{"@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":"2022-05-11","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1938-08-23","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0414281\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" DEATHS OF FOUR IN PRISON CELL\nADD MYSTERY TO HUNGER STRIKE\nAT PHILADELPHIA; DOCTOR SAYS\nTHEY PROBABLY WERE SCALDED\n69 Acres Crown\nGranted Railway\nih the Boundary\nVICTORIA, Aug. 22 (CP)-By\norder-ln-council today the British\nColumbia government crown granted 69 acres of additional right of\nway to the Columbia It Western\nRailway company, at Eholt and\nGrand Forks, at $5 per acre, plus\ntransfer fees.\nMud Slide Puis\nC.P.R. Train Oil\nMain-Line Track\nVANCOUVER, Auf 22 (CP) -\nCanadian Pacific Railway officials\nreported tonight a \"small mud\nslide\" had derailed two wheels of\neastbound passenger train No. 14\na few miles west of Spences Bridge,\nnear Kamloops, Saturday night.\nThe slide delayed arrival here of\ntwo Sunday morning trains and\nthe Kootenay train \"about an hour,\"\nofficials said.\nTwo eastbound trains were also\nheld Up, one of them being the\nKettle Valley train, which arrived\nat Nelson 12.40 a.m. Monday, nearly two hours late.\nBuilding Permit\nTotal Rossland\nHowIs$U8376\nROSSLAND, B.C., Aug. 22\u2014Rossland building permits from January\n.1 to date total $148,376, J. A. McLeod,\ncity clerk, reported tonight The total was made up in 53 permits.\nContributing to the figure was\none permit for $80,000 for the addition, to Mater Misericordiae hospital. The balance was made up largely of residential construction. Extension to the high school was not\nincluded.\nTWO KILLED IN\nSUBWAY CRASH\nNEW YORK, Aug. 22 (AP)-Two\nmen were killed and 49 persons were\ninjured today when a subway train\nsmashed into the rear of another\ntrain on the upper east side of Manhattan.\nAn instant after the heavy impact, which smashed the coach windows and extinguished all lights,\npanic broke loose 25 feet underground.\nHundreds of men, women and\nchildren screamed and were trampled underfoot, caught for several\nminutes behind the pneumatically\nlocked doors of the two trains.\nThe two killed were the motpr-\nman of the second train and a passenger standing beside him, the latter Instantly. Their car was telescoped five feet into the rear of the\ntrain ahead.\nMayor La Guardla, who hurried\nto the scene in a police radio\ncar, knelt beside the dying motor-\nman as the surgeons amputated hit\nleg to free him, then ordered a\nthorough Investigation by police,\nONTARIO TORIES\nDEFER   ELECTION\nTORONTO, Aug. 22 (CP)-Ex-\necutive of the Ontario Conservative association decided here today\nto defer setting a date for a provincial convention to select a new\nparty leader until September 22.\nWarden Asserts the\nVictims Were\nFighting\nBODIES FOUND\nNUDE AND WET\nPHILADELPHIA, Aug. 22 (AP)\n\u2014A prison disturbance that started with an organized revolt\nagainst a \"monotonous\" diet of\nhamburger and spaghetti was climaxed today by the mysterious\ndeath of four \"hunger strikers,\"\nCoroner Charles B. Hersch said\nthe men \"evidently met with a\nviolent death,\" He ordered an\nautopsy,\nDr, Morton Crane, the coroner's\nphysician asserted the men died\n\"violent deaths\" and probably\nwere scalded by hot water.\n\"In the absence of an autopsy,\"\nhe tald, \"I am of, the opinion that\nscalding water somehow got Into\ntheir cells.\n\"All four exhibited the symptoms of nasal congestion that is\ntypical of death by gas, steam or hot\nwater. In the absence of a thorough post-mortem, I should say that\ndeath likely waa caused by hot water.\"\nAll the bodies were naked\u2014and\nwet\nWarden William B. Mills of the\nPhiladelphia county prison at\nHolmesburg said the four had been\nfighting among themselves, but that\nhe kriew of no rioting or other violence.\n\"These men were not murdered,\"\nhe declared.\nThe dead were Henry Osborn, 22,\nserving a three-year sentence for\nburglary; James McQuade, 26, serving -M,\u00abn\u00abnti\u00bb*\u00bbto- thae' years -iiit\nbeating a policeman and threatening a detective; Edward Hayes, 46,\nserving a 10- to 20-year term for\narmed robbery, and Joseph Walters,\na long-termer described as incorrigible.\nWarden Mills said the men and\ntwo others who were sleeping in the\ncells when the bodies were found\nwere \"agitators.\"\nThey were among a group of IS\nprisoners who had refused all food,\neven bread and water in a stubborn\ndemand for ice cream every other\nSunday, a voice in prison regulations, and banishment \"now and\nforever\" of hamburger, spaghetti,\ncheese and fried eggplant.\nFormer Marshall\nHeld lor Kidnap\nOLYMPIA, Wash., Aug. 22 (AP)\n\u2014Prosecutor Smith Troy said tonight a former small town night\nmarshal was identified by the victim's wife as one of four men who\nbeat Irving Baker, 37-year-old onetime coast guard lieutenant, in a\n'revenge abduction\" last Friday.\nWilliam K. McAloon, once a.\nnight marshal at Montesano, Wash.,\nwas arrested late today, brought\nhere and viewed by Mrs. Baker.\n\"She said \"That's the man',\" Troy\nannounced.\nStill in jail, their bonds raised\nfrom $10,000 to $25,000 after Troy\nexpressed belief \"public indignation\" might result in their harm\nif freed, were Dr. K. W. Berry, 54,\nOlympic society physician, and\nJames Reddick, 27, taxicab driver.\nLike McAloon, they were charged\nwith first degree kidnapping and\nassault. A fourth man, unnamed,\nwas sought tonight.\nSEND MAIL BY SUBMARINE\nBARCELONA, Aug. 22 (AP)\u2014The\nfirst voyage by a mail-carrying\nsubmarine between the separated\ngovernment zones was carried out\nyesterday, newspapers here reported. Special stamps were issued for.\nthe service. About 1000 letters were\nsaid to have been carried. f-\nNEGRO IN HINES CASE TELLS OF\nCHANGE IN COURTS FOR HEARING\nNEW YORK, Aug. 22 (AP)-\nA lanky, flashily-dressed West\nIndian Negro who \"took care\" of\nall arrests for Dutch Schultz' numbers racket testified today at the\ntrial of James J. (Jimmy) Hlnei,\nTammany district leader, that a\n1932 policy raid case was transferred from night court to day\nmagistrate's court 'where ha could\nget a better break.\"\nAttempting to show that Hlnes\nInfluenced judicial officials as a\npaid political protector for the\nracket, District Attorney Thomas\nE. Dewey called the Negro, Leo\nAltman, to describe the mob's procedure In handling court cases.\nA former sailor, doorman, elevator operator, waiter and clerk who\ndrifted into the policy business in\nHarlem, Altman also linked alleged\nassociates of Hines to the racket\nheadquarters on Lennox avenue in\nthe heart of New York's Negro\ndistrict.\nIdentifying a picture of Julius\n(Red) Williams, recanting state's\nwitness now held in the Tombs,\nAltman said he had seen Williams\nat the mob's hangout \"pretty often\"\nin 1933.\nCaught in a crossfire of prosecution and defence questions, Williams\nlast week repudiated grand jury\ntestimony in which he said Hines, in\nwhose district he was an election\ncaptain, sent him to racket headquarters for a job.\nLate in 1932, Altman said, he was\nemployed as court representative\nfor all the \"combination's\" banks\nexcept one. He received $100 a week\nsalary and was given \"no less than\n$1000\" each Monday to pay fines.\n t \u25a0\u25a0 1 Sll II11SI IIIB 111111 III IIIII 1111 SI 111 I\n13-YEAR-OLD JEW\nGIRL ON TRIAL\nFOR BOMBING\nJERUSALEM, Aug. 22 (AP)\n\u2014A 13-year-old Jewish girl who\nsat munching a chocolate bar\nwas accused before a military\ntribunal today of carrying a\nbomb which killed four Arabs\nand wounded 36 in a bus explosion here August 17.\nThree Arab witnesses testified they saw the defendant,\nRachel Koka, take the bomb\nfrom a bag and give it to Israel\nMishaii, 17-year-old Jewish boy,\nwho they said threw it at the\nbus.\nBoth the girl and the youth\npleaded not guilty. The death\npenalty is not applicable to\nthem in case of conviction since\nthey are under 18 years of age.\nilllllllllllllllllllllll.ill.lll.l.llllll.IIIII\nASSISTANT U.S.\nWAR SECTARY\nASSERTS ALASKA\nHIGHWAYISNEAR\nBack at Seattle, Says\nAlaska Is Keen on\nthe Plan\n'OLD-TIMERS' ARC\nOPPOSED TO IDEA\n8EATTLE, Aug, 22 (AP) -Alaska, the United States' \"last frontier\" with two-bit shoeshlnes and\ndollar haircuts, Is ready to trade\nIts isolation for closer contaot\nwith the United 3tatei via the\nproposed Canada-Alaska highway,\nLouis Johnson, assistant U, 8.\nsecretary of war, Said late today.\nJohnson returned In an army\nplane from Alaska with J. Monroe Johnson, assistant secretary\nef commerce, and Senator Reynolds (D-N.C), and Immediately\nplunged Into conference with the\nnewly appointed Alaska Highway\ncommission.\nAlthough he said he was forced\nto speak mainly \"off the record\"\nuntil he makes his official report\nto President Roosevelt next week,\nJohnson predicted the proposed A1-'\naska highway would be a reality\nwithin a short time.\n\"I don't believe northwest people\nrealize the immensity of this project and what it will mean. It will\nnot only open up our 'last fronteir'\nbut it will boom the Pacific northwest like nothing before,\" he said.\nHe saw the nesd of more thorough examination of the terrain\nthrough which the proposed highway must pass as he said he found\ndozens of large lakes and mountains heretofore never charted.\n\"This means the bridge building\nproblem is far greater than we\nexpected, but nonetheless it will\nbe a reality, I am sure. Of course,\nI can't speak freely until I have\nreported to the president.\"\nHe said he had no official comment on military significance of\nthe road.\n\"I encountered some opposition to the highway plan In Alaska, most of It from the 'old\ntimers', who wish to keep their\ncountry the last frontier with\nits 25-cent shoeshlnes and Its dollar haircuts. But the younger\nmen\u2014men who were born there\n\u2014are ail for It\"\nHe declined to say officially\nwhether Seattle would be the highway's southern terminus.\nTwo Cases at Trail\nUnder New Rulings;\n$75 Fine Imposed\nTRAIL, B. C, Aug. 22 \u2014 An\ngmendment to the Criminal Code\nof Canada covering reckless use of\nmotor vehicles in a manner danger\nous to the public was applied for\nthe first time in Trail city police\ncourt when two were charged with\nreckless driving. Mayor E. L. Groutage, justice of the peace, sat on the\ncases .in the absence of Donald\nMacDonald, city police court magistrate.\nMike Zoobkoff was charged as\na result of an accident Saturday\nnight when his car bit a lamp\nstandard on Rossland avenue,\nplunged over the railway tracks\nand through a fence on to property\nowned by G. Pasutti, 409 Rossland\navenue, damaging the garden, and\ncoming to a stop at the front steps\nof the residence. Zoobkoff was fined\n$75. He agreed to pay for damage\ndone.\nIn giving sentence his worship\nslated that whenever he was presiding in police court he would do\neverything in his power to protect the lives of the citizens, and\nhoped it might be a lesBon to others\nwho might mix gasoline with liquor.\nA charge of reckless driving\nagainst J. Wallace arose out of his\nspeeding through a stop sign, and\nbeing unable to produce a licence.\nHe was fined $20 and costs.\nPOSTPONE   FLIGHT\nMONTREAL, Aug. 22 (CP) -\nModifications to equipment of the\nnew British long-range monoplane\nAlbatross will necessitate postponement of her first flight across the\nAtlantic to Montreal and New York\nuntil the last week ln September,\naccording to a cable received today\nby Trans-Canada Air Lines.\nCOAST MAYOR TO\nASK WORK PLAN\nFOR SINGLE B. C.\nMEN IN JOBLESS\nTalks to Pearson by\nPhone After Meet\nWith Workless\nDECLINES SPEND\nANY CITY FUNDS\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 22 (CP)-\nMayor George Miller announced\nlate today ha would Interview\nHon. G. S. Pearson, British Columbia minister of labor, within\nthe next few days to Induce the\nprovincial government to establish a works program fors single\nunemployed who can claim domicile In British Columbia,\nThe announcement was made\nafter a special civic committee mat\nJobless representatives and conferred with tha minister In Victoria by telephone. The committee\nsaid they had failed to arrive at\nany solution of the problem of\nsingle unemployed, reported congregating here In large numbers.\nThe mayor said he would attempt to see tha minister when\nMr. Pearson was In Vancouver en\nroute to tha provincial Liberal\nconvention which opens at Kelowna next Thursday.\nThe provincial government policy\nwith regard to single merf la unchanged according to Mr. Pearson. Single unemployed men domiciled in British Columbia under\nthe Residence and Responsibilities\nact can apply to the government for\nrelief while those not qualified for\ndomicile in thla province may apply for transportation to the province of their origin, he said.\nMayor Miller reported the minister declared the government adheres strictly to the act in defining\n\"domfeile,\" and--advUfed the unemployed delegation against arguing\nwith the government\n\"In view of the minister's statement the committee felt it could\ngo no further,\" the mayor said. \"Apparently if the men are not in one\ncategory they are in the other and I\ndo not feel there is any justification\nto spend city money on more relief when they have two alternatives before them.\"\nFIRE UNDER CONTROL\nVICTORIA, Aug. 22 (CP)-Brit-\nish Columbia foresters reported today that the extensive fire burning on the south side of Cowichan\nlake was virtually under control.\nFire fighting crews were strengthened and back-firing .carried out as\nwind and opportunity offered.\nTo Fight Dread Polio\nIron lung recently acquired by the Trail-Tadanac hospital.\nVillagers go on Wagon\nMADRIS, INDIA, Aug. 22 (CP\nReuters)\u2014Voluntary prohibition\nhas been inaugurated in a group\nof villages Inhabited by Harijans\n(depressed classes) in Devakotah,\nSouth India. The entire Harijah\npopulations of the area gathered\nIn front of a temple and took an\noath to abstain trom drinking\nalcoholic or Intoxicating drink.\n(apt. Kendrick Is\nBack in England\nJLONDOHi Aii_r.M <AW\u2014 -Capt\nThomas Kendrick, British passport\nofficer in Vienna who was charged\nby Gertoany with espionage and expelled, arrived by airplane today\nfrom Budapest.\nA foreign office official awaited\nhis arrival at Croydon airdrome, and\nquickly left with him for the foreign office.\n\"I am unable to say anything at\nall about my arrest at the moment,\"\nCaptain Kendrick said. \"I must consult with the foreign office first.\"\nTWO DROWNED\nSOREL, Que.. Aug. 22 (CD-\nTwo men were drowned today when\nthe car in which they were riding\nplunged off the end of a ferry\nbarge Into the St. Lawrence river\nat lie St. Ignace de Loyola, opposite this south shore town.\nLATE NEWS FLASHES\n200-AeRE FIRE\nAT LOS ANGELES\nHOLLYWOOD, Calif., Aug. 22\n(AP)\u2014A two-hour fight by 100 city\nfiremen late today brought under\ncontrol a brush fire that spread over\nsome 200 acres in grassy hills northwest of the Hollywood Bowl. Efforts of firefighters were directed\ntoward diverting the flames from\nswank homes in the locality.\nCANADIANS INJURED\nKALISPELL, Mont, Aug. 22\n(AP)\u2014A touring Canadian family\nescaped narrowly today In the\ncrash of their automobile Into the\nside of a logging truck which was\ncrossing the highway. They were\nMr. and Mrs. Charles H. Howlet\nof Vancouver, B.C., a daughter,\nHelen, who was en route to Saskatchewan to teach school, a\nyoung son, Donald. Mrs. Howlet\nwas released after hospital treatment. The others received only\nsuperficial Injuries.\nTWO KILLED,\nTHREE INJURED\nOREGON CITY, Aug. 2 2(AP)-\nTwo were killed and three injured\nwhen a car was struck by a northbound southern Pacific passenger\ntrain at the Pope's hill grapecrossing\nnear here late today.\nGARDINER PLANE\n8ET8 RECORD\nQUB8NEL, B.C., Aug. 22 (CP)-\nAn airplane carrying Hon. J, G.\nGardiner, federal minister of agriculture and J. G. Turgeon, M.P.,\nCariboo, today set a record for a\nflight from Vancouver to this\nCariboo district centre, It covered\nthe 270-mlle distance In two hours\nand 16 minutes.\nHELEN WILLS MOODY\nNOT IN TENNIS TEST\nNEW YORK, Aug. 22' (API-Entries for the national singles tennis\nchampionships at Forest Hills, Sept.\n1-17, closed today and Mrs. Helen\nWills Moody's name was not on the\nlist Officials of the United States\nLawn Tennis association were at\na loss to explain why the Wimbledon champion had not sent in her\nentry blank.\nCORNWALL APPLICATION\nREJECTED BY QUEBEC\nMONTREAL, Aug. 22 (CP) \u2014\nQuebec Senior Hockey league rejected the application of Cornwall\nFlyers for a franchise In the league\ntonight. Reason given was the\nCanadian Arena company would\nnot grant the Q.8.H.L. any more\ndates at the forum than It had\nlast year.\nFIVE KILLED\nBERLIN, Aug. 22 (AP)-Three\nwomen and two men were fatally\ninjured today when an airplane\ncrashed into the roof of a store\nin the busy eastern Weberstrasse\nsection of Berlin. A two-seater military plane, attempting an emergency\nlanding owing to motor trouble, was\ncompletely wrecked and the store\nwas demolished but the plane's two\noccupants were not hurt.\nSIX FRENCH ARMY\nFLIERS ARE KILLED\nLYON, France, Aug. 22 (A?-\nHavas)\u2014Six Frsnch army flyers\nwere killed tonight when two military planes from the Bron base\ncollided at an altitude of 3300 feet\nand fell near the Berllet-Venlssl-\neux plants. The two planes burst\nInto flames. A seventh filer reported aboard one of the planes\nwas said to have balled out.\nJAPANESE FOLLOW UP AERIAL AND\nNAVAL RAIDS BY INFANTRY ATTACK\nn\nSHANGHAI. Aug. 22 (AP) -\nSwiftly following up severe aerial\nand naval bombardments, Japanese\nInfantrymen struck throughout the\nYangtse river sector today in a des-\nparate attempt to break the long\ndeadlock which has delayed the\nJapanese drive toward Hankow,\nChinese provisional capital.\nThe invaders particularly aimed\nat smashing Chinese lines to open\npathways to Nanchang, Kiangsi\nprovince capital KXMniles south ot\nKiukiang, present river base for\nthe Japanese operations.\nTo get at Nanchang the Japanese\nlaunched a circling overland drive\non which they plan to go south and\nwest around Lake Poyang, which\nlies south and slightly east of Kiukiang, and proceed up to Nanchang,\non the southwest corner of the lake.\nThe final drive is expected to be\ntimed with a simultaneous drive\nsouthward to Nanchang along the\nrailway from Kiukiang.\nRestaurants in Rossland to Be on\nSame Basis as Stores in Purchase\nWholesale Supplies From Truckers\n\u2666\nCafe Man Complains;\nTo Repair Grounds\nat Wading Pool\nSPRINKLING HOURS\nCUT  BY   COUNCIL\nROSSLAND, B. C, Aug. 22-Bert\nGodtlredsen, proprietor of Helen's\ncafe appeared before the city coun-\ncil this evening with the complaint\nthat while stores were allowed to\npurchase fruit and so forth from\nwholesalers bringing produce in by\ntruck, restaurant people who paid\nthe same trader's licence as storekeepers were not given this privilege unless the wholesaler took out\na pedler's licence.\nAfter considerable discussion it\nwas decided that restaurants should\nbe put on the same level with stores\nin regard to purchasing trucked\nsupplies wholesale.\nA complaint from Ernest Morrison that LeRoi avenue east of Georgia street was in a bad condition,\nwas referred to the board of works.\nR. J. Clegg, city solicitor, wrote\nthe council that section 38 of the\nShops Regulation act forbade the\nemployment in bakeries of employees with communicable diseases\nsuch as tuberculosis and so forth.\nASKS FOR TITLE\nHarold Fach, who recently paid\n$10 for an option on two lots between Cook avenue and the railway\ntrack, wrote the council that he\nneeded the title to the lots in order\nto get a home improvement loan. He\nwill be advised that his request will\nbe considered when more work has\nbeen done on the property.\nThe tender of $13 from Hals Stange\nfor lot 8. block 43, was referred to\nthe building committee.\nAlderman James F. Cooper reported the following distribution of\nwork for the past two weeks: Bulldozing, 12 man days; garbage collection, 12 days; sidewalks, 2 days;\nstreet maintenance, 47 days; parks,\n10 days.\nFor the f're, water and light committee the following distribution was\nreported:   Hauling   lumber   from\nflume, 3 days; laying pipeline to\nBlack Bear, 6 days', repairing water services, 9 days.\nIn order to put the grounds around\nthe children's wading pool ln shape\nabout 10 loads of soil will be brought\nup from the excavation at the High\n.ashBoL\nTAX SALE BYLAWS     *'  '\nThe following tait sale bylaws\nwere given i their first reading:\nThomas Nimsick, James H. Conroy,\nThomas Tongue, A. Slater, A. Erickson, R. E. Irvin, Albert J. Alba,\nCarl A. Hansen, Cecil Olmstead,\nJohn Euler, Bernard D. Carlton and\nDonald F. Newton.\nJack Ware offered $5 for an option\non a lot on Thompson avenue but\nthe city set the option price at $10.\nSprinkling hours were cut Sown\nto 8 to 9 a.m. and 6 to 7 pim. in the\nlower town, and 8 to 10 and 4 to 6\non the upper stretches.\nThe Robert H. Mason and John\nMueller tax sale bylaws were read\nthe third time and finally adopted.\nFollowing were the expenditures:\nFinance and relief committee $1803..\n27; school board account, $59.35;\nboard of works payroll, $444; fire,\nwater and light committee, $323.\nNELSON    M\nVictoria  ., 50\nNanaimo  47\nVancouver   52\nKamloops  - 50\nPrince George 40\nEstevan Point  46\nPrince Rupert 48\nLangara    50\nAtlin  42\nDawson 46\nSeattle 52\nPortland  SO\nSan Francisco 56\nSpokane    52\nLos Angeles _ 64\nMin. Max.\n58\n74\n66\n62\n74\n70\n74\n66\n76\n62\n77\nKelowna  51\nPenticton 46\nGrand Forks  50\nKaslo 45\nCranbrook   37\nCalgary  40\nEdmonton - 36\nSwift Current  38\nMoorr Jaw 46\nPnnee Albert 48\nSaskatoon  -. 48\nQu'Appelle  40\nWinnipeg    50\nForecast, Kootenay\u2014Fresh northerly winds, partly cloudy, not much\nchange in temperature.\n76\n71\n64\n72\n64\n70\n70\n78\nHORSE DISEASE\nCASE AT FERNIE\nFERNIE, B. C, Aug. 22-Fernle\ndistrict's first case of encephalo\nmyelitis, terrible horse disease to\nwhich a great number of horses\nIn western Canada are succumbing, was reported from the farm\n> of Robert Schram near Hosmer.\nBRITAIN STRIVES\nTO SAVE SPANISH\nPLAN; CABINET IN\nFRANCE CHANGED\nHitler Parades Naval\nMight for Hungarian\nRegent\nRUSSO-JAPANESE\nTENSION RENEWED\nSI Summoned for\nWearing Topless\nBathing Trunks\nVILLE LaSALLE, Que., Aug. 22\n(CP)\u2014Police of this Montreal suburb handed summons to 51 men\nover the week-end for loitering on\nthe waterfront without a top to\ntheir bathing trunks.\nBy The Canadian Press\nGreat Britain today brought Its\nbest diplomatic brains to bear on\nthe problem of keeping the Spanish non-intervention structure\nfrom complete collapse as a result of Insurgent General Franco's\nunfavorable reply to the foreign\ntroops withdrawal plan.\nIn France, powerful Socialist.\nCommunist and Labor opposition\nrose against Premier Daladier foi*\nlowing his proposal to scrap tha\n40-hour week as a means of\nstrengthening national defences\nand stimulating business, -\nAt Kiel, Germany, Chancellor\nHitler produced the greatest Nail\nnaval display so far for tha benefit of Admiral Nicholas Horthy,\nregent of Hungary, whose nation\nhe would have come within the\nReich sphere of Influence.\nThe foreign ministers of the Little\nEntente, Czechoslovakia, Rumania\nand Yugoslavia, meeting at Bled, de.\ncided to hold another session today\nto attempt to find a compromise\nwhich would satisfy Hungary whose\nleaders remained cool to offers ot\narms equality, a non-aggression pact\nand assurance that her minorities;\nwould be well-treated. One Rumania\nofficial suggested that Germany\nmight not wish Hungary to sign a\nnon-aggression pact with the Czechs\nuntil the Sudeten minority question :\nis settled.\nIn Tokyo, newspapers received\nreports > that Russia  was  active]\nassisting and directing the Chinese\ndefence against the Japanese drive   ]\non Hankow. Meanwhile, Japan lodged two strong protests to Moscow,   j\nindicating only slight improvement\nin  Russo-Japanese  relations since\nAugust  11  when  a  truce  ended\nfrontier fighting.\nIn Spain, the Barcelona govern,\nment claimed its troops fought back\ninsurgent offensives on three fronts.\nReports from the Orient said Japan,\nese divisions struck at Chinese lines\nthroughout the Yangtse river sector\nin an effort to break the deadlock\nwhich has stalled the drive on Han-\nkow. British troops and authorities'\ncontinued to struggle against the\nspread of strife and disorder in the\nHoly Land.\nHENLEIN HOLDS A\nFULL DRESS MEETING\nPRAHA, Aug. 22 (AP)-Konrad\nHenlein, sitting at a desk used often,\nby the late King Edward VII. ot.\nGreat Britain, held a full dress coun-\ncil meeting tonight while reporta ,\nwere current of an impending definite turn in negotiations between hia\nSudeten German followers and the\nCzechoslovak government.\nThe meeting, attended by a dozen\nof Henlein's ranking leaders, took\nplace in the historic Weimar hotel\nat Magisnbad where the late king\nwrote \"numerous papers during pro-\ntracted visits between 1903 and\n1909.\nOFFER HUNGARY\nARMS EQUALITY\nBLED, Yugoslavia, Aug. 22 (AP)_,\n\u2014Hungary's Little Entente neighbors \u2014 Rumania, Czechoslovakia\nand Yugoslavia \u2014 today offered her\nconcessions for which she long has\nclamored, but Hungary remained\ncool.\n(Continued on Page Two.)\n14-YEAR-OLD BOY AT CARDSTON,\nALTA., IS DEAD OF PARALYSIS\nCARDSTON, Alta., Aug,22 (CP)\n\u2014A 14-year-old boy died here this\nevening from poliomyelitis. He\nfirst complained of a headache\nSaturday, It was reported.\nWhite a doctor was Interviewing him In the afternoon the boy\nlapsed Into unconsciousness. Death\ncame at 7 p.m.\nAn \"Iron lung\" had been ordered\nfrom Calgary but the truck carrying the device was stopped\nsouth of the city, late In the evening,\nTWO NEW CASE8\nAT MEDICINE HAT\nEDMONTON, Aug. 22 (CP)\u2014Two\nnew cases of Infantile paralysis were\nreported today at Medicine Hat\nmaking the total for that southeastern Alberta area six and for the\nprovince 48 since July 1.\nThe new patients were an eight-\nyear-old girl receiving treatment at\nher home and a 20-year-old man\nwas brought to Medicine Hat hospital here from Walsh near the Saskatchewan-Alberta boundary.\nSix cases were reported over the\nweek-end, four at Medicine Hat,\none at Turner Valley and another\nat Rockey Mountain house ln Central Alberta.\n130 IN WEST\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 22 (CD-Number of infantile paralysis cases recorded in Western Canada this summer reached 130 during the week-,\nend with Manitoba and Alberta-'\nadding to the list\nNine persons have died this summer from the disease seven of them\nresidents of Alberta where the sit-\nuation is the most serious of the four;\nwestern provinces. At this period\nlast year there were 135 cases and\nfive deaths.\nDuring the week-end and today\neight new cases were reported in\nAlberta bringing the province's to*,\ntal to 48. Four occurred at Medicine\nHat, one at Turner Valley and one;\nat Rocky Mountain house. Alberta'ai\nfourth iron lung respirator, ordered!\nlast week from Toronto, arrived afc\nEdmonton today.\nManitoba provincial health de*\npartment announced five new,\ncases today, one at Winnipeg, two\nin suburban St. James and one In]\nnearby St. Boniface. The Manitoba,\ntotal Is 40, the same num'ier prevailing last year at this tl.nej\nSaskatchewan so far has only IS,\ncases and British Columbia 16,\n_:.:.   \u25a0-. ,\u2022'  - i \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0:.      '    '\n \u2014ffmmmmmmmm\u2014mmi\nn Atme*mmit\n^\nSmoke Eaters to\nDish Up Fighting\nCame, Says Coach\nTRAIL, B. ft, Aug. 23 - Trail\nSmoke Baters will be in there push,\ning against Rossland st the local\narena Tuesday night, according to\nAlex Stephenson, coach.\n\"We're not saving anyone for the\nplayoffs,\" said Alex, \"we're going to\ngive the fans another fighting\ngame.\"\nBradley will be in goal. The defence will comprise Preston, Kirby,\nSnowdon and Stiles. Kendall and\nDavy will play the rover position.\nThe forwards will be Sammartino,\nMerlo and Kirkwood; Harrison,\nSmith and Gallicano.\nMiller will not be on defence as\nhe is working nights and Temple is\nout of the game with an eye infection.\nSocial.. .\nNEW DENVER\nNEW DENVER, B. C.-M. A. Mark\nwas a recent visitor to Nelson.\nJ. A. Vallance of Nelson was a\nVisitor in town Friday.\nH. K. Johnstone and D. R. Grear-\nson visited Slocan City Friday.\nMr. ond Mrs. A. L. Levy, Mrs. E.\nAngrignon, J. Diaper, C. F. Nelson, G. McKean and Neil Tattrie\nnjotored to Edgewood to attend the\nLiberal convention.\nMrs. E. Tier and children are visiting relatives at Nelson.\nH. South of Kaslo was a visitor\nin town Sunday.\nMiss Nellie Johnson of Nakusp\nvisited town Sunday.\nEric Jacks and Orvllle Riley of\nCreston were in town Tuesday.\nA. A. Perrier left for his home\nat Nelson Monday.\nMrs, F. L. Beggs returned Saturday from the coast.\n^Irs. Stone of Burton was a visitor in town Sunday.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Norris of Nakusp\nwere guests at the home of Mr. and\nMrs. H. H. Pendry Sunday. Mr. Norris and Mr. Pendry were renewing\nacquaintance after 40 years.\nMr. and Mrs. Mayoh of Nakusp\nwere visitors in lown Sunday.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Greenwood and\nyoung; son of Slocan City were visitors in town Sunday to attend the\nunveiling ceremonies at the cenotaph.\nMrs. J. Balargeon of Slocan City\nwas a guest of relatives Sunday.\nCaptain Fitzsimmons of Nakusp was\na visitor in town Sunday.\nMrs. C. L. Hiltz of Nakusp was\na week-end guest of Mr. and Mrs.\nH. E. Nelson.\nI   Mr. and Mrs. H. Avison motored\nW Grand Forks Monday to visit\nI the former's brother, George.\nMrs. Brooks of Appledale is a\npatient at the local hospital.\nMr. and Mrs. H. A. Rose and two\nMOVING\nWilliams Transfer\n613 Ward St.       Phone 106\nSailboating on\nWest Arm\nGeorge Green, son Ot Mr,\nand Mrs. A. H. Green, li an\nardent sailboat skipper. Born\nin Nelson, he Is a graduate of\nNelson high school and now\nattends the University of Washington at Seattle.\nchildren, Jane and Bumpy, are\nguests of Mrs. Rose's parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. J. C. Harris from the\nPioneer mine, Bridge river,\nAmong those who attended the\nunveiling ceremonies at the cenotaph Sunday from Kaslo were W.\nL. Billings, G. D. Bowker, C, Creed,\nW. Whittaker, H. T. Hartin, Roy\nKrueger Frank Abey and J. Rud-\ndel.\nH. C. Nye of Slocan City is a\npatient at the local hospital.\nMr. and Mrs. C. Middleton of\nTrail were visitors ln town Sunday.\nSocial...\nSIRDAR\nSIRDAR, B. C. - Mr, and Mrs.\nR. J. Forbes of Creston are occupying the Henderson cottage at\nKuskanook.\nS. Millen of Creston was here this\nweek.\nW. H. Cartwright of the game department was here Saturday.\nBert Ingram who has been In Creston for medical treatment ts back\nhome.\nMiss Alice May Harlow is visiting her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. S. Wilson at Atbara.\nJoe Talarico of Creston visited\nhere at the first of the week.\nJames Mannarino visited Creiton\nWednesday.\nThe Misses Ethel VanAckeren and\nElinor Blair, Canyon, Muriel Thurston, Grace and Iris Bothamley of\nErickson are holidaying at the Twin\nBay camp.\nCharles Wilson visited Twin Bays\nSaturday.\nAbe Goodwin attended the K. P.\nlodge at Creston Thursday.\nCarl and Rube Laib of the Spokane mine visited Nelson this week.\nJ. S. Wilson, with Mrs. Wilson and\ntheir grand daughter visited Cranbrook this week.\nAlfred Bysouth of Kuskanook has\naccepted a position at the Yankee\nGirl mine near Ymir.\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON'S LEADING HOTELS\nHume Hotel\n\u25a0 ..Nelson, B.C.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor,\nSAMPLE ROOMS    :   EXCELLENT DINING ROOM\nEuropean Plan, $1.50 up\nHUME \u2014 Mrs. D. Johnson, Rcvcl-\nI stoke; Mrs. M. Dealer, Kelowna; C.\nI.E. Buyle, W. A. Campbell, A. G.\n[Charrctt, D. B. Thomas, C. Cliffe, G,\nIB. Jones, Vancouver; Miss B. H,\n[Bullock-Webster, Victoria; J. Downing, New Denver; R. Allison,.T. A.\n[Burns,   Medicine  Hal;   A.  J.   Bel\nmont, Trail; Mr. and Mrs. F. E.\nLoveday, Penticton; Mr. and Mrs,\nA. W. Thompson, F. H. Simmons,\nWinnipeg; Captain James Fitzsimmons, Nakusp; W. S. Hall, Taber; R.\nJ. Miner, Chicago; G. W. Miller,\nGrand Forks; J. A. Henry, Castlegar.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON, B.C.-TUESDAY MORNING, AUG. 23. 1933.\nNight Tennis Is\nSplendid Success\nin Its Premiere\nAn Innovation tn Nation sport\ncircles waa Inaugurated Monday\nnight when about a dozen tennis\nenthusiasts brought their racquet*\ninto play ln their first taste of night\ntennis at the Civil Service courts,\nbelow th* court house.\nTen 1500-watt lights were installed Monday, strung on two cables\nrunning lengthwise of the courts.\nFive lights ara on each cable.\nJ. A. Stewart, one of the most\nardent boosters of tha night playing,\nstated he thought the fights were\neven better to play under than daylight. Everyone found the lights\n'fine.\" In short, Mr. Stewart said,\nthe lighting was a \"splendid success.\"\nSocial...\nSILVERTON\n\u201e SILVERTON, B.C.-MT. and Mrs.\nT. H. Wilson were visitors to Edge-\nwood Sunday.\nSeamen Dewis wu a recent visitor to Nelson.\nMiss Margaret Johnson of Trail\nwas a weekend visitor to her home\nhere. \u25a0\nBert Carr of the Reno mine was a\nvisitor here Wednesday.\nMr. and Mrs. B. Miller had as\nguests from the Reno mine, their\nson and daughter-in-law, Mjr. and\nMrs. John Miller.\nPaul Larsen of Ymir spent Wednesday in town.\nMrs. E. Vandergrift ot New Denver was a visitor fn town Tueiday.\nMri. J. Scaia spent Sunday at\nNakusp.\nMill Minnie Wcttcrhuus of Nelson ll visiting relatives here.\nMrs. H. S. Stoolfire, Mrs, 3. Lyle\nPrickelt and ion, Pat, ot Spokane\nare spending a few day's hare.