{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0412195":{"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider":[{"value":"CONTENTdm","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf":[{"value":"BC Historical Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued":[{"value":"2022-04-08","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1937-08-21","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0412195\/source.json","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format":[{"value":"application\/pdf","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note":[{"value":" p\n\t\nNelson Takes Rossland Redmen\nby 23-14 in Boxla\n\u2014Page Twelve\nm^tii 1\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0PIPyWpWqPiPWWIIIiaii.p^ll.1 .'^\u25a0i!.mms,v.^^,.vtj^^T*vr.*..,*u*,r,.t,.\u00bbl   li|ilni*mH\n    W)\nTwo Full Pages of Old Timers'\nPicnic Pictures at Nelson\n\u2014Pages 8 and 9\nVOLUME 36\nFIVE CENT8 PER COPY\nW-      *:LSON, BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA-SATURDAY MORNING, AUG. 21, 1937\n**\u25a0\u25a0  \u25a0!      \u00ab_\u25a0;._ ..*:   i\nNUMBER 10-?\nuns Halt Montreal Strike Attack\nU. S. Cabinet in Huddle as Told\nCruiser Hit by Japanese Shell\nONE-FOURTH OF\nGREAT (ITY OF\nSHANGHAI PREY\nOF RAGING FIRES\nNone to Fight Flames;\nU.S. Seaman Killed\non Cruiser\n18 OF CREW HURL-\nBRITON WOUNDED\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 20 (AP)-\nWord came from a meeting of\nPreildent Roosevelt's cabinet late\ntoday that It wai a Japanese shell\nthat struck the American cruiser\nAugusta, killing one sailor and\nwounding 18.\nOne member disclosed that the\ncabinet had spent considerable\ntime discussing the shelling, which\noccurred In the undeclared Slno-\n.Japanese war around Shanghai.\nHe did not reveal whether\nWashington officials contemplated\nany action. The Information that\nIt was a Japanese shell was laid\nbefore the cabinet, he said, but\nhe did not say by whom.\nKilled in China\nDr. Robert K. Reischauer\n(above), professor of international relations at Princeton\nuniversity, was killed during\nChinese-Japanese aerial warfare\nthat rained death and destruction upon the international settlement at Shanghai. Dr. Reischauer was hit by a bomb in the\nlobby of the Palace hotel on\nNanking road. He died a few\nhours later in a hospital. He\nwas making a study tour of the\nFar East.\nBy The Canadian Pres\nShanghai blazed with fire today. Huge foreign-owned factories and humble Chinese\nhomes alike fell before flames\ncaused by modern artillery\nshells and aerial bombs as\nChina and Japan waged inces-\n*$ant warfare for possession of\nthe city of 3,500,000 people.\nObservers estimated one-\nfourth of the. vast city contained fast-spreading fires,\nnearly all out of control as there\nwas no one to fight them.\nVolunteer detachments a t \u2022\ntempted to prevent some of the\nfiercer conflagrations from engulfing whole sections of the\ncity.\nOut of a furious exchange of\nfire between Chinese batteries\nand Japanese warships massed\nin the Whangpoo river, an antiaircraft shell fell on the United\nStates cruiser Augusta, killed a 21-\nyear-old seaman and wounded 18\nmembers of the crew.\nBRITISH SOLDIER WOUNDED\nAn unidentified british soldier\nfell wounded by a shrapnel fragment while on duty guarding a Japanese factory. A British-owned cotton warehouse went up in flames in\nPootung, the large Chinese settlement in the bend of the Whangpoo\nriver as It winds through the city.\nChinese charged Japan used pois-\nlon gas bombs during an attack on\nllCiangyin near the mouth of the\n| Yangtze river.\nGeneral Chang Chi-Chung, Chin-\n[esc commander at Shanghai, declared China would win the war\n|even though it lasted three years,\nJapanese clamied her forces destroyed 100 grounded Chinese air-\nIcraft and a large hangar at Nan-\nIking, capital of China, and caused\nconsiderable damage to a munitions\nplant and airport at Hankow.\n[BRITISH WARNS\nGreat Britain advised both China\nand Japan she .would hold them\nresponsible for loss of lives or\ndamage to property In the Shanghai area. A protest was sent to\nJapan against occupation of certain British territory In Japan.\nPrince Fumjmaro Konoye, premier\nlof Japan, predicted a long war that\n\u25a0could not end until Japan had \"pun-\nllshed\" the Chinese army for entering the Shanghai area, demilitariz-\nafter the 1932 fighting.\nHe said any settlement had to be\nbetween China and Japan, placing\ni barrier against any third country\n\u25a0intervention.\nFUMIGATING  DEATHS CASE\nADJOURNED\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 20 (CP)-Ar,\nunlocked rear door of an apartment\n.block being fumigated with deadly\njhydrocyanic acid gas led three-\niyear-old Joan Brewer and Kathleen\nBoyce to their deaths June 21, Mrs.\nMargaret Brewer, mother of Joan,\ntestified today at the preliminary\n\"hearing of S. P. Heasman, city health\nInspector; P. W. McLeod, fumigating contractor, and P. J. Brennan,\nIvatchman, on manslaughter charges.\nJfhe case, which was instigated by\n\u25a0he attorney-general deparlment in\nyictoria, was adjourned to Thursday\nby Magistrate Mackenzie Matheson.\nTrail May Be\nScene of Gyro\nDistrict Confab\nSPOKANE, August 20, (AP) \u2014\nFor the second successive day delegates to the Gyro International District convention tossed business aside\nfor pleasure today.\nThe closest the conventioners came\nto following a schedule was when\nless than a score of delegates, clad\nin sport clothes, appeared an hour\nlate for a business meeting this\nmorning. The .meeting adjourned\nafter an address of welcome and\ntwo brief reports.\nTomorrow the 1938 convention city\nwill be picked and new officers\nelected. Trail, B. C, is expected to\nbe the next meeting place.\nCAN'T CONTACT\nMATTERN AS HE\nHUNTS FOR LOST\nRUSSIAN AIRMEN\nReports Not Received;\nHear Faint Radio\nWaves\nWILKINS LANDS\nAT FORT SMITH\nBARROW, Alaska, August 20,\n(CP)\u2014In a great flying boat Sir\nHubert Wilkins, British explorer,\nand five filers landed at Fort\n8mlth, N. W. T., today enroute to\nestablish a rescue base near the\nAlaska-Canada border, preparatory to entering the hunt for six\nlost Russian trans-polar fliers.\nThe Russian flier Zadkoff reached Point Barrow last night, Joining\nBob Randall, Canadian flier, who\nhad been shuttling along the Arctic coast for three days.\nEager to repay, his own rescue\nfour years ago, Jimmie Mattern,\nfamed United States pilot, scared\nout of Fairbanks toward the Arctic\ncoast to take up the search.\nRUSSIAN CRAFT\nJOINS HUNT\nRussian sea and aircraft joined\nthe far-flung hunt almost *s Mattern\ngot away after having been weatherbound at Fairbanks for days. The\nSoviet ice-breaker Krassln said to\nbe carrying planes, stood somewhere\noff Point Barrow.\nSignal corps officers said late today they were not receiving scheduled position reports from Mattern,\nafter he reported he was over the\ntreacherous Endicott mountains between Fairbanks and Point Barrow.\nWhen two hours had passed without further reports the signal corps\nsaid it had been hearing faint radio\nwaves which might have originated from Mattern's plane.\nIt added failure to receive further\nreports might have been due to poor\ntransmission conditions.\nM.C.C. Wins Again\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 20 (CP)-The\ntoruing Marylebone Cricket club\nteam ran its strnig of victories in\nCanada to 10 today, defeating Vancouver Colts by eight wickets at\nBrockton Park. Fifteen Vancouver\nyoungsters faced the Englishmen\nand compiled 162 runs, the visitors passing the total with only two\nwickets down, finishing with a\nscore of 195 for seven wickets.\nWest Arm Close\nto 4-Foot Stage\nContinuing a-gradual decline, the\nWest Arm stood at 4.09 feet above\nthe low water mark at 6 o'clock\nFriday afternoon, by the old Launch\nclub guage.\nUnregistered Gun\nCauses Man Serve\n14 Days in Jail\nFound guilty at Creston of having\nin his possession an unregistered\nrevolver, Peter Sopoff was sentenced to pay a fine of $30 or spend 14\ndays in Jail, and was brought to\nprovincial jail at Nelson Friday to\nserve the term. He appeared before\nE. Mallandaine, stipendiary magistrate.\nMANITOBA LADIES' GOLF\nTEAM\nWINNIPEG, August 20, (CP) -\nTeam to represent Manitoba in the\nwomen's interprovincial golf event\nover the Pine Ridge course here\nAugust 26 was announced today. It\ncomprises four Winnipeggers, 18-\nyear-old Heather Leslie, who defended her Manitoba title today by\ndefeating Mrs. Gordon Ritchie 6 and\n5 in the final; Mrs. John Rogers,\nMrs. R. K. Baeirsto and Miss Jean\nRoss.\nFORT WILIAM (CP)-H. A. Kitchen of Winnipeg is going to fish\nagain in nearby Raleigh Lake. He\ncaught a 23-pound lake trout recently and said it gave him one of\nthc biggest thrills of bis life.\nVice-Regal Parly\nCatches 28 Trout\nINTATA LAKE, B. C, August 20\n(CP, Via British Columbia Police\nWireless)\u2014Hon. Alastair Buchan today broke this camp's record for\nheavy trout, catching one weighing\ntwo and one half pounds to top a\none and a three-quarter pounder\ncaught a few minutes before by Lord\nTweedsmuir, his father.\nThe vice-regal party fished today\nat Nechako (Big River) and caught\n28 trout, all good sized ones, in an\nhour and a half.\nHis Excellency, Lady Tweedsmuir,\nMrs. George Pape, he rlady-in-wait-\ning, Mr. Buchan and Lieut. S. G.\nRiveiB-Smith, aide-de-camp, were\ntaken to Nechako river by boat and\npicked up at 4 p.m. by Royal Canadian Air Force seaplanes which\nbrought them back to camp in time\nfor a tea and reception to the camp\nstaff.\nFighting Author\nResentment over an alleged\nreflection on his ability, supposed to have been contained in\nan article written by Max Eastman, left-wing essayist, caused\nErnest Hemingway (above), the\nmodernist novelist, to tangle\nwith Eastman in their publisher's office in New York. Hemingway was reported to have\nsocked Eastman with a copy of\nthe latter's book containing the\ndisputed statement.\nCranbrook Oil\nSumof$60Sioien'But\nChecks Untouched;\nPolice Trail\nSum of $60 was stolen and $1002\nin checks was left when the Imperial Oil company office at Cranbrook\nwas broken into Thursday night,\nstated a radio message received\nFriday by divisional headquarters\nat Nelson of the provincial police.\nThe cash box in the office safe\nwas jimmied open, thc jimmie being\nfound beside the safe and a single-\njack hammer beside the railway\ntrack nearby. The message stated the\nsafe door might have been left open.\nProvincial police throughout the\ndistrict have been asked to watch\nfor transients.\nHe's the \"Perfect Baby\"\nWORST 'QUAKE\nIN FORTY YEARS\nHAKES MANILA\n(ITY OF TERROR\nRefugee of Shanghai\nAsks If It Is War\nAgain\nWINDOWS BREAK;\nMASONRY FALLS\nBy RAY P. CRONIN\nAssociated Press Foreign Staff\nMANILA, Aug. M (AP)\u2014Twin\nearthquakes\u2014Manila's wont In 40\nyears\u2014converted this haven of\nsafety Into a darkened city of terror tonight for refugees from embattled Shanghai.\nCity lights, snuffed out by the\nfirst shock, were restored to reveal streets strewn with  broken\nmasonry    and    glass.    Hospitals\ntreated   many   Injured   but   no\ndeaths were reported.\nThe  first  and   most  devastating\nquake came at 7:59 p.m. (6:59 a.m.\nM.S.T.)  Broken windows cascaded\ndown the fronts of buildings and\ninto the streets.\nResidents fled In terror from their\nhomes. Fires broke out in many\nplaces, but few proved serious.\n\"ANOTHER WAR?\"\n\"Isihls anotker war?\" crltj) one\nSTr'l 'from anrang a screaming\ngroup of women refugees who\nfive days previously ran a gauntlet of bullets to escape Shanghai.\nThe first wave of terror was just\nbeginning to subside when the second quake shook the city, at 8:24\np.m.\nSeismologists said the force of the\nfirst tremor was of an intensity between No. 5 and No. 6 on the recognized scale which measures lightest\nshocks as No. 1 and the heaviest on\nrecord as No. 10. The second shock\nwas classified as of No. 4 intensity.\nThe foundation of the Great Eastern hotel sank four inches. Guests\nfled to the streets, some in night\nclothing.\nScattered plate glass and other\ndebris was strewn for blocks along\nthe Escolta, Manila's main street.\n15-Year-Old Child\nMother Wins Divorce\nSEATTLE, Aug. 20 (AP)-A child\nmother, Margaret Hunter,. 15, won\na divorce yesterday from Melvin\nHunter, 25-year-old public project\nworker, on grounds he neglected\nher. The couple married January 24.\n1936. with her mother's consent, Mrs.\nHunter said. Her husband and five-\nmonths-old daughter were not in\ncourt.\nMELLON UNABLE\nTO LEAVE HOUSE\nSOUTHAMPTON, N.Y., Aug. 20\n(AP)\u2014Andrew W. Mellon, former\nsecretary of thc United States treasury, has become\ntoo infirm to leave\nthe home of his\nson-in-law, David\nE. K. Bruce, a\nmember of the\nhousehold said today.\nMellon's condition was said to\nbe due to his advancing years. He\nwas 83 last March.\nFLYING BOAT ON\nATLANTIC FLIGHT\nBOTWOOD, Nfld., Aug. 20 (CP\nCable)\u2014Imperial Airways' flying\nboat Caledonia rose gracefully from\nthc sheltered waters of Botwood\nharbor tonight on another experimental transatlantic flight to Foynes,\nIreland.\nThe giant plane with her crew of\nfour tok off at 1:40 p,m. P.S.T. and\nheaded eastward on her second\ncrossing from this side. She made\nthc trip to Foynes in 12 hours five\nminutes last time, the fastest any\neastward crossing until her sister\nship, Cambria, clipped a few minutes from the record.\nCoast Girl Died From\nPhosphorous Poison\nMURRAYVILLE, B.C., Aug. 20\n(CP)\u2014Sixteen-year-old Hazel Nick-\nefrson, Fort Langley girl who danced\nuntil midnight and then went home\nto die was killed by phosphorus\npoison, a coroner's jury sitting here\nThursday afternoon decided.\nThe jury's verdict said there was\n\"nothing to show\" whether the poison was taken by mistake or otherwise.\nMiss Nickerson was found dead\nAugust 3 at. her home at Fort Langley, near this Fraser valley settlement. She was last seen alive shortly after midnight August 1, by\nfriends who took her home from a\ndance.\nNELSON SCHOOL BOARDMOVES\nREVOKE BOARDERS'EXEMPTION\nSends Resolution to Trustees Convention on\nMatter; Grade Junior High Grounds at\nOnce; New Home Economics Teacher\nThat the provision of the schooj\nact exempting from payment of fees\nfor high school tuition, any pupil\nfrom outside the school district wio\nis an only boarder, throws on centers like Nelson an unfair burden\nfor the higher schooling of outside\npupils, is thc opinion of the Nelson\nschool board, which Friday night\nsponsored a resolution for the coming convention of the Scho6l Trustees Association of British Columbia, asking for the revocation of\nthat exemption by an amendment\nto the act. As the great majority of\nboarding pupils could arrange to\nqualify for the exemption, the centers to which they are sent are unfairly hit, it is contended. In the\ncase of Nelsont which has both\nsenior and juriior high schools.\nboarding pupils arc a considerable\nelement.\nThe convention that will have the\nAndrew  Mellon critical\nHis condition wa.i\nsaid    not   to   be! solution 'before it will be in ses\n\u25a0--:Z\n\u25a0^\"^ sion at Victoria September 20-22.\nChairman Leslie Craufurd and\nTrustees W. E. Coles, David Rees,\nE. P. Dawson and A. A. Perrier\nwere all named delegates to the convention, so as to assure adequate\nrepresentation in case some of the\nfive named cannot attend.\nMISS McALPINE APPOINTED\nResignation of Miss Bertha Rogers,\nwho has been home economics teacher at the junior high schol for\neight years, was accepted, and V\u00bb<s\nRuth McAlpine of Wapella, Sask.,\nwas appointed in her place. Miss\nRogers is going to Oak Bay, Vic\ntori a.\nIt was ordered that the grading\nto be done on the grounds of the\njunior high school should be done\nby day labor and should start as\nsoon as possible.\nThose at the meeting of the board\nwere Chairman Craufurd, Trustees\nF. T. Griffiths, Coles, Dawson and\nPerrier, and Secretary F. L. Irwin,\n300 MEN STORM\nA TEXTILE PUNT\nLATE AT NIGHT;\nSMASH WINDOWS\nBricks and Stones Are\nHurled at St. Henri\nBuilding\nEIGHT OFFICERS\nDRAW REVOLVERS\nMONTREAL, August 20, (CP)\u2014\nSome 300 men late tonight storm-\ned the St. Henri plant of Dominion\nTextile company, whole 10,000 employees went on strike 19 dayi\nago, smashing windows with \u2022\nshower of bricks and stones. They\nwere dispersed only after the eight\nconstables on duty had drawn revolvers and formed a line In front\nof the mob.\nNo one was injured but the plant\nwatchman said they were forced\nto duck behind machinery to avoid\nthe broadside hurled by the crowd\nwhich marched up the narrow street\nloading to the big mill, and let fly\ntheir missiles.\nThirty more officers were rushed\nby motor car to the scene, while violence has flared rwjre than once\nsince the workers walked out with\ndemands for collective bargaining\nrights and increased pay or shorter\nhours, but the crowd had fled when\nthey arrived.\nTake a look at the little fellow above who has just brought Joy and\na title home to his parents. Ho is one-year-old Charles Farrell, who\nhas been adjudged the \"perfect baby\" at the Whittier health unit at\nRoxbury, Mass., during a contest in which more than 50 babies competed. Charles' perfect health amazed the doctors and nurses who\njudged the event. The prize winning lad is the son of Mr. and Mrs.\nFrank Farrell of Boston, Mass.\nB.C. Chinese Send\nFunds lo Aid War\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 20 (CP) -\nVancouver Chinese tonight launched in earnest their campaign to\nraise funds to aid the Nanking government in the Sino-Japanese conflict in the far cast.\nPresaged for days \u00bbby announcements in local Chinese language\nnewspapers, final plans were discussed tonight by the Chinese Benevolent association, who said their\npresident, Charlie Lim F. Sing, and\nchairman, Charlie Suey, had each\ncontributed $1500 to start the campaign.\nOver $5000 has been collectod,\nwhile contributions were coming in\nsteadily from Chinese in cities, logging camps and canneries where\nmany were pledging a week's salary.\nVancouver Chinese said thc Chinese Merchants association'here had\nalready sent $45,000 to China.\nFounder of Gainers,\nLtd. Dies, Edmonton\nEDMONTON, August 20, (CP) -\nJohn Gainer, 80, founder and president of the packing firm of Gainers\nLimited, western pioneer and resident of Edmonton for the last 46\nyears, died at his home here last\nnight.\nPLEDGES  ITALY TO\nCONCRETE POLICY\nOF PEACE\nPALERMO, Sicily, Aug. 20 (CD-\nPremier Mussolini, addressing a\nworld-wide audience, today pledged\nItaly to a \"concrete policy of peace\"\nand declared \"I believe we can arrive at a lasting rapprochement\"\nbetween Great Britain and Italy.\nMore than 200,000 Sicilians crowded to hear thc premier while in\nevery principal\ncity in Italy hundreds of thousands\nmarched in formation to line up\nbefore loudspeakers in the central\nsquares. The address was broadcast internation -\nally.\nHis   only   warlike note \u2014 \"We\nwill   not   tolerate\nB o 1 s h e vism   or\nanything like it in\nthe   Mediterranean\" \u2014 was   an\nafterthought,   ob-\nMU8SOLIN1    servers stated, in-\nscrted  when   thc\ncrowd yelled at him to comment on\nthe Spanish civil war situation.\nItaly, he shouted, \"is disposed to\ngive its collaboration on all problems touching the political life of\nEurope.\" He summarized Italian\npolicy with an \"appeal to peace to\nall countries which are touched by\ntho Mediterranean, where three continent have brought their civilization.\"\nv-JWies\nin the news\nWorld famous\nfor his work as\nleader of the\nBoy Scouts\nLord Baden -\nPowell was\ncamping, with\nh u n d reds ot\nScouts, at\n, Haarlem, Holland, for the\nI n t ernational\nBoy Scout\nJamboree. It is\nthrough his\nefforts that\nboys the world\nover have been\n -    -    enrolled in the\nBADEN-POWELL  organization.\nPerhaps the\nbest known\ndoctor in all\nthe world, Dr.\nAllan Roy Dafoe now has his\nhands full with\nthe Dionne\nq u 1 n t u plcts.\nRecently he\ncancelled the\nquints' daily\n\"personal appearances\" because the five\nlittle girls\nwere showing\nsigns of temper.\nDAFOE\nTwo More Deaths of\nInfantile Paralysis\nLONDON, Ont., Aug. 20 (CP)-\nGcrald Morris of Ilderton died in\nhospital here today from infantile\nparalysis. Officials said the number\nof cases had reached 10 in this district.\nTORONTO, Aug. 20 (CP)-Nine\nnew cases of infantile paralysis were\nreported today, bringing the total\nto 30 in three days.\nAnother death was reported, the\n10th in six weeks. Since mid-June\n104 cases have been reported, more\nthan twice the number all last year.\nU.S.  CONGRES8 TO  ADJOURN\nTODAY\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 20 (AP)\n\u2014United States congress coasted\ncomfortably along toward adjournment today with just a few\nmore Issues to be settled before\nthe legislators say a willing farewell to the steamy heat of a Washington summer and the even more\ntorrid controversies of the past\nsession. Officially and definitely,\nparty leaders In both houses fixed\nthe adjournment hour at late tomorrow afternoon, or sometime\ntomorrow evening.\nDoukhobor Jailed\nWhen Refuses lo\nRegister Births\nA Fruitvale Doukhobor is In Jail\nand another resident at Park Siding\nis poorer in pocket as a result of\nfailure to register their children's\nbirths.\nMike Berukoff of Park Siding\npleaded guilty before George T.\nMatthews, stipendiary magistrate it\nSalmo, to charges of failing to\nregister the birth of his 17-year-\nold-daughter and 14-ycar-old son,\nand paid $5 and oosts on each charge.\nHe promised registrations would be\nmade for each.\nFred Popoff was charged with\nfailing to register the birth of a\nstep-daughter aged 20 and a son\naged 16. He pleaded guilty and took\n10-day jail sentences as an alternative to paying $5 fines on each\ncharge. He refused to register the\nchildren.\nPenticton Dog Is\nHeld for Ransom;\nOwner Ready Pay\nPENTICTON, B.C., Aug. 20 (CP)\u2014\nSomewhere in this Okanagan town\nionight a kidnap victim whimpered\nfor release, while the self-styled\nThree-X gang refused to come forward to collect his ransom money.\nAnxious eyes searched Penticton\nlanes and streets for Ming, si:.**-\nmonths-old Scottie pup belonging to\nMiss Winnie Morden, whose disappearance Aug. 11 was followed by an\nanonymous telephone message demanding $10 for his return.\nAlthough Miss Morden said she\nwould pay the ransom, none has\nclaimed it.\nMin Max\nNELSON   48 80\nVictoria   52 70\nNanaimo   50 74\nVancouver   54 76\nKamloops   52 80\nPrince George  42 72\nEstevan Point   54 62\nPrince Rupert  52 62\nLangara   52 56\nAtlin   48 58\nDawson   44 64\nSeattle   58 72\nPortland    58 78\nSan Francisco   56 62\nSpokane     54 88\nLos Angeles   66 80\nKelowna   56 85\nPenticton     50 \u2014\nGrand Forks   42 90\nKaslo    50 \u2014\nCranbrook    39 80\nCalgary   38 76\nEdmonton   46 74\nSwift Current   42 80\nMoose Jaw   42 76\nPrince Albert   48 72\nSaskatoon   38 76\nQu'Appelle   38 72\nWinnipeg   48 66\nOkanagan and Kootenay \u2014 Fair\nj and warm at first, followed by fresh\n1 to strong southerly winds and prob-\n' ably scattered showers at night.\n_^_\u2014\u2014^\n \t\nmmmmmmm\nMM TWO\t\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.\u2014SATURDAY MORNING, AUG. 21, 1937\nCUBS IN CAMP HAIL ORDERS STAY\nPUT TILL WEDNESDAY; TWO CASES\nOF SCARLET FEVER GO TO HOSPITAL\nt Health Officer Says\n\"Everything Under\nControl\"\nURGES ATTEND\nSORE THROATS\nWolf Cubs staging their annual\nouting at Camp Busk, Kokanee, are\njubilantly sympathetic or sympathetically jubilant, or something.\nTwo of the lads in camp developed\nscarlet fever and while expressing\nsympathy for them and the cutting\noff ot their camp due to the necessity of sending them to isolation\nhospital, the remainder hailed with\nglee instructions given them to remain in camp until Wednesday.\nThey were to return home today.\nOne of the two cases was identified Thursday, the other Friday, and\neach patient was placed in isolation\nat Kootenay Lake General hospital\nimmediately.\nEXAMINE8 BOY8\nDr. F. P. Sparks, visiting the camp\nFriday as medical health officer\nsince Dr. H. H. MacKenzie, district\nhealth officer, was absent from the\ncjty, examined everyone in the\ncamp. He found that the two Cubs\n\u25a0who were ill had been in close contact and hoped there would be no\nadditional cases.\n\"Each boy is being carefully\nwatched,\" said Dr. Sparks, \"and we\nhave issued instructions that no one\nis to leave the camp before Wednesday at the earliest. If there are to\nbe any additional cases we should\nknow by Monday and can then say\ndefinitely whether the Cubs will be\nable to break camp Wednesday. Everything is under control,\" he added,\nPointing out that there had been\na case of scariet fever reported in\nNelson previous to the camp, Dr,\nSparks stated this showed the scarlet fever organism was present in the\ncommunity.\nMUST TAKE CARE\n\"The cases should impress everyone,\" he explained, \"with the im\nportance of checking up at once any\ncases of sore throat which may develop. It is urgent that any family\nin which sore throats are reported\ncall in the family doctor. This is necessary to avoid an epidemic.\"\nThe camp scribe at Kokanee, writing his daily news note for the Nelson Daily News, had this to say\nabout it:\n\"Visitors will not be able to come\nto Cub camp until Wednesday because of quarantine for scarlet fever.\n\"Everyone in camp is feeling tine\nand the Cubs think it will be splendid to stay the extra time, and they\ndo no know their camp is quarantined.\n\"Though nothing may be sent out\nfrom camp, things may be sent out\nto the boys.\"\n:very Rural Home\nIs on a\nROCKGAS\nLint\u2014\ntil. Imury of hot water; tht tlirill\not i t nodorn cook stovo; tho\neltin,ieoiy 'warmth of gat lioat\n-\u2014Alt*-lhat* aro economically\nyoun with ROCKGAS, no matter\nwhere you live.\nAik,your dealer -today about -the\nlow'cott and convenience of\nROCKGAS service in your home.\nCALL Tel. 666\nKOOTENAY   PLUMBING   A\nHEATING  CO.  LTD.\n313 Baker St.       Nelson, B.C.\nKOOTENAYS 10\nBENEFIT FROM\nZINC DEMAND\nCanadian Zinc Sells\nin States Despite\nTariff Barrier\nCanadian Zinc production is in\nhigh gear with the stiffening of the\nmarket in recent weeks, and despite\na Hi-cent tariff barrier, Canadian-\nrefined electrolytic zinc has been\nmoving steadily into the United\nStates, the Vancouver Province reports.\n\"Due chiefly to low.water in the\nNorthwest states, zinc output has\nbeen unable to keep up with demand. Not for many years has\nCanadian zinc been in such demand as to surmount the United\nStates tariff, but scarcity of the\nmetal is so pronounced that not\nonly is the pirce paid to Canadian\nproducers sufficient to meet the\nduty, but it also meets the premium\nof more than \u00a32 Ss a ton which\nthe world market allows for zinc of\n99.99 plus per cent purity,\n\"The East Kootenay district in\nBritish Columbia will benefit substantially from this situation, as\nCanada's chief zinc resources are\ncentred there.\n\"Present prices for lead and zinc\nare so satisfactory that smelting\noperations are to be expanded in all\ndirections\u2014lead, zinc, copper, gold,\nsilver, sulphur and fertilizer products.''\nMoslem Marriage Problem in England\nForeign pollen usually la more\neffective than pollen from the same\nplant. Charles Darwin, great naturalist, showed, by years of experimenting, that plants derive great\nadvantages from cross-pollination.\nMost plants which benefit by this\nmethod depend on wind and insects\nto do the work.\nDressed in Moslem robes, Sheik Abdullah Ali, 34-year-old leader\nof the Moslem community at South Shields, Eng., is shown with the\nbrother and sister of the English girl he married six months ago, who\nare now his adopted children, if the law doesn't take them from him.\nIt seems that the Sheik's marriage was performed according to Moslem\nrites only, but British law insists that a ceremony be performed in a\nregister office. Thc Sheik refuses to go through with a second marriage, pleading that such a ceremony is contrary to his religious beliefs.\nSo the law threatens to take Norman, 13, and Norah, 16, unless he\nchanges his mind,\nRossland Social,.\nBy MRS. B. B. FERGUSON\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON, B.C., HOTELS\nHume Hotel.\nNelson, B.C.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor.\nSAMPLE ROOMS   :   EXCELLENT DINING ROOM\nEuropean Plan, $1.50 up\nHUME-Mrs. E. H. Welton, Trail;\nM. L. Benthien, Gray Creek; H.\nMacManus, J. W. Perry, P. Dunker-\nley, J. T. Leigh, N. Smith, Vancouver; Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Macpher-\n\u00bbon,  Crawford  Bay;   Miss   Jeanne\nWolfe, Spokane; G, M. Graham,\nWinnipeg; L. Stephens, Delba, Alta ;\nJ. A. Turner, Toronto; Miss Gladys\nQuinn,-Cheney, Wash.; F. C. Banks,\nPenticton; I.. Roberts, Calgary; R.\nBrough, T. A. Burns, Medicine Hat;\nS. M. Haley, San Francisco.\nTHE SAVOY HOTEL\n\"Where the Guest is King\"\nMODERN  SAMPLE ROOMS\nLicensed Premises\n124 Baker St.       W. K. Clark, Prop.       Nelson, B. C\nROSSLAND, B. C, August 17\n\u2014Mr. and Mrs. Martin Dally and\nArthur Dally, and their guests,\nMrs. Richard Hooper of Seattle\nand Mrs. James Edawrds of Mil\nwaukee, spent the week end at\nNelson, the guests of Mr. and Mrs.\nRobert Crerar.\n\u2022 A. T. Mira of Fernie spent\nthe week end here.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Harrison\nnnd daughter are spending a few\ndays   at   Spokane.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. T. Monkhouse\nhave returned from a holiday at\nVancouver   and   Seattle.\n\u2022 .Miss Kay Guerin and Miss\nEffie Mitchell have returned from\na visit at Nelson,\nt Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Bow\ncock have returned from a holiday   at   Vancouver.\n1 Mrs. B. Andrews and son of\nCreston are guests of Mrs. And-\nrow's parents, Mr. and Mrs. L.\nCotnoir.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Ian Fry have\nreturned from Vancouver. They\nwere guests of Mrs. Fry's mother\nMrs.  R.  C. Fry.\n\u2022 Rev. T. P. Freney and his\nsister, Miss Honora Freney, and\nhis brother, John, have returned\nfrom   a   visit  to   Revelstoke.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Trembath are visiting their daughter\nat Cranbrook.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Claude Anderson and grandson, who were\nguests of Mr, and Mrs. B, F. Anderson, LeRoi avenue, left Sunday\nfer Hollywood and other points in\nCalifornia, before returning to\ntheir home at Tulsa, Oklahoma.\n\u2022 Mrs. Eva Teeters, Mrs. Dorothy Stinson and Miss Winnie\nMorris left Sunday morning for a\ntwo weeks' holiday at Vancouver\nand other coast points.\n\u2022 Mr, nnd Mrs. R. W. Haggen\nand daughters, Beth, Winnie and\nMargaret, are holidaying at Ainsworth.\n\u2022 Miss Patricia Hunter of Medicine Hat is a guest of her brother-\nin-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs.\nR.   D.  Gardner here,\nMiss Grace Singer is spending a week at Christina lake.\nMr. and Mrs. Harold Fourt\nare spending a few days at Spokane.\nMr. nnd Mrs. J. D. Kordmnn\nof Beaverdell were renewing acquaintance here.\n\u2022 Dr. and Mrs, J. S. Daly are\nholidaying in the Cariboo country.\nDuring tiie absence of her parent?,\nyoung Miss Margaret Daly is a\nguest of her grandparents, Mr.\nand Mrs. George Urquhnrt.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs, L. Johnson of\nCalgary, who were guests of Mr.\nJohnson's parents, Mr, and Mrs.\nEdward  Johnson,   have  returned.\n\u2022 H. Cherrington has returned\nfrom a visit to Grand Forks.\n\u2022 Samuel Patterson has returned from a visit to Spokane.\n\u2022 Miss Frances Nicnolson of\nVancouver is a guest of Miss Patricia Hardy.\n\u2022 Miss Helen Stevens who was\nholidaying at Salem, Oregon, has\nreturned to her home here.\n\u2022 Mrs., John Gordon and Miss\nIsabel Gordon, who were holidaying at Loon Lake, Wash., have returned.\n\u2022 Miss Louise Irvin, Miss Ina\nIrvin nnd Miss Lillian Stephens\nhave returned from a holiday at\nChristina lake.\n\u2022 fUr. and Mrs., W. F. Burgess\nand family of Kelowna are guests\nof Mr. and Mrs. L. Elmore.\nROSSLAND, B. C, Aug, 19-Pasi\nChief's club of Maple Leaf Temple,\nPythian Sisters, met Tuesday at the\nhome of the president, Mrs. Frank\nG. Bray. A past president's pin was\npresented to Mrs. Howard Ferguson,\nand cups and saucers were presented\nto Mrs, Gray and Mrs. J. Gendle,\nwhose birthdays occur during August.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Abbott and baby are holidaying at\nCranbrook.\nt Mr. and Mrs. George Best arc\non holiday at the coast.\n\u2022 Friends of Mrs. George Nixon tendered her a- surprise party\nTuesday evening at her home on\nPark street, the occasion being her i\nbirthday. The affair was arranged\nby Mrs. A. Woodward.\nGROWERSHAVE\nPLEDGE OF AID\nFROM MINISTER\nMacKenzie Opposed\nPreference Removal\non All Apples\nFearful that the apple growing industry of British Columbia would\nbe ruined if the present British\npreference, a's arranged under the\nOttawa agreements, were removed\nas a concession to the United SUtea,\na delegatkm representing this industry and B.C. agriculture generally, waited on Hon. Ian McKenzie,\nminister of defence, in Vancouver\nand submited to him a formal brief\nsetting out the effect which abrogation of the preference would have.\nThis brief was implemented by a\nreview of the whole matter by A.\nK. Loyd, Kelowna, president of the\nBritish Columbia Fruit Growers'\nassociation and leaders of the industry.\nMr. McKenzie pledged himself to\nsee that every other member of the\nDominion cabinet received a copy\nof the brief for study and promised\nthat if this issue came before the\ngovernment, the apple growing industry of Canada, including Nova\nScotia, which was also vitally concerned, would be given a full opportunity to supplement its present\ncase.\nSubsequently Mr. Loyd said that\nthis pledge was thoroughly satisfactory to the apple growing industry of British Columbia.\nThe brief recited the benefits\nwhich accrued to the apple growing industry of Canada following\nthe application of the Imperial preference. Previously Washington state\ngrowers had an advantage ranging\nfrom seven to 13 centa a box. Under\nthe Ottawa agreements the preference to apples from the overseas\ndominions is about 38 cents a box.\nThis amount is lessened by the\ndifferential in transportation costs,\nwhich still favor the Washington\nglower as against the B.C. grower,\nthe brief pointed out\nBritish Columbia must export\naround 2,000,000 boxes if the industry is to survive and by 1940 will\nhave to find a market for 1,000,000\nboxes more than the present production as trees now coming into\ncommercial bearing will provide this\nincrease, it added.\nThe effect of the removal of the\npreference, with this increased production in sight, was stressed in the\nbrief and by President Loyd.\nIt was pointed out that Nova\nScotia's case was even more serious\nbecause the Annapolis valley depended more on the export market\nthan did British Columbia,\nIn British Columbia a capital investment of not less than $25,000,000\nwould be gravely impaired if not\ndestroyed by removal of the British preference, the livelihood of\n2400 families, a huge wage account,\nmillions in freight revenues and an\nannual $4,000,000 local purchasing\npower would be seriously affected.\nCHICAGO LOWER\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nP. and L. KAPAK, Proprletori\nCommercial, Tourist and Family Trade Solicited\nROOMS $1.00 AND UP\nNELSON, B.C.\nFree Parking\nPhone 234.\nOccidental Hotel\n70i Vernon St. Phone 897\nH. WASSICK, Prop.\nSPECIAL MONTHLY RATES\nGood Comfortable Rooms\nLicensed Premises\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcome Awaits You\nJAS.  E.  MADDEN,  Prop.\nCompletely  Remodelled.\nHot and Cold Water.\nIn the HEART ot the City\nEDGEWOOD, B. C, HOTELS\nARROW LAKES HOTEL\nE.   NIEDERMAN,\nDroprletop\nComfortable Roomi\nGood Monli\nEDGEWOOD, P,C.\nLogical    Stopping\nPlace on tho\nRoad to Vernon\n:J\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\nI\nYOUR VANCOUVER'HOME\"    Newly Renovated Throu-jhout\nPhones   \u2022   Elevator\nA   PATERSON. lale o;\n900 Seymour St.       Van;ouver. B C.   Coleman, Alia., Proprict\nDufSerin Hotel\nhout   I\nu\nLow Roundtrip Fares\nto\nVancouver, B.C.\nExhibition\nTickets on Sale\nAug. 28 to Sept. 5\nFinal return limit Sept. 9.\nFROM NELSON\nCoach Class . . . $11.45\nFirst Class ....  $17.10\nChildren 8 Years and  Under\n12 Half Fare\nFull details from nearest\nTicket Agent\n(%4c\nCards were played and community\nsinging indulged in. Supper was\nserved at a late hour. Those present were Mrs. Alfred Woodward.\nMrs, Robert E. Fox, M\/s. John Fox.\nMrs. Jnmcs Harper, Mrs. Stanley\nAllibone, Mrs. Helen Smith, Mrs.\nJ. A. Peters, Mrs. Edward Tcrzictf,\nMrs. Setli Martin, Mrs. Fred Parker\nand the hostess, Mrs. Nixon received\na number of Rifts.\nMrs, J-ames H. Moncrieff of\nVancouver, who is visiting Trail,\nspent a day here with her father,\nB. F, Anderson, LeRoi avenue.\nW. K. Esling, M. P., spent\nWednesday at Nelson.\nMiss Beatrice Dams has returned from Castlegar.\n\u2022 Miss Lou Hamblen has re-\nurned to Deer Park.\n\u2022 Mrs. Ira Hendrickson has returned from a visit to Nelson.\n\u2022 Mrs. Ernest Chesham has re-\nurned from a holiday gt Christina\nLake,\n\u2022 Mrs, W. C Burrell and Mrs.\nR. J. Burrell of Spokane spent a\nfew days with the former's parents,\nMr. and Mrs. Thomas Prestley. On\nihe return trip they were accompanied by Miss Donna Burrell.\nMiss Jean Burrell and Miss Barbara\nBurrell, who spent a month with\nIheir grandparents.\n\u2022 Mr, and Mrs. Charles Ledoux\nhave left for the coast.\n\u2022 Mrs. Thomas Gilmour and\nMiss Betty Gilmour are holidaying\nat Deer Park,\n\u2022 Roy and Ronald Briggeman\naro visiting relatives at Deer Park,\n\u2022 J. Wright has left for Windermere, B. C.\n\u2022 Mr, and Mrs, Victor Crane\n.were holidaying at Christina l>ake,\ni \u2022 Miss Jean Morrison of Van-\nI couver is at her home here.\n\u2022 A. Wood has left for Vancouver to visit relatives.\ni    \u2022   Miss [na Hawke of Alberta is\n'\u25a0 a guest af Rossland friends.\n\u2022 Mr, and Mrs. Louis LaFace and\n! granddaughter, Betty Jean, and Mr.\nj and Mr:;, Primo Cabianca and son,\nRobert, have returned from Spokane, where they visited Mr. LaFace's\nson, Frank, from California, who 15\nspending some time in the inland\nempire city.\n\u2022 Mrs. B. Andrews and son, who\nwere visiting Mrs. Andrews' parents,\nMr. and Mrs. L, O. Cotnoir, weni\nto Nelson Tuesday lo join Mr. Andrews. The pai'ty then leaves for a\nholiday at the coast.\n|j    \u2022   Amos Ruelle, Basil McAllister\nCHICAGO, Aug. 20 (AP)- Flurried selling that broke out late today swept wheat and corn values\ndown more than three cents a bushel, September corn almost the immediate permissible limit.