{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0412340":{"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":"1937-08-12","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0412340\/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":" \u25a0\"-' '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.\n\u2014'\nwmw\n\u25a0\u00ab!ji\u00ab!V'.pw\u00bb^!^^\nibi:''ARv\nNelson Takes Trail in Boxh\nby 15 to 12 Score\n\u2014Page Seven\n16m\nCapt. J. Coles Takes the Brier\nShoot at the RR A.\n\u2014Page Two\nRJ\/3\nVOLUME 36\nFIVE CENTS PER COPY\n.li*}\"f.\nLATE FLASHES\nFROM THE\nWIRES\nCOLUMBIA, CANADA-THURSDAY MORNING, AUG. 12, 1937\nNUMBER 98\nSTRIKERS  TURN\nDOWN HEPBURN PLAN\nPETERBOROUGH, Ont, Aug.\n11 (CP)\u2014Holding out for an\nagreement with the company for\nan Increase In wages, the strikers\nof the two Peterborough textile\nmills of the Dominion Woolens\nand Worsteds decided tonight to\nturn down the offer of Premier\nMitchell Hepburn of an investigation Into the Ontario textile\ntrades.\nREMANDED   FOR   HEARING\nON MURDER CHARGE\nMONTREAL, Aug. 11 (CP) -\nCharged with the murder of Hya-\ncinthe Cote, well-to-do property\nowner whose body was found July\n24 on the outskirts of the city, Lionel Gauthier, 30, and Exclephat Benoit, 32 were remanded today for\npreliminary hearing Aug. 18.\nGROUSE 8H00TING\nSEASON OPENSi BRITAIN\nLONDON, Aug. 11 (CP) - The\ngrouse shooting season opens tomorrow\u2014\"the glorious 12th\"\u2014and\nthis year mechanization has made\nrapid strides even into this sport.\nA great fillip has been given the\nseason in Scotland by the presence\nof the King, who Inherits the fine\nmarksmanship of George V* Scottish moors and forests are well let\nand many have commanded higher\nrentals than formerly. The king\nwill be shooting over the royal\nmoors at Altnaguisbach, Balmoral\nand Birkhill.\n60 ATHLETES MAY    *\nREPRESENT CANADA\nTORONTO, Aug. 11 (CP)-Sec-\nretary Bobby Robinson of the British Empire Games association of\nCanada Eaid today it appeared likely a team of 60, including six officials, would represent Canada at\nthe Empire Games in Australia next\nyear. The team will sail from Vancouver Dec. 22 on the S. S. Aorangi.\nMOHAMMEDAN   KURDS\nIN WILD REBELLION\nDtlR-EZ-ZOR, Syria, Aug. 11\n(AP) \u2014French bombing planes\n.....JWdmotorlMd Infantry went into\naction today to suppress a rebel,\nlion of Mohammedan Kurds\nagainst French rule In Syria. Several Christians were Injured, villages were pillaged and civil\nauthorities who tried to restore\norder were fired upon by bands\nof wild Kurdish tribesmen in\nnortheastern Syria. The French\nwere concerned over the origin of\nlarge shipments of cartridges and\nother munitions, found at Aleppo, and consigned to the rebellious,\ntribesmen.\nSILK STRIKERS BACK TO WORK\nPATERSON, N, J., Aug. 11 \u2014\n(AP)\u2014Signed agreement between\nthe C.I.O. and employers brought\na back-to-work movement In\nparts of Pennsylvania's silk and\nrayon Industry today while the\nunion's demands for higher wages\nprevented a quick strike settlement with many mills in the local\nPassaic valley. Union estimates\nvaried as to the number resuming work. In New York Sidney\nHillman, chairman of the ClO's\ntextile workers organizing committee estimated 13,000 returned\nto work with between 30,000 and\n40,000 workers in the two states\nremaining on strike.\n125 MILL WORKERS\nON STRIKE AT COAST\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 11 (CP)\u2014\nThe Arbutus Sash and Door and\nSigurdson Millwqrk plant remained closed here today while officials of the company and the\nLumber and Sawmill Workers'\nunion, Local 2775, met In an attempt to end the strike In which\n125 men walked out Monday,\nSTRIKE CLOSES SEVEN\nSPOKANE LAUNDRIES\nSPOKANE, Aug. 11 (AP)-Spo-\nkane's seven largest laundries were\nclosed tonight and 500 laundry employees on strike \"demanding\"\nclosed shop agreements. The strike\nwas called by the laundry and dry\ncleaning workers union, the International Teamsters union and the\nOperating Engineers union, all American Federation of Labor affiliates. The laundries refused to negotiate, they said.\n5 i\nMattson Kidnap\nSTRIKE OFFICIALS\nINTERVIEW MINISTERS\nOTTAWA, Aug. 11 (CP)-Repre-\nsentatives of striking Quebec textile workers today interviewed two\nmembers of the cabinet and asked\nthe government to use its influence\nwith Dominion Textile Ltd., to induce thc company to recognize their\nunion and enter into collective bargaining negotiations.\nSCHMELING  HEADS\nFOR  UNITED STATES\nBERLIN, Aug. 11 (AP)\u2014Max\nSchmeling, German heavyweight\nand conqueror of Joe Louis, left today to embark on the steamship\nBremen for the United States and\nthe Louis-Tommy Fair bout.\nSchmeling 'denied he had accepted\na fight with the winner. \"I haven't\neven received an offer,\" he said.\nPossible  Doukhobor Parade\non Nelson Mooted by Police\nCHURCH AND CAR\nOF TIES BURNED,\nIRRIGATION TANK\nBOMBED, FORKS\nPremier King Wants Court\nTest of Aberhart Bank Bill\nWould Hold Up Action\nTill Supreme Court\nGives Opinion\nNO COMMENT IN\nALBERTA CIRCLES\nFederal  Premier Sees\nthe Matter as\nUrgent\nEDMONTON, Aug. 11 (CP)\u2014Alberta's reply to Prime Minister\nMackenzie King's message on a supreme court test of the province's\nrecent banking legislation will not be given until Premier Aberhart\nreturns to the city from a rural speaking tour, Hon, E. C. Manning,\nacting premier ,sald today,\n\"I will hand over the telegram to the premier when he returns to\nthe city,\" Mr. Manning stated.\n\"In Premier Aberhart's absence, there will be no official comment\non Premier King's message,\" he added,\nREPORTER HURT\nIN STRIKE RIOT\nSEATTLE, Aug. 11 (AP)-Paul\nO'Neill, 27, Seattle Times reporter,\nlay in a hospital tonight, suffering\nsevere head injuries received tody\nwhen he was \"covering\" street fighting around the Seattle Star plant,\nwhere an American Newspaper guild\nstrike is in progress.\nO'Neill was knocked down by \u00abn\nunidentified man and kicked in the\nstomach i during a clash between\nguild pickets and men wearing teamsters union buttons. He was left-\nunconscious in a service station\nyard until another reporter went to\nhis aid.\nThree others were hurt.\nDr. S. N. Berens said O'Neill was\nunconscious several hours from\nbrain concussion and a possible\nskull fracture. O'Neill aroused late\nin the day but was irrational and\n\"had to be put to sleep,' the physician said.\nITALIAN HOSPITAL\nSHIP BURN8\nNAPLES, Aug. 12 (Thursday)-\n(AP)\u2014The vetern Italian hospital\nship Helouan, whose most recent\ntask has been the return of\nwounded Italian soldiers from\nSpain, was wrecked by fire early\ntoday In Naples harbor. Although\none fireman was asphyxiated, no\nother casualties were Immediately reported. Thc ship recently has\nplied between Spain and Italy,\nbringing back wounded Italian\nsoldiers from the area of the\nSpanish civil war.\n.., names\nin the news\nStaunch opponent to the\nNew Deal, the\nRev. Charles E-\nCoughlin, Detroit radio\npriest, has\nturned his attention to the\nC.I.O., which,\nhe claims, Is\nan unchristian\no r g a nidation,\ntn an open letter published\nIn his newspaper, Social\nJustice,  he\nC^Z.   .C,?r  \"\"  COUGHLIN\nmunlsts   supported the C.I.O. and that the United\nAutomobile Workers' union is \"dom*\nInted by known radicals.\"\nA question sticking In the minds\nof many people is wether the\nC.I.O. will organize Ford\nworkers Into\nthe United\nA u to m o b lie\nW o r k e r s'\nunion. Henry\nFord, Multl-\nin I I llonaire\nmotor magnate,\nhas declared\nverbally anit\nby action that\nhe won't recog\nnlze the union\nunless forced\nto by the government or by\na complete tle-\nu p of his\nplants.\nKING WIRE8 ABERHART\nOTTAWA, Aug. 11 (CP)-Alber-\nta's bank legislation may be referred to the supreme court of Canada for an opinion on its validity,\nPrime Minister Mackenzie King disclosed tonight. He telegraphed Premier William Aberhart today, asking if the Alberta government would\nfacilitate such a reference and refrain from enforcement until the\ncourt delivered its opinion.\nThe telegram Mr. King sent to\nthe Alberta premier read:\n\"Minister of justice is considering\nunder provisions British North\nAmerica act certain legislation enacted at recent session Alberta legislature.\n\"Before submitting question for\ndecision of governor in council\nwould appreciate your letting me\nknow whether your government\nwould be willing to facilitate hearing of a reference to supreme court\nof Canada regarding validity of bills\nNos. 5, 6, and 9 and to undertake\npending determination of such reference not to take any steps toward\nenforcement of any of said measures.\n(Continued on Page Ten)\nINDIANS RESCUE\nGIRL CANOEIST\nPRINCE RUPERT, B.C., Aug. 11,\n(CP)\u2014Rescued by Indians after being marooned three days on the\nrocky shore of Gardner canal south\nof here, Annette Lowman, 22-year-\nold University of Washington co-ed\npaddling a dugout canoe from the\nUnited states to Alaska, arrived\nat this northern British Columbia\nport today.\nMiss Lowman, exhausted by paddling with a piece of wood after\nlosing her paddles in an upset in\nthe canal, was found lying on an\nisolated beach.\n\"This is embarrassing for me to\ntell, but I don't mind admitting I\ncried when those natives took me\naboard their boat,\" the girl canoeist\nsaid on arrival here.\nLONG WALK FOR\nTWEEDSMUIR ON\nEDMONTON VISIT\nEDMONTON, Aug. 11 (CP)-The\nwhole vice-regal touring party was\nreunited tonight with arrival here\nof the governor general's train from\nVancouver bearing Lady Tweedsmuir, Hon. Alastair Buchan and two\nmembers of their excellencies' staff.\nLord Tweedsmuir remained in his\nhotel most of the day, receiving John\nM. Imrie, managing director of the\nEdmonton Journal. In the afternoon\nhe went for a long walK and in the\nevening he and members ot his staff\nalready here went to. the station to\nmeet the vice-regal train.\nMisfire of Dynamite at\nBoundary Probably\nSaved a Life\nBLAME FANATICS\nIN NEW INCIDENTS\nPossibility of a Doukhobor parade on Nelson In connection with\nthe Imprisonment of Peter Vlrl-\ngln, Doukhobor chief, who Is serving three months In provincial Jail\non a vagrancy charge, was mooted\nby provincial police yesterday.\nHowever, no definite Information\nhad been received, It was stated.\nInternal strife between groups\nmaking up the various divisions of\nthe Doukhobor religious sect was\nunderstood to be continuing.\nGRAND FORKS, B.C., Aug. 11 -\nA Doukhobor church and a car of\nrailroad ties fell victim Tuesday\nnight to incendiary torches, and an\nirrigation tank was dynamited\nthough only partly damaged, in the\nlatest outbreak of violence among\nDoukhobors. Provincial police spent\na large part of the night investigating the two fires, which started\nsimultaneously, though three miles\napart, and in endeavoring to trace\nthe explosion, which shook houses\nmore than a mile away, and which\nalso occurerj at the same tlsne, ..\nThe church was in -the east part\nof the valley near Grand Forks,\nwhere Independent Doukhobors predominate; and the car, a Great\nNorthern railway flat car loaded\nwith 300 creosoted ties, was on a\nsiding a few feet from the site of\nthe Great Northern freight shed and\nwaiting room, destroyed by incendiary flames July 31. At that time\nthree barns were destroyed in the\nSlocan valley, attempts were made\nat three other ranches, and an attempt was made to burn a house at\nGrand Forks.\nFanatic Doukhobors were blamed\nfor the latest fires and for the dynamiting, which caused about $20\ndamage to a surge tank of the Grand\nForks irrigation system, at Carson\non the international boundary southwest of Grand Forks.\nHad the dynamiting achieved its\ndesired object, police said, W. J.\nGibbs would be dead and several\nthousand acres of land around Grand\nForks would be without irrigation.\nOnly the entrance of the tank was\ndamaged. It was believed that if\nthe dynamite had blown up thc tank\nas intended it would probably also\nhave destroyed the adjacent pump-\nhouse in which Mr. Gibbs was working.\nThe explosion was heard over a\nwide area at the time of the fires\nbut the scene was not located until\nnOon Wednesday.\nThe dynamiting occurred about\nthree miles from the railway car\nfire and six miles from the destroyed church, the fires and explosion\nall occuring at the same time,\nTrain From Coast\nDelayed, Car Off\nTrack at Switch\nC. P. R. train from the west was\ndelayed an hour and 40 minutes in\nthe Boundary Wednesday night\nwhen a pair of wheels on one of the\nCapol show cars, picked up at Grand\nForks to come east, left the track at\na switch as the train went into a\npassing track at Fisherman. The delay was due to the necessity of sending back to Grand Forks for an engine to pull the train back and enable it to proceed without that one\ncar. Reports that Doukhobors had\nopened a sitch were discounted by\nrailwaymen.\n72 Alleged Railroad Wreckers Are\nShot to Death in Russian Far East\nFORD\nMOSCOW, Aug. 11 (AP)-Death\nof 72 alleged wreckers before firing\nsquads today brought to 320 the reported executions in Russia's far\neastern campaign against \"Trotskyists\". The Irkutsk newspaper East\nSiberian PraVda reported the shooting of the 72.\nIt described the band as Trotskyism right terrorists who operated\nalong the Siberian railroad from the\nJapanese secret service with the aim\nof weakening Soviet transportation\nin case of war.\nThe accused were charged with\ncausing a train wreck in which 14\npersons were killed and many injured among workers and their families en \"route to settle the new town\nof Komsomol.\nConcurrently, the drive continued\nagainst \"wreckers\" held responsible\nfor failure to meet production schedules in various branches of Soviet\neconomy.\nFighting Furious as Japanese\nAdvance on the Nankow Pass\nOffers His Aid\nThat a united China may face\nthe present Japanese invasion of\nNorth China is indicated by thc\noffer of General Ma Pu-Fang,\nabove, governor and war-lord\nof Chinghai province, who has\ntelegraphed the government he\nis ready to lead his provincial\ntroops against the Japanese,\nStolen Furs Found;\non 2 Men's Trail\nPRINCE GEORGE. B.C.. Aug. 11\n(CP)\u2014A posse tonight followed a\ntrail through the wild country near\n\u25a0Fort Nelson, B.C., 350 miles north\nof here, pursuing two men who may\nbe connected with the $34,000 fur\nrobbery at the Hudson's Bay post at\nFort Nelson, July 12,1936.\nThe trail was one of campfires and\nfresh footprints, left by two men\nwhen they fled after an Indian discovered most of the furs cached under a tarpaulin on a river bank near\nthe post Sunday.\nLed by Game Warden J. S. Clark,\nposse surrounded thc cache and\nwaited until nightfall for tho men\nto return and continue removing\nthe furs.\nWhen the suspects gave no sign\nof returning, Game Warden Clark\nlaunched the manhunt which soon\npicked up the fresh tracks and tho\nashes of recent campfires. Two canoes were found stolen from Fori\nNelson.\nChinese Powerfully Armed in Attempt Halt\nMovement of Troops From Manchoukuo;\nBarricade Village Near Shanghai\nTOKYO, Aug. 12 (Thursday) (AP)\u2014Japanese Infantry began an\noffensive at Nankow pass, northwest of Pelplng, under the protection\nof aerial squadrons early today.\nThe Domei, Japanese news agency, said the advance began at 5:30\na.m. (1:30 p.m. P.S.T. Wednesday).\nFurious fighting was In progress.\nThc Chinese, Domei dispatches asserted, were using stuffed, scarecrow figures of armed soldiers atop mountains to foil the Japanese\ngunners.\nThe Chinese were powerfully armed with trench mortars and\nartillery to defend their positions.\nJAPANESE   ON   DEFENSIVE\nTIENTSIN. Aug. 12 (Thursday) (AP)\u2014Japanese troops are on the\ndefensive in bitter battle about the mountains of Nankow, but preparing\nto throw the full force of aerial and*\t\nmotorized units into the fight if\nChinese turn toward Peiping to the\nsouth.\nFighting has been in progress since\nearly Wednesday morning.\nThe Chinese 89th division of Nanking, central government, troops\nfrom Suiyuan and Shansi began the\nattack, the Japanese command here\nsaid.\nThey sought control of Nankow\npass, through which Japan has been\nable to move troop reinforcements\nfrom Manchoukuo, over which she\nexercises a protectorate.\nThe Japanese at once brought artillery into play and their activity\npresently is defensive, the Tientsin\nJapanese  command  said.\nBARRICAPE VILLAGE\nSHANGHAI, Aug. 12 (Thursday)\n(AP)\u2014Militarized Chinese police\nbarricaded Kiangwan village, just\nnorth of Shanghai, today against the\npossibility of attack from thc reinforced Japanese garrison and refused lo allow the American community or other'foreigners to depart.\nBRITISH RAIL WORKERS GET\nWAGE RESTORATION\nLONDON, Aug. 11 (CP Cablc)-\nBritish railwaymen today won restoration of the last IVi per cent of\nthe wage cut imposed in 1931 in a\nruling by the national railway tribunal. Thc increase accounted for\nthe last quarter of the five per cent\ncut thc railway staffs accepted during Ihe depression, the other 3% per\ncent having been previously restored. Tribunal, however, ruled againsi\na demand by the railway clerks for\na 36-hour week and also turned\ndown a general demand by all three\nrailway unions for a minimum wa^o\nof 50 shillings (about $12.45) a week\nVALUABLE IDAHO FARM LAND\nSINKING\nBUHL, Idaho, Aug. 11 (AP)\u2014\nDeep rumblings like muffled\nblasts of dynamite and rising\nclouds of dust were awesofne evidence today that valuable farm\nland Is sinking In southern Idaho's\nmost productive agricultural area.\nGeologists, called in by alarmed\nfarmers, were unable to explain\nthc phenomenon. They said they\nwould begin a thorough investigation of the \"sinking canyon\" on\nAugust 22.\nSUSPECT HELD IN\nSOUTH SAYS HIS\nPARTNER KILLED\nTHE TACOMA LAD\nClaims Killer Now in\nthe Nebraska State\nPenitentiary\nDR. MATTSON IS\nNOT CONVINCED\nLEMMON, S. D\u201e August 11,\n(AP)\u2014Chief of police Pat Jones\nsaid tonight that a man giving his\nname as Floyd Hutchinson of Alliance, Neb., admitted taking part\nIn the Charles Mattson kidnapping at Tacoma, Wash., last December 27.\nThe man, said by Chief Jones to\nfit the known physical description\nof the long-sought fugitive, was\npicked up by Jones on a vagrancy\ncharge in a box car here late today.\nJones said Hutchinson told him\nhe and another man called on Mr.\nMattson to get narcotics last winter and a few days later kidnapped\nthe 10-year-old boy.\nAfter kidnapping the child, the\nChief quoted Hutchinson as saying\nhe and the other man took the boy\nto Everett, Wash., where they held\nhim for ransom. Falling to collect,\nhe said, the other man stabbed the\nboy In the back and threw dirt\nand leaves over the body and left\nfor Alliance.\nShortly   after  they   returned  to\nNebraska,  Hutchinson   told  Jones,\n(Continued on Page Ten)\nInsurgents Slop\nGov't. Offensive\nHENDAYE, Franco-SpanisH*>f'ron-\ntier, Aug. 11 (AP)\u2014Spanish insurgent authorities in Irun today announced General Franco's troops\nhad smashed an attempted government offensive on the Asturian front\nin northern Spain.\nGovernment losses were described\nas \"extremely heavy\".\nThe insurgents said battalions of\nAsturian miners swept out of their\ntrenches in the sector, near Oviedo\nand west of Santander, and charged\ntheir former positions.\nMin. Max.\nNELSON   54   74\nVictoria   54 69\nNanaimo   57 78\nVancouver    60 (JO\nKamloops   56 88\nPrince George  52 72\nEstevan Point  56 62\nPrince Rupert   52 58\nLangara   50 60\nAtlin   50 54\nDawson   46 62\nSeattle  64 76\nPortland  66 82\nSan Francisco   62 78\nSpokane  64 86\nLos Angeles   62 78\nKelowna    58 88\nPenticton   58 \u2014\nGrand Forks   56 88\nKaslo    49 -\nCranbrook     44 80\nCalgary  52 80\nEdmonton   56 76 \u2022\nSwift Current   58 88\nMoose Jaw   52 90\nPrince Albert  52 90\nSaskatoon   52 86\nQu'Appelle   46 88\nWinnipeg     50 82\nForecast, Okanagan and Kootenay\n\u2014Moderate westerly winds, fair and\nquite warm.\nRestrictions Extended Under 193?\nMigratory Bird Regulations in B.(.\nOTTAWA, Aug. 11 (CP) - The\ndepartment of mines and resources\ntoday announced migratory bird\nregulations for the 1937 hunting\nseason, extending the restrictive\nprinciples of thc 1936 regulations\nimposed to meet serious depiction of\nwaterfowl through over-shooting\nand through drought on prairie nesting grounds.\nIn all provinces, bag limit for\nducks is placed at 12 a day, bag\nlimit for the season is 150 in the\nmaritime provinces, Ontario and\nQuebec, but luO in the prairie provinces and 125 in British Columbia,\nIn British Columbia, bag limit for\ngeeso (including black Brant) is five\na day, 50 for thc season.\nProhibition of baiting and live decoys continues in all provinces.\nFollowing are open season dates:\nBritish Columbi?:\nIn the eastern districl,-except the\nprovincial    electoral    districts    of\nSkeena, Atlin, Omineca, Fort\nGeorge, Peace River, Salmon Arm,\nSimilkameen, North and South\nOkanagan, open season for ducks,\ngeese and Wilson's snipe will be\nSept. 15 to Nov. 15.\nIn the provincial electoral districts of Atlin, Omineca, Fort\nGeorge, Peace River and that portion of the Skeena electoral district\nsituated and lying in the eastern\ndistricl, open season for ducks,\ngeese, coots and Wilson's snipe will '\nbe Sept. 1 to Oct. 31.\nIn the provincial electoral district\nof Salmon Arm, Similkameen, North\nand South Okanagan, open season\nfor ducks, geese, cools and Wilson's\nsnipe will be Oct. 1 to Nov. 30,\nIn the western district open season\nfor ducks, geese (except snow .\ngeese) and cools will be Oct. 30 to\nJan. 2; open season for black Brant\nand snow geese will be Dec. 18 to\nFeb. 18; open season for band-tailed\npigeons will bo Sept, 11 to Sept 33.\n-\n\u25a0\n  1\t\nmmtw ~ mwmm&yimmmm\n\u00abm\" *P**J5P!PiiR,':\u00bb*VW'PW'1*'\nPAGE TWO .\t\nWALLACE WINS\nSHOT AT TITLE\nDecisions   Bland   on\nJim Braddock's\nVerdict\nTORONTO, Aug. 11 (CP)-A great\nclosing rally gained Gordon Wallaci.\nof Vancouver, former Canadian welterweight champion, a split decision over Tommy Bland, Toronto,\nin  a  12-round  fight  here  tonight.\nLOW COACH FARES\nOne-Way and Round-Trip\n30-DAY LIMITS\nStopovers Anywhero Within Limits\nFrom SOUTH NELSON\n\u2022f On.      Round\n1\" Woy        Trip\nSpokone $3.98 $7.17\nSeattle   9.98 17.97\nTacomo   9.98 17.97\nVancouver    11.42 20.56\nMinneapolis  23.67 48.00*\nSt. Paul  28.89 48.00*\nChicago  34.50 57.35*\n* Return limit 6 months.\nTRAVEL BY TRAIN\nSAFETY - COMFORT - ECONOMY\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.-THURSDAY MORNING, AUG. 12. 19*37\nThird man in the ring was James J.\nBraddock, former world's heavyweight champion.\n\u25a0 A crowd of nearly 10,000, largest\nhere in years, braved threatening\nrain to see the two boys shoot for a\nchance at Frankie Genovese's Canadian -vvelter title. Both weighed in\nat 146*li pounds, a quarter-pound\nunder the welter limit.\nThe fighters gave Braddock a\nt>ood deal of trouble as thev clinched\nmost of the time. Lights nf Ihe noon\nair ring attracted a horde of flies,\nwhich bothered both men.\nWallace took the victory with a\nlone-mnge right Time after time he\n\u25a0hot it into Blnnd's body as the\nTnrnnto bov came in.\nWallace built un an early lead by\nwaiting for Bland's rushes. Tommy\nworked a right uppercut to good advantage in ihe middle rounds, at\ntimes putting the Pacific coast boy\non thc run and often tying him up\non thc ropes.\nTrail Junior Ball\nTeam at Rossland\nThursday Night\nTRAIL, B.C., Aug. 11\u2014The Trail\njunior baseball team, the nucleus\nof which were bantams last season,\nand who have been diligently practicing under the wing of Clint\nHodges, Trail senior baseball club\nsecond sacker, will engage in their\nfirst game of the season Thursday\nnight when they play the Rossland\nseniors at Rossland.\nClint will catch and coach the lads\nfrom thai position.\nClint figures he has a classy aggregation in the youngsters and although he feels they are hardly\ncapable of taking thc golden city\nlads, is confident they will give them\na stiff battle.\nTRY A WANT AD\njCoeur d'Alene Hotel !|\ni\nA     On the Trent Highway\n*%   Canadian Headquarters in\nSPOKANE\nHome of the Famous\nDUTCH MILL\nTune in on:\nThe   Dutch   Mill   Entertainers\nover KGA Radio Station\nEvery   Wednesday,   3:45   p.m.\nEvery Friday, 7:30 a.m.\nMrs. Harry Goctx, Mgress.  \\\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON, B.C., HOTELS\nHume Hotel. Nelson, B.c.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor.\nSAMPLE ROOMS    :    EXCELLENT DINING ROOM\nEuropean Plan, $1.50 up\nHUME\u2014H. Walkey, Kimberley; R\nM. B. Roomc, G. Johns, Trail; II. II.\nMcLarty, Summerland; S. Butler\nKellogg, Idaho; P. Dunkcrley, Vancouver; Ml*, and Mrs, W. Fey. Chicago; Mr. ond Mrs, T. Chitty, Sou,\nOut.; V. Hingley, R. A. Collins, H.\nA. Glcnnie, P. C. Brunei*, J. J, Tynan, II. It. Cameron, P. Chow. J. L.\nWebb. G. I,. Nics, L. Roberts. Calgary; F. .1 Damkin, R. Shiell, Fernie; C. Wylie. Vernon.\nTHE SAVOY HOTEL\n\"Where the Guest is King\"\nMODERN   SAMPLE   ROOMS\nLicensed Premises\n124 Baker St.        W. K. Clark, Prop.        Nelson, B. C.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nP. and L. KAPAK, Proprietors\nCommercial, Tourist  and   Family Trade Solicited.\nFree Parking NELSON, B.C. Phone 234\nOccidents Hotel\n705  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 of the City\nEDGEWOOD, B. C, HOTELS\nARROW LAKES HOTEL\nE.    NIEDERMAN,\nDroprietor\nComfortable   Rooms\nGood  Meals\nEDGEWOOD, P.C.\nLogical    Stopping\nPlace on the\nRoad to Vernon\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\n\"YOUR  VANCOUVER  HOME\"     Newly Renovated Throughout\nDuffterin Hotel \/p^so\",\n900 Seymour St.       Van;ouver, BC.    Coleman, Alia., Proprietor\nTRANSPORTATION - Passenger and Freight\nCRESTON Freight Truck\n2 ROUND TRIPS WEEKLY\nLEAVE  NELSON  ?;30 A.M. TUESDAY  AND  FRIDAY\nLEAVE CRESTON 9:00 A.M. WEDNESDAY AND SATURDAY\nPhone 342 Nelson or 16 Creston\nASK THE RED TRUCK FOR SERVICE\nGLEN'S TRANSFER\nP. O. Box 539\nNelson, B. C.\nCAPU COLES WIN BRIER SHOOT\nWITH 123 DESPITE A RAIN STORM\nBy  F08TER   BAT.CLAY\nCanadian Prest Staff Writer\nCONNAUGHT RIFLE RANGES,\nOnt., Aug. 11 (CP)-Undisturbed\nby a heavy rainstorm, Capt. James\nColes of Winsloe, P.E.I., station, today won th Brief match, second\nonly to. the governor general's final\nfor toughness, at the annual meet*\ning of Ihe Dominion of Canada Rifle\nassneation.\nMost of Canada's best sharpshooters were irked by the rain,\nbut the Maritime sniper plugged\nalong cautiously to compile a score\nof 123 points, two short of possible,\nover 300 and 600 yards. He was\nawarded first prize money and a\nsilver medal.\nH G. James, member of the Australian team which won the Kolapore cup at Bisley last month, stood\nalone in second place in the Brier\nwith 122.\nFOUR IN THIRD PLACE\nA quartet finished in a tie for\nthird place with 121. They were; Pt,\nA. E. Doig of Montreal; Capt. Desmond T. Burke of Ottawa; Lieut.\nC A. Molecey of Vancouver and\nSergt. N. K. Martin of Ottawa.\nLieut. N. Colville of Vancouver\nand Sgt. Don Brereton of Winnipeg tied for fourth place with 120.\nShooting over the tough 1000 yard\nrange, eight sharpshooters scored\n49 of a possible 50 points to tie for\nfirst place in the life members.\nThose tied and who will shoot off\nlater in the week for a silver medal\nare: Corp. G. C Coleman, Toronto;\nCapt. Wayne MacKenzie, Ottawa,\nSig. R. J. Auty, Fuilph; Sgt. E. J.\nReid, Esquimalt, B. C-\\ Lieut G. E.\nMatchett, Hamilton; Pte. W. Strachan, Ottawa; Sgt. J. D. O'Connell,\nHalifax and Major W. H. Blake,\nSaint John, N. B.\nThe Irish Fusiliers team of four\nfrom Vancouver were easy winners\nof the Brier team prize, compiling\n466 points, four more than the Cameron Highlanders of Ottawa. R. H,\nL. I. four was third with 460.\nMembers of the victorious team\nwere: Lieut. G. A. Molecey, 121;\nLieut, G. N. Colville, 120; Sgt. A. W.\nLamb, 113, and Fusilier I. M. Grant,\n112.