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'_\u00ab. '__\u00bb\nPermits Are\nImpended; Four Fires\nNelson Area Believed\nbf Incendiary Origin\nHis Majesty inspects Hit Reserve Fleet\nJAPAN BLOCKADE\nWASHED OUT BY\niING WATERS\nBritish Appeal for Aid\n\/to Lord Mayor of\nLondon\nTIENTSIN, Aug. 20 (AP)-Rapld-\nly riding flood waten, increaied by\niteedy rain, today temporarily\nwashed out Japan's nine-week\nblockade of Uie 13, il,.-,,. and French |\nconcession! and brought one of the\nwont disasters in thii region'! history.\nFloods from the Hal River and\nother streams poured acrois levelled dikes and embankments, put\ntht city'i electricity supply out of\ncommisilon arid swept away communication and railroad lervice.\n\u2022, Tlie British consul general declared a state of emergency In the\nBritish concession and the municipal council appealed to the Lord\nMayor of London for assistance.\nBritish authorities sought to form\nrefugee camps to provide a' measure of relief but where lack Inn In\nfacilities, British volunteers tought\nto rescue refugees with infant!, and\nalso the large numbers of aged and\nblind.\nBeyond Tientsin and its environs,\nwhere there it - a large Chinese\npopulation, a heavy lou of life and\nproperty damage wu feared,\nIt wai estimated the crest wai\nyet two dayi away,\n.\"Stripping theds,\" where person*\n^washed away. A large portion of\nthe Jtpanete barriers, including the\nelectrified wire entanglements, were\ntubmerged or swept away.\nHon. H. G. Carroll\nol Quebec Dies\nI,; QUEBEC, Aug. -0 (CP)-i-Hon. H.\nO. Carroll, 74, former Lieutenant\nGovernor of Quebeo Province and\nretired Judge of the Quebec Superior and Appeal Courts, died.at his\nhome here today. He had been 111\n\u2022 two months. '\n\u2022 A- native of Kamouraska, Que.,\n. Mr. Carroll was. admitted to the bar\nI iti 1889. At the request of Sir Wil-\n^'ftrid Laurier, then .Prime Minister,\nho contested Kamouraska constituency for the Liberal party in the\ngeneral elections of 1891 and was\nelected. Reelected ln 1896, he wai\nforced by IU health to.resign in\n1903. '\nSir Wilfrid then appointed him\nto the bench and, at the age of 39,\nMr. Carroll was the youngest judge\nin Canada. He later was elevated\nto the Court of Appeal and for 13\nyeara sat in the Court of King's\nBench in Quebec,\nIn 1929 when Quebec was left\nwithout a Lieutenant-Governor by\nthe death of Sir.Lomer Gouln, the\ngovernment turned to Mr. Carroll\nand he held that post until hii\nterm expired in 1934.\nFireworks Climax\nDawson Celebration\nDAWSON CITY, Y.T., Aug. 20\n(CP)\u2014Dawson's three-day celebra-\ntlon commemorating the discovery\nof gold in the Yukon, ended last\nnight with a brilliant pyrotechnic\ndisplay that wai delayed until midnight when the long Northern day\nhad faded sufficiently for the fire-\nworks.\nHigh point of the doling festivities was crowning of Miss Yukon of\n1939 and a grand ball that climaxed\nthe three-day celebrations.\nNo Beach Fires Permitted; Mill and Four\nCars Saved by Backfiring at China\nCreek; 850 Men on Fire Lines\nKLAMATH FALLS, Ore., Aug. 20\n(AP)\u2014The tiny foreit community\not Pine Ridge, 35 miles North of\nhere, wu destroyed in two hours\nSaturday night by fire believed to\nhave been of incendiary origin. Approximately 600 penoni were left\nnomeleii.\nThe blaze itarted In a, lumber pile\nat .the Forest Lumber Co. null,\nleaped the 150-foot wide Williamson\nRiver and burned about 200 dwellings, a company-owned hotel and\nstore. A box factory, lumber shed,\nplaner mill and several million feet\nof cut lumber alto were burned,\nCharlei Coons, office manager of\nthe mill, estimated the damage at\nover $2,000,000. Coons stld he believed the Are wat sit Incendiary\norigin becauie it itarted in the cen-\nter of la*, yard \u00abMre J\u00bbb6dy; was\nwotMrtf.'\" ..v .-\u2022\n\u25a0 After burning the town the flames\n.spread.to. a.rich -stand of yellow\npine, burning a path six mllet long\nand a mile wide.\nFIRE DESTROYS\nOREGON VILLAGE\nAPEX FIRE HELD TWO SIDES;\n10-MILE IS HELD AT BOTTOM\nCampfire permits In Nelson forest dlitrict are suspended, effective\ntoclay. This means, forest, branch officials explained Sunday night, that\nno beach bonfire! and no fires for camps will be permitted; and that\nanyone lighting one will be liable to prosecution.\nAnnouncement of the suspension of campfire permits came at a\nresult of extensive forest fires in the district, which are engaging 850\nmen in a fight for control, and continued hot and dry wealher bringing\nthe hazard to one of the moit dan*erou\u00bb pointi in yean. Foreiti are\ntinder dry and there !s no ilgn of rtinfall within the next day or two.\nV Foreitry official! said the ius-\npenilon would be continued until\nrain reduced the hazard. .\nAnnouncement of the suspension\nof permits was alio mtde over two\ndlitrict radio stations, CJAT at\nTrail and CKLN at Nelion. The\nradio announcement was:\n\"In view ot harzardoui condltioni, all campfire permiti in Nelton foreit' dlitrict are impended\nas from August 21, by order of the\nDistrict Forester.\n\"R. E. ALLEN.\"\nRumors thtt traffic on roadi between Trail and Nelaon and between Kaslo and Nelson had been\nsuspended were without foundation, officials itated.\nThe Nelion Forest Dlitrict extendi trom the Boundary country\nto the Alberta Boundary, and North\nfrom the International Boundary\nto, 'roughly,1 the main lin* of the\nC.P.B.\nIN FAIR SHAPI,\nCONSIDERING\nMeanwhile. *c\u00abeit Brantb offleW\nall stated fires throughout the dlitrict were \"ln fair shape consld\nAGED ONTARIO\nCOUPLE KILLED\n' GALT,' Ont-'Aiig. '20 (CP).--n-\ntpector W. H. Lougheed of Ontario Provincial Police said tonight robbery might be \"reasonably assumed\" to have been the\nmotive for the slaying of John\nMilroy, 78, and hli iliter, Annie,\n78, in their' farm home near\nBranchton, four miles South of\nGait.\nMisi Milroy was found dead and\nher brother dying late Saturday\nafternoon by a neighbor, Mra. William Oliver. Authorities eitimated\nthey were attacked with heavy Instruments from three to five\nhours before.\n500 Clear Wreck\nof U.S. Flier; 17\nInjured in Crash\nCHATSWQRTH, N. J, Aug. 20\n(AP)\u2014Five hundred men labored\nin the flooded South Jersey wilderness tonight to clear the wreck of\nthe \"Blue Comet,\" Atlantic City-\nNew York flier of the Central Railroad of New Jersey, ln which 17\npersons were injured.\nFive derailed coaches and baggage car of the -crack train which\ncarried 49 passengers rested at crazy\nangles along the single track.\nI. L. Gordon, Central Railroad\npublic relations, man, said washout caused the wreck.\nReinstate Two\nCoast Policemen\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 20 (CP). -\nConstables Eldon Pinkerton and\nHugh Hamilton, acquitted ln County\nCourt of charge of accepting two\nbottles of rum for not pressing i\ntraffic violation charge, were re-\ninstated on the Vancouver Police\nForce yesterday.\nCENTRAL BOARDS URGE INTERIOR\nRADIO STATION; FAVOR HIGHWAY\nPRINCE GEORGE, B. C, Aug. 20\n(CP).\u2014The Associated Boardi of\n.Trade of Central Britiah Columbia\ntoday were on record as favoring\nconstruction of the British Columbia-Alaska Highway and establishment ot a radio station in the Province's interior.\nThe Board concluded a two-day\nmeeting here yeiterday after expressing appreciation that Canadian\nand united States members of the\nAlaska! Highway Commliiion discussed and inspected routes for the\nproposed highway which would link\nWashington State, with Alaska\nthrough thii Province.\nIn addition the organization urged\nthat a transprovinclal highway be\n, constructed between Prince Rupert.\nB. C, and Jasper, Alta., and that\nhe British Columbia Government\nthe   partially   finished\ni Pan Hkhway. which will\nu^\ngive Alberta and British Columbit\nresidents of the Peace River Block\nhighway outlet to the Coast. They\nurged that Federal aid be sought\nfor the project as well.\nThe Central Trade Mdy felt that\nthe Canadian Broadcasting Corporation could either install a radio\nstation in central British Columbia\nor enter Into a contract with pri\nvate interests for Its installation.\nThe meeting voted in favor of\nasking the Dominion Government\nto raise the Import duty on foreign\nTimothy seed from one cent a pound\nto two cents and to legalize and\nconduct sweepstakes for the benefit\nof Canadian hospitals.\nOther resolutions urged that the\nBritish Columbia Central Committee of the National Homing Admlniitration viiit interior boardi, of\ntrade and aid in the securing of\nloam under the Housing Act.\ncring the weather and the extremely dry condition of the forests.\"\nTwo new flrei were listed over\nthe weekend, one In the Qrand\nForki area high up on a ridge\nbetween the main Kettle River\nand Granby Rlvtr, Southwest of\nLightning Peak. It wu to high up\nthat no tlmbtr of any valua It\nendangered. The other ntw flrt\nwit In Fernie area, about a mile\nNorth of the city, and It wat'out\nSunday.\n(Continued on Page Two)\nGermany-Russia\nSign Trade Pad\nBERLIN, Aug. 20 (AP). \u2014 Conclusion of a trade agreement between Germany and Russia wat announced tonight, opening Russia's\nrich natural resources to the Nazis.\nGermany granted the Soviets an\n(80,000,000 credit and Russia promised to deliver $72,000,000 worth of\nproducti within the next two yean.\nAnnouncement of the agreement\ncame while military talki among\nGreat Britain, France and the Soviet Union were reported encounter,\ning difficulties iuch ai aroie during\nthe political talks for a mutual assistance pact among these powers.'\nThe Nazis were expected to Import on a much larger tcale than\never before vital Russian raw materials, including manganese and\nother ores, lumber, gasoline and oil,\nsulphur and chemical!.\nRussia will use the German credit!\nto buy machinery for making needed\ntools and spare parts.\nProclaims Hungary's\nDesire to Be Neutral\nBUDAPEST, Aug. 20 (AP).-Tibor\nEckhardt, one of Hungary'! out\nstanding political leaders, hai pro\nclaimed the nation'! firm desire to\nremain neutral if Germany and\nPoland ihould go to war over\nDanzig.\nIn an address to cheering members\nof hli \"Small Landowners' Party\"\nSaturday Eckhardt strongly criticized Premier Paul Teleki and the\nHungarian Government for falling\nto publicly announce thli\n\"unmistakably determined point of\nview.\"\n. Hli Majeity the Klaj Tt Act.t. brinr riprf\naboard the warship Courageous during his inspection of the reserve fleet at Weymouth Bay. Thii\nfleet, contldered ti formidable as the home fleet,\nv-M -***i**4 ln la d\u00abvss -ty,. arttn* themselves orevi-\nously lay in dockyard! manned only'bV maintenance crewi. The King made a 14-mile Journey\nof Inspection in the Royal barge.\nJapanese Take \"QraveView\"\nof Killing of Two Policemen\n250,000 Germans\n\u2022   i\nomiovaKias\nFrontier, Poland\n\"Hour Approaches\" Says Forster;  German\nTheme Is \"Day of Reckoning\" in Poland\nNear; British Ministers Rush Home\nIMPORTANT MEETING DUE TUESDAY\nBritish   Willing   to'\nReopen Currency\nDiscussions\nLONDOK, Aug. 20 (CP)-TOe\nforeign office issued t communique tonight reviewing the Far\nEastern lituation. and disclosing\nthat the British government hat\nopttued .willingness..to Japan\nto examine the currency and silver question anew \"provided the\nlntereit of all parties can be safeguarded.\nThe itatement said His Majesty'! Government \"have already\nmade it clear ln their note to the\nJapaneie government of Jan. 14\nthat they _ do not regard treaties\nas eternal'and that they are prepared to consider. any constructive proposals which the Japanese\ngovernment may have to make regarding the modication of existing treaties.\n\"They consider lt essential, however, that all parties to the nine-\npower and other treaties which govern . the situation in China shall be\nenabled at the appropriate time to\nexpress their views and make a\ncontribution \"to a settlement which\nshould be equitable for all concerned.\"\nThe Japaneie have demanded that\nthe British ban Chinese government\ncurrency ln the Britiih concession\nin Tlentiln, hand over Chinese silver reierve! of about 4,000,000 United States dollars deposited In Tientsin banks and allow circulation of\nJapanese federal reserve notes.\nTOKYO, Aug. 21 (Monday). (AP)\n\u2014The Japanese foreign office in a\nstatement today insisted economic\nquestions at Tientsin were purely\nan' Anglo-Japanese issue and rejected as beyond comprehension a\nBritish suggestion for participation\nof other, power!: in the diteustion.\nClamor for Milk\nin Vain, New York\nNEW YORK, Aug. 20 (AP) -\nMuch of the cltyi population\nclamored ln vain for milk today as\na strike of dairy farmers upstate\nhalved.\"the normal\" dafijt iuppiy|other little girl in the country,\nof 4,400,000 quarts.\nThe New York Metropolitan\nDistributors Bargaining Agency\nestimated the shrinkage would be\nintensified tomorrow. The city\nwas short 2,200.000 quarts today\nand 1,900,000 Saturday. The 3,-\n200,000 quarts normally used for\ndrinking had shrunk to about\n2,000,000 while production of milk\nprodtlcti was cut considerably.\nCranbrook, Fernie,\nKimberley Backing\nPutnam for Cabinet\nCRANBROOK, B. C, Aug. 20\nCranbrook, Kimberley and Fernie Liberals are supporting\nNelson and Creston in urging\nthe appointment of Frank VisX:\nnam, M.L.A., for Nelson-Creston,\nas Minister of Public Works in\nsuccession to Hon. F. M. MacPhenon go to Dominion Board\nof. Transport commiuionen at\nOttawa.\nA wire from the Cranbrook\nBoard of Trade today to Hon,\nT. D\u201e Pattullo itrongly recommended the appointment of Mr,\nPutnam ihould Mr. MacPherson\nresign, and stated the board\nfeels that Mr, Putnam.is well\nqualified to fill such a cabinet\nposition.\nPrincess Margaret\nRose Is Nine Today\nBALMORAL, Scotland, Aug. 20\n(CP)\u2014Princess Margaret Rose went\nto bed tonight wishing lt wai already morning. Tomorrow ll her\nninth birthday and she is to be allowed to celebrate It, not In a ityle\nbefitting a princess, but like any\nThere will be preienti, a plnk-\nand-whlte birthday cake with nine\ncandle! on it, and a little party\nfor children from neighboring ei-\ntates. Perhaps ther only difference\nbetween her birthday and that of\nother girls wUl be the presents.\nAmong the gifts, of a pearl from the\nKing. It has been an annual preient\nfrom His Majeity to hit youngest\ndaughter.\nBritish    Policeman\nUnder Guard After\nShootings\nSHANGHAI, Aug. 20 (AP) -\nKilling of two pro-Japanese Chinese policemen and wounding of\nsix othert by a British policeman\nwith a tub-machine gun Saturday\nthreatened .tonight to deyfjpp into.\n'4 '-'major Mdent 'aggravating\nAnglo-Japanese relation? In the\nFar Eaat.\n\"We take a grave view of this\naffair,\" the Japanese embassy announced after representatives of\nthe Japanese army and navy held\nan emergency meeting. International settlement officials may\nconfer tomorrow.\nThe British policeman, W. L.\nKlnloch of Scotland, a sergeant\nof the settlement police, was placed under an armed guard of British troops ahd settlement police\nin the British hospital.\nThe settlement police version of\nthe affair wai that some of Kin-\nloch's adversaries, members of the\nJapanese-controlled Chinese police\nsquad, were \"armed and in plainclothes\" and that Klnloch had no\nway pf Identifying them.\nThey assumed a threatening attitude,\" a settlement police said,\n\"and one of them fired on Klnloch,\ncausing him to use his sub-machine-\ngun.\"\nKlnloch said \"someone In the\nChinese group shot me in the back\nand I then went into action.\"\nTVeedsmuirs Return\nEDMONTON, Aug. 20 (CP). -\nGovernor General Tweedsmuir and\nthe Vice-Regal party sped Eastward\nby train tonight, for.Ottawa after\ncompleting a,five-day tour of the\nPeace River district of sMberta and\nBritish Columbia and a brief visit\nto. Jasper National Park.\nIteary Mentioned\nfor Cabinet\nC, Leary of Nakuip,\nL. A. for Kailo-Slocan\nAmong thoie whoie names have\nbeen put forward as possible successors to Hon. F. M. MacPherson,\nshould the Cranbrook man resign\nhli pott as Minister of Public\nWorks for Britiih Columbia to\nbecome a member of the Dominion Board of Tramport Commissioners, ii'that bf S. C. Leary,\nNakuip, M L. A. for Kaslo-Slocan.\nThreat   to   Isolate\nHong Kong Made\nby Japanese\nHONG KONG, Aug. 20 (AP)-\nJapanese threat to \"isolate\" thli\nBritiih Crown .Colony  was  re-\nported from Canton today.\nDfstpltJ Muto assurances the.\n\u2022 ftlfnestTdo rTbt 'intend To tVV\n?do tha port, Hong Kong learned\nhe Japanese army press spokesman in Canton made this statement Saturday.\n\"Britain may assist the Chiang\nKai-Shek regime if she pleases,\nbut the Japanese army will be\nobliged to sever Chinese transport\nroutes even if Its entails isolation\nof Hong Kong.\n\"If Britain refuses to discontinue acts benefitting Chiang Kai-\nShek, a blockade of the Hong\nKong perimeter is inevitable.\"\nAuthoritative sources said they\nbelieved the statement was pur-\n. posely ambiguous in threatening\n\"isolation\" of Hong Kong and\nblockade of \"the Hong Kong peri,\nmeter.\" The terms used were1 believed to apply only to the 22'\nmile mainland boundary. In view\nof the fact the itatement emanated from the army and that the\nJapanese navy recently assured\nthat \"a blockade of Hong Kong\nwas not intended.\"\nVancouver Member\nConsidered Likely\nfor MacPherson Place\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 19 - Vancouver political circles are agog with\nthe speculation that British Columbia's new Minister of Public Works\nmay be a man who has not been\npublicly mentioned since jt became\npossible that Hon. Frank MacPherson might accept a position on the\nFederal Transport Board.\nJohn Howard Forester (Vancou-\nver-Burrard) has an excellent\nchance of being called to the cabinet\nin the opinion of many active\nLiberals.\n3Ke\n\"Weanier\nMin. Max.\nNELSON     44 87\nVictoria     54 82\nVancouver   57 73\nKamloops   47 82\nPrinoe George   42 76\nEstevan Point  50 68\nPrince Rupert  46 64\nLangara    - 52 61\nDawson  47 55\nSeatUe     5S 85\nPortland   64 85\nSan Francisco  62 73\nSpokane   51 93\nPenticton   46 \u2014\nVernon     49 \u2014\nGrand Forks  44 97\nCranbrook  39 92\nCalgary  37 87\nEdmonton     46 78\nSwift Current  47 80\nMoose Jaw  48 \u2022 87\nPrince Albert   47 86\nQu'Appelle  42 83\nWinnipeg   46 73\n8ATURDAY TEMPERATURES\nMln. Max.\nNELSON  44  81\nGrand Forks       44     89\nKailo    40     \u2014\nCranbrook -   38     83\nWater level at Nelson Sunday\nnight 5.30 feet above the low water\nmark, compared with 5.23 feet Saturday night and 5.16 feet Friday\nnight.\nZILINA, Slovakia, Aug. 20 (AP)\u00ab.\n\u2014A qutrter of a million German\ntroopi, with full war equipment,\nmassed todty on little Slovakia'!\n200-mlle frontier with  Poland.\nThe greater ptrt wti concentrated behind tht four mtln\npasses leading over the Tatra\nMountains Into Polind. Concentration polnti were the towni of\nCadot, Trstcna, Orlov tnd Mczi-\nlaborce, with centril headquarter! it Zllina. Roadi were choked\nwith moving troopi, artillery and\nsupply trains.\nSchoolt tnd town halls were\ntaken over fbr barracks and bato\nhospitals. Between vlllagei, munition! dtpoti were eitabllihed,\nand there were largt supplies of\nbtrbtd wire and corrugated Iron\nshelter roofs. All bridges were\nguarded by sentries with fixed\nbayonets.\nThli correspondent, making a 60-\nmile automobile trip in the area\nnorth of 2,lllna, counted an average of four German military encampment! of various sizes to the\nmile.\nTents were camouflaged, and,\nnear the frontier, gun crew! were\nwheeling their artillery Into position, spreading camouflage nets\noverhead. In 90 milei, this correspondent saw only three Slovak\nGendarmes, and Slovak troops, if\nthere were any, were completely\nout of sight.\nBERLIN, Aug. 20 (AP)-Declara-\ntlons that the \"day of reckoning\"\nwith Poland Is- coming soon piled\nflfli l_ttSha^w_wi^t--MiBWMtf today. '\u25a0''\".'\nBoth press and officials kept to\nthe theme of Danzig, free city under Polish cultoms administration\nwhich Germany wants returned (it\nwas hers before the Great War),\nand Pomorze (the Polish Corridor)\nthrough which the Nazis want a\nconnection to German East Prussia.\nIn Berlin the press insisted \"Polish insolence\" was fast exhausting\n\"German patience.\"\nThe influential Hamburg Frem-\ndenblatt headlined Poland \"still has\nfive minutes for reflection.\" The\nFremdenblatt reflected the general\nofficial contention that Polish dispute must be settled almost at\nonce.\nSome papers, including the Fremdenblatt, hinted Poland might \"save\nitself\" by coming forward with an\nacceptable suggestion.\nAn implied invitation to Poland\nto take some 'constructive initiative\nwas contained in the official news\nbureau's citations from Italian papers .suggesting Poland \"drop England and France\" and attempt direct negotiations with Germany.\nHOUR APPROACHES\nDANZIG, Aug. 20 (AP)\u2014Albert Fonter, Danilg Nazi dlitrict\nleider,. proclaimed today before\na crowd of 6000 that \"the hour approaches\" for solution of the Polish-German   problem.\n(Continued on Page Two)\n90,000 Pounds of\n' Equipment Rolling\nto U. S. Forest Fires\nSPOKANE, Aug. 20 (AP). -\nNinety thousand pounds of fire\nfighting equipment was rolling\ntoward the Pacific Coast today on\nfive big Forest Service trailer\ntrucks for use on Western Ore\ngon and Washington firclines.\nAn airplane rushed 12 fire-\nfighting supervisors to Portland,\nand a second plane was sent to\nOkanogan and Wenatchee to pick\nup four more Forest Service fire\n\u25a0 experts for work in the Portland\ndistrict.\nBy PAT U88HER     '\nLONDON, Aug. 20 (CP.-Cable)\n\u2014Prime Mlnliter Chimberliln,\nending hii (lining trip 24 houn\nahead of ichedule, left Invernesi,\nScotland, for London todty to attend Tuesday's Important meeting\nof hii key ministers, '\nAmid Indlcitioni a climax to\nmonthi of Europtan tension over\nGermany's demtndi on Polind\nwai at hand, cabinet minister!\nwere travelling to Londc\/i from\nvacation spots to review the lituation both on the continent and In\nGrett   Britain   remained   cilm\ndeipite the ominous ilgm on the\ncontinent, but the Sunday ntwt-\npapen   editorially   reflected   tht .\ngravity of the iltuition. . .\nJ. L. Garvin, well-known politlctl\ncommentator, remarked in the Observer (Conservative) that \"there\nwill be no respite until the tremendous crisis now rising into full\nview has reached its sequel \u2014 '\nwhether of peace almost by a mlr\u00bb\nacle or an irrevocable catastrophe.\nNeither event is excluded.\"\nThe Prime Minister, fiihlng ln\nScotland since Parliament recessed\ntwo weeks ago, had been expected\nto leave for London tomorrow night,\nbut he left this afternoon.: War Secretary Leslie Hor'e-Belisha cut ihort\nhis vacation on the French Riviera.\nForeign Secretary Viscount Hall-,\nfax returned unexpectedly on\nSaturday.\nCRITICAL WEEK\nThe developments came fl tht\n\u201e*,\u201e_ ..-mjjm.,:.^*.\u2022-'\u25a0\u25a0..,->m^m-_-^^__-\u2014: \u25a0 - ,..-*\n(Continued on Pag* Two)\nCampbell Breaks\nSpeed Records\nCONISTON, England, Aug. \u00bb\n(AP) \u2014 Sir Malcolm Campbell\nshattered all existing speed records\non water when he roared over Lake\nConiston Saturday in. an average\ntime of 141.74 miles an hour for two\ntrips along the measured mile.\nBluebird II, with the old engine'!\nwhich the late Sir Henry Seagrave,\nused seven years ago, hit its topTj\nspeed on the South run when Camp- 1\nbell was clocked at 142.85. He came I\nback in 140.62. r\nWhen Bluebird went past the latt   .\nbuoy,   Sir   Malcolm   tore   off  hit\ngoggles and pushed up his thumb to\nshow he felt the record had been I\nbroken.\nCampbell had everything In hit j\nfavor. The lake was glassy smooth. -\nBy the time they carried him out '\nto the waiting Bluebird the mist had I\nrisen. He warmed up his motor I\nabout, a minute, gave her the gun\nand came up the lake to glory.\nLater Sir Malcolm said:\n\"There is no question of the Im- I\nportance and value of the lesson*\nlearned from the use of this hulL\nIt ensures greater safety for high\nspeed work, and I am certain that\nthe design can be included for flying boat hulls.    v\n\"I shall do' np more trials here. I\nWe have found out everything we\nwant to know about this design.\nThe  'plane   three   step   hull'  hat\nproved an absolute success.\"\n\u2022 Commander Peter Du Cane, who.\nbuilt the hull, said the boat llyed .,\nup to all expectations;' He agreed\nwith Sir Malcolm they were on\nthe fringe of a new era of speed on\nthe water. .II\nSir Malcolm said, \"there is a devil\nof a lot more speed in that boat. .,\u2022\u25a0\nI have not even thought of putting\nin our best engine. When we do I\nram sure 150 miles per hour is a\nI definite possibility.\"\n1000 HOMELESS AS FIRES BLAZE\nTHROUGH THE PACIFIC N0RTHWES1\nSEATTLE, Aug. 20 (AP).\u2014Fanned by high winds and abetted by\nlow humidity, fire'ohewed its way\nthrough Pacific Northwest forests\non a hundred fronts today.\nAt least 1000 persons were homeless, one town was destroyed, hundreds of farm buildings were blackened and timber losses mounted so\nfast there was no accurate method\nof checking their size.\nFire fighters ploughed through\nthe forests from Southern Oregon\nto Vancouver Island; and complete\nclosing of forests impended in two\nStates and British Columbia.\nIn Oregon, one blaze destroyed\nthe lumber village of Pine Ridge,\nnear Klamath Falls, leaving 600\nhomeless. In Tillamook County\nwhere one of the largest fires in\nNorthwest history levelled timber\na few years ago, another huge blaze\nrode a 20-mile wind toward the\ncoast on ofur separte fronts. Eight\nfamilies evacuated their homes and\naeveral other homes were burned.\nAt Eugene, a 2000-acre brush fin\nburned uncontrolled last night after\ndestroying two bridges and build\nings on one farm. State Forester J\nW. Ferguson planned to close Western Oregon logging operations \"before Monday\" unless the weather\nimproved. A fire broke out withli\nhaif a mile of La Grande clt_\nlimits last night but was moving\naway from the town.\nIn Washington, a fire on Vashon\nIsland threatened the town of Bur-.\nton for hours last night and still\nburned out of control. The Tacoma,,\nfireboat went to the aid of the Island\nCommunity. One house was burn-\ned before the wind changed and\nended the threat Many residents ot\nNewport abandoned their Summer\ncottages.\nMajor C. S. Cowan of the Foreit\nFire Association said the Statt^\nmight order loggers out of the woods\nagain. They were ordered out one*;\nseveral weeks ago. Forestry Super- i\nvisor T. S. Goodrict called the con- \u25a0\ndltion \"the most critical in 22 years.\"\n^^^^^^j^j^^^j^jjljjg^^^^g^^g^^^\n^^Viisttjfar*'^'-*' *-t-**-t-i*m\n'm\n ,\n \u25a0\"\"\nI\n'\n....      . p\n1900 al Paterson\nol\nRossland Coop Transportation;\nSeventh Outing Is Big Success\nI ROSSLAND, B. C, Aug. 20\u2014Over\n1900 tttended the Seventh Annuel\nRossland   Cooperative   Tramporti-\n' tion Soclety'i picnic tt Ptterson\nSaturday.\n\u25a0 The weather was perfect, and\nIrom the time the first car arrived\nuntil the last car carried its load of\ntired passengers up the hill to Rossland. the crowd entered into the\npicnic spirit, carrying the day\nthrough with good natured rivalry,\neither entering into the sports,-or\ncheering along tbe sidelines of the\nrace track or the ball park.\nThe rices drew in exceptionally\nlarge number of entries, particularly\n\u2022 the ladles' races. The straight distance races for adults were run on\nthe park road, and owing to the\nlimited width, several heats were\noften necessary.\nINTRIGUING. CONTESTS\nThe ladlei' egg and spoon race\nproved particularly popular; so popular in fact, that things became\nrather involved. The crowd laughed\nappreciatively when Leo Nimsick,\nSports Chairman, announced \"This\nli, the first heat of the final heat\"\nover his megaphone. It was in one\nof the egg-and-spoon heats that Mrs.\nPaul Yirmoluk followed' the field,\nfetching up is winner with a slow\nand determined wllk, passing tht\nother more hasty ladies who were\nwaving empty spoons around at tha\nfinishing tape.\nThe thread-and-needle race also\nproved both popular, and complicated. The first time It wil run, tht\nmen allowed their partner! to thread\nthe needle, and came home tuts\npiclously early. Howard . Perkins,\nwho had taken over \"mike\" duties,\nexplained again, and again there\nwas a misunderstanding. The third\nattempt wai successful, and A, H.\nWood led the field down the home\nstretch with iuch vigor thit he tl\nmost collapied Into Leo Ntmslck't\narms.\n\"Spot tha wheelbarrow\" drew a\nlarge crowd, while the blindfolded\nladies pushed their barrows up tht\nclearing, Into the crowd, tnd sometimes right tround the crowd, tn\ntheir efforts to Judge the distance to\nthe stake. Mrs. William Ling, who\ntook four tints,' besides being t\nmember of the ladles' tug-of-war\nteam, included this event among\nher victories.\nThe biggest battle cf the day was\nstaged ln the \"kiddie with the dirti-\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON'S LEADING HOTELS\nHume Hotel Nelson, B.Ce\nGEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor.\nSAMPLE ROOMS     EXCELLENT DINING ROOM\nEuropean Plan, $1.50 Up\nHUME-'Dr. and Mrs. David Hartln, Barbara Jean Hartin, Spokarle:\nMr. and Mrs; Reury Dell, Athena,\nOre.; R. J- Meek, Port Alberni; H.\nM. Coursey, Medicine Hat; Captain\nand Mrs. Macgregor Macintosh, Salt\nSpring Island, B. C; W. B. McCallum, D. J. McAlmon, G. M. Thorn.\nPenticton; E. E Gregg, Victoria;\nLeonard Clark,\" Gray Creek; A N.\nBickley, Ste. Anne, Que.; Mrs. J. R.\nGrey, Nelson; J. Blackman, Kenneth Fosberg, Toronto; F. W.\nHughes, J. E Burk, P. T. Wlnram,\nT. Dick, W. T. Ashcroft, C, R. Stewart, Vancouver.        i\nHEW GRAND HOTEL\n.ADDITION OF NEW ROOMS WITfe. BATH.\nP. snd L. KAPAK, Proprietor!    ,\nEuropean Plan $1.00 and Up.\nFREE PARKING BLK. FROM CIVIC CENTRE PH. 234\n'\nKOKANEE LODGE\n\u2022    ROOM8      a    MEALS      a    CABINS\nExcellent Culilnt \u2014 Qood Betch\nOn North Shore of\nKootenay Ltke  ltt\nmiles from\nNelson\nAINSWORTH AND KASLO RESORTS\nAinsworth Hot Springs Hotel\n\u2022   ROOMS        \u2022   MEALS e   CABINS\nThe perfect spot for a perfect vacation\u2014 -_](*\n. Fishing \u2014 Boating \u2014 Swimming. -_ \\j\nWrite for our literature and rates.\nVANCOUVER, B. G, HOTELS\n\"YOUR VANCOUVER  HOME\"\nDutterin Hotel\nHO Seymour St.,   Vancouver, B. C.\nNewly renovated throughout Phones ond tltvttor.\nA. PATERSON, late ot\nColeman, Alta, Proprietor.\nSPOKANE Hotels and Restaurants\nPEDICORD HOTEL      \u00bb\u25a0\nComplete Service Under One Roof PEDICORD\n111 Rlvenlde Ave. Spoktnt, Wash. Manager\nWhen in SPOKANE You Will Enjoy Staying at the\n4\\rr Hotel VOIJ\u00abETP.uor;\nEVERY COURTESY SHOWN  OUR CANADIAN QUE8T8\nATLANTIC HOTELS]to$9\nFIR8T  and  MADISON\u2014SPOKANE,  WASH.      I As*\nTHE POPULAR  HOTEL FOR CANADIAN8  IN  SPOKANE\nHOTEL RIDPATH T\u00a3\u00ab\n196 outside rooms all it moderate ratei..\nAPARTMENTS ARE ALSO AVAILABLE IF YOU DESIRE THEM.\n= SPA\nE526 Sprague \u2014 SPOKANE\nDINE       DANCE\n\u2022 BREAKFAST\n\u2022 LUNCHEON\n\u2022 DINNER\nA warm welcome ts ex'.ended to\noui Canadian [riends.\nGALAX HOTEL\nThe cleanest Hotel In\nWashldgton\nRATES\u2014-.1 to $3 per day\nMsln d Berntrd Spokane\nSPOKANE  HOTELS\nAND RESTAURANTS\nWELCOME YOU\nPRANSPORTATION\u2014Possenaer and Freight\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE NELSON TWICE. DAILY\n5 a.m. and 10:30 a.m.\u2014Except Sunday\nTrail Livery Co.\nTrail\u2014Phona 135       Nelson-^Phpiw 35\nM   H.  MclVOR,  Prop,\nNELSON DAILY NEWt. NELSON. I. C-MONDAY MORNING, AUO. 21. 1MB\neat face\" competition. Competition\nnarrowed down to a Woodward vi.\nWoodward affair, when Alfred, ion\not Mr. and Mn. Alfred Woodward\nJr, tnd Billy, ion of Mr: and Mrs.\nWilliam Woodward, met face kj.face.\nAlthough hot related, they wert so\nevenly matched that George Dyson,\nPicnic Chairman, hid difficulty in\nmaking a choice. \u201e\nAU DAY BASEBALL\t\nThe ball grounds were'the centre\noj activity From 10:80 oa. A toftball\nfame wts pltyed first, when Mc-\nean ud Diamond Acei battled\nthrough for the Rowland Transportation picnic prize. The battle\nwat a- long- one, tnd terminated\nabout 1:30 when the Aces walked oft\nthe field, triumphant with an 18-19\nwin.