\nMrs. J. Senning entertained at the\ntea hour when guests Included, Mrs.\nH. Lancaster, Mrs, J. Scaia, Mrs.\nW. Hunter, and Mn. W. Monroe of\nTrail.\nMr. and Mrs. A. Ham and daughter, Mary Joy, were weekend visitors to Spokane.\nMrs. C. Norris and Miss B. Thomas\nof Nelion were guests of Mrs. G. T.\nIronside Tuesday.\nSocial...\nCASTLEGAR\nCASTLEGAR,  B.C. - Mn.  B.\nTrustier and daughter, Margaret,\nhave returned home after visiting\nMn. Trussler's parents at Galena\nBay.\nMn. J, Hardy and family of Trail\nare guests of Miss Jean Stainton\nduring the absence of Miss Stain-\nton's mother and brother, Mrs. J.\nStainton, and John, who left for\nVancouver Friday.\nMrs. A. Lampard, Mr. Fernqiilst,\nMrs, P, Owles ant Mrs,-A. Obelkof f\nand daughter, Betty, left Friday for\nVancouver.\nMrs. J. MacKinnon and sister,\nMrs. S. Drain, left Thursday for\nVancouver.\nMr. and Mrs. F. Woodrow and\ndaughter, Beverley, are visiting Mr.\nand Mrs. W. Jarvis of Tarry's.\nMiss Doris Sutherland has returned to her home at Kaslo after\nvisiting Mr. and Mn. Devitt.\nMrs. J. Hansen left Friday lor\nRenata, where she will vllit.\nMri. W, Dams and daughters,\nPearl and Dorothy, and son, Ter-\nryl, are visiting relatives in Slocan\nPark.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nP. and L. KAPAK, Proprietor!\nCommercial, Tourist and Family Trade Solicited\nROOMS $1.00 AND UP\nFree Parking NELSON, B. C. Phone 234\nTrail Footballers\nto Meet in Sudden\nDeath Cup Playoff\n- TRAIL, B.C., Aug. 22-When Oun-\nners failed to field a football team\nagainst Adanacs at Butler park tonight in a scheduled game of the\nSchofleld cup series, lt was decided\nto bring play to a close in two sudden death games. Adanacs drew a\nbye. Uniteds and Rossland will play\nThursday to decide which team will\nmeet Adanacs Monday for the cup.\nAdanacs Get Bye\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B.C., Aug.\n22 (CP)\u2014Blackle Black made his\nlast game of the season in the intercity box lacrosse league something\nto talk about tonight when he scored\n110 goals, but it didn't stop the New\nWestminster Adanacs from beating\nRichmond Farmers 32-21.\nBlack, Richmond forward, was\nthe first man to score 10 goals in\none game this season.\nThe victory gave Adanacs a bye\ninto the league playoffs and pushed\nthe second place Canadian champion New Westminster Salmonbellies\ninto a first-round playoff with Burrard Olympics.\nOccidental Hotel\nJ0b Vernon St.        Phone 897\nH. WASSICK, Prop.\nSPECIAL MONTHLY RATES\nGood Comfortable Rooms\nLicensed Premise!\nWHEN IT'S NEWS\nYou Read About It In the\nNelson Daily News\nEDGEWOOD, B C. HOTELS\n. f Wm m ',-. <;\nI Arrow Lakes Hotel\nEDCEWOQD, B. C.\nE. NIEDERMAN. Proprietor\nComfortable Rooms\u2014Good Meals\nLogical stopping place on the\n     road to Vernon\t\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\nNewly Renovated Throughout\nDllllGVin    HOtCI   a.   PATERSON.   late   ol\nColeman, Alta, Proprietor\n\"YOUR VANCOUVER HOME\"\nDufferin He\n900 Seymour St., Vancouver, B.C,\nWhen in SPOKANE You Will Enjoy Staying at the\n410 Riverside ||AiAf VAf UCV      Opposite\n;  Avenue      HOIOI T Villi A I   Paulsen Bldg.\nEVERY COURTESY SHOWN OUR CANADIAN QUESTS\nCHANCE IN TIME\nKETTLE VALLEY\nROUTE\nEffoctivo August 21\nService will be ai follows\nwhile dotourcd via\nSpencei Bridge\nLeave Dally Arrive\n10:05 a.m. Nilson 10100 p.m,\n10:00 a.m. Trail 0:40 p.m.\n2:66 p.m. Q. Fki.   5:16 p.m.\n(City)\n10:16 p.m. Ponticton 10:00 a.m.\n12:16 p.m. Vanc'vir  8:05 p.m.\nArrive Leave\nStandard Sleeper and Dining\nService.   Air-Conditioned\nDay Coach\nEffective Aug, 22\nTrain No. 45 will leave\nNelson 7:40 p.m. dally\nfor Trail.\nFor further particulars apply\nnearest agent or\nN. J. LOWES, C.T.A.,\nNelion, B.C.\nCroquet at a West Arm Summer Home\nDelightful scenes on lawns of Mr. and Mrs. A. D,.\nEmory's Willow Point residence.\nClyde Emory.and K. Clayton of Los Angeles.\nJoan, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm Thompson\nof Trail.\nMORE ABOUT\nW0RLD1R0UBLES\n(ConttnflW-From Page One)\n________________       .\nFortliiwet 20 y\u00abars Hungary has\nprotested to the world that she was\ndeprived ot arnjamejit equality by\ntha rigid great war peace treaties,\narid that har minorWea were ill-\ntreated tn Czechoslovakia, Rumania\nand YugoiljnrifiV'\nThese thwe nations offered armi\nequality apd non-aggreiilon pacti\nWhich Would grant much of Hun-\n[ary's long-standing ambitions. But\niuhgary refused to be rushed into\nany agreements.\nTWO FRENCH\nMINISTERS ELIMINATED\nPARIS, Aug. 22 (AP)-Premler\nEdouard Daladier rode roughshod\nover initial opposition to abandoning the 40-hour work week in\nFrance today by a swift government shake-Up replacing two cabinet\nministers who raised objections.\nDaladier said' longer working\nhours were necessary to aftengthen\nnational defences and spur French\nbusiness.\nBut new signs of bitter opposition\nby Socialists and Communists arose\nagainst the \"national defence\" premier's announced Intention of scrapping the shorter work week now in\neffect for an estimated 8,000,000\nworkers.\nAppointment of Anatole de Monzlc\nas minister of public works and\nCharles Pimaret as minister ol^ labor quickly ironed out the cabinet\ncrisis.\n. ! r~.        :        \t\n\\. \u2022_    \u2022\u25a0    '...    \u25a0\nSTEEL CANC AT WORK\nON BRIDGE AT SIRDAR\nSIRDAR, B. C.'\u2014 Fire broke\nout this week in the large deposit\nof logs between Slough Bridge and\nKootenay Landing on the north side\nof the C. P. track. Precautionary\nmeasures were Immediately taken\nby the railway company to prevent\nthe fire from spreading to the ashes.\nA steel gang consisting of 36\nmen commenced work at Slough\nBridge Wednesday laying heavy\nsteel rails on the track from here to\nWashout Creek. The headquarters of\nthe gang is Sirdar station and the\nwork is expected to take a month to\nco\/np!ete.\nSamples of ore and non-metals\nfor the Cranbrook Old Timers' reunion are coming to hand. Wilfred Williams and Alfred Allen,\ntwo of Dr. Rice's assistants from the\ngeological survey while here in connection with their work made a\npreliminary classification of samples\non hand to facilitate this which Dr.\nRice has offered to do in his own\ntime.\nThe geological survey party which\nhas been making an extensive survey in the Bayonne country has\ncompleted its work to the border\nabout two weeks ahead of time.\nSome of the party have transferred\nthe equipment to a point near Procter from where thsy will operate\nIn a northerly direction and across\nthe lake.\nRoad work on Ihe trail to Bayonne\nis now completed and most of the\ncrew, many of whom were from\nCreston, have been withdrawn.\nWork at the Bayonne is going\nahead normally with a slightly increased crew.\nProspects for good sport in this\nareathi^eai^r^xceilen^Ducks\nare in large numbers In Duck lake\nand shores of Kootenay lake and\nSlough. Most of the swan are back\nagain. Deer seem in first class shape\nbut are not nearly so tame as they\nwere earlier in the season.\nLocal ranchers are shipping tomatoes and oilier seasonal fruits mostly in less than car load lots.\nSocial...\nNakusp\nNAKUSP, B.C.-B111 Johnson returned this week from a holiday\nspent with relatives at Salmon Arm.\nN. Alpsen was a visitor to Nelson.\nMr. and Mrs. G. Scribner and\nfamily of Nelson were guests at\nPine lodge.\nMr. and Mrs. F. Horrey returned\nthii week from a holiday at Banff\nand Lake Louise.\nG. C. Martin left Friday for Vancouver.\nMr. and Mrs. R. Buerge and family have returned from a motor\ntrip to Wenatchee. En route they\nattended the stampede at Calgary.\nBishop Adams of Kootenay spent\nthe week-end in the district.\nJ. H. Beley of Rossland wai a\nvisitor to Nakuip.\nG. H. Gardiner Jr. left Friday for\nVancouver to Join hli wife, who is\nvisiting her mother, Mrs. P. H.\nSheffield.\nMrs. C. Addyman left Thursday\nfor Vancouver,\nP. A. Schlag was in town from\nFauquier Friday.\nSocial...\nSouth Slocan\nSOUTH SLOCAN, B.C.\u2014Mr. and\nMrs. L. E. Cox of Cranbrook, who\nwere on a motoring trip to Victoria,\nwere guests of Mr, and Mrs. L. B.\nCox for a few days on their return\ntrip.\nMrs. John Nixon entertained informally at tea Friday in honor of\nher guest, Mrs. W. Laurie of Cranbrook, when other guests were Mrs.\nH. Strand, Mrs. John Avis, Mrs.\nWilliam Nixon, Mrs. John Horn and\nMrs. Harry Nixon.\nMrs. C. G. Fenwjck has left to\nspend a week visiting her brother,\nC. Bellamy at Vancouver..\nMr. and Mrs. Peter Horlick have\nreturned from a two-week vacation at Vancouver..\nMrs, William Laurie and two sons\nof Cranbrook, who were visiting\nMr. and Mrs. John Nixon, have returned.\nMr. and Mrs. R. G. Elliott had as\ntheir guests Sunday, Mrs. E. Long,\nMr. and Mrs. Dave Gibbons, Miss\nJill Wigg and Harold Long, all of\nNelson.\nTwo Vagrant! Told\nto Leaye Town, Trail\nTRAIL, B. C, Aug. 23 -Walter\nMiller and Arthur Williams, no fixed\naddress, charged with vagrancy,\nwere given two hours to leave town\nwhen they appeared before Mayor\nE. L. Groutage, Justice of the peace,\nin city police court today.   ,\nThe late Andrew Carnegie once\nremarked he would like to have\nthese words for his epitaph: \"Here\nlies a man who was smart enough\nto employ men who knew more\nthan he.\"\nThe annual crime bill in the United States is more than $15,000,000,-\n000. according to the American Bar\nassociation.\nSURPRISE PARTY HONORS\nNEW DENVER COUPLE\nTWENTIETH ANNIVERSARY\nNEW DENVER, B. C.-Mr. and\nMrs. A.. L. Levy were tendered a\nsurprise party Monday August 15,\nthe occasion being their 20th wedding anniversary.\nGuests were all members of St.\nStephen's Anglican church, of which\nMrs. Levy has been organist for 30\nyears.\nRev. F. Browne, on behalf of the\nmembers present, made a speech\ncongratulating Mr. and Mrs. Levy\nand presented them with a lovely\ntea set.\nMr. Levy responded, thanking\nthem for the gift. Mrs. Browne presented the bride of 20 years ago\nwith a bouquet of flowers.\nThe evening was spent in singing old time songs, etc. Refreshments were served by several of\nthe ladies present.\nThose present were: Rev. and Mrs.\nF. Browne, Mr. and Mrs. C. C.\nClifford, Mr end Mrs. A. D. Trickett, Mr. and Mrs. C. Thring, Mr.\nand Mrs. L. W. Sells, Mrs. C. I. Vandergrift, Mrs R. W. Crellln, Mrs.\nD. Powell, Mrs. A. L. Harris, Mrs.\nH. H. Pendry, Miss B. Bell, Miss\nM. Meers, Mrs. B. Meers, Miss W.\nAlywin, E. Tingle and D. P. Morgan.\nISazVs Wife Is\nArrested\nThe famed flying fists can make\nas many as 12 successive leaps ln\nthe air before submerging into the\nMri. Maria Griebl, above,\nwife of the former American\nNazi leader, Dr. Ignatz T.\nGriebl, who was wanted as a\nspy and who fled to Germany,\nwas arrested in New York as\nshe prepared to rejoin her husband. She is held as a material\nwitness In the spy Investigation now being pushed by U.S.\nfederal   authoritle-\nFINK'S LTD.\nSemi - Annual\nCLEARANCE SALE\nLAST DAT\nTUESDAY, AUGUST 23rd\nYour Last Chance to Buy These\nThe Season's Greatest Bargains\nREADY-TO-WEAR\nFOOTWEAR\nwmwmm\nIn a Cranbrooh Garden\nJackie, age 5 years, and Bobby, 2 V, yean, ions ot Mr. and Mri.\nW. B. Mansfield, Cranbrook, B. C.\nCreston to Ask Change\nIn Etection of Trustees\nCRESTON, B. C. \u2014 Resolutions\nto be considered at the 1938 convention of the British Columbia\nschool trustees association at Kamloops in September will, include one\nfrom Creston asking that in consolidated school districts the methods\nof nominating and electing trustees\nbe changed from the present system\nof hearing and passing financial\nstatements and estimates and nominating and electing trustees all at\none sersion.\nWhat is asked for is that the\nfinancial features and the nominating ot trustees take place at an\nafternoon and evening meeting of\nthe ratspayors, and that voting on\ntrustees take place a few days later\nor a week later, with voting occupying all day\u2014as in provincial\nand village elections. This is the\noutstanding of .several resolutions\nCreston will present, which were\napproved at a special meeting of\nthe trustees Thursday, with chairman S. A. Speers in the chair.\nH. Gorrill was the lowest of several tendering for the Job of levelling and otherwise beautifying the\nschool grounds at Camp Lister.\nWith this work completed a'most\n$200 will have been spent in the\npast six months in betterments at\nthe soldier settlement school. The\ntrustees also favorably considered\nthe purchase of a safe.\nIt was decided to have the school\nbuses air conditioned. Drivers to\nbring the buses here will leave for\nVancouver about Thursday, and\nplan to take some instruction on\ndriving them before leaving lor\nCreston, to reach here about a week\nlater.\nPart time drivers will be Andy\nMiller. G. Mermet and L. Couling,\nwith X. Dupryon and D. J. Martin as reserves. At this meeting the\ntrustees selected the lighting fixtures, * and were able to make a\nsubstantial saving over the estl-\nmutes '\nWith the opening of a class for\nsenior matriculation another teacher was required, ond it was announced that Miss Prjsk, B.A., had\nbeen added to the staff.\nAn unlooked for cxpediturc is\nthe reshlngling the present tour-\nroom high school, for which tenders will be called at once. It was\ndecided to fit up a room in this\nbuilding for the use of the secretary and for trustee meetings. The\nchairman and trustees Constable\nand Cartwright were named a committee to look over the Canyon hill\nand all possible pressure is being\nbrought to bear on the public works\ndepartment to make some asked\nfor Improvements on the highway\nat that point.\nBRICADE ANSWERS\nCHIMNEY FIRE CALL\nNelson fire brigade answered a\ncall to a chimney fire at 1011 Observatory street about 9:15 Monday\nnight,' but nothing was done to it.\nas lt had burned out quickly. No\n________________\nNIGHT BALL\nWE8TERN INTER.\nYakima 2, Vancouver 3.\nTacoma 1, Wenatchea 4.\nSpokane 3, Bellingham t.\nASSOCIATION\nToledo 4, Kansas City T.\nFour Maps North\nVancouver Island\nAlthough the general .topography\nof Vancouver Island li fairly well\nknown, only a few sections of it\nhave been mapped ln detail, but\nrecently four new maps of a portion of the northern part of the island have been published by the\nsurveys and engineering branch of\nthe department of mines and resources, Ottawa, and are now available for distribution. These four\nmaps are mmed from prominent\ntopographical features occurring In\nthe region, and are Adam River,\nNimpkish, Schoen Lake and Wos\u00bb\nLake.\nOn the Woss Lake map sheet occurs tho Zeballos area, where considerable activity in prospecting and\ndeveloping gold properties has taken\nplace recently.\nThe areas mapped are all heavily\nforested and are of a mountainous\ncharacter rising from sea level to\nG300 feet or more. Considerable\nlumbering has been done along some\nof the larger rivers, but much of the\narea is still virgin forest of Douglas fir, hemlock, and cedar. Fish and\ngame are plentiful but there are only\na few roads and trails through the\ncountry. The rainfall is abundant\nand\u00abhere are numerous streams and\nseveral large sized lakes.\nFIRE DEPARTMENT\nANSWERS FALSE\nALARM, ROSSLAND\nROSSLAND, B. C, Aug. 22 -\nShortly before 9 p.m. Sunday, the\nRossland fire department was called\nout to answer a false alarm at\nFourth avenue and Washington\nstreet. This is the second in a series\nof false calls from that district in\nthe past while.\nB. C. RESORTS\nDELIGHTFUL\n: Spend  Your   Holidays, and s\n= Week-Ends at. the.,   .. 1\n=      OUTLET HOTEL      =\nS 'iProetef.'\"'. '. ...' 'S\nGood meals, friendly,, aervlce. Excellent fishing,. boating, hiking,\nswimming furnished cablm. Grocery store in connection.\n_____m\n mmm\n~wm\u2014-\nPage (roil Urges Immigration from\nBritain as \"Protection\" For Canada\nVANCOUVER, Aug; 22 (CP) -\nSir Henry Page Croft today recommended an Immediate increase in\nBritish Columbia's white population\n\u2014preferably through, immigration\nfrom the British Isles\u2014to provide\nCanada with security from attack\non the Pacific coast.\n' The British parliamentarian, who\narrived here from Prince Rupert,\nB. C, today after a tour of interior\nBritish Columbia studying immigration possibilities,. in an. address to\nVancouver board of trade, said:\n\"If nature had placed your great\nprovince with its preient population, a separate land, far out in the\nPacific, divorced from Canada and\noutside the British Empire, away\nfrom the shield of the royal navy,\nwhat'Would have been your fate!\"\nhe asked,\n\"But is it not equally true that\nyour immense territory' today so\nthinly occupied is a temptation to\nhungry nations, a glittery prize to\nthose who, in a world conflagration,\nmight cast their envious eyes upon\nlo fair a land?\n\"I believe, therefore, as a friend\nfrom the Old Land, that you should\nseek white population and seek it\nquickly. '\n\"More especially, I hope it may\nnot be too late to secure a reinforcement from the old country. This\nwill prove your real insurance and\nWAKE UP YOUR\nLIVER BILE-\nAnd You'll Jump Out of Bed in th\u00ab\nMorning Rat-in* to go\nTb* Urn ihould poor out two ponndi of\nliquid bilo Into your boweli daily, If this bite\nyour food doran't di kwL\nie bowete. Gu bloite up\nYou get eooitiMtod. Harmful\nInto the body, and yi\nIthotflowbf _ _\nIt just decays in\nyour stomacD. Yo _   _       _\npoiiotis n Into the \"body, and you fed iout,\nmak and the world looks punk.\nA mm bowil movrawnt doesn't always let\nat tha causa. You need something that works\non tha liver m well. It takca those cood, old\nCarter's little Liver Pills to set these two\nwunds of bilo flowing freely and make you\n.eel \"up and up\". Harmless and gentle, they\nmake tbe bile flow freely. They do tba work\nof calomel but have no calomel or mercury in\nthem. Ask for Carter's little Liver Pills by\nuna) Stubbornly refuse anything alta. 26c\n(Afjvt.)\n\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u00bb\nSand\nAND\nGravel\nfor A!!\nBuilding\nPurposes\nPHONE 701\nFAIRVIEW\nFUEL CO.\nmn\nwill give you a security here on\nyour great Pacific seaboard which\nyou can hardly feel today.\n\"Your strength is our strength,\nyour happiness means much to us,\nlet us cooperate in order that we\nmay gain peace through strength\n.and unity.\"\nHe had studied outstanding possibilities of development in Canada,\nAustralia, New Zealand, South Africa and the colonial empire, but of\nall .of them Canada in particular\nseemed to offer the \"greatest opportunities.\"\n\"This wonderful great area of\nBritish Columbia is foremost in\nhope if we can jointly bend our\nwills to the great purpose I have\nindicated.\" he said, after suggesting assisted British immigration in\nthe province.\nBefore the great war. 250.000 persons were emigrating from the Brib\nlsh Isles each, year.\n\"Had that movement with all the\nattendant circulation of wealth and\nstimulation of progress continued. I\nbelieve your prosperity would have\nreceived no serious check,\" he said,\n\"Had it continued we in the old\ncountry would have had no unemployment today.\"\nWith Sir Henry when he arrived\nhere today were Councillor R. S.\nDalglelsh, former lord mayor of\nNewcastle-on-Tyne, and Brlg.-Gen.\nM. L. Hornby of Lethbridge, Alta.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B.C.-TUESDAY MORNINQ, AUG. 23, 1938.\nTrail Oldtimers\nCLAIMS RETURN\nOF SEAL SKINS\nVICTORIA, Aug, '22 (CP),\u2014For\nthe first time since the Pelagic Sealing treaty was brought into force,\na judge of the exchequer court will\nsit in the courthouse here Sept. 12\nto hear a claim for the return of\nseal skins confiscated under terms\nof the treaty.\nJohn L. Thompson, merchant of\nUcluelet, B. C, a small town on the\nwest coast of Vancouver island, is\nclaiming 46 of 71 skins taken by\nfederal authorities following laying\nof an information in which it was\n'charged the animals had been shot,\nnot speared.\nUnder terms of the treaty Indians\nare allowed only to spear seals.\nKills One Burglar\nCompanion Wounded\nSEATTLE, Aug. 22 (AP)-Charles\nBureau, part owner of a Howell\nstreet tavern, shot and killed - one\narmed burglar suspect and wounded another early today when they\nbroke Into the rear of the tavern.\nPolice Identified the dead man as\nDonald Albert R. MaiDougall,' 23;\nhis critically wounded companion\nas Melvin White, 22, both paroled\nfrom the state reformatory at Mon\nroe.\nThese are the old timers who turned out to\nencounter an all-star bantam baseball teVim at Trail\nrecently. From left to right they are: Back.row\u2014\n\"Mystery\" Dipasquale, Steve Matovich, \"Toughy\"\nOarland; Doc Muir and \"Patchy\" Morgan. Front\nrow\u2014Freddie Lauriente, A. B, Clark, Joe Vanet-\nter, Maze, Leo Letcher, and James \"Byick\" Buchanan. Kneelihg in front are: Pete Mclntyre; A. W,\n\"Gus\" MacDonald and H. R. \"Hank\" Lauriente.\nBETTER  PLUMBING\nSERVICE\n\u2014PHONE 181\u2014\nB. C. PLUMBING\nand HEATING Co.\n\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nWHY SHE CQULDN1GETA JOB...\n010 VOU GET\nTHE JOB,\nMABEL?-\nNO, JUST THE SAME\nOLD STORY! THEY\nSAY THEY'LL LET\nME KNOW...\nIF ONLY IT WERE THE WINTER-'\nTIME! I NEVER HAVE ANY LUCK\nIN HOT 8EASTLY WEATHER\nLIKE THIS...\nMABEL, DON'T BE ANGRY. . BUT\nIT ISNT A MATTER OF LUCK.\nTHERE'S SOMETHING I'VE BEEN\nWANTING Tp TELL YOU.\n..SO TOMORROW TAKE A\nLIFEBUOY SHOWER BEFORE\nGOING OUT TO LOOK FOR A JOB\nEight Promotions\nNavy Announced\nLONDON, Aug. 22 <CP).-Pro'\n(notion of eight captains to the\nranks of rear-admiral is announced\nby the admiralty. Three of the new\nrear-admirals are placed on the re'\ntired list.\nThose promoted are Captain Edward Tj. S. King. Captain Arthur\nF. Pridham, Captain William E. C.\nTait,, Captain Albant B. Curteis,\nCaptain Philip E. Phillips, Captain\nDenham M. T. Befford, Captain William P. Mark-Wardlaw and Capt.\nRonald H. C. Hallifax.\nRear Admirals Phillips, Bedford\nand Mark-Wardlaw are retired.  .\nCollectors Gather for\nFort Massey Auction\nHALIFAX, Aug. 22 (CP) .-Cries\nof auctioneers broke the Victorian\nquiet of the old Odell mansion, in\nrooms reminiscent of the days of\nImperial soldiers, as more than $50,-\n000 worth of-antique furniture went\non the block today.\nCollectors from all parts of Canada and the United States moved\nthrough the halls of Fort Massey,\nhome of the Odell family whose\nmembers left an imprint on the\npages of Nova Scotia and New\nBrunswick history. They made bids\non Chippendale; Sheraton and Hep-\nplewhite pieces in rooms, where\nroyalty once was entertained.\nDEATHS\n.   By The Canadian Press\nTORONTO - William Robert\nRobertson, 63, pioneer in electric\nrailway industry in Ontario, whose\nmessage from Port Dalhousie to Toronto in 1914 was first sent by wireless on Great Lakes.\nMONTREAL \u2014 Alice Louise Parsley. 29, prominent in sport circles\nand sister of Al Parsley, sports\nwriter with Montreal Herald..\nMONTREAL \u2014 Fischel Cohen 90,\na founder of Shaar-Hashomayon\nsynagogue and a brother of Rev.\nHirsch Cohen, chief rabbi of Montreal.\nSPRINGFIELD, Ill-Billy Winn,\nrated among leading United States\nautomobile race drivers.\n\u25a0 VANCOUVER \u2014 Anton Hanson,\n78, retired British Columbia lumberman.\nLEESBURG, Va. \u2014 Dr. O. H. Titt-\nman, 88, former superintendent of\nthe United States coast and geodetic\nsurvey and president of the National\nGeographic society from 1915 to\n1919.\nMiss Claiison's Horse and Dog\nMcCracken Opens\nNew Procter Hall\nMonster Dance Draws\nCrowd From All\nDistrict\nPROCTER, B.C. \u2014 Procter Community'hall -was officially opened\nFriday evening with a monster\ndance, people coming from TraU,\nNelson and lake points.\nCharles Foster introduced E. S.\nMcCracken, divisional superintendent of the CP.R., who, in the absence of C. A. Cotterell, officially\nopened the hall.\nMr. McCracken congratulated the\npeople of Procter on their fine hall\nand gave credit to Fred Parnaby\non the work he had done, and as a\nremembrance, presented him with\nan enlarged, colored picture of the\nhall. Mr. Parnaby thanked the\ndonors for the presentation, assuring1 them of his never falling interest in the community for which\nhe and Mrs. Parnaby would always\nhold pleasant memories.\nThe.hall was decorated wift red,\nwhite and blue streamers, Union\nJacks, colored Chinese lanterns and'\nsweet peas, under the convenor-\nship of J. Coates ot Nelson, assisted\nby Mrs. E. Millor, Mrs. N. Schwarok,\nMrs. I. Janzen, Mrs. L. Exton, Mrs,\nN. MacLeod, Miss Faith Ritchie,\nMiss Phyllis Exton, Miss Rose\nSchwarok, and Miss Elsie Bennett.\nThose in charge of the dance hall\nwere W. R. Jarvis, W. Ahier and C.\nFoster. James Bichan was floor manager.\nRefreshments were \u25a0 served with\nMrs: J. McLeod and Mrs. W. R.\nJarvis as convenors, assisted by Mrs.\nS. Bonacci, Mrs. N. MacLeod. Mrs,\nJ. Bichan, Mrs. E. MacLennan and\nMrs. E. A. Jarvis.\nlOQI\n-PARE THREE I\nThese two pals are Jimmy\nand Prince, owned by Hilda\nClauston of Cranbrook.\nHilda Clauson of Cranbrook\nand her horse Jimmy.\nGood Snapshot\nFOUR PRISONERS DIE '\nIN \"HUNGER STRIKE\"\nPHILADELPHIA, Aug. 22 (AP).\n-Warden William B. Mills of the\ncounty prison at Holmesburg, where\na \"hunger strike\" has been in progress since last Friday, said today\nfour prisoners were found dead in\ntheir cells.\nEarlier Mills had said 13 of the\noriginal 650 strikers continued to\nrefuse to eat after going without\nfood for the week-end.\nNEXT DAY\nWHAT'LUCK TODAY,1 MABEL?\nI'VE GOT A JOB-A GOOD.\nONE! BELIEVE ME I\nNEVER RISK \"B.O\nAGAIN. I FELT SO C\nAND FRESH ALL t\nSO SURE OF MYSEtf\nN.OW READ WHAT\nMR. W. M. HILL\nFashionable tailor of\nColumbus, Ohio, says:\nHFEELSAFE INHOTTEStN\nWEATHER! NO ORDINARY\n\"In my business I can't afford to\noffend. It would cost me my best customers.- I always feel safe, though\u2014\nfor I bathe fegulirly with Lifebuoy;\nIt's a grand loipi and a real 'pick-\nme-up' at the end 'oi a busy day!\"\nLifebuoy's \"secret\" Is its sneclaf, eidusive purl-\nlying ingredient. Try itl See how a daily Lifebuoy bath gives lasting freshness\u2014makes you\nlook and feel extra clean. Protects you from\n\"B. 0.\" even in hottest weather,\nA LEVER PRODUCT\nCALQARY TO BE AIR\nBASE FOR R. C. A. F.\nCALGARY, Aug. 22 (CP.-Two\nsquadrons totalling nine officers\nand 175 men in all of the Royal\nCanadian Air_ Force will entrain for\nCalgary within the' next six weeks,\nto be stationed here permanently.\nWith their arrival, Calgary will\nbecome the sole prairie air base of\nthe permanent force. The only other\nair force detachments in the west\nare at Sea Island, Vancouver.\nCONDITION CRITICAL\nAFTER STABBINC AFFRAY\nWINNIPEG. Aug. 22 (CP)-Mike\nDeshytnyk, 23. farm hand, was in\ncritical condition in hospital here\ntoday from stab wounds. Frank\nShawara and John Donac are in\ncustody, charged with taking part\nin an affray.\nURCED TO PLANT TREES\nSTE. ANNE DE BELLEVUE,\nQue., Aug. 22 (CP) \u2014 Canadians\nwere urged today by the Dominion\nforestry expert to plant trees and\nimprove farming methods as the\nbest means of controlling flOodi and\nsoil erosion. .\ntne\nStands on His\nHead at 83\nDALE, N.Y.. Aug. 22 (AP)\nEighty  three-year-old  G e o r\nMaurer  waa   pleased  with  t__\nworld today. For the 21st tithe in\ntwo decades he successfully stood\non his head.\nAlthough he usually stands on\nhis head ln the spring to celebrate his birthday, Mrs, Maurer\nput a wifely veto on the feat this\nyear until yesterday, their 58th\nMiss Lillian Hermon and Edwin Hermon of Nelson.\nClever Dog\nLaunch German Ship\nKIEL, Gehnany, Aug. 22 (AP). \u2014\nThe latest addition to Germany's\nrebuilt navy\u2014the 10,000-ton heavy\ncruiser Prince Eugene\u2014was launched today at impressive ceremonies\nin connection with the state visit\nof the Hungarian xegent, Admiral\nNicholas Horty.\nThe hew cruisfcr glided into the\nwater after a dedicatory speech, by\nArthur ' Seys-Inquart, governor of\nAustria, and christening by Mme.\nHorthy.\nGRIZZLY CUB PICKS\nA FICHT WITH LION\nCALGARY, Aug. 22 (CP).-Sev-\nenty-five pounds of grizzly bear\ncub came to town Saturday night\nto complete the bear population at\nSt. George's Island zoo. Four months\nold, he was captured on a Canyon\nCreek farm in the Peace River several weeks ago.\nIt took him just two minutes after\nTom Baines, head animal man at\nthe zoo had turned him into the\ncage, to pick a fight with Leo, the\nAfrican lion and turn the whole zoo\ninto a bedlam of snarls.\nThis picture of \"Paddy,\"\nwhose owner is Don MacDonald, son of Police Magistrate\nDonald MacDonald, Trail, was\ntaken at Robson. Donald says\nhis canine can do all kinds of\ntricks and is a good hunting\ndog.\n *_______.___ ..._.. \u201e\t\nwedding anniversary.\nAsked if he was planning\nthe feat again next year, I\nreplied:\n\"You bet your life I am.\"\n______\nto try\nlaurer\nSchuschnigg Seeks\nProof He Is Aryan\nZAGREB. Yugoslavia, Aug. 22\n(AP).\u2014A Catholic priest of Kani-\nnik Solvenia, said yesterday he\nhad received from former Austrian Chancellor Kurt von Schuschnigg a request for the birth certificates of his grandparents to\nprove he is a full Aryan. The\npriest said the certificates would\nbe forwarded to Von Schuschnigg\nin care of the Gestapo (German\nsecret police) at the Metropole\nhotel; Vienna.\nFIFTEEN DROWN IN\nCANADA AT WEEKEND\nTORONTO, Aug. 22 (CP).-'Death\nby drowning\" was written today\non official records beside the names\nof 15 of 23 persons who died violently in eastern Canada during the\nweek-end, two days of warm weather that attracted thousands to\nriverside, and beach. Five persons\ndied in automobile accidents and\nthree others met death in various\nforms.\nPUSH BACK BRONZE ACE\nCAMBRIDGE, Eng., Aug, 22 (AP)\n\u2014Europe's \"bronze age\" was pushed back 1000 years to 2800 B. C. today by Professor W. G. Childe of\nEdinburgh university, who drew a\npicture ot civilization as it existed\nthen in Europe and the near east,\nbased on recent archaeological discoveries. *\n14,589 Receiving\nVets' Allowance\nOTTAWA, Aug. 22 (CP) -Total\nof 14,589 Canadian ex-service men\nare receiving war veterans allowances, Hon. C. G. Power, minister ot\npensions, said today. This is a grant\nof $20 a month to single and $40 to\nmarried men, who have seen war\nservice and who, by reason of handicaps and disabilities, are unable\nto maintain themselves. The annual\nsum of $4,754,710 is involved in the'\nallowance.\nOriginally the grant was made to\nveterans at the age of 60, provided\nthey were indigent. Later, men at\nthe age of 55 were admitted if they\nwere permanently unemployable by\nreason of disability. At the last session of parliament, the 55-year-\nlimit was abolished, and the allowance made to apply if the applicant\nwas unable to maintain himself due\nto physical handicaps or economic\npressure.\nARREST EX-POLICEMAN\nON DRIVING CHARGES\nPENTICTON, B. C, Aug. 22 (CP)\n\u2014Joe Cawston, former Dominion\nIndian policeman on Penticton reserve, was charged today with failing to return to the scene of an automobile accident, and with reckless\ndriving, and was remanded to August 25.\nThe charge was laid after a small\nboy, Johnny George, had been struck\nby a car, and seriously injured.\nNO PLANS FOR ROYAL\nVISIT TO CANADA\nLONDON, Aug. 22 (CP). - The\nPress association said last night it\nhad learned officially at Balmoral\nCastle that there-is no truth\" In the\nstatement that plans have now beert\ncompleted for a visit by the King\nand Queen to Canada next year.\nThe denial .followed recurrent reports that the King and Queen were\ncontemplating a three-month trip to\nCanada and perhaps the United\nStates.\nAIRPORT IS OPENED\nOTTAWA, Aug. 22 (CP). \u2014 The\nnew uplands airport, one of the finest in the Dominion and Ottawa\nterminal for the Trans-Canada Air\nLines, was opened officially Saturday by Mrs. C. D. Howe, wife of\nthe minister of transport, before a\ncrowd of 5000 aviation enthusiasts.\nNEW PLANES FOR COAST\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 22 (CP). -\nHon. Ian Mackenzie, national defence minister, announced today 12\nnew Blackburn bombing planes\nwould arrive here in about two\nweeks from Trenton, Ont., to augment the present number of planes\nat Jericho station of the Royal Canadian Air force.\nHBC Grocery Specials\nON SALE TODAY, WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY\n193\u2014PHONES\u2014194\nlit\n2#\nMARSHMALLOWS-\nWhlte or colored; Ib.\nCUCUMBER PICKLES\u2014\nHeinz;  bottle \t\nVINEGAR\u2014Pure malt or mt\\A\nwhite; gallon  \/3Jr\nLEMONS\u2014\nDozen \t\nRY-KRI8P\u2014Large\ncartons; each \t\nCHEESE\u2014Chateau;\n1-lb. carton \t\nCOCOA-Fry's l\/2s;\ntin \t\nCOFFEE-Maxwell\nHome; 1-lb. tin ......\nDATES\u2014Pitted;\n2 Ibs\t\n8ALMON-Plnk, 1s tall;\n2 tins \t\n35<\n49*\n29U\nIH\n39*5\n230\n25*\nMUSTARD\u2014Prepared,\nEmpress; t-oz. Jar \t\nFRESH MUSHROOMS\u2014\nPer Ib\t\n-Camp.\nTOMATO 80UP-\nbell's; 3 tins\nTEA\u2014Fort Garry;\n1-lb. carton \t\nGREEN CUT BEANS\u2014\nAylmer, 17-oz.; 2 tint ....\nORANGES\u2014Sweet and\nJuicy; 2 doz\t\nIVORY 80AP-Largest\nsize; 2 cakes \t\nLUX FLAKES\u2014 Large\ncarton\t\nPALMOLIVE 80AP-\n4 oakes \t\nICING SUGAR\u2014\n2 lbt .,\t\n30<\n25<\n2W\nlit\n22<\n23*\nm\nOur Phones Are Open for Business at 8:30 a.m. Daily.\nPhone Your Orders Early.\nTJMtfon*!^ dampim^\nINCOBPORATIO  IJ1 MAY 1870.\nAN ALL-DAY\nEVENT OF\nEXCITING VALUES\nVALUES in Women's Wear\n20 Only CIRLS' PRINT DRESSES. Sizes 6 to 14.       J(\\\nReg. $1,00 HiVZ\n10 Only BOYS' WASH SUITS. Zipper fastening.     CC~\nReg. $1.29  OD\n7 Only BABIES' SILK BONNETS. Silk knit with      TA\nwool linings. Reg. $1.00 DUC\nCHILDREN'S' VOILE AND ORCANDY DRESSES. CQ.\nSizes 1 to 3. Reg. $1.00 DUC\nCHILDREN'S COTTON COMBINATIONS. Sizes    QA .\n2 to 6. Reg. 59c ..'     DUC\n10 Only LADIES' PULLOVER SWEATERS. Long <M 40\nand short sleeves. Reg.\" $2.95 \u00abpl.4v)\n12 Only VOILE BLOUSES. Short sleeves, several   or\ncolors. Reg. 98c LOK,\n4 Only SILK CREPE REDINCOTES. Navy and (1 40\nbrown. Reg. $2.95 ._'..' \u00abPl.