\nSenior Golfers\nlo Compete lor\nMcBride Trophy\nLull in tournament golfing at the\nNelson Golf & Country club will\nbe broken next week-end, August 21\nand 22, when the \"old boys\"* of the\nclub take their stand in the Senior\nmembers tourney, with the McBride\ncup as ihe prize. This tourney is\nexclusively for members 50 years old\nand over. It will be the first scheduled tourney in over a month.\nR. E. Horton is the present holder\nof this cup, having defeated W. T.\nFotheringham, runner-up, on the\n19th hole in the finals last season.\nQUISPAMSIS, N. B. (CP)-Three\nbaby skunks, all white and thus extremely rare, were discovered and\ncaptured in a field here by Thomas\nLiddell, farmhand, and now he's\nwondering what lo do with them.\nTwo ordinarily striped skunks were\nin the same litter.\nSoftball Losses\nto Hold Playoffs\nHere in September\nBy mutual consent of the two top\nteams of the Nelson Girls' Softball\nleague, Maple L-eafa and the Red\nSox, the city league playoffs Will\nnot be run off until September, Several players of each squad will be\nabsent on holidays,\nBoth clubs will appear in exhibition games, it was reported, thc\nvacancies being filled by members\nof the Aces squad.\nNelson and- Trail rep teams will\nmeet in exhibition here early in September, it is expected.\nBeavers Revenge\nLoss lo Giants\nTeams Share Top Spot\nin Trail Bantam\nBall Loop\nLEAGUE   STANDING\nPWL\nBeavers   3   2   1\nGiants    3   2   1\nCubs  2   2   2\nTRAIL, B.C., Aug. 11-Beavers\nevidentally learned a few tricks\nsince they last met Giants lor this\nafternoon Beavers triumphed over\nGiants 17-3 at Butler park.\nBuster Smart, who walked about\n10 Giants and permitted about 12\nhits in the last fixture, pulled one\nout of the hat when he heaved a\ncracker-jack of a battle today. He\nwalked only three men, allowed\nfour hits and struck out eight.\nGiants used three hurlers for the\nseven-inning conflict, Billy Rae\nstarting. Ciarelli relieving in the\nsecond and Archie Martin finished\nout the last inning.\nBeavers collected three hits off\nthe  three chuckers.\nHitting talent of Beavers came to\nlight as four sluggers poled out circuit clouts, all pushing runs across\nthe dish. .Homers were made by Reg.\nSmart, Bill Maitland, Buster Smart\nand Tom Wolfe.\nJack McKee of Giants was responsible for three of Giants' four\nruns, hitting a * triple with bases\nloaded.\nThe teams were:\nGiants\u2014Frank Turik, Nick Turik, Fred Pagnan, Lome Tognotti,\nJack McKee, Faust Angerilli, Albis\nBrmacrjra, .Bert Milnei Ciarelli, Bill\nRae and Archie Martin.\nBeavers\u2014Fred Wood, \"Brick\" Edmunds, Reg. Smart, Bill Maitland.\nBuster Smart, Tom Wolfe, Alex\nHoneyman, Herb Moon and Gerald\nBirch.\nH. T. Beckett, was umpire.\n87 Certificates\nof Work Issued\nStatement issued in Wednesday's\npaper that 87 mining claims had\nbeen registered recently at the mining recorder's office at Nelson should\nhave read, \"87 certificates of work\nhave been issued at Ihe mining\nrecorder's office at Nelson.\"\nWhen you, drive to\n'Spokane\nWe will take you fo your hotel, bring back your\ncar, park and service it and deliver it to your\nhotel when you leave. No extra charge.\nCITY   RAMP   has   EVERY\nservice for your car. Parking, Gas and Oil, Tires, Bat-\ni \/}\\A\/ teries and Shop Service'for\n. , '     \u201e\u201e , repairs and adjustments for\n4 hours    .  25< ..,       , '\nPARKING ALL makes of cars.\nRATES\n10 hours   .  40tf C|TY   RAMP   CARACE   is\n24 hours   .   50\u00a3 right downtowri| convenient\nOr by the week or to everything. Open NIGHT\nmon,h- and DAY, Sundays and Holi\ndays.\nCITY RAMP GARAGE\nSprague and First Avenue at Stevens Street\nHAROLD W. TART, Manager\nBaseball Prexies\nThrash Out League\nQuestion at Salmo\nFor the purpose of revamp!fn| the\nleague either as a three tun or\nfour team circuit mentors ol the\nWest Kootenay baseball loop meet in\nSalmo tonight. Con Cummins, league\nexecutive and business manager of\nthe Nelson team and Percy Andrews,\nleague secretary and secretary of\nthe .Nelson learn, will attain''the\nmeeting.\nWith Rossland having failed to\npay their regular dues and F.ruit-\nvale wishing to be dropped from\nthe league, it is thought that the\nresult will be at the most retent or\nof a four team league.\nTrail's position however is precarious. Both Nelson and Salmo executives have protested the eligibi-\nbility of the Trail squad, the protest\nbeing based on the fact that when\nW. C. (Scotty) Ross posted the J10\ndues for the Trail club he failed to\npost an additional $10 to cover a\nforfeited game.\nHowever it will all be thrashed\nout at the meeting and should Ross\nfinally drop his team from the\nleague, Nelson and Salmo will go\ninto a semi-finals series for the\nright to play Metaline Falls, the\nleague-leaders.\nWIGHTMAN (UP\nTEAM GIVEN JOLT\nRYE, N.Y, Aug. 11' (AP)-The\nUnited States Wightman cup team\nselections received a jolt today as\nthe women competitors in the eastern grass courts tennis championships advanced into the semi-final\nround.\nGracyn Wheeler of Los Angeles,\nNo. 4 in the national ranking bul\nnot named to the squad for next\nweek's matches with Great Britain,\nrallied to eliminate Dorothy May\nBundy of Santa Monica, Cal, 20-\nyear-old youngster who was selected to fill the sixth place, 6-4, 7-9,\n8-6.\nGaining the semi-final brackets\ntogether with Miss Wheeler were\nAlice Marble. United States champion from San Francisco; Mme. Syl-\nvio Henrotin of France, the defending titleholder, and Jadwiga Jedrzejowska, the hard-hitting Polish\nstar.\nTrail-Tadanac-\nRossland Tennis\nPlayalWeek-end\nTRAIL, B. C, Aug. 11 - Seventh\nannual tournament of Rossland.\nTrail and Tadanac 'tennis clubs will\nget underway Saturday and with\nmatches scheduled in all senior\nevents will continue until August\n22.\nPlay will commence at 1:30 on\nTadanac club courts and all entries\nshould be handed by 7 o'clock Friday night to Ben Coon or Ned\nRhodes, Trail, or D. K. McAllister,\nRoland. Draws will be made that\nnig^\\ according to the executive,\nand will be released Saturday.\nThe junior tournament will be\nheld  September 9 and 10.\nReigning ciiampions in the tournament, which is the major local net\nevent of the season, are all expected to defend their titles. They are:\nMen's singles, Joe McDonell, Rossland: ladies' singles, ' iss Loretta\nMcDonnell, Rossland; men' doubles,\nNed Rhodes and Ed Haley, Trail;\nmixed doubles, Mr. and Mrs. T. H.\nWeldon, Tadanac: ladies' doubles,\nMrs. Weldon and Miss Loretta McDonell; consolation singles, Herb\nOxley, Trail; junior girls' singles,\nMiss Marjory McDonell, Rossland;\njunior boys' singles, Les Murdoch,\nTrail.\nBritish Cricketers\nAre Easy Victors\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 11 (CP)\u2014Vic-\ntorious in the first two matches of\ntheir visit to western Canada, the\ntouring Marylebone cricketers left\nfor Regina tonight. They will play\na one-day game in the Saskatchewan capital tomorrow. '\nAfter Winnipeg St. George's\nCricket club collapsed for 46 runs\ntoday, the Englishmen passed that\ntotal with nine wickets in hand and\ncompleted their innings for 139. Yesterday the visitors had a margin of\nthree wickets over another St.\nGeorge eleven. The home eleven\ndisappointed a big crowd of Winnipeg enthusiasts at Assiniboine\npark by their inability to solve the\nM.C.C. attack. Twenty runs were\non the board when the first wicket\nfell but with the breaking of the\npartnership the . visiting trundlers\nran through the remaining batsmen in q^iick time.\nStarting in enterprising fashion,\nthe M. C. C. lost J. F. Mendl after\n24 runs ..ad been scorul, but Nigel\nWykes and A. G. Powell stayed together until victory was assured.\nPowell drove a six into the pavilion\nenclosure for the winning hit.\nTRAIL CHIEF IN 8POKANE\nTRAIL. B. C, Aug. 11 - Fire\nChief A. A. MacDonald of the Trail\nFire department left Tuesday to attend a meeting of the Northwest\nFire Chief's association at Spokane.\nThe conferenc will last four\ndays He was accompanied by Aid.\nJohn  (Ice)  Young.\nFOREST HILLS, P. E. I. (CP).-\nAs has been Iheir custom for many\nyears, Neil MacKinnon of Thor-\nburn. N. S, and Daniel MacKinon\nof (his place, twins, celebrated their\nbirthday together on thc old homestead here. They are 90 yea'rs old.\nGirl Track Stars\nBack From (oast\nDoreen Long and Bertha Moir, two\not the five Nelson girl track stars,\nwho competed in the Caledonian\nsports in Vancouver last Saturday,\nreturned to Nelson Monday. They\nreported that .'the others, Isabel\nDonovan, Helen Wigg and Audrey\nEmery would return Saturday evening.\nCoast officials advised the girls\nthat they required but steady competition to bring out their best form\nThe girls reported a splendid time.\nThe Nelson girls made their best\nshowing in the relay in which they\ncame within a hairbreadth of tying\nfor second place. Included in the\nwinning relay team was Barbara\nHoward, sensational colored track\nstar, who, only a couple of months\npreviously had smashed Canadian\nrunning records in Vancouver.\nMRS. G. SHAW IS\nLAID AT REST,\nTRAIL SERVICES\nTRAIL, B. C, Aug. 11 - A large\nnumber of relatives artd friends today gathered in Knox .United\nChurch to pay last respects to Mrs.\nJanet Shaw, wife of George Shaw,\nwho died Saturday.\nRev. F. St. Denis conducted the\nfuneral e\u2014vlces and interment was\nin Mountain View cemetery.\nHymns sung were \"The Lord Is\nMy Shepher\" and \"Abide With Me\"\nThe pall bearers were G. B. Hol-\nlington, Robert Somerville, J. McHardy, D. Longmuir, L. F. Tyson\nand John Balfour.\nMrs. Shaw was a native of Ad-\ndingston, Scotland, and came to\nTrail 27 years ago.\nRossland, Nelson\nCricketers to Play\nAgainst Trail Sun.\nRossland and Nelson cricketers\ngang up on the Trail team in an\nexhibition match in Trail this Sunday. Six players from Nelson and\nthe remainder from Rossland will\ncombine against Trail.\nNelson players will be picked from\nF. H. Smith, P. Boabozzon, Norman\nB. Bradley, Harry Parker. Thomas Nutter, Jim Wood, Charles D.\nPearson, Ernie Bowkett of South\nSlocan and J. Dawson.\nAn attempt is being made by the\nNelson cricketers to arrange a game\nto be played against the Spokane\nclub in Spokane the following week.\nTrail Soccer Reps\nCan Win Title If\nTake Today's Tilt\nTRAIL, B. C, Aug. 11 - Holding\na one-game lead over Rossland in\nthe race for the West Kootenay\nsoccer championship Trail reps\ncan take the title by winning Thursday evening when they face the\nGolden City eleven at Butler park\nin the fourth game of the best-of-\nfive series.\nThe winners will travel fo Kimberley where they are scheduled\nto play a sudden death game September 4 for the Blaylock bowl,\nemblematic of the East and West\nKootenay soccer supremacy.\nTommy Routledge has announced\nthe following teatn to represent\nTrail in the Thursday night game:\nMcLaren; LAwley, Btewart; A.\nPatterson, Cristiano, s. Smith; Robertson, Hills, Forsey, Ferguson, J,\nPatterson, Qodber, Sopko, Bell.\nRossland Softball\nGirls Here Sunday\nWith the excitement of the West\nKootenay Girls' softball league play-,\noffs disappearing, Nelson fans will\nhave their interest revived when\nthe Rossland girls, ona-tir,*; conquerors of the Trail league-leading\nJimmies, appear against the Maple\nLeafs club here Sunday. In the\nevent of there being no senior baseball here, the Rossland men's aggregation will lock horns with the\nNelson. Pucksters and Shamrocks\nin a double-header.\nHelen Ling, long a Nelson favorite, will be on the mound for the\ngals from the Golden city, and they\nwill be going all out to take revenge for 12-1 whipping administered by the Nelson league-leaders in\nRossland recently.\nll\nFINK Si   SALE\nANNUAi.Clearaii\u20ac6\nSummer Stock to Clear\nRidiculously Low Prices\nDRESSES\nAFTERNOON AND STREETS\nPastel crepei, prints, voiles, piquet a ^ _ _\nand rajahs. White, nile, maize, etc. 9 | \u2022OO\nSixes 14 to 44. Reg. $3.00. SALE ...      Jl\nAfternoon and Street Dresses\nOF BETTER QUALITY\nSheers and novelty fabrics including\njacket dresses. Large range for your ft *4\\   OA\nchoice. Sixes 14-44. Reg. to $12.95. \u25bc0***\nSALE        Tf\nSTRING SUITS\nTwo-piece string mesh, cool for hot\nweather wear. White and pastels. A\nnumber of styles, Sixes 14-20. Reg.\nto $3.95. Sale  \t\n98-\nHATS\nStraws, crepes, string\nlace, pique. White,\nmaize,    brown,    black,\netc. Reg. to\n$2.95. ^IOC\nSALE\n49'\nHOSIERY\nChiffon (by ). Kayser).\nThese are all standard\nstockings in the best\ncolors o f\nthe season,.\nAll sizes.\nSALE  ...\nVr\nChildren's Wear\nDon't Miss These Bargains\nDRESSES\nGirls' voile prints. Smartly styled little summer dreuei, \/?ft-\nSizes 6 to 14, SALE   Ol\/C\nDRESSES\nOrgandy and cotton prints, including pantee dresses. <)QA\nPink, maize, etc. Sizes 2 to 6. Reg. to $1.59. SALE  UijSj\nSUN SUITS\nCotton prints, guaranteed colors. Blue, rad, green, etc. A(\\n\nSlzes 2 to 14. SALE  \u201e 4I\/C\nBATHING SUITS\nAll wool. Sun-tan backs. Red, blue, brown, etc. Sizes (t>-|   IQ\nto 14, 8ALE \u00abDl..Li7\nSLACKS\nWhite drill, pre-shrunk, neatly trimmed, Sizes to 14.    \/JQ\nSALE     Ot\/C\nUNDERWEAR\nCotton combinations, lastex back. A real bargain. OQ\/\u00bb\nBoys' and girls' to size 8. 8ALE  ,-Ut\/v\nFOOTWEAR\nSpring and summer shoes. Red!\nblue, yellow, white, brown, black.\nStyles galore. Cuban, high and\nlow heels. Sandals, sport oxfords,\ndress shoes. All sixes and widths\nin the lot. Reg. to\n$6.00.   \u2022\nONE PRICE, Only\n$|.S9\nNO EXCHANCES\nNO REFUNDS\nPHONE\n73\nFINK'S\nBURNS\nBLOCK\n7\/n\\s\nW3SL\nReady-to-Wear\nChildren's Wear\nFootwear\nI\nALWAYS TRAVEL WITH ENO\nEXPERIENCED travellers the\nworld over never fail to carry\na bottle of Eno's \"Fruit Salt\". With\nEno handy they do not fear train,\ncar or sea sickness, headaches' or\nother ills caused by sudden changes\nof climaft, food and water. And on\nlong trips, Enocorrects the sluggishness caused by lack of exercise.\nTake Eno on your travels and keep\nfit. Drink a sparkling glass before\nbreakfast, another at night. Eno is a\nnatural corrective which keeps your\ndigestive system in first-class order.\nYou eat right, sleep right and feel\nright. You can buy Eno wherever\nyou travel. Resolutely refuse\nsubstitutes.  *\nCAH\/17\nENO'S \"FRUIT SALT\nTHE     PLEASANT-TASTING     ALKALIZING     CORRECTIVE\nwemmmes\nri*^awiaa\nurn\n mmmwmmwm-\n\u2014\n\u2014\nmmmwmM^m\u00a7^m\u00a7m^mimnm^w^jmn^'>\nioU\nCANADIAN 1). J. WIRE FLASHES\nDIONNE WAS SHY\n8TRATFORD, Ont. (CP) -\nOllva Dionne, father of the quintuplet!, uied to take refuge under\na portion of the verandah at the\nDionne home when visitors came\nto tee the girls, Miss Patricia\nMullins, Ottawa, former nurse to\nthe five sisters, said while visiting\nhere.\nTO BAR C.I.O. LUMBER\nTACOMA, Wash. (AP)-One huge\nlumber mill was closed Wednesday\nand dozens of others in danger of\nClosing as the International Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners\nmade good its threat of war to death\n\u25a0gainst the Committee for Industrial Organization in the lumber industry Abe Muir, vice-president ol\nthe brotherhood, rushed plans to\nclose the doors to all C.I.O. lumber\nhoping thus to force errant workers\nwho have moved toward the C.I.O\nback into the unions affiliated with\nthe American Federation of Labor.\n8LAMS SOCIAL\nCREDIT EXPERTS\nTORONTO, (CP) - British\nSocial Credit experts now In Edmonton were termed \"high-pressure salesmen who are nobody al\nhome but are running things in\nAlberta,\" by Hon. J. W. Huglll.\nthe province's retiring attorney-\ngeneral. Mr, Hugill's resignation,\nasked by Premier Aberhart, takes\neffect Sept. 15. \"My quarrel Is not\nwith Premier Aberhart; It Is with\nthe English experts I have nothing\nIn common,\" he said.\n50 BOPIE8 AWAIT BURIAL\nKANSAS CITY, Mb. (AP)-Fifty\nbodies have been' placed in receiving\nvaults here since grave diggers\nstruck laet Thursday. Undertakers\nsaid there was vault space enougn\nto last four weeks more if necessary.\nREAR ADMIRAL IRWIN DEAD\nSAN DIEGO, Calif. (AP)-Rear\nAdmiral Noble Edward Irwin, 67,\nUnited States navy, retired, who\nwas decorated with the navy cross\nand by the French legion of honor\nfor bravery In the World war, died\nhere Tuesday.\nBLAMED POM SLAYING\nMONTREAL, (CP) - A coroner's\njury decided V\u00bbednesday that Lionel\nGauthier and Exelaphat Benoit were\ncriminally responsible for the slaying of Hyacinthe Cote, wealthy real\nestate owner whose body was found\nin a lonely spot outside the city\nJuly 24.\nTWO JOCKEYS REINSTATED\nEDMONTON, (CP) _ Indefinite\nsuspension of Joby Gauthier and\nStan Harris and reinstatement of\nArt Siewert and S. Vail, four\njockeys suspended at Regina July\n31, Is announced by Presiding\nSleward E. D. Adams, cf the\nPrairie Thoroughbreds Breeder's\nassociation.\nSKELETON FOUND ON\nDRY LAKE B,ED\nRITZVILLE, Wash., (AP) - A\nskeleton found on a dry lake bed\nnear here gave police a mystery. A\nfractured skull indicated the man\nmay have been slain and a rusted\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C-THURSDAY MORNINO, AUG. 12, 1937\nA Little Visitor From Trail\nWhen You Know\nthe FACTS You'll\nBuy these TIRES!\nThe UR-1\" has\nA FLAT WIDE TREAD- providing\nmore road contact, more traction.\nWIDE  RIDING  RIBS\u2014for  long,\nsmooth wear\u2014easy steering.\nHIGH, BROAD SHOULDERS\u2014for\ngreater \"hold\" on curves,\nCENTRE TRACTION-the Good-\nyear FOUR-WAY margin of safety\nSUPERTWIST CORDS-for maul,\nmum blowout protection.\nLet us show you the \"R-l\" today ... the tire that costs\nyou leu than any standard tire.\nNelson Transfer\nCompany, Limited\nGoodyear Dealers\nVERNON STREET NELSON, B. C.\nPAGE  THRU\nEven little girls like a drink of water now and then and the\ndrinking fountain at Lakeside park has a fascination for them as\nthey stand on the box and bend over the running water. Above is\nHelen MacBey, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. W. MacBey of Trail.\nShe is granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Fotheringham of Nelson.\npistol found nearby suggested he\nmay have taken his own life. The\nbody had been there about two\nyears.\nWOMAN JUSTIFIED\nIN  KILLING  HUSBAND\nCHICAGO, (AP) \u2014 A coroner's\njury exonerated Mrs. Ruth Wer-\nlein, 35, who police said admitted\nshe shot and killed her husband,\nGeorge, 46, because he questioned\nthe paternity of their nine months\nold son, Davie. The Jury returned\na verdict of \"justifiable homicide\"\nafter hearing the testimony of Mrs.\nWerleln's daughter by her first\nmarriage that her mother fired\nonly after Werleln had beaten his\nwife severely.\n25 TO FACE CHARGES\nAFTER  STRIKE  RIOT\nPETERBOROUGH, Out, (CP) -\nFifteen persons, including three\nwomen, face a total of 20 charges\nas an aftermath of the riot at the\nBonner Worth plant here of Dominion Woollens and Textiles, limited\nAll cases were adjourned to Aug. 17.\nSEVEN PRISONERS ESCAPE\nELKTON, Md., (AP) \u2014 Seven\nprisoners escaped from the Cecil\ncounty jail here after sawing two\nlocks off a door and climbing a\n30-foot stone wall around the jail\nyard.\nprivate yacht In New Harbor here.\nDr. Charles F. Perry said Sopwith\nhad suffered an attack of colitis\nwhich developed from a cold.\nHELD FOR BREAKING\nAND ENTERING\nVANCOUVER, (CP) \u2014 Police\nheld Richard Russell and Cliff\nCullimore on charges of breaking\nand entering a chain grocery store,\nThe arrests were made on the\npremises when police Investigated\na report from a resident of the\nneighborhood who had been\naroused by noise in the store.\nANOTHER'COAST\nHOTEL ROBBED\nVANCOUVER, (CP) \u2014 Police\nare seeking two bandits who rifled\nthe till of the Hotel Metropole and\nescaped with $11 Tuesday night.\nIt was the second hotel robbery\nhere in 24 hours.\nMAY  REMOVE  RIPPLE\nROCK AT SEYMOUR NARROWS\nVANCOUVER, (CP) - Removal\nof Ripple Rock, dangerous impediment at the south entrance to Seymour Narrows, B.C., will be recommended to the Dominion public\nworks department by Hon. Ian MacKenzie, he told a delegation from\nthe Vancouver merchants exchange.\nSOPWITH ILL\nBLOCK ISLAND, R.I., (AP) -\nT. 0. M. Sopwith, English yachtsman,   Is   reported   ill   aboard   his\nTO BUILD THREE\nORDNANCE STORES\nVANCOUVER, (CP) - Hon. Ian\nMacKenzie, minister of national defence has announced that he had\nissued instructions for immediate\ncalling for lenders for the construction of three ordnance stores buildings at Esquimault at an estimated\ncost of about $125,000.\nMYSTERY VEHICLE\nHITS GARAGE\nVANCOUVER, (CP) - Police\nare trying to determine the nature of a vehicle which Tuesday\nnight ran Into H. Hanson's garage,\ncausing it and a pile of wood it\ncontained to be shifted several\nfeet. Tracks of the vehicle were\nfound but police were of the opinion it was not an automobile.\nLOW FIRE  LOSSES\nVICTORIA, (CP) - Low forest\n\/ire losses were recorded during cool\ncloudy weather general throughout\nthe province last week, the British\nColumbia forest branch reported.\nFifty-six fires occurred compared\nwith 117 the previous week and\nbrought to 780 the total for the year,\nas compared with 1033 at this date\nlast year. There were 32 fires still\nburning at the week-end and 61\nwere extinguished during the week.\nESCAPES FROM MINE\nMARION, III., (AP) \u2014 Jesse\nWilson, 28, lost In an abondoned\nmine for 40 hours, walked unaided from the slope while 20\nrescuers searched for him. Suffer-\nIng from a gash on the head, he\nwas rushed to the Herrin, III.,\nhospital.\nl^jfotfal^ \u20ac<Min\u00bbttt\u00a3.\nINCORPORATED   Stf* MAY 1670,\n3 L)AY bALE\u2014Thursday, Friday and\" Saturday\nKnee-High\nCrepe HOSE\n\u2022 FULL FASHIONED\n\u2022 SHEER AND RINGLESS\nt GUARANTEED FIRST QUALITY\nFor. cool knee action\u2014wear Knee-Hi hose. Eliminating knee strain and garter runs, their*\nlength makes for long wear! Sheer and ringless with elastic top to keep them snugly in\nplace. Get your summer Knee-Hi's at this special low price!  Sizes 8'A to IQVg in all the summer shades.\nReg. 89c Pair\nColorful BEACH TOGS\nAT SAVING PRICES\nSHORTS AND SHIRT SETS\u2014Silk broadcloth, pique and novelty cottons.     (0 iQ\nRegular $2.95. SET     \u2022$\u2022\u00a3.'*?\nCULOTTES\u2014Silk broadcloth and figured cottons. Regular $3.95. ffO At\\\nSPECIAL    \u00bbP*L.4J\nBEACH SETS\u2014Blouse, shorts and skirt of f ine pique. Regular $3.95. (PO Ah\nSPECIAL AT ..       epLaVJ\nNovelty Weave\nCREPES\nThese include all the seas*\non's best sellers. Big selection of browns, greens,\nfawns, tanswine and black.\nA I I washable ^^\nand 38\" wide. C A\u00a9\nYard.\nCZmfamce\nOF LADIES'\nSPORT SHIRTS\nIdeal for beach wear when you come out from a\ncold dip. Cool, tailored styles, easy to launder and\nneat fitting. In white and a good array of color\ncombinations. Regular $1.00. CQ\u00ab\nEach\nCHILDREN'S BATHERS\nSnug, little one and two piece bathing suits for the\nsmaller children. Nicely made from fine botany\nwool. They come in an assortment of styles and\ncolors. In sizes 2 to 8. Reg. 98c. CQ\u00bb\nSuit    J\"C\n\u20148econd Floor HBC\nFREDERICK STRAUSS DEAD\nNEW YORK, (AP) - Frederick\nStrauss. 72, for many years a partner in the banking firm of J. Si W\nSeligman St Co., died at his home\nhere Wednesday of a heart attack\nHe was a director of Electric Bond\nSi Share Co., Radio Corp, of America. Tri-Continental Corp. and National Broadcasting Co.\nDRUM ROLLER\nAT CALGARY\nCALGARY, (CP) \u2014 Burnest\nHeard, ambitious Toronto youth,\nand a 50 pound oil drum rumbled\ninto Calgary late Tuesday, finishing the first 1000 miles of a 3000\nmile journey from Vancouver to\nMontreal. On a wager, Heard Is\npushing the oil drum, hoping to\nreach Montreal by Oct. 1 and win\n$22. He left Vancouver June 1.\n(able Flashes From Europe-Asia\nB. E. CLUB NAMES\nOFFICERS\nNEW YORK, (CP).-R. L. Andrews, Harbor Grace, Nfld., was named to succeed Dr. Florence S. Dunlop of Ottawa as president of thc\nBritish Empire club at the annual\nmeeting here recently. Dr. S. H\nPrince, Halifax, was named honorary president.\nOther officers for the ensuing\nyear are:\nVice-president, H. E. Patterson.\nVancouver; secretary, ..Miss Ada A\nLent, Edmonton; treasurer. Miss\nMary Varity Mitchell, Montreal.\nSAWDUST RING\nHOBOES' HAVEN\nCALGARY, (CP).\u2014To most of the\npeople attending the recent Calgary exhibition, the stock rings,\npiled deep with straw and sawdusl.\nmay have just meant a place to\nwatch blue blooded cattle weave\ntheir way before judge and farmer,\nbut to bedless 'boes, they meant\nmore than that.\nNightly, after the public filtered\nfrom the exhibition ground, transients gathered in the bull rings,\nmost of them in rags, and bedded\ndown in the warm flooring.\n\"They do no harm\u2014and we know\nwhere they are,\" commented police\nas they walked through the bum\n\"boudoir\", flicking their flashlights\nover the slumbercrs.\nCaptured by\nRebels\nPENETANGUISHENE, Ont., (CP)\n\u2014Dedication of a model of the\nchurch made by patients of the Ontario hospital featured the 101st anniversary of St. James Church. The\nmodel was complete to every detail.\nHis plane shot down by General Franco's rebel gunners near\nMadrid, Harold Dahl (above) 28-\nyear-old Columbia university\ngraduate, is a captive of the insurgent forces in Salamanca and\nno doubt wondering if he ever\nwill see his bride of six months\nagain, Dahl, who learned to fly\nat an American army field in\nTexas, joined the loyalists because he was out of a job and\nneeded money.\n\"If every one had good manners,\nI believe we could cut automobile\naccident tolls 53 per cent,\" says a\nmember of a state accident prevention board.\nCHECKS OF M18SING\nGIRL FOUND, FORGED\nPARIS, (AP)\u2014Police Investigating the strange disappearance of\n22-year-old Jean de Koven, disclosed Wednesday that some of the\nBrooklyn, N. Y., dancer's travellers checks had turned up bearing\nher signature. One police official\nsaid he had received testimony\nthat showed the girl's disappearance to be \"either a killing or a\nkidnapping.\" She has been missing for more than two weeks.\nZIONISTS TO NEGOTIATE\nWITH BRITAIN\nZURICH, Switzerland, (AP)- The\nWorld Zionist Congress voted Wednesday to negotiate with Great Britain on a Roya] Commission's recommendations for the partition of Palestine.\nDAUGHTER TO MRS.\nRAYMOND MASSEY\nHORSHAM, Sussex, (CP Cable)\n\u2014A daughter was born Wednesday to Mrs. Raymond Massey, wife\nof the Canadian actor-producer, at\nRosing Farm, their home near\nhere.\n$174,359 FOR BLIND\nLONDON (CP-Havas)-Lord Nuffield, industrialist-philanthropist has\ndonated \u00a335,000 ($174,359) to aid in\ncaring for the blind. Th's new donation brought the total of his philanthropic gifts to more than \u00a38,000,000\nPRESS LIKES \"ARMY CAREER\"\nLONDON, (CP Cable)-General\npress reaction to war secretarwy\nLeslie Hore-Belisha's plan to\nstrengthen the army was that the\nscheme is fine as far as It goes but\ndoes not go far enough. The idea\nof presenting the army as a career\nfor men was regarded as an improvement on the hitherto temporary enlistment, but whether It\nwill be a good career was questioned.\nCHAMBERLAIN  VICE-\nPRESIDENT OF B. E. LEAGUE\nLONDON,   (CP-Havas)  \u2014  Prime\nMinister Chamberlain accepted the\npost of vice-president of the British Empire League. In taking the\npost he carried out a tradilion followed by all conservative prime\nministers since 1894.\nBELIEVE DEAD PILOT\nCANADIAN\nOXFORD, England, (CP Cable)-\nSergeant William J, Postlethwaite.\nbelieved to be a Canadian from Saskatoon, was killed late Tuesday\nwhen a bomber belonging to the 18th\nSquadron crashed in a Northamptonshire field. Aircraftsman Roberl\nE. Barber also lost his life when\nPostlethwaite, the pilot, apparently\nmistook the field for the nearby\nHeyford Airdrome emergency landing area. In landing the plane narrowly missed a truck and crashed\nirito flames.\nFARNESOUTOF\nTEST CRICKET\nLONDON, (CP Cable)\u2014Illness\nhas forced Kenneth Fames, fast\nbowler of Essex, out of the English line-up for the third cricket\ntest match with New Zealand,\nstarting Saturday at the Oval here\nReplacing Fames, the selection\ncommittee chose E. R. K. Glover,\nfast-medium trundler from Glamorgan.\n59 CHOLERA DEATHS\nAROUND HONG KONG\nHONG KONG, August 11, (AP)-\nA cholera epidemic raging in Canton and on Hainan Island southwest\nof Canton, spread to Hong Kong resulting in 59 deaths within 24 hours.