\nThen E. A. Walten' two teami,\nthe Bantams and the Chlefi, got\ntogether to ihow their audience a\nreally well-conducted; and well-\nfought junior baieball game. Clad\nin thtlr natty white and blue uniformi, these two teams drew a\nlarge crowd to thesldellnei throughout the whole game. Tlie Chiefs\nwon.\nMemben of the very efficient\nSports Committee, who carried tha\nentire program through without a\nhitch, were Chairman L. T.. Nimsick. David Calder, Bull Littley,\nCedric Cox and Howard Perklni,\nJoe Dupperon wai ln charge ol\nthe honeihoe tournament and othen\nnoticed very busy around the Sports\nCommittee tent were George Dyion\nand M. H. Hoyte, President snd Secretary of the Picnic Committee, and\nJohn Melville.\nOther Committee Chairmen were\nA. L, Johnson, Transportation; Walter Hocking, Entertainment; . Wllv\nHam Cunningham, Refreihmenti;\nJaek Longstaff, Dance; and Joieph\nColeman, Grounds.\nTwo highway patrol polloemen\nand one motorcycle pollcemm\nguarded the seven-mile itretch leading from Roisland to the picnic\ngroundi. With a friendly warning,\n\"Careful there, not more then 20,\nwe don't want any accidents,\" they\npatrolled th< winding road during\nthe heavy traffic.\n8PORT WINNERS\nResults of the iportt were tt\nfollows:'\n1 Glrli race, 5 and under\u2014Lucy Su-\nbaslc, flnt; Flora Kleniin, second;\nJean Jensen,' third.\nGirls, 8 and under\u2014Patiy Bathie,\nfirst; Nan Alliion, lecond; Jean\nDonaldson, third.\nGlrli, 11 and under\u2014Annie Marie\nSpring, fint; Eileen Maclntyre, tecond; Audrey Bacon, third.\nGirls, 15 and under\u2014Louise Vetere, fint; Helen Schl*y, second;\nLila .Gooding, third.\nGlrli, 8- legged race, IS and under\u2014Olive Schley and Helen Schley,\nfirst; Mona Conroy and Louise Vetere, second.\nGirli open sack race\u2014Joan Bacon,\nfirst; Mona Conroy, aecond.\nGirli treasure hunt\u2014Donna Mac-\nKenzte, flnt; Ramona Conci, third.\nBoys, 5 yean and under\u2014John Vetere, first; Tom Spring, lecond; Terry\nDougan, third.\n. Boyi, 8 and under\u2014Allan Bacon,\ntint; Donald Davis, second; Jim\nMacDonald, third.\nBoys, 11 tnd under\u2014David Smith,\nflnt; Clifford McMortin, second;\nJohn .Williami\u201etl|lf4 ,   ;,    I\nBoys, 15 and under\u2014Harry Glover,\nfirst; Herbert Exner, second; Marcel\nLeSergent, third.\nBoys 3-legged race, IS and under\n\u2014Eddie Conroy and Bernard Spring,\nflnt; Herbert Exner and Jerry Monaghan, second.\nBoys open sack race\u2014Bernard\nSpring, first; Herbert Exner, lecond.\nLadles race, 25 years and under\u2014\nMiss Olive Schley, first; MrS: Howard Perkins, second.\nLadlei, 26 yean and over\u2014Mrs.\nWilliam Ling, fint: Mrs. Robert\nSaare, lecond.\nLadles open egg and spoon race\n\u2014Mrs. William Ling, fint; Miss\nFlorence Corrado, second.\nThreed and needle race\u2014Miss Millie Sdao and A. H. Wood, flnt.\nWheelbarrow racei\u2014Mils Delphine\nVetere and Hetbert Exner, flnt.\nSpot the wheelbarrow\u2014Mrs. William Ling, flnt.\nNovety rice, open\u2014Min Millie\nSadao and Mri. G. Groslin, first.\nNail driving contest\u2014Mrs. Williim\nLing, first; Mrs. E. Damour, second.\nLadies consolation race,' open-\nMiss Ruth Clare, first; Mrs. Orville\nSawyer, second.\nLadies softball throw\u2014Miss Ruth\nClare, 128 feet, 4 inchei, fint; Miss\nFlorence Corrado, 125 feet, 2 inches,\nsecond.\nLadles tire race\u2014Miss Lucy Tor-\ntorelli. first; Miss Margaret Buick,\nsecond.\nMen's race. 40 years and under\u2014\nHoward Perkins, first; Jack Reid,\nsecond.\nMen, 40 and over\u2014J. C. Milligan,\nfirst; John McCuUough. second.\nMen's obstacle race\u2014Orville Sawyer, first; Cedric Cox, second.\nMens broad Jump\u2014Robert Saare,\nfirst: John Kavic, second.\nMen's high jump\u2014Robert Crane,\nfirst: Robert Saare, second.\nLadies' tug of war\u2014Miss Eda Vetere. Miss Delphine Vetere. Mrs.\nWilliam Ling, Mre. Alexander MacDonald and Miss Dina Andretta,\nfirst.\nMen's tug of war\u2014Mark Birch,\nAnton Kavic. John Kavic, Peter\nTruant,\" Wilfred Lightburn and\nGeorge Maclntyre, firat.\nTRAIL SOFTBALL REPS TAKE FIRST\nSEMI-FINAL M FROM SALMO LADS\nTRAIL, B. C, Aug. 20 - TraU'i\nRep softballers returned to this City\nSunday night with a tale ot ipec\ntacular third-inning run-spree thit\nwon their tint Kootenty toftball\nchampionship semi-final against\nSalmo. The Smelter City boys ran\nup' three runs in t much-talked-\nof third tnd-thtn wtnt op to a\n8-2 triumph.\n36th teami were scoreless for the\nOpening sessions, but in the third\nTrail found Its feeL Burrows, flnt\nman up, hammered out a single,\nRitchie with t life bunt advanced\nhim and Jarrett hit hard to ihort,\nscoring Burrows whin MiDougtll\nfumbled. That itarted the paridt.\nAngerelll bunted, advancing Ritchie and Jarrett. but went out at\ntint. Then Hall ilngled to left Held\nto score Ritchie. First doublt ot tha\nggme came from Jones' bat, a hard\nhit to right field bringing In Jar\nrett. Thoie wtrt the three rum thst\ncounted and after that tha Trad\nboyt died quickly. Benoit flymg\nto right field tnd Berger to short\nThere was a three-inning alienee\nfrom both teama. ln the seventh\nTrail came through with another\nrun but It wasn't until the ninth\nthat Salmo made ita bid. Oliver,\npinch hitting for Thompton, made\ngood oo Ritchie's first offering,\nbanging It deep Into tht left garden\nfor a circuit run. Hale ilngled tnd\npostlewaite made fint on a wild\nthrow after Hale had been caught\nout at second. Humble poled out t\ntriple thet icored Poltlewtite, but\ndidn't get any farther than that for\nMcDougall tiled to Berger and\nRickard to Benoit.\nAngerelll. Jones and Btrger\nbrought ln Trall'i othtr runs.\nTrail Car Stolen From Silica Street\nSaturday Night Found In Ditch, Apex\nTaken from ltt parking place on\nSUlca Street Saturday nlgbt while\nthe driver vilited friends, a car\noperated by James Qalbraith of\ntrail wtt found damaged ln a ditch\nbeside the road at Apex Sundiy\nnight. The ctr, rented from a Trail\ngarage, hid tht right front fender\nand the steering rods damaged. It\nappeared the thieves hid {tiled to\nmtkt t ihtrp corner. Two wheeli\nwere In the ditch and two ln 'he\nair above the road. ,\nMr. Galbraith, accompanied by\nJoieph Buckna, drove to Nelion\nabout 8 o'clock Saturday night and\nwent to vialt Harry Leille at 801\nSUlca StreeL Intending to itay only\na few moments, he left tha keyi\nIn the ctr, but when he ctme out\nof the houie tfttr staying longer\nthan he Intended, the ctr wai gone.\nCity police  were  notified  and  a\nclose watch was kept on all roads\nand fefriei ln the district\nWhile coming to Nelson from\nRosebud Lake Sunday morning,\nGtrry Gillette noticed a green\nsedan car in the ditch, and noticed\nIt wu damaged. In Nelion, he\nlearned in the iftemoon thtt a\ngreen sedan ctr had bttn itolen\nand Immediately connected the two.\nHa obtained the licence number of\nthe itolen car and when he returned to Rosebud Lake ln the evening\nhe checked tht platei, phoning ln\nto the City Police when he found\nthe numberi the tame.\nConitable C. W. Houie of the Provinciil Police tnd Costtblt George\nFisher of the City Polite investigated, md a wrecker wu lent out\nto remove the ctr to Nelson.\nMr. Galbraith and Mr. Bucknt\nrtturntd to Trill Sunday night\nwith a friend.\nRev. J. E. lyner\nEx-Pastor Here\nPasses, Burnaby\nCoait papers report the death of\nRev. James Edward Tyner, of Burnaby, pioneer Baptist minister, killed or fatally injured Tuesday when\nitruck by a car at Honeihoe Bey,\nWeit Vancouver.\nMr. Tyner was paitor of the Nelson Baptist church for lix years,\nfollowing the war, coming here in\n1920 to succeed Rev. H. S. Bagnall,\nand moving from here to Burnaby, to become pastor of the Edmonds Baptist church. After some\nyears in tht latter pastorate, he retired, but Burnaby continued to be\nhis home, his residence at his death\n.belng'2232 Fulton Avenue.\nA native of the Maritime Province, Mr., Tyner was first a deep\nsea sailor, and before entering the\nBaptist ministry was mate of a\nsailing vessel. He was In the Baptist ministry ln Alberta In pioneer\ntimes.\nAged 80 at his death, Mr. Tyner\nis survived by his wife; one daughter, Clara, In Alberta; and five pons,\nRay,' Leigh and Lawrence In Alberta, Ralph in Trtll, and James\nat the family home In Burnaby.\nRalph Is on the'teaching staff of\nthe Trail high school.\nThe funeral was to have been\nSaturday, with Rev. M, A. Talni-\ncoff, pastor of the Edmonds church,\nand Rev. J. L. Sloat officiating.\nMORE ABOUT.\nGERMAN TROOPS\n(Continued From Page One)\nHa predicted victory for Din-\nliners who wish tht Free City\nrejoined to Germany,\n\"The hour approachei now,\" ht\ntold t ptrty rally. \"Whtn It comes\nwt will win.\"\n\"We stand together In thli serious hour stnd our soldiers alio\nstand together,\" Forster said.\nForster told of the \"solution of\nthe Sudeten problem\" and the absorption of Czecho-Slovakia \"without the firing of one shot.\"\n. \"Now,\" he said, \"The problems\nare the Corridor and Danzig. These\nproblems the Fuehrer, will also\nsolve.\"\nROME, Aug. 20 (AP).\u2014Authoritative Italians predicted today tension over Danzig would reach a\nclimax '.'within a few days\" with\nwar the alternative to Germany's\nacquisition of the Free City.\nThe Fascist newspapers, ns though\nby Government inspiration, urged\nthe Warsaw Government to accept\nFuehrer Hitler's plan of last AprU.\nRossland Miners (lose Up on Nelson\nas Belt Vic Howard for 11-5 Triumph\nROSSLAND, B. C, Aug. 20-Ross-\nltnd Miners are again back in a virtual tie for third place with the\nNelson Seniors by taking an 11-5\nvictory from their rivals at the Rosslind Ball Park this afternoon.\nRossland took an early lead, 1-0.\nin its half of the second, but then\nit seemed as if Old Man Jinx was\njfoing to frown on the Miners again\nwhen Nelaon went, to the front of a\n2-1 count in the fourth frame. The\nGolden City squad had Just finished\ndropping two games in a row in the\nlsst couple of Innings to Salmo, but\nthis time the Miners threw the bad\nbreaks right back at their opposition, in the persons of the Nelsonites today.\nSix runs in the sixth decided the\ngame as the Miners got ravenge for\nthe five-hit shutout Vic Howard\ntossed at them In Rouland recenUy.\nIh tact today wss the fint time in\nthree games thii season that Rossland has been able to scol'e at all on\nNeliori, Steve Smith whitewashing\nthe Minen in Nelion previously.\nHoward pitched the route but wai\nhit freely for 14 safeties. He struck\nout five, walked one and committed one balk. Red Tulloch, returning to the Rosiland mound after an\nabsence of several games, allowed\n13 hits, struck out eight and issued\nnns. frp*. naaL\n\u2022 In the eighth when Rossland scored four more runs, Tulloch smashed\nout a home run with Doug Norrli\naboard the sacks, and soon after\nChow Sadao duplicated the feat\nwith Duke SeodeUaro on. Two-base\nhits were, clouted out hy Petrunla\nana Sadao of the Mlntn and Beland,\nHoward and Richardson, with- twd,\nfor pie vlilton.      :,\nRossland reeled off the geme'i\nonly 'double killing.- Merle Wilson,\nthlrd-sacker, picked up Gelllng's\nground ball, tired It to Rico Martin\nto force Chodorcoff at second and\nMartin relayed the- ball to Rusty\nWynn at first in time to catch Gcll-\n\u2122fc    ..\u25a0\u2022..-'\n\u2022 Rosg Forrest umpired behind the\nplate with Albert Fletz on the bues.\nScoie by Innings:'\nNelson 000   200   012\u2014 8\nRoiSlshd  010   008  Mx-11\nWarns were:\nNelson: Roy Anderson, 2b, Vic\nHoward p, Ernie Beland is; Jake\nAllei, cf, Gordon Richardson c,\nJesse Seaby rt, Doc Chodorcoff lb.\nWalt Gelling 3b and Steve Smith If.\nRossland: John Cameron 2b, Rusty\nWynn lb, Doug Norris rf, Red Tulloch p, Rico Marlin ss, George petrunia c, Merle .Wilson 3b, Duke\nSeodeUaro cf, Johnny Gidinski If,\nind Chow Sadao If.\nEsling, Macintosh\non District Tour;\n. Holding Meetings\nW. K. Esling of Rossland, M.P,\nfor Kootenay Wut, and Capt. Macgregor Macintosh, M.L.A. tor The\nIslands snd Coniervative organizer tor Britiih Columbia, are making a tour of West Kootenay points\nmeeting electon and holding meet\nings,\nat Gri\niey were at Procter Thursday,\nray Creek Friday and at Boiwell Saturday, and will bt at Rob.\nson today.\nMORE ABOUT\nFOREST FIRES\n(Continued From Page One)\nBelief that the.four major fire?\n\u2014Sproule Creek, Ten-Mile, China\nCrook and Aptx\u2014wtrt ill ef Incendiary origin wis expressed by\nforestry officials. The last thrtt\nbroke eut almoit simultaneously\nFrldiy tftirnoon; tnd Spreule\nCreek broke out tome distance\nfrom tny settlement, it a tlmt\nwhtn thtn wu nt lightning to\ncause a fire. '\n880 FIRE FIGHTERS\nApproximately 880 men are fighting fires'in the dlitrict, the mijorlty\non the four major outbreaki in\nWest Kootenay.\nAt the China Creek fire backfiring saved the Mazloft mill and 4\nauto;, two of them belonging to the\nForest Branch, on Saturday. The\nfire, which had been steadily advancing downhill toward the mill,\ngot tround lt and cut off the road\nBelow the mill, burning out iome\ncribbing tnd several small- bridges.\nWhile the backfiring wm proceeding a caterpillar tractor from the\nmill wu employed Sunday to haul\ntimbers to rebuild the bridges, and\nanother tractor with bulldozer\nequipment was rushed from a forestry camp at Moyie Sunday to\nwiden the road where Cribbing hu\nburned out. Pumps prevented more\nextensive damage to bridges. About\n200 men are fighting this fire.\nE. E. Gregg of Victoril, assistant\nto G. P. Melrose, Foreiter In charge\nof operations, arrived ln the district over the weekend from Kamloops and with R. E. Allen, District\nForeiter tt Nelson, vliited the Chlnt\nCreek outbreak Sunday.\nSPROULE CREEK\nAt Sproule Creek, \"Over the hill\"\nNorthwest of Nelson, fire fighters\ngained control on the South end of\nthe fire. The fire tighten' camp is\nabout three miles up the Creek,\nand the fire line is a mile to a mile\nand a half higher up.\nThe fire hu not extended Into\nDeer Creek, a tributary of Sproule\nCreek, but is burning on the ridge\nbetween the two, ahd .a guard has\nbeen opened from Deer Creek to\nthe ridge and Northward. On the\nWest sloe a similar guard hu been\nopened up from Bear Creek, another tributary. Twenty-five men\nwere sent ln to fight a spot tire in\nthe Bear Creek' area.\nMost of the Sproule Creek fire\n4s on land logged off some years\nago by the Lambert Lumber Co.,\nand subsequently burned over.\nWhether the flames have extended\ninto green Umber to the North was\nnot known definitely Sundiy night.\nAbout 210 min are on the tire, iome\nhaving been shifted to new fronts.\nAPEX  FIRE\nFire on Whitewater Creek, Apex,\nIs described u ln \"pretty ftlr shape\".\nNinety-six fire fighters are holding\nlt away from the Nelway road, and\nHa,ve blocked the flemes on the side\ntoward Nelsdn. The fire la working\ntowird Ymir Mountain, where there\nli UtUe for lt to bum.\nThe 10-MUe fire, Thrums-Shoreacres area, wu held on the bottom\nbut was burning freely Up on the\nridges, where there was nothing of\ncommerclsl value.\nThere wu little change in the\nremainder of the district, except for\nthe new fires at Grand Forks and\nFeifnie areu.'\nMist serious fire ln CfSrtbrtok\ndlitrict is On Lamb Griek. It ll an\nold burn where windfalls make tire\nfighting extremely difficult.\nPatrolmen travelled up Hone\nThief and Toby Creeki ln tht Windermere in search \u00b0- * <irc reported\nIn thtt vicinity, after a greet cloud\nof smoke waa seen, but were unable\nto locate a tire, the cloud of imoke\ndisappearing. It wu thought the\nfire, if still b-min. mmt iffi HUH,\nSoccer Playoff\nPostponed Again;\ny, Trail\niB-ll's get-\nbe the\nJMfr-game-totel-point\ntertttdH ital* there has been more\npostponeaoeats than play. The game\nicheduletsRor lut Wedneidiy wu\nmoved to Thunday, and the third\ngame wu icheduled tor Sunday,\nthan moved to Monday, and now,\nfinally, to Tuuday.\nInability of Roultnd to field team,\nbecause of a Monday lacrosse engagement, wu the cause for the last\npostponement Strachan isid.   -    -\nThe Rossland-Trail battle is called\nfor 8:80 p.m. Tuesdty,. on DuUer\nPtrk.\nBody in Brush\nHear Brilliant\nTells Tragedy\nGun aad Forked Stick;\nIdentification Is\nLacking\nCASTLEGAR, B C, - Police In-\nvestlgstlon Is itill being carried On\ntoday In hope of Identifying a man's\nbadly decomposed body found about\ntwo mllei Northeast of Castlegar\nby a Doukhobor woman.\nThe woman, Mrs. Zebin, wu returning from picking berries about\n10 o'clock, Tuesday night, when she\ncame upon the body lying in the\nbruth about 500 yards North of Peter\nVerlgln'i tomb. Mn. Zebin reported\nimmediately to Arthur Turner, special constable at Brilliant\nA rifle lay close to the body, snd\nhli hand clutched a forked stick.\nThe bod;- sag chi in raaja cant\nand ticket A tew extra articles of\nclothing lay near by. ,,\nA coroner's investigation pointed\nto suicide and no Inquest will be\nheld. \u25a0  ,       -  -\nNO ONE MISSING\nPolice found little information\nthat would aid In leading to the\nIdentity of the body and no person\nbeing reported as mining in the\ndistrict deepened the myitery of tht\nman't Identity. \u25a0>\n. Speciil Constable Turner,. after\nvisiting the scene, reported to Constable G. MacAndrew at Castlegar,\nby whom investigation is being pursued\nBeatty Guthrie\nOutright release of Beatty Guthrie, rlghthanded. pitches? of the Nelson senior;, wu announced Saturday by T. Con Cummins, Cluh President. Guthrie left Immediately for\nhli home in Cranbrook.\nIn eight starts with the Nelson\nteim thli year; Guthrie wai clubbed from the hill in five of them.\nHe wti given credit for two; victories and charged with five losses.\nNIGHT BASEBALL\nWEST,  INTER.\nVancouver 10, Bellingham 13.\nWenatchee 4, Yakima 8.\nTacoma 2-4, Spokane, ,4-5.   ,.\nMORE ABOUT\nMinisters Return\n(Continued From Page Ont)\nBritish press said the coming week\nmay be the \"most critical since the\nGreat War.\" The ministers will\nconsider a report of European developments during the past two\nweeki and the rapidly deteriorating\nsituation In China.\nThe fact Mr. Chamberlain advanced his return by 24 hours was\nregarded as significant, but it was\nnot mentioned in a communique issued at 10 Downing Street\n\u2022 \"In accordance with arrangements made before the, minlsteri\ndispersed for the recess,\" the announcement' said, \"the' Prime Minister will return from' Scotland In\norder to preside over the meeting\nbf ministers arranged for Tuesday\nnext\n\"For this purpose, Mr. Chamberlain will leave Scotland this afternoon and will arrive in London\nearly tomorrow morning,\"\nFifth Capacity Load\non Moyie Excursion\nOne hundred and twtnty-flve\npassengers, the fifth straight capacity load, took the iteamer Moyie\nexculloh trip to Ainsworth Sunday afternoon.\nAll tickets were.sojd put by Wed-\nnesday and 10 were told for next\nSunday's trip, probably the last of\nthe leason. A large number, from\nTrail, besides Nelsonites, made up\nthe load.\nNORTHERN LIGHTS AT\nSIRDAR BRILLIANT\nSIRDAR, B. ti, \u2014 A beautiful\ndisplay of the Northern lights was\nclearly visible trom here Friday\nnight The play oi light at limes\nwu mott spectacular.\nCRADER AT SIRDAR\nSIRDAR, B. ti, \u2014 The Creston\ngnder under Dolt Weir has been\non the roadi all week putting on en\nexceUent surface, and this will be\ncontinued as. far as Crawford Bay.\nLONDON (CP).-A Kagu, beautiful New Caledonia bird, has been\nacquired by Uit London Zoo to\nliartner one presented lut ytar by\nLord Moyne. The species li now\nnearly extinct. The little grey bird\nIS smaller than a hen.\nLONDON (CP). \u2014 Tho London\nCounty Council has granted a licence for the exhibition here ot the\nRussian anti-Nazi film \"Professor\nMamlock,\" barred by the British\n\"-'\"   \"'  T'*m   rJ\"-';nr^\nI   \".'i\nFINK'S\nHalf-Yearly Sale\nLADIES' WEAR    CHILDREN'S WEAR\nFOOTWEAR\nThe Sensational Sale\nof the Season\nSUMMER SUMMER\nDRESSES      Footwear\nValues te $7.00\n.98\nValuei lo $4.00\n'2\n98\nChildren's Wear\nComplete stock children's summer wear\nall nt reduced prices. Dresses <ind Wash sO^sf^C\nSuits   \t\n69\nHundreds of Bargains\nA Store-Wide Sale\nPhone 73\nNO  EXCHANGES\nNO REFUNDS\nEVERY SALE\nBurns Block     mu\u00abt be final\nANOTHER CARLOAD OF\nSIMMONS\nBedding and Lounges\nTake advantage of these amazing offers\nduring Fink's August furniture Sale!\nand Chair\n\u00bb:\u25a0\u2022:>\nFuU Panel Bed Outfit\nConsisting of full panel Ited, spring filled mattress and\n  $36.95\ncable spring.\nPrice\nTrail Softballers Go One Up Against\nSalmo Wilh 6-2 Vidory at Salmo Park\nSALMO, ;B. C, Aug. 20\u2014\"One up\nand one to go,\" was what the Trail\nReps were chanting today atter\nthey had triumphed by a 6-2 score\nover the Salmo All-Stars at the\nSalmo Ball Psrk. It was the first\ngame of a semi-final series of the\nWest Kootenay men's softball\nchampionships.\nW. Ritchie, on the mound for the\nvisitors, was given brilliant support by his teammates, as he limited Salmo to five hits. The only\ntrouble he was in in the whole ball\ngame was In the ninth when the\nhome team combined three of their\nallotment of five hits for their only\ntwo runs. Up to that time Ritchie\nwas on his way to a wellearned shutout, although he struck out only\none man.\nOliver started the late Salmo rally\nln the ninth Inning with a home run\nto centre field. Jack Hale hit safely\nbut was forced out at second' when\nPostlewaite got on. It could have\nbeen a double play but Holl made a\nwild throw to first. Big Ray Humble, centre fielder, boomed out a\ntriple to score Postlewaite with the\nonly three-bagger of the game. MacDougall and Rickard, however, were\neasy outs on popups to the catcher\nand first baseman respectively.\nSalmo started well with Art Rest\nstriking out four ot the six men to\nface him ln the first two innings,\nand the other two were Infield outs.\nTrail put together three hits and\ntwo errors for three runs hr the\nthird, but Ross and Ritchie locked\nup in a scoreless pitching duel for\nthe next three innings.\nThe second game and third. If necessary, will be played at Trail next\nSunday for the right to meet Ihe\nwinners of the Nelsoii-Castlegar scries which will also be decided the\nsame date.\nMrs. Appleyard Is\n\"Fairly Good\" After\nOperation at Coast\nCondition of Mrs. C. W. Apple-\nyard of Nelson, who underwent an\noperation at Vancouver, was reported Sunday as \"fairly good\". Dr.\nL. H. Appleby performed the operation. Mr. Appleyard accompanied\nhis wife to the Coast.\nIn Season Debut Bogstle Hurls Cards\nlo a 9-8 Victory Over Salmo Seniors\nSALMO, B. C. Aug. 20-Cllff Bogstle made a dramatic return to the\nWest Kootenay baseball wars today\nas he pitched his first game of the\nseason and managed io edge out the\nSalmo SenioTs 9-8 with the aid ol\nlots ot hitting support from his teammates in Salmo. Sunday afternoon.\nThe victory sent the Cards U4\ngames up on the Nelson Seniors\nWho were beaten at Rossland today. The Cards are now assured of\nfinishing in second place.\nTrill had to steal some of Salmo's\nthunder to take the decision. Lately\nthe Salmo team has become quite\nnoted over the way it has been winning games with 1st* rallies, Today\nTrail came trom behind a C-2 lead\nwhich Salmi had ln the fourth inning.\nIt had been a long time since a\nSalmo pitcher has gone the distance,\nand today wss no exception as Clever was batted out in the sixth when\nTtall took over the lead with its\nfifth run in the fifth and six innings\ncombin\u00ab?d. Although Bogstle yielded\nto stagger through (he route.\nTrail added two runs to their total ih the first of the ninth ahd then\nIt looked as If salmo was going lo\nwin after all. Jack Kelly smashed\nout a triple to bring in Liebscher\nand Humble and rested on third\nwith the tying run. But the lanky\nSouthpaw hitched up his trousers\na little more, and then struck out\nRusty Gibbon to end the game.\nThe game was Salmo's second loss'\nof the league schedule,  compared\nwith eight victories. Both losses now\nhave been Inflicted by the youthful\nCardinals. .\nBoth teams got a double play. Ill\nthe ninth inning Macdougall hit\nto the pitcher who thrfw to the\ncatcher tb get Esche and then to\nfirst base to get MacDougall. In\nthe seventh inning Bogstie hit to\nsecond base, Rusty Gibbon touch-,\ning second to force one man and\nthrowing to first to get Bogstle.\nMacDougall made a nice catch\nout in left field when' he caught a\nhard hit ball by Demore in the ninth\n'     ilssss  In.  Shs.   fir.1 \"\n ALL SAFE\n:       ON\nMONDAY\nMORNING\n\u2022 En joy the complete freedom\nfrom worry that comes when\nyoa tide safely oa Goodyear\nLifeGuards. LifeGuards remove all danger of accident\nfrom sudden are failure. You\ncan't gtt bettor protection ta\nsuva your tiftl Your Goodyear\ndealer hu them ; 11 aee him\ntodayl\nNO BLOWOUT DANGERS\nwhen yeu ride on\nr.c.m.c Head on tour\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 20 (CP) -\nColonel C. H. King of Ottawi, Assistant Conimluioner of the Royal\nCanadian Mounted Police left here\nIpr Victoria Frldiy, in the course\nMt a tour of inspection of the Western lection of the force.\nrout hurt in auto\nACCIDENT, VANCOUVER\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 30 (CP) -\nFour penoni were taken ta hot-\netal etrly Saturday when two au-\nmobiles met in t head oo collision\ntt the South approach of Burrard\nBridge.\nZionist Leaden Try\nto Squash Jewish\n\"Terrorist\" Society\nGENEVA, Aug. 20 (AP)-Older\nteen of the World Zionist Congreu\nsought Siturdiy to end t secret\nlociety of youthi who wtnt to pit\nJewish trmed forcei igalnst Arabs\nin Palestine.\nAn uninvited delegation came to\nthe congress from the society which\ncalli itielf \"Irgoun\" or the \"National Jewish  Military  Orgtnlittlon.\"\nThe youthi have flooded the congreu with pamphlets proclaiming\n\"The Irgoun is beginning in armed struggle for the jewlih state.\"\nLeaden iuch as World Preiident\nChain. Welzmann aad the American President, Solomon Goldman,\ninsist the Zionists mutt use peaceful method!.\nThe Irgoun queition wai expected to be dealt with privately by\nthe political commiulon of the\nCongreu next week.\nThe Irgoun cltimt 2000 members.\nZionist leaders uy ltt number il\nnearer 200.\nIt claims to be fighting the Arabs\ntctively In the Holy Land tnd\nsmuggling Jewi into Palestone, despite the British White Piper Um-\nlting emigration in preparation for\nestablishment of in independent\nitate.\nNILSON DAILY NIWS. NILtON. I. C-MONDAY MORNINO. AUO. 21. 1HS\n\u2014m '     m-\u2014-\u2014-\u2014-...\u00ab mm,\nFORMER PRIZE FICHTER\nDIES IN MENTAL HOSP.\nPHILADELPHIA, Aug. 20 (AP)-\n\"Old Joe\" Grim, 58, one of the moit\nfamoui \"iron men\" among the old\ntime heavyweight priie fighters,\ndied in a hotpital for mental patients\nFriday.\nOnly once ln 19 yean of fighting\nwti Grim knocked out. Sailor Burke\nstopped him one night In Brooklyn\ntfter tuch tighten as Bob Fitz-\nlommom, Jtck Johnson, Kid McCoy and Joe Walcott had tried to\ndo lt and failed\nYou qet the coolinq\n| deliqhtful taste of genuine1\npeppermint in WRlGliVSj\nPOUBltMIWT GUM 1\n^^\n\u2022 You, too, ihould discover the delicious\ngenuine peppermint flavor of WrlgUy't\nDoublemlnt Cheering Gum. Healthful,\ndelicious, refreshing. Iti dally ute hasps\nkeep teeth bright and attractive, alio\nImparts a pleasant breath. Enjoy it\nalter ovary meal\u2014millions doi\n[GET SOME\nTODAY!\nTHE FLAVOR LASTS!\nNELSON\nBUSINESS COLLEGE\nThe College With a Provincial Reputation\nIndividual Tuition. Commence Any Time\nNELSON BUSINESS COLLECE GRADUATES are holding\nover 90% of office positions in Nelson and District.\nIf you received your training at the\nNELSON BUSINESS COLLEGE\nyou will stand head and shoulders above the rest.\nCOMPLETE COMMERCIAL COURSE\nNew Term Commences Tuesday, September 5th, 1939.\n107 Baker Street. Phone 603\n-as-\nFAIR WEATHER\nOR FOUL\nSince 1899 we have been on hand\nat all timet to give you a really\nbetter service in haulage and\nstorage.\nWest Transfer Co.\nPHONE 33 FOR SERVICE\nNo female Wage\nCharge Was laid\nAgainst Mr. Maco\nIn ttt luue st AUstttst lt, 1830, the\nNelion Dtlly Newi itated that Steve\nMaco hid been charged under the\nFemale Minimum waft Act. .Thli\nwu Incorrect No charge wu laid\nigtinit Mr. Maco under thli Act\nind tht Dtlly Ntwt regrets tbe\nerror and wishes to convey Its apologies to Mr. Maco for IL\nMartin Asks Boats\nfor Ferry Service\nOLYMPIA, Wuh, Aug. 20 (AP).\n\u2014Governor Martin Saturdiy directed Highwtyi Director Lacey V. Mur-\nrow to determine immediately whtt\nboats, If any,, are available to provide neceiiary ferry tervlce oa\nPuget Sound.\nThe Governor, however, uld lhat\n\"In the' meantime, no effortt would\nbe spared by thii office towird\nbringing about a permanent lettlement of the itrlke.\"\nIn the letter to Murrow, the Gov*\nernor uld:\n\"You tre hereby ordered to Immediately proceed to determine\nwhat boats, tf tny, are available or\ncan be made available, to provide\nadditional ferry service on Puget\nSound.\n\"Becauie of the emergency, under\nwhich many people tre deprived of\ntheir usual meant of transportation.\nIt It Imperative that whatever supplemental service the State mty\nrender be provided without deity.\n\"Therefore, you are requested to\nobtain thit Information and report\nto this office at the earliest possible\ntime.\"\nThe ictlon wu taken after a conference of more than three hours\nbetween the Governor, Murrow and\nOlaf L. Olion, Director of the Department of Finance, Budget and\nBusiness Saturdiy morning.\nTO REMOVE CREST FROM\nROYAL CITY POLICE CARS\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B. C,\nAug. 30 (CF)\u2014 Tlie crest cf the City\nof New Wettmlnit. is going to be\nremoved from police cart, according to the police commission.\nAn order iiiued lut year by the\ncity council itated that the crest\nmust be blazoned on all civic-owned vehicles, but ilnce then it has\nbeen found to hinder police, especially on night prowler work, the\ncommiulon itated.\nPOLICE SEEK FIREBUG\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 30 (CP) -\nVancouver city Police renewed a\n\u2022earch today for a fire bug. believed to have been reiponilble for\nfour calls to the fire department\nwithin an hour Friday night.\nNurse Slain by\nConvict Patient\nPORTLAND, Ore, Aug.-19 (AP)\n\u2014A nurse was slain and a doctor\ntnd police guard were seriously\nwounded today by a convict who\nattempted to eecape from a Good\nSamaritan Hospital ward. .'\u2022\nDetective William Fetters said\nthe mine, Mrs. Hattle Hooker, a\nspeciil attendant, died t few momenta after the wu ihot in the\nmouth by Hulcn Presley, who\nneaped from the Wuhington\nState Prison it Walla Walla 15\ndayt ago.\nPresley wu thot through the\nneck by hli guard, Sam Warrcll.\nWarrell tald when the nune\ncalled him into the ward to assist\nher, Presley grabbed the gun from\nthe hotter and started shooting,\nhitting Warrell in the band and the\nnune in the face.\nDuring the fight Dr. II. C. Man-\nlove, a surgeon, wu wounded in\nthe knee, miley wu felled by a\nbullet after threatening other\nhotpital attendants.\nActor Pays Fine\nto Clear 5-Year-\nOld Sentence, Paris\nPARIS, Aug. 20 (AP)-i-Philllpt\nHolmei, 33-year-old United Statei\nscreen actor, Saturday wiped the\nFrench court recordi clear of a\n19-day prison sentence itanding\nagainst him for a prank five years\nago.\nIn December, 1934, Holmei wai\ndining with a friend here. Both refuted to pay the 70-franc bill. The\nproprietor marched hli two laughing clients to a police itation.\nHolmes carried a long pocket\nknife and wai accordingly booked\ntor carrying concealed weapons.\nThe two finally paid their bill and\ndeparted. But tne machinery of\nJuitlce dragged the concealed\nweapon cue to court\nHolmei was sentenced in absentia\nto 19 days in jail.\nOn hii present visit the police\ntelephoned him for a formal retrial. The Judge fined him 13\nfrancs (about 30 cents) ind cloied\nthe cue.\nFish Revises Plea\nOSLO, Norway, Aug. 30 (AP).\u2014\nThe four-power peace icheme Representative Himllton Fiih laid before tht Interparliamentary Union\nwu replaced Saturday by t limple plea that Europe try peacefully\nto settle ltt disputes \"In t spirit ot\nJustice and goodwill.\"\nFilh, whoie proposal called tor a\n30-day war moratorium and negotiations tmong Germany, Italy,\nFrance and Britain, uld the reviled resolution wu all right with\nhim. as It \"urges my ideas ot\npeaceful  tettlemtnt.