\nLiquidating sales on the part of\nholders of September corn contracts\n, unwilling or unable to accept possible large tenders of corn started\nthe selling, which soon spread to\nthe wheat market, and other commodities. iLard and oats fell to new\nlow price records for the season.\nAt the close, corn was U'h-3%\ncents under yesterday's finish, Sept.\n94&-%, Dec. 64%-%, wheat 2 cents\nto 2%'down, Sept. 1.04%-%, Dec.\n1.08Vi-%, and oats Vfc-% off.\nRFIELD SUITES\nCEPTIONAL PRICES\n... g\u00a7l\u00bb\n1 III\n1   il Ir                 .*&\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0,* j\n.;\n\u25a0V\"\n'\"\u25a0'^SSim\nWm\nla^v\" *\"*\u2022*'\u25a0\u25a0'\u00ab  '.*: *4.   \u25a0     'i*        Spl 1 &:--'\nWW**'     m\n*t^^:\n1  ^\n1\nI\nSSm\ny\nHfe******. 1\n\u00ab*   i\nIllliflipit:\n3 piece suite\u2014Hardwood frames in full webb con*,\nstruction. Coverings that will stand hard wear. Reversible spring filled  cushions.   Modern  designs.\nColors of rust, brown and combination of colors.\nRegular to $165.00. SPECIAL\t\ns 129.50\nPHONE 553\nFURNITURE\nDRAPERIES\nBAKER ST.\nKASLO IS SCENE OF\nPRETTY WEDDING\nMiss Marion Marjorie\nSpeirs Is Bride of\nF. A. Burrows\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Richards\nand family are holidaying at Christina Lake.\nand Alfred LaFace' are on a holiday at Spokane\nt Milan Purcello, George Tomich and Reggie Lefevre have returned from a trip through the Okanagan.\n\u2022 Miss Betty Bentley of Kimberley is a guest of her brother\nand sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Norman Bentley.\n\u2022 Members of Maple Leaf Temple No. 4, Pythian Sisters, gathered\nWednesday evening at the home of\nMrs. Harold Evans to tender a surprise party to Mrs. Charles Ward,\na recent bride. On behalf of the\ncompany, Mrs. Arthur Littley, most\nexcellent chief of the temple, presented Mrs. Ward with a silver\nflower basket. Cards were played,\nfirst prize going to Mrs. J. Gendlt\nand consolation to the guest of honor.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. William Evans\nare holidaying at Loon Lake.\n\u2022 Miss Grace Singer has returned from a holiday at Christina\nLake.\n\u2022 Miss Maizie Gore of Vancou\nver has been visiting Rossland.\n\u2022 H. Olsen, who was visiting\nhere, has returned tn Nelson.\n\u2022 Mrs. L. Blameron and Mrs\nJerome McDonell of Greenwood are\nin Rossland this week.\n\u2022 Miss Margaret Harding has\nreturned to her home at Vancouver\n\u2022 Mrs. Bcrnie Ferrie and son\nhave returned from the hospital.\nt Miss Rita Fourt entertained\nthe Young Ladies' Study group of\nSacred Heart church at her home\nWednesday, a social hour being\nspent. Those present were Miss Norma LaFace, Miss Eleanor Tomich,\nMiss Dorothy LaFace, Miss Eileen\nMara and the hostess.\n\u2022 Miss Marie Prestley Is visiting Spokane.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. L. Graham of\nPortland, Ore., accompanied by Miss\nBeatrice Wilson and Milton Bailey\nof Kelowna, who were visiting Mr.\nand Mrs, J. C. Urquhart, have returned to their homes.\nKASLO, B. C\u2014A pretty home\nwedding was solemnized here Aug.\n14 when Marion Marjorie Speirs,\neldest daughter of Mr. and Mrs.\nFred Speirs, was united in marriage\nto Frederick Albert Burrows, second son of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Burrows. Rev, J. Fielding Shaw, pastor of St. Andrew's United church,\nofficiated.\nThe ceremony took place at the\nhome of the bride's parents where\nthe rooms were beautifully decorated with sweet peas, snapdragon\nand other harmonizing seasonal blossoms.\nMiss Lorna Speirs, sister of the\nbride was her only attendant, the\nbridegroom being supported by Roy\nColeman of Trail.\nThe bride entered the room where\nthe ceremony was performed on the\narm of her father, who gave her\nin marriage.\nA lovely gown of pink flowered\nchiffon in ankle length with while\nbat and accessories, was chosen by\nthe bride as her wedding ensemble.\nShe carried a bridal bouquet of\nsweet peas, rose buds and fern,\nThe bridesmaid's gown was of\npale green flowered chiffon with\nwhite accessories. She carried a\nbouquet of sweet peas, larkspur,\ngypsophila and fern.\nThe mother of the bride was attired in a brown flat silk crepe gown\nwith matching hat and accessories,\nwhile the mother of the groom was\ngowned in flowered silk with blue\nhat and accessories.\nOnly immediate relatives and a\nfew close friends ot the contracting\nparties witnessed the ceremony,\nwhich was followed by a buffet luncheon, the table being arranged\nwith tall yellow candles and rose\nbuds and centered with a three-\ntier wedding cake,\nThe couple left immediately for\na short honeymoon trip, by motor,\nto Tacoma, Wash., and other points.\nThe bride's going away attire consisted of a modish dress in green,\ntopped with a white tailored coat\nand with corresponding accessories.\nThe groom's gift to the bride was\na handsome leather club bag; to the\nbridesmaid he gave a sterling silver slave bracelet and to the best\nman a sterling silver lighter.\nNATIVE DAUGHTER\nOF KASLO\nThe bride is a native daughter of\nKaslo. received her public and high\nschool education here, and after raking a full commercial course, was\nappointed stenographer in the local\ngovernment office, a position which\nshe has filled for several years. She\nhas been a member of St. Andrew's\nUnited church choir for a number\nof years. Many social functions were\ngiven In Iter honor prior to ber marriage.\nThe parents of the groom have\nmade their home in Kaslo for several years but Mr. Burrows has spent\nmuch of his time in Trail where he\nis In the employ of the C. M. k S.\ncompany.\nUpon their return from the honeymoon the couple will reside at Trail.\nA large number of gifts were received.\nThe bride's bouquet was received\nby Miss Irene MacGillivray.\n\u25a0- FINK'S \u2022\nCotton Prints\nNew Stylet\nSASKATOON, (CP)\u2014At a recent\nmeeting in this city as teachers\nwere discussing the advisability of\nplacing school matters under University civil service, one male teacher vigorously and loudly dissented. \"We might come under the\nhammer of the political pork barrel\nand be made political footballs,\"\nBut is is a big ball than Denis\nHaughcy, a recent arrival in\nNelson, has in his hands as he\npaddles in the waters of Kootenay lake at Lakeside park.\nSpokane Lady\nHere to Meet\nPeak (limbers\nMrs, Gladys Quinn, one of the\nunfortunate members of the club\nwho could not accompany the hikers on their journey to Kokanee\nglacier, motored up from Spokane\nFriday lo return with the Spokane\nmountaineers Sunday, when they\nbreak camp at their rendezvous at\nKokanee. Mrs. Quinn announced\nthat the club will return by way of\nTrail and Keitle Falls, stopping en\nroute to visit the famous smelter\nof the C. M. k S. Company at Trail,\nof which they have heard ro much.\nSASKATOON (CP)-Claiming the\nSaskatchewan gasoline tax is causing a loss on operations, flying clubs\nof Regina, Saskatoon and Moose\nJaw have asked Ihe government to\nremit the tax on gasoline used ir,\nclub airplanes, Cost of Ihe tax to the\nSaskatoon club roughly is $375 Regina $231 and Moose Jaw $400 annually.\nWhy Not a Want Ad?\nMrs. Taylor of\nRossland Dies\nROSSLAND, B.C.. Aug. 20 \u2014 Mrs.\nEvelyn Taylor, aged 33, wife of\nVaughn B, Taylor, died this morning after an illness of several weeks.\nMrs. Taylor was born at Toronto,\nOnt. She married Mr. Taylor at\nLethbridge, Alta., in 1030, taking\nup residence at Rossland a few\nmonths later.\nIn addition to her husband she Is\nsurvived by two children, Vaughn,\nsix, and Kenneth, three; her mother,\nMrs. Clara King of Lethbridge and\nsix sisters, Mrs. A. Weaver, Duluth,\nMinn.; Mrs. S. B. Whitesel, Mrs. A,\nJ Hale, Miss Eunice King and Misa\nGeorgina King of Newdayton, Alta.,\nnnd Miss Lila King, Vancouver,\nMrs. Taylor was a member ol\nthe Rossland United church. Interment will be at Lelhbridgi.\n ~~\"~\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\n\u2014\nmmm~        .mm\/mom.\ngW*fHM*!8pppfp>Ww*.w^\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON, B.C-SATURDAY MORNING. AUG. 21, 1337      *\t\nICH U RCH E5\nrrrmrrrrr\n8>t. ilnlju'a\nCutl)rran (Eljurrlj\nStanley and Silica Streets\nRev. V. L. Meyer, Pastor\n11 a.m.\u2014Sunday School and Service.\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening Service.\nA CORDIAL WELCOME\nTO   ALL\n3Firat (Eljurd) nf\n(Eljrifit ftriruttat.\n209  BAKER  STREET\nA Branch ot The Muthel Church\nThe First Church ot Christ.\nScientist,   in   Boston.   Mass.\nSunday   School   9:45   am.\nSunday  Service  11  am.\nSubject   Lesson Sermon\n\"MIND\"\nWednesday Testimonial Meeting\n8 p.m.\nFREE   READING    ROOM    IN\nCHURCH   BUILDING-\nAM Cordially Welcome\nHuckleberries\nOH This Year\n: Peach Plums Are at\nPeak Associated\nGrowers Report\nHuckleberries are very scares\nthis year, hardly any being obtainable, officials of the Associated\nGrowers of B. C. announced Friday. However, a plentiful supply\nof other fruits makes up for the\nlack of huckleberries. Peaches are\nmoving in fair quantities from the\nArrow Lakes district and early\nFreestone Rochesters and Videttes\nare expected to start moving next\nweek. Peach plums are just about at\ntheir peak and are selling in good\nquantities. Bartlett pears are ex- ,\npscted in goodly numbers about the\nend of August, with Wealthy and\nGravenstcin apples following them.\nApples on the trees now show\n''good splashes of color and are expected to be of high quality this\nyear, as the orchards are particularly free of scab.\nttnifefc (Eljitrri?\nnf (Eauato\n11 a.m.\u2014\"About Some Biblical\nOmissions\".\nStoiy tor girls and boys: \"The\nBoy Who Was a Bridge\".\n7:30 p.m.\u2014\"Too Sacred to Destroy'.\nTrinity and St. Paul's congregations meeting in St. Paul's\nChurch.\nGuest Prercher\u2014The Rev. A. D\nPringle of Canmore, Alta.\nColumbus sailed on his first great\nvoyage on Friday, started back on\nFriday and arrived back in Spain\non Friday; he sarted his second voyage on Friday, and discovered the\nIsle of Pines on Friday the 13th.\nFull Crews Work\nin Box Factories\nCreston, Wynndel\nCRESTON, B.C.-Unemployed at\nWynndel was reduced at the first of\nthe week when the Monrad Wigen\nbox factory commenced operation's\nfor the season, giving work to a full\ncrew, who are busy making tomato\ncrates, pear and apple boxes. The\nWigen plant is fully stocked with\nlumber for a full season's run. and\nan increased output over 1936 is\nlooked for as both pear and apple\ncrops are estimated to exceed last\nyear by 25 per cent. The tomato\nacreage is also increased over last\nseason.\nThe Charles 0. Rogers Limited\nplant at Creston is working at top\nspeed on these same lines, and also\nhas a staff of girls at work making\nthe S-lb. tintop baskets for tomato\nand plum crops. The Rodgers firm\nhas trucks on delivery at all points\nin the valley as well as Boswell.\nIn addition to these the Rodger;\nfirm is employing seven hands in\nthe veneer mill turning out the\nmaterial for the unitized tops for\nthe pear and apple boxes and all\n1:tt3s cf crates.\n\\0<\\\nPAGE   THRl\nSerial Story . . .\nRustle of Silks\nBy MARIE BL1ZARD\nArrow Creek School\nIs Being Renovated\nYAHK, B.C.\u2014Seal coating of the\nhighway on the section of the sur-1\nfaced road in the district started j\nSaturday. About 17 miles will re-1\ncoive a coating of asphalt and fine\ngravel. Forty men are employed on\nthe job and put on approximately\ntwo miles of coating a day.\nA number of cars of logs have\nbeen shipped from the camp at Ryan\nin the last month for the C. 0.\nRodgers Co., of Creston.\nRenowned Banjo\nand Guitarist to\nVisit Nelson\nAB. HINE, star of stage and radio\nto stop here on or around\nMon., Aug. 23\nen route East, where he will\ndemonstrate the famous Willner\nGuitar.\nMr. Hine will make his headquarters at the HUME HOTEL, and\ninvites all players to make hi^\nacquaintance.\nREAD THIS FIRST:\nAmbitious to become a dress designer, Mary Barrett accidentally\nmeets Tony Castle, owner of a\nsmart New York dress shop. After\nexamining some of her sketches, he\noffers her a job. They see more and\nmore of one another and begin to\nfall in love. During thc absence of\nFrancine Long, Tony's head buyer\nwho dislikes M3ry, the latter successfully designs some gowns for\nan important client, Liane Weston,\na leading- actress. Something goes\nwrong during the final fitting, the\nactress goes into a tantrum and Tony\npublicly berates himself for letting\nMary, still inexperienced, design the\ngowns. Mary feels certain Miss\nLong purposely altered one of the\ndresses.\n(NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY)\nCHAPTER 8\nExactly 24 hours following the\nnightmare at the studio, Tony Castle\nbrought his roadster to a grinding\nstop before tho brownstone house\non Fifty-fifth street. He ran up the\nlong flight of steps carrying a white\nbox from one end of which protruded long floral stems.\nOn his face there was a look of\nboyish contrition, of speculative\nsheepishness as he rang the bell\nunder the neat card reading, Barrett,\nHe pressed the bell hard and waited.\nHe pressed it again and again.\nA door on the landing opened\nand Johnson, the superintendent,\nstood there, \"Good cvenin', sir,\"\nhe said. \"If yer lookin' fer Miss\nBarrett, she ain't here.\"\n\"Know when she'll be back?\"\n\"She didn't say as she knew. She\njes' paid her rent, soys I should rent\nthe apartment and goes off with her\ntrunks,'*\nA curious sensation attacked Tony\nin the region of his bosom. \"Where\nhas she gone?\"\n\"She didn't leave no forradin'\naddress, but she told the missus she'd\nsend one. Is there anything I could\ndo?\"\nTony rocked uncertainly. \"She\ndidn't leave any . . .\" He recovered himself and presented the\nflorist's box to the man. \"Yes,\nyou can give these to 'the missus'\nwith my compliments.\"\nWhen^two months later, Mary's\nletter arrived with a French postmark and instructions for Mrs,\nJohnson to send along her mail,\nthere was no Mrs. Johnson to receive it. The Johnsons had moved\non, and with them went the chance\nthat Mary would ever see the note\nwhich Tony Castle wrote her that\nnight from the very bottom of his\nheart.\nENERGY FOR\n18 HOLES...\nWHETHER you're playing ii round of golf or\ndoing an afternoon's\nwork, a lunch of Kellogg's Corn Flakes and\nmilk helps keep you \"on\nyour game.\" Nourishing. Rich in energy.\nLight and easy to digest.\nKellogg's are always\ncrisp in the patented\nWAXTITE inner wrapper.\nSold and served everywhere. Made hy Kellogg\n\u2022n London. Ontario.\nSURE! I ATS THE\nRIGHT KIND OF,\nA LUNCH a\n\u25a0'fkT\ni' CORN  FLUKES\nMADE  BETTER   \u2022    PACKED  BETTER   \u2022   TASTE  BETTER\nThe tall, bronzed young man in\nwhite flannels was making his fiffli\nturn about deck. He wasn't idling;\nhe waa looking for the girl in brown\nlinen.\nThere were girls in white, pink\nand yellow linen and he knew\nmost of them. That was the year\nwhen every debutante in New York\nwas on her way to Europe for \"the\nlittle season\".\nHe didn't stop for them. He\ndid have to slop to greet a dowager who had the place next to his\ngrandmother's at Newport. He did\nhave to stop to promise an Austrian\ncountess that he would pay her a\nvisit at her schloss in thc Tyrol. He\nescaped from her only to fall into\nthe clutches of Tommy Wister who\nhad been at Yale with him. Meet\nTommy at tile Yale club, Ciro's, at\nAutcuil or any other civilized place\nand he had nothing important to say\nbut there was no stopping him. He\nwas hard to stop at that moment\nwhile the tall, bronzed young man\ntried to get away, searched the\ngroup playing deck tennis.\nPing.\nA small celluloid ball struck him\nbelow the ear. And then, while\nTommy launched on a story of\nurging his sporting club to get up\nsomething or other, SHE was at hi.*,\nfeet, recovering her lost ball, saying\n\"sorry\", without looking at him.\nThe girl in the brown linen!\nHe tried to unloosen Tommy's\ngrip. \"Listen, Tommy, I'll see you\nat the bar later and you can tell\nme about the giraffes.\"\n\"It wasn't giraffes,\" Tommy wailed dolefully after the departing figure. \"Who ever heard of giraffes\nboxing?   It was kangaroos!\"\n\"Twenty-one all,\" the girl said\nand threw down her racquet. She\nhad picked up her yellow sweater\nand disappeared by the lime the\nbronzed young man got to the table\ntennis group. He looked at his\nwatch\u201412:50. No good looking for\nher before lunch.\nThe hands of that watch were\ntogether at 4:20 when he rounded\nthe deck and saw her again. Saw\nher rising from a deck* chair. She\nwas gone before he got there. He\nleaned over the chair and read the !\ncard.   If he knew her name ...\nHe read: Rev. August Schwei- j\nzer.\nHe shook his head dubiously. She\nmight be a reverend but he doubted\nthe August.\n*   *   \u2022\nThe bronzed young man, now\nin mess jacket stood a little to.\nthe right of the orchestra platform\nin the white-and-gold salon. He\nhummed the tune of the popular\nsong as he watched the dancers.\n\"Oh give me something to remember you by . . . when you are\nfar away from me . . .\"\nHe broke off when he saw the\ngirl in the cinamon lace gown\nwith her crown of coppery curls.\nHe didn't wait for her to circle\nthe room in the arms of her partner - probably the Rev. August\nSchweizer, he thought\u2014but strode\neasily through the dancers and tapped  Ihe partner  on  the shoulder.\nMay I cut. please?\"\nShe gave him the briefest look\nand fitted into his arms smoothly\nThey danced beautifully, silently,\nfor a few minutes. *\n\"I'm Andy MacTavish of Scotland Yard,\" he said.\n\"So that's why you've been tracking me down?\"\n\"So you noticed?\"\nShe didn't say anything.\n\"But, my dear, such a unpleasant alias!   August SchWeizer!\"\n\"I only use that occasionally. 1\nhave a number of others just as.in-\ntriguing. You must try them sometime.\"\n\"Now that you're on to me . . .\nby the way, how did you know\nlhat I've been tracking you down?\"\n\"I'm psychic,\" she answered.\nOver a tiny table in the bar, with\nwhiskies and sodas between them,\nshe stopped him when he was going\nto speak. She closed her eyes\ntheatrically. \"No, don't tell mc who\nyou are. Let me see if my control is working. . . . Yes. ... I hear\nthe Indian calling me.\" He watched\nher with an amused grin breaking thc corners of his mouth. She\nbegan again*.\n\"I see you on a polo field ... in a\nplane that drips Willi icicles. ... At\nthe wheel ot a motor cor. . . . Ah,\nit's coming . . . you're . . . you're\nMark Sutherland!\"\nHe laughed. \"Right! Are you\nas good with cards or do you use\na crystal ball?\"\n\"I read the newspapers, Mr. Suth- I\nof the \"BAY'S\" CIRCULAR SALE\n4 Leaders in Men's Wear\nMEN'S DRESS\nSHIRTS\nYou can always buy shirts at\nthis price, but we ask you\nto examine the exceptional\nvalue we are offering during this sale. None are worth\nless , than $1.25, and some\nare higher priced lines.\nYour choice, OQ\u201e\nEach      JOC\nOVERALL PANTS\nWork pants in blue and\nkhaki. Standard make and\nin a denim that will give\nexcellent service.\nPair   \t\n$149\nMIN'S DRESS\nSOCKS\nRegular quality 50c socks.\nA bevy of smart patterns to\nselect from. Make it several pairs at his low OQ.\nprice. Pair   JJC\nMEN'S WORK\nSOCKS\nFor every day use a low\npriced sock is often desirable. If your work demands\nit you cannot do,better at\nthis low price.\n4 T 95c\nTHE DRESS OF THE WEEK\n'Wings of the Morning'\nFROCKS\nThis clever little dress of good quality [\nprint in an assortment of patterns and\ncolors is one you'll simply love. Trimly\nfitted at the waist, wide flare skirt, two\npockets. But the long zipper from neckline to hem is the feature that makes it\nso different. Navy, blue, green, maroon,\nturquoise and red. Sizes 14 to fljl AF\n20.  Each   ipl.Jj\nCREPE BLOUSES\nSmartly Assorted Styles\nWhite,  egg-shell and  pastels.  Be sure\nto see  these because we  know you'll\nwant one.\n$1.59\nAdvance Fall Styles in Women's and Growing Girls'\nWALKING SHOES\nJUST ARRIVED\nSmart new patterns in up to the minute styles\u2014suedes predominate but plenty of\nsmooth calf and grain leathers. Blue, green, brown, black suede, black and brown\ncalf and black grain. A-B-C-D-E widths. Sizes 3 to 81*2.\n*345\nWabasso SHEETS\nMILL SECONDS\nPURE BLEACHED, LARGE SIZE AND\nHEMSTITCHED\nSize 81x96\u2014not often do we have the opportunity of procuring these mill run sheets. About 25% less than\nthe price of firsts. EACH\t\n$1.59\nPLAIN HEM OR HEMSTITCHED\nSizes 68x86 and 78x86. Full bleach and full size.\nSeconds of a higher priced line. EACH\t\n94c\nPERFECT QUALITY\nCREPE HOSE\nGenuine crepe hosiery, full fashioned, with a particularly high twist that\nmakes for longer wear and clearer beauty. These hose are exactly the same\nquality as our branded dollar lines. Knit on ringless machines. Sizes 8'\/z\nto 10 Vi. Per pair\t\n$9c\n2\nPairs\nfor\n?1.70\nSEMI-\n&\nCHIEFON\nSERVICE       HOSE\nFULL FASHIONED \u2014 PERFECT QUALITY\nSmart shades. Sizes 8'A to 1Q'\/2. Per Pair\t\nPairs\nfor\n$1.35\nPLAID TABLECLOTHS\n52x52 inches, a handy size for the home; assorted colors. Brighten\nup your kitchen with one of these smart tablecloths. Splendid AQ\u201e\nvalue at this low price tUli\nPILLOW SLIPS\nSize 42 inches. Chinese embroidered slips in a\nquality you will be pleased to own. Generously embroidered which adds charm to your bed.\nPAIR   \t\n]|it^tt*1^\u20acitmtw\ntNCORPOKATRD \u00a3\u2022?? MAY 1*70.\nerland.\"\n\"Bright girl! She can read. What\nelse do you do?\"\n\"Work,\"   she   answered   shortly.\nHe .sighed.\n\"That's the trouble with women\nthese days. Too much work. Takes\n'em out of circulation. Where do\nyou play? Why haven't I seen you\naround?\"\n\"Probably because I'm not a debutante. I'm a serious-minded working girl. I'm a dress designer'and\nI'm on my way to Paris to pick\nup some ideas,\"\nShe thought a small lie would\ndo no harm. After all, it was a\nhalf truth. And there was no poinl\nin telling a young millionaire that\nshe was a jobless working girl.\n\"I think I could give you a few,\"\nhe said.\nThat had been their second night\nout. They'd got along famously\nafter that. With one exception.\nMark said he was sorry but he\nhad to make passes when the moon\nwas like that. \"We'll get along\nbetter if you don't,\" she assured\nhim.\n\"I'm a patient man.   1 can wait.'\nShe laughed then. \"I'm afraid\nit'll be a long wait. We dock tomorrow.\"\n\"You're going to Paris and I'm\ngoing to Paris, And you're dining\nwilh mc Saturday. Where shall\nI pick you up at iin\"\n\"The  R1I7,\"  she  said  mockingly\n\"The Ritz it. is,\" he answered.\n(To Be Continued)\nDon Archibald Burned in Fire Which\nThreatened Crops in Creston District\nCRESTON, D.C. \u2014 Don Archibald\nwas taken to Creston hospital suffering from burns received in a\nfire which threatened grain crops\nin the dyking district north of Creston, Wednesday. The fire was caused\nby an explosion attendant upon refuelling of a tractor, the engine of\nwhich had been left running.\nPrompt action of land operators\nin the district in getting out tractors\nand ploughs to provide a fire break\nio head off thc blaze prevented serious loss of ripening grain crops.\nAbout six acres of standing crop\nwere destroyed before the blaze was\nextinguished, and 1500 acres in the\nvicinity   saved  from   destruction.\nThis incident, coupled with the\nprevailing dry weather and more\nwind than usual has caused quite\na rush to take out insurance againsi\ncrop destruction by fire.\nThis is thc first case of the kind in\nlocal wheat fields, but two seasons\nago there was quite a loss in one ot\nthe dyked areas on the Idaho side,\nwhen a smouldering bed of peat\nin District No, 7 was fanned into\nflames whicli travelled rapidly in a\nheavy wind through about 100 acres\nof grain, before burning itself out\non the bench lands to the west.\nGrain cutting on the dyked lands\nis quite general. Much fall wheat\nhas been brought in and the combines will be busy in the earlier\nsows spring wheat before the week\nis out.\nDue the flattened condition of\nconsiderable of the crop, especially\noats, the use of binders is going to\nbe more general than at first anticipated.\nVillage workmen have completed\nthc new sidewalk on fifth street to\nserve residents between Sirdar av-\nnue and Park road. This will be the\nlast of the 1937 walk construction.\nThe front of the Spotswood orchard property east of town is greatly improved with a new stonework\nfence the full width of the acreage.\nAutoistWhoHit\nSteer Pays Fine\nPleading guilty to a common danger charge laid after John Berukoff\nof Salmo complained that a car had\nhit one of his steers and driver.\naway without stopping, Olaf Larsen\nwas fined $10 and costs by George\nT. Matthews, stipendiary magistrate\nat S;.lmo.\nDEATHS\n(By the Canadian Press)\nReggio de Calabria\u2014Mgr. Carme-\nlo Jujia, 85, archbishop, of Reggio\nde Calabria.\nCalgary\u2014Mrs. Annie Glen Broder.\nprominent in the musical life of\nwestern Canada more than 25 years,\nHamilton, Ont.\u2014William F. McLaren, 65, chief draughtsman for\nthc Canadian Westinghouse company.\nManchester\u2014Rt. Rev. Cecil Wilfrid Wilson, 62, suffragan bishop of\nMiddleton, Manchester.\nSouthampton, N.Y.\u2014James Mclntyre, 7!), member of the famed old\nminstrel team of Mclntyre and\nHeath.\nQuebec-Stuart S. Oliver, 79,\ncivil engineer and surveyor, member of one of Quebec's oldest English-speaking families.\nSydney, N.S. \u2014 Mrs. Flora Mac-\nIsaac, 104, oldest woman resident of\nCape Breton.\nMontreal \u2014 Jimmy IShiner)\nWhite, 66, once one of Quebec's\ngreatest, lacrosse piayers.\nHeads Hotels Assoc.\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 20 (CP) -\nBeverley M. Davis of Castle hotel,\nVancouver, was elected president\not the British Columbia Hotels association at the annual meeting held\nhere Wednesday. Kenneth Campbell\npast-president, declined nomination\nfor re-election,\nTemperature Up\nto 80 on Friday\nFriday was hotter than Thursday\nby two degrees, the temperature being 80, even though there were only\n10 hours of sunshine compared with\n12 hours and 10 minutes the previous day. Friday's minimum was\n48, one degree lower than Thursday.\nThe day dawned ominously with\ndark clouds but ended with barely\na cloud in the sky.\nFINEST\nSAND\nAND\nGRAVEL\nFOR\nBUILDING\nPURPOSES\nFairview Fuel\nSupply \u00abfc Teaming Co.\nPHONE 701\n ******\nmm\nmmmm\nijIPj-pipiypp^\nPAUt FOUR\nNELSON DAILY NEW8, NELSON. B.C-SATURDAY MORNING, AUG. 21, 1937\nNURSES   FROM   30 COUNTRIES   AT   LONDON   CONFERENCE\nStick to Rules . . .\nFailure Due to\nImpatience in\nTraining (hild\nBy  GARRY C.  MYERS,  Ph.D.\n\"Dear Dr. Myers: I have failed in\ntwo important training habits of\nmy two-year-old daughter\u2014the use\nof the toilet, and eating.\n\"For several days at a stretch\nshe 'tells' me, and for many more\ndays she does not . . . At first I\nignored the slips and praised the\ncorrect behavior. That did not work,\nso I began spanking her, keeping\nthe praise when she used the nursery chair. But that does not work,\neither. I spank hard enough to make\nit hurt, but through the tears there\nshines a gleam of triumph\u2014and the\nincident is repented.\n\"Her night habits are no better,\nNo matter how quickly I run to\nher room in the morning her bed is\nwet. I don't always get her up when\nwe retire, because it makes no difference in the morning. She also\nwets the bed during the afternoon\nnap . , .\n\"She began feeding herself about\na year ago, but after the novelty\nwore off she began to play throughout the meal\u2014throwing bits of food\nto the dog and waiting for me to\nfeed her the rest. I tried letting her\ngo hungry, but she did no better\nat the following meal (no piecing\nbetween meals, either) and lost so\nmuch weight I started feeding her.\n\"My husband and I agree on\nmethods of training, so there is no\nconflict in the rules\u2014bul we don't\nknow where lo go on from here,\nsince we seem to have failed .. .\"\nWON'T STICK TO RULES\nI have a deal of sympathy for this\nmother, of course, for I know she\nthinks she has tried hard. But she\nis typical of thousands of mothers\nwith like problems. She knows what\nto do, but will not stick to a good\nmethod long enough to get results,\nand resorts lo Ihe usual wrong procedure\u2014spanks the child for wetting\nand feeds her when she chooses not\nto eat alone. Learning good toilet\nhabits is a matter of learning cooperation. Coperalion somec through getting satisfaction therefrom. This\nmother was on the right track: she\npraised thc child when this child\n\"tdld\" her. And she was beginning\nto get results: the child \"told'1 her\npart of Ihe time. The hope was to\ncapitalize patiently on these successes. But in her impatience, the\nmother began spanking for failures,\ndefeating her own ends. And'why\nshould she worry about night wetting in a child so young? Anyway,\nthere is no sense in attacking thc\nnight problem until the day habit is\nestablished.\nAlso she wanted quick results in\nthe child's eating. If only she had\nremoved the food the moment thc\nbaby began throwing it. to the ring,\nand avoided feeding or urging her\nto eat, not being worried about the\ntemporary decline in weight, she\nwould eventually have got results.\nIn order to succeed now it will take\nlonger, but it will come only if she\nwholly quits feeding the child, letting the child eat what is offered or\nnothing, showing no concern whatever about the child's eating.\nBut despite my advice to this\nmother, or to hundreds of others\nlike her, she will probably follow\nher short-sighted ways and go on\nfretting and spoiling the child. These\nproblems are relatively e?sy for the\nmother who will think through a\nsensible plan and discipline herself\nto carry it out.\nThe sandalwood powder and incense punks can be obtained at\nJapanese shops. If crushed spires\ncannot be obtained, use ground\nkitchen spices, one scant ounce of\neach.\nNelson Bridal Party\nMr. and Mrs. Horace Vyse with thefr attendants, following the ceremony at the Church of the\nRedeemer, Fairview, August 8. Front row, left to\nright: Alfred Vyse, best man; the groom; the bride,\nwho w\u00ab the former Miss Margaret Adelene Jarvis;\nMJB5 Margaret Thompson, bridesmaid; Pat Jarvis,\nflower girl; and in the back row: Miss Violet Hawkins of Lethbridge, bridesmaid; and J. L. Dunk,\nuhcle of the bride, who gave her in marriage.\nReal Asset , . .\nVoice Ever Soft\nand Low of Great\n(harm in Woman\nBack in Puritanical days in New\nEngland, women who were habitual\nscolds, or who talked too much, were\npunished by being sentenced to the\nducking stool. This was a cute little\ncontrivance whereby overgarrulous\nwomen were tied to a stool and\nducked up and down in water until\nthey simply couldn't talk any more.\nJEANETTE MacDONALD\nTells how to acquire lovely voice.\nIt is the contention of Jeanette\nMacDonald that the women who\nwere punished in this way probably\nhad unpleasant voices, for Jeanette\nsays that no one who possesses a\nsoft, charming voice ever can talk\nenough to prove annoying to the\ncart,\nJeanette, whose singing is a never-ending source of delight to her\naudiences, certainly is correct. Yet\nALPINE\nBRAND\nEVAPORATED\nMILK\nA WESTERN PRODUCT\nFOR WESTERN PEOPLE\nDelicious full-cream milk,\nsuitable for all household\npurposese. Alpine Milk is\ncreamier and can be used\nwherever fresh milk is called for. Fins for picnics and\ncamp. Will whip when chilled and makes flavorfu\nhome-made ice cream.\nBuy With\nConfidence\nat Your Local\nCrocer\nMMJ^KV;\nAlpine   BRAND *\nEVAPORATED   MILK\nthe voice, oddly enough, is one aj-\npect of beauty that isn't stressed\noften. And it is certainly deserving of far more consideration than\nit receives. For a harsh, unpleasant voice entirely spoils the effect\nof an otherwise lovely personality,\nVoices that are shrill, harsh, monotonous or cold, are anything but\npleasing to the ear.\nUSE LESS VOLUME\nThe talkies should have taught\nwomen how valuable a pleasant\nspeaking voice is. Many formerly\npopular screen stars dropped into\noblivion when motion pictures became audible. Many gained sudden popularity, too, because of\ntheir charming voices. And the individual man or woman is just as\ncritical of a rasping, loud voice as\nmovie audiences are.\nMany women make the mistake\nof thinking that it is necessary to\nspeak loudly to gain attention.\nI've found, however, that the women who speak the loudest often\nhave the least to say. A soft, well-\nmodulate, pleasant voice will catch\nand hold the ear far more effectively\nthan any amount of bellowing.\nThe best way to acquire a pleasant voice, if you don't possess one\nnaturally, is to take instructions\nfrom a good voice culturist. But a\ngirl can do a great deal to improve her voice herself, too, by\njust being watchful of it. Study\nyour voice and find out for yourself just what its defects are. If\nit is shrill and scratchy, practice\nspeaking in a lower tone, and don't\nconstrict your throat. A good exercise you can practice, too, is to\nyawn, in order to open your throat,\nand then pronounee the vowels\nslowly in a low tone, drawing each\nof them out at length.\nIf your voice is harsh and loud,\npractice using less volume; speak\nsoftly. If you continually do this,\na softer voice will, in time, .become\nnatural to you. Humming is an\nexcellent exercise for improving\nsuch a voice.\nThere are several exercises that\nJeanette MacDonald considers\ngrand for preserving the loveliness\nof the voice. To develop the chest,\nshe says, stand erect, with arms\nstretched out in front \"with palms\ntogether. Swing the arms suddenly\nto the back, and at the same time\ninhale deeply and rise on the toes.\nThen gently relax, exhaling at the\nsame time.\nAnother good exercise Jeanette\nrecommends to acquire purity of\nvoice tone is to inhale deeply and\nthen slowly exhale, singing the\nvowel \"0\".\nThe emotional quality of your\nvoice, however, is what gives it\nmost of its charm. Don't let your\nvoice be cold or monotonously dull.\nPut warmth and feeling into the\nthings you say, for these qualities\ngive charming overtones to the\nvoice, and make it delightful to\nhear.\nCurrants Require\nan Annual Pruning\nCurrant bushes require an annual\npruning, or the friut becomes small.\nCurrant canes yield well for three\nyears, therefore each year a few of\nihe oldest canes and two of thc\nstrongest of the young shoots should\nbe allowed tn develop. Trim out all\nthe young tender shoots, as the\ncentre of the bush should be kept\nopen. Leave only six of the older\ncanes, ond cut these back halt way.\nAlways rut back to an outside bud\nAny lateral growth should be cut\nback to within three or four buds.\nCurrants have feeder roots near\nIhe surface of the soil and any cultivation must be done carefully, A\nstraw mulch around each bush is advisable to keep down grass and\nweeds.\nFruit Is Good . . .\nAcidity of Body\nDoes Not Cause\nRashes or Hives\nBY  LOGAN   CLENDENINQ,   M.p.\nIf the body turns acid can it\ncause spots on the skin, eruptions,\nhives, headache, bilioua feelings,\netc., etc.?\nThat is a very general belief,\nbut has very little foundation in\nscientific fact.\nI get many letters about this time\nof year which go like this: \"I\nfeel as if I were very acid. I think\nit come from eating tomatoes (or\nstrawberries, or some fruit). I had\nan itching eruption on my skin last\nweek. Then I'have had a crop of\ncanker sores. What should I eat to\navoid this?\"\nWhen you begin talking about\nthe acidity of the body, or the state\nof the reaction of the body tissues,\nyou must realize that you are dealing with a question that can be\ndetermined with the greatest scientific accuracy, A small amount of\nblood can be sent to a laboratory,\nand it will be possible to tell right\naway whether it is about neutral,\nas it should be in health, or even\nslightly acid, or slightly alkaline.\nSo, since we have made these tests\non many subjects we can say with\ncertainty whether any condition is\ndue to acidity or not.\nNOT DUE TO ACIDITY\nAnd the rashes and cold sores\nand bilious feelings are not due to\nacidity.\nAcidity is a very real bodily condition and occurs not from eating\nfruits, but from eating fats.\nYet nobody says, \"I got a little\nacid today from the cream I had\nyesterday.\" It is always \"from tomatoes\", or \"strawberries\", whereas both tomatoes and strawberries\nburn to an .alkaline ash in the\nbody.\nIt is true that meat burns to an\nacid ash and also bread, but in\nhealth these ashes are qufckly neutralized.\nThis neutral balance which the\nbody maintains is one of the most\nperfect and stable of our bodily\nmechisms.\nThe body preserves its neutrality fiercely.   Foods bring both acid\nForget It . . .\nGood Sports Win\nFriends Despite\nPhysical Defects\nBy VIRGINIA LEE\nThere is one thing I would like\nto impress upon my young readers\nwho have difficulty in making and\nholding friends. It is not often your\nphysical characteristics*\u2014your looks\n\u2014weak eyes, prominent teeth, tall-\nness, shortness, thinness, obesity,\nfreckles Qr whatnot that prevents\nyou from paving friends. These\nthings only have that effect if you\nmake so much of them and are so\nconscious of them that you are not\na good companion.\nAcquaintances may deplore such\nphysical handicaps or raw you about\nthem, but if you are a friendly, sup-\nny, ordinary human being, they\nwon't hold them against you. They\nwill be your pals anyhow. If, however, you make people uncomfortable when they are with you by\nconstantly thinking and calling attention to them, to the point ot boring when they will-prove real handicaps. The best thing to do with\nany handicap that you cannot help\nIs to ignore it, and you will be surprised how many people will never\nrealize you have it.\nAnd another thing\u2014 no matter\nhow few handicaps any one person\nmay appear to have, he or she is\nsure to have.aomething which they\nconsider a blemish, and of which\nthey are very conscious and try to\nconceal. So don't feel too sorry for\nyourself and think you are a marked man or woman and others have\nnothing to fight against, because lt\nnever in true.\n.   *   .\nSUE: \u2022 I am glad you like your\nwork as a home helper. So few\npeople seem lo be satisfied with the\nwork they do that it is a pleasure\nto hear of one who does. You do\nit better too, for liking it, I am\nsure. I cannot see any reason why\nyou should not make a suitable\ncompanion for the young man you\nwrite of, provided you are congenial.\nFolk say you \"could have a nice\npersonality,\" you say. How can you\ncultivate it? You can be friendly\nalways and considerate to everyone\u2014old, young, rich, poor, high, low\nthat is one way. You can train yourself to see the good in everyone in\nstead of the bad; to keep \u00bb sense of\nfun; to be helpful; to try to under\nstand people and not judge harshly. There are other things, but tf\nyou do these you will attract many\npeople.\nIf the young man Is really at*\ntracted to you he will find some\nand alkaline elements into it. Far\nmore potent in acid production,\nhowever, are the active body cells\nthemselves, Every time a muscle\ncontract* it produces some lactic\nacid.