\nSMALLPOX ON EMPRESS\nOF JAPAN\nKOBE, Japan, (AP)\u2014Smallpox\ndeveloped among the 312 Japanese\nrefugees arriving aboard the Empress of Japan. More than 100\nCanadian, United States and British passengers were held up at\nquarantine for disinfection.\nPARIS TAXIS IDLE\nPARIS, (AP) -A combination\nstrike threat and lockout has deprived Paris of nearly all its taxi\ncabs\u2014famous the world over for\ntheir breath-taking speed and low\nrates. An official order of the Seine\nPrefecture raising taxi rates 25 per\ncent brought on the trouble.\nNORWEGIAN GLACIER MELTS\nOSLO, Norway, (AP)\u2014Norweg\nIan glaciers melted, it was so hot\nWednesday. A huge section of\nthe base of Hardanger glacier disintegrated under the Intense heat\nand fell off Into Demme Lake. The\nsplash create a wave 160 feet high\nwhich walshed away in houses, destroyed nearby crops and filled\nfields with large boulders.\nRossland Social..\nBy MRS, B. B. FERGUSON\nROSSLAND, B.C. - Mrs. S. O-\nPalmquist entertained this afternoon in honor of Miss Isabel Jensen, bride-elect. The living room was\nbeautifully decorated with cut flowers, and the gifts were presented in\na basket trimmed with pink anc!\nwhite. Cards were played the first\nprize going to Mrs. H. Frederick-\nson and the consolation to Miss\nIsabel Jensen. Those present wer-5\nMrs V. Bonde, Mrs. A. Mclntyre\nMrs. E. Jensen, Mrs. E. Johnson,\nMrs T. Moline, Mrs. J. Bryan, Mrs.\nA. Johnson, Mrs. J. Berg, Mrs. Mary\nBerg, Mrs. H. Frederickson, and\nMrs. J. Gow.\n\u2022 A quiet wedding was solemnized in Rossland United church,\nMonday when Miss Evelyn Schneider, formerly of Biggar, Sask., became the bride of Clarence Thei-\nrian, son of Louis Therrian and the\nte Mrs, Therrian of Rossland. They\nwere   attended   by   Mr.   and   Mrs.\nEric Nord. Intimate friends of the\nyoung couple were entertained after\nthe ceremony at the home of thfl\ngroom's parents. Mr. and Mrs. Therrian will take up residence here.\n\u2022 Mrs. F. H. White of Salmo ia\nspending a few days with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Roscorla.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. James Petrie and\ngrandchildren, Miss Loretta McLeod\nand Allan McLeod. have left for a\nholiday in Salt Lake City.\n\u2022 Mrs. John Triggs and her\ngranddaughter, Miss Dorothy Lynn(\nare visiting relatives in Kellogg; Ida.\n\u2022 Mr, and Mrs. H. Folvick have\nreturned from a holiday at Greenwood. Misses Roberta and Beth Folvick will spend the summer there.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. B. E, Lees and\nfamily have returned from a holiday\nat Deep Lake. Wash.\n\u2022 Mrs. S. Simcock and Mrs. Gilbert Hunt have returned from a\nholiday at Christina Lake.\nDean Criticizes\nChurch Equality\nEDINBURGH, (CP).-Very Rev.\nCharles L, Warr, dean of the Thistle and Chapel Royal, said in a speech\nhere Presbyterianism's doctrine if\nequality now is \"a mere fiction and\npretence.\"\nThe moderator of the general assembly, with his chaplains and the\nrest, had been exalted into \"a kind\nof national archbishop,\" said Dr.\nWarr. The Church of Scotland had\ndeparted from the idea that all\nministers, as regards their status,\nstood in a position of complete equality.\n\"The doctrine that all men are\nequal has never worked in this\nworld and never will,\" he asserted,\n\"and it was not likely that it would\nwork in the church.\"\n\u2022Want Ads Get Results\nWhat they're saying\nabout MILLBANKS\n\"Why do you smoke Millbanks?\"\n\"My dear fellow, we huntin' people tumbled to\nthem ages ago!\"\nMILLBANK.\nrJ\/t\u00a3 Q.ucxL\nCIGARETTE\n_\n\u2022\n wm\" '\"xwrnrnw*\nipuvaimimf.j.jj iMt,mtu.mmmiVmitVlM-\nmmmmwmmw' : <m\\mm&- . \u2022 .\u25a0j^?.9n,^Mmmm,.i ..witg^y^rw*.?^^\n\u2022AGE POUR >\nDSLSON  DAILY NEWS,  NELSON, B.C.-THURSDAY   MUHrvma. AUU. Ti. 13J7\nCANADIANS IN ENGLAND HAVING VERY INTERESTING TIME\nThey Do Make Difference . . .\nDifferent Nationality and Religion\nCause of Girl's Parents Objections\nDISCONTENTED BROWN EYES\ns, as you may guess, not satisfied\nWith her home and her parents'\ntreatment of her.\nShe likes a man, some years older\nthan herself, but not too many, who\nil of a different nationality and religion. Her parents have forbidden\nher to go with him, and he is not\nwelcome at her home. \"He is not\nthe kind to meet a girl on the street\n30rner,\" writes Brown Eyes, so she\nhasn't seen him for some time, although she did what she says she\nshouldn't, and did meet him a few\ntimes without her people's knowledge.\nThere is another youth in the picture, and he is approved by the\nparents, but Brown Eyes cannot\njee anything in him. She is badly\nbroken up, she states, and can hardly keep her mind on her work She\ngraduated from high school last\nJune and has a job. Her dad (whom\nshe says is the type who thinks his\nChildren should keep him) says she\ncan leave home if she doesn't like\nIt there, and she has a sister with\nwhom she could live is she left. This\nlister married against the wishes of\nher father.\nPOINTS OUT DIFFICULTIES\nQuite aside from the fact that this\nfirst young man has a great attraction for you, Brown Eyes, couldn't\njrou imagine that you might have\ndifficulty in adjusting yourself to\nhim, his ways of living (which\ndoubtless are different from yours),\nand his religion? They do make a\ndifference in married people's lives,\nyou know. Love cannot always conquer all of them. That is the main\npoint, and if you can deride that\njuestion, all the others hinge upon\nit\n' You have a right to choose your\nown friends and your own mate.\ntf you choose those who are of good\ncharacter. But parents sometimes\ncan see, where their own children\nwho are in love cannot, that a match\nis not suitable and will not bring\nhappiness. It is very, very hard for\na young person, carried away by\nlove, to accept that. They may know,\ndeep down in their hearts, that a\nmatch is'unwise, but they put it\naway from them and.think love is\nall that matters.\nThink very seriously about that\nside of the matter, my dear. If you\nare perfectly convinced lhat you can\ncontinue to be happy with this young man, try leaving home and living with your sister. It will grieve\nyour parents, I know, especially\nyour mother, but give it a trial. See\nhow your sister gets along and whether she is happy. Even if you give\n(his first young man up you do not\nneed to go with the one your parents like unless he appeals to you.\n->   *   *\nMARIE has an odd problem. She\nis receiving the attentions of a\nyoung man whom she likes very\nmuch. He hasn't much money, she\nhappens .to know, and many responsibilities, so she,, having mad*:\nher own way in the world for som**\ntime and understanding such mailers, has only been out walking\nwith him. She knows he feels embarrassed on this account, and asks\nme how she can be less independent and allow him to spend a little money on her.\nNext lime he asks for a date and\nmaybe asks you what you would\nlike to do, tell him you would like\nlo go to a picture show, or something of the kind, Marie. Then if\nhe wishes he can take you somewhere afterwards to get a bite to\neat. These things would cost him\n\u2022very little, and lie would feel he\nwas doing something to entertain\nyou,   relieving   embarrassment.\nSonnysayings\nI'm in a spot where a parachute\nwould come in very handy!\nVVhen Hot . . .\nSalt Baths Tone\nUp Circulation,\nAre Fine Tonics\nBy GLADYS GLAD\nAs a rule, in the summer most\ngirls spend all the time they can at\ntheir local beaches. They know that\nthere is nothing quite like a good\nSip into the briny for cooling and\nrefreshing themselves in hot weather. You who have been in the\nocean will agree with them there,\nDIXIE  DUNBAR\nEnjoys Frequent Ocean Dips\n'm sure, for you know what a glori-\nmsly invigorated feeling sea batting always gives.\nUnfortunately, however, there are\n(lenty of women who do not have\nhe chance to indulge in ocean balling whenever they feel hot, tired and\nn need of refreshment. And that's\noo bad. But any woman who can-\nlot take ocean plunges as frequently\nis their beneficial effects warrant\nan reap the revitalizing effects of\nalt right at home. And that is by\nusing a \"peck of salt\" for giving herself salt rubs or baths.\nYou can take salt rubs when you\nhaven't time to go swimming, and\nthey will not only prove most refreshing, but also help to keep the\nskin soft and satiny-smooth.\nSail rubs really arc excellent for\npeople who work or play at the expense nf nervous energy. They arc\nimmeasurably Invigorating and refreshing. They tone up the circulation of the whole body, and counteract the ill effects of fatigue, thus\nassisting greatly in recovering from\nthe weariness and tension of hot\nsummer days.\nSALT RUB\nSIMPLE TO TAKE\nIt really is very simple to take\nthese salt rubs. The first thing to\ndo is to step under your shower and\ndampen your whole body. Then take\nhandfuls of salt and rub it in thor-\noghly until your skin literally glows\nAfter this, while you are still rosy\nfrom the friction, step under the\nshower again and rinse every particle of the salt from your skin. Do\nnot allow any salty residue to remain on your body, as salt has a dry-\nin geffect on the skin. After the rinsing, dry yourself well, dust with a\nfragrant bath powder, and slip into\nclean garments. You'll feel marvel-\nously refreshed!\nIf you haven't a shower in your\nhome, of course, you'll find it a bit\nmore difficult to take a salt rub.\nBut in that case, you may substitute\na salt bath, and you'll find it just as\nbeneficial. The salt bath is a tonic\nbath, and gives the body a gloriously invigorated and refreshed feeling. You can obtain practically the\nsame effect as sea bathing merely\nby making a miniature ocean of\nyour own bathtub.\nTo take a proper salt bath, fill\nyour tub with water lhat is of summer ocean temperature\u2014from 62 to\n72 degrees. Then dissolve at least a\npound of salt in this water, reserving just enough to massage your\nmuscles and your feet. You may use\npure sea salt crystals obtainable in\nmost drug and department stores,\nor common table salt for this purpose. Both are effective.\nRest and relax in the invigorating salt water until you feel thoroughly refreshed. After the bath\nrinse your body well in clear water\nAnd, as the final step, administer a\nbrisk rub-down with a Turkish towel, and dust your body with a fragrant dusting powder. You can take\nit from me. you'll feel like a new\nwoman by that time!\nAlmost Disappear. . .\nTwo Fevers Are\nEradicated in the\nLast 100 Years\nBy LOGAN CLENDENING, M.D.\nIt was a hundred years ago that\nDr. William Wood Gerhard, in Philadelphia, pointed out that the symptoms and the character of typhoid\nfever were peculiar to itself and\nunlike other fevers with which it\nwas then confused. Before this work,\nnearly any continued fever was\ncalled typhus. Typhus fever is a\ndistinct entity and entirely different from typhoid.\nGerhard did not have the advantage of being able to isolate the\ngerm.\" of the two diseases which can\neasily be proved to be different. He\nhad to rely on the physical changes\nin the body produced by the two\ndiseases. He pointed out that the\nspots of inflammation and the ulcers in the intestine in typhoid fever did not occur in the other di\nsease. \"It is as impossible,\" he wrote,\n\"to change typhoid into typhus fever, as it is to change the fuption\nof measles into the pustules of\nsmallpox,\"\nThis was clear thinking and revolutionary thinking for his day.\nILLS ALM08T DI8APPEAR\nBoth'typhus fever and typhoid\nfever virtually have disappeared by\nnow. Typhus fever went out shortly\nafter Gerhard's time, when more\nhumane and hygienic methods of\nhandling prisoners in jails (it was\nnicknamed \"jail fever\") were introduced. Overcrowding on ships\nwas also reduced and this action\ncontributed to the decline of typhus.\nTyphoid, however, continued its\nreign  for   many   years  after  Ger-\nTwoPiece Woolen Dress Popular\nBy   LISBETH\nTwo-piece dresses seem to be favored In the new fashions for fall\nand winter. They usually have the\neffect of being tailored\u2014are are neat\nand trim.\nThis dress worn by Jane Wyman,\nscreen player, is in putty-colored\nsheer wool. It is a two-piece with\nhigh collar with tailored bow, stitched pockets and front closing marked with a rqw of buttons.\nThe fitted waist is accented with\na belt of self-fabric, with loops of\ndark brown leather set on either\nside.\nStriped flannels having been successful this summer, striped woolens\nare being promoted in skirts for\nearly fall. Colors are subdued, and\nare adapted to vertical arrangements\nin all around pleats sewn down over\nthe hips, and there are also interesting chevron shaped, treatments\nwhich are said to be slenderi.'ng.\nThe popular pocket is made decorative when it is intricately worked\nin design treatment.\nPlaids for the college girl are being endorsed enthusiastically, and\nthe Molyneux type of skirt, with\npleats that taper.into a flat hipline,\nhave proved most popular.\nSTYLE WHIMSIES\nDraped turbans and berets in\nmany interpretations will be the\nfirst popular autumn hats.\nMme. Lilly Dache, milliner, advocates color in hats, with trimming\nof  embroidered ribbons.\nVelvet and leather appliques and\ndecorative pockets are used as trimmings on new dresses.\nIf mother or grandmother has\nsome old-fashioned passementerie\ntrimming laid away from days when\nsuch trimming was worn, better get\nit out, for it may be made useful in\ntrimming that new fall or winter\ndress.\nNew satin \"all-in-one\" corsets give\na long, sleek, unbroken line to help\nmold autumn clothes.\nWEDDING PRESENT BOOK\nMany brides of today keep a\nwedding present book, each gift\nbeing entered under its separte initialled index, with address of sender and the shop where bought, if\nknown, by its side.\nTOlttlllull\nmmm\nnam**.,'\n\u2014?\u25a0*.\nV** *:\u25a0.,:\u25a0:*...\nJANE   WYMAN\nhard. It was one of the dreaded intestinal infections of this time of\nyear. Fifty years ago at this season\nyou would have heard of one or two\nof your friends down with typhoid\nevery week.\nBy contrast, I have before me the\nrecord of the number of cases of\ntyphoid in the large cities of' the\nUnited States in 1936. In 18 largd\ncities there was no death from typhoid fever last year. Not one. The\nactual number of cases is not recorded, but as the mortality of typhoid is about ten per cent, it might\nbe argued statistically that less than\nten cases of typhoid occured in\nthese cities. That is quite an achievement, No large city had more than\nten deaths, which means by the\nsame reasoning that no large city\nin the United States had as many as\na hundred cases of typhoid fever\nin 1936. In 1886 there would have\nbeen less than a thousand!\nWhat has brought this about? The\nrecognition that typhoid fever is\na water-borne disease and the regular supervision of the water supply.\nNext the practice of preventing\ntyphoid individually by vaccination\nThis should still be carried out-\nWhile traveling in Europe recently, I was surprised to find that one\nmember of my party never had had\ntyphoid inoculation. She drank nothing but bottled water from then on\u2014\nby orders.\nSerial Story\nLove is for Tomorrow\nBy  VIRGINIA  SCALLON\nAs soon as the pea vines have\nceased bearing, they may be pulled\nup and burned, thus leaving the\nground free for a later crop which\nmay take the form of cabbages, celery, rutabaga, turnips or mangels.\nThe mangels are particularly useful\nwhere poultry is kept, as they are\nexcellent, for winter feeding.\nGaily embroidered cotton blouses\nwith matching, open crowned turbans make summer suits look gay.\nA model in yellow shantung with\nred flowers is particularly attractive.\nTEA   #\naoi\nis delicious\nCONCLUSION\nSandy received Mrs. Madden's letter the following day, and grinned\nas he noticed both an airmail and\na special delivery stamp on the\nlavender envelope. When he saw\nthe postmark of \"La Cresta\", he\nripped it open rapidly. Not troubling to look at the papers that fell\nfrom the envelope, he scanned the\nnotepaper quickly.\nAmazement and then a quick\nsmile of triumphant happiness\nerased the worried lines from his\nface. Like magic he felt a new\nspirit of enthusiasm warming his\nheart, and he stooped to pick up\nthe missing papers. When he had\nstudied them in the bright light of\nthat July day, his satisfaction became complete.\nSilently he re-read the explanatory letter the cunning old lady\nhad sent him,\n\"Sandy, you dear stubborn boy,\"\nit read. \"Look at the enclosed pictures made by my granddaughter, and then rush right down here\nbefore you break both our hearts.\nAny girl who can glorify your\nnondescript face like this must be\nin love with you. T don't know\nthis Paula, but I'll wager she can't\ndraw ... or love . . . like my\nMarcia.\n\"Yours very sincerely,\n\"ALICIA MADDEN.\"\nSandy went tearing about the\noffice like a madman, and Mike\nBorst, who had appropriated Paula's\nold corner, looked on in amazement.\n\"What in thunder has struck you,\nman?\"\n\"Love\u2014Marcia!\" he almost shouted. \"The artist in her was her undoing after all.\" he laughed aloud.\nExcitedly he pushed both the letter\nand the tell-tale pictures under his\nfriend's nose.\n\"Yeah,\" he said vacantly. \"She\nmust be in love \u2014 or nuts!\" And\nhe looked appraisingly at Sandy's\nfeatures and then back at the\nproof in his hand. Decidedly there\nwas a resemblance, but. he shook\nhis head when he considered how\nfar-fetched it was.\nSandy grabbed his hat from the\ndesk and rushed out with a hasty\nremark, \"I'll be back sometime.\"\nTo which Mike said laconically,\n\"Oh, thanks.\"\nHe was in his car when another\nthought struck him, and he stopped\nshort. He felt a belated spirit of\nsportsmanship toward the luckless\nGarrett, and decided before he went\nto claim Marcia that he owed that\ngentleman an apology. Painfully,\nhe forced himself to go to Gary's\noffice, and there he expressed his\nappreciation  for  Gary's   tactful\nhandling of the whole mixup at\nthe Trocadero. Before leaving, he\nturned gratefully to the man sitting\nbehind his big desk. He seemed\nabout to speak, when Gary interrupted him.\n\"Are you trying to tell me that\nyou've won Marcia where I failed?\nBecause if you are, I want to congratulate you,\" the publisher rose\nto his feet, and extended his hand\nwith a sincere smile. , \"Make her\nhappy.\"\nSandy was embarrassed, but appreciative of the man's fine spirit.\n\"Oh, and Knight,\" he continued,\n\"you might take her this child's\nstory, and tell her I'd like to have\nher do the illustrations for it. It's\nan easy kind of vacation job,\" he\nsmiled. Sandy accepted it awkwardly, then quickly took his leave\nThe old gray roadster covered\nthe miles between Los Angeles and\nLa Cresta in a little more than half\nthe time Marcia had taken. No\nluncheon for him when he was on\nhis way to Marcia!\nHe swiftly jumped from the car\nbefore it had hardly stopped in\nfront of the Madden bungalow.\nThe scene looked no different than\nit had the year before, when he\nhad stalked so angrily up the hill\nin search of vengeance. The sun\nglinted brightly on the towering\npalm tree, and flowers again blossomed gaily in the prim little garden. In a moment Mrs. Madden\ncame out on the porch to make\nthe illusion real. From that time\non, the scene was distinctly of the\npresent.\nMrs. Madden hurried down thc\nwalk to meet him.\n\"You're not angry with me?\" she\nasked at once, but his beaming face\ntold her more quickly than his\nwords that he was glad for her\nhelpful 'meddling'.\n\"Well, fools rush in,\" she smiled\nindulgently. Then she pretended\nanger as she turned and scolded\nhim roundly, \"but speaking of\nfoob, T think you and Marcia take\ntho blue ribbons!\"\nSandy barely nodded, then asked,\n\"Where is she?\"\nGrandma pointed toward the hillside where he had spent so many\nher horse and went for a ride,\"\nhappy hours with Marcia. \"She took\nshe began, but Sandy was half way\nout the gate.\n\"You can't drive there!\" she was\ncalling a warning after him, but\nSandy already was roaring away toward the hill. He forced the car\nas far up the steep incline as it\nwould go, then got out and walked\nimpatiently up toward the summit.\nHe loosened the collar of his light\nsport shirt as he plunged over the\nbrush, calling loudly for Marcia.\nThe girl was leading her horse\nacross the ridge when she heard\nhis voice faintly. Disbelieving her\nears, she walked on. Unconsciously she had found the spot where\nSandy had told her of his love\nlong months before and was musing\nunhappily on the way she had kept\npushing love into the future until\nshe had finally lost it completely.\nSuddenly there was no doubting\nthe tones of the voice coming to\nher, and with a quick cry of happiness she started to run in the\ndirection from which it came.\nThey met with forcible violence as\nshe plunged headlong down tho\nsteep clift, and Sandy-held her to\nhim wildly. For a long moment\nthere was no word of explanation\nor of question \u2014 simply complete\nhappiness at, the reunion that had\nhappened so miraculously.\nFinally, Marcia drew back and\nwith wide-eyed wonder said, \"How\ndid you find me after all these\nlonely weeks?\"\n\"I guess my heart unconsciously\nmust, have broadcast un S. 0. S.\nfur help,\" he teased her. \"I received another mysterious letter\nfrom my famous radio public, and\nit brought me to my senses in\ndouble-quick time. From now on\nthere s nothing big enough to keep\nus apart; we've wasted too many\nprecious months in waiting.\"-\nMistily Marcia agreed. She sensed\nvaguely that grandma must have\nhad a hand in their reunion, but\nthere was time enough for those\ndetails later. She found it hard\nto realize that all the loneliness and\nsadness of the past weeks was over,\nand that they were together for ali\ntime.\nIt was almost an hour later that\nSandy  generously   told   Marcia  of\nAll characters In this story are\nfictitious.\nCentral Press Association,\nGary's fine attitude on that last\ninterview. Rather shamefacedly he\nrevealed that his love was no longer\nso demanding, when he encouraged\nher to do the illustrations for thc\nnew children's book,\n\"Children?\" Marcia said dreamily. \"Ah, Sandy\u2014that gives me a\nbetter idea.\"\nWith an embarrassed grin, Sandy\nsmiled down at her.\n\"Yes,\" she said, \"and from now\non we'll leave work for tomorrow.\"\n(THE END)\nKITCHEN IN FRONT\nWhile homcbuildcrs steer clear of\nsome phases of modern architecture,\nthe idea of placing the livingroom\nat the rear of the house and the\nkitchen at the front is increasing\nsteadily in popularity, according to\nan architectural authority.\nDiscourage Habit...\nTattling Shown\nas Bad Policy;\nShould Not Spy\nDR. GARRY C.  MYER8, Ph.  D.\nIn a booklet I recently wrote,\n\"Manners\", I had the child say to\nhimself: ,\n\"I hate a tattler. 1 know some\nboys and girls who* enjoy seeing\ntheir brothers or sisters at home, or\ntheir classmates at school, get punished. They will run to mother or\nto the teacher telling on other children\u2014When 1 see my younger\nbrother or sister, or my playmate,\ndoing what I think he should not do,\nI am going to try to get him to quit\ndoing that. But I am not going to\ntattle on him. It is not my business.\n1 want to learn to mind my own\nbusiness.\"\nParents generally agree with this.\nSome educators don't. I take it, indeed, that the celebrated Dr. William H. Kilpatrick would strongly\ndisagree. He seems to imply that\nan essential of good citizenship is\nto tattle, if I understand. him cor-\nrectly. Perhaps no other living tea*\ncher has had so many adult students, is so widely read by educators, and so literally believed by\nthem, as Prof. Kilpatrick.\nIn his book, \"Foundations of Method\", he cites what he considers an\nideal method of a certain teacher.\nTo quote;\n\"She said one day to her class:\n'Your going through the halls is'\nnot so orderly as it might be. . . .\nToday 1 am going to ask you to notice yourself as you go, and when\nyou come back I shall ask each one\nwho thinks he did not walk exactly\nas he should to raise his hand. I\ntell you in advance I shall punish\nyou. . . .' They made at least as\nmuch'disorder as 'usual; and when\nthe hands were called for not very\nmany were raised. . . .\n\"The teacher stood and looked at\nthe class a bit discouraged. Then\none boy, ignoring her, spoke up,\npointing his finger straight at another boy near by: 'You ought to\nraise your hand. You made just as\nmuch noise as the rest of us and\nyou know you did.' At this boy No\n2 looked sheepish and squirmed a\nlittle. Some others didn't seem very\nOnly Six Babies\nAre Examined at\nW. I. Baby Clinic\nSix babies were examined by Dr.\nC. M. Bennett at the Women's Institute baby clinic at the nurses'\nhome Wednesday, August 11. Mrs\nDyke assisted the doctor and representing the W. I. were Mrs, R. Eunson, Mrs. W. Davidson and Mrs. J.\nFox.\nhappy.   .   .   .The  teacher  practiced\nthem in this way for several day.\n\"In the end the class could control itself reasonably in walkin,\nthrough the hall without teacher\nor monitor, and would, so far as\nthe teacher could judge, tell the\nexact truth,\"\nHow could they do otherwise witli\nthe fear of being told on by a class\nmate and of being punished in this\nfashion? Did the teacher punish\nthem? Indirectly, she did. Would\nthis kind of training make these\nchildren good and truthful outsid-:\nof school, where there is not an or\nganized group to watch and tattle\non them? Would not this teacher\nhave got more pcrmanant value foe\nthese children if she would have\ninduced them to tell one another tc\nbe quiet, when she did not see and\nhear them, rather than to have\nthem serve as detectives and squeal\ncrs on one another? Some teachers\nappoint an official tattler and call\nhim  a  monitor.  More  on  this  to\nLay\nering Method\nfor Propagation\nof Rhododendrons\nTo propagate hybrid rhododend\nrons and be sure of their comiri]\ntrue to color, one must graft them\nor use the layering method of propagation. Layering is not difficult\neven for the amateur gardener, and\nis an interesting process.\nTo layer hybrid rhododendrons\ncut a slit about two inches long in\nthe centre part of a side branch on\na well-developed rhododendron.\nWhere the cut has been made, insert a peg of wood or a small pebble\nto keep the slit open. Place the slit\nportion of the branch in the earth\nand then tie the protruding end\na stake to keep it from whipping\nabout in the wind. Place a large\nstone over the buried or \"layered\"\nportion of the branch to hold the\nsoil in place and to retain moisture.\nCorn Stalks Should Be Hilled\nCorn stalks should be hilled up\nto give them support against strong\nwinds, which otherwise would blow\nthe stalks down. This hilling up also\nserves as a mulch and helps to retain moisture in the soil.\nAs shown in this Garden-Graph,\npile the dirt up four to six inches\non both sides of the row. On th?\nlate, tall growing varieties it can be\npiled up as high as eight inches.\nThis \"hilling-up\" can be accomplished by plowing along each side\nof the row with a wheel cultivator,\nor it can be done by means of a\nhand hoe.\nMost flowers can-be revived if the\nstems are cut under water. After\nthey are cut, plunge- tha flowers\ninto a deep vessel filled with cool\nwater. Sp\/inkle the petals of the\nflowers, and set the vessel in a cool\ndark place away from drafts. The\nflowers should be fully revived in\nhalf an hour. Some plants with\nwoody stems and others with milky\njuice do not respond to this treatment. For flowers of this sort, the\nstem should be singed by holding it\nin a flame until it is thoroughly\ncharred. Sometimes the stems may\nbe dipped in boiling water to accomplish the same purpose, but the\nsteam from the water is likely to\nF\\\n1\n1   >:\nWft\nfi\n\u25a0JT\nW\\\nif   r?fe>\n\\sl          \\   \"'\u25a0\u25a0!':*\n1 \/f~\\   \u25a0\u2022*\nf\/FROM-l X\nll*TO tMNCHEM\n!*4g\nRsfew\n134\n''          BE)\nEarthen supports (or corn stalka\ninjure the flowers, so this must be\ndone carefully.