\"\nKootenay Doctors\non Cancer Staff\nFour Southern Interior docton\nhave been appointed to the honorary\nconsulting staff of the B.C. Cancer\nInstitute, founded in November,\n1938.\nThey are Dr. F. W. Green of\nCrinbrook, Dr. A. L. Jonet of Revelttoke, Dr. H. H. MacKenzie of\nNelson and Dr. J. Bain Thorn of\nTrail.\nThe honorary consulting staff includes docton from many other\npointi in British Columbia.\nAVIATRIX SAILS, ENGLAND\nQUEBEC, Aug. 20 (CP)\u2014Peggy\nSalamtn, Britiih aviatrix who eight\nyean ago made the tint through\nflight from London to Cape Town,\nsailed from here Saturday for England aboard the Liner Empreu of\nAustralit.\nAnd at the same time as Mlu Sals-\nman la sailing down the St. Lawrence River, her companion on the\nflight to South Africa will be flying\ntoward .Canada from England. He\nli Captain A. Gordon Store, in command of Imperial Airways Hying\nBoat Caribou, making Its second\ntrans-Atlantic crossing.\nFees Says Board\nBalfour School District would be\ninformed thst no reduction In High\nSchool itudent feu could be made\nin Its cate, the Nelson School Botrd\ndecided Frldiy night, on receipt of t\nletter from Secretary Frank Seal,\nasking thtt the feet be reduced from\ntS to 33. Thue were to many students from Bilfour attending Nelson High School and Junior High\nthtt tt wu hard for the ratepayen\nto meet tbt demandi, the letter\nitated.\nThe botrd refused on tht grounds\nthat if It allowed Balfour a reduction, It would have to allow reduction! to all other districts.\nChairman R. B. Morrii pointed out\nthtt,whert lt cost rural districts $90\na year for each student, Nelion taxpayers were paying $79 or $80 for\neach student In the High School.\nTWEEDSMUIR'S SISTER\nIN CAR MISHAP\nDAWSON CREEK, B. ti. Aug.\n20 (CP)\u2014Mlu Anns Buchan of\nPeebles, Scotland, sister of Governor-General Tweedsmuir, escaped injury hert Friday when the automobile in which she wat riding\nslipped into a two-foot ditch. Miss\nBuchan wu seated next to a window thit wu shattered.\nMETEOR SEEN, VANCOUVER\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 30 (CP) -\nA meteor thtt exploded \"similar to\nthe flash of a cameraman'! flash\nbulb and relatively about the ttme\nsize,\" wu reported by O. Durltln\nSaturdiy to have flashed tcrou the\nsk\/ and buried itself somewhere\nin the mountains North ot here\nFriday night.\nSERIAL STORY\nWINGS OF YOUTH\nBy HELEN WELSHIMER\nICE\nCALL 106\nWilliams Transfer\nJAMES SMITH\nTILE CONTRACTOR\nBathrooms \u2014 Fireplaces \u2014 Sinks\nStore Fronts \u2014 Floors\n618 Robion St.,   Phone 841-L\nCOOLING\nEQUIPMENT\nFor homes, office, itore or ihop.\nI. C. Plumbing & Heating Co.\nUNDERWOOD\nTYPEWH1TERS\nSundstrand   Adding  Maohlnat\nOFFICE SUPPLIES\nUnderwood Elliott Fliher Ltd.\nIM Ward St. Phont N\nCHAPTER 40\nIt wu late In the afternoon, the\nday following her thopping orgy,\nwhen Sarah Anne came to Corinne's\ncollege campus. She wore the rust-\ncolored bolero suit and the off-the-\nface hat ot shining bronie, and the\nbrown suede accessories.\nCorrinne had not met the bus\nwhich brought Sarah Anne from\nthe college ttatlon, because there\nhad been such uncertainty about\nthe hour of her coming.\nRiding along to the dormitory,\nSarah Anne felt the serenity of the\nwide campus whose maples wore\nthe red and golds and browns ot\nending Autumn. Squares ot yellow\nlight shone In the windows of building and houie, and a radiant moon\nof a clock on the tallest college\ntower declared it wu half-put five.\nThe rain, which had let up for\na day, wu coming again. It wu an\nincessant, sharp down-beat which\nhad no melody.\nSomeone wu playing a piano ln\nthe rear ot the drawing room at\nCorrinne'i house, and a small group\nof girls snd boyt were popping\ncorn around an immense fireplace.\nWhen Sarah Anne wu ushered into\nthe room, a pretty girl looked up.\nThen ahe held out a slim hand.\n\"You're Sarah Anne, aren't you?\nWe've all been watching the buses\nwaiting for you.'\nImmediately Sarah Anne was the\ncentre of a friendly and Interested\ngroup. Someone hurried to tell Corrinne that the had come. Somebody else filled a bowl with the\nwhite, buttered popcorn for her.\nHoun later, when the dormitory\ndinner wu over, and the girls had\ndrifted back to their own rooms,\nSarah Anne said to Cortlnne, who\nwu tilting her new hat one way,\nthen another, u the poied before\nthe mirror:\n\"I feel so st home. Everybody\nunderstands about what happened\nto us, in the Summer, and nobody\nminds.\"\nCorrinne removed the frivolous\nhat and her blue eyes darkened.\n\"It'i becauie we're sll young, I\nguess. We know how easily, things\ncan happen \u2014 no signboard on most\not our itreeti to point directions\nthe way they will ln thirty yean or\nso.\"\nCorrinne hsd not mentioned Robert .Ransom, though it wu his contempt of her that had led to this\nviiit of Sarah Anne'i. Now ihe began to talk about him.\n\"Bob'i important \u2014 but I've de-\nided that if he doubts me io, he\nlin't what I want You lee, he\ncould do foolish things and I'd understand, but he didn't. Yet, of\ncoune, maybe lft my own experience that hu shown me what an\nidiot i penon can be. I keep thinking that. Anyway, I'm going to forget\nhim.\n\"I've accepted a part in the next\nplay tnd I'm doing some campus\nchatter for the college paper and\nI'll come through.'\nAt that very moment, Robert Ransom, impeccable In a new tuxedo,\nwith a min'ute red carnation In his\nbuttonhole, was escorting a girl into\nTwenty-One, the night club in New\nYork's Wett Flftlet where society\nsnd stage, particularly the younger\nmembers, congregate when. the\ntheatre is over. '\nThe girl had a small part in\n\"Sparkle, Sparkle, Sparkle\/' Since\nthe night that Robert had seen her\nfirst, he had escorted her to the\nStork Club, El Morocco and the St.\nRegis. He had not intended to see\nher more thin once, the day he\nmade hli bout to Robert Kennedy.\nHe had been hurt and he needed a\nweapon ln detente.\nBut the wu gay and unimportant and beautiful in a flamboyant\nway, with eyelashes too dark ahd\nthick, and hair too plainly Won-\ndined. So he came down from hli\ncollege three different nights.\nBut he had not fulfilled that\nthreat to get drunk the fint evening or the second. Not until the\nthird.\nSomething about the girl had\nbeen a little nauseating. Maybe the\nway that she coined affectionate\nterms and used them for periods and\nexclamation marks. Maybe the way\nher hands reached out to touch\neverything the wanted, especially it\nit were a tall young boy with\nbrooding eyei who would- take only\nlemonades or coffee.\nAnyway,  Robert  said suddenly,\nas though the words were a repetition instead of an Introduction: \"A\ndouble Scotch, please!\"\nHe laid it again, Not once, but I\ntwice, before the club closed, mid\nhe dropped the girl at the hotel\nwhere iht lived. He had not grown\nmerrier with the liquor. He wu angrier, more despondent. Hit mind\nwu fuddled and blocked. He wt\ndown on the curb to think. This wu\na wow! He'd supposed Scotch made\nyour worries go phfft and tent you\noff In a cloud bank.\nA passing policeman scanned him,\namusement ln hit eyes. \"Not feeling\nWell, buddy?\"\n\"Sure! I feel swell! But let me\ntell you lomething. There's nothing\nto that line about drink. It doein't\npep you up. I know.'\n\"Good! Then you won't want tny\nmore. Isn't there something you\nought to be doing, some place you\nought to be going?\"\n\"Sure! Surel You're right. I hive\nto telephone \u2014 have to telephone a\nlong distance!\"\nHe walked surprisingly straight,\nthe officer decided, u he went\naway.\nRobert went to the nearest all-\nnight drug store, had a five-dollar\nbill changed to nickles, dimes snd\nquarters, and gave the name bf\nCorrinne'i college to the operator.\nSomeone at her dormitory insisted\non asking what he wanted at that\nhour before calling her to the phone,\nbut he would not answer. Finally,\nafter hli money had made a silver\nJingle ln the booth for a moment,\nhe heard Corriniie's voice.\n\"Yes?\" i\n\"This is Bob. Robert Randall Ransom. Remember?\" <\nShe supposed he wu ieeklng for\nthe gay touch. Anyway, he didn't\nsound serious. She had no idea why\nhe ihould call at thli time, or tny\ntime; not now, when the wu getting herself in hand. So ihe said:\n\"Oh, yes, I remember! The guy\nwho used to take me to movies!\"\n\"Sure, that guy. That's air it\nmeans to you.\" His voice wos bitter, so bitter the did not catch the\nhurt underlying the wordi.\n\"She wanted to uy: \"No, Bob,\nyou know better than that,\" but\ninstead, she answered: \"Why do you\nthink that?\"\n\"Listen, Corrinne, I'm sort ot\ntight tnd I'm calling you when I\nhave no business to do it. I'll be so\nsorry tomorrow I'll be sending you\norchids and you'll be tossing them\nin the waste paper basket But I\nwant to uk you something: How\ncould you sell out your Interest In\nme for five thousand dollsn? Why\ndidn't you hold out for ten, any-\nway?\"\n\"Sell out?\" Corrinne breathed.\n\"You're crazy, Bob Ransom!\"\n\"Crazy? Not much! My father\nshowed me the check for that\namount which ht gave your father.\nYou were smart to keep your name\nout of it\"\n\"Your father lied to you,\" Corrlne wu saying coldly. \"Or else you\nare making this up. My father\nnever i-eeelved one cent from youn!''\nShe spun around. Sarah Anne, had\nfollowed her and heard tha 'lut\nwords, and her whisper was distinct\n: \"Oh, but he did, Corrinne, he\ndid!\"\nOblivious of Bob waiting some\nplace, talking on and on, Corrinne\nturned to her sister. Her eyes were\nso immense they gave Sirah Anne\na frightened second.\n\"Let me talk,\" ihe tald, and took\nthe receiver from Corrinne'i lifeless\nhand.\n\"Robert, this Is Sarah Anne. I'm\nbeginning to. sec things straight.\nYour father did give mine a check\n\u2014not for himself, but to buy things\nfor the church\u2014and he made lt out\npersonally because he wanted hli\nidentity hidden. He'i told you that\nCorrinne sold'out Either you are\nstraightening this out or we arei\"\nShe hung up sharply.\n. \"Can you tie that?\" Corrinne wai\nasking, a ipark of lntereit making\nher solemn eyu younger.\nRobert sat in the booth until the\ndrug itore proprietor tapped on the\nglass to see If he wu 111. Then he\nwent out and took a taxicab back\nto his college, though the amount\nof the meter would be staggering.\nHe knew what he wu going to do.\nHe wu going to fly home for the\nweekend and talk to two people\u2014\nCorrinne'i father and hli own,\nWhen he iaw Mr. Melton, he\nnodded ilowly. Here wu ample evidence. He went Into hit father's\noffice, then.\n\"Well, son, what briught you home\nso soon?\" his father uked pleasantly, affectionately. He didn't seem\nsurprised.\n(To Be Continued)\nStrangles Wife and\nThen Kills Self\nTRANSCONA, Mtn, Aug. 10 (CP)\n-What police described u t murder and luicide wu reported Saturday tt Oak Bank, netr thli railway centre, 10 milei Eut of\nWinnipeg.\nPoUce nld they ware told Harry\nSokerka, a farmer, strangled his\nwife, dumped her body In a well\ntnd then Jumped into the well himielf. The offlcen said thtt Sokerka\nhad been tent to the ptychoptthic\nwird of Winnipeg General Hospital on June 11 and that he\nwu released four dayi later.\nPope Plus Makes\nPeace Appeal\n\u2022CASTEL GANDOLFO, Italy, Aug.\n20 (CP)-Pope Plui Siturday ip-\npetled to God to prevent the outbreak of a new war and to statesmen not to take the \"serious responsibility of making appeal to\nforce.\"\nAfter a reference to the late\nPope'l offer of hii life to God a\nyetr ago the Pope pledged himself\nto continue efforts towird achieving luting peace.\nHe Implored the Almighty \"in\nHit Infinite goodness tnd compassion for the humtn net\" to itop\nwtr \"wherever It rages,\"\nWith Europe ln the midst ot t\ngrave crltit, the Pontiff wsrned\nstatesmen against Uw \"grave responsibility of reiortlng to armi to\nsolve  their  disputes.\nHe uld he would not abandon\nhope \"moderation and Justice will\nprevent a conflict which, according to all forecasts, would surpass\nthote ot the put ln destructiveness\nand moral and material ruin.\"\nThe Pope wu addressing pilgrims from Venice who came to the\npapal Summer eitate atter praying\nat the tomb in the Vatican of Pope\nPlus X on the 29th anniverury ot\nhis death,\nCASTEL GANDOLFO, Aug. 20\n(AP)\u2014Pope Plui granted privtte\naudience Saturday to Poitmaster\nGeneral James Farley, of the United Statu. \u2022\nCARTEL GANDOLFO. Au\u00ab. 20\n\u2014W. Rupert Daviei, publliher of\nthe Kingston, Ont, Whig-Standard\nand Preiident of The Cinidlan\nPreu wu ln tht audience which\nheard Pope Plui XII make an appeal Saturday for peace.\nDynamite Found\nOntario Farmhouse\nBRACEBRIDGE, Ont, Aug. 20\n(CP)-Police uld today they found\n300 pounds of dynamite with fuses\nand caps in a raid on a district\nfarm house.\nInvestigations itarted after the\nAnglo-Canadian Leather Company\nreported $500 worth of leather hid\nbeen'stolen from a box car ln their\ntannery yardi. Watchmen were\nplaced around the building Friday\nnight Two men approached the\nboxcar, but broke away from the\nwatchmen.\nChief C. Canon itarted an investigation of farm houses in the\ndistrict and came up to the dynamite, believed the property of\ngovernment departmenti working\non roadi in this district.\nNEW BRIDGE OPENED\nIN DANZIC TERRITORY\nDANZIG, Aug. 20 (AP). - A\nnew bridge over the Vistula River\nbetween Koesemark and Rote-\nbude wu dedicated Saturday and\nopened to traffic,\nThe bridge is the only one\nacross the Vistula in Danzig territory and will ipeed up communication! between the Free\nCity and Eut Prussia.\n-V&5-\npint THRU\nSuitcases\n$2.25\nAn exceptional value in quality suitcases and priced right\nfor holiday time. These cases have plywood frames, metal\ncorners, 2 clasps and strong lock. 26\" siie, black or brown.\n\u2014Miln Floor HBC\nmmWtttMtmtttMtMMMMtlmtHMttlMtMMM\nON THE AIR\nCKLN\u2014\nNELSON\nA. M.\u2014\nl:00\u2014O Canada\n8:03\u2014The   \"You\nNune   H\"   pro-\ngramme\nB:19-Tht Newt\ntmetmm7tttt_m*mttttytt-M\n10:19\u2014Hospital Program\n11:00\u2014Morning  Bulletin  Board\n12:00-Muiic for Mealtime\nP.M.\u2014\n12:90\u2014The Newi\n1:00-Matlnee Melodlei\n1:30-Slgn off\n9:30\u2014Children'! Requeit Program\n0:00\u2014Strange Adventuru\n6:19\u2014Supper Melodlei\nG:30-The Newt\n8:45\u2014Peerless Dentists\n7:00\u2014Moon Over Africa\n7:30\u2014Concert Muter\n8:00\u2014Memoriu of Htwiii\n8:30\u2014Hit Revue\n9:00\u2014Muilcil Roundup\n0:30\u2014Eventide Echoes\n0:45\u2014This Rhythmic Age\n10:19\u2014Romtnce lc Melody\n10:30-Do You Believe in Ghosts\n10:45\u2014At Close of Day\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nA. M.\u2014\n8:00-The Balladeer\n8:30\u2014Tha Newt\n8:45\u2014The Joyce Trio\n9:00\u2014Everett Hoagland'i Orch.\n9:30-Road of Lift\n9:45\u2014The Chirloteen\n10:00\u2014\"Big Sliter\"\n10:19\u2014Life and Lovt of Dr. Susan\n10:30\u2014 Manhattan Melodlei\n11:00\u2014The Story of Mary Marlin\n11:15\u2014Ma Perklni\n11:30\u2014Pepper Young'i Ftmily\n11:49\u2014The Guiding Light\n12:00\u2014The Newi\nP.M.\u2014\n12:15\u2014Club Matinee\n12:49\u2014What'i In a Name\n1:15\u2014Songs by Simone Quesnel\n1:30\u2014Van Alexander'i Orch.\n1:45\u2014Closing Stock Quotations\n2:00\u2014Chuck Shank's Orch.\n2:30-Wlshart Campbell Sings\n2:45-Salon Silhouette!\n3:00\u2014To be tnnounced\n3:15\u2014G. R. Markowski'i Orch.\n3:30\u2014Lucille Cameron and the five\nspades\n4:00\u2014Don Turner'! Orch.\n4:30\u2014Sevillena\n5:00\u2014Friendly Muilc\n6:00\u2014Blue Shadow!\n7:00\u2014The Newi\n7:15\u2014String Trio\n7:30\u2014Len Hopkin'i Orch.\n8:00\u2014Dramatic Seriei\n11:30\u2014Mia Fitzgerald lc her orch.\n9:00\u2014Nocturne\n9:30\u2014Horace Lapp's Orch.\n9:45\u2014The Newi\n10:00\u2014Muilcil Fantuie\n10:30-Ted Weemi' Orch.\n11:00\u2014Tommy Htrrlt\nCJAT \u2014TRAIL\nAM\u2014\n7:00\u2014Rtquut Program\n7:30-Newt\n7:49-Song Hits\n8:00\u2014Morning Bulletin Boird\n12:00-On with tha Dance\nP.M\u2014\n12:30-Vtrittlet\n12:49-Ntwt\n1:00-Up to tht M,mite\n2:00\u2014Women'i Journil\n3:45\u2014Tea Time Tunti\n4:30\u2014Theatre Newi\n4:45-Newi\n6:00\u2014Hetdllnei in Sport\n6:15\u2014Romtnce of Music\n7:15\u2014Light Up tnd Listen\n7:30\u2014Songi of Yesteryear\nOther periods\u2014CBC programmes\nTHE NETS' BEST\nO.30  CuiuiIISjiss \u2014 GUV  Lumuasuw's.\nOrch.\n9:90   NBC-Red-Horace    Heidt'i\nOrch.\n6:00 NBC-Red-Contented Hour\n6:15\u2014Mutual\u2014Pageant of Melody.\n7:00 NBC-Red-Fred   Wiring   In\nPleasure Time\n7:90 NBC-Red\u2014Margaret  Spcaki,\nSoprano\n8:30   NBC-Blue - Philharmonic\nConcert\n9:00 NBC-Red\u2014Hawthorne Houte\n10:00 NBC-Blue \u2014Musical Fantasie\n10:13 NBC-Red\u2014Blue Moonlight\n10:30 NBC-Blue-Ran Wilde's Orch.\n11:00 NBC-Blue\u2014Ptui Canon, organist\nme;\nNBC-RED\nKFI, Los Angeles; KIIQ, Spoku\nKGW. Portland; KGA, Denver;\nKPO, San Franciico.\nNBC-BLUE\nKGA, Spokane; KGO, San  Francisco;  KJR, Seattle.\nCOLUMBIA\nKNX, Hollywood; KSL, Salt Lake\nCity; KFPY, Spokane, KOIN,\nPortland,\nMUTUAL-DON LEE\nKOL,  SeatUe;  KFRC, San  Francisco.\n3 CHILDREN BURNED\nSACRAMENTO, Calif., Aug. 20\n(AP)\u2014Three children burned to\ndeath and two othert were scri-\nously injured Saturday in a fire '\nwhich destroyed a small dwelling\nin a shack settlement on the North\noutskirts of the city.\nOnly two in a family of seven\nescaped without burni,\nA KINGS <S)\nIf\nNo art needi to conceal Itself more deftly than the fine tnd useful\nart of managing a husband. So discerning wives are grateful for any\naid to supplement tbeir talents, During the latter years of King\nHumbert's reign, which ended in 1900, his Queen and Counsellor\nMargherita thus confided ber successful technique!\n\"I can overlook many faults In a man\", ahe laid, \"and make allow*\nancea for bis shortcomings. One fault, however, I cannot overlook\nis his not smoking. When the King is annoyed, I give him his pipe;\nwhtn he is good tempered, I give him a cigarette; when I want him\nto do anything particular for me, I give him a cigar. With a pipe I\ncan console him, with a cigarette I can delight him, but with a cigar\nI can lead him anyhow and anywhere.\"\n\"\\\nThis Company supplies \"the Colonel's Lady and Judy O'Grady\"\nwith products which contribute to domestic tranquillity \u2014 and it\naccepts the responsibility that these products must always be good to\ninduce in husbands that state of benign calm in which they are willing to listen to their wives' advice.\nIMPERIAL   TOBACCO   COMPANY   OF   CANADA,   LIMITED\n!\nto-t-\u00a3-**Ji. ..\n-m\n..,-. ___, ..\nitTiTri'ilri.tifti'Mtti r\n. . .. ....... .\n \u25a0\ni  ;i   mi       \u25a0    I   I   \u25a0 I  NILION DAILY NIWI. NILION. B. C-MONDAY MOBNINO. AUO. If. 1W \u2022\n<   **mm>\nPAQB FOUR - , in. i \u25a0 t    i       NILION DAILY NIWI. NILION. M. C\u2014M0NDAY M0RNIN9. AUB. IT. 1W '     \u25a0 ' '   . n i\nI    Mirror* Kmatoncy Beauty     BRITISH WOMEN    SOLDIERS\" IN CAMP;   r'^l^J!ffS!^!_^rM\nPRINCES ATTEND WORLD ROVER MEET\nat World Rover\nMoat\nYoung Rosslander\nTypical ot Kootenay icanes, and to be lound on almost every\nlake wtthln easy resch of. Kooteniy retldents, Is the photo above with\n. its .mirrored beauty.\nWest Arm Road Side Beauty\nAn evergreen itandt out In solitary beauty against lunset clouds\n... a scene along tha Balfour-Nelson road, West Arm ot Kootenay\ntake. \".' \u2014Photo by Thomas Crack.\nMountain Road and Mountain Ylew\n\u25a0***r5&t''!.'&\\\n\u25a0jffp-'\"'\" ~T\"~    \"'\"'|\nr\nt***iW,< \u25a0 . \u25a0;\u25a0\u25a0,\u25a0   \\-'y''-.'::''.'.:\":'                                 ''\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0'\"'\u25a0'\u25a0''?*JJ\nWr \u25a0'\u25a0'\u25a0-'\u25a0\u2022'\u25a0\u25a0       \u25a0                 \u25a0*,i--:* tWM\nu1\n-k*\n\u25a0 V \u25a0\n1        . \u25a0\n-&*   Sti \u25a0\"\u00bb \u25a0\nJHe**      : \u20ac\n'  \u2022  ; \u25a0   '\u25a0           f*\n....   _. 7*y*mi:,\u00ab, .^\n*^*m*-*-w^f.i_:\u25a0'    .     * M-'\nTwisting Its way through the Cascade!, and presenting splendid\nViews of mountain country. Is the Cascade Road between Rostland\nand Grand Forks. Extensive Improvement Is under way on the road.\nTha picture above, taken from the flrtt summit, shows the road winding down Into Hie villey.\n\u2014Photo by Thomai Crack.\nMl\u00ab Majesty in Scotland\nRepresents Chief\nScout\nMiss Barbara Lewis, 11-year-\nold daughter of Mra. R. J. Lewis\nof Roisland. Barbara passed Into\nGrade VI ln June.\u2014Photo by\nPhoto Shop, Roisland.\nTo Be C.P.R.\nYardmaster\n- m.fL\nRepresenting the Chief Scout,\nLord Baden-Powell, Sir Percy\nEverett, Deputy Commissioner,\nshown as he arrived at Quebec\naboard the Empress of Britain.\nSir Percy will visit Canadlsn\nScouts' central divisions throughout Canada.\nRossland Lass\nBe-kilted and smiling the King Is seen here shaking hsnds with\nCapt. J. V. Bailley, commander of the guard of honor that greeted\nTheir Majesties on their arrival at Ballater, Scotland, en route to\ntheir Scottish seat, Balmoral Castle.\nLord Chancellor Arrives In Canada\nC. M. BELTNER,\nat present at Tadanac, will arrive\nin Nelson about September 1 to\nbecome yardmaster for the Canadian Pacific Railway, succeeding Charles Sewell, retired.\nMr. Beltner entered C. P. R.\nservice at Nelson in June, 1911,\nand was a trainman for several\nyears, In 1918 he transferred to\n\u2022yard service under Mr. Sewell st\nNelson, and has served in Nelson\nand Tadanac since then. He has\nbeen working under Ernest Kinahan, yardmaster at Tadanac, since\n1932.\nArriving In Canada to attend the convention of the Canadian\nBar Association and to officially open the Canadian National Exhibition, Lord Maugham, Lord Chancellor of Great Britain, Is pictured\nhere with Lady Maugham, as they arrived at Quebec City.\nMln Elizabeth Lewis, daughter ot Mn. & J. Lewis of Ron-\nland, hu been a Golden City\nresident for about a year. She\nformerly lived In Trail.\u2014Photo\nby Photo Shop, Rowland.\nh\n.\nw;.      I\n**\n1\nX1\n\u00bbt.^   f-m\n1\n-'\nWm''       i\n1      iM\/fa    ,,-M\n'\u25a0>sm\n'-t**m*W--_M\nB                     tt*\nI^L         ' ___\\\nB\nW        \u2014\u2014SmmmW\ni          sHi\n41\nP\nOhB I\n____m\"   H\nH \"\nPrlnoe Amanuel of Lelchensteln, left,\nof Sweden, sre pictured ln uniform at the-\nat Momle Cattle, Perthshire, Scotland,\nrepresented st the meet.\nand Prlnoe Guatav Adolf\nmeat of 4000 Rover Scout*\nForty-two nations  wet\u00bb\nBacft Home After English Vacation\nShown ln Quebee after returning from a vacation in England are\nthe Hon. Randolph Bruce, former lleutenant-govsri-nor of British Columbia and more recently Canadian minister to Japan, and Mrs. Bruce.\nIn Camp With Members of Britain's Auxiliary Territorial Service\nRossland Cricketers Are Photographed in Spokane\nAnswering the appeals of the government, British girls have\nflocked to Join auxiliary forces which would swing Into action to\nrelease men for fighting in the time of war. Despite the fact that these\ngirls hava donned uniforms and entered training camps they are itill\neternally feminine as witnessed by this young lady, left, using her\nmetal eating plate for a mirror. Happy smiles greeted the cameraman,\nbottom centre, as he visited the Auxiliary Territorial Service camp\nat Strcnshall, where members of the A.T.S. are spending a training\nperiod under canvas Regulations 'of the A.T.S. stipulate that the\nhair must not fall below the tunic collar, and this young \"soldier\",\ntop centre; sees that her friend's hair meets the requirements of the\nservice. Members of the A.T.S. enter Into the spirit of camp life and\nwashing up after meals appears in no way to diminish the happy smile\nof thli young lady, right.\n-____.S^--^t.   . . m..\nRoiilahd Cricket Club, pictured during a visit.\nto Spokane, The eleventh man, William Cowan,\nwas not ln the picture as he had been Injured while\nplaying earlier ln the day. From left to right, back\nrow: A. 0. Read, Matthew Ellis, L. A. Reed, E. B.\nBourchler, C. E Bell, Arthur Snowball and Percy\nHarris; Front row: Norman Cunningham, Ervin\nMatthews, Robert Spencer.\n \u2014\n\u2014\u2014\nm-mrnm\nSfuarf Leader of\nMoral Re-Arming\nj Meeting al Trail\nleaden in Footfathion\n\u25a0NDENING, M. D.\nDr.   Warren   T.\natly published book\ni Allergy, the following nottt on\nHay Fever.\nHeredity. Ht; Fever ln twins.\n<\\mong ilx pain of Identical twini,\nthree pairs both had hay fever, ln\nthe cases of twi pairs, the mothers\nalso had It In a pair of Identical\ntwins, one was lentitlve to pollen,\none to food.\nIn two other sets, both twins had\naithma. One pair was adult and did\nnot remember,! a, date of onset. In\nthe other, peto? children\u2014the onset\nof aithma wti ten monthi and\neleven\nEXPERIENCE OF\nTWO SISTERS (        r-    - -\u25a0\u2022-_;\u2022\nA personal observation of mine\nconcerni two sitters. One htd Fall\nhay fever fromithe age of fifteen.\nThe other wit ftee until the age of\ntwenty-eight, though exposed to the\nsame environment Then she developed severe hay fever\u2014Fall- and\nSpring type-both. '\nThe doctors hive it Every doctor\nwho hu made Important contribuj\ntions to tbestudy of hay fever had\nthe disease himself.    ,'\u25a0\u25a0     _,'_.?.\nJohn Bostock,\",of Liverpool, de-\nscribed In WW kit own, cate of a\n\"Pertodlcsl Affection iet ***** \u2022\u00bb\/~\nand ChesT, which came on In th*\nmiddle of June every year and laited\nuntil the middle of July. It consisted of inflammation of the eyei,\n\"irritation of the nose, producing\nsneering, which occurs in fits of extreme violence,\" He wti tllerglc to\ngrasses, the ifommon type of hay\nfound in England.\nSCOFFED, f HEN\nBELIEVED\nJohn Elliolson, Profeuor of Medicine at London University, knew, \"a\nvery sensible and superior woman\nwho thought It wat the pollen that\ncaused ber hay fever and a rath on\nher haids.\" He ssid this sarcastically, fit afterwards was convinced\nthat \/ay  fever  was  caused'by\nlOWUnder-arm\nfoam Deodorant\n**f*b\nhops Perspiration\n1. Dots not tot dresses\u2014doei\nnot irritate ikin.\n2. Nowaitingtodn\/.Cinbeuscd\nright after stiiving.\n1. Instantlystopspersplrttionfor\n1 to 3 din. Removes odor\nfrom perspiration.\n4. A pure white, greuelejj.juin-\nless vanishing creim.\n8. Arrid bu been twirled the\nApproval Sal ofthe American\nInstitute ot laundering, for\nbeing harmless to fairies.\nIB' MILLION f\u00abt of Arrid\nhave bten told, Try a Jtr todayl\nARRID\nFLOWERS\nDelivered by wire or fut mail\nanywhere-anytime.\nKootenay Flower Shop\n384 Baker St. Phone 962\nTHE BEATTY MODEL A\nThe world's Finest Ironer gives\nyou every ironing convenience.\nIron Electrically with a Butty\nBEATTY BROS LTD.\nNtlion Factory  Branch\n321 Baktr     . .      Phone 91\nFbr Smart Vacation Hosiery\nchoose\n\"RAINBOW\"\nHolldiy Colon.\nPHONE 959\n; The Gingham Shoppe\nOpp. Daily Ntwi\n\"farina\" (pollen). Bottock did not\nknow the cause., '\n\u25a0 In. America Morrill Wyman, Protestor of Medicine In Harvard, himself I iuffered severe attacks, and\nproved thtt the ragweed wts tht\ncausa of Fall fever by wrapping\nsome in a paper, carrying it to the\nWhite Mountains, and on opening tt\ninduced anaiUck in all the members of his family (WW).\nW. P. Dunbar of Hamburg, Germiny, in 1885 tnd R. C. Lowder-\nmllk of Galena, Kansas, In 1011,\n8ve pollen extracts to themselves\nrelieve their own hay fever; Dr.\nLowdermllk, tbe flnt in tbe United\nStates.\n' How br oan hay fever follow you?\nAbbott Smith described a hay\nfever victim who on a boat far from\nland developed symptoms when the\nsails which had previously been\nfurled were raised. Pollen gratni\nlodged: in the folds were liberated.\nColonel. Lindbergh, on hit North\nAtltntic flight, .found that air .currents dl5tribute'cloud3 of pollen.\nAn air current caught up and deposited-a cloud of pollen in St Louis\nso that the ground looked u if it\nhad'been'sprinkled with sulphur.\nA DISEASE QF\nCIVILIZATION\n' Is hay fever increasing? As I remember back, I cannot recall ever\nhaving heard ,of hay fever In my\nboyhood. And thii it confirmed by\nothers of my contemporaries. I certainly never heard oi lt ln medical\nschool. -\nThe first time my attention wu\nfocused on the subject was when Dr.\nLowdermllk read a paper-on the\nsubject before th* C\u00ab\"ritv Medical\nSociety. r*-\\  i\nRagweed, the common ctuse of\nFall hay fever, is a product of civilization. It prefers to grow in cultivated fields. Hay fever would thus\nnaturally follow in the wake of more\nsettled  communities.\nQUESTIONS and ANSWERS\nB. F. G.: \"Is the flow ot natural\nlubricants lessened or injured by the\nuse either of miners! oil or psyllium\nseeds?\" \u2022   .\nAhiwer\u2014No.\nL. J..Q.,: \"My 11-year-old daughter bad the bad luck ot bringing\nlice home trom tchool and I just\ndon't know what to do to rid her of\nthis humiliating'affair.\" ..\nAnswer\u2014I assume that the lice\narc on the hair ot the head. They\nmay'be on any part ot the body. A\nvery'good w\u00bby to kill'oft the animals and: devitalize, the ova Is to\napply raw . petroleum mixed with\nequal parts of olive oil. It should be\ntttorombly appliejt to _lfihe scalp\nsoap and water or tincture of green\nsoap. In a.child 11 years old probably it. is .possible to sacrifice the\nhair entirely and then treat the\nscalp with ointment'ot ammonlated\nmercury. II the hair is not sacrificed, a fine-toothed comb thould\nbe assiduously\" used to detach the\nnits.-. \u25a0 \" \u25a0 \u25a0\nMrs. Gilktr, Wife\nProvincial Officer\nat Kaslo, Passu\nKASLO, B.C., Aug. 20-Mrs. R.\nC. Gilker. wife, of'Provincial,Constable Gilker, passed away ln her\nsleep. some time . early. Friday\nnight\n\u2022Mrs, GOker'had been ln indifferent healthier tome time.\n\u2014 NILSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. \u00bb. C-M6NDAY MORNINO. AUO. tl. WM\no<$\nFint meeting of Ha kind in the\ndistrict wu held :\nthe .Sal.ation Army Hall it Trill\n1 Saturday night in\nwhen 14 memben of the Oxford\nGroup of Trail Rottlaad md Nelton held a Morel Rt-Arpament\nmeeting. Frank A. Stuart of Nelton wu leider of the round-table\ndltcutilon. John Ashbtugh and Mr.\nStutrt were Nelton delegates. \u25a0\u2022\nEdwird Daly of Roultnd told of\na big assembly in- Hollywood and\ntold how class creeds were being\nbroken down by Moral j Re-Armament Plant were made for meeting in Trail, Rosslind and Nelson.\nNecessary...\nTeadi Baby That\nW Means W\nBy GARRY C. MYERS, Ph.D.\n'Repeatedly I have urged In this\ncolumn that tht baby thould lum\ntbout u toon u he begins to toddle tlie mctnlne of NO. I even\nspanking for thu purpoie. I have\nalto tried to show bow very seldom phyilcal pain it necessiry ind\nhow It properly cin be abandon-\n<sd In tht very early years.\nJust as soon u the,toddler.will\nstay where he Is put tor an allotted period, without being held of\ntied there, you can, and undoubted^\nly should, cease to spank him. A\nvery effective substitute lt for him\nto hive to tit for a definite period\nu measured by the clock (and alwayi \u2022\u25a0 io determined, and not\n\"'til I tell you to get down\") In\na comfortable chair with a foot-\nreit.\nSPANK SHOULD\nBE EFFECTIVE\nNor it there any need that I can\ntee why the child ihould ever be\nspanked, or even hear the word NO,\nuntil he it able io now ssuuu'i \u00absiiu\nface dinger.\nFor a spank to be effective It\nshould hurt should follow'the act\nto-be-forbidden on lta tint occurrence, tnd every time thereafter without exception, and it\nihould occur immediately. Unlet!\nthen principles ctn pretty turely\nbe applied to a particular situation\nspanking better not be chosen. Accordingly tuch matters u thumb-\nsucking, clothes-wetting, nail-bit-\nin and the like will be ruled out\nof ipanking-acti.\nWRONG METHOD FAILS\nA mother in one of my parent\nclasses onct inquired about her\ntwo-yetr-old who had been spank-\ncd for opening the ic* box. She ssid,\n\"the child soon learned- not to\nopen it when I was in the kitchen\nbut will still open it while I am In\nanother room or upstairs.\"   \u25a0\nOf coune, her error wu obvious.\nShe would spank tho child on finding what had happened. But often\nhe had had long enjoyment at the\nforbidden pleuure betore apprehension; sometimes he had succeed-.\nedftrtttioutbdng caught at'ill.The\npunishment wu not immediate, nor\nwithout exception. He had not\nlearned to avoid the Ice box perma-\nnetly and automatically, regardless\nof the mother'i presence. Punishment which does not prove effec-\ntual enough to deter In your ab-\ntence, u well as in your presence,\nis bad punishment\nMUST ESTABLISH HABIT   '\nThe mother was advised not to\ntempt the baby by leaving him exposed to the ice box when he could\nopen it without immediate discomfort; but to be with him always\nwhen he wai near the loe box so\nthat he would learn so well to\navoid it that by and by he would\navoid it automatically, even If the\nwere to be ln Europe.