\nTo counteract this the lungs constantly eliminate a volatile acid;\nthe kidneys conserve alkalis. Lastly, and of great importance, is the\nability of the blood, through its\nbuffer substances, to turn acids\ninto alkalis, and alkalis into acids\nas needed to preserve neutrality.\nTo the same end it can utilize sod\\\nium chloride\u2014ordinary table salt\u2014\neither as acid or alkali\u2014the \"chloride shift\".\nQUESTIONS FROM READERS\nG.J.H.:  \"At 65 1 am getting fat\nagain.   Can I reduce without exercises, as 1 have been recommended\nto leave them off?\"\nAnswer: Yes, just as well without exercises as with. Eat a diet\nof vegetables, fruits with lean meal\nonly once a day, and avoid the following eight foods: bread, butter,\ncream, olive oil, sugar (including\ncandy), ice cream, pastries and\ngravies.\nin\nIts*........ .     ttrasw*,\nIf your be*led cake leinjg will not set,\nput the cake into a warm oven for four or\nfive minutes. Don't leave it too long or\n(he fro-sung will harden.\nMeat Loaf\nhints for\nhousewives\nMenu Hint\nLamb loaf Baker Potatoes\nStewed Tomatoes\nCabbage and Cucumber Salad\nSnow White Coconut Cake\nIced Coffee 01 iea\nAdd green and red sweet peppers\nto the cabbage and cucumber salad.\nThey add color and flavor. And if\nthe family approves, also add a wee\nbit ot onion, or rub the salad bowl\nwith a clove of garlic, while mixing.\nToday's Recipes\nLAMB LOAF\u2014Two pound ground\nlamb, one cup fine cracker or dry\nbreak crumbs, two tablespoons of\nminced onion, one green pepper,\nfinely minced; two tablespoons of\nchopped parsley, one egg, slightly\nbeaten, one cup milk or meat stock,\nsalt and pepper. Combine the ground\nlamb and cracker or bread crumbs.\nAdd seasoning and moisten with the\nslightly beaten egg and milk or\nmeat stock.   Mix well and pack into\na greased loaf pan. Bake in a moderate oven (350 degrees F.) until\ndone, about one hour. To serve\nturn out onto a large platter, slice\nand garnish with rai'sh roses and\nparsley or mint leaves.\nSNOW WHITE COCONUT CAKE\n\u2014One-half cup butter or vegetable\nshortening, one and one-half cups\nsugar, one teaspoon salt, one cup\nmilk, three cups flour, two teaspoons\nbaking powder (rounded), four egg\nwhites, flavoring. Cream butter and\nadd sugar by degrees. Work to a\ncream with hands. Sift flour four\ntimes, sifting in the salt and baking\npowder. Add milk and flour alternately to creamed mixture. Beat egg\nwhiles stiff and fold into batter. Add\nflavoring and bake in layers. For\nfrosting use two cups confectioner's\nsugar, one teaspoon butter and a\npinch of salt, adding boiling water\nby degrees till of spreading consistency. Spread on cake and sprinkle\nwith shredded cocpnut. Or add half\na cup of cocoa for chocolate cake.\nPURITY\nFLOUR\nMAKES BETTER BREAD\nSonnysayings\n. asm i*. v*. tt*. *\u00bb~i.\n\"Ten Years of Service All a Nurse\n(an Expect,\" Is Warning lo Council\nNobody seems very jelly ober us\nirihin' Nippy i haircut, not eben\nHippy, hisself I He is sulking under\nthe porch!\nway to get to know you. That is\nthe surest way of knowing he is so\nattracted. And if he likes you 1 do\nnot believe your position as a maid\nwould matter\u2014provided, of courtse,\nhe is not one of those people who\nhas been brought up to believe that\nhe has \"a social position\" to uphold.\nINDIA'S WOMAN MINISTER\nBOMBAY (CP)-India welcomed\nits first woman cabinet minister\nwhen the Congress slate for a ministry in the United Provinces was\napproved, She is Mrs, Vijal Pandit,\nsister of the president of the Congress Nationalist Party, Pandit Ja-\nwaharlal Nehru.\nMany Rose Bushes\nAre Destroyed by\nthe Carpenter Bee\nIn some localities thousands of\nrose bushes are killed each year by\nthe catpenter bee. Thi? bee is very\nsmall, but is distinguished by its\nblack wings and its willingness to\nwork overtime. It bores down into\nthe soft pith in the stubs of the roSe\ncanes.\nEggs are deposited by the carpenter bee in compartments in the\ninvaSed rose cane with a tiny floor\nover each section. The eggs hatch\nout into green borers about one-half\ninch long, and these in turn form a\nchrysalis which reproduces from 10\nto 12 carpenter bees.\nYou will know that the carpenter\nbee has been at work among your\nroses when you see a small hole\nneatly bored in the end of a cut\ncane. The cane turns brown and\nmust be taken care of before the\nbee does damage down to the roots\nof the rose bush. Otherwise the\ndestruction of the pith inside thc\ncane will cause the bush to die.\nTo get rid of the carpenter bee,\nprune infected rose canes down to\nthe fresh pith, below the affected\npart. Apply grafting wax to the\nfreshly cut end ot the cane, and\nthis will keep the bee from drilling\nnew holes. Burn all infected canes\nthat have been cut away, as these\ncontain the eggs of the carpeilter\nbee. .\nLONDON, Aug. 20 (CP) - Ten\nyears of service is all that a nurse\ncan expect under present condition!\nbefore she becomes exhausted anij\nill and has to nurse herself, was th\u00bb\nwarning given those attending th*\nsessions of the Quadrennial Congresg\nof the International Council oj\nNurses in London, Members of the\nnursing profession were told ho**y\nthey should alter hours of working\nand education to take care of them**\nselves as well as how to look aftef\ntheir patients.\nThree hundred Canadians were\namong the 3,500 women from more\nthan 80 countries who sat together\nin flag-draped halls with chart-\nlined walls learning of the advancei\nmade in nursing care and dietetics,\nhearing of the advantages of shorter\nhours of work for nurses and stu*-\ndent nurses, the need for special\nunemployment and health insurance\nand superannuation for health\nworkers, the necessity for more extensive health and social education,\nthe demand for better-trained,\nhigher-type women in the profession.\nMiss Jean Church, Ottawa, chairman of the private duty section,'\nCanadian Nurses Association,\nbrought the ideal of the eight-hour\nday for nurses and student nurses\nbefore the Congress by quoting frorp\na survey of nursing education in\nCanada compiled by Dr. George\nWeir, finding 60 per cent of student\nnurses serving a 12-hour day felt\ntired 20 per cent of the time while\neight per cent never felt rested.\nMiss Church also pointed out the\n(Continued on Paje Five)\nWALKING THE STREET\nbecause he\nCOULDN'T COMPETE\n\"SORRY, nothing today,\" and Jim continues on his weary round of looking\nfor a job. Once he had a good position.\nBut he couldn't keep up with the others.\nDull headaches kept him from doing his\nbest. He lacked pep and \"drive.\" So they\nlet him out.\nYou meet a lot of men like Jim. They're\nhalf-sick and don't know why. They fail\nto realize that common constipation undermines vitality and vigor ; ; ; keeps\nthem tired, listless, without ambition;\nUsually the first question a doctor asks\nhis patient is about constipation. He is\naware of its weakening effects, knows\nthat it can even lead to serious disease.\nWhy feel badly half the week when a\nnatural food corrects constipation-\ncaused by meals low in \"bulk\"? Get this\n\"bulk\" in Kellogg's ALL-BRAN. This\ncereal also furnishes vitamin B to tone\nup the intestines, and iron for the blood.\nThis natural food laxative is much better than taking weakening pills and\ndrugs. Just eat two tablespoonfuls\ndaily. With each meal, in severe cases.\nServe as a cereal with milk or fruits, or\ncook into muffins, breads, etc.\nKellogg's AU-BRAN is\nsold by all grocers. Made\nand guaranteed by Kellogg\nin London, Ontario.\n|    DON'T LEI C0NSIIPATI0N\n\u00a7 GfT YOU DOWN\nThis simple lest shews hew AU-BRAN functions: fill a\nglass 4\/1 fullof AU-BRAN. Pour water up to the hrim of\nthe glass. Soak 15 minutes, and drain off greets water.\nPeel the water-softened mass. Iff much like a soft sponge,\nlit fact, laboratory tests show that AU.-BRAN absorbs at\nleast twice Its weight In water. Within the body, thit\nwater.softned \"bulk\" gently \"sponges\" tut Ike system.\nServe *l(id\u00a3vyty4 ALL-BRA^  reyularly for  regularity\n\u25a0Mid\n*:\"-- \u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u2022*\u00bb\"\u25a0\"\"\"\n\"\u25a0'-\u25a0\u25a0  \u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0 1 iti\n_*-*-_\n m\nmmmmmmmmmmm\nmrns^m\n\u00bbmm\n\u25a0TOPSF\nf^w*wr*wa\u00bb*^^*w<*^^\no!3\nTrappers Give Eye\nto Winter's Lines\nTrappers in the southern interior\nllready are giving an eye to their\nlines for the coming season. A number have changed locations or ex\ntended their lines^ registering the\nchanges with the game department.\nTheodore Roosevelt carried a rabbit's foot, gift of John L. Sullivan,\nfor good luck while hunting in\nAfrica.\nThe LAST DAY\nOF OUR GREAT\nSummer SHOE Sale\nixceptipnal Values You Can't Afford to Miss\nWOMEN'5 SANDALS\n\u2022P-&.1U   and    t^LiJO\nWOMEN'S SPORT\nOXFORDS\nWOMEN'S WHITE\nSHOES,  PUMPS AND\nTIES\n$235 J4.35\nWOMEN'S DRESS SHOES\n$2.35 to $5.35    $2.9510 $6.35\nValues for\nMEN\nMEN'S   WHITE\nOXFORDS\n$2.9510 $4.95\nMEN'S DRESS SHOES\n$3.95 to $6.65\nR.Andrew\nb Company\nLeaders in\nFootfashion\n\u25a0WlWWW^\nHORNER'S Grocery\nSPECIALS SATURDAY AND MONDAY\nPHONE 121 FREE DELIVERY\nBUTTER  GJ.endale and Numald,\nFirst Grade\n3 lbs. $1.05\nCOFFEE\u2014Chase b Sanborn*\u00ab Lb. 39?\nIILLY POWDERS\u2014De Luxe 5 pkgs. 23?\nJELLY POWDERS Nuj8, 3 Phgs. 231\nSPAGHETTI\u2014Libby's, tali tins Tin 11?\nSALADA TEA\u2014 (Yellow Label)  Lb. 53?\nPIC BAR BISCUITS\u2014Fresh -stock Lb. 22?\nCANTALOUPS\nGood size 10?; large size, 2 for 25?; Jumbo size 15?\nPEACHES\u2014Rochester Preserving Case $1.59\nTABLE PEACHES\u2014Excellent eating Basket 25?\nBANANAS 2 Ibs. 19?\nCRAPEFRUIT 4 for 29?\nORANGES Dozen 33?   43?   69?\nTOMATOES\u2014Field 4 Ibs. 25?\nCELERY 2 Ibs. 19?\nCORN Goldc\"\nBantam, No. 1\nDozen 320\nCAULIFLOWER 2 Ibs. 19?\nGREEN AND YELLOW BEANS 3 Ibi. 23?\nGREEN PEPPERS 2 Ibs. 25?\nLETTUCE Large heads 10?\nGrocery Prices the Same at Salmo\nSafeway Siori\nAdditional Saturday\nVALUES\n(With Crocery Order Only)\nMILK\u00bb^\u00ab^.M.^...      .   3 for 20c\nCHIPSO    ... Large pkt. 12c\nSOAP\u2014Lifebuoy Per cake   5c\nSHREDDED WHEAT Per pkt  6c\nCORN FLAKES K??80' 3 pkgs. 19c\nCATSUP-Llbby's   Per bottle 13c\nPEAS-Broder's  -  17-ox. tin 10c\nSODAS      44-o*. box 34c\nIIRISAll     limit 3  ...' J for ,15\/C\nPOTATOES  12 Ibs. 25c\nNO TELEPHONE ORDERS\nWE RESERVE THE  RIGHT TO\nLIMIT QUANTITIES\nSAFEWAY STORES\nLIMITED\nNELSON DAILV NEWS, NELSON, B.C-SATURDAY MORNING. AUG. 21. 1937\nNEW SCHOOL IS\nTO BE BUILT AT\nPERRY'S SIDING\nLumber was ordered Friday for' ;\\\nnew two-room school at Perry Siding, to replace the structure burnecj\nby incendiary fanatics in the Easter\noutbreak. A small temporary building tp which tha pupils concluded\nthe school year has been torn down\nand the new building will take its\nplace.\nA new structure at Appledale, anr\nother of the victim schools, is almost\ncompleted. It is hoped construction\nof a new school at Winlaw will start\nsoon.\nW. R. Dunwoody has been appointed official trustee for Perry Siding\nand Appledale schools, and F, A.\nJewett is official trustee for Winlaw.\nCanyon Auxilary\nCreston Hospital\nCRESTON, B.C. - Pleasure and\nprofit were admirably combined at\nCreston hospital benefit garden party Wednesday sponsored by Canyon Ladles' Hospital Auxiliary, at\nthe horrie of Supt. S. J. and Mrs.\nParker at the West Kootenay Power\n& Light company.\nThe Parker residence, located\npart way d\/>wn the canyon, with\nhills on cither side and captivating\nviews up and down stream, abounds\nwith natural beauty, which was\nheightened as the evening deepened\nby strings of many colored electric\nbulbs, strung all over the property\nand flood lights.\nA competent staff of workers dispensed ice cream and other refreshments.\nBingo was popular as were also\nthe wheels of fortune that brought\nworth while prizes. The tea cup\nfortune teller had a busy evening\nand an orchestra provided mugic\nfor those who wished to dance in the\nhall building.\nA thrilling close to proceedings\nfeatured a balloon shoot under the\nflood lights over the waters above\nthe dam. A picture painted by Miss\nMarion Paker was raffled and was\nwon by C. Blair of Canyon.\nShower Honors Bride\nElect at Kimberley\nKIMBERLEY, B.C.-Mrs. G. Carlson, Mrs. 0. Hendrickson and Mrs. A.\nHendrickson were joint hostesses at\nthe home of the latter Wednesday\nwhen a surprise kitchen shower was\ngiven in honor of Miss Edna Johnston, whose marriage takes plgce\nin the near future. About 30 ladies\nwere present..\nThe gifts in a decorated basket\nwere presented by Roy Hendrickson\nand Inga Carlson.\nNELSON Social..\nBy MRS. M. J. VIGNEUX\nCoating of Highway\nYahk Area Under Way\nARROW CREER, B.C. - Arrow\nCreek school is being renovated, a\nVooci she4 and teacher's room is\nbeing added on the back and two\nbook rooms on the front. Two new\nwindows and a ventilator have been\nadded and the inside is being re-\nsheeted. It is being painted inside\nand out. William Craig ot Creston\nhas the contract.\nThe road at the north end of the\nvalley is now being repaired.\nPRINCE ALBERTA, Sask. (CP) -\nSaskatchewan's new two per cent\nsales tax led a merchant to put this\nsign in his windoiy: \"We are provincial government tax collectors, by\nappointment. We also do plumbing,\nheating and sheet metal work in our\nspare time.\"\nmam\nBufcherteria\nNewi\nPhone\n527\nPhone\n528\nSPECIALS\nSATURDAY and MONDAY\nHAMBURGER:\nFresh, Ib\t\nSAUSAGE MEAT:\nLb\t\n10c\n10c\nFRESH RENDERED DRIPPING: with meat   <)\u00a3\norder, 3 Ibs COS,\nPOT ROASTS BEEF\nUp from\t\nLEGS LAMB:\nLb\t\nOVEN VEAL\nROASTS: Lb\t\nOVEN BEEF ROASTS: 10\n12c\n26c\n15c\nDARIGOLD   CREAMERY\nBUTTER: With meat order, 2nd grade,\n2 Ibs\t\n69c\nROUND STEAK:\nSpecial, 2 lbs\t\nBONELESS STEW\nBEEF: Lb\t\nSPECIAL VEAL\nSTEW: Lb\t\n35c\n12c\n15c\nFREE DELIVERY\n\u2022 Mrs. James O'Shea, Silica\nstreet, entertained Thursday after-,\nnoon at a bridge in honor of her\nhouse guest, Mrs. A. D. McLeod of\nKamloops, Mrs. O'Shea's invited\nguests were Mrs. McLeod, Mrs. Alex\nLeith, Mrs. John Cartmel, Mrs. C.\nW. Appleyard, Mrs. R. W. Diamond,\nof Trail, Mrs. P. G. Morey, Mrs. W.\nT, fotheringham, Mrs. W. R. Grubbe,\nMrs. W. M. Cunliffe, Mrs. E. E. L.\nDewdney, Mrs. J. J. Fingland of\nTrail, Mrs. C. D. Blackwood, Mrs.\nNelson Murphy, Mrs. J. G. Bunyan.\nMrs. R. L. McBride, Mrs. Wilfrid\nAllan, Mrs. L. V. Rogers, Mrs. William AValdie, Mrs. E. G* Matthew of\nVancouver, Mrs. W. M. Walker, Mrs\nH. Rosling, Mrs. A. G. Mackay, Miss\nM. H. Cameron, Mrs. Austin Bell,\nMrs. E. G. Smyth, Mrs. Douglas L.\nThompson of Kimberley, Mrs. Austin Bell of Calgary and Mrs. E. C.\nWragge.\n\u00bb Mrs. G. J. McKay and little\ndaughter Jean have left for Whatshan lake where they will spend a\ncouple of weeks. Mr. McKay will\njoin them on Monday.\n\u2022 Miss Ruth Bond leaves Monday via the Great Northern for Vancouver.\n\u2022 Nelson Johnson, Great North-\nen? road master with office in Spokane spent Thursday in Nelson.\n\u2022 Complimenting Mrs, Douglas\nL. Thompson of Kimberley,\" who ',3\nspending the summer in Nelson, a\nguest of her mother, Mrs. E. G.\nSmyth, Terrace apartments, Mrs. J.\nG. Bunyan, Silica street, entertained\non two occasions at bridge recently\nwhen invited guests included Mrs.\nThompson, Mrs. E. G. Smyth, Mrs.\nH. Rosling. Mrs. Austin Bell of Calgary, Mrs. F. F. Payne, Mrs. R. W.\nDiamond of Trail, Mrs. Hugh W.\nRobertson, Mrs. C. D. Blackwod,\nMrs. John Cartmel, Mrs. W. T. Fotheringham, Mrs. L. E. Borden, Miss\nM. H. Cameron, Mrs. A. G. Mackay,\nMrs. H. W. Seamon, Mrs. L. V. Rogi\nors, Mrs. Barrks of Kimberley, Mrs.\nW. M. Walker. Mrs. Leslie Craufurd,\nMrs. Nelson Murphy, Mrs. IJarry\nBurns, Mrs. E. C. Wragge, Mrs. W.\nR. Grubbe, Mrs. C. W. Appleyard,\nMrs. P. G. Morey, Mrs. Harold Lakes,\nMrs. Wilfrid Allan, Mrs. R. L. McBride, Mrs. Alex Leith, Mrs. James\nO'Shea, Mrs, A. D. McLeod of Kamloops, Mrs. Guy Davis, Mrs. E. E. L.\nDewdney, Mrs. H. H. McKenzie and\nMrs. E- G. Matthew of Vancouver.\nMr. and Mrs. A. Willey of Bonnington visited town yesterday.\nThursday Mr. and Mrs. A. G.\nNorcross of the Reno mill were\nguests of the former's mother, Mrs.\nH. Norcross, Granite road.\nE. J. Hacking and daughter\nAnnette, who spent 10 days at Red\nDeer, Alta., passed through town\nyesterday en route to their home at\nSalmon Arm.\n\u2022 Mr. Johnston of Burton visited\ntown yesterday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. T. H. Glover,\nThird street, Fairview, have as their\nhouse guests Mr. Glover's niece, Miss\nReta Jackman, also Miss May Armour, both of Toronto.\n\u2022 Mrs. Harry Allan of Calgary\nis visiting her son, Harry Allan, jr.,\nin Nelson.\n\u2022 . Mrs. Con Cummins and infant\ndaughter, Constance Barbara, left\nthe Kootenay Lake General hospital yesterday for their home on Hall\nstreet.\n\u2022 D. E. Grobe of Spokane was n\nvisitor in town Thursday, a guest at\nthe home of Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Appleyard, Hoover street.\n\u2022 W. J. McConnell of Harry visited town yesterday.\n\u2022 Mrs. E. T- Coleman of Vallican\nwas among city shoppers yesterday,\n\u2022 Mrs. A. H. Wells of Winnipeg\nwho has been a guest of her brother-\nin-law and sister, Mr, and Mrs.\nJames Robertson, Silica street, for\nsome weeks, plans to leave this\nmorning by bus for home. She will\nbe accompanied as far as Banff by\nMrs. Robertson, who will spend a\nweek or more there and at Calgary.\n\u2022 Rev. F. V. Harrison of Cranbrook plans to leave Monday for\nHalifax to replaee Ven. Archdeacon,\nFred H. Graham at the general\nmeeting of the synod .of the Church\nof England. He will be accompanied\nhy Mrs. Harrison as a delegate tn\nthe Dominion board of the W.A..\nwho is going as proxy for Mrs. E. H.\nH. Applewhaite of Willow Point,\npresident of the diocesan W.A. En\nroute they plan to visit their son\nat Regina.\n\u2022 Mrs. Rod McDonald of Bonnington visited town Thursday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. E. McGinnis of\nYmir were Nelson shoppers Thursday. They were accompanied by thc\nformer's parents, Mr, and Mrs. S.\nMcGinnis of Vancouver and then-\ndaughter, Mary Stewart McGinnis.\n\u2022 Dr. and Mrs. H. H. McKenzie\nare at Spokane attending the Gyro\nconvention.\nMrs. W. E. Marshall, her\ndaughter, Mrs. F. Brennan, and her\ndaughter-in-law, Mrs. E. Marshall,\nall of Silverton, visited town yesterday.\nT. D. Edgar of Vallican spen.\nyesterday shopping in Nelson.\nMrs. H. Hansen of Ainsworth\nwas a Nelson visitor yesterday.\n. Mrs. Noel Harrop and son-of\nTrail are at Harrop visiting Mr. and\nMrs. E. Harrop.\nW. C. Dorey of Salmo spent\nyesterday in town.\n\u2022 Robert Thompson of Willow\nPoint was a city shopper yesterday.\na Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Brown,\n121 Chatham street, Fairview, will\nbe \"at home' on the afternoon and\nevening of August 31 On the occasion\nof their 30th wedding anniversary.\nIt is also Mrs. Brown's birthday.\n\u2022 Mrs. F. W. Johnson of Rosemont has returned from a visit to\nDetroit, Mich.\n\u00ab Mr. $nd Mrs. R. A. Horswill.\nSilica street, have returned from\ntwo weeks' holiday at Balfour.\n\u2022 Master Denny Davis of Vancouver, who spent a month at the\nhome at Willow Point of his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. E. H. H. Applewhaite, has left for Nanoose Bay,\nV.I., where his parents are holidaying.\n\u2022 A picnic honoring Mrs. A. H.\nWells of Winnipeg, who has been a\nguest of her sister, Mrs. James Robertson. Silica street for a month, was\nheld Wednesday at Lakeside park.\nAmong those present were Mrs.\nWells, Miss Beverley Littlejohn, Mr.\nand Mrs. T. S. Jemson, Mrs. Joseph\nHolland. Biflie Rolland, Mrs. A.-Lundie, Mrs, C. E. A. Simonds, Mrs.\nJames Armstrong, Mrs. Everett\nBrasch. Mr. and Mrs. J. Ryan. Mr.\nand Mrs. Rex Little, Mrs. W. Calbick, Mrs. G. Williscroft, Miss Iris\nWilliscroft, Mr. and Mrs. James Robertson, J. A. Smith, Mr. and Mrs. C.\nH. Robinson, W. D. Smith, Mr. and\nMrs Archie Robertson of Qualicum\nBeach, V.I., J. W. Graham, Miss Annie Smith, Miss Ethel Smith and\nMr. and Mrs. H. H- Sutherland.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Ludwig\nhave had as their guests at their\nsummer home on the north shpre\nMrs. Ludwig's aunt and cousin, Mrs.\nJennie Fox and her daughter, Miss\nIsabel Fox of Whitechurch, Ont.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Bargett of\nShaunavon, Sask., spent yesterday\nin Nelson en route to the coast.\nMORE ABOUT\nNURSES' COUNCIL\n(Continued From Page Four)\nincrease in employment among private duty nurses serving an eight-\nhour day. This fact was later emphasized by Miss Pearl Brownell,\ndirector of Manitoba nurses, and\nmet with general approval, though\nall recognized the difficulties of\n\"converting\" hospital boards and\ntreasurers.\nThe system of sickness and unemployment insurance and superannuation for health workers, at\npresent in practice in Great Britain,\nand a Bill now being passed by the\nBritish parliament regarding these\nsubjects, were matters of open admiration from nurses of other countries. Mme. Paul Lippens of Belgium\ngave a speech showing the advance\nmade in these matters in her court-\ntry.\nMore extensive education for\nnurses was advocated by several\nspeakers. Miss Mary S. Mathewson,\nassistant director, School for Grad'\nuate Nurses, McGill University,\nstated boldly \"dissatisfaction with\nthe product of our nursing schools\nhas been almost universal and resulted in a realization that certain\nessential aspects have been neglected in the undergraduate course,\nnotably health and social aspects,\"\nShe advocated the finding of opportunities for student nurses to practise outside the hospital under\nskilled supervision.\nThe replacement of the autocratic\nhospital matron by the cooperative\nhospital leader was stressed by Miss\nR. Darbyshire who is on the executive of the British Nurses Association and former matron of University College hospital, who spoke of\nthe demand for the better type of\ngirl in hospital work.\nMiss Effie J, Taylor, Dean of Yale\nUniversity School of Nursing, was\nelected president of the International Council of Nurses for the period\n1937-41. Miss Jean Gunn, Superintendent of Nurses, Toronto General\nhospital, was elected vice-president.\nThe congress of 1941 is to take place\nin the United States. The city Will\nbe announced later.\nPOPULAR JAIL\nWARDEN GOING\nOAKALLA POST\nA. T. Stephenson Has\nBeen Resident in\nNelson 7 Years\nWord has been received hy A. T.\nStephenson, warden at the Nelson\nprovincial jail, of his transfer to n.\nsimilar post at Oakalla. Mr. Stephenson came to Nelson in March,\n1930, as staff sergeant in charge of\nthe Nelson detachment of provinciaj\npolice. Six years ago he became\nwarden of the local jail. He will go\nto the coast post September 1.\nWarden Stephenson and Mrs. Stephenson are well and popularly\nknown in Nelson ansj district. Greeted as \"Staff\", Mr. Stephenson ia\nwell known throughout East and\nWest Kootenay. He has taken an\nactive interest in all sports while\nin Nelson, and was a member for\nsome years of the Nelson Curling\nclub.\nPrior to coming to, Nelson, he\nserved in the provincial police forces\nat various points in B. C. He joined\nthe force in Alberni in 1968. In 1969\nhe was stationed at Michel. For a\nperiod of 11 years he was chief eon-\nstable in the city of Nanaimo, and\nprior to his coming to Nelson ho\nwas staff-sergeant of the Revelstoke\ndistrict.\nMrs. Stephensen has been closely\nidentified with the ladies' activities\nof  St.   Saviour's  Anglican   church\nG. Choquette Hanged\nMONTREAL, Aug, 20 (CP) \u2014\nGaetan Choquette, 20, ruddy-faced\nfarmhand who was convicted of\nstrangling his widowed employer\nat her lonely farm home near suburban Languewil six months ago,\nwas hanged here  today.\nWhen lead is cooled it shrinks, but\nthe metal antimony expands on\ncoolin.\nWeek-End\nSPECIALS\nat\nLowery's\nGroceteria\nSalted Sodas\u2014Christie's;    | mA\nper pkt  **F\nBloater Paste\u2014Macono-     |A*J\nchic's; per tin   *V}\u00bb\nPork and Beans\u2014Aylmer, JQri\n2's; 3 tins   *'r\nAssorted  Marmalade\u2014       93t*\nShirriff's; 1-lb. jar  *\u2022**\u25a0\nMo|a\u00abses\u2014Sugar House,      1Q|*\n2's; per tin   ***T\nTomato Juice\u2014Wh-oi.      WLA\ntins; 3 for *\u2022\u2022\u00a5!\u2022\nBUTTER\u2014Alberta,\nFirst Grade; 3 Ibs...\n$1.05\nEconomy Lltjs\u2014 Valt.\n3 doz. for-  -*\\Wr\nLemonade Powder\u2014 2-W\nGrantham's; 2 pkts m*T\nRubber Rings\u2014Best \u00abJ|J\nquality; per doz  -ar\nLime Juice\u2014Montserratt,  OjC(J\nquarts; per bottle  aJT\n\u2022\nPeaches\u2014Dessert; 2M\nper basket **'r\nCantaloups-^-Medium size; 'at'A\n2 for  *9r\nCorn\u2014Nice size; 2Q(i\nper doz m*ayt\nBananas\u2014Real nice; 9Q<s\n3 lbs.' *~r\nPotatoes\u2014 ICA\n10 lbs  **3*'\nCukes\u2014 JJjt\nEach,  3V\nTomatoes\u2014 2Ci*\nPer basket  \u2022'aft*\nGOOD QUALITY ONLY\nAND   FRESH\nwhile in Nelson, and she also holds\nan office with the Ladies' auxiliary\nof the Nelson Golf and Country\nclub,\nNo word of Mr. Stephenson's successor has been received.\nPRESIDENT  OF  ACCOUNTANTS\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 20 (CP) \u2014\nFrank A. Nightingale of Halifax today was installed as president of\nthe Dominion Association of Chartered Accountants. Elected at closing session of the annual! convention here yesterday, Nightingale\nsucceeds George E. Winter of Vancouver.\nSell It With a Want Ad\n PAQE   FIVE\nJohn Moire Dies at\nCranbrook Hospital\nCRANBBOOK, B.C.-John Moire,\nage 50, died in the St. Eugene hls-\npital Wednesday. He has been in tho\nhospital for the past two years and*:\nprior to his illness was with the.\nCrow's Nest Pass Lumber company*\nat Skookumchuck. He was a native,\nof England and has no relatives in\nthis country.\nLONDON, (CP)-Every other wo-,\nman one meets in London seems\nto be wearing a different type of\nhat and there is no such thing as\nthe \"fashionable\"hat this season!\nSpme hqve hr'-T*-8, others no brims.'\nTOILET SOAP\u2014Colgate's 6 for 24?\nPEAS\u2014Ungraded 2 tint 25?\nSOAP\u2014Pels Naptha 3 for 25?\nPINEAPPLE\u2014Faultless Tin 11?\nSARDINES\u2014Nabob, very small fish 2 for 25?\nSODAS\u2014Snowflake   Pkg. 22?\nSALAD DRESSING\u2014Best Foods 23? and 42?\nHONEY GRAHAM WAFERS' Pkg. 23?\nBEANS\u2014Libby's Deep Brown Tin 14?\nSALMON\u2014Red Seal, Spring  Tin 25?\nRICE\u2014Best jap 3 lbs. 22?\nMARMALADE\u2014Suntipt, No. 4 Tin 45?\nBLUEINC\u2014Reckitts  Pkg. ' 5?\nYEAST\u2014Lallymand's, \"It's faster\" 2 pkgs. 15?\nCORN\u2014Middleton's Golden Bantam Dox. 34?\nWe have everything seasonable in fruit and vegetables\nBrookfield Butter demonstration today.\nBEANS\u2014Green and      *je#\u00bb\nWax; 4 Ibs  **T\nSWEET SPUDS- <)\u00a3-,\n2 Ibs  ^SV\n2cfbL.ERY- m\n^pERS: iw\nCAULIFLOWER- VQA\nCANTALOUPS\u2014 fgA\nEach 15c; 2 for  \"IT\nPEACHES- <*nA\nBasket    *-**\nPLUMS\u2014 7Qf*\nBasket    *'T\nGRAPES-Malasa; *}\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\n2 Ibs.  3*T\nTOMATOE8- 25*}\nHorswill Bros.\nPHONE 235\nFREE DELIVERY\nSPECIAL VALUES\nfor SATURDAY\nLAST PROMOTION DAY\nFancy Tea Aprons\n35-\nA great assortment of good quality and\nstyle tea aprons and house aprons. Some\norgandy trimmed. All fast colors. Each .\nWool Sweaters\nKnitted Wool Pullovers in bright colors of\nred, green, turquoise, yellow and white.\nRegular $1.75. Promotion Days\t\n98*\nGloves\nWashable Fabric and Silk Cloves with gauntlet and\nfancy cuffs. Colors of grey, fawn, white,\nbrown, navy and black. A wonderful     ^ -~\nvalue. Regular to $1.00 pair. Z Up\nPromotion Pays       \u2022**-\/ Jf\nWhite Flannelette Sheets\nSoft and fluffy flannelette sheets with bright      ^\ncolored borders. A large size and all first <fc |    QC\nquality. Saturday Only, Pair   ^ A *?\nKnitting Wool\nAll colors in good 4 ply Knitting Wool.\nA nice even weave that will give splendid satisfaction. Saturday Only, Ball ....\n09\nFull Fashioned Hose\nSilk Crepe Full Fashioned Hose in good shades. Substandards of a well known make. Also a few full\nfashioned, Semi Service and Chiffons.  Buy     C*Cjr\u00bb\na few pairs. Saturday Only, Pair      J We\nReady-to-Wear and Drygoods\nPhone 200 Baker St.\naaaaaawmaamaaaammaaaaaamaaaaaaaa\nWE\nDELIVER\nFREE\nVASSARS'\nPHONES\n831\n832\nCASH MEAT MARKET\nGood Buying for Saturday and Monday\nChoice Steer Beef\nJuicy Round Steak,\n2 Ibs  39?\nPot Roasts, Ib. 10? and 121\nRump Roast, Ib. 18?, 201\nBoiling Beef, Lean, Ib. 10?\nRolled Rib Roast, Ib. . 25?\nStewing leef, lean,\n2 Ibs 25?\nVeal Fillet Roast, Ib. . 22?\nVeal Oven Roast,\nLb.' 12? and 15?\nVeal Steaks, 2 Ibs. .. 25?\nLegs Real Lamb, Ib. . 26?\nLamb Chops, Ib  20?\nLamb Stewing, 2 Ibs. . 25?\nPork Lean Spare Ribs,\nLb  16?\nPork Oven Roast, Ib. . 22?\nOld Nippy Cheese, Ib. 30?\njellied Veal, Ib  30?\nCreamery Butter, Thistle\nBrand, 3rd grade, with meat\norder, 2 lb*  63?\nBreakfast Bacon,fresh\nsliced, Ib  35?\nFry Chicken, fresh killed,\nLb 35?\nRoasting Chicken, fresh\nkilled, Ib.  28?\nBoiling Fowl, lb 23?\nHamburger, good fresh,\n2 lbs 23?\nBreakfast Sausage, choice\nfresh, 2 Ibs 25?\nPure Lard, 2 Ibs 39?\nBologna, large, Ib. ... 19?\nEggs, local, large A's,\nDoxen   39?\nPolly Vardon Trout,\nLb      80?\nWhole or half\nMushrooms, Ib 40?\n\\\nma\n amw.\nPAGE SIX\nmmm^mimmmm\nJMsmt Saily News\nEstablished April 22, 1902.\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper.::,,\nPublished every morning except Sunday by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY. LIMITED,\n216  Baker Street.    Nelson,    British  Columbia.\nPhone 144. Private Exchange Connecting All Departments.\nMembers   of   the   Audit   Bureau   of   Circulations   and\nThe    Canadian   Press    Leased    Wire    News   Service,\nSATURDAY, AUG. 21, 1937\nBRITAIN PLANS REVIVAL OF\nAGRICULTURE\n\u2022 The rearmament program well under way, Britain is\nnow making plans to increase her supply of home grown\nfood, which is a vital part of defence in case of enemy\nattack.\nIn an extremely vulnerable position so far as food supplies are concerned, it has been recognized by the government that Britain's best protection against starvation\nthrough submarine and airplane blockade is the development of agriculture on a much larger scale. The agricultural\nindustry has been steadily going down hill in recent years.\nLack of profits has led to the abandonment of large acreages of farm land. Since 1318 some 320,000 farm workers\nhave gone to the cities to find employment or live on the dole.\nIn the hope of overcoming this condition, attributable\nto a considerable extent to lack of protection for home\ngrown produce from foreign competition, a number of measures have now been decided upon to increase the general\nefficiency and prosperity of home agriculture. These are\naimed primarily at greater fertility and productivity of\nthe soil. Grassland will be improved by making lime and\nbasic slag cheaper to the farmer, this to be done by meeting half the cost out of the national treasury. The higher\nfertility will be valuable in peace time and will be especially important in event of war.\nIncreased wheat acreage is also to be encouraged by\nraising the limit available for subsidy from 27,000,000\nhundredweight to 36,000,000 hundredweight. Oats and barley are also to be insured against low prices.\nBritain, of course, cannot raise enough wheat to supply her needs for more than a short period. Even if the\nanticipated increased production is realized huge imports\nwill be necessary. A suggestion has been made that reserves\nagainst emergency be purchased in Canada and stored in\nspecially designed granaries, and no doubt this suggestion\nhas been taken into consideration. The present measures for\nincreased home production are felt to be necessary, however, regardless of all other precautions and are certain\nto receive the same measure of support as the rearmament\nexpenditures. Kven for peace times it was seen that the\nneglect and falling off of farm production was an unhealthy\neconomic development which reacted unfavorably on the\ngeneral prosperity of the nation. Urban centres were crowded with wofkless while farms which could produce much\nof the nation's food supplies lay unfilled.\nQUEBEC NOT FOR SEPARISM\nSuperficially, Quebec during the past 12 months has\ngone through something like a political revolution. After\nthe Liberal parly had been power in the province for longer\nthan most of us care to remember, the people wanted a\nchange and put the Union Nationale into office. The government of the day is composed of oldtime Conservatives allied with Liberals who became insurgent against the old\nadministration.\nMany new measures have been passed into law, some\nof them almost revolutionary in their apparent intention,\nbut actually, the changes in Quebec are most apparent than\nreal. Reforms are in thc air, but Quebec is not likely to do\nanything radical.\nBut the changes have produced a flock of rumors. Some\nof them have indicated a growth of a separatist movement,\nwith clerical or at least quasi-clerical support. It was probably these rumors which caused Cardinal Villeneuve, speaking in the old province the other day, to make the following\nemphatic declaration:\nAnd I for one believe that Ihe more French-speaking people\nwill be themselves wilh their proper spirit and ancestral peculiarities, the more will they nourish in their hearts deep and precious\nlove for Canada. This is ihe only kind of \"separatism'' that we\nentourage. As In political separatism from thc Empire, or from\nCanada, il is none of the church's business, and we feci no inclination for il. F,ven more, wc recall to every one that political evolution is illicit unless in accordance with acknowledged rights and\nconstitutional order.\nThe Church in no way admits that patriotism should be love\nof isolation-that it should be confined to one village, town or\nprovince. No; but thai it .must extend In thc whole country and\nshould be accompanied by a feeling of loyally to our Sovereign,\nnamely King George VI.\nHis eminence went on:\nDivine Providence seems to have destined the English-speaking and the French-speaking Canadians lo cooperate in building\na nation based upon Anglo-Saxon and French civilizations.\nTo upbuild this Canadian nation, our two great races ought not to\nignore one another: they ought not to strike out one at the other;\nthey ought not In despise or to weaken one another; they must,\nby their conduct on the eternal principles of justice, truth, right-\neousnoss. foster our mutual goodwill and toleration in their dealings wilh one another.\nCanada has a big enough job on its hands, without\nweakening itself by sectional divisions. Cardinal Villen-\neuve's categorical declaration of policy is a true service\nto the country.\nA French newspaper, Le Journal of Paris, has this to\nsay of Great Britain's new armament policy:\n\"It almost seems that tiie Army, Navy and Air Force is taking\nthe place the League of Nations once occupied. Where the League\nfailod Ihe armed might of the British Empire will .succeed. This\nexplains the gradual change-over of pacifists, even like Lord\nCecil, to the side of those who want lo sec a well-armed Britain.\"\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON, B.C-SATURDAY MORNING, AUG. 21, 1937      \t\n\u2022>^m\ne\nBy   ). B. C\nSUMMER IS PASSING\nErnie Steele remarked the other\nday that we had had but little\nsummer this season, Yes it is hard\nto realize that summer will be\npractically over in two weeks. Why,\nit seems only yesterday that the\nslores began to advertise their\nsummer furs..\nSLIPPERY  CHANCE\nLittle Willie, what a dope.\nFilled Pa's pipe with Castile soap,\nMa says: \"Willie, better head south,\nPa's gonna start foaming1 at the\nmouth.'\nAND THEY WOULD TOO\nA Glasgow Irishman and a Coatbridge Pole were arguing about\npolitics.\nTo finish up the debate, the Irishman said:\n\"Listen, son, if ye went over to\nPoland and said the things ye said\nhere they'd throw ye in the Clyde.\"\nSOMETHING    DICOVERED\nThe news that Hawaiian music\nis being revived raises the quoslion\nof what those guitarists have found\nto wail about now.\n4        *        \u2022\nTOLLED\nA traveller seeking advertisements for a local paper called at\nthe village grocer's, Upon presenting his card, he was surprised when\nthe grey-haired proprietor said:\n\"Nothing doing. Been established !J0\nyears and never advertised.\"\nTurning to leave, Ihe travcllrr\nsaid: \"Excuse me, sir, but what is\nlhat building on the hill?\"\n\"The village church,\" said the\ngrocer.\n\"Been there long1\" r.sked thc\ntraveller,\n\"About three hundred years.\"\n\"Well,\" rpelied the traveller,\n\"they still ring the bell.'1\nOBSERVATION\nMost  girls,   in  sports,\nShouldn't wear shorts,\nHASTY   RECOLLECTIONS\nOF OUR  AFTERNOON\nWhat to write about is a problem\u2014Spent the day around the shipyard watching the boys work on\nthe West Kootenny Tower & Light\ncompany's equipment \u2014 Glorious\ndown that way on a summer's afternoon\u2014Noticed Constable House of\nthe city police force out for a clip\nin the arm\u2014and out for a row or\npaddle\u2014He   had   his   trusty   pipe\nwith him\u2014Fred Chapman of South\nSlocan was around the yards superintending the unloading of the company tug the Vivian B\u2014He said\nne had lost track of the lacrosse\nsituation at the coast\u2014J. A. Stobo\nhad just returned from Nakusp way\n\u2014and he said he had run into\nGeorge Keyes who had been to the\nhot springs\u2014and a lot of other old\ntimers\u2014Mr. Stobo tells me Nakusp\nhas*had a lot of tourists passing\nthat way this summer\u2014And up\ntown 1 ran into Jim Spencer am.\nClaude Miller\u2014who were undoubtedly, talking about the pamt business\u2014Noticed Kuuolph Chs-ii Having\na snooze\u2014and Frank Carlson gel-\nting home rather early for Frank\u2014\n1 intended getting a. haircut but\ndidn't get up town in time\u2014Notices\n\"Doc'- bnaw's boat on the lake in\nthe afternoon \u2014 and learned his\nbrother is here from somewr.ue hi\nthe U. S. A. and intends staying\nfur a couple ot mon.hs\u2014-Uvein^aiv.\nD.-,ve Wade telling a tall story \u2014\nand Bob Maber wasn't far benino\nwith one to equal it \u2014 Roy Pollaro\nmade a quick trip to Kaslo this\nweek and says the roads are none\nloo bad\u2014Raaio reports the road to\nSpokane from Nelson in good sliapc\n\u2014I wonder'.'\u2014Noticed ail week a\n;;ood string of American autos in\ntown\u2014and indications are the tourist season has been better this summer\u2014 Looking out the office window\nI see Kokanee peak\u2014there is no;\na sign of snow on it\u2014Am wondering now the climbers from across\nthe   line   are   faring   on   its   loft>\nranges Can't  help  but think  thai\nwithin a few weeks the peaks will\nno doubt, be covered witn snow -\nJimmie McCandlish carried a paper,\nmuch in the style of a sergeant-\nmajor, as he walked home for an\nevening meal\u2014\"Mick\" Michelson n\ndriving his car to work these day;\n\u2014as he can't depend upon the street\ncar service\u2014and who can?