriously ill\nat Spokane and his father as a result, is doubly anxious to get in\ntouch with him.\nThe lad left for Creston in search\nof work, and two letters addressed\nto him t. .e by his father, John\nMuir, were returned. He is described as 17 years of age; five feet, nine\ninches in height; and 170 pounds in\nweight. He has fair hair, in pompadour style, and in appearance is of\n\"round-faced\" type.\nMacPherson How\nHead Good Roads\nAssoc, in Canada\nB. C. Minister Named\nPresident at N. B.\nMeeting\nST. ANDREWS, N. B., September\n9 (CP) \u2014After a day of lectures\nand discussion, final business at the\nconvention of the Canadian Good\nRoads association today included unanimous adbption of a resolution\nurging various safety measures, election of officers and directors and\npresentation of the report of the\nretiring president, Hon. A. S. Mac-\nMillan, minister of highways for\nNova Scotia. The new president is\nHon. Frank M. MacPherson, minister of highways in British Columbia.\nOther officers elected included:\nfourth vice-president, Hon. Charles\nM. Dunn. Saskatchewan minister of\nhighways.\nDirectors elected included H. S.\nCarpenter, Regina; Hon. W. R. Club,\nManitoba minister of public works;\nArthur Dixon, British Columbia deputy minister of public works, and\nHon. W. A. Fallow, Alberta minister\nof public works.\nSmelter Tribunal\nTold Damage Slight\nOTTAWA, 8ept. 9 (CP)-Sul-\nphur dioxide fumet from the\n\u25a0melter at Trail, B. C\u201e had caused\nnoticeable damage to Douglas fir\nand yellow pine In adjacent United States forests prior to 1932 but\nno substantial damans had been\nfound since then, the Trail smelter arbitration tribunal was told\ntoday.\nAlan MacCallum, forest pathologist of the national research\ncouncil, testified conifers had not\nbeen affected adversely by smelter fumes since the beginning of\n1932 with the exception of some\nmarkings on larch. He convicted\nhis testimony and will be .rots-\nexamined by J. F. Raftis, atro-\nclate United States counsel.\nONE IN EVERY SIX\nDEATHS IN B.C. IN\nJULY IS OF CANCER\nVICTORIA, Sept. 9 (CP)-One\nout of every six deaths in British\nColumbia during July resulted from\ncancer, according to statistics released by the department of health\ntoday. Of 520 deaths from all causes\ncancer took a toll of 86, the report\nshows.\nTuberculosis took the next heaviest loll with 28 deaths; pneumonia\n(all types) accounted for 12; influenza three; measles one; cerebrospinal meningitis one; septic sore\nthroat one; puerperal deaths numbered five motor accidents took a\ntoll of 12 lives and 61 children under one year of at* were shown in\nthe list\nJury Asks Warning\nSign on Okanagan\nHighway Death Site\nPENTICTON, B. C, Sept. 9 (CP)\n\u2014 Recommendation for the placing\nof \"a proper warning sign\" on the\nOkanagan Falls - Penticton road\nwhere Mrs. Clarice Xeith of Kelowna met death in an automobile\naccident Labor day, was before the\nBritish Columbia government today.\nThe recommendation was made\nWednesday by a coroner's jury\nwhich investigated the death of\nMrs. Krith and found she died\n\"through injuries received in an\naccident to an automobile allegedly driven by Ronald G. Bell.\"\nMAYOR MORGAN\nMAKES JIBE AT\n'COAST FELLOWS'\nON LAW EVASION\n\"They Apply to You as\nWell as Rest of the\nCountry\" He Says\nHOME LOAN PLAN\nIS TURNED DOWN\nNANAIMO, B.C., Sept. 9 (CP)-\nThe Union of British Columbia\nMunicipalities today wound up Its\ntwo-day convention, leaving In the\nhands of a special committee the\ntask of drafting a brief on municipal affairs for presentation to\nFinance Minister John Hart,\nSeveral resolutions sponsored\nby representatives from various\nparts of the province were endorsed by the convention before they\nturned to the task of electing officers and executive and winding\nup the meeting.\nAmong the main resolutions passed today was a resolution from the\ndistrict of Pitt Meadows regarding\nlicenced teamsters picking up goods\nin the district.\nThe resolution was aimed at orientals in the interior delivering goods\nwithout a truckers licence.\nCOQUITLAM REEVE IS HEAD\nReeve R. C. Macdonald of Coquit-\nlam, formerly first vice-president,\nwas elected president, of the union by\nacclamation. 4teeve J. fe. Leyland\nof West Vancouver was elected first\nvice-president and J. W. Prowse of\nVernon was chosen second vice-president. R. R. H. Sewell of Saanich was\nelected secretary-treasurer.\nThe executive was elected as\nfollows: Commissioner A. Graham,\nof Mission; Mayor J, P. Morgan,\nof Nelson; Mayor George C. Miller\nof Vancouver; Alderman James\nAdam of Victoria; Mayor T. A.\nLove of Grand Forks; Mayor John\nBarsby of Nanaimo;' Reeve J. T.\nBrown of Surrey; Reeve William\nCrouch of Saanich and Mayor Fred\nHume of New Westminster.\nNelson was chosen as the lite\nfor the 1938 convention.\nOPPOSE CIVIL\nSERVICE FOR FIREMEN\nA resolution opposing application\nof the Civil Service act to fire\ndepartments was adopted unanimously and without discussion today.\nThe union, in the second day of its\ntwo-day convention, passed the resolution despite a second motion on\nthe agenda advocating a civil ser\u00bb\nvice status for British Columbia\nfiremen.\nA proposal from the Oak Bay delegation to remove all municipalities except Victoria, Vancouver and\nNew Westminster from operation of\nthe fire department1 hours of labor\nact was turned down after healed\ndebate.\nMORGAN CRITICAL\nAddressing sponsors of the motion Mayor J. P. Morgan of Nelson criticized the proposal and\nadded;\n\"You coast fellows ought to\nstop trying to get out from under\nthe laws. They apply to you as well\nas the rest of the country. When\nyou work a man 60 hours a week\nhe has done more than enough.\"\nThe delegates rejected a resolution urging power be qlvcn to municipalities to borrow .and make\nloans for home construction.\nUnanimous endorsement was' given a resolution requesting the provincial government from enacting\nlegislation concerning municipalittes\nwithout first referring it to the union.\nA resolution asking for a provision\nthat municipalities must approve before the government could grant a\nbeer parlor plebiscite on petition of\nelectors, was defeated.\nAssistant general passenger agent\nat Montreal since last October and a\nveteran of 33 years with the Canadian Pacific railway's passenger\ntraffic department, G. Bruce Burpee has been named by N. R. DesBrlsay, assistant passenger traffic\nmanager, Winnipeg, to take over the\npost of general passenger agent for\nthe Pacific Coast at Vancouver, October 1. Mr. Burpee succeeds E. F.\nL. Sturdee, general passenger agent\nin Vancouver since May, 1930, on the\nletter's promotion to Montreal as\nassistant passenger traffic manager for Eastern lines.\nEdmonton Schools Closed Until\nSept 20th. Because of Paralysis\n^Toronto and London Take Same Action as the\nDisease Claims 58th. Victim in Canada;\nHope Is Seen in Cooler Weather\nEIGHT NEW CASES IN MANITOBA; 30\nNEW ONES IN ONTARIO; TWO DEATHS\nCOAST WAITING\nFOR CHALLENGE\nFROM KOOTENAY\nVANCoy\\;.ER, .apt 9 (\u00ab\u00bb\u25a0)-\nWinners of tHe tnter-clty box lacrosse league are prepared to\nmeet the finalists of the Kootenay lacrosse league, E. E. Barnes,\nlacrosse commissioner, said tonight.\n\"Until we receive a challenge\nfrom the Kootenay champions we\ncannot say when or where the\nmatch for the British Columbia\ntitle will be played,\" Mr. Barnes\nsaid.\nTORONTO. Sept. 9 (CP) - Mike\nKelley, president of the Canadian\nAmateur Lacrosse association, announced today the Mann cup finals\nwould bo played ollternately at\nNew Westminster and Vancouver,\nirrespective of which club wins the\ncoastal playoffs.\nVancouver Police\nSeek Degenerate\nVANCOUVER, Sept, 9 (CP) -*\nDegenerates again held the attention\nof Vancouver police today as a tccn-\naged girl was found in the company\nof a man and two other girls reported being accosted.\nThe teen-aged girl, missing from\nher home since yesterday, was found\non the street by relatives witn a 15-\nyear-old boy and a man. After a\nchase, the boy and girl were caught\nbut the man escaped.' '\nA short time later police received\na report from two 12-year-old girls\nof being accosted by a man who asked them to go with him. When they\nrefused he fled.\nCase of Infantile\nParalysis in B.C.\nin August Listed\nVICTORIA, Sept. 9 (CD-Notifiable diseases reported by medical\npractitioners to the British Columbia department of health during the\nmonth of August follow:\nCancer 67; cerebrospinal meningitis 2; chickenpox 19; conjunctivitis\n1; erysipelas 3; German measles 5;\ninfluenza 17; measles 62; mumps 20;\npneumonia (all types) 17; scarlet fever 32; poliomyelitis (infantile para>\nlysis) l; septic sore throat 4; trach'\noma 4; tuberculosis 58; typhoid fe\nver 4; undulent fever 1; and whoop'\ning cough 58.\nCOMMISSION IS\nALL SET TO START\nHEARINGS WHEN\nPROVINCES ARE\nMunicipalities May Be\nHeard If Province\nDesires\nWILL RECOMMEND\nB.N.A. ACT CHANGE\nOTTAWA, Sept. 9 (CP)-With\nplans for public hearings in every\nprovincial capital and in Ottawa to\ncommence as soon as the provincial\ngovernment submissions are ready,\nthe royal commission on Dominion-\nprovincial relations completed organization here today.\nChief Justice Newton Wesley\nRowell of Ontario, chairman of the\nfive-man commission, said tonight\nhe could not forecast a date for the\nopening session. \"As soon as two or\nthree of the provinces are ready\nwith their submissions we will\nstart,\" he said.\nBecause of the \"enormous task\"\nbefore the commission, Judge Rowell said evidence would be heard\nfrom Dominion and provincial governments and spokesmen for \"recognized public organizations\" that\ndesire to be represented.\nNO   PERSONAL  OPINION\nPerson^, representing only their\nown opinioria-'will not be heard exj\ncept in the possible event that the\ncommission desires light on some\nparticular problem and calls an expert lor that purpose.\nMunicipalities, which are the creations of the provinces and derive\ntheir jurisdiction and taxation powers from the provincial legislatures,\nwill be represented before the commission by the provincial governments, Judge Rowell said. If any\nprovincial government desired its\nmunicipalities to go directly before\nthe commission there would be no\nobjection.\nMembers met here yesterday for\nprivate conferences completed today. No further meetings are expected until taking of evidence actually starts and scene of the opening may be in Ottawa as a preliminary to visiting provincial capitals. The real investigation will start\nwith the provinces, Judge Rowell\nsaid.\nTO  RECOMMEND\nCONSTITUTIONAL  CHANGES\nChief Justice Rowell said he was\nsatisfied the terms of reference gave\nthe commission direct instructions\nto study the British North America\nact with a view to recommending\nchanges in the constitution necessary to improve economic relations\nbetween the Dominion and the provinces.\nIn addition to Chief Justice Rowell members of the commission are:\nHon. Thibaudeau Rinfret, justice of\nthe supreme court of Canada; John\nW. Dafoe, president and editor of\nthe Winnipeg Free Press; H. F. Angus, professor of economics at University of British Columbia Van\ncouver; and R, A. MacKay, profes'\nsor of government at Dalhousie university, Halifax. D. A. Skelton of\nthe Bank of Canada, Ottawa, is\nsecretary.\nBritain and France to Use\nForce in the Mediterranean\nDecide on Action When Italy and Germany\nRefuse to Attend Today's \"Anti-Piracy\"\nConference of Powers at Nyon\n(By J. S. Stark)\n(Associated Press Staff Writer)\nLONDON, September 9, (AP)\n\u2014Great Britain and France determined on force tonight as tha only protection left for their Mediterranean shipping after Italy\nand Germany Jointly refused to\nattend   tomorrow's   \"antl-plracy\"\nconference In Switzerland.\nAnglo-French unity was cemented strongly by cleavage with\nthe Fascist powers on the eve of\nwhat may prove one of tho most\nvital meetings In Europe's recent\nhistory.\nGreat Britain and France were\nIn complete harmony on tho use\nof their warships for \"unltlve action\" to safeguard Mediterranean\ncommerce. They agreed to discard a \"preventive plan\"\u2014a sys\ntem of restricted areas In which\nsubmarines would be forbidden\u2014\nthat they would have proposed\nhad Germany and Italy attended.\nUse of warships called for organization of a nine-power internation\nal fleet with orders to sink any\nsubmarine threatening a neutral\nmerchantman. Besides warships of\nBritain and France the international\nfleet would Include those of the other seven nations participating in\nthe parley\u2014Greece, Turkey, Yugoslavia, Soviet Russia, Egypt, Rumania and Bulgaria.\nForeign Secretary Eden flew to\nParis today and conferred on the\nMediterranean crisis with foreign\nminister Delbos while a committee\nof naval experts drafted plans for\nthe international fleet\nCANADIANS OWE\n$7,039,091,531, THE\nSTATISTICS SAY\nFederal, Provincial and\nMunicipal Debts\nIncluded\nOTTAWA. Sept. 9 (CP)-Cana-\ndians owe $7,039,091,538 through operations of the various taxing auth-\nqrities throughout the Dominion.\nThe figure is, in all likelihood, considerably larger, for .a Dominion\nbureau of statistics report, issued today, covering Dominion, provincial\nand municipal debts, gave the Dominion and provincial amounts up\nto tho end of 1936, and those of the\nmur,\\ ipalities up to the end of 1935\nonly.\nWith the 1935 figure for municipalities added .to the 1936 totals for\nDominion and provincial governments, the aggregate net direct debt\namounted to $5,535,744,794, and the\nguaranteed indirect debt of Dominion and provinces totalled $1,503,-\n346,744.\nActive assets of the Dominion have\na value of $425,643,510, and i)on-ac-\ntive assets, $3,006,100,517.\nThe Dominion government's liabilities totalled $3,431,944,127.\nBy Tho Canadian Press\nToronto, London and Edmonton moved again last night (Thursday)\nto keep their children from schools as tho Infantile paralysis epidemic,\nbelieved to be on the wane with the advent of cooler weather, claimed\nIts 57th and 58th victims In Canada.\nToronto board of health, acting on city council's recommendation,\nordered a third postponement In reopening of schools, this time until\n8opt. 20. Edmonton and London officials set tho same date.\n-f In many districts of Ontario, hard-\n| est hit with a case list of more than\n1200 and death toll of more than 30,\nschools already have been ordered\nshut until late this month with officials prepared to keep them closed\nuntil the epidemic has abated sufficient so that children can gather\nwith safety.\nA dramatic race against death\nfailed at Barrle, Ont., early Thursday, and brought about one of the\n' two deaths reported yesterday. The\nother was at Toronto where a\nfive-year-old girl died, raising to\n20 the disease's toll In the Ontario\ncapital.\nDIES IN AMBULANCE\nThomas Gibbs, 17, died in an ambulance at Barrie while Dr. C. G.\nJohnstone worked desperately to\nkeep him alive until they reached\nToronto, 40 miles south, where an\niron lung was ready for the Brace-\nbridge boy,\nTwo new cases and a total of\n38 were reported In Montreal;\neight now ones and a total of 97\nIn Manitoba where three persons\nwere stricken at Transcona, three\nIn greater Winnipeg and two In\n-Tttril\"tlliti1Ws. gome 30 new cam\nwere treated In Ontario,\nEdmonton officials, besides closing\nschools, ordered thqjiasal spray preventive be given children. That step\nalready has been taken throughout\nOntario.\nSPREAD BELIEVED\nSTEMMED\nMeanwhile health officials reiterated belief that cooling breezes from\ncoast to coast had stemmed spread\nof the disease, though the weather's\ndirect benefits will not be known\nfor sure for another week or so. In\nthat time the number of those afflicted by the paralysis virus in the\nhot days of early September will\nbe known.\nNelsoniles Going\nlo Edgewood Fair\nNumbers of Nelson residents plan\ntoday to visit Edgewood and attend\nthe annual Edgewood and Inonoak-\nlin valley fair, anticipating one of\nthe finest in a series of exhibitions\nthat have established the Edgewood\nfair as one of the best in the district.\nSeveral parties plan to leave by\ncar early today, and to return to\nthe city Saturday.\nSay More People\nb Canada's Need\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 9 (CP) -\nTwo promincn'. Canadians\u2014one a\nsenator and the other director of\ncolonization and agriculture for Canadian National railways\u2014today\ntold the Canadian chamber of commerce convention here that Canada's principal need was more pop-\nSenator J. W. deB. Farri- of Van-\nulation.\ncouver said \"our machinery, our\nboilers and our engines are too big\nfcr the steam we are able to gen\nate.\" He said Canadians had laid*\nthe foundations and erected^ a\nperstructure for three \u25a0 more times\nthe present population.\nThe same thought was expressed\nby Dr. W. J. Black of Montn d,\nwho called for \"constructive leadership\" of the immigration problem\nbecause Canada needed more people\n\"it we are to fulfil in any degree\nthe destiny that nature intended\nfor us.\"\nB.C. Fruit Board Prices\nKELOWNA - Current prices ot\nthe British Columbia Fruit Board,\neffective September 8, are:\nFlemish Beauty:\nFancy        $1.20\nC    -      1.10\nFacet and Fill      1.00\nAnjou:\nExtra Fancy       1.85\nFancy            1.70\nC     1.40\nRed Plums:\n4-basket  crates        1.00\nNo. 1 lugs  65\nNo. 2 lugs 55\nNo. 1   6-qt. basket 35\nPeaches:\nJ. H. Hale, No.   1 85\nJ. H. Hale, No. 2  70\nOthers:\nFreestones, No. 1 78\nFreestones, No. 2 \u201e 65\nDragging Again\nIs Unsuccessful\nUnsuccessful dragging in the West\nArm for the body of Thomas Bird,\nwho disappeared from the Nelson\nferry Saturday night and was believed to have drowned, was carried out Thursday. Hope for recovery of the body was slender as\nthe third consecutive day of dragging   failed.   Two   launches   were\nMrs. James Bird, Tommy's mother,\nused.\nprostrated after the disappearance,\nwas reported Thursday to be in\nbetter condition. She was out for\nan auto ride last night.  -\nFUMES FOLLOW\nFIGHT BETWEEN\nCHIHESE PLANES\nANDJAPANNAVY\nShanghai,   Nanking,\nHangchow Area Is\n\"Danger Zone\"\nLOSSES HEAVY IN\nA VIOLENT BATTLE\nSHANGHAI,    September    10,\n(Friday), (CP) \u2014 Damage to British property In Shanghai Increased today when the China Import\nand export lumber company ware- I\nhouses blaied In flames following  :\na  battle   between Chinese     air\nsquadrons and Japanese naval for- I\nces.\nWhile British property damage\nhas been heavy and bombi ind\nshells on many occasions have\nthreatened lives In the International section, there was no sign that\nBritish businessmen Intended to\ngive up their Interests In this great\nInternational trading city and flee.\nMany, however, sent their wlvei\nand children In liners for Hong\nKong to escape the ever-present\ndanger.\nThe United States has advised Its\ncitizens throughout China to leave\nthe country.\nA violent battle, with losses heavy\non both sides raged today around\nJukong wharf, midway between\nYangtzepoo and Woosung. }\nCHINESE PLANE8 RAID\nThe great lumber sheds broke into flames shortly before midnight as\nChinese planes raided Japanese'infantry positions In the Yangtzepoo\nquarter of the international settlement. Land anti-aircraft batteries\nand guns aboard Japanese warships\nanchored in tho Whangpoo fiver,\nsent flares and projectiles aloft 111 a\nfurious defensive fire, As soon *%':\nthe battle died down an entire sec- j\ntion of Shanghai was illuminated by'\na conflagration raging on the British property.\nAnother development disturbing\nneutrals was a formal declaration\nby Japanese military headquarters\nhere that the wide triangle bounded by Shanghai, Nanking and Hangchow was henceforth to be considered a \"danger zone\" subject to air\nattacks,\nONLY \"SAFE\" AREA\nThe declaration warned that ths\nonly \"safe\" area in which to travel\nwas the sea route through waters\npatrolled by the Japanese navy. A\nspokesman said consideration would\nbe given the foreign request for exempting evacuation convoys from\nattack, in return for reciprocal guarantees that the Chinese armed forces would in no way benefit from\nsuch protection.\nThe proclamation forced 1200 United States citizens evacuated from\nNanking and Peiping to change\ntheir plans for leaving the fighting\nzone. These refugees are being\nconcentrated at Hankow and will go\nfrom there to Hong Kong by rail,\ntraversing China in their trek to a\nsafe sea outlet.\n\"Batman\" and His\nAssociates Free,\n$1000 Bail Each\nOLIVER, B.C., Sept. 9 (CP)-A\n\"batman\" parachute jumper his\nfather and a Tacoma airplane pilot,\ncharged wilh violating Canadian air\nregulations, were free on bail ol\n$100 each today after spending three\ndays in jail cells.\nThe trial of the three has been\nset for September 15.\nCecil McKenzie of Vancouver,\nthe \"batman\", his father, W. T. McKenzie, and Bert Eckstein, Tacoma\npilot, were released from the cells\nwhere they had been since their\narrest by Royal Canadian Mounted\nPolice Monday after McKenzie had\nperformed his \"batwing\" jump at\nthe opening of the Oliver airport.\nEckstein, manager of the Tacoma\nFlying Service, charged with operating a commercial plane in Canada without a licence, said he appealed to the American consul at\nVancouver.\n44 DIVORCES IN\nB. C. IN AUGUST\nVICTORIA, Sept. 9 (CP)-Dissolutions of marriages in British Columbia during August totalled 44,\nwith husbands obtaining 17 decrees\nand wives 27, according to the\nmonthly bulletin of the vital statistics branch released today\nBROUILLARD WINS\nPORTLAND, Me,, September 9,\n(AP) \u2014 Lou Broulllard of Worcester, Mass., former world's welter\nand middleweight champion, tonight knocked out Roy Williams,\nNegro, In the second round of a\nscheduled 10-rounder, Broulllard\nweighed 165; Williams 167,\nWeajrner\nMin. Max.\nNELSON    46 80\nVictoria  52 62\nNanaimo  54 70\nVancouver  60 70\nKamloops  54 76\nPrince George _ 40 66\nEstevan Point  \u201e  50 64\nPrince Rupert  54 64\nLangara    54 60\nAtlin    46 58\nDawson, Y.T.  38 66\nSeattle     58 72\nPortland    60 76\nSan Francisco  54 68\nSpokane    __ 52 84\nLos Angeles  64 86\nKelowna    49 78\nPenticton    _ 50 \u2014\nGrand Forks  46 84\nKaslo   58 \u2014\nCranbrook 38 79\nCalgary    44 78\nEdmonton    40 72\nSwift Current  44 82\nMoose Jaw  46 80\nPrince Albert  '44 66\nSaskatoon    42 72\nQu'Appelle     46 75\nWinnipeg    50 76\nForecast, Okanagan and Kootenay\n\u2014Moderate easterly winds, fair and\ncooler becoming unsettled.\n__^_\n^^m^mmtmmtttttmtm\n I^PWP\u00ab|l!!pipP?f\u00bbPr^W\nCRESTON APPLE\nCROP 2000 BOXES\nSHORT ESTIMATE\nj. CRESTON, B. C\u2014The final estimate ot the Creston Valley apple\n' crop shows a falling off of about\n2000 boxes as compared with the\n\u25a0 first estimates issued at the middle\nOf July by C. B. Twigg, district agriculturist. There is a slight decrease   in  the  expected   crop  of\n, plums and prunes.\nIn connection with the reduction\nMr. Twigg points out that the dry\ncondition of the subsoil and the sus-\nIjtdned winter injury has lessened\nthe outlook on unirrigated lands.\nSecent high winds caused a considerable blowoff on the punter\ntrees.\n' Stone fruits dropped to some extent as they were exposed to some\ni'xoot Injury where the snow was\nblown away.\nOf the estimated apple yield of\n216,000 boxes the chief gains over\nlast year's crop of 154,000 boxes, has\n| to do with Mcintosh Reds which\nASTHMA\nThe wife of a prominent Montreal\nphysician suffered 16 years terribly with Asthma. She has gained 24 Ibs, In weight to almost normal and her husband Is so delighted that he has put many patients on \"PAVIS' ASTHMA\nREMEDY NO.,7895\". 64 doses at\nyour Druggist $3.50\nare expected to show a gain of 24,000;\nfor a total of 110,000 boxes, or more\nthan 50 per cent of the valley's total apple crop. \u2022\nDelicious show a gain of 16,000\nboxes, with an anticipated total\ncrop of 32,000 boxes in this variety.\nIt Is cheering to note that the favorite export variety, Jonathan,\nshow an increase of 4000 boxes over\n1936, and a crop totalling 10,000\nboxes is looked for. Rome Beauty\nis expected to rise to 5000 boxes,\nin comparison with 3000 a year ago.\nThe final statement indicates a\ncrop of 16,000 boxes of pears of all\nvarieties. This is a gain of 2000\ncases over 1936, and the way these\nare coming in it seems certain the\nestimate will be equalled.\nThe effects of the severe winters\nof 1935-36 and 1936-37 are still being\nfelt by the plums and prunes which\nare down to 5000 crates, a-decrease\nof 1500 over last year. For the same\ncause, presumably, crabapples are\nreduced 500 boxc3 over the 1936\nshipping. v\nMaroons to Operate\nAgain at Montreal\nMONTREAL, Sept. 9 (CP)-Pf(t-\npetual rumors that Montreal Maroons would carry their National\nHockey league franchise to some\nother city this season were squelched officially today by Senator Do-\nnat Raymond, president of Canadian Arena company.\nSenator Raymond, head of the\ncompany holding the Maroon fran-\npress, giving assurance the Maroons\nchise wrote letters to the Montreal\nwould operate in their home city,\nwhere Canadlens also hold an N.H.L.\nfranchise!\nExpect Enrollment\nof 320 al the Public\nSchool al Creston\nWILSON DAILY NEWS .NELSON, B. C.-FRIDAY MORNING, SEPT. 10, 1937.\nly, and Herb Dodd, last year at\nCRESTON, B.C. - Almost S00\npup'ilA were on hand Tuesday morning for the opening of Creston's\neight instructors are employed with\nnumber will be increased to 320\nby the time the usual crop of late\ncomers enroll.\nLast year a staff of seven handled\nan enrolment of 285. This year\neight instructors areemployed with\nthe extra classroom temporarily\nprovided in the basement of the\nfour-room high school.\nThere are three new faces on\nthe teaching staff. Miss Burgess of\nKaslo replaces Miss Wade in\nDivision 3, the latter having leave\nof absence until the first of the\nyear. Miss F. McLure of Wycliffe\nreplaces Miss Gladys Webster,\nwhose marriage took place recent-\nFINE WHISKY^        ^P\nIThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nGuide for Travellers\nAlice Siding, is the new teacher.\nThe trustees;have, allocated the\nrooms as follows: Division 1, E.\nMarriottf'principal; Division 2. Ben\nCrawford; vice-principal; Division 3,\nMiss Burgess;' Division 4, Mis\nMabre; Division 5, Herb Dodd,\nDivision f, Miss McLure; Division\n7,-$iss Hazel Hobden; Division 8,\nMiss Evg Holniii,\nMiss Holmes, who has the primary\nroom',\"' had 41 beglnn-rs*-, and in\nDivision 2 the enrolment was the\nfsame number. The janitor, R. R.\nRoebuck, had the buildings in\nsplendid order and the pupils got\noft to a good start.\nAt the high school Division 2\nfailed to open. At the last minute\nR. Thorpe, who had been re-en\ngaged, wired asking to be released\nbut sent no substitute. It is hoped\nto have the room in operation by\nMonday. Other members of the\nstaff are the same as 1936-37; W. A.\nMarchbank, principal, assisted by T.\nGautier and Miss Olive Norgrove.\nThe two latter will have charge of\nthe physical culture work this\nterm.\nKASLO Social...-\ni\nNELSON, B.C., HOTELS\nHume Hotel..\n..Nelson, B.C.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor.\n8AMPLE ROOMS    :   EXCELLENT DINING ROOM\nEuropean Plan, $1.50 up\n, HUME\u2014Miss R. Farrow, R. C.\nFarrow, Victoria; H. V. Phillips, J.\nT. McCary, H. Hoylaid, E. W. Johnson, G. P. Watson, Mr. and Mrs. C.\nJ. Campbell, Mrs. G. Watson, Mrs.\nPatrick, D. A. Lownie. F. McDonald, Vancouver; Mr. and Mrs. H.\nL> Boyle, North Bay; J. H. Hizle-\nwood, Kelowna; Mr. and Mrs. S.\nSmith, Kamloops: Mr. and Mrs. A.\nF. Rudd, Wynndel; Mr. and Mrs.\nG. A. Allen, Toronto; Mr. and Mrs.\nA. H. Rasper, Seattle; L. W. Smith,\nCalgary; A J. Watson, Kootenay\nBay; O. H. Burden, Port Crawford;\nL. G. McQuade, Carbon, Alta.; O. C.\nGregory, Toronto.\nTHE SAVOY HOTEL\n\"Where the Guest is King\"\nMODERN  SAMPLE ROOMS\nLicensed Premises\n124 Baker St.       W. K. Clark, Prop.       Nelson, B, C.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nP. and L. KAPAK, Proprietors\nCommercial, Tourist and Family Trade Solicited\nBOOMS $1.00 AND UP\nPhone 234\nFree Parking\nROOMS $1.00 AND UP\nNELSON, B.C.\nOccidental Hotel\n705 Vernon St Phone 89?\nH. WASSICK, Prop.\nSPECIAL MONTHLY  RATES\nGood Comfortable Rooms\nLicensed\" Premises\t\n_\u2014\u2014\u2014_\u2014\u25a0\u25a0\u00bba\u2014\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcome Awaits You\nJAS. E.  MADDEN, Prop.\nCompletely Remodelled.\nHot and Cold Water.\nIn the HEART ot the City\nEDGEWOOD, B. C, HOTELS\nI\n[_\nARROW LAKES HOTEL\nE.   NIEDERMAN,\nProprietor\nComfortable  Rooms\nGood Meals\nEDGEWOOD, P.C.\nLogical   Stopping\nPlace on the\nRoad to Vernon\nKASLO\u2014The Misses Kathleen and\nEvelyn Burgess were week-end visitors in Nelson.\nMiss Mary Shutty and her brother\nLouis have left to visit friends at\nTrail.\nTommy Beck has accepted a position in a local store.\nMiss Katherine Gillis has returned to her school teaching duties In\nTrail after spending a part of the\nholidays in town with her mother,\nMrs. H. Gillis.\nMiss Joan Cadden has returned\nfrom a short visit to Trail.\nMrs. W. V. Papworlh has taken\nup residence in the Kane house on\nB avenue.\nArchie Reuter has returned from\na visit to Trail.\nMrs. Walter Newton and children\nhave returned to their home in Trail\nafter spending the past two months\nat their summer homer here.\nE. A. Matthews was In from Nakusp to spend the week-end with\nhis family.\nMrs. H. McKenna and children\nhave returned to their home in\nRossland after spending several\nweeks in town with Mrs. McKenna's\nfather, John MacPherson.\nMrs. J. Taylor of New Denver was\na Saturday visitor in town.,\nMiss Elsie Rouleau has Joined the\nnursing staff of the Victorian hospital.\nA. L. MacPhee was a Friday visitor in Nelson.\nMrs. Dick and children, who have\nbeen guests of Mrs. Dick's parents,\nMr. and Mrs. Peter McGregor, have\nreturned to their home in .Langley\nPrairie, ,'.  ,..:\nMrs. Ronald Hewat left Saturday\nfor a visit in Fernie.\nMr. and Mrs. T. H, Robson and\nchildren left Friday for Deer Park\nwhere Mr. Robson will teach school\nduring the present term, after having been on the Kaslo school teaching staff for the past 10 years.\nRoss Workman of New Denver\nwas a visitor In town Saturday.\nGeorge Baker has returned from\na short visit to his former home in\nFruitvale.\nJack Fingland of Kimberley was\nin town Saturday.\nMiss Mary Mucha and her brother\nLouis have left to spend the winter\nin Vancouver.\nMiss Phyllis Fox has returned\nfrom a week's visit with friends in\nTrail.\nMiss Evelyn Burgess has left to\nresume her school teaching duties\nin South Slocan.\nMiss Freda Burton and her brother, Peter, have left for Chllliwack\nwhere they will join their father\nand make their future home.\nMiss Margaret MacDonald has left\nfor Brilliant to resume her duties\non the school teaching staff.\nLeonard Cadden of Trail is spending a few days In town with his\nmother, Mrs. John Cadden.\nT. A. Rice of Trail was a weekend visitor.\nEric Bacchus of Birchdale spent\nSaturday here.\nMrs. J. R. Thompson and son of\nJohnson's Landing were city visitors\nSaturday, en route to Nelson.\nP. J. Lyner of Nelson was a recent visitor in town.\nW. P. Rudkin has returned from\nvisit in the Lardeau district,\nMr. and Mrs. E. E. Perkins and\nchildren have returned to their home\nin Rossland where Mr. Perkins is\nprincipal of tlie McLean school,\nDuring the stay in Raslo the family\n^vere guests of Mr. Perkins' mother,\nMrs. Alice Perkins.\"\nMr. and Mrs. Thomas Price of\nHillcrcst, Alia., were recent visitors\nin town. While here they made a\ntrip to Retallack to visit their son\nand daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.\nFrank Price.\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\n\"YOUR VANCOUVER HOME\"    Newly Renovated Throughout\nPhones   \u2022   Elevator\nA. PATERSON, late of\n1   900 Seymour 8t.      