\nAccordingly, she would take the\nchild with her on leaving the kitchen until iuch time u the habit\nof avoidance had been tttabllihed\ndiouMwivsiii.\n\u25a0y BETSY NEWMAN\nRADIO SALE\nUSED RADIOS. Up from $5.00\nNEW 0. E. RADIOS, up from $14.95\nNelson Electric Co.\n674 Biktr St.\nPhont SM\nFRESH CUT\nFlowers and Plants\nMac's Greenhouses\nOne Blk. From Hospital\nCedar and Front Sts.    Phone 910\nTODAY'S MENU\nTuna and Vegetable Pie\nBaked Potatoes\nCabbage and Apple Salad\nCreamy Rice with Apricots     Tea\nTUNA AND VEGETABLE PIE\nThree ' tablespoons butter, three\ntablespoons flour, one and one-half\ncups milk, one teaspoon salt, one-\neighth teaspoon pepper, one third\ncup diced celery, one-half cup cooked ^carrots, one-third cup cooked\ngreen peat, one-third :cup coartely\nchopped tweet'pickles, seven ounce\ncsn tuna fish'coaniely flaked, flaky\npastry.\nMelt two tablespoons butter in\nsaucepan, stir ln flour, add milk and\ncoojc until-thickened and imotjth,\nstirring constantly.\nAdd. salt and pepper. Saute celery\nand onions in remaining butter un-\ntil lightly browned:; add -carrots,\npeas and plcldet. \u2022 Place alternate\nlayers of vegetable mixture, tuna\nfish md sauce, ln buttered casserole\nand cover'with pastry rolled one-\neighth inch thick, moistening rim\nwith water to make cruet adhere. ;\nTrim, press crust (town and prick\nwith fork. Bake In hot oven (4J0 degrees F.) for IB minutes, then reduce\nheat to moderate (300 .degrees) and\nbake 15 minutes longer. This will\nserve six persons.\nCREAMY RICE WITH APRICOTS\nOne-half, cup rice, one cup boiling\nwater,'one and. one-halt cups milk,\nwt^sw^\u00bbat^w\u00bb\u00bbwawaMiei\u00bb9es>\u00bb\u00bbs\u00bb\nDresses,  Coats,  Suits,  Hats.\nDrastically. Reduced\n499 Bsker St Phone 970\ntW9WW?iWMMS\u00bb8aMW\u00bb>\u00bbM>ft\none-half teaspoon salt, one-halt cup\nsugar, two cups chopped fresh fruit\nor :drled trult<soaked ahd cooked,\nCook riot over direct* beet in th\u00ab\ncup ot boiling -water; when mixture\nhas been almost absorbed'put rice\nIn double boiler, add mint, salt and\nCover and cook until rice is, ten'\nder. Mix rice and fruit and when\nChilled, serve with ton milk ot\ncream. Canned shredded pineapple\ngives an excellent flavor to this\n.dish.\nCOFFEE EGQNOG\nTo make it, beat two egg whites\nuntil stiff; add one-fourth cup sugar,\none-half cup fresh double-strength\nblack coffee, three cups milk and\none teupoon vanilla.\nShake in covered, glass jar and\n, jur over ice in tali glasses. Top\nwith whipped cream and dust with\nNELSON SOCIAL\nBy MRS. M. J. VIGNEUX\n\u2022 \u25a0 Thursday evtnlng, August IT,\nRev. J. A. DonntU united fc marriage at Trinity mama, Raymond\nGordon Barber tnd Francii Monjct\nBiyleu, both of Kelownt.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Erneit Kinahan\nand'sons Pat and Mike, who visited the Kinahan homt, alao friends\nin Cnnbrook, havt returned to\nTralL\ne. Mre. Clarence Ogilvie of Harrop.tpent Siturdiy ln Nelaon.\n\u2022 Mr. ind Mre. C King of Cutlegar wen city ihoppen Saturday.\n: \u2022   Vltlton to town Saturday Included Mn. Olion ot Ainsworth.\ne i Miss .G.-E. Lomoges of Santa\nMonies, Calif., is s guett of Mn.\nE. J, Shardelow, Front Street\n1 Willard Ellison wu ln town\nfrom the Relief Arlington mine over\ntht weekend.\n\u2022 'Mn. A. Major ot Procter visited Nelton Saturday.\n\u2022 - Teddy Bums, who hu bten\nspending his vacation at tha Summer plice of hli parents,' Mr. and\nMrs. John Burnt, ltft yetterday tor\nSanta.Clara, Cal., where he attend!\nSanta - Clara: University. Ha wu\naccompanied u far u Spokane by\nhis parents,\n\u2022 Mr. and Mn. J. K Batley of\nSouth Slocin vliited town Saturday.\n\u2022 Shoppers ln the city Saturday\nincluded Mr. and Mn. F. K. StortU\not Boswell.\n1 Mr. and Mn. C B. Sharp of\nBortnlngton spent Saturday in the\ncity.\na- Walter Neale of the Relief-\nArlington mint visited Nelson at\nthe; weekend. \u2022\n'\u2022\u25a0Mrs.' R. D. Hall, Josephine\nStreet returned Saturday from a\ntwo-month vacation, ln Nova Scotia\nwhere she vitlted relatives snd\nfriends, and also In New York City,\nwhere the attended the World Fair.\n> Mn. J. D. Yeatman ot South\nSlocan spent Saturday in town.\n\u2022 W. H. Ahier of Procter left\nSaturday.tor Victoria to visit his\nbrother,\n\u2022 T. Walker of tht Relief Arlington mine vitlted Nelton tt the\nweekend.    .\n\u2022 Mrs. R. T. Tiffin, Silica Street,\nreturned Saturday trom. Natal,\nwhere she. was'called on account\noi use snuius. issxislcat to hir sliter!\nMiss Ven Walsh, who Is progressing\nwell aa can be expected. She wu\naccompanied by her young sons,\nBilly and Stuart.\n\u2022 Visiton in the city over the\nweekend included Dan Tattrie of\nthe Relief Arlington mine.\n\u2022 At 8:30 o'clock Thursday morning the'home of Mn. M. E. Watts,\nFairview, wu the. scene of a quiet,\nbut pretty wedding, when Edna,\nonly daughter of the late Edward\nWatts, and Mrs. WatU. btcamt tha\nbride of Leille Ntil McEachern, only\nson of the late Mr. and Mrs. D. D.\nMcEtcbern ot NeUon. Rtv. E. E.\nLindgren performed the ceremony\nimldtt a profusion of Bummer blossoms. The bride looked lovely in\nher smart ensemble.of dusky rott\nwith, all white accestorlts - and, a\ncontgt of Ttlitman rose buds. She\nwas attended by her sister-in-law,\nMrs. R. B. Morris, u matron, of\nhonor, who wore a regal blue iheer\nwith, white accessorial, and a corsage of yellow rote. buds. Donild\nWatts, only brother of the bride,\nsupported the . bridegroom. She\nwm . given in marriage by her\nmother, who donned a smart powder blut lace gown and matching\nhat Htr corsage wu made of white\nlarkspur and pink rote buds. Immediately atter i the ceremony t\ntit i down wedding breakfut wu\nterved, the beautifully covered table\nbeing centred by a handsome three-\ntiered wedding cake mounted by a\nsilver vase of' pink rote buds, surrounded by trailing smiltx. R. B.\nMorrii, brother-in-law of the bridegroom, proposed the tout to the\nbride uid groom, the Utter replying. Mr, ind Mrs. McEachern lett\nby car on a two-week honeymoon\nto Cout cities, the bride travelling\nina smart iuit in Teal blue and\nwhite accessories. On thtlr return\nthey will take up residence ln their\nnew home on Fifth Street, Fair-\nview.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mn. D. O. Thomas,\nwho have tpent i couple ot weeks\nin-Nelton renewing old acquaint-\nmeet left Siturday tor thtlr home\nin Victoria. They alto vilited their\nton and daughter-in-law, Mr. and\nMrt. Jack Thomai, at Rouland.  !\n\u2022 Mr, tnd Mn. McDonough of\nthe Reliet Arlington mine wtre\nweekend viiiton in \u25a0 town. They\nwere accompanied by Mrs. McDon-\nough's mother, Mn. Hancock, who\nhas spent a fortnight there.\n\u2022 Walton Hcpple and his daughter of SeatUe, left yesterdsy after\na few days at the home ot the\nformer'i mother, Mrs. M. Hcpple,\nSilica StreeL Mr. Hepple was accompanied u far u Seattle by his\nsister, Mn. McDougall, who tpent\na couple of weekt with her mother.\n\u2022 Jack Dingwall tt 'he Relief\nArlington mine wu a city visitor\nStturdiy.\na Rou Renwick wu ln tht city\nfrom the Relief Arlington mine at\nthe weekend.\na. Mn. C. Irving, Granite Read,\nhas u guests, Mr. snd Mrs. Thomas\nHodgson and family of Outlook,\nSask., who irrived Stturdiy.\na M..Nyboof the Reliet Arlington mine visited Nelson it the\nweekend.\nCheerfulness...\nWhistle While\nIdea for All\nUM FIVE\nwithout tny doubt A month later\nshe reported complete success, after Just one more spanking, though\na score of-them had tailed betore.\nSOLVING PARENT\nPROBLEMS\nQ. Do you-believe in paying children for helping about the home7\n. A. No; if the child Is to be paid\nfor such tasks, bow is he to gain a\nfeeling .that he is a responsible\nmember of the family group? Ltt\neach child, as soon as he Is old\nenough, have a tew lost to be done\nevery' day at a regular time, whose.\ndomfiietannoteMape. Ashe vol-\nunteert to help at other thlngi;\n\u2022how great appreciation of his cooperation.1 However, if the child\nis striving to earn a special fund\ntor-a specific purpoie, a few irregular jobs might properly be paid\nfor.       r\nSuggest U. S. Pay-\nImports With Gold\nBURLINGTON, Vt, Aug.'JO (AP)\n\u2014In the belief that a more equitable\ndistribution of gold could be beneficial to the United Statei, Thomai\nMcNelce ot the General Moton Export Corporation recommended that\nmore goods be imported and paid\ntor with gold.\nThis, he said Friday night at a\nmeeting of agricultural and1 industrial leaden discussing ways of\nbringing about a balanced price\nlevel to Insure farmers better prices\nfor, their products,: would increue\nthe standard ot living in the United\nSUtes.\nReleasing gold trom the Treuury,\nMcNelce said, would serve to reduce hoarding tendencies and would\ndepreciate the price-ot gold and\nthus would csuse commodity prices\nto rise, bringing, a more balanced\nprice leveL\n\"Mind\" Subject in\nJkientist Church\n\"MIND\" was the subject of the lesson-sermon in the Flnt Church of\nChrlit'- Scientist on. Sunday.\nThe Golden Text was: \"Who hath\nknown; the mind of the Lord? or\nwho hath been His. counsellor? .'..\nFor of Him ond through Him, and to\nHim, ate'all things: to whom be\nglory for ever\" (Romans 11:34,36). j\n.Among the citations which com-\n'\u25a0-* .the lesson-sermon wit the\n___kt ftom.th* nBiMer-TMl\nhearing ear, and the seeing eye, the\nLord hath made even both of them\"\n(Proverbs 20:12).\nThe' lesson-sermon also included\nthe following passage trom the\nChristian Science textbook: \"Science and Health with Key to the\nScriptures\" by Mary Baker Eddy:\n\"Mind alone possesses all faculties,\nperception and comprehension.\u2014\nTherefore mental endowments are\nnot at the mercy of organization and\ndecompositlon,-iotherwlse the very\nworms could unfashlon man. If it\nwere pouible for the real senses\nof man to be injured, Soul could\nreproduce them In all their perfection; but they cannot be disturbed\nnor destroyed, since they exist in\nimmortal Mind, not in matter.\"\nNEW ZEALAND FLOOD\nCAUSES HEAVY DAMACE\nAUCKLAND. New Zealand, Aug.\n\u00bb (CP-Cable)\u2014Flood waten cauied\nby phenomenal rainfall throughout\nthe sSouthern part .of the Northern\nIsland ot New Zealand subsided\nSaturday, revealing an uneitlmated\namount of property damage . and\nheavy liveitock losses.\nHava yeu read tha \"Cltiiltled\"?\nKASLO Social.\u2666\u2666\ncinnamon.\n; CIDER EQGNOQ\nOne egg, elder, one tableipoon\ntugir. Ice, nutmeg. For each portion\nmix the egg, sugar, cracked let tnd\ncider. Shake well and serve In tall\nglasses with a grating of nutmeg.\nSPICED VIOLET\nIt is concocted with the aid of one\ncup blueberry Juice (drained from\ncanned blueberries), one-half; teaspoon cinnamon, one. and one-half\ncups unsweetened pineapple juice,\nJuice of two lemons,-one-half cup\nsugar syrup. Combine' all items\nthoroughly. Pour into glass, one-\nfourth full cracked ice. Garnish with\nsprig ot freth mint Servei tour. ,\nSPICED GRAPE JUICE\nGood and healthful, requires ten\ncloves, one stick cinnamon, ten allspice berries an dtwo quarts grape\njuice. Add spices to grape Juice and\nhett ilowly for ten minutei. Strain\nand cool.\nPour, over cracked. ice ind serve\nIn-tall glasses with tresh mint garnish. Serves ten.        ,.   .\nTEA-FLAVORED Fin\nSpiced Chilled Fizz is made with\ntwo teupooni tea, tour cupt boiling\nwater, one-hilf teaspoon, each powdered cloves tnd powdered cinnamon, one-fourth teispoon nutmeg,\nohe cup orange Juice,' one-fourth\ncup lemon Juice, one-third cup granulated sugar.\nPut tea in pot Add [water and\nspices. Cover for 10 minutes,' drain,\ncool and add the rest of the ingredients. Chili. Sen<\u00ab in glasses which\nhave been halt filled with, chopped\nice..Garnish with fresh mint leaves.\nKASLO. B. C-Mrt. X. H. Kane,\nwu a Nelson viiitor Wedneiday.\nMils Grsce Tonkin and her brother William were In from Sheep\nCreek, accompanied by their sister-in-law, Mrt. E. J. Tonkin, who\nwill spend a few weeks with her\nmother, Mn. W. A. Tinkess.\nMr. snd Mn. William Bowman\nof Johnson's Landing visited Ratio.\nMn. A. P. Alleibrooke of Shutty\nBench vitlted Nelton.\nEd Farnelli of Nelion mi city\nvisitor Wedneiday.\nA. G. Ritchie of Nelson is spend-\ntag a few dayi in tha city.  ,\nMrs. Charles Lind lias left to\nspend: tome time in Nelton.\nMr. ind Mn. X. R. Erwin, who\nhave been camping in Kulo Bay\nfor a. few days, made I the. trip to\nKokanee Glacier Wednesday, accompanied by Miss Rita Munn-and\nR. \/.Chester. Mr. and Mrs. Erwin\nreturned Thursday to Rostltd. \u25a0\nMr. and Mrs. Cecil Pangburn and\nchildren have returned-trom a visit\nto Mrs. Pangburn's parents, Mr.\nand Mn. James Alexander of Cooper Creek.       ;j, \u25a0\u25a0\nMr. and Mn. J. Layton and two\ndaughten of Trail' are spending a\nfew days at. Shutty Bench.      t\nMr. and Mn. J.N. Murphy hsve\nleft for a three week holiday at\ncoatt .points. ,   , '\nPercy Amu U enjoying a two\nweek hoUday being relieved ,by\nCarl Linden of Nelton. '\nMr. and Mrs. Robert McDougall\nhave u guests, Mr: and Mn. War-\ndell of Brtbdon, Man. : i\n1 john'Dlmtey otJohnaeni Landtag Visited in:tqwtv .' ' ; :\n.Mr., and Mrs. A. M. Affleck, ot\nKimberley are holidaying at Shutty Bench. ,:   r \"'  '   ' \u2022'   I\nJohn Owen of Shutty Bench visited Nelson.\nMn. Jamei Spain ii spending\na .few days In Spokane.    , _   '\n'  Mr. and Mn. V. Craig of Shutty\nBench vilited Nelson.\nStanley Lakei of Johnson's Landtag visited town.\n\u2022 Miss Winnie Chsndler left Thun\nday to spend a few days with her\nbrother-in-law and sister, Mr. and\nMn. Thomu Berkley of Willow\nPoint\n' P. W. Cutler of Winlaw wu a\ncity visitor Monday.\nW. C. Weed of Vallican visited\ntbe city Monday.\nHarry Taylor of New Denver wat\na Monday visitor ln town.\nMr. and Mrs. Sowerby ot Nelaon\nwere Tuesday visiton ln' Kulo.\nThey made the, trip to Kokanee\nGlacier.\nBobby Andrew is visiting his brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mn.\nJ, Milne, of Fruitvale.\nMn. C. W. Webster and her cousin and guut, Miss Jesn Garden ot\nLossiemouth, Scotland, lett Tueiday to .viiit relativei in Kelowna.\nAtter having been a guett ot her\nbrother-in-law nnd sister, Mr. and\nMrs. A. W. Bavington, Mrs. John\nStrachan, Jr., and son left Monday\nfor Lethbridge to visit Mrs. Strach-\nan's mother for a taw days prior\nto returning to their home In Three\nHills, Alta. They were accompanied to Nelson by Mrs.' Bavington,\nwho.will.spend a week with her\nbrother-in-law and sister, Mr. and\nMn. Eric Chapman.\nMr. and Mn, Clifford Vance and\nchildren have returned to Chap.\nman ,Camp af ler spending a; few\ndays in town with Mrs. Vance's\nmother, Mn. Alice Perkins.\n' Miu Eileen Johnstone of Cranbrook was a Kaslo Visitor. .\n. W. Hotson of Nelson is.relieving\nat the.Bsnk ot Montreal while;Mimger 'Walter Wright' ia! enjoying\nholidiys  in  Vancouver  with   his\n' jTli' Traynor. I ot (Perry Siding\nvisited Kislo Monday.\n' D. Kennedy of Alnsworth wu a\nrecent city vliitor.\nArchie McQueen arrived in the\ncity Saturday to spend a holiday\nwith hit mother. Mn. Margaret Mc\nQueen. Upon hli return to Men\ntreal he will be accompanied I by\nMrs. McQueen and twin daughten.'\n\u2022y OAROLINI CHATFIELD\nWhen the Uve-AIone-ind.Llke.lt\nauthor gal got married a while tgo,\na lot of gurfiws went up trom the\npublic. You know her lite wun't\nworth living for tevenl weeki whit\nwith the cheap Jokes tnd fracetioui\nremarks got off by the tmtrt-ilecki\nit her expense. Wtll, the joke Isn't\non thtt gtl, for ihe did a swell job\not whistling. She whittled up time\nand fortune and a husband to boot\nJoke, if tny, ll on the gullible readers who didn't know the wu whittling, to keep her courage up and\nraise her income.\nOf coune she was able to whistle\nso cheerfully and . chipperly because tbe didn't havt to live alone.\nNobody reilly likes to live alone except those thst don't have to, plui\na- few crochety individuals who\ndont-like to livt at all.\nHowever, in principle and practice, it'i great to learn to bt content\nwith whatsoever state we are in and\nwith what we have. A toast to the\ntingle woman who can think up\naloud Ukt in abracadabra, put them\nta print connect with her public,\nand conjure the shekels out ot her\npublic's pocket\nThe Uve-Alone-and-Like.lt lady\nis good. Sbe mastered the arts of\nhousekeeping, buiineu and book\nwriting ind according to her friendl,\nran a menage into which were lured Interesting men tnd women who\nwished to be. entertained merrily,\nfed royally and Invited back again.\nYou've got to be good to put that\nprogram over.\nAll of which leasts up to one of\nthe funniest things about a female.\nShe howls for independence. She\nworks her head off to schleve it snd\nthen she lectures volubly and writes\nvolumes on the joys and delights of\nfreedom. She can deceive the very\nelect But what's the tint thing she\ndoei with her independence? Why\nihe tpends tt profligately to buy dependence.\nAnd she's not happy until the\npurchue Is complete; for there\nnever bss beer, a vrontan who we?\nhapspy and contented without love;\nand there'i no iuch thing u Independence with love; no independence u fir is pleasures, pocket-\nbooks, plans for present or future\nsre concerned.\nAnyhow It's good to \"whistle\nwhile you work, good for dwarfs\nu well u big folks: for you never\ncsn tell what you'll whistle up.\nMarshall Wells\nSchool Hardware\nBid Is Accepted\nTender of $108.60 from Msnhall\nWells Hardwire Compiny Ltd., to\nsupply hirdware for the new Nelson High School addition wu accepted by. the School Board Friday night. The other bidder wu\nthe Wood, Vallance Hardwire Compiny Ltd., its price being $289.\nBefore accepting the bid, the\ntrustees went Into committe* to\nexsmine the contract with A. H.\nGreen Co., Ltd. for construction ot\nthe addition u they were ell under\nthe impression the hardware wu\ncared for ln the contract. An examination, however, ihowed the hardware was separate.\nRepairs Made to\nNelson Schools\nPurchase of two dozen chain\ntor the primary gradei of Central\nSchool wu authoriied by the\nSchool Board at its meeting Friday\nnight Kalsomtalng in the school\nhad been undertaken, R. B. Morris,\nchairman, reported.\n. Extra lights tor a room in the\nHume School had been ordered\nbut were not yet installed.\nShelving, double blackboards, a\nlock on the drafting room, and new\nchain had been installed in the\nJunior High School, and the gym-\nnasium curtain had been repaired.\n1412 More Cherry\nPackages Go Out\nof Boswell House\nBOSWELL, B. C\u2014Final cherry\nshipments for the 1038 seuon have\ngone out and the packing shed closed down, after a run of 21 consecu-.\ntive days In all 3487 crates and\nlugs were shipped, an increase of\n1412 over Uit year.\nA. Hepher, secretary-manager for\nthe Boswell Fruit Growen, wu\nagain in charge of the ihed. The\npacken were Mn. A. Shell, Mrs. F.\nCummings, Misi Joyce Hall, Miss\nMse Miller, Miss Evelyn Van\nKoughnett and Miss Irene Karpowlch. At the peak of the season,\nthree additional packen brought in\nfrom Creston were Miss Marion\nCooper tnd Miss Helen Staplei, who\neach packed tor three daysand Miss\nDorii Hendy who packed tor one\nday.\nB.C. WOMAN ON TOUR\nHEADS UP OHIO RIVER\nCAIRO, 111., Auit. aO<(JU>).-Mre.\nE. G. Clegg of Vancouver, B.C.,\nand her navigator, Haldane (Buzz)\nHolmstrom, making a river journey, aerou the continent in an outboard motorboat passed Cairo at\ndaybreak Saturday and headed up\nthe Ohio River.\nThey left St Louis Thursday, coming down the Mississippi to Cairo-\nStarting from Oregon April 23, they\nhave traversed sections of the Snake,\nYellowstone, Mil tour 1 and the\nMississippi Riven.\nS30 REALIZED AT TEA,\nBAKE SALE AT KASLO\nKASLO, B. C-The bake sale\nsnd tea sponsored by the ladles ot\nthe Catholic Church grounds Saturday afternoon.wu well.patronized, the-weather being ideal tor\nthe.occasion which netted-the,ladles about $30. The President ot the\nLadies Mi ot i the, Church. Mn.\nWilliam MabDonald,' wu convenor\nof i all committees aU \u2022 of . whom\nworked with a.will to make the affair a decided success, \u2022\nCRESTON CHURCH HOLDS\nPICNIC AT SIRDAR\nSIRDAH^B. C; \u2014 The Creston\nAnglican Church held a picnic here\nSaturday. Under ideal weather condlUoni the large number that turned out enjoyed themselves until a\nlate hour. The largest number of\ncsn seen at one time in Sirdar\nbrought the picnickers.\nJkmmtjriL\nSmall lengths of materials thst ones wars large bolts of\ncloth are now marked at lass than half tha original price\n, per yard. Woollena,  silks,   rayons,   linens, cottons,\ntowellings, sheetings.\nBUY THEM NOW!\nman\nTtunt\nPHONE 200\nBAKER ST.\n9\nSchool Children\nGet 1109 Gallons\nof Milk in July\nA total of 1100 gallons of milk, including chocolate flavored milk,\nwas consumed by Nelton school\nchildren In July, tccordlng to the\nreport of Mill Ntncy Dunn, Public\nHealth. Nurse, read to the Nelson\nSchool Board Friday night by Fred\nL. Irwin, Secretary. Of the total, 488\ngalloni were obtained from the\nI. O. D. E., 34 gallons-trom s private\ndonor, and 987 gallons from the\nmakers of the chocolate drink.\nBenefits...\nMassage Reduces\nand Gives Energy\nBy DONNA GRACE\nThe business of keeping tit his\nbecome the dominating theme in\nthe life of every clever woman.\nWe, hear ot the professionals of\nstage and screen and their dally\nexercises, which are so necessiry\nin their work before the public, but\nthe home womin, society girl tnd\nbusiness girl ire ill well informed\nalto at to the need of physical culture.\nThere art several methods of\nkeeping fit Calisthenics, sports,\ndancing, walking or massage will be\nsatisfactory when done systematically and corectly, io one may tetect\nany of them and expect the bett\nresults.\nMassage, while one of the oldest\nmethods, Is seldom given due credit.\nThose who hsve regular massages\nare well aware of the benefit they\nreceive, but,until recently massage\nwas thought either a luxury tor the\nleisure class, or to be given only\nunder the order ot a physician.\nMassage will reduce, and do it\nquickly too. The best point in its\nfavor is that it will distribute the\nweight, ahd frequently will take off\nInches in measurements without\nmuch chsnge in' weight.\nModern authorities believe tho\nmuscles should be kept flexible and\ncirculation stimulated through scientific msnlpulations, and this math-\n'W is advocated' tor' rtducinr and\nkeeping In tint physlctl condition.\nThere ire prellmlnsry picks to\ninduce penpirstion but the real\nbenefit is from the massage. It is\nimpossible to reach the deep-seated\nmuscles and nerve centres through\nthe usual exercises, but the trained\nfingers of a ikilled operator can\npick out the spots likely to ba dormant, and with deft strokes and\npressure impart a new feeling of\nvigor and energy.\nIt is not unusual for women to\nwear dresses three and four sizes\nsmeller after a few courses of\ntegular messige, and those who do\nnot need to reduce are filled with\nvibrant new energy that enables\nthem to go through the day and\nweir along with their night festivities without the feeling of fa-\nNearly all the acreen stars' have\na dally massage, but the average\nsociety-or business woman usually\ndepends on two or three each week.\nThey are the best means of reducing for the girl or woman who can't\nget down to work at exercises, or\nthe one who likes to \"put off until\ntomorrow\" while she continues to\nlose her pretty lines.\nBOSWELL YOUTH\nAKD LADIES SAVE\nSTOLEN BICYCLE\nBOSWELL, B. C. \u2014 A boy't pow-\nen of observation, coupled with\nprompt action of two ladlet, resulted in recovery of a stolen bicycle this week.\nJack Smith, aged 10, on his way\nto the Post Office, stopped at P.\nL. Sullivan's to pick up mail, and\nnoticed a bicycle leaning against a\nahed netr the gate. Further along,\nhe paued a man, walking towards\nGray Creek.\nThe youth had reached his own\ngate and put his bicycle away, when\ntha i same man pained, this time\nriding a bicycle which looked like\nthe one which had been near Sullivan's gste. The ' boy returned to\nSullivan's, found that the bike had\ndisappeared and went up to the\nhouse to report the matter,\nMr. Sullivan was away, but Mn.\nSullivan and her sister, Mn. Weir,\nher gueit, immediately iet ott in\npureuit by car. Thssy overtook the\nman near Lockhart Creek, about\nthree milei North of Boiwell, and\ntook possession ot the stolen machine.\nThe bicycle belonged to Miss\nJoyce, Hall ot Boswell, who was\nvisiting at the Sullivan home that\nday.\nIt is understood that no charge\nwill be made against the man, who\nwas a. tnnsient. The incident is\ncausing other bicycle ownen to\nIrsjep -\u00ab' clote watch on their\nmachines.  '-'\u25a0\u25a0\"'\u25a0\nCharier of Royal\nVisit Given HI\nSchool Dramatists\nNelton High School Playen Club\nbu received a charter from -tha)']\nB.C. School Drama Guild in commemoration of tha visit of Their j\nMajesties King George VI and\nQueen Ellubeth to Canida in Mty\ntnd June. The club received the\ncharter as a foundation member\not the guild. It wu luued by tM\nSchool ind Community Drama offloe, Department of Edueetlon, and\nIl ilgned by Mijor L. Bullock-\nWebster, organizer of the .Drams\nGuild, and Hon. Dr. G. M. Weir,\nMinister of Education.. ,- J\nOh the charter are also the.\nnames of L. V. Rogen, Scho3~\nPrincipal; Mlu Patricia Campbell,\nichool drama director; and Ingeborg Martschinke, President, ahd\nBetty Holt, Secretary-Treuurer ot\nthe School Playen' Club.\nAuthorization to have the charter\nframed and hung in tha High School\nwu given by the Nelson School\nBoard Friday night.\nCONSTIPATION*\nmfmmirm\n\u2022 You ctn't go out and win If con-1\nttipttion pulli your punchei. It'a,\nwhit you don't cat tint hurti you.\nOrdinary dieti often fail to lupply\n\"bulk\" of the kind your bowelt '\nneed for regular movements. Adept\nan eisy-to-follow habit tbat fotttn\nregular habita: Bat KeUogg't ALL-\nBRAN every day; drink plenty of.\nwater. ALL-BRAN helpt. in the\nformation of the toft \"bulky\" mui\nrequired for good elimination. .And\nALL-BRAN is also \u00ab rich lource of\nNiturt't inteitintl tonic, Vitamin\nBi. When your tyitem it running oa\nichedule you are ready to go plictt.\nSNAP OUT OF IT\nWITHAIH\nPRINCE RESCUES FAMILY\n...    AFTER BOATS COLLIDE\nAMSTERDAM, The Netherlands,\nAug. 20 (AF).\u2014A father and three\nchildren fell overboard trom their\nmotorboat when a launch driven by\nPrince Bemhard, husband ot Crown\nPrincess Juliana, crashed into it on\na yachting lake near here Friday,\nThe Prince rescued all four with\na boathook.\nPrince: Bemhard wu towing a\nsurfboard for a friend on the \"Loos-\ndrechteiche Plassen,\" a favorite\nboating like between Amsterdam\nind Soestdyk, and apparently failed\nto see the other boat\nSill If Kllllll ll Hllli, Clll<l \u00bbt Jllf (THM\nLINGERIE\n25% DISCOUNT\ntit Biker SL\ntsttot-meuottttot-im\nNelson, B.\nFor Light Lunch\nSuggestions   .\nSee Mr special atternoon menu\nGOLDEN GATE CAF\nA REAL SAVINGS ON\nCOMMUNITY AND TUC\nPLATE\nFrom $5.00 to $25.00 on a\ncomplete aervice at\ndtahvsujk ^mosdhM-\n417 Baktr St. Nelion, B. O.\nTRY KOOTENAY\nCHOCOLATE MILK\nTUB HEALTH DRINK\nPHONE 116\nKOOTENAY VALLEY &\nISWSSSlMMSWBWMSMIMMl\nADVANCE SHOWING\nNEW FALL HATS\nMilady's Fashion Shoppe\n44D Baker St Phone 814,\ntttotbtlMtitittti\n.,..-,,\u201e,,. ^.^-Slmk-U-...:  \u25a0 : .\u25a0__mmi-m1l.*\n.\nIll frl.flii.\u00abMl^     mmt^k%imm\\\\M,l-mm\\^M~**'\n _\nSAQg SIX\n\t\n\u25a0 mini.      \u2022 . tm* i\n*******\nT\"~\nW \"HHI i-i.\"   \u2014\n51* bum Bally Nmh\nEstablished April 23 ISM\nBritiih ColumWt Mott Mtrttting NuMjwpsf\nPublished every morning tseeet Sundiy by\ntbt NEWS PUBLISHING COMP AH* IIMITO).\n266  Biker  Street   Ntlion.   Britiih  Columbli.\nPhone 144 Private Exchtnit Connecting All Departmenti.\n\"\u2014 s mmmrmmmm, i\nMEMBER Of THE CANADIAN PRESS AUO\nTHE   AUDIT   BUREAU   OP   CIRCULATIONS\n'MONDAY MORNING, AUGUST 21,1989\n*\u2014r\nKOOTENAY SHOULD NOT LOSE\nITS CABINET MEMBERSHIP\n\u25a0If Hon. F. M. MacPherson, minister of public works,\nI decides to accept the vacancy on the Board of Transport s\nKootenay member should be appointed In his pises.\nMr. MacPherson has been doing good work snd if he\n| decides to leave the turmoil of active provincial politics\nfor the comparative calm of the Board of Transport tt will\nbs regretted. No one would blame him if he decided to\n: accept, but we would prefer to retain his servioss In British\nI Columbia public life. His record both in Opposition snd ss\na member of the Government has been good.\nBut if he decides to go to Ottawa It is Important to\nj Interior that Kootenay retain the one Cabinet position\nat it has held, and that another Kootenay member be\nselected to replace him.\n'From among Kootenay members in the Legislature,\n, Premier Pattullo should have only one difficulty in making\nM choice\u2014and that is, out of a plethora of good material\nWhich man shall he select?\nfio-nttoLCml\nShepard Barelsy\nTells How to Bid\nsnd Plsy\niOWEitlNCIPUB whtek ia lie.\n..MtM-tf of taportaeee prescribu\nUat, wJUi a afcrcea; hand opposite\na week hand, the weaker one may\nba the better declarer, since tbt\nlines Itianil .1 ill good dummy\nlor a,'whereas tha weaker sand\nskx* b\u00ab a poor dummy for the\nttroug hand. Another prtaeUa Is\nthat a bend containing a itnglt-\nton, or more cipedally \u2022 blank\ntult, should seldom leave the contract to Mo Trump. When these\nprinciples conflict,, what, is the\npoor bbMer.rto do?\nATiS\n\u2022Sksss\n*io ess\nsftKSfrM\n\u2666 S2\n\u00bbJS\nIm-m\n\u25a0VAQllO\nttt*\n4K JS\n*K8 7\nM None\nVA JT\nt A Q 10 0 8 7\nAQ8*\nstiealer: South. ; North-Sooth\nvulnerable.)\nHen la a dupllctte deal on\nwhich South at ont tablt bid 1*\nDiamond, North 1-Spade, South\nJ-Diamonds, North 2-Spades,\nEo)ith 3-Clubs, North S-No\nfrumps and South 4-Dlamonda,\n\u25a0wiiich hit partner puud, refusing\nthe vary atrong Invitation to go to\nHOHS Wdmmmmm Vt* l**tll**\nwu nuu5# tlffet on tbt mw\nAt tte other tsMe the Wddbig\nwaa txactlv the same up to the\npoint ot North't 8-No Trumpi.\nSouth ln thla eaaa dadoed to taka\nA chanot en hla void tult and\nleave tha contract at a No Tramp\ngame, whloh wu madt. Eut Ud\ntht ipade Q. to the K. The diamond\n10 was flnetitd, a heart led to tht\nK and a tpade returned tat But\nte get three mora trlcki. When ha\nthen led his remaining heart, the\nQ wen, then the diamond 4 was\ntlneeatd sad the game made with\ntve tricks In diamonds, two tn\nhearts, snd ont tach ln the black\n410 TS\n\u2022 \u00a310 611.\n.    +A10T8\n4KS4     ,-tjt-i   *88\n\u2022 ItST     r\u00bbJ   VJ8\u00bb\n\u2666AQJ88\n\u00abAS\nIks\nIqhi\n(Dtaltr: South. Neither ride\nvulnerable.)\nIt South gets Into i-Spadet\nhere, North having bid hla hearta\nca tha way, what card should\nWest lead?\nAUNT Hr\nBy BOBfltt ODOUR\nNILSON DAILY NlWt. NILtON. B,\nDEATHS\n(ty Tha Ctniditn Prett)\nTOJET WILLIAM, Onl-John\nCooper, 80, council member tor It\nmri etter Uie incorporation ot\nFort William as a town.\nHALITAX-Harry McNib Wylde,\nTi general tain manager tor Cinidlan Induitrlei Limited In Uit\nMaritime Provlncei until hli retirement in 1934.\nATAMI, Japan\u2014Princeu Tiuntko\nFusl'ml, 57, will ot Admiral\nPrinc Hiroynu, chief ot tha Ja-\npmtie nivil seneril itiff.\nMONTEVIDEO, Uruguay\u2014Ilea.\nur Glufira, for U yean a pro*\ntetior In the University of Montevideo tnd the author ot 40 booki\non shyilci and geography.\nORILLIA, Ont-frink Smith. 68,\nEreildent of the t. Long Company.\nImlted, one of Canada'i '\nI t.u\n\"Maybe its envy, but It rllat\nme to lie t Ifca-waek woman\ntreated like the Queen ot Shebe\nbecause a big man died and lett\nber i pile oi money.\"\n?? Questions ll\nANSWERS\nThli column ol quettloni aad\n\u2022nswtri Is open to any reader of\nthe Nelton Daily News. Jn no\nsua will tha name ot the perion\nuking the question he published.\nc-monday Momma, auo, n. nee \u2014\nJ-\n\u2022 r\none of\nmtchlntry\nplints,\nltrgeil\nilnce\nmining\n198S.\nTORONTO\u2014Miry Ann Htnlin,\nIX, titter ot Ned Hanlan, former\nworld champion oariman.\nGLASGOW, Scotland-Lauthlin\nMacNeil Weir, SI, Labor member\nof Parliament tor Clakmannan and\nEatt Stirlingshire.