\u2014 \"Mick\"\nis already talking about the approaching curling season\u2014W. H.\nTowhey, who likes to call stations\n\u25a0 for the C. P. R\u201e walked down the\nstreet in shirt slervcs-and handed\na lady a book in front of our office\u2014 There that's enough for a Friday\u2014Tell you more maybe on Monday.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nLIMPING LIMERICK\nThere was a brave lass of Connecticut\nWho signalled  thc train with her\npetticoat,\nWhich the papers defined\nAs piT-cocc cif mind-\nBut dcr\"     V-c absence of ecticut.\n\"D'you realize, guv'nor that It's over two months since we've 'ad a\ncall'.1 Couldn't we 'ave a small ad, in the local paper or something?\"\u2014Humorist.\nLooking Backward ...\nTEN   YEARS  AGO\nAugust 21, 1027\nDavid   Sutcliffe.   Riondel,   is   a\nguest   at   tho   Savoy. Mis.   R.   C\nFry, Trail, is a guest at the Queens,\n?>-\n-<$\nAUNT HET\nBy   ROBERT  QUILLEN\nI \u2014J. Snow, South Slocan, is a guest\nhit the New Grand.\u2014Francis Cur-\nren of Trail was a business visitor\nto Nelson.-Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Carter and Iheir daughter of Trail have\nreturned from a two weeks vacation at Kaslo.\u2014Mrs. C S. Williams:\nand daughter of Tadanac are spending the summer at* Vancouver.\u2014'\nMrs. W. Tyndal and sons, Grant,\nJack and Graeme and Mrs. W. Pow\nhave returned to their home at\nSouth Slocan after two weeks\ncamping at Deer Park.\u2014Fred Fraser. Trail barrister, was in Rossland Friday.- Miss Mabel Wiikie\nhas returned fron* her holidays and\nIns resumed her duties in Ihe office of the West Kootenny Power\n& Li\"ht company.- -James Skinner of Trail is a visitor in Rossland. -Mr. and Mrs. Collingwood\nGray nf Bonnington have returned\nlo 1he:r home after a spending a\nholiday at  Nelson.\nTWENTY YEARS AGO\nAugust 21,  1917\nItalians   have   taken   10,1)00   prisoners  in  Austrh. \u2014 Canadians  and\n\"1 don't use much make-up.*\nI done it once and Pa bragged\non me, but I don't want him i French have taken rpore territory\nthinkin' I'm pretty only when north of V-*'rdun.--Mrs. A. W. Me-\ni A,.,-,',  innb i;i,n ,-,-,-.*\u25a0 \u00a3.*\u25a0*,if \" I p\u201e\u201en    t,-     a :\u201e*\u25a0\u201e,\n\"This is just a wee bit of string, Angus, for measuring the length of\nrope I'll need to buy.\"\u2014Humorist.\nWHAT DO YOU THINK?\nAll letters to the editor must be signed with the name of the\nwriter. A nom de plume may be used for publication if desired.\nLines in typewritten copy should be double spaped.\nand  read with  interest  about the\nmango consignment.\nI addressed this Parsee gentleman\nand gave him full data re the Kulu\napple sold in Calcutta and suggested\nhe get in touch with some Japanese:\nfirms with ships. He did so, and the\nfirst consignment of 200,000 apples\nwas shipped from San Francisco to\nIndia four years ago. 1 cannot sav\nwhat steps were taken re the distribution of this consignment, but i\ndo know from Calcutta papers these\napples were sold in Calcutta at a\nvery much lower rate than the Kulu\napples. With this data I attended\na fruit growers' meeting at Creston\nplaced ihe full data before members\nconnected with fruit companies anil\nso far as I know this information\nlies in a file, forgotten as usual.\nMy experience covers 14 years in\nBritish Columbia behind me 33^\nyears in India, behind that 9 years\nat sea and lastly I was born in India,\nspending 13 years before I faced thc\nworld. In the period referred to I\ncan say I have seen the wide world\na great deal more than most business\nCanadians, who perhaps may have\nseen Canada from east to west and\nknow more of the wide, wide world.\nIndia has a population comparable\nto China. Its census cannot be taken\ncorrectly. The Hindu does not eat\nmeat, the Mohammedan does, but\nboth sects eat fruit and vegetables.\nIf the trade commissioners do then-\njobs in the interest of Canada as a\nwhole, but particularly in the interest of thousands who have bought\nfruit farms and all they get is the\nsmell of an oil rag very interestingly\ncxplaind by Mr. Haskin, head of a\nTree Fruit board. He said \". . . an\nempty bag is the fruit grower*\nshare,\" and HE IS RIGHT.\nWake up, Canadian business men.\nand see if you can't get busy for\nfruit growers.\nThank, you, Mr. Editor, for space\nin your valuable paper. By travel\nwe get,knowledge and not by book\nreading or hearsay as I have heard\nso often in Canada. Knowledge by\ntravel.\nS, R. SHERMAN.\nBoswell, B.C.\nSAYS KOOTENAY\nAPPLES CAN BE\nSENT TO INDIA\nTn the Editor:\nSir\u2014Fruit (apples) to California\nand India, an article by P. Hartridge\not Baltour, B.C., issued in Family\nHerald and Weekly Star, page 8,\nJuly 28, 1937.\nI agree with the writer on the\nsubject ot apples to India leaving\nthe question re California to those\nwho may have a different opinion.\nDuring 14 years (1923-37) as a\nfruit farmer in the Kootenays I\nhave repeatedly placed this question\n(apples to India) before many men\nholding executive, positions in cooperative fruit companies and, up\nto date, none of them have conceded\nthe possibility of sending fruit to\nIndia.\nTo further support of this question, may 1 say, I sent three boxes\nas Christmas gifts to Calcutta in\nOctober, 1924 (Yellow Newtowns)\nand these apples arrived in perfect\ncondition in December. One wenl\nto Kuenong by railway about 24\nhours further. At the same time\nanother consignment of nine boxes\nof Macs and Delicious also arrived\nThese apples are Kulu apples. They\nsell in Calcutta for R 8.8.0 a box,\nand more according to size and condition, for about 20 pounds or H 10\nfor 40 pounds.\nDuring my many representations\nat meetings some companies have\nsent apples to Egypt not in cold\nstorage. India is merely a hop, skip\nand a jump to Bombay from Egypt.\nSome six years ago an influential\nParsee gentleman connected with\nthe Bombay government made a\nsuggestion to the governor to send\na small consignment of choice Bombay mangoes to the late King George\nV, This was done in cold storage\n'and arrived in perfect condition. The\nmango is the most delicate fruit in\nIndia. It ripens quickly during midsummer months, June and July. I!\nis hot as hell.\nI get, Indian papers from friends\nI don't look like myself.'\nCune. Jr., Ainsworth, is a gurst at\nthe Hume-Harry O, Wells. Arrowhead, is a guest at the Queens-\nCharles Erickson, Greenwood, is a\nguest at the Grand Central\u2014P. B.\nMcDougall, Midway, is a guest at\nIhe Nelson\u2014G. Belthrome, Fernie,\nis a guest at' the New Grand,\u2014Mr,\nEvans of Fort Steele has received\nthe D.SO.-W. H. Falding has left\nRossland for a business trip to\nSkidgate\u2014L. A. Campbell has relumed to Rossland after a trip\nthrough the Boundary.\u2014Miss Lucy\nDedolph and Miss Hazel Whittaker\nare camping near Minor Lake for\nn few days\u2014Miss Annie Norman\nhas returned lo Mirror Lake after\na visit to Miss Kathleen Strathern\n\u25a0it Kaslo.-Mrs. W. S. Logan, Vancouver, is a .guest of Mrs. C, F. McHardy.\u2014Mrs. A. G. Nash has returned from a visit to Mrs. A. W\nMoCune at Ainsworth,\u2014Alex I.\nFisher. M.P.P.. for Fernie passed\nthrough the city on his way home\nfrom Victoria,\u2014M'SS Mela Bowles\nnf the staff of the Hudson Bay\ncompany was married to Frank\nNoscworth\" of Vancouver at that\ncity rceently.\nTHIRTY YEARS AGO\nAugust 21, 1907\nShortage of coke has necessitated\nthe closing of the lead smelter at\nTrail\u2014Dr. Crandall and Dr. Peck\nof Minneapolis and Chicago respectively, who have had the C. P. R\nhouseboat on the lake, have returned to their homes.\u2014-Last of the\nnew order 20,000 club's advertising\nfolder. \"Glorious Kootenay,\" is\nnow out of the printers' hands, on\nits way to the city.\u2014C. Noel. Sirdar,\nis a guest at the Grand Central,\u2014\nW. Haig-Smellie nf Procter is in\nthe city.\u2014Mr. and Mrs. Re\"in*ld\nWebb, Strathcona hotel, left for\nLondon, where Mr. Webb will un-\ndergo a surgicrl operation.\u2014S. Zim-\nmer. Crawford Bay. is a gftest at\nthe Klondike.\u2014Miss Lucile Tiorn-w.\nwho has been the guest of Miss S\nL. Tiernev for the past few months\nhas left for her home in Minneapolis.\u2014Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Granl. of\nRossland, are guests at the Strathcona.\u2014Lord Vivian, accompanied\nby W. W. Viv'an, W. T. K*rby md\nJ. R, Edmondson. are touring the\ndistrict on  a fishing  trip.\nCONTRACT\nBRIDGE\nAs Written\nby\nSHEPARD\nBARCLAY\nALL VALUES RELATIVE\nNothing in life hrs any value except in relation to the uses to which\nit may be put. This is just as important regarding honor cards on\nyour side as in anything else. II\nthe fate of a contract hinges upon\nobtaining a certain number of leads\ntoward a particular combination, the\nnecessary number of entries for thai\npurpose must be created, no mattei\nwhat face cards have to get overtaken during the procedure.\n\u00a5863\na AK63\n+ 10 8 5 4\n|AK7I\nN.\nS.\n4*5 3\n\u00bb52\nf A JT\na Q J 10 8\n+ KJ6\n\u2666 9542\n*AQ97\nA Q J 10 8 5\nf K Q 10 9 i\n\u2666 7\n*32\n(Daaler: South.   North-South vul\nnerable,]\nAfter Soulh's opening bid of 1-\nSpade, North bid 2-Diamonds, South\n2-Hearts. North 4-Hearts and South\n3-Hearts.\nWhen the opening lead of the diamond 5 was made, the declarer realized that the hand was very simple\nprovided he could trap the missing\nhonors and limit his loss in the\ntrump suit to one trick.\nThe   declarer,   Leo  Candidus   of\nV. Questions V.\nANSWERS\nThis column ot questions and\nanswers is open to any reader ot\n\u2022he Nelson Daily News In no\n:ase will the name ol the person\n\u25a0sking the question he published\nBrooklyn, Immediately sized up the\nsituation when the diamond lead was\nmade and decided that two entries\nwere necessary into the dummy to\nprovide for two leads toward his\nown heart holding. He therefore\nplayed the diamond Ace on the first\ntrick, dropping his own diamond K.\nA heart was now led, the Q cap-\nluring East's 10. A club lead provided a second entry to the dummy\nand on the second heart lead it did\nnot matter whether East played the\nJ or the Ace, as only one heart would\nbe lost.\nHad the first diamond been won\nin the South hand with the K, the\ncontract would have been defeated.\nl-tcndry's Problem\n\u2666 QJ7\n\u00bbJ8S\n\u2666 QJ7\n410 971\n48541\n*43\n-#9863}\n+ A6\na A K 10 9 6\n\u00bbAKS*>\n\u2666 K10\n*>*\u2022\n(Dealer: East. North-South vulnerable.)\nAgainst South's 4-Spade contract\nthe Club K, Ace and Diamond Ace\nhave been cashed, then the club Q\nled. How can declarer make his\ncontract?\n\u00ab3\n1    N. 1\n\u25a0\u00bb Q 10 9 7\nM   \u00abi\na A42\n*KQJ84\n\u25a0S.\nL.K.D., Creston\u2014Who is the Canadian Trade Commissioner to\nAfrica ond what is his address?\nG. R. Heasman, Canadian Government Trade Commissioner, P.O\nBox 683, Cape Town whose territory includes Cape Province and\nSouthwest Africa, Natal, Tanganyika, Kenya, Uganda, Mauritius\nand Madagascar. J. L, Mutter\nCanadian Government Trade\nCommissioner, P.O. Box 715\nJohannesburg whose territory includes Transvaal, Orange Free\nStale, the Rhodesias, Portugese\nEast Africa, Mozambique and Ny-\nasaland.\nP.D.B., Trail\u2014Can you tell me how\nmany governors-general there\nhave been in Canada and how\nmany licutcnanl-governots in B.C.\nsince Confederation? When was\nLord Tweedsmuir appointed?\nThere have been 15 governors-\ngeneral .since Confederation and\n15 lieutenant-governors of B.C.\nRight Hon. Baron Tweedsmuir of J\nElsficld G.C.M.B., C.H. was ap-\npointed August 10, 1935 and as- j\nsumed office November 2, 1935.\nR.J., Nelson\u2014When did the Dean\nbrothers start to play league baseball?\nJerome (Dizzy) Dean started in\nminor    leagues    in    1930;   Paul\n(Daffy) in 1931.\nK.L., Nelson\u2014When will the Cambridgeshire be run?\nOctober 27, at Newmarket,\nSALLYS SALLIES\nCRAIK, Sask, (CP)-Walking is\nbecoming popular\u2014 or maybe just\na fad\u2014in this district again. In\ngroups of three, four and more\nyoung people of the district and\nsome of the older folk too have\nbeen making three and four mile\nwalks nightly for exercise.\nHome\nImprovement\nCover your cracked pla*'er\nwith Cottonwood Panels. You\nwill   beautify   and   insulate\nyour home.\nDistrict  Distributors:\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Co., Ltd.\n\"Build B. C. Payrolls\"\nBYWAY\nOF A\nMAN\nWe know a home where Pacific Milk found a place in\ncooking through the \"man\nof the house.\"\nHe insisted, at first, upon\nhaving Pacific for his coffee\nand for fresh fruit.\nFrom this beginning most of\nthe cooking is now done with\nour milk.\nPacific Milk\nIrradiated of Coursi\nFew people take pnina with their singing\u2014but many give tliem.\nCETHUNE, Sask. (CD-Friction\ncaused when big stones were being\nhauled along a roadside set fire tn\nIhe grass here recently, Joseph\nTomlin on and his hired man ere\nhauling stones over the dry hot\nground when tho fire started.\nAir\nConditioning\nIs Not a Luxury\nIt is within the means of\neven a modest income and\nthe maintenance costs are\nless.\nThis modern heating and\nventilating system purifies the air your breathe\nand brings it back to you\nwarm, moist and healthful.\nSee Us About an\nInstallation Nowl\nPhone 666\nKOOTENAY\nPLUMBING & HEATINC\nCOMPANY, LIMITED\nP.O. Box 646       313 Baker St.\nTILLIE THE TOILER\nBy Russ Westovcr\nIt is good news that the Michel colliery has been wmk-\ning four or five days a week for the past three months. Energetic salesmanship of coal is no small factor in the improvement.\nYOU   -SOEE   LEFT\nIM A HUtiRV AFTER.\nlolita marred\nRAMDy\nHumph -he had\nWCm-llMca to Do wtlTH\nIT J\nSHUCKS, TILUE, I\nKnOvj Hovai you\nFEEL^DOM'T TOfc-\n(3ET I UKEO LOLITA\nBUT V4E \"STILL Hti*SB\nEACH OT-r^K.\nHi,THERE, TIL.UE -\\[ VMH1\/\/ TIMMV DA.VMSOW,!\n(JiEMEMBHt ME7 II MEMEtZ. WAS .SO GLAD TO\n \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0^\u25a0\u25a0,wi'..|\u00bbp.r*.*   \u25a0\u25a0   \u00ab     mi.ip\u00bbipiiw.i.*ww>n\u00bb.*T\u00bbw. .....i\u2014ii.^*.*.^,.,,!,... .^..u. u   i *,, ib.i,*\u00bbi\u00bbi ,,*TOW\u00bb\u2014wi\u00bb\nCANNERS AND\nGROWERS ARE\nIN AGREEMENT\nCanners Assured Will\nHave Ample Supply\nB. C. Peaches\nConferring with representatives\nof the growers In Vancouver, British\nColumbia canners agreed to withdraw their application to the department of national revenue for\na rebate of dump duties paid on\ncanning peaches of this year's crop.\nThey urged, however, that favorable consideration be given their\naction In applying for a rebate of\ndump duties on pears for canning,\nclaiming that there were not enough\nBartlett pears available for canning\nfrom the B.C. crop. They agreed\nto take all B.C. Bartletts they could\nget.\nThe growers submitted that there\nwere ample peaches in British Columbia to meet the canning needs\nwithout any Importations. This condition, barring weather exigencies,\nwould continue as more peach trees\nwere coming into bearing.\nAs for pears, production was likely to increase and the situation\nwould change.\nTherefore it was not reasonable,\nit was held, that any set arrangement should be made covering more\nthan one season. In fact the growers'\nrepresentatives could not speak\nwith final authority as the tariff\ncommittee of the B.C.F.G.A., which\nwas empowered to deal with such\nmatters, would have to be consulted.\nFollowing further discussion, it\nwas agreed, subject lo confirmation\nof the tariff committee of the\nB.C.F.G.A., that the drawback\nshould only be asked for and granted by the government, following\nconferences between growers' representatives and canners in the spring\nof each year. Then when prospective\nyields of apricots and pears could\nbe estimated fairly closely, an agreement could be reached as to drawbacks on thc firm understanding\nthat the canners would absorb all\ncanning pears and apricots availably\nfrom B.C. orchards at prices mutually agreed-upon.\nCol. Mary Stillwell\nBitter About Parents\nof Unmarried Mothers\nDALLAS, August 20, (AP)- Not\nfrom the crowded cities with all\ntheir bright lights, but from the rural districts come 75 per cent of the\nunwed mothers, Col. Mary Stillwell,\nretired Salvation Army leader, said\ntoday,\nA Using tide of loose living, especially ahwng young women, can\nbe stemmed only in \"religion and\nthe church,\" she declared.\n\"I used to think the girls had\ncome to big cities and were the innocent prey of traps. Now 1 know\nthat virtually all of them have fallen\nprey in their home communities and\ncome to the city to hide their shame.\n\"Unmarried mothers differ greatly\nnow from the class we used to get\"\nshe said. \"Once they were from\nthe under-privileged class. Now we\nhave a thick sprinkling of high\nschool graduates, college girls and\neven trained nurses.\"\nFor the parents of these women\nColonel Stillwell, the mother of\neight children, had bitter words.\n\"The mothers come to see them,\nwithout shame at their condition.\nThey smoke, are rouged and powdered, talk loudly. Their letters have\nno depth of character.\"\nMary Stillwell is the only living\nmember of the first Salvation Army\ngroup sent to San Francisco SS\nyears ago.\nSKELETON MAY\nSOLVE MYSTERY\nVERNQN, B. C, Aug. 20 (CD-\nFinding .f the skeleton of man In a\ncabin near tht Monaihee mine on\nCherry creek today led British Columbia police to the belief the mysterious disappearance ot Jtques\nBernardl in IMS had been solved.\nBernardl, a Frenchman, formerly\nlived at \u2022 relief camp near Canoe,\nB. C. From letters found in clothing\ncovering the skeleton, police said he\napparently left the camp, determined to make a start on his own initiative.\nSalmo Man Fined;\nFails Make Turn,\nCar Upside Down\nCharged with driving to the common danger after he failed to make\na turn on the highway about two\nmiles north of Salmo, his car going\n71 feet out into a vacant lot and\nturning upside down, John Morrison\npleaded guilty when he appeared\nbefore George T. Matthews, stipendiary magistrate at Salmo, and paid\na fine of $10 and costs.\nGreen Tomatoes\nHold Back Sales\nCalgary Market\nVANCOUVER, B.C, Aug. 20 -\nBusiness continues good on the\nwholesale fruit and vegetable row\nsays the Markets Bulletin, Department of Agriculture, Victoria, B.C.\nB.C. apples, yellow transparent, local, No. 3 (1 to $1.23 per box. Okanagan green apples $1.25 and Trans-\nparents, if. .40 per box. Okanagan\nand Washington appricots are selling\nat 90c per suitcase. Okanagan\npeaches expected on the market at\nan early date. Imported Freestone\nElbertas, 20s. $1,35 and Hale's $1.65\nper box. Cantaloupes, 32s, 38s, 45s.\n$3.00, Honey Dews 9s to 12s $2.50\nper crate. Local celery $2.50 to $3.25\nper crate or $1*25 per dozen. Hothouse tomatoes 4-basket crate $1.10 i\nto $1:15, Okanagan field lugs, No. 2 j\n$1.25 to $1.73. Local plums, No. 2 3c I\nto 4c and Greengage 2-Ac per pound.,\nNew carrots $2.25 and turnips, Rutabagas, $1.50 per sack, Okanagan\nonions $2.25 per cwt. Eggs continue\non the upward trend, large sites\nonly being aHected. Eggs to pro-'\nducer at farm, cases returned; Grade\nA-large 28c; A-medlum 26c; A-pullet\n20c; C-pee wee 12c, i\nCALGARY\u2014The market has been\nactive during the week with ample i\nsupplies of all commodities. There!\nare still some cherres, mostly sour, j\narriving, also shipments of raspberries and late strawberries. There\nis a demand for good berries. Apricots from B.C. are on the market\nin quantities, also heavy supplies\nfrom Washington. These are movljig\nout at firm prices. Cantaloupes from\nOliver are arriving in volume, some\non the ripe side, with demand good.\nThe tomato market has been active\nwith good semi-rlpes in fair demand.\nThere have been too many green,\nimmature apecimens In some packs\nwhich have a tendency to slow down\nthe movement. Transcendent crab-\napple supplies limited, but demand\nslow. Local potatoes are now on the\nmarket.\nKimberley Bowlers\nPlan Entertainment\nfor South Africans\nKIMBERLEY, B. C. **- Final arrangements for the visit of the South\nAfrican Bowlers were completed at\na joint meeting of the McDougall,\nChapman and Cranbrook clubs Monday.\nThe visitors will arrive in Cranbrook Aug. 27 and will be met by\ncars from Kimberley and Immediately driven to the Sullivan Mine\nwhere they will be taken underground for an inspection tour. Then\nlunch and a trip through the concentrator. At 2:30 the six rinks will\nbe drawn against the local bowlers.\nThree rinks from McDougall, two\nfrom Chapman and one from Cranbrook will play against them. Following the games a banquet will be\nheld in honor of the visitors at McDougall hall. Later they will be\ndriven back to Cranbrook.\nA garden party will also be held\nat McDougall in the afternoon in\nhonor of the 15 ladies of the party,\nThe public Is invited to see the\ngames and attend the banquet.\nThe Cranbrook bowlers came to\nChapman Camp Wednesday night\nexpecting to lift the Brewery Shield\nbut were defeated by a narrow margin of four points. Rinks competing\nwere Cranbrook-McGiU and Chath-\ncart Chapman-Baxter and Leaman\nSAINT JOHN,* N.B. (CP)-Dyna-\nmite exploded in the holds of the\nRussian motorvessel Kalinin loading here but aroused no concern.\nThe charges were set deliberately\nto loosen a cargo of potash.\nCubs Make Grand Cleanup in Tents,\nPrize Offered For Best Tent In (amp\nTents were so clean in Cub camp\nat Kokanee that one could actually\nsee the floor, the reason being that\nthere was a prize for the neatest.\nAfter a routine morning we started for a Bwim but the wind blew us\nback. When we \"blew\" into camp\nAl Euerby was there with a number of other visitors, including Mrs.\nR. Simpson, who left us six dosen\nbuns. We also noticed Jim McCallum all dressed up, but \"she\" didn't\ncome.\nCampfire was late because of a\n\"bear hunt\". Jackie Jarbeau and\nAllan Deschamps, alias \"Small\nHorse\" and \"Baby Frog\", led the\nsinging until the Scouts gave out\ncocoa and biscuits.\nTHE II1TH. FIELD BATTERY R.C.A.\nWEEKLY BATTERY ORDER\nBy MAJOR  O.  E. DALGAS, M.C, COMMANDING\nPARTI\nParagraph 1: Duties\u2014Orderly officer for the week commencing\nAugust 22, Sec. Lieutenant J, B.\nCurran. Next for duty: Lieutenant\nA. M. Banks. Orderly sergeants for\nthe week commencing August 22; L-\nSergeant D. D. Corbould. Next for\nduty, Sergeant A. R. Johnson.\nFlag N. C. 0. for the month of\nAugust, I\u201e Bombardier W. Wools.\nParagraph   II:   Parades\u2014Discontinued.\nPART II\nParagraph 1: Meetings\u2014The B.S.M*\nwishes all N* C. O.'s to meet him\nat 2000 hours on Tuesday, August\nthe 24th in the battery orderly room.\nParagraph II: Q. M. S'l\u2014The B. Q.\nM. S. will arrange to move the Q. M*\nS.'s to its permanent location In the\nbasement of the armory. Sgt. Harlow, Sgt. Castle, Sergt Fisher, L-b\ndr. Wools and the 0. C. has volunteered to assist. This move will take\nplace at 1930 hours on August the\n23rd, Monday. Other volunteers will\nbe appreciated.\nG. C. Wallach, Sec. Lieutenant,\nOrderly Officer.\nNELSON DAILY NEWI. NELSON. B.C.-8ATURDAY MORNINO. AUO. 21, 1137\n10*4\nPAGE SEVEN\nWE ARE\nV.\nTO LARGER PREMISES\nDEMAND FOR BEATTY WASHERS,\nREQUIRES BIGGER STORE\nThe women of this city and vicinity LIKE the Beatty\nwasher. They like our pUn of selling direct to them off\nour own factory show rooms here. They like our finance\nand installment plan for it is simple ind cheap and\naltogether confidential because we do not use a finance\ncompany. They like our factory service. Demand for\nBeatty Washers, makes it necessary to ha\u00bbe a bigger\nstore and to expand in all departments.\nCLEARANCE OF DEMONSTRATING MODELS\nNo shop-worn stock is to be taken to the new store.\nEverything is to be sacrificed to clear quickly. All -rebuilt\nmachines and demonstrators are to go. There is a chance\nto pick up a real good bargain if you come early.\nSMALL DEPOSIT-EASY TERMS\nPay what you like down-the remainder in the smallest\npossible amounts, weekly or monthly. No other way is\nso cheap\u2014the washer pays for itself faster than you are\nasked to pay for it.\n\u2022ssj^\n\u2022tart. ,-7.,*0Tk\u00b0r.\n\u2022CSS-*-*\n\"Mi**it.929,50 i\n\u25a0\u2022\u2022\u2022V, aeV'\u00bb\u00ab\n\u00bborkj ' la tood\n(W   ' \u2022fier.\nVoiV?'**\n?tV*>*\u00ab*.a'H\n\"Sric,,   '\"*>-\n*\u2022    .10.50\nMOOu A\nft?.?****\n10 *\u00ab9.S0,\ncr\n'*\u00bb% tZek.   *'\u00ab*\nmW\"\"\"\"'i\n**\u2022\u25a0..'JJL50\nONLY $29.50\nIn good running order complete with motor and wringer\n\u2014an early Beatty Model_ and\na bargain. Always a good\nteller and only two on hand.\nONLY $42.50\nOutstanding snap on a copper\ntub machine. Up to date metal\nwringer. There's just the one\nto speak for it quickly If you\nwant it.\n**-*\u25a0\u00ab 969.50\nTa*rkeS \u00b0,*k\u00ab\n\"\"\"\"oc'eV'\"\"\n'anon limited\nOrtSAl,., \"\"\"\nACT\nQUICKLY\nWe are opening up in our\nnew modernized store this\nmorning at 321 Baker St.\nSee our novel window\ndemonstration this evening.\nA. C. VIRTUE\nMa\nHere Is\nGOOD NEWS\nWe now have an attachment to fit on any\nrecent model washer that will do ALL the ironing and do it faster and better. Make your\nwasher do the ironing and banish washdays last\nburden.\nPRICE! *$1,0\u00b0\nAND UP\nVDE*V VDITir 1911 w\njrmsiJBi jfiueia jriuciiSi\nWith every appliance sold during this sale we are giving absolutely free.\nOne Water EMPTIER\nThis wonderful attachment eliminates the drudgery women do not like\nduring washday. ,\nDo Not Fail to Ask About the\nWater Emptier\nSMALL DOWN\nTVDIICi  SMALL DOW\nA JCf 1% Ml 9 \u2022     PAYMENTS\nPay as much as you can afford down. Easy monthly payments on the balance\nWe finance you ourselves.\nThe Beatty\nPolisher\nThe Beatty Polisher makes\npolishing easy and simple. Tha\nweight, speed and bristle resistance of the Beatty Polisher\nare In Just the right ratio to\nburnish the way Into the very\npores of the floor.\nPRICE:\n$1750 _ $29*5\u00a9\nand Up\n321 Baker Street       Nelson B. C.        Telephone 91\nNEW ADDRESS DIRECTLY ACROSS THE STREET FROM OUR FORMER LOCATION\n_\n___^__\n^mm^^\n IWWWWl'mUjJAH.IMWI.I^IJ.   ii        W\\m>*W.V*^k.iwv.amw*.i.'a\u00bb'mmr~\u2122r*^!, mm\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C-SATURDAY MORNING, AUG. 21. 1937\nNELSON & DISTRICT OLD TIMERS HONOR J. J. MALONE-J. A. GILKER\nHawy Paanlngton\nl waa first .!\"\n[la aiva for b\u00bbT\u00bb\n&-'dd\u00bbn\u00abn J.J. Salone at\"tha aioroffcone, Ifayor torgan, \u00bb. K. Ealing, H.P. and \u201e\u201e, JaBM ,*., oui\u201e\ncivl: dignitaries of past and present on tha platfora. jjfc;f\":\u00ab*,:>.       gsiso-n\nI    Hrs. J.R. Huntnr,\nSilicon\nyears a Beleon church\nwarden\n-~~w**-*J*j\nil m Vim* ii.     'i        i.^*.\u2014^.-.^^\n\u2014-\u2014a-**\u2014***\u2014-^-aa*^*^\n NELSON DAILY NEW8. NEL80N, B.C-SATURDAY MORNINO, AUG. 21, 1937\n\u2014 PAGE nin:\n\u00a3\n40th. ANNIVERSARY OF NELSON BECOMING A CITY IS CELEBRATED\nlelsOBt       '   .\nkuSHRI*..'.\nkaka   Pit\nNelion chief of Police'\nnd In command of\nCM. & S. Pirot Aid     Alderman Roy Shw-pl\nNelson\n\u25a0 i,*.**;. \u25a0,:;...*?\u25a0:\u25a0 ,.*v*;.. \u25a0'..-. ..-\u2022\u25a0...\u2022..-\u25a0 \u25a0,*..,\n;,\u201e'..r>,;',.^a,*.tfj.,;^ *.\u25a0*;;;!,.\u25a0   .I*,:,i*.l-.^,.,* .1;...,\u25a0..\u201e,;\u201e?\u25a0\u25a0,. .:.,i..   ..    ,...:.:,..      ..,,.\u25a0.   .    \u25a0     \u2022 _^__ \u2022 ^^-^^^\n-\u00bb\niiil\n  MPW^UiimHiiiiiiLtH \u25a0 -1'iw -**-rg. lMms,mmmwmmKmimvmr^mm\nmmmwsim?^m!'^ieW:\ntf^ftm^fmrxwfirzrspVT&r.F--* \u25a0 -rana\nPAGE TEN\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C-SATURDAY MORNING, AUG. 21, 1937\nNORMAN EMMOTT GETS\nTaste of\nLife\nIn Air\nForce'\n\"Experiences ot a Recruit\" might1;\nbe the title of this story, written\nfrom the letters to his parents, of\nNorman Emmott, Nelson lad, who\nwas a member of the lllth battery,\nH. C. A., Nelson, and who has enlisted in the Royal Canadian Air\nForce, and is in training at Trenton.\nOut. While he is \"finding out about\nthings\", he seems to like it and to\nhave done fairly well so far.\nLeaving Nelson, Norman drove to\nVancouver with Brian Weld, provincial police constable, recently\ntransferred to Victoria. He passed\nthe medical examination at Vancouver, and was sent east to Trenton at\nonce. He wan, apparently, not impressed by the trip across the prairies.\n\"Anything will be better than this\ndarn inaction I'm suffering from\nnow, as nobody seems to know I'm\nhere,\" he wrote home shortly after\narival at Trenton, voicing thc age-\nold recruit's complaint. But the food\noffset this feeling to quite on extent,\nfor there's \"lots of it\" and it is of\ngood quality. \"I generally have two\nhelpings of everything,\" he said.\nESCAPES FATIGUES\nInoculation and vaccination didn't\ntake so well, he wrote \"but it got mc\nout of a bunch of fatigues.\" Norman\nremarked in on,e letter on the arrival of a new plane which, since it\n'25 Reward\nTKU <:OH!N  SM.Vt.  Iut  un* corn or *\u2022*.- I\nloin    T1IBY    cannot    trmove    will)    thii ]\nvondrrfnl  n\u00bbw  \u2022t-irnllfin  preparation  for ;\nCORNS  OR   CAM\/HISE8.   It   H\u00ab-.\u00abn\u00abl- I\ntin\u00aba and rfilUtna   pain  with  Rrat  nppll- 1\ncation.\nSOc\nhad to be flown immediately on a^my cap brim any too well, but no\n10-hour test, stayed above the airdrome \"going around in 10-mile circles\" until 9 p.m.\nNorman's first work was in the\nstores, and though one session was\ndevoted to handling fairly heavy\nmaterial his letters indicated the\nwork was not exhausting. In a later letter he said \"stores school has\nreally started now.\"\nDescribing his first pay day, thc\nNelson youth explained he had to\nstand in line for an hour before his\nname was called. Then he \"stood\n.... before the orderly officer of\nthe day. I saluted him and he gave\nme a check. I saluted him again\nand went away. That was all there\nwas to it.\"\nEmmott has also been acquainted\nwith the biting tongue of a drill-\nsergeant, his letters indicate. Morning drill from 7:30 to 6:30 is routine.\nHe attends classes at 8:30, lunches\nat 12, returns to classes at 1:30, has\nlunch at 4:30 and is then free,   A\nthing was said\nNorman remarked that a great\nnumber at the Trenton station were\napparently from Ottawa. Another\nletter indicated he had learned \"you\ncan't judge from appearances\" of\nhis fellows.\nOne of his greatest troubles was,\nwhen given liberty, to hunt up someone who would loan him tunic buttons\u2014these being detachable\u2014since\nhis own had not yet been issued.\nCRESTON, B. C.-Creston board\nof school trustess met Tuesday with\nChairman F. H. Jackson in charge,\nand Trustees M. R. Joyce and R.\nIbbitson in attendance.\nAs committee of the whole, thc\ngood deal of each week-end is free j trustees considered the* resolutions\nSix of Seven Former\nMembers School Staff\nReturning to Creston\nwill   \\,r   p.U\nI'V tl.*** nlfr\u00bb\not 1.I.OVII'!\nTHYMOL*.\nit ml luniKR uhvi; stoke?.\ntime, and Wednesday afternoons are\ngiven over to sports.\n\"DUTY WATCH\"\nOne-quarter of the men are constantly on \"duty watch\", their tasks\nbeing to clean up the canteens, help\nin the messes, mow lawns and make\nthree parades daily. Two of the\nparades, he remarked are really \"to\nkeep the boys on their toes.\"\nA \"great furbishing\" takes place\nin the barracks Friday nights in\npreparation for the weekly inspection by the commanding officer,\nsaid one letter. In another, describing kit inspection, he explained: 'We\nshined everything up, . . . I was\nacutely  conscious I hadn't shined\nto come up at the annual convention\nof the B.C. Trustees' association, to\nbe held at Victoria September 20,\nat which the board chairman will\nbe local delegate. The trustees made\na grant of $25 to the annual valley\nschools' fair to be held at Creston\nin October, under the direction of\nthc Women's Institute.\nJanitor R. R. Roebuck reported\nwork of installing desks and blackboards in the room being fitted up\nin Central school basement was well\nalong.\nThe 1037-38 teaching staff of the\nhigh school remains intact, and six\nof the seven former public school\nteachers will be back.\nTudor Rutherglen\nIs an Honor Guest\nLONGBEACH, B. C.-Gordon Sargent and Miss Lillian Dickinson\nentertained .at a beach party Saturday evening, celebrating the coming of age of Tudor Rutherglen, who\nhas been staying with Gordon Sargent during thc summer.\nA huge fire had been built and\nscats made comfortable around the\nflro with logs and countless rugs.\nRefreshments were served, many\ngames indulged In and community\nsinging followed. Gordon Sargent\nhad motored to Nelson earlier in\nthe evening in order to bring Mrs,\nRutherglen, Conway Rutherglen.\nTed Rutherglen and Bill Rutherglen out for tho celebration and the\nweek-end.\nThe honor guest received many\ngifts.   '\nDon Revie Makes Flight Hamilton lo\nCranbrookr 2100 Mi!esr in 37 Hours\nCRANBROOK, B, C.-This is one\nof the first privately owned planes\nin the interior. Don Revie, accompanied by Don Thompson, commercial pilot for the company in Hamilton, flfiW 2100 miles in 37 flying\nhours Irom Hamilton to Cranbrook.\nDuring the trip, which they did in\neasy jumps over a period of five\ndays, they made 22 stops.\nThey crossed the international border at Walderville, and from there\nwent to Detroit, Chicago, St. Paul\nand over North Dakota, and where\nthey came into Canada again was\nat Portal; N. D-, and crossed the\nRockies through the Crows Nest\nPass. Mr. Revie will keep his plane\nin \u25a0 the city-hangar, and expects to\nfly as a pasttime.\nThe machlii! is 40 horsepower and\nhas a 4-cyllnder motor with a cruising distance of 200 miles. Its tank\nholds 9 American gallons which will\nsupply the plane for about three\nhours bf flight, and about twenty-\nfive miles to the gallon. It's gross\nweight is 970 pounds. This Is the\nfirst of its type that has been flown\nInto British Columbia.\nCranbrook Retains\nMacPherson Trophy\nCRANBROOK, B.C.-Another unsuccessful attempt to take back the\nMacPherson trophy was made this\nweek when the Chapman Camp\nlady bowlers came to Cranbrook\nThe trophy was won by the Cranbrook teams at Kimberley a short\ntime ago. Thc defending teams were\nMrs. G. Lunn, skip, Mrs. Barber,\nMrs. Pascuzzo and Mrs. Hewson;\nand Mrs. Norgrove skip, Mrs. S. McLeary, Mrs. Eberlein and Mrs. Voisey.\nWednesday the Cranbrook ladies\nwere guests of the Chapman Camp\nladies, when friendly games were\nplayed and refreshments served.\nCranbrook Couple\nWed at Sandpoint\nCRANBROOK, B.C.-A wedding\nof wide spread interest in Cranbrook\nand district took place in Sandpoint\nWednesday when Hazel Glen, second daughter of A. C. Bowness of\nCranbrook and the late Mrs. Bowness, was united in marriage to Gordon William Hanna of Cranbrook.\nThe witnesses were Mrs, A. C.\nBowness and W. G. T. Taylor of\nCranbrook.\nMrs. Hanna was born in Cranbrook and attended school here. Mr,\nHanna came to the city several\nyears ago. On their return from\nSpokane Mr. and Mrs. Hanna will\nreside in Cranbrook.\nFAREWELL PARTY FOR\nMR. AND MRS. HANKE\nKINCSCATE-EASTPORT\nKINGSGATE-EASTPORT, B.C.-\nA farewell party for Mr. and Mrs.\nHanke was held in the Community\nRooms Wednesday. Bridge was\nplayed and Jim Sullivan and Mrs.\nH. Hannah were the high scorers,\nMrs. John Mauldin made a presentation on behalf of the company to Mrs. Hanke. This took the\nform of a Silex Coffe maker and\nexpressed the regret of the com-\nA Kootenay Aviator\nAbove is Don Revie and his airplane, one of the first privately\nowned planes in the district. He was one of the first pilots to set a\nplane down on the Cranbrook airport.\nKASLO Social ...\nKASLO, B. C.-Mr. and Mrs. F,\nH. Abey have returned to their Mirror Lake home after a visit to the\ncoast and to Penticton where Mr.\nAbey represented the Kaslo branch\nof the Canadian Legion at the provincial Legion convention.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Chester Speirs\nof Ymir spent the week-end in the\ncity for the wedding of the former's\nsister, to F. A, Burrows.\n\u2022 Miss Katherine Gillis has returned from an extended visit to\nToronto and other eastern Canadian points.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Taylor\nhave returned to their home at Shutty Bench after spending a holiday at\nthe coast.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. 0. St. H. Wagner\nof Okanagan, Wash., were visiting\nfriends in town Sunday.\n\u2022 Lorenz Kaip of Khedive, Sask.,\nIs spending a few days in town with\nfriends.\n\u2022 Mrs. S. S. Fowler has returned\nto her home at Riondel after being\na patient at Victorian hospital for\na few days.\n\u2022 M. Nahl of Creston is spending a short holiday here.\n\u2022 Mrs. P. Butler and two sons\nhave left for Retallack to spend a\nfew weeks'\n\u2022 Dr, and Mrs. G. E. L. McKinnon and children, who were\nholidaying at Mirror Lake, have left\nto visit the Campbell disirict prior\nto returning to their home at Cranbrook.\n\u2022 \"Pat\" Fowler of Riondel was\na Kaslo visitor Tuesday.\n\u2022 Miss Phyllis Wright was a visitor to Nelson.\nWEEK-END RADIO\nCANADIAN BROADCASTING\nCORPORATION  NETWORK\nSATURDAY\n5:00 Louisiana hayride. Los Angeles; 6:30 Legende d'un Peuple, Mont.;\n6:00 Geoffrey Waddington's orch.,\nToronto; 6:00 To le announced; 6:45\nNews, and the weather, from Toronto; 7:00 Nye Mayhew's or.; Banff;\n7:30 Horace Lapp's orchestra, from\nBanff; 8:00 La Hacienda, Vancouver;\n8.30 Sport week. Henry Viney, Lethbridge; 8:45 Good Evening, news,\nVancouver; 9:00 Joe DeCourcey's\norch., Jasper; 9:30 Stan Patton's\norch.. Lethbridge; 10:00 News, Vancouver; 10:15 Sandy de Santis and\norchestra; 10:45 Weather forecast,\nVancouver,\nN.B.C.-KPO RED NETWORK\n5:30 Emery Deutsch's orch.; 6:00\nNBC jamboree; 7:00 Carlos Molina's\norchestra; 7:30 Circus, variety; 8:00\nOrchestra \u2014 Mike Riley; William\nFarmer; Don Fernando; Paul Sabin;\nWill Hollander; Jimmy Gricr;\nArchie Loveland; Hal Kemp 11:30\nTo be announced.\nN.B.C.-KGO BLUE NETWORK\n5:00 Josef Hornik's orch.; 5:30\nMeakin's musical news; 6:15 Concert Party; 7:00 National Barn dance;\n8:00 Orchestras \u2014Paul Whiteman;\nHal Kemp; Eddie Varzo; Leon Mo-\njica; Ellis Kimball; George Breece;\n9:30 On the Mall, KGO; 11:00 Paul\nCarson, organist.\nCOLUMBIA NETWORK\n5:00 Maurice's orch.; 5:30 Hollywood Show case; 6:00 Hit parade and\nsweepstakes; 6:45 Patti Chapin,\nsongs: 7:00 Bunny Berigan and his\norchestra; 7:15 Songtime, Betty\nGrable; 7:30 Johnnie presents; 8:00\nProfessor Quiz and his brainbusters;\n8:30 Orchestras \u2014 Benny Goodman;\nHorace Henderson; Stirling Young;\nJan Garber; Carrol Lofner; 11:00\nPasadena Civic auditorium; 11:30\nGeorge Hamilton's orchestra.\nmunity \"at losing valued and respected citizens and at the same time\nwished them every success and\nhappiness in their new home. Mrs.\nHanke suitably replied. Mr. and\nMrs. Hanke and Marcia left Thursday for Spokane where they will\nreside in future.\nAaron Ribillard of Spokane has\narrived here to take the position\nvacated by the transfer of Mr,\nHanke to Spokane. Mr. Ribillard will\nbe followed shortly by Mrs. Ribillard\nand will take up house in the apartments vacated by Mr. and Mrs.