Vaniouver, B.C.    Coleman. Alta., Proprietor\nI-yuuh VAnouuvtH numc-    n\nDuKerin Hotel\n\u25a0\nTRANSPORTATION - Passenger and Freight\nNOXACORN\nE\u00bbch picktfp cmtiins iptcUl fottum; aukt\ncertain you |tt the\nYELLOW TUK AND PACKAGE,\nNoK-cor- li lotd only hi tubes.    Your com\nremoved or money refunded at drug ttotee.\n35c\u2014ait Noxa-orn today\nSold at: Mann, Rutherford Co-\nGeorge E. Thompson of Vancouver\nwas a recent Kaslo visitor.\nMr. and Mrs. Paul Coony of Spokane were week-end visitors In\ntown.\nT. J. Guinan of Princeton, who Is\nlooking into relief matters in the\ndistrict, has returned from New\nDenver.\nR. D. Walker of Nelson was a\nvisitor in the city Sunday.\nI. Luazzari, P. Kobluk and John\nA. Delzley of Trail spent the weekend in Kaslo,\nDave Anderson of Sandon was a\nvisitor in the city Sunday.\nGeorge Murchison has returned to\nTrail after spending a few days in\ntown with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nWilliam Murchison.\nC. N. Wright of- Trail spent the\nweek-end in the city.\nH. Commelin of Spokane was a\nrecent city visitor.\nMiss Dorothy Fox is spending a\nfew days with friends in Nelson.\nJ. F. Millican of Trail was a weekend visitor in the city;\nGeorge Johnson was here from\nAinsworth for the week-end.\nMiss Neta Munn, matron of the\nVictorian hospital, has left for a holiday to be spent in California and\nVictoria. While in the latter city\nshe will be the guest of Major and\nMrs. J. Hamilton Stubbs.\nTheo Wood, who has been transferred to Creston visited the city\nat the week-end, coming to visit\nhis wife and infant son who are\npatients in the Victorian hospital.\nMr. and Mrs. M. McNeish of Slocan City were visitors in town Saturday.\nD. McDonald of Nelson was a city\nvisitor recently.\nMiss Jean McKinnon of Trail spent\nthe week-end in Kaslo.\nMrs. T- Clarke had as a week-end\nguest, Miss K. Gerein and John B.\nFears of Rossland,\nMr. and Mrs. John W. Makie of\nHillcrest, Alta., were city visitors.\nMr. and Mrs. E. G. Player of Trail\nwere among the many week-end\nvisitors.\nJohn M. Baker of Spokane was a\nweek-end visitor in Raslo.\nMiss Purney of Slocan City was\na Saturday visitor in town.\nMrs. Angrignon of New Denver\nwas a visitor in town Saturday en\nroute to her home after visiting her\nson-in-law and daughter, Mr. and\nMrs. Archie Greenlaw of Lardeau.\nW. F. MacNicol and son, Bruce,\nof Johnson's Landing were visitors\nin the city Saturday.\nMrs. R. D. Salmon and children\nhave returned to their home in Ram-\nloops after having been guests of\nMrs. Salmon's father, H. Calvert.\nCharles Webster left Sunday for\nVancouver to again take up his studies in the U. B. C.\nE. Amos went to Oliver at the\nweek-end and upon his return was\naccompanied by Mrs. Amos. They\nwill make their home in the Fink\nhouse on Front street.\nMr. and Mrs. Mason ond Mr. and\nMrs. Wood of Fruitvale were Satur\nday visitors in the city.\nMr. and Mrs. J. D. Anderson and\ndaughter, Shirley, of Trail spent the\nweek-end in town.\nPeter McGregor and his daughter,\nMiss Marjorie McGregor, have returned from a visit to Mr. McGregor's old home in Dumfermline.\nScotland. While away they visited\nEdinburgh, London and other cities\nin th_ British Isles. Mr. McGregor\nhas spent 50 years in Canada.\nMr. and Mrs. R. Langille of Fruitvale were city visitors during the\nweek-end.\nMayor F. E. Archer, City Clerk\nH. T. Hartin and Aldermen Henry\nLarson are in Vancouver attending\na meeting of the Union of B. C. Municipalities.\nMiss Eunice Goodenough, who\nspent part of the holidays in town\nwith her parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nJames Goodenough, has left to resume her teaching duties in the McLean school in Rossland.\nMrs.   Burg  and   Miss  Young  of\nFruitvale were recent city visitors.\nMr. and Mrs. William Devitt of\nTrail were week-end visitors.\nCharles Idle has returned.to Trail.\nCreston Harvest\nol Grain May Be\nEnded in a Week\nFew Days Longer May\nBe Needed in Some\nSections\nCRESTON, B.C.\u2014Another week\nof the sort of harvest weather the\ndistrict has been favored with and\nthe grain harvest on the 14,000 acres\nof dyked lands within the Creston\nDyking district and Creston Reclamation farm will be completed.\nOn the Bruner-Poole project on I\nNick's Island a few days longer may\nbe required as that district, comprising about 1500 acres in crop,\nwas later In being seeded. Too, in\nCreston Dyking district there will\nremain some late sown oats, which\nwill be cut for green feed.\nSome of the smaller landowners\nhave already finished and this has\nreleased a number of combines for\nwork on the bigger tracts. At the\nend of the week five combines were\nat work on the Christensen Broth-\nacreage   on   the   Reclamation\nfarm, with one tractor hauling two\nmachines.\nBinders, that were in evidence\nearlier in the harvesi, have been\ndiscarded, and the cut is now exclusively by combine. Two threshing rigs, one owned by Fred Shier,\nwho farms in Creston Dyking district, and the Hobden-Helffle-Hus-\ncroft-Demchuk rig from the Hus-\ncroft section, will about complete\nthe thresh of binder cut oats and\nwheat early in the week.\nTRUCK OWNER8\nNOT SO BU8Y\nTruck owners, who equipped their\nchassis with boxes to carry 1801\nbushels, have not been as busy as\nlast season. This is accounted for\nby the fact that a number of operators have built grain sheds into\nwhich the grain goes direct from\nthe combines, and is hauled to the\nelevator by the farmer's own truck\nafter cutting is finished in the early\nevening, and at least one load hauled In the morning before cutting\ncommo   -*. .\nAt the Reclamation farm Ferrymen John Ryckman and James\nLockhead provide a service from 8\na.m. to 11 p.m., and the two town\nelevators are opt. for business until almost midnight.\nRegulation elevators have been\nbuilt by Lawrence Bishop and\nChristensen brothers, both on the\nReclamation farm. The former has\nup-to-date storage for over 4000\nbushels, and the latter can store\n7000 bushels. Later this will hold\nthe seed grain for the 1038 crop.\nG. J. Garretson, operating at the\nextreme south of the 'Reclamation\nfarm has scored a great success in\nplanting varieties that mature in\nrotation and has kept his combines\nbusy ever since cutting commenced,\nHe started with Riddit winter\nwheat, the cut of which ended just\nas the Red Bobs spring wheat was\nmature, and when this variety was\ndisposed of the Marquis was available.\nDespite the badly lodged condition of about 20 per cent of the crop\non the two projects, by the use of\npickups, cutting one way, and slowing up the tractors in the tangled\nsection the whole crop has been\nharvested with much less loss than\nwas first anticipated.\nKENWOOD WOOLEN TOP COVERS\nPure wool two-tone covers of the dependable Kenwood quality. All satin bound.\n^6o:x84':$9.50  S84:':. $1150\nWABASSO SHEETS AND PILLOW\nSLIPS\nFine quality cotton sheets. All torn to size in plain\nhemmed or hemstitched.\nSize 72\"        IQ Cft      Sise 80\"       <M PA\nDown Filled\nComforters\nFine down filled comforters for\nthe chilly autumn nights. All\novere dwith good quality paisley sateen with inserts of plain\nsatin.\nSize 60\"x72\". Pricei\n$C.95   $9.75\n1*50 $15.00\nndlewick Bedspreads\nworked in colored candlewick. Beautiful\nand blue.\n104\". Prices\n$8-s\u00b0 'IO*00\nKenwood\nTHROWS\nn bou\n$6.50\nFine wool throws. Satin bound.\nSize 60\"x80\". All\nshades. Each ....\nby 95\". Each\n$3.50\nby 95V. Pair\nPILLOW SLIPS\nTo match above sheets.   QA .\nSizes 42\". Pair 3UC\nCranbrook Library\nto Gel New Books\nCRANBROOK, B.C.-^he regular\nmonthly meeting of the Cranbrook\nTuesday. The committee was Instructed to order new books for\nthe month, and a list of special\nchildren's books is being made, on\nthe advise of the Provincial librarian.\nMrs. R. W. Hardy and Mrs. E. H.\nMcPhee were tea hostesses at the\nfirst meeting of tho fall season of\nthe Aited church ladies aid. Members for. the committee in charge\nof the annual banquet in October\nwere appointed, and a committss\nwas appointed to arrange for the\nannual bazaar to be held in November.\nPHONE 553\nBelly McLean of\nGreenwood Bride\nGREENWOOD, B. p.-A pretty\nwedding was solemnized at Grand\nForks Saturday when Betty McLean, oldest daughter of Mr. and\nMrs. Homer McLean of Greenwood,\nbecame the bride of James Forshaw.\nsecond son of Mr. and Mrs. R. Forshaw of Phoenix. Rev. T. A. Scot!\nperformed the ceremony.\nMrs. B. Cady of Nelson attended\nthe bride. The groom was supported\nby Alan Cudworth.\nThe bride looked charming in an\nall white ensemble of silk crepe.\nThe dress was made on princess\nlines and the finger tip coat was\nslightly fitted. Her corsage was of\npale yellow sweetheart roses. She\ncarried a white prayer book.\nMrs. B. Cady wore a pretty suit\nof black and white morocian crepe.\nBAKER ST.\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE KELSON TWICE DAILY\n\u2022     5 a.m. and 10:30 a.m. Except Sunday\nTrail Livery Co.\nTrail\u2014Phone 135        Nelson\u2014Phone 35\nM. H. MclVOR, Prop.\nClearance SALE\n-prl\nWXX PAPER\u2014 JO foot roll. 10c\nWAX PAPER-100 foot roll* 20c\nSHELF PAPER-Reg. 18c:\nPar pkt.   10c\nWRITING PAD8-Re_< 18el\nSpecial   1*\nENVELOPES\u2014Reg. 10o:\n2 pkgs. for   16c\n8CRIBBLER8\u2014Pan and Ink:\nPer doi   3Se\n8TEN0'8 NOTE BOOKS\u2014\nReg, 10e: 2 for  15c\n8UN GOGGLES\u2014To cltar\n.  at  16c and 26c\nTYPEWRITERS\nIn Good Condition\nRemington No. 10, Standard $20.00\nRemington No. 11, Standard $25.00\nUnderwood Standard, 12\" $46.00\nNelson Stationery Co.\ngJAjtfllSI....-.,.- ,,-,, \u201e. MPNS.84.\nFURNITURE\nDRY\nHer corsage was pure white rosebuds.\nMrs. H. McLean, mother of the\nbride wore a \"nigger brown\" suit\nwith a turban hat to match and\nwore a corsage of cream roses.\nMrs. B. Forshaw was gowned in\nnavy georgette with a wide brimmed hat of the same material. Her\ncorsage was of sweetpeas.\nFollowing the wedding a reception was held at the Windsor hotel,\nGreenwood, when Mr, and Mrs. McLean and Mr. and Mrs. Forshaw\nreceived with the newlyweds.\nThe bride and groom left for a\nhoneymoon in the south. For travelling the bride chose a navy suit\nstrictly tailored with accessories to\nmatch.\nOn their return they will reside\nat Ymir, B. O.\nPARI8? 8ep\\ 9 (AP)\u2014Panama\nAl Brown, fomar world's ban\ntamwelght champion, knocked out\nAndrew (Tlgar) Regis In UIM\/of\ntha first round tonight in the most\nspectacular battle of his come'\nback cainitilrjn.\nFINK'S\nLucky Draw\nAUGUST\nReady-to-Wear\nPhone 73 Burnt Block\nTHE BOOTERY\nNelson Miss Is\nHonor Guest at\nAinsworth Party\nAINSWORTH, B.C. \u2014 Miss Isabel Lane entertained Sunday evening in honor of Miss Lilian Fisher\nof Nelson who has been visiting her\nand who left for home Monday. The\nday was also Isabel's birthday,\ngames and contests were enjoyed.\nSteve Bedrey of Creston played the\naccordian and Mrs. T.ane the piano.\nRefreshments were served. Guests\nwere Miss Ruby Hansen, Miss Mavis Fletcher, Miss Eileen Fletcher,\nMiss Marjory Brown, Miss Kay\nTwells, Miss Mona McKean, Miss\nLilian Fisher, Miss Isabel Lane and\nMiss Mabel Lane, Steve Bedrey,\nChuck Shricves, Hans Hansen, Willie Hansen, Evcrct Gordon, David\nKennedy, Jerry Fitzsimmons, Ron\nGriffen, Bill Lane, T. Lane and W.\nMarleau.\nMrs. L. W. Oughtred of Montreal\nand her mother, Mrs. A. MacKinnon, whom she has been visiting,\nleft Tuesday for Nelson where they\nwill visit friends. From there\" they\nintend to go to Kimberley where\nthey will b\u00ab guests of Mr. and Mrs.\nC. Oughtred and Mr. L. Thompson,\nMrs. Oughtred will leave for her\nhomo about the middle of this\nmonth.\nMiss Mona MacKean has returned\nfrom Trail where she visited her\nsister, Mrs. Drake. Mrs. Drake and\nMrs. Barber were here Sunday,\nguests of Mr. and Mrs. F. Kennedy.\nSell It With a Want Ad\nfor Footwear\nA Brand New Stock of Fall Shoes\nMEN'S WOMEN'S BOYS' CHILDREN'S\nBOYS'\n\u2022MEN'S\nWOMEN'S\nDrosi oxfords and Hi\nshoos. Black calf, kid,\nand brown calf. Brogues,\nwingtips\u2014plain tips. Solid leather. A style to fit\nyour foot in this group\nSixes 6 to 11.\nPair\n$4.95\nStreet and sport shoes.\nPumps (Hi cut patterns),\nstrap patterns and oxfords. Black and brown\nsuede or plain leathers all\nneatly trimmed. Cuban\nand low heels.\nSizes 3 to 8. . .\n$2.59\n(School shoes)\nBlack  oxfords.   Really\ngood wearing. Cood fitting lasts. Sizes (PO OC\nII to5'\/_ QL.Ld\nCHILDREN'S\n(School shoes)\nBlack plain leather. Blu-\ncher style oxfords. Rubber heels.\nSizes 5-7Vi ... $1.39\nSizes 8-10Vi ... $1.40\nSixes  11-2   ....  SI. lit\n mwmmmimuiwl   mm wwwm%vmiwum\nWPPjpwppiliJiHiiikiiiii.il,. i.\\i\\4Atm*>w>miMwiiimmB\nNEL80N OAILY NEWS .NELSON, B. C.\u2014FK1DAY MORNINQ, SEPI. 10.  i\u00bb,.\nll~b\nPAGE   THREE\nFRIDAY\nAND\nSATURDAY\nBIG SALE OF\nWABASSO\nSHEETS\nsheet sale at the right time. Stock up now for your seas-\nans' requirements. Heavy quality fully bleached sheets\nin a double bed size. They come in hemstitched or\nplain hem and would sell ordinarily for much higher prices.\nSome are slightly substandard but the small weaving errors will not affect the wearing.\nSizes 80 by 90.\nEach ....\n*1\n.19\n\"Kenwood\" and \"Ayres\"\nBLANKETS\nTwo nationally known makes at close prices. New rainbow\nborders that will catch your eye and tell you they are smart.\n64 by 84.           fl\"Q QC          72 by 84.\nPair    J)\u00bbf.J\/D Pair   \t\n$12.95\nGrey Wool Blankets\n48 ONLY slightly imperfect blankets. Double and single\nbed sizes in the lot. A big saving on these. (M QQ\nI Each\nFeather Pillows\n24 ONLY all feather pillows for general household use. Sizes 17 by 25.\nOur reg. $1.00 value.     'fljc\nEach   \/ T\nBED OUTFIT\nBED\nSPRING\nMATTRESS\nAll steel continuous post bed, choice of coil or cable springs. A bed that\ngives greater comfort for a longer time at a greatly reduced price. Take   Cf       k Qf\u00bb\nadvantage of this offer now to'replace your old uncomfortable bed.        '\u2022    I i ^B'*'<1-!\nComplete Outfit\t\n19\nANOTHER GREAT VALUE IN\nBLEACHED SHEETS\nThese are all perfect sheets in a medium wabasso quality which sells \u00a3<i    AA\nregularly for $1.29 each. Sizes 70 by 90. Special at each 9* iW\nDOWN   FILLED\nComfortables\nLight but warm comfortables cov-\n1 ered in bright colored floral sateen. Will enhance the appearance\n| * of any bedroom and give years\nof use.\nEach\t\n\t\n$7.95\nFlannelette Sheets\nBig cosy sheets cf the finest grade. Perfect goods at a close price. Whip- &<^ \u00ab^f ?\nped singly. Sizes 70 by 90. Pair       dm\nEnglish\nPillow Slips\nThis make is famous for long and hard wear. They\nare plain hemmed and in a 42-inch size. (PI AA\nStock up at this price. 3 for d)l.uV\nCot Mattresses\nWell filled mattresses covered with\nfloral ticking. A very useful mattress for many occasions.\nSize 30\nby 72.\nEach ....\n84.9S\nSHEETING\nSPECIAL\nHeavy quality hospital sheeting\u2014entirely free from filling. Years of hard wear in this quality.\n72\" width, per yard 60c\n81\" width, per yard 65c\nINITIALLED\nPILLOW SLIPS\nEvery initial now in stock. Worked in white in Old English\nletters on a splendid quality wabasso slip. Size 42 inch.\nA lovely gift item. <M OC\nSpecial, Per Pair yl.Ld\nHBC TWO-DAY PURE FOOD SALE\n193 - phones -194 FRIDAY   AND   SATURDAY 1 free city delivery\nFort Qarry Tea and Coffee\n\"Making  Friends Everywhere\"\nFORT GARRY TEA\u2014\n1 lb. cartons\t\n65*\nCOFFEE\u2014Vacuum Tin,\nPer lb\t\n45c\nFree Demonstration Friday and Saturday\nSoap Specials\nSUNLIGHT SOAP\u2014 17_\u00bb\n3 bars    ll1\nOne large Lux Flakes with one bar Lifebuoy\nSoap (while they last) OC \u201e\nTwo for  w\nLIFEBUOY HEALTH\nSOAP\u20143 cakes\nRINSO\u2014Large\npackages. Each\nSALMON\u2014Fraser Cold Sockeye,   Vis,\n2 tins   31^\nTUNA FISH\u2014Solid light meat, 'A's,\n3 tins      25^\nSHRIMP\u2014Black Label, excellent for salads,\nPer tin       21t*\nSHELLED WALNUTS\u2014Per lb 29c1\nSEEDLESS RAISINS\u2014Australian, 2 Ibs. 25c*\nPRUNE JUICE\u2014Sunsweet, 12 ox. tins,\n2 for '  23?\nTEA\u2014H B C Broken Pekoe, per lb    (!><\u25a0\nBUTTER\u2014Hudsonia first grade, 3 Ibs. $1.05\nHONEY\u2014Linden, 2 lb. tins, each .... 32<\nEmpress\nQuality Products\nORANGE MARMALADE\u20144 lb. tins,\nEach   .\u2022\t\nJELLY POWDERS\u2014Assorted, 1Q\n4 for  131\nSTRAWBERRY JAM\u2014\n4 lb. tins\t\n47c\nSWEET MIXED PICKLES\u2014\n28 ox. jar\t\nLihby\nFood Products\nPORK AND BEANS\u2014\n23 ox. sixe. Each . ..\nPINEAPPLE\u2014Australian 2's.\nPer tin \t\nlie\n23c\nTOMATO JUICE- OP\n14'\/. ox. tins. 3 for Lo\\>\nRIPE OLIVES\u2014      01\n9 ox. tins. Each .. L\\\\i\nBABY FOODS\n2 tins\njfe\nHero Line of Quality PRODUCTS\nSOUP\u2014All varieties.\n3 tins   \t\nKETCHUP\u2014Large bottles. 14 ox.\nEach   \t\nPORK AND BEANS\nsauce. 3 tins\t\n-In tomato\n29c\n21c\n29c\nFree  Demonstration  Friday\nand Saturday\nVINEGAR\u2014Malt, White or Cider.        1 O\n16 ox. bottles   lOt\n32 ox. bottles  32c1\nSWEET MIXED PICKLES\u201421 ox.,        OQ\nEach    \u00abwC\nPREPARED MUSTARD\u2014\nPer Jar \t\nOLIVE OIL\u20148 ox. bottles, OQ\nIk\nEach\nAylmer FamousFoods\nPEAS\u2014Sieve 5, very tender, 17 ox. tins, each\nBuy them by the doxen at\t\nCORN\u2014Choice, white, 2's, 2 tins . .  25c1\nPORK and BEANS\u201411 ox. tins, 2 for 13c1\nSOUP\u2014Tomato, 3 tins   23\u00ab?\nKETCHUP\u201412 ox. bottle, each ....   16c?\nORANGE MARMALADE\u201432 ox. jars,\nEach    ,   32f\nCHERRIES\u2014Red pitted, 2's, per tin   Kio1\nRoyal Crown Soap\nand Washing Powders\nNAPTHA SOAP\u2014Pearl White,\n5 cakes   22.?\nROYAL CROWN SOAP\u2014Per carton. 26\u00ab?\nJIF FLAKES with cup and saucer.\nThe 3 for  22\u00ab*\nWASHING POWDER\u2014Royal Crown,\nlarge cartons, each   22c1\nCARBOLIC SOAP\u2014Safeguard, 4 cakes I7<>\nHedlunds' Delicious\nReady Cooked DINNERS\nSTEAK and ONIONS\u2014l's, per tin   32c?\nQUICK DINNER\u2014l's, per tin   23c\nMEAT BALLS and CRAVY\u2014 l's, per tin   22c1\nBAKED BEANS\u201416 ox. tins, each    13c1\nSANDWICH PASTES\u2014Per tin     9c1\nMUSHROOM SOUP\u2014Per tin   10?\nI hedluno's\n.    baked    J\nSwift's Ever Popular\nDelicatessen Products\nJEWEL H.ORTENINC\u2014               17          PREMIUM SAUSAGES\u2014l's, 07\n1 lb. cartons  11 C        Per tin L I C\n 59c r.rFlE.LDBUTTERr $1.05\nFree Demonstration Friday and Saturday\nSILVERLEAF 1ARD\u2014\n3 lb. tins \t\nINCORPORATED   2\"!\u00b0  MAY  I670.\nPEACHES\u2014Per basket  25c1\nBANANAS\u20143 Ibs  25?\nCAULIFLOWER\u2014Per lb     8?\nPOTATOES\u201411  Ibs  350\nCARROTS\u20143 bunches   13?\nW4-\n-:\\.:.. ..\u00bb\u00ab**,   ......,-....\n.       : ;.__:\t\n. -.\n,\u25a0'... > .. I-.'v-v 1 f mm\n-\u25a0--\u25a0\u25a0 \u2014\u2022\n*\u00ab*}X);:\u00abS.f?'.'*;.\n__\n U   . nil.^HJUPHi,\u2014p||\nMai four .\nNELSON DAILY NEWS .NELSON, B.C-FRIDAY MORNINQ, SEPT. 10, 1M7.        .  .u\u2014M\u00bb\nIMMUNIZE   CHILD   AGAINST   DISEASES   ADVISES   DOCTOR\nFOR THE SERIAL\nUSEE PACE TEN!\nWILSONS\nFLYJlPADS\nIre-fy kill\nOne pad kills flies all day and every\nI day for 2 or 3 weeks. 3 pads in each\npacket.   No spraying, no stickiness,\niao bad odor,   Ask your Druggist,\nGrocery or General Store.   .\n1  10 CENTS PER PACKET\n-   WHY PAY MORE?\nj 1flB WILSON FLYfAO CO., HimiUro, Onf,\nMUFFETS\n%Smdw(fo^attGM\u00a3\n100%\nWHOLE WHEAT\nALL THE ENERGYI\nALL THE PROTEINSI\nALL THE MINERALS I\nALL THE VITAMINS!\nALL THE BRAN I\nDmcioud a6 mtoj\naM ntdiUioud\nA QUAKER OATS PRODUCT\nPrepare the Body . . .,\nVaccination Is\nUrged for Child\nPre-School Years\nBy   LOGAN  CLENDENING,   M.D.\nThe life of a child is becoming\nmore and more complicated. I know\na pair of young gentlemen, aged\n15, who have been taking bridge\nlessons this summer. Besides this\none of them is behind in his French\nand is studying that twice a week.\nAnd there are horseback riding\nlessons and lessons on the accordion and an endless list of prepara-\ntions for life.\nThe business of preparing the\nbody against contagious diseases is\nalso getting more and more involved.\nWhen I started writing this column\nthe only vaccinations I felt I could\nconscientiously recommend were\nagainst smallpox and typhoid fever.\nSoon after the success ot diphtheria\nvaccination was proved to my satisfaction and I added that to the\nlist. Now both scarlet fever and\nwhooping' cough can be recommended.\nSo altogether, already the grow\ntag child should have five immuni\n.ations given him and inevitably\nthere are more to come. How will\nhe find time to get them all in? I\nam frank to say I don't know exactly, but I, suggest that it should\nbe worked out by each family In-.\nBlv-dnslly.\nIt would be convenient to set\naside one week a year for the first\nfew years i of the child's life as\n\"Family immunization week\",\nDuring,;the-first year when it is\ngenerally -recognized that immunization to smallpox be done, will be\nJennerian vaccination year.\n. Diphtheria should be done after\nthe first year is passed, but not before, according to most authorities,\nso the second year includes diphtheria week.\nThe third year I think we can\nkeep free.\nThe fourth year is for typhoid\nvaccine.\nThe fifth year for whooping\ncough.\nAnd the sixth for scarlet fever.\nLEAST SURE OF\nFIFTH VACCINE\nI put scarlet fever off to the last\nbecause I am least sure of the effectiveness of that vaccine: Still it\"\nhas   been   recommended   by   the\nBELTLESS LINE SMART DETAIL\nStar of \"WEE WILLIE WINKIE\" A 20,h Century Fox Pfefwt\nSHIRLEY TEMPLE\nAayi.\n'\u25a0mm'-\nTriple-sealed\nto guard that\nright-fromthe-oven\nFRESHNESS\n^USb\u00ae1\nQUAKER PUFFED WHEAT\nMartha Hunt poses In gray tweed fall coat with square patch pockets\nand beltless line.\nBy Central Press\nCoats for early fall are trim and\nwell tailored, with several new features. Some of them slightly resemble dresses.\nThis latter statement is true of\nthe gray tweed coat chosen by\nMarsha Hunt, moving picture player.\nIt has Interesting square patch pockets and a chic, beltless line. The\ncollar is small, and the sleeves\nslightly squared at the shoulders.\nA black felt beret is worn well\nback on Miss Hunt's head, and she\nhas chosen black suede shoes with\ncut-out motif, and black gloves and\nbag to serve as her accessories.\nMarsha's prize Bedllngton terrier\nfits smartly into the color scheme of\nher costume.\nOne prophet says it is to be a big\nseason for suedes. It is also to be a\nbig season for tweeds. A rhum\nbrown suede topcoat is very classy\nwith broad shoulders, wide turned over collar and sash belt. Then a\nswagger suit caught my eye, consisting of coat and skirt in pine\ngreen suede, the coat having pleats\nin the back.\nSTRAIGHT COAT8 SMART\n. Straight coats are very smart for\nautumn. One model from London,\na thick black soft woolen material,\nwas single breasted, with shoulder\nCheckered Lily It\nInteresting Bulb\nfor a Rock Gordon\nThe quaint checkered lily, proper\nname FrltUlaria me'eagris has many\nnames and many unusual color combinations which make it a mott interesting bulb bloom for the rock\ngarden; It is also good for naturalizing or for uae in a mixed border.\nTo grow happily and increase,\nthe bulbs require a somewhat damp\nlocation (but not one where water\nis apt to stand) in rioh, sandy soil.\nThese lilies also prefer shade part\nof the day.\nThe blooms which appear in early\nApril are bell-shaped flowers with\nrather square shoulders. Two or\nthree blooms grow on a slender,\nsingle stem about 12 inches in\nheight. The coloring, are bronze\npurple, with white checks, reddish,\nbrown with pale green checks, violet with yellow checks and, as also\nillustrated above, a pure white variety.\nWisterias will bloom sooner if\nthey are grown in rather poor soil,\nbut during their first years they\nare benefitted by amplications of\nfertilizer which encourages 'their\nquick growth. If after several years\na wisteria does not bloom, lt sometimes helps to root prune it.\nwidth emphasized by wide turnover collar and very wide revers.\nStitching and fabric incrustations\nare favorite decoration for this type\nof coat.\nFollowing are a few style notes on\ncoat sleeves to guide you in your\nchoice of a new model: Some coats\nhave fur on their sleeves; some,\nin fact, have almost the entire sleeve\nof fur, sometimes dyed to match the\ncolor of the coat fabric.\nPersian lamb is as popular as it\nwas last season. Sleeves may be\neasy from shoulder to wrist, where\na neat Persian band finishes them.\nBlue fox swirled around the sleeves\nis another styling noticed.\nAnother outstanding fashion is a\nsleeve of sheared beaver, with cloth\non the section of the sleeve inside.\nPersian is also used for the entire\nsleeve, with a fabric cuff.\nOne very boxy ooat had beaver\nsleeves, another silver fox that ran\ndown in panels from the neckline;\nand a third used bands of mink to\nstress the bell shape. Sleeves, you\nmay gather from the foregoing, are\nimportant in coats\u2014almost more so\nthan in dresses this year.\nIn novelty coats there are those\nwith fur sleeves, circular cut skirts,\ncapelet coats, untrimmed coats with\nseparate furs.\nFrom8 to 15 Years...\nDevelopment and\nGrowth Influence a\nChild's Studies\n(By GARRY C. MYERS, PH. D.)\nWithout doubt, T. Wingate Todd,\nM. D-, of the medical school of\nWestern Reserve university, knows\nmore about the physical growth of\nchildren from 8 to 15 years of age\nthan any other person, 1 believe. In\na non-technical article of his in\n\"Growth and Development: the Basis for Educational Programs.\" he\nwrites:\n\"At the age of five years the average stature of boys and girls in\nthe - economically stable class la\napproximately the same\u20141100 mm.\nBy the age of 10 the girli are approximately 10 mm. taller than the\nboys. (There are about 25 millimeters to an inch.) This la due to an\nexcess of growth before the eighth\nbirthday. Between eight and ten\nyears both sexes grow practically\nthe same amount, When the girls\nhave reached 13 years their stature\nis increased over that of the boys\nby approximately 20 mm. Thereafter the increment of stature in girls\nrapidly diminishes, for on the average they will grow only 70 mm.\nwhereas the boys will grow more\nthan three times this amount \u2014\n233 mm. The great majority of this\ngrowth in boys, namely 175 mm.,\ntakes place between the thirteenth\nand sixteenth birthdays.\"\nChange Lasts Longer\nFrom X-ray studies, Dr. Todd\nfinds: \"At the age of eight years,\ngirls show a greater maturity than\nboys; but between this age and ten\nyears, both* sexes mature at practi-\nViennese Know the Secret . . .\nModeration Is Half the Secret of\nSuccess in Expert Use of Perfume\nBy GLADYS CLAD\nMaybe it's the approach of autumn that is affecting most of,us\nright now, and the desire for flowers and floral fragrance that are\nresponsible lor the overdoing of\nAmerican Academy of Pediatrics,\nand that is equivalent to meaning\nthat it has bee nthoroughly investigated. The present vaccine is a\nmodified form of the original which\ndid not prove satisfactory.\nThe vaccine against whooping\ncough has been widely used now.\nand enough cases are on record for\nus to be able to say that it has no\nbad reactions and that it does protect in an epidemic of whooping\ncough.\nI do not believe that scarlet fever\nor whooping cough vaccinations\nshould be made compulsory yet,\nbut as an optional procedure they\ncan be recommended.\nSomething entirely new, and destined to be very popular, is the\nshort boxy coat of opossum,\nFew Exceptions . .\nGirl Who Proposes\nIs Unfair to Boy;\n(By VIRGINIA' LEE)\nThe girls who go around telling\nmen they love them, unasked, you\nunderstand, always \"get me\". Of\ncourse, there are occasions where a\nbrave girl will take her courage in\nto both hands and announce to the\nboy friend that she loves him and\nintends to marry him. But those\nare exceptional cases. They occur\nin stories one reads in magazines,\nand occasionally in real life.\nBut these girls who believe they\nwill lose the boy friend if they do\nnot announce that they love them\nvery much and can't live without\nthem, lt seems to me, defeat their\nown ends. They take an unfair\nadvantage of the man who likes\nthem but may not be so gone that\nhe wishes to become engaged, for\nit seems to be an unwritten law\nthat a man can't turn a loving girl\ndown. By confessing her love the\ngirl gets a hold on him, which it\nwould be ungallant to break. That\nis really why the girls do it, whether they know and acknowledge it or\nnot.\nNow that isn't being sporting. It\nyou cannot possibly keep your love\nto yourself, and simply must tell\nthe adored youth how much you\nlove him, be enough of a sport to\n\"take it\" if he says, sorry, but I\ndon't care for you that way. If you\nusurp a man's privilege, be a man\nabout the answer, if he were the\none who loved too well and you\n(Continued en Page Ten)\nMARSHA  HUNT\nDainty Young Woman\nthe use of perfumes. I don't rightly\nknow. But I've passed some dam\n\u00bbels of late who are so flagrantly\nperfumed that it proves almost a\nnasal injury to get near them. \\^i\nyou can't tell me that any man enjoys going out with a walking perfume shop. Men like to think that\nthe fragrance their best girls exhale\nare parts of them\u2014an exhalation\nof their own clean sweetness. But\nwhen a girl misuses her perfume,\n\u2022and forgets, subtlety entirely, her\nperfume proves more of a detriment\nthan an asset.\nModeration is half the secret ot\nsuccess in using perfume. If you\napply it too lavishly, it becomes\nhjatant and overpowering, and it\nmarks you as uncultured in Us\nuse. More than that, too, the overuse of perfume makes a girl seem\ncoarse and lacking in the intelligence necessary for prdper perfume\nusage. Perfume should be undefined, mystifying.\nIf you are not very well versed\nin the proper,method of applying\nperfume, I can suggest nothing better than that you follow the procedure used by most of the famous\nbeauties of Vienna today. For the\naverage Viennese always does a\nthorough job of her perfuming.\nAnd she does it so cleverly that\nonly a subtle, delicate fragrance\nresults.\nBATHES FIRST\nThe smart Viennese woman always bathes first, before using perfume, so that her body is clean\nand fresh. Then, with a fine perfume atomizer, she sprays her\nchosen scent over her entire body.\nThis insures even distribution of\nthe perfume.\nNext, before she dons her undies,\nthe Viennese damsel also sprays\nthem with the perfume. She does\nthis very lightly, so that no stain\nremaiis. In like manner, she perfumes her silk stockings and the\nhems of her frocks, And when she\nwalks or dances, the motion, of her\nskirt frees the perfume and doubles\nher charm.\nAfter she has dressed, the little\nViennese maiden does her surface\nperfuming. She places a bit of her\nperfume in the palms of her hands\nand smoothes it lightly over hel\nneck, shoulders and arms. With a\nsquare of absorbent cotton, she dabs\na bit of the scent behind her ears.\nFollow this method when applying your perfumes, and I will guarantee-that you'll find the delicate\nfragrance that results a great enhancement of your attractiveness,\nand charm!\ncally Identical rates. Between the\ntenth and thirteenth birthdays girls\nagain mature more rapidly than\nboys. .. This change in proportionate growth indicates a corresponding modification in endocrine dominance. , .The physical strain incident, to this change, and the depletion of bodily reserve resulting\nfrom accelerated growth, have their\neffects in mental responses and\ntheir counterpart in emotional turmoil, complications which disappear\nafter the change in dominance is\ncompleted.\n\"Boys go through a similar change\nbut it lasts much longer and, because of the much greater growth, is\naccompanied by a more profound\ndepletion of bodily reserves.\"\nStyle Whimsies\nHigh-cut  shoes  for  fall  is the\nlatest word, with the open toe and\nopen   heel   effects   continuing  for\nevening wear only.\nRefrigerator . . .