\nPicnic Sandwich . .\nhints for\nhousewives\nMenu  Hint\nIced Tomato Juice Veal Loaf\nScalloped or Creamed Potatoes\nSpinach\nCarrot,  Cabbage,  Cucumber  Salad\nCantaloupe a la Mode\nCoffee\nThis veal loaf is delicious served\nhot or cold. It makes fine sandwiches to take on the picnic, too.\nOnion may bd added, if you like the\nflavor and the lemon left out, also\nomit the nutmeg if you do not care\nfor that flavor. Chill the melons\nwell before serving them*with thc\nice cream.\nToday's Recipes\nVeal Loaf \u2014 Three pounds shank\nand shoulder of veal, one-half pound\npork, ground fine; one cup bread or\ncracker crumbs, three eggs ,one cup\nmilk, three tablespoons melted butter, juice and grated rind of one\nlemon, six ogives, chopped fine; one-\nhalf teaspoon chopped parsley, one\ntablespoon chopped celery, grating\nof nutmeg, one and one-half teaspoons salt,, pepper. Put meat into a\nmixing bowl. Add crumbs and mix\nthem into the meat. Break in eggs,\nadd milk, melted butter and remaining ingredients in order named, Blend together well, using a\nfork or the fingers. Season well.\nShape into a loaf. Put into a greased\npan, dot over the top with butter or\nwith bacon fat. Bake in a moderate\noven 350 degrees, about three hours.\nThe loaf may be basted during the\nbaking with tomato puree, with\nchili sauce diluted half with water\nor with creamed mushroom soup.\nFACTS   AND   FANCIES\nMock Mince Meat\nOne peck green tomatoes, one teaspoon salt, four tablespoons cinnamon, pinch of pepper, one tablespoon ground cloves, one cup candied citron, cut fine; four pounds\nsugar, one cup vinegar, four cups\nraisins. Chop-tomatoes fine, add one\ngallon water and one tablespoon\nslat and let stand over night. In\nthe morning drain There should be\neight pounds. Add the other ingredients and one quart water and boil\nfor one and one-half hours very\nslowly, then put into slcrlizcd glass\njars and seal, Good for either pica\nor preserve.\nDuchess oi Kent\nat Fair Chooses\nToy Tolem Pole\nCanadians in London\nTake Part in Social\nand Art Group:;\nBy MOLLIE McGEE\nCanadian   Press   Correspondent\nLONDON, (CP) - The Duchess\nof Kent met her first totem pole at\nthe Canadian booth at the International Red Cross Bazaar in London.\nIt was a toy carved by Louie Charley, Songhee Indian of Esquimau,\nB. C, and caught her eye while\nMrs. Vincent Massey, wife of the\nCanadian high commissioner, was\nintroducing those in charge of the\nstall\nThe Duchess admired a sweet\ngrass basket made by Cecilia .Phillip\nof the Saanish, Asarlip. Indian day\nschool and pottery by Doris Corby\nof the Okanagan valley, but it was\nthe gaily-painted pole she had set\naside to take home, after first asking what it was.\nMiss Annette Arnaud, formerly of\nOttawa, was in charge of the booth\nand her assistants, all members of\nthe Women's Canadian club in London were: Miss Marjorie Jenkins,\nToronto; Miss Alice Poole, Winnipeg; Mrs. L. Hancock, Montreal;\nMrs. Bernard Farish, Yarmouth;\nMrs. John Murray, Winnipeg; Mrs.\nHallowel Macpherson, Montreal.\nCentre of attraction at the Canadian booth were two huge dolls\ndressed in miniature by nurses at\nthe Regina General hospital and\nthe City Hospital School of Nursing\nin Saskatoon. At other stalls were\npresents sent in from nursing associations from all over the world\nto be sold by stall holders dressed\nin the national costumes of more\nthan 20 countries. The proceeds\nare to aid in raising the standard\nof nursing by augmenting the scholarship fund for nurses from abroad.\nWomen's Canadian club executives in London* pinned another\nfeather in their cap when Mrs.\nNeville Chamberlain, pretty, intellectual and usually silent partner\nof England's .jrime minister, agreed\nto make one of her rare public appearances at their meeting July 21.\nCANADIAN   MUSICIANS   BUSY\nMembers of the Canadian musical\ngroup in London, headed by Madame Ellis Browne, formerly of\nCalgary, are busy on plans that not\nonly include those for the reception\nof scholarship students expected\nfrom the Dominion in London this\n(Continued on Page Five)\nAlpine\nMilk,..\nBabies\nThrive\non It!\nPASTEURIZED\n.  .  .for Purity\nSTERILIZED\n... for Safety\nEVAPORATED\n... for Edibility\nBuy with\nConfidence\nat your\nlocal\ngrocer.\nAlpine\nEVAPORATED\nMILK\n PPfiiPiPSPSpWPIRPW!*^^\nI\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON, B.C-THURSDAY MORNING, AUG. 12. 1937\nCreston Bride to\nLive at Erickson\nCRESTON, B.C.\u2014Marriage of interest throughout the valley was\nthat ot Wednesday. August 4, at the\nUnited Church manse, Fernie, when\nMiss Reatha Leola, daughter of Mr\nWhen Cutting Teeth\nBabies Subject To\nDiarrhoea & Dysentery\n\u2022was*\nhas been used by thousands of\nCanadian mothers for the past 92\nyears for looseness of the bowels\nwhen the babies are teething.\nA T. MILBURN CO. LTD., PRODUCT\nShe Found Fame\nand Bad Dreams\nWhan Mari awoke one morning to find the dressmaking\nworld at her door, she learned\nthat a press agent, a towi car,\na chauffeur, butler, coe and\nmaid became necessary adjuncts to her household. They\nall brought her a number of\nbad dreams. She felt she was\nplaying a part and she didn't\nlike it. Such was the prk of\nfame for Marl Barat In\nRUSTLE\nof SILKS\nBeginning Friday\nAugust 13, in\nThe Nelson Daily\nNews\nand Mrs, Frank Ingham of Elko, and '\nformerly of Creston, was united in\nmarriage with Robert William,\nyoungest Son of R, J. and the late\nMrs. Long of Erickson. The bride\nwas given in marriage by her father,\nand Rev. H. J. Matthews officiated.\nThe bride's dress was of pink\nflowered organdie, with matching\njacket and white accessories. She\ncarried a bouquet of pink and white\ncarnations and roses. The bridesmaid\nwas her cousin Miss Yvonne La-\nBelle, of Creston, attired in blue\nand white figured chiffon, with\nwhite accessories. She carried a bouquet of yellow gladioli and white\ncarnations. The best man was Lyle\nKemp of  Erickson.\nAfter the ceremony a buffet\nlunch w-r.s held in the reception\nroom of the King Edward hotel,\nwhich was attractively decorated,\nthe table centred with a three tier\nwedding cake. Later in the day Mr\nand Mrs, Long left by motor for\nSpokane, from which city they returned at the first of the week, and\nare in residence at Erickson. For\ntravel the bride chose white with\nred jacket and white accessories.\nThe bride v \/: prominent in young\npeople's activities and in dramatics\nand enjoyed a wide popularity and\nthe groom is well known in the\nyounger circle.\nKimberley Baby\nIs laid to Rest\nKIMBERLEY, B.C.-St. Andrew's\nchurch was taxed lo capacity Friday, when Rev. B. L. Willis, assisted\nby Rev. S, T. Galbraith. pastor of\nthe United church, conducted funeral services for Barbara Arm\nSmith, infant daughter of Mr. and\nMrs. Amby Smith of Chapman\nCamp.\nMr. and Mrs. Smith are well\nknown here and at Moyie, having\nlived at Kimberley and Moyie for\n20 years or more.\nInterment took place at Kimberley cemetery. Pallbearers were: E\nBenson. M. leaman, G. Brown and\nW. Johnston. Floral tributes covered the grave and carpeted the grass\nabout it.\nLIVERPOOL, N. S. (CP).-Glad-\nstone Murray, general manager of\nthe Canadian Broadcasting corporation, is among anglers who succeeded in catching a tuna fish off\nthe South Shore port this summer.\nHis tuna weighed 533 pounds and\nwas captured after a three hours\nand 35 minutes' fight.\nMRS. C. SWAN IS\nLAID AT REST\nFuneral services for Mrs. Charles\nSwan, who died at Kamloops, August 6. were conducted by Rev, Earl\nE. Lindgren Wednesday at 10 a.m\nfrom the Somers' Funeral Home.\nThe hymn sung was \"Abide With\nMe.*' Rev. Lindgren also sang a solo\n\"Does Jesus Care.\" A large number\nof friends attended the last rites and\nthere were many beautiful floral\ntributes. Pallbearers were Fred\nGraves, Thomas Bate, Harold Bate.\nJames Bate, Maurice Latornel and\nJohn Dejong.\nNELSON Social.\nBy MRS. M. J. VIGNEUX\nKASLO Social...\nKASLO, B.C.\u2014Kaslo Ladies' Hos- \u25a0\npital aid sponsored a tea and sale of\nhome cooking Friday afternoon and\na dance in the evening. Mrs, J. G\nFox loaned her home for the tea\nend bake sale and had charge of\ntea arrangements, assisted by Mrs.\nV. L, Trail. Miss Dorothy Fox, Miss\nFreda Burton, Miss Virginia Hendricks and Mrs. \"Bob\" Paterson were\nserviteurs. The rooms were decorated with huge gladiolos and other\nblooms. At the home cooking tables\nMrs. John Tonkin and Mrs. John\nPaterson presided. Mrs. Paterson and\nMrs. Tonkin also'did all the canvassing for both the bake sale and refreshments for the dance. Mrs, F. S.\nChandler told fortunes. There was\na large crowd al the Canadian Legion hall for the dance with large\nparties from Nelson and Ainsworth\nThe president of the aid was in full\ncharge nf the dance arrangements.\nMrs. E. M. Sandilands and Mrs. F.\nS- Chandler were at the door. E. C.\nCherry and A. L. MacPhee were\nmasters of ceremonies. Mrs. Tonkin\nwas in charge of refreshments, assisted by Mrs M, White, Mrs. Frank\nHelme, Miss A. Hodges. Miss Sophie\nMarleau, Mrs. T. H. Horner and\nMrs, L. Lockard. Winnie Chandler\nsold a large number of dance tickets\nA 26-piece silver flatware set. was\nwon by Mrs. E. H, Latham, The\nday's program was under the general\nconvenership of Mrs. E, H. Latham,\npresident of the Aid,\n\u2022 A wedding of interest in the\ndistrict and especially to Kasloites,\nwas that of Ronald Hewat, second\nson of Government Agent and Mrs,\nRonald Hewat of this city, to Miss\nPauline Downey, youngest daughter\nof Mr. and Mrs. Downey of Comox\nthe ceremony taking place at Comox. The couple will reside at Nanaimo.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. David Milne.\nBert and Bob Milne have returned\nto their home at Trail after visiting\nrelatives here.\n\u2022 Alex Nisbet of Trail was a Kaslo visitor Friday.\n\u2022 Mrs. H. M. Heath and daughters, Miss Ruth Heath and Miss Jessie Heath have left for a month's\nholiday in central and eastern Canada,\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Lake ot\nJohnson's Landing were Kaslo visitors,\n\u2022 Capt. and Mrs, M. K. Harrison\nleft the latter part of the week to\nspend a  few  days at Nelson  and\nCorra   Linn  prior to  returning\ntheir home at Howser.\nto\nHERE ARE SOME OF OUR VALUES AT OUR\nGREAT SUMMER\nShoe CLEARANCE\nWOMEN'S SANDALS\n$1.65      $2.35\nWOMEN'S WHITE SHOES,\nPUMPS AND TIES\n<P\u00a3.JJ to $J.<)\u00bb)\nWOMEN'S SPORT OXFORDS\n$2.35 to $4.35\nWOMEN'S DRESS SHOES    .     va^L NIVIRSK\n$2.95 \u201e $6.35 \u00ab\u00bbrSH\nMEN'S WHITE\nOXFORDS\n$2.95, $4.95\nMEN'S DRESS SHOES\n$3.95 to $6.65\nBOYS' BOOTS AND\nOXFORDS\n<pl.Jj to \u00ab()J.lb\nBUY NOW\nAND SAVE\nR* Andrew & Co.\nLenders in Footfashion\n\u2022 Peter and Pat Fowler ot Riondel were visitors to town Friday.\nMr. and Mrs. Jess Saunders and\ndaughter of Nelson were Saturday\nvisitors here.\n\u2022 Alex Grant and L. Jeffreys ot\nAinsworth were Kaslo visitor Friday.\n\u2022 Bert Green of Nelson was a\nvisitor in town Thursday.\n\u2022 William Chartres of Trail spent\nthe week-end in town a guest of\nMiss C. M. Fawcett.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. V. Bonde of Rossland were city visitors Friday.\n\u2022 Mrs. and Miss Spence of Trail\nwere Friday visitors to Kaslo.\n\u2022 Dave Anderson of Sandon was\na Kaslo visitor during the latter pari\nof the week.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. R. V. Maynard of\nLethbridge are spending a few weeks\nhere.\n\u2022 Mrs. C. Johnson of Rossland\nvisited Kaslo Friday.\n\u2022 M, Brulotte of Nelson was a\nKaslo visitor recently.\n\u2022 Dorothy H. Graham of Trail\nspent the week-end here.\nR. MacPherson of Sandon was a\nSaturday visitor In town.\n\u2022 Mr, and Mrs. Thomas Taylor\nof Shutty Bench are holidaying a!\nthe coast.\n\u2022 Joe Mucha of Lardo was a\nweek-end visitor in town.\n\u2022 Mrs. R. Bell and Mrs. Hanson\nof Ainsworth were Friday visitors\nin town.\n\u2022 Mr, and Mrs. T. E, Levasseur\nof Nelson were Sunday visitors here.\nThey were accompanied by Mr. and\nMrs. Brown, also of Nelson.\n\u2022 Charles Idle of Trail is spending a few days in town.\n\u2022 W. L. Billings was a Sunday\nvisitor to Nelson.\nMr. and Mrs. Noel Bacchus of\nBirchdale spent Monday here.\n\u2022 Mrs. E. M. Sandilands was a\nSaturday visitor to Nelson!\n\u2022 J. B. Twaddle, postmaster at\nTrail spent the weekrepd in town\nwith his family who are spending the\nholidays here. ;\n\u2022 A. L, MacPhee was a Sunday\nvisitor to Nelson.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. H. Eperson of\nNelson were Kaslo visitors. \u2022\n\u2022 James St. G. Mitchell of Trail\nspent Sunday at Kaslo.\n\u2022 Mr, and Mrs. Collingwood Gray\nof Bonnington were week-end visitors here.\n\u2022 D. Chownynk of Retallack\nspent Saturday at Kaslo.\n\u2022 Mr, and Mrs. A. Erskine Smith\nof Ymir were Saturday visitors in\ntown.\n\u2022 George Baker was a Nelson\nvisitor Sunday.\n\u2022 H. T* Hartin and son. David,\nhave returned from Kelowna where\nthey  attended  the  regatta.\n\u2022 L. A. Gerry and Mrs. Gerry\nof Rosslarid were among Saturday\nvisitors here.\n\u2022 R. A, Wallinger of Trail spent\nthe week-end with his family here.\nMrs, Wallinger and children Peter.\nJill and Tony, who had been holidaying here for several weeks, returned to Trail Monday.\n\u2022 Stuart K. Metcalfe of Trail\nspenl Sunday in town.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. George Pale-\nihorpe arrived in town Saturday\nafter spending their honeymoon at\nSpokane. They will reside at Kaslo\nfor the present.\n\u2022 Mrs. T. Pearson of Imber. Ore,\nwas a city visitor during the weekend.\n\u2022 F. Defoe and E. Defoe of Trail\nare visiting here.\n\u2022 Mrs. D. S. Wetmore and sons,\nDouglas and Mickey, left Sunday\nfor their home at Trail after holidaying in Kaslo for several weeks.\n\u2022 W. F. MacNicol and sons, Bruce\nand Jack were Kaslo visitors Monday, the two former returning to\ntheir home at Johnson's Landing\nthe same day and Jack leaving for\nTrail where he is employed.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Driver\nhave returned from their hdliey-\nmoon and are guests of Mrs. Driver's\nmother. Mrs, Margaret McQueen,\nfor a few days, prior to goiijg 10\nAinsworth to reside.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Hannay\nand daughter, Joan, left Monday for\nIheir home at Trail after spending\nseveral weeks holiday here.\n\u2022 Mrs. T. Pearson left Monday\nto visit Howser.\n\u2022 W. P. Barnard left Monday to\nvisit properties in which he is interested near Howser.\n\u2022 Mrs, Harry Ferguson and\ndaughters. Joy and Betty, returned\nTuesday night from two months'\nholiday at lngersoll, Ont., where\nthey visited Mrs. Ferguson's parents.\nMr. and Mrs. F. G. Walley, and at\nOttawa with Mr. and Mrs. Stuart\nWalley They have taken up residence in the A. D. Emory home on\nVernon street. Mr. Ferguson, who\nwas a patient at Kootenay Lake\nGeneral hospital, has left the hospital for home.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. G. Noel Brown\nof Corra Linn spent yesterday in\nNelson.\nt Mr. and Mrs. J. DeVoin, Silica\nstreet, had as their guests Mrs. DeVoin's uncle and aunt. Mr. and Mrs,\nJ. A. Ma'cdougall of Edmonton' and\ntheir daughter. Jean, who have left\n(or Portland, Ore,, and other coast\ncities.\n\u2022 Mrs. Frank Duff and baby\ndaughter, Beverley Ann, who visited at the home of Mr. and Mrs. R.\nD. Wallace, Latimer street, for sis\nweeks, left yesterday for her homo\nat Butte, Mont,\nDaniel McDougall, Stanley\nstreet, left yesterday for Vancouver,\nMrs. S. Welliver of Trail is a\nhouse guest of Mr. and Mrs. D. D,\nMcLean, Victoria street.\n\u25a0 \u2022 Miss H. M. Affleck, who spent\na few weeks in Nelson at the home\nof Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Affleck and\nat Fruitvale with Mr. and Mrs. Boyd\nC. Affleck, was in town Tuesday en\nroute to her home at Vancouver,\n\u2022 Miss Margaret Forbes, who\nwas teaching at Hope, spent Tuesday in Nelson en route to Passmore\nwhere her parents reside.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Robert Young\nand son, Robert, of Victoria are\nvisiting Mrs. Young's parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. C. W. Walton, Fairview.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. R. B. (Jack) Morris and their sons. Jack and Douglas\nFairview. and Mr. Morris' sister.\nMrs. E. L. Boynton of Everett,\nWash., leave today by motor for a\nholiday at Spokane.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Cannon of Kimberley are spending a few days in\ntown. !\n\u2022 Mrs. W, Reyden. Selwyn street,\nand daughter. Miss Christina, have\nreturned from Victoria, where the\nformer attended summer school.\n\u2022 E. Dewar of Spokane is a city\nvisitor.\"\n\u2022 F, R, McCharles, contractor of\nVancouver, who spent some time in\nNelson, left yesterday for the roast.\n\u2022 Mrs. W. J. G. Oliver and\ndaughter of South Slocan spent yesterday in town.\n\u2022 Mrs. James Johnstone and\ndaughter. Miss Alia Johnstone, leave\ntoday hy motor for a few days' visit\nin the Okanagan district.\n\u2022 Mrs. Mary Wallace. Victoria\nstreet, is visiting in Thrums, a guest\nof Mr, ahd Mrs, Johnson.\nMr. and Mrs. John Dolphin and\nson, Danny, who were guests, at the\nsummer place of the latter's parents,\nMr. and Mrs, Charles F. McHardy.\nalso al the home of Mr. and Mri.\nDolphin. Ward street, have returned\nto their home at Trail.\n\u2022 Dr. T. H. Bourque, Houston\nstreet, plans to leave today by motor for a week's holiday at Vancouver.\n\u2022 Miss Kathryn Taylor of New\nPort arrived Tuesday to spend two\nweeks al the Cedar point summer\nplace of her sister, Mrs. J. T, Andrews.\n\u2022 Miss Sheila Stewart, Hume hotel, is visiting at the summer place\nof Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Dunnett at\nQueen's Bay.\n\u2022 Miss Phyllis Gray of the staff\nof the Tranquille sanitarium at\nKamloops is expected in Nelson tomorrow to visit over the week-end\nwith her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J.\nB. Gray, Baker street. Miss Gray\nwill then take up her duties on the\nstaff of thc Trail-Tadanac hospital\nat Trail.\n\u2022 Miss Helen McBride and her\nbrother, Jack, are expected to arrive today from Edmonton to spend\na few weeks at the home of Mr. and\nMrs. R. L. McBride, Hoover street\n\u2022 Mrs. M. Quance and her\nyoung daughter. Eileen, of Robson,\nwere in Nelson Tuesday.\n\u2022 Mrs. J. M. Kirk of Mirror Lake\nvisited the city yesterday en route\nhome from a vacation at the coast.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Hoogerwerf, High street, have taken up\nresidence in their recently purchased home at 616 Nelson avenue.\nColin   F.   McDougall,  Stanley\nenay Lake General hospital, has left\nthat institution.\n\u2022 Miss Joan Hunter, daughter uf\nMr. and Mrs. Roy W. Hunter. Fair-\nview, has returned from the Relief\nArlington mine, where she was visiting her uncle and aunt, Mr. and\nMrs. Charles Madden.\n\u2022 Albert Nelson of Crescent Valley has left for Vancouver.\n\u2022 Dr. H. C. L. Lindsay, who has\nbeen a house guest of Mr. and Mrs.\nC. D. Blackwood, Hall Mines road,\nsince Sunday, plans to leave today\nfor Edmonton.\n\u2022 Mrs. A. F. Dodd and daughter,\nBeity, have arrived in the city from\nNorth Battleford, Sask.. to take up\nresidence with Mr. Dodd, 615 Mill\nstreet.\n\u2022 C. F. B. Wilding-White has left\non a canoe trip on the Arrow Lakes\n\u2022 H. Cliff of Procter visited town\nyesterday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Archie Robertson\nformerly of Salmo, who were holidaying at the coast, are guests at the\nhome of the former's parents, Mr\nand Mrs. James Robertson. Silica\nstreet. They plan to leave at the\nend of the school vacation for Quali-\ncum Beach, where Mr. Robertson\nwill be principal of the high school.\nMrs. J. Morrison ahd young\nson, Jack, of Ymir, visited Nelson\nyesterday.\n\u2022 Honoring F. Denison's mother, Mrs. S. Denison, of Finmore, B.C..\nWho is holidaying in Nelson, at the\nhome of her son and daughter-in-\nlaw, Miss Helen Seanlan, Stanley\nstreet, entertained informally at the\ntea hour Tuesday. Gladioli and\nsnapdragons were the flowers used.\n\u2022 Bernard Dodd, son of Mr. and\nMrs. A. F. Dodd, 615 Mill street, who\nwas operated on for appendicitis at\nKootenay Lake General hospital is\nprogressing favorably.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. R, W. Hagen of\nRossland. visited town yesterday.\n\u2022 Mrs. Dorothy Lewis and son,\nWarren of Smith's, B.C., were guests\nat the home of Mrs. Lewis' brother\nand sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. J.\nDeVoin, Silica street.\n\u2022 Miss Muriel Stenson has left\non a vacation at Calgary.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs, W. R. Thomson\nof Victoria, former residents of Nelson, are in town.\n\u2022 Captain and Mrs. Maitland\nHarrison and daughter, June, of\nHowser, visited Nelson yesterday.\n\u2022 J, H. T. Horslold of Longbeach. spent Tuesday in Nelson.\n\u2022 J. P, Herron. Stanley street,\nspent a week at Ainsworth.\n\u2022 Dr, and Mrs, Wilfrid Laishley,\nFairview. had as their guest. Rev\nand Mrs. H, A, D. Ashford and their\nthree sons, Ina, Ray and Owen, who\nspent a few days intown en route\nto their home in India, sailing from\nVancouver on the Empress of Asia.\n\u2022 Miss Lillian Lewis of Creston\nis holidaying here.\n\u2022 Mrs. Everett Gille and young\ndaughter, Donna, of Ymir. spent yesterday in Nelson.\nCreston Council\nDiscusses Walks\nIdeal Secretary\nPropose Memorial\nto Famous Writer\nLONDON, <CP).-Details of a scheme to perpetuate the memory of\nRudyard Kipling have been disclosed by Lord Athlone, estimated cost\nbeing $3,250,000, Lord Athlone is\nchairman of the fund committee,\nThe chief object is to build and\nequip a Kipling library at the Imperial Service college, Windsor, and\nto provide a capital sum, the income\nfrom which will be devoted to the\nprovision of bursaries at the Imperial Service college for 50 boys.\nSons of men engaged in the governmental and public services resident in the United Kingdam, in\nthe dominions, in India and in th\u00bb\ncolonial empire, would be eligible\nfor bursaries. The boys so chosen\nwill be known as \"Kipling Scholars\".\nKimberley Has\nNew Sidewalks\nKIMBERLEY, B.C.-A new sidewalk is being made from Mark\nCreek bridge to Lower Blarch-\nmont road. It is six feet in width\nrunning beside the main road to\nCamp. It is being surfaced and will\nsooon be finished as far as the new\nschool.\nSince erosion control has becomo\nso important, a new type of scien-\n(tific specialist in soil and farm prob-\nstreet, who was a patient at Koot-'lems. is coming to the fore,\nCRANBROOK Social...\nCRESTON. B.C. - Reeve Mallandaine presided at the August meeting of the village council Monday\nevening, and councillors, Craig and\nNichols were in attendance.\nE. J. Werre, who asked for an extension of the walk on Barton avp-\nnue to serve his residence, was denied his request. The council will\ninvestigate the claim of K. E. Paulson for a walk and some gravelling\nto improve traffic to his new building on Canyon street. Favorable attention was paid the deferred request of the hospital directors for\na stretch of walk on the west side\nof Creston avenue to a point opposite\nthe hospital. Residents along Fifth\nstreet between the Maione corner\nand the point where the streets join\ncemetery road at Wilson avenue,\nare also to get a walk.\nPayment for labor and lumber\nused in July's sidewalk construction\nprogram in which much needed new\nplank walks were laid on Edward\navenue. Victoria avenue, on botli\nsides of the business section of Canyon street and a walk connecting\ncemetery road with Reull avenue,\nwas authorized. This along with\nsome bridge repair work, had used\nup about 21,000 feet of luniber that\ncost $612. and a labor outlay of\n$348 Other items of the month's\nexpenditures were $200 initial payment, on a 40x208 strip of A. Brady's\nproperty to open Vancouver street\nthrough to the hospital. $29 had been\nspent on painting the exterior of the\ntown hall and the interior of the\nclerk's office.\nBills passed for payment were the\nhighest of the year, accounting for\nan outlay of $1641. $500 will also\nbe required to pay a note at the\nbank. With all this liquidated the\ntreasury will still boast $850. After\nthe financial statement had been\npresented the council agreed no\nmore walks would be laid this year\nother than the two agreed upon\nearlier in the session.\nThe council will pay $10 to the\nboard of trade being 50 per cent of\nthe cost of painting the sign \"Creston'' on the north side roof of the\nGrand theatre. Earlier in the year\ntho same sort of sign was painted\non the south side for the guidance\nof aircraft,\n$15 will be given to the agricul\ntural association for the fall fail\non Labor day. Exhibition park and\nPark pavilion are given free. $5 was\ntrimmed off a $15 account rendered\nthe Knights of Pythias for a recent\ndance at the pavilion which did not\nextend into the usual early morning quilting time.\nVictor Mawson was\" present to\nback up a petition signed by most\nof the interested property owners\nasking that the lane onto Canyon\nstreet, between the Mawson store\nand R, Walmsley's office, be closed.\nThe council was agreed1 that the\nlane was very dangerous but to\nmake sure there would be no legal\ncomplications if closure was effected the matter will stand over until\nVillage Solicitor Bell can be consulted.\nIn connection with the fall fair\nthe council had been advised Park\npavilion roof leaked badly. Re-\nshingling was suggested but when\nthis was figured up to cost at least\n$500 it was decided to make temporary repairs. For the benefit ot\ncouncil members three copies cf\nthe fully revised Village act will be\npurchased.\nPermits to build residences were\ngranted S. A. Speers and L. Leaviti\nbut it was observed that the estimated cost of these structures was altogether too modest and the applicants must not expect assessment\nnotices to be in line with the costs\nmentioned in the applications.\nComplaint was voiced of mer-\ncrfants failing to observe the hours\nof closing bylaw but council opinion\nseemed to be that if action was desired some interested party should\nsummon the guilty party or parties\nto appear at police court. The parking regulations on Canyon street are\nbeing disregarded. Red tickets will\nbe printed and placed in cars belonging to those who infringe thc\nbylaw inviting them to appear before the police magistrate.\nThe reeve announced papers were\nabout ready to sign authorizing the\ncouncil to take over the cemetery\nand by next month arrangements\nwould be completed. The cemetery\ncompany is turning over $180 and\nthis amount along with monies collected for the purchase of burial\nplots, will go into a special fund\nfor cemetery maintenance exclusively.\nFormerly a school teacher in\nRegina, Sask.. Miss Nora Gold-\nthorpe (ABOVE) of Spokane,\nWash,, was named 'Ideal Secretary' in a contest held in conjunction with the convention of\nAlpha Iota, National Business\nGirls' Sorority at Detroit. Miss\nGoldthorpe, a graduate of Regina Normal school, is \"crazy\"\nabout her work, does not chew\ngum and seldom smokes.\nPAGE   FIVE\nMother of Forme!\nNelson Lady Dies\nNanaimo Hospital\nVictim of a lengthy illness, Mrs;\nElizabeth Morton, widow of the late1\nJames Morton, died aged 89, in a\nNanaimo hospital Sunday, August\n8 Funeral services were held in\nNanaimo Tuesday.\nSurviving are two sons, Robert!\nand James, and three daughters.!\nMrs. M. Brown, Mrs. J. Robertson!\nand Mrs. William C, Mawhinney, |\nformerly of Nelson and now resident in Saskatoon.\nCRANBROOK-Mrs. W. H, Wilson\nentertained at tea Tuesday in honor\nof her guests, Mrs. George Wilson\nand Miss Barbara Wilson of Sher-\nbrook. The tea tables were decorated\nwith vases of pink and white sweet\npeas. Mrs, H. A. McKowan presided\nat the urns. Guests were Mrs. Wilson. Miss Barbara Wilson, Mrs.\nHardy. Mrs. Miller, Mrs. Sneath\nMrs. J Gibbons, Mrs, D, Gilroy\nMiss Helen Gilroy, Mrs, J. D. MacGillivray, Mrs. W. Morton, Mrs, Irwin. Mrs. McKowan and Miss Ruth\nMcKowan.