*tO\n14 Only SILK CREPE and SATIN PANTIES. Tea    OQ\nrose and white. Reg. 79c  OVy\nClearance of Men's and Boys' Wear\nMEN'S RAYON COMBINATIONS. Just a few suits in\nsizes 36, 38, 40 and 42. Wliite only. Button and    CA\nbuttonless styles  DUC\nBOYS' WORK SHIRTS. 18 only, sizes 13, 13 Vi and CA\n14. Blue and khaki colors DUC\nMEN'S SPORT SHIRTS. 30 only cotton sport shirts, AQ\nin a good variety of colors and sizes Wjtj\nMEN'S WORK SHIRTS. 22 men's chambray work    \u00a3A\nshirts. Blue, khaki and grey shades. Sizes 15 to I6V2 U\u00bbrC\nSPORT SHIRTS      190\nPLAY CAPS    19<*\nATHLETIC VESTS    190\nGOLF HOSE    190\nBRACES       19c\nFOOTWEAR\nMEN'S SPORT OXFORDS. Blue, brown and grey suede or\ntwo-tone elk. Leather or composition soles. flJO Aft\nReg. $4.45     i)L.VV\nCHILDREN'S PLAYTIME SHOES. White or natural elk.\nMost sizes from IOV2 to 3. Cushion soles. fljl \/JQ\nReg. $2.50   ..\" tpl.03\n_\u2014\u00bb NOTIONS \u2014\u2014\n9 Only LADIES' WHITE HANDBACS. CQ\nReg. $1.00 DUC\n25 pairs only LADIES' CLOVES. 1 A\u201e\nTo Clear at  liJC\n10 Only WHITE PIQUE COLLARS. TA\nTo Clear at  DUC\n4 pairs only CELANESE HOSE. 1A\n52 pairs KNEE HIGH CREPE HOSE. PA\nReg. 89c   OMC\n3 pairs only KID CLOVES. PA\nTo Clear at  DUC\nPICNIC SUPPLIES A\nTo Clear at  \"C\n100 pairs LADIES'SUMMER CLOVES. OQ\nTo Clear at  .... dVC\nHOUSE\nFURNISHINGS\nDEPT.\n$15.95 Reversible Wool Cn Ag\nRugs, 4ft. by 7ft.; each 97*73\n$2.49 Pottery Table\nLamps; ea<jh \t\n49c Scotch Felt Lino\nSquare yard \t\n16c Grass Mats, 18 by\nEach\t\n29c Grass Mats, 36 by 54; -inA\nEach   *~r\n$149\n330\n36  JO0\nHARDWARE and\nCHINA DEPT.\n$3.50 Alarm Clocks;     Ct At*,\nEach  9m**ts,7\n49c Decorated China Tea\nPots; each \t\n59c Floral Serving\nTrays; each '.\t\n35c Steel Wool\nPackage   \t\n$1.00 Novelty Fruit.\nBowls;  each \t\n29*\n39*\n19<\n29*\nDRYGOODS'\n39c H.S. Pillow Slips, Each  250\n16c Linen Tea Towelling, Yard    100\n25c Marquisette Drapery, Yard     loir-\n35c Marquisette Drapery, Yard   250\n$1.10 Homespun Drapery, 50\", Yard   650\n$3.50 Luncheon Sets, Set   $1.98\n29c Check Flannelette, 36\", Yard  220\n$2.75 Wool Auto Rugs, Each    $1.98\n19c Cotton Huek Towels, Each   130\n50e Cuest Towels, Each  200\n$25.00 Rose Taffeta Comforters, Each   $15.95\n69e Flat Crepe, Yard   390\ntotoittftl^tQ dWjmng\n p*\nPAH  FOUR-\nNEL80N DAILY NEWS. NELSON, B.C_-TUI8DAY MORNINO, AUO, 23. 1938.\nNEW YORK WRITER AND CANADIAN GUEST MEET AUTHOR\n...'\u25a0\u25a0'.      '\/' \u25a0        , -..-\u25a0.\u25a0'; \"j\nNewspaper Women Meet Margaret\nMitchell; Don't Recognize Her\nFew Exceptions...\nSending Child lo\nSchool Too Young\nIs Often Harmful\nBy bR. GARY C. MYERS, PH. D.\nDuring the summer I have received many letters asking me\nwhether it would be wise to enter\nthe child barely Jive, or who will be\nsix in four or five months, in regular (irst grade at school. In practically every instance my reply was,\n\"nn\".\n'j no bad the kindergarten is not\navailable for all children, but where\nit iB not. the first grade is hardly a\nfit substitute. The arguments usually\nadvanced in favor of the child In\nquestion entering school before six\nare that he plays at home with six\nand seven-year-olds who will go to\nschool, and that he will be lonely at\nhome without them; or that he needs\nthe social contacts of school, or that\nhe shows advanced learning ability.\nMore often the parent is moved because the child is so eager to go to\nschool. Of course there often is the\nfamily pride in a supposedly precocious child; to some parents having a child in school under age has\nsocial distinction, so they believe.\nIF CHILD IS ABOVE AVERAGE\nIf the child is very bright, he\nmay be the very one whose entering school should be delayed, except for the social contacts. All\ntoo soon he will be overexcited\nabout book learning.\nUnless the child under six is above\naverage in height and weight and\nabove average in enjoyment of the\nrough and tumble of the playground,\nabove average In poise\u2014unless he\nis physically and socially beyond\nThis Is the Time\nto Care for Iris\n>   Honsecleanlng time for Iris\nAugust should be house cleaning\ntime for iris. All the yellowish\nleaves and litter around the plants\nshould be gathered and burned.\nSanitation is of vital importance in\nthe culture of iris, for strict observance of it will prevent many diseases of the plants which otherwise\nwould be carried over Ihe winier\nand become epidemic the following\nyear.\nBe alert for the appearance of leaf-\nspit in iris. It usually develops soon\nafter the plants have flowered.\nThe best method of control is to\nremove and burn any leaves showing the markings, illustrated in this\nGarden-Graph.\nIf iris are at all crowded in their\nbeds, the leaves should be cut back\nto allow sun and air to reach the\nrhizomes.\n\u2022   *   \u2022\nEvergreens should be watched\nlor attacks of red spider, particularly during dry weather. Sometimes a strong spray of cold water\nfrom a hoee will control them.\nOtherwise use one of the contact\naprays or dust with sulphur.\nPloy Sidt\nROSEMARY LANE\nSoft fringe is the individual\ntrimming used on this play\nsuit \\vorn ,by Rosemary Lane.\nThe suit consists of white cotton shortt with front lacing,\nbolero jacket woven in shades\nof red, yellow, white and black,\nwith fringed edge and vest, and\nwith broad revers of soft yellow pique showing three large,\nself-covered buttons at the\nfront.\nA sash of the same fringed\nfabric ties at the waist.\nIf you don't care for anything so dressed up when you\nplay, four-piece gabardine suits\nare fine. They consist of shirt,\nskirt, shorts and slacks, and\nmay be had in white, navy,\nbrown, rust or faded blue. They\nwill fit you out for any weekend at the beach or country.\nhis years, it is hazardous to his physical and mental health to have him\nenter before the age of six. Far\nbetter that he should be over six\nthan under six when he starts to\nschool.\nEven for the six-year-old, the\nfirst weeks at school are a trying\nordeal. He must make so- many\nadaptations in the classroom and\nso many times more outside of\nschool. The eye-strain alone may be\nvery severe. You see the young\nchild's eyes are not yet well coordinated. Learning to read makes\nvery great demands upon his eye\nadjustments.\nWhat may be done for this child\nfrom five to six where there is no\npublic kindergarten? Enough parents who are interested might be\nable to -create sentiment sufficient\nto make free kindergartens available. Otherwise encourage this child\nto play with other children his own\nage. Go to any reasonable sacrifice\nto this end. You might have him\ngo to Sunday school. Read a great\ndeal to him. You and a few neighbors with young children might\nwork out a co-operative Informal\nplay group of which you and they\nwould take charge in turns.\nInspiration .\nTry New Beauty Products if You\nAre Bored With Die Old Routine\nBy JULIET 8HELBY\nThis is the time when we begin\nto be bored and the very thought\n| ol keeping up beauty routines is\nappalling. We are just going to take\nit easy and let things look after\n; themselves. Even the cool shower is\n1 an effort, and when we have refreshed ourselves in this way morning and evening, we feel it is about\nenough.  Well, we should  take it\n| easy but not at the expense of our\n\u00abood looks, and no one can afford\n,   i look  wilted when  it takes so\nlittle to present a crisp fresh ap-\nI pearance.\nOne of the very best sources of\nInspiration is a new makeup. Just\nput away all the things you have\nbeen using and get a' whole new\noutfit.   Taite   your   dressing   table\nI contents and put them in a box for\nanother time. Then keep all your\n' new  creams, lotions and fresheners   ln   the  refrigerator.   There   is\nsomething about the iced things that\nChanges your whole mental attitude\nabout keeping up.\nM.    There are any number of good\n|(ioaps, but for a change try a lav-\n1 ender scent. It is one of those that\nis always refreshing in the bath. You\ni must have a tepid tub bath, and\nwhen the perspiration is profuse, the\nI akin  needs  special  cleansing, and\n[\/.for   this,  we recommend   a  good\nbristle brush. You can get them\nwith the lavender soap in a bowl,\nand that combination, with the lavender bath salts or meal, will act\nas a real tonic. When you have finished the thorough scrub, turn on\nthe cool sliower and you are ready\nto wrap the big towel about you.\nThen finish with a quick sponging\nof the ice cold lavender cologne\nand a bit of dusting powder.\nIt is advisable to cream the face\nthoroughly after it has been scrubbed, so apply the cleansing cream\nfirst Then remove and use one of\nthe liquid creamy lotions. When\nthis is removed, you will give your\nface and neck a regular facial with\nthe tissue cream. It will soften and\nrefine the texture when all the dust\nand perspiration has been removed.\nThe final treatment is the iced toning. Have a bowl of ice and pour in\na tablespoonful of the toning astringent, then with the cotton pads keep\nup this application until there is a\ncool smoothness of the face and\nneck. When you are going to apply\nmakeup, put on some more of the\nmilky liquid. After it Is blended\nwell, it will make a perfect powder\nbase. Paste rouge is always nice with\nthis thorough treatment, and then\nthe powder, lipstick and eye makeup.\nEvery cup a delight\nTEA\n:\u25a0\" \u00bb' \u25a0\u25a0 \": \" \"\"\".   ;\n:\u25a0;\u25a0\u25a0'.,' ..-\u25a0 . A ...\nUnhappy...\nWife of Man With\nMother Fixation\nHas a Hard Time\nBy CAROLINE CHATFIELD\nDear Miss Chatfield:\nEighteen months ago I married a\nbrilliant young lawyei*\u2014the only\nson of a widowed mother. He is\nconsidered very well-off financially,\nand his mother has a sizeable income of her own. Except for the\nfirst two months of. our marriage,\nshe has lived with us and has been\nmistress of the whole situation. My\nhusband confides in her, goes to\nher with all of his troubles and\nsuccesses, and they sit and talk In\nundertones until I enter the room,\nwhen the conversation between\nthem suddenly turns to the weather\nand other unimportant things. My\nhusband's only recreations are golf\nand talking to his mother. I am utterly left out. I have been asked to\njoin women's clubs, book and bridge\nclubs, etc., but my husband objects\nto this, saying he can't afford such\nextravagance.\nIsn't there anything I can do. I\nlove mu husband and want to be\nhappy and make him happy, but I\ncan't do it with a selfish doting\nmother-in-law between us. If -she\ndearly loves her son, don't you\nthink she should help him to make\nhis marriage a success?\nUnhappy Wife.\nANSWER:\nUnhappy Wife, all the perfume\nof Araby won't sweeten that situation and nothing anybody can say\nwill Induce that mother to relinquish her grip on her sop who's\nsatisfied with things as they are.\nOf course, these sons with mother\nfixations should never get married\nbut they do and their poor wives\npay the piper.\nNow face the bitter truth and instead of raging inwardly and outwardly over something you can't\ncorrect, school yourself to accept it\nas graciously as possible: which\nmeans hardening your heart to your\nhusband -to tuch an extent that you\nwon't be hurt with him as you now\nUre. Although you are married, you\nhave your own life to lead and it\nwill be miserable or moderately\ncontented according to tbe pattern\nyou cut and follow. Leave off nagging about the separate establishment and tell your husband that\nsince you have no responsibility\nfor the housekeeping you have much\ntime on your hands and feel the\nnecessity for outside activities-and\nassociation with, people. Tell him\nthat your memberships in book,\nbridge and civic clubs can't cost him\nmore than a lew dollars a.month\nwhich you are sure he can afford.\nIf he refuses tell him you'll get a\nJob and pay your dues.\nYou should go out and take some\ngolf lessons, so you can join him\nin his hobby. This will give you an\nopportunity for private conversation with him when you play a\ntwosome and opportunity to widen\nyour acquaintance when you make\nit a foursome. M-I-L can't' trail you\naround thi goll course. You'll ,iave\nher blocked on golf days.\nNow I know every wife wants to\ntear her hair out by the roots\u2014\nand her husband's too\u2014when her\nmarriage turns out; to be a farce\nand a cheat. (That's what your marriage is when a husband puts his\nmother first.) But how much better\nfor her to calm herself, get busy\nand do something worthwhile with\nher time until the angels come ind\ntake the old lady to a land where\n\"there's no marriage and no giving in marriage.\"\nCAROLINE CHATFIELD.\nTrail Lady Wins in\n\"Hidden Hole\" Golf\non Kaslo's Course\nKASLO, B.C.-The \"hidden hole\"\ncontest played over the Kaslo Golf\nand Country club links during the\nweek-end preyed most interesting,\npractically every member of the\nclub making a try for tire prizes.\nMrs. Donald McDonald Of Trail\nwas the lucky lady while Charles\nR. Webster captured the men's prize\neach with a par on'the chosen hole,\nNo. 2.\nSunday afternoon tea was,served\nthe hostesses being Mrs. J. Coles\nand Mrs. F. S. Chandler.\nA \"Monkey\" contest is being arranged for the coming week end.\nSerial Story . . .\nTWO WORLDS\nBy MAUD McCURDY WELCH\nCHAPTER 23\nWhen Noel reached home, the\nnurse told her there was no change\nin Laurie's condition. Today had\nbeen one of her bad days, and the\nnight, had seen her grow steadily\nworse.\nThen she asked, \"Who is this\nJimmy she keeps calling for in her\ndelirium?\"\nNoel looked thoughtful. She didn't\nknow. She had never heard Laurie\nspeak of anybody by that name.\nThe truth was Laurie had never\ntold Noel much about herself. Noel\ndid know, of course, that she had\nbeen in love with a man she could\nnot marry. She thought it might\nhave been that the man Laurie loved\ndid not love her. That sort of thing\nhappened as Noel had reason to\nknow. .\nThere was slso the possibility\nthat the man Laurie loved might\nhave been married. Noel explained\nthis to the nurse, and told her what\nlittle she knew of Laurie's unhappy\nlove affair.\n\"Lots of girls are foolish enough\nto fall in love with a married man,\"\nKitty said, \"but somehow this girl\ndoesn't strike me that way. I'd say\nthat she's a very sensible type.\"\n\"She is,\" Noel agreed. \"But I\ncan't figure out what was wrong.\"\n\"We've ot to find this Jimmy,\"\nKitty Perry said. \"It might have\na lot to do with Laurie's recovery.\"\nNoel didn't have the slightest\nidea how to go about finding him.\nIf Laurie had only told her more\nabout herself, it might not have\nseemed so Impossible. But it was\ntoo late to think of that now.\nThe next morning, while Noel\nsat by Laurie's bedside, as the nurse\nwas having breakfast, the sick girl\nsuddenly opened her eyes and looked at Noel with recognition. For\nso many long hours she had been\nbabbling unconsciously, making\nqueer, heart-breaking sounds with\nher throat and throwing her hands\nabout wildly, even when under hypodermics, which Kitty gave her\nevery two or three hours.\nBut Laurie was conscious now,\nthere wasn't any doubt of it. Noel\nwas overjoyed. Did that mean that\nshe was better?\n\"Noel,\" Laurie breathed weakly.\nNoel leaned her head nearer.\n\"Yes, darling.\" she said brokenly.\n\"Get Jimmy\u2014for me,\" Laurie\nsaid weakly. \"Tell him I'll\u2014\" she\ndidn't finish.\nNoel said quickly, \"Where will I\nfind him, Laurie? Tell me and I'll\ngo after him at once.\"   \u25a0\nBut Laurie's eyes were closed, and\nonce again she was babbling in a\ndelirium.\nNoel rose, feeling sick at heart.\nIf only Laurie could have told her!\nKitty came in and beckoned Noel\nto come outside. \"I suppose you\nunderstand that after tomorrow\nDoctor Merridew and I will have\nto leave?\"\nNoel had of course known, but\nshe had dreaded for this moment\nto come.\n\"We will, nf course, get a nurse\nand another doctor before leaving,\"\nKitty said. She then went on to\nsay that Doctor Merridew knew a\nyoung doctor who was beginning\nto make a name for himself both\nto general practice and surgery as\nwell. \"We both believe he can do\na lot lor little Laurie,\" she finished.\nNoel thanked her, but she was\nworried. Laurie was so critically 111\nNoel wasn't sure but that it might\nhave i bad effect to change the doctor and the nurse. Still, She could\nOnly hope for the best.\nAs soon as Noel had a chance,\nshe went through Laurie's things.\nShe didn't like to do it, but there\nwas the possible chance that she\nwould find some clue to Jimmy's\nidentity and where she could lind\nhim.\nLaurie's things were in meticulous order. The few dresses hanging in the makeshift cloSet behind\nthe cretonne curtain were beautifully fresh. In the suitcase, she\nfound four pair of hose, neatly darned and washed, a little pile of very\nwhite starched handkerchiefs, all of\nwhich came trom the five and ten,\nand some fresh rayon underwear,\nbut no clue whatever to Jimmy,\nNoel wondered il there would be\nany chance ol reaching hlnj by a\npersonal ad in some of the papers.\nShe didn't believe that men ever\nread \"personals\" in the newspapers.\nStill, she thought, there Anight be\na chance that Jimmy would see it.\nSo she wrote out the following personal, and had it inserted ih two afternoon papers.        \u2022\n\"If Jimmy who Used to know\nLaurie Evans will call at  1148\nCourt street, he will lind that he\nis very much needed.\"\nBecause she hadn't been able to\nleave Laurie and go to the newspaper offices, Noel had the personals charged to Mrs. Blarsom's\nphone. Mrs. Blarsom caipe out and\nexpressed her opinion that it was\nboth silly and foolish. She demanded\nNoel to find out what the two \"personals\" had cost, and pay her immediately. This Noel did.\nShe couldn't help thinking that\nMrs. Blarsom must be about the\nmost self-centred person in the\nworld. Still, Noel concluded, with\na new tolerance born'of her recent\nexperiences, the poor woman had a\nhard life.\nNoel hoped she would have an\nanswer to the personals before she\nleft for the Peacock. But she was\ndisappointed.\nJust before she left, Kitty and\nthe doctor held a sort of consultation about Laurie's condition. Noel\nneeded but one look at their grave\nfaces to know that Laurie was\ngrowing steadily worse.\nFor the first time,Noel almost\ngave way to her grief. She looked\nat Laurie who was now lying motionless and so white she appeared\nas if she already might be dead.\nFor a moment Noel almost lost\ncontrol of herself. The nurse came\nover and hurriedly gave her a dose\nof aromatic spirits of ammonia.\n\"Couldn't you .take tonight off?\"\nshe asked. \"You're not in condition\nto dance and you shouldn't attempt\nit.\"\nNoel shook her head,, said hse\nwould have to go. The ammonia\ndid help her a little. So she made\nher way to the Peacock, finding that\na person could summon all her\nstrength and do the urgent thing\nwhen there was no chance to dodge\nlt\nAt last the erttiless hours al the\nPeacock were over and Noel and\nMaida were on their way back,\nNoel walking fast because of her\nsnxifitv.\nTto her intense surprise when she\nentered the sick room, Noel found\nRuth Chester there in charge. Kitty\nhad gone.\nRuth and Noel stared at each\nother in surprise. Then Ruth asked\ncurtly, \"Are you the girl who is\nsupposed to help out during the\nday?\"\nNoel nodded.\n\"What do you know about nursing?\" Ruth demanded.\n\"I know enough .o follow direc\ntions,\" Noel said with spirit.\n'.Well don't forget that you take\norders from me from now on,\" Ruth\nsaid, turning away.\nThen she turned back to Noel\nagain and demanded, \"Who's going\nto guarantee my money? I don't\nintend to work for what Kitty\nPerry was paid.' I know this is a\nkind of charity case, but my price\nis $8 and that's below schedule.\"\n\"You'll get it,\" Noel promised\nfirmly.\n\"All right,\" Ruth turned again,\nThen onCe mor-5 she turned to\nNoel. 'You don't look well at all.\nAnd you needn't think I'm going\nto have two sick girls on my hands.\nI want you to go to a doctor tomorrow and have him give you a\ntonic to build you up.\" She stopped then, and after a pause went\non a little sell-consciously. \"I don't\nmean for you to go to Doctor Jul\nIan Paige. He's too busy to be bothered with a tonic prescription. There\nare lots of good doctors in the Medical Arts. I recommend Doctor\nArcher on the fifth floor.\"\nNoel looked at her with a little\nhall-smile. She knew if she had to\nfollow Ruth Chester's directions\nand go to a doctor, she would at\nleast choose her own. And it would\nbe JUlian Paige.\n'   (To Be Continued)\nX-Ray...\nMethod Permits\nReading Through\nClosed Eyelids\nBy LOGAN CLENDENING, M. D.\nI always felt it was an oversight\non the part ol nature that she did\nnot provide means, to allow us to\nclose our ears as we do our :yes.\nThink ol the luxury ol closing out\nall ugly sounds, alt the noises of\nthe world. It would certainly promote comfortable sleeping, especially in city hotels, where I have been\ntrying to sleep for the last night or\ntwo.\nI suppose the strict evolutionist\nwould say that it was a protective\ndevice to promote the survival of\nthe fittest\u2014that we must have some\nwarning to wake the sleeper ln case\ndanger is near. So, for the sake of\nwhat might possibly happen, we will\nhave to near the honk of the midnight motorist in the street below.\nPerhaps science would devise\nsome method to overcome shut ears\nanyhow, as it has to overcome shut\neyes. I was startled to lind in a\nmedical journal the other day, an\narticle on reading with your eyes\nshut.\nThis is not one oi those hocus-\npocus medicine stunts, and does not\nmean that anyone can read with\nthe eyes shut under normal circumstances. It means the use-'ol the\nX-rays to stimulate the retina.\n01 course, the X-rays penetrate\nthe closed eyelids and throw an\nimage on the retina. A film \"on which\nare printed words, is passed between the X-ray tube and the closed\neyelids, and the letters can be teen\nquite clearly.\nHAS PRACTICAL U8EB\nThe idea has practical uses In\neye medicine. For instance, in the\nease of an old cataract, the doctor\ndoes not tujow whether the prolonged presence of the opacity has\ncaused atrophy of the retina or not,\nEyes do deteriorate from having\nlight shut oil Irom them. The cataract prevents the patlept Irom seeing\nprint or light and the doctor Irom\nexamining the retina with an Ophthalmoscope. Here the X-ray comes\nin. It can penetrate the eyelid and\nthe cataract both, and If it be turned on in such an instance and the\npatient sees light, then it is known\nthat the retina is intact and removal\nof the cataract will be followed by\na return of vision.   \u2022\nAlso in the case of foreign bodies\nin the eye. Small pieces ot steel can\npenetrate the eyeball and .remain\ninside. When small they may be very\ndifficult to locate, or even their presence at all may be doubtlul II the\nX-ray is turned on such an object,\nthe patient sees everything light\nexcept the loreign body, which will\nappear as a dark object in the Held\nof vision. By using a metallic grid,\nthe patient can point out the exact\nlocation ol this body inside the eyeball. ' \u2022\nInjury to the retina\u2014the seeing\npart of the eye\u2014can also be made\nout by the patient in this way, because lt appears dark to him when\nthe rays are turned on.\nHITCH-HIKERS FROM\nWEST REACH HALIFAX\nHALIFAX, Aug. 22 (CP). - Mrs.\nFlorae Hayes and her two daughters, Dorothy and Kathleen, arrived\nhere last night from Vancouver,\n24\\4 days after they set out to\nhitch-hike acrofs the continent.\nTHE ONE MINUTE PULPIT\nA man shall be commended according to his wisdom: but he that\nIs of a perverse heart shlll be despised. Proverbs 1!:8.\nCotton Lace Gown\nfor Evening\nWhite Cotton Laoe Evening Dress\nThis filmy cotton lace formal\nmight well be called the ideal\nsummer evening .gown.\nIt is designed in the peasant\nmanner with fitted bodice and\nlull skirt. And it is posed over\na petticoat slip ol white sheeting, which is also used lor the\nllully niching trimming on the\nskirt and the crisp flowers\nforming the decoltetage. \u25a0\nThe original mpflel was posed\nby Gisela Bennati ol Hollywood.\nNEW YORK, (CP)-Isabel Paterson of \"Turns With a Bookworm\"\nin The Herald-Tribune, entertained\nher friend Grace Luckhart ol the\nVancouver Province at the time ol\nthe visit to New York of Margaret\nMitchell, author of \"Gone With the\nWind.\" ' .\n(The total sale of the book Is 1,-\n690,000 if translations and foreign\nsales are Included, It has been published in 11 languages.) But let\nMiss Paterson tell it:\nGrace Lockhart didn't ask to see\nany celebrities, and as it's the oil\nseason, we thought one literary party was a pretty good break.\nArriving (at a New York allair)\nwe were just ahead of another guest\nobviously a southern girl. . . . She\nwas small and cute, with bobbed\nbrown hair, a faint suggestion of\ndimples and 'a smile.... Mrs. Marsh\nwas the name. . . . Her face was\nvaguely familiar, but that's no help\nto us.\nIn the course of conversation,'she\nsaid something which gave us a\nlead. . . We said brightly. \"You are\nfrom Atlanta, we take it\" . . . She\nadmitted the fact, without stress,\nand began an amusing story about\nthe southern network of cousins, and\nthe peculiar southern ability to remember them all to tbe ninth and\n10th degree, with real interest and\naffection. . . She said this was the\ntime of year when the cousins circulate most freely, and she had only\na day ln New York because she had\nto hurry back to meet all the new\nhusbands and offspring who could\nbe Introduced during the annual\nround of visits.\nShe had Just come from a series\nol barbecues, lunches, dinners, teas,\ndances and breakfasts, extending\nover half a dozen countries, sometimes with a range ot 200 miles a\nday. .. She tola how she had\nlirst met her own husband, at a\ndance, where he overheard her reciting a selected list ol relatives, and\nthat he said afterward, he came of\na numerous family himself and\nrecognized the fitness of things, and\nwhen she married him, she promised he should never want lor kin\n\u2014and he hadn't\n\"Atlanta,\" w\u00ab repeated. Intending\nto pursue some further Inquiry, \u2014\nBut someone was laughing at the\ntime and jogged our elbow gently\nand said: \"Don't you know this Is\nMargaret Mitchell?\"\nIt showed us up sadly, for ln\nfact We had never seen Margaret\nMitchell. . . And there were were\nasking her politely il she came Irom\nAtlanta!. . . Not that she cared. She\npreferred not to be recognized, as\nshe had made a Hying trip to New\nYork on business only, and we're\nprobably doing her a disfavor by\nmentioning it at all.\nKimberley Ladies'\nFirst Aid Classes'\nStarted for Test\nKIMBERLEY, B. C. \u2014 The ladies\nclasses in first aid staffed last week\nand are meeting twice a week preparing to enter the competition at\nFernie September 10.   \u2022\nJoe Shaw the instructor is in hospital. JOe McLay is taking his place.\nOils Bentley is captain of a team\nwith Helen Sutherland, Betty Bentley, Mildred Sortome and Irene\nShaw. Last year this team came second among four ladies' teams at the\ncompetition. Another team may be\nsent also.\n8MELLS GOOD\u2014TASTES GOOD\nExperts say that food that smells\ngood, looks good and tastes good\nis more easily digested.; So cooks\nare advised to choose foods that\nhave a pleasing taste, an appetizing\naroma and also appeal to the eye.\nBy ALICE LYNN BARRY\nHere's a bunch of items from our\ngrab bag, and we hope that you'll\ngrab 'em and make good use of\nsame. First of all, we want to answer\na question that has been put to us\nabout sardines or brislings. Why\nsardines, why brislings, and what's\nthe diilerence, ask many readers.\nWell, it seems that Sardinia, which\ngave its name to the little fish\ncalled sardine, now wants it back\nand wants it used only lor those\nfish caught in its own Waters. Smok;\ned sardines, as the Norwegians prepare them, are \"brislings\", and that's\nwhat Sardinia wants us to call them.\nSo whether it's sardines from the\nsouth, or bristlings from the north,\ntry the little fellows with crackers\nand pearly onions and cocktail\nsauce Ior a first course tonight\nHINTS ON ICE8\nHome-made ices are very cooling,\nand making your own is simple if\nyou know the secret. For best results, make ices with smooth mixtures and quick freezing. Too much\nsugar slow* up freezing and is responsible for grains. Mint ice is\nrefreshing and coolly correct To\nserve six, you'll need a cup of sugar, one-half cup light corn syrup,\none cup water, one-half cup fresh\nmint or mint essence, one cup unsweetened pineapple pulce, one-half\ncup orange Juice and one egg white.\nCook together syrup, sugar and water to 240 F. (soft ball in cold water).Remove from stove, add crushed mint leaves and cool. (If essence\nis used, add with fruit juices.) Strain\nadd fruit juices and pour into freezing tray of automatic refrigerator.\nFreeze for 30 minutes, then reT\nmove. Beat well, and add stiffly-\nbeaten egg White. Return to refrigerator and freeze until firm\nBanana savory with pineapple\nsauce Is making it debut here and\nnow. Clip this recipe for your file\naad serve lt soon, for it is a brand-\nnew way with ham. It calls lor\nthree lirm mananas, salt six thin\nslices cold boiled ham, bottled horseradish, thinly-rolled pastry, milk\nor melted butter and one hall cup\ncanifcd, crushed pineapple. Peel bananas and cut crosswise into halves.\nSprinkle lightly with salt Spread\nham thinly with horseradish. Wrap\na slice of ham around each banana\nhall, then roll each in pastry, leaving ends open. Brush lightly with\nmilk or butter. Bake ln hot oyep\n(428 F.) about 20 minutes or until\npastry Is browned and banana tender. Serve hot with hot, crushed\npineapple over the top ol each serving.\n8UMMER PEACH PIE\n(One 9-inch Pie)    \u2022    ,\n2 cups sliced peaches\ns\/, cup sugar\n1   package   orange   \"gelatin    QVt\nounces)\nHi cups hot-water\nFew grains salt\n1 baked 9-inch pie shell\nCombine peaches with sugar and\nstand. Dissolve orange gelatin in hot\nwater. Add, salt. When lukewarm,\npour over peaches.\nChill until slightly thickened.\nTurn into chilled pie shell. Chill\nuntil lirm and cover with three-\nminute meringue.\nCHOW CHOW (two quarts)\n1 large cauliflower\n18 small cucumbers\n1 pt. pickling onions (small)\n8 small green peppers\n2 small red pepers\n1 qt. vinegar \u2022\n2 tablespoons mustard\n1 tablespoon tumeric\n1 cup salt\nPeel the onions, let cook ten minutes ln boiling water, then drain.\nSeparate the cauliflower into flowerets and let soak in salted Water\nhalf an hour. Put the onions in one\nbowl, the cauliflower, cucumbers,\nand peppers, in another. Add the\nsalt to\" three quarts of water and let\nboil ten minutes. Skim-and pour it\nover the vegetables in the two bowls\nand let stand overnight .Pour, off\nthe brine and. put the vegetables\ntogether ln a preserving kettle. Mix\nthe mustard and tumeric with half\na cup of water and pour it over the\nvegetables. Add vinegar and let heat\nto boiling point Let simmer one\nhour, then seal in sterilized jars.\nCOUPLEMARRIED\nKASLO, B.C.\u2014A quiet and pretty\nwedding took place Thursday at 2\np.m. in St. Mark's Anglican church\nwher), in the presence of a lew\nIriends, Else Charlotte, third daughter el John Dinney ol Johnson's\nLanding, and the late Mrs. Dinney,\nwas united in wedlock to Arthur\nRaymond Raper, eldest son of Mr,\nand Mrs. A. C Raper of Johnson's\nLanding. A sister of the bride, Mrs.\nC. Anderson of Ymir was matron ol\nhonor while George St John Raper,\nbrother 01 the groom, was best man.\nThe bride was given ln marriage by\nher father.\nRev. C. 6. Gardner, vicar ol St\nMark's officiated.\nThe bride was attired ln a blue\ncostume with white accessories, the\nmatron of honor being gowned in\npale yellow with brown accessories.\nImmediately after the ceremony the\ncouple left by launch for Johnson's\nLanding where they will reside.\nQUINTS MAY GO BACK\nON VIEW TOMORROW\nCALLANDER, Ont., Aug. 22 (CP).\n\u25a0The Dionne quintuplet^ 111 lor\nmore than two weeks with a slight\nthroat inlection, likely will be on\nview in their playground tomorrow,\nDr. A. R. Dafoe announced today.\nPublic showings ot the quints stopped when they became ill.\nSWEET FRUIT 8ALAD DRES8INQ\nFour egg yolks, one-quarter cup\nvinegar, one-hall tablespoon dry\nmustard, three tablespoons sugar,\ntwenty-four marshmallows, one cup\nbroken nutmeats, one pint heavy\ncream. Beat the egg yolks and vinegar together, then add the sugar\nand mustard. Cook over hot water\nuntil thick, stirring constantly. Cool,\nthen add marshmallows cut into\nsmall bits, Also add the nutmeats,\nand finally the cream whipped stiff.\nMix all completely, and use at once\nover fruit and lettuce combinations.\nIt's No Surprise That\n.You're Constipated!\nII constipation has you bogged\ndown so you leel tired, sunk, all\nplayed out-it's time you asked\nyourself some queaUonsI\nWhat have you hod to eat\nlately? Just meat, bread, eggs,\npotatoes? Itt no surprise you're\nconstipated I The chance* are\nyou don't get enough \"bulk.\" And\n\"built\" doesn't mean alot of food.\nIt's a tind of food that lent consumed In the body, but leaves a\nsoft \"bulky\" mass In the Intestines and help* a bowel movement.\nIf this is what yon lack, your\nticket Is crisp crunchy Kellogg's\nAll-Bran for breakfast every day.\nIt contains the \"bulk\" you need\nplus Nature's great Intestinal\ntonic, vitamin B,. ' \u25a0-.-   \u25a0\nEat All-Bran every day, drink\nilenty ot water, and take a new\nease on life I All-Bran la made by\nKellogg In London, Ontario. Bold\nby every grocer.