\nMr. Weir  wat  tbe author  ot\ntld\" a critical\n, MseDen.\nof the political carter ot the late prat min-\nsttr to whom Mr. Weir acted ai\nparliament   private   secretary   tor\nX (CP)-Canon\nproftitor emeritus of divinity tt Cambridge Unl-\nminy years.\nLONDON. Aui.\nW. E. Barnei, SO,\ntin of\nvtnity\nlogical wot*.\nNIW GERMAN SOUTH\nAFRICAN TRADI PACT\nPRETORIA! Aug.  \u00bb (CP.-Reu-\nters)\u2014Conclusion ot a ntw trad* accord between Germany and the\nUnion of South Africa wai announced Saturday to replace the\nagreement expiring at the and ef\nUit month and to cover the same\namount of purchases.\nTht accord calls tor German purchases of South Afrlcsn goodi to\nthe total of \u00a3\u00ab,3M,000 (\u00bbM,7tl,400)\nfor a 12-month period beginning\nSeptember 1.    \u2022\nMANCHESTER, England (CP) -\n\"Completely natural girl\" ll Dtinna\nDurbln, 17-year-old film iter, according to htr parents, Mr, and\nMr\u00bb. James Durbln. who sre visiting their old home hare.\nAppi* Demand In\nSouth Alberta ll\nComparable 1938\nCRESTON, B. ti, Aat. SB\u2014A demand for applei in Southern Alberta\non a ptr with ltW may bt oesfldtot-\nly looktd for, according te Gtorge\nC. Cope, Manager of the Lethbridge\nbranch of Plunkett it Sivige, wholesale fruit house, who wtt here on\nSaturdiy in compiny with Willltm\nJohnston, tht Blalrmore manager\nof the firm snd five of the firm's\ntravellers, who hid a look over the\ndlitrict ind conferred with tht two\nlocal telling agencies ind with representatives of the B. C. Fruit Botrd\nLtd., who art establishing I selling\nigency hera to work In with tht\ncentril telling policy being inaugurated thii ytar.\nJust t ytar ago, Mr. Cope and\nhit utoetatet wtrt here on t similar viilt, ind Impacted the then\nnewly-opentd 80,000 box cold itor-\ntge plint ot Cretton Cooperative\nFruit Exchinge.\nThe visitors ustrt that were\nSouthern Alberts enjoying Its normal prosperity there would be no\nilly  tilling   ~\ndifficulty\nCretton'i  entire\nMcintosh ted apple crop in that\narea. Now that cold itortge facilitiet\nhavt been provided thii virlety ll\nenjoying an liwooeel popularity.\nReserve Deciiion\nPower Theft Com\nTRAIL. B. C, Aug. 20-Magli-\ntrate Pirker Williams reserved until Tuetdty tt 10 a.m. hli decision\nin tbe case ot John G. Wilson, charged with tht theft of electricity from\na Wett Kosjtenty power llnet, following conclusions ot arguments by\nR. J. G. Richards, defence counsel,\nand R. J. Clegg, prosecuting. Ths\ncast wat first hesrd Tuesday, ind\nadjourned until Friday afternoon.\nCoit of Living Up\nOTTAWA, Aug, 20 (CP). - In-\ncreates in pricu of t ftw ot the\nmore importtnt food|, only partially olfset by further recessions in\ncoal and cost prices, rteulted in an\nadvance In tbe general coit of living\nIndex for Canadt from 82.9 In June\nto 83.1 In July, according to a re-\n\u00a7ert from the Dominion Bureau of\ntitlsttes. The Index for July, 1938.\nwai 84.2.\nWater Entries\nto Miss Boomer\nSwimming entrlei fo:\nKinsmen Ca\nthe Nelson\n. Jub's Ont ttnuel regatta Wtdnetdty mty be eft with or\nmilled to Miss Shirliy Boomer,\nswimming Instructress \u00abt Lekeside\nPirk, T. C. (Buck) Ltbibert, Re-\ngitte Chtirman, announced Sunday,\nThe Kinsmen are lookini for a Wg\nentry in their twimmllg events,\nwhich are to be held'between the\nCity Wharf and Rowing Club floit\nWhether or not a diving (bat ctn bt\nbuilt ln time is still in the air.\nWith the swimming eventi go the\nthree-boat race for the lO-mlle (unlimited ipeed) Kooteniy Lake\nchamplonihlp; witer ikilng, turf\nboard riding, canoe tilting, rowing\nrices between Kelowna and Nelion\ncrews, and \"oodlet\" of Other thlngi\nto make tht club't regatU Slogan.\n\"never a dull moment ,'ftand right\neut\nDistributed br Kinr sTttttrtt 8yasMetU, tae.,\npoking Backward \u2666\u2666.\ni    TEN YEARS AGO\nfrom' Dally Ntwi of August 21,1928\nAfter a gale had driven the foreit fire close to Slocan City, tho\ngale died down and the town was\naavedj Twenty-three people and\neight'horses  marooned  up  Evans\n\u2022 Creels' are also safe.\u2014The largest\nconflagration Femie has seen ilnce\n1808 occurred when the Elk Lum-\n! ber Company mill was burned to\nI the ground.\u2014The new road, con-\natructed by the Provincial Government, between Nelson and the Utica\n', taint itii been opened. \u2014 Formal\nopening of the new Vernon Street\nbandstand by Mayor R. D. Barnes\ni took place last night.\u2014Mrs, George\nSimms, Latimer Street, has left on\na three weeks' visit to Weyburn.\nI    TWENTY-FIVE  YEARS AGO\n| From Dally News of Auguit 21,1014\nMrs, D. A. Mackemie and Mrs. J.\n. R. Maclanders of Sandon are visiting in the City.\u2014Steps will be Uken\nfor the reorganisation of the Canadian Club at a meeting tonight.-?\nThe Nelson Lacrosse Club plans on\nplaying at Cranbrook and Spokane\nfairs next month.\u2014C. F. Sherwln,\nSuperintendent of the Bluebell\nMine at Alnsworth, was a Nelion\nvisitor yesterday.\u2014About 40 of the\nmen who have enlisted for service with the Kootenay Corps of\nthe first Canadim contingent had\nmusketry practice at the Rifle\nRange yesterday.\nFORTY YEARS A<50\nFrom Daily Miner of Aug. 21, 1699\nJ. Tlnling of Slocan City wn a\nvisitor to the City last night.\u2014Newi\nfrom Manchuria says that the Rust\nsians have taken five ot the great\ncoal, iron and gold mines of Man-\nhcuria, paying the Chineie nothing\nfor them.\u2014It was reported in the\ncity last night that the Hennesseys\nhad sold their mineral property on\nMidge Creek for $100,000 caih.\nJXK., Movie-How fast do rating\npigeons travel? How long dott lt\ntike them to return to the home\nloft?\nThe average ipeed of racing pigeons Is 40 miles per hour though\nspeeds of 80 and 70 mil* per hour\nare known. The usual distance for\nracing pigeon races is around 800\nmiles and in thete races a good\nmany blrdi return to the loft in one\nor two days.\nHJC, Nelaon-Can you give me a\nformula tor cleaning bronie?\nClean the bronse with soft soap;\nnext waah it tn plenty ot water;\nwipe, let dfy, and apply light and\neneauatte mixture composed 61 spirits a tarpsaSae ja rW?R \u00ab small\nauwllty pf yellow wax has been\ndissolved. The encaustic ia, spread\nby means ot a linen or woolen pad;\nfor gilt bronie, add one spoonful ot\nalkali to three spoonfuls ot water\ntnd rub the article with thli by\nmeans ot a ball ot wadding. Next\nwipe with a clean chamois.\nT.K, Alnsworth\u2014What Is the address ot Vidette Gold Mlnea Ltd.?\n404 Pacific Building, Vancouver,\nB.C.\nG.T., Procter\u2014Whert do I get a\ntieitet for a T.CA. flight?\nTraffic offlcei ire now established\nit Montreal, OtUwi, Toronto, Winnipeg, Reglna, Lethbridge, Calgary,\nEdmonton, Vancouver and Seittlo\nand booking tgenclei are estab.\nlished at smaller points Including\nNelson and TralL\nWhat Is the rate?\nFares are determined on a basis\nof six cents a mile tor short or local\njourneyi and vary, with five and a\nfraction centi a mile In aome In-\nttenees, on long flights. A substantial uvlng ii obtained by purchasing return tickets.\nCurious, Nelson-'Whet States In the\nU.SA. require thst 73 hours elapse\nafter the issuance of a marriage\nlicence before the ceremony l>\nperformed, and which States do\nnot have this law?\nAfter tht llcenct lt luued a five-\nday interval It required ln Iowa,\nVermont, Wisconsin and Wyoming!\na 48-hour Interval In Maryland and\n24 hours In New Jersey; in Delaware, 96 hours for non-reildents, 24\nhours when one party ii a reildent;\nin New York SUte and Washington,\n72 hours; in' Rhode Island there li a\nfive-day interval tor non-reildent\nwomen. In tht other SUtes, ss a\nrule, there li no lntervsl.\nNew High School\nAddition Moving\nAhead Rapidly\nWork on the new Nelson High\nSchool addition was moving ahead\nrapidly and the two ground floor\nrooms shouM be ready for occu-\nation when school opens Septem\nCurrant Bushei Need Annual Pruning\nUnless currant bushei receive an\nannuil pruning, the lruit gradually\nbecomes smaller and smaller. Cur-\nI rant canes yield well for three years.\nI Therefore, each year a lew of the\nI oldest canes and two of the itrong-\n' eit of the young shooU should be\ni allowed to develop,   ,\nTrim out all of the young centre\nthoots, except the two to be saved.\n>The centre of the bush should be\nkept open, as shown In today's\nGarden-Graph. Leave only six or\nseven of the older canes, and cut\nthese back half way. Always cut\nback to an outside bud.\nCurrants have feeder roots near\nthe surface of the soil and any\ncultivation must be done carefully.\nA straw mulch around each bush\nis advisable to keep down gi\u00ab>i\nand weeds.\nSome of the perennial flower\nseeds iuch as those of hollyhocks,\npopples i and sweet Williams may\natlll be sown.\nRogers re-\norted to the Nejion School Board\nMULCH\n\u00bb\u25a0'\u25a0 B\nCorrect proninf of currants\nFLYER BRINGS ESKIMO\n\u25a0 CONVICTS TO SIATHI\nPRINCE GEORGE, B. C, Aug. 30\n(CP). - Pilot Hans Mlrow, flyln*\ntrl-motored plane of the Mirow\nAir Transport Company of Fairbanks, Alaska, - took off from ' the\nPrince George airport on Saturday\nmorning for Seattle after an over-\n' night 'stop. He had as passengers\nthree Eskimo convicts, two patients committed to mental hospiUl\nsnd two other passengers.\nJapanese Apologize\nfor Slapping Woman\nFEIPINO, Aug, SO (APL-Con.\nsul General Takekl Horluchl of\nJapan today tendered a formal\n' apology to Frank P. Lockhart.\nCounsellor of the United Slates\nEmbassy, for the slapping by a\nJapaneie sentry of a tW.year-old,\nAmerican woman, .Mrs. P.' M'\nRichard.\nr 8, Principal L.\nported to the    '\nFriday night\nDr. F. P. Spsrki, Medicil Health\nOfficer, told the board thit equipment would not be expensive for\nthe medicil room. It would consist\nof t detk, some chain, an eye totting machine tnd a medical couch.\nB.C. Trustees Body\nAsks Board to Have\nResolutions Ready\nA letter trom tht Britiih Columbia Trustees Association, asking the\nNelson School Botrd to have retdy\nany reiolutlon! which it might wish\nto present to a near future convention wes received by the board on\nFriday night,\t\nBoard to Ask Paying\nof High School Fees\nDue From Last Year\nLetters asking payment of back\nfees due to Nelson High School will\nbe sent to students who have not\nas yet paid part of their lsst year's\nfees, the Nelson School Board decided Friday night. Principal L. V.\nRogers of the High Sohool sUted\nthat about tt or (10 wss still due\ntrom several itudents.\n -** :\t\nU.S. BOMIIRS STOP\nBN ROUTE TO FAIRBANKS\nPRINCE GEORGE, B. C, Aug, 2Q\n(CP).-Two United States Army\nDouglai B.18A bombers were at\nPrince George airport today, en\nroute to Fairbanks, Alaska,\nThe ships ara each carrying nine\nmemberi of the Unlted.Statei Army\nQuartermasters Deptrtment, 1000\npounds ot equipment and gaioline\ntor 1800 miles cruising.\nThe crewi tre going North to do\ntdditlonll conitructlOn work on the\narmy but at Fairbanks. They expect to leave here as toon as favor,\nable weather reports are received\nfrom Whitehorse. They left the\nSouthern California army airbase\nyeiterday and came North via\nSpokane.  \u2022\nii i-WliTni^sMssnMI\nThe season Is well advanced but there is still plenty of time to soen'd\nhappy hours in the glorious surroundings of lake and mountain;* In\nand around Nelson there are literally hundreds of things to do ot-id\nsee that will make your vacation one that will long be remembered.\nBesides the attractions of paVk, lake and natural scenic beauty, the\nNelson merchants can make your vacation as enjoyable as \"time\\\noff\" can be. They do this in their desire and ability to serve you\\\nwith all that goes to make a really fine holiday. Come to Nelson,\nShop in Nelson and Save\nBOATING AND\nSAILING\nFrom Nelson there are miles\nand miles of navigable water\non the Kootenay Lake that\nare Ideal for canoeing, sailing,\nrowing, or power-bostlng. In\nNelson boats ol almost every\ndescription can be rented for\nk very small sum, by the hour\nor by the day. Boat trips can\nextend from 60 to 150 miles.\nIn a few days one can spend\nmany happy hours on the\nbroad waters of the Kootenay.\nCAMPING AND\nHIKING\nKokinee, Silver King, Burns\nMeadows, Lemon Creek, Six-\nMile, are but a few of the\ntrips into the high places <if\nthe mountains. Game, fish,\nflowers, glacier snd mounUln\npeaks over 9000 feet high\nawait you at Kokanee. Near\nNelson the deserted Silver\nKing Mine will be Interesting\nto more than a few. Scores of\nother trips long and short will\nUke you Into country that\nwill really open your eyes to\nthe wonders of the mounUlns\naround Nelson.\nAQUAPLANING\nAND WATER\nSPORTS\nDuring recent years wster\nsports have gone ahead by\nleaps and bounds in Nelson.\nA few of the top notch Nelson\nSki Club skiers have Uken to\nthe water and are now expert\nwater skiers. The regatta to\nbe held August 23 will show\nthe Kootenays what Nelson\nwater acrobate can do.\nEntertainment\nand Games\nTheatre, dancing, lacrone\ngarnet, bueball games, cricket, tennis, golf, never a dull\nmoment when you spend your\nvacation ln Nelson. Whether\nyou spend a few hours or a\nlew days or months ln Nelson\nyou will always be able to\nfind something to do. More\nthan that, you will find that\nthe people ot Nelson are excellent hosU. For a good time,\ncome to Nelson.\nFISHING\nLake and Stream\nIn the waters ot the Kootenay\nthere abound the subjects of\nan angler's dream. Rainbow\nand Speckled trout test the\nskill and tempt the palate ot\nany fisherman, and the salmon, the king of Inland game\nfish, is a treat to see and a\nthrill beyond compare to land,\nBass and sturgeon have been\ncaught. In the numerous rivers and streams that feed the\nKootenay Lake there Is excellent fly fishing for trout.\nRight now Is the tUrt of the\ntall run of these game fish.\nLakeside Park\nConcession\nHamburgers\u2014Hot Does\nCandy, Popcorn, Drinks\n&\nKootenay Motors\n(Nelson) Limited\nFor real garage service\nand body work\nPhone 117\nJ\u00ae\nGINGHAM\nSHOPPE\nDresses Lingerie\nHosiery      Sportswear\nSee us FIR8T (or your Httt-\nig tnd Vtn\nRequirements\nIng, Plumbing tnd ventilation\nKOOTENAY PLUMBING\nand HEATING CO., LTD.\nQUEEN CITY\nMOTORS LTD.\nFORD DEALERS\nSatisfaction It Our Aim\nStandard Cafe\n\"Nelton's Popular\nRestaurant\"\nThe Beit fer Lett\nNelson Transfer\nCompany, Limited\nPHONE 35\nAUTO PARTI - TIRI8\nPRINTING FOR EVERY\nOCCASION\nNcliimi Daily Ndiud\nCommercial Printing Dept\nThe\nLD.\nNelion'i Most Popular\nRESTAURANT\nGOOD FOODS\nCOOD SERVICE\nMODERATE PRICES\nBUV-\n\"NILSON BRAND\"\nJAMS AND JELLIES\nProducts ot the\nMcDonald Jam\nCompany, Limited\nPURITY FLOUR\nBrackman-Ker\nMilling Co., Ltd.\nFront St., Nelspn^ B.C.\nA. H. GREEN\nCOMPANY, LIMITED\nCONTRACTORS\nWord St.     Notion, B.C.\nMacdonaldi\nConsolidated Ltd.\nWholesale Grocers\nPhono 28\nFRONT ST. NILSON\nPHONE 22 for\nLetterheads, Envelopes and\nall kinds of Business Forms.\nH. M. Whimster\n|QB PRINTING\nTHE MAYOR\nAND ALDERMEN\nof the\nCITY\nOF\nNELSON\nInvito You to Do\nYour Shopping\nIn Nelion\nKootenay Steam\nLaundry and\nNo-Odor Dry\nCleaning Co.\nCall Ui First fer Coal, Wood,\nCekts Moving or Transfer\nWork\nWest Transfer Co.\nPhono 33\nLadies'\nReady- to-Wear\nSpecializing in half sizes\nEdith A.\nCarrothers\nFink Blk.\nNelson\nMother's Bread\nPhono 210 for Delivery\nChoquette  Bros.\nBAKERS\nR. W.DAWSON\nReal Estate\u2014Insurance\nPhono 197       Baker St.\nNolson, B.C.\nSTAR\nGROCERY\nfor\n.    QUALITY\nGROCERIES\nAND SERVICE\nWhen   in   Nelson   dino\nwhere  meals are  really\ngood and prices are\nmoderate.\nREX\nCAFE\nBAKER ST.\n 111 nhi ium inn ium\n\u25a0      l    'W\nREDMEN AND IEAFS PLAY LEAGUE\nBOXLA IN NELSON RINK TONIGHT\nHot dlsheartantd by thtlr dtftat\ni Ttall laat weak, Ronland Radars determined to end their\n[ toad jinx tonight at tha expense of\nleague-leading Ntlion Mania\nLesfs it tha Civic Arena tonight\nthe Rstdmen have given a good\naccount of themselves on their home\npk all season, even subduing tbe\nLetts ln eaay fashion on two occasions. But once out ot their own\nrink\u2014well, It's a sad, ltd itory for\nthe Indians' supporters.\nF But tonight as tbe teami tune up\n.for the playoffs, it is as good a\n'chance at any for the Rouland teim\nto ihtke off Its losing wsyi. At the\nsame time, Jock Walmsley will prime\nhis club for the finals which start\nnext month. Ht will trot out Pett\nBonneville tor the tint lime In t\ncouple of weekt. Jtck Blihop will\nbe an absentee, however, injuring\nhli knee badly in practice Sunday\nmorning. At that time It wu not\nknown how serious lt wu but bt\nwill mist one or two garnet at leut.\nThe Nelton team will be composed\nBill\" ToWntend,  tfowdle Cam\n\u20221\nof Dave Gibboni, goal; Bud Cooper,\nind Syd Horswill, defence:\nEgsn and Foster Milli, rovers; Pete\nBonneville ind Reg Miller, centres;\nAlbert Maxwell, George Biihop. Ian\nDlngwill tnd Harold Mayo, wings.\nMcSpaden's Two 73s Good Enough\nfor Canadian Open Goil Victory\nBy SYDNEY ORUSON\n\u25a0 NIUON DAILY NIWI. NILSON. t. C-MONDAY MORNINO, AUO. 11.1<M \u25a0\nssss\u2014sss\u2014ssssisss.\nSPORT\nIhu WiAt-i O-v&l\nArmstrong Firm\n, SAINT JOHN, N. B, Aug. 20-\n;<CP)\u2014 Hsrold (Jug) McSpaden of\n(Winchester, Mass., one of the better\niron pliyers ilnce Tommy Armour.\n[look to golf's tournament train once\nmore today, hli reputation enhanced\n* By the Canadian open championship,\n' bis pocket enriched with $1000 and\nhis trophies Increased with the Sea-\ngram Gold Cup.\ni   The Jug, faltering down Ihe home\nstretch, succeeded Sammy Snead ol\nI White Sulphur Springi, W. Va, to\n[the open title when ha cracked out\n\u2022 ptir of 78s Saturdiy and the other\n; leaders obligingly followed hli over\npar pace. McSpaden wound up with\na 72-hole total of 283, two over ptr,\n_ but five itrokei better than burly\nI Ralph Guldahl of Madison, N. J.,\n' pre-tournement favorite.\n. Henry Martell of Edmonton flnlihed as third amateur with 73 and\nTt tor a total of 300, three strokes\nbetter thin Phil Ftrley of Toronto,\nwho never recovered afer his first-\nsound 70.\nGuldahl ssved second place by\none stroke iruM Vic Glitz*, of Deal,\nN. J, whoie 286 was another stroke\nbetter than Bobby Cruickshnnk, of\nRichmond, Vs., and the hotteit man\non the course for the last two rounds.\nCruickshank knocked off a 71 and\n88 to get fourth place and $300. A 77\non the fint round cost him hit\nchances for the title.\nHORN! TAKE! 71\nYoung Stan Home of Montreal\nblew himself to a 78 on the lut\nround snd with lt Cinsdt's chances\nfor her first open victory since 1914.\nRoss (Sandy) Somerville of London, Ont, one of Canada's leading\namateun, tnd Home finished In t\ntie for fifth pltcf with 291.\nSandy had 71-72 on the lut\nrounds and a total of five strokes\nhetter thtn the next amateur, Ted\nBishop of Boston, who tacked a\npair of 78s and a 75 to hit firit-\nround 80, one ot the lix tub pir\nroundi of the championship.\nMcSpaden's winnings boosted his\nearnings for the yetr to $8200 while\nGuldahl's $600 lifted him Into second place among the money men\nwith $8200 to $10,000 for Henry\nPlctrd of Hershey Pa., who did ..ot\ncompete. Home was top Canadian\nmoney winner taking $200 for fifth\nand $200 u the leading native pro.\nHome and Arthur Hulbert of\nToronto, the ,only others within\nreasonable shooting distance after\ntwo rounds, blew even higher than\nGuldahl, who played with s sore\nleft side. Home, 71 tnd 70 for Thursday ssssst Frldav tot iround for a 72\nthat left him'four itrokei behind\nwith 18 to play. A 78 on I pair of\n303 flnlihed him. Hulbert rocketed\nto 83 on the lut round to finish far\nback with 297.\nBehind Home and Somerville,\nwith 292s came E. J. (Dutch) Harrison of Little Rock, Ark, ruined\nby a 78 ln the lut round; Horton\nSmith of Oak Psrk, 111, with s\nlast-round 77 and Bobby Burns and\nLex Robton, Toronto professionals.\nOLD COUNTRY\ni   FOOTBALL\nLONDON, Aug. 20 (CP Ctble). -\nJubilee Fund matches played by\nEnglish Football League teams on\nSaturday, preliminary to the opening of the regular league campaign\nAug. 26, resulted u followi:\n_ Aston Villa 1, West Bromwlch\nJAlbion 1.\n' ' Blackpool 0, Preiton North End 1.\nBolton Wanderen 2, Bury 1,\nBrentford 1, Chelsea S,\nChtrlton Athletic 1, Mlllwtll 1.\nCoventry City 3, Birmingham 2.\nDerby County 4, Leicester City 8.\nGrimsby Town 3, Lincoln City 2.\nLiverpool 2, Everton 1.\nManchester United 1, Manchester\nlty 1.\nMiddlesbrough 8, Sunderland 3.\nSouthampton 0, Portsmouth 3.\nStoke City 2, Wolverhampton Wanderen t\nTottenham Hotspurs 0, Anenel 1.\nCardiff City 1, Swansea Town 1.\nChesterfield 1, Barnsley 1.\nIpswich Town 2, Norwich City 1.\nNewcastle United 8, Gateshead 0.\nNotts County 1, Notts Forest 1.\nSheffield Wednesday 2, Sheffield\nUnited 4.\nStockport County 4, Oldham Athletic tr\nWatford 1, Luton Town 1.\nWett Ham United 3, Fulham 3.\nAldershot 3, Reading 3.\nBrighton 3, Crystal Palace 3.\nBristol Roven 4, Bristol City 0.\nQueens Psrk Rangers 3, Northampton Town 2.\nSouthend    United    1,    Clspton\nOrient 1.\nSwindon Town 2, Newport County 1.\nTorquay United 3, Bournemouth 1.\nWalsall B, Mansfield Town 1.\nAccrlngton Stanley 6, Southport 1.\nCrewe Alexandra 2, Port vale 1.\nHartlepools  United   6,   Darlington 1.\nNew Brighton 2, Tranmere Rov-\ntn l,\nRochdale 3, Halifax Town 1.\nRotherham United 3,  Doncaster\nRovers 1.\nWrexhtm 2, Chester 3.\nYork City 2, Hull 2.\nHuddenfieldTown 5 (five), Leedi\nUnited 0.\nBradford 8, Bradford City 2.\nBurnley 3, Blackburn Roven 1.\nExeter City l, Plymouth Argyle 2.\nMifte Buchna WUl\nReturn to Prague\nGuttapercha Tires\nFot Parted Grip and Safe Driving\nShorty's Repair Shop\n714 Baker Nelaon. B.C.\nWholesale Distributors\nSnap-On and Blue\nPoint Tools\nAcme Automotive\n611 Baker Supply Phone IC 0\nMike Buckm, Trill\nOne of the outstanding hockey\nproducts of Trail, Mike Buckna,\nwill return to Prague next month\nto continue is playing coach of\none of Europe's leading hockey\nclubs-iinlesi further political up-\nheaval should prevent him. Mike,\nan all-round athlete during his\nichool yean at Trail, learned his\nhockey u a Junior In that city\nunder the tutelage of P. F. Mclntyre. former Allan Cupper. Shortly after reaching senior age he\nJoined the trek of Canadian hockey playen to Europe, carving out\na place for himself In Czechoslovaks hockey circles. He hu\ntwice returned to Trail for holiday trips, but returns each season\nto Prague.\nAmbers Tuesday\nBy EDDII BRIETZ\nNEW YORK, Aug. 20 (AP). -\nHenry Armitrong, only three-time\"\nchimpion In pugilistic history, todiy wu firmly ettabllahed u t 5-8\nchoice to hold hli lightweight title\nin his 15-round cluh with former\nChampion Lou Ambers tt tht Yankee Stadium Tuesday night\nAll the stories tbout Armstrong's\nbid hands and the trouble he ll\nhaving miking the 138-pound lightweight limit htvt failed to take\nhold. The faithful went right on\nbetting on the little Loi Angeles\nnegro to repeat his triumph of lut\nAugust, when he took the title tway\nfrom tht Herkimer (N. Y.) Hurricane.\nTuesday night the boys are, expected to do thalr encore before tn\naudience of 30,000. Promoter Mike\nJlcobi sees t gate ot $150,000\u2014maybe more.\nThe two tlretdy have ilgned to\nmeet ln November for the welterweight title\u2014If Armitrong li beaten\nTuesday night. Ambers hu been\ntelling his friends he'll retire and\nget mirrled If he loses.\nIn other words, If he drops his\nlightweight championship, Armstrong Is all set to itep back Into\nanother big monty match with Amben In November. Otherwise, he'll\nfind himself still wearing both\ncrowns, but with nobody around to\nfight him far them.\nMcNair Bals Sox\nlo Seventh Win;\nYankees Divide\nCHICAGO, Aug. 20 (AP).-Eric\nMcNalr's 10th Inning single gave\nChicago White Sox a 0-8 American\nLeague victory over Cleveland Indians today \u2014 and their seventh\nconsecutive basViall triumph. The\ndecision Increased the Sox third-\nplace margin to 4% games.\nIn the 10th Jeff Heath, once of\nFort William, Ont, doubled ahd Ken\nKeltner and Roy Weatherly ilngled\nto send the Indians ahead,\nR H E\nCleveland      5 14  1\nChicago    6 13  0\n.Harder.. Dobion and Hemsley;\nRigney, Brown and Schlueter.\nSUNDRA WINS\nNEW YORK, Aug. 20 (AP). -\nSteve Sundra subdued Philadelphia\nAthletici on five hits In tfie second\nhalf of an American League double-\nheader today to win hit seventh\nbaseball game 5-1 and give World\nChampion Yankees an even break\nafter losing the opener 5-4.\nFlnt game:\nPhiladelphia       5   5   2\nNew York    4   8   0\nRon and Hayes; Gomel, Hadley,\nHlldebrand and Dickey.\nSecond game:\nPhiladelphia        1  5  1\nNew York       5 10   1,\nNelion, Potter and Brucker;\nSundra and Rosar.\nUDL\nRYE\nThis advertisement ta not publiihed\nor displayed by tha Liquor Control\nBoard or by tha Government ol\nBritish Columbia\nIRISH SOCCER\nBELF.\\ST, Aug. 20 (CP Cable).\n\u2014Opening soccer games for the Bel-\nfut City cup plsyed Saturday resulted as follows:\nLame l, Cllftonville 4.\nDlitillery 0, Derry City 1.\nPortadown 1, Belfast Celtic 2.\nLinfield 8, Glenavon 1.\nColeraine 3, Glentoran 2.\nNewry Town 1, Bangor 1.\nArdt 1, Ballymena United 2.\nScottish Soccer\nGLASGOW, Aug. 20 (CP Cable).\n\u2014Scottish Football League games\nplayed Saturday resulted as follows:\nDIVISION 1\nArbroath 5, Alloa 2.\nAyr United 0, Rangeri 4.\nCeltic 2, Heart! 0.\nFalkirk 7, Cowdenbeath 1.\nHlbernlam 3, Clyde 3.\nMotherwell 3, Aberdeen 0.\nPartick Thistle 2, Albion Rovera 1.\nSt. Johnstone 0, Kilmarnock 3.\nSt. Mirren 3, Queen of South 3.\nThird Lanark 2, Hamilton Academicals 2.\nDIVISION  2\nAirdrleonians 2, Dundee 4.\nDumbarton 3, Eut Fife 3.\nDundee   United   4,   Stenhouse-\nmuir 2.\nDunfermline 3, Queen'i Park 3.\nKing'i Park 3, Leith Athletic 1.\nMontrose 2, Edinburgh City 2.\nMorton 3, East Stirling 0.\nRaith Rovers 2, Brechin City 0.\nSt. Bernards 8, Forfar Athletic 2.\nANDREWS J0IN8 CARDS\nST. LOUIS, Aug. 20 (AP)-To\nbolster their hurling staff In their\nattempted pennant drive, SL Louis\nCardinals announced that Nate\nAndrews, purchased from the\nColumbui, 0\u201e club of the Americin\nAssocittion, would join the Red\nBirds in Cincinnati.\nBOSTON-SENATORS SPLIT\n, WASHINGTON, Aug. 20 (AP).-\nAtter being shut out 2-0 by the veteran Dutch Leonard In the lirst\ngame, Boiton Red Sox came back'\nin the second today to split an'\nAmerican League bueball double-\nheader with Washington by winning\n10-5. Boston won the series, three\ngames to two.\nFint game:\nBoston    0  7  2\nWashington        2   7   1\nWilson, Heving and Berg. Leonard\nand Ferrell.\nSecond game:\nBoiton    , 10 12  0\nWuhington-   5 11   1\nWagner, Dickman, Heving and\nPeacock; Krakauskas, Masterson,\nCarrasqucl, Appleton and Giuliani.\nNEWSOM HONORED\nST. LOUIS, Aug. 20 (AP). - A\ngroup of baseball fam honored Buck\nNewsom today u he made his tint\nappearance . here since St. Louii\nBrowni traded him lut Spring, but\nhit erstwhile teammates paid him\nno respect as they pounded him for\na 6-2 American League victory over\nDetroit Tigers. The second game of\nthe scheduled doubleheader wu\npostponed by rain.\nFlnt game:\nDetroit        2  5  3\nSt. Louis       6  9   2\nNewsom and Tebbetts, York;\nKennedy and Harshany,\nCOUNTY CRICKET\nLONDON, Aug. 20 (CP Cabltl-\nClose of play icores In English\nCounty Cricket matches started\nSaturday follow:\nDerby 319; Nottinghamshire 15\nfor no wickets.\nNorthamptonshire 805 for five;\nvs Glamorgan.\nGloucester 214; Middlesex 195 for\nseven wicketi.\nSomenet 381 for five wickets; vs\nHampshire.\nKent 215; Lancashire 149 for three.\nWorcestershire 372; Sussex 25 for\nno wickets.\nSurrey 336; vt Wlrwlckihlre.\nEssex 836 for eight; vi Yorkshire.\nCalgary Hillhurst   .\nin Soccer Victory\nEDMONTON.A ug, 20 (CP)-Led\nby a classy centre forward, Teddy\nThomu, Calgary Hlllhurat squeesed\nout a 3-2 Victory over Edmonton\nCloverleafs here Saturday ln the\nfirst of a two-game total goal.series for the Alberta Junior,soccer\nchampionship. The second game will\nbe pltyed in Calgary next SStur\nday.\nRoyals, Bulldogs\nPlay Boxla Tie\nin Trail League\nTRAIL, B. C Aug. 20\u2014Indian\nRoyali and Gulch Bulldogs ln a\npreliminary to tht senior Golden\nBear-Redmeri boxla tangle battled\nto an 8-8 tie ln the Arena here.\nTeams snd sooren were:\nRoyals\u2014A. Anderson, J, McKenzie, G. Long, Honeyman, 1, Murdock, 1, A. McKensle, 1\u201e W. Brownlee, 1, Jones. Bpurne, J. Hall, and\nDavis, 4.\nGulch\u2014M. Mattewcccl, Constanzo,\n1. De Blssiio, Lazarotto, Sammartino, 2, A. Tognotti, Battistella, 1,\nMcDonald, Sam Stprlnoff.\nU.J. Men's Tennis\nDoubles Final Is\nAll-Foreign Event\nBROOKLINE, Man., Aug. 20 (AP)\n\u2014Rain today caused a one-day\npostponement of final matches in\nthe United States doubles tennis\ntourney and,, weather permitting,\nthe Australians Adrian Quist and\nJack Bromwlch will play Jack\nCrawford and Harry Hopman tomorrow in the first all-foreign wind-\nup of the men's doubles ln the 58-\nyear hlstory.of the tourney.\nMrs. Sarah Palfrey Fabyan ot\nBrookline and Alice Marble of Beverly Hills, Calif., winners the last\ntwo year?, ivlll defend their title In\nthe women'i doublei against England's Kay Stammers snd Mrs. Freda Jamei Hammersley.\nMn. Fabyan la paired with Elwood Cooke of Portland, Ore., and\nMiss Marble with Hopman for the\nmixed doublts finals.\nQuist snd Bromwlch completed\nthe rout ot the outstanding United\nStates pairs by humbling Bobby\nRlggs ot Chicago, and Elwood Cooke\nof Portland, Ore, 6-1, 6-4, 6-0, ln the\nlut ot the semi-finals Saturday.\nKay Stammers and Mrs. Freda\nJames Hammersley, star members\nof the British Wlghtman Cup tennis\nteam, gained the final round of the\nwomen's doubles tourney by overwhelming Helen Jacobs and Dorothy\nWorkman, second-seeded domestic\nentry, 6-1, 6-2, at Longwood.,\nBeckett Wins\nMedal Shoot\nCONNAUGHT RIFLE RANGES\nSouth March, Ont, Aug. 20 (CP).\n\u2014Sergt. Norman Beckett, crack\nHamilton, Ont, shot, won the Gov\nernor General'i medal at the Dominion of Canada Rifle Association\nannual meet yesterday.\nSergeant Beckett posted a icore\nof 174, one short of possible, to win\nthe coveted prize over a field of\n150 Canadian crack shots, Including\ntwo women.\nThe Hamilton marksman fired a\n?ossible 75 at the 900 yard range, a\n9, one short of possible at 600\nyards, and a possible 50 at 300. The\nHamilton shot also won the D. C. R.\nA. Grand Aggregate.\nTrooper J. Wilson, young marki-\nman from Innlsf nil. Alta. took second\nprize money of $150,\n\"You're Another\nCharges Demore\nlo (on Cummings\nTRAIL, B. C, Aug. 20\u2014Twlxt\nRube Demore, Tnil Ctrdlntl Coach,\nand Con Cummins, Nelion Manager, a itirrlng wtr of wordi hu\nbeen waged \u2014 but Cliff Bogstle\nwould definitely tee duty on the\nTrail mound, Demore made known\nto all and sundry Saturday.\n\" .... We nessd a good pitcher\ntnd everyone knowt It\", itetmed\ntht Rube, tfter charging Nelson's\nBeattie Guthrie wu tn Import u\nmuch u Bogstle, tnd getting hit\nroom and keep from the Nelion\nclub to boot.\nBogstle would itart in tht Salmo-\nTratl game Sundiy, Demore itated.\nCummins claims all clubi should\nback youthful home playen, u\nmuch u possible, and keep away\nfrom Imports. He objects to Bogstie\nu an experienced import of the\n1938 Trail squad.\nPirates Record\nWin Streak Is\nBrought lo Hall\nPITTSBURGH. Alii SO (AP) \u2014\nPittsburgh Pirates' iS-gami\" lo'ilng\nstreak, record for the current National League season wu halted today by tne combination of Max\nButcher and Pennsylvania'! six\no'clock Sunday Baieball Law,\nAfter dropping the flnt gtme of\na doubleheader 9-5 to Chicigo\nCubi, the Piratei rallied behind\nthe two-hit hurling of Butcher to\nwin the nightcap 6-0.\nFirst game:\nChicago    9 11   3 ,\nPittsburgh    3 11   I'l\nPasseau and Hartnett, Garbark;\nKlinger. Swift, Brown, Clememon,\nHelntzelman and Mueller.\nSecond game:\nChicago       0  2   1\nPittiburgh      6   9   0\n(Called end 6th Sunday law)\nWhitehill, Page, Dean and Man\ncuso; Butcher and Suice.\nMort Valuable?\nMOI IIVIN\nC.A.H.A. May Sound Out\nPublic Opinion Before]\nCats Enter Olympics\nBy JACK CALDIR\nTORONTO, Aug. \u00bb (CP)-Publle opinion, In the light of developments ln International affairs, may be sounded by the Canadian Amateur\nHockey Assoclstion betore Port Arthur Bearcats are formally entered\nin the 1940 Winter Olympics at Girmlschpartenkirchen, Germany.