\nt Mrs. W. E. Davies. who has\nbeen visiting her son and daughter-\nin-law Mr. and Mrs. E, Davies has\nreturned to her home in Vancouver.\n\u2022 Mrs. G. Cockshott and daughter Alice, of Canal Flats are guests\nof Mr. and Mrs. Lindholm.\n\u2022 Mack Schell is visiting friends\nin Seattle and Vancouver.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Gummer and\nfamily have returned from a vacation in Prince Albert,\n\u2022 Mrs, J, Young and family of\nPenticton are guests of Mrs. Young's\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Sarvis.\n\u2022 Miss Mary Paget is a guest of\nMr, and Mrs. N. Blunt at Issisfail.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Maidment and\nfamily have returned from a vacation at  Fairmont Hot Springs.\n\u2022 Rev. and Mrs. R, W, Hardy,\nMiss Ruth and Miss Lois Hardy, who\nhave been spending their vacation at\nKsslo and Vancouver, have returned\nto the city.\n\u2022 Dr. and Mrs, Moffatt of Calgary are visiting Mrs. Moffatt's parents, Mr, and Mrs. Bowley at Green\nBay.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Adams and family have returned from a holiday in\nVancouver.\n\u2022 Corporal Jarvis and family are\nspending Iheir vacation at the coast.\n\u2022 Miss Elizabeth Godderis has as\nher guest Miss Monfca Carroll of\nPowell River.\nMORE ABOUT\nDuchess of Kent\n(Continued From Page Four)\nfall, but also arrangements for a\ncampaign of publicity to let those\nat home know how well young Canadian musicians are doing in England.\nThere is a real success story in\nthe tale of three Nelson sisters:\nZara. cellist; Anna, pianist, and Ida.\nviolinist, who left Winnipeg seven\nyears ago in their early 'teens, infant, prodigies backed by public subscription. Since then they have\nstudied and toured the world giving concerts in Austria, Rhodesia\nand South Africa, Major Gladstone\nMurray, general manager of the Canadian Broadcasting corporation,\nheard them while he was in England\nand now they are preparing to return and broadcast in Canada at his\nrequest next year. Two of them\nare not yet 20. In the limelight also\nis Frederick Trinke, young Winni-\npegger who is to play the solo at\none of the famous promenade concerts in. King's hall on Aug. 13.\nThere now are more than 20 professional first-rank musicians in\nEngland and more than d0 students\nfrom the Dominion at the Royal\nCollege and Academy of Music.\nWith them is a young Englishwoman, 18-year-old Veror.ica Carpenter, who is creating conversation\nat the moment. Daughter of Dr. E.\nC. Carpenter, dean rf Exeter, she is\nstudying singing, elocution and\ndramitic art and plans to make her\nprofessional debut in the part of\n\"second boy\" in a Christmastide\npantomine in her home town, When\nshe was three years old she played\nthe part of an angel in a nativity\nplay.\nCanadians attended at jther celebration in memory of a famous\ndancer when the Marchioness of\nTitchfield opened a garden party at\nIvy House, Golders Green, in aid\nof a trade unionists scheme to turn\nPavlova's old home into a women's\nhospital .\nSadly enough other Canadians\nwere lucky and still unfortunate\nenough to be present at the garden\nparty in honor of their Majesties\nin Edinburgh. Among those caught\nin the rain were Miss Jean Gunn,\nsuperintendent of nur >s at the Toronto General hospital; Miss M. F,\nHersey of the International Nurses\nassociation; Miss C M. Ferguson,\nWinnipeg and Miss K. M. Simpson,\npresident of the Canadian Nurses\nassociation, all on their way to the\nInternational Nurses congress,\nConstable Shiell\nGoes to Nakusp I\nConstable  Richard  Shiell  of the |\nFernie  detachment,  provincial  police,  who  has  been  transferred  to j\nNakusp, passed through Nelson on I\nWednesday on his way to his new |\nstation.   He   succeeds  Constable  V.\nW. Jupp,  who is leaving the service.\nConstable Shiell was stationed In {\nNelson previous to going to Fer-.\nnie. He was originally from Ver-.\nnon.\nDEATHS\n(By the Canadian Preis)\nMelbourne, Australia \u2014 Sir David\nOrme Masson, 79, one of Australia's*!\nmost distinguished scientists. '\nSeville, Spain \u2014 Eustace, Cardinal\nIllundain Y. Esteban, 72, archbishop,\nof Seville.\nBoston \u2014  F. Nathanial PerkinfcS\n75, widely known United States wool\nmerchant.\nGranville, O. \u2014 Dr. Francis W,\nShepardson, 75, president of Beta\nTheta Pi  fraternity.\nWilmington, Del. \u2014 William L. j\nEdison, 58, eldest son of the inventor,'\nthe late Thomas A. Edison.\nBrusseLs \u2014 Camille Gurix, -.\u00ab,\nhonorary professor at the Brussels j\nconservatory of music.\nBexhill-on-Sea, Eng. \u2014 Rt. Hon,\nJohn   Hodge,  81,  first minister  of-|\nlabor for Great Britain and later\nminister of pensions.\nEnglewood,   N.J.   --   Edwin   C,\nWashburn, 67. assistant to the presi- |\ndent of the Baltimore & Ohio railway\nI\nPair Get Year on\nTwo Theft Charges I\nVANCOUVER. Aug. 11 (CP) \u2014J.T\nBabcock and Frank Cherrill were I\neach sentenced to one year for auto [\ntheft and one year for breaking andl\nentering by Magistrate G, R. Mc-I\nQueen in police court today. TheT\nmen pleaded guilty to the charge*;!\nMonday, a few hours after a w11(|m\nautomobile chase ended in capture;.;;\nby police.\nWhen air is exhaled from th?\nlungs, it has had four per cent of\nits oxygen  removed.\nARE YOU ONLY A\nTHREE-QUARTER WIFE?]\nTHERE   are certain   things   a\nwoman has to put up with and\nlie a good sport.\nMen, because they are men, can\nnever understand a three-quarter\nwife\u2014a' wife who is all love and\nkindness three weeks in a mouth\nand a hell cat the rest of the time.\nNo matter how your hack aches\n\u2014 no matter bow loudly your\nnervea scream\u2014don't take it out\non your husband.\nFor three generations one woman\nlias told another how to go \"smiling through\" with Lydia E. Pink-\nham's Vegetable Compound. It\nhelps Nature lone up the system,\nthus lessening tho discomforts from\nthe functional disorders winch\nwomen must endure in tho three\nordeals or life: 1. Turning from\ngirlhood Ui womanhood. 2. Preparing for motherhood. 3. Approaching \"middle age.\"\nDon't be a three-quarter wife,\ntake LYDIA E. PtNKHAM'S\nVEGETABLE COMPOUND and\nGo \"Smiling Through,\"\n(Advt.)\nThe Union of B.C. Municipalities\nwill have the annual convention at\nNanaimo early in September. The\nreeve was urged to attend, and 'f\nit is possible he will do so, and on\nthe trip will see the authorities at\nVictoria about the $15,000 loan for\nCreston's sewer system.\nDespite the fact that much older\nwritings are known, only one clay\ntablet, has been found that was written between 1800 and 1500 B. C.\nKIMBERLEY Social...\nKIMBERLEY-Mrs. T. Mathieson\nof Chapman Camp received news\nSaturday of the death of her mother,\nMrs. G. Shaw of Trail. Mr. and Mrs\nMathieson left Sunday for Trail.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. W. Raynor left\nSaturday to spend their vacation at\nthe coast.\n\u2022 C, A. Seaton of Havelock, Ont,.\nvisited here last week.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Steve Waite and\nfamily are spending their vacation at\nSouth Slocan and Arrow Lake\npoints.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. J. McGowan of\nChapman Camp left. Saturday for\nthe coast where they will spend\ntheir vacation.\n\u2022 Mi', and Mrs. J. S. Fisher and\nAllan Dickson left Sunday for a\nvacation in Bellingham.\n\u2022 Miss Noel MacDonald, captain\nof Ihe famous Edmonton Grads\nbasketball team, is visiting friends\nin Kimberley.\n\u2022 There was a light frost in parts\nof the town Tuesday morning.\n\u2022 Miss Elvira Nordlund spent the\nweek-end visiting Miss Marjorie\nMcLeod at Coeur D'Alene, Ida. She\naccompanied R. B, McLeod on a\nvisit to his family there.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. F. Porter of Calgary were guests of Mr. and Mrs\nJ. H. Twells Friday and Saturday.\nKIMBERLEY-Dr. Milne of Calgary General hospital and his wife\nand three children visited Kimberley Friday. They had been holidaying at Fairmont and were on thei\nway to Cranbrook and Bull Rivei\nbefore returning to Calgary, With\n(hem was the doctor's sister Miss\nMilne.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. George Plant and\nfamily left Saturday to spend HI\ndays holiday in Spokane. They wen\naccompanied by Mrs. W. Barr.\nCapilano Estates Limited\nWEST VANCOUVER'S BEAUTIFUL\nRESIDENTIAL DEVELOPMENT\nFamous Golf Course\nComparatively Low Taxes\nChoice Lots Now Available\nFor Particulars Apply to\nT.D. ROSLING\n3 Royal Bank Bldg.       Nelson, B. C.       Telephone 717\nAgent for\nBlane, Fullerton&White\nLimited\nGeneral  Insurance Agents and Real  Estate Counsellorj\nVANCOUVER, B. C.\n g.-fgPjp.p.-gp.-jP^\n\u00bbACE SIX\nNELSON DAILY NEW8, NELSON, B.C\n,-THURSD'v> WORNING, AUG. 12. 1937\nEstablished April 22, 1902.\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Neivspaper\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.\nWEDNESDAY, AUGUST 11, 1937.\nTHURSDAY, AUGUST 12, 1937.\nV\nAfter years of struggle, A. P. Herbert has won his\nbattle in the British parliament for amendment of the divorce law. Under the aet recently sanctioned in London to\n.adultery are added cruelty, desertion for three years and insanity for five years as grounds for divorce.\nCanada's divorce laws are as archaic as those of Great\nBritain prior to the recent amendment, and their effect has\nbeen even worse. In Canada, as in Great Britain, a large\npercentage of divorces are obtained by collusion in one\nform or another\u2014yet collusion in divorce is law-breaking.\nCollusion is rife in this country, and so are faked adultriea,\nbecause the law insists that without adultery there can\n\u2022be no divorce.\nIn amending our divorce laws we should face the factB\nof the situation more logically than they have done in Great\nBritain. Canadians do not wish to make divorce too easy, or\nto make it possible for leas than obviously potent reasons,\nbut to grant a divorce in cases of three years' desertion or\ninsanity for five years and to refuse it when husband or\nWife is incarcerated for life imprisonment is obviously\nabsurd.\nEven collusion which involves no moral turpitude is\nat present a barrier to divorce\u2014an absurd and illogical\nsituation which circumstances and common sense have\nforced the courts to meet by looking not too eagerly into\nevery suspected case. Yet for us to continue to say that there\ncan be a divorce when one party to the marriage strongly\nopposes it, but there can be no divorce when both are so\nstrongly in favor of divorce that they are willing to arrange\nit between them is ridiculous. As a matter of public policy\nthere must be a barrier to collusive divorce when such collusion involves falsification of evidence, but for it to be\neasier to obtain a divorce when one party fights it tooth\nand nail than when both show very clearly that they wish\nfor it is a very different matter.\nBRITISH TRAFFIC ACCIDENTS\nIn spite of the fierce glare that has been beating upon\n\u2022the subject for years, in spite of new regulations, traffic\nbeacons and so forth, the numbers killed and injured in\nhighway accidents in Great Britain during the first six\nmonths of this year, as compared with those in the corresponding portion of 1936, are higher in all categories.\nThe number of persons killed increased by 169 and of\ninjured 660. Pedestrians killed rose in number by 614\nand others fatally injured by 46. Deaths during the six\nmonths totalled 3018, while persons injured numbered 103,-\n621, a staggering total of 106,639. This means that on\n,the average 181 persons were killed or injured daily on the\nstreets and highways of Great Britain.\nDuring the year ending May 31 last the number of\nmotor vehicles in Great Britain increased by 150,334, or\nfrom 2,605,067 to 2,755,401.\nThe British minister of transport, Mr. Leslie Burgin,\nhas recently appealed to cyclists and pedestrians to be more\ncareful in using the roads. The number of cyclists killed\nduring the first six months of this year was 655 and of\npedestrians 1437. Cyclists and pedestrians killed under\n15 years of age numbered 98 and 425, respectively.\nSince safety campaigns and intensive propaganda of all\nkinds are unable to keep down the number of accidents it\n,;would really seem as if some of the more drastic expedients, proposed but not yet applied, would have to be resorted to.\n. Between You and Me\nBy   J.B.C.\nFIVE LONG YEAR8\nThey were selecting a jury and the\nfollowing  dialogue took  place:\n\"You are a property owner?\"\n\"Yes, your honor.\"\n\"Married or single?\"\n\"I have been married for five\nyears, your honor.\"\n\"Have you formed or expressed an\nopinion?\"\n\"Not for five years, your honor.\"\nJUST  IN  CASE\nThe young attorney was sent out\nof town to interview an important\nclient in regard to a case.\nLater the head of his firm received the following telegram: \"Have\nforgotten name of client. Please\nwire at once.\"\nThis was the reply: \"Client's name\nWhitehead. Your name Burkey.\"\n.   .   .\nA LETTER FROM\nMR,  MAWHINNEY\nRecently while on holiday I was\nin Saskatoon where Rev. W. C.\nMawhinney, former pastor of Trinity church here, has a church. My\nstay was brief and as he lived in\nthe west end of the city I did not\nget out to see him. However, through\nsome means, he learnod of my visit\nto Saskatoon and today I received\na letter fr\u00bbm him expressing his sorrow at missing me and a chat about\nNelson. He says \"I still remember\nNelson and the friends\". He sends\nkind regards to the boss, boys on the\nstaff and Nelsonites.\nGot a lift up town from Fairview\nway yesterday with George Benwell\nHe just drove along leisurely and\nwe had a good look at the district\nwe passed through. He remarked\nhow green the country appeared today compared with a year ago when\neverything was dry. Fairview is\nbeautiful at present, the flower gardens being at their best. Mr. Benwell discussed trap shooting and\nboxla. He is of the opinion that with\nthe young Nelson players coming on\nso well Nelson will not need imports next year.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nTOUGH TO FILL\nEthel Barrymore, says George\nRoss, receives so many letter from\nstage-struck girls asking her advise on how to get on the stage,\nshe uses a form letter to reply:\n\"For an actress to be a success, she\nmust have the face of a Venus, the\nbrains of a Minerva, the grace of\na Terpsichore, the memory of a\nMacaulay, the figure of a Juno\u2014and\nthe hide of a rhinoceros.\"\nTHE MASTER KEY?\nDespite this, Miss Barrymore gets\nback many replies saying, \"Dear\nMiss Barrymore,  I  believe that I\nfill all the requirements,\"\n\u2022 *   *    *\nRECALLS OLD DAY8\nJack Boyce who is camping out\nFairview was discussing early days\nin Fairview when he and his family\nresided out there. There have been\nmany changes since then but he was\nremarking about this event and that\nto bring back to mind. He was going\nevent happening which I was able\nback 27 years.\n* .   .\nMORE  HOWLERS\n\"Contralto is the low sort of music\nthat only ladies can sing.'\n\"Dust is mud with the juice\nsqueezed  out.'\n\"A republic is a country where no\none can do' anything in private.\"\n\"It the Forth Bridge collapsed\nthey would build a fifth.\"\n\"Shavians were a Russian racei\nwith a Spartan sense of humor.\"\u2014]\nTit-Bits.\nJACK ANNABLE FISHES\nJack Annable started on an early\nafternoon fishing trip with a friend.\nThe Walton launch looked exceptionally pretty as it cut through the\nrough waters of the arm yesterday\nafternoon. Jimmie Minnis likes to\nride when he has a team working\nat the shipyard pulling out a craft.\nLawrence Exton. engineer on the\nsteamer Moyie, plans to have her\nready for action by end of the week.\nThere was smoke emerging from her\nstack yesterday afternoon. Ole Olson was among those who had a dip\nin the west arm yesterday and who\nremarked it was cooler out of the\nwater than in it. Calvin Winters and.\nGeorge Leask were quite absorbed\nas they talked in the little rest room\nat the ferry landing. Dr. David\nWilkinson was having a meal out\nthe other evening and he declatd\nhe was tired of \"batching\". Using\none plate for a week is rather tiresome. Jack Cope recently returned\nfrom a trip to California and he\nbelieves he'll go through the prairies\nand old stamping grounds next sum\nmer. Douglas Male will feel a lot\ncleaner shortly. They moved a new\nbathtub into his home yesterday\nafternoon. Shades of winter's ap*\nproach\u2014a load of coke passing up\nBaker street yesterday afternoon\nCool comfort by Allan McLean\u2014a\nlow cut almost sleeveless shirt,\nbathing suit, a nice looking girl, an\nice cream cone\u2014and all on Baker\nstreet at the same time.\nV. Questions V.\nANSWERS\nThis column of questions and\nanswers ia open to any reader ol\nthe Nelson Daily News. In no\n:ase will the name ot the person\nisking the question be published.\nLooking Backward.*.\nTEN YEARS AGO\nAugust 12, 1927\nVictoria\u2014The condition of Premier John Oliver, who recently underwent an operation, is reported as\nunchanged . . . Pinehurst Inn, South\nSlocan, was burned to the ground\nyesterday. . . . Crescent Valley \u2014\n900,000 feet of white pine lumber\nwere totally destroyed by fire last\nCrow's Nest Pass, Coeur d'Alene and\nSpokane, . . . Cranbrook \u2014 Mrs.\nJames Davidson, a former resident,\nhas been spending the holidays with\nMiss Emslie. . . . Procter\u2014Mr. and\nMrs. Guy Browell of Nelson spent\nSaturday here. . . . Cranbrook\nKimberley residents are making\ngreat preparations for the arrival\nAUNTHET\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\nnight.\nCalgary'\u2014 H. R. H. the j of the Prince of Wales. . . . Pitts-\nPrince of Wales has arrived at his\nranch. . . . Trail \u2014 Tadanac has\nstarted on the first of three wading\npools to be constructed in the city.\n. . . Thrums \u2014 W. K. Esling and\nLieut-Col. Fred Lister were the\nchief speakers at the Conservative\npicnic held yesterday. , . . Trail \u2014\nMiss Edith Ternan passed through\nthe city on the way to her home at\nRossland.. . . Creston \u2014 Mrs. James\nMaxwell has returned from a\nmonth's visit to Vancouver. . . .\nCreston\u2014Mrs. M. J. Boyd and Mrs.\nGeorge Cartwright. judges at tot\nyear's Kootenay fall fairs, have\nbeen notified that their services will\nbe required in 1927.. . . Mr. and Mrs,\nGeorge E, Lester, High street, have\nas their guests, Mrs. Lester's sistea.\nMiss Dora Gairns of Trail.. . . E. M.\nGillott has returned from a motsr\ntrip  to  Radium  Hot  Springs,   the\nSally's SAiXieS\nAlberta Social Creditors in their windmill battle\nagainst the banks may think they are Robin Hoods, but to\nOutsiders they look much more like Aimee Semple Mac-\nj?rrersons\u2014their prophetic bible work was quite a characteristic of the technique of the charming southern Cali-\nfornian o>;ator. Of course, there is one great big difference\n|\u00bb-Robin did get the deer, Aimee sure did get the money, but\nAberhart just can't make that $25 a month materialize, out\nof nothing. He thinks it is in the banks, but he'll find it\nisn't even there by the time he gets his claws on the vaults.\nWhich is just as well, as while the deer belonged to the\nwicked barons and ihope who threw money into Aimee's\nlovely lap owned it to do as they pleased with it, the banks\ndon't own the money they hold. It belongs to their customers.\nburgh\u2014Valentine F. Smith of Gray\nCreek, B.C., has joined the faculty\nof the Cargegie Institute of Technology. . , . L. F. Gilbert and his\nLadybird won the 20-mile launch\nrace and with It won the championship of Kootenay lake and the\nPatenaude trophy.. . . Spectators at\nthe regatta yesterday saw a fire\ndestroy the cabin of \"Coal Oil Johnny\" and a small patch of timber.\nTWENTY YEARS AGO\nAugust 12, 1917\nMayor Annable, who returned recently from the prairies, reports a\nrecord crop of oats in Alberta. . . .\nLondon\u2014A German patrol ship was\nblown up when it struck a German\nmine. . . . New York\u2014A cablegram\nfrom Paris states that Pope Benedict\nhas appointed Monsignor Frederico\nTedeschini as his prime minister,\n. . . Archdeacon Beer, Kaslo, is a\nguest at the Strathcona. . . . Seattle\n\u2014The 16-day street car strike in\nthis city has ended. . . . New York\n\u2014 New York university has opened\na new war course In methods of\nteaching office training. ... J,\nBlomberg has bought out his partner, Dominic Maglio, of the New\nGrand hotel.\nGenerally a girl who is quick la catch\non doesn't know when to let go.\nTHIRTY YEARS AGO\nAugurt 12, 1907\nDetroit\u2014Many people were killed\nin a terrific explosion of half a car\nof nitro glycerine. . . . Chicago \u2014\nStrike of Western Union telegraphers was still spreading tonight. . . .\nVancouver\u2014Bill Miner, nOrtorious\ntrain robber, who escaped August 8,\nis still at large. . . . Ottawa \u2014 G. T.\nP. Railway will probably erect a\n$1,000,000 hotel on Nepean Point on\nthe Ottawa river. . . . McDemmid\nand McHardy have leased the back\nportion of the Alan block for five\nyears. . . . Superintendent Smith of\nthe city electric light, department\nhas been investigating possibilities\nof Fairview as a market for light.\n\"Jim can't fool me about his age.\nI never saw anybody get interested\nin obituary notices till he was on\nthe other side o' fifty.\"\nTHE CANCER CRUSADE\nBy\nW. S. McCullough, M.D., D.P.H.\nSecretary Cancer Committee\nTHE HEALTH LEAGUE OF CANADA\nEARLY 8IGNS OF CANCER CALL\nFOR PROMPT ACTION\nIf any sign of cancer is found, the\nfamily doctor should at once be\nconsulted. At this period in the\nhistory of a cancer, the family doctor Is the best counsellor, particularly if he. is alert to his responsibility. He knows the history of the\nfamily; he may know a couple of\ngenerations of the family. Often he\nknows the patient from birth. In\nsuch cases the family doctor must\nemploy all the resources at his command in the making of an accurate\ndiagnosis. The task will not always\nbe an easy one.\nBut fhe doctor has, In addition to\nCONTRACT\nBRIDGE\nAs Written\nby '\nSHEPARD\nBARCLAY\nCONSIOE RYOUR PARTNER\nIT IS RISKY business to credit\nan unimaginative partner with ability to see through anything unusual in your bidding tactics. When\nsuch a player sits opposite you, it\nwill pay in the long run to make\nthe situation as easily understandable as possible. Fancy tactics,\nwhich might prove profitable with\nthe right kind of a partner, can get\nyou : in some terrible messes with\nthe wrong kind.\n4A.Q109653\n\u00bbA\n\u2666 Q10\n+ 853\nV 10 8 3 2\n\u2666 AJ972\n*K J9\n4 None\n#J9874\n+ K8543\nA*\" 6 2\n4K8742\nV KQ5\n\u2666 6\n+ AQ74\n<Dealer: South.   Neither side vulnerable.)\nWhen South opened the bidding\non this deal with 1-Spade, North\nfelt sure there was a probable slam\nin the hand, so over West's 2-Dia-\nmofids, North put in a bid 4 4-Clubs.\nHe felt that if the slam was reached clubs would probably be the least\ndesirable lead, and he hoped his bid\nwould ward off a lead of that. suit.\nWhen East overcalled with 5-Dia-\nmonds, South called 6-Clubs which\nWest doubled. North's next bid was\n6-Diamonds.\nIt should have been evident to\nSouth by this time that his partner\nwould have redoubled the 6-Clubs\ndouble if he held a legitimate suit\nin connection with South's own\nholding, and that when North cue\nbid in diamonds he was certainly\nannouncing that he held a fit in the\nspade suit. South, however, disregarded all this and went to 7-Clubs,\nwhjrh West again doubled and\nNorth was forced to bid 7-Spades,\nwhich waa Immediately set one\nwith the lead of the Diamond A.\nIf North held any other type of\nhand than the one he did, which\nhad to end up in a spade contract,\nhe would have redoubled the 6-\nClubs, doubled, as not being vulnerable that would have netted his\nside more than seven doubled.\n*   *   *\nTomorrow'* Problem\n4> A 10 8 4\ntQ 6 2\n\u2666 AQJ9\n+ 83\nhis acquired knowledge, other lids\nin diagnosis which he will apply to\na solution of the problem. Among\nthese are, in suitable cases, the X-\nray, the test-meal, transillumination\nand the microscope. He may, if necessary, have the advice of a colleague. The question does not admit of delays it must be settled as\nrapidly as possible, for what the\npatient suspicions of cancer, brings\nto the doctor is either a cancer or\nit is not a cancer.\nHow important in the interest of\nthe patient are these early signs. The\nvery existence of a man or woman\nmay depend upon their early recognition. Many of them may readily\nbe recognized by almost any intelligent person. Keep your eyes open\nfor irregular bleedings, unhealing\nsores, lumps anywhere In the body,\nchronic hoarseness, disorders of digestion or change of bowel habits in\npersons of 35 years and upwards.\nOne sees these signs every day.\nPerhaps the commonest are the so-\ncalled unhealing sores, sores that\nfail to heal. They appear as brown,\nyellow or dark-looking scabs on the\nface or hands. Underneath the scab\nis ah unhealed sore. They are seen\nas scabs on the lip which may exist\nfor weeks, even months without\nshowing any signs of healing. Originally they are not cancers but if\nneglected they are sure to become\ncancerous. Bleedings of an irregular character, lumps, chronic hoarseness, disorders of digestion and\nchange in bowel habits may be recognized by almost any observant\npersons.\nNext article: \"Cancer Research No.\n1.\"\nH.N.,\u2014What is the royalty on cordwood and dot;, a person who is\ncutting wood for a government\nschool have to pay royalty when\nhe is not cutting on a wood limit\nbut on someone's property?\nThe royalty on cordwood cut\nfrom land crown granted prior to\nMarch 2, 1914. is 25 cents; On\nland crown granted subsequent to\nMarch 2, 1914, lt is 35 cents. A\nbona fide settler may apply to\nthe Forest branch and obtain a\nsettlers Free Use Permit to cut and\nsell cordwood from lands he is\noccupying, free of royalty.\n\u00ab   \u2022   \u2022\nM.R., Nelson\u2014When is St. Swithin's\nday and how did the belief that\nif it rains on St. Swithin's day it\nwill rain for forty days originate?\nSt. Swithin was a bishop of Winchester (852-268) and was of conspicuous devotion. He was credited with many miracles. He asked\nthat when he died he might be\nburied where \"passersby might\ntread on his grave and where the\nrain from the eaves might fall\nupon it.\" When a century later his\nbody was to be exhumed for the\npurpose of being deposited in the\nCathedral, on the day appointed\nfor the translation (July 15) it\nrained and for m^ny days after\nso as to delay the ceremony. This\nis responsible for the superstition.\nJuly 15 is kept aa his day in the\nAnglican calendar.\nA.R.K., Nelson\u2014What are the main\ndivisions or races of mankind and\nto which do the people of India\nbelong?\nThere are three main groups or\ndivisions of mankind, each having\nmany subdivisions. These divisions\nare; the white race (Caucasians);\nthe yellow-brown race (Mongolians etc.) and the black race (Negroes and Austroloids). The Hindus\nbelong to the Aryan, race, which\nis a branch of the Caucasian group.\nThere are more than 45 racial\nsubdivisions in India.\nI VERSE I\n<s> <j,\nA DOG \"IF\"\nIf I can be a dog my Master's proud\nof,\nAnd never bark, or growl or even\nwhine;\nIi I can keep my heart to full of\nlove,\nThat I can go hungry while 1\nwatch Him dine;\nIi I can wait, and not get tired of\nwaiting,\nWhen He forgets to take me for\na walk;\nIf I can keep my loyal heart from\nhating,\nThe things He says is foolish, Idle\ntalk;\nIf I can comfort Him when He's in\ntrouble,\nAnd not intrude upon His privacy\ntoo much;\nIi I can let Him know I love Him\ndouble,\nAnd wait in patience for His loving touch;\nIf I can do the tricks He tries to\nteach me;\nAnd never let Him know how\ntired I am;\nIf I can be as smart as He still\nthinks me,\nAnd fetch and carry all the things\nlean;\nIf I can be His friend when others\nfail Him,\nAnd worship in the path His feet\nhave trod;\nIf I can do these, things and still\nmore for Him,\nThen  I'll  know  that  I've   been\nfaithful to my God.