\nJ\"\nIe\nK\nV by\nSCRUBBING CUJTHES WHEN\nTHEREfe A SOAP UKE\nTHAT SOAKS OUT\n,WHAT A WASTE OF\n(ENERGY!I\n(SPEAK TO YOUR\nMOTHER\nCERTAINLY WISH MOTHER\nDIDN'T HAVE TO\n[WORK SO HARD\nEVERY WASHDAY\nPurity\nFLOUR\nMAKES  BETTER   BREAD\nFOLLOWING WASHDAY\n\/'HURRAY FOR RINSO AND A\nI  WONDERFULLY QUICK.EASV\n\/SNOWY WASH'LETS THROW\nAWAY THE OLD SCRUB-\nBOARD, JOHNNY AND\n60 TO THE MOVIES\nTHIS AFTERNOON\nCup for cup. New Rinso gives\nover 25% more suds\nEVEN in hardest water fat New Rinjo gives heaps more sods dtsa\nthe old. Active, longer-lasting suds that soak clothes snuringly\ndean in ss little ss 10 minutes... yet is safe even\nfor Overnight soaking. Clothes washed 'the safe,'\n\"no-scrub\" Rinso way last 2 or 3 times longer.\nRinso is recommended by the makers of 26 I\nfamous Canadian washers. Grand for dlshwash-l\ning. and all desoiog. t. LEVER hoductI\n\u2014-\n -'\"\". ''\"fHP\nippppp\nmrnmmmmmym.\nto'\nPif\niat\nKaslo Nets $100\nTo Hospital Aid\nKASLO, B.C.-A lawn lete on\nthe Victorian hospital grounds on\nWednesday afternoon drew a large\ncrowd of visitors, Kasloltes and\nmany from out of town.\n. Tea tables dotted the lovely lawn\nand were well patronized during\n|the entire afternoon. The \"white\n.elephant\" table was gaily decorated\nand successful. The home cooking\nstall was sold out before the day\n(tnded.\nMiss Dudley, R.N, matron ol the\nhospital, and the nursing stall in\nuniform, assisted the Ladles' Hospital aid, sponsors of the affair,\nv Visitors, especially from outside\npoints, wera shown over the hospital.\nThe Hartin ward came in for enthusiastic remarks. This ward was\nrecently refurnished with beautilul\n' steel iittings. the gift of Dr. David\nHartin of Spokane, who wished\nthis to be a memorial to his parents, the late Dr. and Mrs. Gilbert\nHartin.\nMrs. F. S. Chandler was fortune\nteller and was kept busy the en-\nentire afternoon, being assisted by\nMrs. J. N. Murphy as cashier.\nThe Janitor of the hospital, A.\nJohnson, also came in for his share\nof praise for the fine condition of\nthe grounds and for assistance he\ngave in preparing tables, etc.\nMrs. D. J. Barclay and Mrs. T.\nH. Horner were in charge of tea\narrangements. Miss Bernice Shaw,\nMiss Mabel Beck, Miss Clara Hor-\nVier, Miss Daphne Chandler and\nMiss Eleanor Horner serving tea\nguests, Mrs. Fred McGibbon collected entry fees at the gate. Mrs.\nJohn Paterson and Miss A. Hodges\nwere in charge of the home cooking\nstgll. Mrs. George Wellington and\nMrs. Frank Helme managed the\n\"white'elephant\" table. Miss Winnie Chandler was saleslady lor the\ntickets. A doll donated by Mrs. D.\nJ. Barclay was won by Mrs. F. V.\nWebber.\nMrs. F. S. Chandler, president of\nthe Ladies' aid, was general convener of all committees.\nNet proceeds will total around\n$100.\nMISS MUIR IS\nFERNIE BRIDE\nFERNIE, B. C. - Knox United\nchurch was the scene of a quiet\nwedding Saturday, August 20, when\n\u25a0 Margaret, third daughter ol Mr. and\nMrs. James Muir ot Fernie became\nthe bride of Frank Crawford, third\nsoii of Mr. ahd Mrs. William Henry\nCrawford of Creston, B. C. The Rev.\nJ. H. Matthews performed the ceremony.\nAttended by her sister, Mrs. Thora\nMcNab, the bride wore a smart\npink dress with a white jacket, a\npink hat and white accessories.\nGladioli and sweet peas lormed her\nI bouquet; Clarence Botterlll of Creston, was the best man. Following\nthe ceremony a reception was held\nat the home of the bride's parents.\nMr. and Mrs. Frank Crawford will\nreside at Creston, B. C.\nSEND 5000 MEN TO\nHARVEST FIELDS\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 22 (CP) .-Employment service officials today reported 5000 men have been sent to\nManitoba harvest fields since the\nmiddle of July. Officials believed\nthe peak demand for harvesters\nover.\nAHtPLANE CRASHES   ..\nIN BERLIN SUBURB\nBERLIN, Aug. 22 (AP).-An airplane crashed today in the populous\nBerlin suburb of Neukoell and killed or injured seven passersby. The\nplane's two' occupants escaped injury.\n8UNSET DYES *2|4\n2 pkgs *wY\nAt HILLYARD'S\nFairway Grocery\nThe Coolest Store In Town\nPhone 264        Vie Crawford, Mgr.\nS\u00ab\u00bbWS\u00ab\u00abSSKS\u00bb\u00ab\u00bb\u00ab*\u00ab\u00abS\u00bb\u00ab5\nFRESH\nPop * Corn\nGRENFELLS\nW4S\u00bb\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab**M\u00bb\u00bb*\u00bb\u00bb>*S5\u00ab*W\u00ab!\nJust\nA\nReminder\nTHAT THE\nBIG\nSHOE\nSALE\nIS STILL\nIN PROGRESS\nAT\nR* Andrew\nLei\n& Company\n>tfashion\nIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIII\nCUT TOE DOESN'T\nKEEP PANTAGES\nON DRY LAND\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 22 (CP)\n\u2014Fete Pantages, president of\nthe Polar Bear club whose members swim at a Vancouver bathing beach every day of the year,\ncut a toe helping two boys land\ntheir small boat.\nDoctors said he couldn't wet\nhis toe for a week. Pantages\nfaced breaking his 16-year record for swimming every day.\nThe last few days, however,\nhe's been paddling around the\nharbor, swimming on his back\nwith the injured foot held out\nof water.\n\"You couldn't really call it\nswimming.\" he says. \"It's just\na form of navigation, but I'm\nwet and I'm floating, so I guess\nI can hold my record.\"\nilliiiiiiliilllilll.lillilllil_llili_iiilllil.il\nSocial...\nWILLOW\nPOINT\nWILLOW POINT, B. C.-The Woman's auxiliary held a home-cooking\nand vegetable sale at the Willow\nPoint wharf Friday with Mrs. J. Gilroy in charge and Mrs. B. Townshend and Miss D. Jackson assisting\nEverything sold quickly, the proceeds being satisfactory.\nSaturday night Mrs, J. Learmonth\nand Mrs. I. C. Campbell staged a\ncard-party in aid of the hall funds.\nHigh scores in bridge were held by\nMrs. C. Shannon and J. Gaskell and\na low by Mrs. F. Hobson and Mrs.\nP. Green.\nIn whist, Mrs. K Brinley and T.\nDalrymple won first prize and Mrs.\nRees and B. Kelly the consolations.\nRefreshments were served by the\nhostesses.\nSocial...\nNEW DENVER\nNEW DENVER, B. C\u2014The W. A.\nto Canadian Legion met at the home\nol  Mrs.  T.  Pearson,  Wednesday,\n.tig. 17. Mrs. Pearson and her sis-\n:r, Mrs. Belle Pendry, being co-\nhostesses.\nMrs. F. L. Beggs, president read\na splendid report ol the Legion convention held at Vancouver Aug. 4-\n5-8.\nMembers present were, Mrs. F. L.\nBeggs, Mrs. W. J. George, Mrs. R.\nW. Crellin, Mrs. G. Burkitt, Mrs.\nT. R. Flint, Mrs. J. Draper, Mrs.\nD. Shannon, Mrs. A. L. Levy, Mrs.\nC. Thring, Mrs. A. Schnaeble, Mrs.\nS. Burgess, Mrs. B. Meers, Miss May\nMeers, Mrs. T. Pearson and Mrs.\nBelle Pendry.\nThe hostesses served refreshments. Two visitors, Mrs. E. T. Fowler and Mrs. A. Nesmith were present\nMrs. H. Clever is visiting relatives\nin Kansas City.\nMr. and Mrs. H. Bolston and\nyoung son have left for their home\nin Kansas City.\nMrs. C. Sinclair has gone to Tranquille to visit her son Dave.\nAlvin Sanderson ot Trail was a\nguest of his parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nBert Sanderson.\nMrs. A. Shaw, who was a guest\nof her mother, Mrs. E. A. Boudier\nof Three Forks, has left lor her\nhome in Kitchener.\nMiss Marjorie Meers is spending\na holiday at the home of Mr. and\nMrs. C. E. Towgood, Standard mine,\nSilverton.\nMr. and Mrs. Lance Emerson of\nTrail are guests of the latter's mother, Mrs. D. Shannon.\nMiss Emma Clever ol Edmonton\nis visiting relatives in town.\nMrs. D. Powell and son David\nare visiting friends in Nakusp.\nMrs. E. T. Fowler and 'Mrs. J.\nNesmith left Friday for Trail.\nMiss Alice Caisley left for Slocan\nCity, where she was a bridesmaid\nThursday at the wedding of her\ncousin, Miss Cecile Balargeon.\nMrs. A. Schnaeble and daughter\nFrances, and Mrs. S. A. Christopherson and son Bobby have returned\nfrom Slocan City where they attended the wedding of their niece, Miss\nCecile Balargeon.\nMiss Evelyn Vandergrift, of Nelson is a guest of her parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. E. Vandergrift\nMiss Delia Traynor of Perry's\nSiding is a visitor in town.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C,-TU__3DAY MORNING. AUG. 23, 1938.\nContract Shortly\nfor SI. Anthony's\nChurch in Trail\nTRAIL,, B. C, AUg. 22 \u2014 Contract for the construction of the\nnew proposed Catholic church, St.\nAnthony ol Padua, to be erected on\nRossland avenue, will be awarded\nprobably next week, according.to\nan announcement by Most Rev.\nMartin M. Johnson, bishop ot Nelson.   ,\nWhen completed; St. Anthony's\nwill be the church ol the newly\ncreated parish of West Trail, including the Gulch, Warfield and\nAnnable.\nEAST TRAIL CHURCH\nIt is said that the present parish\nof Trail will be further divided,\nthe downtown section being known\nas Central Trail and the other side\nof Columbia river, as East Trail,\nwhere property near the school has\nalready been purchased lor construction of a church.\nSt. Anthony of Padua will also\nhave a kindergarten attached, provision for a church hall being made\nin the plans of the edifice,\nKINDERGARTEN  HERE\nThe kindergarten well be started\nin Trail by three members of the\nSisters of St. Joseph of Newark,\nwho will use the adjoining house,\nnow being renovated. It.is expected that the sisters of the order will\narrive in Trail during the next\nthree or four weeks.\nThis kindergarten will cater to\nall Catholic children of pre-school\nage in the city of Trail.\nRev. A. Renaudo will be priest\nof the parish.\nWed at Fernie, to\nLive at Coal Creek\nFERNIE, B. C, \u2014 A wedding of\nwide interest was solemnized in\nChrist Anglican church at six\no'clock Saturday evening, August 20\nwhen Amelda Josephine Vernon,\nonly daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Worthington ol Coal Creek became the bride of Joseph Chester,\nyoungest son of Mr. and Mrs. John\nChester of Coal Creek. Rev. M. C.\nT. Percival performed the ceremony.\nGiven in marriage by her lather,\nthe bride was charming in a princess 'style floor length gown of\nwhite crepe back satin. Her veil\nwas held- in place by a peaked back\nthree strand coronet of orange blossoms. Pink and yellow rosebuds\nformed her bouquet.\nThe bridesmaids were Miss Isobel\nChester, sister of the groom and Miss\nGladys Worthington of Nelson, B.\nC, niece of the bride. Miss Chester\nwore a rose taffeta gown while Miss\nWorthington's gown was of gold\ntalfeta. Both bridesmaids wore gold\nJuliette caps and carried bouquets\nof pink and yellow carnations and\nfern.\nDressed in yellow taffeta in Empire style, with a flowered bandeau and necklace and carrying a\nsilver basket of sweet peas and baby's breath, Verdelle Thompson,\nniece of the groom made a charming little flower girl.\nThe bridegroom was attended by\nRobert Lee. Norman Green was the\norganist.\nFollowing the ceremony 50 guests\nattended a reception and dinner at\nCoal Creek. The room was fittingly decorated for the occasion with\npink and white streamers and a\nprofusion of gladioli, sweet peas,\nsnapdragons and baby's breath. The\nbride's three tier wedding cake\nwas beautifully decorated, with\nwhite roses, and was surmounted by\na silver bell hanging under an archway formed of lily of the valley.\nFollowihg the reception a dance was\nheld in the Coal Creek club hall.\nMr. and Mrs. Chester will reside at\nCoal Creek.\nLife Membership Is\nGiven T. B. Murray\nEDINBURGH, Aug. 22 (CP)-E.\nP. MacKay, president of Dominion\nof Canada association, has presented\na certificate of honorary life membership of the Dominion Curling association to T. B. Murray, past president of the Royal Caledonian club,\nto whom were conveyed the congratulations of 25,000 curlers of the\ndominion association.\nKASLO Social**.\nKASLO, B.C.-Mr. and Mrs. R. A.\nAnderson and daughter, Shirley, of\nTrail are spending a holiday in\ntown.\nMrs. W. M. Cannilf and baby, who\nwere guests of the former's parents\nMr. and Mrs. Robert Hamilton, have\nreturned to their home at Coyken-\ndahl.\nMr. and Mrs. A. Glenn Smith of\nSeattle are guests of the latter's mother, Mrs. A. McQueen.\nPaul Augustine came in from\nSheep Creek the middle of-the week,\nbeing called here by the serious\nillness of his father, Otto Augustine,\nSr.\nK. Scatchard of New Denver is\nspending a few days in town.\nMrs. H. M. Heath was a visitor in\nNelson Thursday.\nMiss Katherine Gillis left Friday\nto spend a few days in Nelson with\nfriends.\nMr. and Mrs. E. Amos and daughter have returned from a holiday at\nOliver and other B.C. points.\nMr. and Mrs. Noel Bacchus of\nBirchdale were city visitors Thursday.\nA. C. Raper ol Johnson's Landing\nspent Thursday in the city.\nMrs. J. J. Streit was at Nelson\nThursday.\nMr. and Mrs. Ronald Hewat have\nleft to spend several weeks holiday\nat coast and other B.C. points.\nMrs. F. T. Abey was a Nelson\nvisitor Friday.\nMrs. D. J. Barclay has returned\nfrom Willow Point where she spent\na few days.\nMr. and Mrs, E. J. Cook and son,\nErnest, who were visiting Mrs.\nCook's parents, Mr. and Mrs. E.\nTimms, left Friday for their home\nat Vancouver.\nTRAIL SOCIAL\nBy MRS. H. 8. ALLEN\nMrs. Harold F. Moffatt, who before her recent marriage in Spokane was Miss Helen Bragg, sailed\nSaturday from Vancouver lor Honolulu to join her husband, Dr. Moftatt who has preceded her to establish a new home there. Mrs. Moffatt is the daughter of Mrs. Vera L.\nBragg of Vancouver and the late\nT. G. Bragg. The bride is a former\nstudent oil St. Michael's school in\nVernon, and lor the past two years\nhas been on the nursing staff of\nthe Trail-Tadanac hospital. Dr. Moffatt is the son of A. B. Moffatt of\nToronto.\nMr. and Mrs. Lloyd Crowe and\ndaughters, Miss Pauline and Miss\nEileen Crowe, who have been spending the past two weeks on vacation\nat Vancouver, have returned to Trail.\nMr. and Mrs. J. B. Cormack, Buckna street, have as their guest this\nweek the latter's niece, Julia Doig,\ndaughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. B.\nDoig of Fruitvale.\nMiss Jean Digiustini, who has\nbeen the house guest of Mrs. V.\nMasci for the past 10 days, returned\nto her home in Vancouver, Monday\nmorning.\nAfter spending the summer at\nHarrop, Mrs. M. Salsiccioli and\ndaughter, Jacqueline returned to\ntheir home here Sunday evening.\nJames Cameron motored to Nelson Sunday, where he visited relatives.\nMr. and Mrs. David Calder, Green\navenue, have as their guests Mr.\nCalder's sister, Mrs. Cuthbert Hay,\nand three daughters, Doris, Betty\nand Ruth and son, Charles, all of\nAberdeen, Wash.\nMrs. V. Masci has had as her guests\nfor the past month, Mrs. E. Gasper-\ninini and little son, who returned to\ntheir home in Vancouver, Monday,\nVisits the Hartlns\nMiss Virginia Newton who recently returned to her home in Spokane after a visit to Mrs. David Hartin and daughter, Miss Mary Hartin of Spokane at the summer home on the West Arm which is being\noccupied by Dr. and Mrs. Hartin.\u2014Daily News Photo.\nNELSON Social..\nBy MRS. M. J. VIGNEUX\ne Mrs. C. C. Rhodes has as a\nguest her daughter, Miss Theodora\n(Babs) Rhodes, who arrived Sunday from Vancouver to spend two\nweeks' vacation. She was accompanied by her cousin, Miss Peggy\nPickford of Victoria, who will divide her holiday in Nelson between\nher two aunts, Mrs. C. C. Rhodes\nand Mrs. L. H- Choquette.\n* Mrs. Carl S. Johnson and her\ndaughter Peggy of Rossland visited\nNelson Sunday.\n* Mrs. David Nelson was in the\ncity from Crescent Valley yesterday.\n* Nels Alpsen of Nakusp was a\nvisitor in town yesterday.\n* Shoppers in the city yesterday included Mr. and Mrs. J. A.\nCullanine of Ymir.\ne Mr. and Mrs. Bradley Watson\nof the Relief Arlington mine were\ncity visitors yesterday.\ne Mrs. William J. Simpson and\nsister, Miss Annie Gillies of Cochrane, Alta., who spent 10 days visiting at the home of their brother-\nin-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs.\nJohn McPhail, Silica street, plan to\nleave this morning by bus for their\nhome. While here they attended the\nwedding of their niece, Miss Mayme\nMcPhail, to Don McNab.\ne Mrs. Fred C. Sharpe of Crescent Bay and her mother. Mrs. J.\nJ. Moore, of Medicine Hat, are\nspending a few days at Trail at\nthe home of the former's son and\ndaughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. F.\nSharpe.\ne Mr. and Mrs. Max Ewart and\nson Peter and Mrs. Ruby Clayton\nof Los Angeles, Cal., have returned\nfrom a week at Whatshan Lake.\n* Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Clegg of\nRossland visited town at the weekend.\ne Miss Dorothy Fawcett, Fair-\nview, has returned from - three\nweeks at Chicago. She was accompanied home by her brother-in-\nlaw and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Lee\nand family of Chicago.\ne George Matthews of Salmo\nvisited Nelson yesterday.\n* Miss Margaret Meyer, Hall\nMines road, is at Spokane visiting\nher twin sister, Mrs. W. Kelly.\ne W. M. Stubbs, Cedar street,\nis confined to his room at the home\nof his daughter, Mrs. H. H. Pitts,\nfollowing a slight stroke last week.\ne Mrs. E. Teir of New Denver\nand her children, Earl. Anne and\nBobby, who spent a week at the\nhome of Mrs. Teir's parents,' Mr.\nand Mrs. A. H. Boss, Hall street,\nhave returned.\n* Miss Kathleen Clarkson of\nVictoria, who was a guest of Mr.\nand Mrs. Frank Baker. Fairview,'\nfor two weeks, has returned to the\ncoast.\n* Parents of W. A. Triggs at\nCroydon, Eng., celebrated their\ngolden wedding anniversary recently. The two are 78 years of age.\n* A. N- Cushing of Sheep Creek\nvisited town at the week-end.\n* Mr. and Mrs. R. T. Tiffin, Silica street, have as their guest the\nformer's niece, Miss Beryl Tiffin of\nLethbridge.\ne J. Kubiski of Ymir was a Nelson shopper yesterday.\n* Visitors in the city yesterday included J. J. Campbell of\nWillow Point.\ne Mr. and Mrs. J. Armstrong,\nFront street, have as their guests\ntheir daughter and young son, Mrs.\nLambert and Brian of Vancouver.\n* Mrs. Noel Harrop has returned from Victoria, where she attended summer school.\ne Mrs. Oscar B. Appleton of\nSunshine Bay has returned after a\nvisit at the home of her sister, Mrs.\nH. H. Pitts.\ne A. Causer, who was relieving\nat the C.P.R. shops for two months,\npians to leave today for his home\nat Penticton.\n* C. Holmberg of Willow Point\nvisited the city yesterday.\ne Shoppers in Nelson yesterday\nincluded Mr. Feeney of Salmo.\n* W. R. Cunningham and his\nson and daughter-in-law. Mr. and\nMrs. William B. Cunningham, who\nspent a few days at the home at\nCrescent Bay of Mr. and Mrs. F.\nC. Sharpe, have returned to Calgary.\n* Mrs. Frezu and daughter of\nYmir visited Nelson yesterday.\n* Mr. and Mrs. E. Creed-Johnston plan to leave today by motor\nfor San Diego, Cal. They will be\naccompanied by their daughter\nDorothy, who will attend school\nthere.\n* H. H. Perkins of Salmo was\nin town yesterday en route to Kaslo\nto visit his mother, Mrs. A. E.\nPerkins.\n* Mrs. W. Kapak, Mrs. Victor\nDoyle, Mrs. Harry Korlack and Mrs.\nMichael Efachinski were among\nthose from Nelson attending the\nopening-'of St. Joseph's church at\nProcter Sunday,\n\u2022 Mrs. Douglas Chamberlain\nand baby have left Kootenay Lake\nGeneral hospital for their home on\nJosephine street.\ne Mr. \u00a3|nd Mrs. F. Baker, Fair-\nview, have as their guest Miss Anne\nDavis of Kamloops.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Sells of\nNew Denver were week-end visitors in town.\n\u2022 H. L. Stevens, who'spent a\nfew weeks in the city, a guest at\nthe home of Mrs. H. H. Pitts, Cedar street, left yesterday for Calgary.\ne Mr. and Mrs. John C. Waldie and family of Robson visited\nNelson Sunday at the home of Mrs.\nWaldie's mother, Mrs. H. H. Pitts.\n\u2022 Miss Bertha Thomas left last\nnight for McAdam, N.B., to reside\nwith her parents.\n\u2022 H. R. Board of Howser visited town yesterday.\n\u2022 Mrs. Birkbeck and daughter\nPatricia are at Kaslo. guests of Mr.\nand Mrs. George Mclnnes.\n\u2022 Mrs. Andy Burgess of Ymir\nspent yesterday in town.\ne . Mr. and Mrs. David Laughton, Edgewood avenue, have as\ntheir guest their son, William\nLaughton of Edmonton.\n\u2022 'W. H. Thomas and daughter\nof Sunshine Bay we're city shoppers Monday.\ne Mr. and Mrs. Harry Sprott\nhave as their guest Mrs, Sprott's\nsister, Miss Hilda Sterling of Vancouver, who will be in Nelson several weeks.\nTwo Fined on Driving\nCharges at Castlegar\nCASTLEGAR, B.C. \u2014 George\nPearson of Trail appeared before\nStipendiary Magistrate J. Speakman\nin Castlegar recently on a charge\nof failing to return to the scene of\nan accident involving another car\ndriven by a Trail resident. The accident took place on the Robson-\nSyringa Creek highway. Mr. Pearson pleaded guilty and was fined\n$20 and costs.\nWilliam Lychuk of Trail appeared in Castlegar police court before Stipendiary Magistrate J.\nSpeakman recently on a charge of\nleaving his car on the highway\nnear Brilliant all night without\nlights. Mr. Lychuk was found guilty\nand paid'a fine of $5 and costs.\nPLAN MONSTER PARADE\nFOR FERNIE LABOR DAY\nFERNIE, B.C.,\u2014Plans are practically complele for the Fernie Labor day celebration. Main events include a children's parade, foot races,\nbicycle and tricycle races, softball,\ntug-of-war and horse-shoe pitching.\nEach child in the parade and eleven\nhundred of Ihem are expected, will\nreceive a bag of candy,\nARRESTED-\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 22 (CP).\u2014A\nman who gave his name as John\nP. Campbell was arrested on a\ncharge of breaking and entering after Steve Durgan reported a man\nhad entered his room in an east\nend hotel.\nMrs. D. Hutchinson\nCalgary, Dies at\nShaw Home, Here\nMrs. Edith Agnes Hutchinson, wife\nof Daniel W. Hutchinson, 223 First\navenue West, Calgary, died suddenly at the home of her sister, Mrs.\nW. E. Shaw, Carbonate street, Monday afternoon.\nMr. and Mrs. Hutchinson were\nresidents of Nelson about 20 years\nago, when Mr. Hutchinson was in\nthe clothing business. They later\nmoved to Calgary, where they have\nlived since. Mrs. Hutchinson came\nto visit her sister only two weeks\nago Sunday. She was born in Sea-\nforth, Ont.\nMr. Hutchinson, who is a C. P. R.\nemployee, will arrive in Nelson today.\nBesides her husband and sister,\nMrs. Hutchinson is survived by three\nother sisters, Mrs. Margaret Magee,\nand Mrs. A. T. Currie, in Toronto,\nand Miss Grace Cash of Nelson.\nInterment will be made in the\nNelson cemetery.\nSocial...\nPROCTER\nPROCTER, B.C.-Mr. and Mrs. J.\nC. Smith and Miss Alma Smith of\nChelan, Sask., Miss Rose Smith of\nMilwaukee, Wis., Miss Isabel Ross of\nGovan, Sask., and Mrs. Hooper of\nDidsbury, Alta., are visiting their\nrelatives, Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Johnston and family and Mr. and Mrs.\nI. Lewis and family here.\nMr. and Mrs. Fred Parnaby returned Thursday from visiting Cranbrook and points,\nPatrick Mariner and C. Lornaks\nol Willow Point are visitors to\nProcter.\nJule Lewis ol Trail is visiting\nrelatives here.\nMrs. W. A. Ward entertained\nThursday evening at a dinner party\nat the Outlet hotel. Guests were\nMr. and Mrs. James Bichan, Mrs. E.\nMacLennan of Ashcroft B.C., and\nMr. and Mrs. F. Parnaby.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Bichan have as\ntheir guest, Mrs. E. MacLennan of\nAshcroft B.C. Mrs. MacLennan was\na former school teacher at Procter.\nMrs. H. Clift entertained at tea\nTuesday.\nMrs. A. Batchelor and children,\nKathleen and Bartley, who spent\nthree weeks holidaying at Sunshine\nBay returned Thursday.\n.Mrs. R. Thompson of Nelson is\nspending a week here, a guest of\nMrs. W. Rose.\nGrant MeKean left Saturday for\nJohnston's Landing to visit Mr.\nBarrow.\nJohn Gray, Ray Freeman and C. A\nMann of Nelson were Friday visitors\nat the hotel.\nMr. and Mrs. A. S. Ritchie have\nas their guest, Miss Hazel Long of\nCalgary.\nW. Rigby of Trail visited old-\ntimers here Friday.\nB. Simpson of TraU was a Procter\nvisitor Friday.\nMrs. David Hartin and Mrs. E.\nNelson of Spokane, and Mrs. Bartley\nof Kaslo were guests of Mrs. W. Rose\nFriday.\nMr. and Mrs. C. Van Hemert have\nI. as their guest, J. Sparling of Calgary.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Dosenberger visited Nelson Friday.\nMr. and Mrs. J. F. Coates, Victoria\nstreet, Nelson are visiting Mrs, E.\nMillar.\nMr. and Mrs. L. Bonacci, Mr. and\nMrs. W- Ling, Mr, and Mrs. E.\nLeschutta, A. Ling, E. Splgariol,\nMiss Mary Ling and Mr. and Mrs. E.\nOlson, all of Trail were guests of\nMr. and Mrs. S. Bonaccijriday.\nMr. and Mrs. Albert Ogden and\ndaughter, Claire, left Friday to\nspend a vacation at the coast.\nFernie Miss Bride\n, in Quiet Ceremony\nFERNIE, B.C.\u2014A quiet wedding\nceremony was performed by Rev.\nJ. H. Matthews at Knox United\nchurch, Saturday August 20, when\nMargaret, youngest daughter of\nThomas Biddulph of Fernie became\nthe bride of Frank Louis Rothel,\nfourth son of Mr. and Mrs. William\nRothel of Elk Valley. B.C. The\nbride, who was given in marriage\nby her father, wore a floor length\nprincess gown of white crepe, white\nhat and matching accessories. Mixed\nroses, fern and baby's breath formed her bouquet. The bridesmaid\nMrs. Fred Brewer, sister of the\ngroom wore a pink crepe gown with\nwhite accessories. Her bouquet consisted of gladioli, sweet peas and\nbaby's breath. The grdom was attended by his brother, John Rothel.\nFollowing the ceremony a reception\nwas held at the Elk Valley home of\nthe groom's parents. Mr. and Mrs.\nRothel will reside in Elk Valley.\nROLICK FINED $30\nON NEW CHARGE\nFacing the second charge of its\nkind in the Nelson district, Alexander Rolick pleaded guilty to a\ncharge of driving a vehicle in a\nmanner which was dangerous to the\npublic, and was fined (30 by William\nBrown, police magistrate, in city police court Monday morning.\nThe charge was brought under the\nCriminal \u00a3ode, and not under the\nMotor VajliOle act as formerly.\nRolick committed the offense Saturday at 9 p.m.\nSocial...\nNAKUSP\nNAKUSP, B.C.-Mr. and Mrs. E.\nOxenham have as their guests Mrs.\nOxenham's sister, Miss E. P. LaRue\nof Vancouver, and her cousin. Miss\nM. Witney ol St. Paul, Minn.\nF. C. Moir of Trail was a holiday\nvisitor to Nakusp.\nMr. and Mrs. George Keys have\nas their guests their son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Willard\nKeys and two children of Blain\nLake, Sask.\nF. T. Abey ol Kaslo was a visitor\nto Nakusp.\nMiss R. Humphrey ol Kamloops,\nwho was on a motor trip to Banff,\nwas a Nakusp visitor en route to\nher home.\nMr. and Mrs. D. Spain and Mrs.\nSpain's father, R. Billingsley, who\nwere vacationing here, have left\nfor their home at Trail.\nMr. and Mrs. M. Barrow have\nleft Ior a two-week trip to Spokane, Seattle and Vancouver.     ,\nW. Waldie and son and B. A.\nHawley ol Castlegar were visitors\nhere Wednesday.\nB. Griffiths ol the Bayonne mine\nwas in town this week.\nMiss Sydney Leary left Wednesday to visit Miss Mavis Barlow at\nthe home ol Mr. and Mrs. Trotter\nat Arrowhead.\nMrs. -M. Cassidy of Edgewood is\nvisiting her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. G. W. M. Hakeman.\nMr. and Mrs. Hayne and Miss\nJoan Hayne of Kamloops were holiday guests at the Leland.\nCapt. C. S. Leary, M.L.A., left\nthis week lor Vancouver.\nMr. and Mrs. R\u201e S. La Rue and\nMrs. M. La Rue have as their guests\nMr. and Mrs. E Witney ot St. Paul,\nMinn.\nJ. Draper and M. Mark of New\nDenver were motor visitors to Nakusp Wednesday.\nMrs. L. J. Edwards has'as her\nguests her son-in-law and daughter Mr. and Mrs. E. McCamon of\nCalgary.\nE. T. Coleman was in town from\nVallican Wednesday.\nMisses Eileen, Sheila and Sydney\nLeary have returned from Edge-\nwood.\nMrs. L. A. Bond and daughter,\nwho were visiting Kaslo, were visitors at Nakusp en route to their\nhome at Revelstoke.\nMrs. Campbell of Riverside, Cal.,\nis visiting at the home of her\nbrother-in-law and sister, Mr. and\nMrs. G. Keys.\nMr. and Mrs. N. Levant ol Vancouver were holiday visitors in the\ndistrict.\nMr. and Mrs. P. F. Bird ol Prince\nRupert visited Nakusp this week.\nMr. Bird relieved at a local bank\nseveral years ago.\nA. McMillan ol Sandon spent\nWednesday here.\nMr. and Mrs. Byron of Riverside,\nCalifornia, were visitors here en\nroute to Edgewood where they will\nvisit their cousins, Mr. and Mrs. C.\nTalbot.\nL. Exton, who has been employed\nhere lor several months, left for\nhis home at Robson Thursday.\nMrs. E. Trimble of Vancouver was\nrenewing acquaintance in Nakusp\nthis weelt.\nMrs. A. Johnson and Mr. and Mrs.\nF. Arnold of Burton wore among\nvisitors in town Wednesday.\nMr. and Mrs. A. Stanley and two\nsons, Alan and Kenneth, returned\nWednesday from Vancouver where\nthey were guests at the home of\nthe former's parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nA. B. S. Stanley, sr. Mr. Stanley\nattended a newspapermen's convention\nMr. and Mrs. A. K. Miller and\nMiss Miller of Graham's Landing\nwere among shoppers in Nakusp\nWednesday.\nBuy or sell with a Classified Ad.\nCOUPLE VISITING AT KIMBERLEY HEAR\nON RADIO OF SON'S PLANE CRASHING\nKIMBERLEY, B. C. - Mr. and\nMrs. Driscoll and family from Edmonton, who were visiting their\ndaughter, Mrs. R, Whellam, last\nweek-end, left for Banff Tuesday.\nWhile here last Sunday they heard\nover the radio the news that their\nson, Dan Driscoll, pilot of the Alaskan plane from Fairbanks, had crashed at Lower Post near the Liard\nriver but was unhurt.\nRossland Social \u2666\u2666\nBy MRS B. B. FERGUSON\nROSSLAND, Aug. 22 - Miss Margaret Janni of Trail is spending a\nweek with her grandparents, Mr.\nand Mrs. F. Speno.\nMr. and Mrs. Ray Underwood of\nBlueberry Creek spent the weekend with Mrs. Underwood's parents,\nMr. and Mrs. A. E. Harrison.\nGeorge Chuley of Penticton spent\nthe week-end in the city.\nMr. and Mrs. Peter Corrado,\ndaughter Florence, and son Louis,\nhave returned from a holiday at\nSpokane.\nMr. and Mrs. Ray Whittick and\nMr. and Mrs. King Commesotti\nspent the week-end at Northport,\nWash.\nBruce MacAulay, Ernest Cleverley\nand Leslie Cleverley spent the week\nend at Spokane.\nMiss Gladys Prestley is holidaying in Spokane, the guest of her\nsister, Mrs, W. Burroughs.\nMr. and Mrs. Jack Fears have\nreturned to take up residence in\nRossland after spending two weeks\nhoneymoon in the States.\nHerbert Martin and Percy Taylor\nspent the week-end in Spokane.\nMrs. A. T. Nichols and daughter\nBelle have returned from Slocan\nPark, where they were the guests\nof Mrs. E. Greavison.\nMr. and Mrs. Harry Smith and\nson David have returned Irom a\nweek's holiday at Ainsworth.\nMr. and Mrs. Fred Martello and\ndaughter Kathleen, who have been\nthe guests of Mr. Martello's parents,\nMr. and Mrs. N. Martello, have returned to their home in Wynndel,\nMiss Virginia M\u00b0l'ne is visiting in\nVancouver the guest of Mrs, Victor\nForbes.\nMiss Margaret Fuocco and Thomas Perry of Fernie are thq.guests ol\nMiss Delphine Vetere, \u25a0   \u2022>\nPROBE CRASH IN\nWHICH TWO DIE\nMITCHELL, S. D., Aug. 22 (AP)\n\u2014Authorities attempted to determine today the cause of the airplane\ncrash last evening in which Arlie\nToomire, 28, manager of the Mitchell airport, and Francis Schoreder,\n23, Plankinton, burned to death here.\n\u2014 PAGE   FIVE\nRossland Band Is\nDetermined Seize\nShield, Cranbrook\nROSSLAND, B. C, Aug. 22 -\nRossland City band is determined\nto bring home the Hon. F. M. MacPherson Shield offered as top honors in the Cranbrook anniversary\nband festival, a feature ot the festivities, Carl Frlberg, band maestro,\nsaid today.\nA prize of $150 is offered to the\nwinner, $75 for the second and $50\nfor third place. Rossland band needs\nmoney in the worst way at the\npresent; the cost of outfitting the\nbandsmen with uniforms will eat a\nbig hole in the treasury. Uniforms\nare on order and should be in any\ntime now.\nThe bandsmen are practising diligently for nearly 10 hours a week,\nwhich includes street parades.\nSocial. ..\nNATAL\nNATAL, B. C.-Miss Vickl Ati- .\ndrolick returned to Natal after j\nspending a holiday at the coast.\nMrs. Gaskell and son Pete left\nMichel last week end for a holiday\nto the United  States. They were.  I\naccompanied by Mr. and Mrs. J.\nGaskell.\nMrs. Chala and daughter Clara   ;\nreturned to Natal after visiting at\nFernie.\nBilly Eckersley returned to his\nhome at Fernie after spending his\nholidays at Natal.\nThe children of Mary ot the Michel\nCatholic church are spending a holiday at Rock Lake some 50 miles\nwest of Natal. The Boy Scouts of\nthe same church spent a week at\nRock Lake recently.\nMrs.. M. Liebscher\nHonored, Silverton j\nSILVERTON, B.C. - A birthday\nparty was given in honor ol Mrs. J.\nScaia at the home of Mrs. M. Liebscher Saturday evening.\nCommunity singing and contests |\nfeatured.\nA beautiful electric waffle iron\nWas presented to the guest of\nhonor. Refreshments were served\nat mid-night\nInvited were Mrs. M. Liebscher,\nMrs. L. Boisvert, Mrs. P. Harding,\nMrs, D. Ryans, Mrs. E. Fairhurst,\nMrs. M. Melby, Mrs. A. Erickson,\nMrs. A. Johnson, Mrs. W. Monroe\nof Trail, Mrs. Jones of Kimberley,\nRev. and Mrs. J. Dewar of New Denver, Mr. and Mrs. T. H. Wilson, Mr.\nand Mrs. J. Kelly. Mr. and Mrs. T.\nBurley,   Mr.   and   Mrs.   H.   Lancaster, Mr. and Mrs. T. Dinsdale,\nMr. and Mrs. w. Hunter, Mr. and I\nMrs. C. Schmidt, Mr. and Mrs. R.   I\nDeuel, Mr. and Mrs. Avery, Mr. and   I\nMrs. H. Kelsall, Mr. and Mrs. R. f\nFairhurst, Mr. and Mrs. O. Berg-  I\nman, Mr. and Mrs. T. Elsmore, Mr. f\nand Mrs. W. Nelson, Mr. and Mrs.  f\nT. Anderson. Mr. and Mrs. R. Hamb-   I\nly, Mr. and Mrs. J. Senning, Mr. and   I\nMrs. J. Cooper, Miss F, Moss, Miss\nV. Deane. Miss S. Hunter, Miss L.\nMelby, Miss M. Boisvert, Miss E.\nMinns, H.  Leibscher, J. Scaia, A.\nJames and F. Fingland,\nPLAN FIRST AID, MINE\nRESCUE COMPETITIONS      j\nTO BE HELD AT FERNIE\nFERNIE, B.C.-The East Kootenay\nMine Safety association will hold\nits annual mine rescue and first aid\ncompetitions at the Fernie Mine\nRescue station Saturday, September\n10. The competitions are open to\nteams from the East Kootenay.\nEvents include mine rescue, senior\nand junior and ladies first aid.\nSave Time and Labor\nGeneral Electric\nWashers\n$79.50   and up\nNelson Electric Co.\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilinilii j\nASK YOUR NEWS STAND-\nDEALER FOR\nKOOTENAY   VALLEY\nCHOCOLATE MILK\nii.mii.iiiMiiiii.iiin.iiiiMiH.il.iniiim\nLeave LADY LUCK\nat Home\nShe is a dangerous guide for your shopping\ntours, this fickle lady. Let her smile, and\nbargains may be yours. But let her frown\u2014\nor even lose interest\u2014and you are likely\nto pay more than you should, or bring\nhome disappointing merchandise.