\nhints for\nhousewives\nPOEMS THAT LIVE\nA MAIDEN'S IDEAL OF A\nHUSBAND\nFrom \"The Contrivances\"\nGenteel in personage,\nConduct) a\u00bbd equijragf,\n- Noble by heritage,\nGenerous and free:\nBrave, not romantic;\nLearned, not pedantic;\nFrolic, not frantic;\nThis must he be.\nHonor maintaining,\nMeanness disdaining,\nStill entertaining,\nEngaging and new.\nNeat, but not finical;\nSage, but not cynical;\nNever tyrannical,\nBut ever true.\n\u2014Henry Carey.\nIn 27 of the 48 states in the union,\nwomen are barred from jury duty.\nNobodt knew how t1e.ic.oiia\nrice could be, until Kellogg\nintroduced Rice Krispies.\nTasty bubbles of toasted rice,\n\u00abo crisp they crackle out loud\nin milk or cream.\nBice Krispies are a ready-\nto-scrVc cereal. Delicious and\ndifferent. Light, wholesome\nand easily digested. Especially good with fruit or honey\nadded.\nYour grocer sella Rice\nKrispies. A Singing Lady\nMother Goose story printed\non each package. Served by\nrestaurants and hotels everywhere. Made by Kellogg in\nLondon, Ont\nMenu Hint\nCube Steaks, Broiled\nBoiled Potatoes With Meat Gravy\nButtered  Carrots\nMixed Vegetable Salad\u2014Tomatoes,\n'Cabbage,   Cucumbers,   Onions,\nGreen Pepper, etc.\nRefrigerator Dessert\nTea or Coffee\nI have given you two refrigerator\ndessert recipes for your convenience.\nThese desserts are very delicious,\nand are always a satisfactory sweet\nto serve if you like desserts. These\nrecipes are all made with sweetened\ncondensed milk, you see, which Is\nperfectly wholesome and healthful,\naccording to physicians, and handy\nto keep on hand.\nToday's Recipes\nChocolate Peppermint Refrigerator Cake \u2014 Two squares unsweetened chocolate, one and one-third cups\n(one can) sweetened condensed\nmilk, one-half cup water, three drops\noil of peppermint, 24 vanilla wafers.\nMelt chocolate In top of double boiler. Add sweetened condensed mtlk\nand stir over boiling water five\nminutes, until mixture thickens. Add\nwater and oil of peppermint. Line\nnarrow, oblong pan with wax paper.\nCover wilh chocolate mixture. Add\nlayer of vanilla wafers, alternating\nin this way until chocolate mixture\nis used, finishing with layer of\nwafers. Chill in refrigerator 12 hours\nor longer. To serve turn out on small\nplatter and carefully remove wax\npaper. Cut in slices. Garnish with\nwhipped cream, if desired. Serves\neight.\nCream Cheese Refrigerator Cake\n\u2014One and one-third cups (one can)\nsweetened condensed milk, four ta\nblespoons lemon Juice, one-eighth\nteaspoon salt, one-fourth cup orange\nJuice, one tablespoon orange rind,\ntwo packages (six ounces) cream\ncheese, lady fingers or sponge cake.\nThoroughly blend sweetened con-\ndensed milk, lemon juice, salt, orange juice and rind. Fold in two\npackages (six ounces) cream cheese,\nwhich has been forced through a\nsieve. Line oblong loaf pan with\nlayer of split lady fingers or sponge\ncake. Thin cover with a layer of the\norange and cheese filling. Repeat until mixture is all used. Top with\nlayer of lady fingers or cake. Chill in\nrefrigerator six hours or longer. To\nserve turn out on small platter and\ncarefully remove wax paper. Cut in\nslices. May be garnished with whip-.j\nped cream. Serves eight.\nChocolate Peppermint Frosting-\nTwo squares unsweetened chocolate,\none and one-third cups (one can)-\nsweetened condensed milk, eight\nmarshmallows one-half teaspoon oil\npeppermint. Melt chocolate in double boiler. Add sweetened condensed\nmilk, stir over boiling water five\nminutes until it thickens. Add\nmarshmallows which have been\nquartered. Stir until they begin to\nblend but are not fully dissolved.\nRemove from fire and add peppermint.\nFACT8 AND  FANCIES\nMANTELS ARE\nDECORATIVE ;,\nSays' Up. Edna H. Kern, New\nYork interior decorator: Mantels\nfor real fireplaces or to make fake\nones are an addition to any room,\nand can be had for almost any\nprice. A fireplace points up and\ncentres a room as nothing else can.\nGeorgian mantels with Their simple beauty of line are appropriate\nfor almost any style of room. If the\nroom is wide enough it is very attractive to build a fake or rebuild\nover a real fireplace, a mantle piece\nthat reaches to the ceiling, protruding a foot or so from the actual\nwall to leave recesses on either\nside of the fireplace into which\nbookcases can be built.\nOLD IDUTCH\nOne for the BATHROOM\nOne for the KITCHEN\nOne for the LAUNDRY\nOne for the GARAGE ^\nSave time and steps. Don't waste time going!'\nfrom one part of the house to the other to get\nthe Old Dutch. Keep Old Dutch handy in\nevery room where you use it. Thus you save\ntime, save steps, save surfaces. For Old Dutch\ndoesn't scratch. It is made with Seismotite.\n\u25a0\u00aboa IN CAHAPA\nOLD DUTCH OFFERS YOU THESE HANDSOME\nWM. A. ROGERS SALAD FORKS\n,..For only 50f- ond the windmill panels from\nthree Old Dutch labels. Value... $1.60. This A-1\nPlus Quality Silverware is made by Oneida, Lid,\nDon't Miss This Big Bargain\nThis oiler, good only in Canada, expires Dec. 31,1937\nOU3 DUTCH ClIANSM, Dept.    <\"\u00bb-   .MMocaulayAyo., Toronto\nt am f ndodng windmill pnnali from Old Dutch loboli\n(or complete Inb.lsl ami.\n_F for which plaoio lend mo 3 Wm.\nA. Roger. Salad Forki ond circular tailing how I con gat olhar plecai\nor a comploto lat of thil A-t plot quality lilvorwara.\n_i_i_i_i_M_M_n\n -.<\u25a0>  .-P , .;\u25a0\nUHUI piJUlHUU uiuyii pj\n\u25a0\u25a0 ,.\"'flBK\u00bb^^\n||PPIirP!P||j|l||jPJP|p|if\nTRADE IN YOUR\nOLD RADII\nON A BEAUTIFUL 1938\nGEnERRL\nELECTRIC\nMafic ^Iomc\nMade In Canada\nONLY a )\u00bboiier\u00bb radio reproduces programs with the tone\nquality, color and naturalness of the original broadcast.\nSo trade in your old radio now . . . take advantage of our\nliberal allowance . . . and begin at once to enjoy a modern\nGeneral Electric Magic Tone Radio.\nWhen you buy a G-E Radio you get more value per dollar.\nExceptional cabinet beauty! Up-to-the-minute features! Better\nperformance!\nLet us show you how little it will cost you to own a new G-E.\nChoose from ten beautiful models. Come in today.        jm.^\nNELSON ELECTRIC Co.\nMcRORY & REDDEN\nPHONE 153 NELSON, B.C.\n^GENERAL ELECTRIC\njM Mof<c1c*te RADIO\n'*>\/ WITH   TOUCH   TUNING\nSAFEWAY\nPRICES  EFFECTIVE  FRIDAY,  SATURDAY,  MONDAY\nAND TUESDAY, SEPT. 10, 11,13, 14\nPHONE YOUR ORDERS EARLY FRIDAY\u2014NO PHONE\nORDERS DELIVERED ON SATURDAY\nThe SAFEWAY FOOD CENTRE offers you many BAR-\nCAINS not listed in this advertisement. Look for the\nYELLOW BARGAIN TACS.\nBAKEASY ^WW.'  2 lbs. 25c\nCOFFEE-Excello (Our Best) Lb. 30c\nBAKERS CHOCOLATE\u20148 oz.    Cake 16c\nGRAPE NUTS\u2014Limit 4 2 pkgs. 25c\nRINSO\u2014Large .......... Pkg. 19c\nCALAY SOAP 3 bars 14c\nLYE\u2014Royal Crown Tin   8c\nPILCHARDS\u2014Tall..... Tin  9c\nTOMATOES\u2014Aylmer, 2'\/z's ...... Tin 10c\nMUSTARD\u2014Libby's, 6 ox . Jar  8c\nTANG SALAD DRESSING     8 oz. jar 20c\nBUTTER KE:.... 3 Ibs. $1.05\nBananas \u25a0ST 3^27*\nGrapes   VJKL JLbs J5c\nMEAT DEPARTMENT\nSMOKED PICNICS\u2014Lb. 18c\nCANNED YORK BRAND SAUSAGES\u2014\n2 tins 45c\nCHOICE NO. 1 LEGS LAMB\u2014Lb.       27c\nLOIN LAMB or LAMB CHOPS\u2014lb.   25c\nSHOULDERS LAMB\u2014Lb        16c\nBREAST LAMB\u20142 Ibs.       25c\nTENDER ROUND STEAK\u2014Lb    20c\nRUMP ROASTS BEEF OR VEAL\u2014Lb. 18c\nHAMBURGER or SAUSAGE MEAT\u2014\n2 Ibs. 19c\nHADDIE FILLETS\u2014Lb  22c\nSALMON\u2014Lb.        24c\nHALIBUT\u2014Lb.     22c\nCODFISH\u2014Lb.     19c\nLarge Variety Cooked Meats\nWE RESERVE THE RICHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES\nSAFEWAY STORES LIMITED\nNELSON DAILY NEWS .NEL80N, B.C\u2014FRIDAY MORNINQ, 8EPT. 10. 1937.\nNELSON Social..\nBy MR8. M. J. VIGNEUX\n\u2022 Those attending the luncheon\nyesterday at the Nelson Golf and\nCountry club house were Mrs. Robert Thompson, Mrs. W. O. Hose, Mrs.\nReginald H. Dill, Miss M. H. Cameron, Mrs. John Cartmel, Mrs. G.\nSpencer Godfrey, Mrs. E. E. L.\nDewdney, Mrs. C. V. Gagnon, Mrs\nA. D. C. Parnell, of Vancouver, Mrs.\nColin A. Moir of Medicine Hat. Mrs\nJames O'Shea, Mrs. R. L. McBride.\nMrs. E. G. Smyth, Mrs. P. G. Morey,\nMrs. Waldo W. Ferguson, Mrs. H\nH. McKenzie, Mrs. Arthur Baird.\nMrs. A. C. Whitehouse, Mrs. Don\nClark, Mr. Alfred MacD. Noxon,\nMrs. Harold Lakes, Mrs. H. Rosling,\nMrs. W. D. Harvie of Vancouver.\nMrs. A. G. Mackie, Mrs. C. W. Ap-\npleyard, Mrs. C. F. Domoney, Mrs.\nNorman Mahon, Mrs. Arthur M.\nParker, Mrs. Ralph Rees, Mrs. J.\nFred Weir, Mrs. William Cummins,\nMrs. Roy Temple, and Mrs. Robert\nWatson.\n\u2022 \u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Norman C. Stibbs,\nJosephine street, have as their guest\na former resident of Nelson, Mrs.\nW. C. Mawhinney of Saskatoon, who\nwas holidaying at Nanaimo.\n\u2022 Miss Vera B. Eidt, superintendent of Kootenay Lake General hospital, has returned from holiday,\nat coast cities, Stewart and at Louis\nCreek, near Kamloops, where she\nvisited her sister.\n\u2022 Mrs. Frank Hufly of Slocan\nCily is holidaying at the coast.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Sullivan ot\nTrail, who visited Kimberley, were\nin town yesterday en route home\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Walter C. Ket-\ntlewell are holidaying at the coast.\n\u2022 A. E. Crosby of Procter spent\nyesterday in Nelson.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Charles Haid,\nwho visited relatives at South Slocan, have returned to town.\n\u2022 J. Kosancic and his brother\nV. Kosancic, of Crescent Valley were\nshoppers in the city Wednesday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. S. G. Brewster\nhave returned to Vancouver.\nt D. L. Doyle of Cedar Point\nvisited the city yesterday.\n\u2022 Mrs. Gordon Berry of Trail\nwas a Nelson visitor yesterday.\n\u2022 , A. J. Gaul, mining man, left\nyesterday for the coast.\n\u2022 Charles Dickie, merchant of\nSlocan Park, spent yesterday In\ntown.\n\u2022 Miss Ada Brown, Hoover street,\nhas returned from a vacation al\nSan Francisco, Calif.\nt Miss Muriel Ahier of the staff\nof Kootenay Lake General hospital,\nhas returned from a vacation at\nVictoria where her parents reside.\n\u2022 Alfred Parker, Victoria street,\nhas left for Vancouver to resume\nhis studies at University of British\nColumbia.\n\u2022 Mr. Duff of Cedar Point spent\nyesterday in town.\n\u2022 Mrs. Cawley, of Salmo is a\npatient at Kootenay Lake General\nhospital.\n\u2022 Mrs. W. R. McDonald of South\nSlocan visited Nelson yesterday.\n\u2022 Mrs. Tangres Gallicano of Revelstoke is a guest of her parents,\nMr. and Mrs. J. Bird, Victoria street.\n\u2022 J. C. TJilker of Bonnington\nspent Wednesday in town.\n\u2022 Mrs. W. A. Hufty, Silica street,\nis visiting her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Fitzpatrick\nat Trail.\nt Mrs. C. Lindblad of, Blewett\nvisited Salmo and Sheep Creek. She\nwas a guest of her son and daughter-\nin-law, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Lindblad\nat the latter place.\n\u2022 Mrs. Parker Williams of Trail,\nnee Kay Gordon of Nelson, is in the\nAppoint Committee lo Investigate\nCost of Consolidation al Creston\nCRESTON, B.C. - Five buses\nwould be\" required to transport an\nestimated attendance of 160 pupils\nfrom the seven rural districts interested In the proposed consolidated\nhigh school at Creston, according to\nan informal discussion of the matter\nat the trustees conference at Creston Friday night.\nIn addition to the transported\nstudents, Creston village would provide 140 pupils, giving the new seat\nof higher education a starting enrolment of around 300 in grades 7,\n8 and 9 in the junior high, and\ngrades 10, 11 and and 12 in the senior division.\nArrow Creek, Camp Lister, Canyon. Erickson, Creston, West Creston, Alice Siding and Wynndel districts were represented al the conference, which was presided over by\nJ. E. VanAckeren of Canyon, with\nH. A. Powell named permanent secretary. Public School Inspector J. E.\nBrown of Cranbrook was in attendance, chiefly in his capacity as official trustee for Arrow Creek.\nThe meeting made real progress\nin the way of getting the matter\nbefore the ratepayers of each district by passing a resolution to name\na committee of three to assemble all\nthe necessary information and data,\nwhich will be carefully compiled.\nMeetings will be held in each district at which the situation will be\npresented by two speakers, an open\ndiscussion held, and at the close of\neach meeting a vote will be taken\nto ascertain whether consolidation\nis favorpd.\nThe meeting agreed that this\nwhole vote should be completed by\nJanuary  10, and if it is favorable\nDODtiS\nKIDNEY\n'j. PILLS\nS,        'VTmEM\/   J\nCn..*>. Vn, _..\u00ab,jf<\"\\.\u00bb .A\nGOOD FOR\nYOUR BABY\nand\nEverybody's\nBaby\na general meeting of all ratepayers\nof the district will be held at some\ncentral point to elect a temporary\ntrustee board of five members, who\nwill administer the eight districts\nuntil July, when the permanent\nboard of trustees will be chosen.\nThe committee of three is made\nup of J. E. VanAckeren, Alfred\nSpencer and James Cook, and at a\nmeeting of these three it was decided that the work of gathering\ninformation be apportioned as follows: Mr. VanAckeren, buses, transportation costs, etc. Mr. Spencer,\nschools management, maintenance,\netc. Mr. Cook, teachers' salaries, etc.\nThat no time is to be lost is indicated by the fact that Sunday the\nthree trustees and Secretary Powell\nare to visit Kimberley to inspect\nthe new higli school being built\nthere, and get some real \"on the\nspot\" information.\nFriday night's session was pretty\nmuch a meeting of committee of the\nwhole. Inspector Brown opened with\na few remarks indicating that he\nfavored the trustees handling the\nmatter themselves.\nMr. Cook was granted permission\nto state the case for Creston arid\npointed out that the local board was\nagreed, consolidation was the next\nstep in any educational program.\nThe board was impressed with the\ngreater efficiency and economies to\nbe obtained and would cooperate\n100 per cent, but insisted the initiative be taken by the department.\nHe demonstrated that Creston was\nmaking a notable contribution io\nthe effect. Creston school district\npaid on an assessment of almost a\nmillion dollars, and the total assessment for the whole eight sections\nwas just a little over two millions.\nOn this basis Creston would have to\npay half the transportation costs and\nwould have no children to benefit\nby transportation. Creston would\nalso turn over the new district buildings in the other seven districts interested. Estimated value of Creston schools' equipment was $12,000.\nHaving these facts in mind the\nspeaker insisted that Creston's contribution pretty well offset any indirect benefits tfiat may accrue from\nIrving the new high school in town.\nSeveral letters were read giving\nbus costs in other school districts,\nmost of which indicated that where\nthe district owned its own buses\ntravel costs were much lower. Cos:\ndepended on the size ot the bus, of\ncourse. It cost $60 a month for a\nbus to take pupils from Lumberton\nto Cranbrook a distance of 8 miles.\nA bus to carry 25 to 30 pupils would\ncost about $2500.\nIn connection with buses it was\npointed out that the government\npays half the transportation cost,\nand in the case of erecting a new\nschool building the grant would be\n33 per cent for a consolidated project, as compared with 20 per cent\nfor ordinary school extension. One\ntrustee present observed that the\ncost on buses would be partly saved\non teachers' salaries.\nTrustee Mather of Alice Siding\nwas assured that under consolidation whatever mill rate was imposed\nwould finance the individual school\ndistricts as well as the new high\nschool. Taking the eight districts\ninterested the average tax rate for\n1936 was 9.5 mills, but it was not\nthought that it would be sufficient\nfor consolidation.\nIt was also made clear that whatever cash balances there were on\nhand in the individual districts at\nthe lime of consolidation sucli surpluses would go to the new district,\nwhich would also automatically own\nall school properties.\nThe motion lo name the committee\nwas moved by Messrs. Cook and\nSpencer, and the meeting also named the members of the committee.\nTrustees presented included John\nBird, Camp Lister; J. E. VanAckeren, Canyon: J. B. Holder. Erickson;\nMalt. Moorcs. West Creston; F. H.\nJackson, Creston; W. H. Mather.\nAlice Siding; Alf. Spencer, Wynndel.\ncity, a guest of Miss Belle McGauley,\nSilica  street.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. J. Carlisle, High\nstreet, have returned from Spokane.\n\u2022 Mrs. M. Roberts of Willow\nPoint visited town yesterday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Robinson,\nFairview, plan to leave today for\nSpokane on a vacation.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Fitzpatrick\nof Prince Rupert are guests at the\nhome of their'son and daughter-in-\nlaw, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Fitzpatrick\nof Trail and will later visit relatives\nand friends at Nelson.\n\u2022 Mrs. E. Rear of Gold Hill, In\nthe Lardeau, Is a guest ot Mr. and\nMrs. J. Bird, Victoria street.\n\u2022 Miss Lena McElwaine, who\nspent the sumrrier visiting her\nbrother at Reno, Nev., has arrived\nat Crawford Bay where she teaches.\n\u2022 Mrs. Bert Davis of South Slocan visited the city yesterday.\n\u2022 Mrs. Douglas Ridge has returned to Trail after a week in Nelson.\n\u2022 Mrs. Robert Gilker has returned to Kaslo after a week at the\nhome of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nGeorge Scott, High street.\n\u2022 Mrs. Alex Dungmore of South\nSlocan visited Nelson yesterday.\n\u2022 Miss Betty Johnston, of the\nstaff of Kootenay Lake General\nhospital, has returned from a vacation at Vancouver.\n\u2022 Mrs. Eric P. Dawson plans to\nleave this morning to visit her parents at Victoria. She will be accompanied by her sister, Miss Jackson,\nwho was visiting here.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. John McPhail,\nSilica street, and daughter, Alice\nMcPhail, have returned from a\nmotor trip to Allenby 'where they\nvisited Mr. and Mrs. McPhail's son\nand daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.\nWallace McPhail. They were accompanied by another daughter, Mayme,\nwho has returned to Westbank, to\nresume her duties as teacher.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. George Scott,\nHigh street, have returned from a\nweek at Spokane,\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Mann and\nfamily have returned to town from\ntheir summer place at Six-Mile.\n\u2022 S. N. Ross superintendent of\nInsect Pests\nNo matter what kind of insect peat\nyon want to get rid of\u2014ants, roaches,\nbed bugs or mosquitoes around the\nhouse\u2014flea, on your cat or dog\u2014lice\non plants and poultry\u2014BUHACH will\nput an end to them or money back,\nBUHACH. with a reputation of 60\nyears of usefulness behind it, is guaranteed safe for human beingB and\nanimals, though it is sure death to insect neata\u2014best of all H'b odorless.\nIn Handy Sifter Cans 25e up at all\nDrag, Grocery, Seed Stores, Pet Shops.\n(Advt.)\nOverwaitea\nLimited\nFREE DELIVERY\nPHONE 707\nSPECIALS\nFRIDAY and SATURDAY\nLard: Shamrock,\n2 Ibs\t\nChicken Haddies:\n2 tins for\t\nCooking Figs:\n3 Ibs. for \t\nPrunes: Choice, 50-    1ft\n60's, 2 Ibs  Wt\nPink Salmon: Choice   1C\u201e\ntails, per tin   IOC\n35c\n29c\n25c\n10 Ibs. Granulated Sugar;\n1 lb. Coffee\u201eOver- (U\nwaitea Best, both . \u2022\/'it\nSnlnd Dressing: Kraft, Ol\n12 oz. jar \u00a31L\nCocoanut: Dessicated, 1 TL\nPer lb  lit\nCorn Flakes: Quaker,  OQ\n3 pkts LdK,\nSoap: Cal ay,\n4 cakes for ...\nJif Flakes: 1 pkt.\ncup and saucer .\nBrooms: Good quality, OP\nEach      DdC\n25c\n22c\nMILK: Tall, all\nlimit,\n5 tins for\nkinds, no\n45c\nWax Paper: Para Sani OO\n100 feet roll  LiX\nSoap Flakes: Bulk, 1ft\n2 Ibs. for  io\\>\nSalmon: Fancy Red, OP -\n1 lb. tin  Lo\\>\nO-Cedar Oil:\nLarge bottles .\nFRUITS AND\nVEGETABLES\nPeaches: Freestone,    OC^\nBasket   LoKi\nGreen Peppers:\n3 Ibs. for\t\nGrapes: Red Malaga,\n2 Ibs. for \t\nGrapes: Concord,\nPer basket \t\nTomatoes: 5 Ibs and\nover, per basket . . .\nBananas: Good quality, 3 Ibs\t\nEating Plums:\nBasket  \t\n35c\n29c\n25c\n59c\n22c\n23c\n19c\nBuy your preserving peaches\nnow.\nALL PHONE ORDERS\nSTRICTLY C. O. D.\nthe Whitewater mine, was a city\nvisitor yesterday.\n\u2022 Rev. and Mrs. W. E. Dorey\nare guests of Mr. Dovey's parents\nMr. and Mrs. J. B. Dovey Fruitvale.\nMr. Dovey has charge.of the United\nchurch at Colemont B.C.\nMrs. James Carney who has\nbeen the guest of Mrs. H. E. Stevenson, Fairview, for the past month\nreturned to her home in Edmonton on Wednesday,\nComplete Surfacing\nof Kingsgate Road\nKINGSGATE-EASTPORT, B.C.-\nHard surfacing of the road from\nRyan to the border at Kingsgate\nhas been completed and the road\nis in fine shape. On the American\nportion between Eastport and the\njunction the road has received its\nfirst coat of oil and hard surfacing\nhas been commenced.\nPAGE   FIVE\nDEATHS\n(By The Canadian Press)\nPOITIERS, France\u2014 Pierre Ques-\nnay. general director of the bank\nfor international settlements.\nCASALE MONFERRATO, Italy\u2014 I\nSenator Hector Mazzuco, 72, first;!\npresident of the Fascist parliament* '<\nary group.\nNEW LONDON, Conn. - Ann*,]\nHempstead Branch, poet and play\u00bb\nwright.\n*\nmm\nFREEMAN & LEEW\nPHONE 115\nFURNITURE COMPANY\nThe House of Furniture Stylet\nNELSON, B.C.\nEAGLE BLOCK\nSave Money on Your Furniture\nVISIT OUR STORE WHERE YOUR DOLLAR BUYS MORE\n3 Pieces\nModern\u20143   piece   Living   Room Suites\u2014Conventional\nSound value in these moderately priced suites. Choice of conventional or moderne design. Hardwood frames\u2014spring filled construction and attractive durable covers in a\nvariety of colors. Call and ask to see these real values.\nOCCASIONAL\nCHAIRS\nit An assortment\nVof high grade\n^chairs in a wide\nI range of styles\nland coverings.\nOriental Design\nSCATTER  RUGS\n27x54. Rust or flJO in\nmulberry. Each . \u00abPO.Tt\"\nAXMINSTER\nMATS\nDurable -wool mats\npopular size. '\n' 27\"x54\", Each\nNEW POTTERY\nLAMPS\nLOVELY\nNEW\nLAMPS\nFROM\ncVoc    $395\nJj.95    *J,W\nqocd-voMHfl\nl3ofdm6 ST. CHARLES  MILK\nTHE  BETTER   IRRADIATED  EVAPORATED  MILK\n---.. .:.J_L.-_Lu_-_J_l__Ji___\n\u2014._-_-\u2014.\n\u2014_._._\u00ab\n.\n iPPiPpPPP fpiflrpipi^\n^W>'-7W^VrW\nPAGE SIX\nJMsmt lattij Jfaroa\nEstablished April 22, 1902.\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED,\n216 Baker  Street,    Nelson,    British  Columbia.\nPhone 144, Private Exchange Connecting All Departments.\nMembers  of  the  Audit  Bureau  of  Circulations  and\nThe   Canadian   Press   Leased   Wire   News   Service.\nFRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 10,1937,\nTENNIS INDOORS SUCCESS HERE\nDuring the recent Labor Day tennis tournament in\nNelson the Nelson civic centre again blossomed forth as a\npinch-hitter when the weatherman was unfavorable for the\nout-of-doors sport. When the tennis was stopped by showery weather the executive approached the civic centre\nmanagement and two singles courts were installed in the\narena. These courts were in use day and night and had\nthey not been available the tournament, which drew one\nof the largest entries ever, would have been a flop.\nIndoor tennis was not thought about when the project\nwas built and the fact that the spacious arena filled the\nbill is cause for much satisfaction. There is no doubt\nadditional courts could be arranged in the badminton hall\nif necessity arises.\nIn addition to the ample playing space afforded in the\narena there was also ample seating accommodation under\nthe most comfortable surroundings. There is no denying\nthe rain helped to boost tennis in the city for hundreds of\npeople flocked to the building over the week-end and there\nwere hundreds who have not gone out of their way ever\nbefore to watch tournament play.\nNelson need not fear in the future should occasion\narise that some of the great in tennis should wish to put on\nexhibition games here. There is ample room for the show\nand plenty of seating room.\nThe latest explanation is that George Bernard Shaw\nis really two persons, George and Bernard. In other words,\nwhat seemed like a world war was really only a civil war.\nSir Malcolm Campbell, already holder of the world's\nrecord of 301 miles an hour for speed in an automobile, has\nset a speedboat record of 129 miles an hour, perhaps as\npart of a balanced diet.\nButtons made from milk are to be exhibited. Does this\nmean that the omnivorous baby will be assured of his vitamins when he explores the sewing basket ?\nMan, 74, Convicted of Reckless Driving\u2014Headline.\nNo doubt he was a blameless youth who realized that the\ntime for sowing his wild oats is short.\nThe Spaniards must be jealous over the way their private war has been pushed to one side.\nNEL80N DAILY NEWS .NELSON, B..C*-FR|DAY MORNING, SEPT. 10, 1937.\nBy\ne\nB.C.\nLIMPING LIMERICK\nThere was a young lady of Lynn,\nWho was so extraordinarily thynn\nThat when she essayed\nTo drink lemonade\nShe slipped through the straw and\nfell ynn.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nTOUGH ON THE COLONEL\nWhen I was at Military camp at\nShilo, Manitoba, this summer, Colonel Philpot, commander of the\n24th Field Brigade, R. C. A., told\nme he might make a soldier out of\nme in three years. I found lt hard\nat times, to remember army discipline, and on one occasion when the\nColonel had asked me to do a chore,\nand had some forms to go through\nwith me before I could get them\nout, I asked him to \"step on it\" so I\ncould get the job done. Needless\nto say he reminded me in a nice\nway that he was the colonel\u2014so I\nhad to await his pleasure. This reminds me of another army story.\nA colonel was crossing a parade\nground when he passed a new recruit. To the colonel's surprise, the\nlatter took not the slightest notice\nof him.\nThe colonel said, \"Why don't you\nsalute?\" But the recruit stolidly remained silent. \"Don't you know\nwho I am? I am the colonel!\" yelled\nthe C. 0.\nThe recruit woke up and said \"Oh.\nyou are the colonel, are yer? Well,\nyou'd better buzz off, for the sergeant-major's bin 'ere three limes\nlookin' for yer!\"\nMAID AFRAID\nProspective maid:\n'You have thir\nteen children, eh?   Well, I'm afraid\nthis place wouldn't suit me.\"\nProspective mistress: \"What's the\nmatter, are you superstitious?\"\n,   .   *\n'ROUND THE TOWN\nHere and there \u2014 Charles McLaughlin, former Fairview resident,\nin town for Labor Day and hobnobbing with his father-in-law, Steve\nHillyard \u2014 Commander Burrard\nSmith of Longbeach on a shopping\ntour in town\u2014R. B. Laughton pulling on a cigar that was nearly all\nsmoked away\u2014Norman Lowes and\nDr. D. W. McKay looking over the\nboxla situation\u2014and reporting a lot\nof interest in tonight's playoff final game\u2014between Rossland and\nNelson\u2014on the Trail floor\u2014and expecting a monster crowd\u2014of wild-\neyed Nelson supporters\u2014oh the special train that leaves Nelson around\ndinner hour tonight\u2014Charles F. McHardy, J. B. Gray, R. E. Allen, John\nCartmel and A. Baird planning a\ntrip to Edgewood fair this morning\n\u2014George Dvorjetz also planning to\nmake the trip\u2014but having to cancel it on account of business\u2014S. J.\nLangill coming out of his home via\nthe alley\u2014and carefully putting the\ncatch over the gate\u2014\nSCOTCH JOKE NO. 786\nSaid McPherson, entering the\nnursery garden, \"Have ye a nice cucumber?\"\n\"Aye. here's one,\" said the gardener. \"That will be fivepence.\"\n\"To much. Haven't ye one for\ntuppence.\"\n\"Ye can have this for tuppence.\"\n\"All right, here's the money. But\ndon't cut it off; I'll be calling for it\nin about a fortnight!\"\nLooking Backward \u2666. \u2666\nTHIRTY YEARS AGO\nSeptember 10, 1907\nCharles Taylor who was in the\nprovince for some time looking over\nthe copper and other properties for\nhis firm, Taylor & Company of\nGlasgow, has left for Scotland.\u2014J.\nB. Henderson, Bonnington, is a\nguest at the Strathcona.\u2014E. J. Hunt,\nMoyie, is a guest at the Grand\nCentral.\u2014C. Lucy. Silver King, is a\nguest at the Bartlett\u2014J. S. Stewart, Ymir, is a guest at the Lake-\nview.\u2014James Cronin has arrived in\nthe city from Spokane.\u2014F. C. Mof-\nfatt of the staff of the Daily News\nhas returned from the coast.\u2014A big\nSilver Tip bear was shot recently\nat the Silver King mine by 0.\nCarlson and J. Anderson.\nTEN YEARS AGO\nSeptember 10, 1927\nH. Gauthier, well known Kimberley resident was accidentally\nshot recently while helping a neighbor to shoot a pig. The bullet glanced from the pig and entered Mr.\nGauthier's abdomen. His condition\nis serious.\u2014Body of George Thorn\nof the C. M. & S. company at Trail\nhas been recovered from the Columbia river.\u2014Miss Lorna Anthony\nof Rossland was a recent visitor to\nTrail.\u2014Mrs. J. Ramsay, Silica street,\nhas retured from a four-months visit to England and Wales\u2014Major\nand Mrs. J. S. Gooch of Crawford\nBay were recent visitors to town-\nMiss Helen Blaylock of Trail was\nin the city recently.\u2014Miss O. Olson has left for Victoria where she\nwill attend normal school.\nTWENTY YEARS AGO\nSeptember 10, 1917\nItalians have taken 30,000 Austrian prisoners.\u2014H. Murray, Crawford Bny, is a guest at the Hume \u2014\nMr. and Mrs. Towgood. Sandon, are\nguests at the Strathcona\u2014Pte. William K. Gunn of New Denver has\nbeen wounded in action.\u2014Pte. Mer-\nvyn Edwards of Nakusp has died\nof wounds received in action.\u2014C. R.\nHickman has returned from a visit\nto the coast.\u2014D. St.Denis leaves\nsoon for a visit to the Arrow Lakes\ndistrict\u2014Rev. and Mrs. H. S- Bag-\nnal! have returned from a six weeks\nholiday at Prince Edward Island \u2014\nJim Schofield of Trail has been\nwounded a second time in action.\n\"Quick, Jamps! See if you can interest cook in one of your mystery\nyarns. I'm sure she's looking for a railway time-table.\n\u2014Humorist.\nWHAT THE PRESS IS SAYING\nSOLOMON WAS WISE\u2014BUT NOT\nAS A   MINER\nOld King Solomon wasn't so much\nas a gold miner. This news comes\nto light with the re-opening of one\nof the famous King Solomon's mines.\nIt is at Saudi, on the edge of the\nArbian desert, and it has been taken\nover by a combination of British\nand American mining men. The\nmine is evidently one of the famed\nsiring which supplied King Solomon\nwith all the gold for the glittering\ndisplay of wealth with which he\nastounded the Queen of Sheba ;md\nother persons who flitted across the\npages of the Old Testament. The\nmines have been located by students\nof ancient lore as being alt the\nway from the Urals in Russia to\nRhodesia in South Africa. And, as\nthe Arabian desert is in between,\nit should be well in line as one of\nSolomon's stores of riches.\nHowever, present day miners\ndon't think a great deal of Solomon's mining men. They have-been\nlooking into the workings and they\nfind ore in the mine should assay\nI      AUNT HET\n|       By  ROBERT QUILLEN\n$\t\n\"If he thinks all women like lo\nbe patted and called Deary, he's\ncrazy. The only ones that like\nit are the married ones that\nain't satisfied with what they\ngot.\"\nTHECUMPS\nBy Cus Prison\nat $20 per ton. But there are a lot\nof tailings which have been left\nby the ancient miners of King\nSolomon's day. And, the present\nday miners find these tailings can\nbe sent to the smelter and will assay $14 per ton. So that for every\nton of gold mined, King Solomon\nlook out only $6 worth, left the\nother $14 worth as tailings.\nTsk! Tsk! Imagine any mining\nman in Ontario's northland leaving\nbehind talings worth $14 per ton.\nThey don't do it that way any more.\n\u2014Windsor Star.