\nCreviston.\nJohn Sims of Spokane visited in\nEastport Saturday and Sunday.\nSUNDAY\nCANADIAN BROADCASTING\nCORPORATION  NETWORK\n2:00 Grenadier Guards. Mon., 2:30\nDr. H. L. Stewart, news review, Hall.\n2:45 George Miquelle, cellist; 3:00\nCodolban and his violin; 3:30 Melodic Strings, Tor.; 4:00 \"The Headless\nHorseman,\" operetta; 4:45 Mont Str.\nQuartet; 5:00 Inter Var., Mont.; 5:30\nMus. time from Tor.; 6:00 Operatic\nFantasia, dir Cesar Borre. 6:30 Snyder and Ross, Piano team; 6:45 News\nand the weath., from Tor.; 7:00 Summer over the British Isles, rebroad-\ncast BBC; 7:30 Tudor string quar.\n8:00 Romance* of Sacred Songs, dr.,\nfrom Vancouver; 8:30 Concert trio,\nfrom Calgary; 8:45 Good Evening,\nnews, Vancouver; 9:00 Interlude, Re-\ngine; 0:30 program to be announced;\nCRCV; 10:00 News, from Vancou-\nver; 10:15 Sacred cameos, organist,\nVancouver; 10:45 Weather forecast,\nVancouver. '\nSpencer, basso; 6:45 Johnny O'Brien\nand his Harmomcatu; 7:00 Morin\nsisters, the rancn bjye, songs; 7:15\nCliffe Engle, the voice of exposition; 7:30 Jane i'roman,. Don Ross,\nD'Artega and his orchestra; 6:00\nBarney Rapp's orchestra; Behind the\nmicrophone, Buddy Twiss, KPO;\n8:30 One Mans family, Carlton\nMorse drama; 9:00 Night editor, 9:00\nJ. Nesbitt, narr,; 0:15 id Varzoa or,\nH. Burdick; 9:30 C. Molinas orch.; D.\nAllen, Hollywood news, KPO; U:\\lu\nNews flashes; 10:15 Bridge to\nDreamland, organ; 11:00 Jack Win-\nstrom's orch.; 11:30 Beaux Arts trio.\nN.B.C.-KGO BLUE NETWORK\n5:00 Rippling Rhythm revue; 5:80\nWalter Wmcnell, gossip; 6:00 National music camp program; 7:00\nIrene Rich, drama; 7:15, Con. Petit;\n7:30 Ed Varzo's or.; 8:00 H. Busse's\nor.; baa Keaaers' uuiae; u lienors\norch.; 8:30 Mike Riley's orcnestra;\nt!;00 iales ot California tKUO); Don\nFernanao's orch.; 9:30 Concert Hall,\nE.T. KGO; Paul Sabin's orch,; 9:45\nWill Hollander's orch.; 10:00 Hall ot\nfame; 10:30 Leon Mojica and orch.;\nists, U:U0 Charles nunyan, organusi.\nCOLUMBIA NETWORK\n5:00 Universal rhythm, Rex\nChandler's orch.; 6:00 Lewisohn stadium concert, Philharmonic orch.;\n7:00 Community sings; 7:30 Jay\nFreeman's orch.; 8:00 Jimmy Texaco\nTown's Jimmy Wallington; 8:30 Jan\nGarbers or.; 9:00 G. Hamilton's or.;\nNoc. with K House, pant,; 9:15 Al\nens' orch., Charles Engel's orch KSL;\n9:45 George Hamilton's orch.; 10:1b\nSunday Evening on Temple Square,\norgan, violin, tenor; 10:45 AI\nLyons' or., Charles Engel's or., KSL;\nMoon; 11:30 Jan Garber's orch,\nAverage equipment of a dining car\nincludes 800 pieces of china, 240\npieces of glassware, 550 pieces of\nsilver, 980 napkins and tablecloths,\nand 200 kitchen and pantry items.\nN.B.C.-KPO RED NETWORK\n5:00 Manhattan Merry-Go-Round:\n5:30 Album of Familiar Music; 6:15\nJosef Hornik Orch.; 6:30 Kenneth\nBURGESS BATTERY\nModern Mother Goose Cutouts\nWe are starting a word square for\nyou, and counting on you to finish it,\nThe second word is found on a clock, j\nthe third is a fruit, and the fourth j\nis used in winter. |\nADDS\nD\t\nD\t\n\u2014 2-\nNow we come to four cities in\nCanada, but the letters have been\nscrambled until they are pretty hard\nto recognize. Can you figure them\nout?\n1. A SOOT SANK\n2. ROOT NOT\n3. RAM LET ON\n4. IN WORDS.\n\u2014 3 \u2014\nAdd a preposition to a small flap\nor tag, and get a house pet. Add a\ndifferent preposition to a piece of\nmetal and get a member of the nobility.\nAnswer lo Wednesday's puzzles:\n1. Breakfast.\n2. Cab-in; Lot-to.\nWhy Not Shoot the\nRising Moon Tonight\nWith Your Camera?\nTo make a really good moonlight\npicture takes only some experimenting and courage. Perch your camera\non a firm foundation\u2014a stump, for\nexample\u2014and level it straight at the\nobject you wish to photograph.\nHow about shooting the rising\nmoon? This picture should be exposed for 10 minutes. You should bo\nsure that no one crosses in front of\nyour lens during this time.\nNaturally enough, the film will\nshow an oblong moon, since the\nmoon is not a very obliging subject\nand will not stay still. But a resourceful developer can paint a tiny\norange spot on the film and the effect is the same blur of light that\nthe real moon shows.\nAnd such a picture as this, better\nthan any taken in daylight, seems\nalmost to bring you the very smell\nof the pines!\nHIS TURN  TO GUE83\nTeacher; \"Are there any questions\nbefore we start to recite?\"\nStudent: \"Yes, sir! What's the lesion?\"\n\"What became of that portable\ngarage of yours?\"\n\"I tied the dog to it the other day\nday and a cat came by!'1\n\\\n\"Where arc you going, my pretty maid?\"\n\"I'm going milking, sir.\" she said.\nMilk came from cows in days of yore,\nBut today it comes from the grocery store!\nKAY'S CORNER\nBy KATHERINE HOUISON\nMAKE YOUR OWN HAT BOX\nDoes that sound like quite an\norder? It's really not hard, and you\nwill have something individual and\ndistinctive,   yet   inexpensive.\nDecide on the shape and size of\nbox you want and ask your grocer\nfor a wooden one with a cover.\nThere are several ways of finishing\nit. For a plain box, enamel it inside\nand out, add a design on the cover,\nand there you are.\nFor a fanc-ier one, use a round box\ncovered with pretty cretonne. Line\nthe inside first, cutting a strip a little\nwider than the depth of the box and\nlong enough to go completely around\nit. Glue it on smoothly, overlapping\nit on the bottom. Now cut a piece-\nto fit the bottom and glue it in\nplace. Line the cover the same way,\ninside and out, and yoti're ready for\ntho outside,\nMeasure the box to where the\ncover fils down, cut a strip of cro-\ntonne   the   necessary   length   and\nwidth, and glue it in place,\nNow, bore a. small hole in the\ncentre of the cover, insert the small\nend of a bronze curtain ring, slip\na piece of wood or metal through it\non the inside, and you have a handle\nto complete your box.\nFor a square box, cut the material\nto fit two sides at a time, to keep it\neven and smooth, then work the\nsame way as before. Wide bands of\nribbon crossed and fastened at opposite corners of the cover make a\ngood handle, instead of the ring,\nFind Turkey Gobbler\nWith Mother Complex\nWEST CHESTER. Pa,, -A turkey\ngobbler with a \"mother complex\"\nhas been discovered on a farm near\nhere.\nThe gobbler has been conducting a\n\"sit-down\" on a nest of goose eggs,\nand it forcibly resisted all efforts\nto move him.\nOnce before It hatched out a\nbrood of duck eggs, but he made nn\nefforts at furthering mothering\nthem once they wcro hatched.\nTHE BOYS AND GIRLS PAGE\nThe Dam on\nTUMBLING RIVER\n(A SERIAL STORY)\nBy W. BOYCE MORGAN\nDOUBLE DUTY\nThe chief of police of Dinksvllle\nwas also Dinksville's veterinary surgeon. An agitated woman called up\nhis home.\n\"Co you want my husband in his\ncapacity of veterinary or chief of\npolice?\" asked the chief's wife.\n\"Both,\" came the reply. \"We can't\nget a bulldog to open hia mouth\u2014\nthere's a burglar in it.''\nSYNOPSIS\nMel Bingham, Slats Turner and\nChick Greene are Camping just\nabove a new dam under construction, and Mel spends much ol his\ntime watching the job. Mr. Apperson, the engineer in charge, leis him\nknow he is not welcome after he\nasks questions about a disastrous\nlandslide on the dam site Then Mr,\nApperson is replaced by Mr. Winlon.\nwho gives Mel a job as water boy.\nThis enables the boys to stay in\ncamp, although their money for\nfood was running low. One night\nthey hear a car on a narrow road\nbehind their camp, and they investigate. Id find a car parked on the\nbluff above the dam. They see three\nmen holding a secret conference\nnear the bottom of the bluff. They\nhide near thc car to find out who\nthe three men are, but only one\nof them returns to the car. As he\ndrives away, they sec it is Mr. Apperson. They decide that the other\nmen must have been workmen from\nthe dam, and Mel's suspicions are\nso aroused that he decides to report\nthe incident to Mr. Winton.\nNOW GO ON WITH THE STORY\nINSTALLMENT SIX\nAt his first opportunity on the\nfollowing morning, Mei sought out\nthe engineer in charge of the dam\nbuilding job.\n\"Something funny happened las',\nnight, Mr. Winton,\" he began. \"I\nthink you ought to know about it.'\nMr. Winlon listened closely as\nMel related the incident of the coa-\nference. He pursed his lips when\nMel announced that the man in the\ncar had been Mr. Apperson,\n\"You're sure?\" he inquired.\n\"Positive.\" said Mel. \"I got a\ngood look at him.\"\n\"And you think the other men\nwere workmen?\"\n\"They must have been, although\nI couldn't be sure from the top of\nthe bluff.\"\nMr. Winton was silent for a moment. \"Well.\" he said, \"there's probably nothing to it. Mr. Apperson\nmay have left something here which\nlie wanted these men to get for him.\nOr It may have been a personal matter entirely.\"\n\"Hut isn't it possible that he was\nplanning to make trouble for you\nj in some way? Stirring up ihe men.\nor something?\"\n\"Don't you do it,\" said Mark sharply. \"That bank might cave in with you.'\nMr. Winton looked thoughtful.\n\"I'd hate to think Apperson would\ndo that, just because I took his place\non the job,\" he said. \"Well, in any\ncase, we'll be ready for him. I think\n1 can count on most of the men\nhero. There's nothing to worry\nabout. But thanks for telling me,\nMel.\"\nConsiderably reassured, Mel went\nback to his Job. And he had his\nhands full supplying the men with\nwater today, for it was hot and\nsultry, and they were calling for\nthe bucket constantly.\nA lunch time, Slats and* Chick\nappeared with a lunch they had\nprepared for him, and they sat and\nchatted with him while he ate it In\nthe shade of the big steam shovel.\nThen Mel made a suggestion.\n\"Let's walk up along the bottom of the bluff a little way.\" he\nsaid. \"I'd like to see where those\nmen were last night. But don't give\nit away, because the men who were\nthere might see us.\"\nSlats and Chick agreed, and they\nI\nwalked casually away from the\nshovel and up along the bluff.\n\"It was right above here, I think,\"\nMel said, staring up at the bluff.\n\"Yes! I can see where Mr. Apperson climbed up\u2014he left that rope\nthere. See it?, That black strip\nagainst the yellow clay? It looks\nmore like a thin cable than a rope.\"\nThe other boys nodded. \"Looks\nlike they might be planning another\nmeeting, and they left that there as\na means of getting up and down,\"\nSlats pointed out.\nThe boys had paused, and suddenly they heard a sharp hail from\nbehind them. Turning, they saw two\nmen hurrying toward them. Mel\nrecogniied them as two workmen\ncalled Pete and Mark\u2014he'd never\nheard their last names. Pete was a\nburly, rough-spoken in d v i d u a 1,\nwhile Mark was short, dark ond\nrather sly.\n\"Where are you kids going?\" Pete\ndemanded. \"Don't you know you're\nnqi supposed to wander around on\nthis job?\"\nThe Future You\nDo you ever think about the kind of man or woman you are\ngoing to be when you grow up? Most boys and girls do. They like\nto daydream now and then, painting glowing pictures of themselves as they hope and expect to be, 10 or 15 or 20 y^ars from now.\nBut they don't stop to realize that right now, every day, they\narc setting the pattern which will determine what they're like in the\nfuture. Everything you do\u2014the way you accept a defeat or a victory, your habits of study, your ambition or laziness, your conduct around your, home and at school\u2014all these things are relentlessly shaping and molding your character.\nIt will be too late, when you're grown up, to make yourself\nthe kind of person you want to be. The time to do that is right\nnow. Get a clear picture in your mind of yourself as you hope to\nbe some day, and then t.*y to meet every present situation as you\nthink that ideal, Imaginary YOU would meet It.\nIf you do that, you won't have to worry about that future person. He'll take care of himself!\nBugs Blow Bubbles\nWithout the Help of\nSoap to Hide Young\nHundreds of small soap-sudy looking blobs, scattered over any summer's meadow, are really the bubbly\ncamouflages of tiny bugs aptly named spittle bugs.\nNot an awfully good camouflage,\none might think at first glance, because the sticky white blob of bubbles is everywhere plainly obvious\nagainst the dark green grass. But\ntry to find a spittle bug in a field\nof white clover\u2014and you'll have to\nlook closely to see which is blossom\nand which is spittle bug. Nature\nhas given the spittle bug a happy\npreference for building its shelter\nof bubbles in a field of whiie clover.\nThe eggs of the spittle bug are\nusually laid one at a time, at the\nbase of a stem of grass, and immediately afler hatching the young\nbug, which looks like a tiny, soft,\npale cigar, begins to climb part way\nup the blade of grass. Finding a\ncomfortable crotch, it secretes a\ndrop of slicky white liquid, pushes\nits tiny tail into it, and begins Ihe\nbusiness of blowing bubbles, one\nafter another, with its tail. Thousands of bubbles swell and stick together, until they form a cloak\nwhich completely surrounds the\nlittle bug.\nBUBBLES  DON'T  BURST\nSpittle bug's bubbles do not burst\nMel thought quickly. \"The boys\nwere just wondering if they could\nscale the bluff here and make a\nshort-cut back to camp,\" he replied.\n\"They brought me my lunch.\"\n\"Don't you do It,\" said Mark\nsharply. \"That bank might cave in\nwith you, and then you'd be suing\nthe construction company. Go back\nthe way you came.\"\n(Continued   Wednesday)\nRIDDLES\nToday two sisters, Bernice and\nJanice Reed, have come to the rescue of the girls in the riddle race\nand sent the Riddle Man all the riddles below except the last one, which\ncame from a boy\u2014Jack White.\n1. Which is the best side to milk\na cow on?\n2. What word of five letters is\nnever pronounced right?\n3. What is the difference between\na wealthy man and a little dog's\ntail?\n4. When is water like a tiger?\n5. What men live on nothing but\nwater?\nbecause of their sticky walls, and the\nbug inside is quite safely hidden\naway from its enemies, until it develops into a little winged insect\nwhich sets off at once, preparing to\nlay more eggs\nJust what the young spittle bug\nfeeds upon, while growing inside\nthe bubbles into a mature insect, is\nstill somewhat mysterious. Thc general opinion is that the sticky mass\nof spittle gathers tiny insects like\nfly paper attracts files, and that tho\nlittle bug within makes the best possible use of the insects its bubble:\nsnare, mercilessly feeding upon\nthem.\nLook inside any spittle at the bug,\nand likely as not you will find the\nlittle creature feeding upon the insect its bubbles have trapped.\nThe plant upon which the bug\nclings and builds his queer nest il\nnot injured because of it.\nRIDDLE ANSWERS\n1.   The outside.    2.   Wrong,      3.\nOne keeps a motor car and the other   keeps  a   wagon   twaggln').    4.\nWhen it makes a spring. 5.   Sailors.\n\u2014 \u25a0*    -.*\u25a0'. .,iV.i.;i.;,^*r.i\n mm\n\u2014\n\t\nIW11I1MHJWUI*    i' ISSMSH.-IHI \u00bb'*V\n*5W5W\u00ab\u00bbSW\u00bbi\u00bb^PP\u00bb!l9!WW*'*'\" %\nI r.^Sn \\\nWITH (UBS AT (AMP BUSK\nSurprise Attack Is Made on Scouts\nFirst Morning; Grand Howl, Opening\nSi 1\t\nScouts May Hike Out\nto Willow Point;\nWade Is Akela\nBy a Scout at Camp\nWe have 26 cubs under canvas a!\nCamp Busk, and assisting Cubmaster Sidney Wade are the following\nscouts: N. May and R. Thain, assistant cooks; B. Harrison, first aid\nand campfire; B. Ramsden, scribe\nand games; J. Holland, assistant\nAkela; Mr. Ure, visiting Akela; Mrs,\nWade, camp nurse; George Corbie,\ncamp cook. Cubmaster Wade is Akela.\nAt 3 a. m of the first morning\nIn camp the cubs sprang a surprise\nattack on the tired scouts, but Akela and his assistants held their own\nuntil 7 o'clock. Washing in the creek,\nthe cubs worked up a grand breakfast appetite. Then beds were aired\nand the camp was officially opened\nby the cubs' grand howl and flag-\nbreak by Tom Madden, senior sixer. Cubmaster Wade as Akela instructed the boys in camp \"don'ts\"\nHIKE FOR BREAD *     I\nThen came a S. 0. S. from the *\ncookhouse due to a shortage of\nbread, and checking up on boots,\nwe found Norman May with good\nones to be broken in and started\nhim on his way to Willlow Poini.\nHe made the record time of 3h\nhours, but being a good scout he\ndid it cheerfully.\nOur first camp fire, conducted by\nBill Harrison, was a great success\nHe also gave first aid instruction\nthe second day and J. Holland gave\nsignalling instruction. After dinner\na swim and softball game kept the\nlads busy. This night visitors supplied candies, cookies and cake. The\nvisitors stayed for the campfire.\nwhere voices like nightingales sang\nuntil the usual cocoa and cookies\nwere downed.\nThe scouts held a Court of Honor\nwhere the following names were\ngiven to the heads; Bill Harrison\n\"White Plume\"*; J. Holland, \"Baloo\";\nNorman May, \"Sheerkhan\"; Bert\nRamsden. \"Baghura\"; R. Thain,\n\"Mowgh\"; Mr. Wade, \"Akela\".\nEdgewood Liberals\nTalk of Road Work\nEDGEWOOD, B. C.,-The local\nLiberal association met Saturday\nAmong matters discussed was the\nkeeping in repair of the mining,\n'road from the Inonoaklin Crossing |\ninto Lightning Peak, a distance of;\n' 18 miles. This road is in poor re-1\npair owing to heavy trucking and\nbad drainage.\nDr. C. Courville, J. H. Naylor,\ni Pender. H. Hopp, P. Nesbitt and\nH. 0. Smith were elected delegates\nto represent the local Liberal association at the annual convention\nat Slocan City.\nBill Husband Leads\nCreston Fishermen\nin Angling Contest\nCRESTON, B.C.-Entries already\nin for the 31)37 fishing contest conducted by Victor Mawson would indicate that angling is attracting\nmuch more attention than last season.\nBill Husband is the outstanding\nfisherman leading in the rainbow\ntrout class with a sample weighing\none pound ten ounces, and is second\nin the bass division with one weighing four pounds six ounces. The\nking of the bass catchers is Egon\nHollm, a high s:hool student, with\none that weighed five pounds.\nReeve Mallandaine is in the lead\nwith an eastern brook trout weighing two pounds two ounces. In lake\ntrout Lionel Moore has a big lead\nwith a beauty weighing five pounds\ntwo ounces, the biggest brought in\nfor some years.\nBass fishing is particularly good\nand lake fishermen state catches in\nKootenay Lake at Kuskanook are\nmuch the best since 1934.\nNELSON DAILY NEW8, NELSON. B.C.\u20148ATURDAY MORNING. AUG. 21. 1937\nS***************!]; **- \u25a0* ^\nGift of Bassinets\ndived Creston\nHospital Nursery\nCRESTON, B.C.-Due the absence\nof both the president and vice-\npresident, F. H. Jackson presided al\nthe August meeting of the directors\nof Creston Valley Hospital association Wednesday. Owing to activity\nin village real estate, the board decided to secure an option on two\nlots to tfie north of the hospital to\ntake care of an enlargement thai\ncannot much longer be avoided.\nThe secretary, H. A. Powell, submitted the report which showed\nthere had been 351 hospital days in\nJuly, as compared with 388 in June,\nand 357 in July 1936.\nDuring the month the hospital had\nre:civcd half a dozen bassinets foi\nthe nursery. These were purchased\nwith $80 whicli had been raised al\na dance sponsored by residents of\nCrawford Bay and Gray Creek af\nIhe latter point Dominion day, to\nwhich had been added some donations by Gray Creek citizens.\nWhy Not a Want Ad?\nDark Grey Suit\nIs Ideal for\nMidsummer\nBy Central Press\nMaybe it is> sacrilege to say\nso, and we shouldn't. But if a\nman corrals a good looking light\nweight worsted suit in a medium or dark color now. he will\nget a lot of wear out of it before\nthe warm weather is over, and\nthen he'll have it fo.- a starter\nnext summer.\nThis dark gray tropica] worsted suit, is cool for this time\nof year. The material is relieved\nby fine blue and white line\nchecks. Witli such a suit, worn\nin midsummer, the young man\nabout town wears a Panama hat,\nwhite shirt, and printed foulard\ntie in red and blue. This completes a satisfying August ensemble.\nThe Cub (amp:\nas Told\nin Rhyme...\nJUNGLE JOTS\nWe all got up at seven-thirty,\nTiie Cubs to wash their faces dirty.\nThe Scouts to chop wood thin ond\nfine,\nMr. Wade to prepare for nine;\nFor at nine began a hike\nTo Harrop ferry by Kootenay \"like\".\nNow on arriving at this site,\nOn the shore of Kootenay \"like\",\nMr. Wade found a rusted gun\nTo add to the pleasure and thc fun.\nThe old antique, less cylinder,\nReminded the boys of Dillinger,\nAfter eating and having a rest\nWe thought a swim would be the\nbest,\nBefore the lengthy homeward trot\nTo our green and grassy plot,\nWhere Johnnie Holland went to bed\nWhile the Cubs played and read.\nAt the campfire warm and bright\nDid we sing and joke this night,\nWhile the guests looked on to see\nWhat  made these boys so full of\nglee.\nUntil they all were quiet in bed\nSome sleeping there like logs of lead.\n\u2014Alone.\nJuly Maximum 97\nin Shade in Creston\nCRESTON. B. C.-Supt. S, G.\nParker at the West Kootenay Power\n& Light Company plant at Goa:\nriver canyon, reports 423 visitor:-\nfor July. In that vicinity his records show a rainfall for July of\n,90. The hottest day was 97 in the\nshade and the minimum temperature was 43 above zero.\nArmless Author Who\nSpoke in Kootenays\nIs Now in England\nW. R. (Bill) Watson, armless author, who spoke in the Kootenays\nsome months ago. in the course of a\ncross-country tour, campaigning for\nthe. establishment in Canada of an\ninstitution for cripples to fit them\nto make the most of life, is now in\nEngland inspecting institutions for\ncripples. He is the author of the book\n\"My Desire\", which has gone\nthrough two editions.\nMr. and Mrs. Watson made a number of friends during their visit to\nthe Kootenays. Telling how, when\nas a baby he lost the use of both\narms, he \"fought through\" school and\nuniversity, writing with his feet\nor mouth, Mr. Watson declared his\npurpose was to show what handicapped persons could do, given\ntraining and opportunity.\nFALL REOPENING OF PRIVATE SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES\n- PAGE ELEVEN\nI Parents   and!\nI students make\n1 your plans for ;\nthe new Term :\nnow from the j\nfollowing list]\n| o f   Advertise\n\\ ments\nLion's Gate School\nfor Boys\n1020 WOLFE AVENUE SHAUGHNESSY HEIGHTS\nVANCOUVER. BRITISH COLUMBIA\nScientifically   designed   classroom   building,   complete   with\nscie.ice laboratory. Good housing accommodation ard\nspacious grounds  with  tennis courts.\nREOPENS  SEPTEMBER   9TH,* 1937\nFor illustrated booklet write to the Headmaster\nSt. Anthony's College\n919 Wcct 27th Avenue, Vancouver, B. C.\nBoarding and Day School for Girls, under the direction of the\nSisters of the Love** of Jesus, assisted by a fully qualified and\nexperienced staff.\nElementary and High School Course lo\nJunior and Senior Matriculation\nGOOD   MUSIC      GAMES      AST      NEEDLEWORK\nFor Prospectus write to the Sister in Charge\nNEW FALL TERM AUG. 30, SEPT. 7\nSprotf-Shaw Schools\nThe Best in Business Education\nat Your Service\nStudents always in demand \u2014 ask their employers\nDay and Night Classes\n812 Robson St. Voncouver, B. C.\nNaramata School for Girls\nSnJ\u201ehaWakea,   NARAMATA, B. C.\nA Boarding School offering Elementary and High School\ncourses. Art, Music, Physical Education, with indoor and\noutdoor activities including winter sports.\nUnder th\" direction of\nMISS M. SIMES, Froebel Institute\nMISS D. ROBINSON, Physical Education, McG II\nUniversity\nProspectus on Application\nTrail Business College\nCOMPLETE SECRETARIAL COURSE\nNew Term Commences Sept. 1\nFrances E. Cook, B.A., Principal\nOrlando Blk. TRAIL, B.C. Phone 84\nSt. Michael's School\nVERNON, B.C.\nA Boarding and Day School for Girls\nAt an elevation of 1500 feet in the Okanagan Valley, well known for\nits dry and healthy climate. Strongly recommended for delicate\nchildren.\nCourses from Grade 1 to Junior Matriculation inclusive. Highly\nqualified staff.\nGymnastics, summer and winter sports, and dancing under supervision of McGill Graduate.\nProspectus and AM Information on Application to:\nMISS M. L. WILY, M.A., Head Mistress\nFull Development\nof Faculties Aim\nPrivate Schools\n\"Education\",  says  the dic-\n.ionary, \"is the systematic development and  cultivation of\n| ihe  mind  and  other natural\nIpowers.  It is the harmonious\n] development of all the faculties.\" It begins in the nursery\nI and continues through school\nJut it does not stop there. It\ncontinues through life, whether we will it or not, and the\nproper foundation or groundwork is most important to this\ndevelopment.\nChildren need understanding and sympathetic training\nand this is what they receive\nin the private school today.\nOwing to the smaller classes\nwider curriculum and constant\nsupervision the teacher is able\nto know the individual and\nknowing him to direct his energies along the lines for which\nhe shows most aptitude. Latent abilities are discovered;\nfriendships formed and tastes\nand intellectual interests de\nveloped which will continue\nthrough  life.\nFor the backward child the\nprivate school has the advantage of being able to give him\nexpert and sympathetic understanding  and   guidance  with\nout forcing him into cempeti\ntion with those above his men\ntal level. This means that with\nproper   instruction   the   child\nwho is slow or backward will\nbe able  to achieve  the same\ngoal  as his brighter compan\nion.\nThe bright child, on the\nother hand, is encouraged, to\nget ahead' as quickly as is\nconsistent with proper assim-\nlation and he is not forced to\n\u00abvait for the slower child,\nwhich might cause him to lose\ninterest in his studies. He will\nalso have the time and opportunity to broaden his course of\nstudies and will be given\nplenty to occupy his mind. This\nis possible through the indiv\nidual attention, personal\ncoaching and interest of the\nteacher.\nSocial deportment is stressed in the private school and is\na great aid in developing grac-\niousness and ease of manner\nwhich are being recognized as\nan outstanding asset in the\nbusiness as well as the social\nworld, today.\nSupervised recreation and\noutdoor games, in which every\nstudent, in most schools, must\ntake part, does much to develop courage, initiative, self-\ncontrol and a spirit of fair\nplay as well as assisting in\nkeeping the body healthy.\nClose and continuous association    with    teachers    who\nMOOSE JAW, Sask, (CD- On\na dare and with only ice cream sodas a.s reward. Lloyd Anderson and\nF.cidie Phinn of Briercrest walked 26\nj miles lo Moose Jaw. After a day in\nJ the city they returned by bus to get\nthe ice cream sodas.\nThe Provincial Institute\nof Technology and Art\nCALGARY, ALBERTA\nA Government School Conducted by the\nDepartment of Education\nClasses Open Oct. 4, 1937\n1.   DAY COURSES:\nElectricity including Radio: Motor Mechanics including\nWeldlnq, Batteries and Ignition, Vulcanizing, painting and Body\nWork; Machine Shop Practice; Acetylene and Electric Welding;\nSurvey Drafting and Map Making; Mechanical Drafting; Building Construction; Aeronautics: Farm Mechanics, including tractors, Diesel Engines, Blacksmithing. Building Construction, Cement work; Special Diesel Engine courses for Mechanics, for\nvery moderate fees.\nDressmaking and Millinery including Home Economics, Costume Design, Drafting from figure, Tailoring.\nArt (fine and applied) Involving Drawing from Objects,\nLife, Still Life. Landscape, using pencil, crayon, pastel water-\ncolors, paints; Design, Batik, Woodcarving; Clay modelling and\nglazing; Stained glass, Leathertoollng. Special opportunities for\nspecial students.\nFees are nominal $35.00 for eight months, including deposits.\n2.\nMining, Surveying, Mech-\nHOME STUDY COURSES:\nAre offered in Steam Engineering\nanical Drafting, Elementary Art.\n3.   EVENING COURSES:\nA full  program  Is being  planned for the winter, opening\nMonday, October 18th.\nAnnouncement Bulletin sent on Application\nHON. WM. ABERHART. W. G. CARPENTER,\nMinister of Education Principal\nhave been chosen, not only for\ntheir educational qualifications\nbut for their personality and\ninterest in the young, does\nmuch to encourage the child\nand aid him in the development of his most worthy traits.\n\u00a7\u00a3ft0tt\nSCHOOL FOR GIRLS\n965 FOUL BAY ROAD\nVICTORIA, B, C.\nPrivate. Hiqh and Preoaratory\nBeginners to Matriculation. A\nlimited number of boarders\nreceived. Excellent education,\nwith happy disciplined home\nlife. Tutorial system of study.\nSmall classes. Music, Games.\nArt, Voice Training. Special\nattention to the Speaking\nVoice.\nModerate Inclusive Fees\nWrite to the Headmistress:\nMISS E. F, ROBERTS, L.L.A.\nSt Joseph's Academy,\n5?.* Mill St.\nNELSON, B. C.\nBoarding and Day School\nfor Girls and Young Ladies\nPrimary.  Elementary  and High  School  Departments.    Pupils\nprepared for Normal Entrance and Matriculation Examinations.\nAffiliated with the Catholic University of America.\nCompete courses in Music. Advantages in Athletics.\nAddrcss-SISTER SUPERIOR\nTERMS  MODERATE\nFurther particulars given by the SISTER SUPERIOR\nInquiries and   Reservations Invited from out-of-town parents.\nThe Grammar\nSCHOOL, DUNCAN,\nVancouver  Island,  B.C.\nEstablished 1926\nBOARDING   SCHOOL    FOR\nBOYS\nCurriculum as laid down by\nthe Department of Education.\nFully equipped machine shop\nand carpentry shop. 18 acres\nof playing fields. Healthy\nsurroundings. Modern equipment. Experienced masters.\nRugby, football, cricket, gym,\nboxing, etc. Moderate fees.\nTerm starts Sept. 14th. For\nprospectus write lo the Headmaster or Bursar, Duncan, B.C.\nST. JOSEPH'S\nACADEMY\nWAINWRIGHT,  ALBERTA\nConducted   by  The   Sisters   of\nSt. Joseph\nResident School for Girls and\nYoung Ladies\nGRADES   1   to   12   INCLUSIVE\nCultural   Ideals   and   Character\nFormations are Distinctive Features  of  Training   Offered \u25a0\nFull Commercial Course\u2014Special\nCourse in Folk Dancing\u2014Musical Advantages-\nAll Grades (Tor. Cons.)\nApply for Prospectus to\nSister Superior\u2014\nST.  JOSEPH'S  ACADEMY,\nWainwright, Alberta\nPITMAN'S\nDay and Night School\nFall Term       Enroll Now\nStudents   may   enter\nat any time.\nComplete    Secretarial     and\nBookkeeping Courses,  Public\nand   High   School    Subjects.\nIndividual   Attention\nNIGHT SCHOOL: $3.50 Month\nEVELINE   A.   C.   RICHARDS\nPrincipal\nCor. Granville and Broadway\nVancouver, B. C.\n I\t\nFOUNDED 1898\nCROfTM HOUSE WSJ(\"\"BST\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\n0 BOflRDMG ORD DRV SCHOOL FOR GIRLS\nExceptional results in Junior Matriculation Examinations. Good Music, Art,\nSpeech Training, Dancing, Games, Gymnastics and Riding.\nFor\nProspectus\napply to\nthe\nSecretary.\nREOPENINC SEPTEMBER 8th\nHeadmistress: Miss S. E. G. MACDONALD, B.A.\nTHE\n0(^\/0\nResidential and coeducational\nFrom Primary to Senior Matriculation. Fully qualified ano\nexperienced staff. Physical\neducation and games stressed,\nHome-like atmosphere in a\ndignified setting. Write for\nprospectus.\nPrincipal:\nGRACE S. BLACKIE, M.A\n(Edinburgh\nNew Westminster, B. C\n20 GIRLS WANTED\nTo Learn Hairdressing\nAlso Hoys to hearn Barbering\nBoth these profession.1! provide prof-\n1 table employment with pleasant iur-\nsoundings find an opportunity for Independence by opening your own\nshop. Tuition Reasonable. TOOLS\nFRBB.    Term?' Arranged.\nMoler Hairdressing School\nWhile In the city visit\nM n 1 f r   Hn irrtrossinf*     .,\nShop. 311 w. Hastings    Vancouver,  B.C.\n303 West Hastings\nSey. 7789\nQueen Margaret's\nSchool\nDuncan, Vancouver Island, B.C.\nBoarding school for girls. Beginners to matriculation. Beautiful country, healthy situation, large playing fields, with own\nchapel and swimming pool. Happy home atmosphere.\nFully qualified staff. Church of England.\nPrincipals:\nMiss N. C. Denny, A.R.R.C.   \u2014   Miss D. R. Geoghegan, B.A.\nWRITE FOR PROSPECTUS\nNelson Business College\nThe College With a Provincial Reputation\nINDIVIDUAL TUITION    COMMENCE ANY TIME\nNew Term Commences\nWEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1ST, 1937\nWe Teach Canadian Business Methods to Canadian\nStudents.\nPhone 603\nP. O. Box 14\nNelson, B. C.\nC\nM,.\nOUT-OF-\nTOWN\nSTUDENTS'\nATTENDANCE\nINVITED\nT.\nCor. Cambie and Dunsmuir Sts.\nVancouver, B. C.\nWRITE\nNOW FOR\nDETAILS\nAND\nPROSPECTUS\nTHE    VANCOUVER\nSCHOOL     OF     ART\nvital, constructive art education\nDepartment   of   Education   Training   Centre   for   Art  Teachers\nTraining for Specialized  Art Vocations\nTERM COMMENCES SEPT. 13     CHARLES H. SCOTT, Director\nA Distinguished Day and Residential Undenominational School\nST. HILDA'S\nSCHOOL FOR GIRLS\nProviding excellent facilities for a\nsound academic education leading to\nuniversity matriculation, in an environment of pleasant harmonious\nhomo life.\nKindergarten to Crade XII\nMusic. Physical Education, Dancing,\nIndoor and Outdoor Sports, Sewing,\nDressmaking, Music Appreciation.\nRiding. Special Gymnasium. Spacious Grounds. Secretarial Training,\nEntrance Scholarships, Religious\nTraining.\nFall Term  Opens Sept. 8th for\nBoarders,\nStaff  of  Specialists ^ 9th for ^ Glr\"'\nFor Prospectus apply the Principal, MISS BEATRICE SHAND,\nCALGARY, ALBERTA\nmmmmm\nto\n JJIPPP\np.wip*jjpi*w^^ .\newimymmm!*w**w\n\u00abt**aB*f\u00bb^**q.*m*,^\nPAGE TWELVI\nNSL3CN DAILY\nf.Z'*ZO>t. t.C.-SATUr.DAY MORNINO, AUG. 21, 1M7\nNELSON COMES FROM BEHIND TO BEAT ROSSLAND\n(rops at Arrow\n(reek Touched\nBy Light Frost\nARROW CREEK, B.C.-A slight\nfrost in the valley Saturday night\ntouched some cucumbers, beans and\npotatoes. The frost seemed to run\nalong the edge of Goat Mountain and\nmissed some gardens.\nThe raspberry crop has been good,\nsome ranchers having a bumper\ncrop.\nMcBride (up Is\nUnder Fire For\nWeek-end Golf\nLast golf tournament of the seas.\non before the Labor Day tournament for the McBride cup, senior\nmembers will be held Saturday and\nSunday and the final the following*\nSunday, officials of the Nelson Golf\n& Country club announced Friday\nnight. The tournament will be a\nhandicap affair with the usual\nhandicap allowance. The McBride\ncup is at present held by R. E.\nHorton. Draws were made Friday\nnight. Hesults follow: Saturday, 1:30,\nH. E. Horton vs. B. Townshenji;\n1:40, W. Seamon vs. E. C. Wragge.\nSunday morning\u20149:45, winner cf\nHorton, Townshen match vs. winner of Seamon, Wragge match. 9:50,\nW. J. Waters vs. John Fraser; 9:55,\nCharles Stark vs. R. L. McBride; 10,\nPaul Lincoln vs. W. Fotheringham.\nSunday afternoon\u20142 p.m., winner\nof 9:45 match vs. winner of 9:50\nmatch; 2:10, winner of 9:55 match\nVs. winner of 10 match. Sunday,\n.August 29, 'inals.\nNelson May See\nPole Vaulter of\n(oast, Labor Day\n; There is a possibility that Ed.\nBurret, one of the best pole-vault-\ners in Canada, will participate in\nthe Labor day sports in Nelson.\nBurret has done better than 12 feet\nsix inches. There is also a chance\nthat three of Vancouver's best\nweight men will take part in the\nsports. These men will compete in\nthe discus, javelin and hammer\nthrow. John Mutter, president of the\nBritish Columbia Amateur Athletic\n\u2022association, has announced that the\nchampionships of the British Columbia track and field events could\nbe held in Nelson if the queen city's\ntrack was of proper dimensions but\nas the track is banked on the turns,\ntimes of the races could not be taken.\nMr. Mutter explained that a regulation track must be level all the\nway round, or at least not have\nmore than three inches banking in\nevery 100 yards, Mr. Mutter said\nthat if Nelson's track could be\nlevelled off, the championships\ncould be held here, as greater enthusiasm is shown in the Kootenays\nthan at the coast in sports of this\nkind. Miss Ann Clark, president of\n.the British Columbia Women's Athletic association showed great interest in the Nelson girls team when\n[they took part in the Caledonian\n'day sports at Vancouver. Miss Clark\nsuggested that as such great enthusiasm is shown in the Kootenays and\n;the girls posses such wonderful talent they should form an Amateur\nAssociation of their own.\nRossland Softball\nGirls Here Sunday\nNelson girls' softball officials stated Friday evening, while Johnny\nGidinski was in town with the Rossland boxla club arrangements were\ncompleted for the Rossland girls'\nsoftball club to play in Nelson Sunday against the league-leading Nelson Maple Leafs. The game is called\nfor 2 o'clock so as fo allow the Rossland girls to play in Salmo later in\nthe day. It is expected that a men's\ngame will also be arranged to take\nplace following the girls' game. Hel-\n\u25a0 en Ling, who pitched the Nelson\ngirls to their first West Kootenay\ntitle, will be on the mound for thc\nRoasland club.\nWith Hazel Spiers visiting in Creston, the local Maple Leafs will have\nGertie Whitehead on the mound.\nThe balance of the team will be\nchosen from Alice Gillett, Jean\nSpiers, Phyllis Wallace, Deanie Wallace, Iris Johansson, Elvera Matheson, Mary Payne, Doreen Long, Dot\nPostlethwaite and another player\nwho will be picked today tn replace\nEva Hendrickson, who is in Vancouver.\nHeavy Traffic\non Trail Bridge\nTRAIL. B. C, Aug. 20 - During\nthe nine-hour period from 7:30 a.m.\nto 4:30 p.m. Thursday, 1385 ears\npassed over the Columbia river\nbridge, R. R. Burns, M.L.A. announced this morning.\n\"This does not take into account\npedestrians and bicyclists,\" Mr.\nBurns explained.\nCheek on tho daily volume passing over the span during the relaying of the runway, is being kept for\nMr. Burns by the special traffic director, E. A. Temple.\nSatisfactory progress is being\nmade on the renovating of the\nStructure.\n<\nPut Out the Elk, Locfc Up the Course.\nNight-Time Slogan at Banff\nnight, Banff Springs Hotel mountain course is guarded by heavy wire\nfencing to keep out the friendly elk, bear, moose and deer of Banff\nNational park that would relish Us fine fairways and greens. Special\nwatchmen keep guard every night to keep the course in order for the\nWales and Willingdon competitions, week of August 23.\nClose Matches in\nBrake Competition\nRate for the E. Y. Brake Memorial\ncup is drawing tighter and three\nclosely contested matches were\nfought at the C. P. R. bowling\ngreens Friday evening. Results of\nthe matches follow: A. G. Lane's\nteam defeated J. Draper's, 19-11;\nN. J. Lowes' team defeated J. s.\nGoulding's 14-12; and N. B. Bradley's team defeated E. Penwill's\n15-10.\nRichmond Takes\nNewWeslminsler\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 20 (CP) \u2014\nRichmond Homes tonight moved\nnearer a playoff berth in the intercity box lacrosse league playoffs\nwhen they defeated New Westminster Salmonbellies 13-11 in a game\nwhich failed to excite 5000 spectators at the Vancouver forum.\nSalmonbellies led 6-4 at the halfway mark, but a third period rally\nled by Johnny Dale and Blackie\nBlack netted Richmond seven goals\nto Salmonbellies' two. Salmonbelli\u00ab\noutscored their opponents by one\ngoals in the final period, but failed\nto reach a winning total.