\nMeeting here Saturdiy, the C.A.HA. central committee decided\nto repeat \"with clarifications\" an offer to Port Arthur's Dominion Champ.\nions for a European tour next Winter along the llnu of that taken -\nby Trail Smoke Eaten, the 1937-38 champlom, lut teuon. No mention\not the Olympics wu made In the itatement given out by the President,\nDr. G. W. Hardy of Edmonton, after the cloied nation.\nIt wu learned the committee dit-f | \u25a0.\nOIORQI BIIHOP\nOne of the main cogt of the\nNelson Maple Leafi boxla machine, Georgle, younger half ef the\nBishop brother act, it currently\nPacini! the rest ot the league ln\npoint-scoring. He has a two-point\nadvantage over Booney Sammartino of Trail and will be out to\nstrengthen his position when the\nLeafi lake on the Rowland Red-\nmen at the Civic Arena tonight.\nGeorge li prominently in the\nrunning for the Murray Memor-\ns.s  rm.\u2014....  *\u201e,. ...-   -,*-.  .......c.\n....     ..,-.,,,J     lu.      .,.-.    .,,,'.,.     ..i.tiutj...\nplayer ln the league. Buddy Hammond, who played for the Leafi,\nwon the cup lut year.\ncussed it length the possibility pub.\nUc opinion might oppose entry to\nthe Winter Olymplci if lnternatlonil\neventi ihould Ukt t more serious\nturn. Ways and meani of testing the\npublic's attitude were considered.\nQuestioned regarding absence of\na statement on an Olympic entry,\nDr. Hardy uld final disposition of\nthat question would await \"developments.\" He pointed out, however,\nthe Bearcati hive been deilgnated\nthe team to represent Canada If\nand when an Olympic entry lt made.\nThe financial termi previoui offered to Port Arthur for the tour,\nind rejected, will be repeated by\nthe Association \"ln essence\", Dr.\nHardy uid. There will be \"further\nexplanation\" of the C. A. H. A.'t\nposition.\nDr. Hardy said the trip would be\nfinanced from gate receipts tt Port\nArthur's exhibitions ln Europe ind\nin a brief tour of Eastern Canada\nand the United States preparatory\nto sailing.\nIn addition, the Association often\nthe Bearcats a $5000 grant. Without\na grant from the Auoclation, and\ndespite the faot each player wu\nallowed $20 a week .the Trail Club\ncleared more than $1000 from Its\nEuropean tour, Dr. Hardy said.\nBALL STANDINGS\nAMERICAN\nW\nNew York   78\nBoston   70\nChicago  63\nCleveland  5!\nDetroit  68\nWashington  \u201e 50\nPhiladelphia   39\nSL Louis  33\nPet. Bhd.\n.631\n.558\n.518\n.513\n.431\n.348\n.303\n7V4\n15VS\n20\n20 V4\n30\n44\n4814\nREDS DROP TWO\nCINCINNATI, .Aug. 20 (AP) -\nCincinnati Bedi crumbled twice before St.. Louis .Cardinals today and\nth: Beds' National Baseball League\nlead was sloshed to 314 games.\nJohnny Mize hit his 21st and\n22nd homers and batted ln six rum\nin the second game to give his\nmates a 7-5 victory after the Cards\nbattered Bueky Walters in the first\nfor a 7-1 win.\nFirst game:\nSt. Louis     7   8  0\nCincinnati       1   4   1\nWelland, C. Davii and Padgett,\nOwen; Walters, Shoffner, Thompson and Lombardl.\nSecond game:\nSt Louis     7 12   0\nCincinnati      5 15   0\nMcGee, Shoun, Bowman, Andrews, snd Padgett, Owen; L.\nMoore, Shoffner, Grlssom,. Johnson\nand Hershberger.\nOIANTS, PHILS DIVIDE\nPHILADELPHIA, Aug. 20 (AP)\n\u2014An eighth-inning crackup by the\nGlints' infield gave the Phillies\nthe second game of a National\nLeague Baseball doubleheader today 3-2 after New York took an\neasy 8-4 victory In the opener.\nFirst game:\nNew York     8 15   2\nPhiladelphia      4   9   2\nSchumacher and Danning; Beck\nand Millies, V. Davis.\nSecond game;\nNew York     2   5   2\nPhiladelphia      3   5   1\nHubbell and O'Dea; Mulcahy and\nMillies, V. Davis.\nNATIONAL\nCinclnnaU  69 41 .627 -\u00bb\nSL LOUls   65 44 .596 314\nChicago  :  62 62 .544 9\nNew York  55 54 .505 1314\nBrooklyn  ......  54 54 .500 14\nPittsburgh  50 58 .463 18\nBoston  - 47 81 .435 21\nPhiladelphia   34 72 .321 33\nGonzaga Husky Goes\nto Calgary Bronks\nCALGARY, Aug. 20 (CP)-Coech\nDick Haughlan, coach of Calgary\nBreaks of the Western Canada Interprovlnclal Rugby Football Union\ntoday announced the fifth new Import player, 'Buck\" Baker of Spokane, needed to balance the team's\n200-pound line from end to end,\nwill join the team tomorrow.\nBaker, a huiky 235-pound Inside\nwho played with Gonzaga University fbr two yean, Is said to pack\npower on a par with Al Hoptowit,\nan absentee this year.\nEdmonton Civics\nWin Soccer Trophy\nCALGARY, Aug. 20 (CP)-The\nAlberta challenge cup, emblematic\nof senior soccer supremacy in Alberta, today returned to Edmonton\nCivics who staved olf Calgary Cal-\nllea' desperate rally here lut night\nto win the two-game-total-goal\n\u25a0eries 5-4.\nCallies, defending champions, facing a three-goal deficit after lait\nweek's encounter at Edmonton, won\ntht second match 2-0, Clvici took\nthe tint 5-2.\nBaseball Scores\nSATURDAY\nAMERICAN\nBoston 8-1, Washington 6-2.\nCleveland 5, Chicago 6.\nDetroit 9, St. Louli 3.\nPhiladelphia at New York, rain.\nNATIONAL\nSt. Louli 3, Cincinnati 3, rain ended game ln ninth.\nBrooklyn 4, Boiton 0.\nChicago 5, Pittsburgh 0.\nNew York at Philadelphia, rain.\nWESTERN INTERNATIONAL\n. Bellingham 9, Vancouver 14.\nTacoma 3, Spokane *l.\nWenatchee 1, Yakima 2.\nPACIFIC 'COAST\nHollywood 3, San Francisco 18.\nSan Diego 4, Portland 2. .\nINTERNATIONAL\nBuffalo 10, Syracuse 5.\nRochester 4, Newark 2.\nMontreal 7, Baltimore 2.\nJeney City 1-5, Toronto 0-0.\nAMERICAN  ASSOCIATION\nMinneapolis 4-8, Columbus 1-9.\nKansas City 2, Indianapolis 1.\nSt. Paul 4, Toledo 2,\nGolden Eagles of\nTrail Presented\nTrophy al Banquet\nTRAIL. B, ti, Ant. 20\u2014Goldtn\nEaglet todty wtre proudly bearing ,\nthe palm of victory In the Cathollo\nBoyi' Softball League, formally presented, ln the shape of a trophy, at\na banquet ln SL Anthony ot Padua\nParish Hill, Stturdiy night Th*\nEaglet claimed the league crown\nFriday, defeating the Cavalier fin*\nalltti 21-10 ln the playoffs' deciding\ngame. They dropped the Cavallera\n17-9 Thunday.\nOther presentation and award!\nwere made at the spaghetti teed.\nLeonard Vernee, league head, wil\ngeneral chairman.\nThe Golden Eagles team com-\nprises Toffolo, Cavalln, Monaldi,\nPagnan, Sovian, McKee, Sammartino, Ermtcora and Merlo.\nEngland Dismissed for 352 Runs In  j\nOpening Play of Final Test Matches]\nO.S. Youngster\nWins Tennis at\nQuebec on Toss\nSEIGNIORY CLUB, Que., Aug.\n20 (CP)\u2014Through a driving rain,\nMorey Lewis snd Ted Schroeder,\nyoungsters from the United States,\nplayed 12 games today ln the singles\nfinal of the annual Invitation tournament here, then tossed for the\nwinner.\nThe 21-year-old Lewis from Texarkana, Ark., who won the Canadian tingles title at Windsor, Ont.,\nhad captured a set from the United\nStates Junior champion as Schroeder was leading 3-0 in the next. The\ntoss set Lewis u winner but officials said both names would be\nbracketed on the tournament trophy.\nThe rain also forced cancellation\nof the doubles final of Schroeder\nand Bob Kamrath of Austin, Texu,\nagainst Bill Talbert of Cincinnati\nond Frank Guernsey from Orlando,\nFlorida. Previous tournament engagements prevented the playen\nfrom staying over another day.\nIn the morning semi-finals ot the\ndoublet, Guernsey and Talbert upset the favored pair of Lewii and\nFrank Froehllng of Chicago, who\nteamed to capture the Dominion\ncrown at Windsor. Guernsey and\nTalbert rode to a straight set, 6-4,\n6-3 victory.\nKamrath. and Schroeder advanced In the other bracket by beating\nGilbert Hall of New York and Jack\nTldball of Hollywood, Cal., 6-1, 6-3.\nWhen rain set In and prevented afternoon play, they lost the winners'\nprizes on the toss with Guernsey\nand Talbert.\nBAITING LEADERS\nBy The Associated Preu\nBatting (three leaden in each\nleague)\nG Ab R H Pta.\nDiMaggio, Yank 80 304 68 119 .390\nFoxx, Red Sox 104 394 111 144 .366\nMize, Cards .... 110 404 77 145 .359\nJohnson, Ath .. 113 409 92 140 .342\nBonura, Giants 107 400 72 136 .340\nArnovich, Phils 106 394   55 133 .388\nHome runs:\nAmerican League\u2014Foxx, Red Sox,\n32; Greenberg, Tigen, 22; Gordon,\nYankeei, 19; Selkirk, Yankees, 19;\nJohnson, Athletics, 19.\nNational League\u2014Ott, Glanti, 24;\nMize, Cardinals, 22; Camilli, Dodgers, 19.\nRuns batted ln:\nAmerican League\u2014Williams, Red\nSox, 99; Foxx, Red Sox, 97: Greenberg, Tigers, 90; Johnson, Athletics,\n80.\nNational League \u2014 McCormick,\nReds, 97; Mize, Cardinali. 77; Camilli, Dodgen, 77; Bonura,\nGianta, 77.\nAGGREGATE WINNER\nCONNAUGHT RIFLE RANGES,\nSouth March, Ont, Aug. 20 <CP).-\nCapt. Desmond Burke of Ottawa\nwon the individual service condltioni aggregate at the Dominion of\nCanada Rifle Association meet\nCapt. Burke scored 328 to win the\naggregate awarded the competitor\nmaking the highest icores In the\nHelmer Memorial, Sherwood. Borden   tnd  the   King's   medal\nmjss>h\u00bb\u00abL   *      .\nSUNDAY\nINTERNATIONAL:\nToronto 2, 4, Montreal 4,13.\nBaltlmort 1, ferity City 3.\nNewark 2, Rocheiter 9.\nSyracuse 8, 2, Buffalo 0, t.\nAMERICAN ASSN.:\nSt Paul 10, 8, Toledo 8, 3.\nMinneapolis 10, 4, Columbus 2, 2.\nKansas City 3, 2, Indianapolis 0, 5.\nMilwaukee 1, 0, Louisville 2, 3.\nPACIFIC COA8T:\nSacramento 4, Seattle 6.\nHollywood 3, San Francisco 5.\nSan Diego 7, Portland 8.\nOakland 5, Lot Angelei 2,\nDeath Ends Cricket\nGame at Vancouver\nNORTH VANCOUVER, B.C,\nAug. 19 (CP)\u2014A cricket match here\ntoday between Bank of Commerce\nof Vancouver and a North Vancouver squad wai abandoned after\none player was sent to hospital\nand another fell dead on the pitch.\nGeorge Berridge was struck over\nthe eye with a full-pitched ball\nand sent to hospital.\nJoe Gill, a pioneer North Vancouver cricketer, then went in in hii\nplace. He struck the ball for one\nrun and tan to the far wicket\nwhere he collapsed and died.\nREMEMBER WHEN?\nBy The Canadian Prett\nBilly Winn, ont of the United\nStates' leading automobile driven,\ndied at Springfield, 111, one year\nago today, when his car blew a\ntire and overturned In a 100-mlle\nrace at the Illinois State Fair. Winn,\nat 31, had competed In seven 500-\nmile races on the famed Indianapolis Speedway and came nearest to\nvictory when he finished ilxth In\n1935,\nOldfield   Faultless   in'\nBatting, First\nMatch\nLONDON, Aug. 20 (CP.-Cable)-\nPlsying on a batsman's wicket, England wn dismissed for 862 runs at\nthe Oval Saturday in the opening\nday's play of the third and final\ncricket test match with the Wett Indies. In half an hour'i batting near\nthe close the tourists lost one wicket\nfor 27 mm.\nThe Englishmen went Into tht\ncontest with an edge on the aeries\nby virtue of their elght-wlckets victory in the inaugurtl test at Lord's.\nThe second encounter, at Old Traf-\nford, Manchester, resulted In a\nstalemate.\nThirteen thousand spectators saw\na disastrous opening and a poor\nfinish to the home team's lnningi,\nbut ln between they were thrilled\nby a strong assault on the West Indian bowling. One wicket waa down\nfor two runi, when a youngiter and\ntwo seasoned players changed the\ncomplexion of the game.\nJoseph Hardstaff hit up 94 rum\nln exactly two houn for the top\nscore. The Nottinghamshire player\ngave a sparkling display featured\nby hefty off driving. Norman Old-\nfield, Lancashire, ln his tint teit\nmatch, batted faultlessly for 80 and\nLeonard Hutton, Yorkshire stif',\nmade 73. Captain Wally Hammond\nwent out to a brilliant catch by his\nvis-vis, Rolf Grant, after icorlng 43.\nThe last five wicketi fell ln 60\nminutes, Learle Constantino bowling\nwith devastating effect. The \"laughing cavalier of cricket\" as he is\nknown, trapped hit opponents with\ndeceptive spinners to take five\nwickets for 75 rum.\nGrant and Jeffrey Stollmeyer\npended the touring team's Innings\nbut the former went out after scoring only six. At the close Stollmeyer\nhad made 14, and George Headley,\nwho replaced Grant, teven.\nEngland played as selected but a\nlast-minute change wai made ln the\nWeit Indian eleven, Victor Stollmeyer coming in for the veteran\nIvan Barrow, J. E. Sealey will act\nat wicket-keeper ln place of Barrow.\nWhen the game started, Denis\nCompton, young Middlesex player,\nhad not put tn an appearance. He\nwas detained by police lor a ihort\ntime for exceeding the speed limit\nln North London.\nOn a batsman's wicket, England\nhad scored two runa through Hutton when Keeton played on to Tyrrell Johnion. Oldfleld Joined the\nYorkihlreman but tha pair did not\nscore very rapidly so accurate was\nthe West Indian bowling.\nThe half-century went up after\nan hour's play and at thli stage the\nEnglishmen batted more vigorously.\nThey added another 50 runs in 30\nminutes but Hutton was caught and\nbowled by Johnson with hli icore\nat 73 and the aggregate at 133. The\nNorth country star hit eight fours\nln a faultless Innings.\nAt lunch Wally Hammond and\nOldfleld were together but the English skipper had not opened his\nscore.\nThe total wss advanced after the\nlunch Interval to 168, when Oldfleld attempted to cut Constantino\nand wai beaten by the spin.\nCompton came in with Hammond\nand the score mounted steadily,\nboth players facing accurate bowling with confidence. They added 47\nmns when the Middlesex youngiter\nsnicked a fast one from Emanuel\nMsrtindsle to Gomez at lecond slip\nHe hit up 21 runs.\nHardstaff wai next man In, but\nwith the total of 244, Hammond\nwas out to a brilliant catch by Rolf\nGrant off Constantlne. The former\nSt. Andrew's College, Aurora, Ont,\nttudent took tha ball Inches from\nthe ground, after flinging himself\nfull length.\nAt thit stage Conatantlna wu par.\nat top form and frequently ltad tht j\nbatsmen ln difficulties with his variation ot pace. Hardstaff retched\nhla 60 ln ona hour.\nWith the departure of Hardstaff\natter scoring 94 runs disaster overtook the Englishmen. Nichols' scorn\nstood at 24 and the total at 391\nwhen he attempted a quick single.\nConstantlne scattered his wicket\nwith a sharp return. The mm*\nplayer uprooted Arthur Wood's leg\nitump before he had icored.\nAt litis stace Constantlne was par-.\ntlcularly unplayable. Douglas Wright\nmade six when he went out leg.\nbefora-wicket the eighth wicket fall-\nIng at 345. Tom Goddard was dismissed for a duck and the lnninga\nclosed when Reginald Perks had\nmade a single.\nThe icore card:\nENGLAND-Flnt Innlngi.\nKeeton, b Johnson        __\nHutton, c and b.Johnion    73\nOldfield, b Constantlne    \u00abE\nW. H. Hammond, c Grant, b\nComtantlne         43\nCompton, c Gomes, b Mirtlndalt  21\nHardstaff, b Constantlne \t\nNichols, run out  -\nWood, b  Comtantlne   __.\nWright 1 b Comtantlne \u2014\nGoddard, b Clarke -\nPerks, not out -...\u2014    il\nExtrss       101\nTotal\nBOWLING:\n.352 |\nPUIW1\nE. A. Martindale  13   0  87\nT. Johnion    18   1   81\nL. N. Conttantlnt    17.32   75\nG. B. Clarke 21   0   96\nR. S. Grant   6   0   31\nWEST INDIES-FInt innings:\nR. S. Grant c Goddard, b Perks\nJ. Stollmeyer, not out -  14\nG. A. Headley, not out     7\nExtrai    _     ft\nTotali (for one wicket)   *tf\\\nProvincial Boxla\nPlaydowns to Be\nin the Kootenai\nTRAIL B. C, Aug. \u00bb-To\nteam garnering the West Koota\nsenior boxla title will coma\nadded reward of having tha 1\nthree Provincial finals ln their hoi\narena, President Lyle Jestley state\ntoday. September 23, 25 and 27 i\nthe dates for the Coast-KooU\nplaydown.\nMTHUM1WMAI mun\nflnt sUfWtss) Ib BritsiB\nits 1750, Victors' Ismloo\nDiy **\u2022* stss jsusbsssI 1 -m\nAl If. ssnirtnsl ttpatsslco (or lstCHf \"'.\n\"I\"       Iti\u2122,  staooihuts!  sod     \"111\n*?\nWICKER*\nThis advt. is not published or\ndisplayed by the Liquor Con\u00ab\ntrol Board or by the Government of British Columbia*!\n \u2014\u2014\u2014\nPmdt    UGHT\n-i 1 '\u00bb\"    '        T\u00ab\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B, C\u2014MONDAY MORNING. AUG. II. '\n\u25a0    \u25a0\u2022'IN.\n*\"\u2022'\"\"*\u25a0\nProof of the Profits Is in Answering These Advertisements]\n. \u2014. \u2014 \u2014\u2014:\u2014!\u25a0\",\u25a0       i ;\u2014;\u2014;\u2014; : '\u25a0\u2014 1\nSuspended Sentence\nGiven Rosan; Agrees\nto Pay Back Wages\nOn agreeing that he would pay\nstB0.\u00abX) in back wages to Duncan Weston, his employee, William Rosan\nwas given a suspended sentence\nwhen he taced a charge before Stipendiary Magistrate William Irvine\n'.In Provincial Police Court Friday\n:Of failing to pay wages semi-monthly as required in the mining industry.\nBliss W. Dysart,  Department of\n: Labor   Inspector,   who   prosecuted,\nagreed to  the suspended sentence\n, on condition that Rosan pay Weston\nthe  back  wages  due  him,   rather\nthan have Rosan pay the minimum\ntine of $100. Rosan pleaded guilty\n[to the charge, which involved pay-\nfpienl of wages  between  April   12\nr end June 8  for work on mineral\nClaims in the Hall Creek area.\n[Nomads Entertain\nIdaho Visitors at\nPicnic and Dance\nEntertaining Judge and Mrs. J. J.\nLaFebe and Mr. and Mrs. Henry\nt Clarke of Lewiston, Idaho, the No-\n| Iliads of Avrudaka Drill Team held\n\u2022,a picnic and get-together at Lake-\naide Park Friday afternoon, follow-\n' Ing up with a dance at night in the\nK.P. Hall.\nThe Nomads met Judge and Mrs.\nI LaFebe and Mr. and Mrs. Clarke\nwhen the team participated in the\n\u25a0 international D.O.K.K. and Nomad\n'Convention at Boise, Idaho, two\nI weeks ago. Mr. Clarke Is a highway\ni patrolman at Lewiston.\nL The travellers, who left Saturday\nj morning for Banff and Lake Louise,\nexpressed themselves as delighted\n[with the Kootenay country. They\nfere making a holiday tour.\nPopoff Is Fined Lack\nof Driver's Licence\nCharged with driving .without a\ndriver's licence, John Popoff of Tar-\n| rys was fined $10 when he pleaded\n! guilty   to   Stipendiary   Magistrate\nWilliam Irvine in Provincial Police\n[ Court Friday.\nI It was charged Popoff was driving\non the Nelson-Ymir road while\n\u25a0 holding only a learner's licence and\nI was not accompanied by an adult\n\u25a0holder of a driver's licence.\n'. Constable R. A. Lees of the Provincial Police Highway Patrol pros-\n- ecuted.\nNelann Satly Npoib\nMember of The Canadian  Dally\nNewspapers Association\nTelephone 144\nPrivate Exchange Connecting to\nAll Departments.\nClassified Advertising\nRates \u2014 1 lc Per Line\n(Minimum t Lines)\n2 linn, per Insertion  $ 32\n2 lines, tl  coniecutivt\ninsertions      M\n(6 for the price of 4)\n3 lines. rer insertion     .33\n3 lines. 6 consecutive\ninsertions      - 1 32\n2 lines. 1 month   2.88\n3 lines. 1 month   4.29\nFor advertisements of more than\nthree lines, calculate oo\nthe above bails.\nBox numbers lie extra. This\ncovers any number of\ninsertions.\nLEGAL NOTICES\n18c per lines, first insertion and\n14c  each  subsequent insertion.\nALL ABOVE RATES LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAVMENT.\nSPECIAL LOW RATE\nSituations Winted   26c for tny\nrequired   number  of   llnei  for\nsix  days,  payable   in  advance.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\nSingle copy ..._ \u2014 $   .05\nBy carrier, per week        .25\nBy carrier, per year    13.00\nBy Mail:\nOne month $ .75\nThree months   _   2.00\nSix months     4 00\nOne year  _ \u2014   8.00\nAbove rates apply in Canada,\nthe United States, and the\nUnited Kingdom, to subscribers\nliving outside regular carrier\nareas.\nF1??'.vh',rf *\u25a0\"-\u2022 in CssnsiHfl whpre\nextra postage is required, one\nmonth $1.50, three months $4.00,\nsix months $8.00, one year $15.00.\nJAPANESE FISHERMEN\nRESCUED AT COAST\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 20 (CP) -\nThree Japanese fishermen were\nen route to their homes here Saturday after being rescued from\nnear the mouth of the Fraser\nRiver Friday night by the coastal\nsteamer Princess Kathleen when\ntheir gasoline launch foundered.\nloolaree Cavalcade, 1939 \u2022 \u2022 \u2022\niirls Become Leaders and Leaders\nTake Girls' Places; Six Nalalors\nSwim Lake; Masquerade al Campfire\nIt was \"Girls' Day\" and the girls\n.became leaders and the leaders bc-\nt'came    girls.    Rosemary    Fleming,\nGreat Brave of camp, became Manuka; Claire Jamieson became Pilot:\nFlorence Mclntyre became Pocky;\n'Agnes  Deans  became Lindy;   Min\nMilliard became Flash; Helene Har-\n: jrli became Eluta; Peggy Dodimead\nbecame   Leewa.   The   day, started\nearly  with the  girls  routing  the\nleaders from their beds, and while\n, the leaders did fag duty the girls\n\u00bbad\u00ab pudding pie beds for them.\nThe girl leaders found it was not\n.such  a snap  being  leaders  when\n'they had  to  serve  the meals  for\nabout a dozen campers. In a morning a few  innings  of. softball   in\n'which thei leaders took an active\n' part were played, but the leaders\n> lound that the girls easily outclass-\n' ed them as the leaders were verv\nrusty in spots as far as ball playing\n\u25a0 was concerned.\n,    A new interest group in making\nquote books and autograph books\n. out of cork was begun under the\nleadership of Mrs. W. C. Kettlewell\nand Mrs. Steiger. The girls  were\nvery  interested  and many  lovelv\npoems are being copied  into  the\n: books to take back to their groups\ntor next year. Every morning Man-\n; uka reads a poem which the girls\n' can have for their books.\ni,   In the afternoon the few \"fishes\"\nI of the camp went in swimming and\n'\"swam ana swam\" for about two\n| hours,.the, water wa? so warm and\n\"nviiorating.\nSIRLSWlN AGAIN\nI In the evening another softball\n';game was staged between the lead-\n. ers and a few of the girls against\n| a picked team of other girls. The\n! girls won 10-3. It was an exciting\ni game and the checrers were enthusiastic.\nIn the evening around the camp-\ntire two stunts were the order of\nhe evening. The Cherokces put on\nYoung Lockinvar\". A sing song\nled by Agnes  (Lindy)  Deans was\nenjoyed at odd times botween stunts.\nThe leaders then climazed the evening by their super-colossal pantomime \"The King's Breakfast\". Those\ntaking part were \"Manuka\", curtain; \"Pilot\" readers; \"Lindy\". King;\n\"Flash\", Dairy-maid; \"Eluta\",\nQueen; \"Nurse\", read end of cow\nand \"Leewa\", front end of cow. The\nleaders then sang their song to the\ngirls and with the friendship circle\nand \"Taps\" the day ended. Soon\nall the girls were washed and tucked\ninto bed for the night.\nLAKE SWIM\nNext day the much awaited swim\nacross the lake was undertaken by\nsix of the girls: Rosemary Flemin\"\nof Nelson; Margaret Wright, Claire\nJamieson, Betty Atkinson and Mary\nBathie of Rossland; and Florence\nMclntyre of Sheep Creek. The girls\nwere well wrapped in coats and\nblankets and smeared with cold\ncream to go across the lake in the\nlaunch to Ayres Landing, whence\nthey started their swim back. There\nwere two rowboats and the launch\nwith, them. Those who did not swim\nthe lake were ready on Ihe shore\nto give them a warm reception when\nthey returned. All precautions\nagainst accidents were taken. Rosemary did it in 35 minutes; the other\ngirls being only five and ten min-.\nutes behind. The girls swathed in\nblankets, posed for many cameras\nto record their feat for all time.\nAfter the usual routine of the day\na masquerade was held in the evening. Following a Grand March\naround tlie cairn the judges awarded ihe prizes. Pat Baird winning\nthe prize for the most original with\nher costume of \"K-K-Katy\"; Margaret Wright and Claire Jamieson\nwon the prize for the most cleverly\ndepicted .as \"Mr. and Mrs. Hen-\nPecked\", and Mary Bathio for the\nfunniest as a clown.\nAfter the prizes we went down\nto the campfire, where the girls\nhad to put on a stunt in keeping\nwith their costume \"Taps\" closed a\nfull day of fun.\niov'l. (loses Lower Mainland, Island\nForest Areas Till Fire Danger Over\nVICTORIA, Aug. 20 (CP).-A full\nclosure ordeT  for  forest areas  on\nVancouver   Island  and  the   lower\nMainland was issued by the British\nColumbia Government Saturday to\nprotect the woods from fire. Conditions have become extremely hazardous from the month's dry spell\nnd the Government acted to prevent a recurrence of last Summer's\ndisastrous blaze at Campbell River.\nEffect of the order is that all trav-\n', elling,   camping,   fishing,   hunting,\n. recreation, prospecting for minerals\n: and all logging operations are pro-\nI hibited in the forest areas of the\n'closed district.\n1 Sawmill operations located with-\nj ln a half mile of a forest or wond-\nfland arc prohibited except under\n[special permit.\nI All the regular permits issued for\n[.camp fires, clearing or special burn-\nI ing of any kind are suspended while\n' the closure is in iorce.\nI' The closure took effect at mid-\nI night Saturday and will last until\nthe present danger lifts.\nI    Forestry  officials explained  that\nI, travel over highways, by tourists or\n| residents ,is not banned by the clos-\nlure, but only travel within forest\nlands.\nThe Northern part of the district,\nwhere conditions are not so serious.\nis exempt from the order. The exempted sections includes: The West\ncoast of Vancouver Island from\nToquart harbor North: the East coast\nof the Island from Suquash North\nand tiie mainland and Islands from\nWeils Passage and Kingcome Inlet\nNorth.\n\"We are acting to prevent a serious outbreak,\" said a Forestry\nBranch spokesman.\n\"So far we have been fortunate\nin this region, but humidity conditions and Ihe fire danger rating has\nnow reached a point where the\nstrictest precautions must be exercised.\"\n\"At this critical juncture any operations in the woods are likely to\ncause fires. The conditions can only\nbe remedied by cooler weather and\npossible showers.\"\nSaturday's closure was the second\ntime in history that the Government\nhad invoked powers conferred under the Forest Act to limit traffic\nin the woods. The previous occasion\nwas last year in July when the\nCampbell River fire broke out.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL   DIRECTORY\nASSAVERS\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst, Assayer, Metallurgical\nEngineer. Sampling Agents for\nTrail Smelter. 301-305, Josephine\nStreet, Nelson, & ________ _\nGRENVlLLE H. \"GRIMWOSD\nProvincial Assayer snd Chemist, 420\nFall Street. P. O. Box 9. Nelson.\nB. C. Representing shippers\ninterest at Trail, B. C.\nHAROLD S, ELMES\", ROSStSKD\nB C, Provinciil Aiisyer, Chemist.\nIndividual Representatives tor\nshippers tt Trail Smelter.\t\nCHIROPRACTOR8\nJ. R   McM4LLAN, D  C, NEURO-\ncalomeler. X-rty   McCullocst Blk.\nDR WI1.BERT BROCK. PAI.MER\nGraduate X-ray 16 yetn expen\nence  542 Baker St   Phone 989\ncorsetiep.es\nSPENCER CORSETS. MRS. V   M\nCampbell. 370 Baker St  Ph  tWd\nENGINEER8 AND SURVEYORS\nBOYUC AFFLECK. Fruitvale, B C\nSurveyor and Engineer, 'Phone\n\"Beaver Falls.\"\nHOMES FOR THE AGED\nCONDUCTED BY THE SISTERS\nof the Love of Jesus. St. Jude'i\nHome of Rest for elderly couplet.\nSt. Anthony's Guest House and\nthe Priory Guest House tor ladies\nover sixty. Private rooms with\nbath. Beautiful location. A real\nHorrtfe with every comfort. Nursing\ncare when needed. Apply to\nMother Superior, 949 West 27th\nAvenue, Vancouver, B. C.\nINSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE\nC. D. BLACKWOOD, Insurance of\nevery description. Real Est. Ph. 99.\nS^!)  D. L   K^RR,  AOKNT'TTOR\nWawonesa Fire Ins. For better rales,\nJ. E. ANNABLE; REAL ESTATE,\nRentals, Insurance. Annable Blk.\nCHAS. F. McHARDY, INSURANCE,\nReal Estate. Phone 135.\nR. W. DAWSON, Reinstate, ff-\nsurance, Rentals. Next Hipperson\nHardware. Baker St. Phone 197.\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine shop, acetylene and electric\nwelding,  motor rewinding, commercial refrigeration\nPhone 593, 324 Vernon St.\nMEMORIALS\nPLACE A BRONZE ONE ON THE\ngrave of your loved one. Get price\nlist from Bronze Memorials Ltd.,\nP. O Box 726, Vancouver, B. C.\nPATENT ATTORNEYS\nW. ST. J. MILLER, A. M. E. 1. C\nRegistered Patent Attorney, Canada and U. S. A. 703-Zhd St. W\u201e\nCalgary. Advice free, confidential.\n8A8H FACTORIES\nLAWSON'S    SASH    FACTORY.\nHardwood merchant, 273 Baker St\nSECOND HAND STORE8\nWE BUY, SELL It EXCHANGE\nfurniture, etc. Ark Store. Ph, 534.\nHOME FURNITURE, BUY, SELL.\nExch., Rpr., Upholster. Phone 1032.\nWATCH REPAIRING\nWhen SUTHERLAND repairs youi\nwatch It is on time all the time\n345,   Baker   St..   Nelson,   B.   C.\nBIRTHS\nJONES - To Mr. and Mrs. R. M.\nJones, Observatory Street, at Kootenay Lake General Hospital, August i9, a son.\nLeague of Nations\nBranch Members Talk\nInternational Police\nDiscussion of an international police force, carried over from the\nprevious meeting, was continued\nwhen members of Nelson Branch of\nthe League of Nations Societies met\nat the home of Mrs. Gretchen Gibson on the North Shore. H. D. Dawson, leader of the Foreign Policies\ngroup, was in the chair.\nMany members expressed the\nopinion that an international police\nforce would not be effective unless\ndisarmament came first. Rev. J. A.\nDonnell suggested that the causes\nol war should be discussed. The\nbasic cause had been one of population, he felt. A. D. Papazian suggested that another chief cause was\nprofit.\nA resolution favoring an international police force was passed.\nWard Liquor Trial\nAdjourned One Week\nTrial of a charge against W. A,\nWard of Procter of supplying liquor\nto a minor was adjourned Friday\nfor one week by Stipendiary Migi-\nstrate William Irvine in Provincial\nPolice Court. Constable G. A. Brabazon, prosecuting, requested the adjournment.\njourn Trail Case\noc Reckless Driving\nTRAIL, B. C, Aug. 20 - The once:\nadjourned case of John Meuller.\ncharged with reckless driving and\nfailure to return to the scene of an\naccident, Was further adojurned by\nMagistrate Parker Williams in city\npolice court Saturday. Adjournment was until Tuesday at 10 a.m.\nFUNERAL SERVICES FOR\nFORMER EMPRESS CAPTAIN\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 20 (CP). -\nFuneral services were held here\nSaturday for Captain Frank Lawrence Davidson, 74, former Captain\nof the Empress of Russia and retired Marine Superintendent of the\nCanadian Pacific Steamships. He\ndied et his home here Thursday.\nCaptain Davidson was born ln\nNova Scotia and came to Vancouver\n41 years ago.\nAdj\nHELP WANTED\nCHRISTMAS CARD SALESPEO'\npie. Big profits if you are a\nworker and begin NOW. Choice\nof 4 different lamples\u2014over 300\ndesigns \u2014 more than twice sny\nother line in Canada. You can\nsatisfy any taste or pocket book.\n20 different Boxed Assortments,\nTags and Seals. Wonderful Birthday Box. Everything you need so\nyou can sell something to every\nprospect. No experience necessary.\nExtra bonus cards for early orders. Literature lent without obligation. Be first, write today.\nMASTER KRAFT LIMITED.\nRoom 14 Doherty Bldg.,\nToronto.\nWANTED MARRIED COUPLE 30-\n35 yn. for farm. Both willing\nworkers. Able to milk. Man must\nbe handy with repairing. Woman\ngood cook Neat, clean. No children. Box 47, Slocan, B. C:_\nWANTED IMMEDIATELY, GIRL\nfor cafe, soda fountain and confectionery counter. Must be experienced. Give referencei to Box\n59, Creston, B. C.\nWANTED - PRACTICAL NURSE\nfew wks. 818 Vernon St afternoons\nWANTED - GIRL FOR HOUSE-\nwk. Sleep out. References Ph. 255L\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nALL AROUND EXPERIENCED\nfarm hand from the prairie. Have\nlight delivery truck. Would like\na dairy job, milking, driving truck\nand all general work. Would accept any kind of steady job. Box\n8181 Daily News.\t\nYOUNG MAN REQUIRES WORK.\nWill tackle anything. Experienced in painting and jnsulatlng.\nAlso handy at gardening, and all\ncarpenter repair work. Box 8187\nDally News.\t\nEXPERIENCED BOOKKEEPER lc\ngeneral office clerk with best of\nreferences, requires work. Part\ntime accounts a specialty. Will go\nany place. Box 8188 Dally News\nFIRST CLASS HOUSE KEEPER\nwants work at once. Will go anywhere. Good cook ana clean.\nWould like housework or hotel\n\/ork. Box 8032 Dally News.\nAMBITIOUS YOUNG MAN 27. Dfi-\nilres work ln grocery or meat\nmarket. 12 years experience\nQualifications and references. Box\n8081 Daily News.\nHIGH SCHOOL STUDENT RE-\nqulres home in return for services. Age 17. Good references.\nBox 7419 Daily News. .\nAn Ad Here Is Your\nBest Agent\nPERSONAL\nFREE SEX BOOKS, CATALOGUE\non request \u2014 12 paget include*\nDrug Sundries. Largeit assortment of Sanitary Rubber Goods\nin Canada. Send 25c for six samples Supreme Brand Latex.\nAdults only. Supreme Specislty\nCo., Dept. N-D, 189 Yonga\nStreet, Toronto, Ontario.\nMEN - SUITS CLEANED, PRESS-\ned, repaired or altered. H. J\nWilton's, Ph, 107, 534 Josephine.