\nA   NOTABLE   CAREER\nThe recent sudden death in a Lon\ndon restaurant of Lord Strathcarron,\nbelter known as James Ian MacPherson, for many 'years member\nof the British Parliament for Inver\nness Burghs, has ended a remarkable career. A son of a carter in the\nHighlands of Scotland, he was one of\nthree brothers who earned high dis\nUnction in public life, medicine and\nlaw  respectively.\nHe was educated in Kingussie and\nlater at George Watson's College in\nEdinburgh. He was one of five\nformer pupils of the latter institution who, during the Great War\nwere members of the British Cabinet at one and the same time, 8\nrecord said to he unequalled by\nany other school in Great Britain\nThe other four were Sir Robert\nHome, Sir Erric Geddes, Sir Auck\nland Geddes, an dthe late Lord\nWeir.\nJames Ian Macpherson graduated\nin law at tlie University of Edinburgh, later becoming a barrister at\nthe English Bar. In 1911 he was\nelected to the British House of Commons and speedily won recognition\nAt, one time he held the responsible\noffice of Chief Secretary for Ireland in succession of the late Lord\nBalfour. In 1930 he resigned\nmember of Parliament and entered\ntlie House of Lords. His seat ir\nIhe Commons was filled in the ensuing by-election by Mr. Malcolm\nMacDonald, son of the former prime\nminister\u2014Calgary Herald.\nCHEAP STEAM POWER\nReports of studies made under\nthe supervision of the National Resources committc indicate that in the\nmain production of electricity by\nsteam lias already overhauled pro\nduction by water in economy. It is\nfound that water power plants are\nusually more expensive than steam\nplants for an equal volume of pro\nduction provided that the value of\nengine reserves be included in estimate of cost. Ordinarily hydro\nelectric power plants now involve\na cost in excess of $150 for each\nkilowatt of capacity ash compared\nwith from $75 to $125 for steam\nplants. F. F. Fowlo, a Chicago\nengineer , holds that under ordinary\nconditions a steam generating plant\ncan deliver current at a cost of 4\nmills a kilowatt hour as compared\nwitli a cost of 6.3 mills for a hydro\nelectric plant. These figures cover\nfixed charges and operating expense,\n$85 for'each kilowatt of installed\ncapacity being assigned to steam\nplants. $250 to hydro electric\u2014New\nYork Sun.\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nBy Ceo, McManu.\nA GEMTLEMAW TO\n5EE YOU-AMD HE\nSAYS HIS NAME 15\nNW.HATE-SEMSELP-\nTHAT'S HIS\nWAME- BUT\nHE IS  NO\nGENTLENAAN-\nSEND HIM IN-\nMG. JIGGS-1 UMDERSTAWD YOU'RE\nTHE ONE WHO RUINED MY PINE\nDINNER IN HONOR OF COUNT\nTUSSIN- BY MAKING HIM CANCEL IT TO KEEP AN APPOINTMENT WITH YOU JUST _\nBECAUSE YOU WERE (\nWILLING TO LEND HIM   I\nSOME MONEY-__\/\nW_>W- IF THAT GITS IN\nTHE PAPER- I'M SUNK.\nMAGGIE WILL NEVER\nFORGIVE ME-WHAT-\nTO DO - WH AT TO DO?\nI     TILLIE THE TOILER\nBy Russ Wesrover\nOH, HE'S  A PLAV\nBOY- ALWAYS\nHAN<S1N6  ABOUND\nMISHT CLUBS\u2014\nGOING \"TO DANCES\nEMEPY NIGHT-AMD\n:Mm\nCONTRACT -MT\"\nBRIDGE      SK\nWHEN NOT TO PRE-EMPT\nOriginal bids of four in a suit\nshould be reserved almost entirely\nfor defensive purposes in hands\nwhich are worthless at anything\nexcept the suit named. This is seldom true of one which has the three\ntop honors at its head, as it can\nbe invaluable to your partner in a\nno-trump game if he can stop the\nopponents before they have taken\nfive tricks. Pre-emptive bids are\nmore useful on suits lacking the\nace or with honors immediately beneath the ace missing, as they are\nuseless for no trump purposes.\n\u2666 43\nVA942\n\u2666 10 9 4 3\n*AQ_\n*10 9\nVK106\nOQ87!i\n*J973\n\/V.\ns.\n\u2666 70\nVQJB3\nOAKG\n+ K 8 0 2\n->AKQJSB2\n\u00bb87\n\u2666 J2\nA 10 5\n(Dealer: South. Neither side vulnerable.)\nHere South pre-empted with 4-\nSpades and everyone else passed.\nThe diamond 5 was led and won by\nEast, who then cashed the diamond\nA  and  switched  to  the  heart  Q\nwhich was won in the dummy. The\ndeclarer later lost a heart trick\nand a club, so that he was set one\ntrick.\nSouth should have realized with\nhis holdings that someone might\nopen the bidding and he could\nhave injected a spade bid later. Had\nhe done this, North would have opened and would eventually have\nended in 3-No Trumps, which can\nbe made. With seven sure spade\ntricks and his two aces and a sure\nstopper in any suit that would have\nbeen opened, the contract could\nnot have been defeated.\nSouth's pre-emptive bid made It\nimpossible for North to take any\naction, and as a result they ended\nup with a minus score.\nTomorrow'i   Problem\n4 (.864\n\u00bbA7\n\u2666 652\n+ A432\nV. Questions V.\nANSWERS\nThis column of questions and\nanswers is open to any reader of\nthe Nelson Daily News. In no\nlase will the name ot the person\nisking the question be published.\nC. Yahk-Norlh bids 2 spades; East,\n3 diamonds; South, 3 spades; West,\n4 diamonds; North doubles 4 diamonds; East redoubles; players\nclaim South is not allowed to bid\nagain as a redouble closed the\nbidding. Please advise.\nLaws of Contract Bridge\u2014International Code\u2014states: \"When a bid\nhas been doubled or doubled and\nredoubled, a player may in relation make a further bid until the\nauction  closes.''\nC, Yahk\u2014Can the partner of the\nbidder redouble or just the original bidder?\nLaws of Contract Bridge\u2014International Code\u2014states: \"Any player\nmay in rotation double the last preceding bid, if made by opponent;\nor may redouble it, if it has been\ndoubled by opponent.\"\nG.I.N,,  Nelson-What day  of  the\nweek did April 16, 1910; January\n7,   1914;   and  February  20,   1918\nfall on?\nApril 16, 1910. Saturday; January\n7,  1914,  Wednesday;  February  20,\n1918, Wednesday.\nB.D., Trail\u2014What must a Canadian-\nborn citizen do who wishes to go\nto the United States to reside?\nWrite to the American  Consulate,  Marine  Building,  Vancouver,\nB.C., for full information.\n\u2666 -\nVERSE\n-\u00ab\u25a0\nTHE POET\nTls wisely said \u2014 the poet dwells\nalone!\nFor who can comprehend the soul\nin flight?\nOr sense that in the silence of constraint\nIs born anew a Pathway unto God.\nAnd who can vision with the poet's\neye,\nThe beauty in the simple things of\nlife?\nOr who could ever dream a life so\nplain,\nWas dedicated to eternal time?\nOh, yes. We say: A poet dwells apart.\nFor none there arc whose heart is\nquite so free\u2014\nFor none there arc who suffer pain\nand woe\nAnd sacrifice and sorrow,  but  to\nrise\nAbove the surface of life's stormy\nwinds\u2014\nLife's petty cares, and lead the way\nTo higher, better, holier truths\nThan man could ever fashion on his\nown.\nAnd so we leave the poet as we\nmust, i\nTo pave the way to soul's eternity.\nHis life was given for a cause\u2014\nHis destiny to serve.\"\nHis thoughts  rise on a flowering\ncrest of love,\nHis words become as flesh.\n$K 10 2\nVKQJ8\n4\n\u2666 Q73\n*76\nN.\n5.\n\u2666 AJ 75\n^ 10 9 3\n\u2666 K108\n*J96\n\u2666 93\n\u00bb652\n\u2666 AJ04\n*K Q 10 8\n(Dealer: West. Neither side vulnerable.)\nPlaying duplicate, what action\nshould South take after three pas-\n\/ CANT CLIMB\nANOTHER STEP\nWITHOUT A REST\n\\\nurro\nnu fir\nEat foods tliat tarte good\n. . . and mako you feel\ngood! Kellogg's Bran\nFlakes, for instance. ThiB\nis about the tastiest, easicst-\ngoing-down energy-food\nyou ever put in your\nmouth! Oven-crisp, deli-\nciously flavored. Nourishing and mildly laxative.\nGet a package at your\ngrocer's today. Ready to\nserve with milk or cream.\nMade by Kellogg in London, Ontario.\nBRAN FLAKES\nIn tho Golden Yellow Potkago\nSO THEY SAY\nGAS COOKING-We have organizations which teach women how\nto use gas masks and to protect\nthemselves in war, but how many\nof these organizations teach girls\nhow to cook?\u2014Dame Louise Mc-\n11-oy. ,\nINEVITABLE - War involves\ncompulsory enmity, diabolical outrage against, human personality, and\nn wanton destruction of the truth-\nPrincipal John Mackay, Princeton\nUniversity, U. S. A.\ni *   *\nBLUNT -If it was ever true thai\nWaterloo was won on Ihe playing\nfields of Eton. Gallipoli was practically lost on the playing fields\nof Eton-lost through the lack of\nhigher intelligence and scientific\nknowledge in the staff rommand.\n- Bishop Blunt of Bradford,\nMODERN ENGLAND.- England\nis becoming more and more practically pagan.\u2014Bishop of St. Albans,\nSMALL\nOR\nLARGE\nWith Our\n35 Years\nExperience\nWe Are\nAble to\nHandle\nYour Job\nWith Greater\nEfficiency\nand Care\nTRAINED MEN\nWHO KNOW HOW\nAT YOUR SERVICE\nPHONE  33\nWEST\nTRANSFER CO.\nEst'd. 1899\n._. . ;...-_-:_ ... '-\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0Ji't\"f,ir-kif-lr-i-'-}i-.t1:,f\n mmm\nim\nURGE PROBE OF\nU.S. ACTIVITIES\nOF NAZI GROUPS\nSenators   Borah   and\nBurke Propose an\nInvestigation\nWASHINGTON, Sept. 9 (AP>-\nfwo senators\u2014Borah (R-Ida) and\nBurke (D-Meb) \u2014 declared today\ncongress should investigate Nazi\nactivities in the United States.\nThey   made   their   proposals   in\n\"Hoot Mon!\nA Bargain!\"\nTalk To\nKamloops\nfor\n60c\n(Station-to-Station)\n$U5\n(Person-to-Person)\nafter 7 p.m. weekdays or\nany time Sundays\nThe above  rates cover a\nthree-minute conversation.\nGovernment Tax Extra\nB. C. TELEPHONE CO.\ncommenting on a Chicago Dally\nTimes article declaring that Ger\nman-American Nazi leaders are or\nganiztng American citizens with intent to seize control of the nation.\n\"On the first day of (he next ses,\nsion, specia. or regular,\" Burke\nsaid, \"I am going to introduce a\nresolution proposing a senate committee investigation.\"\nThe Idahoan, who charged on the\nsenate floor last session :hat Nazi\ngroups were training American\nyouths In Anti-American principles,\nsaid he deemed the matter \"sufficiently important\" to call for a\ns.i :cial inquiry.\n\"There isn't any doubt of the fact\nthat such organization is going on\nii. this country,\" Borah said. \"But\nto what .xtent I do not know.\"\nWhile stating that he was not\n\"greatly alarmed\" by such activities Burke said investigations of his\nov n convinced him it would be\nwise to inquires into them.\nLEADERS DENY CHARGE\nCHICAGO, Sept. 9 (AP) - The\nDaily Times' copyright story of a\nNazi army being organized in the\nUnited States for a counter-offensive \"when the communists' revolution starts\" was quickly denied\ntoday by German-American leaders.\nThe Times said officers pf the two\ngroups subjected to \"exhaustive investigation\" by three reporter-investigators over a period of months\n-the Amerikadeutscrier Volksbund\nand Deutscher Vo.i-sbui.d \u2014 gave\nthis explanation of the purposes of\ntheir followers:\n\"We are not plotting a revolution,\nbut we are going to be prepared to\nwrest control from the Ccmmunist-\nJews when they start their revolution. We will save America for\nwhite-Americans.\"\nThe Times said the Amerikadeut-\nsch-r Vo'ksbund had an inner organization known as the \"Ordnungs\nDienrt\" and described it as \"an exact leplica of the Hitler storm\ntroops.\"\nSilent Toast to\nHarry Ferguson\nAt the instance of President W. B.\nBamford, members of the Nelson\nboard of trade stood for a minute\nin respectful silence at Thursday's\nmeeting, to honor the memory of\nthe late G. H. (Harry) Ferguson.\nURIC ACID DEPOSITS\nRemoved By\nNox Kidney Flushers\nTo neglect the first symptom ot\nKidney trouble might lead to very\nserious results. Your kidneys contain thousands of little filters, each\none having special work to perform.\nIf some of these filters become clogged, poisons and Uric acid enters the\nblood stream. The result is a backache, a dead, heavy pain. The Uric\nacid deposits a fine granule in the\njoints, causing a pain known as\nrheumatism. Nox Kidney Flushers\nreally flush the kidneys, placing\nthem in a healthy, sound condition.\nNo more getting up at night\u2014no\nmore backache. That sallow complexion is replaced by a natural clear\nskin. Your eyes become bright and\nyour headaches disappear. Each\npackage of Nox Kidney Flushers\ncontains a full month's treatment.\nThere is only one Nox Kidney Flush-\ner\u2014they improve your entire general health. Your Kidneys and Liver\nwill function perfectly. Why not\nstart today on the road to good\nhealth, let Nox Kidney Flushers\nbring you good health. Sold at Fleu-\nry's Pharmacy, Nelson, B.C. (Advt.)\nInspiring devotions and Important\nbusiness deliberations characterized\nthe fall meeting of the prestbytery\nof Kootenay of the Presbyterian\nChurch in Canada in session Thursday at First Presbyterian church,\nNelson. Rev. J. F. Bell, Cranbrook,\nthe moderator, presided throughout\nthe day. conducting the opening\nhour of worship in the morning.\nRev. J. M. Ritchie, Nelson, led the\ndevotions in the afternoon. Rev. F.\nG. St Denis, the presbytery clerk,\nguided the business sessions. Other ministers attending were Rev.\nMurray Y. Fraser of Creston, and\nRev. J. E. Taylor, Slocan City. Rev.\nW. D. Grant Hollingworth, of rPince\nRupert, was a visitor.\nTRIBUTE8 TO RITCHIE\nThe resignation of ;Rev. J. M. Ritchie from the pastorate of Fir.t\nChurch, Nelson, was considered and\naccepted with regret. The moderator expressed the good wishes ot the\npresbytery for Mr. Ritchie's success\nas he takes up work in eastern Canada. Rev. F. G. St. Denis paid tribute to Mr. Ritchie's work in the work\nof the Sabbath schools and young\npeople's committee, specially emphasizing his keen interest in the West\nKootenay Religious Education Council, representing the Presbyterian\nchurch.\nSteps were taken to fill the vacancy, Mr. St. Denis being appointed\ninterim-moderator.\nMiss Ruby Blyth, deaconess for\nSabbath school work, made a report of her activities during the\nlast year at Kimberley, Creston, Sil-\nverton and New Denver. She will\ncontinue her work at Nelson, Grank\nForks and Trail during the winter,\norganizing and leading training classes for teachers.\nAs commissioner to the general\nassembly held in Ottawa last June,\nRev. F. G. St, Denis brought an encouraging report of the general work\nof the church in Canada, drawing\nattention to plans and recommendation for the quickening of activity,\nand the extension of evangelistic\nand mission endeavor.\nKOOTENAY MISSION\nSURVEY\nKeen discussion marked the consideration of a survey of mission\nwork throughout the presbytery.\nRecommendations were brought in\ncovering the appointment of ministers for the winter term at New\nDenver and Creston.\nAppointment of a synodical missionary superintendent, to take the\nplace of Rev. R. J. Douglas, D. D.,\nretired, was urged upon the board\nof missions at the next general assembly. It was also recommended\nthat Rev. Grant Hollingworth of\nPrince Rupert who has been making a survey in connection with\nmission work throughout British\nColumbia, be appointed to fulfil\nthe duties of superintendent during\nthe coming winter and spring.\nPermission was granted to St.\nStephen's church, Cerston, to proceed with the erection of a new\nmanse on lots adjacent to the present building.\nEVENING 8ERVICE\nAt a public meeting held in the\nevening,   Rev,   Mr.   Hollingworth\nNElM-k DAILY NEWS .NELSON, B,c.-PKIDAY lYiOfmma, o-rr. to, to\nDYNAMITING AND\nBURNING CHARGES\nUP  TODAY,   TRAIL\nTRAIL, B.C., Sept. 8\u2014William\nMakonan, William Posnikoff and\nFred Popoff, three Doukhobors\ncharged with conspiracy with others in connection with wcent firings\nend burnings and the attempted dynamiting of power lines In the West\nKootenay, will appear in Trail police court Friday at 10 a.m. before\nDeputy Police Magistrate Donald\nMcDonald.\nThe men appeared in court last\nFriday and were remanded trial\none week, to give time for a thorough investigation of the men's actions in regard to the burnings and\nother acts of incendiarism which\nhave occurred in the district intermittently for some months.\nPresbytery Accepts Resignation\nol Ritchie; St.Denis Moderator\nPresbyterian'Sabbath School Work Reported\non for Kootenay; Ask General Assembly\nArrange Mission Superintendent\npreached 'an inspiring sermon on\nthe subject of maintenance of the\nchurch. He emphasized the responsibility and privilege of all Christians in furthering the cause of the\nMaster. At this service Rev. J. F.\nBell presided, and he was assisted\nby Revs. Murray Fraser, J. E. Taylor and J. M .Ritchie.\nRefreshments at a social hour were\nserved by the Ladies' association of\nthe Nelson church and informal addresses were made by the various\nmembers of the presbytery. Again\nwords of farewell were spoken to\nMr. Ritchie, who closes his ministry\nat Nelson next Sunday.\nApples, Pears Are\nMoving al Creston\nCRESTON, B.C. - Straight carloads of mixed fruits and vegetables\n\u2014heavy to Wealthy apples\u2014are on\nthe move from Creston and Erickson packing sheds, along with considerable movement of Ihe Jive-ton\nexpress cars.\nWith the car lots Winnipeg, Moose\nJaw, Swift Current, Eastend and\nEdmonton are drawing supplies,\nWinnipeg showing a preference for\nCreston valley pears and with\napples.\nThe Exchange rolled its first car\nto export at the end of the week.\nIt went to Cardiff and carried 750\nboxes of Wealthies in the Fancy\ngrade, excellent as to color, and\nsold on a firm-f.o.b. price Creston.\nDespite some price cutting difficulties with trucked Wealthies both\nLong, Allan Sc Long and the Exchange report a healthy movement\nof this variety. Gravensteins in\nsmall quantity are still coming in.\nIn the five-ton car lots deliveries\nare now being taken at the smaller\npoints. Cars have gone, to Nanton,\nClaresholm, Milk River. Taber and\nMacLeod in southern Alberta, and\nthere is a brisk demand at Lethbridge and Medicine Hat.\nThe Exchange had a six ton truck\nliovement to Moose Jaw at the first\nof the week, principally Wealthy\napples and pears. Moose Jaw is\nagain buying vegetables from Creston. Long. Allan & Long, rolled\na mixed car featuring crates, lugs\nand green tomatoes, peppers and a\nquantity  of  Wealthy  apples.\nTranscendant crabs and Clapp's\nFavorite pears are over. Cool weather at the end of the week enabled\nshipping houses to clear out surplus supplies of tomatoes and cucumbers and they are hopeful supply and demand will be about\nequalized for the balance of the\nseason.\nBRANTFORD, Ont., (CP)-Glad-\niolus of the Lord Lambourne variety, eight feet tall and with the\nflower stems in pairs, are giving F.\nE. Morrison a thrill and some sort\nof a record, he thinks.\nCoral reefs often protect a nearby\nshore from being worn down by\nwaves.\nPostal Inspector\nal lake Points\nJ. Turner, inspector for the post\noffice department who has been\nworking through the Kootenay\ncountry for the past fortnight or\nso, on Thursday continued an interrupted inspection of Nelson in\nthe light of institution of letter carrier service expected shortly.\nToday the inspector will visit lake\npoints, visiting rural post offices. He\nexpects to return to the city tonight.\nHe has already made one trip to\nKaslo and other points.\nInspector Turner previously visited Trail, carrying out an inspection with respect to Institution of\nletter delivery.\nBride-Elect Honored\nat Shower at Balfour\nBALFOUR, B. C\u2014Mrs. C. Holt\nentertained Thursday in honor of\nMiss K. McKay whose marriage is\nexpected to take place this mbnth.\nThe bride to be was the recipient\nof many gifts. Those present were\nMrs. Holt, Mrs. McKay, Mrs. Cooper,\nMrs. Hartridge, Mrs. Peachey, Mrs.\nLing, Mrs. Seal, Mrs. Noakes, Mrs.\nHudson, Mrs. Drenilson, Mrs. Shrie-\nves, Mrs. Sherman, Mrs. Lischutti,\nMrs .Bayes, Mrs. Merz, Miss Kitty\nand Miss Isabel McKay, Miss Mae\nMuirhead, Miss Audray Hudson,\nMiss Connie Noakes, Miss Margaret\nCooper, Miss Nora Hartridge, Miss\nJanet Holt, Miss Lindsey Holt, Miss\nAllison Holt, Miss Ginette Merz,\nMiss Daphne Shrieves and Miss\nMabel Conrad.\nRefreshments were served and\nthe hostess was assisted by Miss\nJanet Holt, Miss Lindsey Holt, Miss\nAudrey Hudson and Miss Margaret\nCooper.\nMr. Stewart of Nelson arrived\nSaturday to take up his duties as\nteacher at Balfour school.\nCASCADE   OFFICER   ASSISTING\nIN TRAIL\nTRAIL, B.C., Sept. 9-E. S. Reynolds ot the Cascade customs office\nstaff is relieving in the local customs office. Mr. Reynolds is assisting in the office under Mr. Padberg.\nFREDERICTON (CP)\u2014Orders for\nNew Brunswick potato shipments to\nforeign markets this fall already\namount to 200,000 barrels, announced Hon. A. C. Taylor, provincial\nminister of agriculture.\nON THE AIR\nCANADIAN  BROADCASTING\nCORPORATION NETWORK\n5:00 Shadows on tho grass, Hall-\nfax; 5:30 From a Viennese Garden, music of old Vienna, Montreal;\n6:00 Backstage, variety, Winnipeg;\n6:30 Interview, Bob Davis; 6:45 News\nand weather Toronto; 7:00 Promenade concert; 8:00 Hawaiian Nights,\nfrom Winnipeg; 8:30 Moulders of\nNational Destiny, Professor Soward;\n8:45 Good Evening, news, from Vancouver; 9:00 Continental Varieties,\nfrom Vancouver; 9:30 At the Red\nGap social, from Regina, not CRCV;\n10:00 News, Vancouver; 10:15 Organ\nrecital, Vancouver; 10:45 Weather\nforecast, Vancouver.\nand orch.; 8:00 Herby Kay's orch.;\n8:30 Ted Fio-Rito's orch.; 9:00 Nocturne; Herble King's orch., KOL;\n9:15 Horace Henderson's orch.; 9:30\nPaul Pendarvis' orch.; 10:00 By\nthe Fireside; 10:15 Stirling Young's\norch.; 10:45 Benny Goodman's orchestra; 11:00 Pasadena Civic auditorium; 11:30 Eddie Fitzpatrick's\norchestra.\nN.B.C.-KPO RED NETWORK\nKHQ  KGW KFI  KPO  KOMO\n690      620    640    680       920\n5:00 The Beaux Arts trio; 5:30\nKen Spencer, basso; 5:45 The Junior News, dramatizations: 6:00 First\nNlghter. Don Ameche in drama;\n6:30 Jimmy Fidler. Hollywood gossip; 6:45 Talk, Dorothy Thompson; 7:00 Amos 'n' Andy, blackface\ncomedians; 7:15 Uncle Ezra's Radio\nStation E-Z-R-A; 7:30 Court of Human Relations, drama; 8:00 Carefree\nCarnival, Ned Tollinger, m.c.; 8:30\nMike Riley and his orchestra; 0:00\nDon Fernando and orchestra; 9:13\nPaul Sabin and his orchestra; 9:45\nAl Vierra's orchestra; 10:00 News\nflashes; 10:15 Sports graphic; 10:30\nLeon Mojica's orchestra; 11:00 Hal\nKemp's orch.; 11:30 Jules Radinsky's\norchestra.\nN.B.C.-KGO BLUE NETWORK\nKGO KJR KEX KECA KGA\n790     970     1180     1430     1470\n5:00 Musical Echoes; 5:30 American Institute of Banking; 6:00 Morton Bowe, Tommy Dorsey's orch.;\n7:00 Darrell Donnell, news; 7:15\nLum and Abner, comedy; 7:30\nPromenade concert; 8:00 Henry\nBusse and orchestra; Dance Hour,\nKGO; 8:15 Chester Rowell; 8:30\nRobert \"Believe-It-or-No.\" Ripley;\n9:00 Ricardo and his Cabeneros; 9:30\nCarlos Molina's orch.; 10:00 Frank\nCastle's orch.; 10:30 Jimmy Grier's\norchestra; 11:00 Charles Runyan,\norgan.\nCOLUMBIA   NETWORK\nKVI    KOIN   KNX   ISL   KOL\n570 940 1050 1130 1270\n5:00 Hollywood Hotel, dramatic\nmusical revue; 6:00 Kitty Carlysle\nand others, a Glee club orchestra;\n700 Scattergood Baines. dr.; 7:15\nBoake Carter, news; 7:30 Hal Kemp\n600 k CJOR 499.7 m\nVancouver- 600 w\n5:15'Uncle Mickey's Mystery club;\n6:20 Monitor Views the News; 6:45\nSports Resume; 7:00 Stock quotations; Real Life dr.; 7:30 Political;\n8:00 NBC Theaurus; 8:15 Joe Rocks,\ntenor; 8:30 Sports; 10:30 News;\n10:45 Dance Parade; 11:00 De Santis\norch.; 11:30 Slumber hour.\n910 k CJAT 319.6 m\nTrail 1000 w\n7:00 Morning Vespers; 7:15 Musical Clock; 7:45 Comedy Capers; 8:00\nRequest program; 8:30 Nelson bulletin; 9:30 The Old Timer; 9:45\nBarn dance; 10:00 What's new?;\n10:15 Memory lane; 10:30 The Radio chef; 10:45 Melodic Pipes; 11:00\nBackstage Wife, E.T.; 11:15 Kootenay Echoes; 11:30 Monitor views\nthe news; 11:45 House of Peter McGregor; 12:00 Home Folks; 12:15\nSpokane Welcomes You; 12:30 The\nMusic Masters; 12:45 Colville Rangers; 1:15 Rhythm and Romance;\n1:30 Concert Time; 3:00 in the\nCrime-light; 3:15 Your Home; 4:15\nCub Reporters; 4:40 News Quirks;\n4:45 Cecil and Sally; 5:00 Theatre\nnews; 5:15 Happy Valley Folks, E.T.;\n5:30 Songs of the Stars; 5:45 Nonsense and Melody; 6:00 See C.B.C\nnetwork except: 6:30 The Buccaneers: 8:30 Donald Novis; 10:45 Crazy\nMountaineers.\n1030 k CFCN 293.1 m\nCalgary 10,000 w\n6:00 Honor the Law; 6:15 The\nBuccaneers; 6:30 Red Head family;\n7:30 Cub Reporters; 8:00 Now and\nThen; 8:45 House of Peter McGregor; 9:00 News Flashes; 9:30 Peacock\ncourt; 9:45 Garden of Melody.\nSHORT WAVE PROGRAMS\nBRITISH EMPIRE\nTRANSMISSION 6\nGSI 15.26 mcs. (19.68 m.)\nG8F 15.14 mcs. (19.82 m.)\nGSD 11:76 mci. (25.53 m.)\nGSC 9.58 mcs. (31.32 m.)\n6:00 p.m. Big Ben. A Man With a\nPast, comedy. 6:30 Rccilal of Scottish Songs. 7:00 The Giddiest Girl in\nthe Coll. 7:40 News and Announcements.\nBOXLA FATE OF\nREDMEN, LEAFS\nISSUE TONIGHT\nRossland and Nelson\nto Lock Horns on\ntrail Floor\nRossland Redmen and Nelson\nMaple Leafs will know their 1937\nboxla fate tonight. They meet at\nTrail In the third game of the\nKootenay semi-final, and when the\nfinal bell rings one or the other\nwill carry on against Trail, league\nleaders, In the title series of five\ngames.\nRossland and Nelson are all even\non the two games to date, though\nRedmen have the margin in goals\nscored. Tonight's deciding game will\nbe played on a neutral floor at\nTrail, with Nelson fans travelling\nto the game by special train and\nRossland fans using auto transportation. Between the two cities and\nTrail followers of the game, it is\nexpected Trail rink tonight will be\njammed to the bursting point.\nMaple Leafs will go Into the game\nwith, it is expected, the same lineup ap in late league games and the\nplayoff series to date. They almost\nhave to, for the only substitutions\nthat can be made are of juniors.\nGeorge Bishop and \"Pro\" Dingwall\nhave had the odd game in senior\ncompany but it is considered unlikely they will get the call tonight.\nMurray Clark, coach-manager, is\nstill 111 and will be unable to direct\nthe team, Cliff McKinnon, president\nis out of town. It is understood Bill\nFreno will go into the box with the\nboys.\nRedmen, on their showing in the\nplayoff series to date, are favorites\nto take the series but Nelson fans\nbelieve that the Maple Leafs, should\nthey get down to combination and\nput up the Ught they have in the\npast, can win.\nRossland fans are sure that their\nlads will advance to the final. Boss-\nland's ability to produce a first class\nbrand of lacrosse on occasion, superior weight and more experienced\nplayers are advanced as arguments\nin support of this faith In the Red-\nmen.\nNo matter which way lt goes, fans\nare assured of boxla thrills tonight.\nWedding Bells Ring\nfor Cranbrook Miss\nCRANBROOK, B.C.-A wedding\nof much interest in Cranbrook took\nplace here recently when Louise\nConstance, daughter of Mr. and\nMrs. A. A. Robertson of Cranbrook,\nwas United in* marriage to Robert\nStrachan, youngest son of J. Strachan\nand the late Mrs. Strachan of Aberdeen, Rev. R. W. Hardy officiating.\nMiss Nancy McCrindle was the\nbride's only attendant, and Cyril\nRobertson acted as groomsman.\nFollowing a short wedding trip to\nSpokane, Mr. and Mrs. Strachan\nwill reside on Lumsden avenue.\nMrs. Strachan was born in Whitley Bay, England, coming to Cranbrook with her parents in 1928. She\nattended school here and since graduating has been employed with the\nCranbrook post office.\nMr. Strachan was born in Aberdeen, Scotland, coming to Canada\nin 1928. He is on the staff of the\nCanadian Bank of Commerce and\nhas been in Cranbrook for the past\n18 months.\nPAGE MVtN\nJUNIOR TENNIS BOUT\nAT TADANAC SATURDAY\nTRAIL, B.C., Sept. 9 \u2014 Annual\nTrail-Rossland-Tadanac junior singles tennis tournament gets away\nSaturday at the Tadanac courts,\nfinals to be played Sunday. Entries\nare to be in the hands of Ben Coon,\nsecretary by 7 p.m. Friday.\nBoys and girls who were under\n18 on January 1,1937 are eligible to\nplay and an entry fee of 25 cents\nwill be charged.\nDefending champions are Les Murdoch, Trail and Marjorie McDonell,\nRossland.\nHigh School al\nWynndel Opened\ntor Inspection\nWYNNDEL, B. C\u2014The new high\nschool building with accommodation for 20 pupils was inspected by\nresidents and high school pupils\nheld open house Saturday, Aug. 28.\nwhen tea was served on the school\ngrounds.\nA free will offering netted $4.45\nto be used for the purchase of\nsweaters for the basketball club.\nThe services of Mrs. G. Robinson\nof Vancouver have been obtained to\ntake charge of this new school.\nUsed lo Wake Up\nWilh a Headache\nNow Fresh' and Lively\nEvery Morning\nHere Is a man who woke up\nevery morning with a dull headache. Then Kruschen transformed\nhis days. Read his letter:\u2014\n\"I used to wake up in the mornings with a dull headache. A year\nago, I started taking Kruschen\nSalts regularly. Today, I wake up\nfresh and lively and can So my\nday's work without any exertion,\nand constipation, and for putting\nI can recommend Kruschen for\nanyone suffering from headaches\nand constipation, and for putting\nnew life Into you. I Intend to continue with Kruschen for the rest\nof my life.\"\u2014E.P.\nHeadaches can nearly always be\ntraced to a disordered stomach, and\nto the unsuspected retention in the\nsystem of stagnating waste material which poisons the blood, Remove these poisons\u2014prevent them\nfrom forming again \u2014 and you'll\nnever have to worry any more.\nAnd ihat is lust how Kruschen\nSalts brings quick and lasting relief\nfrom headaches. (Advt.)\nPHILCO C7XX*\nThe utmost in radio value I Domestic\nand Foreign Reception. Phllco Cone-\nCentric Automatic Tuning. Inclined\nControl Panel. Philco Foreign Tuning\nSystem. Inclined Sounding Board.\nConcert Grand Electro-Dynamic\nSpeaker. Pentode Audio System.\nThree-Point Tone Control. Automatic\nVolumeCobtrol.TwoTuningRanges.\nBeautiful Walnut Cabinet,\n$149\n.50\nTht New 1938\nPHILCO\nAUTOMATIC\nTUNING\nFOR 1938 PHILCO combines two of\nradio's greatest advancements\u2014Philco\nAutomatic Tuning... the fastest, most\naccurate method of tuning ever devised\n\u2014and the Inclined Control Panel, providing complete ease and grace when tuning. The result ia the\nworld's greatest radio... the new Philco Double-X I\nA single glance shows the call letters of your favourite\nstations, whether you are standing or sitting. A single\nmotion, and Philco Automatic Tuning gets them ...\ninstantly, perfectly, automatically.\nGet all that radio can provide... now... In the new\nDouble-X PhilccGreatest tuning easel Finest of tone,\nprovided by the Inclined Sounding Board! Double the\nnumber of short-wave stations, with the Philco Foreign\nTuning System I years\u2014in any one of the five new\nDouble-X Philcos... at a wide range of new low prices.\n'Sold only with Philco High-EMctmcy Afri-l\n(o insure greatest foreign reception\u2014$7.00.\nLIBERAL\nEASY TERMS\nTRADE-IN   ALLOWANCE\nWHOLESALE   DISTRIBUTORS\nMACKENZIE, WHITE 8c DUNSMUIR, LTD.\nVANCOUVER.   VICTORIA.   NANAIMO.   NELSON.   NIW   WMTMIN8TIR,   PtNTICTON,   VBRNON\nPHILCO RADIOS SOLD IN NELSON BY\nMcKay & Stretton\nPHONE 544\nMEDICAL ARTS BLDC.\nNELSON, B. C.\nPHILCO RADIOS SOLD IN TRAIL BY\nKline Brothers\nPHONE 533\nBAY AVENUE\nTRAIL,'B. C.\nBUY ONLY THE BEST IN RADIO!\nSEE OUR COMPLETE STOCK OF PHILCOS\nRossland Cooperative Society\nPHONE 52\nCOLUMBIA AVE.\nROSSLAND, B. C.\n. .,_.._*._..,._..,_.__________\t\n (AGE EIGHT-\n\u2014        NELSON DAILY NEWS .NELSON, B.C.-FRIDAY MORNING, SEPT. 10, 1937.\nGOLF TITLES CHANGE HANDS LABOR DAY\nIf. # # 41 K JK ,       M M.A ^_ Jf If. If, 4. J|l K M\nCARL CARLSON AND MRS. B. TOWNSHEND WIN HONORS; COMPETITORS NUMEROUS IN THE WEEK-END TOURNAMENT PLAY AT NELSON\nCongratulations!\n*    *    *    *    *    *    *     *    *    *    *\nRUNNERS-UP CONGRATULATE WINNERS\nKen McBride, left, congratulates Carl Carlson, right, on his winning of the Leith cup.\nThree holes from the end, Carlson was three\nup, and the match ended when McBride was\nonly able to halve the next hole. Both are\nNelson youths.\nMrs. B, Townshend of Willow Point, left,\nholder of the women's title for a number of\nyears, receives the congratulations of Miss E.\nHughes of Fernie, gallant finalist, whom she\ndefeated four up and three to play, for the\nKootenay Breweries cup.