\nThrifty shoppers long ago left this unreliable lady in the lurch. They now plan\ntheir shopping tours as carefully as a\nmaster navigator plots his course. Their\nweather maps and charts are news of\nsales and up-to-the-hour information on\nnew merchandise and today's prices. But\nwhere do they get this money-saving\ninformation in advance? From a source\nat your own finger-tips this very minute!\nSimply turn to the advertising pages of\nthis paper. Settle down in your favorite\nchair, and look for the things you intend\nto buy on your next shopping trip. You'll\nbe surprised at the number of them advertised. Compare descriptions, compare the\nprices, and you will find out exactly where\nto get the things you want at your prices.\nSo leave Lady Luck behind on'your next\nshopping trip. Follow an ad-charted course\ninstead, and enjoy safer shopping, with\nmore and better merchandise for your\nmoney. ,\nBuyers and Sells Both Profit From\nNewspaper Advertising\n mmm\nmorning   except  Sunday   by\nISH1NU COMFAN*   LIMITED,\n266  Baker  Street  Nelson   British  Columbia.\nPhone 144. Private Exchange Connecting All Departments.\nMemben ol the Audit Bureau ol Circulations and\nThe Canadian Preu Leased  Wire  Nows Service,\nTUESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1938.\nNO SETTLED PEACE WHILE\nDICTATORS RULE\nProfessor Nicholas Murray Butler has given the world\nhis opinion of its affairs in an article \"Bluffing the Democracies.\" Here is a sentence which serves as a sample of\nstyle and content. \"Just now three powerful dictatorships\nhave bluffed the democracies into giving aid to the crippling of the one hopeful and progressive institution which\nmodern man has brought into existence to make possible\nthat constant and effective international consultation and\ninternational action, on the part of small nations as well\nas great, which alone can lay the foundations for a prosperous and peaceful world in which Democracy may live\nand serve.\"\nWhat the professor means is that the dictators have\nbluffed the democracies into crippling the League of Nations. That is not correct. The league was crippled when\nthe United States stood out, before the dictators were heard\nof, In its crippled state, divided by various fears and conflicting interests, it could not check Japan, and the defection of Japan crippled it further. When Mussolini challenged it, America was out, Japan was out, Germany was\nunsympathetic, Italy was an enemy, the smaller nations\nwere fearful, France did not want war and Britain would\nnot fight alone. Mussolini did not bluff\u2014he knew the1\nleague was crippled and he acted on that. His action put\nthe cripple to bed.\nHis argument goes on that the only hope of Democracy is \"the avoidance of war by the prevention of war\nand by the removal of the causes of war.\" This has sense\nas well as sound, but he adds\u2014there is .no space for his\nexuberance in words\u2014that this cannot be done by making agreements with dictators. Summarized, his argument\ncomes to this: War inevitably results in dictatorship and\nthe destruction of democracy, therefore it is to be avoided\nand its cause removed; it cannot be avoided, however, by\nmaking agreements with dictators, therefore the democracies must arm and assert the \"rule of force,\" by making\nwar if necessary. This leads nowhere, a fact of whioh Professor Butler seems to be conscious, for he concludes by\nasking whether it is possible Spengler was right when he\npredicted the downfall of western civilization.\nA\nIt may take nine tailors to make a map but one dressmakef can\nbreak him.\nWe wound our modetty, and make foul the clearness\nof our deservings, when of ourselves we publish them.\n\u2014Shakespeare.\nNO, IT DID NOT HAPPEN THERE,\nTHIS TIME\nNo, it \"did not happen there.\"\nIn Kansas an exponent of Nazi-like policies has been\nrepudiated by Republicans in the primaries. Probably this\ndoes not mean much, though the contest created a lot of\nexcitement in the United States.\nIt is not so long since Sinclair Lewis wrote, a novel,\n\"It Can't Happen Here,\" describing the advent of dictatorship to the United States. The \"fuehrer\" in the book was\nnamed BUZZ WINDRIP.\nBy an odd coincidence one of the first political aspirants to run for office in the United States, with the support\nof Fascist influence and the aid of Nazi literature, openly\ndistributed, turned out to be a man with a somewhat similar name, DOC WINROD. American papers, such as Ken\nof Chicago, were quick to catch the likeness.\nWinrod ran for Republican nomination as senatorial\ncandidate in Kansas. His campaign, which was taken very\nseriously in the middle west, aroused storms of indignation. Slighting remarks which he had made giving offense\nto both Jews and Christians were given wide pulicity\nfrom political platforms. One by one Republican leaders,\nboth conservative and liberal, came out against Winrod.\nLast but not least, John Hamilton, national chairman of\nthe Republican party, warned that the nomination of Win-\nrod would not only defeat the Kansas Republican state and\ncounty tickets but would put a Nazi stain of bigotry and\nintolerance upon the national Republican party. That, in\nturn, would endanger Republican success all over the\nUnited States in this year's congressional campaign.\nIn the upshot Doc Winrod was soundly beaten. He ran\n| far behind Clyde Reed, a former governor of the state.\nFor the time being at least, democracy has been saved in\nthe Jayhawk State. It just didn't happen there.\nA benefit consists not in what is done or given, but\nin the intention of the giver or doer.\u2014Senaca.\nTOBACCO GROWING IN THIS PROVINCE\nWhile we hear less than some years ago about the\ntobacco industry in British Columbia, government reports\nshow that it is still growing.\nThe 1937 Canadian tobacco crop was the largest ever\nproduced and the quality was exceptionally good. The acreage was 69,000 compared with 55,000 in 1936. Production\namounted to 71,457,000 pounds as against 46,117,400 in the\nprevious year. The acreage increase in Quebec was also\nadvanced from that of 1936.\nThe greatest increase of flue-cured occurred in Ontario, but substantial increases of this type w'fere also made\nIn Quebec and British Columbia.\nProduction for the provinces was as follows with 1936\nfigures in brackets; Quebec, 8,678,00 (9,111,400) pounds;\nOntario, 62,392,000 (36,883,400); British Columbia, 387,-\n000^(122,600).\nIn Nelson\nBy-Paths\nNelson's flock of blackbirds, familiar all summer to all who have\nvisited the waterfront with any re1\ngularlty, has suddenly increased to\nlarge and indefinite proportions,\nMore or less all the season, a\nsmall group of birds, eight in number according to my count, has been\nseen around the boathouse area. II\nyou met a solitary blackbird, it\nwould Ily, and disclose itself as a\nmember of the group, which would\nimmediately show up, to right or\nleft, or below in the water's edge,\nor overhead on the tops of the piles.\nI suppose actually the birds first\ncame to notice as a group after the\nnesting season, and I imagine they\nnested here.\nOn the other hand, a recent large\nincrease can be attributed only to\nblackbirds on migration southward.\nOne day I counted 30 in a group,\nfeeding in the sedge, and another\nday at least a couple of score flew,\nby twos and threes, over to the\ndump. No doubt they are now a feature of the landscape all along Nelson's shore line. They are extremely\ntame, and will allow people to approach within three or four yards\nof them. From the way they walk\nabout in the shallows, it is quite\nclear that their natural habitat is\nthe swamps.\nRELATION8 OF CROW8\nAlso, from their mannerisms, lt is\neasy to trace their close relationship\nto the crows.\n\"Hold your fire until you can see\nthe whites of their eyes\" used to\nbe the instructions to riflemen receiving a bayonet charge, and there\nare points about withholding either\nrifle fire, or one's judgment, until\none has an opportunity to make\nexact identifications.\nLast year I came to the casual\nconclusion that the few blackbirds\nthat came to Nelson each fall in\nrecent years were the rusty blackbird, but my mistake in identification didn't hurt anybody, as I was\nnot then spreading the news around.\nBut this year, with more at stake,\nI have been at some pains to track\nour Nelson blackbird, local resident\nor migrant as the case may be, back\nto its lair in Taverner's \"Birds df\nCanada,\" and the whites of its eyes\ngave me the essential clew.\nWhile all along, year by y\u00abar,\nsome of the blackbirds here nave\nclearly had heads and capes about\nwhich there was a suggestion of\nbrown, or at least, of a brown wash\non black, It has been equally clear\nthat there have been some stark\nblack birds, and these black fellows,\nI recently noticed, have white eyes,\nor white eye-rings\u2014or so they appear at a little distance. Those with\nthe lighter shoulders and headworks\nhave just ordinary eyes, that attract\nno attention. References to Taverner\nshows that of the all-black blackbirds of Canada, the only one of\ncomparable size to the ones we see\nhere, that has a light eye in the male\nand a dark eye in the female and\njuvenile, is .Brewer's blackbird.\nBREWER'S BLACKBIRD\nCOMMON\nSo there you arel Brewer's blackbird, described as the commonest\nblackbird in western Canada, and\nof about the same size as the red\nwinged and the yellow-headed, both\nalso common in the west, is honor'\ning us with its presence on migra-\ntion, and to a small extent seems\nto be nesting here. Water does not\nseem to be so essential to it as to\nthe red-winged and the yellow-\nheaded, which invariably nest\naround swamps, but lt prefers the\nvicinity of water just the same.\nI imagined it is the blackbird that\nI once saw in my youth, in an immense flock of thousands, on a New\nBrunswick grain field, the farmers\nregarding it as an enemy. There\nwere certainly no red-wings in the\nflock, not yet any vellow-neads.\nIncidentally, once one has traced\nthese details down, there need be no\nreal confusion among these various\nspecies of blackbirds. The males\nof the red-wing have red shoulders\nor epaulettes, and the females are\nsimply striped brown birds. The\nyellow-headed males are accurately\ndescribed by their name, and the\nfemales, though dark, are inclined to\nlightness about the throat In the\ncase of the rusty variety, both sexes\nhave a wash of brown or red on tho\ncape at least ot their black coats,\nIn the fall, though the male has\nsolid black spring plumage, and both\nsexes have dark eyes.\n\"Crack\" or \"krek\" seems to be the\ncall note of Brewer's blackbird, at\nleast, of the specimens now flocking here. Only one have I heard utter a different note, and I took It to\nbe the male's song, perhaps shortened because of the lateness of the\nseason. It sounded like \"Click, click,\nclick, clee,\" uttered in swift, soft\nsequence.\nBlackbirds of all species are said\nto be gregarious, and perhaps the\nWest Arm and Kootenay river will\nsee a lot more of them than in the\npast\n-* THE STBOLLEE\nACTIVE IN . . .\nKOOTENAY LIFE\nBob Kirkland's occupation\ntakes him to various parts of\nthe province. He is well known\nin Kootenay.\nCOMBINATION FINESSES\nA GUARDED queen has just as\nmuch chance to take a trick If it is\nopposite the ace ot its suit as If It\nwere in the same hud. When you\nlead a small card toward lt, the\nchances are E0-S0 that lt will win.\nIf the first opponent to play on the\ntrick has the king, tht queen Is\nsure to be set up. Of course, If the\nlast opponent has the king, she Is\ndoomed.\nf 882\n\u2666 A83 .\n_t.ee 4 3\nT5T. u\nK 10 ft\nAKQJ86Z\nfAKS\n\u2666 <_)\u00ab\n*A J\n(Dealer: South. East-West vulnerable.)\nAftel a 1-Spade bid by iBouth,\nNorth called 1-No Trump, South\n3-Spades and North (-Spades.\nThe heart Q was led by West and\nwon In the South hand. East won\nthe spade K with the A and returned a heart to South's A. A\nspade was led to the 9 and an effort\nvie to finesse the club J, which\nwu no finesse at all. When thli\nlost to West's Q, the heart 10 was\ntaken, and followed by a diamond\nto East's K.     .\nWith a loser ln each suit, South'!\nonly hope for game was to find the\ndiamond K with Eaat. It was there\nbut he did not take advantage of\nthat fact. He had enough entries\nIn dummy and should have used\none of theln to lead a low diamond\ntoward his Q. Had he dons that\nonly three tricks would have been\nlost, one spade, one diamond and\none heart; the diamond A providing a spot for the club J.\n\u2022  \u2022  \u2022       .    .\nTomorrow's Problem\n\u00ab8852\nMifmmmtmmttmimmmmmmosmimmAw\nWHAT DO YOU THlfrK*\nLetters may b* published wer a nom di plume, tut the actual\nname ot the writer must be given to the editor aa evidence ef\ngood faith. Anonymous letters go In ths waste paper basket\n\"4AKJ4\n\u00abJ3\nA10 B 8\n+ 0 10 8 2\n\u2666 Q0 7\nf 1082\n\u2666 A82\n*KJ53\nA10 3\n#AK875\n'itl\n\u2666 ATM\n(Dealer: South. Both sides vulnerable.)\nWhat Is South's best play for\n4-Hearts, having lost two spade\ntricks and ruffed the third?\nV* Questions ??\nANSWERS\nThis column ol questions and\nanswers is open to any reader oi\nthe Nelson Daily Newa In no\ncase will the name of the person\nasking the question be published\nVERSE\nCURIOUS, Nelson-Is Edsel Ford\nthe only child of Henry Ford, or\ndid he have other children? How\nmany children has Edsel Ford?\nEdsel Ford is the onlff child of\nHenry and Clara (Bryant) Ford. He . feet and heard his word. But Mar-\n_._~ -__.___T___.____    TM ___.\u2022_.   __*11 __._._    -.A   i^_.iu_.u    :___.      H-m   tiPQB  oiimhofnrl   onmlt  ini'.iU   cm-ir_\nTHE SONS OF  MARTHA AND\nMARY\nAs pictured by a poet of world\nwide renown, Budyard Kipling, and\nby a versifier of no renown.\nThe story Is found in the tenth\nchapter of Luke's Gospel and lt reads\nas follows:\n\"He (Jesus) entered into a certain\nvillage (Bethany.) and a certain wo'\nman named Martha received him\ninto her house; and she had a sister\nnamed Mary which also sat at Jesus\n;*\u00ab\u00ab9!_\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00abS$\u00bb\u00abW5S_WS\u00aba_$SSv\n}WWMmCL\nSoil Culture\nSeems Effective, Anyway\nShe takes a walk in London:\u2014\nThe moist climate (in a less charitable mood 1 would have said soggy)\naccounts for the greenness and the\nair of full-fleshed abundance of\nthese parks, but that they are so\nneat and unlittered must be due at\nleast partly to the instinctive good\nmanners and considerateness of the\nLondon population. Perhaps also\nthe long love affair between. Englishmen and the responsible English\nsoil has something to do with it.\nWhatever it is, compared with the\nelderly streetwalker aspet of New\nYork parks, the parks of London\nlook like prom dates.\".\u2014From \"With\nMalice Toward Some,\" an American\ngirl's story about England, by Margaret Halsey.\nBe Gentle to\nBurglars and Bears\nEmptying his shotgun with perfect aim at a midnight visitor\nwho had entered his apartment\nthrough a back window, Ivan\nZhukov, a bank clerk of Moscow,\nRussia, found his guest's trousers\nresembling a sieve. When Ivan\nturned on the light and started\nto tie up the thief he discovered\nthat the man's snot-riddled trousers were Ivan's best pair,\nIvan's experience is not unlike\nthat of a nervous man who was\ncamping in northern British Columbia not long ago. This chap always slept with a revolver within\nreach. He was awakened one night\nby a noise in tiie tent and, looking\ndown, saw a large bear peering\nover the end of the bed, Hardly\nmoving, he raised his gun and fired.\nThe yell he gave awakened his\nfriends. They found he had shot\nhimself in the foot.\nIt Was the Dog\nPrincess Wanted Moved\nAn amusing story about a favorite\nItalian greyhound belonging to the\nlate Queen., Alexandra, when she\nwas Princess of Wales, is related\nby H. E. Wortham (In \"Edward VII:\nKing and Man\"). The dog, it seems,\nhad a weakness for cream and used\nto upset the cream jug at the royal\ntea table and lick up the contents.\nOnce, at Sandringham, he had overturned one jug and was meditating\nan attack on another which stood\nby one of the guests, James\nKnowles, editor of \"Nineteenth Century\" magazine.\nQueen Alexandra, who was watching the delinquent, rang the. bell.\nAn enormously tall footman appeared.\n\"Take, him out,\" she said, pointing in Knowles' direction. The footman hesitated.\n\"Remove him!\" said the Princess\nmore peremptorily.\nThe man stepped forward and put\nout his hand to seize the eminent\neditor by the shoulder, who, all unaware of the fate threatened him,\nwent on quietly eating buttered\ntoast.\nSomething like a shadow of anxiety passed across the Queen's face.\nThen she grasped the situation,\n\"No, no,, take the dog out,\" she\nadded, as everyone, except the still\nunsuspecting victim, laugtied at his\nnarrow escape.   '\nmarried Eleanor Clay of Detroit in\n1916,, and they have four children,\nHenry II, Benson, Josephine Clay\nand William.\nI.M.G., Nelson\u2014Can a nurse who\nhas completed her training in the\nUnited States nurse in Canada,\nand  if  not,  what qualifications\nwould she have to have?\nIf the school at which she trained\ncomes up to the Canadian standard\nand is recognized by the profession\nin Canada, there would be no reason\nwhy a nurse trained in. the U.S.\ncould not nurse in Canada. For full\ninformation  write  to Miss Helen\nRandal, Registered Nurses' association  of  B.C.,  520-322  Vancouver\nBlock, Vancouver, B.C.\nM.H.G., Trail\u2014Where should I ap-\nSly for admission to the Royal\nanadian Air Force and what are\nthe qualifications?\nIt is understood that: The Royal\nCanadian Air Force has vacancies\nfor a number ot permanent commissioned officers, and selections will\nbe made shortly so that training may\nbe commenced on Nov. 1,1936,\nTo be eligible, a candidate must\nfulfil the following conditions:\u2014\n(a) Of pure European descent,\nthe son of parents both of\nwhom are (or if deceased\nwere at the time of their\ndeaths) British subjects, or\nnaturalized British subjects.\nUnmarried.\nMedically fit for full flying\nduties,\nBetween the ages of 18 and\n25 on the 1st of June, 1938,\nA   graduate of the   Royal\nMilitary College or a graduate of a four-year course\nin the faculty of applied science, arts, arts and science,\nlaw, or forestry, of a recognized Canadian university.\nOtherwise suitable, including\nappearance,   character   and\npersonality,\nApply by letter to the Officer\nCommanding,   Western   Air-Command, Vancouver, B. C, prior to\n1st September, 1938.\n(b)\n(c)\n(d)\n(e)\n(f)\nAUNT HET\ni)y   tOBERT QUILLEN\nWHAT'S IN A NAME\nMargolis, Weirl, Schmitt, Nichta,\nUnger, Osheroff, McCarthy, Beven-\nsee, Civiers, Dogdendorf, Siskin,\nPolen, Cohen, Lidz, Rabie\u2014no, dear\nreader, this isn't the batting order\nfor a major league ball game; mereJ\nly the list of wounded American\nmembers of the Abraham Lincoln\nbattalion who have arrived home\nfrom Spain.\u2014Windsor Daily Stsir.  .\n\"I reckon I've changed, but\nI don't notice much difference\nas I grow older except that\nnothln' seems as important as\nI used to think it was, except\nkindness and a good bed.\"\ntha was cumbered about much serving and came to him and said,\n\"Lord dost thou not care that my\nsister hath left me to serve r.lone?\nBid her therefore that she help\nme.\" And Jesus answered, Martha,\nMartha, thou are careful and troubled about many things; but one\nthing is needful, and Mary hath chosen that good part\"\nA poet renowned chose for a lay\nMartha and Mary of Bethany fame;\nHe pictured their sons as living today,\nWith praise for Martha's, for Mary's\nshame.\nThat gifted poet with insight rare\nCould never nave penned a lay like\nthat.\nDrawing his pictures ln lines unfair,\nHad he grace to sit where Mary sat,\nMartha was cumbered with earth\nborn cares\nJesus, the Prophet, she had as guest;\nShe wearied herself with kitchen\nwares\nTo spread her board with her larder's best\nTroubled and careful for thing! ot\nearth\nMartha has many such sons today;\nThey .slight for lesser the greater\nworth,\nThe one thing needful on life's grim\nway.\nMary sought first the Kingdom ot\nGod,\nShe honoured her guest with listening ear\nWhile Jesus dispensed the word of\nlife;\nMary was Messed with the ears to\nhear.\nWhen Jesus'sat weary on Jacob's\nwell\nAnd loving desciples pressed him\nto eat,\n\"I have meat,\" he said, \"that ye\nknow not  of.\"\nBut Mary knew; \"she sat at his\nfeet\".\nAnd the sons of Mary, now far and\nwide,\nAre bearing the truth ihe Master\ntaught;\nThey have laid all earth born cares\naside\nTo follow our Lord and share his\nlot\n\"Peacefully sleeping and unaware\nAs Kipling says 'In a cushioned\nseat\"\nIs not the part they are called to\nbear,\nFor they have sat at the Master's\nfeet\nMartha received Him into her house,\nAnd Jesus became a willing guest;\nMary received him Into her heart,\nAnd that Is ever our Saviour's quest.\nThey sons in spirit we see today\nOn the mission field or the busy\nmart\nServing, yes, serving, each ln his\nway,    , .\nBut Mary's have chosen \"that good\npart.\"\nF. W. NASH\nRenata, B.C.\nIVU8T AIM  HIGHER\nGreat Britain has purchased 400\nfighting airplanes In the United\nStates, bringing Its efective fleet\nup to 3500 ready for action. But it\nhas not yet solved, 'he problem of\nbeing able to build them as fast as\nthey may be destroyed. \u2014Saskatoon\nStar-Phoenix.\nBetter to Appeal\nto Healthy-Minded\nThan to the Morbid\nTo the Editor.    <\nSir; I should like to endorse the\nobjection of L. Frank Carter to the\nprominence given to crime and its\nrevolting details.\nThe faults of a good man are\nmore noticeable than the faults of\nthe bad. That is by reason of con-\ntrast. The same may be said of a\ngood newspaper like \"The Dally\nNews.\"\nI am familiar with the stock arguments. It is said that the public\ndemand it. But the tact is, only some\not the public demand it. And I ask\nyou which it is more commendable\nto please: the morbid minded, horror mongers, or decent, healthy\nminded people who have no desire\nto look at a photograph bf blood\nstains on the ground. Those who\nlike sensational and crime stories\nwill find plenty of them glaring at\nthem from cheap magazine stalls.\nIt is said that a newspaper is run\nfor profit like any other business\nand could not be run profitably if it\ndid not publish long details ot crime.\nNo doubt many criminals would try\nto justify their deeds on the same\nplea\u2014economi* necessity. It is hardly ln line with the high Ideals expressed at the recent convention ot\nnewspaper men, and gives support to\nthe criticism we hear of In the\n\"Capitalist Press.\" The Christian Science Monitor is a perpetual disproof\nof this theory.\nIt is said \"The truth will not hurt\nanyone.\" II that is so let's meet our\nenemies next time with dummy\nguns. It is also said that whatever\nis true should be exposed. That is\nevidently the. philosophy of the\nnudists.\nR. B. W.\nAnnable, B. C,\nAug. 18, 1938.\nLooking Backward..*\nTEN YEARS AQO\nAugust 23, 1926\nHarold (Chic) Gillett, Nelson athlete, and Miss Ruth Nicholson were\nmarried at Trail August 21.\u2014On\ntheir return to Nelson, friends ot\nthe couple held them up on the\nTaghum hill, and \"kidnapped\" the\nbride, only letting her Join her\nhusband near the outskirts of Nelson.\u2014Miss Helen Young of Portland, Ore., is visiting her mother,\nMrs. E. C. Young at Rossland.\u2014Miss\nFrances McHardy returned from\nCranbrook, where she was a guest\nof Mr. and Mrs. Walter Brddie.\nTWENTY YEARS AGO\nAugust 23, 1918\nFrench troops have taken 8000\nprisoners in a smash on a 15M_-mtle\nfront in the Oise-Alsntf river sector.\u2014Mrs. Gertrude Elsen Lane and\nDuncan Gillis were mai-risll at the\nhome of v. H. Delves at Trail, Aug\nust 20. \u2014 Early apples, peaches,\nplums and pears are being shipped\nfrom Waneta.\u2014John H. Hoyle and\nWilliam F. Hoyle of Queen's Bay\nwere city visitors.\u2014Miss Grace Cos-\ngrlff of Rossland was a visitor in\ntown.\u2014The Balfour sanitarium has\nbeen changed trom a military to a\ncivilian hospital.\nTHIRTY YEAR8 AGO\nAugust 23, 1908\nA branch ot the Imperial Bank\not Canada has been opened at Michel under the management ot T. B.\nBaker.\u2014School opens in Nelson tomorrow.\u2014George Stilwell of Nelson Is confined to hospital at New\nDenver with appendicitis. \u2014 The\ncity park is being Cleaned and new\nseats put up.\u2014The barometer is\nfalling for the first time In a month.\nWater is so low that sprinkling regulations may be Imposed on citizens shortly, cutting their hours\nconsiderably,\nLesson for Man\nin Operation in    \u2022\nCreston Hospital\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014Medical science Is the art of\nstudying the energy laws in the\nuniverse, which are the creators of\nall organic life both in the vegetable\nand animal kingdom here on earth,\nbesides the creators and maintainors\nof the universe within the orbit of\nour solar system, and not a personal God\u2014as established at the beginning ot human civilization by the\npolitical hierarchy at that time, for\nits own selfish end.\nSo expert has medical science become in discovering and applying\nthose energy laws, forces and elements, which creates all organic life,\nthat it practically can rebuild a\nhuman wreck, thht Satan's monetary\nsystem, constantly keep on destroying within the nation's organism\u2014\nif the flow of energy has not ceased\nto operate.\nMedical science Studies the laws\not cause and effect, and finding the\ncause traces the effect, and seeing\nthe effect traces the cause.\nMedical science applies only to\norganic life, and in organic life\nmedical science has discovered that\none organ operates for the benefit\nof all the organs, and all the organs\noperate tor the benefit of each individual organ. For if one organ is\ninjured or out of work, all the\nother organs are immediately put\ninto activity for mending the injured organ.\nI had occasion not long ago to\nstudy -the marvelous skill of medical science in mending the human\nbody, when I was brought to Creston hospital, to be operated on for\nrupture. During the whole operation,\nI was in full control of my mental\nfaculty so as tb follow the operation,\nin as much as the doctors simply\nfrote that part of the abdomen\nwhich they had to cut open, to get\nat the rupture inside, and there was\npractically no pain during the whole\noperation. When the entrails were\nreplaced In their natural position,\nthe doctor began to sew up the\ninner rupture, and for this purpose,\nhe must have used thread that had\norganic life, for eventually the\nthread has to unite with the flesh\nwithout being subjected to decay,\nfor after the abdomfcn was sewed\nup, no one could get at the thread to\nremove it.\nFor sewing up the abdomen, wire-\nthread was used, and these were removed about 15 days after, when\ntbe cut was healed on the outside.\nAnd in 21 days I was released from\nthe hospital, thanks to the skill of\nthe two doctors, Dr. Murray and\nDr. Campbell, and the splendid nursing staff of the Creston hospital.\nIt is a crime for anyone to go\nwith a rupture, when medical\nscience can restore nature to its\noriginal function. For when a man of\nmy age, 83, so successfully can be\nhandled and mended by medical\nscience what excuse have you beyond my age, to neglect the proper\nmending of your body?\nI learned another thing, which\nmedical science has discovered. Namely, that the energy laws ln the\nuniverse nature will mend almost\nany wound, if medical science will\nattend to keep the poisonous bacteria\naway from tne wound.\nMedical science does not kneel\nand pray to a personal God, with\nheadquarters at some heavenly planet. Medical science deals direct\nwith our real God or creators\u2014those\nimmutable energy laws, forces and\nelements, that engulf the whole\nuniverse.\nAnd those energy-laws equip all\ntheir organic creations with senses\nso as to enable them to obey their\nlaws.\nThose life giving energy laws,\nforces and elements in the universe\nmake no discrimination between\ncreed, nationalities, religions, dag-\nmas, rich or poor, high or low, gentiles or criminals, they all have unstinted and free access to their abundance of life giving functions. Nor\ndo these laws, forces and elements\nrecognize what we call sin or crime,\nbut if we disobey those laws, we\nbring the punishments upon ourselves, such as take place, If we\neat too much, drink too much, or in\nany other way disobey the instruction of our senses, when we have\nto call upon medical science to mend\nus.\nIf we could apply those energy\nlaws\u2014now understood and available\nby medical science for giving nations\ntheir industrial and social life\u2014instead of Satans monetary system, as\nImmutable\niverse, as\nwhich we\nnow in use, we would have solved\nthe problem that now remains unsolved by all Nations.     , Tj\nWhen mankind attempts to\"maka\na national organic body ont of human beings, mankind must adhere to\nthe same laws as those which our\ncreators apply for making healthy\nhuman beings, or its creation will be\na failure, such as we now are fully\naware of.\nMedical science could be ot great\nassistance ln helping political science\nin creating a healthy nation,' lust\nas It assists out Creator's energy\nlaws in mending ths Ills Ot a human\nbody.\nBut Satan's monetary system, now\nIn control ot all nations, will not\nrmit this. And then\nprevent Satan's n\ntern to continue its.t\ntions, except a men\nby a majority ot the\nman beings In the ni\nphysical revolution c\nthis. That only wotll\nmonetary system in fl\nnations.\nAs formerly ex],\norganic life as reqi\nganized nation, can I\nwhen individual indi\ncial organizations in\ncrate for the full\nwhole nation. And- L\nindustrial and social\noperate for the welfat\nof each Individual ori\nThat is, the laws ot\nenergy forces ln ibi\napplied to organic 1110,\nall live and have our beings. And\nall the activities of those laws, forces and elements result in \"Lite\".\nMay I quote an incident, that took\nplace in Norway some years ago,\nwhen the students at the Oslo university were to write for their final\nexaminations, on the -Subject \u2014\n\"What is Life?\" The-students were\ngiven so many hours to write on the\nsubject, and they all became busy,\ncovering sheets pf paper,, except\none who later became one of Norway's foremost poets. (Sorry I can\nnot recall his name, as NOrway has\nhad many outstanding poets apd\nauthors.) This student, instead of\nbusying himself with writing, folded\nhis arms, concentrated his mind on\nthe void, and became lost to all bis\nsurroundings, until one of the professors announced that only one\nminute remained tor the students to\nfinish their writings., then took his\npen and wrote:\n\"What.Is LifeVA breath in matters, A play of Energy, urging forward Eternity,\"\nWhen the professors came to this\npaper, they were\" all nonplussed, and\nundecided, what to do .with it But\nat last, they decided that here was a\nmind superlous to.theirs, and tvrote\non the paper, \"Peascf\nI am aware that I. am distributing\na hornet's nest in the affairs of\nmankind.\n0. J. Wigen,\n WynnaeL-B. c.\nCAMBERWELU Eng. (CP)\u2014In-\nqucst on Dick Bromley, 81, disclosed he always Wore two waistcoats containing more than \u00a3150 ;'\n((795) in gold. Total weight ot the\nmoney was 8'A pounds.\nFOR\nMINING CAMPS\nUnsanded Cottonwood\npanels are suitable for\nall mining ahd other\ncamp buildings. They\nare strong, waterproof,\nlight and vary easy to\nhandle.\nDistrict Distributors\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Co., Ltd.'\nm\n\"Build B.C. Payrolls\"\nClimate\nWater\nPasture\nThe climate alone' and water\nand their effects upon herds\nand pasture are enough in\nthemselves to produce good\nmilk and they help greatly\nto make Pacific the fine\nmilk it is.\n'Every can of Pacific Milk,\"\nonce wrote a user, \"Is a tribute to British Columbia.\"\n\u25a0   \u25a0       -Tl\nPacific Milk\nIrradiated, of Course\nHove Ypu Any\nUsed\nFARM\nIMPLEMENTS\ni\n\u25a0\nWhy Not Turn\nThem Into Gash\nA WANT AD\nWill find a\nPurchaser\nTwo (2)- lines 8 times 80c net\nTwo (2) lines once 20o net\nNelson Daily News\n -IWUWRP\nmmmmmm\nmw^wt\u2014a\u2014m.\nI6<*<f\nNELSON,DAILY NEW8. NELSON. B.C-TUESDAY MORNINO, AUG. 23, 1938.\n\u25a0 PAGE SEVEN\nYOUNG SAM SNEAD BEATS COOPER\nFOR TITLE IN 27-HOLE PLAY-OFF\nLoughlin Resigns\nSASKATOON, Aug. 22 (CP) -\nAnnouncement of the resignation of\nClem Loughlin as coach of the Saskatoon Quakers for the 1938-39 sea-\ncon was made today by Jack Hunter\nrhanager of the Northern Senior\nHockey league entry.\nLoughlin, former coach of the Chicago Black Hawks in the National\nHockey league, Joined the Quakers\nlast fall and piloted them into the\nnorthern league finals where they\nlost to Flin Flon in an eight game\nseries.\nThe Quakers have not appointed\na successor.\nNelson Athletes\nAt Final Stage\nTrack Training\nlo Compete at Trail,\nNelson, Labor Day\nWeek-End\nSix Nelson athletes are entering\non the last stage ol conditioning alter a summer's track and field\ntraining in preparation for two\nforthcoming meets. They are getting into final shape under the direction ol A. (Major) Wallach, veteran Nelson trainer, and will be on\ntheir marks' when the gun sounds.\nThey will compete at Trail September 3 and at Nelson September\n5.\nDanny Barry, a recent arrival\nIrom Vancouver, is working on\nthe mile and half-mile, and Frank\nSwerydo, one of Nelson's most serious runners, is conditioning himself for his favorite distance events.\nThe \"Major\" has lour smart girl\nrunners preparing to defend the\nalmost-traditional Nelson supremacy in the girls' relay\u2014Audrey Emery, Isobel Donovan, Doreen Long\nand Bertha Moir.