\nBLANCHE BUTLER\nApologies to Kipling\nIf man's voice was as powerful for\nhis size as that of the tree frog, he\ncould be heard from eastern Washington State to New York City.\n\u2666 \u00ab\nV A Id 9\n73\n\u2666 7 532\n+ K\nA'.\nS.\n\u2666 K2\n\u00ab10 5\n\u2666 KM\n+J9764\n2\n-}4j9873\n*84\n\u2666 10 8\n+ AQ10\n(Dealer: East. East-West vulnerable.)\nAgainst South's 4-Spade contract,\ndoubled by East, West cashed the\nheart K and A and followed with\nthe Heart 3. What reading should\nEast get from this?\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nBy Geo. McManus\nSO THEY SAY\nThe last fifty years have witnessed a notable retreat from monotheism towards idolatry. The worship of one God has been abandoned\nin favor of the worship of such\nlocal divinities as the nation, the\nclass and even the deified individual.\u2014Mr. Aldous Huxley,\nIt is silly and presumptuous to\nsay that war is inevitable: for no\none can possibly know. The only\nconclusion which is certain is that\nwe cannot avoid war by bringing it\non.\u2014Mr. J. M. Keynes.\nSTAIR CLIMB TEST\nSHOWS HEART ILLS\nA stair climbing test for early detection of failing hearts is reported\nby Dr. Gustav Nylin of Stockholm,\nSweden, says Science Service. The\ntest gives information about the\nheart's ability not revealed by the\nelectrocardiograph. X-ray or other\ntests and also can be used in diseases of the lungs.\nThe test is made on a special\nstairway on which patients walk a\ncertain number of rounds at a rate\nmeasured by a metronome. The\namount of oxygen consumed while\nperforming the test is measured and\nthis shows the amount of exertion\nthe heart can stand.\nThe stairs are climbed at a rate\nof 38 steps per minute fori 5 rounds;\n160 steps per minute for 5 rounds,\nand 203 steps per minute for 10\nrounds. Normal persons used 30,\n75 and 112 per cent more oxygen\nthan they did at rest for the three\nrespective grades of the test.\nThere are over a billion elm trees\nin the United States-all threatened unless the Dutch elm disease\nis checked.\nHome\nImprovement\nCover your floors with Cottonwood Panels, and finish in\nlinoleum effect by dapple-art\npainting. You will have a sanitary, durable floor.\nDistrict  Distributon:\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Co., Ltd.\n\u25a0 \u25a0 i\n\"Build B. C. Payrolls\"\nA Milk\nFor\nChildren\nNot every milk has Vitamin D.\nPacific has. Vitamin D must be\nbrought out. It requires a patented process to do It and the\nright to use this patent has\nbeen granted to thc packers of\nPacific Milk.\nVitamin D plays a\nvilal part in the building of bones and teeth.\nPacific Milk\nIrradiated of Cour\n mmmmmmmmmmmmm.\n\t\n\t\no-b<\\\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.\u2014THURSDAY MORNINO, AUG. 12. 19S7     \u2014-\nPAGE KVM\nNELSON LEADS ALL WAY TO BEAT TRAIL BY 15-12\nGAME IS TIGHTEST AND ROUGHEST\nFOR SOME TIME IN NELSON RINK;\nNELSON'S DRIVE IN THIRD WINS\nITrail   Gets  Seven   in\nFourth; Referees\nMiss Lot Stuff\nLEAGUE   8TAND1NG\nP W I,   F    A  Pts\nTrail   19 12   7 321 291   24\nRossland     19   9 10 299 318    II!\nNelson  20   8 12 282 293   16\nNext gSmc\u2014Rossland at Trail.\nFriday.\nProducing the lightest, roughest\ngame of a long time in Nelson, Trail\nand Nelson boxla squads pulled fans\nto their feet time and again at the\ncivic centre arena Wednesday night\nas they battled over marginal goals\nfor two periods and then alternated\nin scoring drives in the third and\nfinal cantos. Nelson won by IS to 12,\nNelson's drive in the third .won the\ngame, for Trail came back with a\nseven-goal comeback in the fourth,\noutscoring the Maple Leafs by one\ngoal, to make it touch and go up to\nthe final whistle.\nIt was a bitter affair on the floor,\nand lax refereeing didn't help a\nbit. The boys on both sides got away\nwith near-mayhem.\nSmith of Trail with two goals\nand three assists, and Cooper of\nNelson with one and four sparked\nthe scoring as they added five fat\npoints to their averages. James, Carr\nand Egan each came through with\nfour points.\nNelson's 2-1 lead was converted\nto 4-3 at half time and to 9-5 at the\nthree-quarter mark. The first half\nwas entirely a goalie's game, Leroy\nand Gibbons turning in fine performances.\nIt was a goalie's first period, Gibbons and Leroy starring alternately.\nTwo Trail penalties passed without\nscoring, then Egan was chased for\nfive as he cut down Marcus Smith.\n'Slashing at his stick. It provided\nthe first break. Carr's score on Des-\nBrlsay's rebound as Nelson pressed. Twelve seconds after Trail\n.equalized on Merle's tally from\n[Miller's pass, and it was tied until\nCarr scored again two and a half\nminutes after, the big blonde using\n!his head as Cooper passed up the\n.floor to him and gave him his opportunity.\nEgan's penalty stretched 55 seconds into the second stanza, which\ndeveloped into a burly affair mark-\ned by the most slack refereeing seen\non the Nelson floor this season as\n\u25a0Smith got away with two minutes\nafter slashing Cooper over the head\nand Preston got away with two\nminutes for hitting Kelly over the\nhead, besides a lot that was passed\nup entirely. The fans roared their\ndisapproval by tossing out boxes\nand bits of refuse at Jock Walmsley,\nThere was no scoring until 11:50\n\u2022when James tied the game on\nSmith's pass. Cooper put Nelson\nahead again 19 seconds after and\nSmith tied it up again 40 seconds\nlater. A second three-way combination attack gave Nelson a 4-3 half-\ntime lead as Dingwall scored on\nthe end of a Cooper-Carr combination.\nThe third at the start was another\ndesecration of the art of refereeing.\nbut the boys weren't quite so hot\nand it wasn't as obvious. Opening\nof the period was marked by a penalty shot against Leroy when he\ncame out to wrap up Paterson, unchecked in front of the net, but\nStewie missed the shot.\nIt was tight boxla until two-thirds\nof the way along when James scored and then Nelson went to town\non counters by Horswill, Kelly, DesBrisay and Egan, the first three in\nless than a minute.\nNine penalties Were dished out.\nAtwell and Sambrook going off altogether for glaring at each other.\nIn the final canto Trail sat back\n\u2022f-before a Nelson barrage that stretched the count to 12-5 before they\nstarted to count, and then began\nto go to town. Temple, James, Kendall, Smith, Moure Davy (2). \"and\nMerlo contributed to seven Trail\ngoals, one more than Nelson caught.\nPenalties were lighter, one for each\nteam.\nTRAIL\nLeroy, g\nMiller, d\nLathom, d\nSnowdon, d\nPreston, d . .\nG\n0\n...   0\n0\n...   0\n...   0\nKendall, r           2\n. 0\n, 0\n.. 3\n2\n.... 2\n.... 1\n...   2\nA P\n0   0\nSambrook,\nLes Davy, c\nJames, c    . .\nMouse Davy, w\nSmith, w \t\nTemple, w\t\nMerlo,  w \t\nTotals \t\nNELSON\nGibbons, g \t\nAtwell, d    .  ..\nHorswill, d  \t\nKelly,  d  \t\nDesBrisay, d ....\nEgan,   r   \t\nCooper, r \t\nBonneville, c\nJack Bishop, c\nHooker, w\nPaterson, w \t\nCarr,  w   \t\n  0\n  0\n  1\n  1\n  1\n  2\n  1\n....... 2\n  0\n  1\n  2\n  3\nDingwall, w    1\nFor Best Sport, Most Valuable Player\n.   In Boxla\nTotals     15 13 21\nOfficials\u2014Ken Paul, referee; Jock\nWalmsley, judge of play; Jimmie\nClark and Tommy Bishop, goal umpires; E. W. Jackson, R. E. Crerar\nand T. R. Wilson, timekeepers.\nWRESTLING\n(By the Associated Press)\nPhiladelphia\u2014Ernie   Dusek.\nOmaha. Neb., threw Joe Cox,\nKansas City, 43:36.\nSan   Francisco\u2014Pat  Fraley.\nBoston, 'defeated Ezra Morgan,\nHouston, two straight falls.\nuwtMHmu -i\nFOR OTHER SPORT NEWS\nSEE PAGE TWO\nFor a good\nSmoke...\n\u25a0 3\nA trophy eagerly sought after this season and which in years to\ncome will be more prized, is the George E. Murray memorial trophy,\npictured above, to be awarded to the player in the Kootenay boxla\nloop who on his season's performance proves most, sportsmanlike\nand at the same time is most valuable to his team. The trophy, posted\nby James Buchanan of Trail, will be awarded this year for the first\ntime, and competition is keen for the honor of being the first to receive\nit. While the trophy is posted in perpetuity, an annual medal accompanying it will be awarded Ihe player winning it.\nLANSDOWNE\nRESULTS\nLANSDOWNE PARK, Vancouver,\nAug. 11 (CP).\u2014Race results today:\nFirst race\u2014claiming; purse $400,\nFive and one-half furlongs.\nJoysim (Sporri) $5.90 $3.40 $2.90.\nTerry Tet (Simpson) $4.35 $3.50,\nLou Marc (Sherlock) $11,70.\nTime 1:09 2-5. Also ran: Simonette,\nLady Marcus, Princess Sally, Evelyn May, Saxon King.\nSecond race\u2014claiming; purse $400.\nSix furlongs.\nModern Maid (Connell) $16,85\n$7,80 $5.40.\nBrown Wisdom (Sporri) $4,35\n$3.50.\nStorm Princess (Cox) $7.75.\nTime 1:15 1-5. Also ran: Pipes Pal,\nHappy Madge. Mate A, Dutch Boy,\nTomdil. Golden Token, King Diego, Unknown Women, Red Canoe.\nThird race\u2014claiming; purse $-100.\nSix furlongs:\nSaprtan Beauty (Holecko) 8.40\n4.60 3.20.\nMargery Daw  (Frasch)  5.65 3.00\nPeach Stone (Sporri) 2.75.\nTime 1:15, Also ran: Black Desert,\nRoyal    Flint,    Silumo,    MacLeod\nBreeze.\nFourth race\u2014claiming; purse $400.\nSix furlongs:\nLeelarious (Frasch) 5.45 5.05 3.85.\nMortgage Lifter (Connell) 21.35\n7.70,\nSwepen (Lyons) 5.10\nTime 1:15 4-5. Also ran: Judge\nBud, Cisco Kid, Mendell, Newsman,\nDark Devil.\nFifth race \u2014 the Lansdowne\nderby. Mile and one eighth.\nSky Breeze (Neal) 6.40 2.90 3.15.\nHypnotist (Sporri) 3.40 3.25.\nSealine  (Connell) 3.15.\nTime 1:56 4-5. Also ran: Trap\nLake, Daw Dawn, Dr. Pills.\nSixth race\u2014claiming; purse $400.\nMile and one-sixteenth.\nPert Peggy (Cox) 28.70 9.40 7.00.\nPeace Leg (Craigmyle) 5.75 4.25.\nTeeny Weeny (Young) 11.30.\nTime 1:52 2-5. Also ran: Enlo,\nTriassic. Ken Kling, Tampa Lass.\nParis Leave, Chas. Clarke, Too Busy,\nChardie.\nSeventh race \u2014 claiming; purse\n$400. One mile and one-sixteenth.\nThe Pagan (Craigmyle) 4.40 3.70\n2.60.\nBooster Twist (Cox) 8.50 4.15.\nLeader (Kelly) 3.05.\nTime 1:51 3-5. Also ran: Trossachs,\nExeterl, Red Regent, Mahukona,\nMiss Doublet.\nA SPLENDID TROPHY,\nA FINER IDEA\nThe George E. Murray Memorial\ntrophy, posted by James Buchanan\nto be awarded to the most sportsmanlike boxla player who also Is\nmost valuable to his team, is a splendid trophy. But the idea behind it\nis infinitely more important. In the\nfirst place It Is a splendid tribute\nto a man who dW a great deal for\nsport in the Kootenays, George\nHurray, and the presentation is a\nsplendid gesture by the man who\nposted it, James Buchanan.\nIt is not difficult to anticipate the\nday when the face plate of the trophy is covered with the names of\nwinners and another base and plate\nare added, and sports writers look\nback to evaluate the influence it has\nhad in Kootenay lacrosse; for there\ncan be no doubt that lt will exercise\na tremendous influence as the game\ndevelops in this district.\nFrank Coates, as president of the\nBoxla league, has sought earnestly\nfor the posting of this trophy, and\nnow that it is in competition he\nwill be keenly interested in its effect upon the league.\nAs to the warding of the trophy,\nthat's going to be a major headache\nfor six sports writers In this Kootenay district, a headache the six of us\nhave got to start thinking about\nright away. -\nWHO, WHAT, WHERE\nFOR PLAYOFFS?\nThe West Kootenay league has\nannounced playoffs will be staged\nbetween the second and third teams\nfor the right to meet the top team\nin the finals. But no dates have been\nset and it has not yet been announced whether they will follow the current round of the league, which ends\nFriday, or whether another round is\nto be played,\nPrexy Coates has been battling\nfor the B. C. playoffs to come to\nthe interior. We can think of no\ngreater boost for the game in these\nparts than a provincial playoff, but\nwith all due respect to the Kootenay\nteams, they'd hardly get to first\nbase.\nMuch has been said for and against all-star teams, and the arguments\nare good on both 6ides, depending\nmostly on how you want to look at\nIt yourself.\nOne thing is sure\u2014a pretty strong\nsquad could be lined up by choosing among the three teams of the\nKootenay circuit, picking those who\ncan be knit into a team and who will\nwork together, and working them\nout. against the remaining best in\nthe league.\nI'd like to hear from the cash customers, not only as to what they\nthink of the idea, but as to their choices for a selected Kootenay squad-\npot necessarily an all-star team, but\none that would marshal! the greatest team strength. What do you\nt'iink?\n\u2022   \u2022   .\nINTERNATIONAL TRADE\nHarry Scott of the Calgary Albertan makes a pungent remark anent\nCalgary and Spokane, hockey and\nrugby. Here 'tis*.\n\"Did you know that\u2014Spokane is\nbeating even Calgary to the gun\nwhen it comes to talking hockey.\nThe Washington city, which got its\nfirst taste of pro hockey for nearly\n20 years last winter when the Oakland team transferred there, is looking forward to a great season of the\nIce sport in a new covered arena.\nPresent gossip concerns the makeup\nof the Northwestern league rather\nthan likely lineup of players on the\nvarious teams. Two arrangements\nare being discussed, a single league\nwith Vancouver, Spokane, Portland,\nSeattle, Tacoma and possibly Victoria and a double loop, operated in two\nhalves, and including Oakland and\nSan Francisco. Hockey moguls on\nthe coast are not very optimistic concerning the double loop but are still\ngiving it some .consideration. International trade figures won't, show\nit but Calgary and Spokane are doing quite a business this year. . . .\nThis city has brought several high\nclass grid players from the Washington centre which Is preparing to\nbalance matters by Importing some\nof Calgary's hockey material. . . .\nSpokane liked Sam Tinynins and\nother Calgary boys who played pro\nhockey for the Orphans at the latter\nend of last season and is looking forward to having a few more players\nfrom the foothills city when It starts\nthe 1937-38 season in the re-organized Northwestern pro hockey loop.\n. . . With Pat Higgins, Ole Olsen and\nother Gonzaga players looking like\nchampions in Calgary Bronk workouts this city may soon be ready to\nstart a wholesale business in swapping hockey playets for gridders\nwhich the Washington city produces\nin abundance.\"\nWe also learn from Harry's column, in answer to a reader:\n\"When a baseball game ends in\na tie. ail figures are incorporated\ninto the official averages, providing\nfive or more innings have been played. The three home runs hit by Joe\nDiMaggio in the game of June 13 at\nSt. Louis, which was called at the\nend of the eighth Inning with the\nscore tied, go (nto the records.\"\n(This advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia\nYANKEES TAKE\nRED SOX TWICE\n8-5 in 14 Innings and\n:10-4in7asDark\nCuts Short\nBOSTON, August 11, (AP)- The\nNew York Yankees' Murderers' Row\nturned back the challenge of the\nsecond-place Red Sox in the American league race today with a double-\nheader victory that stretched their\npace-setting margin to UVs games.\nThey outclassed Tom Yawkey's\nthree-million dollar collection in a\n14-inning thriller to take the opener 8-5 and then clubbed four fling-\ners for a 10-4 victory in the nightcap, which was cut to seven innings\nby darkness.\nThe Red 8ox were on the defensive from the flnt Inning of\nthe opener, when Joe DiMaggio\nwalloped hlii 3rd homer of the\nseason, until the Yankees put on\na six-run splurge In the sixth Inning of the nightcap to break up\nthe proceedings.\nA crowd of 36,127 saw the Yankees stretch their current winning\nstreak to 10 straight.\nAltogether, the New York swat\nsquad landed on six Boston pitching hopefuls for 29 hits, 16 in the\nopener off Lefty Grove and Jack\nWilson, and 13 in the abbreviated\nnightcap at the expense of Buck\nNewsom, Fred Ostermueller, Al\nThomas and Ted Olson.\nFirst game\u201414 innings:\nNew York     h     16     2\nBoston      d      VI      2\nRuffing, Murphy, Makosky, Malone and Dickey; Grove, Wilson and\nBarg, Desautels, Foxx.\nSecond game\u20147 * innings\u2014called\naccount darkness:\nNew York     10      13     1\nBoston       4      10      1\nMalone and Glenn; Newsom, Ostermueller, Thomas, Olson and Berg.\nDOUBLE FOR CLEVELAND\nCLEVELAND, August 11, (AP)-\nTimely clouting produced a double\nvictory (or Cleveland today over\nthe St. Louis Browns, Bob Feller\ntaking the opener, 5-2, and Denny\nGalehouse the second, 7-2.\nFeller struck out six and allowed\nseven hits in the first game as he\nregistered his third victory ot the\nseason.\nIn the nightcap. Billy Sullivan's\nsixth-inning circuit blow with two\non base sewed things up for Galehouse.\nFirst game:\nSt. Louis   2       7      0\nCleveland     5      11     0\nBonetti and Hemsley; Feller and\nPytlak.\nSecond game:\nSt. Louis    2      10      2\nCleveland     7      12      2\nHogsett and Hemsley; Galehouse\nand Sullivan.\nWASHINGTON, August 11, (AP)\n\u2014The Senators won their third\nstraight game over the Athletics\nhere today, but lost the services of\nshortstop Cecil Travis for an Indefinite period.  The score was 5-4.\nTravis was spiked on the left\nankle by team-mate Buddy Lewis\nwhen they both attempted to field\na ground ball hit by Bill Werber.\nThe Washington club physician was\nunable to say how long Travis would\nbe out of the lineup.\nPhiladelphia   4     7     0\nWashington        5     8      1\nThomas, Fink  and Brucker;  W.\nFerrell and R. Ferrell.\nChicago at Detroit postponed, rain.\n3attirvA\ncoders\n o\t\nBy The Associated Press\nBaseball's batting \"big six\" went\nthrough yesterday without a change,\nalthough Cecil Travis of the Senators, leading in the American\nleague, lost ground to second-place\nLou Gehrig, while Ducky Medwick\nof the Cardinals gained on Gabby\nHartnett in the National legaue.\nTravis boosted his average one\npoint to ,386, while Gehrig picked\nup two, getting four-for-nine for a\nseason mark of .376. Medwick dropped a point to an even .400 and\nHartnett. hitting one-for-four, skidded three to .380.\nStandings   of   the  leaders   (first\nthree in each league):\nG Ab R H Pet.\nMedwick, Cards 100 400 87 160 .400\nTravis, Sen. .... 77 298 45 115 .386\nHartnett, Cubs 69 221 28 84 .380\nGehrig, Yanks IdO 375 94 141 .376\nP, Waner, Pir. 99 400 68 160 .375\nDiMaggio, Yanks 94 391 104 145 ,371\nMfi\nPACIFIC COA8T\nOakland 4, San Diego 2.\nSacramento 4, Missions 2.\nAMERICAN ASSOCIATION\nIndianapolis 12. 5; St. Paul 4, 8.\nLouisville 11, Minneapolis 10. (13\ninnings). \u25a0\nSecond game\u2014Louisville 6, Minneapolis 6 (called end 9th\u2014darkness).\nToledo 9, Kansas City 5.\nrNTERNATIONAL\nBuffalo 7, 2, Baltimore 8. 4.\nREMEMBER WHEN?\n(By The Canadian Press)\nChuck Campbell, Canada's Olympic \"lone wolf\" swept into the sculling semi-finals when he beat off the\npre-race favorite, Cecil Pearce of\nAustralia, at Grunau, Germany, one\nyear ago today. Chuck placed 4th\nin the final.\n(UBS MOVE UP\nWITH A 5-1 WIN\nCHICAGO, Aug. 11 (API-Combining Clay Bryant's five-hit pitching with an 11-hlt attack off Red\nLucas that included Augie Galan's\n17th homer and Gabby Hartnett's\neighth, the National league leading\nCubs defeated Pittsburgh 5-1 before\n11.363 today to even the series at\none game apiece.\nThe triumph added a half game to\nthe Chlcagoan's lead over the second place Giants, increasing it to\nsix and one-half games.\nPittsburgh    1   8   0\nChicago       5 11   1\nLucas. Swift and Padden; Bryant\nand Hartnett.\nCARD8 WIN, 3-2\nST. LOUIS, Aug. 11 (AP)-Three\nstraight hits in the ninth inning, including a single by Pitcher Si Johnson, gave the St. Louis Cardinal*\nthe winning run today in a second\nstraight 3-2 victory over the Cincinnati Reds.\nThe Cardinals scored in the fourth\non Pepper Martin's triple and Don\nGutteridge's long fly, and they tied\nthe count in the sixth when Johnny Mize doubled and Stan Bordaga-\nray singled.\nCincinnati       2 10   0\nSt. Louis     8 13   1\nR. Davis, Hollingsworth and Lombardi; Johnson and Owen.\nBoston at New'York, Brooklyn at\nPhiladelphia, postponed, rain.\n\u00ab9-\nAMERICAN\nWon\nNew York   \u00ab9\nBoston    57\nDetroit       56\nChicago    59\nCleveland    45\nWashington     44\nSt. Louis     S2\nPhiladelphia     29\nNATIONAL\nChicago  65\nNew York  58\nSt. Louis  55\nPittsburgh   52\nBoston  48\nCincinnati   41\nBrooklyn   40\nPhiladelphia   40\nLost  Pet.\n29      .704\n.588\n.583\n.578\n.469\n.454\n.333\n.644\n.580\n.556\n.525\n.471\n.418\n.412\n.392\nThis advertisement ia not published of displayed by tiie Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of Britith Columbia.\nEXPECT ORILLIA\nTO WIK IN EAST\nTORONTO, Aug. 11 (CP)\u2014Lacrosse experts still look to Orillia\nTerriers. Mann cup holders, to win\nthe Eastern Canada playoffs starting August 27 although Terriers\nhave had a tough battle with Injuries and internal troubles through\nthe latter part of the Ontario Amateur Lacrosse association season.\nSix clubs will go Into the O.A.L.A.\nplaydowns. The winner will meet\nvictors among four clubs in the\nQuebec association and one in the\nCornwall district of eastern Ontario.\nAS AN (KE AN BREEZE!\nWhen Bummor'days'aro'hotlMt you'll And\nBlack Hon* Ale oo Ideal friond! Cooling at\nIho fresh long of anvocean breeievTPttJ\nsmooth, full strength goodnosu adds Mil to,\n-\u00ab**\u00bby\nany occasion! Made from Iho finest B.C. hops.\nDAWES\nBIACK\nTHE   LARGEST   SELL I n G ' BOTTLED   ALE   in   CAI1ADA\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquot Control Board or by the\nGovernment of British Columbia\n' ' ii    i i       i \u25a0\u2014\u25a0\u2014*\u25a0\u00bb.mmmmmm^^^^m^^^^t^mm^^ttt^,^^m^tlilmtm\n-MiMMBiHaaiiiB\n *****\t\nipppipwsiwwi^^\nPAGE EIGHT-\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON, B.C-THURSDAY MORNING, AUG. 12. 1937\nLET A CLASSIFIED AD SELL IT \u00ab ECONOMICAL - EFFECTIVE\nNrlfiiut Daily NrutB\nMember of the Canadian Dally\nNewspapers Association\nTELEPHONE   144\nPrivate Exchange Connecting to\nall Departments\nSubscription Rates\nSingle copy  _.-.$'  .05\nBy earner per week ._      .25\nBy carrier per year _  13.U0\nBy mail In Canada, to subscribers livirjg outside regular\ncarrier areas, per month 60c;\nthree months .1 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\nU.S., same as above plus any\nextra postage.\nAdvertising  Rates\nIlea Line\n(Minimum 2 Lines)\n2 lines, per insertion  $ .22\n2 lines. 6 consecutive\nInsertions _ -    88\n(6 lor the priee of 4)\n3 lines, per insertion _ 33\n3 lines. 6 consecutive\ninsertions    \u2122  1 32\n2 lines. 1 month    2 86\n3 lines. 1 month    4.29\nFor   advertisements   of   more\nthan three lines, calculait on\nthe above Dasis\nBox   numbers   lie  extra,   This\ncovers any number of insertion*..\nCRESTON Social...\nCRESTON-Miss Madeline Put-'*,\nnam, R.N., of Nanaimo, is visiting\nher parents, Mr.  and  Mrs.  Frank\nPutnam.\n\u2022 Mrs. Carpenter of Toronto is\nholidaying at Creston, a guest of\nher son-in-law and daughter, Dr.\nand Mrs. J. V. Murray. She will\nvisit at Portland, Ore., before returning east.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Speaker\nare visitors at Invermere, guests of\nMr. and Mrs. H. Cartmel.\n\u2022 Rev. Andrew H. and Mrs.\nWalker and daughter, Goldie, are\nback from a holiday in Spokane.\n\u2022 Jim Heric of Seattle is visiting\nhis uncle, W. L. Heric. Miss Marion\nHeric, who is attending commercial\nschool in Spokane, is holidaying\nwith her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. L.\nHeric,\n\u2022 Miss Olive Speaker of Trail\narrived last week to visit her mother, Mrs. Fred Speaker.\n\u2022 Mrs. Harrison and Margaret\nGrexton of Yahk are at the former's\norchard property east of town.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Paul Stinson of\nKellogg, Ida., are visiting the former's sisters, Mrs. Ron Stewart and\nMrs. George Leadbetter.\n\u2022 Ralph Baldwin of Edmonton\nis spending his holidays with his\ngrandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Spots-\nwood.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. H. Armstrong and\nMiss McNeill of Cranbrook were\nweek-end guests of Mrs. Fred\nSpeaker.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. George Leadbetter visited Cranbrook friends at the\nweek-end.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Murrell are\ncamping at West Creston.\n\u2022 Mrs. R. S. Bevan is visiting at\nVancouver, returning with her\ndaughter, Mrs. Leach, who visited\nat Creston last week. Miss Ruth\nDavis returned with them.\n\u2022 Mrs. A. Hobden and Miss Ag-\nCRANBROOK LADY\nBOWLERS DEFEAT\nKIMBERLEY CLUB\nCRANBROOK; B. C\u2014The members of the ladies' lawn bowling\nclub held a picnic su^ per and\nbridge party at tl e summer home\nof Mrs. G. Lunn at Green Bay\nDuring the afternoon there was\nswimming and g-mes and following\nsupper there was bridge. Mrs. S.\nI'cLeary held the high score at\nbridge, 'ihere were about 25 members of the club and friends present.\nMembers f t.ie Cranbrook club\nwere the guests of the Kimberley\nmembers Thursday at tea. Following tea friendly gamer were play d.\nSaturday evening nembers of\nthe Kimberley club came to Cranbrook to play for the McPherson\ntrophy, but were unsuccessful.\nThis trophy was wo.- by the Iran-\nbroo' players at Kimberley lail\nweek after three attempts this\nseason. Members of the winning\nteams were Mrs. Norgrcve s..lp,\nMrs. McLeary second, Mrs. Voisey\nfirst and Mrs. Ederlein lead; md\nMrs. G. Lunn skip, Mrs. Barber\nsecond, Mrs. Pascu. o first, and\nMrs. McGill lead.\nFREDERICTON (CP).\u2014During\nthe last 50 years Charles Fleet, Fred-\nericton, veteran river man, has recovered 61 bodies from the St. John\nriver, Miramichi river and Grand\nLake. The grim, unselfish service,\nwithout reward, \"just seemed to\ncome to me,\" says Fleet, who is 05.\nnes Hobden are in residence in their\nnew bungalow at the north end of\nthe village, moving in from Huscroft at the end of the week.\nON THE AIR\nCANACIAN  BROADCASTING\nCORPORATION   NETWORK\nfl:00 Canadian Weekly Newspaper\n\u2022association, Halifax, address, \"If I\nwere a Country Editor,\" John H.\nCasey, University of Oklahoma;\n5:30 Midnight in Mayfair. from\nMontreal; 6:00 The Ghost Room\ndrama, Montreal; 6:30 Talk by Dan\nMcCowan. Banff; 6:45 News and the\nweather, from Toronto; 7:00 Music\nfor Music's Soke; 7:15 Fighting the\nSwordfish by Bob Edge, CBC-MBS\nexchange from Sydney; 7:30 Lloyd\nHuntley's orch., Montreal; 8:00 Airs\nGais. Airs Tendres, Winnipeg; 8:30\nHorace Lapp's orchestra, Banff; 8:45\nGood Evening, News, Vancouver;\n9:00 Restless Bows, Vancouver; 8:30\nFrom the coast line, drama, Vancouver; 10:00 News, Vancouver;\n10:15 Tropic Goodnight, Vancouver;\n10:45 Weather report. Vancouver.\nN.B.C.-KPO  RED NETWORK\nKHQ   KGW  KFI   KPO   KOMO\n690 620 640 680 920\n5:00 Beaux Arts trio; 5:30 Three\nCheers, vocal; 5:45 Government,\ninterview; 6:00 Bob Burns, Jimmy\nTrotter and his orch.; 7:00 Amos\n'n' Andy, blackface comedians; 7:15\nShow Boat; 8:15 Symphony orch.;\n9:15 Eddie Varzo's orchestra; 9:30\nJimmy Grier and his orchestra;\n10:00 News flashes; .10:15 Spiritual\nFantasy; 10:30 Archie Loveland's\norch.; 11:00 Jack Winston's orch.;\n11:30 To be announced.\nN.B.C.-KGO BLUE NETWORK\nKGO KJR KEX KECA KGA\n790 970 1180 1430 1470\n7:00 Darrell Donnell, news; 7:15\nPaul Sabin's orchestra; 7:30 Eddie\nVarzo's orch; 8:00 Ted Lewis' orch.;\n8:30 Gar Wood Van's orch.; 9:00 Police dramas; 9:30 Viennese Echoes,\ndir Josef Hornik; 10:00 George Olsen's orch.: Sports head'.iners, KGO;\n10:30 Frank Castle's orch.; 11:00 Haven of Rest. KECA; 11:30 Charles\nRunyan organist.\nCOLUMBIA   NETWORK\nKVI    KOIN    KNX    KSL    KOL\n670 940 1050 1130 1270\n5:00 Major Bowes' Amateur Hour;\n6:00 Your True Adventures, Floyd\nGibbons; 6:30 March of Time; 7:00\nScattergood Baines. drama; 7:15\nFrank Dailey's orch.. (KSL); Lloyd\nPantagcs covers Hollywood; 7:30\nDick Stabile's orchestra; 8:00 Berl\nBlock's orchestra; 8:30 Benny Goodman's orch.; 9:00 George Hamilton's\norchestra; 9:30 Al Lyon's orchestra;\n10:00 Color Harmony; 10:15 Fiesta:\n10:45 Benny Goodman's orchestra,\n11:00 Carol Lofner's orchestra; 11:30\nEddie Fitzpatrick's orch.; 11:45\nBlack Chapel.