\nHan Killed by Engine in Nelson\nYard Apparently Under Influence\nLiquor and Asleep on Ihe Track\nSo Finds Jury Delving\nInto Death of Emil\nRose, Wednesday\n\"Coroner's jury, sitting Thursday\nmorning at an inquest into the death\nof Emil Rose, 59-year-old bachelor,\nwho was run over by a yard engine\non the C. P. R. tracks early Wednesday morning, came to the conclusion\nthat he was apparently under the\ninfluence of liquor.\nEvidence showed he had either\nfallen on Ihe tracks and struck his\nliead or had lain down to sleep between the rails. Dr. H. H. MacKcn-\nzie, coroner, conducted the inquest.\nTHE VERDICT\nVerdict of the jury follows: \"Emil\nRose died about 12:40 a.m. on September 8. 1937 at a point on the C.\nP. R. Railway tracks about one-\nlialf mile east of the Nelson depot;\nthat his death was caused by injuries sustained by being run over by\nthe C. P. R. yard engine: That in\ncur opinion, based on evidence produced, the deceased was deeply under the influence of liquor and was\nlying, presumably 'unconscious, on\nthe tracks when run over by the\nyard engine.\"\nMembers of the engine crew, riding on the back of the engine, testified they saw some dark object lying between the tracks and thought\nit was a b'undle of clothes or some\nsimilar object and paid no more\nattention to it until it was directly\nbeneath them, when one of the crew\nsaw that it was an unusual shape\nand gave the signal to stop to the\nengineer. When the engine could\nbe stopped, it had passed completely\nover the man and apparently had\ndragged him for some distance,\nSUGGEST LIGHT ON\nENGINE\nAfter its verdict the jury suggested that a light be placed on the back\nof the yard engine so as to illuminate the tracks at night to prevent\nany recurrence of the tragic accident. Jury also suggested that some\ndevice be placed at the rear of the\nengine so that it could be brought\nto an immediate stop in case of just\nsuch an emergency as occurred Wednesday morning, or that a means of\nsignalling the engineer to make an\nimmediate stop be placed on the\nengine.\nWitnesses at the inquest were\nGeorge Lapointe, who saw Rose earlier in the night and said the man\nwas apparently under the influence\nof liquor. P. L. Traynor, engineer,\nE. R. McCaskie, one of those riding\non the engine, N. W. Armstrong foreman of the yard crew, and Constable Ralph E. Robinson of the city\npolice force.\nJurymen were C. F. McHardy,\nforeman; Frank Carter, Frank\nWebber, W. A. Hufty, Douglas Cummins and Kirby Douglas.\nB.C. WILL JOIN IN\nPENSIONS FOR\nBLIND\nVICTORIA, September 9 (CP)\n\u2014Following reports from Ottawa that the federal government had arranged for payment\nof pensions lo the blind, Premier\nT. D. Pattullo announced today\nthe pensions would be mada\navailable in British Columbia\nwith a mmimum of delay\nthrough an order-in-council to\nbe passed at the next meeting\nof the cabinet.\nUnder the amendment to the\nold age pensions act, blind persons become eligible for old age\npensions at the age of 40 and\nare paid a maximum of $240\nyearly. Other provisions are\nsimilar to those applying to\nsighted persons at 70 years of\nALBERTA AL80\nTO PARTICIPATE\nEDMONTON, September 9,\n(CP) \u2014 Alberta will participate in the Dominion-provincial\nscheme for joint payment of\npensions to the blind, Premier\nAberhart said here today following receipt of copies of the\nagreement from Ottawa. It was\nexpected the matter would be\ndiscussed at the next cabinet\nmeeting.\nHORIZON, Sask. (CP) - Shaped\nlike a crouched animal, an odd-\nshaped rock was found in a cave\non the banks of the Big Muddy lake.\nSome think it an Indian idol but\nothers believe it is just an odd natural formation.\nCRESTON Social...\nCRESTON\u2014Mrs. Morrison of Nelson was a week-end visitor at Creston, guest of her brother and sister-\nin-law, Mr. and Mrs. H. S. Mc-\nCrcath.\nMrs. G. P. Smith of Vauxhall, Alta.,\nis a guest of Mr. and Mrs. C. F.\nHayes. She left Thursday for Silver-\nton. The Smiths are former residents, Mr. Smith having been principal of Creston public school some\nyears ago.\nMrs. J. W. Hamilton and Miss M.\nHamilton visited Nelson at the first\nof the week, guests of Miss Phyllis\nHamilton.\nH. H. Fairbanks of Harrop has\narrived to take charge of federal\napple inspection work at Creston\nwarehouses, replacing H. Carne of\nSunshine Bay, who has been in\ncharge the past few sessions. W. V,\nJackson is in charge at Wynndel\nand Erickson.\nFred Powers of Camp Lister returned Monday from Nelson where\nhe had been writing the civil service examinations. Prior to the war\"\nhe was on the postofficc staff at\nWinnipeg.\nMr. and Mrs. J. W. Harvey have\nreturned to Creston from the coast,\nJohn Bird of Camp Lister was another rural school trustee here Friday for the consolidated high school\nconference.\nMrs. W. Clough has returned to\nSouth Slocan, after visiting Mr. and\nMrs. James Compton.\nMr. and Mrs. Hales Ross of Edmonton were here for a few days,\nguests of Mr. and Mrs. W. Ridd.\nMr. and Mrs. E. Bothamley have\nreturned from a vacation at Spo-\n(able Flashes From Europe-Asia\nBURGLAR8 RIFLE SUITE\nNEXT TO THE POPE'S\nVATICAN CITY, 8ept. 9 (AP)\n\u2014The Papal Major-Domo, archbishop Mella Dl Sant'ella reported today that burglars had rifled\nhis apartment, next to Pope Plus'\nsuite, while the archbishop was\naway on holiday. The archbishop Is\nthat m.rjber of the papal staff who\napproves the applications of thousands of pilgrims who come each\nyear to see the Holy Father.\n126 CHOLERA  DEATHS\nAT HONG KONG IN WEEK\nSINGAPORE, Straits Settlements.\nSept. 9 (AP)\u2014Reports from Hong\nKon*. today said there were 126\ndeaths from cholera there out of\n203 cases dining the week ending\nvostardav. Shanfihai   ranorUd   nini*\ndeaths in 29 cases.\nFIVE FRENCH\nFLIERS KILLED\nBORDEAUX, France, Sept. 9\n(AP)\u2014The bodies of five French\narmy fliers were recovered today\nfrom the wreckage of a large\nfighting plane which crashed In\nflames last night ncfr the Bordeaux airport.\nBRITISH NATIONALS NOT\nADVISED TO LEAVE SHANGHAI\nLONDON. Sept. 9 (CP Cablej-\nBritish nationals in Shanghai have\nnot been advised lo leave. Those\nwishing to leave were requested to\nnotify the British authorities, but\nso few requests were received that\nspecial arrangements for evacuation\nwere not considered necessary.\nkane, Coeur d'Alene and Sandpoint.\nMrs, S. Johnson of Frontier, Sask.,\nhas arrived to spend the winter at\nthe homo of Nels Johnson. Her husband will come later,\nSam Garlland and Miss Anne\nGarlland, who were here for the\nfuneral of their father, the late John\nS. Gartland, pave returned to Bull\nRiver and Kimberley, respectively.\nMr. and Mrs. Huff and Miss Betty\nHuff and Miss Patty Gooding have\nreturned to Cloverdale, after visiting Mr. and Mrs. S. G. Parker.\nMrs. J. W. Dow was a week-end\nvisitor at Cranbrook, a guest of her\nson and daughter-in-law, Mr. and\nMrs. D. W. Dow.\nMrs. S. A. Speers is holidaying\nthis week at Lethbridge, a guest of\nher son, H. J. Speers.\nMrs. H. Curtis is at Wynndel for\nfair week, a guest of her daughter,\nMrs. Andestad.\nMiss Anna Peltzer and Miss Elsa\nForster represented St. Paul's church\nYoung People's association at the\nLutheran youth's conference at Nelson at the first of the week.\nMr. and Mrs. T. W. Bundy am!\nfamily were week-end visitors at\nCranbrook.\nAfter a holiday in July and August, evening services have been resumed at St. Stephen's Presbyterian\nchurch.\nAfter a summer vacation the Sunday school at Christ church, Anglican, resumed Sunday,\nC. B. Twigg, district agriculturist,\nwas at Wynndel Wednesday, judging fruit, flowers and vegetables at\nthe fall fair.\nCRESTON.^ B. C. \u2014 Rev. C. F.\nBasse, pastor of St. Paul's Lutheran\nehurch, Creston, left Sunday on 0\ntrip to eastern points. He is representing the Kootenay conference\nat Lutheran synod meetings at St.\nPaul, Minn,, St. Louis. Mo., and in\nNew York.\nDu,e pressure of business Reeve\nT. R. Wilson\nNelson\nmany times Kootenay\nchampion, as benevolent spectator\nMrs. A. C. Whitehouse\nNelson\nJohn Cartmel\nNelson\nC. H. Stark\nNelson\nR. H. Ross-\nTrail\nHarold Lakes\nNelson\nMiss Margaret McLeod Cecil (Buck) Lambert\nNelson Nelson\nEd. T. Stromstead\nNelson\nHarold Putnam\nNelson\nGordon Roynon\nNelson\nJames Cherrington\nNelson\n-\">\nJ. D. Kerr\nLongbeach\nMallandaine is unable to attend tho\n1937 sessions of the Union of B. C.\nMunicipalities, which opened at\nNanaimo September 8.\nMrs. Hill of Edmonton is visiting\nat Creston, a guest of Mr. and Mrs.\nCharles Murrell.\nPublic School Inspector Brown\nof Cranbronk spent Friday and Saturday in the valley. He attended\nthe consolidated school districts\nconference at Creston Friday night.\nMatthew Moore of West Creston\nwas a visitor Friday, representing\nthat section at the consolidated\nschool districts meeting,\nMrs. Clarence Holden returned to\nBoswell Saturday after visiting Mrs.\nGeorge Mead.\nMiss Edith Palfreyman has returned to Vancouver to resume her\nmusical studies after spending th?\nholidays with her parents, Mr. and\nMrs. R. A. Palfreyman.\nMiss Frances Park of Kimberley\nand L. Gilmore and 0. Riggitt of\nFernie were guests of Mr, and Mrs,\nG. Currie.\nOn her return to Yahk. Miss Mary\nBureh is accompanied by Miss Bertha Fraser, with whom she had been\nvisiting.\nMartin Bale of Trail has been\nvisiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nG. Bale.\nAfter visiting her parents. Miss\nBetty Kemp and her two friends.\nMiss D. Anderson and Miss Bessie\nVialoux, have returned to Winnipeg.\nG. McMaster of Cranbrook was a\nweek-end visitor at the McMaster\nranch.\nMiss Minnie Downcs is home\nfrom a visit at Cranbrook.\nMr. and Mrs. A. W. Millin and\nson. Louis, are home from the coast.\nMrs. Jack Lewis and family have\nreturned to Medicine Hat after\nvisiting Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sinister.\nMrs. T. Moull and- children have\nreturned to Vancouver after visiting the former's mother, Mrs. John\nMarshall,\nMiss Betty Staeo Smith has left\nfor Fdmnnton where she will soend\nthe next school term taking senior\nmatriculation. She graduated from\nCreston high school in June.\nMrs, John Marshull, Mr. and Mrs,\nFrank Martin and Mcta McNeil are\nhome from a visit at Silverton,\nwhere they were guests of (lie former's son and daughter-in-law, Mr,\nand Mrs. Tom Marshall.\nWynndel W.I. Plan\nSocial Afternoon\nWYNNDEL. B. C, \u2014 The August\nmeeting of the Wynndel Women's\ninstitute was held Thursday, Aug.\n26, Hi members and four visitors\nbeing present. Installation of a plui:\nin the hospital room was passed rnd\nthe work is to be proceeded with.\nEmply jars to he tilled for the\nhospitai shower are available at the\npost office.\nThe institute is to serve tea a:\nthe fall fair and Ihe table (or display of donations will also h? in\nthe exhibit ion. Mrs. Abbott is \\o\nact as convener (or this function.\nInvitations arc lo be sent to Creston Hospital auxiliary and Creston\nWomen's institute to a social afternoon Sept. 15 (or which Mrs. E\nUuri and Mrs. Wigrn will act as\nthe entertainment committee.\nMrs. Eakin jr., was elecled to the\nways and moans committee for the\ncoming month.\nMiss 0. Hagen reported on calls\nmade. Tea hostesses for the aficr-\nnoon were Mrs .Towscn, Mrs, Wigcn\nand Miss L. Bcnnedcttji.\n\u2014_____ _ \u25a0   \u25a0 .\n_\n^^^^^^^UM^y^^t_y_i-U-i\nFall Class Enters\nTraining School at\nCranbrook Hospital\nCRANBROOK, B.C.-Membcrs ol\nthe training class of the St. Eugene\nhospital who entered this month\nare Miss D. Thompson of Kootenay\nOrchards, Miss E. Godrcau of Pin-\nchcr Creek, Miss J. Huchison of\nLumberton, Mia C. Erickson ol\nKimberley. Miss M. Marchuk of\nNanlon, Alta..Miss R. Northcott of\nMilo, Alta., and Miss J. Bellinger of\nStrathmore, Alta.\nSister Theresa is directress nnd\nMiss 0, Belccky instructress. Lectures will be given by Dr. F. W.\nGreen, Dr. Anderson and Miss R.\nThurston.\nMrs. C. R. Spence and Mr*. J.\nAtchison entertained al a jam, jelly\nand pickle shower in honour of\nMiss R. Strachan, a recent bride, at\nthe home of Mrs, Atchison. The\ngifts were presented to live guest of\nhonour in a decorated baby carriage\nDuring Ihe evening there were\ncontests and bridge. Miss Mae Kennedy was the winner of the contests and Miss Bessie Passmore and\nM;ss Enid Shankland winners at\nbridge Miss Norma Spence and Miss\nFlorence Finley assisted with the\nserving of refreshments.\nGuests were Mrs. Strach3n, Mrs,\nA. A. Robertson, Mrs. S. McNeil,\nMrs. A. MacPherson. Mrs. .1. Davidson, Mrs. W. Taylor, Miss  Bessie\nPassmore, Miss Enid Shankland,\nMiss Mildred Passmore, Miss Esther\nChalander, Miss Kathleen Haley,\nMiss Ethel Neily, Miss Mac Kennedy, Miss Nancy McCrindle, Miss\nMuriel Little, Miss Florence Finley\nand Miss Norma Spence.\nRegistration of\nOver 600 Pupils.\nat Fernie Schools\nFERNIE, B. C. - The Fernie Elementary junior high and senior\nhigh schools ' reopened Tuesday,\nSept. 7, for the fall .term. In the\nelementary sehool 314 pupils registered, inc'udlng 36 beginners. 205\nregistered in the junior high and\nan even 100 in the senior high\nschool. New staff members of the\njunior and senior high schools are\nB. F. Neary of Victoria, who will\nteach history and mathematics; J.\nH. Barclay of Vancouver, whose\nsubjects will be science and mathematics; and J. Roberts of Victoria,\nwho will teach science. Tho new\ncommercial teacher is E. Simpson of\nVictoria. Miss May MaUnum of\nFernie is ths new English instructor.\nMrs. Cowan of Vancouver is relieving Miss M- McCIure. the home\neconomics teacher, who is on leave\nof absence.\nA new course in electricity under\nIhe supervision of C. V. Stalnsby,\nmanual training instructor, is being\noffered this year.\nTO HAKE DRIVE\nFOR FRUIT, AID\nDROUGHT AREA]\nTwice Number of Cara\nNeeded This Year, \u00a7\nSays App'eal\nSEEK TO HELP\nTHE CHILDREN!\nAnother campaign to collect frnitl\nand vegetables for drought-strickenl\nareas of Saskatchewan is beinf\nlaunched in British Columbia fol\u00bb|\nlowing an appeal from Premier Patterson of that province in the fdl\"]\nlowing telegram:\n\"Residents Saskatchewan droughll\nareas greatly appreciate contribui\ntions from your province in previoui\nyears. Sincerely regret that condiJ\ntions this year even more serious\nand larger area affected. Any do!\nnations to Saskatchewan voluntary\nrelief committee will be most use!\nful and distributed to those whoijj\nneed is greatest.\"\nThe British Columbia Fruit Grow\ners' association is launching tluj\ncampaign, appealing for cooperation\nfrom growers, shippers and voluil'l\nteers. The drive will be carried (\nthrough newspapers, service clubsj\nand churches. Last year, desplU\na late start, 101 cars of fruits and!\nvegetables were made up, although!\nthe start in the campaign was latef\nNEED TWICE A8 MUCH\n\"Double that number of cars andl\nmore will be needed this year, golngl\nto places that are 100 per cent des-f\ntitute,\" the B. C. F. G. A. appeal says,\nadding: I\n\"The situation in Saskatchewan,!\nliterally, is desperate! We, in the!\nfruitful interior of British Columbia, T\ncan  hardly  appreciate  the  hearts\nbreaking  sufferings  being  undergone by our friends and former customers on the prairies.\n\"It is not only that they cannot I\nbuy fresh fruits and vegetables but!\nthat their health, and especially and I\nunfortunately. . . the health of their j\nchildren, is deteriorating. Anything!\nwe can do lo help the prairie drought!\nvictims will be a service to human-l\nity. whose value cannot be even|\nestimated.\"\nThe Saskatchewan relief commls-l\nsion arranged with the railways fori\nfree transportation of relief cars, and!\nwires to.Gordon D. Herbert, Kel-I\nowna, the names and addresses ofl\nrepresentatives to whom the cars are!\nto be sent. Distribution is arrang-j\ned through local agencies.\nCULLS ACCEPTABLE\n\"Culls, whether fruits or vege-l\ntables if fit for human consump-l\nlion, will be welcome,\" the appeal J\ncloses. \\\nInvestigating rumors that apples)\nsent to relief areas were being dis*l\ntributed to people not actually inl\nneed, W. E. Haskins, chairman ofl\nthe British Columbia Fruit board.f\nwhile visiting the prairies, inter\nviewed  government authorities\nSaskatchewan. Careful Investigation!\nwas made and the board \"is satieJ\nfied that the system of distribution\nemployed by the relief commissiorj\nis efficient,\" says another letter.\nMr. Haskins was assured thai\n\"any complaints would be careful\u2122\ninvestigated and effectively deall\nwith if any facts could be secured\non which an investigation coulq\nbe based.\"\nB. (. Fruit Sells\non the Prairiesl\nVANCOUVER, B. C. September 91\n\u2014Vancouver   fruit   and   vegetable!\nwholesale row reports an lncreas-1\ning supply ot local and Okanagan j\nfruits  with  a slightly  lower tendency in prices.  Everbearing strawberries are in better condition since !\nimproved   weather.    The   price  is |\n$2,25 per crate.   Okanagan peaches\nare expected lo arrive any day now.\nOkanagan Wealthy apples, wraoped,\n$1.50, unwrapped $1.25 box.  Crabapples $1.25 box.    Italian prunes 15\nlbs. 80c.   Apricots, Moorpark. 15 lb.\nsuitcase   85c.    Okanagan   Bartlett\npears fancy $2.50 box.   Field tomatoes $1 per crate.  Sacked vegetables\nbeets, new $2.25; carrots $1.50; turnips, rutabagas $1.50; local onions\n$1.75,   Okanagan   onions  $2.25  per\ncwt.   The potato market is steady\nat $1.15  to  $1.30  cwt.  for No. 2.\nEggs arc still going  up  in  price.\nEggs   to   producer   at   farm   cases\nreturned: Grade A large 31c; A medium 29c; A pullet 21c: C pee wee\n12c.   Wholesale price 4c more.\nCALGARY - Wholesale business\nthis past week is showing slight improvement. B. C. fruits are increasing in volume with an improvement\nin the size of peaches. Duchess,\nWealthy and Gravensteins comprise\nthe main varieties of apples\u2014mostly\nall showing good size and color and\nselling at $1.20; Green cookers arc\nselling at $1.35. There are some\nfancy Weallhies at $1.50. Transcendent crabapples arc $1,25 and Hyslop\n$1.35 box. Bartlett pears in volume\nwith quality good, fancy $2.50, C\ngrade $2.35. Flemish Beauty mostly No. 3 at $1.50 box. There is a\nlarge volume of plums-on hand but\nmovement slow at $1.25 for fated\nlugs; assorted No. 2, 90c to $1.15,\nWashington and Oregon Italian\nprunes at $1,10 are moving slowly.\nA few B. C. Italian prunes are on\nthe market at $1.10. Peaches have\nimproved in size. Freestones are\nselling at $1.35 to $1.50 No. 1. and\n$1.15 to $1.25 for No. 2. A small\nquantity of J. H. Hales, Crawfords\nand Elberlas has arrived. These are\nmostly good sizes. There Is not much\nimprovement in tomatoes, prices\nrange from 68* to Sflc but with reduced stocky\nwsmmssssssssssMmmmmmmm\n T^^^^WBPWP.^UJ'Hl.u.hi'^J'JmW.'.iw.i\u00bb\u00bbui .w-urn...muJ'iutjiuni.,MjiwiiuJiiJs.uw-iwii Wip\u00bb^\u00aby\u00bb\nlit\nIt's Time for Shotguns and\nlifles; September 15 Is Big\n)ay in the Life of Nimrods\nMost Seasons Open That Day; Hunters Have\nEyes on Hills; Grouse May Be Scarce;\n\u25a0Longer Season for Pheasants\nIf you should see a fellow look In at a hardware store or .ports\nihop window and move along up ths street with his shoulders back and\ntill head up, a faraway look In hli eyes!\nIf you should notice a fellow's hands looking a bit greasy, or smelling\njust a little of ammonia;\nIf you ihould happen to see him with his eyes to tha hilltops and\n. a dog at his heels;\nIf you should hear him In argument with two or three of hli kind\nabout \"velocity\", \"trajectory\", \"load\", and \"pattern\"; or if you should\nhear him talking In figures and decimali such as \"30-3-\", or \"30.06\", or\n\".260-3OO0\" or \".303\" or what-have-you:\nThen you'll know the hunting season is at hand. You'll know he's\nthinking of deer and ducks, bear and geese, goats and grouse, or perhaps even elk and caribou.\nAs a matter of fact some of the seasons already have opened, but\nbo far tho hunting fever has actively gripped only the nimrods who\nlive all year In expectation of the season-opening. The majority of\nhunters juit now are concerned chiefly with guns and ammunition,\noutfits and preparations for the big day, September 15.\nIKANAGAN TO DRAW i\nIt is expected the number of Koo-\nenay shots going to the Okanagan\nor pheasants will again increase this\n'ear; the Kotoenay flats with their\nlucks and geese will draw others;\nmd the surrounding mountains with\nheir deer and grouse will provide\nhe chief attraction for most of the\nlimrods.\nShooting of European partridge in\nlelson-Creston is again permitted\n.his year, for a season of one day,\nJctober 24. These birds apparently\nnove about a good deal and consid-\nirable fluctuation in seasons is to\nie expected until they become more\nlumerous and more widespread.\nPheasanls, responding admirably\n;o game department efforts to make\nhem a common game bird, are more\nlumerous this year and the season\nlas been extended. Last year in\nrestricted areas of Nelson-Crestoi:\nind Grand Forks-Greenwood dis-\nilcts the season was October 14 to\n.8, five days, whereas this year it\nI October 13 to 24,12 days. The bag\nUnits are unchanged.\n\u2022EW GROUSE\nIt it likely grouse bags, particu-\narly of Willow, will be light this\n'ear. The available number of\n[rouse runs in cycles of about 10\n[ears, and (his year is one of the\now ebbs.\nExperiments with closed seasons\nmd restricted bags have been under\nBray in B.C. since 1898, but still there\nare good and better, poor and worse\nyears. If there's no shooting of them\nit all, the poor and worse years still\n!Ollow the good and better. The\n\u25a0estricted bag limit has been most\natisfactory method to date. Little of\nTactical value is known about\nrouse.\nThe number of bears expected to\nlagged is high, however. For\n>me weeks past ranchers in the\nipotenays have suffered their de-\nredations in orchards, and not a few\nears have fallen to ranchers' guns.\n\u00bbhn Munro's big black, shot on the\nlountain opposite Nelson where\numbers of the animals have been\natched through binoculars for the\nist few days, Is the first reported\ns a hunters bag.\nLack of huckleberries in the hills\nlas driven the bears down into or-\nhards in search of foods, lt is clalm-\n1, and the opinion is expressed that\ngood many of the animals will\nen up this winter in poor condition\nnd will die under the snow.\nIn the main, seasons and bag limits\nire little changed.\nHere are the open seasons of chief\ninterest In the southeastern interior:\nBIG GAME\u2014\nMoose\u2014Male only. In the electoral\ndistricts of Fernie and Columbia,\nexcept that portion of Columbia\nsouth of Toby creek and west of tho\nColumbia river, September 15 to\nOctober 81. Limit, one.\nCariboo\u2014Male only. South of the\nmain line of the C.P.R., October 1\nto October 31. Limit, one.\nElk\u2014Male only. In electoral districts of Fernie and Columbia except that part of Columbia west of\nthe Columbia river, September 15\nto October 31. Limit, one.\nMountain sheep\u2014 Male only. In\nelectoral districts of Fernie, Cranbrook and Columbia, October 1 to\nOctober 31. Limit, one.\nMountain goat\u2014Except in electoral\ndistricts of North and South Okana-\nDUNDEE ON SPOT\nATTHEWEEK-END\nGLASGOW, September 9, (CP\nCable)\u2014 Coupled with Glasgow Hangers as only unbeaten club in the\nScottish football league's first division, Dundee is on the spot Saturday at Aberdeen, and'while this\ntest is going on, the Champions and\nCeltic, the circuit's giants, are billed\natIbrox Park.\nBracketed with Aberdeen, Celtic\nand Rangers for the runners-up position, Motherwell goes to Hamilton. The Accies have split points\nin their last four home games\nagainst Motherwell, but the visitors\nare favorites to take the \"rubber.\"\nMorton, with five consecutive defeats and still without a point, is\nunderdog Saturday against Falkirk at Cappielow Park. Third\nLanark, tied with Falkirk and Hearts\nin third place, meets Queen'. Park\nat ' Hampden. The Edinburgh\nDerby brings together Hearts and\nHibernians at Tynecastle Park.\nAyr United is hitting 50 per cent\nscheduled to meet Queen of South\nthis week, the United has five out of\na possible 10 points. The Dunfries\nteam has yet to register a victory.\nAlbion and Ralth Rovers, tied for\nsecond division leadership, play\naway.^ Albion*'meets Airdrteonians\nand Ralth goes to East Fife.\nSeptember 1, to December 15. Limit,\ntwo.\nBear\u2014September 1 to June 30.\nLimit, two grizzly and three ol any\nother species.\nDeer\u2014Bucks only. September 15\nto December 15, except white-tails\nin North and South Okanagan and\nSimilkameen districts and in Grand\nForks-Greenwood west of Boundary\ncreek. September 15 to December\n15. Limit, two.\nGAME AND\nMIGRATION BIRDS-\nDucks\u2014September 15 to November 15. Daily limit, 12; season, 125.\nGeese\u2014September 15 to November\n15. Daily limit 15; season, 50.\nGrouse. Blue and Franklins\u2014September 15 to October 15. Daily limit,\nsix; season, 50.\nGrouse, Ruffed or Willow\u2014Sept-\ntember 15 to September 30. Daily\nlimit, six; season 50. No more than\n12 grouse of all species may be taken\nin one day.\nPheasants \u2014 Cock birds only. In\nSouth Okanagan, October 15 to November 15; in Nelson-Creston, south\nof an east west line through Kootenay Landing, and in Grand Forks-\nGreenwood east of a north south\nline through Eholt. October 13 lo\nOctober 24. Cn the first two days ol\nthe season in Grand Forks-Greenwood shooting shall be between the\nhours of 12 noon and 4 p.m., and\nduring the remainder of the season\nbatween 7 a.m. and 4 p.m. Limits:\nIn South Okanagan, daily, 4; season\n15; in Nelson-Creston and Grand\nForks-Greenwood, daily, 2; season\n12.\nEuropean partridge\u2014In Nelson-\nCreston, south' of an east west line\nthrough Kootenay Landing, one day\nonly, October 24. In South Okanagan,\nOctober 15 to October 31. Limits: In\nNelson-Creston, two; in South Okan-\ngan and Grand Forks-Greenwood, agan, daily, 4; season, 15.\niONAUB.C'>,STU- 40\n26.0, Decant* *>\u00ab\u25a0<_\u00a3.\nThit advertisement it not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS .NELSON. B.C-FRIDAY MORNINQ, SEPT. 10, 1987.\nSPORTING NEWS\nBowlers Not to\nTravel lo Trail\nThis Saturday\nNelson bowlers of the C. P. R.\nLawn Bowling club will not travel\nta Trail Saturday for the final playoff game for the Nelson Brewery\ncup as first anticipated. The bowl-\nert have found it Impossible to muster their forces for the trip and so\nhave requested that a later date\nbe set for the Trail game.\nA letter informing the Trail club\nas to the situation has been sent to\nRobert Livingstone of the Trail club\nby A. T. Richards, secretary, on the\ninstruction of F. E. Wheeler, president.\nBig Crowd Sure\nfor Boxla Game\nat Trail Tonight\nReserves Allocated to\nTrail Fans Sold\nOut\nTRAIL, B. C. September 9\u2014\nThere will be a bis crowd at the\nRoiiland-Nelion boxla game here\nFriday night If ticket sales In Trail\nare any indication.\nTwo hundred reserved teats\nfoe Trail fans were told out early\ntoday. Two hundred were allocated to Rossland and the same\nnumber to Nelson.\nFans who saw the last meeting\nof thete two teams at Nelson labelled It a \"great game\" and are anticipating ah even greater one\nhere tomorrow night. The whole\ntown't talking about it\nBudge and Parker\nReach Semi-Finals\nJadwiga Jedrzejowska\nand Helen Jacobs\nAlso Advance\nFOREST HILLS, N. Y\u201e September\n9 (AP) \u2014 Two contenders who had\nnot lost a set kept those records\nclear and two others who had encountered early difficulties came\nthrough with ease today as the vacant semi-final brackets were filled\nin the combined men's and women's\nnational singles championships.\nDon Budge, with an ease that\nbaffled description, mopped up the\n19-year-old junior champion from\nLos Angeles, Joe Hunt, 6-2, 6-2, 6-4,\nand tomorrow will go up against\nFrank Parker, his Davis Cup singles\nmate, who took a 6-2,12-10,6-2 decision from Johnny Van Ryn, the Austin, Texas, doubles ace.\nJadwiga Jedrzejowska rarely falt-\ntering with the booming forehands,\nthat have established her as top\nchoice for the women's crown,\ndefeated Ruth Mary Hardwick, another hard hitter from England, at\n6-4, 6-2. \"Ja-Ja\" thus moved into a\nmeeting which Helen Jacob?, perennial contender and four-time former champion who won out at 7-5,\n6-3 over Kay Stammers, English miss\nwho was unable to keep her southpaw shots under control.\nTomorrow's other semi-final matches will pair Bobby Riggs, second\nseeded American from Los Angeles,\nagainst Baron Gottfried von Cramm\nGermany's last foreigner survivor,\nand Anita Lizana, next to Miss Jedrzejowska on the list of favored\ninvaders, against Dorothy May\nBundy, the Santa Monica, Calif.,\nyoungsters who yesterday dismissed\n1936 champion Alice Marble.\nBolton Is All Set\nLONDON, September 9 (CP\nCable)\u2014Although the English football league season is only two weeks\nold not one of the 88 clubs has obtained maximum points. After turning in three straight victories, Arsenal lost 2-1 at Huddersfield yesterday and Notts County dropped\nits first point in third division play\nwhen held to a scoreless draw by\nExeter City.\nSurprise team of the campaign to\ndate, Bolton Wanderers head the\nfirst division with seven points, one\nmore than the Gunners, and hove\nyet to taste defeat. Bolton plays\nat Haddersfield Saturday.\nLeicester City, promoted from the\nsecond league at the end of last season, is host to Arsenal and a lively\ntussle is in prospect. Sunderland.\nEnglish cup holder, is at home to\nanchester City, league champion,\nThe Wearslders will be handicapped\nby the absence of R. Gurney. leader of the attack, but Manchester\nCity has not yet struck its stride\nJudging by the 4-1 defeat Inflicted\nby Everton yesterday.\nWRESTLING\n(By The Associated Press)\nSPRINGFIELD, Mass. - Danno\nO'Mahoney, 225, Ireland, defeated\nGeorge (Dazzler) Clark. 222, Scotland, 60:19. (Clark disqualified for\nrough and abusive tactics.)\nQUAiau-y has\nBEEM FL009HUS Mis ft>6j-\niaj au. his ttetxur stakts-.\nuiu. m Furnn SAiiciA 7\nPace-Makers Up Three in National\nPennant Chase; Split Double-Bill\nGiant Hurler Hubbell\nHumbled by Dodgers,\nComeback 9-2\nBROOKLYN, N.Y., Sept. 9 (AP)-\nThe pace-making New York Giants\ncushioned the defeat of their southpaw ace, Carl Hubbell, by shellacking the Brooklyn Dodgers 9-2 in the\nsecond half of a doubleheader at\nEbbets field today. The even break,\nwhile the Cubs were losing to St.\nLouis, increased the Giants' lead to\nthree full games in the National\nleague pennant chase.\nYoung Luke Hamlin's iix-b.it\nflinging and superb control in the\npinches were too much for the Giants in tho opener. Big Babe Phelps'\nclouting, including a three-run\nhomer in the first inning, was too\nmuch for Hubbell and the Dodgers\ntook a 5-1 decision.\nLed by mauling Mel Ott, who\nsmashed four hits, the Giants came\nback to take the second game with\na sustained show of power. Their\nown starting pitcher, \"Lefty\" Al\nSmith, lasted only three innings,\nbut the league-leaders pounded Roy\nHenshaw, Jim Lindsey and Ben\nCantwell fo_ 14 safeties and won\ngoing away.\nWhat the Giants didn't do with\ntheir bats the Dodgers finished\nwith erratic defensive work. A\nthree-base muff by Eddie Wilson\nand a two-base miscue by Jimmy\nBucher, both on short fly balls from\nJack McCarthy's bat, contributed to\nthe scoring melee together with\nthree wild pitches.\nHubbell's d -at was his seventh,\nas compared with 18 victories.\nFirst game;\nNew York   1   6  2\nBrooklyn    5   8   1\nHubbell, Coffman and Mancuso;\nHamlin and Phelps.\nSecond  game;\nNew York       9 14   0\nBrooklyn. :     2   8  2\nSmith, Coffman and Danning;\nHenshaw, Lindsey, Cantwell and\nPhelps.\nand Bill Brubaker's single gave\nPittsburgh a 1-0 triumph over Cincinnati today. It was the 30th time\nthis season the Reds have been beaten by one run.\nCincinnati     o  4  1\nPittsburgh      1   6  0\nScott and Lombardl; Brandt and\nPadden.