\nAudrey and Bertha have been\noutstanding performers in Kootenay\ngirls' track events lor several years.\nThe latter is returning, to competition after a year's absence.\nFirst B.(. Boxla\nFinals al (oast\nAbout Sept. U\nTRAIL, B.C., Aug. 22\u2014First game\nol the B.C. senior lacrosse finals will\nbe played at the coast about September 24, according to a telegram received by frank Coates, vice-president of the B.C. association.\nIrish League\nBELFAST, Aug. 22 (CP Cable)-\nIrlsh Football league games played\ntoday resulted as follows:\nCliftonville 1, Derry City 5.\nBallymena United 1, Newry Town\n0.\nGlenavon 2, Belfast Celtic 1.\nArds 2, Bangor 0.\nDistillery 2, Pwtadown 2.\nLame 1, Linfield 4.\nColeraine 3, Glentoran 5.\nTied at End of Extra\n18, Has 5-Stroke\nLead at Finish\nBy JACK CALDER\n(Canadian Press Staff Writer)\nTORONTO, Au(j. 22 (CP) -\nYoung Sam Snead of White Sulphur Spring, W, Va., slammed a\nl2th-hole eagle at the studied\ngame of llghthorse Harry Cooper\nby five strokes In a spectacular\nCanadian open golf championship\ntoday and went on to win the\n17-hole playoff. .\nJust when he seemed about to\nyield to the fine Iron play of the\nveteran Chlcagoan, Sam conquered Mtsilssauga club's toughest\nhole with a soaring woodshot and\na EO-foot putt to catch up. They\nfinished the stipulated 18 holes of\nmedal play tied at 67 strokes, but\nafter that Snead got hotter and\nCooper colder. Tne southerner\nfinished with 101, five below par,\nand Cooper with 108.\nSnead was a stroke down as they\ncame to the 12th, a 630-yard stretch\nover water. Cooper spanked his\ndrive- down the alley and Snead's\nslice landed 100 feet behind a tall\ntree that lay in line with the hole.\nCooper's second was short and to the\nright of the green. The young\nslammer picked his No. 4 wood and\nbalooned the ball over the tree and\nthe creek. It dropped dead on the\nfar side of the green.\nThe lighthorse rolled his approach to 25 leet from the pin. Snead\ncurled his 50-footer into the cup for\nthree and Harry sank a downhill\nslider for birdie four.\nTURNING POINT\nThat was the turning point, for\nthough Cooper was as good as the\nyoungster until the 19th, Snead was\nmore confident and accurate than\nhe had been all day. Cooper nearly\nwon on the 18th, when he slipped\nhis try for a birdie three a fraction\nof an inch to the left of the cup. Sam\nwon the 19th and stayed ahead as\nCooper's game blew up, casting off\nthe title he won last year at Toronto\nSt. Andrew's.\nBut Cooper didn't lose at the 12th,\nnor at the 18th nor the 19th, He lost\non the home hole Saturday, when he\nwas finishing the 72-hole championship tournament well ahead of the\nfield.\nThere he floundered over the 18th\nfairway for a seven, to finish with a\nfour-round total of 277. Snead followed him in with a birdie and\nthree pars on the last lour holes to,\ncome even and Paul  Runyan of\nWhite Plains, N.Y., only other close\ncontender, was third with 280.\nBy   his   victory,   Snead   took\ndown $1000 first prise, the Seagram gold cup and the medal of\nthe Royal Canadian golf association. Cooper won  $600.  8nead\nwent farther ahead of Cooper at\nthe top of the year's list of money\nwinners, expanding his earnings\nto more than $11,000.\nTEST MATCH\nSCORE CARD\nLONDON, Aug. 22 (CP Cable) .-\nScore card in the final England-\nAustralia cricket test match started\nSaturday, follows:\nEngland\u2014first innings\nHutton. not out 300\nEdrich, lbw b O'Reilly    12\nLeyland, run out , 187\nW. R. Hammond, lbw\nb Fleetwood-Smith     69\nPaynter, lbw b O'ReilJy      0\nCompton, b Waite ..._ \u2014     1\nHardstafl, not out    40\nExtras    35\nTotal (for five wickets) 634\n-Fall of wickets: 1-29; 2-411; 3-546,\n4-84\u00a3 5-555.\nSPORT SIMMERINGS From the Wire\nBy ALAN RANDAL\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nNEW YORK, Aug. 22 (AP)-Ten-\n, nls ln the United States is in the\nmidst of one of the biggest years\nsince Its pioneer days as measured\nby crowd appeal.\u2014The Aussie Davis cuppers have no fear of the United States in doubles\u2014Take it Irom\nJack Bromwich who says, \"We'll do\nail right\u2014we've beaten Budge and\nMako three times, haven't we?\"\u2014\nBobby Riggs ol the United States\nteam watched the Aussies sweep\nthrough the Germans and was deeply impressed with the ability of\nthe boys from down under.\nFrom now oh Bobby Feller is\ngoing to pitch Oscar Vitt's way.\u2014\nThe Cleveland manager told the\nyoung lireballer to stop raising his\nlelt leg high In tha air belore the\npitch\u2014\"Feller can't possibly have\ngood Control so long as he's throwing himself off balance with an exaggerated leg movement,\" says Vltt.\nGene Tunney, former heavyweight champion, says Henry Armstrong's monopoly on three boxing\ntitles is detrimental to the box-\nfighting business.\u2014'It leaves public\ninterest in the lower divisions at\na low ebb,\" says Gene.\nLou Ambers' boxing .earnings\nhave assured him ol a monthly annuity payment ol $250 any time he\nwishes to call on it\u2014That means\nhe's salted away about $90,000.\u2014\nChris Dundee makes his fighters\nbe 'thrifty whether they want to or\nnot.\u2014From each purse they must\nbuy at least one $37.50 federal bond.\n5RIGH0USE PARK RACE RESULTS\nSPORTING NEWS\nPreparing for fhe Kootenay Boxla Playoffs\nRedmen put an edge on the tomahawk and Smoke Eaters fill up on smoke,, belore tangling with each other prior to'the survivor going alter\nthe Maple Leals hanging high.\nTAYLOR'SEBONY\nMOONWINSRACE\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 21 (CP) \u2014\nEbony Moon Irom the Major Austin C. Taylor's stables won the\nbreeder's handicap, feature event on\ntoday's card at Brighouse park.\nHer stablemate, Ho Hey, was second and Eagle Crest third.\nEbony Moon, which returned\n$2.90, $2.70 and $2.40 won without\nbeing seriously extended. Ho Hey\nlaid $2.70 and $2.40. Jockey Emil\niporri had the mount on Ebony.\nGateway won the sixth in a driving finish with Cold South and\nBarney Keen. Handled by Jockey\nColpitts, the horse challenged in\nthe stretch and won going away,\nwhile Cold South raced Society Editor into submission. Gateway was\nworth $12.70, $6.05 and $4.75..\nGaillardia won the first when he\npractically set all the pace and\nstood a drive to hold off Thunder\nHawk and Hadage, who finished in\nthat order. Thistle Grace won the\nthird coming from behind to defeat.Be- Mine and Homminy Imp.\nThe daily double was worth $61.10\nto bettors who picked Nellie Quince\nin the second and Thistle Grace in\nthe third, while the one-two paid\n$32.35 on the Gateway-Cold South\ncombination in the sixth.\nBone Chip Taken\nOutofHubbell's\nArm at Hospital\nMEMPHIS, Tenn., Aug. 22 (AP)\n\u2014A surgeon cut a bone chip from\nCarl Hubbell's left arm today and\ntonight the freshly bandaged incision held the answer to the question: \"Will the Screwball King return to his baseball throne?\"\nA routine hospital report said the\nlong-time big gun of New York\nGiants'pitching artillery was ''getting along fine.\" Operating Surgeon J. Spencer Speed- declined to\npredict the ultimate result.\nSPORTS ROUNDUP...\nBy cDDIE\nNEW YORK, Aug. 22 (AP). \u2014\nThose red faces out Cleveland way\nbelong to the Indians' bosses who\ngave up on Joe Heving. .. . And\nnow read about his winning two\nin a row and pitching 17 straight\nscoreless innings for 'the Red Sox.\n. . . Are the Pirates cracking, or is\nthat thunder in the distance? . ..\nWhat's this about someone with\nplenty of what-it-takes making offers for the Phillies, lock, stock and\nbarrel. . . . This corner's personal\nnomination for the A.L.'s most valuable player this year is Buck New-\nsome. ... Any flinger who can\npitch those Brownies out of the cellar deserves the keys to the city.. . .\nJoe Dwyer, the ex-Southern association walloper (late of Baltimore), is a free agent and wants to\nBRIETZ\nget back in baseball. ... His good\npal, Tony Galento, will recuperate\nfrom old man pneumonia at Joe's\nplace in the Poconos....\nDon't be surprised if Connie Mack\npulls the biggest deal of the offseason again. . . . Philly writers say\nhe may get Rudy York from the\nTigers for Bob Johnson. ... If he\ndoes, York will go back to first\nbase\u2014the one job in the field he\ncan really handle,\nEdo Vanni, a sophomore back\nwho learned the game playing\nrugby up Vancouver way, is one ol\nthe biggest reasons they're tabbing\nWashington as the dark hoss of the\ncoast conference.... The Yanks are\na cinch to bust the 10O-game mark\nin the win column this year. . . .\nDon't be surprised if they have the\npennant sewn up by Sept. 15. . . \u25a0\nBatting Leaders\nBy The Associated Press\nG AB R HPct.\nLombardi, Reds 94 355 43 127 .361\nTravis, Senats 109 417 78 146 .350\nRadcliff, W. S. 84 324 43 111 .343\nFoxx, Red Sox 106 397 95 135 .340\nSteinb'r, W. S. 82 318 48 108 .340\nW'ntraub, Phil 59 206 32 70 .304\nM'C'mick, Reds 114 489   73 164 .335\nHome runs:\nAmerican league: Greenberg, Tigers, 42; Foxx, Red Sox, 33; York,\nTigers, 27; Johnson, Athletics, 25;\nGehrig, Yankees, 24; DiMaggio,\nYankees, 24; Clift, Browns, 24.\nNational league: Goodman, Reds,\n28- Ott, Giants, 27; Mize. Cardinals,\n19; Camilli, Dodgers, 17; Medwick,\nCardinals, 15.\nRuns batted in:\nAmerican league: Foxx, Red Sox,\n118; Greenberg, Tigers, 98; DiMaggio, Yankees, 95; Dickey, Yankees,\n89; York, Tigers, 89.\nNational league: Ott. Giants, 90;\nMedwick, Cardinals, 87; McCormick, Reds, 86; Goodman, Reds, 78;\nCamilli, Tlodgers, 77.\nResults\nINTERNATIONAL\nBaltimore 2, Montreal 13.\nJersey City 6, Toronto 2.\nSyracuse 8, Toronto 2.\nAMERICAN ASSOCIATION\nIndianapolis 3; St. Paul 8.\nColumbus 4, Milwaukee 8.\nLouisville 3; Minneapolis 9.\nRedmen Tonight\nPlay Last Game\nLeague Schedule\nROSSLAND, B. C, Aug. 22 -\nRossland Redmen play their last\n;ame of the West Kootenay La-\n\u2022rosse league Tuesday night when\ni hey meet Trail Smoke Eaters on\nihe Trail floor.\nAmbers Just Ducked This One In Time!\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 21 (CP)\u2014\nRace results at Brighouse park today:\nFirst race, claiming, purse $400.\nFor three-year-olds and up; bV,\nlurlongs:\nGaillardia (Griffin) $11.90, $7.50,\n$5.40.\nThunder Hawk (Cox) $12.90, $7.10.\nHadage (Grigg) $5.55.\nTime, 1:06 4-5. Also ran\u2014Myturn,\nWeneedit, Pour Mol, Ethel Star,\nSorrtl Top, Louie Dear, Arthur W\nand Omar John.\nSecond race, claiming, pure $400.\nFor three-year-olds and up, loaled\nin western Canada; six furlongs:\nNellie Quince (Pierson) $9.35,\n$5.15, $4.20.\nTetra Play (Robinson) $5.80, $5.40.\nLady Goldstream (Cox) $3.90.\nTime, 1:13. Also ran \u2014 Peach\nStone, Rose Camp, Sprangle Hen,\nFavorsome, Princess Han, Weno\nand Pert Peggy.\nThird race, claiming, purse $500.\nFor  three-year-olds  and  up;  one\nFOR   CAS!\nFOR   OIL!\nFOR   CREAStl\nSHORTY'S REPAIR\nSHOP\nM4 BAKER ST.        NELSON, B.C.\nLOOK AT YOUR HAT\nEveryone Else Does!\nJACK BOYCE\nt_. ,*   lit1'        __.\u00bb____\n5\u00a36 Baker St.\nmile and one-sixteenth.\nThistle Grace (Jackson) $11.35,\n$5.05, $3.55.\nBe Mine  (Haller)   $3.85, $3.40.\nHominy Imp (Wilbourne) $5.90.\nTime, 1:45 2-5. Also ran\u2014Mr.\nSpence, Good Han, King's Folly\nand Kelconard. The daily double\npaid $61.10.\nFourth race, claiming, purse $400.\nFor three-year-old maidens; bV>\nfurlongs:\nClear Title (Jackson) $16.00, $8.10,\n$6.15.\nMorpeth (Kelly)  $3.95, $2.95.\nHasty Julia (Wilbourne) $3.65.\nTime, 1:07. Also ran \u2014 Memphis\nMaid, Glacine, Avondale Star, Ro-\nseta V, Go-Go, In Chains, Gold\nNormanne and Orm Ele.\nFifth race, the Breeders' Handicap purse $700. Six furlongs:\nEbony Moon (Sporri) $2.90, $2.70,\n$2.40.\nHo Hey (Craigmyle) $2.70. $2.40.\nEagle Crest  (Simpson)   $3.10.\nTime, 1:14 1-5. Also ran\u2014Bellos,\nCraig Shot, Fay Park, Pharima.\nSixth race, claiming, purse $400.\nFor four-year-olds and up; six furlongs:\nGateway (Colpitts) $12.70, $8.05,\n$4.75.\nCold South (Lasswell) $5.60,\n$4.20.\nBarney Keen (Pierson) $8.95.\nTime, 1:11 1-5. Also ran-SOclety\nEditor, How High, Hasty Day, Miss\nNoyes, Genevieve M. His Selection,\nTwin Peeks, Grico. The one-two bet\npaid $32.35.\nSeventh race, claiming, purse\n$500. For three-year-olds and up;\none mile, 70 yards:\nJusta Sheik (Craigmyle) $4.55,\n$3.10, $2.55.\nIrene F <Cox) *3.55, $170.\nValerie Jean (Pierson) $3.45.\nTime, 1:44 3-5. Also rah-Peggy\nGeorge, Fllsak and My Gentleman.\nHUTTON HAS 300 RUNSr NOT OUT, AS\nRECORDSCRASH IN TEST CRICKET;\nENGLAND HAS 63\u00ab RUNS FOR FIVE\nLONDON, Aug. 22 (CP-Cable)\u2014Records went by the board today\nas England piled up 834 runs for five wickets In the second day's play\nof the fifth and final cricket test match against Australia.\nAfter 11 hours at the wickets, Leonard Hutton was unbeaten when\nstumps were drawn with 300 runs, highest Individual score ever made\nly 34 i\ntwo c\nby an Englishman In Anglo-Australian tests.\nThe 22-year-old Yorkshire player needs o\nBradman's record score for tests between the two countries and only\n38 to equal Wally Hammond's 336 against New Zealand at Auckland\nIn the 1932-33 series\u2014highest test match score on record.\n\"new REOORD\nHutton and Maurice Leyland,\nalso a Yorkshireman, by adding 352\nfor the second wicket set a new\nlartnership record lor any wicket\nhighest partnership waa\nset by Jack Hobbs  and  Wilfred\nNo Information\non N.Y. Rangers\nVisiting Nelson\nAlthough reports are circulating In Nelson that New York\nRangers hockey team will be seen\nIn Nelson this fill, before the\nopening of the National Hockey\nleague, no definite Information is\navailable so far. There has aa yet\nbeen no communication from the\nRangers club to the Nelson civic\ncentre commission, stated Denis\nStDenis, secretary-manager, Tuesday night.\nLynn Patrick, son of the famous Lester Patrick, Rangers' head,\nwas reported by the Vernon\nNews recently as saying Vernon\nfans might see the Rangers this\nfall as they would be In Nelson\nand might visit Vernon on their\nway through.\nNothing more definite than this\nIs known In Nelson.\nPirates Add Half\nGame le Margin\n(By The Canadian Press)\nBig Jim Tobin hurled five-hit ball\nand bis Pirate mates bunched four\nof their hits for three runs in the\nseventh inning Monday to give\nPittsburgh a 4-2 victory over the\nCubs in the linal game of their\nseries. It was one of three games ln\nan abbreviated schedule in both\nmajor league circuits.\nA crowd of 13,768. which brought\nattendance for the three-day setto\nto better than 70,000, saw the Pirates\ntack  another  half-game   to  their\nnational league lead. They are now\nfive and a half games in front of\nthe New York Giants, most of whom\nwere spectators at yesterday's game.\nIn the only other National fixture en the list, Cincinnati Reds\nbroke loose with an  18-hlt attack against four St. Louis Cardinal pitchers to give Paul  Derringer his 17th victory of the season, 11-4.\nALL IN TWO INNINQ8\nThe Reds exploded for five runs in\nthe fourth, the inning after Manager Bill McKechnie was banished\nby Umpire George Barr for protesting Derringer's being called out at\nthe plate, and garnered six more in\nthe next three frames.\nThe Chicago White Sox caught up\nwith Bob Feller in the eighth inning, scored three runs on Mike Kree-\nvich's triple with the bases loaded,\nand handed the Indians a 4-2 trimming in the fifth and deciding game\nol the series. It was the only game\nin the American league. The New\nYork Yankees scheduled appearance at Philadelphia was played as\npart of a doubleheader Sunday.\nGoing into the eighth the Indians\nwere leading 2-1, and Feller had\nfanned eight, walked but two and\nheld the Sox to six hits.\nIt was Feller's eighth deleat\nagainst 12 victories, and his second\nstraight loss.  ^^\nFairway Extension\nGrass Growing Well,\nRossland-Trail Club\nROSSLAND, B. C, Aug. 22-The\nrecently seeded extension lairways\nol the Rossland-Trail goll course\nare rapidly growing into line shape,\nAl Baker, course caretaker, reports.\nThe good grade ol grass seed, constant treatment and watering hastened the growth ol the grass, and\nMr. Baker found he had to cut the\ngrass several times. It is being kept\n2I_4 inches long to prevent further\nevaporation of the moisture.\nThe new five-unit pneumatic tire\ngrass-cutter is being used on this\nJob.\nMarie Mont and\nSalero in a Dead\nHeal at Edmonton\nEDMONTON, Aug. 22 (CP) -\nCaught ln a dead heat by the eye-in-\nthe-sky camera, Salero and Marie\nMont, a pair ol the day's longest\nshots, provided the biggest thrill\nand a $241.90 qulnella at the filth\nday ol Edmonton's fall race meet\ntoday.\nJockey Johnny Collins, substituted as Salero's rider when Jockey\nFumano hurt his leg in riding the\nwinner ol the sixth race, carried\nhis mount to the top from the barrier and stayed there ufttil the home\nstretch. Just as they crossed the\nfinish line, Marie Mont, ridden by\nJockey Hamilton, caught up. Marie\nMont would have been the lone\nwinner in another stride.\nAcross the board, Salero, which\nclosed at approximately 30-to-one,\npaid $19.45, $11.90 and $6.95 while\nMarie Mont paid $14.20, $10.55 and\n$7.30. Breeze Brown, the even-money\nfavorite, finished last.\nMarellus, a favorite, won the first\nrace and when Buddy's Choice won\nthe third, the winning daily double\nticket holders collected $105.60.\nJockey Albert Bodlou came back\nfrom three days' rest to guide Hornet to victory in the day's feature\nrace. The gelding covered the seven\nlurlongs in 1:28 3-5, lour-lifths of\na second behind the track record.\nLargest of the day's high prices\nwas paid by Book Whittier, winner\nof the fourth race. The veteran campaigner paid $35.10, $16.85 and $10.10\nacross the board after barely beating Nourrice and Wee Carol in a\nthree-horse photo-finish.\nrevious highest\nRhodes, In Australia in the 1911-12\nseries the noted opening batsmen\nmade 323 lor the lirst wicket.\nWithout E. L. McCormick, their\nnoted last bowler, suffering from\nneuritis, the Australians were forced to put the burden ol attack on\nFleetwood-Smith and W. J. O'Reilly.\nAt present the lormer has sent\n70 overs, taking only one wicket lor\n235 runs. O'Reilly's brace cost 72\nruns apiece, The big New South\nWales spin bowler has bowled 86\novers. Waite, Stanley McCabe and\nSidney Barnes were used, the lormer's one wicket costing 121 runs.\nLEYLAND  MAKES  187\nTwenty-live thousand spectators\nsaw the English batsmen Hog the\ntired Australian bowlers, Maurice\nLeyland making 187 lor his seventh\ncentury and highest score against\nAustralia in test competition.\nShowers Sunday and again today\napparently had little elfect on thi\nwicket. In view pi the lact tha\nmatch is to be played to n finish\nthe north countrymen took no\nchances, picking the loose deliveries and keeping the ball low most\nol the time.\nIt was Hutton's highest score since\nhe made his debut in first-class\ncricket lour years ago. Last year\nthe chunky lirst-wicket batsman\nhit up 271 not out Ior hie county\nagainst Derbyshire ln a county\nmatch. When he resumes play to-\nmorrow he will be partnered by\nJoseph Hardstaff, Nottinghamshire\npro, whose total at present is 40.\nIf England is successful in tha\ncurrent match the series will end\nwith one victory lor each team.\nTwo matches were drawn and the\nthird abandoned on account of rain.\nIn any event Australia will continue\nto hold the ashes which they won\nin England ln 1934.\nEntries In Labor\nDay Sports Ahead\nof Last Year's\n~For~th?'firsi tifne ln the history ol the ring\none man wears three crowns at the same time,\nthe battler who turned the trick being Henry Armstrong, sending a smashing right to the head of\nLou Ambers, as he annexed the latter's lightweight\ntitle by taking a 15-round decision in New York.\nAmbers ducked this blow and caught it on his\nshoulder, but the grimace on his lace indicates he\nwas having no easy time. It was a much closer\nbattle than expected and the decision was booed by\nthe pro-Ambers crowd. Hammering Hennery already held the featherweight and welterweight\ntitles.\nBuy or sell with a Classified Ad.\nltWiMiM*WtW'I*W*W'W'J\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nW L Pet.\nNew York  75 34 .688\nCleveland     63 45 .583\nBoston      81 \u00ab .575\nWashington    57 57 .500\nDetroit     55 56 .495\nChicago     46 58 .442\nPhiladelphia  38 70 .352\nSt. Louis  39 69 .361\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nPittsburgh      67 42 .615\nNew York  63 49 .583\nCincinnati  82 51 .549\nChicago  61 52 .540\nBoston       53 58 .\nBrooklyn     53 58 .477\nSt.   Louis    50 62 .448\nPhiladelphia    34 73 .318\nSYDNEY, Australia (CP)\u2014A payout clerk, presented with a winning\nticket worth \u00a355 ($220) at the Canterbury park course, said he had\nalready paid a ticket of that number. It had been forged on the cashed ticket\n\"Entries are away ahead of last\nyear at this time, and things are\nlooking really good,\" said Albert\n(Major) Wallach, secretary of the\nClan McLeary and Nelson Kiltie\nband Labor Day sports committee,\nMonday night, speaking of preparations for the big day, September 5.\nAn entry never before on the\nlist, ln the live years the sports\nhave been held, was received Irom\nJ. Mayble of Calgary, who is entered in the 440 and 880 yards, and\none mile runs. A track entry from\nfar away has never been received before.\nIn the highland dancing, one entry is in from Vancouver, three\nIrom Edmonton, six Irom Calgary,\nand one Irom Clover Bar, Alta,\nSunday afternoon, Len Negus sot\nTraU, motorcycle daredevil who\ncrashes through a wall of flaming\nboards one-liall inch thick, measured the Recreation grounds track\nlor a spot to erect his board wall\nBIG LEAGE BALL\nSCORES\nNATIONALI\nl!l\nPittsburgh         4    I  0\nChicago         2    8  I\nTobin and Todd; Bryant, Russell,\nRoot and Garbark.\nR  H\nCincinnati     11   18\nSt. Louis      4  10\nDerringer and Lombardi; Davis,\nShoun, Roe, Henshaw,\nAMERICAN:\nR  HI\nChicago        4    \u00bb  1\nCleveland     2    \u00bb 8\nWhitehead and Rensa; Feller and\nHemsley.\nBUDGE, MAKO, QUIST, BROMWICH\nADVANCE WITH ONE-SIDED WINS\nBROOKLINE, Mass., Aug. 22\n(AP)\u2014One of the largest foreign\ndelegations In the 57 years of\nnational doubles tennia competition was halved during today's\nopening play, whioh saw the future Davis cup rivals, Don Budge\nand Gene Mako, of the United\nStstes, and Adrian Quist and Jack\nBromwich of Australia, advance\nwith one-sided victories.\nTen of the 32 pairs entered In\nthe United States championships\nwsre foreign teams and half of\nthem were eliminated during the\nfirst-round play, two because of\ndefaults.\nHenner Henkel, a winner here\nlast year with the Imprisoned\nBaron Gottfried Von. Cramm, and\nhis new German Davis cup teammate, Georg Von Metaxa, were\nordered to withdraw by their\nhome tennis association. The same\ncablegram also prevented their\nteam's spare player, Rolf Gfofert,\nfrom teaming with Jacques'Brug-\nnon, the French veteran.\nThe other foreign pairs to drop\nout were Tamio Abe and Fumitera\nNakano of Japan, who were beaten,\n6-3, 6-4, 10-12, 6-4, by Bobby Riggs\nof Chicago, and Bryan Grant of\nAtlanta; the Japanese Australian\ncombination of Yasumine Kuramit-\nsu and Mervin Weston, which was\neliminated 6-2, 6-3, 6-4, by Wilmer\nAllison and Johnny Van Ryan ol\nAustin, Tex., and England's Eric J.\nFilby and Roland A. Shayes, who\nbowed to Gardner Mulloy ol Miami, and George Foley ol Los Angeles, 6-2, 3-8,1-5, 3-6, 6-4.\nUpholding their top seedings on\nthe domestic and foreign lists respectively in the approved style,\nBudge and Mako swept through\nMarvin Wachman of Milwaukee,\nand Norbert Burgess of Chicago,\n8-3, 8-1, 6-3, while Quist and Bromwich were Just a bit more impressive overwhelming the California\npair ol Ballagh and Verne Hughes,\n6-2, 6-2, 6-2.\nTrain\nfor\nOpportunities\nAIRCRAFT CONSTRUCTION\nAIR CONDITIONING AND\nREFRIGERATION\nDIESEL ENGINEERING\nELECTRIC WELDING\nThese fields urgently need men.\nWrite Before Thunday to:\nS E. OKELL\nVocational Service\nLimited\nCare ef Nelson Dally News er\napply at Royal Hotel.\n \u25a0 ' \u25a0.\"\nWM\"\u00bbfl\u00abPl'l\n,GE EIGHT-\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON, B.C.-TUESDAY MORNING, AUG, 23, 1338,\nALL THRIFTY PERSONS USE THE CLASSIFIED ADS EVERY DAY\nON THE AIR\n\u202210 k. CJAT\nTRAIL,  B.  C.\n319.0  m.\n1000  w.\n7:30\u2014All-request program\n8:15\u2014Morning Bulletin Board\n9:00\u2014Glen Darwin, songs\n9:30\u2014Street scene\n9:45\u2014Rhythm Revels\n10:00\u2014Big Sister\n10:15\u2014Songs\n10:30\u2014Uooo   Morning  Neighbor\n11:00\u2014Mary Marlin\n11:15\u2014Ma Perkins\n11:30-Pepper Young's Family\n11:45\u2014The Guiding Light\n12:00\u2014Lazy Rhythm\n12:15\u2014Organ and Violin\n12:30\u2014Noontime novelties\n12:45\u2014Sport Page of the Air\n1:00\u2014Rhythm and Romance\n1:15\u2014Backwoods  Breakdown\n1:30\u2014These Four\n1:45\u2014Closing stock quotations\n2:00\u2014Orchestra\n2:30\u2014Weekly song sheet\n3:00\u2014Orchestra\n3:30\u2014News\n3:45\u2014Sport in Canada\n4:00\u2014Theatre News\n4:30\u2014Trail Times Presents\n5:00\u2014Everybody's hour\n6:00\u2014At the Big Store\n6:30\u2014Mart Kenny's orch.\n7:00\u2014News\n7:15\u2014 \"Listen\"\n7:30\u2014Lloyd Huntley's orch.\n8:00-That Was the Year\n8:30\u2014Mitchel Ayres\n9:00\u2014Ensemble de Cordes\n9:30 Easy to Remember\n9:45\u2014News\n10:00\u2014Master Singers\n10:30\u2014Swing Time\n10:45\u2014Sign Off Serenade\nCANADIAN   BROADCA81INC\nCORPORATION  NETWORK\nCKOV CJCJ CJCA CHWK CFQC\n630       690      730       780       840\nCFJC   CJAT   CKY CFAC   CJOC\n880       910       910 930       960\nCKCK CBR\n1010 1100\n5:15 P.M.\u2014~~~\nEverybody's Hour (CBC)\n6:00 P.M.\u2014\nEvening Serenade (CBC)\n6:30 P.M.\u2014\nMart Kenny's orch,\n7:00 P.M.\u2014\nNews, weather (CBC)\n7:15 P.M.\u2014\nAviation Today\n7:30 P.M.\u2014\nLloyd Huntley's orch. (CBC)\n8:00 P.M.\u2014\nFamiliar Music\n8:30 P.M.\u2014\nMitchell Ayre's orch. (CBC)\n9:00 P.M.\u2014\nEnsemble de Cordes (CBC)\n9:30 P.M.\u2014\nSpent Spinner, talk (CBC)\n9:45 P.M.\u2014\nWeather and News (CBC)\n10:00 P.M.\u2014\nConcert Trio (CBC)\nSocial. ..\nSALMO\nSALMO, B.C.-Misses Shirley and\nCarol Lindstrom left Saturday for\nNelson to be guests of Miss Mona\nMiller.\nMrs. Dan Murray of Fruitvale is\non an extended visit to her son and\ndaughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. W.\nMurray.\nMr. and Mrs. C. Botteril have returned to their home at Creston\nafter visiting the later's parents,\nMr. and Mrs. D. Anderson.\nJ. Fraser of Durango mine at\nYmir is spending a few days at his\nhome here.\nMiss W. McAlpine was a visitor\nin town Saturday.\nMiss Mary Miller has returned to\nher home at Nelson after spending\ntwo weeks at the home of her uncle\nand aunt, Mr. and Mrs. A. Bremner.\nMrs. L. Anderson has left for\nCreston to reside.\nMrs. George Bradley left Sunday\nto spend a two-week vacation with\nrelatives in Oregon.\nMr. and Mrs. H. Grutchfield were\nin Nelson Monday to attend the\nfuneral of the latter's aunt, Miss J.\nWhite.\nMiss June King was a visitor in\nNelson Wednesday and was bridesmaid at the wedding of her sister,\nMiss Mary King to Bernard Dodd.\nMiss Elizabeth Wilson left Sunday\ntor Spokane where her marriage to\nCharlie Wanstall took place Monday.\nShe was accompanied by her sister,\nRita, who will remain with her uncle\nand aunt, Mr. and Mrs. L. Wilson.\nMr. and Mrs. Henry John were\nvisitors to Nelson Monday to attend the funeral of J. G. Bunyan.\n\u25a0 Miss Joyce Bremner visited her\naunt. Mrs. W. Miller, in Nelson\nMonday.\nMr. and Mrs. L. G. Moir and children, accompanied by Mrs. Churches\n. of Rossland, motored to Nelson Sunday. They were accompanied home\nby Mrs. Moir, sr., who spent 10 days\nWith relatives at Nelson.\nMrs. D. Gibbon and children have\nreturned from two weeks holiday\nin Nelson.\nMr. and Mrs. C. Wanstall and\ndaughter, Rose have returned after\nspending two months at Nakusp.\nMr. and Mrs. D. C. Aldis motored\nto Sullivan Lake Wednesday afternoon where they attended the Kootenay Belle picnic.\nCHINESE QUALIFIES\nFOR PILOT'S LICENCE\n' MOOSE JAW, Sask., Aug., Aug. 22\n(CP)\u2014Believed to be the first Chin-\nI ese to qualify for a commercial p.-\nI lot's licence in Canada, Tom Wong,\nI qualified today at the airport here\nI following tests under an officer of\nI the Department of Transport. He\nswans to enter University of Toronto\nI this fall.\nPAYS PENALTY\nJ BROKEN HILL, Northern Rhode-\nIlia, Aug. 22 (CP Reuters)\u2014George\niBlackmore was executed at dawn\nI today for murder\u2014the first white\nI man ever to suffer the death penalty\nI in Northern Rhodesia.\nMiss K. Morrison\nIs Honored Guest\nat Chapman Camp\nKIMBERLEY, B. C.-A miscellaneous shower was held Friday\nevening at the home of Mrs. Art\nDutton of Chapman Camp in honor\nof Miss K. Morrison.\nAbout 30 guests were present and\nfive tables of bridge were in play.\nMrs. Jack Barrett won first prize,\nAgnes McGowan second, and consolation was taken by Mrs. Edith\nMorrison of Medicine Hat, who is a\nguest of Mr. and Mrs. Wilfred\nMason.\nAfter refreshments a basket decorated in rose color was given to the\nbride-to-be. It contained many\npresents.\nDivine Mind Is\nAil-Embracing\n\"MIND\" was the subject of the\nlesson-sermon in the First Church\nof Christ, Scientist, Sunday.\nThe Golden Text was, \"Behold,\nGod is almighty, and despiseth not\nany: He is mighty in strength ond\nwisdom\". (Job 36:5).\nAmong the citations which comprised the lesson-sermon was the\nfollowing from the Bible: \"And now,\nIsrael, what doth the Lord thy God\nrequire of thee, but to fear the\nLord thy God, to walk in all his\nways, and to love him, and to serve\nthe Lord thy God with all thy heart\nand with all thy soul\". (Deut. 10:12).\nThe lesson-sermon also included\nthe following passage from the\nChristian Science textbook, \"Science\nand Health with Key to the Scriptures,\" by Mary Baker Eddy: \"When\nwe realize that there is one Mind,\nthe divine law of loving our neighbor as ourselves is unfolded; whereas a belief in many ruling minds\nhinders man's normal drift towards\nthe one Mind, one God, and leads\nhuman thought into opposite channels where selfishness reigns.\"\nTRANS-CANADA AIR\nSERVICE TO START IN\nFALL- -HUNCERFORD\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 22 (CP)-S.\nJ. Hungerford, president of Canadian National Railways and Trans-\nCanada Air Lines, said today -om-\npletion of Lethbridge, Alta. airport\nsometime around Sept. 1 would\nmark completion of ground facilities\nin the Vancouver-Winnipeg lap of\nT. C. A.'s route.\nWhile he was not prepared to say\njust when traffic would be started\nover the western section of the\ntrans-continental airway, he said it\nwas anticipated service would begin \"shortly after\" the last six T.\nC. A. planes were delivered from\nthe California factory early next\nmonth.\nNdium Daily Nfttis\nMember ot tht Canadian Dally\nNewspapers Association\nTELEPHONE  144\nPrivate Exchange Connecting to\nAll Departmenti\nSubscription Rates\nSingle copy I   Ob\nBy carrier, per week 2b\nBy carrier, per year 13.00\nBy mall tn Canada to subscribers living outside regular\ncarrier areas, per mouth 60c;\nthree months $1.80; six months\n$3.00; one year $6.00.\nUnited States and'Great Britain, one month 75c; six mouths\n$4.00; one year $7.50.\nForeign countries, othei than\nUnited States, same ai above\nplus any extra postage.\nClassified\nAdvertising Rates\nWet Lin*\n(Minimum 2 Lines!\n2 lines, pel insertion $ .22\n2 lines. Is consecutive\niniertlous ....\u201e__.  \u25a0\u2014.   Ob\n(8 for the price of 4)\n3 lines per insertion *_\u2014 -33\n3 lines. 6 consecutive\ninsertions   ............ 1.32\n2 lines, 1 nionth 2.66\n3 lines. 1 mouth 4.29\nFor advertisements of more than\nthree lines, calculate on\nthe above basis.\nBox   numbers  Ac  extra.  This '\ncovers any number of insertions.\nALL ABOVE RATES LESS 10%\nFOP PROMPT PAYMENT\nRate for advertisements under\nSituations Wanted, 25c for required number of lines for six\ndays, payable in advance.\nBIRTHS\nDYNES - To Mr. and Mrs. W.\nV. Dynes, Pine avenue, Trail, at\nTrail-Tadanac hospital, Wednesday,\nAugust 17, a daughter. Mrs. Dynes\nwas formerly Miss Dorothy Dockerill.\nPIGHEN \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs. Z.\nPighen, Trail, at the Trail-Tadanac\nhospital, Wednesday, August 14, a\ndaughter. Mrs. Pighen was formerly\nMiss Sophie Yurkoski.\nTEACHERS WANTED\nFEMALE TEACHER FOR PRIM-\nary grades of Yahk school. Must\nplay piano and teach music to\nDivs. I., II.. and 111. Apply to Mrs.\nA. L. Lythgoe, Sec.-Treas.   (2600)\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nGIRL, 25 WANTS WORK IN STORE\nexperienced in office work, also\nunderstands soda fountain work.\nWork more essential than good\npay. Ready to start in Sept. Box\n2611 Daily News.   . (2611)\nGIRL 20, WANTS HOUSEKEEP-\ning job and help cooking in or\naround Nelson. Apply Box 2818\nDaily News. (2818)\nFINNISH WOMAN WANTS WORK\nby hour. Camp or hotel cook. Go\nanywhere, Ph. 1011L, 416 Silica St.\n (2785)\nCOMPETENT GIRL DESIREsW-\ntel work or housekeeping; adults\npreferred. Box 2837 Daily News.\n(28371\nHIGH SCHOOL GIRL WANTS\nwork after school and week-ends.\nBegin now. 642 Wasson St. (2832)\nRELIABLE GIRL WOULD LIKE\nhousecleaning by hour or day.\nPhone 670L1. . (2781)\nGIRL, 21, FOND OF CHILDREN,\nwill care for them by day or hour.\nPhone 915R. (2748)\nAN EXPERIENCED GIRL WANTS\nhousework or any other work.\nPhone 44.  (2831)\nEXP. GAS WELDER AND BENCH\nman. Married. Box 2763 Daily\nNews. (2763)\nPERSONAL\nPROMOTED\nVANCOUVER, B. C, Aug. 22 (CP)\n\u2014City Detective Sergeant Jack Parsons has been promoted to the rank\nof inspector, succeeding Inspector S.\nLowry who retired recently.\n1MBERLEY Social...\nKIMBERLEY, B. C. - Mr. and\n|MrB. John Morrison of Chapman\n\u25a0Camp announce the engagement of\n\u25a0their eldest daughter, Katherine\nILorna, to Everett Clark Price oi\n\u25a0Rossland, the marriage to take place\nprly in September.