\nFREE-SNAPPY BANDANA WITH\nbottle of Hind's Honey A Almond\nCream 49c, st Mann, Rutherford.\nBREAD AT EVERY MEAL IS\nwhat the growing child needal\nBuy Choquette'i Mother't Bretd.\nSANITARY RUBBER GOOfiS. 24\nLatex $1. Free price list. J. Jensen,\n1042 Harp, Vancouver, B. C.\nWHEN IN VANCOUVW SfOPTiT\nAimer Hotel. Opp, C. PJR. Depot.\nBE ASSURED OF FRESH FRUITS\nand vegetables at all times\u2014buy\nst Star Grocery. Spec, refrigeration\nNERVOUS BREAKDOWN. NEB-\nvous Exhaustion. Mtlanrholit\nWrite Box 7895 Dtlly News\t\nGENUINE LATEX SPEClAlTGfE\n25 for $1.00 or jlfty prepared 18\nfor $1.00 (free catalogue) National\nImporters, Box 244, Edmonton. .\nLONELY PEOPLE IN CANADA!\nJoin Elite Club. Confidential reliable. For particular! and de-\nscrip'.ions send 10c, Box 121,\nRegina, Saskatchewan.\nAN' OFFER TO EVERTTN\"-\nventor, list of wanted inventions\nand full information sent free. The\nRamsay Company, World Patent\nAttorneys, 273 Bank St., Ottawa\nBOYS - STAMPS - GfRLS\nForeign and British Colony itampi\nat far less than catalogue prices.\nWrite, at once, for approval sheets\nto G. F. Goodwin, 630 4th Avenue\nWest, Calgary, Alberta, __^^\nVACATION SNAP SHOTS BRING\nback pleasant memories. Let ui\nmake extra prints for relativei\nand friendl. Prints 3c each. Films\ndeveloped and printed 29c.\nKrystal Photos, Wilkie, Sask.\nENROLL NOW FOR A BEAUTY\nCourse under Protestor Nicholas,\nInternationally famoui hair stylist\nsnd Beauty Culture Authority\nWrite for particulan, SpokBne\nSchool of Beauty Culture,\nSpokane, Washington,\nHYGIENE SANITARY SUPPLIES\nand drug sundries. For highest\nquality goods at lowest prices,\nwrite tor latest price list, or tend\n$1 for Special Sample assortment\nof 24 postpaid under plain sealed\ncover. Western Supply Agency,\nBox 667 Vancouver, B, C.\nTEACHERS WANTED        FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS PROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nWANTBD-LADY TEACHER FOR\nprivate home. Three pupils. Mrs.\nA. G. Watson, Appitdait, B. C.\nPRINCIPAL FORYAHK SUPER1-\nor (two room) school. Apply to\nSecty., School Board, Yahk, B. C.\nFOR AHO WANTED TO RENT\nWANTED, BY SEPT. 1, FURNISH-\nssd ta\u00bbue, with two bedrooms. Re-\nliable tentnt BoxJ222 Dally News.\nFOR RENT SIX ROOM HOUSE,\n708 Silica StreeL 822 per month.\nAp. Ph. 662 during business hours\nTOR RSNT MODERN APART-\nments. Unfurnished. Apply Room\n203 Johnstone Building.\nFURN. AND UNFURN. 3 A 4 RM\nsuites, reduced rates. Kerr Apts\nFOR RENT 3 ROOMS, FtJRNISIl-\n' ad. Suitable for two. Phone 307L.\nFOR RENT APARTMENT MEUI-\ncal Arts bldg Ap C l^ MrHardy\nFOR RENT 6 RM. HOUSE, with\nfurnace. 1013 Stanley St. Ph. 67\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms for rent Annable Block\nFOR RENT 3 RM. FURNISHED\naparttnent. Petty Apartments.\nTERRACE APTS Beautiful modem\nfrlgldalre equipped suites\t\nROYAL HOTEL. NEW LOW\nmonthly rates. Phone 686^\nFOR RENT - 8ffOOM FLAT. 408\nHouston Street.\nROOM AND BOARD\nCOMFORTABLE BOARD Si ROOM\n2 icW. girls. Box 8223 Daily News\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND SUPPLIES. ETC.\nWE .MANUFACTURE\nALL TYPES OF MILLWORK\nWindowi, Sajh. Doors, Kitchen\nCupboards, Store and Restaurant\nFixtures, Screens, Ironing Boards\nMedicine Csblnets, Office Desks,\nsll detail millwork.\n\u25a0 NELSON SASH & DOOR\nCO. LTD.\n701 Front Street. Phone 292\nWe want jour business!\nPIPE, TUBES, FITTINGS\nNEW  AND  USED\nLarge stocks for immediate shipment\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD\n1st Avenue and Main St.\nVancouver, B. C.\nWHISKY BARRELS FOR WINE\nAll sizes; also barrels for other\npurposes. Active Trading, 916\nPowell Street, Vancouver, B. C.\nFOR SALE 6 FT. PLATE GLASS\nshowcase, 1st class condition. The\nFashion Firat Shop, 446 Baker St.\nPIPE AND FITTING\nATLAS IRON lc METALS LTD\n250 Prior Std. Vancouver, IMJ\nFOR SALE - BARRELS. KEGS,\nsugar sacks, liners. McDonald Jam\nCompany, Ltd., Nelson, B^jti\t\nFOR SALE. PIANO. GOOD CON-\nditlon. Box 8168 Daily News.\nWANTED   MISCELLANEOUS\nFOR SALE YOUNG PURE BRED\nJersey cow. T. B.Hested. Freshened\n1 month.-H. A. McCarthy, R. R. 1.\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS\nor Iron, any quantity. Top prices\npaid. Active Trading Company,\n916 Powell St\u201e Vancouver. B. C.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nGOOD BUSINESS LOCATION IN\nEast Trail, suitable for a Drug\nStore, snd fountain. Approximately 4000 people. Closest store\n1-2 miles away. Vacant Sept. 10.\nWrite T. J. Johniton, 1437 Mc-\nQuarrie Street, Trail, B. C. \u25a0\nFOR SALE, CHICKEN BUSINESS.\n300 laying White Leghorn hens.\nMn. Joe Payant, Salmo, B. C.\nLOST AND FOUND\nFOUND - LADIES  OVERCOAT.\nPlease enquire at Dally News.'\nIM IS THE CLASSIFIED\nPHONE NUMBER\nMACHINERY\nCITY AUTO WRECKERS CAN\nbring their Portable Arc Welder\nto you, anywhere 431 Josephine st.\nFARM. CARDEN & NURSERY\nPRODUCTS, FERTILIZER\nFRUIT GROWERS!\nShip your berries  and  cherrlei\nto an Independent Fruit Company.\nReturns are made every Saturday.\nROYAL FRUIT COMPANY\nREGINA, SASK.\nCLASSIFIED MAIL ORDERS\ntrom out-of-town resident! given\nprompt   attemion\nOUR ERROR\nIn our td Friday last we described the location of s property FOR\nSALE as being in the 900 Block\nHoover Street. The number is 714\nHoover, one Block from High\nSchool, one Block from Junior\nHigh, four Blocks from Central\nSchool and one Block from Street\nCar. Get the key from our offlct\nand make in inspection. You will\nbe surprised a Home of tills description can be sold tt the price\noifered, (L'DOAft\nOn terms 90*Vj\\J\npobertson Dealty (\"ompany | bl\n347 Baker Street Nelson B.C.\nSAVE MONEY AND BUY THIS\none: Fully modern year old compact Bungalow located fine district Fairview, centred in tiroi\nnew lawn, cement walk to glassed\nin porch, do your wuhing on cement floor in basement. Cost $3900\nyours for $3000 Cash. Phone 980\nNOW, Frank A. Stuart, 577 Baker\nStreet, Nelion, B, C,       \u25a0\nFOR SALE \u2014 20 ACRES, 3 ORl\ncleared and fenced. Wood, larga\n3 rm. houre, attic. oGod basement.\nCement foundation. Plenty of well\nwater near creek Near City Power\nplant, $1200. Mrs. A. Jerome, P. O,\n_Box_257, Nelson, B. C.\nCOOK YOUR OWN MEALS, REAX\nsnap on an established boarding\nhouse, one block from centre or\nCity, Live well and retire early\non the profits. Phono 980, Frank A.\nStuart, 577 Baker St\u201e Nelion, B, C.\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SATE,\non  easy  terms  In  Alberta  and.\nSaskatchewan. Write, for full Information to 908. Dept. of Natural 1\nResourcei, C. P. R\u201e Calgary, Alta.\nFOR SALE 5 RM. HOUSE CEMENT\nfdtn. 2 cor. lots. 1423 Vancouver St.\nPETS. CANARIES. BEES, ETC.\nFOR SALE - NEW ZEALAND\nWhite and Flemish Giant Rabbits\nfrom prize winning itock at Van-\ncouver Fair. H. Abey, Mjrror_Lake.\nHUNTERS, 2 BEAUTIFUL SPRING\".\ner males, 12 and 6 months, retrieve\nland and water. Photoi on request.\nEd Sparrow, Enderby, B. C.\n1 ONLY PUREBRED DOBERMAN\nPinscher pup. 3 months old. Ap-\nply Box 8185 Dally Newi.\nPUREBRED LABRADOR P~UF3\nfor tale. Mature dogs. Harrop,\nAbbotsford, B. C.\n0,\n\u2022<\nT\nYES-MRS. UPPEUATTUM- MY\nDAUGHTER-LADY WORTHKtOTTEM-\nAND HER HUSBAWD ARE GOING\nTO LIVE IN ENGLAND -AND MC\nJIGGS AND I ARE GONG TO JOIN\nTHEM LATER OW-\nMRS. JQ6S-I THINK MX1 HAD\nBETTER SPEAK TO MISTER\nJIGGS IN THE CELLAR-HE IS\nDOWN THERE IN THE\nPITCH DARK-WALKING ALL\nAROUND WITH AW UMBRELLA-\nV\nLISTEN, eRI6SS,I'M PAYING YOU FOR MUSIC.NOT\nDANCING~OUR PATRONS ARE COMPLAINING,^\u2014'\niw>iP __tA right, y*p% rea\nV>. S&k    52S MISTER >?> .  \\  (i*J\nHMM-TS*\nMAC OVER\nBY THE ,\nMANAGER.\nf\\ I'LL BET.\n\/\/\/irJE'Smttmir Im^^^aUi\nCrt. W>. fc'Tf feim.Ti ^ssJK.sr. !\u00ab ,\\VWJ n,:Vm rrifrv-l  Ls-sls^H                     f \\'\nWI \/i\nHow Al Lost His Ball and Chain .\n\u2014Advertiiement\nEnd \" Good for Nothing \"   Bjg*,i5tk-'1 \"--\"\u00bb\u00bb*-\nFeeling   ... It Makes\nSuch a Difference\ncope with tilings, It may be due to a\nsluggish system... the result of too little\nbulk in the diet. Post's Bran Rakes may\nbe just what you need to correct it You'll\nfind Post's Bran Flakes with Other Parts\nof Wheat, a delicious cereal\u2014just full of\nappetizing flavour and goodness. Eat them\nevery day. If this does not readily relieve\nlistless, tired feeling, see a physician, nt\nssL^^UssMsU^s]^|^MgdUg|b|i|fJ|a&\n wm ii \"iiujmj.-i ,-\nipipipipipnii. iwpm linn.\n: . \u2022\n\u25a0\nlO<^\nirtners Are Coming; Parade,\nConcerts, Dance Scheduled Nelson\n15   Hospitals   Treat J14\n65,000 Crippled\nChildren\nOf uncommon interest to Nelson\neltliens is the forthcoming visit\nof the Potentate ind members of\nOiseh Temple of the. Order of the\nMystic Shrine. William Ross of Vancouver is the present head of this\norganization ln the Juriidiction nt\nBritish Columbia and the Yukon.\nIt will be recalled that some years\nago a similar visit was paid Nelson\nby this same Temple.\nThe program on the present oc-\neailon Is full snd varied and is calculated to be highly entertaining.\nIncluded In the visiting caravan is\nGlzeh Temple's Band, Its Patrol.\nand Its dance orchestra.\nArriving at 12 o'clock noon from\nTrail on September 2, by 1:30 p.m.\ntile Band and Patrol  will  be on\nrade en route from the depot to\nwhere the band will entertain pa>\nRe\n.ootemy   Lake  General   Hospital.\ntients and itaff with musical selections. Thence, by private cars, the\nvisitors will be taken to Lakeside\nPark, where the band will again,\nplay until about 4 p.m. At 7:30 p.m.\na concert will be given in the bend\n\u25a0hell, Vernon Street, after which\ndancing to the strains of Gizeh*\nDance Orchestra will commence at\nthe Civic Centre. Tickets for the\ndance are on sale.\nThere are no other dances Just\nlike Shrine dances, resplendent with\ntenet, Eastern costumes and effects which lend a touch of the\nmysticism of the East to the gatherings, according to L. H. Hawling of\nVictoria. To those who have not\npreviously attended a Shrine dance\nIt il an occasion; to those who have,\nIt is an urgent appointment, he\nadded.\n\"A Temple of Shriners Is an aggregation of men that has learned tlie\nvalue of wholesome tun; a group\nthat has been taught to amuse and\nto be amused. But more than that.\nIt is but a unit In a continent-wide\norganization which, behind the curtains, hai taken a serious under,\ntaking in hand and Is making a\nwonderful Job of it,\" Mr. Rawlmas\nexplained. \"It Is the owner of ho\nfewer than 15 hospitals Where poor\ncrippled children, regardless of any\naffiliation may receive without\ncharge the benefit of the contlnent'i\nfinest orthopaedic lurgery. Upwards\nof 65,000 children have been thus\nsuccessfully treated in the past few\nyears.\n\"Million! of dollars have been invested by the Shrine in the cause\nof crippled children and the work\ncontinues year by year, paying the\nfinest kind of interest, that of pride.\nln worthwhile endeavor and the\nsatisfaction of achievement,\" said\nMr. Rawlings, \"The doors of the\nShriners' Magic' Houses are wide\nopen to all crippled children under'range.\nNILION DAILY NIWS. NILION, 8. C\u2014MONDAY MORNING, AUG. 11. 193J \u25a0\n\u2014  -AUE  NINI\n.    I\n. years of age, of leu wealthy parentage, but Just as Irrevocably doled to those who cm afford prlvtte\ntreatment. From the Kootenay District children are at preient being\ntreated at both the Spokane and\nthe Winnipeg units but most of the\nBritish Columbia children and thoie\nfrom the Yukon ire ient to the hospital at PorUand, Ore.\n\"Nelsonltei who are not memben\nof the Mystic Shrine, when gazing\nupon the frolics of Shrineri and\nmeditating upon their evident lev\nity, will find added interest in the\nknowledge that behind the mak\/'\nup there lies the most wonderful\nand serious of undertakings, the\ncaring for the unfortunate children of others on a scale so large\nand so difficult to manage that it has\nbeen frequently referred to ts tht\nworld's greatest philanthropy,\" he\nconcluded.\nWheal Prices\nal Weeks High\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 20 (CP)-Wheat\nfutures prices staged a spirited rally\nin the week's final session on Winnipeg Grain Exchange Saturday. Increased political tension in Europe\nand a strong Liverpool market\nprompted good buying and left\nvalues 1 to % cent higher, Octpber\nat 52%, November 53%, December\n53% and May 57%.\nExport Interests made fair purchases in the pit and boosted estimates on the day's business to\naround 300,000 bushels. Sales Included 200,000 bushels worked from\nChurchill.\nWhile mills offered scattered tupport, most of the buying came from\nSouthern homes. It was believed,\nhowever, that some of the Southern\ninterest came out In connection with\nmUtr-iuarket spreading between\nWinnipeg and Chicago.   '\nDiscouraging political dispatches\nfrom Europes danger zones, together with firmer Canadian C.I.F.\noffers and the influence of Friday's\nstrength on North American markets easily outweighed Argentine\nhedging at Liverpool and lifted\noverseas values %-%d. Chicago\ngained about a cent while Buenos\nAires continued unchanged.\nIn the coarse grain pit exporters\nwere credited with taking a little\nbarley and Southern traders made\nsmall purchases of rye. Cash wheat\ntransactions were unimportant\nQUITO, Ecuador (CP). \u2014 Five\ngiant raspberries, each bigger than\na penny, were shipped from here\nfor exhibition in London. They were\ncollected with other oddities by A.\nH. C. Alston, exploring the Andean\nMontreal Stock Exchange\nFruit Activity\nal Creston Od\nfor Time Being\nPeach   Plum  Sales\nHandicapped by\nU. S. Prunes\nCRESTON, B. C, Aug. 20-Pend-\nlng the arrival of Wealthy apples,\nwhich are due about the end ot the\nweek, there is a minimum of activity in fruit shipping circlei at\nCreston.\nRed Astrachan, Yellow Transpar\nent and Llveland Raspberry ap\nplei ire cleaned up. A few more\nwill see the end of the Ducheu,\nmost of which have gone out al\ncookers.\nPeach plums sre arriving ln vol\nume and had been moving satisfactorily all week, but a snag wai encountered Saturday when selling\nagenciei were advised that U. S.\nprunes were available at a price on\na par with B. C. plums and were\ngreatly outselling the latter,\nClapp'i Favorite pears have commenced to reach the packing sheds.\nThey are of good quality and telling concern! are hopeful ot a\ncleanup at preient prices, due to\nthe fact that, the price on Bart-\nletts has been set at a figure that\nshould bring a demand for Clapp's.\nLocally Bartlett picking is expected\nto start ihortly.\nThere Is a movement In cucumbers but it it rapidly eating off as\nthe Prairie gardens are.now about\nable to supply requirements. The\ncold backward Spring has sffected\nthe tomatoes. Either the early bloom\nWsscs   uss.Us>yssd  vs   iSt'\u2014Ximi   tu  .uCh\nan extent that they are 10 daya later\nthan usual In coming ln commercial\nquantities. They ihould be plentiful, however, to expedite the mixed\nctr movement which will commence\nss soon ss the Weilthys make their\nappea ranee.\nTransport by rail will be on the\ntame basis.as last year.\nIt was hoped there would be an\nIncrease in the number of points at\nwhich the fawrlte five-ton minimum express car service would\nprevail but to date thorn Is no\nannouncement of any extension.\nExchanges\nMONTREAL, Aug. 20 (CP) .-British and foreign exchange cloied\nsteady Saturday. Nominal ratei for\nlarge amounts:\nFrance, franc, .020493.\nGermany, reichsmark, .4013.\nGreat Britain, Dound, 4.6812.\nItaly,  lire,   .0526.\nUnited Statet dollar, par.\nINDUSTRIALS;\nAlta Pac Grain  3\nAlloc Brew of Can ..... ..... 16%\nBathurst P & P A  5%\nCanadian Bronze      30\nCan Bronze Pfd   105\nCan Car Sc Fdy Pld  18'A\nCan Celanese     17\nCan Celanese Pfd     105%\nCan North Power     16%\nCan Steamship  1%\nCan Steamship Pfd    7%\nCockshutt Plow      5%\nCon Min It Smelting     - 41V4\nDominion Coal Pfd    18%\nDom Steel lc Coal B  9%\nDominion Textile     38\nDryden Paper      3%\nFoundation C of C  8%\nGatineau Power \u00bb 14%\nGatineau Power Pfd    94V\u00ab\nGurd Charlei        5%\nHoward Smith Paper   10%\nH Smith Paper Pfd     05\nMetal Markets\nLONDON, Aug. 20 (AP). - Bar\ngold 141i 7d, unchanged. (Equivalent 134.78).\nBar lilver 17%d, up Ml, (Squivt-\nlent 58.07 centa).\nMONTREAL \u2014 Bar gold in London was unchanged at 184.78- tn\nounce ln Canadian funds; 148\u00ab 7d\nIn Britiih. The fixed 135 Washing,\nton price amounted to 138 in Canadian, with the United States dollar\nat par.\nSpot: Copper, electrolytic 12.00;\ntin 52.50; lead 4.85; zinc 4.55;\nantimony 1100.\nSilver futures closed itesdy on\nSaturday, 15 points up. Bid:\nAugust 35.60.\nNEW YORK - Copper itesdy:\nelectrolytic tpot 10.50; export 10.65.\nOther metals nominally unchmged.\nSlightly Easier\nTone, Toronto\nTORONTO, Aug. 20 (CP). - A\"\ngeneril eaaler tone marked Saturday's session of the Toronto stock\nexchange. Sales were approximately\n190,000 shares.\nCanada. Packers dipped 3 points,\nGoodyear dropped 1%. Hollinger,\nDome and Lake Shore htld up well\nagainst the lower tendency ln high\npriced golds. Sigma dropped 25\ncents, Macassa loit 15 and losses of\n6 lo 10 cents were boarded by\nO'Brien, Pamour, Pickle Crow, Sylvanite. UchI Gold and Stadancona\ndlnped Into new low1 territory.\nFalconbridge had a 20-cent advance. Consolidated Smelters tell\nmore than a point. Noranda Was up\nVt ind International Nickel was\ndown 1%. Eldorado fell to 90 cents,\na new low. Ventures wu off 15.\nCanadian Wlrebound Boxes md\nBrazilian Traction touched new low\npricu for liie y..t:\nWeitern oils ihowed losses ranging up to 8 cents. Davies Petroleum,\nFoundation, Home Oil md Okalta\nfell to their lowest marks of thit\nyear. Texas Ctnadlin fell to 60 \u2014\na new low \u2014 but recovered and\nat the close posted a gain of 2%\ncents.\nWall SL Calmer\nal War News, but\nTrading Is light\nNEW YORK, Aug. 20 (AP). -\nStock mirket triders, while itill\n\"war conscious,\" ippirently took a\nlittle cslmer view of the Europein\njumble Saturday snd selling contracted noticeably during the brief\nsession.\nAlthough t few Issues were able\nto negotiate any real recovery from\nFriday's shsrp release, further decline! were limited to fractions in\nmoit cases. Here and there letbacks\not around a point tppeared on small\nturnovers.\nOfferings dried up it the start\nand there wu no particular pickup\nln activity during the remainder of\nthe proceeding!. Transfers tor the\ntwo hours approximated 250,000\niharei.\nThe step of Germiny ln tightening\nIts . military \"protective\" grip on\nSlovakia failed tq excite Wall Street\nInasmuch as It wil ih line with expectations.\nSpeculative forces recognized that\noverseas tension' remained as a\nprime market Influence and the inclination wai to stand uide for the\nmoment.\nUnder witer the greater part of\nthe day were Bethlehem Steel, General Motors, Montgomery Ward,\nDouglu Aircraft, American Telephone, International Nickel, Dupont,\nU. S. Rubber and General Electric.\nSome of these revived at the finish.\nReilttant were U. S. Steel, Chrysler, Sears Roebuck, Western Union,\nStandard Oil of N. J., Third Avenue\nRailway, N, Y. Central and Allied\nChemical.\nC P. R. and Mclntyre Porcuolne\nslipped a trifle In the Canadian\ngroup while most others couted\nalong evenly, In the bond market\nDominion 4s gained a minor fraction.\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 20 (CP).-Grain\nfutures quotations:\nWHEAT     Open High Low Cloie\nOct    52%   52%   51%   52\">4\nNov  53%   53%   53%\nDec    53%   54      53      53V.\nMay     56%   57%   66%   57%\nOATS\nOct    27%   28%   27%   28\nDec _   27%   27%   27%   27%\nMay     28%   28%   28%   28%\nBARLEY\n34%\n33 li\n33\nSix Varieties of Apples Sell for\nEight Pounds for a Quarter, Market\n34%\n34%\n.'S3'j\na4%\n88%\n33\n34''i\n34'\/i\n33%\n34%\n129\n124%\n37 >i\n38%\n411,\nOct.\nOct. (new)\nDec;\t\nMiy \t\nFLAX\nOct  129      \u2014\nDec _'.    \u2014     \u2014\nRYE\nOct    38%   38%   38\nDec    38%   39%   38%\nMay    41%   41%   41%\nCASH PRICES:\nWHEAT - No. 1 hard 53%; No.\n1 nor. 53%; No. 2 nor. 50; No. 3 nor.\n46%; No. 4 nor. 42%; No. 5, 38%;\nNo. 6. 34%; feed 33%; No. 1 girnet\n43%; No. 2 garnet 40%; No. 3 garnet\n39%;No. 1 durum 47%; No. 4 special\n41; No. 5 special 39%;.No. 6 special\n36%; No. 1 mixed 38%; track 52%.'\nOATS - No. 2 C. W. 27%; Ex.\n3 C. W. 25%; No. 3 C. W. 25%; No.\n1 feed 24%; No. 2 feed 23; No. 3\nfeed 21; track 27.\nBARLEY - 6- and 2-row No. 1\nC. W. 33%; 6- and 2-row No. 2 C. W.\n33%; (-row No. 3 C. W. 33%; No. 1\nfeed 33%; No. 2 feed S\\*. No. 3\nfeed 29%; track 33%.\nFLAX - No. 1 C. W. and track\n128; No. 2 C. W. 124; No. 3 C, W.\n110; No. 4 C. W. 105.\nRYE - No. 2 C. W 37%.\nImperial Oil       25\nInter Petroleum     21%\nInter Nickel of Oan  \u201e.. 47%\nLake of the Woods  1%\nMcColl Frontenac   5%\nNational Brew Ltd  40\nNat Brew Pfd     42%\nOgilvie Flour new      26\nPrice Bros '  10\nQuebec Power     16\nShawnigan W lc P  19%\nSt Lawrence Corp  2%\nSt Lawrence Corp Pfd .  9\nSouth Can Power  \u201e  11\nSteel of Can Pfd     74\nWestern Grocers  45%\nBANKS:\nCommerce    167\nDominion      207\nImperial  218\nMontreal     211\nNova Scotia     300\nRoyal     190%\nTeronto ..' :  252\nToronto Stock Quotations\nMINES:\nAmm  Cold   06\n\/Vnglo-Huronlan.'....;.........:.....    2.25\nArntfield Gold   12\nAstoria Rouyn Mines 03\nAunor   Gold        2.09\nBagamac Rouyn      .08%\nBankfield  Gold     .... 22\nBase Metals Mining   15%\nBeattie Gold Mines      1.10\nBidgood Kirkland  15%\nBig Missouri    11%\nBobjo Mines       .08%\nBralorne Mines        10.90\nBrett Trethewey         .01\nBuffalo Ankerite       8.75\nBunker Hill Extension    05\nCmadian Malartlc     63\nCariboo Gold Quartz        2.15\nCastle-Trethewey       76\nCentral Patricia        2.40\nChibougamau      14\nChromium M & S  48\nCoast Copper      1.75\nConiaurum Mines        1.52\nConsolidated M lc S    41.25\nDarkwater     04\nDome Mines       33.50\nDorval-Slscoe       03\nEast Malartic        2.50\nEldorado Gold     91\nFalconbridge Nickel        5.50\nFederal Kirkland     03%\nFrancoeur Gold\nGillies Lake   \t\nGod's Lake Gold   ..\n\u2022 Gold Belt    \t\nGranada Gold Mines\nGrandoro Mines\nGunnar Gold     45\nHard Rock Gold   \t\nHarker Gold    \t\nHollinger     \t\nHowey Gold    \t\nHudson Bay M & S\nInternational Nickel        47.00\nJ-M Consolidated          .03%\nJack  Waite     20%\nJacola Gold          .04%\nKerr-Addison            1.90\nKirkland Lake        1.35\nLake Shore Mines        39.50\nLeitch Gold  75\nLebel Oro Mines         .02%\nLittle Long Lac        2.85\nMacassa Mines           4.50\nMacLeod Cockshutt          1.70\nMadsen Red Lake Gold 34\nMandy    11\nI Mclntyre-Porcuoine        7.50\n\u25a0 McKenzie Red Lake        1.22 ,\n_ McVitUe-Graham l.i\n\u25a0 MeWatters Gold      50\n\u25a0 Mining Corporation         1.16\nI Minto Gold         .01\n\u25a0 Monet* Porcupine    97\n\u25a0 MOrrts-Kirkland      06%\nI Nipissing Mining        1.32\n.05%\n.35%\n.29\n.02%\n.04%\n14.50\n.32%\n33.75\nPerron Gold   1.78\nPickle Crow Gold    u. 4.50\nPioneer Gold     2.45\nPremier Gold        1.71\nPowell Rouyn Gold     1.68\nPreston Eut Dome '.\nQuebec Gold\nReno Gold Mines'..\nRoche Long Lac\n1.43\n.26\n.44%\n.05\nSan Antonio Gold        1.75\nHome Oil Down\nCALGARY, Aug. 20 (fcP).-Olls\nwere irregular oq Calgary's Stock\nExchange Saturday with Home off\nfive at 1.90. Transfers totalled 11,550.\nPrairie Royalties sagged three at\n19. Okalta, weak earlier ih the week,\ngained two at 90.\nMontreal Produce\nMONTREAL, Aug. 20 (CP). \u2014\nCanadian commodity exchinge.\nSpot: Butter, Que. 20%-21%. Eggs,\nA-large 29.\nButter futures: Aug. 21-21%; Sept.\n21%-%; Oct. 21%-%; Nov. 22-22%.\nWorld Exchanges\n. BOSTON, Aug. 20 (AP).-Deaplte\na quiet Foreign Exchange market,\nthe Dutch guilder added .01 to its\nFridsy gain of .06 of a cent ln\nterms of the dollar. There was heavy\ncontinental selling of the pound\nsterling ln London, but the price\nwai held up through English control operations.\nClosing rates, Great Britain in dollars, others in cents:\nGreat Britain 4.68%; Ctnsds.\nMontreal ln Boston 100.00, Canada,\nBoiton ln Montreal, 100.00; Belgium\n16.99%; Denmark 20.91; Finland\n2.06%; France 2.64 15-16; Germany\n40.13%, benevolent 19.20, travel 11:\nGreece .85%; Hungary .19.70; Italy\n5.26%; Netherlands 53.66%; Norway\n23.53; Poland 18.85; Portugal 4.28:\nRumania .74; Sweden 24.13; Switzerland 22.38%; Argentina (official)\n31.21, Argentina (free) 23.20; Brazil\n(official) 6.05, Brazil (free) 5,10;\nMexico 17, nominal; Japan 27.31:\nHong Kong 2850; Shanghai 7.14\nYugoslavia 2.31.\n(Rttei In spot ctblet unless otherwise indicated).\nKINGSTON, Jamaica (CP). \u2014 A\ngrant to Jamaica to fight a banana\ntree, blight hat \u25a0 been announced\nby the Britiih Depirtment of\nAgriculture,\nDow Jones Averages\nHigh    Low\n30 industrials     136.57   134.87\n20 rails     27.01    26.85\n15 utilities     25.30    25.04\n40 bonds  : \t\nClose Change\n135.11 off    .43\n26.96 off    .08\n25.26 off    .15\n89.17 off    .04\nQuotations on Wall Street\nNoranda\nNormetal\n1 O'Brien Gold\nOmega Gold\n80.75\n.43\n1.99\n.27\nPamour Porcupine         1.95\nI Paulore M        \t\nI Payma'ter Cons   \t\n.Oil's\nM\n1 in\nShawkey Gold 00%\nSheep Creek Gold   1.16\nSherritt Gordon  95\nSiscoe Gold    _  1.08\nSladen Malartic    36\nStadacona Rouyn  43\nSt Anthony    08\nSudbury Basin      1.95\nSullivan Consolidated    73\nSylvanite      3.15\nTeck-Hughes Gold      4.10\nToburn Gold Minei     1.75\nTowagmac    20\nVentures      4.50\nWaite Amulet    6.15\nWhitewater      01%\nWright Hargreaves     8.05\nYmir Yankee Girl     .04%\nOIL8:\nBritish American     21.00\nChemical Research  20\nImperial       15.00\nInter Petroleum   21.50\nINDUSTRIALS:\nAbitibi Power A 70\nBell Telephone     _ 173%\nBrazilian T L lc P  7%\nBrewers lc Distillers  4\nBrewing Corporation     1\nB C Power A   27\nB C Power B  2%\nBuilding Products     17\nCanada Bread     .'.  4\nCan Bud Malting  4\nCan Car.& Foundry   7% \\\nCan Cement      7\nCan Malting       34\nCan Pacific Railway   3%\nCan Ind Alcohol A   1.90\nCon Wineries     1%\nCons Bakeries     16%\nCosmos     77%\nDominion Bridge     25\nDominion Stores     5%,\nDom Tar & Chem    4%\nDistillers Seagrams     16%\nFanny Farmer         22%\nFord of Canada A   18%\nGen Steel Wares     5\nGoodyear Tire      .    70\nGypsum UA   4%\nHamiltoh Bridge  1  \u25a0\nHinde  Dauche     41%\nImpertil Tobacco   16%\nLoblaw A  25%\ntsoblaw  B  23%\nKelvlnater       11%\nMassev Harris  4%\nMontreal Power     31%\nMoore Corp      39\nNat Str-cl Car     47\nPage Hersey    ... 101\nPower Corp    9%\nPressed Metals  7%\nSteel of Can    ..,  71 ii\nHigh\nAm Can     98%\nAm For Pow . .    2%-\nAm Smelt & Re   43\nAm Telephone   163'\nAm Tobacco ....   80%\nAnaconda      24%\nBaldwin  10% '\nBait lc Ohio     4%\nBendlx Av     23%\nBeth Steel     56%\nBorden     20%\nCan Dry    17%\nCan Pacific .. ..    3%\nCerro de Pasco    35\nChrysler       79%\nCon Gas N Y ....   30%\nC Wright Pfd ....   23%\nDupont 156%\nEast Kodak 164.\nGen Elec     34%\nGen Foods     46%\nGen Motori .....   44%\nGoodrich     19%\nGranby       6%\nGrt Nor Pfd ....   21%\nHowe Sound .,..   46%\nHudson Mo      5\nInt Nickel _,    48\nLow\nClose\nInt Tel 6c Tel....\n5%\n5%\n5%\n98\n98\nKenn Copper ....\n34%\n34%\n34%\n2%\n2%\nMont Ward\t\n48%\n48%\n48%\n42%\n43\nNaih Motors ....\n6%\n6%\n6%\n162%\n162%\nN Y Central \u2022....\n13%\n13\n13%\n80%\n80%\nPack Motors ....\n3%\n3%\n3%\n23%\n23%\nPenn R.R \t\n16%\n16%\n16%\n10\n10%\nPhillips Pete ....\n32%\n32%\n32%\n4%\n4%\nPullman \t\n24%\n24%\n24%\n22%\n55%\n23\nRadio Corp    ,..\nRem Rand\n5%\n5%\n5%\n56%\n11%\n11%\n11%\n20%\n20%\nSafeway Stores\n42\n41%\n42\n17%\n17%\nShell Union\n10%\n10%\n10%\n3%\n3%\nS Cal Edison ....\n27%\n27%\n27%\n35\n35\nStin Oil of N J\n39%\n39%\n39%\n78%\n79\nTex Corp \t\nTex Gulf Sul ....\n34%\n33%\n34%\n30%\n30%\n28\n28\n28\n23%\n23%\nTlmken Roller\n42\n42\n42\n156\n156.\nUnion Car \t\n77\n76%\n76%\n164\n164\nUnion Oil of Cal 16\n16\n16\n34\n34%\nUnited Air\n34%\n34%\n34%\n46\n46%\nUn Pacific   \t\n94\n94\n94\n44%\n44%\nU S Rubber ...\n40%\n39\n39%\n18%\n19%\nU S Steel \t\n45%\n45\n. 43%\na\n6\nWarner Broth .\n4%\n4%\n. 4%\n21%\n21%\n46%\nWest Electric ...\n100%\n99%\n100%\n22%\n46%\nWest Union \u201e.\n22%\n22%\n5%\n5%\nWoolworth\n48\n47%\n48\n47\n47%\nYellow Tmck .\n14%\n14\n14%\nPrices Steadier\nVancouver Exchg.\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 20 (CP). -\nPrices were iteadler on the short\nthree hour session of the Vancouver\nStock Exchange Saturday and several gains from Friday's slump were\nrecorded. On the whole, though,\nthere wis \u2022 slight easing otf. Transactions totalled 41,000 shares.\nPrivateer nosed upward again in\nthe gold section, gaining 2 to 1.07\nand Premier jumped 2 lo 1.78. Fair-\nview firmed % to 3, Dentonia\nstrengthened % to 2% while Whitewater at 3 wai up %. Cariboo wu\noff 4 at 2.06, Hedley Mascot closed\ndown 2 at 1.78 while Reward eased\n% to 1%. Reno wa\u00ab unchanged at\n44 but Sheep .Creek slipped one\ncent to. 1.14. *\nOils were steady with Home at\n1.90, Mercury at 6%, Model at 24,\nMill City at 5, Okalta at 85. Calgary lc Edmonton at 1.78 and Brown\nat 19 all remaining unchanged. Freehold was off % at 3.   .'\u25a0,\nNicola In the base metals group\nwas steady at 2%.\nItalian Bonds Down\nNEW YORK, Aug. 20 (AP). -\nItalian bonds slipped in a soggy\nmarket Saturday u traders nervously watched another European crisis\ntake shape.\nItaly 7i dropped more than a\npoint, along with iome of .the\nItalian municipal md utility issues. Dealings were light.\nU. S. treasury loans generally\nwere marked down a little with\nthe rank and file of the list.\nMining Stocks Off\nOTTAWA, Aug. 20 (CP) .-Price\nIndex tor 25 mining stocks declined\nto 156.6 from 1515 the previous\nweek, according to a report from\nthe Bureau of Statistics. In the corresponding week of 1938 It was 155.3.\nIndex for eight banki stood at 85.3.\nunchanged from the previous week\nof latt year, and for 22 gold stocks\nat 116.5 compared with 117.4 the\nprevious week and 123.8 a year ago.\nThree Building\nPermits in Week\nThree building permits, totalling\n$675, for work which included renewal of a ceiling, repairing a basement and making alterations, were\nIssued at'the City Engineer's office\nin the past week.\nPermits from August 11 to August\n18 follow:\nResidential:\nE. Lawson, to repair bailment for\nMrs. Nellie Lawson, 614 Carbonate\nStreet, $75.\nCommercial:\nP. Burns lc Co. to renew ceiling,\netc.. 556 Baker Street, $450.\nD. Fawcett, to make alterations,\n436 Baker Street, $150.\nRaspberries Leave the\nScene; Very Few\nStrawberries\nWillie raspberries disappeared entirely from the Nelson Public Market scene, and strawberries were\nfew and far between at 10 cents a\nbasket, apples appeared in full force\nSaturday. Six varietlei of apples\nwere on sale, Transparent, Wealthier Duchesi, Early Reds, Graven-\nsteins snd Crab apples, thfe latter\ntwo making their first appearances\nof the season. All sold eight pounds\nfor a quarter.\nMeanwhile peaches dropped\nslightly In price, to $1.05 a crate,\n15 cents cheaper than the previous\nweek\nAmong the vegetables cauliflower\nJumped slightly In price to 10 cents\na pound, two cents more. Field tomatoes were up a cent a pound to\nseven cents. Prices of peppers which\nappeared for the first time a week\nago, varied between 10 and 12 cents\na pound.\nCorn on the cob was down to 30\ncents a dozen, while two bunches\nof broccoli sold for 25 cents, compared with 15 cents a bunch last\nweek. A week ago corn was priced\nat 35 cents a dozen.\nQuotations were:\nVEGETABLES\nNew beets, 3 bunches for     .10\nArtichokes. 4  lbs.       .25\nSauerkraut, Ib.    .10\n3   Ibs   fbr  25\nHadlshes, 2 bunches __:  05\nParsley, bunch    - 05\nCelery,  Ib      .08\nHorseradish, lb ____    .15\nSplmch, lb.-  03\nLeaf lettuce, bunch  05\nBroad beans, lb _    .08\nEndive, bunch    .05\nCom on cob, dozen\nSquash,   lb\t\nWatermelon, lb\t\nPeppers, lb\t\nEgg plants, 3 for \t\nFRUITS\nStrawberries, basket .\nGooseberries,  3   lbs.\nBing cherries, 5 lbs.\n.10 to\nJO\n.04\n.04\n.12\n.10\n.10\n.25\n.25\n.25\na\nRhubarb, lb.\nNew cabbage, lb\t\nCucumbers, 2 for   .05:\nHead lettuce, 3 heads ..:.\nGreen onions. 2 bunches\nCauliflower, lb\t\nA*P\u00abr3\u00a3us, bur.c. .,\u2014.