\nCOOPER, DIEGEL\nLEAD IN OPENING\nROUND OF GOLF\nST. ANDREWS GOLF CLUB. Toronto, September 9 (CP) \u2014Llghthorse\nMarry Cooper, the best medal jcor-\ner of them all, and veteran Leo\nDiegel, four times winner of the\ncrown, scored startling 67'*, three\nunder par, to share the lead today\non the first 18-hole round of the\nCanadian open golf championship,\nDapper Leo missed a 9ix-foot putt\non the 18th green for 66. He first\nwon the title in 1924 and there was\nno one in the gallery today to say\nthe croucriing putter might not put\nit over again.\nDefending champion Lawson Little, found plenty of trouble on the\n6685 yards of territory. The burly\ntitle-holder, former king of the\nworld's amateurs, had to cover the\nlast nine holes In par 35 to keep\nwithin shooting distance of the leaders. At that he was seven strokes\nback with 74.\nThe immediate competition was\nprovided by broad-shouldered Ed\nOliver of Wilmington, Del., and the\nstout Billie Burke of Cleveland, former United States open champion.\nThey had 69's.\nThree strokes ofl the pace were\nEd Dudley of Philadelphia and Vic\nGhezzi of Deal. N. X.with par 70's\nand. another stroke back was Ralph\nGuldahl, American open champion.\nAfter a summer of brilliant shooting by Canadian pros, the opening\nday was marked by a general fall-\ndown on the part of domestic players. Top Canadians were Bobby\nAlston of Ottawa and R. H. Green of\nKingston, Ont., who had 72's.\nCHICAGO, Sept. 9 (AP)-Through\nthe combination of steady six-hit\npitching by Lon Warneke and a\n16-hit blast agai\u2014t Charley Root\nand Roy Parmelee, the St. Louis\nCardinals finally routed their Cub\n\"Jinx\" today and whipped the Chi-\ncagoant, 8-2,\nIt was the first defeat for the Cubs\nin 12 meetings with the Redbirds\nand sent them back an additional\nhalf game behind the league-leading Giants, who now boast a three-\ngame margin over them.\nThe 38-year-old Root, making his\nfirst appearance in 12 days due to\narm weariness, held his former colleague, Warneke even for six innings in a 1-1 pitching duel, but\ntired visibly in the seventh, when\nthe Cards punched home three runs.\nThey added three more runs in tho\neighth and one in tho ninth off\nParmelee, who came to the Cubs\nfrom St. Louis along with the injured Rip Collins in the deal for\nWarneke last winter.\nWarneke's triumph was his 17th\nof t\\e season and his second over\nhis cx-mates. He was in difficulty-\nonly in the second Inning when\nStan Hack singled with one out,\nscooted to third as the St. Louis\nHurler threw slightly wild past second on an attempted force play and\nthen scored on Phil Cavarretta'!\nsingle.\nSt. Louis     8 16   2\nChicago     2   6   2\nWarneke and Ogrodowski; Root,\nParmelee, and Hartnett, Bottarini.\nDIMAGGIO'S  HOMER  GIVES\nBEES CLOSING WIN, 5-3\nBOSTON, Sept 9 (AP)-Vince\nDIMaggio's homer with two on and\ntwo out in the sixth today enabled\nthe Boston Bees to conclude their\nseries with the Phillies with a 5-3\nvictory.\nThe Phillies had a 3-1 lead until\nthe last of the sixth.\nPhiladelphia     3 10  0\nBoston     5   7  3\nPasseau and Atwood; Hutchinson,\nGabler and I^ipez.\nPITTSBURGH, Sept. 9 (AP) -\nArky Vauglian's ninth inning triple\nYankees Jinxing\nPowers Fail in\nSox Attack, 13-7\nSenators Win Double-\nDecker From Detroit\n13-6,12-10\nNEW YORK, Sept. 9 (AP)-The\nBoston Red Sox wore themselves\nbut today hitting and running the\nbases, but it was worth it since they\nhammered their favorite \"jinx\", the\nYankees, into a 13-7 defeat, ending\nthe New Yorkers' six-game winning\nstreak.\nAfter spotting the Yanks four runs\nin the first inning, they came from\nbehind twice to chalk up the victory with a 16-hit attack at the\nexpense of the Yankee \"M-men\"\u2014\nBlubber Malone, Johnny Murphy\nand Frank Makosky, with Murphy\nthe official loser.\nBoston  13 16   6\nNew York .\u201e    7 10   1\nMcKain, Marcum and Desautels,\nBerg Malone, Murphy, Makosky\nand Glenn.\nSENATORS COP DOUBLE\nPROGRAM  FROM ATHLETICS\nPHILADELPHIA, Sept. 9 (AP)-\nThe Washington Senators won both\nends of an American league double-\nheader with the Athletics today,\ntaking the first game 13-6 and the\nsecond 12-10.\nSeven runs scored in the fourth\nInning of the opener and nine in the\nthird stanza of the nightcap cinched\nboth games for the Senators.\n> First game;\nWashington    13 13   2\nPhiladelphia      6   5   2\nLanahan, Krakauskas, and R. Ferrell; Kelley, Kink, Archer, Turbe-\nville and Hayes.\nSecond game;\nWashington    12 17   1\nPhiladelphia    10 11   3\nLinke, Cohen, Phebus and Millies; Williams, Nelson and Brucker.\nROGELL'S SINGLE\nBEATS TIGERS 10-9\nDETROIT, -Sept. 9 (AP)-Billy\nRogell's single with the bases full\nin the last half of the ninth inning\nenabled the Detroit Tigers to nojo\nout the Cleveland Indians, 10-9, today.\nCleveland       9 11   1\nDetroit     10 10   0\nGalehouse, Whitehill, Hudlin,\nHarder and Sullivan; Lawson, McLaughlin, Gill and York.\nCELLAR DWELLERS DOWN\nANOTHER STEP, LOSE 9-8\nST. LOUIS, Sept. 9 (AP)-The\nthird-place Chicago White Sox\nmade a clean sweep ot the two-\ngame series with the Browns, nosing out the cellar dwellers today\n9-8. It was the 11th game In which\nthe Browni have failed to register\na triumph.\nChicago    9 18  3\nSt. Louis .     8 18   1\nRigney, Cain, Brown and Sewell;\nTrotter.Vanatta, Hildebrand, Walk-\nup, Koupal and Huffman.\nSchacht to Quit?\nBERLIN, September 9 (CP-Havas)\n\u2014 Resignation of Dr. Hjalmar\nSchacht, German minister of economy, is near, authorized sources revealed tonight. His retirement from\nhis important portfolio has been\nrumored for some time. Dr. Schacht\nalto is Di'esidcnt U the Heidi-bank.\nTOP   \u2666\nOSSERS\nIn the Majors\nBurness Earns\nSpot on Next\nFight Program\nDisplaying his wares an an exponent of the manly art with sufficient gusto to satisfy Sergeant\nWalter Fisher, match-maker for th$\n111th battery armory fight catds,\nMike Burness, 158-pound Ymir walloper .earned himself a berth on the\nnext card to be ru noff some time\nnear the end of this month.\nBurness is primarily a heavy hitter, it was explained, and he will\nbe given a chance to shrow some\nof his weight against Steve Jossul\nof Edmonton in the semi-headliner.\nStan Castle and the \"Beverly Kidd\"\nof Nelson along with young Hartin\nof Kaslo will supply the fistic entertainment, on the supporting card,\nWinnifred Evans\nIs in Golf Semi\nLilian   Boyd   Beaten\non Extra Hole in\nthe 16's\nNIAKWA COUNTRY CLUB,\nWinnipeg, Sept. 9 (CP)\u2014Two Winnipeg women, one from Toronto\nand another from Vancouver-emerged tonight from a day of upsets in\nthe Canadian women's close golf\ntournament.\nHeather Leslie, Winnipeg's 19-\nyear-old Manitoba champion, and\nWinnifred Evans, Vancouver, meet\nin one 18-hole semi-final match tomorrow afternoon. The Canadian\nwomen's open title holder, Mrs. John\nRogers of Winnipeg, opposes pretty\nWillo Love of Toronto in the other.\nThe sharpshootlng quartet reached the bracket of four after two\nrounds today marked by elimination of a strong Montreal trio and\ndownfall of Mrs. Eric Phillips, Toronto, runner-up to Mrs. Rogers in\nthe open.\nMiss Evans accomplished defeat\nof Mrs. Pkillips 5 \u00abnd 4 In the second roun dand edged Out Mrs. Gordon Konantz, Winnipeg, two up in\nthe quarter-finals.\nMils Leslie disposed of the 22-\nyear-old medalist, Nora Hankin of\nMontreal, on the home green of\ntheir second-round match. In the\nthird round Heather ousted the gallery favorite, 16-year-old Margaret\nEsson of Rosetown, Sask., on the\n19th green. Miss Esson, playing in\nher first national tournament, upset\nthe clever Vancouver player, Lilian\nBoyd, on an extra hole in the morning.\nDIZZY DEAN\nConsistent pitching successes of\nJerome Herman Dean, sometimes\nknown as Jay Hanner Dean, together with one of the most colorful\nbaseball personalities of all time,\nplaces the Cardinals' ace right-hander among who's who greats of base\nball history.\nDiz pitched good baseball in his\nschool days\u2014at Oklahoma City\nTeachers college\u2014and also on the\nsandlota to gain a chance with\nminor league club. Hs went to St.\nJoseph ot the Western league In 1930\nfor his first try at organized bate-\nball. A fine season with Houston\n.the next year and Dean was examined by the Cards.\nIn his first full season with the\nCards, 1932, he won 18 and lost 15.\nHis fast ball placed him on top of\nthe circuit In strikeouts, a feat he\nhas duplicated three timet since.\nHe was born in Holdenville, Oklahoma, in 1911. He stands almost\n4 inches over six feet and weighs\n189 pounds. He is a right hander.\n .  PAGE NINE\nBUCK BEAR IS\nSHOT ON HILL\nOPPOSITE CITY\nKaslo Resident Shoos\nAway Visiting\nBruin\nA black bear shot by John Munro\non Granite mountain, opposite the\ncity of Nelson, is the first hunter's\nbear reported this season. A number\nof them have fallen to the guns of\nirate ranchers defending their or-\ncards, and a good many bear stories\nhave developed in the pjiat fortnight or so\u2014including the one of\na Kaslo resident who clad in night\nattire, \"shooed away\" a night visiting bruin.\nL. Westerlund, who lives la a\ncabin in Vimy park at Kaslo, was\nawakened in the early hours of\nWednesday morning by a thumping\non a verandah In front of his cottage, and saw a black bear trying\nto get a tub off a box ot apples on\nthe verandah.\n\"Mr. Westerlund, who was In his\nnight attire, tried to shoo the bear\naway,\" says the Kaslo Kootenaian,\n\"but the bear wouldn't shoo. Finally\nafter much vocal persuasion by\nWesterlund the bear decided to\namble off.\"\nThe Kootenaian report! Mr. Westerlund was \"somewhat excited .,.\nwhen telling friends of the expet.-\nence.\"\nFor some days Nelsonites who\nown binoculars have spent a good\ndeal of time watching bears on\nGranite mountain, particularly on\nthe John Burns property. Several\ncubs are amonfc them.\nWash. Browns\nDefeat Trail 9-2\nBogstie to Pitch on\nFriday in Another\nExhibition\nTRAIL, B. C, September 9\u2014Washington Browns, touring colored team\nfrom Yakima, weren't quite so serious minded in the game with the\nlocal senior nine this evening when\nthey defeated them 9 runs to 2 after\ntaking a lead in the first inning.\nIn their last go here they were on\nan uphill grade all the way and finally tied up the fixture 10-10. Browns\nplay here again Friday, the fixture\nbeing scheduled for 5 o'clock.\nTrail boys were not far behind\nin the fifth frame when the count\nwas 3-2 in favor of the visitors, but\nthe Browns hit Wynn for two and\nfour hits in the respective sixth and\nseventh innings for the same number of runs.\nWith Bogstie. the team's southpaw\nst\u00bbr not on deck, there was no relief for Wynn, who had to keep\non fighting. It was announced that\nBogstie would hurl on Friday.\nWith the Browns knocking so\nmany over and under the fences,\nmany arguments ensued about the\nground rules, and fans derived a deal\nof clowning by the visitors as a\nresult. Mcintosh snagged two triples and a double for four times at\nbat, W. Davis poled out two doubles\nand Watts one. Smith clouted a\nhome run.\nBoth Hall and Hodges made the\ncircuit run but unfortunately for\nTrail they were first to bat in the\nfirst and fourth innings respectively.\nMarshall's double was the locals' only other big hit,\nYates, hurling for Browns, allowed eight hits, walked one and struck\nout seven.\nWynn allowed 13 hits, walked two\nand struck out three.\nTrail's chances ot getting big hits\nwas cut to the minimum with the\nvisiting outfielders covering great\nareas in the out-garden. Crelling\nmade a sensational catch In left\nfield when he fell after snagging\nthe onion and kept it in his mitt.\nCasey Jones at first, had a red\npalm after the game as the result\nof a hot drive.\nScore by innings:\nR   H   E\nBrowns   201   002   4\u20149   13   0\nTrail     100   100   0\u20142    8   1\nUmpires\u2014 Loblick and Moffat.\nTrail Cricketers\nHere Sunday for\nLaslGameofYear\nDistrict cricket season win be\nbrought to an early close this Sunday when the Trail top-notcherp\njourney to Nel:an to meet the home\nteam on their own field.\nSince the beginning of the season\nthe Trailites have remained unbeaten.\nThe game opens at 10 a.m., the\nstumps not be drawn until 5 p.m.,\nwhen the Nelson Maple Leafs 6*3\nRed Sox take the field for the\nopener of the city girls' softball\nplayoffs.\nThe Nelson team will be chosen\nfrom the following: H. A. Parker,\nE. Bowkett, H. Smith, R. Main,\nNorman B. Bradley, J. Dawson F.\nWebber, S. B. Jepson, Derek Tye, J.\nCorbyn and C, D. Pearson.\nOLD (OUNTRY\nSOCCER\nLONDON, Sept 9 (CP Cable)-\nEnglish Football league games played today resulted as follows:\nTHIRD DIVISION\n(SOUTHERN   SECTION)\nClapton Orient 3, Bournemouth 0.\nNewport County 2, Gillingham 0.\nQueen's Park Rangers 0, Mill-\nwall 2.\nSiejvfliiyzfc\nAmerican League\nW L Pet.\nNew York   86 41 .677\nDetroit.    76 53 .589\nChicago    76 56 .576\nBoston    \u00ab8 60 .531\nCleveland    67 60 .528\nWashington     61 67 .477\nPhiladelphia    41 84 .328\nSt. Louis   38 91 .296\nNatlonsl League\nW L Pet.\nNew York  78 49 .614\nChicago  76 53 .589\nPittsburgh   69 60 .535\nSt. Louis 68 61 .527\nBoston     64 66 .492\nBrooklyn     ,  55 73 .430\nPhiladelphia   53 76 .411\nCiacinHsU  50 75 490\nfee Runs\n \u00a9-V\t\nYesterday's homers: Solters, Indians, 2; Averill, Hale, Indians,\nR. Ferrell, Senators; Hasson, Brucker, Moses, Athletics; Conners, White\nSox; Phelps, Dodgers; DiMaggio,\nYankees, one each.\nThe leaders: DiMaggio, Yankees.\n40; Greenberg, Tigers, 35; Gehrig,\nYankees, 33; Foxx, Red Sox, 33;\nYork, Tigers, 31; Ott, Qiants, 30.\nLeague totals: American 710; National \u00ab60.   Total 1270.\nJapan to Go Ahead\non Plans to Hold\nthe 1940 Olympiad\nTOKYO, September 9 (AP) -\nAfter a conference with Premier\nFumimaro Konoye, members of the\nOlympic organizing committee today decided definitely to go ahead\nwith plans for holding the 1940 international games in Tokyo.\nM_a\nMONTREAL, September 9 (CP)\n\u2014Sllck-halred Maxle Berger of\nMontreal tonight Jabbed hli way\nto the vacant Canadian lightweight\nboxing throne by scoring a unanimous 10-round decision over Dave\nCastllloux, another Montrealer.\nFor Your\nSupreme\nEnjoyment\nCAMADA'S\nFINEST\nCIGAR\nPANETELAS\nOR\nPERFECTOS\nunc\nCIGAR\nI\n mmwnmmu\nmmmm^fm^simmmm^wmmmm^\nNELSON DAILY NEW8 .NELSON, B.C.-FR1DAY MORNING, 8EPT. 10, 1937.\nPAGE TEN \t\nQUICK RESULTS AT   LITTLE COST TO YO\n*>\"\"\u2022>\u2022\u2022\u2022 I   UNtlHULWiltASHES I''1\"-*\u00bb H Classified I -J_Sr- I*''\"\"\"\"\nSerial Story\nRustle of Silks\nBy MARIE BLIZARD\nCHAPTER 25 I be, Mari. For me, I do not care for\nAnetka  was  in   a  hospital  and  fame. You have made me rich in\nMary  Barrett  ought  to  have  felt many ways, and I should be the\u2014\n*\u2014-J *t\u2014 -I*,.*, i what do you say?\u2014the means  to\nsubdued as she entered the struc\nture. Instead, she felt an absurd\ndesire to break into a dance step\nshe had learned in her nursery\ndays as she followed the bobbing\nBreton cap of the nursing sister\nleading her to Anetka's hospital\nroom. Instead she managed the\nmost decorous of steps as her hign\nheels clicked on the marble floor\nof the corridors.\nIn the wake of the sister, she\nskirted a figure being wheeled on\na stretcher table and felt a double twinge of sympathy for the\npatient; she was twice sympathetic\nbecause the wrapped figure was\nmalade, and because she had nothing so great in her bosom, bursting for expression, as Mari Barat\nhad.\nThe girl rolled her name with\nthe Latin inflection around her\ntongue, the better to assure her\nself that it was she and not tht\nexuberant Mary Barrett of her\nearly youth who was, this day.\nbringing tidings of their fame to\nher partner in a hospital in Paris.\nThey arrived at the door to Anetka's room, bowed to each other.\nThe sister looked at her watch\nmeaningly and opened the door\nfor the visitor.\nAnetka's wan face, eager and\nexpectant, turned to Mary.\nMary closed the door and, with\nher eyes widening said: (\n\"Darling, is it  safe to  tell you\nexciting news, or will you burst\nyour stitches?\"\n\"I have no stitches,\" Anetka said\nproudly. \"The doctaire took them\naway this morning.\" She closed\nher eyes, \"Let me guess\u2014Madame\nLejeune is going to take the brown\nensemble!\"\n\"Of course, she is!\" Mary answered. \"She'd take anything\u2014 today!\"\n\"It is something more than that?\"\nMadame had been displeased with\nthe ensemble and was the current\nproblem when Anetka had been\ntaken ill.\n\"It's so much more than that,\nthat I must warn you, Anetka, to\ntake it easy when you hear about\nit.\" Mary had slipped off her coat\nand come around, to the side of\nAnetka's bed.\nIn her arms was the large black\npasteboard portfolio which once\nhad been the agent in the most\nimportant day of her life. It was\nthe portfolio she had carried\u2014and\nnearly lost\u2014the night she had met\nTony Castle. Now she unfastened\nthe tapes with great care and opened\nit.'\nTherein lay many imposing pages\non which newspaper clippings had\nbeen neatly pasted that very morning.\nMary's color faded from her face\nin   her   intensity.   Her   voice   was\nproperly impressive:\n\"Anetka, we're famous!\"\nAnetka closed her eyes and waited.\n\"These\nAmerica!\nAnetka opened her eyes.\n\"They  came  this   mornin\nfrom   a   clipping   service   ii\nYork. And all the time we thought\nwe were being neglected by Claire\nTodd!\" There had been a short note\nfrom Claire Todd after her return\nto  America,  saying  that  she  was\nsorry she hadn't been able to see\nMari before she left, that she would\nbe heard from later.\nAnd then, before Anetka's incredulous eyes, Mary turned the\npages slowly.\nAnetka was pleased, excited to\nsee the columns of news copy, the\nsketches\u2014for there were no photographs\u2014the extravagant praise\nand predictions. But Anetka didn't\nrealize what it meant. Or that i'\nwas the name of Mari Barat and\nnot her own to whom all credit\nwent.\nEmbarrassed, Mary protested\nabout that, said that she would\ncorrect it.\nGently, Anetka stopped the flow\nof Mary's protests. \"It is as it should\nare     clippings     from\nsent\nNew\nhelp you. I do not want to be rich\nI do not want to be famous. Before,\nlong before, in another life in Russia, I have had those things. I want\nnow to be quiet, secure. I ask\nnothing more. I am afraid of those\nthings now, my little one. I have\nnot the strength for them. You are\nyoung. You have no past defeats\nto mar your faith. You have the\ncourage to face them.\"\nAnetka had never talked that\nway before to Mary. The younger\nwoman listened without interrupting.\n\"I do not envy you anything\nexcept your faith. You are not\nyet 30. The full years are for you\nand you are ready for them because you have ambition, courage\nand a blind faith in yourself. You\ndo not know that whatever wealth\nyou have has its price. To get to\nthe top is hard, to stay there is\nharder, Mari. I do not mean that\nbusiness you will be any the\nless\"\u2014Anetka faltered, aware that\nin the translation of words to French\nfrom Russian, she was perhaps not\nmaking herself clear\u2014\"successful.\nI mean that success, being among\nthe greatest in your career, makes\ndemands on you as a person. Those\nare demands that are hardest to\nmeet.\"\n\"How do you mean?\" Mary asked.\n\"Your life will change. Nothing is simple when you are successful. The problems you have today will be as nothing. There are\nthings that will be inside of you.\nThese will be the problems of the,\nwoman, not the business-woman.\"\n\"I think I understand,\" Mary\nanswered softly. \"But do not fear\nfor me, Anetka. I have had problems before and solved them.\"\nAnetka smiled sadly, knowing\nthat Mary had not understood.\nThen Mary said:\n\"And now you are tired. I must\ngo back at once. We're very busy,\nAnetka. Suddenly, we have many\nnew clients. I have engaged four\nmore seamstresses and I think,\nperhaps, next year we must have\na little more room.\"\nTlie sister came in, bowed and\nmurmured that it was time for\nMadame to go.\nMary said she would return the\nnext day.\nTwenty-four hours later Mary\ndeposited her box of flowers on the\ndresser beside Anetka's bed, waited\nuntil the sister had once more closed\nthe door, and said:\n\"Anetka. will you pinch me,\nplease?\" Anetka obliged and asked\nfor an explanation.\n\"I'm not sure I haven't a fever.\nI'm not sure \u25a0 I'm not delirious. 1\nthink I'm seeing things. Anetka\nlllovitch, by 11 o'clock this morning there wasn't room enough to\nturn around in our place! Heaven\nonly knows where the people came\nfrom. We haven't a thing left unsold and we simply can't fill the\norders unless we send out our work.\nAnd how I'm ever going to meet\nthe demands for designs I don't\nknow!\"\nAnetka's blue eyes looked like\ncorn flowers\u2014and as uncomprehending.\n\"The most peculiar people came\nin and out\u2014all of them ordering\ntilings and most of them looking\nlike spies. You don't suppose that\ntlie government is suspicious of us,\ndo you? Not that I mind if we sell\nnil their agents as well as we've\nbeen doing today.\"\n\"I\u2014do\u2014not\u2014know,\" Anetka said\nvery slowly. Great shadows  came\ninto her eyes. \"It was so long ago\u2014\"\n\"Oh, Anetka!  You. . . you don't\nmean. . . . Russia, do you?\"\nSlowly Anetka nodded her head\n\"But that was 20 years ago and\nthings like that couldn't happen!\"\nMary   patted   Anetka's   frail   hand\ncomfortingly but she felt as though\nshe had stepped into some plot out\nof a paper covered novel. It was not\na pleasant sensation.\n(To Be Continued\nRED CROSS OBJECTIVE\nSET AT $125,000\nTORONTO. September 9 (CP)\n\u2014Objective of the Canadian Red\nCross Society In the Canada-wide\ncampaign to start shortly will be\n$125,000, It was announced after a\nmeeting of women vice-chairmen.\nBecause of the Infantile paralysis\nepidemic, the officials expect work\namong physically handicapped\nchildren will be Increased.\nSTRANGE FRIENDS\nCOST HIM $391\nVANCOUVER, September 9 (CP)\n\u2014Making friends of three strangers cost Albert Juston $391, he reported to police today. Huston said\nhe missed $360 cash and a $31\ncheck from his pocket after leaving three men and a woman whom\nhe met last night. The strangers are\nbeing sought by detectives.\nDIES AFTER PLUNGE\nIN HOT TAR VAT\nVANCOUVER, September 9\n(CP)\u2014George Taylor, Vancouver\nresident, died early today as the\nresult of severe burns received\nwhen he fell or climbed Into a vat\nof hot tar near his home Wednesday.\nONE KILLED IN\nMINE EXPLOSION\nKIRKLAND LAKE, Ont., September 9 (CP) \u2014One man was killed\nand another seriously injured in an\nexplosion yesterday at the Martin\nBird mine, five miles outside of\nLarder Lake. Body of the dead\nman was brought here and the injured man to hospital, but their\nidentities have not yet been ascertained.\nTWO YOUNG GIRLS\nBURN TO DEATH\nLEWISTON, Idaho, September\n9 (AP)\u2014Two young girls burned\nto death today In a fire which\ndestroyed their home at Gifford,\na village east of here, at 2 a.m.\nThey were Emma Shoemaker, 13,\nand Evelyn Shoemaker, 9. Their\nmother and three other children\nescaped from the flaming house\nafter the fire awakened a boy.\nBODY IS FOUND IN\nFALSE CREEK, VANCOUVER\nVANCOUVER, September 9 (CP)\n\u2014The body of a man found drowned in False Creek today has been\nidentified as that of Harold Edmund\nTaylor, 33, believed to be the victim of an accident.\nORDERS ARREST OF\nNEWSPAPER  PUBLISHER\nPROVIDENCE, September 9,\n(CP)\u2014Governor Robert E. Quinn\nof Rhode Island today announced\nhe had ordered the arrest of Walter E. O'Hara on a charge of\n\"criminal libel and blasphemy.\"\nAs the Governor spoke, O'Hara\nsat in the State Supreme Court\nchamber at a hearing of his case\nattempting to block the order of\nthe state racing commission, which\ndemanded he be dropped as managing director of the Narragan-\nsett race track. There was no Immediate Indication when the arrest of the trackman, and publisher of the Providence Star-Tribune would be sought.\nU.S. AIRMAN'S  LIFE\nSPARED BY FRANCO\nBURGOS, Spain, Sept. 9 (AP)-\nHarold Dahl, 28-year-old Champaign, III., captive airman who Is\nunder sentence of death, told the\nAssociated Press today Insurgent\nGeneralissimo Franco has promised his release. The promise was\nmade to Dahl's bride of less than\na year who Is now living at\nCannes, France, Dahl was Informed. The Insurgent chieftain\nassured her Dahl would be released as an exchange prisoner,\nthe young flyer learned.\nFAST-TALKING  HOUSEWIFE\nNICKS SALESMAN  FOR $9\nNEW YORK, Sept. 9 (AP)-A\nfast-talking housewife was held on\na petty larceny charge today after\na gullible door-to-door brush salesman told police she had taken him\nfor a $9 cleaning. Robert Prender-\ngast, 26, said that, before he could\ncomplete his brush selling spiel to\nMrs. Alice Cohen, 24, she high-\npressured him into paying her $!!\non a promise to \u00a3:t him a job in a\nhospital. When he got to the hospital, Prendergast complained, no one\nthere had heard of the woman. She\ndidn't buy a brush.\nMember of the Canadian Daily\nNewspapers Association\nT tl -PHONE   144 ,\nPrivate Exchange Connecting to\nall Departments\nSubscription Rates\nSingle copj \t\nBy carrier per week\nBy carrier per year -\n5   .05\n.25\n13.00\nBy mail In Canada, to subscribers living outside regular\ncarrier areas, per month 60c;\nthree months .180; six months\n$3.00>ne year $6 00.\nUnited States and Great Britain, one month 75c: six months\n$4.00, one year $7 50.\nForeign countries, other than\nU.S., same as above plus any\nextra postage\nClassified\nAdvertising Rates\n11c a Line\n(Minimum 2 lines)\n2 lines, per Insertion  $ .22\n2 lines, 6 consecutive\ninsertions    88\n(6 for the price of 4)\n3 lines, per insertion \u2022 33\n3 lines, 6 consecutive\ninsertions    1.32\n2 lines, 1 month 2.86\n3 lines, 1 month  4.29\nFor   advertisements   of   more\nthan three lines, calculate on\nthe above basis\nBox  numbers  lie extra. This\ncovers any number of insertions\nALL ABOVE RATES LESS 10%\nFOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nPIPE TUBES   FITTINGS\nNEW AND USED\nLarge stock for Immediate shipment\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD\n1st Avenue and Main St.\nVancouver. B.C.\n(2237)\n7 H. P. ENGINE, SUITABLE SAW\nmill drag saw. 20 foot 1 5-16 in.\nSteel Shaft, 4 hangers, 125 feet 1\nin. Steel Cable. Stump Puller and\nLight Wagon. What offers? A.\nMerrifield. Procter, B. C.     (2351)\nCHAMPION OF\nGOLF CHAMPIONS\nHOLLYWOOD, Sept. 9 (API-\nBill Holt, Syracuse, N.Y., golfer,\nwas official champion of champions today, winning the title at\nBing Crosby's Lakeside Country\nclub yesterday with a 36-hole\nscore of 73-68\u2014141, but Johnny\nGoodman, Omaha's National Amateur king, carded 67-69\u2014136 for\nthe par 70 course. However, Johnny couldn't qualify for the cham\npionship because he Is not the\nchampion of his home club in Nebraska.\n12-YEAR-OLD MOTHER\nWATERTOWN, N.Y., Sept. 9 (AP)\n\u2014Twelve-year-old Mrs. Leona E. R,\nBackus is the mother of a daughter.\nThe girl, married last January, gave\nbirth to the baby Sunday at the\nstate institution for women, where\nshe was committed last spring. The\ngirl's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph\nRoshia, announced the birth.\nBIRTHS\nDEVOIN\u2014Born to Mr. and Mrs.\nJohn L. DeVoin at Creston hospital,\nSeptember 9, a son.\nPERSONAL\nMEN! GET VIGOR AT ONCE. NEW\nOstrex Tonic Tablets contain raw\noyster tnvigorators and ' other\nstimulants. One dose peps up organs, glands. If not delighted,\nmaker refunds few cents paid\nCall, write, Mann-Rutherford Co\n_ -,        (2233)\nFRESH SANITARY RUBBER LA-\ntex special guaranteed 25 for $1.00.\nWrite for free catalogue. National\nImporters, Box 244, Edmonton. Alberta. (2234)\nBOYS AND GIRLS! GET-\"PEN\nPals in England. New Zealand,\nNewfoundland as well as all over\nCanada. 25c brings list of over 25\nnames and you receive as well\ndozens of letters from all over the\nworld. Write Box 2388 Daily News,\n(2388)\nSonnysayings\n34 BIRTHS AT TRAIL FOR JULY LEADS\nALL B. C. EXCEPT VANCOUVER, VICTORIA\nAND WESTMINSTER, STATISTICS SHOW\nRossland With 13 Is Ahead of Nelson With 11; Nelson Is\nFifth in Province in Weddings With 1 1\nVICTORIA, September 9 (CP) \u2014\nA total of 1001 births were registered in British Columbia during\nJuly, as compared with 875 in the\nsame month a year ago, according\nto the monthly bulletin of the vital\nstatistics branch of the department\nof health. Deaths totalled 520 as\nagainst 525 in July. 1936, and marriages solemnized numbered 635 as\ncompared with 483 in July of last\nyear.\nA general summary of births,\ndeatlis and marriages in larger centres of the province follows:\nVancouver 335 births. 188 deaths\nand 297 marriages; Victoria 81, 53\nand 37; New Westminster 69. 25 and\n23.\nNelson 11, 7 and 11; Cranbrook\n0, 0 and 3; Fernie 7. 1 and 7; Rossland 13, 1 and 3: Trail, 34, 3 and 9;\nGrand Forks 3, 4 and 3.\nKelowna 26. 3 and 2; Vernon 17,\n2 and 7; Revelstoke 5, 3 and 3; Chil-\nliwack 2, 0 and 3; North Vancouver\n17, 9 and 12.\nCourtenay 0, 2 and 6; Cumberland\n6, 2 and 3; Ladysmith 3, 1 and 3,\nNanaimo 18, 8 and 9; Port Alberni\n16. 1 and 3: Duncan 12, 4 and 4.\nKamloops 22, 10 and 9; Prince\nGeorge 7, 3 and 6; Prince Rupert\n8, 5 and 3.\nI thought when we got out on the\nporch roof we could reach tlv.ni\napples, but I was mistooken! I\nwonder why far-olT things alers\nlooks the best?\nTO DISCUSS NEW RULES\nFOR  PICTURE THEATRES\nVICTORIA, September 9 (CP)\u2014\nNew regulations of moving picture\ntheatres providing that one fully-\nfledged projectionist and one apprentice may be employed in a projection room, due lo go into effect\nJanuary 1, will be discussed at a\nmeeting of the provincial cabinet\nwith projectionists, theatre operators, trades and labor representa-1\nlives and other interested parties on\nTuesday next, Attorney-General\nGordon S. Wismer announced today,\nNO SERIOUS LOSSES\nFROM FOREST FIRES\nVICTORIA, September 9 (CP)\n\u2014While forest fire hazards increased with warm weather\nthroughout the province last week,\nno serious losses were reported\nby the forest branch from 33 out\nbreaks, 11 of which were still\nburning at the week-end.\nADAM BELL GOES  .\nTO TORONTO\nVICTORIA, September 9 (CP>-\nAdam Bell, deputy minister of labor for British Columbia, left this\nweek for Toronto to attend the convention of the International association of government labor officials\nHe will be followed by E, W, Griffith, unemployment relief administrator, and Mrs, Rex Eaton, member of the board of industrial relations, later this week. The meeting opens next Tuesday.\nBURNS TO  DEATH\nIN TRUCK  CAB\nVERMILION, Alta, September\n9 (CP) \u2014Trapped In the cab of\nan overturned truck Frank Steed-\nen, 39, of Maidstone, Sask., was\nburned to death when the machine caught fire near here last\nnight. Milton 8tubbs escaped\nwith minor Injuries.\nTWO DRIVERS\nKILLED IN CRASH\nELLENSBURG, Wash, Sepl. 9\n(AP)\u2014Two drivers were killed lo-\nday when a farm truck and a semitrailer tanker truck loaded wilh\ndiesel oil collided on a curve 16\nmiles north of Ellcnsburg on the\nClc Elum highway. Fire which\nbroke out in bolh trucks immediately after the head-on crash cremated the bodies of the drivers beyond any possibility of recognition.\nTHIEF MAKES 1000\nCUTS TO STEAL WIRE\nFOUNTAIN, Colo., Sept. 9 (AP)\n\u2014Sheriff Sam R, Deal and his\ndeputies began ioklng for a thief\nwith a very sore wrist after\nrancher N. L, Powers reported\nsomeone had removed a mile-long\nstretch of three-strand barbed\nwire fence from his place. Every\nstrand was cut between each post.\nDeputy Sheriff M. J. Vasseur estimated more than 1000 cuts were\nmade.\nBETTER   IF  \"PROVINCE\nTOOK  OVER  RELIEF\"\nNANAIMO, B.C., Sept. 9 (CP)\n\u2014Hon. George S. Pearson, British\nColumbia minister of mine3 and\nlabor, last night told the Union\nof British Columbia Municipalities In two-day convention here\n\"It would be better If the province took over relief entirely.