\nDon McKenzie of Trail is visiting\nIbis parents, Mr. and Mrs. N. P. Mc-\niKcnzie.  His  wife  and  baby  have\nbeen here rincc the middle of July\nisiting   Mrs.   McKenzie's   parents,\nand   Mrs.   William  Young  ol\nChapman Camp.\n, Mr. and Mrs. William Vallance\n(are holidaying at Spokane and other points.\nI. Mr. and Mrs. Art. Irwin spent three\nays at Nelson, Trail and Rossland,\n^turning Wednesday,\n\\ Mr. and Mrs. Fred Edmunds and\nMargaret left Saturday for two\nweeks vacation at Spokane and El-\nfnberg.\n\u25a0 Jimmy Campbell left Saturday\n|or two weeks vacation.\n; Mrs. Roy Schmid of Butte, Mont,\nIs visiting her sister, Mrs. Jack Sanderson. Miss Mildred Nevin came\nJlith her. They spent the week-end\nIt Banff.\nT'Mr...  Ethel  Skead  and  Margaret\nlltutned Wednesday from a month's\n- \u25a0\nholiday at Coeur d'Alene and Trail.\nSarah White returned today from\ntwo weeks holidays at Drumheller\nand Calgary.\nRev. Mr. and Mrs. J. Allan left.\nWednesday for two weeks vactaion\nat Biggar, Sask. Mrs. McPhail and\nson, John, went with them to visit\nrelatives in Alberta,\nMr. and Mrs. William Allan will\nsupply during their pastor's absence.\nMadame Laurent Morin from Edmonton is visiting her daughter\nand son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. A.\nLauzon.\nMrs. M. A. Terry of Vancouver is\nvisiting her brother and sister-in-\nlaw. Mr. and Mrs. J. McNicholas of\nMcDougall townsite. She plans to\ngo on to Nelson to see her daughter-\na nurse at Kootenay Lake General\nhospital.\nMr. and Mrs. J. C. Shields of\nMarysville returned Saturday from\na holiday at the coast. Isabel, Donald and Billy accompanied them.\nEvelyn Gustafston returned on\nThursday from a week's holiday\nwith her grandfather in Saskatchewan.\nTerry Gower and Finley Conroy\nleft Wednesday for four days fishing 10 miles above St. Marys lake.\nMiss Jean Wlieatly of Regina is\nNEW PEP AT 40 FOR MEN AND\nwomen. New OSTREX Tonic\nTablets contain 2 stimulants from\nraw oysters plus 4 general tonics\nto pep up whole body. Try package today. If not delighted, maker\nrefunds its low price. Call, write\nMann, Rutherford Co.        (2187)\nVACATION TIME IS SNAPSHOT\ntime. Add to your holidays pleasures by making sure your films\nare properly developed and printed, thus keeping an everlasting\nmemory. Films developed and\nprinted for 25c. Krystal Photos,\nWilkie, Saskatchewan. (205)\nHAVE YOUR RUGS tt CARPETS\nthoroughly cleaned the Schrader\nWay. Satisfaction Grtd. Ph. 564 or\nwrite for estimates and list of satisfied cstmrs. Home Rug Cleaners.\n(18261\nCOMPANIES INCORPORATED;\npersonal liability reduced; other\nadvantages; free advice; quick\nwork, fair price. Box 2801 Daily\nNews.  (2801)\nGENUINE LATEX SPECIAL GTD.\n25 for $1.00 or jiffy prepared 18\nfor $1.00 (free catalogue). National\nImporters, Box 244, Edmonton.\n       (214)\nANY SIZE ROLL DEVELOPED\nand printed 25c. Reprints eight tor\n25c. Mail to Interior Photo Supply,\nBox 2133, Trail. B. C.        (2526)\nMEN'S SUPERFINE SANITARY\nrubbers. 18 for $1\/10, also Latex\n25 for $1.00. Burrard Specialty. 18\nW. Hastings St., Vancouver. (2610)\nMETROPOLE HOTEL, 320 ABBOTT\nStreet, Vancouver. $1.00 per day\nup Private bath $1.50. Best value\nin Vancouver. (2307)\na guest in the home of Mr. and Mrs.\nEdmunds of Chapman Camp.\nMiss Bessie Bidder left Saturday\nfor a vacation at Spokane, Portland\nand the coast.       *\nJack Hargreaves is a patient at\nMcDougall hospital.\nBill Derbyshire is a patient in the\nlocal hospital.\nHarry and Robert Smith from\nVancouver, who were visiting their\nniece Miss Knighton of Chapman\nCamp, for two weeks left for Winnipeg Sunday.\nE. C. Price of Rossland visited Mr.\nand Mrs. John Morrison at Chapman Camp, leaving Friday.\nMr. and Mrs. Syd Smith returned\nSaturday from two weeks vacation\non Vancouver Island.\nJoe Samaniski from Reno, Nev.;\nPaul Morris of Los Angeles; Roy\nSchmid, Bill Barrett and Frank\nWakely from Butte and T. R. Stone\nfrom Calgary, left Friday with Jack\nSanderson for a week's fishing up\nthe Elk river,\nMr. and Mrs. E. Jones returned\nSunday from Spokane.\nMiss Velma Zak and Miss Mary\nLatka left Sunday for Portland,\nwhere they will spend a holiday.\nROOM AND BOARD\nU. B. C. GIRLS-EXCEPTIONALLY\ngood place to board. Apply Mrs.\nDaviis 4786 W. 4th, Vancouver, B. C.\n (2828)\n16 YR. OLD HIGH SCHOOL BOY\nwants room and board in exchange\nfor services. Box 2771 Daily News.\n(2771)\nROOM OR ROOM AND BOARD\navailable for gentleman. 642 Wasson St., Rosemont. (2833)\nROOM AND BOARD IN NEW P'ST-\nvate home close in. Box 2747,\nDaily  News. (2747)\nROOM OR ROOM AND BOARD\nfor gentleman. 723 Silica St. (2823)\nFOR HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS.\nApply 904 Vernon St. (2744)\nROOM AND BOARD, 419 SILICA\nstreet. (2737)\nPOULTRY. SUPPLIES, ETC.\nRHODE ISLAND RED  PULLETS\nfor sale. Particulars  on request.\nTriangle Poultry Fm., Armstrong.\n(2641)\n25  LEGHORN PULLETS, AGE 4\nmths. $1.25 each. Hudson, Balfour.\n(2811)\n144 IS THE CLASSIFIED\nPHONE NUMBER\nFOR SALE\nPIPES, TUBES, FITTINGS\nNEW AND USED\nLarge stock for immediate shipment\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD\n1st Avenue and Main St\nVancouver, B. C.\n(216)\n2-CYCLE GAS ENGINE, PEARCE,\nEquipped, Marine or stationary..\nOperates by gas, steam ot compressed air, Apply 208 Anderson\nStreet. Nelson. (2741)\nPIPE AND FITTING\nCANADIAN JUNK Company, Ltd\n250 Prior St. Vancouver, B. C.\n(215)\nAUTOMOTIVE\nvFORD\nSACKS, BAGS ALL KINDS. PIPE\ntt Fittings all sizes\u2014Active Trading Co., 916 Powell St., Vancouver.\n(1499)\nHOUSEHOLD    FURNISHINGS -\nRange,   Singer   sewing  machine;\nHeater, etc. Cheap. 55 Douglas Rd.\n(2838)\nGROCERY STORE FITTINGS AND\nfixtures. Well made. Cheap for\nquick sale. Lowery, Baker St.\n(2761)\nFOR SALE - BARRELS, KEGS,\nsugar sacks, liners. McDonald Jam\nCo., Ltd., Nelson, B. C. (217)\nMILL   ENDS, BIG   LOADS   $3.75.\nSaw Dust $4 unit. Ph. 434R1 or 163.\n(2515)\nBLK  CURRANTS, CHERRIES, 3c\n\u25a0 lb. Pick them yourself. Ph. 374L3.\n(2757)\nCHEAP. SOME GOOD USED GAS\nranges. Apply office Kerr Apts.\n(2685)\nLIVESTOCK\nFOR SALE- WELL MATCHED\nteam horses, 7 years old. $175, or\nsell separate. Raymond Hong,\nHarrop, B. C. \u2022 (2779)\nFOR SALE GRADE JERSEY COW\nwith first calf (heifer). G. Noel\nBrown. Bonnington. (2778)\nWANTED 1 YEARLING BULL,\nShorthorn preferred. Gus Anderson, Salmo, B. C. (2767)\nYOUNG COW FOR SALE. APPLY\nJ. Law Bell, Park's Siding.  (2812)\nFor Want Ad\nService\nPhone 144\nTWO \u25a0\nGOOD BUYS\n1. Located on Second street, one and a half lots, new modern\nBungalow, just completed.\nConsists of modern kitchen and dinette, built-in white plumbing, large panelled living room and two bedrooms. Wired for\nelectric stove, concealed lighting, attic space for two more\nbedrooms, if desired, ample cupboard space, full basement,\nlaundry tubs and direct hot-air heating. For immediate sale\n$3950 terms, or $3500 cash. This is a model house built to the\nlatest designs, and a bargain.\n2. Very desirable property consisting of modern house, four bedrooms, large livingroom, open fireplace, good plumbing. Full\nbasement, stone foundation, furnace heated and twelve lots\nunder cultivation, excellent soil.\nA splendid buy at $3000 with terms or $2800 cash.\nAPPLY:\nR. W. DAWSON\nPhone 197\nGeneral Insurance\nHipperson Block\nP. O. Box 61\n(2830)\nWe Must Unload at\nOnce AH'of Our\nR. and G. CARS\nYOU SHOULD SEE THESE\nVALUES\nNothing to Compare With\nThem Any Place as to\nCondition and Appearance!\nPONTIAC COUPE- dj-l iC\nSpecial dJi'id\nCHEVROLET COUPE\u2014   d\u00ab<)-J ff\nLovely shape   tftulO\nPLYMOUTH SEDAN-     $97K\nNewly painted  ti)u t O\nPONTIAC SEDAN- ffOQK\nAll reconditioned  dJOOu\nFORD COUPE\u2014Late        <C7QK\nmodel, low mileage   w i s)D\nTERRAPLANE COUPE- ifcCQK\nNearly new  (DOt\/t)\nCHEVROLET  TUDOR-  d\u00bb\u00ab)__4K\nExceptional value   sgu'iO\nPLYMOUTH SEDAN-     flfCCA\nOnly one left; special   tDQt\/U\nFORD TUDOR\u2014Late        AJ70K\nmodel; this will go quick so i LO\nWHEN WE  ADVERTISE  WE\nMEAN BUSINESS-NO PHONIES\nQueen City\nMotors Ltd.,\nFORD DEALERS\nNELSON. B.C.\nPhone 43 561 Josephine St.\n(2577)\nSERVICEABLE \"STAR\" CAR.MIL-\neage 24,000. Nearly new balloon\ntires. Make good light truck. $50.\nPorteous, Queen's Bay.        (2782)\nFOR RENT, HOUSES, ROOMS\nAND    APARTMENTS\nFOR RENT - FURNISHED COT-\ntage seven miles from Nelson,\nNorth Shore. Until Sept. 17. Running water and light. Apply L. R.\nDuff, R. R. No. 1. J2825)\nFOR RENT.- SMALL HOUSE.\nCentral location. Apply 621 Silica\nStreet or Phone 478R.        (2780)\nFURNISHED  HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms for rent Annable Block.\n(219)\n5   RM.   UNFURN.   SUITE,   ALSO\nfurn. suites. Kerr Apartments.\ntm\nFURN. HOUSE. CALL 1002 HOO\nver St. 1 blk. from carline. (2813)\nTERRACE APTS. Beautiful modern\nfrigidaire equipped suites.   (221)\nTWO ROOM FURNISHED SUITE\nfor rent. Stirling Hotel.       (2628)\nNEWLY   FURNISHED   SUITES.\nGas. Apply 140 Baker St.   (2772)\nHOUSEKEEPING\nVictoria  Street.\nROOMS.     420\n(2786)\nPROPERTY, HOUSES. FARMS\nWONDERFUL OPPORTUNITY -\nDesirable one-acre property. Fair-\nview. Tenant there four years;\nrental yields about 10 per cent on\nInvestment. Space for 6 mote houses. Lovely view. Good land. Sacrifice |750. D. L. Kerr. (2554)\nFOR SALE - GOOD HOME ON\nfinest site in Nelson. Grand view.\nFive level lots. Stone foundation,\nfurnace, sleeping porch. Two car\ngarage, fruit trees. On view 10\na.m to 12. Call at 532 Baker St.\n(2758)\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non easy terms in Alberta and\nSaskatchewan. Write for full information to 908 Dept. of Natural\nResources, C. P. R\u201e Calgary, Alta.\n; (228)\n6 ACRE RANCH FOR SALE. 2\nstorey house, furnished. Water\nrights. One acre in garden. 1 Jersey cow and calf. 2 blocks from\nst car. $1250. Apply P. O. Box 67.\n(2836)\nFOR SALE - 6 ACRE RANCH. 2\nstorey turn, house. Water rights,\none acre in garden, one Jersey cow\n.and calf. 2' Blocks from Street Car\nLine. $1250. P. O. Box 67.     (2816)\n(Continued In Next Column)\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS,\n(Continued)\nSTORE. SMALL COUNTRY STORE\nin the Kootenays, wanted for cash.\nPrice required to handle and all\nparticulars to Box 2829 Dally Newa\n (2829)\nFOR SALE, - LARGE FULLY\nequipped Restaurant, with silt\nroom modern apartment above.\nApply Box 10, Creston, B. C.\n(2827)\nFOR SALE FULL SIZE CEMENT\nbasement 22 x 24. Unfln. 4 rmd.\nhouse. 2Vi lots. Cheap for cash.\nApply 302 Union St. (2799)\nWANTED TO RENT SMALL C5T-\ntage close in. North Shore or Fair-\nview. Low rent. Careful tenants,\nBox 2768 Dally Newi.        (2768)\nFOR SALE, GOOD FARM PROP-\nerty, all cleared, under Irrigation.\nReal brgn. E. Nouguier, Canyon.\n(2765)\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST - WALLET IN TRAIL OR\nNelson, Saturday. Contains identification, G.  S.  Austin. Reward.\nFinder please return to Daily News\n(2820)\nBusiness and Professional Directory\nA\u00bbayen\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst, Assayer, Metallurgical\nEngineer. Sampling Agents at\nTrail Smelter. 301-305 Josephine\nSt., Nelson, B. C. (182)\nGRENVILLE H. GRIMWOOD\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist, 420\nFall Street. Nelson, B. C\u201e P. O\nBox   No.  9.   Representing  shipper's interest. Trail, B. C.   (183)\nHAROLD S. ELMES, ROSSLAND\nB. C. Provincial Assayer, Chemist.\nIndividual Representative for\nshippers at Trail Smelter.   (184)\nChiropractors\nj. r. McMillan, d. c, neuro-\ncalometer, X-ray, McCullock Blk.\n(185)\nW. J. BROCK, D. C, 16 years' Ex-\nprnc. Ph. 969 Gilker Blk., Nelson.\n.  (186)\nFuneral Directors\nSOMERS' FUNERAL HOME\n702 Baker St Phone 252\nCert Mortician       Lady Attendant\nModern Ambulance Service\n1190)\nInsurance and Real Estate\nROBERTSON REALTY CO., LTD.\nReal Estate, Insurance, Rentals.\n347 Baker St., Phone 68.      (191)\nC. D. BLACKWOOD, Insurance of\nevery description. Real Est Ph. 99.\n(192)\nH. E. DILL, AUTO AND FIRE IN-\nsurance, Real Estate. 532 Ward St.\n.   (193)\nSEE D.   L.   KERR,   AGENT  FUR\nWawanesa Fire Ins. For better rates\n(194)\nJ. E. ANNABLE,   REAL ESTATE\nRentals, insurance.   Annable Blk\n(195)\nCHAS. F. McHARDY, INSURANCE\nReal Estate. Phone 135.       (196)\nR W. DAWSON, Real Estate, Insurance, Rentals. Next' Hipperson\nHard-ware, Baker St. Phone 197.\n(197)\nNotaries\nD. J. ROBERTSON, NOTARY PUB-\nlie. 305 Victoria St., Nelson. (2673)\nCorsets\nSpencer Corsets, Surgical Belts M.\nW. Mitchell, 370 Baker St., Ph. 668.\n(187)\nEngineers and Surveyors\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, Fruitvale, B C.\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor.\nReg. Professional Civil Engineer.\n(188)\nNelson,\nH.  D.  DAWSON,\nEngineer It Surveyor\n(1922)\nMachinists\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nFor ail Classes of Metal Work, Lathe\nWork. Drilling. Boring and Grinding. Motor Rewiring, Acetylene\nWelding.\nTelephone 593     324 Vernon Street\n(199)\nH. E. STEVENSON. Machinists.\nBlacksmiths, Electric and Acetylene\nWelders. Expert workmen. Satisfaction guaranteed. Mine & Mill work a\nspecialty. Fully equipped shop. Ph.\n98, 708-12 Vernon St., Nelson.  (201)\nMine & Equipment Machinery\nE. L WARBURTON, Representing\nC. C. Snowdon, Oils, Greases,\nPaints, etc. Agt Mine Mchnry. tt\nequipt., etc. Steam coals. Office\nChamber ot Mines, Ph. 894. Box\n28, Nelson. 203)\nSash Factory\nLAWSON'S    SASH    FACTORY,\nHardwood merchant, 273 Baker SL\n(206)\nWatch Repairing\nWhen SUTHERLAND retain your\nwatch it Is on time all the time.\n345 Baker St., Nelson. (209)\nSecond Hand Stores\nWE  BUY; SELL  tt  EXCHANGE\nfurniture, etc. The Ark Store.   \u2022\n(207)\nHOME FURNITURE, BUY, SELL,\nExch., Rpr. Upholster. 413 HID St.\n(1575)\nMac\nIS STILL\nUP IN THE\nAIR\u2014MR.\nSIMPKINS\nIS IN\nANOTHER\nPLANE\nTRYING\nTO CONTACT HIM\nBY RADIO\n...NOW\nANYTHIN6\nMISHT\nHAPPEN\nTHAT SORE IS A\nB16  PLANE YOUR I\nBOSS IS IN,TILLIE.\nIT MAKES MY\nPLANE LOOK\nA MOSQUITO\nBUT,, DICK,YOUR\nPLANE   HAS A    L\nRADIO IN IT-DONT\nVOU SUPPOSE MAC,\nIS LISTENIN6 TO\nTHE BOSS ?\n ___, \u25a0-\"\u25a0.'-\u00bb\"\n .\t\n\u2014^ ____\u2022__.\n \u2014mrnit\u2014mm'\u2014mimm\nI too\nMotors Lead Slow Decline on\nDull Market on Wall Street\nNEW YORK, Aug. 22 (AP). \u2014\nRallying power faded from the\nstock market today and dealings\ndwindled to'the lowest total for a\nfull' session in more than two\nmonths.\nWith the ticker tape frequently\nat a dead stop for more than a minute at a time, transfers for the five\nhours approximated only 350,000\nshares, the smallest turnover since\nJune.\nMotors led the morning slow-\nmotion decline, with profit selling\nIn this group indicated by the fact\nthe automobile stocks were in the\nforefront of last week's recovery\nmove.\nLosses ran to a point or so at the\nworst but feeble support near the\nclose enabled many to reduce setbacks materially.\nThe business picture generally\ncontinued to prop market sentiment,\nalthough pome skeptics in the financial sector were of the opinion\nshare prices, in the sharp mid-summer upswing, may have discounted\nmuch ot the Industrial Improvement\nlooked for over the remainder ot\nthe year.\nThe bond market presented a\nspotty appearance in late trading\nwith gains and losses, mostly of\nfractions, about equally divided in\nthe most active groups.\nAt the beginning of the final hour\nimprovement was shown by American Water Works 6s, Illinois Central\n4^48, Pennsylvania General 4%s and\nTexas Corp 3%s. Manati Sugar 7s\ngained nearly 2 in light turnover.\nLosers included N. Y. Central 5s,\nNorthern Pacific 4s, Southern'Pacific 4%s and Anaconda Copper\n4%s. Pillsbury Flour Mills 6s dropped nearly 2 on fairly substantial\nOfferings.\nThe foreign division was generally lower. U. S. governments extremely quiet, 5-finds higher to\n2-32nds lower.\nVANCOUVERDULl\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 22 (CP) -\nOnly 37,758 shares were traded on\ntoday's session of Vancouver stock\nexchange, with few issues trading\nat all, and those that did mostly\nholding ground, with some stocks\nloafing up or down a point or so.\nPremier Gold gained 3 at 2.35 and\nSheep Creek at 95 lost 1. Salmon\nGold ended at 10% with no sale Saturday. Neither was there any Satur.\nday sale of Kootenay Belle which\nended at 1.37 and Ymlr Yankee Girl\nat 16. Fairview at 6% and Reno at\n43 were unchanged.    ,\nThere was practically no base\nmetal activity, with Whitewater unchanged at 4%.\nCalgary It Edmonton lost 9 at\n2.25 in the oil section and Anglo-\nCanadian lost 2 at 1.38. Four Star\nclosed at 15, Foundation at 16%\nand Imperial Oil at 17.00, all unchanged. Okalta lost 2 at 1.28,\nSALT LOADING WAS\nHELD UP BY STRIKE\nGOODRICH, Ont., Aug. 22 (CP)\n\u2014Salt-loading operations on the package freighter Superior were delayed three hours last night when\n30 longshoremen stopped work and\ndemanded a 10-cent increase in\nwages to 50 cents an hour for night\nand Sunday work. Captain Dalton\nHudson refused the demand and\nother loaders were recruited from\nthe ship's crew.\nHUGE LOAN TO\nRAILWAY APPROVED\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 22 (AP) -\nThe United, States. Interstate Commerce commission approved today\nthe application of the Southern Railway company for a five-year loan ol\n$11,795,000 by the reconstruction corporation and the extension ot an R.\nF. C. loan of $12,475,204 maturing\nSeptember 1.\nImprove Road\nBetween Huscroft\nand Camp Lister\nCRESTON, B.C.\u2014Inauguration of\nCreston Consolidated school district has been particularly beneficial to the Huscroft-Camp Lister\nsection.\nAbout $200 has been expended on\nbettering the ventilation and lighting and otherwise brightening up\nthe Camp Lister school and on\nschool ground Improvements. And to\nfacilitate the operation of the school\nbus from Huscroft a very fine piece\nof highway reconstruction has been\ndone between the Husc!>oft and\nLister schools.\nThis stretch of road building was\nin charge of John Huscroft and is\nrated the best piece of work\u2014expenditure considered\u2014done by relief labor.\nReports from the district Indicate\nthat the apiarists in that section are\nto have a much better year than in\n1938. At the Demchuk and A. W,\nSinclair places a honey output of\n100 pounds per hive is anticipated,\nwith prospect of a better price than\nlast year as both the Canadian and\nU.S. honey markets are bare\u2014there\nis little or no carryover from 1937.\nOn the basis of 100 pounds per hive\nHuscroft-Camp Lister should market around five tons of honey.\nWhile the alfalfa crop is lighter\nthan last year, the second cut is of\nunusually fine quality, and with a\nshort hay crop ln the Kootenay's a\nsatisfactory price la looked for and\na demand that will compensate for\nthe disappointment manifest due the\nfailure of the effort to establish a\ncreamery at some point in the valley.\nLONDON. Aug. 22 (AP). \u2014 The\nUnited States dollar declined 1-16\ncent in terms of sterling today.\nFinal quotation for the unit was\n$4,98 1-16 to the pound compared\nwith a similar rate for sterling in\nNew York over the week-end.\nFrench francs improved slightly\nto close 178.56 to the pound against\n178.81 Saturday. ...\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NILSON, B.C.-TUESDAY MORNINQ. AUG. 23, 1938.\nand Mining News\nMany Losses in\nListless Session\nToronto Market\nDow-Jones Averages\n'   . .   , , ,                                       High       Low Close    Change\n30 Industrial .  141.61     146.12 140.92\u2014off    .28\n20 rails -    28.39       28.10 28.25\u2014off    .20\nU.UtUltiw  ~    19.76       19.62 19.69-off    .10\n40 bonds              88.83-off    .08\nToronto Stock Quotations\nMINES\nAlton Mines 03\nAldermac Copper  47\nAmm Gold    -15\nAnglo-Huronian\nArntfield Gold\t\nAstoria Rouyn Mines..\nAztec Mining\t\nBagamac Rouyn\t\nBankfield Gold .\nBase Metals Mining\t\n3eattie Gold Mines\t\nBidgood Kirkland\t\nBig-Missouri __\nBoWo Mines \t\nBralonie Mines __\nBrett Trethewey ___.\n3.30\n.16\n.04 Vt\n.04 %\n.19\n.63\n.3114\n1.30\n.33\n.3114\n.10\n9.50\n.0914\n15,75\n.1314\n1.00\n2.59.\n.90\nBuffalo Ankerite ...\nBunker Hill Ex\t\nCanadian Malartic ...\nCariboo Gold Quartz\nCastle-Trethewey \t\nCentral Patricia     2,59\nChibougamau  31\nChromium M 4t S ,    .67\nCoast Copper   2.50\nConiagas Mines    1.35\nConlaurum Mines    1.40\nConsolidated M tt S 59.50\nDarkwater  09\nDome Mines _. S3.00\nDom Explorers      .03%\nDorval-Siscoe  _.    ,07\nEast Malartic ...._    2.18\nEldorado Gold         2.27\nFalconbrldge Nickel   6.00\nFederal Kirkland     .07\nFrancoeur Gold _. _    .33\nSillies Lake  16\n3old Belt     .47\nClod's Lake Gold     .48\nGranada Gold Mines _.    .13\nGrandoro Mines  _.    ,05%\nGunnar Gold      70\nHard Rock Gold    2.21\nHarker Gold  10%\nHollinger   15.10\nHowey Gold     2614\nHudson Bay M & S   30.00\nInternational Nickel   49.35\nJ.-M. Consolidated      11\nJack Waite  3814\nJacola Gold     19\nKerr-Addison     2.05\nKirkland Lake    1.30\nLake Shore Mines 53,50\nLamaque Contact  03%\nLapa Cadillac  52\nLeitch Gold         87%\nLebel Oro Mines  06%\nLittle Long Lac    3.45\nMacassa Mines    5.25\nMacLeod Cockshult            3.60\nMadsen Red Lake Gold .53\nManitoba & Eastern 01%\nMandy 18\nMclntyre-Porcuplne     46.75\nMcKenzie Red Lake     1.23\nMcVittie-Graham         16\nMfWatters.Gold  66\nMining Corporation         1.95\nMinto Gold 03\nMoneta Porcupine     1.72\nMorris-Kirkland  09\nNipissing Mining     1.70\nNoran'da  74.00\nNormetal- 75\nO'Brien Gold     3.55\nOmega Gold ...\u00bb      .55\nPamour Porcupine .....       .  4.40\nPaulore , 07\nPaymaster Cons     .50\nPend Oreille    1.85\nPerron Gold    148\nPickle Crow Gold    5.20\nPioneer Gold .       3.00\nPremier Gold    2,32\nPowell Roiiyn Gold    2.43\nPreston East Dov_e     1.77\nReeves MacDonald       27\nReno Gold Miries 44\nRitchie Gold Mines 01%\nRoche Long Lac  12\nSan Antonio Gold    1.28\nShawkey Gold \"     ,0514\nSheep Creek Gold\" 97\nSherritt Gordon  _    1.26\nSiscoe Gold _.   212\nSmelters Gold     .03%\nSladen Malartic    1.07\nStadacona Rouyn 50\nSt Anthony  12\nSudbury Basin    2.55\nSullivan Consolidated    1.08\nSylvanite   '3.30\nTeck-Hughes Gold    4.80\nToburn Gold Mines    2.05\nTowagmac  42\nVentures           570\nWaite Amulet \u201e _.... 8.35\nWhite Eagle Silver 01%\nWhitewater  _. _    .05\nWright Hargreaves   7.85\nYmir Yankee Girl 1514\nOILS\nAjax    \u201e... \u201e.   .20\nBritish American  21.29\nChemical Research     45\nImperial  n.25\nInter Petroleum 26.50\nMcColl Frontenac 10.50\nTexas Canadian    1.39\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi Power        314\nBell Telephone      165\nBrazilian T L tt P    1114\nBrewers It Distillers      5%\nBrewing Corp      1.00\nBrewing Corp pfd     2014\nB C Power \"A\"        30V,\nB C Power \"B\"        314\nBuilding Products         54\nBurt FN        22%\nCanada Bread      414\nCan Bud Malting           4%\nCan Car It Foundry    16%\nCan Ceme.it      1014\nCan Cement pfd     95'A\nCan  Dredge     22%\nCan Malting        30%\nCan Pacific Rly      6%\nCan Ind Alcohol A     2%\nCan Ind Alcohol B     _    1.85\nCan Wineries      214\nCarnation  p(d   10214\nCons Bakeries     1414\nCosmos    20%\nDominion Bridge     36%\nDominion Stores     5\nDom Tar & Chem      7%\nD Ta\u00a5 & Chem pfd     78\nDistillers Seagrams     1314\nFanny Farmer       19%\nFord of Canada A     19%\nGen Steel Wares      814\nGoodyear Tire     6614\nGypsum L & A     0%\nHarding Carpet      3%\nHamilton Bridge .       8%\nHamilton Bridge pfd     42\nHinde Dauche         1514\nHiram Walker     4314\nIntl Metals          614\nIntl Milling pfd   101\nImperial Tobacco     15%\nLoblaw \"A\"     23%\nLoblaw \"B\"     21\nKelvinator     13\nMaple Leaf Milling      3\nMassey Harris     714\nMonlreal Power     30\nMoore Corp       3614\nNat Steel Car        64\nOnt Steel Prods    12\nOnt Silk Net      5%\nPage Hersey    95\nPower Corp    14\nPressed Metals     19\nSteel of Can   -    70\nTORONTO, Aug. 22 (CP).-Losses\npredominated today in a listless\nsession of Toronto stock exchange.\nTransfers approximated 400,000\nshares.\nA gold prospect, Granada, spurted\n2% to 13 for a new 1938 high. Gillies\nLakes eased a point to 16. Gunnar\njumped five to 70.\nPioneer, Tecfe-Hughes and Pickle\nCrow posted five-point advances\nwhile Macassa dipped five to 5.25\nO'Brien was the worst hit, dropping\n20 to 8.55.\nFalconbrldge was up 15 at 8.00.\nSmelters and Noranda forged ahead\nfractionally but Nickel' eased 14 to\n49%. Waite Amulet was off five\nat 5.35.\nMcColl preferred, ahead 14 at\n9914, was about the only big oil\nto withstand softening tendencies.\nDominion Bridge advanced around\n1% to 3614. National Steel Car eased\n1 to 64%.\nOkalta maintained a fiVe-polnt\nadvance at 1.30 throughout the day\nand Foothills pushed ahead four to\n60 but .others in the thin western\noil list did little. Royalite was up\n1% at 47 while Calgary and Edmonton eased a point to 2.30.\nApple Pack to Start\nat Creston Next Week\nCRESTON, B,C.-Graders at Long,\nAllan It Long, .Limited, and-Creston\nCo-Operative Fruit Exchange are\nthis week being conditioned for a\nstart at the 1938 apple pack, which\nwill get under way in volume in\nabout a week when Wealthy apples\nwill be coming ln.\nLast year the shipping of this\nvariety went over 21.W0 boxes, and\nexpectations are that the 1938 outgo\nwill be almost as large. Thursday's\nrain, with cool nights and abundant\nsunshine is just what is needed to\nbring along the color. Size was never\nbetter in the Wealthy.\nWhat volume movement there is\nat present is in the five-ton express\ncar section. At least two a day of\nthese are moving to points along the\nCrow as far as Medicine Hat. These\ncars are taking out a variety of\nproducts Including Duchess apples,\nClapp's Favorite pears, Transcendant\ncrabs, tomatoes and a small supply\nof cucumbers.\nAlthough canning plants have been\noperating in the Okanagan for the\npast week, the market is over-supplied with tomatoes, and the price is\nabout the lowest local growers have\nknown this early in the season.\nShipping will hardly be more than\n50 per cent of 1937, when well over\n20,000 crates were marketed.\nPeach plums are cleaned up.\nSo far the Tree Fruit board has\nnot set prices on Wealthys but it\nhas issued certain regulations as\nto pack. The minimum size permitted is 214 inches. They must have\nground color characteristic of the\nmature apple, and the fancy must\nhave 15 per cent color\u2014not \"showing of color.\"\nFor orders they may be packed\nfancy wrapped; otherwise Cee and\nf. and j. As soon as the movement\nassumes some proportion the Tree\nFruit board announces a cartel will\nbecome effective.\nHUPP   MOTOR8 TO\nINCREA8E CAPITAL STOCK\nNEW YORK, Aug. 22 (AP) -\nHupp Motor Car corporation, Detroit today notified New York stock\nexchange it plans to increase its authorized capital stock to 3.000,000\nfrom 2,000,000 shares. The new management has announced an expanded program for the 1939 model year\nwith Introduction of two new low-\npriced models.\nBuy or set1 with a Classified \/ d.\nMetal Markets\nLONDON, Aug. 22 (AP)-Closing;\nCopper, standard spot \u00a349 5s, future\ntZiO 10s, both up 2s 6d; electrolytic\nspot, bid \u00a343 5s, asked \u00a348 5s, both\nup 5s.\nTin spot \u00a319110s, future \u00a319 10s,\nboth off \u00a31.\nBid: Lead spot \u00a314 12s 0d, future\n\u00a314 13s 9d, both up 3s.\nZinc spot \u00a3 13 5s, up 8s 3d; future\n\u00a313 6s 9d, up 5s.\nBar gold 42s Sd, oft 14 penny.\n(Equivalent $84.78).\nBar silver 19 6-lCd, unchanged.\nNEW YORK\nCopper steady; electrolytic spot\n10.12%: export 10.01\u201408.\nTin steady; spot and nearby 43.00;\nforward 43.05.\nLead steady; spot, New York 4.90\n-AS; East St. Louis 4.75.\nZinc steady; East St. Louis spot\nand forward 4.78.\nPig iron, No. 2, f.o.b. Eastern\nPennsylvania, 21.00; Buffalo 20.00;\nAlabama 16.00.\nAluminum, virgin 99 per. cent,\n20.00.\nAntimony, spot 14.00. Quicksilver\n70.00-8.00.\nPlatinum, pure 39.00. Chinese\nwolframite, duty paid, 18.00\u201420.00\nnominal.\nBar silver 42%, unchanged.\nMONTREAL\nSpot: Copper, electrolytic 11.56;\ntin 45%; lead 4.50; zinc, 4.30; antimony 15.\nBar gold in London steady at\n$34.90 in Canadian funds; 142s 5d\nIn British. The fixed $35 Washington price amounted to $36.12 ln Canadian.\nSilver futures closed steady and\nunchanged today. No sales. Bids:\nAug. 42.35, Sept. 42.10 and Dec. 41.80,\nWorld   Exchonqes\nNEW YORK, Aug. 22 (API-Closing rates, Great Britain in dollars,\nothers in cents:\nGreat Britain 4.88%, 60-day bills\n4.87%; Canada, Montreal in New\nYork 99.65%; New York in Montreal\n100.34%; Belgium 16.86; Czechoslovakia 3.45%; Denmark 21.79; Finland 2.17; France 2.73%; Germany\n40.08, benevolent 19.65, travel 22.15;\nGreece .90; Hungary 19.85; Italy\n5.26%; Jugoslavia 2.34; Netherlands\n54.71; Norway 24.52; Poland 18.87;\nPortugal 4.43%; Rumania .75; Sweden 25.16; Switzerland 22.93; Argentina 32.53N; Brazil (free) 5.85N;\nMexico City 20.50N; Japan 28.48;\nHong Kong 30.53; Shanghai 17.30.\nRates in spot cables unless otherwise indicated. (N)\u2014Nominal.\nExchanges\nMONTREAL, Aug. 22 (CP)-Brlt.\nish and foreign exchange closed\neasier today. Nominal rates for\nlarge amounts:\nArgentina, peso, ,2584.\nAustralia, pound, 3.9101.\nChina, Hong Kong dollars, .3066.\nDenmark, krone, .2187.\nFrance, franc, .027431.\nGermany, reichsmark, .4022.\nGreat Britain, pound, 4.8980.\nNew Zealand, pound, 3.9416.\nSouth Africa, pound, 4.8729.\n(Compiled by The Royal Bank of\nCanada.)\nBond Trend Uneven\nNEW YORK, Aug. 22 (AP) -\nPrice movements in the bond market\ntoday Were mixed and uneven. U.\nS. governments closed 3-32ds higher\nto 3-32ds lower.\nDeclines were the rule in'the foreign list. Heaviest losers included\nMontevideo 6s, down 5%, and Milan\n5%s, down 1%.\nWinnipeg Wheal\nIs Fairly Steady\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 22 (CP) .-Winnipeg wheat futures were fairly\nsteady in a listless session today\nwith final values unchanged to %\ncent lower, October 67%, November\n67%, December 67% and May 70%\u2014\n14 cents.\nSmall advances were scored in\nihe initial hour owing to the better\ntone at Liverpool but reactions occurred when light selling developed\nat the half-way mark. .\nWeather reports from northern\nSaskatchewan and Alberta Indicated week-end rains might delay harvesting ln some areas. A United\nStates crop authority. R. O. Cromwell, at present inspecting Alberta's\ncrop, today estimated wheat production for that province at,141,000,-\n000 bushels. However, these reports\nfailed to Influence the trend at Winnipeg.\nLiverpool closed %d down to\nlid higher. Buenos Aires fell 1\u2014114\ncents but Chicago was relatively\nfirm.\nWorld wheat shipments last week\ntotalled 10.867,000 bushels, a decrease\nof 1,400.000 bushels. They were more\nthan 3,000,000 higher than for the\nsame week a year ago.\nNorth America cleared 4,402,000\nbushels, an increase of slightly more\nthan 200,000 bushels.\nWestern Canada wheat marketings Saturday took a big jump com-\n'pared with new crop deliveries a\nyear ago. They totalled 2.034,000\nbushels against only 959,000 bushels\nlast year.\nCash wheat dealings were dull\nwith most spreads unchanged. The\ncoarse grain futures were steady.\nHedging pressure in barley was offset by a fair export demand.\nMoney\nBy The Canadian Press\nClosing exchange rates:\nAt Montreal \u2014 Pound 4.89 26-32;\nU. S. dollar 1.00 11-32; franc 2.74\n5-16.'\nAt New York \u2014 Pound 4.88%;\nCanadian dollar .99 21-32; franc 2.73\n%.\nAt Paris \u2014 Pound 178.55 fr.; U.\nS. dollar S6.59 fr.; Canadian dollar\n36.46 fr.\nIn Gold \u2014 Pound 12s; U. S. dollar\n59.43 cents; Canadian dollar 59.23\ncents.\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 22 (CP).-Grain\nfutures quotations:\nOpen  High Low  Close\nWHEAT:\nOct\t\nNov    68\nDec    67%\nMay       70\nOATS:\nOct    31%\nDec    29%\nBARLEY:\nOct.\nDec.\n68       68%\n67%\n70%\n67%\n67%\n67\n7014\n31%    31%\n38%\n39\n39%-\n38%\n38%\n38%\n67%\n67%\n67%\n70%\n31%\n29%\n38%\n38%\n39%\nLondon Close\nLONDON, Aug. 22 (AP).\u2014Closing: Brazil $12; C. P. R. $6%; Int\nNickel $50%; U. S. Steel J6014; Cent\nMining \u00a323%; Consol Gold Fields\n75s; Courtaulds 30s 9d; Crown\n\u00a317%; H. B. C. 21s; East Geduld\n\u00a311%; Metal Box 75s 7%d; Mex\nEagle 4s 3d; Mining Trust 2s Od;\nSprings 29s 4%d.\nBonds\u2014British 2% per cent Consols \u00a375%; 3% per cent war loan\n\u00a3102t; funding 4s 1960-90 \u00a3113%.\nDividends\nFLAX;\nOct    - 141%\nRYE:\nOct    40%    40%    40%    40%\nDec    41%    41%    41       41\nMay   \u2014       \u2014       \u2014       48%\nCASH PRICES:\nWHEAT-No. 1 Nor. 78%;\nNor. 72%; No. 3 Nor. 69%;\nNo.\nNo.\n2\n_. 4\nNor. 61%; No. 5 wheat 53%; No. t\nwheat 47%; teed 44%; No. 1 Garnet\n60%; No. 2 Oarnet SIVs; No. 1\nDurum 56%; No, 4 special 53%; No, 5\nspecial 47%; No. 6 special 43%; track\n70%; screenings 33.\nOATS-No. 2 C. W. 31%; No. 3\nC. W. 39%; Ex. 1 feed 29%; No. 2\nfeed 27%; No. 3 feed 24%; track\ngilt\nbarley-no. 3 c. w. 37%; No. 4\nC. W. 35%; No. 5 C W. 34%; No. '\nC. W. 33%; track 87%.\nFLAX-No. 1 C. W. 141%; No. 2\nC. W. 137%; No. 3 C. W. 123%; No. 4\nC. W. 120%; track 139%.\nRYE-No. 2 C. W. 38%.\n-PAGE NINI\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY, Aug. 22 (CP). - Receipts to noon today: Cattle 313;\ncalves 32.\nWeek-end receipts: Cattle 447;\ncalves 141; hogs 177; sheep 11.\nCatlte prices steady on butcher\ncows, heifers and veal calves. Medium to good butcher steers- 5.00\u2014\n5.80; good heifers 4.50\u20144.76; common 3.00\u20144,00; good cows 8.00\u20143.50;\ncommon to medium cows 2.00\u20142.75;\ngood bulls 8.00; common bulls 2.50\u2014\n2.75; good to choice veal calves\n5.50\u20146.00; common to medium veal\ncalves 3.50\u20144.50.