\nIt was the third straight loss for\nthe Salmonbellies,\nBELFAST (CP).\u2014Just an old\nIrish custom, Miss Mary Falcona,\nwas selected \"Queen of Irish Linen\" and entertained royally with her\nIrish linen frock and \"crown\" in\nLondon.\nTRAIL JUNIORS\nGET BALL GAME\nTRAIL, B.C., Aug. 20\u2014Trail's recently mustered junior baseball\nteam has at last found a squad to\ngive them a game. Sunday, begin\nning at 3:30 p.m., they will play a\npickup team. The Junior lineup follows:\nRiley, pitcher; Hodges, catcher;\nBuna, first base; Anselmo, second\nbase; Michaely, third base; Mike\nWolfe, shortstop; Sam Saprunoff,\nleft field; Miscisco, center field and\nAndy Belisky, right field; Hugh McLeod, July Belisky and Simpson will\nact as spares.\nPleads Guilty to\nSix Theft Charges\nTRAIL, B. C., Aug. 20 - Pleading guilty to six charges of theft,\nWilliam Alfred Sneath was given\nsuspended sentence on five counts\nand sentenced to $100 and $2.50\ncosts or three months in Nelson\njail with hard labor when he appeared before deputy police Magistrate Donald MacDonald in city police court today. Sneath had a stolen\na number of chattels over a period.\nJohn Hellyer pleaded guilty to a\ncharge of theft and was given suspended sentence provided he leave\ntown within four hours.\nCRESTON Social...\nCRESTON, B.C.-R. G. Armstrong\nof Markham, Ont., who has been\nvisiting his son, W. G. Armstrong,\nleft Tuesday for his home. He will\nvisit his daughter, Mrs. McLaughlin,\nat Irvine, Alta., en route east.\n\u2022 Mrs. Speers is treating her\nSunday school class of St. Stephen's\nPresbyterian church, to an outing at\nTwin Bays.\n\u2022 Returning from a holiday a.\nNakusp to Fernie, Rev. M. T. C. and\nMrs. Percival, visited at Creston\nWednesday.\n\u2022 Mrs. Ray has returned to Vancouver after visiting Creston valley\nfriends. She was a guest of her sister, Mrs. H. W. MacLaren. Mrs.\nRay was a former teacher at Erickson school.\n\u2022 Miss Betty Kemp and two\nfriends, of Winnipeg, are visiting the\nformer's father, W. H. Kemp.\n\u2022 Miss Gladys Webster, whose\nmarriage takes place Monday, was\nguest of honor at a miscellaneous\nshower at the home of Mrs, J. V.\nMurray, *j Wednesday. The shower\ntook the form of a treasure hunt.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Caughey and\nfamily are visiting at Lethbridge\nand other points in south Alberta.\nGLANCES INTO THE MIRROR OF\nLIFE IN KOOTENAY-BOUNDARY\nNAKUSP\u2014Mri. E. Olson, entertained at a supper party honoring\nher daughter, Gladys, on her 11th\nbirthday. Invited guests were Louise\nBrodie, Gertrude Brown, Vivian Ber-\nrard, Bernice Jordon, Kay Sutherland, Ruth Johnson, Charlotte and\nGay Barrow, and Margaret Vinall.\n... Mrs. E. Maitland and Mrs. Soules\nof Glendevon were guests at the\nhome of Mr., and Mrs. W. Vinall. . ..\nG. Hunter Gardner Jr. left Thursday to spend a few days at Nelson.\n. .*. Mr. and Mrs. J. McLeod and\nMiss M. Donselaar of Edgewood\nwere visitors to Nakusp Wednesday.\n... D. Fairhurst of Silverton was in\ntown Wednesday. . . . Dr. C. A.\nCourville of Edgewood spent Thursday at Nakusp. ... J. Egloff of\nEdgewood was a visitor here Wednesday. . . . L. Lund of Fauquier\nspent Wednesday at Nakusp. .\nMrs. Clarence Picard was a visitor\nto Halcyon. . . . Mr. and Mrs. H.\nDuckworth and Mr. and Mrs. Roper\nwere visitors to town Tuesday. . . .\nF. Meers of New Denver was in town\nWednesday. . . . F. F. Marriage and\nson of Kelowna were among holiday\nvisitors to town. . . . R. Ward of\nLumby was a motor visitor to Na*\nkusp Wednesday. . . ,R. C. Bush of\nSalmo was a visitor here Tuesday\n. . . Mrs. R. E. Bruhn and daughter, Gladys, of Sicamous were holiday visitors in town. . . . Mrs. A.\nKennedy of Arrow Park spent Tuesday in Nakusp. . . . Mrs. A. Harvey\nSmith, who was visiting her brother\nand sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. P.\nR. Henke, left Wednesday for Vancouver. . . . Mrs. Henn of Arrow\nPark visited Nakusp Tuesday. . .\nH. Bowes, who spent a few months\nin Nakusp, left for Kaslo Thursday.\n. . . F. Benton left Thursday for\nVancouver... Mr. Crispin of Arrow\nPark was a Tuesday visitor to town.\n... J. James and daughter, Miss\nAnnie James, of Arrow Park were\nWednesday visitors .to town. . . .\nMrs. M. Du Mont and daughter,\nMiss Du Mont of Hunter's Siding,\nwere visitors to town Monday. . . .\nJ. Hopp of Edgewood was a visitor\nin town. . . . C. Dilley has returned\nafter visiting his daughters, Mrs.\nP. Hurry of Jaffrey and Mrs.  C.\nHurry of Kimberley Miss Laura\nBredy of Carroll's Landing was a\nNakusp visitor Wednesday. . . .\nMiss Eva Johnson of Burton was in\ntown Wednesday.\nAINSWORTH\u2014D. Lonna and son\nof Trail are spending a holiday here,\nguests at the Silver Ledge. ... Mr.\nand Mrs. F. Moro of Trail are visitors at the Silver Ledge Mrs.\nB. Gio Vanna of Trail is a guest at\nthe Silver Ledge. . , . Glen Gillette,\nwho is employed at the Banker\nmine, was called home to Prince\nAlbert on account of the death of\nhis father.... J. Moisday was a visitor from Nelson. ... Mr. and Mrs.\nWilley and Miss Ruth Willey of\nCorra Linn were in town Monday\nen route to Howser. Captain and\nMrs. M. K. Harrison, who were on\na fishing trip and visiting at Bonnington were with them. . . . W.\nE. Lane and his sons were in Nelson Saturday. . . . Mrs. V. W. Oughtred of Montreal arrived Monday\nto visit her mother, Mrs. A. McKinnon. Mrs. Oughtred formerly resided at Nelson and Ainsworth. . . .\nIsabel Lane has as her guest, Miss\nLillian Fisher of Nelson. . . .Miss\nMargaret Murray and Miss Beth\nMurray, of Frank, Alta,, Miss Frances Linville and Miss Ruth Linville\nof Nelson spent Wednesday at the\nhot springs. . . . E. S. Dewar of\nTrail, J. Cameron and W. Robertson\nof Fruitvale were visitors to the\nhot springs. ... A party from Grantham's Landing, B.C. spent the weekend in one of the cottages at the\nhot springs consisted of A. G. Bolton,\nMrs. V. B. Loames, Miss K. Soames\nand Mrs. A. M. Robinson. ... Mr.\nand Mrs. Jack Page and children of\nWillow Point spent Sunday here.\nThey had with them Mrs. Page's\nbrother-in-law and sister, of Walla\nWalla, Wash. ... Mrs. Alex Thompson and son, Roland Thompson, mo-\ntoled here from Nelson Sunday and\nwere guests of Mr. and Mrs. R.\nSherraden. ... A. Ragotta who is\ncimployed at the Kootenay Belle\nmine, Salmo, was a week-end visi-\nor to his home here. . . . H. Brook\nof Nelson was a guest at the hot\nsprings hotel for a few days. . . .\nMr. and Mrs. H. R. Adie of Trail\nspent a holiday in one of the cabins I\nat the hot springs. . . . Mr. and Mrs.\nJ H. HKTgrave of Trail are staying\nat the Hot Springs hotel Mr. and\nMrs. Calvin Winter, Mr, and Mrs.\nE. W. Somers of Nelson and R. 3.\nAvis of Vancouver were visitors to\nthe hot springs. . . . Mr. and Mrs.\nW. A. Bennett of Nelson are occupying one of the cabins at the hot\nsprings. . . . Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Le-\nvasscur of Nelson were at the hot\nsprings Monday. ... Mr. and Mrs.\nW.\" Simpson, and Mr. and Mrs. E.\nMcHale all of Trail spent a holiday\nin the cabins at the hot springs. . . .\nMiss Margaret Rahal and Miss Catherine Rahal of Nelson were recent\nguests at the hot springs hctel. .\nGeorge Gcthe of Trail is a guest at\nthe Hot Springs hotel. ... Mr. and\nMrs. J. M. Young of Tadanac ar*\nspending a holiday in one of the Hot\nSpring's cottages. . . . Lafe McLellan\nof the Utica mine, was in town Sunday evening on his way from Nelson\nwhere he spent the week-end. . .\nTom Hawes who is working at a\nmine in the Whitewater district, was\nin town Monday to visit his family.\n. . . T. Lcnnon was a week-end visitor to his home here. . . . Mrs. D.\nLaughton and her daughters, Miss\nIrene Laughton and Miss Grace\nLaughton are occupying one of the\ncollages at the hot springs. They\nhad as their guests Sunday Mr.\nLaughton, Mr. and Mrs. J. A. S.\nLaughton and their young son. . . .\nJ. Cossetto and Hans Hansen are\nback from Woodberry, where they\nwent to do some development work\non a property belonging to Mr. Cos\nsetto. . . . Miss Mona Mackean is\nspending a holiday at Trail when:\nshe is a guest of her sister, Mrs. R\nDrake.\nYAHK, B.C.-Mrs. Alec Rattray\nand daughter, Jean, left Sunday\nfor a visit in Spokane. . .. Tom Uphill, M.L.A. for Fernie visited Yahk\nSunday en route home from the\nWest Kootenay. . . . Miss Donalda\nWalker spent the week-end in Boswell the guest of Mr. and Mrs. W,\nLawson Hepher.... Mr. and Mrs. R.\nBall of Michel and Arthur Rutledge\nof Fernie passed through here Sun\nday, returning from the coast. . .\nHarry Harper returned Sunday from\na prospecting trip. . . . Nelson Mc*\nInnis son of Mr. and Mrs. Hugh\nMclnnis arrived here Tuesday from\nTrail. . . . Jack Anderson, Albert\nHoffman, Billy Wardrope and Vic*\ntor Lythgoe, are out in St. Mary's\nlake district, making forestry trails.\n, , . E. Nordas of Ymir spent a few\ndays here. . . . L. S. Murdoch visited Cranbrook. . . . The new store\nbeing erected for E. A. Lythgoe is\nunder way. The work is being done\nby George Warren. ... P. Williams\nof Yahk and G. Williams of Kings*\ngate were visitors in Cranbrook\nThursday. ... P. II. Robinson and\nfamily of Fernie arrived here Tuesday.\nBONNINGTON \u2014Mrt A- Willey,\nMiss Ruth Willey and Miss Brownie\nSchupe were motorists to Cascade,\nspending the week-end.. . . Mr. and\nMrs. C. H. Bland and children, Bobbie and Joyce, left Tuesday on a\ntwo weeks motoring trip to Spokane\nand points in the Okanagan. . . .\nMrs. K. Birkbeck and daughter, Pat,\nof Nelson are guests of Mrs. E. E.\nJohnson here. . . . Mr. and Mrs.\nMaitland Harrison of Howser who\nare house guests of Mr. and Mrs. G.\nN. Brown, Corra Linn, were weekend visiters at Willow Point. . , .\nMr. and Mrs. W. C. Motley and family, Phyllis and David have returned\nfrom a two weeks camping holiday\nat Procter. . . Mrs. Hugh Greenwood\nof Willow Point was a guest of Mrs.\nRonald Greyson Monday. Her sons,\nIan and David, are staying for a\nweek. . . . Mr. and Mrs. A. Mc-\nCronf were Nelson visitors Saturday.\nEASTPORT,- KINGSGATE\u2014Mrt.\nSam Ciprian of Kingsgate is visiting\nher daughter Mrs. J. Basso at Canal Flats. ... Dr. Mustard of Vancouver is relieving veterinary officer here during the absence of Dr.\nLefevre who is at present holidaying with his family at Edmonton.\nA new warehouse has been completed at the side of the Canadian\ncustoms office where it will be possible to examine fruit trucks, and\nother shipments with greater facility. ... Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Dunbar having returned from Banff and\nVallican Mon Has\nA Smile for AH\nThis is Fred Moore of Vallican,\nknown as the man \"who is always meeting people with a\nsmile\". He is an ardent hunter\nand fisherman and is chairman\nof the Vallican Improvement\nsociety.\nFirst Catholic\nRetreat Is Over\nFirst annual retreat of the priests\nof Nelson diocese came to an end\nwith the noon luncheon Friday, terminating a retirement from contact\nwith the public that began Monday\nevening at 7. The priests were quartered at St. Joseph's academy,.but\nwhile sequestered, could be seen\ntwice a day, in the recreation periods, strolling in twos and threes\nabout the academy playground.\nSome of the visiting priests left\nNelson by car Friday afternoon,\nothers were planning to take the\nnight through train for East Kootenay, and the last of the visitors will\nleave Nelson Saturday, Altogether\n20 priests of varying ranks, from\nBishop Martin M. Johnson down,\nwere in attendance.\nNE WYORK (CP).\u2014Children need\nall the loving they can get, declares\nMrs. Delia Ganer, who as foster\nmother, has reared 230 children for\nthe New York child's foster home\nservice.\nROSSLAND HAS LEAD AT END OF\nTHIRD PERIOD IH BOXLA BATTLE,\nWILTS IH FINAL, LOSES BY H-TO-H\nBLAYLOCK WILL\nSPEAK AT MINES\nMEET AT COAST\nOutstanding feature of the join!\nmeeting of the C. I. M- M. and A. I.\nM. E. in Vancouver September 13\nto 20, will be the address of S. G,\nBlaylock, vice-president and general manager of the C- M. & S. Co.,\nwho will speak on \"The Operations\nof the Consolidated Mining &\nSmelting company.\nThe big convention of the Western division of Canadian Institute\nof 'Mining and Metallurgy will be\nswelled by the regional meeting of\nthe American Institute of Mining\nand Metallurgy and it is expected\nsome 700 members will attend.\nTrail-Tadanac\nTennis Semis\nOver Week-End\nTRAIL, B. C, August 20\u2014 Semi\nfinals matches for the Trail-Ross-\nland-Tadanac tennis 46urnament\nwill be played at Tadanac courts\nSaturday, starting at 2 o'clock. The\ndraws follow:\nLadies' singles, Miss Diana Han\nnay vs. Mrs. Percy Hallowell; Miss\nLoretta McDonell vs. Miss Betty\nWright. Men's singles, Ned Rhodes\nvs. Joe McDonell. Men's doubles,\nNed Rhodes and Ed Haley vs. Joe\nMcDonell and George Murray\nLadies' doubles, Miss Loretta McDonell and Miss Cara Ringwood\nvs. Mrs. Percy Hallowell and Mrs. P.\nH. Weldon. Mixed doubles, P. H.\nWright and Miss Diana Hannay beat\nvs. Bob Haley and Miss Diana Hannay\nThe results of the ladies' doubles\nand a mixed doubles semi-final\nplayed today follow: Miss Betty\nWright and Miss Diana Hanney beat\nMrs. J. E. Hardley and Mrs. C. H.\nWright, 6-3, 6-4; Joe McDonell and\nMiss Loretta McDonell beat A. M.\nChesser and Miss Jane Diamond, 6-4,\n7-5.\nthe Yoho valley are finishing then-\nvacation in Spokane. . . . Mr. and\nMrs. Dyer of Spokane are in residence at their cabin on the Little\nMoyie. Mr. Dyer is a well-known\nSpokane journalist and-is an au\nthority on fishing.... Fish are again\ngiving good sport. David Graham\nhad a splendid catch the other nigh'\nand Jim Sullivan equalled his\nachievements of last season by getting a three and a half pounder out\nof the swimming hole. . . . Misses\nBertha and Jean Corbett of Spokane have been visiting in Eastport\nfor the past week. . . . Archie Blair\nand his daughter, Mrs. Frederickson\nof Cranbrook visited friends in the\nport this week.... Mrs. Pearl Stach-\nler who left to reside in California\nsome time ago is visiting here. . . .\nR. W. Sheffer of Spokane has been\nappointed operator at the S. 1.\ndepot. . . . Mr. and Mrs. E. Ncid-\nig and Mr. and Mrs. Allan of Fernie visited Mrs. Layton Miles on\ntheir way to Soap Lake for a vacation. . . . Sandy Stewart has returned home here after a holiday\nspent with relatives at Garfield,\nWash. . . . Dale Fallon is at present\ntaking a special six-week course at\nSevern school, Annapolis, M. This is\na preparatory school for candidates\nwishing to enter the Naval college\nthere. . . . Gus Williams' returned\nfrom a recent trip with a magnificent basket of fish, one weighing\naround eight pounds. He had gone\nall Ihe way to Moyie lake to get\nthem.\nFIFE, B.C.\u2014Tommy Lauriente of\nTrail was a visitor here Friday. . . .\nM. Agostenelli returned Wednesday\nfrom Trail where he spent several\ndays. . . . Mrs. O. Mazzocchi and\nMiss Nicola Mazzocchi were visiting friends at North Fork Friday.\n, Miss Muriel Roach left Mon\nday for her home at Edmonton,\nafter spending the summer here\nwith her brother and sister-in-law,\nMr. and Mrs. Cyril Roach. . . . V.\nTedesco and F. Fornelli visited\nGrand Forks Saturday. . . . Miss\nElsie Nybcrg was a visitor to Grand\nForks Tuesday. . . . W. Crowe, S.\nButorac and Joe Buckna of Trail\nwere visiting here during the weekend.\nROBSON\u2014Mr. and Mrs. Duncan\nCarter plan to leave Robson Aug\n22 for a six-months visit to England. They expect to sail on the\nEmpress of Britain Aug. 28.\nMrs. Oborne and Mrs. Miller were\nRossland visitors Saturday. . . . Mr.\nand Mrs. Leslie Crauford were\nweek-end guests at the home of\nMr. and Mrs. R. Waldie.\nSUNSHINE BAY\u2014Mrs. C. Salslc-\ncolliof Trail, who was visiting her\nfather, H, Holmes has returned. . . .\nMr. and Mrs.,Philip R. Hong of\nBellingham, Wash., were guests of\ntheir cousins, Mr. and Mrs. Robert\nL. Hong. . . . Mr. and Mrs, Tom\nNeale spent the week-end in Nelson. . . . Mr. and Mrs. J. Mackereth\nwere shoppers to Nelson Saturday.\n. . . Mr. and Mrs. Matthews and\ntwo sons of Hollywood, Calif., arc\nguests of Mrs. Matthews' brother\nand sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs\nRobert Stevenson. . . . Mrs. Thomas\nand daughters were shoppers to\nNelson Saturday.. . . Miss Catherine\nFerguson spent Sunday at her home\nhere. . . . Mrs. J. Sewell was a\nshopper to Nelson Monday. . . . Mr,\nand Mrs. A Fletcher of Nelson speni\nSunday with Mrs. Fletcher's parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Sewell. . . .\nMonday morning Capt. J, Ferguson\nand son, Fred, left for the Okanagan Lalfe.\nCamera Divulges Secrets of BrHaWs Heavyweight Title Holder\nYoung Players on the\nNelson Team Star\nin Ding-Dong Go\nLooking like a cellar team, Nelson\nMaple Leafs went into the last period of their West Kootenay boxla\ngame with Rossland at the civic centre arena Friday night, down one\ngoal and headed for the skids. Then\nthey started to play the brand of\nlacrosse they had dished up in the\nfirst and second stanzas, and they\nblew Rossland as full of holes as a\nmoth-eaten dress suit, ft was something of a debacle for Rossland Red-\nmen, that last period, for they had.\njust, finished a scoring drive that\nbrought them from the rear and gave\nthem a 14-13 lead with the final 15\nminutes to go. Nelson scored 10\nw&ile Redmen were looking for the\nnet, and finished it with a 23-14 victory.\nRef Ken Paul and Judge of Play\nMickey Brennan absorbed plenty of\nvocal brickbats, but they made the\nrefereeing job their own, and\nthough unpopular with both sides,\nturned in a good piece of work.\nFifteen assists in 23 goals was the\nbasis of the Nelson win. Ian Dingwall, 17-year-old recruit, paced Nelson with four goals and four assists,\nwith the scrappy Bonneville countering five times and assisting on two\nwhile Carr fattened his average with\nfour lights and one assist.\nNeil's sharpshooting accounted for\nfour Rosslond goals, and the remainder were scattered, as were the assists.\nRedmen absorbed 13 penalties and\nNelson 12.   There were no majors.\nNelson put on the heat at the start\nand McNaughton pfoduced a great\njob in goal. He couldn't hold off\nthe barrage forever, however, and\nNelson led 5-3 at half time after\nRossland had tied the score at 2-2\non individual sorties. The pace\nwas hot enough for the most rabid\nfan.\nRossland started to get through\nas Nelson slipped into its habitual\nsecond-period doldrums, and looked like tying it up for a time. But\nthe Leafs came out of it and by the\nhalf held a lead of 11-7. Rossland got\nthrough a mile-wide hole in the,\nNelson defence for the final goal\nof the period.\nRedmen really opened up in the\nthird, finding holes all over the\nplace and driving through for successive counters. Early in the period\nthe game was tied up after Jack\nBishop knocked the Rossland goal\nloose, and later it was delayed while\nSaundry, clipped, was first-aided.\nTIED AND AWAY\nTying the score at 13-13 as they\noutscored Nelson six to two in the\ninterrupted first 10 minutes, the\nwood choppers got into action about\nthen. Putting on power play pressure, Rossland took the lead for the\nfirst time on Walmsley's counter\nfrom a scramble. Redmen had it\n14-13 at the intermission.\nThe refs put the finger on rough\nstuff early in the fourth and the\npenalty box was close to filled when\nHorswill passed to Dingwall for tho\ntying goal again. The Nelson attack\nwas hot but the boys had spent too\nlong trying to do it all alone and lost\na flock of opportunities.\nMcNaughton got away with a\nswell case of roughing up Hooker\nbehind the net and Hartney was\nchased right after for charging him\ninto the goal post, and with Cark-\nney also off Leafs capitalized on the\nmanpower advantage for three goals.\nThe advantage was the other way\nas Carr followed Egan into the cooler, Carr getting his for illegally\nspilling Carkner on a break, but the\nRedmen failed to make good.\nTheir fire and drive gone, Rossland opened like a sieve before an\nattack that went through to the\ngoal every lime, and McNaughton's\nblocking faded too. Redmen failed\nto score in this period.\nBox score:\nNELSON GAP\nGibbons, g  0 0 0\nAtwell, d   0 1 4\nHorswill, d   1 1 2\nKelly, d    2 1 0\nDesBrisay, d   0 0 0\nEgan, r   2 1 8\nCooper, r   2 12\nBonneville, c  5 2 0\nBishop, c   1 0 0\nHooker, w  1 1 0\nDingwall, w  \u2014 4 4 2\nPaterson, w  12 2\nCarl, w   4 1 1\nTotal.; \t\nROSSLAND\nMcNaughton, ,\nWalmsley, d\nHartney, d ....\nSimcock, d ....\n. 23 15 24\nGAP\n.000\n.   2   1\n.   0   0\n0   1\n4\n6\n2\nBaakc,  d       0   0   0\nundry, r     '\u25a0'.   2   2\nCarkner, r    2   0   0\nAnderson, c    0   1   0\nForrest, c    0   0   2\nNeil, w     4   0   0\nScott, w     1   0   4\nEzart, w     2   1   0\n\u25a0iinirn, w\n1   0   0\nTotals   14   6 26\nOfficials   \u2014   Ken   Paul,  referee;\nMickey Brennan, judge of play; G. \u2022\nRowling  and  T. R.  Wilson, timekeepers.\nPRETORIA, South Africa (CP) \u2014\nOn arrival from England, Lady\nDuncan told the Guild of Loyal\nWomen here that \"I have been seldom more impressed by the character of anyone than I was of ouf\nQueen Elizabeth.\"\n warn\nwmmm.\nmm^r '^^w^im^i^m^^m'm'wief^rw^wa\nHI i\u00bb.'f via IV u\u00ab\n\u25a0      . \u25a0    \u25a0        \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-   .'-,*  . -,.*      \u25a0*.  \u25a0\u25a0\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C-SATURDAY MORNING. AUG. 21, 1937      \u2014-\nTest Match For\nTop Teams in the\nO.C. Cricket Play\nLONDON, Aug. 20 (CP Cable)-\nOne of the most hectic duels in\nyears for the first-class county\ncricket championship tonight resulted in arrangements for a special\n\"test match\" between Middlesex and\nYorkshire, the two teams that hr.ve\nbeen disputing the championship\nlead for weeks,\nYorkshire tonight was back on top\nof the table, with an average of 71.20\npoints to 70.29 for Middlesex.\nThe novel challenge for a \"test\"\nmatch along the lines of the epic\nstruggles between England md Australia, was issued by R. W. V. Robin?, skipper of , Middlesex and\npromptly accepted by Br.an Sel-\nlars. Yorkshire manager.\nThe standings, including today's\ngrimes:\nWLWfiLfiN.R.Pts.Pct.\nFIRST OFFERINGS OF\nALL-STAR TEAM8\nA short while back this stumbling\nreporter was sufficiently venturesome to suggest a Kootenay all-star\nboxla team. Just about the time it\nappeared to be a faux pas Gilbert\nRowling came through with hie\nselections, and without comment on\nthem, though they're terrible, I pass\nthem on:\nFIRST TEAM SECOND TEAM\nGoal\nSPORTING NEWS\nYorks\n16   2\n3 4 0 267 71.20\nMiddlesex\n14   4\n2 1 0 223 70.79\nSussex\n13   5\n8 3 0 244 56.08\nDerby\n12   5\n2 4 2 210 56.00\nGloucester\n13 1(1\n2 3 0 214 50.95\nLanes\n9   3 116 0 208 48.04\nEssex\n11 11\n1  1 1 177 47.20\nGlamorgan\n10   7\n4 6 0 188 46.42\nSurrey\n7   5\n6 3 2 152 44.06\nNotts\n6   3\n8 6 2 156 41.60\nWarwick\n5   1!\n5 4 0 112 33.94\nWorcester\n8 14\n0 5 0 .135 33.33\nKent\n7 15\n2 2 0 121 31.02\nHampshire\n6 15\n4 1 0 113 28.97\nSomerset .\n6 14\n1 4 0 107 28.53\nLeicester  .\n1   I)\n3 10 0   CO 17.39\nNorthants\n.   0 14\n4 3 1   33 10.00\nLongacres Results\nLONGACRES, Seattle, Aug. 20 (CP)\n\u2014Race results:\nFirst race. Five furlongs:\nRochester Boy (Josephson) 7.30\n4.20 3.20\nJay L. (McCormick) 9.20 7.60\nSilk Train (Duncan) 4.40\nTime\u201459 4-5. Also ran: Piraetta,\nGolden Steeple, Milly Rogon, Step,\nGlad Mabel and Ferdricka.\nSecond race. Six furlongs:\nHallucinator (Vedder) 15.40 5.60\n3.20\nPrince Pad (Adams) 3.20 2.80\nWoods-tin (Fuche) 4.20\nTime\u20141:13. Also ran: Arthur\nMetz, Cloud sergeant, Santa Marita,\nMiss Booter, Molly Lou, Panipat,\nTen Hug (F), and Iron Red. (F)-\nlield.\n(Declared; Bonnie Frances.)\nThird race. One mile:\nManteca (Adams) 4.00 2,40 2.20\nWaft (Gribble) 2.90 2.30\nAdder (McCormick) 2.50\nTime\u20141:40 1-5. Also ran: Myrna\nMisstep, Crystal Lake, Don Grafton,\nBonnie Miss and Top Card. (Daily\ndouble paid $48.80).\nFourth race. One mile:\nGold Set (Josephson) 18.20 4.10\n2.90\nCaptain Logan (Adamsi 3.20 2.40\nDancing Jane (Fuche) 4.70\nTime\u20141:40. Also ran: Rosser S,\nVoyage, Brimfield, (Amazement and\nModesto declared).\nFifth race. Six furlongs:\nPosilipo (Josephson) 8.10 4.00 2.60\nBrilliant Baby (Malear) 6.40 2.70\nQuick Look (Thompson) 2.20\nTime-M:12 2-5. Also ran: Capt.\nL-jico, Evilo, Opening Night and\nSmall Mortgage. (Declared: Felaxe).\nSixth race. Six furlcngs:\nSanta Monica (Adams) 7.70 5.20\n3.30\nJack o'Spades (Gray) 3.40 2.40\nDolly K. (Gribble) 2.70\nTime\u20141:12. Also ran: Star Cluster, Mekong, Tall Oak and Maud\nAmber.\nSeventh race. One mile and sixteenth:\nWell  Dressed   (McClintock)   9.30\n3.90 2.90\nTemper (Adams) 3.30 2.50\nCresta Run (Gribble) 2.60\nTime\u20141:45 3-5. Also ran: Shasta\nOvern, Facchina, Broad Royal and\nEvidently.\nEighth race. One mile:\nOn  Champs  (Vedder)   17.50  3.90\n5.20\nAksale (Duncan) 10.80 5.70\nShasta Fire (Nevers) 2,90\nTime\u20141:39   3-5.   Also   ran:   Too\nMuch Talk, Lanty Boy, Simon, Parisian Witch, Bitter Bark, Miss Ogden and Woodgaln.\nQuinnella paid $148.00\nGibbons, N.\nDefence\nLeroy,\nT.\nWalmsley, R.\nLathom\nT.\nDavies, R.\nHorswill,\nN\nMiller, T.\nDesBrisay,\nN\nEgan, N.\nRevels\nBradbury\nT.\nKelly, N.\nSaundry,\nR.\nScott, R.\nCentres\nCooper,\nN.\nBonneville. N\nLes Davy\nT.\nWood, R.\nJ\nWings\nidt Bishop\nN.\n\"Mouse\" Daw, T.\nMerlo.\nT.\nSmith, T.\nMorris,\nT.\nNeil, R\t\nHooker,\nN.\nAnderson, R.\nDingwall\nN.\nNelson Plays at\nSalmo on Sunday\nNelson ball team will travel to\nSalmo Sunday for an exhibition\ngame, and on the following Sunday\nthe Salmo nine will play a return\ngame in Nelson.\n\"Lefty\" Mydansky is slated to do\nthe pitching against Salmo, and his\nsupport will be selected from the\nfollowing: Richardson, Euerby,\nGrice, Stewart, McGinnis, Ball.\nSchumaker, Smith, Brennan. Three\nothers of the team, Niven, Robertson and Waterer are out of town,\nWhv Not a Want Ad?\nMr. Howling also chisels in thy suggestion that Ezart of Rossland,\nhealth permitting, should take\n'Mouse' Davy'c place, and 'Mouse'\noust Les Davy on the second squad.\nWho else is going to pick one?\n*   *   *\nTAKING A PENALTY\nSHOT IN  BOXLA\nNelson fans 'tother day were\ntreated to a penally shot awarded\nStewie Paterson. Most of the boys\ndidn't know what it was all about.\nSeeking information, I was informed that a player taking a penalty shot in boxla must keep both\nfeet on the floor and fire. It must\nbe a straight shot, impelled by the\narms alone, wihout lifting the feet.\nAnd before we get off this subject of boxla, permit me to ask why\nthe Nelson team consents to Jock\nWalmsley of Rossland Redmen, as\njudge of play in the Trail-Nelson\ngames. Apart altogether from his\nability or lack of it, the Maple Leafs\nare making a mistake, the league is\nmaking a mistake and the individual\nconcerned is making a mistake when\nany players of another team is permitted to sit in judgment. Johnny\nDeVoin of Nelson, was subjected to\nRossland's objections.\nI'd like to suggest too that the\nNelson players ought to study dramatics. If they'd drop to the floor\nand roll around when they get clouted over the head instead of cussing\nand carrying on they'd see the opposing team's penalty deficit much\nlarger. It's not altogether the sportsmanlike thing to do, but there's no\nreason why the lads should be victimized and do no victimizing.\nIt might be well to point out to\nreferees also that any accidental\nclout over the head, whether it drops\nthe player or not. calls for a five-\nminute penalty\u2014not two.\nA LITTLE HOCKEY'\nFOR COOLNESS\nArchie McTeer of Calgary, brother\nof Gordon McTeer of Trail, may get\na shot at refereeing in the National\nHockey league this winter. He had\nhis opportunity last season, but the\nbid was made after he agreed to\ncoach Calgary Bronks, and he stayed at home. Now he has another\noffer.\nMickey McKay, the \"great\" of\nKootenay hockey, has had another\nbid to go coach-managing in the\nN. H. L\u201e but he says there aren't\nenough peanuts in the bid as yet.\nMickey, a Grand Forks resident for\nyears, is now in Rossland.\nHarry Scott of the Calgary Albertan points out:\n\"Hockey has been making its contribution to the golf tournaments of\nrecent years, and this season the\npuck-chasers have been prominent\non the fairways. In the recent final of the Maritime privince tournament at Charlottetown, Pete Kelly\nof the Detroit Red Wings, triumphed.\nThe same week Gordon Savage,\nformerly of the Montreal Canadiens,\nEddie Shore, defence star of the\nBoston Bruins, Sweeney Schriner,\nof the New York Americans, Freddy\nHergert and Billy Hudson of the\nInternational-American league were\ncompeting in the Alberta tournament.\n\"Marvin Wentworth. defence star\nof the Maroons, Charlie Connacher,\nBusher Jackson and Red Horner of\n13-6 FOR GIANTS\nPHILADELPHIA, Aug. 20 (API-\nNew York Giants delivered the;'\nheaviest dose of pitchers1 poison to\nthe faltering Phillies today and\nclubbed out a 13-6 victory.\nThey collected 21 hits for then\nbiggest hitting and run-making\nproduction of the season, and remained right on the heels of Chicago Cubs m the National league fight.\nIn the sixth, Pitcher Dick Coffman collided with the Phils' Hers-\nchel Martin in a play at first base\nand was spiked so badly on the\nright foot lie had to be carried to\nthe clubhouse.\nNew York   13 21   0\nPhiladelphia          6 13   2\nCastleman, Schumacher, Coffman\nHubbell and Danning: Lamaster,\nJorgens, Kellehcr, Crawford and\nAtwood.\n6-4 FOR REDS\nCINCINNATI, Aug. 20 (AP) -\nPaul Derringer, big Cincinnati Red\nhurler, batted in five runs on three\nhits tonight and allowed nine hits\nin eight innings to lead the Reds\nto a 6-4 victory over the Chicago\nCubs. It was the Red's fourth consecutive win over the Cubs.\nScore:\nChicago          4   9   0\nCincinnati       6 10   <)\nParmelee, Bryant and O'Dea:\nDerringer, Grissom and Campbell.\nBEES TAKE DODGERS\nBROOKLYN, Aug. 20 (AP) -\nBoston Bees made every hit count\ntoday and nosed out the Dodgers\n6-5 behind the effective pitching of\nDanny MacFayden.\nAI Lopez, Bees' catcher only recently back from the hospital list,\nwas sidelined again when a foul\ntip hit a finger on his right hand.\nBoston      :    6   9   1\nBrooklyn     5 12   2\nMacFayden, Gabler and Lopez,\nMueller; Butcher, Henshaw, Cant-\nwell and Phelps.\n12TH WIN FOR BLANTON\nPITTSBURGH, Aug. 20 (AP) -\nCy Blanton won his 12th game today as Pittsburgh rallied behind his\nsix-hit pitching to defeat St. Louis\n7-4 and moved to within one-half\ngame of third place in the National\nleague.\nJohnny Mize hit his 17th homer of\nthe season in the first inning with\nTerry Moore on base and Joe Medwick made his 27th circuit smash\nin the third with Brown on base.\nMedwick later was ejected by Umpire Ballanfant for his objections to\na third strike.\nSt. Louis     i   6   1\nPittsburgh        7 15   1\nJohnson, Haines and Owen; Blanton and Todd.\nInsist on \"Grants Best Procurable\"\u2014The Original. For sale at Vendors or\ndirect from Mail Order Dept, Liquor Control Bd, 847 Beatty St., Vancouver\nCHANTS\nPROCURABLE\nSfetogngg\nNATIONAL   LEAGUE\nW L Pet.\nChicago   67 43 .609\nNew York    64 44 .593\nSt. Louis   59 48 .551\nPittsburgh   59 49 .546\nBoston       54 57 .488\nCincinnati   45 61   .425\nPhiladelphia   44 67 .396\nBrooklyn  42 65 .393\nChinning With the Ex-Champ\n\"Ves- \/\u2022arfl-ti.Y oo\nwAve i^CKJOie with \/vMk.\n\/\/Vs sTyce wtu puzzl**\n\u25a0Jo?   \/ 7*4tAlK  \"\nOo \/ 6\u00a3LI\u00a3Vtl\nThi&T \/oc\"3 f 5   \/9\n\/ oo \/-\/es &<?,\/?\/e\/\u00a3>&jeovc\n*)AJ0 HAS  i9   TtT\/S^\/^\/C.\n\"fflL    0\/C*    Jo\u20ac  TO\nigwa, --Joe \/$ ft cor\/wzy\n\/MPieOx\/GO    r\/GHn+J? 3\/AJCd\n(   ScuweuNC tr&Yoeo mm ,\n\\r  AMD  A?\/}*    \/$Ajr   Ccr77AJC\nTl   SNOT \u00a3JT\nCw^vW\"*-'\nBy A. R. |.\nALONG TRAIL'S SPORTS WAY\nvows.   And we hear there are a lot\nmore seriously thinking about it.\nStewart Smith, local fireman, is a\nbit of a tease. He tells us he found\na creek in the Salmo district from\nwhich he hauled a dozen Eastern\nbrook trout and took home 12\npounds of fish. That is all he will\ntoll. us.\n\u2022   *   \u2022\nWe were talking with Fred Bradley, Trail-fight fan No. 1. Fred has\nall the \"low down\" on Farr and\nLouis and besides hoping his English countryman to win, figures he'll\njust do that.\nFred scans all the \"dope\" in Canadian, American and Old Country\npapers and has it all down pat. In\nBroadribb, Farr's manager, Bradley\nfeels the British champion has a\nclever trainer. Broadribb has handled several champions and knows\nwhat it's all about.\nBo.tiir\\$\nLeaders\n-^ Qr\t\n(By The Associated Press)\nCharlie Gehringer of the Tigen\nwas 1 he only member of baseball's\nhatting \"big six\" to boost his average through yesterday's games, getting two-for-three to climb three\npoints to .379 and increase his edge\nin the' American league race to seven points.\nStandings of the leaders (first\nthree places in each league); (does\nnot include night).\nG AB R H Pet\nMedwick Cards 108 435 92 174 .400\nP. Waner Pir . 108 438 75 169 .386\nGehringer, Tig 97 375 95 142 .379\nDiMaggio Yank 104 436 113 162 .372\nHartnett, Cubs 76 238 30 88 .370\nGehrig, Yanks 110 412 102 152 .369\nTravis,  Sen     .   87 336   50 124 .369\nAMERICAN   LEAGUE\nW I, Pet.\nNew York  75 33 .694\nDetroit     62 45 .579\nBoston   60 45 .571\nChicago  63 49 .563\nCleveland   51 54 .486\nWashington   50 57 .467\nSt. Louis  35 72 .327\nPhiladelphia      .33 72 .314\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nF.A.C. Enters in\nTrack Events for\nLabor Day Program\nFairview Athletic Club, having\naffiliated with the British Columbia\nTrack and Field association, will enter a track team in the Labor Day\nsports, officials of the club announced Friday. Such star athletes as\nGeorge Bishop, Harold (Rabbit)\nMayo, Raymond Burgess, Robert\nAndrew, Tommy Carlisle and Dick\nWallace will comprise the roster of\nthe F. A. C. team with Manville\n(Slim) Porter as trainer.,\nQUEBEC LADIES' GOLF TEAM\nMONTREAL, Aug. 20 (CP)-Per-\nsonncl of the team to represent Quebec branch of Canadian Ladies Golf\nunion at the interprovinci.il team\nmatch at Winnipeg next month, was\nannounced today by provincial president, Mrs. H. I. Nelson. Nora Hankin of Rosemere club and Mrs. H. W\nSopcr of Kanawaki, who won tho\nfinal ot the championship consolation flight today, were selected from\nMontreal area while Evelyn Mills of\nRoyal Ottawa will be third member\nuf Ihe team.\nthe Leafs, and Eddie Wiseman of the\nAmericans, are also accurate in\nshooting the little white pill around\nthe links.\nThose men who do their bit in the\ncommunity hy making baseball possible were disheartened Wednesday\nevening when there wasn't a large\nenough \"take\" to pay the guarantee\nto the crack visiting club, Eastern\nState hospital from Medical lake.\nThe attendance was poor, awfully\npoor. The boys dished out first-\nrate ball, but only a few were on\nhand to see it.\nIf the brand of baseball is poor,\nthe fans \"crab\". If it is good, they\ndon't turn out to see it. So what's\nto do about lt.\nWednesday night's game was an\nexhibition fixture. Apparently fans\nare interested only when the win\nmeans something other than just a\nvictory. A good crowd saw Medical\nlake play Trail in an Eastern Washington league game here some time\nago. But that loop is a thing of the\npast. Teams across the line can't\nmake the trip and make it pay.\nIt is too late in the season for the\nlocal club to get into any other\ncompetitive ploy but the club Still\nwants to dish out ball, and the\nplayers still want to play.\nBut the fans obviously don't care\nabout rendering support.\nNow that participating in a loop\nwith players across the line is \"out\"\nit would appear that, the only hopes\nfor next season would be a league\nwith Nelson and Rossland.\nThese towns have come up to\nTrail's class in boxla. Why can't it\nbe done in baseball?\n* \u00bb   \u2022\nTrail's junior baseball team still\nhas not found the other squad necessary to make a, game. We are told\nthat W. S. \"Scotty\" Ross' club will\nnot entertain the youngsters, nor\nwill Rossland. Are they afraid the\nkids will beat them?\nClint Hodges, coach of the junior\nclub figures the kids would provide a good game with the seniors\nwith Bogstie hurling for the juniors, but to date we have heard nothing definite about it. We are\nsure that such a contest would certainly draw a large crowd.\n* *   *\nStan Angus is the \"iron man\" of\nthe Tadanac tennis club.\nAt the recent tennis tournament\nat Kelowna, playing the strenuous\ngame all day was not enough for\nhim. Into a shell he went and raced another skuller up and down the\nrippling waters of Lake Okanagan.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nSeveral of this district's leading\ntennis players took in the Kelowna\ntournament. It was at such* a time\nto conflict with the Trail-Rossland-\nTadanac annual tournament which\nstarted last Saturday. Although an\nunorthodox procedure, certain portions of the various playdowns were\nheld up so that these stars could return and carry on in the local fray.\nThere are two ways of looking\nat the matter. Some feel that the\n\"champs\" should have forfeited their\nmatches here if they weren't on\ntime to play, without holding up the\n\"works\", and give \"someone else\"\na chance at the silverware.\nOn the other hand it was only\nproper for this district to be represented at the Kelowna tournament by its best, after all, there\ncan't be much pride in winning a\nrace that isn't run.\nAfter \"going to town\" In two\ngames with the Rossland Redmen,\nKen McGuire, chunky forward,.has\nreturned to the Richmond club at\nthe coast. According to George\nNixon, McGuire .liked the bright\nlights. George sai'd McGuire didn't\nlike finding his way around with a\ncandle until he possessed owl's eyes.\nOne man doesn't make a team, although there are several who think\nio, and Rossland team will g?t along\njust as well without him.\n.    \u2022   *   *\nAn article in a recent issue of\nEsquire claims that marriage makes\na better athlete. If such is the case\nwe can expect a great improvement\nin local sports, for quite a number\nof our stars have taken the marital\nII\nYorkshire Again\nLeads in Cricket\nLONDON, Aug. 20 (CP Cable)-\nAnother overturn came today in the\nclosest duel for first-class county\ncricket championship honors seen\nhere in many seasons, wheA Yorkshire again displaced Middlesex\nfrom the head of the standing.   \u2022\nWinning a match with Glamorgan,\nYorkshire went into the lead with\nan average of 71.20 points compared\nto 70.79 for Middlesex, who won its\nmatch with Somerset yesterday. .\nYorkshire pulled out a win over\nGlamorgan by 85 runs, thanks to\nthe powerful arm of Hedley Verity,\ntest cricket bowler, who took 10\nwickets in two innings today for 147\nruns and gathered 15 points for a\nvictory when it seemed tha best the\nYorkshiremen could do would be to\nwin first innings.\nThe scores:\nYorkshire 356 and 171 for seven\ndeclare* (Yardley 74 not out); Glamorgan 243 and 199 (Verity five for\n76 and five for 71, E. Davies 63); at\nScarborough.