\"\nHis statement was made without\nthe consent of the government,\nMr. Pearson said, but it was made\nbecause he was confident that\ngovernmental control of unemployment relief would halve the\nnumber of cases now handled by\nmunicipalities.\nHELP WANTED\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nETC., FOR SALE\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non easy terms in Alberta and\nSaskatchewan. Write for full information to 908 Dept of Natural\nResources. C.PR., Calgary Alta\n(2243)\nSIX ROOM RESIDENCE,^ VER-\nnon street. Excellent condition,\nfireplace, full cement basement\nand furnace. Phone 662.      (2333)\nFOR RENT, HOUSES, APTS.\nETC.\n8 ROOMED HOUSE, NELSON AV-\nenue- Furnace, garage, lovely gar-\nden. 3 lots. Phone 607 L.     (2334)\nALL MODERN DWELLING. 6\nrooms and bathroom. 1015 Stanley\nSt. Apply 302 Baker St. (2385)\nFOR RENT, 6-ROOMED HOUSE,\npartly furnished. Phone 572-X.\n (2383)\nFURNISHED 6 ROOM HOUSE, AP-\nply 303 Observatory after 4 p.m.\n(2319)\nPIPE AND FITTINGS\nCANADIAN JUNK Company  Ltd\n250 Prior St. Vancouver. BC\n \u2022 (2238)\nFOR SALE - BARRELS.    KEGS\nsugar sacks, liners. McDonald Jam\nCo.. Ltd, Nelson. B. C. (2239)\nFURNISHED   HOUSE   SljITABLE\nfor boarders.   Close in. Ph. 243Y.\n(2207)\nPOULTRY. SUPPLIES, ETC.\nPULLETS\nRaised from thej\n\"Chicks Which\nGive Results\",\nLeghorns. 8 weeks \u201e $55 per 101\n10 weeks   75 per 10]\nBarred Rocks and\nLight Sussex 8 weeks 75 per lflj\n10 weeks  85 per IO)\nRUMP b SENDALL LTD.\nLangley Prairie, B.C.\n(2231\nWE SELL EVERYTHING AT BAR-\ngain prices. The Ark' Store. (2348)\nLIVESTOCK FOR SALE\nBARGAIN SALE FOR CASH -\nwork team. Weight 3000 lbs With\nharness and wagon. Price $200.00\nLionel Moore. Creston. B. C.(2374)\nOTERSTOCKEO- YOUR^CHOICE\nof five purebred Jersey Cows $50\neach. A. H. Noakes, Balfour, B. C\n  (23971\nTWO~^OWSTTUST^RESHENED\nJ. P. Bell, Parks Siding, B. C.\n(2373)\nWANTED\nWANTED TO TENT NEAR NE\nson. 4 or 5 room hou_e with watej\nGood garden and place for coJ\nBox 2290. Daily news. (229q\nRIDE TO VANC'R. FROM SALMI\nno later than 12th. Expense sh'f\nR. C. R. Smith, The Queen, Salh_\nPORTABLE OR SEMI-PORTABlj\nsteam engine. Must pass inspectiq\nH. B. Dewolf, Perry Siding, (238T\nYEAR OLD JERSEY BULL. $3000.\nT. Roynon. Nelson, B. C.     (2396)\nELECTRICAL   MACHINERY\nFOR SALE\nElectric Arc Welding\nGenerators\nWANTED - ELDERLY GENTLE-\nwoman as companion housekeeper to old couple. Daniell. Procter\n         (2350)\nMAN FOR DAIRY. MUST~BE\ngood   milker.    Fruitvale   Dairy,\nFruitvale .\n(2372)\nHOUSE KEEPER FOR FARMER.\nState age, wages. Box 2300, Dally\nNews. (2300)\nROOM FOR MAN NEAR SCHOOLS\nand business centre. 415 Latimer.\n(2305)\nLIGHT HOUSEKEEPING ROOMS,\n(no children). 918 Kootenay Street\n(2184)\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms for rent   Annable Blork\n(22401\nACENTS WANTED\nCIVILIAN  NAVAL  TRAINING\nPROPOSED  IN   U.S.A.\nWASHINGTON, Sept. 9 (AP)-\nThe United States navy will ask\ncongress to authorize a program of\ncivilian naval training next year,\ncongressmen interested in naval\naffairs said today. Tentative plans\ncall for enrollment of 2500 high\nschool and college students in naval\ntraining courses during the first\nyear, a recent letter from the navy\ndepartment to the senate and house\nnaval affairs committees said.\nLIME COMPANY\nSTRIKE SETTLED *\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 9 (CP)\u2014\nP. J. Maw, vice-president and\ngeneral manager of the Pacific\nLime Co., Ltd, announced today\na strike of 160 men has been settled without the company in any\nway recognizing the Lumber and\nSaw Mill Workers' union, recently affiliated with the Committee\nfor Industrial Organization.\nSHOPLIFTER WRAPS\nUP  GOODS  IN  STORE\nVANCOUVER. Sept. 9 (CP)-A\nnervy shoplifter who calmly wrapped his loot while employees of a\ncity wholesale establishment looked\non, was held by police wilhout\ncharge today as they investigated\nhis case. The man walked into the\nwholesale store yesterday, picked\nup three toasters and wrapped them\nin paper lie had brought with him.\nEmployees, suspicious, followed him\nond he was seen to leave his loot\nat a nearby confectionery store. Police were called and he was arrested by detectives when he returned\nto the store for his parcel.\nCHRISTMAS CARD AGENTS\nmake more money selling the\nPremier Art Guild line of personal Christmas cards and boxed\nassortments. We pay you 50%\ncommission on personal cards priced over one dollar per dozen, and\npractically' 40% on our dollar-a-\ndozen Series. Agents should not\nbe satisfied with less. Premier\nline is the smartest, largest and\nmost up-to-date and ready for you\nto begin making money with at\nonce. No experience necessary;\nno charge for sample book. Prices\nare lower and commissions higher at Premier Art Guild. 576 Seymour St, Vancouver. Apply today. Agents in smaller towns\nshould write. (2173)\nSTENOGRAPHERS\nSTENOGRAPHERS (MALE AND\nFemale) wanted in Nelson by the\nDominion Civil Service. Applications for examination to reach\nOttawa by September 18th. We\nhave helped hundreds to obtain\nCivil Service positions and can\nhelp you.\u2022Proof of this statement\nand full information about the examination, etc, free. M. C. C.\nCivil Service Schools, Winnipeg\nOldest in Canada. (2185)\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nTERRACE APTS. Beautiful modern\nfrigidaire equipped suites. (2241)\nBEDROOM FOR RENTTTiTsE-CA\nStreet.' Phone 387-R1. (2330)\n7 ROOM MODERN HOUSE FOR\nrent. Phone 732R.  (2378)\nSMALL UNFURNISHED  HOUSE\nApply 712 Josephine St. (2380)\nIN THE\n(2242)\nFURNISHED    SUITES\nKerr apartments.\nFOR SALE OR RENT\nWith  standard  equipment  ready\nto attach to your own engine\n150\namp \t\namp  <B_5i\/i)\n300 <j.qnr\namp  <a)OUO\n110-volt A.C. 5 K.W. Decil (mnr\nElectric Plant  \u00abD . JjD\n110-V. Electric Plants\nand up \t\n32-V. Electric Plants\nand up \t\n6-volt Electric <\u00a3\/.(.\n6-volt Wind Electric,\nused\t\nWrite for prices on lighting batteries,\nnew and rebuilt\nLEEDER'S LTD.\n1375 Portage Ave, Winnipeg, Man.\n(2270)\nWANTED FOR CASH, TIE MIL\nin A-l condition. Frank Talarei\nGrand Forks, B. C.\nFRUIT ACENTS\nFRUIT GROWERS - SHIP US A.J\nvarieties of tree fruits in straigff\nor mixed cars. Receive benefi\nof the highest prairie markef\nprices. Returns made every Satu\nday. The Royal Fruit Compand\nRegina, Sask. (2186|\nLOST AND FOUND\n$195\n$79\n$65\n$25\nTo Finders\nIf you find a cat or dog. pocket-\nbook,  jewelry  or fur. or anything else of value, telephone I\nthe Daily News.   A \"Found\" Ad f\nwill be inserted without cost to\nyou    We will collect from the j\nowner.\nLOST,   B.   C.   LICENCE   PLAT\n43-319 between Trail and Silvertol\nBox 1383. Trail, B. C. (238*3\nNURSERY PRODUCTS\nFERTILIZERS FOR FALL APPLf\ncation on strawberries, Trail 3-10f\nTrail 5-10-5, Blood Sc Bone; Basl\nSlag for run-down meadows. Trf\nBrackman-Ker Millg. Co., Ltd.\n(23921\nREGAL LILY BULBS, $2 D03\nEnglish Iris, 50c doz. MacDonaldl\nRhubarb, 25c each. British Sovef\nreign Strawberry plants, 50c i\nW. H. Mawer, Nelson. B. C. (237?\nTRY  A WANT AD\nBusiness and Professional Directory\nCHARMING MODERN HOME. 7\nrooms, furnace, fire-place. A-l\ncondition. Mrs. Sandercock, 406.\nRichard street. (2227)\nCOMFORTABLE 6-ROOM HOUSE\non CXatham St. Bath, furnace and\ngaragt. Ap. mornings, 520 Mill St.\n(2136)\nROOM AN!) BOARD\nTWO FURNISHED BEDROOMS.\nBoard optional. Lovely private\nhome. Box 2375 Daily News. (2375)\nROOM  AND  BOARD .IN QUIET.\nrespectable home.  Close in. Phone\n697X, or 423 Silica St. (2197)\nROOM AND BOARD.   3 BLOCKS\nfrom Baker St. Ph. 273-R. J2382)\nUSED CARS\nWILL TRADE 1929 WHIPPET\nCoupe. Delivery for digging base-\nment. Box 2394, Daily News. (2394)\nI9M^o15g\u00a5 good-SHAPE,\nNelson Auto Wrecking.      (2391)\nYOUNG MAN WANTS WORK\nGood dry milker. Reference\nBenny Sweet, R.R. 1 Nelson. (2352)\n2^XR~GIRLS^lv^\u00a5-^HOUS\u00a5-\nwork. Apply P. O. Box 328, Nelson\n(2354)\nDOCS, PETS. FOR SALE\nWILL TRADE 1931 FORD Victoria Coupe for lumber. Box 2394\nDaily News. (2394)\nSTAMPS\nMISSING  15-YEAR-OLD\nGIRL   IS  LOCATED\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 9 (CP)~\nMabel Kennedy, the 15-year-old\ndaughter of Mr. and Mr9. Allan\nKennedy who was the object of\na widespread police search since\nMonday when she disappeared,\nwaB returned safely to her parents\ntoday. The young girl, who left\na note to her mother saying \"Sorry to leave you like this,\" was\nfound at New Westminster last\nnight with another girl, police\nsaid.\nREGISTERED 'SCOTTIES\" AND\nAired les. from best imported\nstock. Whatshan Kennels, Needles,\nB. C. (1976)\nHIGHEST PRICES PAID FOR OR\ndinary used Canadian and all oth\ner stamps. Send dime for buying\nprice list. \"Stamps.\" Stn. B,\nWinnipeg. \u00a32371)\nAssayers\nE W. WIDDOWSON. PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst. Assayer. Metallurgical\nEngineer Sampling Agents ot\nTrail Smelter. 301-305 Josephine\nSt, -Nelson. B. C. (2244)\n\"grenvTlle h. grTmwood\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist 618\nBaker Street. Nelson. B, C, P O\nBox No 726. Representing shipper's interest, Trail, B. C.     (2245)\nInsurance and Real Estate\n(Continued)\nAutomobile Radiator Repairs\nNELSON RADIATOR WORKS\nExpert Repairs\nNew Cores Installed\nCapitol M0,ors Building\n(2246)\nChiropractors\nJ. r, McMillan, d. c, neuro-\nealometer and X-ray.    16   years\nexperience. McCullock Blk, (2247)\nCorsets\nSpencer corests.   Surgical Belts  M\nW. Mitchell, K. W. C. Block, Ph 668\n(2248)\nEngineers and Surveyors\nAn Ad Here Is Your\nBest Agent\nNow that hundreds of brands of\ndog foods are being sold. Connecticut is considering the idea of state\ninspecticn.\nMORE ABOUT\nGirl Who Proposes\n{Continued From Page Four)\ncouldn't care for h'm like that you\nwould feel perfectly free to say so\nand expect him to be tragic about\nit, maybe, but not to insist that you\nmarry him anyhow,\nDOT. The foregoing is your answer. Dot, Leave this married m&n\nalone. Even if he loved you\u2014which\nhe evidently doesn't \u2014keep away\nfrom him. He is not free to make\nlove to you, no matter whether he\nloves h;s wife or not,\nI'm sorry you suffer because of\nyour infatuation for this man, but\nI still think even a gir) of 18 should\nwait to be wooed before she throws\nherself into a man's arms.\n*   \u2022   \u2022\nI HOPE I AM HELPFUL writes\nthat there is an organization in\nPennsylvania which helps handicapped people. It is the Rehabilitation Bureau. 1207 Twelfth avenue\nAltoono, Pa. You apply to the\nbureau, get an application blank\nto be filled out by your doctor, then\nsend.it back. If the application Is\naccepted the bureau will do every\ntrain you for work that you are best\nfitted for.\nI wish every state had such an organization and that there was a\nfederal bureau of that kind. Thank\nyou very much. It will not help our\nyoung crippled friend in New York\nbut should be helpful to others in\nthe state you name.\n*   *   *\n\"My Dear Miss Lee: Will you\nplease print the following: One-\nHalf Pint, please get in touch with\nme through general delivery, Mas-\nsillon, O. One Quart-and One-Half,\nAnd thanks so much as this means\na great deal to me.\n\"AN ARDENT READER.\"\nThink of that. Hope I'm doing\nright by printing. Anything within\nreason to oblige.\n600 POUNDS OF LION FOR\nLIONS' CLUB  FEAST\nDEL MONTE, Cal, Kept. 9 (AP)-\nSix hundred pounds of barbecued\nlion meat will be served when 600\nLions' club members hold their\nsixth annual banquet here. For those\nnot liking lion meat, a chicken din\nner will be substituted.\nAt Bethlehem, archaeologists have\nfound fossil animal bones and crude\nflint tools, revealing the earliest existence of men in Palestine so far\nthing possible to g?tjyou work   or ' discovered.\nH. D DAWSON Nelson, B. C\nMine Surveys and Reports\nB. C. Land Surveyor.     (2249)\nbWdTTaFFLECK. Fruitvale\" B C.\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor\nReg. Professional Civil Engineer\n(22501\nFuneral Directors\nSOMERS' FUNERAL HOME\n702 Baker St. Phone 252\nCert   Mortician       Lady   Attendant\nModern Ambulance Service\n(2251_)\n\"davis^unIralTservice\nEmbalming & Plastic Work\nLady Mortician Assisting\nPhone 95. Nelson. B   C.\n(2252)\nUNDER   NEW   MA*NAGEMEN\nDistrict management of the Mli\nual Benefit Health and ace. asset\nnow under supervision of FrankJ\nStuart and E. L. Warburton.\nfice: Aberdeen Block, 577 Ba\nstreet, Nelson, P. O. Box 389.\n(2171\nMachinists\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nFor all Classes of Metal Work, Latfl\nWork, Drilling. Boring and Grind!\ning, Motor Rewiring, AcetyleneJ\nWelding\nTelephone 503      324 Vernon Strei\n (22601\nH E. STEVENSON, Machinist}\nBlacksmiths. Electric and Acetylen\nWelders. Expert workmen. Satisfacj\ntion guaranteed. Mine Sc Mill work I\nspecialty. Fully eaulpped shop Phi\n98, 708-12 Vernon St, Nelson. (2261]\nMine & Equipment Machinerfl\nE. L. WARBURTON. REPRESENT!\ning C. C. Snowdon. oils, greases!\npaints, etc. Agent mine machine\nery, rails, pipe steels, sheet IronJ\netc. Steam coals. Office 5131\nWard street, Phone 53, Residence!\nphone 239. (2262) f\nNotaries\nD.    J     ROBERTSON.      NOTARY I\nPublic. Nelson. Phone 157L. (2263) |\nPatents\nInsurance and Real Estate\nROBERTSON REALTY CO, LTD\nReal Estate Insurance. Rentals\n311, Baker St. Phone 68.        (2253)\nR.^W DAWSON. Real Estate, Insurance, Rentals Next Hipperson\nHardware. Baker St. Phone 197\n(2254).\n(-HT BLACKWOODTTnsuranre of\nevery description.   Real Est Ph 99\n(2255)\nrTTdill7auto~and fire in-\nsurancc. Real Estate. 508. Ward St\n(2256)\nJ~E. ANNABLE.^REAL ESTATE.\nRentals, Insurance.   Annable Blk\n(2257)\nSEE   D~T KERR. \"AGENT   FOR\nWawanesa Fire Ins For bettei rates\n(2258)\nCHAS7F. McHARDY, INSURANCE\nReal Estate.  Phone 135.       (2250)\nAN OFFER TO  EVERY  INVENT- I\nor. list of wanted inventions and\nfull  information sent free.   The\nRamsay Company.   World Patent\nAttorneys. 273 Bank St, Ottawa.\n(2264)\nPhotography\nOUR BUSINESS FOR 1936 AL-\nmost doubled that of 1935. There\nmust be a reason. A trial order\nwill convince YOU of the superior\nPhoto Finishing done in our plant.\nYour films developed and printed\n25c Renrints, eight for 25c. KRYS-\nTAL PHOTOS. WILKIE. SASK. I\n(2265)\nSanitariums\nDR. ALDRICH, SPOKANE. WASH.,\nHeart, Stomach. Kidney, Bladder)\nDiseases treated.   X-ray work.\n(2266) I\nSash Factory\nI.AWSON'S      SASH      FACTORY,\nHardwood merchant. 217 Baker St\n(2267)\nSecond Hand Stores\nWE   BUY.   SELL   &   EXCHANG*\nfurniture, etc.    The Ark Store.\n(2268)\n\t\n\u25a0_i_i_i_i_i_i_i_M_i_i_H_H_l\n_i_i_i_i_i_i_M_H\nurn\n I^PPm|n|\numtm^mm\nl.pifJ|Jipjlf!pp\u00bbpiSJipii\nwfppnswwp\nWppW\u00bbpspiP*'W!'*W\u2122\n\\m\nDow-Jones Averages\nHigh       Low Close  Change\nIndustrials   188.06     164.88 166.36-up 2.99\nBails     45.27       44.05 44.66\u2014up 1.13\nJtilities    26.26       25.25 25.94-up   .66\nBonds  .\"....             98.95\u2014up   .09\nToronto Stock Quotations\nNES\n 03\n.97\n\u202201%\n5.60\n.38\natfield Gold \t\n;oria Rouyn\t\n.25\n.07\n.07\n.25\nokfield Gold \t\n.65\nie Metals \t\n.22\n1,00\n.50\n.45\n.12\nalome Mines\t\natt   Trethewey   \t\n7.25\n.07%\n9.35\n.12\nn Malartic\t\nriboo Gold Q \t\n....     1.12\n1.47\n.85\n.05\nptral Pat\t\n2.30\n.42\n.05\n.    3.50\npiagas Mines \t\nfniaurum Mines \t\n2.45\n1.15\n75.00\n.50\n>m Explorers \t\n38.75\n.05\n.40 .\nist Malartic  J..\n1.00\n2.50\nilconbridge Nickel \t\n6.40\n OTA\npiles Lake \t\nod's Lake Gold\t\nDid Belt\t\n.50\n.27\n.52\n.25\n.14\n.06\n.79\n1.07\n.13\n11.50\n.32\n    28.00\n58.00\n 23\n.33\n 65\n2.10\n\t\nDEPARTMENT  OF  MINES\n[Synopses of Mining\nLaws\nHXNERA1   ACT\nFrM Miner*' Certificate!\n1_ny pereon over the age ol eighteen,\nd any Joint Stock Company is entitled\nenter upon all waste lands ol the Crown\nd upon any other lands whereon the\nserais other than coal aYe reserved to\ni Crown and its licensees (with specific\n\u2022rvatlons). for the purpose of prospect--\nt for minerals, locating claims, and min-\n* The fee to an Individual for a Free\nI icrs' Certificate Is $5.00 for one year.\na Joint Stock Company having a capital\n1100,000.00 or less the fee for a year\n150.00; if capitalized beyond this the\nIs $100.00. The Free Miners' Certifies run from date of issue and expire\nthe 3lst of May next after Its date\ntome subsequent 31st of May. Certifies may be obtained for any part of\nyear terminating on 31st of May for\nproportionately less fee, (Free Miners'\nrtlflcatcs are also applicable to tho\n.Cftr Mining Act.)\nMineral  Claims\nBlue: 61.05 acres.\n\u25a0Recording fee; $3.50 per claim.\n\u25a0Representation:   Assessment work to the\nWent ot $100.00 must be done each year\nTid recorded on or before the anniversary\nkte of record of the claim. .Cash In the\nEm of (100.00  may be paid in lieu  of\nten assessment work.   Fee for recording\nJsscssment   Work,   \u00a33.50.   If  the  required\nKseBsmcnt    work    has    been    performed\nTlthfn the year, but not recorded within\npat time, a free miner may within thirty\n*ys   thereafter   record   such   assessment\nlorV: upon payment of an additional fee\nIf $10.00.   The  actual cost of the mirvey\nIf  a mineral   claim to an  amount  not\nkceedlng  $100.00  may  also be  recorded\nas assessment work.   As soon  as  assess-\ntient work to the extent of $50000 (or cash\njild    of    a   like   amount!    is    recorded\nand    a    survey    made    of    the    claim.\nDie owner of such claim Is entitled  to a\nCrown  Grant  on payment  of  a  fee  of\n^36.00,   and  Riving  the necessary notices\n|rcquircd by the Act.\nPLACER  MINING   ACT\nyour types of placer claims:\nCreek diggings; bar diggings; dry dig-\n(lngs; and previous stone dlg^lnits. (For\ndetails  see  Part II.   Placer Mining   Act,)\nRepresentation; A placer claim mutt\nbe worked by the owner or someone on\nhis behalf continuously as far as practicable during working hours. Lay-overs\nand leaves of absence may be declared\nby the Gold Commissioner under certain\nconditions. To hold a placer claim for\nmore than one year it must be re-recorded\nbefore the expiration of the record or re-\nrecord.\nPlacer Mining Leases '\nfWr.tt and method of staking, etc.\nEighty acres In extent, staked along a\n\u2022location line\" not more than one-half\nmile in length. In this line one bend or\nChange of direction is permitted.   Where\n\u2022 straight line is followed two posts only\nare necessary,  I.e., an  \"initial post\"  and\n\u2022 \"final post.\" .Where there is a change\nof direction a legal post must be placed\nto mark the point of the said change.\nTha leasehold Is allowed a width not in\nexcess of one-quarter mile. The locator\nIs required wlthl.i thirty days after the\ndata of the location to pout a notice in\nthe office of the Mining Recorder setting\nout the name of the applicant; the number of his free miner's certificate; the\ndate of location: the number of feet lying\nta the right and left of the location line;\nand the approximate area or size of the\npound.\nDredging leases on rivers for five miles\nbelow  low-water  mark  are  also  granted.\nPees;   Annual rental on placer  mining\nlease,   $30.00;    annual   development   work\nrequired  to be expended,  $25000;  annual\nftntal on dredging lease, $25.00 per mile;\nannual  development  work required  to be\n\u2022xpended. $1,000.00 per mile; the value of\n\u2022ny new plant or machinery employed to\ncount as money expended In development.\nwe for recording certificate of work, $2.50.\ntease fee.  $9.00.\nProvisions!  Free  Miners' Certificates,\n(Placer)  Act\nDepartment of Minei Act\n,    Among other things, these Acts provide\nI lor the staking and representing of placer\nJ claims   without   payment   of    fees,    and\n; assistance to  prospectors by  free  assays.\n, A detailed synopsis of the  above  Acts.\nalfio     tbe     \"Mines     Development     Act\";\n\"Mineral  Survey  and  Development   Act\";\n\"Iron and Steel Bounties Act\"; and\n1 \"Phosphate-mining Act\": are available at\nthe Department of Mines, Victoria. Com-\n| piste copies of the Acts may be obtains'\nI mim the King's Printer, Victoria.\nNr-LSON DAILY NEWS .NELSON, B.C.-FRIDAY MORNING. SEPT. 10. 1937.\n\u2022 PAGE ELEVEN\nMarket and Mining News| \u2022*\u00a3\u00a3%\u00a3*\nKirkland Lake      1.16\nLake Shore Mines    48.75\nLamaque Contact 04%\nLeitch Gold  52\nLebel Oro Mines 16\nLittle Long Lac     4.75\nMacassa Mines     4.95\nMacLec,_ Cockshutt _    1.45\nMadsen R L 60\nMan & East  0214\nMandy  24\nMalroblc Mines  01%\nMclntyre-Porcupine      33.50\nMcKenzie R L       1.10\nMcVittie Graham  20%\nMcWatters Gold  43\nMining Corp      2.95\nMinto Gold   09\nMoneta Porcupine       1.42\nMorris Kirkland  25\nNipissing Mining      2.05\nNoranda     56.50\nNormetal       1.45\nO'Brien Gold      4.40\nOmega Gold  47\nPamour Porcupine     2.65\nParkhill Gold 15\nPaulore M 13\nPaymaster Cons  47\nPend Oreille      3.75\nPerron Gold  87\nPickle Crow Gold      4.85\nPioneer Gold      3.80\nPremier Gold      2.10\nPorcupine Crown 03\nPowell Rouyn Gold       1.15\nPreston East Dome  - 95\nQuebec Gold  40\nRead Authier      3.05\nR L Gold Shore        .30\nReeves MacDonald 70\nReno Gold  82\nRitchie Gold ....: 03%\nRoche Long Lac 11%\nSan Antonio Gold      1.40\nShawkey Gold 47\nSheep Creek Gold  90\nSherritt Gordon      2.20\nSiscoe Gold     3.25\nSmelters Gold  01%\nSladen Malartic     1.00\nStadacona Rouyn     1-04\nSt. Anthony  14\nSudbury Basin     3.75\nSullivan Cons       115\nSylvanite      2.95\nTashota Goldfields  06\nTeck Hughes Gold     5.00\nToburn Gold Mines     2.30\nTowagamac  95\nVentures '     7,00\nWaite Amulet      2.80\nWhite Eagle Silver  01%\nWhitewater       11\nWright Hargreaves      6.20\nYmir Yankee Girl  22\nOILS\nBrown Oil   _      .38\nCalmont      43\nCalgary & Edmonton      2.15\nCommonwealth       .26\nDalhousie  65\nEastcrest      15\nFoundation   23\nFoothills        1.00\nHighwood    16\nHome       1.50\nImperial        19.60\nInt Petroleum     32.25\nLowery Pete  25\nMcColl Front     12.50\nMerland  08\nModel    50\nMonarch Roy   30\nNordon  18\nOkalta       1.35\nPacalta  19\nPantepec        6.00\nRoyalite      36.50\nSouthwest Pete  60\nTexas Canadian       1.45\nUnited  17\nVulcan         1.21\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi Power      4%\nBeatty Bros     12\nBell Telephone .\nBrazilian T L Sc P ..\nBrew Sc Distillers\nBrit Am Oil\nBrewing Corp\nBrewing Corp Pfd\nB C Power A\nB C Power B\nBuilding Products ..\nBurt F N\n. 166'\/.\n21%\n7\n21\n2%\ni9y.\n35\n4',.\n59%\n37'.\nMONTREAL SEES\nSMELTERS GAIN\nMONTREAL, Sept. 9 (CP)-The\nprices worked to higher levels on\nthe stock market today as moderate buying appeared to replace recent selling.\nSmelters was up 3% to TBVi. Nickel gained 1% at 58% with Noranda\na point higher at 57.\nPrice preferred chalked up a point\ngain at 14. St. Lawrence Paper preferred weakened to 81, off two\npoints.\nIncrease of a point each turned\nup for Steel ot Canada at 76, Foundation at 18 and Dominion Steel Sc\nCoal at 19. Dominion Bridge recovered two points at 44. Canadian\nHydro-Electric preferred gained a\npoint at 86 and Shawinlgan 1% at\n26',.. Brazilian boarded a '\/\u00ab addition at 22.\nNew York Better\nNEW YORK. September 9 (AP)\n\u2014The stock market regained some\nof its courage today and retrieved\none to four or more points of its\nrecent heavy losses.\nScanning the headlines, brokers\nfound the Mediterranean and far\neastern clouds as dark as ever.\nThere also were plenty of skeptics\non fall business prospects.\nThe trend reversal, consequently,\nwas attributed principally to quick-\nturned traders who stepped in on\nthe belief leaders had been oversold\nand were due for at least a temporary rebound. In addition short covering was reported by those who\nhad piled up sizable profits on the\nTuesday break.\nVolume dwindled appreciably on\nthe upswing, transfers totalling 1,-\n411,500 shares compared with 2,-\n257,520 yesterday which was the largest aggregate since April 28. '\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nLI8TED Bid\nA P Con  30\nAmal Oil '\u201e     .07\nAztec Mining 06\nBig Miss 45%\nBrit Dom Oil 23\nBrew Sc Dist    7.00\nBralome Gold   7.35\nC Sc E Corp    2.13\nCalmont Oil 42\nCariboo Gold    1.55\nCoast Brew  13.00\nCommonwealth  Oil    .25\nDentonia  , 13\nGold Belt     .25\nHargal Oil  17\nHome  Oil      1.49\nInt Coal  21\nIsland Mount 67\nKoot Belle  95\nMak Siccar      .02 .\nMcDougal Segur Ex    .20\nMinto Gold\" 09\nModel Oil  50\nPioneer Gold    3.70\nPremier Gold     2.07\nPremier Border .....    .01%\nQuatslno  03%\nRelief Arlington      \u2014\nReno Gold   78\nReeves MacD 70\nSally 05\nSalmon Gold      .06%\nSheep Creek  88\nSflbak Premier    1.50\nSpooner Oil 20\nTaylor B R  04Vi\nVanalta Ltd     .08\nVidette  30\nWellington Oil -    .03%\nWesko   15\nYmir Yankee Girl..    .21\nCURB\nAnaconda  09%\nAssoc Oil  10\nBaltac Oil     -04%\nBeaver Silver 01%\nBluebird   01%\nB C Nickel      -\nCongress      -02V-\nCork Prov     .01%\nCrows Nest new ....    .06%\nDalhousie Oils     \u2014\nAsk\n.31\n.07%\n.46\n7.50\n7.50\n2.15\n.46\n1.60\n13.20\n.14\n1.52\n.25\n1.00\n.09%\n.53\n3.80\n2.10\n.01%\n.04%\n.20\n.07%\n2.00\n.25'\nLondon Close\nLONDON, Sept. 9 (AP)-Stocks\nwere stronger today stimulated by\nthe upturn in Ksw York yesterday.\nDespite unsettling developments in\nthe Mediterranean, most shares\nwere in demand, particularly rayon,\nmotor and chemical issues. Transatlantics were steady. The gilt edge\ndivision and home rails held'even.\nClosing; Brazilian $22%; C.P.R.\n$10%; Eastman $179; Hydro Electric\n$7; International Nickel $58%; U. S.\nSteel $100%; Central Mining \u00a321%;\nConsol Gold Fields 74s 4%d; Crown\n\u00a312%; De Haviland 46s 3d; Distillers 108s; Dunlop 33s 9d; Ford 26s\n6d; General Electric 83s 9d; HBC\n30s 6d; Mining Trust Ltd 5s 3d; Rolls\nRoyce 103s 9d; Shell T Sc T \u00a35%;\nSprings 29s 4%d.\nBonds\u2014British 2% per cent consols \u00a373%; British 3% per cent wr\nloan \u00a3100%; British funding 4's\n1960-1990 \u00a3110%.\nCan Bakeries A     4\nCan Bakeries Pfd   54%\nCan Bread Co   6\nCan Bud Malting  7%\nCan Car & Foundry  12%\nCan Cement       12%\nCan Cement Pfd   107\nCan  Dredge    42\nCan Malting   36\nCan Pac Railway   10%\nCan Ind Ale A      5V|\nCan Ind Ale B   4%\nCan Wineries      2%\nCarnation Pfd  - 102%\nCons Bakeries   17%\nCons Smelters  75%\nCosmos  22%\nDominion Bridge .._  43%\nDominion Stores        7'4\nDom Tar Sc Chem        9%\nD Tar & Chem Pfd  87\nDist Seag   18%\nFanny Farmer       22\nFord of Can A   21%\nGen Steel Wares   12%\nGoodyear Tire     88\nGypsum L Sc A      9%\nHarding Carpet     41\/4\nHamilton Bridge         11%\nHamilton Bridge Pfd   75\nHinde Douche   19%\nHiram Walker   44\nInt   Metals         10%\nInt Milling Pfd   99%\nImperial Oil   19%\nImperial Tobacco   14\nInt Nickel   58\nInt Petrol  ,.. 32%\nLoblaw A   24\nLoblaw B  21%\nKelvinator   '  25\nMaple Leaf Milling     4\nMassey Harris           9%\nMcColl Frontenac   12%\nMontreal   Power    '.  30\nMoore Corp          40\nNat Steel Car '    38\nOnt Steel Prods   16\nOnt Silk Nets      8\nPage Hersey   09\nPower Corp   18%\nPressed  Metals    30\nSteel of Can        75\nStandard  Paving       3%\nIncorporations\nBarkerville Development Co., limited, 1000 shares, no par value, Vancouver.\nSecurities Foundation limited.\n$100,000, Vancouver.\nFraser River Power limited, $10,-\n000, Vancouver.\nMacgregors Ltd., $25,000. Vancouver.\nPublic Collection Service limited,\n$10,000, Vancouver.\nGermansen Ventures limited, $10,-\n000, Prince Rupert.\nBarnett Sawmills limited, $10,000,\nVancouver.\nAn extra-provincial concern, the\nCanadian Bell Mining Co., inc., $15.-\n000, with offices in Spokane and\nHall Siding, took out papers.\nZeballos Gold Peak Mines, limited, <N. P. L.) $1,500,000, New Westminster.\nMinerals Consolidated, limited $5,-\n000.000, Vancouver.\n.08%\n.34\n.25\n.10\n.12\n.02\n.14\n.03\n.01%\n.07\n.65\nDavies Pete  34%\nDevenish  05\nDunwell Mining 02%\nFairvlewAmal 05%\nFederal Gold  02%\nFoundation Pete 23\nFreehold Oil  05%\nGeo Enterprise       \u2014\nGeo River 01%\nGolconda        .06%\nGold Mount 02%\nGrandview  17%\nGrull Wihksne  08\nHaida 00%\nHome Gold     .01%\nIndian Mines       \u2014\nKoot Florence 02\nLakeview Mine  01%\nLowery Pete  17\nLucky Jim  05%\nMadison Oil  07\nMar Jon Oil 10%\nMercury Oil 26%\nMeridian new  01%\nMetaline Metals      '.07\nMcGillivray     .19%\nMill City Oil 20\nMonarch R 30\nNicola    04%\nNoble Five  06\nOkalta com     135\nPacalta   ..: 18\nPend Oreille     3.70\nPorter Idaho  04%\nPilot Gold 02%\nQuesnelle Q  08\nRanchmen's  15\nReliance    02%\nReward Mining 08%\nRoyalite Oil  35.00\nRufus Argenta 02%\nRuth Hope  02%\nSilver Crest\nSilversmith     .02\nSouthwest Pete 50,\nSunloch Mines _ 22\nUnited Dist  90\nUnited Oil 18\nViking Gold  01\nVulcan Oil     1-25\nWaverly Tang new.. .00%\nWellington Mines .... .03%\nWhitewater   11\n.35\n.06\n.02%\n..06%\n.02%\n.23%\n.06%\n.03%\n.01%\n.03\n.19\n.08%\n.02\n.03\n.01%\n.05%\n.07%\n.12\n.28\n.08\n.23\n.30%\n.05\n1.38\n.19\n.03%\n.19\n.02%\n.08%\n37.00\n.03\nPROFITS TAKEN\nIN WINNIPEG PIT\nWINNIPEG, Sept. 9 (CP)-Ab-\nsence of heavy speculative demand\nin view of an easier European political situation reduced trading on\nthe Winnipeg grain exchange to a\nmore usual volume today. Wheat\nfluctuated nervously within a narrow range and at the close was %\ncent lower to unchanged, October\n$1.29%, November $1.29, December\n$1.26% and May $1.27%-$1.27%.\nEvery rally induced by export and\noverseas orders found profit-takers\nand hedging sales forcing wheat\nbelow y terday's close. Values\nmoved % cent higher in early trading but dipped nearly a cent at the\nhalf-way mark.\nExport sales of Canadian wheat\nwere estimated at 400,000 bushels.\nLiverpool closed l-lVid^own and\nUnited States markets w'ere off as\nmuch as a cent in late dealings.\nBuenos Aires, however, showed %-l\ncent gains at noon.\n- .05\n.95\n.19\n.01%\n1.35\n.03%\n.12\nMontreal Stock Exchange\nOntario Steel Prods '.     1!\nPower Corp of Can      1814\nQuebec  Power  ....\nINDUSTRIALS;\nAlta Pac Grain  2%\nAssoc Brew of Can  13%\nAssoc Tel Sc Tel   6%\nBathurst P Sc P \"A\"   16%\nBell Telephone   166\nBrazilian T L Sc P  22\nB C Power A  34%\nB C Power B  7\nBuilding Products   52%\nCanada Cement    12%\nCan Cement Pfd  107%\nCan North Power   20\nCan Steamship   4%\nCan Steamship Pfd  13%\nCanadian  Bronze     41\nCan Car Sc Fdy - 12%\nCan Car & Fdy Pfd  23\nCan Celanese  23\nCan Celanese Pld  116\nCan Hydro-Electric   85\nCan Ind Ale A  5%\nCan Ind Ale B   4%\nCan Pacific Railway  10%\nCockshutt Plow   12%\nCon Min Sc Smelting  76\nDistillers Seagrams  18%\nDominion Bridge   43\nDominion Coal Pfd '._ 20%\nDom Steel Sc Coal B   18%\nDominion Textile   80\nDryden Paper   _ 14%\nFoundation C of C  18\nGen Steel Wares   11%\nGurd Charles  .'.  8%\nGyp Lime Sc Alab  19%\nHamilton Bridge   11%\nHoward Smith Paper  23\nH Smith Paper Pfd   103%\nImp Tobacco of C   14\nInter Nickel of Can '.  58%\nLake of the Woods   20\nMassey Harris  9%\nMcColl Frontenac   12%\nMontreal L H & P  30\nNational Brew Ltd  39%\nNat Brew Pfd       40\nNat Steel Car       39\nOgilvie Flour Mills  225\nDividends\nBuilding Products limited, 50 cents\nplus 25 cents payable October 1 to\nshareholders of record September\n16.\nKirkland Lake Gold Mines, limited, six cents, payable November\n1, to shareholders of record October\n1.\nHinde Sc Douch Paper company\nof Canada limited, 25 cents' payable\nOctober 1 to shareholders of record\nSeptember 15.\nAmerican Cyanamid company\nclass \"A\" and \"B\", 15 cents payable\nOctober 1 to shareholders of record\nSeptember 15.\nU. S. DOLLAR GAINS 5-16\nOF CENT AT LONDON\nLONDON, September 9 (AP) \u2014\nThe United States dollar gained 5-16\nof a cent in foreign exchange.dealings today. The American unit closed $4.94% to the pound compared\nwith $4.96 3-16 for sterling in New\nYork overnight. The franc ended\n134.37 to the pound against 132.97\ntlie day before.