\nNo hog sales; last week's close:\nSelects 10,00; bacons 8.50; butchers\n9.00.\nVancouver Wheat\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 22 (CP). \u25a0\nVancouver wheat cash prices:\nEnglish   Electric   Company\nCanada Limited, class A, 62% cents.' point at 39.\nStrt. Tough\nNo. 1 hard 68% 66%\nNo. 1 Nor 68% 66%\nNo. 2 Nor 64% 62%\nNo. 3 Nor ! 60% 58\nNo. 4 Nor 57% 55\nNo. 5 wheat 53% 51\nNo. 6 wheat 49% 47\nFeed  '42% 40\nOILS FIRM AT CALGARY\nCALGARY, Aug, 22 (CP) .-Trading was almost at a standstill on\nthe Calgary stock exchange today\nwhen only 5350 shares changed\nhands.\nPrices on the other hand however, held firm, and a few small\nincreases were boarded. Okalta was\nup 3 at 1.30; Davies Petroleum 1%\nat 32; McDougall-Segur % at 15%;\nPrairie Royalties 1% at 35; Calgary\nI and Edmonton steady at 2.30 as\nof was East Crest at 7, Sunset lost a\nInterest in West Arm Fall Fair\nIs Keen; Challenge Cup Ottered\nRECOMMEND PROBE\nB. C. MARKETING\nVICTORIA, Aug. 22 (CP)-At-\ntorney-General Gordon Wismer said\ntoday the British Columbia government has recommended to Ottawa\nthat an investigation be made of\ncharges that a combine is working\nin the marketing of fruit and vegetables in western Canada.\nMontreal Stock Exchange\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlta Pac Grain  16\nAssoc Brew of Can  16\nBathurst P It P A  9%\nCanadian Bronze  -37\nCan Bronze pfd  104\nCan Car tt Fdy pfd  28%\nCan Celanese  14\nCan Celanese pfd   96\nCan North Power  17%\nCan Steamship   3%\nCan Steamship pfd  14\nCockshutt Plow   10\nCon Min tt Smelting  59%\nDominion Coal pfd  17%\nDOm Steel & Coal B   13%\nDryden Paper   6%\nFoundation C of C  13\nGatineau Po'*er pfd   84\nHoward Smith Paper  15\nH Smith Paper ptd  91\nImperial Oil   17%\nInter Petroleum  ;  26%\nInter Nickel of Can  49%\nLake of the Woods  14\nNational Brew Ltd  42%\nNat Brew pfd ... 44\nOgilvie Flour new  29%\nPrice Bros  17%\nQuebec Power  17\nShawinigan W It P :.... 12%\nSt Lawrence Corp      5%\nSt Law Corp pfd    17%\nSteel of Can pfd    66\nBANKS\nCommerce  173\nDominion  209\nImperial    209\nMontreal  213\nNova Scotia 307\nRoyal   186\nToronto  232%\nCURB\nAbitibi 6 pfd    25%\nBathurst P & P B     9%\nBeauharnois Corp      3%\nBritish American Oil    21%\nCan Industries B      2%\nCan Marconi 1.20\nCan Vickers     9\nCons Paper Corp     8%\nFairchild Aircraft ' 6%\nFraser Co Ltd    18\nInter Utilities A     9\nInter Utilities B 80\nLake Sulphite     3\nMacLaren P It P     13%\nMcColl Frontenac ptd    99\nMitchell'Robt     20%\nRoyalite OU    46%\nUnited Dist of Can  .95\nWalker Good tt W    43\nWalker Good pfd    19%\nQuotations on Wall Street\nHigh\nAm Can  101% .\nAm For Pow .... 3%\nAm Smelt tt Rf;   47%\nAm Tel   142%\nAm Tob     87%\nAnaconda     34%\nBaldwin        9%\nBait It Ohio ....    8%\nBendix Av     23%\nBeth Steel     58%\nBorden       16%\nCan Dry     18%\nCan Pac      6%\nCerro de Pasco  43%\nChrysler    73\nCon Gas N Y .. 26%\nC Wright pfd ..    5%\nDupont    130%\nEast Kodak   175\nFord Eng      4%\nFord of Can ....   19%\nFree Texas     29%\nGen Elec    42%\nGen Foods    35%\nGen Motors     47%\nGoodrich     24%\nGreat Nor pfd .. 21%\nHowe Sound .... 43%\nHud Motors      9%\nLow\nClose\nHigh\n100%\n101%\nInter Tel tt Tel\n8%\n3%\n3%\nKenn Cop \t\n40%\n47\n47%\n20%\n142%\n142%\nMont Ward \t\n46%\n86%\n87%\nNash Motors ....\n10V8\n33%\n34\nN Y Central\t\n18%\n9%\n9%\nPack Motors ....\n6%\n7%\n8V\u00ab\nPenn R R \t\n20%\n22%\n23 Vs\nPhillips Pete'..,.\n89%\n57%\n58%\nRadio Corp\nRem Rand \t\n7%\n16%\nI6I11\n15%\n18%\n18%\nSafeway   Stores\n19\n6%\n6%\nShell Un \t\n16%\n43\n43\nS Cal Edison ....\n22%\n71%\n72%\nStan Oil of N J\n54%\n26%\n26%\nTexas Corp \t\n46\n5\n5%\nTexas Gulf Sul\n35%\n130\n130%\nTimken Roll ....\n50\n174\n174\nUnder Type ....\n61\n4%\n4%\nUn Carbide \t\n81%\n111%\n19%\nUn OU of Cal ..\n21\n29%\n29%\nUn Aircraft \t\n27%\n41%\n42\nUn Pac \t\n8(1\n35%\n35%\nU S Rub \t\n45%\n46%\n47%\nU S Steel \t\n5ft'\/,\n24\n24%\nWarner Bros ....\n6\n20%\n21%\nWest Elec -;.\t\n103%\n43%\n43%\nWest Un \t\n27%\nII\n9\nWoolworth \t\n45%\nLow\nClose\n0%\n8%\n4(1%\n40%\n25%\n25 V.\n45%\n46%\n9%\n10%\n18%\n18%\n5\n5\n20\n20%\n36 li\n39%\n7\n7\n15%\n15%\n19\n19\n15\n1514\n22%\n22%\n54%\n64%\n44%\n45%\n35%\n35%\n50\n50\n61   .\n61\n81%\n81%\n20%\n20%\n26%\n26%\n88\n88\n44%\n46%\n57%\n68%\n.5%\n5%\n102\n1112\n27 '\n27%\n48%\n45%\nJudging by the Interest being taken in the West Arm fair to be\nheld at Harrop, Wednesday, August 31, it bids fair to exceed in\nnumber of entries this year over\nprevious events of a similar nature.\nA cup has been donated by Frank\nPutnSm, M. L. A., for canned vegetables and fruits, and the fair board\nhave a challenge cup for the aggregate points in sections covering\ntruit, garden produce, field produce,\nflowers, dairy products, stock and\npoultry.\nIndications point to increased interest in the poultry sections, and the\ndirectors of the fair have drawn up\nthe following rules for the guidance\nof exhibitors: ,\n1. All classes In poultry will be\njudged from the point of view of\nlaying ability, but must be free\nfrom standard disqualifications.\n2. Exhibitors may have more than\none entry ln each class.\n3. Entries in the Utility Pens may\nbe shown in other classes providing they wear an identification leg\nband. Utility pens consist ot one\nmale and three hens.\nThis annual event at Harrop is\nbeing looked forward to with keen\ninterest by the people of Nelson fend\ndistrict. The Harrop fair directors\nare offering many attractions for\nvisitors, and the day will conclude\nwith the annual fair dance in the\nHarrop hall.\nThe officers in charge of the West\nArm Fair this year are W. S. Ashby,\npresident; F. H. W. Chanter, vice-\npresident; Mrs. W. J. McConnell,\nsecretary-treasurer.\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nBid        Ask\nMINES:\nAztec       06%      .07\nB C Nickel 08 .08%\nBig Missouri 31 .32\nBluebird     01%      \u2014\nBralorne        9.45 \u2014\nBridge Riv Con 01%\nB R Mount        \u2014\nCariboo Gold      2.52\nDentonia    05\nDunwell          .02\nFairview Amal 07%\nFederal Gold  4      .01\nGeorge Copper 27%\nGolconda     05\nGeld  Belt    47\nGold Mount       .01%\nGrandview          .07\nGrull-Wihksne   ....      .04\nHaida Gold  02%\nHedley Mascot     1.14\nHedley Sterling       .00%\nHome  Gold     ,    - .01%\nIndian Mines  01%\nInter Coal & Coke      \u2014\nIsland Mount      1.30\n.04\n2.60\n.06\n.0214\n.08\n.01%\n.06%\n.48%\n.0414\n.03\n1.16\nKoot Belle      1.3\nLucky   Jim    02\nMak Sic Gold 01%\nMcGilllvray    21%\nMinto   Gold    03%\nNicola M & M 03%\nNoble   Five    02\nPend Oreille      1.83\nPilot  Gold    01\nPioneer Gold      3.00\nPorter Idaho 03\nPremier Border 01\nPremier Gold      2.35\n.29\n1.40\n1.40\n.02%\nQuatslno    . \t\nQuesnelle Q .\nReeves MacD .\nRelief Arl \t\nReno Gold ...\nReward . ...\nRufus Argenta .\nSally Mines ....\nSalmon Gold .\n.04\n.09\n.28\n.15\n.43\n.04\n.01\n.03\n.10%\nna\n.03%\n.04\n.03\n.01%\n3.03\n.04\n.01%\n2.37\n.04%\n.0914\n.34\n.45\n.04%\n.01%\n.11\nBid Ask\nSilbak Premier ....    1.80       2.00\nSilver Crest  17        .20\nSunloch Mines 15 \u2014\nSunshine       11.75      12.50\nTavlor B R         \u2014 .04\nVidette Gold  06%      .08\nWaverly T        .00%      .00%\nWellington          .01%      .02%\nWesko Mines 02 .02%\nWhite Eagle  01%      .02\nWhitewater        .04%      .04%\nYmir Yank Girl 14%      .17\nOILS:\nA P Con   17\nAmalgamated  00%\nAnglo Can      1.38\nBaltac           .03\nBrit Dom  06\nBrown Corp  31\n.01\n1.45\n.04\n.34\n2.32\n.01%\nCalgary tt Edm ....    2.30\nCalmont    32\nCrows Nest   01\nDalhousie    .      .43\nDavies Pete  31\nEast  Crest    07\nFoundation fete 16%\nFour Star Pete 15%\nFreehold Corp 04\nHome           1.17\nMadison           .04\nMar Jon          .06%\nMcDoug Seg 15%\nMercury     09\nMerland           .05\nMonarch Roy 11\nOkalta com     1.26\nPacalta           .05%\nPrairie Roy  _. 38 .40\nRoyalite        45.50 -\nSpooner     07 \u2014\nUnited      12 .13\nVanalta           .05 \u2014\nINDUSTRIALS'.\nBCElec 109.50 -\nBrew & Dist      5,25 \u2014\nCapital Est        -       1.90\nCoast Brew      1.30     11.35\nPacific Coyle  15 \u2014\nTin\u00bb.rt  nia\n.08%\n.17\n.04%\n1.20\n.04%\n.08\n.16\n1.29\nNELSON AND CRESTON SHIP OUT\n26.389 CRATES CHERRIES TO DATE\nMontreal Stocki\nDown Fractions\nMONTREAL, Aug, 22 (CP). -\nMontreal market settled back on its\nheels near the close today as light\nselling was unable to shake more\nthan small fractions from Saturday's\ngains.\nQuarter-point losses were reported for Price, St. Lawrence Paper\npreferred and St. Lawrence Corporation preferred.\nNickel and Smelters were each a\nhalf lower while Noranda added a\npoint. Canadian Car common and\npreferred dipped Vt each while Dominion Steel and Coal B held steady.\nAn odd lot of National Steel Car\nchanged hands down %.\nDominion Bridge firmed 14 and\nMontreal Power %.\nSlight Drop in\nChicago Wheal\nCHICAGO, Aug. 22 (AP)-After\ndropping about a cent from early\nhighs, wheat prices steadied today\nat a level fractionally below Saturday's close,\nHedging sales coincident with\nmovement of new grain ln the\nspring wheat belt were persistent\nbut enough buying appeared on the\nrecession to keep the market on an\neven keeL Many traders were Inclined to mark time pending the\nexpected announcement concerning\nthe government's exports subsidy\nprogram. .\nWheat closed %-% lower compared with Saturday's finish, September 63%-% and corn was unchanged\nto % off, September 62%-%, December 48%-%.\nOats were unchanged to Vt higher.\nCARMNER TO STUDY\nOKANAGAN MARKETING\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 22 (CP). -\nHon. J. G. Gardiner, federal agriculture minister, said today he\nwould visit the Okanagan valley to\nmake a \"first-hand study\" of allegations that a combine existed in marketing of British Columbia fruits\nsnd vegetables.\nMr. Gardiner passed through\nVancouver today, arriving from\nPrince Rupert, B. C, and leaving\nshort after an airplane tour of the\nCariboo district with J. O. Turgeon,\nLiberal member ot parliament for\nthat riding.    .\nCreston Has Also Put\n2246 Boxes Apples\non the Market\nBritish Columbia fruit board's\nanalysis of crop movements for Nel*\nson and Creston districts shows a\ntotal of 26.389 crates ot cherries\nshipped from the two districts this\nseason, Creston having shipped 9738\nand Nelson 16,666.\nThe analysis of crop movement as\nat August 17 also shows that Creston\nhas shipped 2246 boxes of apples\nand 47 of pears up to that date.\nFigures follbw:\nNELSON AND DI8TRICT\nCHERRIES:\nBings   5,007\nBlack Republican       804\nBlack Tartarian       68\nDeacon          319\nLambert         8.036\nRoyal Anne   .  2,036\nSours         334\nSweets       28\nWindsors            4\nTotal    \t\nPLUMS:\nPeach Plums.\n. 16,656\n88\ncreston and district\ncherries:\nCrates\nBings       2.696\nBlack Republican   479\nBlack Tartarjan  92\nDeacon       84\nLambert  5,017\nRoyal Anne   685\nSours     5901\nSweets  90\nTotal \t\nPLUMS;\nEarly  varieties\nPeach plums\t\nTotal \t\nCRABAPPLES:\nTranscendents\nPEARS:\nDr. Jules   \t\n9,733    I\n375\n47\nAPPLES:\nCookers    357\nDuchess       1.402\nTransparent  484\nWealthy  3\nTotal\n2.246\nAND WHILE ON VACATION\nYOU CAW GET YOUR COPY\nOF THE\nHt lamt lath} Nnua\nFROM ANY OF THESE AGENTS\nAINSWORTH\nAinsworth  Hot  Springs\nHotel\nBALFOUR\nC. Holt\nBOSWELL\nR. C. Yager\nCALGARY\nHarry's  News  tt Tobacco\nStand\nCANAL FLATS\nJ. L. Roberta\nCASCADE\nH. P. Ritchie\nCASTLEGAR\nR. A. D. West\nCRANBROOK\nBeattle-Noble Ltd.\nH. W. Laker\nJ. R. MacDonald\nScott's Cranbrook Drug &\nBook\nCRESTON\nCreston Bakery\nCurrle's Pharmacy\nPalm Confectionery\nWinter it Co.\nFERNIE\nW. A, Ingram le Son\nFIFE\nC. Maziochl\nFRUITVALE\nFraser Brothers\nM. Watson\nGRAND FORKS\nCheerl-o Shoppe\nWoodland Drug\nGREENWOOD\nAcre's Drug Store\nKASLO\nChas. W. Webster\nKIMBERLEY\nChatson's Confectionery\nCosy Nook Confectionery\nKimberley   Drug  te  Book\nCompany\nKimberley Pharmacy\nLUMBERTON\nL. Hilton\nNAKUSP\nF. H. Jordan\nNATAL\nW. J. Thompson\nNELSON\nAvenue Service Station\nBishop's Newsstand\nBush's Cigar Store\nCity Drug & Stationery Co.\nFleury's Pharmacy\nHume Hotel\nMann, Rutherford Co.\nSavoy Hotel\nValentine's Newsstand\nWait's News Depot\n0. B. Wright, CP.R. Depot\nNEW DENVER\nH. G. Gunn\nNEEDLE8\nGeorge Craft\nROSSLAND\nCherrington's Confectionery\nRossland Bus Depot\nRossland   Drug   &   Book\nStore\nJ. C. Urquhart\nSALMO\nJ. F. Donaldson\nSHEEP CREEK\nSalmo-Ymir Meat Market\nSPOKANE\nS. P. Jacoy, 226 Stevens St\nTRAIL\nArlington Hotel\nCanadian National Institute\nfor the Blind\nCrown Point Hotel\nJ. M. Doughty\nErnie Hunt's Confectionery\nJoffe's Confectionery\nK. A. Margeson\nStrand Soda Fountain\nSchwans Confectionery\nSwiss Confectionery\nTrail News Agency\nVANCOUVER\nPost Office Newsstand\n\"Galloways\", 940 Granville\nstreet\nE. Ralston, 138 Hastings E.\nWorld Wide News Centre\nVICTORIA\nT. J. Wachter, 1320 Douglas\nstreet,\nWILLOW  POINT\nWillow Point Store\nWINLAW\nJ. Winters\nWYNNDEL\nA. W. Burch\nYAHK\nS. J. McCartney\nYMIR\nJ. Daly\nS. A. Curwen\nON C. P. R. TRAINS AND KOOTENAY\nLAKE FERRY\n\u00bb\n mmmm*g>mmlmmm^\n\"' j\u00ab\nPAGE TEN \u2022\nNELSON DAILY NEW8, NILSON. B.O-TUE8DAY MORNINQ, AUG. it. 1938.\nexssssssstxtsstxist&siaxas^^\nLAST TIMES\nTODAY\nCOMPLETE SHOWS AT 2:00, 7:00 and 8:16\nBank Nite Tonite\nOne Grand Prize\u2014$25.00 Cash\nWomen can't fool women AT\nBARBARA  STANWYCK 2:06\nHERBERT   MARSHALL 7:06\nIN 9:50\n\"ALWAYS GOODBYE'\nA HILL-BILLY SLAM-BANC-)AROO\n\"SWING YOUR LADY\"\nWITH\nHumphrey BOCART  \u2022   Frank McHUCH\nDRAW AT 9:30. NITE 15c and 25c\nWednesday \"WHITE BANNERS\"\nThursday added, \"SAINT  IN  NEW YORK\"\nPOONA, India (CP)\u2014The Governor's Eleven opened the cricket\nseason with a 73-run victory over\nRoyal Bombay Sappers and Miners.\nShanker Krishna took five wickets\nfor five runs for the winners.\n1936 FORD\nDELUXE TOURING SEDAN\nHeater \u2014 Like New,\nKOOTENAY MOTORS\n(NELSON)  LTD.-PHONE 117\n!)\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nPHONE 25\nPrescription!\nCompounded\nAccurately\nFleury's Pharmacy\nMedical Arts Block\nTIP TOP TAILORS\nFall Samples Here\nCHARLES MORRIS\nPhone 147 547 Baker\nGO  PARTY-ING LOOKING\nYOUR   BESTI\nA new coiffure style\u2014smart,\nflattering.\nWJMu'a,\nSsmtJbf (pahloJL.\nPhone 244\n577 Baker St.\nFRANK A. STUART\nLIFE \u2014FIRE \u2014AUTO\nINSURANCE\nPhone 980    577 Baker St.\nROOFING\nEaves Troughs, etc.\nR. H. Maber\nPhone 655    510 Kootenay St.\nFORMAL CREAMS\nTISSUE\nCOLD\nCLEANSING\nFINISHING\n50c\nEACH\nMann,Rutherford\nDrug Co.\nTWO B.C. LAWS\nARE AMENDED\nVICTORIA, Aug. 22 (CP)- Two\nBritish Columbia statutes Jfere under amendment today by'order-in-\ncouncil, the major change being the\ngranting of discretionary powers to\ngold commissioners to demand security for two years' performance if\nimprovement work on special placer\nmining leases, under section 127 of\nthe Placer Mining act.\nA series of five regulations were\npassed in connection with the Fruit,\nVegetables and Honey act, allowing the minister of agriculture discretion to exempt producers from\nvarious of its terms; to vary inspection fees at various times and in\nvarious places; and conferring rights\nof collection on inspectors of their\nextra-routine travelling expenses,\nincluding wires and telephone costs.\nTry LEDINGHAM'S\nHomemade   Milk   Bread.\nAlso their sliced loaf.\nYou will like them.\nHOOD BAKING CO, LTD\nBETTER CLASS\nUSED CARS\n\u00bbt\nKline's City Service\nJack McDowell    Howard Thurman\nRain Stops Play\nLONDON, Aug. 22 (CP Cable)-\nWorcestershire, well down in the\nEnglish county competition standing, defeated Lancashire by 10 wickets today. It was the only match\nconcluded in games started Saturday.\nRain cut play short at Newport\nand cancelled today's play at Cardiff. Eastbourne and Taunton.\nThe scores:\nLancashire 273 and 101; Gloucest\nershire 371 (Barnett 168) and seven\nruns for no wickets.\nWorcestershire 460 runs for five\nwickets declared 'Cooper 216 not\nout, Martin 136); Warwickshire 263\nfor nine.\nNorthamptonshire 195, Hampshire\n80 for four.\nGlamorgan 218 for three; vs Leicestershire.\nSussex 279; Derbyshire 56 for two.\nSomerset 357; Surrey three runs\nfor no wickets.\nYorkshire 320; Nottinghamshire\n301 for six.\nProtection of Her Possessions Is\nJapan's Reason For Chinese Attack,\nK. Parker of Kobe Tells Rotarians\n<?>\nYellow and White\n' Imperialism,Are\nMeeting\nAn insight into, and an explanation of the reason for Japan's war\nwith China, was given Rotary club\nmembers by Kenneth Parker of a\nUnited Church Canadian Academy\nIn Kobe, Japan. Mr. Parker, in\nKobe since 1930, knew Rev. Foster\nHilliard, now of St. Paul's United\nchurch in Nelson, there seven years\nago.\n\u2022Delving Into some phases of the\neconomical and moral reasons for\nJapan's attack on China, Mr. Parker\nsaid he would rather regard the\nSlno-Japanese problem as an international, problem than just a\ncase of, Japan attacking .China.\n\"I am not offering excuses for\nJapan's actions, but merely trying\nto give you an idea of her reasons\nfor her attfck, and present her point\nof view,\" he said.\nMr. Parker felt that the war between Japan and China \"had to\ncome.\" It. was the first stage of\nwhen yellow imperialism came face\nto face with, white imperialism. Other nations of the world were in Japan \"for what they can get out of\nher.\" Commodore Perry of the United States, and before him the English and Dutch, landing ln Japan\nwere there only to see if she had\npotential markets. When Japan realized this, her doors were shut to\nthem and have remained so since.\nBALKED BY WHITES\nAn important factor In the history of Japanese history, especially\nin her trade, has been the interven\ntion and mediation of white men.\nIn the Russo-Japanese war, ending\nin 1906, Japan was robbed of the\nfruits of her victory by the mediation of white men. And such.had\nbeen the case in every war she has\nfought.\nJapan had risen from \"nothing'\nSheriff's Sale\nIN  THE COUNTY COURT OF WEST\nKOOTENAY   HOLDEN   AT   NELSON\nEDWARD BERCSTROM, Plaintiff\nKootenay Nevada Minei, Ltd. (N.P.L.), Defendant\nUnder and by virtue of a Warrant of Execution, Issued out of the\nabove Court, dated the 7th day of June, 1938, and to me directed, I\nhave seized all right, title and interest of the above named defendant In the following goods and chattels, and will offer the same for\nsale at Edward Bergstrom ranch, Granite road, on Wednesday, the\n24th day of August at the hour of 2 o'clock In the afternoon:\nBlacksmith Blower, Drilling Machinery, 2 Anvils, About 65 pieces\nSteel, 2 Ore Cars, 8 lengths 2-inch pipe, Cookstove, Heater Stove,\n4 Cots, 3 Screen Doors, Enamelware, nearly new, Shovels, Saws,\nAxes, 1-inch rope, and numerous other articles.\nTERMS OF SALE: CASH.\nDated This 22nd. Day of August, 1938.\nM. E. HARPER.\nSheriff of South Kootenay\nNOW IS THE TIME\nTO INSULATE\nBEFORE THE COLD WEATHER STARTS\nUSE ZONOLITE\nAn economical insulation that can be applied on a\nSaturday afternoon. It is vermin-proof, fireproof.\n3 inches of Zonolite laid in almost any attic will give\nyou a minimum fuel saving of 20% and eliminate\nfive-sixths of heat loss.\n321 CUBIC FOOT\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Ltd.\n1\nLast Tributes Paid\nMrs. Campbell, Trail\nTRAIL, B.C., Aug. 22\u2014Final tribute was paid Mrs. Eleanor Annie\nCampbell, 78, wife of William Campbell, Edmonton, who died in Trail-\nTadanac hospital Saturday, when\nfuneral services were held in Clark's\nFuneral chapel this afternoon.\nA large attendance and profusion\nof floral tributes evidenced the high\nesteem in which she was Y-XA.\nRev. L. A. Morrant officiated at\nboth the chapel and the graveside.\n\"Abide With Me\" was the hymn\nsung.\nPall bearers were J. T. Webster,\nO. B. Ballard and G. Millan, Robson, and J. R. Craig, S. Roberts and\nL. Monypenny, Trail.\nFamed Racer Killed\nNEW YORK,. Aug. 22 (AP) -\nBilly Winn of Detroit, one of. the\nearnest of the little guys of the\nroaring road, is dead and automobile racers all over the country sorrowed tonight at the loss of the\nlittle fellow whose flaming red helmet and equally red shirt were a\nbig part of the sport where the best\nis a short-lived glory.\nWinn lost his life Saturday in a\n100-mile automobile race at Springfield, 111.\nGOVERNMENT WINS CASE\nDETROIT, Aug. 22 (CP).\u2014Assistant United States Attorney Louis\nHopping wrote finis during the\nweek-end to an 11-year-old suit by\nthe government to collect $1000 from\na bonding company for a bond forfeited by Jovan Wesclvick, 31. Native of Jugoslavia and once resident of Winnipeg, Waselvick's\nwhereabouts are now unknown\nto one of the world's largest trade\ncountries. Four large families had\ncontrol of the trade, and directed its\nmovements.\nWith her rightful possessions at\nhand, Japan was not going to sit\nback and say \"Oh, I'm sorry, some\none else Is on the land ahead of me,\"\nwhen other nations walked in and\ntried to snatch the possessions. Protecting her rights Was one of the\nmajor reasons for her antagonistic\nattitude towards China.\nPROTECTING HER\nRIGHTS\nWith the British, French and other nations pressing in on her possessions from all sides ln China, Japan was being squeezed out. Her\npresent war with China was to protect those rights and possessions.\nSome Chinese were not true to\ntheir generalissimo and his clique\nof friends and officers, Mr. Parker\nstated.\nA phase of the moral issue of the\nJapanese aggression was the belief\nheld by the Japanese soldier that it\nwas the highest honor he could obtain if he were to die for his emperor. The.army and navy were responsible to the emperor alone, and\nnot to the elected houses.\nA terrifying fear pf communism\nwas another reason for the Japanese\naggression. Farmers, who made up\nthe largest proportion of the popu>\nlation, lived on a yearly income of\nabout $30, with a family of five, and\nthey did not want communism.\nWith so many factors so contrary\nto peace in Japan, it was useless tor\nother countries, who called them\nselves Christian, to pray for peace\nuntil they could show a way of\nmeeting the problems.\nK. C. McCannell thanked Mr.\nParker on behalf of the club, stating he had given them an enlightenment on the whole situation. As a\nRotary International club, it was\nnot for them to take sides with any\ncountry in a war.\nHolt Arrested at\nKelowna, Warrant\non Nelson Charge\nKenneth Holt, formerly of the Nelson district, was arrested at Kelowna Saturday on a charge of theft\nby conversion, provincial police divisional headquarters at Nelson\nlearned by radio Monday, the charge\noriginating in Nelson district Details were not available.\nLaunch Raff at\nTrail Bound for\nfhe Coulee Dam\nTRAIL, B.C., Aug. 22\u2014James Mahon, feature writer for the Toronto\nStar and Robert Tamblyn, University of Toronto, student, shoved off\nfrom Trail about noon today on a\nraft down the Columbia river.\nThey plan to pilot their crude\ncraft as far as Grand Coulee Dam\n\u2014if possible. Their adventures will\nform the basis for a story.\nWished \"lots of luck\" as they\ncompleted plans for the'jr exciting\ntrip, the two chorused \"we'll need\nluck af the Little Dalles rapids and\nMyers Falls\". They expect to travel\n150 miles, averaging' approximately\nsix miles an hour by the current.\nTheir craft, built of cedar logs\nat Blueberry by the two men and\nthe assistance of James Lawrie, a\ndistrict resident, is 15 feet by 10\nfeet, with a tent on top.\nFrom Grand Coulee the men will\ntravel overland to Spokane, Seattle\nand Vancouver.\nREMEMBER WHEN?\nBy the Canadlah Press\nBill Cook, Sault Ste. Marie right\nwinger, turned professional with\nSaskatoon Shieks of the,Western\nCanada league 16 years ago today.\nHe went tb New York Rangers,\nnewly formed National Hookey\nleague entry, In 1926, teaming up\nwith his brother Fred and Frankie\nBoucher to form one of hockey's\ngreatest  forward  lines.\nSEND US YOUR\nMAIL ORDERS\nWe dispatch day ordera\nreceived. Prompt, efficient service. Buy your\ndrugs from A DRUGGIST\n~m\nCovers on medieval Illuminated\nBibles were so ornate that it sometimes took a scribe five years to\nmake one.\n\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab$\u00bb\nmmtmmommomot\nRadio Sale\nAll Battery and\nElectric Sets\nPEEBLES MOTORS LTD.\nM\u00ab\u00ab#S\u00abSSM*\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab!_\u00ab\u00abSSS\u00ab_\u00bb$_\u00bbI\nBattery Repairs\nPHONE 930\nNelson Battery Shop\nLauritz Block, Fairview\nSEE JACK   HOOGERWERF\nStandard Electric\nfor\nElectrical   Contracting\nPHONE 838      617 VERNON 8T.\nAcross from New Grand  Hotel\nTrail Man Pays $10\nDriving Car Without\nLicence, Rossland\nROSSLAND, B. C, Aug. 22-F. J.\nFried, Trail, pleaded guilty to the\ncharge of driving a car without a\ndriver's licence, and was fined $6.50\nand costs when he appeared before R. E. Plewman, police magistrate, in court here this morning.\nBoxla Player Is\nCritically Injured\nFERGUS, Ont., Aug. 22 (CP) -\nDr. N. M. Craig said here tonight\nRusty White, captain of the Fergus\nThistles lacrosse team, is in critical\ncondition with head injuries suffered in an Ontario Lacrosse association senior game with Orillia Terriers a week ago.\nDr. Craig, attending the injured\nplayer, said practically all the blood\nvessels in White's face were ruptured, and infection had set in.\nBOYS ARRESTED\nVANCOUVER, B. C. (CP)-Four\nboys arrested by city police constables after a high-speed automobile chase through downtown streets\nwere held at juvenile detention\nhome here today, awaiting trial on\na charge of stealing a quantity of\ngasoline.\n25 AT FIRST DAY\nOF CHEST CLINIC\nAbout 25 attended the chest clinic\ncopducted by Dr. G. F. Kincade of\nKamloops, at Kootenay Lake General hospital, in its first day of operation Monday. Dr. Kincade stated Monday night that it was about\nthe usual attendance, but owing to\nthe large number lined up to attend the clinic, he may have to stay\nover into next week,.when he completes his regular stay this week.\nHe is being assisted by Miss\nEvangeline Pease of Kajnloops, who\nis with the travelling chest clinic.\nSAYS AUSTRIANS\nARE NOT CONQUERED\nPOUGHKEEPSIE, N. Y\u201e Aug. 22\n(AP)\u2014Dr. Franz Otto, lone Austrian\ndelegate to the second World Youth\nCongress, told the gathering today\ndespite annexation of his country\nby Germany \"the Austrian people\nand Austrian youth are not conquered.\"\nDr. Otto, recently was made an\nofficial member of the residing committee of the congress. Its action,\nthe committee said, was intended to\nsignify its recognition of Austria as\na separate entity and its refusal to\nrecognize the German annexation.\nENGLISH RADIO LECTURER (OVERS\nPIONEER TRAILS WITH PACK PONY\nWARNER OLAND TO BE\nBURIED AUGUST 30\nSTOCKHOLM, Aug. 22 (API-\nFuneral services for Warner Oland,\nmotion picture actor who died of\npneumonia two weeks ago, will be\nheld here Aug. 30. Cremation will\nfollow. Mrs. Oland is expected to\nreach Stockholm Friday from Hol-\ni lywood.\nSI. Andrews in Rossland Given\nPicture in Honor Rev. C.H. Daly\nROSSLAND, Aug. 22-An outstanding feature of the Sunday morning service of St. Andrew's United\nchurch was the unveiling of a beau-\nREV. C. H. DALY\ntifulcopy of the painting by Hein-\nrich Hofmann, \"Christ in Gethse-\nmane\" presented to the church by\nthe family of Rev. C. H. Daly in\ncommemoration of the life and service of their parents during the\nnine years' that Rev. Mr. Daly was\nminister at St. Andrew's.\nRev. C. H. Daly unveiled the\npainting, and the presentation address was given by his eldest son,\nCharles F. Daly of this city.\nThe choir rendered Stainer's\n\"Could Ye Not Watch With Me One\nBrief Hour?\" the solo part being\ntaken by Louis Freeman, and Margaret Dawson, daughter of Mr. and\nMrs. Edward M. Daly, was baptized\nby her grandfather.\nLES80NS FROM\nGETHSEMANE\nRev. T. W. Reed spoke of the lessons to be learned from Gethsemane,\npointing out that large trees survived tempests because they had\nlearned to sway with the wind, and\nthat the same thing held true of\nlarge monuments, Nelson's monument in Trafalgar Square being\nknown to sway three to four feet,\nfrom the perpendicular. Thus In the\ngreat experiences of life, when the\nsoul learned to say with Christ in\nGethsemane, 'Not my will, but Thine\nbe done,\" it gained strength to face\nlife, as the Master gained strength\nto face death on the cross.\nThe usual vesper service was held\nln the evening, with a number of\norgan and violin selections, readings\nfrom the works of Tennyson, and a\nsolo, \"Crossing the Bar,\" by Louis\nFreeman.\nAlwin Gissing Stops\nOvernight at\nRossland\nROSSLAND, B. C, Aug. 22-He\nis 41 years old and grey around the\ntemples, but he looks 35 and feels\n25. That's Alwin Gissing, writer and\nradio lecturer for the British Broadcasting company. He's a nephew of\nthe late George Gissing, noted English novelist.\nMr. Gissing stopped in Rossland\nMonday night in the course of a\ntour through interior B. C. with a\npack pony. He planned to move on\nTuesday morning toward Trail and\nNelson en route to his homestead\nat Cochrane, Alta.\nThe traveler started his tour of\nthe province from Kamloops June 23\nat 7 p.m. and averaged 15 miles a\nday. His total trip will cost him $150\n\"I met up with an unusual experience in a skyline thrill between\nSkagit river and Cambie creek,\"\nhe said. \"On August 7 I was up\nearly one morn, dreadfully cold it\nwas, and It started to snow,\"\nUSE8 THE TRAILS\n\"Do you travel along the highway?\" he was asked.\n\"Not unless I have to. I travel\nmostly on the trails. Coming over\nFirst Summit I came along the pole\nline,\" he answered.\nDuring his narration he became\nhighly enthusiastic over some of his\ndiscoveries, one of which was a find\nof six varieties of coniferous trees\nin the vicinity of Big Sheep creek.\nHe travels in the cool of the day,\nseeking a shady spot in the heat of\nthe afternoon.\nAlong the old Dewdney and the\nCariboo trails this man has made his\nway with a pack pony, seeking the\ndeserted lanes, particularly those\nused by pioneers snd voyageurs.\nThe traveler plans to return to\nEngland soon and to tell radio audiences of his journey.\nUp to his fifteenth year he attended George Watson college, Edinburgh, Scotland. From 1918 to 1918\nhe served in the British army. He\nhas sold several articles on his experiences in Canada, to English\nmagazines.\nJ.A.C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSuite 205 Medical Art. Bldg\n|  HOT WEATHER  |\nI MEALS AT THE  ,\n|Star Cafe |\nMiWiiaiiiiiii**'\"**\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nFOR RENT - 6 ROOMED HOUSE\nwith garage. Apply 214 Victoria St.\n(2839)\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nWanted early Apples and Plums.\nMcdonald jam company.\n(2365)\nProfessor Bloomfield will remain\none more month at the Golden Gate\ncafe. (2826)\nSAFETY AND SERVICE-\nPHONE 93   B. B. TAXI   PHONE 93\n(2321F\nTRY THE NEW CIGT., \"BLACK\nCAT\" 10 for 10c. 25 for 26c at\nVALENTINE'S. (2835)\nCLEARANCE 8ALE OF 1938 Radios, Refrigerators and Appliances,\nJOHN DEWICK, Fink Block. (2729)\nAINSWORTH HOT SPRINGS\nHOTEL, Special Weekly Rates for\nthe balance of season. Room and\nmeals, $18 per week.  .        (2573)\nKeep In touch with events at\nhome and enjoy your vacation all\nthe more. Have the Daily News sent\nto your vacation address.      (1988)\nSee the new CONNOR washers. 4\nyear Free Parts and Service.\nMcKAY A 8TRETTON\n(706)\nSpecial attraction booked for\nLabor Day In Nelion Is the spectacular motor cycle rifle of Len\nNegus of Trail. See him dash\nthrough a flaming wall of fire.\n(2580)\nWe have a very complete stock of\nToronto Conservatory staff books,\nexercise books, manuscript paper,\netc.\u2014 KOOTENAY MUSIC HOUSE\n(708)\nFALL ROUND-TRIP\nExcursions\nto Poirie Points\nNow on sale until November 16.\nReturn  limit,  December  1, 1938\nSample  return  fares  from\nNelion to:\nEdmonton     .$22.75\nCalgary   15.75\nLethbridge     13.35\nRegina   ......... 28.30\nWinnipeg   40.35\nSaskatoon   30.15\nYorkton    32.65\nPhone BOO for further\nparticulars.\nGREYHOUND\n\u00ab\u00abW\u00ab\u00abS$5S\u00bb\u00ab\u00ab\u00bbS\u00ab!\u00bb\u00ab\u00ab__!\u00abS\u00ab\n44 TAXI\nCON. CUMMINS\n50c up to 5 passengers\nAny place in the city\n&^-_&_MMMW-_ft\u00ab--M-*-M----MM--WIM>-^-_-W\nAny place in the city\nFall\nSweaters\nOne of these new sweaters is a mighty nice garment for cool evenings.\nAll styles. Zipper, button\ncoats and pullovers.\nMade by Jantzen.\n$3.95    $4.95\nRMORY'G\n^ LIMITED\nTESTED\u2014QUALITY\nDOUGHNUTS\nFresh Daily\nAT THE\nPERCOLATOR\nE. W. KOPECKI-509 Baker.\nFIRESTONE\nTIRES\nEric's Motor Service\n295 Baker St.\nPhone 75\nPHONE 815\nfor better and prompter service In plumbing repairs and\nalterations.\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nCool Coiffures for Cool\nComfort.\nFor a style to suit you\nHai&k Tru-Art\nBeauty Salon\nPhone 827 426 Baker St.\nINSULATE   YOUR   HOME   WITH\nMOSS-TEX\nYOU CAN APPLY IT YOURSELF\n13c PER CUBIC FOOT\nKOOTENAY DISTRIBUTORS\nBums Coal & Cartage\nPhone 53\nNelson, B. C.\n518 Ward Street\nCIVIC\n-TODAY-\nAT 7:00, 8:32\nTWO BIG HITS\nwith PRESTON FOSTER . ANITA LOUISE -WALTER CONNOLLY\nAnd, RONALD COLEMAN \u2014 MADELEINE CARROLL\nIN\n\"THE PRISONER OF ZENDA\"\n$40.00 IS THE PRIZE FOR WEDNESDAY NICHT\nTHIS UNKNOWN MAN\nFOUND IN A\nDAZED CONDITION\nIN OUR\nUSED CAR DEPARTMENT\nFor further particulars see our ad in Friday's paper.\nNELSON TRANSFER\nCompany, Limited\n35-PHONES-36\n\t\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1938_08_23","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0414281","@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":"1938-08-23 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1938-08-23 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\/1.0414281"}