\nNew carrots, 2 bunches\nField tomatoes, lb.\n.02%\n    .03\nor doz. .25\n.10\n.OS\n.10\nRoyal Anne cherries. 5 lbs.\nblack currants, 5 lbs.\nTransparent apples, 8 lbs    .25\nSour cherries, lb . 05  I\nApricots,   lb    .05   ',\nPeach plums, lb 05\nPeaches, lb 07\nand crate  $1.05\nDuchess apples, 8 lbs 25\nRed currants, 3 lbs.    .25\nEarly red apples. 8 Ibs 25\nLambert  cherries,  5  lbs     .35\nPears, No. l's, crate  $1.95\nNo. 2's, crate         $1.75\nHuckleberries, 2 lbs    .25\nGrapes,   lb.  10\nWealthy apples. 8 lbs 25\nGravenstein apples, 8 lbs    .25\nCrab apples, 8 lbs    J5\nMISCELLANEOUS\nSweet pickles. 2 quarts  L50\nBlack currant Juice, pt     .25\nSweet elder, gallon       JO\nPickles, pt.     J5\nCut flowers, sweet peu, bunch    .10\nor 3 for   25\nNasturtiums, bunch     *-'\u25a0...   Ms\nStrawberry juice, qt 50\nEGOS\nGrade \"A\" large, doz    .35\nGrade A medium, doz 32\nMEATS\nBeef, lb    .10 to J5\nVeal, Ib 10 to J5\nLamb, lb 10 to .25\nPork, lb     .18 to ,2!)\nBeef liver   Ib,   10   to .12\n.   .05\n.   .07\nBeet topi, bunch  _    .05\nSwiss chttr, lb    .05\nWater cress, bunch     .05\nMint, bunch  _.   .05\nCooking onions, bunch  05\nBroccoli, 2 bunches 25\nNew potatoes, 12 lbs 25\nPeu, lb '. 05\nChinese lettuce, 4 bunches _   .10\nWild carrots, 3 bunches     .10\nIcicle radishes, 2 bunches -   .05\nMarrow, lb 05\nGarlic, lb 20\nGolden Wax Beans, lb 05\nGreen string beans, lb 05\nKolrabl, each ...'. 05\nBeans, lb 10\nCalf liver, Ib.\nHead cheese, Ib. ..\nFowl,  lb\t\nSausage, 2 lbs. .\nPork Tenderloin.\nSpare Ribs, lb.\n 25 snd\n 12% to\nlb.   ....\nJO\n.20\n.20\n.25\nJO\n.15\nBologna, lb.   JO\nHamburger, lb.\nLiver sausage, lb. ..\nPork Sausage, lb.\nSpring chicken, lb.\nDAIRY  PRODUCE\n10\n..   J0\nButter, lb J5 to .15\nCream,  pint     .   .... . XI\nGoat cheese. lh\u00bb brown \u2014..\u2014 .35\nCottage cheeie, lb  jOS\nNew cheese, lb - .10\nWhipping cream. % pint  .15\nButtermilk,   gallon         JO\nGoat cheese, lb, white  J5\nCream cheese, lb  .25\nRent your house with a want nd.\nA NEW SERIAL\nThat's Packed With Thrills\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nMINE8 Bid\nBig Miss  12\nBralorne Gold    10.85\nBR Con. 02\nCariboo Gold      2.06   ,\nDentonia M  -.      .02%\nFairview Amal 02%\nFederal Gold        .00%\nGolconda          .04%\nGold Belt  29\nGrandview        .04\nOriill Wihksne 01%\nHefjley Mascot\nHome Gold\t\nIndian Mines ..\nIsland Mount\nKoot Belle \t\nLucky Jim   .01%.\nMinto     . .01%\nMcColl  20\nNicola        .02%\nNoble Five  01%\nPend Oreille ,     1.28\nPilot  00%\nPioneer      2.40\nPorter Idlho  02\nPrem Border  \u25a0   .00%\nPremier Gold     1.75 ^\nPriVitstr     I.M\nQuatsino Copptr ..     .02%\nRelief Arl 12%\nReno Gold  40.\nReward M  01%\nRufus Argenta        .00%\nSally Mines        \u2014\nSalmon Gold  03%\nSheep Creek       1.13.\nSilbak     1.20\nAik\n.15\n10.95\n.03\n2.10\n.02%\n.03%\n.06\n- .72\n.00%\n.00%       -\n.32 .34\n.75 .80\n.01%\n.02\n.03\n.02\n2.45\n1.80\n1.08\n.03\n.14\n.44%\n.01%\n,01\n.08%\n1.15\n1.25\ntClar.rl.rrl    P.1V1I1\"\n1% Silver Crest ,\n.00%      -\nBid\n.05\n.00%\n.00%\n.03%\n.04%\n,18\n.85\n.01%\n.17%\nTaylor B R\t\nWellington \t\nWesko  \t\nWhitewater  \t\nYmlr Yankee Girl..\nOILS\nA P Con\t\nAmal Oil\t\nAnglo Can\t\nBaltac Oil \t\nBrit Dominion \t\nBrown Corp\t\nCalgary tt Ed -    1.73\nCalmont Oil  >   .28\nDalhousie  -      .35\nEast Crest       .05\nFireitone Pete        \u2014\nFour Star Pete 12\nFreehold Corp ......      .03\nHargal Oil  19\nHighwood Sarcee ..      .12\nHome Oil      1.90\nMadison Oil       .02%\nMar Jon Oil       .04\nMcDougall Segur ..      .11%\nMercury Oil      -.06%\nMid-Wett Pete        .02%\nMill City Pete ..._      .03\nPicilta    \u201e.      .04\nPrairie R6y  ..-     .18%\nSouth End Pete 02%\nUnited Oil       .07\nVanalta Ltd  -.      .04\nINDUSTRIALS\nCapital Estates 90\nCoait Brew ,     1.26\nPacific Coyle  12\nU D L _      JO\nAsk\n.01\n.03%\n.05\n.15\n.00%\n.02\n.02\n.11%\n.20\n.30\n.07%\n.14\n.03%\n.21\n1.94\n.04%\n.05%\n.04%\n.20\n.04\n.09\n.06\n1.30\nU.S. Dollar Steady\nLONDON, Aug. 20 (AP). \u2014 The\nUnited Statei dollar was unchanged\ntt 4.68% to the pound Saturday, corresponding to a similar' overnight\nrati for sterling in New York.\nFrench franci continued 176.72\nto the pound.\nMONTREAL STOCKS SLIP\nDUE EUROPEAN NEWS\nMONTREAL, Aug. 20 (CP). -\nAnother light sinking spell took\nplace on Uie stock market Saturday\ninspired by a freih batch of disturbing European political news.\nFractions were clipped from Canadian Car common and preferred,\nC. P. R. and Dosco. Nickel and\nSmelters dropped % point each.\nBrazilian and Montreal Power\nwere off small amounts. Among\nother Issues down from % to % were\nAabestot. Intemstionel Pete, Howard\nSmith, Cnadian Celanese and Ogilvie Flour.\nSHERRITT CORDON MINES\nMAKE $203,138 PROFIT\nTORONTO, Aug. 20 (CP). \u2014 For\nthe quarter ended June 30, 1939,\nSherrltt Gordon Mines Ltd., Manitoba, had operating profit of $203,-\n138 before charges, compared with\n$180,413 ln the preceding three-\nmonth period and with $163,847 in\nIhe same period ot 1938.\n: Production was 757,714 from 144,-\n105 tons of ore mined against $735.-\n929 from 160,802 tons in the preceding three months.\nCommon Stocks Off\nOTTAWA, Aqg. 20 (CP). - Investors price index for 85 common\nstocks stood at 07.1 in the week ended Aug. 17 compared with 87.5 a\nweek belore and 104.5 in the corresponding week of 1938, according\nto a report from the Dominion Bureau of Statistics.. Index for 68 industrials stood at 159.4 compared with\n\"iii imMTMrinai\nA fearless Kentucky modern ... a slow-spoken Arizona\ncowpuncher. They meet by chance ... ahd become\npartners in a fantastic exploit. A great story!\nPhantom Ranch\nBy OREN ARNOLD\nBEGINS FRIDAY, AUGUST 25 in\nNe laott lmhj Stag\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper\nS^sM\n PAttl TIN\nNIUON DAILY NIWS. NILSON. I, C-MONDAY MORN IN a, AUO. \u00ab. \u00ab\u2022 \u2014 -\nJJII.lUHI.'IIUJIIIinillMHIDHI\nCAPITOL\nTODAY TIL\nWEDNESDAY\nCOMPUTI SHOWS AT 2:00, 7:00 AND 8:51\nA GREAT PICTURE\nXk\nBUT DEFINITELY\ndaughters  \\\n(Jmrageo\nIhUIMtUOl*-**\nJOHN GARFIELD\nmd THI -m\/t DJ.CHTUf\nPRISCIUA LANE\nROSEMARY LANE\n\\. LOLA LANE. GALE PAGB\n\u2022\u00bb,        fi*mmi,alICHJll.C*tTlt\n15< - 35* At 2:14, 7:04 ind 10\nTHRILLS ... COMEDY... ROMANCE\nWomen in the Wind\n\u2022$\nwith\nKAY FRANCIS   \u2022   WILLIAM CARCAN\nMmtt)t-tet-tlt*m*)m-ttmmttS^^\n1936 CHEVROLET\nl_-ton Express. Excellent Condition.\nNew Rubber. A,Red Stir Vilue\nowerby-Cuthbert Ltd.\nOpposite tht\nPostofflce and Hume Hotel\nEAST TRAIL LOTS\nSend for map and prlct Hit Mike\na itart on having your own Home\nr-with our monthly easy payment.\nRobertton Realty Co. Ltd.\nNfitssrsn.   B.C.\nLook yeart younger tnd be\nmore beautiful with a\npermanent from\nHaifch Tru-Art\nBeauty Salon\nPhone 327      Johnttone Blk.\nWINDOWS, SASH AND\nDOORS\nAT  COMPETITIVE PRICES\nT. H. Waten & Co.\nLimited\nJ\nLambert's\nFOR\nLUMBER\nPHONE 82\nI\nDEVELOPING\nPRINTING\nENLARGING\nPICTURE   FRAMING\nPhotographic Supplies\nCbit ShojftpL\nGreeting Card for Every Occasion\nRent your houte with a want til\nSWIM TRUNKS\nJack Boyce\n514 Baker   Style Shop   Phone 100\nROOFING\nEaves Troughs, etc.\nR.H. Maber\nPhone 159     610 Kootenay 8t\n>W9iWW)W\u00bbaWWJ8<8WWiiWfl#WW\u00bb\nKEEP COOL\nIn Clean Clothes\nptullcL CkansAA,\nPHONE 1042\nPHONE 25\nPreicriptiont\nCompounded\nAccurately\nFleury's Pharmacy\nMEDICAL ART8 BLOCK\nFinancial Security\nINVESTORS SYNDICATE\nMonthly Savings Plan\nR. W. DAWSON\nBonded Representative\nBox tl     Hlppereon Blk.     Ph. 197\nHamson's 61 Best\nin Golf Sweep\nAlbert Himion upiet the applecart in the medal iweep golf it the\nNelion Golf It Country Club Sundiy when he carded a net 61 to\nwin flnt priie. Hit icore wu\nW-23-61.\nR. E. Horton thot below par but\nhad to be content with tecond place\nwith a net 64, two under par. Third\nplace wat taken by Joseph Hunden,\na pait winner, with a 90-24\u201466. In\nfourth place wu Bob Wataon, 71-4\u2014\n67. W. 3. Barwick wu fifth with a\nnet 68, 83-15\u2014C8.\n-lie entry was much larger than\nIn put weekt, making five prizes\npouible.\nCranbrook Beats\nColeman's Nine\nCRANBROOK, B. C, Aug. 20 -\nCranbrook bueball team icored another win today In the cloteit game\nof the seuon, defeating, the Coleman, Alia., Puekiten, 8-7, to hold\ntheir record of only one game lost\nsince Young hu been pitching.\nColeman, winnen of the Crow'i\nNett Pan League, had a five-run\nlead by fourth inning. At the eighth\nInning the teams were tied with\nseven each, Cranbrook scoring the\nwinning run in the last of the ninth.\nDeister pitched for Coleman.\nGarland Has Letters\nof Administration in\nN. A. MacLean Estate\nLetters of administration with the\nwill annexed for the estate In British Columbia of Norman A, Mac-\nLean, were issued to C. B. Garland by His Honor Judge W. A.\nNisbet in Chambers. Mr. Garland\nwu given power of attorney by the\ntwo executora, William J. Dooley\nof Fitchburg,' Mass., and John G.\nMcLeod ot Norrli, Mont, to care\nfor the eitate until they apply for\nletten probate of the will.\nMr. MacLean, formerly a resident of Monteaa. who died !r> Fitchburg, October 2,1938, had money in\nthe, Bank of Montreal at Nelson to\nthe extent of $6719.73. The rest of\nthe eitate,'totalling $75,735.93, wai\nin mining claims, bonds, cash and\npersonal belongings in the United\nStates, mainly in Montana.\nJ. J. MacLean of Albany, N. Y., is\na brother and, Mri. Annie M. Dooley\nof Fitchburg, and Mrs. Mary B.\nSmith of Inverness, N. S., are sisters.\nWOODSTOCK, Oltt. (CP)-Ox-\nford Is aiming for the \"tall corn\ncounty\" title, and- Thomas Meadows Is growing 10-foot maize just\nto show what can be done.\nBealby Eitate le\nBe Re-Sealed in\nB. C. Supreme Court\nAn order to havi tbe (rant ot\nprobate of the eetite of F. J. Bealby,\nwho died In T^tf*** June 8, 1938,\nre-sealed in Britiih Columbia Supreme Court under provisions of the\nProbates Recognition Act wu given by Hii Honor Judge W. A. Nit.\nbet in Chamben. E. P. Dawion, who\nwu given power of attorney by the\ntwo execulon, T. G. Lumby and\nJ. H. Cawwell, in England, made\napplication under the Probates Recognition Act, for J. T. Bealby ot\nNelson.\nProbate of the eitate wu tint\ngranted in the Principal Probate\nRegistry of the High Court of Juitlce for England.\nThe eitate, total of which wu 134.\n957.78, Included a halt Intenttin\nsome property near Nelton valued\nat $150. Tne rett ot the estate it in\nEngland.\nRangers Win (-0\nGLsVSGOW, Aug. 20 (CP Cable)-\nRangers and Falkirk went out ln\nfront in the Scottish Football League\nrace Saturday, turning in decisive\nvictorlei. Rangen triumphed 4-0\nover Ayr Unltad for their lecond\nitraight triumph and Falkirk foi-\nlowed up a 6-4 decision over Clyde\na week ago by swamping Cowdenbeath 7-1.\nThe clubi are the only memben\nof the tint diviiion to obtain maximum points although tha season it\nbut two weeki old. Alloa, promoted\nto the major league with Cowdenbeath, alio went under, losing 5-2\nto Arbroath at Gayfield Park.\nCeltic blanked Hearts 2-0 at Park-\nhead for ita flnt victory, but Aberdeen, successful over the Celts t\nweek ago, loit 3-0 at Motherwell.\nSt. Johnstone lost its second straight.\nKilmarnock winning 3-0 on the\nSaints' ground.\nIn other games Clyde bowed 3-2\nt\u00ab Hibernians ln Edinburgh, and\nPartick Thistle edged out a 2-1 decision over Albion Roven, There\nwere two drawn gamei. St. Mirren\nand Queen of the South played a\n3-3 stalemate at Paisley and Third\nLanark and Hamilton Academicals\nmade lt 2-2 at Cathkln Park.\nDundee Is shaping up strongly ln\nthe second division and today on\nJordan, soil iv-Jotc- Airdrleonians\n4-2. Queen's Park drew 3-3 at Dunfermline and Raith Roven, who accompanied the amateurs to the second division this season blanked\nBrechin City 2-0.\nCONNAUGHT RIFLE RANGES,\nSouth March, Ont, Aug. 20 (CP).\u2014\nLieut. S. Johnson of Calgary won\nthe Sherwood Active Service competition at the Dominion of Canada Rifle Association annual meet\nLieut. Johnson icored 48 pointa\nwhile Captain Desmond Burke. Ottawa; Sergt P. M. Gibault, Vancouver, and Pte. F. Wakereli ot\nOttawa, were tied with 47;\nNELSON, CASTLEGAR TEAMS ARE ALL\nEVEN AGAIN IN SOFTBALL SKIES\nCastlegar Wins First Game Here Sunday 12-4\nto Even Series; Mayo Ties Second\nGame for Nelson, Ending 7-7\nRosslanders and Hiss Wright Make\nCleanup in Trail District Tennis\nReds Buy Shoffner\nCINCINNATI, Aug. 20 (AP) -\nMilburn Shoffner, left hand pitcher\nof Boston Bees, wu purchased yesterday on waiven by Cincinnati\nReds. Shoffner has won four and\nlost lix games this season. He is\nexpected to report here tomorrow.\n\u00ab$$S\u00ab\u00ab$$S$\u00ab\u00ab5S\u00ab\u00ab$S\u00ab\u00ab\u00abK\u00ab?S\u00ab\n1934 Chevrolet\nDeluxe Sedan\n2 spare tlrei\nKootenay Motors\n(Nelion) Ltd. Phont 11?\nW.W.Powell\nCOMPANY, LIMITED\n'\u25a0\u25a0\u00bb Tht Homt of Good Lumber\nLumber Lath Shingles\nAT RETAIL\nPHONE 176\nFoot of Stanley Street\nLeague Lacrosse Game\nNELSON CIVIC ARENA\nWhere It It alwayi cool,\nTONIGHT\nNELSON vs.\nROSSLAND\nDoon open at 7:30    Game at 8:15\nADMISSION \u2014 Adult Rush 25<t\nChildren Under 15 10*.\nReserved Seat* 40*.\nReserved ttlt ticket* available at Ntlion\nCivic Centrt Office.\u2014Phone 118.\nNEWS OF THE DAY\n$5\u00ab*5*\u00ab$$\u00abss$\ns^_-_y-j-_.\n\u00ab5WSSSSS\u00bb\nNOMAD MEETING TONIGHT\nAT 8:00\nFor dry wood phone Pete Iwanik:\n289-Y3. \u2022\nWinted huckleberriei. McDONALD\nJAM  COMPANY   LTD.\nDance, Willow Point, Aug. 22 $1\ncouple. Mara. Graham't Oreheitrt.\nREFRIGERATION 8ERVICE. PH.\n666, F. ,H. Smith, 361 Baktr St.\nNelson Liberal Meeting, Aug. 23,\n8 p.m. Legion Hall. Delegates for\nnominating convention.\nFIR8T Annual WATER CARNIVAL preiented by Klnimen Club,\nWedneiday, Auguit 23,\nSPECIAL \u2014 Okanagan Freeitone\nPeaches, Canti, Tomatoei, Peppen.\nOpen Daily. Free dcllv., Radios Mkt\nAlk ui about VELLO - \"The Modern\nCasein  Paint.\" 1 gal. $1.25. Nelion\nSaih A Door, 701 Front Ph. 292.\nSte the New Westinghouse Washing Machines with the Million Dollar Mechanism. No Oiling Anywhere\nHIPPERSON'8.\nSEE THE SPEED BOAT RACES\n-ROWING RACE8 - SWIMMING\nRACE8 - NOVELTY EVENTS tt\nKIN8MEN CLUB WATER CARNIVAL WEDNESDAY, Auguit 23rd.\nRemember \u2014 Have your entries In\nto the Secretary, West Arm Agricultural Fair, Harrop, by Tuesday,\nAuguit 25th.\nElectric Irom, $2.19, Aluminum\nSteamers, $1.09, Aluminum Routeri,\n69c See our windowi for other\nvalueis-HIPPERSON'S.\nWOOD, VALLANCE\nHardware Company, Limited\nWHOLESALE RETAIL\nSHELF\u2014HEAVY HARDWARE\u2014MINE SUPPLIES\nMILL SUPPLIES\u2014SPORTING GOODS\u2014BUILDING\nMATERIALS\u2014ZONOLITE INSULATION\nDISTRIBUTORS FOR BAPCO PAINTS\nR. and R. GROCERY\n8PECIAL8 ON SALE TODAY\nBlue Ribbon Tea\n3 lb. Pantry Tin. 3 lbs.'\n$1.59\nLABOR DAY SPORT\nCHAMPIONSHIP CUP DONAT\nED BY HUME HOTEL FOR INTER\nCITY COMPETITION TRACK AND\nFIELD\u2014ENTRY FORM8 FROM A.\nWALLACH,908 LATIMER 8TREET,\nNELSON, D. C.\nBUY YOUR ADMISSION TICK\nETS NOW AND SIT IN A BLEACH\nER CHAIR ON THE CITY WHARF\nTO SEE THE KINSMEN CLUB\nFIRST ANNUAL WATER CARNI\nVAL, WEDNE8DAY, Auguit 23rd.\nCORRECTION\n.      FUNERAL NOTICE\nJOHNSON - Mri. Anna Maria\npasied away Thunday. Body, rest!\nat Somen Funeral Home until today, thence to Scandinavian Church\nwhere services will lie held at 2 p.m.,\nRev. Earl E. Lindgren officiating. No\nflowen by request.\nMiss  Wright  Singles\nand   Doubles\nWinner\nTRAIL, B. ti, Aug. 30-Interclty\nchampions in six divisions were\ncrowned Sunday ai flnali of the\nannual Trail-Tadanac-Roasland tennis tournament were played at the\nTadanac counts.\nThey are;\nMEN'S\nSingles\u2014Joe McDonell, Rosiland.\nDoubles\u2014Jack Neal and Joe McDonell, Rossland.\nConsolation, singles\u2014Lou Freeman,\nRossland.\nLADIES'\nSingles\u2014Miss Betty Wright, of\nTadanac.\nDoubles\u2014Miss Loretta McDonell,\nRossland, and Miss Betty Wright,\nTadanac.\nMIXED\nDoubles\u2014Ned Rhodes, Trail, and\nMiss Betty Wright, .Tadanac.\nWhile Rosslanders were making it\ntheir day in the men's classes, Miss\nBetty Wright, Tadanac ace wat (laving a field day all her own. She\nmade a cleanup, defeating a fellow\ntownswoman, Mrs. Percy Halliwell,\n6-2, 6-2 in the singles, and with Miss\nLoretta. McDonell of Rossland capturing the doubles crown with a\nsmart 6-3, 6-3 triumph over Mn.\nHalliwell and Mrt. T. H. Weldon,\nTadanac. Wednesday evening with\nNed Rhodei, one of Trail't crack\ncourtmen, Miss Wright, figured in\nthe mixed doubles title with a, 6-3,\n6-3 win over Mrs. Halliwell and A,\nM. Chesser, Tadanac.\nMcDONELL NO. 1 MAN\nJoe McDonell, brother of Miss\nWright's doubles partner, became\nsingles NO. 1 man of the three-cities\nby virtue of a three-set victory over\nJack Neal, Rossland, 0-0, 6-2, 6-2.\nThen with his singles opponent he\ntook the doubles title match from\nEd Haley and Ned Rhodes of Trail,\n6-4-, 0-4. Another Rossander, Louis\nFreeman, ended a long struggle in\nthe men's consolation final by drop-\npng Herbert Oxley, Trail, 10-8, 6-4.\nMEN'S 8INQLE8 |,\nSemi-final\u2014Joe McDonell, Rossland, beat Ed Haley, Trail,'6-4, 8-3:\nJack Neal, Rossland, beat Stan Angus, Tadanac, 6-3, 6-3.\nFinal\u2014McDonell beet Neal, 0-6,\n6-2, 6-2.\nMEN'S DOUBLES\nSemi-finals\u2014Ed Hiley and Ned\nRhodes, Trail, beat George Murray\nand Stanley Angus, Tadanac 7-5,\n6-2; Jack Neal and. Joe McDonell.\nRossland, beat Jack Salter and T, H.\nWeldon, Tadanac, 6-4, 2-6, 7-5.\nFinal\u2014Neal ini McDonell beat\nHaley and Rhodes, 0-4, 0-4.\nLADIES'SINGLES\nSemi-final\u2014Mrs. Percy Halliwell,\nTadanac, beat Mitts. M. McDonell.\nRossland, C-2, 6-2; and Miss Betty\nWright, Tadanac,, boat.Mra. J. D.\nHartley, Tadanac, 6-3, 6-1.\nFinal\u2014Miss Betty Wright beat\nMrs. Halliwell, 6-2, 6-3.\nLADIES' DOUBLES\nSeml-finalt\u2014Mre. Percy Halliwell.\nTadanac, and Mn. T. II. Weldon.\nTadanac, won' from Mlts McLennan\nand Miss B. Humphries, Castlegar,\nby default; Mlsa L. McDonell, Rossland and Miss Betty Wright, Tadanac, beat Mrs. J. D. Hartley, Tadanac, and Mias I. Evans,, Trail, 7-9.\n6-2.\nFinals\u2014Miss McDonell and Miss\nI Wright beat Mrs. Halliwell and Mn.\nTwo bittle-wetry taunt now ut\nJuit where they itarted from a\nweek ago Sunday before they entered their bett-of-three temi-fina\nfor the Kootenty men't joftball\ntitle and tha Gilbert Rowling Memorial Trophy. Underdogt ln the\nbitting tfter being betten it home\nln the flnt game, the Caitlegar\nloftballen imuhed out a 124 victory tnd earned a 7-7 draw with the\nNelton Repi at the Recreation\nGroundi Sunday afternoon.\nTbe fourth game, an extra conteit will he pliyed In Nelion next\nSunday following the lenior baieball game, play getting away at\nabout 4:49.\nEveryone In the ttansli knew\nthey were In for a hectic gtme when\nthe two iquad! went into the third\ntilt And they weren't disappointed,\neither. Fierce diiputet with the umpire! marked the game and feeling\nran high between the playen of the\nrespective teams.\nProspects for victory in the fint\ngtme for the vlilton wat never in\ndoubt tfter they Jumped away to a\nthree-run lead ln the flnt inning.\nThey pecked twty conilitently tt\nLes Trtlnor'i deliveriei tfter thtt;\nonly ln three inning! were they\nblanked.\nNICE PITCHING\nMeanwhile Bill Mann, their cagy\nchucker, wts mowing down the Nelsonites, and although not pitching\nspectacularly, he wai nevertheleu\nvery effective. Hla only bad inning\nwai the filth when Nelson went to\ntown for four runs, but that wai\nthe only frtmelie yielded a marker.\nIn only the Sixth did he let a mtn\nreach third, besldet of coune the\nfifth Inning. And that man, Selinger,\nwai thrown out at the plate, catcher\nto pitcher, as lie wat trying to icore\nafter the ball got away momentarily\nfrom Wanleii, the catcher.\nIncidentally that fellow, Gerry\nWanleu, would rank at anybody s\n<lre*m of otic swejl. teU player.\nGerry, who doei a creditable bit of\npuckchasing in the Winter, last season played for the Trail BUzera,\nkept his team on their collective\ntoes during both gamei. Lefthanded,\nsomething unusual for a catcher, he\nwas.a whirlwind behind the plate,\nilthough he li Inclined to cry to the\numpires a little too much.\nThe most brilliant play In that\nflnt game wat in the fourth Inning\nwhen CuUegar Wed to work the\ndouble iteal with men on flnt ind\nthird. It backfired badly as Sam-\nton was nipped going into tecond,\nAllan to Sid Ball, and the return\npeg, and what a throw, got Mann at\nthe plate. Nelson ln the second game\nwas more successful In working\nthat play, Culley and AUan beating\nthe throws respectively at they left\nthird and flnt\nBRILLIANT CATCH\nThe fielding high light of the last\ngame was furnished by little Harold\nMayo, who wat a hero in more\nways than one. With bates lotded\nIn the sixth, and nobody out he\ncaught a low. liner from the bat of\nMcGauley at hit ihoelacei at he\ncame Iri on a long. run.\nThat second game was a real\nthriller. From the time Mayo led\nof the first inning with a single and\nscored In Sid Ball's double atter\nbeing advanced Into icoring position by Pisacreta, a variety of alternately weird and brilliant playi\nkept the crowd active. Nelion led\n5-1 going Into the fifth Inning but\ntwo rum in that frame and two in\neach of the followln frames, land-\nwlched by a Nelton run ln the\nfifth, gave Caitlegar a 7-6 lead.\nThat one-run advantage loomed\ngreat at Caitlegar cut Nelson' rallies\nshort as the game wore pn; and at\nthe same time they threatened themselves aa they got men repeatedly\nIn scoring position ns Lazier wavered badly after a wonderful itart.\nBut up came Mayo as darkness was\ndescending son the field in the last\nof the ninth. He singled to centre\nto start things  off.  On the next\npitch he wm tway end htd tecond\nitolen. The throw got awiy from the\nsecond bateman into thit outfield\ntnd Mtyo wai on hli way to third,\nand then icored n the return throw\nwiled over the third baseman's hetd.\nNelton wat retired one, two, three,\nand then Loula Aunlla called the\ngame.\nOne of tbe bett playen ln tht\ngarnet wu Bobby Magee, happy-\ngo-lucky Infielder of the viiiton.\nBesides handling 18 fielding chincet\nwith but one error, and that wu a\ntough one, he banged wt tlx hltt ln\n11 trips to the plate to letd the hit\nparade.\nBOX SCORE\nFlnt game:\nCASTLEGAR\nREXALl STORE\nPrescription\nSpecialitti\nLONDON   (CP)  -  A  four-foot\nsnake, yellow with broad arrow\nmarkingi, frightened WemWy reil\ndentt when they were informed by\nZoo official! it wu probably tropical and poisonous. It wu captured\nin a rubbish hetp.\nCHESTER, England (CP) \u2014 Dr.\nGeoffrey Fliher, BUhop-Designate\nof London, will be enthroned ui St.\nPiul'i Ctthednl Nov. 3, It ii announced. Dr. Fliher It the 35th\nBlihop of Chester.\nSamton, cf .\nBacon, If ....\nAb R\n6   0\nHPOAE\n3   10   0\n2 11\n1   2\n 45 12 18 27 10\nMoore, 2b\nMagee, is .....\nObedko, Sb .\nObourne, rf.\nWtnleti, c \u201e\nAvli, lb \t\nMann, p\nTotals\nNELSON\nMayo, If \t\nKtpak, cf \t\nPisacreta, 2b ...\nBall, ts _\nSelinger, rf \t\nAhrens, lb\t\nAllan, c .-\nMcCulloch, 3b\nTrainor, p \u201e\t\nGray, rf \u201e\t\nTotala  39\nScore by Innings:\nCastlegar  311   013   030-12 18 1\nNelson   000   040   000\u2014 4   8 9\nRum batted in: Obourne 9, Magee\n2, Mann, Moore, Trainor, Mayo, Kapak. Two-base hits\u2014Obourne 1\nThree-base hlts-Kapak, Selinger.\nHome runt\u2014Mann. Stolen bases-\nBacon, Moore, Obedko. Left on\nbases \u2014 Castlegar 12, Nelion 4,\nDouble play\u2014Allan to Ball to Allan. Struck out\u2014By Mann I, by\nTrainor 2. Baiet on balls\u2014Off Trainor 6. Wild pitch\u2014Trainor. Pused\nballt\u2014Wanleii 1, AUan 3. Time of\ngame\u20141:40. Umpires\u2014Louie Aur-\nclla plate; Martin Pederson, buei.\n8 27 10\nSECOND GAME\nCASTLEGAR\nSamton. cf\nBacon, If ..\nMo    , lb, it\nMagee, it, 3b\nABR HPOAE\n5\n5\n.... 5\nObedko, 3b    2\nObourne, rf\nWanleu, c \t\nAvli, lb \t\nMcGauley,   p..\nBorden, 2b \t\nMann, cf \t\n2 10\n0 0\n2 4\n0   0\nTotali    \u201e\nNELSON\nMayo, If \t\nAhrehi lb ......\nPisacreta, 2b\nS. Ball, ti \t\nD. BaU,\n.43   7 12 27 13   4\n5\n5\n4\n5\n4\nAllan, rf, cf    4\nCulley, 3b\nMcBride, cf, rf .\nLazier, p \t\nA.  Selinger, rf\n2 2\n0 6\n0   4\n3 0\n0 12\n3   1\nYOUR NEW\nFall HAT\nIS HERE\nWe have a hit for every\nheid and a shade for every\nsuit. See the new shapes.\n$350 $5.00\nEMORY'S\nLimited\nTht Han't Stort\nSTUTTGART, Germany (CP). \u2014\nNewipapen ln ipeclal racks for the\nfree ute ot passengers are provided\non Stuttgart itreet can.\nB.C. Tree Fruits Ud. Opens Office\naf Creston to Aid Central Selling\nHembling in Charge;\nSeek Synchronize\nWith Okanagan\nKelownt\u2014General movement of\nthe Okanagan fruit crop ll satisfactory, states Dave McNair, tales\nmanager of B. C. Tree Fruits, Ltd.,\nthe single selling agency, ln his\nweekly resume of the crop movement. The single agency staff Is now\n Joins\nand!\na fair and unblued representative\nthere who can represent ua and\nduplicate the service for Creston\nwith full consideration of local details.\"\nCRE8TON  OFFICE\nCRESTON, B. C.-O. W, Hembllnlj\nof oyama, who is to have charge of\nthe Creston sub-central of B. C. Tree\nFrulta Limited under the central\nselling plan of fruit growen, hu ar*\nrived and has  opened  in  office.\nin its new building which adjoins \u2122K\"\u00bbJ\u2122 \"g!\"\"1 n\u2122,.,\u00b0n,Lni\nthe n   r  Fruit Board office   and Members of the Fruit Board will\nthi wo* m now\"be c^rfed out j vWt her.,ta get the sub-centrel in\nwith more efficiency than in the! runnlng^order.\ncramped quarters occupied before,\nChief Interest ln the deil thli\nweek eenten on the commencement\nIn Creston of i tub-central of B. C.\nTree Fruits, under the charge of O.\nW. Hembling, Oyama grower tnd\nformerly a member oi -Use B. C.\nFruit Board Thli tub-central will\nhandle approximately 89 per cent of\nthe Cretton tonnage, A. K. Loyd,\nchairman of the board of governors\nof Tree Fruits, states. The other 19\nper cent does not come through regular shipping channels but is disposed of by truck.\nTO CONTROL TRUCKS\nEfforts will be made to control\ntheie truck shipments which miny\ntimes disrupt market! and force\nprice level! down.\n\"Via are instituting a nib-central\nto handle the Creston tonnage u a\nunit and to consider the Creston\ndeal on Its merits,\" declared Mr.\nLoyd. \"The belt chance we have of\nsynchronizing the Okanagan and\nCreston blocks ot tonnage il to have\nDoughnuts\nTake Home a Doien\nThe PERCOLATOR\n30   7 14 27 8   7\nTotali   ....\nScore by Innlngi:\nCuUegar  '. 010 022 200-7 12   4\nNelson  130 110 001-7 14  7\nRuns *batted In\u2014Wanlesi 8, Sid\nBall 2, McBride 2, Borden. Two-\nbase hits\u2014Magee,. Sid Ball, McBride. Three-bate hltt\u2014Obourne.\nHome runt\u2014Sid Ball Stolen baiei\n\u2014Allan 2, Culley 2, Mayo 2, Magee. Sacrifice hit*\u2014pisacreta. Left\non bates\u2014Cutlegar IQ, Nelson 6.\nDouble playa-Borden to Avis; McBride to Pisacreta to Ahrens. Struck\nout\u2014By McGauley 1, by Lazier 9.\nBases on balls\u2014Off McGauley, 1,\noff Lazier 1, Wild pitch\u2014McGauley,\nLazier. Paised ballt\u2014D. Ball. Time\nof game\u20142:00. Umpirei\u2014Louie Au-\nrella, plate; Leo Wation, bases.\nJ. D. Kerr Defeats R. L. McBride on\nHlh Hole lo Win McBride Trophy\nNew    Senior    Golf\nChampion of\nNelson\nJ. D. Kerr Wu crowned tenlor\nchampion at the Nelson Golf le\nCountry Club Sunday when he defeated R. L. McBride, laat year'i\nwinner at the nineteenth hole. Although Kerr had a small lead leveral times during tlie match, it\nwun't until the extra hole that he\nwu able to clinch tbe match and\ntitle.\nOn the thirteenth tae Kerr was\nthree up on McBride but he taw his\ncomfortable lead wiped out u McBride shot a string of five pan In a\nrow to square the match on the\neighteenth: Kerr played a safe par\nfour on the nineteenth to win the\nhole and the match.\nDespite the small entry ln the\ncompetition there were several\nhard-fought battle*. O. G. Gallaher\ncarried his game with John Fruer\nto the eighteenth tee where his putt\nrimmed and stayed out; costing him\nthe match. W. S. Baiwick and McBride had a sec-saw battle which\nwas also carried to the eighteenth\nbefore it wu decided.\nOne of the highlights cf the day\nwu the semi-final match between\nMcBride and Fraser, McBride shot\nan eagle two on the fint hole, holing out his 133-yard Iron thot.\nWeldon, 6-3, 6-3.'\nMIXED DOUBLES\nSeml^nalt\u2014Ned Rhodes, Trail,\nand Miss Betty Wright, Tadanac.\nbeat W. D. Williams, Tadanac, and\nMrs. T. H Weldon, Tadanac, 6-2,\n7-9; A. M. Chester, Tadanic and\nMn. Percy Halliwell, Tadanac, beat\nJoe McDonell and Miss L. McDonell, Rossland, 6-2, 0-6, 9-1.\nFinal\u2014Rhodes and Miss Wright.\nbeat Chester and Mn. Halliwell\n6-3,6-3.\nMEN'S CONSOLATION\nSemi-final\u2014Herbert Oxley of Trail\nbeat Jim Graham, Trail, 7-9,2-6,6-2:\nLouis Freeman, Rossland, beat Cllve\nMcQueen, Trail 6-2 9-7.\nFinal\u2014Freeman beat Oxley, 10-8,\n6-4.\nST. CATHARINES, Ont  (CP)-\nIt's unseasonable, and the number\n13 it said to be unlucky, but Mrs.\nR. Goit won a ton of coal with that\nnumber in a draw on a hot August\nday.\n3^tt\u00bbSWW\u00ab\u00ab3\u00bbS$3S$\u00bb\u00abS\u00ab3\u00bbS\nREVELS\nNOW ON SALE AT\nMOST PALM DEALERS\nPALM  DAIRIES  LIMITED\nJ\u00bb A. C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSUITE 209. MEDICAL ARTS BLDG\n\u00bb\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0mm*****mmmmmWm*Smmmm-m\nOrder SUMMER WOOD Now\nMill Endt, loid $ 3.75\n8 loadt for : $10.00\nSlibwood, $ cordi. $10,00\nSaw Duit, unit - $ 4.00\nPhono 163 or 434RI\nThe Home- of\nGuaranteed\nWork Clothing\nGodfreys* Lttt\nWEEK END SPECIALS\n\u25a037 Olds Victoria Coupe. Run 9500\nmiles. Price  _   $923.00\n\"38   Plymouth   De   Luxe   Sedan.\nRadio, Heater. Price   $990.00\nPEEBLES MOTORS\nBaker St     Limited     Phone 119\n$5.00 TO ANYONE\nfor namt of uied oar proipect\n(Unlets we already have tha namt)\nIf a tale is concluded\nAUTOMOBILE BROKERS\nJtck McDowell 4 Howard thurman\nNext Savoy Hotel\nDWELLINC HOUSES Wanted\nWanted listing* of homei for ult,\nWt hive projective buyeri, your\nproperty may tult thtm.\nH.E, DILL\n932 Wird St     Opp. Mfddtn Hottl\nPHONE 128 FOR COMPLETE\nLaundry Service\nKOOTENAY\nSTEAM LAUNDRY\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMMIIIIMIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIII\nFUMIGATE WITH\nSMYTHE'S\nBUCK DEATH TO BUCS\n10,000 found dead lo one home.\nSMYTHE'S PHARMACY\nPHONE 1\n'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin\nFUR STORAGE\nREPAIRS ANO REMODELS\nMalcolm's F\nLAKEFRONT PROPERTY\nPOR SALI\nDesirable North Shore location,\none mile from  Nelion  ferry.\nPlenty of water, will divide to\niuit purchaser. Euy Termi.\nT. D. ROSLING\nS Royal Bank Bldt       Phone 717\nCIVIC\nTonight and Tueiday\nComplete at 7:00\u20148:31\nPrloet 35c\u201416c\nQO PARTYINO LOOKING YOUR |\nBE8TI A new coiffure ityle-\nimart, flattering.\nBEAUTY\nPARLOR\nWMlfa\ntfl* Baker St\nPhone 244\nSEE\nVIC  GRAVES\nMASTER  PLUMBER\nPer all your needi In plumb.\nIng repaln, alterations, and\nInstallations.\nPh. 816       801 VICTORIA ST\nABLAZE WITH ACTION I...\nCONFUCII...EMOTIONI...\nCOUKAOE! <______________%\ni'fcMPii\nSUSANNA;\nOF THE\nMOUNTIES\nRANDOLPH SCOTT\nMARGARET LOCKWOOD\nMARTIN COOD RIDER\nJ.Forr.llMotOONAlO\n-2nd Hit-\n\"All American\nSweetheart\"\nPlut\u2014Weekly Newi\nSUPPOSE YOU AND I HAVE A\n\"Fire Side Chat\" about Educating\nJunior. It ii bound to coit money\nto Educate your Child. Phone me'\nat 980. Will be glad to talk ovtr\nthit  important matter.\nFRANK A. STUART\n577 Baker St ' Nelton, B.C.\nmmWO^mmmmmmMimmmmmmmm\nFOUNTAIN\nSERVICE\nQreiifeU's Cafe\nFUEL!!\n12-INCH FIR AND TAMARACK\n$3.00 par Rick f 9.00 par Cord\n16-INCH FIR AND TAMARACK\n?3.50 par Rick $8.50 par Cord\n12-INCH BIRCH\n$3.50 per Rick $10.00 par Cord\nWhere Fuel It tha Fineit\nNELSON TRANSFER\nCompany, Limited\n35 -PHONES -36\ni:\nsHAti^tai^iitiMii\ntiY'ttttl.^^WritiftlfaiViii*ilii1h'rriT if. 11 fciiMJfc>f.yVr.MiiifiM.tfiMi \u25a0JifiifJtiraii'i:\n11 imitiiiii1iiillii.tfi1iMlliiiiiiiiiiii.iii fiiiiMil\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1939_08_21","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0414652","@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":"1939-08-21 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1939-08-21 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\/1.0414652"}