\nBOND8 FIRMER\nNEW YORK, September 9 (AP)\nThe bond market was on firmer\nground today, recapturing part of\nthe losses suffered yesterday and\nthe day before. Japanese dollar\nloans scored moderate recoveries,\nItalians were mixed and Germans\nwere lower.\n1  .     ;    :^ .: .... \u25a0\nWILL   CLOSE   OUT  CANUSA\nGOLD MINES, LTD.\nTORONTO, Sept. 9 (CP)-Share-\nholders and creditors of the Canusa\nGold Mines, Ltd. of Toronto decided\nto close out the company at a meeting here today. G, S. Holmdstead.\ncustodian, presided. The company\nwas organized some years ago with\na capital stock of $3,000,000. later\nincreased   to   $4,500,000.\n  17%\nSt Lawrence Corp'  10%\nSt Lawrence Corp Pfd  27%\nSt Lawrence Paper Pfd  91\nSouth Can Power   13%\nShawnigan W Sc P  26\nSteel of Can  - 75%\nSteel of Can Pfd  .68\nWestern Grocers  69\nBANKS;\nBank of Canada   58\nCanadienne Natlonale  160\nCommerce     ., 179%\nDominion       225\nMontreal  215\nNova Scotia   330\nRoyal  189\nCURB;\nAbitibi P & P Co   4%\nAbitibi 6 Pfd   45\nBeauharnois  Corp   6%\nBathurst P & P B  6\nBrew Sc Dist Van  7\nBrew Corp of Can  2%\nBritish American Oil   21%\nB C Packers   12%\nCan Malting Ltd  33\nCan Dredge Sc Dock _ 42\nCan Vickers   6\nCan  Wineries     2%\nCons Paper Corp  14%\nDominion Stores  7%\nDonnacona Paper A  _ 12%\nDonnacona Paper B   11%\nFord Motor A   21%\nFraser Co Ltd   31%\nImperial Oil   19%\nInter Petroleum   32%\nCHICAGO LOWER\nCHICAGO, September 9 (AP) \u2014\nLower prices on wheat formed the\nrule today late as well as early.\nThe Russian grain selling agency\nat Rotterdam was reported to have\nreopened, a circumstance construed\nin some quarters as pointing to sharp\nRussian competition with other\ncountries. Black Sea shipments of\nwheat this week totalled 2,824,000\nbushels against 1,544,000 bushels last\nweek.\nAt the close wheat was % to 1\ncent under yesterday's finish. September 1.07%-%; December 1.09%-%\ncorn varying from 2% decline to %\nadvance, September 1.03%-1.06%,\nDecember 63%-% and oats % off to\n% up.\nMontreal Metals\nMpNTREAL, September 9 (CP)\u2014\nSpot; copper, electrolytic 15.45; tin\n61.75; lead 6.15; zinc 6.25; antimony\n17.00; per 100 pounds F. O. B. Montreal, five-ton lots.\nGOLDS AND OILS\nGAIN AT (OAST\nVANCOUVER, September 9 (CP)\n\u2014Golds and oils recorded small\ngains on. Vancouver stock exchange\ntoday while base metals weakened.\nLower-priced metals were fairly active and boord transactions totalled\n181,051 shares.\nIsland Mountain headed gold advances up 7 at 67. Bralorne at 7.35.\nKootenay Belle at 95 and Pioneer\nat 3.70 each gained 5, Cariboo Gold\nQuartz 3 at 1.55 and Premier 2 at\n2.07. Fractional gains were posted in Minto at 9 and Big Missouri\nat 45%. Reno was down 3 at 78\nand other major golds were unchanged.\nIn the metal section, Pend Oreille\ndeclined 5 at 3.70 as Whitewater at\n11, Grandview 17% and Lucky Jim\nat 5% eased fractions. Nicola was\nup % at 4% and Reeves MacDonald\nadded 2 at 70.\nExchanges\nMONTREAL, Sept. 9 (CP)-Brlt-\nish and foreign exchange closed\neasier today. Nominal rates for large\namounts:\nArgentina, peso, .2996.\nAustralia, pound, 3.9513.\nBelgium, belga, .1686.\nBrazil, milreis, .0640.\nDenmark, krone, .2211.\nFinland, finmark, .0219.\nFrance, franc, .0363.\nGermany, reichsmark, .4014.\nGreat Britain, pound, 4.9470.\nHolland, florin, .5507.\nJapan, yen, .2891.\nNew Zealand, pound, 3.9881.\nNorway, krone, ,2487.\nSouth Africa, pouijd, 4.9243.\nSweden, krone, .2553.\nUnited States, dollar, 1-64 per cent\npremium.\n(Compiled by the Royal Bank of\nCanada).\n15\n1%\n24%\n17\n100\nRoyalite Oil      35\nThrift Stor.es        %\nUnited Dist of Can      90\nWalker-Good Sc W     44\nWalker-Good Pfd     19%\nInter Utilities A ,\nInter Utilities B .\nMacLaren P & P .\nMitchell  Robt  \t\nPage Hersey Tubes.\nQuotations on Wall Street\nHigh\nAl Chem   216\nAm Can     98%\nAm For Pow ....    6%\nAm Mac Sc Fdy   18\nAm Smelt & Re   84%\nAm Tel   163%\nAm Tob     78%\nAnaconda      52%\nAtchison      65%\nAuburn   Motors   13%\nAv Corp      5%\nBaldwin       4\nBait Sc Ohio    21%\nBendix Av     17%\nBeth Steel     87%\nBorden     22%\nCon Dry     22\nCan Pac    10%\nCerro de Pasco   66\nChes & Ohio    44%\nChrysler    101%\nCon Gas N Y ....   33\nCorn Prods    60%\nC Wright pfd ....    5\nDupont     150\nEast Kodak  181%\nEl Power Sc Lt   17%\nErie     12\nFord English ....    6%\nFord of Can    21%\nFirst Nat Stores   39\nFreeport   Texas   29\nGen Elec ...,    49%\nGen Foods     35\nGen Motors     52%\nGoodrich      30%\nGranby       8'\/,\nGreat Nor pfd .. 43%\nGreat West Sug 32%\nHecker Prods ....   lO'\/s\nHowe Sound    73\nHudson   Motors   13%\nInter Nickel     58%\nInter Tel Sc Tel     8%\nLow\n214\n97%\n61\/8\n18\n82%\n162%\n78\n51%\n64\n13\n4%\n3%\n201.\n16 \"a\n85%\n21%\n21%\n10\n66\n43%\n99%\n32%\n59%\n4%\n148%\n181%\n17\n111'2\n6%\n21 %\n38\n25%\n411%\n3414\n51%\n29%\n8%\n42%\n31%\n10%\n71\n12%\n57%\n8%\nClose\n215\n98\n6%\n18\n83%\n163\n78\n51'4\n64%\n13%\n5\n4\n21%\n167a\n87\n22\n21%\n10%\n66\n44\n100%\n33\n60\n4's\n149%\n181%\n17%\n12\n6%\n21%\n38',4\n26\n40\n34'4\n51%\n30%\n8%\n43%\n32%\n10%\n72\n12'\/,\n57%\nJewel Tea   57%\nKresge  SS  21%\nKroegger & Toll 20\nMack Truck   38%\nMilwaukee   pfd    1%\nMont Ward  56\nNash Motors  16%\nNat Dairy Prods 18%\nN Power Sc Lt .. 9%\nN Y Central  31%\nPac Gas & El.... 29%\nPack Motors     7%\nPcnn R R   34%\nPhillips Pete .... 54\nPure Oil   17%\nRadio Corp  10%\nRadio Keith Or    7%\nRem Rand   21%\nSafeway   Stores 33%\nShell Un   24%\nS Cal Edison .... 23%\nSouth Pac   35%\nStan Oil of Cal 39%\nStan Oil of Ind 40%\nStan Oil of N J 61%\nStew Warner .... 15%\nStudebaker   11%\nTexas Corp  54%\nTexas Gulf Sul 35\nTimken Roll .... 57%\nUnder Type   81%\nUn Carbide     93%\nUn Oil of Cal.... 22%\nUn Aircraft   24%\nUn Biscuit  22\nUn Pac   Ill\nU S Pipe  43%\nU S Rubber  47%\nU S Steel  100H\nVan Steel  27%\nWarner Bros .... 13\nWest Elec   139\nWest Un     44%\nWoolworth  44\nWrigley    67%\nYellow Truck.... 17%\n56%\n20%\n10%\n37\n1%\n54%\n15%\n18%\n9\n30'I\n29%\n7%\n32\n53%\n16%\n10\n7%\n20%\n32%\n23%\n23\n34%\n39%\n40\n60%\n15'A\n11%\n82%\n34%\n57\n78%\n2\n22%\n24\n21%\n111\n42\n45%\n98%\n26%\n12%\n136%\n43\n43\n67%\n17%\n57%\n21\n19%\n38%\n1%\n54 %\n16<\/\u00bb\n18%\n9\n30%\n29%\n7%\n33%\n53%\n16%\n10%\n7%\n21%\n32%\n24\n23\n35\n39%\n40%\n61%\n15'j\n11%\n54\n35\n\"57%\n81%\n92\n22%\n24%\n22\n111\n42%\n46%\n99\n27\n12%\n138%\n44%\n44\n67%\n17%\nWHEAT;\nOct.\n129%\n130\n128%\nNov\t\n128%\n129%\n128%\nDec.\n126%\n126%\n125%\nMay   \t\n127%\n128%\n126%\nOATS:\nOct\t\n48%\n49%\n48%\nDec.\n46%\n46%\n46%\nMay   \t\n46%\n46%\n46%\nBARLEY\nOct\t\n' 57%\n58%\n57%\nDec.\n55%\n56%\n55%\nMay   \t\n55%\n56%\n55%\nFLAX:\nOct.   ..\n179%\n179%\n179%\nDec\t\n179%\n180%\n179\nMay   \t\n180\n180%\n180\nRYE:\nOct\t\n91%\n92\n90%\nDec\t\n89%\n90%\n88%\nMay   \t\nCASH\n.   90%\nWHEA\n91\nT: No.\n89%\n1 hard\nMetal Markets\nNEW YORK, September 9 (AP)\nCopper steady; electrolytic spot and\nfuture 14.00; export 13.87%.\nTin steady; spot and nearby 59.00\nfuture 58.75.\nLead steady; New York spot 8.50-\n55; East St. Louis 6.35.\nZinc steady; East St. Louis spot\nand future 7.25.\nIron, aluminum, antimony, quicksilver, platinum and scheelite unchanged.\nBar silver steady and unchanged\nat 44%.\nLONDON,\u2014Copper, standard spot\n\u00a335 10s, off \u00a31; future \u00a355 lis 3d,\noff 18s 9d; electrolytic spot, bid \u00a361\n15s, off 10s; asked \u00a362 15s, off 10s.\nTin spot \u00a3262 5s, up \u00a31; future\n\u00a3261 5s, up \u00a31 5s.\n.Bids: lead spot \u00a321 18s 9d; oft\n8s 9d; future \u00a322, off 8s 9d.\nZinc spot \u00a322 17s 6d, off 7s fld;\nfuture \u00a323 3s 9d, off 5s.\nBar silver unchanged at 19 15-16d.\n(By Howard W. Blakeslee)\n(Associated Press Science Editor)\nROCHESTER, N. Y., September 9\n(AP) \u2014 A \"negative catalyst,\" a\nchemical to end mine explosions by\npoisoning the explosion before it\ncan start was seen today at the American. Chemical society as a future\npossibility.\nTwo of these explosion poisoners\nare known, it was explained by\nBernard Lewis of the U. S. bureau\nof mines at Pittsburgh, but they\ncannot be used because they would\nalso poison men. The pair are a\nform of iodine known as an organic iodide, and a bromide, which\nis unlike the well known medicine.\n\"Whether mine and other explosions can be effectively inhibited,\"\nsaid Dr. Lewis, \"by some such\nmeans as the addition of small amounts of substances acting as negative catalysts remains to be answered in the future.\"\nLEAD IN GASOLINE\nPOPULAR POISON\nThe most popular \"negative catalyst\" is the lead in gasoline. It\nslows down the explosion so the\nengine will not knock.\nA mine explosion comes when methane or fire-damp forms formaldehydes and peroxides, which join\nwith other particles to form a highly explosive chain of particles.\nSometimes one of these particles\nmay result in formation of 1,000,000\nexplosive chains during a fraction\nof a second. That is where the\n\"poison\" or negative catalyst comes\nin. Experiments at Pittsburgh have\nshown that a small amount of Inhibiting chemical in the mine air\nwill choke the first of these particles\nso that it expires without giving\noff its million-legged spawn.\nSMELTERS UP VA\nVancouver Wheat\nVANCOUVER, September 9 (CP)\n\u2014Vancouver wheat cash prices;\nStraight  Tough\n127%\n127%\n122%\n116%\n110%\nNo, 5 wheat   104%\nNo. 6 wheat     91%\nFeed     ~   '\u00bb%\nNo. 1 hard ......\nNo. 1 nor\t\nNo. 2 nor. \u2014\nNo. 3 nor\t\nNo. 4 nor\t\n125%\n125%\n120%\n112%\n107%\n101%\n88%\n77\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG, September 9 (CP)\u2014\nGrain futures quotations:\nOpen  High  Low   Close\n129%\n129\n126%\n126%\n49%\n46%\n46%\n58%\n56%\n56%\n179%\n180%\n180%\n91%\n89%\n90%\nand\nNo. 1 nor. 133%; No. 2 nor. 128; No. 3\nnor. 122%; No. 4 nor. 116%; No. 5,\n112%; No. 6, 97%; feed 89%; No. 1\ngarnet 123%; No. 2 Garnet 120%; No.\n1 durum 107%; No. 1 A. R. W. 119%;\nNo. 4 special 110%; No. 5 special\n107%; No. 6 special 95%; track 131%;\nscreenings $4.50 per ton.\n, ., .    .     _   ,   p. .      \u25a0 wasningion puce\nWant AdS Get ReSUltS same in Canadian\n2\nTORONTO, Sept. 9 (CP)-5Cn-\ncouraged by more peaceful tone of\nthe European uote exchanges, the\nstock market ventured forward today to record net gains in all groups.\nBrazilian held a gain of %, Walkers co.mn.on 1%, Distillers-Seagrams\n%, C.P.R. % and British American\nOil, Imperial and International Petroleum retained gains of minor\nfractions. The close was up for Dominion Steel B, Steel of Canada,\nUnited Steel, Dominion Bridge and\nHamilton Bridge. Massey-Harrls\ncommon and Cockshutt Plow were\nhigher.\nLosses were boarded for Alberta\nPacific Grain preferred, Dominion\nStores, Loblaw B, Western Flour\nand Canada Vinegars.\nSmelters led the base metal* wltji\na recovery of 3% points to 7\u00ab\\i,\nNickel gained 1%, Noranda 14 and\nHudson Bay %. Falconbrldgo sold\nat a new low and closed 20 -eat*\noff.\t\nBAR GOLD DOWN ONB\nMONTREAL, September 9 (CP)\u2014\nBar gold in London down one cent\nat $34.76 an ounce in Canadian fundi;\n140s 4d in British. The fixed $35\nWashington price amounted to tho\nMoney\n(By The Canadian Press)\nClosing exchange rates:\nAt Montreal \u2014 Pound 4.94 11-16;\nfranc 3.63; U.' S. dollar 1.00 1-64.\nAt New York-Pound 4.94 13-16;\nfranc 3.64; Canadian dollar .99 31-32.\nAt Paris-Pound 133.50 fr.; U. S.\ndollar 26.96 fr.; Canadian dollar 26.93\n% fr.\nIn Gold\u2014Pound 12s; U. S. dollar\n59.50 cents; Canadian dollar 59.46\ncents.\nMontreal Silver Quotations\nMONTREAL, Sept. 9  (CP)\u2014Silver futures closed steady and unchanged today. No sales. Bids: Sept. 44.30; Dec. 43.90; March 48.21B.\nC. N. R. REVENUES UP\nMONTREAL, September 9 (CP)\n\u2014Increase of $79,806 was shown\ntoday In Canadian National Railways gross revenues of $3,739,'\nfor the week ended September 7,\ncompared with $3,659,392 In the\ncorresponding week last year.\nOILS STEADIER AT CALGARY\nCALGARY, Sept. 7 (CP)\u2014Oil\nshares were steadier on the Calgary\nstock exchange today. Transfers totalled 38,305 shares. Calmont was 3\nhigher at 4 ; Home up 5 at 1.55;\nRoyalite $1.50 higher at $S7 and C.\n& E. up 5 at 2.18. Davies Pete was\nfractionally higher at 36%. Foundation and Okalta held unchanged.\n^\nlooking After Your\nNeeds in Stocks mi Bovfai\nPhone\n70\nWe have evsry facility ind \u00bbfl\nthe proper connections to giva\nyou an up to the minute, as well\nas personal service in the buying\nand selling of stocks and bonds.\nSTOCKS\n.WARD ST,\nP. E. POULIN\nBONDS\nINSURANCE\nNELSON, B. C.\n\u00abs$*\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab$\u00bb\u00ab\u00ab*$s\u00ab\u00abs**\u00ab\u00abs^^\nPOUND LOWER AT\nMONTREAL\nMONTREAL. September 9 (CP)\n\u2014Pound sterling declined 9-16 cent\non Montreal foreign exchanges today to 4.94 11-16. The French franc\ndropped 3-32 cent to 3.83 cents while\nthe United States dollar eased 1-64\nat 1-64 premium.\nWe Offer\nYou.,.\nPhone  144\n' QUICK PRINTING SERVICI\nGUARANTEED\nWORKMANSHIP\nASSISTANCE IN LAYOUT,\nDESIGN AND ILLUSTRATION\nADVANTAGE OF FAST\nTYPE-SETTING MACHINE!\nNEW PAPER STOCK OP.\nWELL KNOWN QUALITY\nTHE EXPERIENCE AND SKILl\nOF THE LARGEST AND MOST\nMODERN PRINTING ESTA6-\nLISHMENT BETWEEN CALGARY AND VANCOUVER.\nNelson Daily News\nCOMMERCIAL PRINTING DEPARTMENT\nXt&&S&SS$&StXz^^\n *-=-\u2014\nPAGE TWELVE\n\"Color In the\nCanadian\nRockies\"\nBy Phillips and Niven\n$3.00\n., Rutherford\nDrug Co.\nREGINA (CP)-An oddity here\nvas a two-pound green turtle, found\n,n a potato patch by three boys who\nwere pulling weeds' out of the garden. The turtle, nine inches long,\nfive inches wide and about 12\nInches in circumference, was searching for bugs at the time of its discovery.\nEmployment Head\nAsks Preference\nfor Local People\nJ. H. McVety Appeals\nBoard of Trade to\nCooperate\nAn appeal to the business community of Nelson, as represented by\nthe board of trade, to employ residents of the .district before new arrivals from the other provinces, was\nmade Thursday by J. H. McVety of\nVancouver, general superintendent\nof employment services- for the provincial government, at the board's\nfirst meeting of the fall.\nMr. McVety, who was accompanied by James Dronsfleld of Nelson,\nWildfire Coal\nHOT \u2014CLEAN \u2014SOOTLESS\nLump $10.50   Egg $10.00   Stove $9.00\nBurns Coal & Cartage Co.\n568 WARD ST.\nPHONE 53\nsuperintendent for the Kootenay,\nand who was Introduced by C. F.\nMcHardy, introduced his subject\nby laying down the principle that\nif a board of trade member were\nfound to have nglected his family\nin Alberta, he would be considered\nto have acted reprehensibly.\nOUTSIDERS BEING\nEMPLOYED\nThere was a curious situation in\nthis province, he said, for while employment was better than for years,\nthe reduction in relief was less\nproportionately than anywhere else.\nTwo conclusions could be drawn\nfrom this situation: first, that some\npeople were staying on relief when\nthey did not need to do so, and second, that outsiders were being employed, to the disadvantage of residents.\nThis might sound harsh, and it\nmight be asked if all the provinces\nwere not Canadian soil. It was all in\nCanada, of course, but under the\nconstitution each province was entitled to look after its own first.\nIf residents of the province were\nnot given employment, then they\nmust be taken care of by the method of relief. There were younft people coming out of the schoo\/s, and\nthey must be looked after. Mr. Mp-\nVety said he had the authority of\nthe minister of labor to discuss the\nquestion in this way.\nSASKATCHEWAN NATIONAL\nTo the question, \"What about Saskatchewan?\" the speaker said the\nspecial condition in that province\nwas recognized by British Columbia\nand the other provinces as a national disaster. If it was treated by\nthe Dominion government as a na\u00bb\ntional disaster, the other provinces\nwould have to pay their share. If\nNELSON DAILY NEWS .NELSON, B.C*-FRIDAY MOKNINQ, 8-PT. TO, 1.37.\nthe people of British Columbia employed non-residents in preference\nto thpse of their own province, they\nhelped reduce the cost of relief for\nthe other provinces and for the\nDominion.\nWhile this attitude looked selfish\nGOOD ONLY FRIDAY AND SATURDAY\nThis Certificate Is Worth $2.31\nThis certificate and 69c entitles bearer to one of our Genuine indestructable $3.00 VACUUM\nFILLER SACKLESS FOUNTAIN PENS, Visible Ink Supply, You SEE the ink! A lifetime guarantee with each pen.  Sizes for Ladies, Men, Boys and Girls.\n^fr\u00bb\nPLUNOER   FILLER-ZIP-ONE  PULL  AND  IT'S FULL\nThis Pen holds 200% more ink than any ordinary fountain pen on the market! You can write for\nThree Months on One Filling I No. Repair Bills! No pressure Bar ! Every pen tested and guaranteed to be unbreakable for life. Get yours Now. THIS PEN GIVEN FREE if you can buy one in the\ncity for less than THREE DOLLARS I This certificate good only while advertising sale is on,\nAlio $1.00 and $1.60 Pencils to Match Above Pens, 39e\nADD\ndc Extra\nFor  Mail\nOrders\nFLEURYS PHARMACY\nNELSON, B. C.\nIntroductory Offer\u2014This Pen Will be $3.00 After Sale\nLIMIT\n3 Pens to\nEach\nCertificate\nON REALLY QUALITY FOOD\nHEINZ KETCHUP\u2014Large bottles,\nPREPARED MUSTARD\u2014Libby's,\nDILL PICKLES\u2014Libby'i, large tin,\nZVi't, 2H\nDAINTY SODAS\u2014Christie's,\nPASTRY FLOUR\u2014Sperry's, Snowflake,\n5 lb. sack  29\u00a3\nCOFFEE: Chase & Sanborn's,     OQ\nboiled Salad dressing\u2014Kraft,\nOld Fashioned,                          00.\nBAKER'S COOKING CHOCOLATE\u2014\nVi lb. cake   19^\nPURE PORK SAUSAGES\u2014Swift's,\nLb. tin   25<\nHERRING\u2014Cloverleaf, tails, lb. tin,\n2 for  25<*\nCUT GREEN BEANS\u2014Nabob, 2 tins 250\nPEAS\u2014Broders' No. 5, 2 tins 25?\n2 bottles Certo and 1 Maywood silver\nplated Salad Fork,                      CC\n\u2022\nJELLY DESSERTS\u2014Sherriff's, all flavors,\n4 pkts 29?\nWINDSOR PLAIN OR IODIZED 1 r\nSALT: 2 pkts : \u00b1dC\nPUREX TOILET TISSUE\u2014         OO\nPICKLING SPICE\u2014All kinds,\nPICKLING VINEGAR\u2014Cider, Malt,\nWhite, best quality, gallon 'X>(\nSQUIRREL PEANUT BUTTER-\nBEAVER COFFEE\u2014Hudson's Bay,\nFACIAL SOAP\u2014Woodbury's, 3 bars 25?\nSTAR SPECIAL FLOOR WAXt-\nLb. tin  49?\nFRESH FRUITS\nVEGETABLES\nCARROTS\u2014 IM\nBEETS\u2014                                                         tgj*\nBANANAS\u2014Golden Ripe,          OP _\nGRAPES\u2014Red   Malaga, White  Malaga, fCA\nBlack  Rlbleri! 2 lb - **T\nPEACHES\u2014Freestone,           ,                   <ygA\nCANTALOUPS\u2014Medium size,                  fed\n3 for  Z>V\nGRAPES\u2014Concord,                                   \u00a3\u00a3A\n6 lb. basket        - ._ -. *Jr\nLETTUCE-                                                   IE*\nSWEET POTATOES\u2014 *\u00bbQ|*\n3 Ibs    , \"*r\nSQUASH-                                                        \u00a3A\nVEGETABLE MARROW-                             MA\nAPPLES\u2014Gravenstelns,                             \"\u00bb__\u00ab<\n7 Ibs  *W\nGRAPEFRUIT\u2014Medium size,                   25(\nGRAPEFRUIT\u2014Large size,                      <*t\\A\n3 for _. **r\nOkanagan Freestone Preserving Peaches\nare now In\nCAULIFLOWER\u2014Large white heads,       inA\n2 ib _ *yy\nCELERY\u2014Okanagan,                                 1QA\n2 Ilis *JrV\nTURNIPS-                                                   fCA\n6 Ib  '\u2022Vr\nRADISHE8 AND ONIONS\u2014                       InA\n3 bunches AVY\nPhone 10\nQuality\nICROCERYf\nPhone 11\nService\nit was the way the others looked\nat it.\nIf anything could be done by the\nbusiness men of this district to give\nmore employment to those alreadj\nresident, in place of outsiders, such\naction would certainly please the\nminister of labor, Hon. G. S. Pearson, he said.\nIt might be news to some members \u00abof the board that relief expenditure In this district was $50,000\na year, while the provincial expenditure on this object was millions.\n\"You will have to pay more taxes\nbecause of your good-heartedness to\nothers,\" was Mr. McVety's parting\nobservation on the employment topic, as he thanked the board for the\nopportunity of addressing it, and\nsaid he understood it was able and\nenergetic.\nGEORGETOWN, British Guiana\n(CP)\u2014British Guiana's treasury has\nbeen enriched by $58,000 paid by the\nestate of Frederick Scrutton as duty\non locally-held sugar shares, Scrutton, a master stevedore, and brother of the late Lord Justice Scrutton,\ndied in London, Eng., last April.\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nBOXLA SPECIAL-TICKET8 ON\nSALE C. P. R. TICKET OFFICE 10\nA. M. - 5:30 P. M. (2384)\nTRAIL SOCIAL\nBy MRS. GLENN QUAYLE\nROOM AND BOARD AT 919 Victoria street.   Phone 702-L.   (2316)\nElectrical   Contracting.     F,    H.\nSMITH, 313 Baker St. PHONE 666,\n(2176)\nGUY KIBBEE-YOUR FAVORITE\nCOMEDIAN AT The CIVIC TODAY\n(2326)\nPloardy boxes have arrived.\nMURPHY'S CONFECTIONERY\n(2400)\nSEE OUR LINE OF LETTER BOX\nPLATE8,   H1PPERSON HDWRE.\n(2349)\nTRAIL, B.C., Sept. 9\u2014Plans for\nan early autumn tea were discussed\nwhen members of the Arthur Chapman chapter I.O.D.E. held their\nopening meeting lor the season in\nthe Memorial hall Wednesday after-\nnoon. Mrs. F. E. Dockerill, regent,\npresided. At the conclusion of the\nbusiness session Mrs. V. C. Huycke,\nMrs. James S. Johnson and Mrs. A.\nSmith served tea.\nMrs. Warren Hall and daughter\nJoan, who have been in Trail for a\nfew days returned Thursday to\ntheir home in Kimberley.\nOpening meeting of the Senior\nWomen's auxiliary to St. Andrew's\nAnglican cnurch was held Thursday afternoon in the parish hall.\nPlans for the Christmas bazaar were\nthe main item of business under discussion. Refreshments were served\nby Mrs. Francis J. Glover and Mrs.\nCharles Beltner.\nMiss Louise Roessler, popular\nmember of Trail's younger set, who\nleaves shortly for Powell River\nwhere she will make her home, was\nguest of honor Wednesday evening\nat a delightfully informal social\nevent when a number of friends arranged a farewell party at the Country club house. Dancing was the featured entertainment, refreshments\nbeing served buffet style. Miss Roessler will leave Trail during the\nweek-end.\nMiss Hill of the Pend d'Oreille arrived in Trail Tuesday for a visit\nwith friends.\nGood attendance marked the opening meeting of the Women's \u00absso-\nciation of Knox United church which\ntook the form of a business gathering, when members met at the\nmanse. Circle meetings will continue\nnext week. Discussion centred\naround an early tea which will be\nheld in the church hall. At the close\nof business delicious refreshments\nwere served by Mrs. David Chalmers, Mrs. F. Wilby, Mrs., John For\nrest and Mrs. A. L. Garvin.\nMrs. Ira Minion, East Trail, ac<\ncompanied by Miss Mary Minion left\nWednesday for Pincher Creek where\nthey will be guests of Mrs. Minion's\ndaughter. They will return to Trail\nabout the end of the month,\nMrs.\nlie Women's league at the tea\nhour Thursday afternoon, the\nevent being held at her home. Those\npresent were Mrs. J. Hall, Mrs. W.\nLeinss, Mrs, James Devito, Mrs. W.\nGirard, Mrs. George Bergeron, Mrs.\nS. C. Stewart, Mrs. George Drew,\nMrs. White, Mrs. Aitken, Mrs.\nCharles Catalano, Mrs. Bruno Lcrose,\nMrs. Ernest Levesque, Mrs. N. Ru-\nelle, Mrs. K. Butorac, and Mrs.\nWoods.\nMr. and Mrs. Frank E. Dockerill,\nPine avenue, who have been vacationing at coast cities have returned\nto their home in Trail.\nMrs. C. Bradbury and daughter\nreturn to their home In Trail this\nweek from a vacation spent at\nNeedles.\nDr. and Mrs. Herbert Marks, who\nhave been spending a vacation at\ncoast cities have returned to Trail\nAn opening social gathering of\nmembers of the Ladies' aid of East\nTrail United church was held in the\nchurch hall Thursday afternoon. Ow>\nlng to the number of members who\nare still out of town the attendance\nwas low. Tea was served by Mrs.\nJ. S. Ross and Mrs. Cohrod Reik.\nOthers in attendance were Mrs. J.\nMcNeill, Mrs. J. Chambers, Mrs. W.\nE. Benton, Mrs. A. M. Adie and\nMrs. S. Lennox.\nMrs. I. E. Brlnson left this week\non a vacation which will be spent at\nthe coast.\nCherry slugs are bad this year.\nPhone Roynon for efficient spraying,\nn (2395)\nEAT WHERE THE FOOD 18 BEST\n-AT THE GOLDEN GATE CAFE.\n(2368)\nWanted \u2014Plums, Green Gages,\nHuckleberries, early apples. McDonald 'Jam Co. (2216)\nKITCHENER Florists. Wreathi\nand Sprays a specialty. Hoover St\nPhone 218-R. (2332)\nBURGESS RADIO BATTERIES,\n1000 Hour \"A\" BATTERY. Hipperson's. '    (2349)\nYOU'LL ENJOY A FRIED OYSTER SANDWICH AT GRENFELL'S\nTONIGHT. (2369)\nWOMEN'S HOSPITAL AUXILIARY TODAY AT NURSES' HOME\nAT 3 P. M. (2393)\nMARGARET GRAHAM, teacher\nof Piano and Violin \u2014 Classical and\nModern.   PHONE 799L. (2390)\nI will not be responsible for any\ndebts incurred by anyone but myself.  C. Malahoff, Tye, B. C.    (2389)\nAINSWORTH HOT 8PRINGS HOTEL, POOL, COTTAGES AND\nCABINS ARE STILL OPERATING,\n(2401)\nTHE  ZENITH  Washer carries a\nlifetime guarantee.\nMcKAY & 8TRETTON\n(2361)\nYmlr-Salmo Freight Truck Ser<\nvice\u2014Two trips daily, leaving at\n9 a.m. and 2 p.m.\u2014Phone 77, Elks\nTaxi  and  Transfer. (2155)\nRead a Magazine To-nlte. Colliers\n\u2014Hollywood \u2014 Photoplay \u2014 Ring\nand Western Story \u2014 on Sale at all\nNews Stands Friday. (2398)\nBOOST THE NELSON BOYS TO\nA WIN\u2014HOP ABOARD THE BOXLA SPECIAL AT 5:45. (2384)\nFUNERAL   NOTICE\nEmil Rose passed away Wednes\nday.   Body rests at Somers' Fun\noral  Home  until  Saturday  where\nservice will be held at 2 p.m. (2402)\nGREYHOUND   SUPER\nCOACH\nNELSON to:\u2014\nThese new \"highway cruisers\" are\nnow being operated over many\nroutes. They provide more room,\nbetter vision and unequalled riding comfort. They set a new\nstandard in highway travel.\nGreyhound Lines\nNelson Depot - 205 Baker St.\nPHONE 800        (2232)\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nFOR QUICK SALE - 9 JERSEY\nand Ayrshire cows. 3 fresh, 4 coming fresh. 13 head of young stock.\n(2405)\nLOST-PAIR OF GLASSES IN\nblack leather case. Return Daily\nNews. (2404)\nWANTED-HOW BOAT. IN FAIR\ncondition. Ph. 708Y. Box 273 City.\n(2399)\nURGES COST OF\nPRODUCTION BE\nNOT INCREASED\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 9 (CP) -\nWhile British Columbia's wage income and prosperity continue to be\ndependent on her ability to compete against other countries in foreign markets, it would be wise not\nto increase the cost of production\nby \"burdensome social legislation,\",\nH. R. MacMillan of Vancouver today\ntold delegates to the 11th annual\nCanadian Chamber of Commerce\nconvention.\nNone of British Columbia's chief\nexports Is a monopoly, Mr. MacMillan said. Each product meets stiff\ncompetition from goods equal or\nusable in quality produced on lower\nwage scales and in many intances\nenjoying a shorter freight haul.\nSince low wages prevail in the\norient and in Baltic countries whose\nproducts compete with those of the\nPacific coast province, British Columbia's legislation should be to\nreduce and not to increase the cost\nof living.\nFOREIGN CURRENCIES\nSLUMP AT N. Y.\nNEW YORK, September 9 (AP)-\nForeign currencies fell off gener\nally today, led by the French franc\nwhich reached its Jowest level since\nthe Paris monetary crisis of 1926.\nThe franc broke sharply in terms\no* the dollar, losing .0914 of a cent\nand closing at 3.63y.. The pound\nsterling closed off % of a cent It\n$4.94 13-16. The Canadian dollar\nwas unchanged at 99 31-32;\nWoman Shoots a\nBear at Winlaw\nWINLAW, B.C.\u2014Bears have been\ncausing plenty of trouble here lately, destroying the orchard trees.\nMany have been chased and fired\nat.\nMrs. W. Fischer of Lebahdo whose\ndog chased a bear up a tree, managed to shoot and kill it. The same\nafternoon F. Smith chased and fired at one back of Mr. Derrig's\nhouse.\nThe psychology of fashions has\nincluded some curious \"negative\"\ninfluences\u2014as for example, when\nMarie Antoinette was unpopular,\nwomen turned to long narrow skirts,\nW. Baril entertained mem-1 just the opposite of the queen's bil-\nbers of Nelson avenue circle, Catho- lowing costumes.\nSPECIAL TRAIN to Trail\nNelson vs. Rossland Boxla\nFINAL GAME\nTonight\nGame Called\n8:15 p.m.\nTrain leaves Nelson\ndepot 5:45 p.m.\nsharp\nRAIL TICKETS RETURN PLUS RESERVE SEAT\nTICKETS FOR CAME\t\n$2.00\nNow on Sals C.P.R. Ticket Office, 10 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. today.\nNOTE: Reserved seat tickets\nwill not be sold without \u25a0\nrailway ticket\nBattery Radio Sale\nStewart Warner, 6 tube, Mantel all-wave, 6-volt only.\nNo \"B\" needed. Reg. $94. Now  $65\nWind power for this Radio  $24.95\nStewart-Warner 6 tube Console all-wave. One 2-volt and\ntwo 45-volt only. Very economical. Reg $106. Now $65\nStewart-Warner 6 tube Console, all wave. 6-volt (No. \"B\"\nneeded). Reg. $139. Now  $82.50\nWind power for this Radio  $24.95\nVictor 7-tube Mantel all-wave. Reg. $105. Now .. $45\nVictor Console 7-tube all-wave. Reg. $165. Now .. $75\nVictor Standard 8-tube Console. Only  $30\nVictor 8-tube Mantel Standard. Only  $20\nALL OF THESE RADIOS GUARANTEED\nFOR SIX MONTHS\nSold on Terms and Delivered Free Any Place\nMartin Petersen\nTRAIL, b. c.\nP. O, BOX 779 PHONE8 901\u2014197-L-3\nOnce Again the Civic Centre\nComes to the Fore\nIt was indeed most disappointing to\nevery tennis enthusiast in the district\nwhen Jupiter Pluvius was most unkind to\nus last week-end and delivered so much\nrain. However, we fooled him when we\nbuilt our Civic Centre and it was only\nthe fact that two fine courts were drawn\nup in the Rink that the tournament was\nable to be carried out. Once again we say,\nthank you for our wonderful Civic Centre.\nBy the way, it is pretty chilly on these\nrainy evenings. I guess you had better\norder that ton of HILLCREST today.\nCompliments of\nHILLCREST COAL\nand the\nNelson Transfer Co., Ltd.\nA*\nMEBR-TON, Ont. (CP)\u2014Arthur\nMcGee, 52, machine tender foreman at the Alliance Paper Company, died from injuries received\nin the explosion of a glass cylinder\nhe was cleaning with water pressure.\nWant Ads Get Results\nJ. A, C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSuite 205 Medical Arts Bldg\ntkfiu caaTAKE IT]\n'^-ftimtij!\n:,.. these handsome socks I\nHOLEPROOI\nTheir finer quality Ii certified 6y t\nBelter Fabrics Tosllnrj Bureeu . \u25a0. ill\nrigid tosls. Every pair been the \"teste!\nSeal... another witness to whet mllllol\nol men have learned by long experienl\n\u2014 that Holeproof Socks not only fit al\nlook batter but wear far J\nlongorl   See  these  great     r'\/A]\nvalues  at..       __)v\/i\n75c and $1.0t\nPlain shades or newest patterns.\n\u00a3MORY'\u00a7|\nLimited\nTRY A WANT AD\nFINE BEAUTY\nSHOP\nIn best location In Nelson, doing]\na splendid business. First ('\nmodern equipment.\nThis Is a going concern with\neverything completo to step In,\nand go to work.\nTerms reasonable. For further]\nInformation write to\u2014\nP.O.BOX 1078\nYOUR OWN\nCIVIC THCATRC\nNOW TILL SATURDAY 7C^\u00bb1.m.t\nOn the screen for the first time! Octavus Roy Cohen's ace\ndetective in a'brand new clues-and-kisses yarn!\npTTV     If T Ti \"D \"E T-T    IN HIS MOST\nbUl      JtVlDDE\/C LOVABLE ROLE\n'TIM HANVEY'\nJ DETECTIVE\nWITH TOM BROWN and LUCEY KAYE\n\" _; PLUS :\u2014 ~\nAT 8:20 ONLY\nAdded Short Subjects\t\nFRED PERRY\nin \"TENNIS TACTICS\"\nMusical \u2014 \"SUNKIST STARS AT PALM SPRINGS\"\nWORLD EVENTS IN PARAMOUNT NEWS\nCOM INC TO OUR STAGE\n| MAJOR BOWES' JAMBOREE\n,.V    ...,..,.. .-\u25a0A....':.. _:<\u25a0.....\n '\ni_l_i_iii\n\u25a0Ml\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1937_09_10","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0413314","@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":"1937-09-10 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1937-09-10 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\/1.0413314"}