\nSurrey defeated Warwickshire on\nfirst innings. Warwickshire 253 and\n263 for eight wickets (Sanstall 75,\nWyatt 72); Surrey 369 for nine declared; at Birmingham.\nEssex defeated Nottinghamshire\nby 171 runs. Essex 301 and 276 for\nseven declared (Wilcox 99); Nottinghamshire 288 and 108; at Southend.\nLancashire beat Northamptonshire\non first innings. Northamptonshire\n227 and 225 for four (Timms 104,\nBrookes 84 not out); Lancachire 230\nfor six declared (Iddon 83 not out);\nat Manchester.\nKent defeated Gloucestershire by\neight wickets. Gloucestershire 434\nand 182; Kent 399 and 219 for two\nwickets; at Dover.\nDerbyshire defeated Sussex by\nnine wickets. Sussex 219 and 311\n(John Langridge 123, Mitchell five\nfor 87); Derbyshire 485 for eight declared and 47 for one wicket; at\nDerby.\nHonve Runs\n< Does not include night, game)\nYesterdays homers: Dickey. Yankees; Nelson, Athletics; Greenberg,\nFoxx, Tigers; Bell, Clift, Browns;\nAverill, Indians; Walker- Radcliff.\nWhite Sox; Cronin, Red Sox; Ott.\nGiants; Camilli, Phillies; English,\nDodgers; Medwick, Mize, Cardinals,\none each.\nLeaders: DiMaggio. Yankees. 35;\nFoxx, Red Sox, 31; Gehrig, Yankees. 28; Medwick, Cardinals, 27;\nGreenberg; Tigers, 27; Dickey. Yankees. 25; Ott. Giants, 25; Trosky.\nIndians, 25.\nLeague totals: American 608, Nation 489, total 1097,\nREMEMBER WHEN?\n(By The Canadian Press)\nBobby Pearce easily defeated Canada's top-notch scullers at the British Empire Games at Burlington seven years ago today. Jack Beresford\nof England and Joe Wright, jr., of\nToronto, both Diamond Sculls winners, trailed. Pearce made Hamilton his home, turned professional in\n1933 and is still tops.\nSPORTS\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nBy ALAN GOULD\nAssociated   Press   Sports   Editor\nNEW YORK, Aug. 20 (AP)-The\nreturn match between Joe Louis and\nMax Schmeling is all but signed,\nsealed and delivered\u2014for next June\n. . . for all we know it may be signed now but Promoter Mike Jacobs\nreserves the right to change his\nmind, on this or any other fistic\nproject ... it will take place In\nNew York, and should draw a $1,-\n000,000 \"gate\" . . . one reason, among others, why it can't be held In\nthe big town this fall is the presence of the anti-Nazi issue in New\nYork's mayoralty campaign . .\nmoreover, three heavyweight title\nbouts in one year, even if held in\nseparate towns, would be a strain\non the industry . . .\nSchmeling made the mistake of\ntrying to outsmart Promoter Jacobs\n... he turned down a bonafide offer of $300,000 to fight Jim Braddock for the title . . , then the German sought a match abroad with\nTommy Farr, only to have the\nWelshman taken out from under\nhim for the bout here with Joe\nLouis . . .\nIt's literally true that you have to\nget up early in the morning to pull\nanything over on Mike Jacobs . . .\nwhen Mike crawla out of the hay\nas late as 5:30 a.m. he apologizes for\nover-sleeping . . , his architect, Lionel Levy, figures four hours of\nshuteye is par for the course when\na big fight Joe gets underway . . ,\nJoe Burk, fruit farmer, who won\nthe United States sculling title this\nyear, will row against the pick of\nCanadian rivals at Toronto, Sept. 7,\nover a mile course . . . Burk uses\nan unusually high sculling stroke\n(40 to the minute), weighs 195\npounds, and represents Penn. A C.\nin competition . . .\nZipp Newman, the Birmingham\n(Ala.) Observer, reports Slingin'\nSammy Baugh, The Texas passing\nwizard, will draw one of the top National league pro football salaries\nthis season, $500 per game ... the\nNavy's boxing coach, back from a\nEuropean trip with the midshipmen,\nthinks Tommy Farr is \"tough and\ntricky enough\" to give Joe Louis a\nreal argument but Broadway figures\none dollar may get you five next\nweek if you think the Welshman\nhas a chance to last more than six\nrounds against the bomber . . .\nINTERNATIONAL\nJersey   City   at   Montreal,   two\ngames, postponed, rain.\nINTERNATIONAL\nBaltimore 1-10, Toronto 0-8,\nSyracuse 2-5, Buffalo 15-0\nNewark 5, Rochester 1.\nASSOCIATION\nMinneapolis 2, Toledo 6.\nSt Paul 1, Columbus 2.\nKansas City 1, Louisville 6.\nGreenskeeperIs\nManitoba Champ\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 20 (CP)--Ar-\nihur Land, assistant greenskeeper\nat the St. Charles Country club,\nWinnipeg, today won the Manitoba\nopen golf championship, defeating\nthe provincial amateur champion,\nBobby Reith, Winnipeg, in. a nine-\nhole playoff after they tied with 151\nfor the 38 holes.\nU.S. LEADS 3-0INWIGHTMAHCUP\nPLAY; NEED ONLY ONE WIN TODAY\nFARR'S CUT UNDER EYE\nNOT SERIOUS\nLONG BRANCH, N. J\u201e Aug. 20\n(AP)\u2014An examination today of Ihe\ncut under the right eye suffered by\nTommy Fan* in training yesterday\nsatisfied Bill Brown, member of the\nNew York State airile'ic commission,\nnnd Dr. William Walker, commission physician, that the injury was\nslight.\nFOREST HILLS, N.Y.. Aug. 20\n(AP)\u2014Three of the four players\ndesignated to defend the Wightman\ncup, women's international tennis\ntrophy, provided the United States\nwith a well-night insurmountable\n3-0 lead over Great Britain today at\nthe West Side Tennis club.\nTiie United States women were\nleft needing only one victory in tomorrow's concluding set of four\nmatches to attain their seventh consecutive triumph and llth in the\nseries of 15 encounters.\nAlice Marble, opening the program\nbefore a gathering of little more\nthan 1000 spectators, dropped the\nfirst set but rallied to defeat Ruth\nMary Hardwick, 4-8, 6-2, 6-4, and\nlater returned to the court to team\nwith Mrs. Sarah Palfrey Fabyan in\na 6-2, 6-3 conquest of Great Britain's\nEvelyn Dearman and Joan Ingram.\nIn between, her fellow-Califor-\nnian, Helen Jacobs, swept to a 6-1,\n4-6, 6-4 victory over Kay Stammers,\nNo. 1 star of the visiting forces.\n\u2022PAGE THIRTIH\nDICKEY'S H0MEI\nWINS FOR YANKS\nNEW YORK, August 20, (AP) 4\nBill Dickey walloped his 25th hon'.\nof the year with one out in the 10U\ninning and the score tied to give t\nYankees an 8-7 decision over thJ\nPhiladelphia Athletics and run thel!\ncurrent winning streak to fivj\nstraight.\nIt was the Yanks' only homer i\nthe day, but it was enough to givd\nthem their second extra-inning de^\nvision in as many days.\nIvy Paul Andrews, making\nfirst start for the Y.anks since nd\nwas obtained from Cleveland, breez**}\ned along until the seventh when hj[\nblew up on Lynn Nelson's homer.\nPhiladelphia .     7      12\nNew York 8      11\nRoss, Nelson. and Brucker; An-|\ndrews, Murphy and Dickey.\n7-6 FOR CLEVELAND\nCHICAGO, August 20, (AP) -I\nCleveland pounded out fourteen hlt|l\noff Thornton Lee and Clint Brownl\ntoday to beat the Chicago White Sox.l\n7-6 in the opener of the four-gams|\nseries.\nScore:\nCleveland         7      14      0|\nChicago        6      10      If\nGalehouse. Hullin and Pytlak; Lee\nC. Brown and Sewell\nBROWNS TAKE SLUGFEST\nST. LOUIS, August 20, (AP) \u2014\nThe Browns dominated a slugfest\nwith the Detroit Tigers today, winning the series-opener 11-6.\nBeau Bell, Harlond Clife, Hank\nGreenberg and Pete Fox hit hom\u00ab\nruns.\nScore:\nDetroit       6      12      3\nSt. Louis       11      16      t\nGill, Wade, Russell and York!\nKnott, Waikup and Hemsley.\nUMPIRE OVERCOME\nBOSTON, August 20, (AP) -Aj\nbroiling heat overcame umpire Clar*\nence (Brick) Owens in the seventh\ninning, the Washington Senators to*\nday took the series opener from tha\nRed Sox 3-1, for their tenth victory\nin fourteen games with the Hose,\nOwens was taken to his hotel,'\nwhere his condition tonight was im*.\nproved.\nJoe Cronin's homer in the left\nfield screen in the Boston half saved the Sox from a shutout\nScore:\nWashington       3       8       1\nBoston        1      8      ',\nWeavef. Linke and R, Ferrell\nGrove and Desautels, Berg.\nLONDON, Aug. 20 (AP)\u2014111 most\nof the year, Pam Barton announced\ntoday she would not defend her\nUnited States golf championship at\nMemphis, October 4-9. Miss Barton\nsaid she would play no more golf\nuntil next year.\nSiffi^SfflMKHSlSMSSSWI\nDRINK A TOAST\nTO THAT POPULAR\nFAVORITE\nPolar Igloo\nThe New Ice\nCream With So\nMany Delicious\nFlavors\n\"We Make It Ourselves\"\nG\nOLDEN\nATE CAFE\nrtisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nI\n ppp\u00bby,.mw^^-r^\nPAGE FOURTEEN-\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON, B.C.--SATURDAY MORNING, AUG. 21, 1937\nOpportunity Uses Classified Ads \"You Can't Afford to Miss Them\nJfabmt latly Nctus\nMember of the Canadian Daily\nNewspapers Association\nTELEPHONE   144\n' Private Exchange Connecting to\nall Departments\nSubscription Rates\nSingle copy  .....\nBy carrier per week\nBy carrier per year -\n$   .05\n.25\n13 00\nBy mail In Canada, to subscribers living outside regular\ncarrier areas, per nionlh 00c;\nthree months *\\ 80; six months\n$3 00. one year $6 00.\nUnited States and Great Britain, one month 75c; six months\n$4.00; one year $7.50.\nForeign countries, other than\nUS., same as above plus any\nextra postage.\nAdvertising   Rates\nIlea tine\n(Minimum 2 Lines)\n2 lines, per Insertion $ .22\n2 lines,  6  cuiiseculive\ninsertions    88\n(6 lor the prire of 4)\n3 lines, per insertion _ 33\n3 lines. 6 cunserutive\ninsertions    132\n2 lines. 1  month  2 86\n3 lines..! month   4 29\nFor    advertisements    ot   more\nthan three lines, ralrulait on\nthe above Dasis\nBox   numbers   lie   extra.   i*his\ncovers any number of insertion*..\nCRANBROOK Social...\nCRANBROOK-Mrs. T. R. Flett\nentertained at tea in honour of her\nguest.s Mrs. Hart and Miss Edna\nMatheson of Vancouver, and her\ndaughter Miss Dorothy Flett of Vancouver, who is spending her vaca-\n| tion here. Guests were Mrs, Hart\nMiss Matheson, Mrs, James Taylor.\nMrs, G, Palmore, Mrs. G. Taylor,\nMrs. R, W, Hardy, Mrs. C. A. Sneath,\nMrs. H. A. McKowan, Miss Kathleen\nDezall, Miss Nancy Miles, Miss Ruth\n(McKowan, Miss Dorothy Flett and\nMiss Marion Flett,\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Wilson and\ntheir guests, Mrs. George Wilson,\nMiss Barbara Lax and Bill Wilson\nof Farnham, Que,, were visitors at\nSinclair Hot springs during the\nweek-end,\n\u2022 Miss Delia Baxter has left for\nSan Francisco where she will spend\nher holidays.\n\u2022 Mrs. Hart, who has been the\nguest of Mrs. Flett, lias returned to\nher home in Vancouver.\n\u2022 Miss M. Mailman, and Mr. and\nMrs.. C. Duncan of Fernie are guests\nof Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Bride,\n\u2022 Mrs. E. S, Jones and famil.*. and\nMiss Helen Scott have returned from\nInvermere.\n\u2022 Miss Mary Louise Attridge,\nwho has been visiting with friends\nat McBains lake, has returned to the\ncity.\n\u2022 Mrs. R. Haines of Wynndel,\nwho has been visiting her mother,\nMrs. 1. Baxter, has returned to her\nhome,\n\u2022 George Campion, who has been\nspending his vacation with his parents in Nelson, has returned to thc\ncity. ,\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. A, Bellhouse of\nCanal Flat, were city visitors Monday.\n\u2022 Mrs. G, Gibbons entertained\nat bridge Tuesday in honor of Mrs.\nGeorge Wilson and Miss Barbara\nLax of farnham, Que., who are\nguqts of Mrs. W. 11. Wilson.\n\u2022 Mrs.' Birce, who has been visiting Mrs, Gill has relumed to her\nhome in Vancouver.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs, P. Dow visited\nCreston during the week-end.\n\u2022 Miss Helen Gilroy left Monday for Wynndel, where she will\nvisit Mr. and Mrs Haines.\n\u2022 Miss M. McLanders of Nelson\nis a guest of her brother-in-law\nand sister, Mr. and Mrs. J. Davidson.\n\u2022 Mr, and Mrs. F, A. MacDonald\nof Creston were visitors recently,\nguests of Mr. and Mrs. P, Dow.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs, J. Moffatt. and\ndaughter, Miss Hazel Bowley and\nMiss Enid Home left Sunday for\nMcBains Lake.\n\u00a9 Miss Jessie McLanders. Miss\nTommy and Miss Gerry Davidson\nwho have been visiting in Nelson,\nhave returned.\n\u2022 Miss Phyllis Barchard of Trail\nis a guest of Miss Mary Wilson.\n\u2022 Mrs. L, P. Williams and son\nTrevor of Kamloops, who have been\nguests of Mr, and Mrs. McFadden,\nhave returned home.\n\u2022 Mrs, Ellen McLean, who has\nbeen visiting her parents, Mr. and\nMrs. S, Johnson, has returned to\nher homo at Lethbridge,\n\u2022 Mrs. J, M. Nedelec and daughter Marcella. who were the guests\nof Mrs, C. B. Simpson have returned\nto their home at Yahk.\n\u2022 E. Home of Canal Flat spent\nthe week-end visiting in the city.\nCRANBROOK-Miss A. Woodland\nwho   has   been   attending   summer\nschool at Victoria arrived here Friday,\n\u2022 Mrs. Rowse and daughters\nhave left to visit relatives in Edmonton for the remainder of the\nholidays.\n\u2022 Mrs. B. Littley and children\nof Rossland are guests of Mrs. D. R\nMacDonald.\n\u2022 Miss Muriel Baxter has returned from Victoria, where she attended summer school.\n\u2022 Mrs, E. A. Hill, who has been\nvisiting friends in Penticton, has returned to the city.\n\u2022 Mrs, A, McGrath, who was a\nguest of Mrs, A. J. Balment, has returned to her home at Yahk.\n\u2022 Miss Kathleen McFarlane, who\nhas been a guest of Mr, and Mrs,\nT. A. Wallace at Nelson, has relumed to the city.\n\u2022 Mrs. Leonard, Miss Dorothy\nand Archie Leonard have left for\nBoisevain, Sask,, where they will\nspend the next three weeks.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. J. Wadsworth.\nwho have been guests of Mr, and\nMrs. O. C. Redpath, have returned\nto their home al Moose Jaw.\n\u2022 Mrs. T. N. Weir and daughters\nChristine and Marjory of Invermere\nare guests of Mr. and Mrs. M. A.\nBeale, and Mrs. James Taylor at\nGreen Bay.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Palmer of Wilmer, who were visitors in thc city\nhave returned home.\n\u2022 Constable and Mrs. Jarvis and\nfamily, who have been visiting in\nNelson have returned to their home\nhere.\n\u2022 Miss Ethel Dingley, who was a\nguest of Mrs. T. A. Wallace al\nNelsen, has returned to the city,\n\u2022 Miss Olive Norgrove, who has\nbeen attending summer school at\nVancouver, has returned to the city,\n\u2022 Miss Florence MacDonald, who\nhas been visiting her parents in\nGrand Forks, has returned to resume   her   duties   at   St.   Eugene\nj training  school.\n|    \u2022    Mrs. H. Fyles has left for Van-\nj couver where she will visit, friends\n!    \u2022    Mr,  and  Mrs.   Robert   Slater.\nMr. Slater Sr. and son William of\nCalgary   were   the   guests   of   Mrs\nJames Butt.\n\u2022 Miss Dora Manners has resumed her training at the hospital\nhere after a vacation,\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Flowers\nare spending their holidays visiting in northern Washington.\n\u2022 Mrs. Kilby is spending a holiday  in  Vancouver.\n\u2022 Mrs. L. E. Gilinas and daughters of Stettler, Alta.. who have\nbeen visiting Hrs. H. Sheedy have\nreturned to their home.\n\u2022 Miss May Maltman, who has\nbeen a guest of Mr, and Mrs. W, W\nBride has returned to McBains lake,\nwhore she is spending the summer,\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Easton, who\nhave been guests of Mi', and Mrs.\nS. McLeary. have returned to their\nhome in Lethbridge,\n\u2022 Miss Lindsay, who has been\nspending her vacation at her home\nin Kamloops, has returned to the\nSt. Eugene training school.\n\u2022 Mrs. Colvin Meliurney is visiting her sister in Calgary.\n\u2022 Members of the Cranbrook\nGyro club who arc attending thc\nGyro convention at Spokane arc\nC. J. Knight. W. G T. Taylor and\nG Hanna. Others from thc city\nwho accompanied them are Mrs.\nKnighl, Mrs, Hanna, Mr, and Mrs.\nA. C. Bowness, Miss Enid Shankland\nand D. McNeil.\nKIMBERLEY Social...\nKIMBERLEY, B.C.\u2014E. Parks of\nMcDougall Townsite received word\nMonday that he had passed his examinations at the Canadian Western\nCollege   in  Calgary.\n\u2022 Miss Stella Patience left Saturday for a vacation at Vancouver.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. W. Mason hrrve\nreturned   from   St,   Mary's  Lake.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs, W. 'schad visited Nelson and Ainsworth last week\n\u2022 Miss Lillian Moss left Monday\nfor Prince Rupert,\n\u00bb Mrs. II. Stanton visited Creston\nSunday to see her father, Louis\nL.-amy, who recently suffered a\ns'roke,\n\u2022 ('. Sorenson, hockey player\narrived Sunday night and will be\nattached to the Dynamiters.   '\n\u2022 Zelda, Nola and Arlene Sims\nleft Wednesday for a vacation at the\ncoasl.\n\u2022 Mrs. M. J. Halpin and children\nleft Sunday morning with R. B\nMcLeod, for the Coeur d'Alene country, where they will camp for a\nweek. Mr. Halpin left Thursday to\njoin them. *\n\u2022 George Clerf, who is a patient\nin McDougall hospital, is greatly\nimproved.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Roskilly left for\nl a  vacation  in   Spokane  and  coas;\ncities.\n\u2022 Mrs. Gill left Sunday for a\nholiday  in   Spokane.\n\u2022 Mrs. R. L. Mathews and daughter, Shirley, returned to Winnipeg\nSaturday after spending three\nmonlhs with Mrs. Mathews' parents.\nMr. and Mrs. T. F, Scott of Chapman\nCamp.\n\u2022 Mrs. N, P. McKenzie and\ndaughter. Jessie, lefl for Vancouver\nand Victoria, Jessie will enter a\ncoast hospital to train for nursing.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. A. Watson and\nfamily returned to Chapman Camo\nafter a vacation spent a the coas'.,\n1    \u2022   W, Young Jr. of Trail is spend-\n1 ing some  time   here  at  his home\nrecuperating  from  an   illness.\n\u2022 Mrs. Stan GrcV and son, Duncan left Thursday to spend a vaca-\ntion at Coeur d'Alene.\n\u2022 Mr, and Mrs. W. Evans visited\nSpokane during Ihe week-end.\nFORT WILLIAM, Ont., (CP) -! The largest plant in the world\nShelterings under a tree during an 'manufacturing smokeless fuel, gas\nelectric storm, two cows owned by j and oil, is at Glenbnig, Glasgow, Its\nW, J. Phillips to South Neebing, ' daily oulpul is 101) tons ef fuel,\nwere killed when lightning shuck j 15.00 gallons of crude oil and 15,-\nthe tree and shattered it. i 000,003 cubic feet of gas.\nBIRTHS\nBROADFOOT-To Mr. and Mrs.\nBruce Broadfoot, Third street, at\nKootenay Lake General hospital.\nAugust 19, a daughter.\n~BEATTY-fo\" Mr. and~Mrir~Al-\nfred Beatty, Kootenay street, at\nKootenay Lake General hospital,\nAugust 20, a daughter.\nPERSONAL\nNATURAL FEMININE\nHYGIENE\nEvery married woman should have\nthis Bulletin which explains the\nfamous Dr. K Ofilno's method and\ntheory of fertile and sterile\nperiods in women's cycle.\nSsnd 25c to cover cost of Litei-\nature. mailing, etc.\nHEALTHWELL\nP. Q. Drawer 267.     Vancouver, B C\n (1664)\nMEN! GET VIGUH Al ONcFTnEW\nOstrex Tonic Tablets contain raw\noyster invifinrators and othei\nstimulants One rinse peps up or\ngans. glands If not delighted\nmaker refunds few cents paid\nCall, write. Mann-Rutherford Co\n(1750i\nMEN'S SUPERFINE \"SANITARY\nrubbers. None belter. Send $1.00\nfor 15 guaranteed. Also cheaper\nline at 25 for $1 01 Mention which.\nBURRARD SPECIALTY CO., IS\nHastings St., W , Vancouver.\n(1004)\nWOMEN WANTED~TO~~START\nPrivate Kindergarten Schools in\ntheir own homes this coming fall\nFree booklet on request Canadian Kindergarten Institute. Win\nnipeg.    Established 1927.      (18571\nFRESH SANITAhY RUBBER LA*\ntex special 25 for $100 Write foi\nfree catalogue Nalional Importers\nBox 244, Edmonton. (18351\nLECAL NOTICES\nNOTICE OF CANCELLATION\nNOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN thai\nIhe reserve covering Lot 12498, Kootenay District, situated at Kuskanook, B. C, is cancelled.\nH. CATHCART.\nDeputy Minister of Lands\nLands Department,\nVictoria. B. C.\n31st July, 1937.\n f1846)\nHELP WANTED\n'DIESEL\"\nDO   YOU   KNOW- thai   the   Diesel  fn\n(tine mn nn fr. chircrs fin lins eminent\nrWd I9.i(, with the Urj^l volume oi\nbusiness in die history nl the industry\u2014an increnie of tfl% nvrr 1\",15\n(another rerun!-(leaking vear). Com-\nliarrd to W) it was a 50!)% iiine.-^e.\nOur l mini un lia* already been tlir\nme.ins of a nr-t\\it number ni amliitimi<\nmer enterinfi tins field. Why not ynu?\nFor information rriiardiiitf our Home\nStiuly and F'adiral Training courts\nsnd rojiy of our free and intereMtic\npublication \"Diesel News.\" write to\nHEMPHILL DIESEL ENGINEERING\nSCHOOLS, LIMITED\n1365 Granville St.,        Vancouver. B. C.\nWANTED, NELSON CIVIC CEN-\nter Commission require llio services of nn Assistant Refrigerating\nEngineer. Duties to commence\nabout November 10th nnd continue\nuntil closing of Arena for season\n1037-38, Salary $125.00 per month.\nApnly in person or by letter.\nD. StDenis, Secretary-Manager.\n(2033;\nREFRIGERATION AND AIR CON-\nditioning want men to train as\nservicemen in this fast growing\nindustry, Complete course $36.00.\nterms $2.50 per week. Apply Department \"A\" Western Technical\nTrades Association Limited, 470.\nGranville Street, Vancouver. R. C,\n(2015)\nAVIATION\" ENGINEERING WITH\nactual flying instruction available\nto young men willing to devote\nspare time to preliminary training and desirous of entering aviation as a career. Write for free\ninformation to Box 1881, Daily\nNews. (188H\nANYONE\" WISHING \"TO SELL\nEggs graded or ungraded, write to\nG. Cuthbert. Trail, B, C.     (2017)\nMIDDLE AGED WOMAN FOB\nhousekeeper, apply Dox 196, Ross-\nhind. (l!)9fi)\nMlbDLE-AGED\"\"HOUSE\"KEEPER\n(refined).     Nursing    experience.\nGood home. Box 2028. Daily News.\n(2028)\nInsects learned to manufacture\npaper, administer anesihics, farm,\ndomesticate other creatures, ventilate Iheir homes, and make pottery,\nlong before man ever dreamed of\nsuch achievements.\nA CLASSIFIED \"AD\"\nwill tell more people, more times, more effectively\nand get more results, more economically than any\nother medium.\nPHONE 144\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\n\"CLASSIFIED\"\nLARGEST IN THE INTERIOR\nREAD MORE USED MORE\nLOST AND FOUND\nTo Finders\nIf you find a cat 01 dug. porkct-\nbonk lewplry or fur or anything else of value, telephone\nthe Daily News A \"Found' Ad\nwill be inserted without rost Jo\nyou We will collect from the\nowner\nLOST, SILVER BANGLE BRACE-\nlet. Willow Point Dance, Saturday\nniaht. Initials N. E. S. Reward.\nPhone 19!) X. (2022)\nLOST-GREEN CANOE. DRIFTED\nfrom Willow Point., Findei Phone\n782 L 2. (2016)\nPOULTRY, SUPPLIES, ETC.\nPULLETS\ny m SKt     Raised  from  the\n'VJkW       \"Chicks   Which\nGive Results.\"\ni.etniorns,   8   weeks  $65 per 100\n10 weeks     75 per 10C\nBarred Rock-s t.nd\nLight Sussex 8 weeks   75 per 10C\n10   weeks       85   *er 100\nRUMP & SENDALL LTD.\nLANGLEV PRAIRIE, B.C.\n(1749)\nAUTOMOTIVE\nFOR  SALE.  '27   ESSEX,    CHEAP\nfor cash.   Apply 718, Baker street\n(1982)\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nGIRL WANTS WORK. UPSTAIRS\nhotel or house work. Could take\ncharge. Box 2040, Daily News.\n(2040)\nELECTRICAL    MACHINERY\nFOR SALE\nMACHINERY\nSpecial  Sale of Guaranteed\nExchange\n32-volt glass jar batteries.\n80 amp. $66.50; 100 amp.\n$76.50; 140 amp. $95.00;\n180 amp. $123.00; 200\namp. $139.00. Also a few\nrebuilt batteries cheap for\ncash. Write for prices and\nquotations.\nLEEDER'S LTD.\n1375 Portage Ave, Winnipeg. Man.\n(2020)\nNakusp Golf Champ\nIs Given Davies Cup\nNAKUSP, B.C.-William Morgan\nchampion Nakusp golfer was recently presented with the, Davie.-'\ncup at the completion of the 1937\ncup competition. Tiie presentation\nwas made al a gathering of Golf club\nmembers at Mr. Morgan's home,\nThe annual dance sponsored by\nthe Nakusp Branch of Canadian Legion U.K.S.I,, on ihe anniversary o.f\nthe opening of Ihe Legion hall was\nheld Wednesday evening with many\nvisitors from out-of-town in attendance. A six-piece orchestra supplied\nmusic. C. I*. Hambling was floor\nmanager.\nFOR SALE\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nETC., FOR SALE\nFOR SALE CHEAP\n1 Oak Show Case, 4 [t.; 1 Oak\nShow Case. 6 ft.; 1 Wall Case,\n14 tt., large back Mirrors; 2'Wall\nCases, 8 tt.. no mirrors; 1 Toledo\nCandy Scale.\nFAIRVIEW   CO-OPERATIVE\nSTORES\nNELSON Ave. P. O. 502\n(2004)\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALK\non easy terms in Alberta and\nSaskatchewan Write for full in\nformation to 908 Dept of Natura\nResources. CPR.. Calgary Alta\n117511\n5-ROOM COTTAGE, 1 ACRE LAND\nModern plumbing, lake frontage\n5 minutes from ferry. Also 15\nacres north shore property. Will\nsubdivide.   P. O. Box 734, City\n(1988)\n5~acWsTmTgXted~orchard,\nno house, good barn, chicken house\nhay shed and shack. Apply Mrs\nW. B. Martin. Creston, B. C\n(2023)\nsijTroom\" IesTdenceTW ver*\nnon street, excellent condition\nfireplace, .full cement basement\nand furnace. PhoneJ62.      0875)\n2~lots1ngarden. WATER AND\nhose. Block 13, Falls St. Apply\n318 Observatory St., Nelson. (2002\n80~ACRES\" 0F\"TIMBERLAND, AT\nFruitvale, B. C. Will sell cheap\nBox 1997, Daily News.       (1997)\nCORNER LOTS BETWEEN CHAT-\nham and High. Apply Box 2031,\nDaily News. (2031)\nLIVESTOCK FOR SALE\nTEAM OF HORSES, HARNESS.\nWagons, etc. Dominion Dairy. Ph\n188 L 2. (2019)\nYOUNG PUREBRED JERSEY COW\nHamilton, Perry Siding, B. C.\n(2018)\nWANTED\nWANTED AGED MAN OR LADY\nwith small steady income, without\nhome, to go 50-50 running furnished home, which 1 own Box\n1979. Daily News. U979i\n6 OR 7 ROOM HOUSE. FURN, OR\nunturn.    Comfortable. Ph. 373R1\n(2034)\nYEARLING \"LEGHORN HENS. 1st\nclass stock. Thompson Poultry Farm\n(1990)\nTHY  A  WANT   AD\nICE DELIVERIES\nKEEP YOUR\nWITH\nICE\n'iliiams Transfer\nPHONE 106\n(1984)\nbusiness amcl Professional Directory\nAssayer;\nE W. WIDDOWSON, PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst. Assayer. Metallurgical\nEngineer Sampling Agents at\nTrail Smclt-r. 301-305 Joseohme\nSt.. Nelson. B. C. (1761)\nGRENVILLE H. GRIMWOOD\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist filfl\nBaker Street. Nelson. B. C. P O\nBox No 726. Representing shipper's interest. Trail, B. C.      I17G21\nNEW AND USED GALVANIZED\nPipe and Fittings, all sizes\u2014Extra\nheavy slate surface Roofing with\nNails & Cement, about 80 Ibs. per\nroll, $2.75. - Light ply Roofing\n(without Nails and Cement) 125\nfeet by 12 inches wide, 70c per\nroll.\u20142Vi\" Nails $3.50 per 100 Ibs\n-Wire Rope; Belt; '\"-ulleys: Galvanized Iron Roofing; Grain and\nPotato Sacks; Canvas: Doors and\nWindows: Hose\u2014Merchandise and\nequipment of all descriptions-\nHundreds of our customers without exception testify to our $2.50\nper gallon guaranteed Paint for\nall purposes; Colors, Grey\nGreen, White and Cream.\nB. C. JUNK CO.\n125 Powell St.     Vancouver, B. C.\n  (1858)\nPIPE   TUBES   FITTINGS ~~\nNEW AND USED\nLarge stock for immediate shipment\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD\n1st Avenue and Main St.\nVancouver. B.C.\n(1756)\nDRESSED LAMBS $150; ~2 MILK\ncows $100. Wool 14c lb. Oldsmobile\ntruck,   $70.     Mackereth,   Broadwater. B. C. (2036)\nPIPE~AND FITTINGS' ~\nCANADIAN   JUNK  Company   Ltd\n250 Prior St. Vancouver.  BC\n (1757)\nFOR   SALE - BARRELS.   KEGS\nsugar sacks, liners McDonald .lam\n_Co.. Ltd^Nelson, B. C. 0758)\nWE SELL EVERYTHffl(TWl3AR*\ngain prices. The Ark Store.  (1759)\nGOOD USED GAS RANGE.TWCE\n.    $3.   Kerr Apartments. (1760)\nFOR SALE 2 WELL BOATHOUSE.\n_j;ood. condition. Ph. 535.        (2035)\nMAIL CLERKS\nSUMMER HOMES, RESORTS\nAND CAMPS\nFOR A QUIET VACATION SPEND\nYour Holidays at the Outle_t Hotel\nProcter Furnished Cabins\"on the\nLake Front in the Shady Orchard   Grocery storft  in connec*\n*   tion W. A. Ward. (1752)\nWE EXPECT EXAMINATIONS\nfor Letter Carriers, Mail Clerks\nand Stenographers will be held\nthis Fall. The way to get these\npositions is to act at once. Full\ninformation free. We have helped hundreds to obtain Civil Service positions and can help you\nyou. Address M. C C. Civil Service Schools, Winnipeg, oldest in\nCanada. (1816)\nFOR RENT, HOUSES, APTS.\nETC.\nVICTORY    HOTEL    FURNISHED\nsingle and double rooms. Ph. 940\n(1899)\nFIVFTTtOOM- BUNGALOWr~7i5\nCedar St. Phone Mrs. Croll, 614 X.\n(1995)\nr^TORNiSHED\"Ti0USEKEEPING\nroom. Oakes, 618 Victoria Street.\n(2025)\nFURNISHED  HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms for rent\nAnnable   Bln-I*\n(1753)\nTERRACE APTS. Beautiful modern\nfrigidaire equipped suites.   (1754)\nFURNISHED SUITES-IN*~ THF\nKerr apartments. (1755)\nFOR SALE OR RENT\nLOVELY MODERN HOME. SEVEN\nlarge bright rooms, white bath,\nfurnace, fireplace, and charming\ngrounds, all in Al condition,\nnear car, or would rent to careful tenant on very reasonable\nterms. Mrs. M. Sandercock, cor\nRichard and Stanley streets,\n(2041)\nLOVELY SUMMElTHOMEr VERY\nreasonable, to right party. Apply\nroom 6. Strathcona hotel, or P O\nBox 617. ' (203!))\nDOCS, PETS, FOR SALE\nAutomobile Radiator Repairs\nNELSON RAdTaTOR WORKS\nExpert Repairs\nNew Cores Installed\nCapitol Motors Building\n(1763)\nChiropractors\nZ1Z McMillan.~b7c7NEURO-\ncalometer and X-ray,    16   years\nexperience. McCulloch Blk. (17641\nW\"     BROCK ^CHIROPRACTOR\nlady attendant 2-5 p.m. Gilker blk\n(1765)\nCorsets\nSpencer corests.   Surgical Belts  M\nW. Mitchell. K. W. C. Block, Ph. 668\n(1706)\nEngineers and Surveyors\nH. D DAWSON NelsonTB7c\nMine Surveys and Reports\nB. C Land Surveyor.   (1767)\nBOYD C. AFFLECK Fruitvale\" B C.\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor\nReg. Professional Civil Engineer\n(17681\nSCOTCH COLLIE PUPS, WELL\nmarked, both sables and tri-colors\nReasonable prices, also gTown\ndogs. Will furnish registration papers. Gibson, Longbeach, RR No. 1\nNelson. (19991\nREGTSTERlifr~'SCOTTIES'' AND\nAired -les, from best imported\nstock. Whatshan Kennels, Needles,\nB. C. (1976)\nWant Ads Get Results\nFuneral  Directors\nSOMERS'^FUNERAt ~HOME~\n702 Bilker St. Phone 25!'\nCert   Mortician      Lady Attendant\nModern Ambulance Service\n(1769)\n~mYis~funerTl7serv!ce \"\nEmbalming & Plastic Work\nLady Mortician Asssting\nPhono 95. Nelson, B   C\n_ (1770)\nInsurance and Real Estate\nMuiual Benefit Health & Ace. Assoc\nWorld's largest Al, W. Foote Dist\nMgr.   Hume Hotel,   Nelson, B C\n(1771)\nROBERTSON\" REALTY\" CO.. LTD\nReal Estate. Insurance. Rentals\n311, Baker St. Phone 68.       1772)\nR. W DAWSON. Real Estate. Insurance. Rentals. Next Hipperson\nHardware. Baker St. Phone 197\n(1773)\n^D7T3T.ACkW0\"aDr\"livrurance of\nevery description.   Real Est. Ph 99\n(1774)\nH. E. DILL, AUTO AND FIRE IN*\nsuranee. Real Estate. 508, Ward St\n1_    (17751\nJ. E. ANNABLE. \"REAL ESTATE\nRentals, Insurance.   Annable Blk\n(17761\nSEE\"\"l)T L\" \"KERR7 AGENT   FOR\nWawanesa Fire Ins. For better rates\n(1777i\nCHAS. F.McHARDY.lNSURANCE\nReal  Estate.    Phone 135.    (1778)\nMachinists\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nFor all Classes ot Metal Work, Lathe\nWork, Drilling. Boring and Grinding.  Motor  Rewiring. Acetylene\nWelding\nTelephone 503     324 Vernon Street\n        (1779)\nH E. STEVENSON, Machinists.\nBlacksmiths. Electric and Acetylene\nWelders. Expert workmen. Satisfaction guaranteed. Mine & Mill work a\nspecialty. Fully equipped shop. Ph.\n98. 708-12 Vernon St.. Nelson. (1780)\nMine & Equipment Machinery\nE. L. WARBURTON. REPRESENT-\ning C- C. Snowdon. oils, greases.\nRaints. etc. Richardson road building machinery and equipment.\nAgent mine machinery, rails pipe\nsteels, sheet iron. etc. Steam coals\nOffice 518 Ward street. Phone 53,\nResidence phone 239. (1781)\nNotaries\nD.    J.   ROBERTSON,     NOTARY\nPublic. Nelson. Phone 157L. (1782)\nPatents\nAN OFFER TO EVERY INVENT-\nor, list of wanted inventions and\nfull information sent free. The\nRamsay Company. World Patent\nAttorneys. 273 Bank St., Ottawa.\n(1783)\nPhotography\nOUR BUSINESS FOR 1936 AL-\nmost doubled that of 1935. There\nmust be a reason. A trial order\nwill convince YOU of the superior\nPhoto Finishing done in our plant.\nYour films developed and printed\n25c Renrints eight for 25c. KRYS-\nTAL PHOTOS, WILKIE. SASK,\n (1784)\nSanitariums\nDR. AI.DRICH. SPOKANE. WASH.\nHeart. Stomach, Kidney, Bladder\nDiseases treated.  X-ray work.\n(1785)\nSash Factory\nLAWSON'S     SASH      FACTORY,\nHardwood merchant, 217 Baker St\n(1786)\nSecond Hand Stores\nWE   BUY.   SELL  &   EXCHANGE\nfurniture, etc.    The Ark Store.\n(1787)\nTHE GUMPS\nFOR WANT AD\nSERVICE\nPHONE 144\nBy Cus Edson\n.   HO-HO \/ IF I LIVE TO BE A\nMUNDKEP, I'LL MEVER FORGET\n' THE EXPRESSION OM HERCULES'\nFACE WHEN HE PROPPED\nv THAT PUM0-3ELL ON HIS\nTOP.' TOO &AP IT   ,\u00ab\u25a0,,[,\/,\n-^\"\"^ || ^ M \u25a0\nANOTHER  0AKJQUET-\nTHIS IS THE THIRD TIME\nTODAY I'VE ROBBED\nTHE CANARV OF\nHIS FOOD\n*\nIT'S A GOOD THING MV EYES ARE GOOD -\nSOME PEOPLE MIGHT MISTAKE THAT THIN\nBROWN RECTANGLE FOR A CIGARETTE\nPAPER-BUT I KNOW IT'S A SLICE OFTOAST-\nAND THAT MAGNIFICENT CHOP\/ THE LAMB\nMUST HAVE BEEN RAISED BYATROUPE,\nOF MIDGETS WELL, THE RACE\nIS ON \u2014WILL MY BROKEN TOE\nHEAL BEFORE I PIE OF\nSTARVATION ?        i ,;      (f^Vg^\n&*\u201e,\n**\u00a3&,\nBRINCING UP FATHER\nBy Geo. McManus\nWELL-AT LAST  I GOT\nME   K\/'OV'E   r.AV'EWA\nDOWN TO rtJ'GFFICE-\nWOW   I K1K 3T DOWW\nQUIETLY    AM' SEE\nHOW TO WORK   IT -\n:^ii\nOH-HAVE YOU GOT ONE\nOP TH05E NEW MOVIE\nCAMERAS^ IVE GOT\nONE-BUT | THINK TH'\nOME YOU HAVE IS A\nLATER MODEL THAN\nKAIME-LET ME SEE IT-\nKNOW-\nBUT-\nT\nYE5-THIS IS A\nBIT DIFFERENT\nTHAN MINS-\nNO-YES-SURE\nOH-* DID YOU GET ONE\nOF THOSE MOVIE\nCAMERAS ? MY AUNT\nHAS ONE-SHE SAYS\nSHE COULDN'T GET\nALONQ WITHOUT   IT-\nWELL- I'M QONNA\n6IT ALONG WITHOUT YOU 6UYS-\nNOW STAY OUT\nOF   t-AY  OFFICE-\nZi\nIII 8'*   1\nL.\n \u2014\u2014^~\nIPPJSF\"      \"      \u2014 ' '  \/wwwwi.-iE^'j'?*^.^^\n.*\u25a0\u25a0*.-, .*\u25a0 . *..-\u2022 ,.* \u25a0 \u25a0\nI\n(tfl\nfIFTH DAY OF\nDROP, TORONTO\nTORONTO, August 20s (CP)-The\nfifth daily decline without a break\nwas registered by the Toronto stock\nmarket today on the smallest turn-\ni over for a full session since July\n28. Industrials and golds dropped\nabout two points in the exchange\nindices and the miscellaneous mines\n2Vs points.\nNickel, Smelters and Noranda held\ntheir losses down to Vi, to V4 but\nHudson Bay closed IVs down at\n31-4. Falconbridge declined 45\ncents to 7.25 and Waite-Amulet,\nVentures and Pend Oreille closed\n20 to 25 cents lower. Sherritt, Aldermac and Jack Waite dropped 2\nto 5 cents each. Silvers moved with\nthe rest of the world, Eldorado losing\n7 cents and Mining Corporation 10.\nCastle closed 4 cents higher.\nPreston lost 8 to 120. Other fairly active traders at losses of 5 to\n10 cents were Beattie, Canadian\nMalartic, East Malartic, Kirkland\nLake and Sladen. O'Brien lost 30\ncents and Slave Lake 13.\nMoney\nthe\n(By The Canadian Press)\nClosing exchange rates:\nAt  Montreal\u2014Pound  4.98%;\nfranc 3.76; U. S. dollar par.\nAt New York\u2014Pound 4.98%; the\nfranc 3.75%; Canadian dollar\n.99 63-64.\nAt Paris\u2014Pound 132.86 fr.; U. S.\ndollar 26.63% fr.; Canadian dollar\n26.63.\/, fr.\nIn Gold-Pound 12s 2d; U. S. dollar 59.44 cents; Canadian dollar\n59.46 cents.\nMetal Markets\nNEW YORK, Aujust 20, (AP) -\nCopper steady; electrolytic epot and\nfuture 14.00; export 14-14.10.\nTin steady; spot and nearby 59.50;\nfuture 59.12 Vs.\nLead steady; spot New York 6.50-\n55; East St. Louis 6.35.\nZinc steady; East St. Louis spot\nand future 7.25.\nBar silver steady and unchanged\nat 44-S.\nLONDON, August 20, (API\u2014Closing: copper, standard spot \u00a356 10s,\noff 5s, future \u00a356 15s; off 5s; electrolytic spot, bid \u00a362 10s, unchanged: asked \u00a36310s, unchanged.\nTin spot \u00a3264 5s, off 1 5s; future\n\u00a3262 15s. off \u00a31.\nBids: lead spot \u00a322 7s 6d, off Is\n3d: future \u00a322 10s. off Is 3d.\nZinc spot \u00a323 18s 9d. off 8s 9d;\nfuture \u00a324 Is 3d, off 7s 6d.\nBar silver unchanged at 19 15-16d.\nNX TUMBLES\nNEW YORK, Aug. 20 (AP) -\nStocks rattled down in today's market and most leaders duplicated\ntheir yesterday's losses of one to\nmore than three points.\nSteel, motors, coppers, rubbers\nand mall orders led tho reaction.\nBrokers brought out a variety of\nreasons for the resumption of the\nslide, although few specific news\ndevelopments were blamed.\nTransfers totalled 799,170 shares\nagainst 762,540 Thursday. The Associated Press average of 10 issues\nwas off .8 of a point at 67.5. This\ncompares with a low for the year\nof 62.6 and a high of 75.3.\nDow-Jones Averages\nHigh       Low Close   Change\n30 industrials   185.28      182.30 182.95\u2014off 2.33\n20 rails  ,.    52.38       51.75 51.87\u2014off   .51\n20 utilities     28.10       27.60 27.65\u2014off   .34\n40 bonds   100.40\u2014off   .26\nMontreal Silver Quotations\nMONTREAL, Aug. 20 (CP)\u2014Silver futures closed steady and unchanged today. No sales. Bids: August 44.80; September 44.75; December\n44.65; March, June and July 44.55.\nToronto Stock Quotations\nMINES\nAfton Mines 04\nAldermac Copper     1.12\nAlexandria Gold  02\nAnglo-Huronian       5.80\nArgosy Gold    46\nArntfield Gold  35\nAstoria R Mines  08V4\nAztec Mining  IOMi\nBagamac R  33\n* Bankfield Gold  75\nBase Metals 27\nBeattie Gold      1.20\nBidgood Kirkland  62\nBig Missouri 54\nBobjo Mines  16-\/4\nBralorne Mines      7.30\nBrett Trethewey  08'A\nBuffalo Ankerite     10.00\nBunker Hill 1414\nCanadian Malartic       1.27\nCariboo Gold       1.61\nCastle-Trethewey       1.00\nCentral Man  06'A\nCentral Pat      2.75\nChibougamau    47\nChro M & S  78*\/i\nCoast Copper     4.75\nConiagas Mines      1.45\nConiaurum Mines       1.31\nCons M & S     84.50\nDarkwater  57\nDome Mines     41.00\nDom Explorers 08\nDorval-Siscoe  50\nEast Malartic     1.11\nEldorado Gold      2.75\nFalconbridge        7.30\nFederal Kirkland 10<4\nFrancoeur Gold 68!*i\nGod's Lake  01\nGold Belt  23\nGranada Gold 19\nGrandoro Mines 07'A\nGunnar Gold  83\nHard Rock       1.35\nHarkcr Gold  15\nHollinger       12.25\nHowey Gold  40\nHudson Bay     31.50\nInter Nickel     63.25\nJ M Cons  21%\nJack Waite 72\nJacola Gold 33\nKerr-Addison       2.45\nKirkland Lake     1.31\nLake Shore     51.15\nLamaque C  05\nLeitch Gold   65\nLebel Oro Mines 20\nLittle Long Lac     5.30\nMacassa Mines     5.86\nMacLeod Cockshutt      1.92\nMadsen R Lake  70\nMan & East 03\nMandy  31\nMalrobjc Mines  16*\nMclnlyre-Porcupine      35.75\nMcKenzie Red Lake      1.25\nMcVittie-Graham  28\nMcWatters Gold 52\nMining Corp      3.60\nMinto Gold  08\nMoneta Porcupine     1,70\nMorris-Kirkland  25\nNipissing Mining     2.32\nNoranda     64.00\nNormetal        1.82\nO'Brien Gold     25.70\nOmega Gold  57\nPamour Porcupine      2.95\nParkhill Gold  18\nPaulorc M  20\nPaymaster Cons 60\nPend Oreille       4.05\nPerron Gold       1.05\nPickle Crow        5.65\nPioneer Gold      4.00\nPremier Gold 2.25\nPorcupine Crown  03%\nPowell R Gold           1.50\nPreston East Dome      1.23\nBuebec Gold 40\nitead-Authier      3.70\nRed Lake 34\nReeves Mac 75\nleno Gold  90\ntitchie Gold      04\n(oche Long Lac 15\nSan Antonio Gold  58\nSheep Creek       90\nSherritt Gordon          2.80\nSiscoe Gold            3.80\nsladen Malartic       1.04\nStadacona Rouyn       1.28\nSt Anthony \t\nSudbury Basin \t\nSullivan Consolidated\nSylvanite  \t\nTashota Goldfields \t\nTeck-Hughes Gold \t\nToburn Gold Mines\t\nTowagamac\t\nVentures Limited\t\nWaite  Amulet   \t\nWhitewater     \t\nWright Hargreaves\t\nYmir Yankee Girl \t\nOILS:\nBrown Oil \t\nCalmont  \t\nCalgary k Edmonton\nChem Research\t\nCommonwealth   \t\nDalhousie    \t\nEastcrest    \t\nFoundation \t\nFoothills   \t\nHighwood\t\nHome   \t\nImperial \t\nInter Petroleum \t\nLowery Pete \t\nMcColl Frontenac \t\nMerland  \t\nModel   \t\nMonarch Roy \t\nNordon   \t\nOkalta \t\nPacalta  \t\nPantepec\t\nRoyalite    \t\nSouthwest Pete \t\nTexas Canadian \t\nUnited    \t\nVulcan\nINDUSTRIALS;\nAbitibi  Power  \t\nBeatty Bros   \t\nBell Telephone \t\nBrazilian TL4P\t\nBrewers & Distillers ....\nBritish American Oil ..\nBrewing  Corp  \t\nBrewing Corp Pfd\t\nB C Power \"A\" \t\nB C Power \"B\" \t\nBuilding Products \t\nBurt F N Co\t\nCan Bakeries \"A\" \t\nCan Bakeries Pfd \t\nCan Bud Malting \t\nCan Car k Fdy\t\nCan  Cement   \t\nCan Cement Pfd \t\nCan Dredge  \t\nCan Malting    \t\nCan Pacific Rly \t\nCan Ind Ale \"A\" \t\nCan Ind Ale \"B\"\t\nCan Wineries\t\nCarnation   Pfd   \t\nCons Bakeries \t\nCons Smelters\t\nCosmos   \t\nDominion Bridge\t\nDominion Stores \t\nDom Tar k Chem\t\nD Tar k Chem Pfd\t\nDistillers  Seagrams  ...\nFanny Farmer \t\nFord of Canada \"A\"\t\nGypsum L & A\t\nHarding Carpet\t\nHamilton Bridge\t\nHiram Walker \t\nIntl   Metals   \t\nIntl Milling Pfd \t\nImperial  Oil   \t\nImperial Tobacco \t\nInternational Nickel ....\nInternational Petrol ....\nLoblaw \"A\" \t\nLoblaw   \"B\"   \t\nKelvinator   \t\nMaple Leaf Milling ...\nMassey Harris \t\nMcColl Frontenac\t\nMontreal Power \t\nMoore  Corp   \t\nNat Steel Car \t\nOnt Steel Prods\t\nPage Hersey \t\nPower Corp\t\nPressed Meetals \t\nSteel  of Can    .,\t\nStandard Paving \t\n.17\n4.50\n1.30\n3.25\n.06*!i\n5.30\n2.50\n1.20\n8.00\n3.50\n.14\n6.65\n.27\n.44\n.55\n2.35\n.80\n.30\n.80\n.13%\n.28\n1.02\n.20\n1.85\n20.75\n34.35\n.25\n12.00\n\u2022 10%\n.51\n.33\n20%\n1.55\n\u25a020%\n7.00\n44.00\n.60\n1.75\n.21\n1.51\n5%\n18%\n169%\n24%\n7\n22'\/.\n2*li\n20\n34 Vs\n7%\n62\n41%\n4\n49\n8%\n15%\n15%\n109%\n42\n37\n11%\n6%\n43,i\n2%\n102\n20\n84\n25\n49\n8'i\n13%\n90\n22%\n25\n24%\n13\n5\n82%\n48%\n13%\n93%\n20*4\n14%\n63%\n34%\n24%\n22%\n20\n4%\n9%\n12\n31 %\n44%\n48\n17\n106%\n23%\n24\n85\n4%\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C-SATURDAY MORNINO. AUG. 21, 1937\nMarket and Mining News\n-PAGE nrnren\nWINNIPEG LIST\nAGAIN IS LOWER\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 20 (CP)-Gen-\neral liquidation caused by acute\nweakness of Chicago corn and wheat\nfutures pushed wheat lower for the\nthird consecutive day on the Winnipeg grain exchange today.\nAfter holding above yesterday's\nclose on sales of 500,000 bushels of\nCanadian wheat to exporters and\nsome speculative buying due to delayed harvesting conditions in Manitoba and southern Alberta, wheal\nfutures dipped to close 1%-1% cents\ndown, October at $1.22%, December\n$1.19 and May $1.20%.\nGrain deliveries from the prairie\nprovinces yesterday totalled 1,236,-\n000 bushels.\nBright Spots\nof the Week\nBy The Canadian Press\nBRANTFORD, Ont. - Registrations of unemployed in 3rantford\nnow total about 750 or half the total\nat this time a year ago.\nHALIFAX - United Service Corporation begins construction of\n$250,000 showroom and garage in\nHalifax.\nSARNIA, Ont. - Tourist traffic\nthrough Sarnia in July set an all-\ntime July record with 42,096 cars\nhandled by customs, a gain of 6000\ncars over the previous peak year\nof 1929.\nTORONTO - Direct relief in Toronto in first seven months of this\nyear cost $4,536,303, a decline of $1,-\n035,586 from the total for the same\nperiod of last year or about 20 per\ncent.\nOTTAWA \u2014 Canada's external\ntrade totalled $907,000,000 in first\nsix months of this year, a gain of\n26 per cent over the 1936 comparable period.\nSTRATFORD. Ont. \u2014 Collections\nof tax arrears to date this year show\nan increase of 9.5 per cent over the\nsame period of last year.\nVANCOUVER-Relief cases In\nVancouver show a drop of 643 from\nthe total of 6569 in July, 1936.\nST. BONIFACE, Man. - Swift Canadian company will erect a $2,-\n000,000 packing plant here.\nExchanges\nMONTREAL, Aug. 20 (CP) -\nBritish and foreign exchange closed\neasier today. Nominal rates for large\namounts:\nArgentina, peso, .3015.\nAustralia, pourtd, 3.9835.\nAustria, schilling, .1890.\nBelgium, belga, .1685.\nBrazil, milreis, .0645.\nChina, Hong Kong dollars, .3120.\nDenmark, krone, .2227.\nFinland, finmark, ,0221.\nFrance, franc, .0376.\nGermany, reichsmark, .4024.\nGreat Britain, pound, 4.9887.\nHolland, florin, .5518.\nHungary, pengo. 1977.\nIndia, rupee, .3769.\nJapan, yen, .2912.\nNew Zealand, pound, 4.0156.\nNorway, krone, .2508.\nPoland, zloti, .1896.\nSouth Africa, pound, 4.9644.\nSweden, krone, .2574.\nSwitzerland, franc, .2297.\nUnited Slates, dollar, par.\n(Compiled by the Royal Bank of\nCanada).\nMontreal Metals\nMONTREAL, Aug. 20 (CP)-Spot:\nCopper, electrolytic, 15.65; tin'62,00;\nlead 6.20; zinc 6.55; antimony 15.50;\nper 100 pounds f.o.b. Montreal, five-\nton lots.\nDividends\nSiscoe Gold Mines, Ltd.. five cents\npayable Sept. 15 to shareholders of\nrecord Aug. 31.\nBaker's Bread Ltd., eight cents,\npayable Sept 1 to shareholders of\nrecord Aug. 24.\nHollinger Consolidated Gold Mines, regular monthly dividend of one\nper cent, or five cents a share. Payable September 9 to shareholders of\nrecord August 26.\nLONDON IRREGULAR\nLONDON, August 20, (AP) -\nThe stock market here closed irregularly with transatlantic shares\nsomewhat below the best ririces for\nthe day. Gilt edged securities and\nGerman bonds held firm and the far\neastern issues were steadier. The\nindustrial section was quiet while\nmining shares were offered in good\nsupply. Liquidation in early trading\nwas Induced by unfavorable European and far eastern news.\nBAR GOLD DOWN\nMONTREAL, August 20, (CP) -\nBar gold in London down one cent\nat $34.76 an ounce in Canadian funds\n139s 4%d in British. The fixed $35\nWashington price amounted to the\nsame in Canadian,\nJAPAN ISSUES OFF\nNEW YORK. August 20, (AP) -\nA slump in U. S. government loans\nand heaviness in carrier liens darkened the bond market today. Japanese issues met some offerings following yesterday's late rally. Losses of fractions to a point or more\nwere recorded by Japan 6%s at 74,\nJapan 5%s at 65 and Ujigawa Electric 7s at 75%. Other foreigns were\nmostly a little lower.\nECONOMIC INDEX DOWN\nOTTAWA, August 20, (CP)-Due\nto the decline of three out of the\nsix major factors, the Dominion\nbureau of statistics economic index\nrecorded last week from 111.8 (in\n(he first week of August) to 111.7.\nThe drop was one of .01 per cent.\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nLI8TED\nA P Con \t\nAmal Oil\t\nAztec Min\t\nBig Missouri\t\nBralorne  \t\nBrew k Dist\t\nBridge River \t\nC & E Corp\t\nCalmont Oil \t\nCariboo Gold\t\nCoast Breweries ....\nCom'wealth Oil\t\nDentonia   \t\nGold Belt\t\nHargal Oil\t\nHome Oil\t\nInter Coal \t\nKootenay Belle\t\nMak Siccar\t\nMcDoug Seg Ex ....\nMinto \t\nModel Oil \t\nPioneer Gold\t\nPremier Gold\t\nPremier Border\t\nQuatsino\t\nRelief Arlington ....\nReno Gold\t\nReeves Mac\t\nSally \t\nSalmon Gold\t\nSheep Creek \t\nSilbak-Premier \t\nSpooner Oil \t\nVanalta  \t\nVidette \t\nWesko\t\nYmir Yankee Girl\nCURB\nAlexandria \t\nAnaconda \t\nBaltac Oil \t\nBayview     \t\nBeaver Silver\t\nBluebird       \t\nB C Nickel\t\nCongress   \t\nCrows Nest, new ....\nDalhousie Oils\t\nDavies Pete \t\nDevenish \t\nDom Explorers \t\nFairview Amal\t\nBid      Ask\n.   .30\n.05\n.11%*\n.53\n7.40\n7.00\n.02%\n2.40\n.55\n1.57\n13.30\n.30\n.14\n.24\n.18%\n1.90\n.23\n.99\n.02\n.24\n.08%\n.52\n3.00\n2.20\n.02\n.04%\n.22%\n.88\n.83\n.08\n.07%\n.88\n1.95\n.20\n.08\n.37\n.15\n,26\n.02\n.10%\n.05%\n.00%\n.01%\n.02\n.16%\n.03%\n.05%\n.34\n.05\n.02\n.06\n.33\n.05%\n.13\n.55\n7.50\n7.50\n.04\n2.42\n.60\n1.60\n13.75\n.32\n.15\n.25\n1.95\n.25\n1.00\n.25\n.09\n.60\n4.00\n2.30\n.02%\n.05\n.25\n.91\nS3\n.07\n.09\n.02\n2.10\n.09\n.42\n.17\n.02\n.03\n.17\n.04\n.06\n.00\n.34%\n.06\n.02%\n.07\nFederal Gold\t\nFirestone Pete\t\nFoundation Pete ...\nFoothills G Ji O ...\nFreehold Oil \t\nGeo Enterprise\t\nGeo River \t\nGolconda \t\nGold Mountain \t\nGrandview \t\nGrange Mines \t\nGrull-Wihksne \t\nHedley St.\t\nHighwood Sarcee .\nHome Gold\t\nIndian Mines\t\nInter Gold\t\nKoot Florence\t\nKoot King \t\nLakeview Mine\t\nLowery Pete \t\nLucky Jim \t\nMadison Oil\t\nMar Jon Oil\t\nMercury Oil\t\nMcGillivray     \t\nMill City Oil\t\nMonarch R\t\nNicola\t\nNoble Five \t\nNordon Oil \t\nOkalta, Com\t\nPacalta\t\nPend Oreille\t\nPorter Idaho \t\nPilot Gold \t\nQuesnelle 'Q' \t\nRanchmen's \t\nReliance  \t\nReward Mining\t\nRoyalite Oil \t\nRufus Argenta\t\nRuth Hope \t\nSilver Crest \t\nSilversmith \t\nSouthwest Pete\t\nStandard S L\t\nSunloch Mines\t\nUnited Distillers .\nUnited Oil \t\nViking Gild \t\nVulcan Oil\t\nWaverly T., new .\nWellington Mines .\nWhitewater\t\n.02%       -\n\u2014 .20\n.27\n1.04\n.07%\n.01%\n.07%\n.02%\n.19%\n.07%\n.10\n.02%\n.02%\n.02\n.00%\n.01%\n.21\n.06%\n.08\n.11%\n.29%\n.19%\n.35\n.06\n.06%\n.20\n1.60\n.19\n4.00\n.05\n.03\n.09\n.15\n.01%\n.08%\n41.00\n.03\n.03%\n.05\n.03\n.50\n.39\n.20\n.21\n.01%\n1,57\n.00%\n.03%\n.14\n1,10\n.07%\n.03%\n.02\n.09\n.02%\n.20\n.01%\n,00\n,02\n.02%\n.03\n.04\n.02%\n.01%\n.22\n.06%\n.08%\n.30\n.25\n.36\n.06%\n.06%\n.20%\n1.62\n.22\n4.15\n.07\n.04\n.11\n.02\n.09%\n.03%\n.03%\n1.15\n.22\n1.60\n.01\n.04\n.15\nMontreal Stock Exchange\nINDUSTRIALS;\nAlta Pac Grain \t\nAssoc Brew of Can\t\nBathurst P k P \"A\" .\nBell Telephone \t\nBrazilian Tl    &P .\nB C Power \"A\"\t\nB C Power \"B\"\t\nBuilding Products \t\nCanada Cement \t\nCan Cement Pfd \t\nCan North Power\t\nCan  Steamship  \t\nCan Steamship Pfd\t\nCanadian Bronze \t\nCan Car k Fdy \t\nCan Car k Fdy Pfd\t\nCan Celanese \t\nCan Celanese Pfd\t\nCan Hydro-Elec \t\nCan Ind Ale \"A\" \t\nCan Ind Ale \"B\" \t\nCan Pacific Rly\t\nCockshutt  Plow  \t\nCon Min k Smelting ...\nDominion Bridge\t\nDominion Coal Pfd\t\nDom Steel & Coal \"B\" .\nDominion Textile\t\nDryden  Paper \t\nFoundation C of C \t\nGen Steel Wares \t\nGurd Charles\t\nGyp Lime & Alab \t\nHoward Smith Paper .\nH Smith Paper Pfd\t\nImp Tobacco of C \t\nInter Nickel of Can\t\nMassey Harris\t\nMcColl Frontenac \t\nMontreal L H k P\t\nNat Brew Pfd \t\nNat Steel Car \t\n3\n14\n20%\n169%\n24%\n35\n7%\n62\n15%\n109%\n21\n4\n12%\n47\n15%\n. 26\n24%\n116%\n91%\n6%\n4%\n11%\n14\n8*1%\n49\n20%\n23\n80\n16%\n22%\n15%\n11\n12%\n20\n103%\n14%\n63%\n9%\n12\n31'%\n41\n48\nOntario Steel Prods\t\nPower Corp of Can\t\nQuebec Power  _.\nSt. Lawrence Corp \t\nSt Lawrence Corp Pfd .\nSt Lawrence Paper Pfd .\nSouth Can Power \t\nShawnigan W k P\t\nSteel of Can   \t\nSteel of Can Pfd\t\nWestern Grocers \t\nBANK8:\nBank of Canada ..,\t\nCanadienne Nationale\t\nMontreal\nNova Scotia\t\nCURB;\nAbitibi P & P Co \t\nAbitibi 6 Pfd   \t\nBeauharnois Corp  _...\nBathurst P k P \"B\"\t\nBrew & Dist Van \t\nBrew Corp of Can \t\nBritish American Oil\t\nB C Packers \t\nCan Dredge k Dock \t\nCan Industries \"B\"\t\nCan Wineries \t\nCons Paper Corp \t\nDominion   Stores   \t\nDonnacona Paper \"A\"\t\nDonnacona Paper \"B\"\t\nFraser Co Ltd \t\nImperial   Oil   \t\nInter Petroleum  \t\nInter Utilities \"A\"\t\nInter Utilities  \"B\"  \t\nMacLaren P & P\t\nMitchell  Robt  \t\nRoyalite Oil  \t\nUnited Dist of Can \t\nWalker-Good k W \t\nWalker-Good Pfd \t\n17\n23\n19\n13%\n34\n95\n14\n27\n86  *\n79\n69%\n224\n331\n5%\n60%\n8%\n9%\n7\n2%\n22%\n16%\n41%\n235\n2%\n18\n8%\n16%\n15%\n43\n20%\n34%\n17%\n1%\n30\n21%\n43\n1.05\n48\n19%\nQuotations on Wall Street\n108%\n107%\n7%\n7%\n19%\n19%\n93%\n91\n170\n168%\n79%\n79\n59%\n57%\n76%\n75%\n16\n15%\n6%\n6%\n5%\n5\n26%\n26%\nW,\n19%\nHigh Low\nAllied Chem ... 237% 235\nAmerican Can\nAm For Power\nAm Mach k F\nAm Smelt k R\nAm Telephone\nAm Tobacco ....\nAnaconda\t\nAtciiison   \t\nAuburn Motors\nAviation Corp .\nBaldwin   \t\nBait & Ohio ...\nBendix Av\t\nBeth Steel    \t\nBorden   23% 23%\nCanada  Dry .... 25% 25\nCan Pacific   11% 11%\nCerro de Pasco 72% 71%\nChes k Ohio ... 50 49%\nChrysler    114% 111%\nCon Gas N Y 36% 35%\nCom Products 65% 65%\nC Wright pfd ... 5% 5tt\nDupont          162% 160%\nEast Kodak     . 191 186%\nEl Power k L 21% 20%\nErie   15 14%\nFord English ... 6% 6%\nFord of Canada 24 24\nFirst N Stores .. 41% 41%\nFreeport Tex .. 30 30\nGeneral Elec .... 56 55\nGeneral Foods 37% 37\nGeneral Motor 57% 56%\nGoodrich  39% 38\nGranby     9% 9%\nG N pfd          .. 50% 49%\nHecker Prods .. 11% 11%\nHowe Sound 81% 80%\nHudson Motors 16 15%\nInter Nickel    . 64% 63\nInter Tel k Tel 10% 10%\nClose\n235\n107%\n7%\n19%\n91\n168%\n79\n57%\n76%\n15%\n6%\n5\n26%\n19%\n97%\n23%\n25\n11%\n71%\n49%\n112%\n35%\n65%\n5%\n160%\n188%\n20%\n14%\n6%\n24\n41%\n30\n55%\n37%\n56%\n38\n9%\n50 %\n11%\n80%\n15%\n63%\n10%\nKenn Copper ...\nKresge S S \t\nKroegger k T\nMack Truck\nMilwaukee pfd\nMont Ward\t\nNash Motors .\nN Dairy Prods\nN Pow & Light\nN Y Central ...\nPac Gas & El ....\nPackard Motor\nPenn RR. ..\nPhillips Pete ....\nPure Oil\t\nRadio Corp \t\nRadio Keith Or\nRem* Rand \t\nSafeway Stores\nShell Union ...\nS Cal Edison . .\nSouth Pacific\nStan Oil of Cal\nStan Oil of Ind\nStan Oil of N J\nStewart Warn\nStudebaker\t\nTexas Corp \t\nTexas Gulf Sul\nTimken Roller\nUnder Type ....\nUnion Carbide\nUn Oil of Cal\nUnited Aircraft\nUnited Biscuit\nUnion Pacific ..\nU S Pipe \t\nU S Rubber \t\nU S Steel \t\nVanadium \t\nWarner  Bros  ..\nWest Electric ..\nWest Union \t\nWoolworth \t\nYellow Truck ...\n60% 59%\n23 22%\n21% 21%\n45% 45%\n1%       1%\n62% 60%\n18% 18%\n20% 20\n10% 10%\n30% 38%\n30% 30%\n8%      8%\n36% 35%\n59% 57%\n20% 19%\n10% 10%\n8%      8%\n25% 25%\n35% 35%\n25% 25%\n24% 24%\n45% 44\n44% 43%\n46% 45%\n67 66%\n18% 18\n14% 13%\n62% 59%\n38% 38%\n64 64\n88% 87%\n100% 99%\n24% 24%\n28% 27%\n23 22%\n120% 120%\n54% 54%\n60 57%\n116% 113%\n32 31%\n15 14%\n153% 151\n47% 46%\n47% 47\n22% 22%\n60%\n23\n21%\n45%\n1%\n61\n18%\n20\n10%\n38%\n30%\n8%\n36\n58\n19%\n10%\n8%\n25%\n35%\n25%\n24%\n44\n43%\n45%\n66%\n18\n13%\n60%\n38%\n64\n24%\n28\n23\n120%\n54%\n58\n114%\n31%\n14%\n151\n46 %\n47%\n22%\n8UNSHINE 8TOCK ACTIVE\nCALGARY, Aug. 20 (CP)\u2014Activity in Sunshine, a long neglected oil\nstock, featured trading on the Calgary stock exchange today. Heavy\nbuying developed and at the noon\nclose it was quoted at five cents,\na gain of 1% cents. C. k E. advanced five to $2.55 while Vulcan\nlost five at 1.55. Richland was one\nhigher at 35 and Anaconda up one\nat 12.\nI\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY, August 20, (CP)-Re-\ncelpts: to noon, cattle 89; calves 8;\nhogs 13; sheep 220.\nCattle trade slow; good butcher\nsteers 6.00-6.50; good heifers 4.75-\n5.00; no choice; good cows 2.85-3.00;\ngood to choice vealers 5.00-5.50.\nHogs unchanged; selects 10.00; bacons 9.50; butchers 9.00.\nC. M. & S. Nof to\nDrop Interests\nin Chibougamau\nTORONTO, Aug. 20 (CP)\u2014Consolidated Mining k Smelting Company of Canada, Limited will not\nabandon its interests In Chibougamau, but a reorganization of Consolidated Chibougamau Goldfields,\nLimited, which it controls, may be\nnecessary before further operations\ncan be considered, 3. J. Warren,\npresident of Consolidated Mining AV\nSmelting, announced today.\nAnswering a telegram of inquiry\nfrom Hon. A. Gagnon, Quebec minister of mines, Mr. Warren wired:\n\"Understand our mining department\nhas written Mr. Dufresne, your deputy minister, that we are ceasing operations when winter sets in. This\nis done because of possible effect on\nyour road-building policy. Believe\ncessation temporary, although reorganization of the company may be\nnecessary before resumption of development.\"\nCommenting on bis message to\nthe Quebec minister, Mr. Warren\nsaid the Quebec department had\nbeen advised of the company's proposals because of the government's\nassistance in building the road. Further transportation facilities and the\nquestion of a smelter were matters\nto be considered if and when work\nis resumed.\nAnswering a question, Mr. Warren\nsaid that while operations would\ncease at the end of this season, the\npolicy of the company would be\nconsidered later. Work will be continued for another three months and\nthe equipment will not be taken\nout of the district, said Mr. Warren.\nThe Smelters' president added that\nwhile his company does not yet own\ncontrol of the issued capital, it recently took over operating control\nof the property because of its large\nexpenditure there.\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 20 (CP) -\nGrain futures quotations:\nOpen   High   Low    Close\nWheat:\nOct  124%   125%   122%   122%\nDec  120%   121%   118%   119\nMay   122%   123      120%   120%\nOats:\nOct    46        46%     45%     45%\nDec    44        44        43%     43%\nMay     44%    44%     43%     44\nBarley:\nOct    55%     56%     54%     54%\nDec    54%     55%     54        54%\nMay     ...   \u2014       \u2014       \u2014       55%\nFlax:\nOct 175      175%   174%-   175\nDec    -       -       -      174%\nMay     -       -       -      175%\nRye:\nOct    85%     86%     84        84\nDec    83%    83%     81%     81%\nMay     84        84%     83%     83%\nCash wheat: No. 1 hard and No.\n1 nor. 128%; No. 2 nor. 120%; No. 3\nnor. 117%; No. 4 nor. 113%; No. 5,\n106%; No. 6, 100%; feed 84%; Nos.\n104%; No. 1 A. R. W. 111%; No. 4\n1 and 2 garnet 116%; No. 1 durum\nspecial 107%; No. 5 special 104%;\nNo. 6 special 97%; track 124%;\nscreenings $5 per ton.\nMontreal Produce\nMONTREAL, August 20, (CP) \u2014\nButter 26%B; cheese 13%B. Eggs,\nA large 28A; C, 20A.\nNo. 1 northern wheat $1.36%;\nNo. 2 C. W. oats 57%; No. 1 feed\noats 42; bran $2.25.\nSHANGHAI DOLLAR OFF\nNEW YORK, August 20, (AP) \u2014\nFar-eastern currencies were quiet\nand steady against the United States\ndollar in foreign exchange dealings\ntoday. The Japanese yen was unchanged at 29.12 cents as was the\nHong Kong dollar at 31% cents. The\nShanghai dollar slid .00% of a cent\nto 30 5-16 cents in what traders term\nisolated transactions. The French\nfranc was unchanged at 3.75% cents.\nThe British pound dropped 7-16 of\na cent to $4.98%. The Canadian\ndollar at 99 63-64 was unchanged.\nMONTREAL, August 20, (CP) \u2014\nPound sterling declined % cent at\n4.08% on Montreal foreign exchange\ntoday. The French franc at 3.76\ncents, and the United States dollar\nat par, ruled unchanged.\nCANADIAN AT SANDON PUTTING\nIN CHUTES FOR STOPING ORE\nBIG APPLE CROP\nFOR THIS SEASON\nOTTAWA, August 20, (CP) -Canada's apple crop this year is estimated at more than 5,000,000 barrels.\nThe present figure being placed at\n5,160,000, says a condition report\non the fruit crop Issued today by the\nDominion bureau of statistics.\nAll provinces share in the increase\nbut the greatest gain is shown In\nNova Scotia, the report says, where\nthe crop is at least 30 per cent greater than last season's.\nMARKETS AT\nA GLANCE\n(By The Canadian Press)\nToronto and Montreal\u2014 Stocks\nclosed lower,\nNew York\u2014Stocks lower.\nWinnipeg\u2014Wheat 1% to 1% cents\nlower.\nLondon\u2014Bar silver and lead unchanged; copper and zinc lower,\nNew York\u2014Silver, lead and zinc\nunchanged; export copper lower.\n.Montreal\u2014Silver unchanged.\nNew York\u2014Cotton, sugar and coffee lower; rubber higher.\nMONTREALOFF\nMONTREAL, August 20, (CP) -\nSelling pressure sent stocks on the\ndownward trend during today's\nstock market session in sympathy\nwith recessions on Wall Street.\nLoss of a point each showed for\nNoranda at 64 and Nickel at 63%.\nSmelters lost % at 84%. Dominion\nSteel k Coal and Gypsum lost %\neach at 23 and 12%, respectively,\nwhile General Steel Wares lost a\npoint at 16 and Dominion Tar % at\n13%.\nVancouver Loses\nVANCOUVER, August 20, (CP) -\nMajority of issues in oil, gold and\nbase metal sections registered losses on Vancouver stock exchange today, although selected issues managed to hold even in continued quiet trading. Transfers totalled 120,-\n604 shares, about the same as yesterday,\nCalgary k Edmonton led the\ndownward issues in the oil section,\ndropping 7 to 2.40. A. P. Consolidated lost 2 points to 30, and Okalta\n1 to 1.60. Vulcan managed to lift\n1 to 1,57, while Calmont at 55, Home\nat 1.90, Mercury at 29%, United at\n21 and Ranchmen's at 15 yere unchanged.\nPremier dropped 12 to 2,20 in the\ngolds, Sheep Creek lost 4 to 88, Pioneer 5 to 3.90, Cariboo Gold Quartz\n3 to 1.57 and Reno 1 to 88. Big Missouri upped % at 53 and Minto %\nat 8%. Bralorne was unchanged at\n7.40.\nWant Ads Get Results\n'To Ship for Export as\nSoon as Plant Is\nReady\nBlocking out ore and putting In\nchutes in preparation for stoplng,\nthe Canadian silver-lead-zinc mini\nof the Sandon camp expects to ship\nin the immediate future, J. T. MacGregor of Vancouver, president ol\nBasal Mines, Limited, the operating\ncompany, stated Tuesday when seen\nat thc Hume, The ore, both clean and\nmilling, is destined for the mill\nof Ayerton k Cohen at Taghum,\nwhen that new plant starts operating, for eventual export to a\nEuropean smelter, but before actual shipment begins two miles ol\nroad is to be cleaned out by the\npublic works department, so that\nthe ore can be trucked to Sandon\nfrom the tram terminal, which it\nlocated at the old Ivanhoe camp,\nthree miles above Sandon.\nBesides 250 tons of milling ore\nbroken down by thc late Joe Brandon or his leasers in former operations that took account only of\nshipping ore, and left in the workings, the company has 300 tons ot\nmilling ore blocked out for stoplng,\nin a fine looking ore body opened\nby a raise from No, 2 level.\nIn addition to raising from No.\n2 to No. 1, the company is also\nraising from No. 1 to the surface,\nand is also extending No. 2 level,\nwhich is now an adit tunnel from\nthe north side of Silver ridge, io\nas have it come out at the south\nside. No. 1 tunnel opens on both\nslopes.\nOUTLET   TOWARD   SILVERTON\nEventually it is the intention to\nhave the mine entirely operated\nfrom the south side of the ridge,\nthe side facing Silverton, with th\u00ab\nore of the upper workings brought\nout from No, 2 tunnel and trammed down by Four-Mile creek to\na mill of about 50 tons capacity\nthat the company will build if the\nrequisite tonnage is found. There if\ndevelopment on the north side oh\nthe fourth and eighth levels, but\nthis will be disregarded in favor\nof going in with new deep adits\nfrom the south side.\nBasal Mines, Limited, is a private\ncampany, Mr. MacGregor stated\nwith no stock offered on the market. The superintendent, Howard\nThompson, has a crew of 13, tha\npresent program being carried out\nwith hand work. Alfred A. Gaul,\nVancouver mining engineer, has\ncharge of the operation.\nA power development on Four-\nMile creek is anticipated when tha\ntime comes to enlarge the acopa\nof   the   operation.\nVancouver Wheat\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 20  (CP) \u2014\nVancouver wheat cash prices:\nStraight  Tough\nNo. 1 hard   121%\nNo. 1 nor  121\nNo. 2 nor  115\nNo. 3 nor  112\nNo. 4 nor  187\nNo. 5 wheat   100\nNo. 1 wheat      93%\nFeed        73%\n119V\u00ab\n119\n114\n109%\n104 Vt\n97%\nBO?4\n70%\nv\nWe recommend for accumulation\nat today's market levels\n\u2022 As an     INVESTMENT\nBRALORNE\n\u2022 As a       Speculative Investment   *\nBIG MISSOURI\n\u00a7 As a       SPECULATION\nCariboo Hudson\nThere are good fundamental reasons for these recommendations. Write for copy of analysis which explains\nclearly the position of these properties, both mine-\nwise and marketwise.\nOut-of-Town Inquiries Invited\nCM. Olivers. Co., Lid.\n' j Members Vancouver 8tock Exchange\nEst'd. 1907    734 West Hastings St.   Vancouver, B, C.\nAAA    AGEGC\nA A M    GUARAh\n3 STAR RVE\nA special  quality old rye of Ant\nflavor, thoroughly matured  In   oak.\nMr \u00bb!-\u201e 0i\nAGE GOVERNMENT\nGUARANTEED \\\nM75    m\nA    40 oz.\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by tiie Liquor Control Board or by.\nThe Government of British Columbia.\nMM\n \t\nm *wmmmmmmm\nmmm\ntsf\"^*-^^^\nt SIXTEEN\nNEL80N DAILY NEW8, NELSON, B.C^-SATURBAY MORNINO. AUG. 21. 1937\n:;**:\u2022 :*\u2022*, ., \u25a0*.-,;-\nr\nFILMS\nTO FIT ALL\nCAMERAS\nfann, Rutherford\nDrug Co.\n, A. C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nita 205\nMedical Arts Bldg\nPERFUMES\nD'ORSAY\nCHEVALIER\nTROPHEE\nCOMTESSE\nAt SMYTHE'S\nPrescription Druggist\nPHONE  1\nSomers Hears ol\nMolher'sPassing\nat Venerable Age\nE. W. Somers received a wire Friday announcing the death of his\nmother, Mrs, Robert H. Somers,\nwhich occurred earlier in the day\nat her home at Baie Verte, N.B., at\nthe age of 77 years. Mrs. Somers,\nwhose maiden name was Lavinia\nSprague, was predeceased by her\nhusband, who died in May, 1935.\nafter a lifetime on their farm overlooking Northumberland Strait.\nMrs. Somers, whose funeral takes\nplace Saturday, is survived by three\nsons and six daughters. Thc sons\nare Rev. George N. Somers, Kensington, P.E.I.; Rev. Harry L. Somers, Tunkhannock, Penn.; and E. W.\nSomers, Nelson. The daughters arc\nMrs. Fred Dobson, Tignish, N.B;\nMrs. Blake Ogden, Billcrica, Mass.:\nMrs. Walter L. Maxwell, Nakusp,\nB.C.; Mrs. Roy Bishop, Arlington,\nMass.; Mrs. Harris Esterbrooks,\nSackvillc, N.B.; and Mrs. Floyd\nWheaton, Upper Sackvillc, N.B.\nMr. Somers, when in eastern Canada last year for the general assembly of the United Church of\nCanada, made a trip to Prince Edward Island and visited his mother,\nwhose health was then frail.\nNews of the Day  Week'sFlresin\nTerritory Bui 23;\nDance at the Golf Club Tonight\n(2042)\nSee the Cllpihave Electric Razor\n$12.50.    Hlppenon  Hardware,\n(1971)\nProven by teit, we carry R. C. A.\nVictor, Stromberg-Carlion and Welt-\nInghouie Radios. Kootenay Music\nHouse. (1799)\n5*KS*\u00bb\u00ab**\u00bbMS$*\u00abS5\u00abS\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab$\u00ab$S5$ -\nCarson Old Country Asi't. Chocolates\nAT   VALENTINE'S\nDay and night Service. Phone 93,\nB.B.Taxi. 0817)\nThe  best  malted  mllki  In town\nare at GELINAS'. Try them. (1818)\nWhen next you need a Floral Design, try H. Kitchener, Ph. 218, R.\n(1987)\nDon't put It off.   See the new\nQuaker Oil Burning Heater now.\nPhone E. Gould, 946\n(1986)\nFISHING IS GOOD AT\nAINSWORTH.    COTTAGES, CABINS,  SPECIAL   HOTEL   RATES.\n(2014)\nComplete Stock of Burgeu Batteries\nMcKAY & 8TRETTON\n(2021)\nNewspapers, Magazine! and Smokes\nBISHOP'S NEWS STAND\n(1823)\nFor Typewriter Repair! and Service\nCall Kitto, 964.\n(1822)\nThe TREND li definitely to\nthe New CIVIC THEATRE\n(1973)\n8EE A. TERRILL FOR UPHOLS\nTERING AND DRAPERIES. 120\nHIGH STREET. (1862)\n\"Kootenay Valley Dairy\" milk li\npure, freih and wholeiome. Raw or\npasteurized. Phone 116. (1865)\nWanted \u2014Plums, Green Gages.\nHuckleberries, early apples. McDonald Jam. Co. (1924)\nDANCE-TONIGHT AT\nAINSWORTH.     MARGARET\nGRAHAM'S ORCHESTRA\n(2013)\nWeit Arm Agricultural Fair,\nHarrop, Sept. 1st. Entrlei cloie Aug.\n27th. Prize lists from Secretary.\n(2043)\nHazard Moderate\nWhile there were 23 forest fires\nin the Kootenay-Boundary territory\nduring the week ending Thursday,\naccording to Friday's compilation by\nthe forest branch here, the fires\nwere practically all of the \"spot'\ncategory, none being over a couple\nof acres in extent, and of the two\nfires still alive at the time the rangers mailed their reports, both were\ndown to a patrol basis.\nOn the 23 new fires of the week,\n13 were in the West Kootenay-\nBoundary, and 10 in the East Kootenay, bringing the former district's\ntotal to date since May 1 to 134,\nand the latter's to 108, with a combined total of 242. Each district had\none fire alive.\nBoth divisions had only a moderate fire hazard during the week,\nthough any rains were no more than\nsprinkles.\nDance at the Golf Club Tonight\n(2042)\nCAPITOL\nComing\u2014MONDAY and TUESDAY\nCOMPLETE PICTURES OF THE\nCORONATION\nIN GORGEOUS TECHNICOLOR\nSIMONE SIMON\nPLUS \u25a0\nJAMES STEWART\n\"SEVENTH HEAVEN'\nDon't forget ueen City Moton\nSpecials this week.\nHonest   $   Values.\n(2038)\nST. SAVIOUR'8 PRO-CATHEDRAL\n13th Sunday after Trinity\nMorning Prayer 11 a.m.\nVen. Archdeacon F. H. Graham\nPreacher\nEvening Prayer 7:30 p.m.\nRev. A. S. Partington, Preacher\n(2037)\nBENEFIT DANCE\nIn aid of family whose home was\ndestroyed by fire. Woodland Hall,\nBalfour, August 20th, 9 p.m. Margaret Graham's Orchestra. Tickets\n40c at Flcury's or J. Berry, Harrop;\nMrs. W. Driver, Kaslo; R. Sherraden,\nAinsworth; C. Holt, Balfour.   (2032)\nElectric Hotplatei, $1.75, $2.00 and\n$2.25.   Hipperson Hardware. (1971)\nDance at the Golf Club Tonight\n(2042)\nFor the finest In Radio reception\nconiult the Kootenay Music Houie.\n(1799)\nLADIES'WHITE SHOES, pr.\nSANDALS, pr. \t\nSATURDAY ONLY\nGODFREY'S LTD.\n$1.49\n... 50c\n(2030)\n\u2014 YOUR OWN\nCIVIC TfiCftTRC\nEXCLUSIVE SHOWING\nFOR ADULTS ONLY\nTHE MOST DARING PICTURE OF THE YEAR\u2014TRUE\nAND AUTHENTIC IN EVERY DETAIL\u2014THE\nSENSATION OF THE DAY.\n'SINSofLOVF\nSTARTS MONDAY\nfor Two Days Only\nLADIES ONLY TM\nMEN ONLY\nuesday Evening, 7 and 9 p.m.\nMonday Evening, 7 and 9 p.m.\nTuesday    Matinee,   2;00    p. m.\nThis is a picture that exposes the\ntraffic in illegal operations and is\npurely o\u00a3 an educational nature.\nADMISSION\nFOR THIS ENGAGEMENT ONLY\nMATINEE 400       EVENINGS 40*5\nDANCE \u2014TONIGHT\u2014DANCE\nIn Eagle Hall, Mutlc by\nThe TROUBADOURS\nGenti 50c \u25a0:\u25a0 Ladlei 25c\n(2044)\nHeads Bar Association\nTORONTO. Aug. 20 (CP)\u2014Senator J. W. deB. Farris of Vancouver\ntoday was elected president of the\nCanadian Bar association, succeeding Mr. Justice H. H. Davis of the\nsupreme court of Canada.\nRANGER WINS\nMATTAPOISETT, Mass., August\n20 (AP)\u2014Bowling along in a brisk\nsouthwester, the current America's\ncup defence yacht Ranger, trounced\ntwo British and two American rivals\nin a 31-mile race today.\nFour minutes astern of Ranger,\ncame Rainbow, cup defender in\n1934, with a comfortable margin over the two Endeavors with which\nT. 0. M. Sopwith, British yachtsman, sought to lift the cup.\nRanger led Rainbow by four minutes, Endeavor II by 8V4 minutes,\nGerard Lambert's Yankee by 11*>4\nminutes, and Endeavor I, by 12\nminutes.\nA change Is as good ai > rett.\nTreat the family to a meal that will\nrival your home cooked dlnneri\nat   The Golden Gate Cafe\n(2011)\nKodak Fllmi and Developing\nValentine's Newi Depot\nOur luiti are built for any man\nwith an eye to spirited distinction\nand a desire to command admiration\nfrom the right people.\nJACK   BOYCE\n(1795)\nKNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS\nBasket picnic at Park, 1 o'clock\ntoday, August 21, to celebrate\n40th anniversary of Nelson. Trail\nand New Denver lodges, all Knights,\nPythian Sisters and families, also\nvisiting Brothers and Sisters are requested to attend. (2029)\nAmateur Cards\nNecessary For\nSports Events\nAlbert (Major) Wallach announced Thursday night that all athletes\nentering the Labor day sports will\nhave to obtain amateur cards to\nallow them to participate in the\nsports. The cards, which cost 25\ncents, are to prove the amateur status of the athlete.\nTo date, Mr. Wallach has received\nentries from Edmonton, Vancouver,\nHalcyon Springs, the Wilcox mine\nat Ymir and other nearby points\nfor the dancing and games. Mr.\nWallach has had four letters from\nVancouver asking permission to\njudge the highland games.\nComfortably furnished Club Room\nnow available for Board Meetings,\nPrivate Bridge Parties, Church\nCircle Gatherings, etc. Ideal Headquarters for any Service Clubs.\nFully equipped kitchen in conjunction if required. Moderate tariff.\nApply Sec, Canadian Legion.\n(2024)\nNowhere else on the American\nContinent has pageantry reached\nthe heights of sparkling brilliance\nand variety attained at the Canadian National Exhibition at Toronto. Let Greyhound Lines take\nyou to the World's Greatest Annual Exposition.\nPhono 800 for Particulars.\nGreyhound Lines\nNelson Depot - 205 Baker St\nPHONE 800       U80f>\nLOS ANGELES, August 20, (AP)\n\u2014John Montague, wizard ot the golf\nlinks, waived extradition today (ind\nprepared to leave for New York to\nface a charge of participating in\nthe holdup of a Jay, N. Y., roadhouse\nin 1030. Municipal Judge Leroy\nDawson then released Montague's\n$10,000 bond.\nWhy Not a Want Ad?\nOn That-\nFISHING TRIP\nRoyal\nExport\nwL\n''~^~S *\"&'\u25a0\" \\\nV'B#^\n\\\u00ab*n\u00bbrt\";...-:'\u25a0 x^\nKootenay\nBreweries\nLimited\nThis advt. is not published or\ndisplayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nAfter the\nParty or Dance\nWhen you feel like\na real tasty snack\nyou'll enjoy one of\nour delicious chicken\nsandwiches \u2014 Come\nin tonight.\nTHE STAR\nThe Right Place to Dine\nin Nelson\nR\u00abkRi\nGROCERY\nSuccessors to J. A. Irving 4 Co.\nPHONE 161\nEffective\nSATURDAY and MONDAY\nPEACHES\u2014Eating;      nn\nbaiket  .-fat\/l\/\nTOMATOES-Just        <)Q\nright; baiket   AlOC\nCORN\u2014Golden\nBantam; doz. ....\n32c\nCANTALOUPS\u2014Large\n29c\nCANTALOUPS\u2014Extra      QK\u00ab\nlarge; 2 for  OJ-L\nWATERMELONS\u2014Medium  k *\nsize; per lb  frL\nGRAPES\u2014Big  Red  Ma-  9,1 ~\nlaga; 2 Ibi  O'it\nCUCUMBERS\u2014Good ilze; 1 A-\nGREEN ONIONS\u2014 1(j.\nHUBBARD  SQUASH\u2014 A _\nPer\/lb  li\\,\nBEANS\u2014Green  or Yellow; 3 Ibi\t\n23c\nHALF-GALLON JARS\u2014Regular\nand Wide Mouth;\ndoz\t\nCORN FLAKES\u2014\nQuaker; 3 pkgs\t\nPINEAPPLE\u2014Large\nslice*; 2 tlni \t\nSODAS\u2014I.B.C., 1-lb. car-\ntorn; each\t\n4 ban Cold Cream Soap and 1\nKarbol Soap;\nAll for\t\nWHOLE GRAIN WA-       OQ _\nFERS\u2014Pkg  tUOL\nCELERY,  BANANAS,  APPLES,\nPEPPERS, LETTUCE\nPhone Orden In Early, Please\nFREE DELIVERY\n$1.75\n25c\n25c\nr: 15c\na and 1\n24c\nThe\nSugar Bowl\nGrocery\n~ specials\"\nFor 21 stand 23rd\nSockeye Salmon, All Gold \u00a3\u00a3jt\ni\/2'i; 4 for **T\nPink Salmon\u20141-lb, tint;    a*C\u00abJ\n3 for   ***\nFresh Herrings\u20141-lb. tlni; iCak\n3 for   \u2022*'r\nBrumwick Sardinei\u2014       \"Xtt\n5 for  mjr\nShlrriff'i Jellies In 1-lb. glaii Jari\n\u2014Mint, quince, etc.;       \"tAt\neach mjr\nShlrriff'i Luihut Jellies\u2014 JJjJ\n3 pkti. for m*r\nShlrriff'i Fancy Free Dei- 2,\\t\niert-3 pkti. for m'tr\nCreamery  Butter\u2014       C| ()\u00a3\nGrade A; 3 Ibi. for.... **\u2022\"\u2022*\nPremium Bacon\u2014'\/2-lb.     JC(J\npkti.; per Ib *JT\nFreih Eggi\u2014Grade A-       *JCA\nlarge; 2 doz. for   \u25a0\u00bb\u25a0**\"\n2 pkti. Quaker Puffed Rice, and\none glatt tumbler free; aQ|t\nall for *   r\nFaultleii Pineapple, 2'i, slicedI or\ncruihed; Viet\n2 tint for      \u25a0*T\nHeinz Pure Vinegar\u2014       JAti\nQuart bottlei; each      '~\nCoffee\u2014Nabob; AQ\u00a3\nper Ib *   r\nPotatoet\u2014Flnett quality; 2tt\n10 Ibt. for m'*r\nFOR FINEST QUALITY AT\nLOWEST PRICES\nPHONE 110\nFreih Milk, Cream and Ice Cream\n-YOUR OWN\nCIVIC\nContinuous From 1 p.m.\nLast Complete Show at 9:10\nPut them all together\n...they spell ths year'i\ngreatest screen ihow!\n*JACK BENNY\n.GEORGE BURNS\n* ORACIE ALLEN\n+ BOB BURNS and\n* MARTHA RAYE\n\u25a0As. Benny Goodman\nond hli Orthsttra\njl,SHIII11Y   ROSS\nHAY MULANP\n1  FRANK   fOREST    M\nBENNY   FIELDS\n.Ilk Otttttttttl it tit jtlltrUj,\nLEOPOLD STOKOWSKI\nond Ml Symphony Orch.,\nLouii DaPron, Eleanors\nWhitney, Lorry Adler,\nVirginia (ftgi.iM Weidler\nDavid Holt, Billy let.\nA Pa ro mo Milt Pltturt\nDlitetid ky Mluh.ll lalitn\n7:30 and 9:10\n2-REEL   COMEDY\n\"OFFICERS'   MESS\"\nWith Shemp Howard\nCOLORED  CARTOON\n\"BOULEVARDIER  OF\nBRONX\"\nudiaitund\n, REX\"*'\nADULTS 25c\nChildren 10c Anytime\nFALL\nHATS\nSee   these   new   wider\nbrim hats for fall. Hom-\nbergs,   welts   and   snap\nbrims. New styles. New\ncolors.\nKensington  .... f3.85\nBrock     ?5.00\ngMORY'S\nLimited\nSeventy-one women are among\nthe research workers in the Soviet\nArctic.\nPHONE  81S\nfor better and prompter ierv-\nIce In plumbing report and\nalteration!.\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER FLUMBER\nAuction Sale\nLARCE HALL\nCANADIAN LECION\nWednesday, Aug. 25th.\n\u2022   2 P.M.\nActing under instructions from\nthe owners I will of(er the following (subject to prior sale):\n2 dish washers, utensils, chicken\nwire, electric plate and oven, gasoline lamp, taps and dies, sealers,\nsmall cook stove, theaters, posi\nauger, cultivator, l D.C. motor,\nchest of drawers, brass bed and\nmattress, cedar wardrobe, kitchen\ntable and chairs, Zenith electric\nwashing machine, centre and end\ntables, blankets, book case and\nbooks, oak dining room chair, table lamps, occasional chair, phonograph records, etc, etc., etc.\nTerms: G. HORSTEAD,\nCaih. Auctioneer\nROOFING\nEoves Troughs, etc.\nR. H. Maber\nPhone 865      510 Kootenr*^ St.\nWant Ads Get Results\nGreeting Cards\n* Yes People do have birth- ,\nJ days in the hot weather,\nX and some get siok. Others\nJ get married and have chil-\nf dren.\n| You would like to remem-\ni ber all these events but it\n* is too warm tor writing\nt letters or maybe you're too\n* busy.\nWe have a properly worded card tor\nall ot these occasion.\nAllen's Art Shoppe\nHeadquarters for Fine Photo\nFinishing.\nGOOD  THINGS  TO   EAT\nVariety\u2014\nWith a most varied menu to chooso\nfrom, you could eat at the L.D. every\nday for a month and never repeat\na meal .. .\nYou'll like our food.\nL.D. CAFE\nNELSON'S   FINEST   RESTAURANT\nLAST\nTIMES\nTODAY\nCONTINUOUS SHOW FROM 1 ;00 P.M\nPRESENTS        0\nWOMAN CHASES MAW\nmfh MIRIAM HOPKINS -JOR MCCR\u00a3A\nCHARLES wf-NNINGER-ERIK RHODES\nFeature Start, at 1:36.4:20,7:22, 10:06\nA^Sm.\nDANCER \u2014 ACTION \u2014 THRILLS\nINDIANS ARE ON THE WARPATH\nHILLS OF OLD WYOMING'\nFeaturing WILLIAM BOYD\nBOYS and GIRLS\nFREE\nSHOW\nCHILDREN'!\nmiatinU*\ninTURDAV\nFREE\nSHOW\nSpecial Matinee for Children at 1:00\nSerial\u2014\"BURN 'EM UP BARNES\"\nPop-Eye\u2014I SKI LOVE SKI YOU SKI\nOswald\u2014\"SOFTBALL CAME\"\namm\nm\n","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"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.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType":[{"value":"Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial":[{"value":"Nelson (B.C.)","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier":[{"value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1937_08_21","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0412195","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language":[{"value":"English","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat":[{"value":"49.493333","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long":[{"value":"-117.295833","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider":[{"value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher":[{"value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/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","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source":[{"value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title":[{"value":"The Daily News","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type":[{"value":"Text","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description":[{"value":"","type":"literal","lang":"en"}]}}