\n600 k CJOR 499.7 m\nVancouver 500 w\n5:15 Rhythm wranglers; 6:15 Racing Results; 6:20 Monitor views\nthe  news; 7:00 Stock  report;  7:05\nWrestling interview; 7:30 Finan. talk\n7:45 Tales of Twilight; 8:00 Salute\nto industry; 8:30 Braden and trio;\n9:00 Len Chamberlain's orch.; 9:30\nSports; 11:00 News; 11:15 Frank Fil-\ngiano's orch.; 11:45 slumber hour.\n910 k\nTrail\nCJAT\n319.6 m\n1000 w\n7:00 Morning Vespers; 7:15 Musical Clock: 7:45 Comedy Capers; 8:03\nRequest program; 8:30 Grand Forks\nBulletin; 9:30 Old Timer; 9:45 Organ\nFantasy; 10:00 What's New?; 10:15\nMemory Lane; 10:30 The Radio\nChef; 10:45 Melodic Pipes; 11:00\nMorning Matinee; 11:15 Kootenay\nEchoes; 11:30 Mon.tor Views the\nNews; 11:45 House of Peter McGregor; 12:00 Remember When? 12:15\nSpokane Welcomes; 12:30 Pinto Fete,\n1:30 Concert Time; 2:00 Women's\nMagazine of the Air; 3:00 Black Magic; 3:30 Tea time tunes; 4:00 Success\nstory, E.T.; 4:15 Hollywood whispers;\n4:45 Cecil and Sally E.T; 5:00\nTheatre news; 5:15 Happy Valley\nfolks; 5:45 Nonsense and Melody;\n6:80 See C.B.C. network except: 6:30\nThe Buccaneers; 8:30 Salute to 'the\nKootenays; 10:45 Lullaby Land.\n1030 k CFCN 293.1 m\nCalgary 10,000 <*\n5:00 Petite Musicale; 6:00 Eventide echoes; 6:15 The Buccaneers:\n6:30 Talking* Drums, 7:00 Joseph\nT. Shaw; 7:15 Peacock court;\n7:30 The cub reporter; 7:45 Guest\nnight; 8:00 Old Time Music; 9:00\nNews flashes; 9:15 Old time dance.\nSHORT WAVE PROGRAMS\nBRITISH   EMPIRE\nTRANSMISSION 6\nGSI, 15.26 mcs. (19 66 n .)\nGSF  15.14 mcs.  (19.82 m.)\nGSD 11:75 mcs. (25.53 m.)\nGSC 9.58 m\u00ab. (31.32 m.)\n6:00 p.m.-Big Ben. B.B.C. Empire\norch. 7:00\u2014Paradise Isle. 7:20\u2014Concert of Irish music. 7:40\u2014News and\nannouncements.\nINTERNATIONAL\nTokyo 1:45 p.m.\u2014Choral selections,\nsung by students of the Tokyo academy of music. JZJ, 25.4 m\u201e 11.80\nmeg. JZK. 19.7 m\u201e 15.16 meg.\nBerlin 2:15- Cabaret for Two. DJD\n25.4 m\u201e 11,77 meg.\nSchenectady 3:30 \u2014 The science\nforum. W2XAF, 31.4 m\u201e 9.53 meg.\nPrague, Czechoslovakia 4:05 \u2014\nLight Music and songs; Biblical\nsongs. OI.R4A, 25.34 m, 11.84 meg.\nParis 5\u2014Talk by Mme. de Gramont\n(in English). TPA, 25.6 m\u201e 11.72\nmeg.\nBerlin 5:30\u2014New German books\nDJD, 25.4 m.,  11.77 meg.\nCaracas 5:45\u2014The Theatre of the\nAir. VV5RC, 51.7 m, 5.8 meg.\nBuenos Aires, Argentine 0:30 \u2014\nChamber Music. LRX, 31.06 m.. 9.66\nmeg.\nTokyo 9:45\u2014Biwa, or .Inpancse\nGuitar selections. JZK. 19.7 r.v, 15.16\nmeg.\nBIRTHS\nTURNER\u2014Born to Mr. and Mrs.\nE. Turner, at McDougall hospital,\nKimberley, Saturday, August 7, a\nPERSONAL\nMEN! GET VIGOR AT ONCE! NEW\nOstrex Tonic Tablets contain raw\noyster invigorators and other\nstimulants One dose peps up organs, glands. If not delighted\nmaker refunds few cents paid\nCall, write, Mann-Rutherfoid Co\n       (1750)\nTO YOUNfTMEN AND WOMEN\nPRO RAMTOLLA. 1. B. M.-S.I.A.P\nthe only teacher of magic in Canada. Go on the.stage and get big\nmoney. 1 teach you personally\nAll interested write Box 1884,\nDaily News. (1884)\nMEN'S~BEST SANITARY RUBBER\nSupplies. Send $1.00 for 15 winners. BURRARD SPECIALTY CO\n18 Hastings W., Vancouver. B.C\n(1904)\nFRESH SANITARY RUBBER LA*\ntex special 25 [or $1 00 Write for\nfree catalogue National Importers\nBox 244. Edmonton. (1835)\nLECAL NOTICES\nCORPORATION OF THE CITY OF\nROSSLAND\nTENDERS FOR LUMBER\nTenders for the supplying of 74.000\nfeet of Cedar Planking in the following dimensions will be received by\nthe undersigned up to 5:00 p.m. on\nAugust 16th, 1937:\n64,000 feet 3x  8x16 Rough\n18,000 feet 3x12x16 Rough\n2,000 feet 2x12x16 Sized\nDelivery to be made on City Water Flume about one mile South from\nintake at Rock Creek.\nJ. A. McLEOD.\nCity Clerk\nRossland. B. C,\nAugust 10th, 1937. (1931)\nHELP WANTED\nAVIATION!\nThe man trained in aircraft con-\nifructhn is a valuable man to\nthe industry. No matter where\nyou live you can start this training Now. Qualifications include\nnatural mechanical ability, 18\nyears of age or older, physical\nfitness and satisfactory character. If you can measure up to\nthese qualifications and are interested on learning of opportunities, send for FREE copy of\n\"More Planes\" and complete information.\n1103 Dcmlnlon\nBank lilfljj.\nVancouver, B. C.\n(1888)\nSSIFIED \"AD\n59\nwill tell more people, more times, more effectively\nand get more results, more economically than any\nother medium.\nPHONE 144\n\"CLASSIFIED\"\nLARGEST IN THE INTERIOR\nREAD MORE '    USED MORE\nAUTOMOTIVE\n(Continued)\nSALE,  WILLIS  KNIGHT TRUCK\nThompson Poultry Farm, Nelson\n(1879'I\nAUTOMOTIVE\nPOULTRY, SUPPLIES, ETC.\nPULLETS\n, ,     ,,     Raised  from the\ni>\/'lStW       \"Chicks   Winch\nGive Results\"\nLeghorns.  8  weeks .*. $65 per 101,\n10 weeks  ...     75 per IOC\nBarred Rocks i.nd\nLight Sussex 8 weeks   75 per 100\n10  weeks       85   *er 100\nRUMP & SENDALL LTD.\nLANGLEY PRAIRIE. B.C\n(1749)\nFOR SALE\nPIPE  TUBES   FITTINGS\nNEW AND USED\nLarge stock for immed-ate shipment\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD\n1st Avenue and Main St.\nVancouver, BC.\n(1756)\nOF USED CARS IS STILL PROGRESSING AT QUEEN CITY\nMOTORS LTD.. FORD DEAL*\nERS, NELSON, B. C.\n$18.00  PER  MONTH\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. (1881)\n50 ACRES OF HAY TO CUT\" THE\nparty takes one-third for cutting\nand stacking in field. R. D. Kennedy, Lemon Creek, via Perry Siding.' (1847)\nDEMOCRAT,    2    SEATS.    PLOW\nbrooder, two harness, cream separator, 240 beam scales. Box 1876. j\nDaily News. (1876) i\nPIPE AND FITTINGS\nCANADIAN JUNK  Company  Ltd\n250 Prior St. Vancouver.  BC\n(1757)\n: BRUNS. GRAMAPHONETaS NEW.\ni Cost $88. Records. All for $18\n|     Box 1863, Daily News. (1863)\nI FURNITURE OF 7-ROOM HOUSE\n; including piano and combination\nI    radio.   816 Silica St. (1896)\nfOR~SALE - BARRELS. KEGS\nsugar sacks, liners McDonald .Inm\nCp\u201e Ltd., Nelson, B. C. (17581\nFEW\" LOADS\" LEFT\" $3.75\"\"MILL\nends. Slab wood $3.50 a corcT\nPhone 434 R 1. (19081\nwe^uTeverythingXt \"bar*\ngain prices. The Ark Store.  (1759)\nGOOD USEDGAS RANGE. PRICE\n$3.   Kerr Apartments. (1760)\none po6lTable.\"sizeW\"b\"y\"9.\nTom Jadro, Salmo. B.C.       (1845)\nwith a reasonable down payment\nbuys a 1929 FORD SEDAN\n(best of shape)\nFOR SALE OR EXCHANCE\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nCAPABLE CARPENTER AND\nmillwright desires position, go any\nwhere, 1st class ref. Box 2, Ymir.\nB. C. _ (1866)\nRESPECTABLE GIRL WA NTS\nwork in or out of town. Box 1932\nDaily News. (1932)\nMOVINC\nFURNITURE\nMOVING\nLarge Covered Van With\nExperienced Men\nC-ROOM HOUSE, LARGE GARDEN\nC09, Mill St., Box 911, Nelson. B C\n(1907)\n$20.00  PER  MONTH\nwith a reasonable down payment\nbuys a 1931 FORD COUPE\n(all overhauled)\n$25.00  PER  MONTH\nwith a reasonable down payment\nbuys a 1932 CHEV SEDAN\n(in dandy shape)\n$30.00   PER   MONTH\nwith a reasonable down payment\nbuys a 1933 PLYMOUTH SEDAN\n(best of rubber)\n$35.00   PER   MONTH\nwith a reasonable down payment\nbuys a 1935 FORD SEDAN\n(You should see this one)\nLONDON (CP).-Through the\nNational Milk Publicity campaign\n4186 industrial firms with 1.314.377\nemployees now pass out a morning\ndrink of milk to each worker.\nDON'T WAIT UNTIL THEY ARE\nALL PICKED OVER!\nLONDON (CP).-Lord Bessborough. former governor-general ot\nCanada, has been elected a director\nof the Royal Academy of music of\nwhich the Archbishop of Cantcl-\nbury is vice-president.\nTHE GUMPS\nQueen City\nMotors Ltd.\nNelson and Vicinity Ford\nDealers\nil9 Josephine St. Phone 43\n(1926)\nWANTED\nWANTED\u2014TWO UNFURNISHED\nhousekeeping rooms, close in. Ap-\nply Box 1922, Daily News.   (1922)\nWANTED SMALL UNFURNISHED\nHouse.  Phone 829R. (1913)\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nETC.. FOR SALE\nFOR QUICK SALE\nCASH PRICE $1200.00\nTerms $1400.00\nA valuable lakeside property on\nthe North Shore opposite City of'\nNelson, 5 minutes' walk West\nof Ferry. The estate comprises\ndwelling house containing 6\nrooms and necessary outbuildings and 1.033 acres all in various\nfruit trees and garden. Water\nright, electric light, also boat\nhouse and float. This property\ncan be seen at any time. Apply\nA. D.  ALLEN\nBox 704, Nelson, or at Dwelling\n(1927)\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non easy terms in Alberta and\nSaskatchewan Write for full in\nformation to 908 Dent ot Natural\nResources CPR.. Calgary Alia\n(17511\nSIX RO6MTfESTDENCE720\"4 VER*\nnon street, excellent condition\nfireplace, full cement basement\nand furnace. Phone 662.       (1875)\nBUNGALOW, HOT WATER 'FURN-\nace. garden and fruit trees.   Near\nstreet car.   Write P. O. Box 182.\n(1934)\nFOR SALE CABIN\"frTCOTTON-\nwood.   Box 1902. Daily News\n(1902)\nFOR RENT, HOUSES, APTS.\nETC. \u2022\nFOR RENT - CRESTON CAFE FUR-\nnished. Reasonable rent. Immediate posse?s;on. Apoly Commercial Hotel, Creston, B. C.\n_udiii\nNORTH SH0RE713UPLEX~FIRE\"-\nplace, good beach. Near ferry, $15\nto $25.   Phones 923 or 678R1.\n  (1877)\nAPARTMENT FOR RENT PRI-\nvate entrance and bath. 420 Victoria St. (1909)\nFURN. 3-R'OOM COTTAGE FOR A\nfew months to adults only. Phone\n537 L3. (1900i\nVICTORY\"HOTOTfURNISHED\nsingle and double rooms. Ph. 940\n(1899)\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEKHINli\nrooms for rent.    Annable Blnek\n(1753)\nGOOD 2 ANDlS^OOMED~SUITES,\nApply Strathcona Hotel.        (1903)\n2 ROOWiSUlf ABLEFOR~H SKPG.\nPrivate home. 723 Latimer. (1920)\nFIVE ROOM~BUNGALOW, \"GOR\"-\ndon Road    Phone 662.  (1874)\nTERRACE APTS. Beautiful modern\nfrigidaire equipped suites. (1754)\nFURNISHED    SuTTES~IN\u2014 THE\nKerr apartments. (1755)\nFOR SALE OR RENT\nA COSY 7-ROOMED HOUSE WITH\nfurnace and garage. Inquire in\nmorning, 520 Mill St. (1892)\nSUMMER HOMES, RESORTS\nAND CAMPS\nFOR A QUIET VACATION SPEND\nYour Holidays at the Outlet Hotel\nProcter Furnished Cabins on the\nLake Front in the Shady Orchard Grocery store in connection W. A. Ward. (1752)\nROOM AND BOARD\nFOR ONE OR TWO GIRLS. GOOD\nquiet home near schools. Box\n1897. Daily News. (1897)\nAn Ad Here Is Your\nBest Agent\nLIVESTOCK FOR SALE\nSEVEN WEEKS OLD PURE BRED\nYorkshire pigs.   $4.50 each. J. A.\nKnauf. R. R. 1, Nelson. (1878)\nAYRSHIRE HEIFER^ 18 MON. T.B.\ntest. Cash offers? Hoskin, Balfour\n  11848)\nFOR SALE TWO MILKING GOATS\n_Phone 937L. _ (1850)\nJERSEY BULL YEARLINcT$3'0.00\nT. Roynon, Nelson. (1901)\nELECTRICAL,   MACHINERY\nFOR SALE\nWANTED - 1, 1 HORSEPOWER\nMotor, 220 volt, single phase or\nthree phase. 1 half-horsepower\nmotor, 220 volt, single or three\nphase, Anply Rossland Miner\nRossland, B. C. (1817)\nTRY  A  WANT  At)\nLOST AND FOUND\nTo Finders\nIf you find a cat or dog, pocket-\nbook. Jewelry or fur. or anything else of value, telephone\nthe Daily News A \"Found\" Ad\nwill be inserted without cost to\nyou We will collect from tht\nowner\nLOST HUB CAP TO TRUCK. STAI\nGrocery . (1837\nDOCS. PETS, FOR SALE\n2 YOUNG PUPS. CATTLE DO\u00a3\nfor sale, one male $5.00. one Fe\nmale $3.00. Parents born heeler\nJohn Egloff, Edgewood, B. C.\n (1886)\nREGISTERED WIRE HAIRED TEH-\nrier puppies. Male. Imported\nstock. Phone 110, H. Harding.\nNelson. (1867)\njusioess and Professional Directory\nAss.iyers\nE~w7wrDbOWSON7PROV!NCIAL\nAnalyst, Assayer, Metallurgical\nEngineer Sampling Agents .*\u25a0#\nTrail Smelt-r. 301-305 Joseohm?\nSt.. Nelson, B. C. (1761)\nGRENVILLE H. GRIMWOOD\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist 618\nBaker Street, Nelson, B. C, P. O.\nBox No. 726. Representing shipper's interest, Trail, B. C.      (17621\nAutomobile  Radiator Repairs\n\"NELSON RADIATOR WORKS\nExnert Repairs\nNew Cores Installed\nCapitol Motors Building\n(17C3)\nChiropractors\nj. r. McMillan,' d.\" cT neuro\"-\ncalometer and X-ray.    16   years\nexperience. McCulloch Blk. (1764)\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(1766)\nMachinists\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nFor all Classes of Metal Work, Lathe\nWork, Drilling, Boring and Grinding, Motor Rewiring, Acetylene\nWelding\nTelephone 503      324 Vernon Street\n          (1779)\nH. E. STEVENSON, Machinist^\nBlacksmiths. Electric and Acetylene\nWelders. Expert workmen. Satisfaction guaranteed. Mine Si Mill work 1\nsnecialty. Fully equipped shop. Ph\n98, 708-12 Vernon St., Nelson. (1780),\nMine & Equipment Machinery\nE. L. WARBURTON. REPRESENT-\ning C. C, Snowdon, oils, greases,\npaints, et''. Richardson road build'\ning 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)\nEngineers and Surveyors\nH. D. DAWSON N*3ls~om B7c\nMine Surveys and Reports\nB. C. Land Surveyor.   (1767)\nBOYD C. AFFLECK Fru;tval(TBC..\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor.\nReg, Professional Civil Engineer.\n(1768)\nPatents\nFuneral  Directors\nSOMERS' FUNERAL HOME-\"\n702 Baker St. Phone 252\nCert. Mortician      Lady Attendant\nModern Ambulance Service\n(1769)\nDAVIS  FUNERAL  SERVICE ~\nEmbalming Si Plastic Work\nLady Mortician Ass'sting\nPhone 95. Nelson, B. C\n(1770)\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\nInsurance and Reel Estate\nMutual Benefit Health St Ace. Assoc\nWorld's largest Al. W. Foote. Dist\nMgr.   Hume Hotel,   Nelson, B. C.\n(1771)\nROBERTSON REALTY C0.7 LTD.\nRea] 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)\nC. D. BLACKWOOD,   Insurance of\nevery description.   Real Est. Ph. 99\n(1774)\nH. E. DILL, AUTO AND FIRE IN-\nsurance. Real Estate. 508, Ward St.\n(1775)\nJ. E. ANNABLE,   REAL ESTATE,\nRentals, Insu-ance.   Annable Blk.\n(1776)\nSEE~D7L.   KERR.   AGENT  FOR\nWawanesa Fire Ins. For better rates.\n(1777)\nCHAS. F. McHARDY. INSURANCE\nReal Estate.    Phone 135.    (1778)\nI OUR   BUSINESS   FOR   1936   AL-\nj    most doubled that of 1935.   There\nI    must be a reason.   A trial order\nwill convince YOU of the superior\nPhoto Finishing done in our plant;\nYour films developed and printed\n25c ReDrints, eight for 25c. KRYS-\nTAL  PHOTOS,  WILKIE, SASK.\n(1784)\nSanitariums\nDR. ALDRICH, 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  St  EXCHANGE\nfurniture, etc.    The Ark Store.\n(1787)\nFOR WANT AD\nSERVICE\nPHONE 144\nBy Cus Edson *\nPHONE 106\n(1791)\nKINGSTON, Jamaica (CP).-Jamaica's government railway set a\nrecord when it hauled 450 carloads\nof bananas from the interior to\nKingston wharves in two days. Greater part of the shipments was to\nCanada\n\/ VOU'RE TRYING MY\nPATIENCE 0EVONDTHE\nPOINT OF ENDURANCE ~y\nPATH\nPOIN\nI '   '\n1   LI\n1    5\nI  WARN YOU -I'M\nLIABLE TO DO\nSOMETHING\nPRASTIC.'\n.'WHAT, FOR        ,\n,'lNSTANICE'CUT\/\n1 OUT MIPNIGHT\nLUNCHES ?\nTILLIE THE TOILER\nBy Russ Westover\n\\AJEl_L-,  IF U3LITA WASN'T\nIM   \"THE PLAY, I NEMER J\nVAlOUUD \"SEE VflU ANy f\nMORE, MAC'\nI'M BESIMMlMeS\nTO THINK THERE';\nSOMEPlN' FISHY\nA&OUT LOL.ITA-\nTHINK THERE'5\nA DETECT WE\nFOU-OVrtIN' Her\n\\   KMOVA)   -there IS, MAC.\nHIM, My-SELF -\nI   HH2E.0\nio  ft-'\n\u25a0   .*.   .. *    . :..'. .. .lv- ..:.'. _.*..\n..   . .:\u25a0:*.\u25a0 \u25a0 *... .j.* .....-.\u25a0\u25a0..  \u25a0\n mmmmmmmemmmm'\ni-wpwpWiww\npiflN\u00bbpw^!lwiwB**w**,*j***\u00ab*ip^w**->*^^\nW?W!!W.:>Wi1\".-*-**^^\n040\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.-THURSDAY MORNINO, AUG. 12, 1937\nPAQE NINE\n:.M.&S. TO GET\nNTEREST IN THE\nJNIONS.S.COMP.\n\u2022TORONTO; Aug, ll (CP)-James\n, Warren, president of Consolidated\nlining & Smelting company, of\n!anada, Ltd., in a statement today\nays the company is acquiring a\nlinority interest in the Union\niteamship company at the invita-\nlon of a Vancouver group that re\nently secured control. The company\nporks a number of properties on the\n:oast and has large quantities of\ntilphur to move to Sulphite pulp\ndills there,\nThe Union Steamship company\nlas served B.C. coast north to the\nUaska border since 1889. Majority\nlontrol passed to British interests\nn 1910. It brought the Boxcowitz\nIne of Victoria in 1912, the All-Red\nine in 1917 and the Terminal Navi-\n(ation company in 1920. A majority\nlontrol was secured by the Vancouver group from I. H. Welsford and\n:ompany, Liverpool, effective July\nJl.\nVolume Expands\non Montreal List\ni MONTREAL, Aug. 11 (CP)-Buy-\ni*s displayed keener interest on the\nock market with volume expand-\ng and prices higher.\nResponding to good demand, Do-\ninion Tar stepped up Hi to 13',*\nid Gypsum 1% to 13%. Cement\nlined 1% at 17'A and Steel ol Can-\nla 'A at 85%.\nAmong papers, Price Brothers\nsded on the big board lor the first\nne, gained two points at 44. The\nefcrred added Vs at 72>A and How-\nd Smith % at 30%.\nIn metals, Nickel was off Vs. Nor-\nda Vs and Smelters -li while, in\nlis, C.P.R. eased Vi to 12VB.\nMetal Markets\nNEW YORK, August 11, (AP) -\nBar silver unchanged at 44%.\nLONDON, August 11, (AP)-Clos-\nIng: Copper, standard spot \u00a358 8s Bd.\noff 10s; future \u00a358 12s 6d. off 10s:\nelectrolytic spot, bid \u00a365 10s, off 10s.\nAsked \u00a368 10s. off 10\u00bb. Tin spot\n\u00a3266 10s, off \u00a31 5s; future \u00a3264 5s.\noff \u00a32 5s. Bids: lead spot \u00a322 15s.\noff Is 3d; future \u00a323, off 2s 6d. Zinc\nspot \u00a324 10s. off 3s 9d; future \u00a324\n12s 6d, off 6s 3d.\nNEW YORK, August 11, (API-\nCopper firm; electrolytic, spot and\nfuture 14.00; export 14.72. Tin steady: spot and nearby 59.75; future\n59.25. Lead steady; spot New York\n6.50-55; East St. Louis 6.35. Zinc\nsteady; East St. Louis spot and future 7.25.\nMarket and Mining News\nMARKETS AT\nA GLANCE\nToronto and Montreal \u2014Stocks\nclosed higher.\nNew York\u2014Stocks slightly lower,\nWinnipeg\u2014Wheat 2% to 314 cents\nhigher.\nToro'nto\u2014Bacon hogs off truck\nsteady at 11.25 to 11.35.\nLondon\u2014Bar silver and other metals lower.\nNew York\u2014Silver, lead and zinc\nunchanged; export copper lower.\nMontreal\u2014Silver unchanged.\nNew York\u2014Cotton lower; sugar\nand coffee higher; rubber unchanged.\nNew York\u2014Canadian dollar unchanged at 99 63-64.\nDividends\nPioneer Gold Mines of British\nColumbia, Ltd., 10 cents per share\nfor the quarter ending September\n30, 1937. payable October 1, 1937. to\nshareholders of record September\n1, 1937.\nFalconbridge Nickel Mines Ltd.,\n714 cents, payable September 30\nto shareholders ot record, September 8.\nPioneer Gold Mines, Ltd., 10 cents\npayable October 1 to shareholders of\nrecord August 31.\nToronto Stock Quotations\nHINES\nVJton  Mines  Ltd  ...\n\u2022tldermac Copper \t\nAlexandria Gold \t\nAnglo Huronian \t\nArgosy Gold\t\nArntfield Gold\t\nAstoria Rouyn \t\nAztec Mining Co\t\n)agamac Rouyn\t\niankfield Gold \t\nJase Metals Mining .\nieattie Gold Mines...\niidgood Kirk \t\niig Miss \t\n|3o,bjo Mines \t\njralornc Mines ._...\nIrett Treth \t\nSuffalo Ankerite \t\nJunker Hill Ex \t\n;an Malartic\t\nCariboo Gold Q\t\nrastle Treth \t\n>ntral Man \t\nCentral Pat \t\nChibougamau \t\nfchromium M & S .\nam\n1.24\n.0214\n5.65\n.44\n.38\n.0714\n.10\n.34\n.73\n.31\n1.10\n.57\n.48M;\n.1514\n7,50\n.071*4\n9.15\n,17\n1.20\n1.50\n.90\n.05'i*\n, 2,75\n.86\n.78\ntoast Copper      475\nkvniagas Mines\nloniaurum  \t\nIons M & S \narkwater  \nome Mines \nom Kxplor  \norval Siscoe  \nast Malartic \nldorado\n2.35\n1.30\n86,00\n.52\n40.85\n.0514\n.4(1\n1.07\n2.85\nfalconbridge Nickel      8.45\n\u25a0\u2022ed Kirkland 09\nFrancoeur Gold 70\nGillies Lake 281-4\npod's Lake Gold  60\nold Belt  20\nranada Gold 1914\nrandoro Mines  07\nIunnar Gold  7314\nard Rock Gold      1.34\narkcr Gold  1614\nollinger     11,75\nowey Gold  40\nudson Bay M & S    34.25\n:nt Nickel    66.25\n( M Con  20\n\u25a0lack Waite 75\nJacola Gold  25\nKerr Addison      2.40\nKirkland Lake      1.34\nLake Shore     50,50\n.amaque Contact  04%\n.eitch Gold  65\n,ebel Oro Mines  21\n.ittlc Long Lac      5.45\n;acassa Mines \t\n\u25a0tlacLeod Cockshutt ,\n\u25a0itadsen R L Gold ..,.\nMan Si East \t\nTlandy\t\nMalrobic Mines\n5.55\n105\n.73\n.03\n.38\n.01%\n(Iclntyre Porcupine     33.90\nMcKenzie R L\t\nitcVittie Graham \t\ntlcWatters Gold\t\ndining Corp \t\nUinto Gold \t\niJoneta Porcupine\t\nMorris  Kirk   \t\n\u25a0Ilpissing Mining ...\nNoranda \t\n\u25a0lormetal  \t\n3'Brien Gold \t\nDmega Gold \t\n\u25a0\u2022\"amour Porcupine .\nParkhill Gold \t\n?aulorc M \t\nsaymaster Cons \t\n'end Oreille \t\n'erron Gold\t\n'ickle Crow Gold ....\n-Moneer  Gold   \t\n'remier Gold \t\n'orcupine Crown\n1.24\n.20\n.4314\n3.60\n.10\n1.71\n.30\n2211\n67.00\n108\n5.90\n.49\n2.70\n,1614\n,18\n,8(1\n4.45\n1.05\n580\n3.86\n236\n.0314\nfowell Rouyn Gold  *   1.61\nStadacona Rouyn      1.17\nSt Anthony  16\nSudbury Basin      4.80\nSullivan Con      1.27\nSylvanite       3.25\nTashota Goldfields  06\nTeck Hughes Gold     5.15\nToburn Gold      2.25\nTowagamac        1.22\nVentures Ltd      8.45\nWaite Amulet     3.85\nWhitewater  1514\nWright Hargreaves     6.35\nYmir Yankee Girl  23\nOILS\nAjax Oil  30\nA P Consolidated 32\nBrit American      23.60\nBrit Dom  26\nBrown Oil  43\nCalmont Oil 60\nCalgary St Edmonton     2.65\nOILS FEATURE\nATVANCOUVER\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 11 (CP) -\nRenewed interest in oil stocks was\nshown on Vancouver stock exchange\ntoday as prices moved upward\nGolds and base meals were irregular in trading that totalled 201,236\nshares.\nHome Oil led the oil division with\nan advance of 18 to 2.03, and Calgary and Edmonton was up 14 to\n2.60. A. P. Consolidated added 1 at\n33, Calmont was up 7 at 62, and\nMercury up 2 at 31. Dalhousie was\ndown 5 to 80. but Monarch Royalties added 2 to 35. Okalta was up\n12 at 1.64, and Vulcan added 7 at\n1.57.\nIn the base metals Nicola was an\nactive trader, closing up % at 6*!4.\nbut Reeves MacDonald lost 7 to 93.\nGrandview added 14 at 22, but\nWhitewater was down 1 at 15.\nSheep Creek was the strongest of\nthe golds, up 8 at B0. Pioneer losi\nto 3.85, and Premier 7 to 2.37, while\nReno was up 1 at 85.\nHeavy Volume on\nToronto Market\nTORONTO, Aug, 11 (CP)-Toron-\nto share market had its heaviest\nvolume today since June 25, showing aggregate turnover of 723,000\nshares on a rising price trend.\nPreston East Dome gained 14 cents\nto close at 1.20. Bidgood-Kirkland\ngained 11 cents, Central Patricia\nadded 12 cents,\nPowell-Rouyn sold for a loss of\n12 cents.\nFinal sales found Calgary-Edmonton up IB cents, Okalta up 14, Vulcan up 2, Foothills up 17 and Home\noff 16. Royalite sold a couple points\nup at 47 for broken lots. Imperial\nand International Petroleum were\nup fractions.\nSmelters weakened a point and\nDow-Jones Averages\nHigh       Low Close   Change\n30 industrials   187.31      185.93 186.72-oft   .26\n20 rails     53.17       52.86 53.00\u2014off   .08\n20 utilities    29.14        28.86 28,06\u2014oft   .17\n40  bonds    101.26\u2014up    .02\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nLISTED\nA P Con  05\nAmal Oil 11\nBig Missouri  49\nBralorne          7.25\nBrew Si Dist         7.00\nBridge River Con ,      .03\nC St E Corp      2.90\nCalmont Oil     62\nCariboo Gold      1.50\nCoast Breweries ...   13,50\nCom'wealth Oil... \u201e      .32\nDentonia  1314\nGold Belt  23\nHome Oil     2.03\nInter Coal  23\nIsland Mount  62\nKootenay Belle ....      .95\nMak Siccar       .0214\nMcDoug Seg Ex ..      .25\nMinto        0914\nModel Oil  55\nPioneer Gold      3.85\nPremier Gold         2.35\nNoranda %.\nChem Research .\nCommonwealth Oil.\nDalhousie Oils \t\nEast Crest \t\nFoundation Pete \t\nFoothills \t\nHighwood Sarcee ...\nHome Oil \t\nTeston East Dome\nluebee Gold\t\nesd Authier \t\ned Lake Gold \t\neeves Mac \t\neno Gold  \t\nitchle Gold  \t\n,oche Long Lac \t\nH'<>\" Antonio Gold ...\n.hawkey Gold\t\nheep Creek Gold\nherrilt Gordon ...\nilscoe Gold \t\n(inciters Gold     ,\niladcn   Malartic   ..\n1,20\n.35\n390\n.34\n105\n.13\n163\n.55\n.85\n3.115\n3.70\n.02-li\n,94\n.79\n.30\n.90\n.14\n.30\n1.20\n.19\n2.05\nImperial Oil     20.75\nInt Pete  35\nLowery Pete  26\nMcColi Frontenac     11.90\nMerland Oil 10\nModel Oil 47\nMonarch Roy  36\nNordon Oil        .21\nOkalta Oils     1.69\nPantepec     7.25\nRoyalite      47.00\nSouthwest  Pete   70\nTexas Can      1.95\nUnited Oil  23\nVulcan Oil      1.33\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi Power        6%\nBeatty Bros     17\nBell Telephone   16814\nBrazilian Traction    27%\nBrew & Dist       7\nBrit Amer Oil     2314\nBrewing Corp       3\nBrewing Corp pfd     221i\nB C Power A     35'4\nB C Power B       714\nBuilding Products 60\nBurt F N       41'A\nCan Bakeries A       4\nCan  Bakeries pfd     50\nCan   Bread         514\nCan Bud Malting       8\nCan Car St Fdy     14 V4\nCan Cement     16>4\nCan  Cement pfd   10814\nCan Dredge      41\nCan   Malting       3714\nCan Pac Rly     12\nCan Ind Alcohol A       6V4\nCan Ind Alcohol B     414\nCan Wineries       2Vt\nCarnation  pfd    103\nCons Bakeries     20\nCons Smelters     8514\nCosmos       253\/4\nDom   Stores         8\nDom Tar & Chem    12Vj\nDom Tar Si Chem pfd    88\nDist Seagrams    22%\nFanny Farmer     247\u00bb\nFord  of Canada  A     2514\nGeneral  Steel  Wares     1614\nGoodyear Tire    B2\nGypsum L Si A     l.l'.i\nHarding Carpet       5*a\nHamilton Bridge pfd     79\nHinde Dauche      2V\nHiram Walker     4814\nInt   Metals    ,    14\nInt Milling pfd     98\nImperial Oil     20%\nImperial Tobacco    14>*i\nInt   Nickel       6614\nLoblaw A     24y4\nLoblaw B    24V\u00ab\nKelvinator Refrigerator     26\nMaple Leaf Milling      4V\u00bb\n\"tassey Harris          93\/4\n:Coll   Fronlc ~c        't\nMontreal Power      ji\nNal Steel Car     4714\nOnt Steel Prods     17\nPage Hersey   105\nPower   Corp       23%\nPressed Metals    3314\nSteel  of Canada     85\nStandard   Paving        414\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG, August 11, (CP) -\nGrain futures quotations:\nOpen  High  Low   Close\nWHEAT:\nOct  12414   131*14   12414   130%\nDec  12114   12814   121%   127'\/,\nMay   ....  1243\/*   130>\/4   123%   129%\nOATS:\nOct     4714     48%     46*14    4814\nDec    43',4     45%     43%     44%\nMay   . ..   44%    46%     44%     46%\nBARLEY*.\nOct.    , ..   58%     62%     59%     60%\nDec.      ..   58%     59%     57%    59V4\nFLAX:\nOct 178       \u2014       -      178\nDec  -.*       -      177\nMay     \u2014       -      17814\nRYE:\nOct    90'*4    9314    89%    9314\nDec    87%    91        87       90%\nMay   ...    89       93       88V4    91%\nCASH PRICES:\nWheat\u2014No. 1 hard and No. 1 nor,\n137%; No. 2 nor, 132%; No. 3 nor.\n127%; No. 4 nor. 124\\ No. 5 114%;\nNo. 6. 108%; feed 9*2%;'No. 1 Garnet 125%; No. 2 Gaa*net 123%; No. 1\nDurum 111%; No. 1 A. R. W. ill%;\nNo. 4 special 116%; No. 5 special\n112%; No. 6 special 105%; track 132%\nscreenings $9 per ton.\nNICKEL   PROFIT   IS  94\nCENTS A SHARE\nTORONTO, Aug, 11 (CP)-A net\nprofit of $14,199,395, equivalent to\n94 cents a share on the common,\nafter allowing for the preferred\ndividend, is reported for the second\nquarter of 1937 by the International\nNickel Company of Canada, Limited\nThis compared with a net of $11,-\n7*4,957, equal to 77 cents a share, in\nthe first quarter, and $9,070,187 for\n50 cents a share in the second quar\nter of last year.\nPremier Border ....\nQuatsino      \t\nRelief Arlington .\nReno Gold\nReeves MacDonald\nSally \t\nSalmon Gold\t\nSheep Creek    \t\nSilbak-Premier \t\nVanalta\t\nVidette\t\nWesko \t\nYmir Yankee Girl\nCURB\nAnaconda  \t\nBaltac Oil     \t\nBeaver Silver \t\nBluebird    \t\nB C Nickel \t\nCongress \t\nCork Province\t\nCrows Nest, new ....\nDalhousie Oils\t\nDavies Pete \t\nDevenish\nDunwell Mining ....\nFairview Amal \t\nFederal Gold \t\nFirestone Pete\t\n.02\n.04'4\n.23\n.85\n.93\n,05\n.08\n.9(1\n1.00\n.09\n.36\n,17\n.22\n,12\n,00\n,01%\n.02%\n.17\n.0214\n.0114\n.80\n.33\n.05 '4\n.0614\n.02\n.06\n.12\n.50\n7.35\n7.50\n.04\n2 65\n.01\n13.65\n.35\n.16\n.25\n2.05\n.25\n.65\n.00\n.2614\n.1014\n.59\n4.00\n2.40\n.02%\n.05'A\n.26\n1.00\n.0914\n.95\n2.00\n.1014\n.18\n,02\n,03\n.18\n.03\n.0214\n.07\n.02'4\n.21\nFoundation Pete 28\nFreehold Oil 0914\nGeo Copper         \u2014\nGeo Enterprise         \u2014\nGeo River  0114\nGolconda    0914\nGold Mountain 03%\nGrandview  22\nGrange Mines        \u2014\nGrull-Wihksne  08\nHedley St.         -\nHome Gold  0314\nIndian Mines 0214\nKoot Florence  02\nKoot King         00'4\nLakeview Mine 0114\nLowery Pete  20\nLucky Jim  0814\nMadison Oil  09\nMar Jon Oil  1214\nMercury Oil  31\nMeridian, new  01\nMcGillivray     1914\nMil! City Oil 20\nMonarch R    35\nNicola  06%\nNoble Five  07\nNordon Oil  21\nOkalta, Com       1.6*1\nPacalta .  21\nPend Oreille      4.40\nPorter Idaho         \u2014\nPilot Gold 031-4\nPrairies Royalties        .24\nQuesnelle 'Q' 09\nRanchmen's          .20\nReliance  0114\nReward Mining 08    *\nRoyalite Oil         45,00\nRufus Argenta 03-4\nRuth Hope 0314\nSilver Crest  05\nSilversmith      02%\nSouthwest Pete   ...      .70\nStandard S L     40\nSunloch Mines      .       ,20\nSunshine  Mining      18.00\nDDL              1.09\nUnited Oil      2214\nViking Gold 0114\nVulcan Oil .....     .     1.57\nWaverley T.. new .00%\nWellington Mines . .0414\nWhitewater    15\n.1014\n,68\n.0314\n.02\n,0914\n,04\n,25\n.01 li\n.09\n.02\n.03'A\n.03\n.02 li\n.0114\n.23\n.08'4\n,09 '4\n.15\n.32\n.02\n.25\n.3614\n.07\n.07\n.0*1\n.25\n.11\n.0414\n\"3'*\n.75\n.45\n10.00\n1.15\n.23'4\n.01%\n1.70\n.01\n.04'4\n.17\nWALL STREET\nDRIFTS LOWER\nNEW YORK, Aug. 11 (AP)-The\nstock market drifted a little lower\ntoday for want of attention.\nTrading was lightest since June\n29. Inactivity and irregularity of\nprice swings was symptomatic of\ntraders' indecision prompted partly\nby pending legislation, brokers\nsaid.\nFrom the start, dealings lacked\nvigor and modest gains and losses\nwere about evenly distributed. For\na while around mid-day, Oils felt\nthe glow of recent reductions in\ngasoline inventories but gains in\nthis sector where whittled down\nwhen a crack in wheat prices, later\nrecovered, put traders in a selling\nmood.\nVolunme fell to 571,890 shares\nfrom 692,380 Tuesday.\nAlthough Wall streeters found\nlittle incentive in the news for a\nchange of pace or direction, opinion\nin brokerage circles was that the\ntwo important entries of the day indicated further industrial momentum,\nROLLED OATS, BRAN AND SHORTS\nDROP SHARPLY; SHORTAGE FRUIT\nJARS LIKELY; PEACHES ROLLING\nWinnipeg Rallies\nlo Advance Four\nWINNIPEG, August 11, (CP) -\nWheat traders on the Winnipeg\ngrain exchange today did the unexpected by hopping from the selling\nside to turn trading into a sudden\nbuying boom near the end of the\nsession.\nEarly three-cent losses were substituted by four cent gains and before the demoralizing trade subsided liquidation pared the advance.\nFinal quotations were 2S,'4 to V\/i\ncents higher. October at $1.30%, Dec.\n$1.27% and May $1.29%-%.\nA bearish United States crop report forecasting increases of Winter-\nwheat production, rain in Australia\nand weakness Liverpool materially\naided slump in opening prices,\nTriumphs Arrive From\nArrow Lakes; \"Cot\"\nDeal Finished\nNEW TOMATOES\nEXPECTED SOON\nRolled oats, bran and shorts were\nin the ipotllght on the wholesale\nmarket during the past week, as they\nmade unusual price changes after\na fortnight's comparative quietness.\nIn the week beginning August 5,\nbran dropped $2 a ton and shorts $5\na ton, middlings following suit. Rolled oats slipped back twice, the first\ndrop of 10 cents per 80-pound bale\nbeing followed by a 20-cent drop. 30\ncents for the week. Flour, which a\nshort time ago slid back several\ntimes after a fairly steady upward\nclimb, began to recover some of the\nlost ground with an advance of 20\ncents a barrel Wednesday afternoon.\nThe reductions in bran and shorts\nbrought these two wheat products\na little closer to their usual price\nrelation to each other, but they are\nstill not back to the ordinary ratio,\nNelson dealers stated.\nNEW \"TOMS\" EXPECTED\nWholesale grocers are giving a\ngood deal of attention to the new\npack of canned goods, endeavoring\nto anticipate demands. Some new\npack goods are on the market, but\nthey are coming in slowly as yet.\nPealers have been advised that\npacking of tomatoes will begin in\nthe Okanagan this week, and they\nare eagerly awaiting receipt of them\nto relieve the present acute shortage. One wholesaler stated there\nhas never been a time in the last 20\nyears when stocks have been so\nlow. Price's will be considerably\nlower, it is also said.\nThere has been a good pack of\npeas in British Columbia, but the\npack in the east has been short, according to advices received here. It\nis expected a considerable quantity\nof B. C. peas will, therefore, be\nshipped to the prairie markets ordinarily served by Ontario, and the\nquantity available in this province\nMontreal Stock Exchange\nINDUSTRIALS:\nAlta Pac Grain   \t\nAssoc Brew of Can\nBathurst P Si V \"A\"\nBell Telephone\t\nBraz T L St P    \t\nB C Power \"A\" \t\nB C Power \"B' \t\nBuilding   Prods   \t\nCanada Cement \t\nCan Cement Ptd\nLONDON SEES PROFITS TAKEN\nLONDON, August 11, (AP)- The\nstock market closed quiet after an\nearly wave of profit-taking had\nbeen abandoned today, and prices\nheld at the lower levels. Few rallies of importance took place and the\ntrans-atlantic section remained quiet and lower. There was decided\nweakness in rubber, mining and tobacco issues and the industrial shares were generally easier. Home\nrails held steady reflecting the firmness in traffic index figures.\nBAR GOLD 8TEADY\nMONTREAL, August 11, (CP>-\nBar gold in London unchanged today at $34,75 an ounce in Canadian\nfunds: 139s 6d in British. The fixed\n$35 Washington price amounted to\nthe same in Canadian.\nPOUND GAINS\nMONTREAL, Aug. 11 (CP)-Thc\npound sterling advanced Vs cent on\nMontreal foreign exchanges today\nto 4.98 7-16. The French franc at 3.75\ncents and the United States dollar\nat par remained unchanged.\nCANADIAN DOLLAR IS\nUNCHANGED .\nNEW YORK. Aug. 11 (AP) -\nWorld monetary units were little\nchanged in terms of the United\nStates dollar tn quiet foreign exchange dealings today. Sterling\nclosed 1-16 higher at 4.94 5-16. The\nFrench franc finished MVs ot a cent\nhigher at 3.75V*. The Canadian dollar was unchanged at 99 63-64.\nt'ALIBUT SA \"9\nKilNCE RUPERT, B. C, August\n11, (CP)\u2014Halibut sales today were:\nAmerican 57,000 pounds at 10.9 cents\nand 6 cents to 11.6 cents; and 8\ncents; Canadian, none.\nSellltWithaWantAd\n3\nmi\n21 Vs\n169\n27%\n361*4\nVk\n60\n17V\u00bb\n108\nCan North Power       21\nCanadian Bronze      49\nCan Car Si Fdy              15%\nCan Car Si Fdy Pfd      25*4\nCan Celanese      25?'**\nCan Celanese Pfd     117Vi\nCan Ind Ale \"A\"        6Vi\nCan Ind Ale \"B\"       4<*4\nCan Pac Rly       12\nCockshutt  Plow           14Vr\nCon  Min Si Smelting       85*>,i\nDominion Bridge           49\nDominion Coal Pfd             20Vi\nDom Steel St Coal \"B\"       23\nDominion Textile      81\nDryden  Paper        18\nFoundation C ot C      24\nGen Steel Wares       16V4\nGurd Charles       12\nGyp Lime Si Alab       13*,i>\nHamilton   Bridge             13**.\nHoward Smith Paper       303'*\nH Smith Paper Pfd     103-A\nImp Tobacco of C         14%\nInter Nickel of Can      66\nLake of the Woods      28',i\nMassey   Harris           9%\nMcColl   Frontenac         12\nMont LHtP          321\/,\nNational Brew Ltd      41'A\nNat Brew Pfd          41\nNat Steel Car            4814\nOgilvie Flour Mills     2,35\nOntario Steel Prods       16\n20\n13%\n31 *!i\n9*1\nPower Corp of Can\nQuebec Power \t\nSt Lawr Corp \t\nSt Lawr Corp Pfd   \t\nSt Lawr Paper Pfd \t\nSouth Can Power       13\nShawnigan W   &P       281,4\nSteel of Can             85V.,\nSteel of Can Pfd       79\"*.\nWestern Grocers       GO'\/i\nBANKS:\nBank of Canada         59\nCanadienne Nationale    161\nCommerce ,   185\nMontreal     \t\nNova  Scotia  \t\nCURB:\nAbitibi P & P Co \t\nAbitibi 6 Pfd\nBeauharnois   Corp\nBathurst P & P \"B'\nBrew and Dist Van .\nBrew Corp of Can .\n221\n330\n(li;\n03 \"j\n9i\/z\n7\n3\nBrit American Oil   .2314\nB C Packers           16%\nCan  Malting  Ltd 37\nCan Industries \"B\"   235\nCan Vickers  8V1\nCan Wineries   ...   23*\nCons Paper Corp      , ... 18%\nDominion Stores  834\nDonnacona Paper \"A\"   16*11\nDonnacona Paper \"B\"   if)\\\\\nFord Motor \"A\"  25'i\nFraser Co Ltd   451,4\nImperial Oil            20%\nInter Petroleum       3,vi*\nInter Utilities \"A\"     17*14\nInter Utilities \"B'   1 80\nMacLaren P Si P        .... 33 \u2022\u2022>\nMitchell   Robt        22 Vi\nPage Horsey Tubes  105\nRoyalite Oil   45'5\nUnited Dist* of Can   1.00\nWalker-Good Pfd   lOVi\nQuotations on Wall Street\nAll Chem\nAm Can\nAm for Pow\nAm Mch, Fdy\nAm Smt. Ref\nAm Tel     ..\nAm  Tob  \t\nAnaconda \t\nAtchison         79%\nAub  Mot        16%\nAvi Corp        6%\nBaldwin        5%\nBait Si Ohio     273\/i\nBen Avi        20V4\nBeth Steel     89%\n237\n109\n!l',4\n19%\n98\n170 Vi\n82'i\n62',4\n235      235\nBorden    \t\nCan Dry \t\nCan Pac   \t\nCer de Pasco ...\ndies & Ohio\nChrysler\nCon Gas N Y\nCorn   Prods\nC   Wright  Pfd\nDupont\nEast Kud\nEl Pow Si Lt\nErie \t\nFord Eng   \t\nFord of Can   ...     25*\/t\nFirst Nat Str        42\nFreept Texas ..     31%\nGen  Elec     ...,     57\nGen Foods        37V4\nGen Mot   ... ..    58%\nGoodrich      39%\n24'\n25\n1214\n75*!,,\n52 Vz\n1151A\n37'\/,\n65 \u2022\n.6\n161\n185 V4\n2212\n15\n7V8\n97 ii-\n170\n82\n61%\n79\n16i*4\n5',4\n27 'i\n20%\n986\n24%\n24 %\n12\n51%\n114\n36 >i\n65 V4\n5%\nKid '2\n1841\/4\n22\n98\n170%\n82\n61%\n79\n16 \"2\n5'4\n27'i\n20 Vi\n98 V;\n2*1*1,\n24'.,\n12i\u201e\n51%\n115%\n37\n6512\n6\n161\n185 14\n22\nGranby    \t\nGrt Nor Pfd   .\nGrt West Sug\nHecker Pro-is\n.Towe Sound\nHud  Mot\nInter  Nick\nInter Tel & Tel\nJewel Tea\t\n11V\u00ab\n50%\n341*4\n\u20221*\n16',4\n661\/2\n111,4\n68%\n31\"4\n56%\n37 Vj\n5714\n3914\n11\n\u2022IO'.\",\n10%\n651,4\n11'A\n68\n3H'i\n56'i\n37 V,\n58%\n39%\n11\n50\n16*4\n661\/4\n11%\nKenn Copper ..\nKresge S S\nKrog Si Toll\nMack Truck ..\nMil Pfd\nMont Ward\nNash Mot\nNat Dy Prods ..\nN Pow & Lt\nN Y Central ..\nPac Gas  &E1\nPack Mot\nPen R R\nPhillips Pete\n'Pure Oil\nRad Corp\nRad Keith Or\nRem Rand\nSafe Stores\nShell Union ...\nS Cal Edison .\nSoutli Pac\nStan Oil of Cal\nStan Oil of Ind\n.Stan Oil of N.J.\nStew Warner .\nStudebaker\nTex Corp\nTex   Gulf   Sul\nTim Roller\nUnder Type  .\nUnion Carb\nUn Oil of Cal\nUnit Aircraft ..\nUn Pac \t\nU S Pipe   \t\nU S Rubber\t\nU  S  Steel   .\nCan Steel\nW.rner Pros\n\/es!  Ei:-.:\n\\Ve*,t Union ....\nWoolworth\nWrigley          70V4\nYei Truck  .....     23%\n63%\n24\n21%\n45\n1%\n6*1%\n18%\n20%\n10%\n40*'!i\n32\n9\n37%\n62%\n20'.,\n10',,\n9\n25'i\n34%\n27'2\n2*1'1\n\u25a017',\n45'2\n461.4\n68\n18%\n13'4\nMi 4\n39%\n68\nntvi\n101\n25V,\n29%\n125\n541,4\n0H4\n118%\n32%\n1*1\"\nI fi\n48\n48%\n62%\n23'4\n63'i\n24\n44%      45\n63 '4\n18%\n211%\nlll'i\n41)\n31%\n11%\n36%\n61'4\n201,\n10%\n8%\n24%\n27 H\n2*1%\n47 V,\n4414\n'15%\n07%\n18%\n13%\n63%\n391,4\n91\n160%\n25\n2814\n12414\n54\n60 Vi\n117V4\n32%\n14s'\n1541\n46%\n48 V,\n61%,\n111%\n2(1%\n10%\n40%\n31%\n8%\n37%\n62%\n20%\n10%\n9\n25\n27%\n2*1%\n47%\n45%\n40%\n67%\n18%\n13%\n64%\n39%\n01\n101\n25%\n28%\n1241-4\n54\n60%\nII8V4\n32%\n1 *:' j\n6\n47\n48%\nExchanges\nMONTREAL, Aug. 11 (CP) Bel-\ngium, Belga, .1684.\nChina, Hong Kong dollars, .3095.\nDenmark, krone, .2225.\nFrance, franc, .0375.\nGreat Britain, pound, 4.9845.\nIndia, rupee, ,3765.\nNorway,  krone.   .2505.\nSweden, crone, .2570.\nUnited States, dollar, par.\n(Compiled by the Royal Bank of\nCanada).\nVancouver Wheat\nVANCOUVER, August 11, (CP) -\nVancouver wheat cash prices:\nStraight   Tough\nNo. 1 hard     Wa       1285,8\nNo. 1 Nor    130%       128%\nNo 2 Nor.     126%       124%\nNo. 3 Nor.     122%       119%\nNo. 4 Nor    117%       114%\nNo. 5 wheat  :    109%       106%\nNo. 6 wheat     101%        98%\nFeed  .          81%        78%\nmay be affected.\nThe pack of some canned fruits is\nshort, dealers have been informed.\nJam and gallon good orders, particularly as affecting strawberries,\nloganberries and raspberries, have\nbeen only partly filled. This situ*\nation is not expected to be severe,\nhowever, since peaches, pears,\nplums, prunes and crabapples have\nyet to be packed, and the deficiencies may be made up.\nJARS IN DEMAND\nDemand for fruit jars, accessories,\nsugar and other canning supplies\ncontinues keen. Dealers expect\nstocks, particularly of jars, to be\ncleaned out and some doubt has\nbeen expressed as to whether supplies now on hand will be sufficient\nto carry through the season.\nThe apricot deal is about closed,\nthe last shipment to arrive being\njam \"cots\" from Spokane, tne Okanagan deal being finished. Canadian\npeaches are now protected by a\ndump duty of V,k cents a pound. A\nsmall quantity of clingstones from\nthe Okanagan has been received-\nTriumph peaches from the Arrow\nLake are starting to roll and Ro-\nchestcrs from the Okanagan are\nexpected to move to market Monday or Tuesday. Okanagan pears\nalso will probably be available Monday.\nOliver cantaloups are rolling in\nincreasing quantity and are meeting a ready sale.\nSoaps and soap products are\nsteady, and sugar is about the same\nprice. An advance expected this\nweek failed to materialize. Corn\nflakes prices are described as low\nbut no advance is anticipated at this\ntime in the season.\nNo changes were reported in eggs,\nbutter and meats. Cooked and\nsmoked meats remain in seasonal\ndemand.\nAmong outgoing shipments of the\nweek were Jam sent by rail to Regina; and by truck to Shaunavon,\nSask.\nCarlot arrivals included a car of\noranges, watermelon, peaches, grapes and other fruits; four of groceries; two of sugar; one each of canned milk, soap, feed and flour;\nGrand Forks hay, and two of fresh\nand cooked meats.\n7-16;\nMoney\nBy the Canadian Press\nCloying exchange rates;\nAt   Montreal\u2014Pound   4.98\nfranc 3.75; U.S. dollar par.\nAt New York\u2014Pound 4.98 5-16;\nfranc 3.75Vi; Canadian dollar .99\n63-64.\nAt Paris\u2014Pound 132.85 francs;\nU.S. dollar 26.65% francs; Canadian\ndollar 26.65 25-32 francs.\nIn gold\u2014Pound 12s 2d; U.S. dollar\n59.48  cents;   Canadian  dollar\ncents.\n59.46\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nMONTREAL, August ,11, (CP)\u2014\nEggs declined on Canadian Commodity Exchange produce section\ntoday while butter firmed a little.\nButter, fresh 26Vb-%. Cheese unquoted.\nEggs spot\u2014A large 27A; A medium 25A; B large 22A; C 20A.\nFutures\u2014Butter firmed lk cent\nhigher: Aug. 26H-%; Nov. 27%-^.\nSales\u2014One November contract at\n27%.\nWheat Northern No. 1, 174H; barley C. W. No. 3, 7iy4; Oats, C. W.\nNo, 1, 60; white corn flour 6.00-6.20;\nbran, ton, 25.55.\nC. I. O. HEAD USES\nA. F. OF L LABOR\nWASHINGTON, (CP) .\u2014United\nStates labor circles are chuckling\nover thc dilemma of John L. Lewis\nin his capacity as a private employer.\nThe czar of the Committee for\nIndustrial Organization, sworn foe\nof the American Federatino of Labor, recently bought a historic house in Alexandria, vf. It had to be\nrenovated. The C. I. O. has not yet\norganized the  building trades,\nInvestigators discovered the workmen on the Lewis home were members of the A. F. of L.\nBuild Long Tunnel\nin Scottish Hills\nGLASGOW, (CP).-A five mile\ntunnel connecting Loch Garry and\nLoch Ericht in the heart of the\nGrampians as part of a hydroelectric power project has been\ncompleted after two  years'  work.\nThe tunnel, about nine feet in\ndiameter, runs beneath Mam Ban,\na peak, 3000 feet high between the\nlochs. The intake at Loch Garry\nwill be 32 feet below the present\nsurface of the water. Inflow will be\ncontrolled by regulating gates, so\nthe level of the loch can be raised\nor lowered as required.\nThe scheme cost about \u00a3250,000.\nMontreal Metals\nMONTREAL, August 11, (CP)~\nSpot: copper, electrolytic 16.30; tin\n62.25; lead 6.25; zinc 6.60; antimony\n15.25; per 100 pounds F. O. B. Montreal, five ton lots.\nKINGSTON, Jamaica (CP) .-Plana\nfor a tuberculosis sanatorium and\nhospital to be erected at Hope Pasture, St. Andrew, are nearing completion. Almost $500,000 will be\nspent on the institution,\nCOST OF LIVING\nIN CANADA GAINS\nOTTAWA, Aug. 11 (CP)-A Dominion bureau of statistics report\ntoday says that moderate advances\nin prices ot a Jew of the more Important foods, partially offset by\nseasonal productions in coal and\ncoke prices, resulted in an increase\nin the general cost of living for Canada from 82.7 in June to 83.0 in\nJuly, The comparative figure for\nJuly, 1936, was 80.4.\nWhy Not a Want Aa?\nai Kootenay\nX Belle Gold\nI    Mines Ltd.\nOwing to the exceptional\ndemand for copies of our\nanalysis of Kootenay\nBelle Gold Mines, Ltd.,\nwe regret having had to\ndisappoint a number of\napplicants. We have\ntherefore had a further\nsupply printed and copies\nare now available on\nrequest.\nStock Department\nWaghorn,Gwynn\n& Company, Limited\n525 Seymour St., Vancouver, B.C.\nBoost for the Kootenay District - It Pays!\nCALGARY OILS BOOSTED\nCALGARY, August 11, (CP)\u2014Revived interest by eastern buyers\nboosted oil shares prices on the Calgary stock exchange today. Volume\nincrease, transfers totalling 43,896\nshares. Okalta gained 15 at 1.67;\nVulcan up 9 at 1.55; C, & E. 9 at\n2.60 and Home 13 at 1.98. Calmont\nwas 7 higher at !i2; Model 3 at 50\nand Monarch 2 at 35Va. Foundation\ndropped \\\\i at 29.\nBONDS   LOWER\nNEW YORK. Aug. 11 (AP)-Most\nUnited States government bonds\nfloated downstream in more active\ndealings in the bond market today.\nFinal prices in the federal list were\noff as much as 10-32 of a point. In\ncontrast to the domestic government\nlist several foreign government loans\nmoved forward moderately, including German government 7s and 5^s,\nRome 6^s and Brazil 6^5.\nCHARLOTTETOWN (CP) .-Quite\nin keeping with coronation year, a\ndesign in flowers \"Long Live the\nKing\" has been arranged in a. bed\nin front of thc post office here. Cup\nshaped green plants, sempervivum,\nhave been used to form the letters,\nwhile the entire space between the\nfetters was filled with plants of a\nreddish color called altunanlhera.  t\nCHECK \u2022\nTHAT\nVACATION\nLIST\nBe sure you have ordered your\npaper to be sent to your summer address.\nYou'll want to keep in touch with events \"back home\"\n\u2022\u2014with club activities, sporting news, births, deaths,\nmarriages\u2014and you'll want to follow the serial story\nand comics.\nIF YOU HAVEN'T PLACID THAT ORDER\nYET, DO IT NOW!\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper\n \t\n\t\nmmwmmw^\nmmm\n\\emmammmmmmmmammmareW3r\u25a0 \"\"^ \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'-\u25a0\u25a0rw^m^^am\nPAGE TEN .\nJUST RUB IT IN\nNoxacont\nDOES THE REST\n35c\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug Co.\nFour Rinks Lawn\nBowlers Invade\nTrail, (up Bowls\nRinks of the C.P.R. Lawn Bowling club turn invaders this weekend when they journey to Trail for\nthe second game of the Brewery\ncup intercity tournament. They sally\nforth with one win already under\ntheir belts and eager for another.\nThe bowlers will probably travel\nby car.\nRinks in order of skip, third, second and lead follow:\nJack Draper. Norman B. Bradley,\nF. Lang and F. C. Davies.\nF. E. Wheeler. A. G. Lang, E.\nStangherlin and C. F, McHardy.\nJ. S. Goulding, N. J. Lowes, Dave\nLaughton and W. Graham.\nJames Ball, W. C. Calbick, E. L,\nWright and C. I. Archibald.\nIt is possible that changes will be\nmade in this lineup, if some of thc\nbowlers are unable to go.\nTrail Junior Rep\nBoxla Team Plans\nWorkout Tonight\nWhile in Nelson Wednesday evening for tho league boxla game,\nmembers of the Trail senior club\nstated that the Trail junior reps will\npractice this evening and all prospective players are asked to be at\nthe rink in uniform by 8 o'clock.\nChuck Bradbury, Mouse Davy and\nStephenson will be in charge of the\nteam.\nROOFING\nEaves Troughs, etc.\nR. H. Maber\nPhone 665      610 Kootenay St\nTrail-Rossland,\nSalmo Shriners\nGuests at Picinic\nSports, Novelty Events\nMark First Nelson\nShriners Picnic\nSoftball, novelty sports, peanut\nand candy scrambles, capped by a\nhuge picnic banquet beneath the\ntrees at Lakeside park, marked the\nfirst annual picnic of the Shrine\nclub of Nelson, Wednesday. Trail-\nRossland and Salmo club members\nattended as guests.\nThose present from Trail-Rossland\nwere 0. H, Nelson and Miss Nelson,\nMr. and Mrs. G. A. V. Sandercombe,\nMr. and Mrs. J. Alexander, Mr. and\nMrs. W. J. Ternan and child, Mr.\nand Mrs. Fred Peters, Mrs. A. R.\nBuchan, Frank Scott; and from\nSalmo there were Mr. and Mrs. S.\nN. Ellis and child, Mr.,and Mrs. M.\nC. Donaldson, Miss Peggy Donaldson, Miss Shirley Donaldson; Nelsonites attending were W. B. Bamford, Fred Irvine, Mr. and Mrs, R. B.\nMcEwcan and son, Bill, Mrs. Risk,\nMrs. C. Fraser, Mr. and Mrs. Charles\nKelman, J. A. Smith, Miss Annie\nSmith, Miss Ethel Smith, Mr. and\nMrs. George Clerihew and grandson, Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Allen, Mr,\nand Mrs. R. E. Crerar .and family,\nL. R. Hood and family, Mr. and Mrs.\nHarry Burns, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon\nBurns and son, Bobby, Harry Dronsfield and Mrs. Edwards of Vancouver.\nNEL80N DAILY NEWS, NEL80N, B.C-THURSDAY MORNING, AUG. 12. U37\nGLANCES INTO THE MIRROR OF\nLIFE IH KOOTENAY-BOUNDARY\nMORE ABOUT\nMalison Suspect\n(Continued From Pago One)\nthe   other  man  was  arrested   for\ncattle rustling and sent to the Nebraska State Penitentiary.\nMATTSON DOUBTFUL\nTACOMA, August 11, (AP)\u2014 Dr.\nW. W. Mattson said tonight he had\nno recollection of any patient by\nthe name of Floyd Hutchinson and\ncould nflt recall having received any\ncall for narcotics from a pair of\nmen during December.\nThe physician, father of kidnap-\nslaying victim Charles Mattson. declared he believed the \"confession\"\nof Hutchinson, given at Lemmon, S,\nD., was \"another publicity attempt\"\nor simply the raving of a demented\nperson.\nKangaroos are such slow eaters\nthat a zoo meal may last a kangaroo\nfour hours.\nRetail Lumber\nLATH-SHINGLES\nMOULDINGS *\nW. W. Powell Co., Ltd.\n\"The Home of Cood Lumber\"\nTelephone 176 Foot of Stanley St.\nLUMBER\nBOARDS, SHIPLAP, DIMENSION\nPOLES, POSTS, PILING\nTIMBERS SAWN TO ORDER\nMine and Mill Lumber a Specialty\nTRUCK OR RAIL DELIVERY\nPlaning Mill and Sawmill at Taghum, B. C.\nHARRY BURNS\n518 Ward St.\nNelson, B. C.\nPhone 53\nSPECIAL\n*   Reduced\nPRICES\non\nGOLF CLUBS\nALL THIS WEEK\nWe will allow a discount of\n25% OFF\nALL PRO-MADE OR McLEOD\nWOODS AND IRONS\nThat we have in stock\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Ltd.\nBULL  RIVER\u2014H,   McDonald  of\nKimberley, accaompanied by Miss\nK. Rosicky and Miss Ruth Hamrin\nof Wardner, were visitors here Sunday. . . . Miss Emma Costanzo spent\nthe week-end in Jaffray at the home\nof Mr, and Mrs. W. C. Barr.. . . Mrs.\nI. Jerhan of Kimberley is visiting\nher mother, Mrs. C. Dillon, for a\nfew weeks.. . . H. Malone of Regina\nis spending a few 'days at the home\nof Mr. Costanzo. . . . Claude McDonald and Miss Emma Costanzo\nvisited Mr. and Mrs. Reed of Wardner Thursday. . . . Mr. Neily and\ndaughter Joyce of Peckham's Lake\nwere visitors here Thursday.. . . Mr.\nand Mrs. C. Zilli of Cranbrook were\nin Bull River Sunday. ... Mr. and\nMrs. McDonald, Allan McDohald\nand Claude McDonald accompanied\nby Miss Emma Costanzo, motored\nto Aberfeldie Friday. . . . Mr. and\nMrs. J. Rossi and son Mike went to\nMcBaines' Lak'e Sunday. . . . Victor\nLind left for Vancouver Wednesday.\n. Miss Emma Costanzo visited\nMr. and Mrs. MacM&hon at Fort\nSteele. . . . Miss Charolette Graf\nhas returned from a visit to Washington. . . . Tony Eimer and Miss\nMargaret Dow were united in mar-\nraige last Monday evening at Tony\nEimer's home here. . . . Mrs. O. McDonald was a guest in Wardner\nTuesday and Wednesday.. . . Mrs. J.\nFloden and son William are home\nagain from Cranbrook. . . . Martin\nNelson arrived home last week. . . .\nMiss Emma Costanzo was a Cranbrook visitor Saturday. . . . Mrs. J,\nRossi and son Mike, accompained by\nMr. and Mrs. Peterson went to\nCranbrook Wednesday. . . . Allan\nMcDonald was here Sunday from\nKimberley.\nSANCA-Mr. and Mrs. B. Hurack\nand family of Creston, and Mr. and\nMrs. John Patrick of Creston where\nmotor visitors to Sanca Sunday,\nguests of Mr. and Mrs. J. Karpow-\nich. . . . Miss Olga Hurack has returned to Creston after a short holiday here, a guest of Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. Karpowich. . . . Bob Tillittson of\nOsoyoos spent the week-end here,\na guest of his uncle and aunt, Mr\nand Mrs. Bill Tillittson. . . . Jimmie Miller has returned to Osoyoos\nafter spending the week-end here,,\na guest of his parents, Mr. and Mr;\nL. Miller. . . . Mr. and Mrs. Eri\nBainbridge and children spent the\nweek-end here, guests of tho for*\nmer's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin\nBainbridge. . . . Fred Miller of Kus\nkanook spent the week-end with\nhis parents Mr. and Mrs. L. Miller\nhere. , . . Mrs. J. Hall and daughter,\nJoyce, spent Sunday at Sanca, guests\nof Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Bainbridge.\n... Mr. and Mrs. John Shwarok and\nMrs. Heap of Sirdar were motor\nvisitors here, guests of Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. Karpowich.\naccompanied by their daughter,\nMiss Alice Morrison, have returned\nhome from Calgary. . . . Emory\nLegault left Monday to visit at his\nhome in Ottawa. . .'. Mrs. Homer\nMcLean and family and Mrs. J.\nKendal, and son are visiting at Penticton. ... Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert\nPrideaux of Princeton were visitors here at the week end.\nGREENWOOD-MIm Helen Hal-\nseth who has been visiting Mr. and\nMrs. A. Suler left Sunday for her\nhome in Kendrick, Ida. . . . Miss\nLorna Terhune left Saturday for\nher home in Vancouver. She has\nbeen a guest of Mr. and Mrs. J.\nRoylance. . . . Mr. McPharlon of\nGrand Forks was a visitor at the\nweek end. . . . Jack and Dick Morrison of Beaverdell were week end\nvisitors at their home here. , . .\nMiss Alice Riley of Midway was a\nvisitor in town Saturday. ... Mr.\nand Mrs. John Halseth of Spokane\nand family and Miss Marion Pearson visited Mr. and Mrs. A. Sater.\nThey left Sunday for Spokane. . . .\nBob Henderson who has been visiting at Spokane has returned. . . .\nMiss Dela Dumont of Oliver is a\nguest of Miss Dorcis Mitchell. . . .\nMajor and Mrs. A. W. Davis and\nchildren are at Christina Lake. . . .\nMrs. G. A. Rendell entertained at\nthe tea hour Wednesday r.nd Friday afternoons when the rooms\nwere prettily decorated with summer blossoms. Presiding at the tea\ntable, which was covered with a\nVenetian cloth and centered with\nsummer flowers, were Mrs. R. Morrison and Mrs. A. W. Davis while\nMrs. C. King and Mrs. Clyde White\ncut the ices. Guests included Mrs.\nJ. Reid, Mrs. C. King, Mrs. W. Hol-\nsworth, Mrs. R. Pritchard, Mrs. A.\nW. Davis, Mrs. A. J. Morrison,\nMiss Alice Morrison. Mrs. A. Legault, Mrs. George Bryan, Mrs. H.\nThomas, Mrs. J. Keady, Mrs. R.\nN. Morrison, Mrs. I. Saunders of\nSeattle, Mrs. J. P. C. Wright, Mrs.\nA. Sater, Mrs. M. McKay, Mrs.\nG. Manly, Mrs. C. White, Mrs.\nJohnson, Miss A. Simpson and\nMrs. Broughton. . . . Mrs. R. N.\nMorrison entertained at a bridge\nluncheon in honor of her daughter\nMrs. I Saunders of Seattle. Mrs.\nW. Holdsworth captured first honors at bridge and Mrs. G. Manly the\nconsolation. ... In honor of her\nniece, Miss Helen Halseth of Kendrick, Ida., who is her house guest,\nMrs. A Sater entertained Wednesday. Music was enjoyed by the\nguests who were: Miss Lorna Terhune of Vancouver, Miss Alice\nMorrison, Miss B. McLarnen, Miss\nCorinne Wright acted as serviteurs.\nchell, Miss Dela Dumont and Miss\nElizabeth Saunders of Seattle. . . .\nMrs. A S..ter entertained at the tea\nhour Monday in honor of Miss\nLorna Terhune of Vancouver. Mrs.\nA. Broughton and Mrs. J. Roylance\npresided at the prettily decorated\ntea table. Miss Helen Halseth and\nCorrine Wright acted as serviteurs.\nGuests included Mrs. Clyde White,\nMrs. A. J. Morrison, Mrs. M. Curry\nJ. A. Leslie, Mrs. R. B. Wallace,\nMrs. I. Saunders of Seattle, Mrs,\nof Wenatchee, Mrs. G. A. Rendell,\nMrs. J. p. C. Wright, Mrs. J. Hay,\nMrs. I. Inglis of Beaverdell, Miss\nB. McLaren, Mrs. J. Roylance and\nMrs. H. Thomas. . . . Mrs. R. N.\nMorrison entertained at tea recently in honor of her daughter.\nMrs. 1. Saunders, who is visiting\nin Greenwood. . . . Mrs. R. N. Pritchard has returned from Kamloops,\n. . . Mrs. M. McKay and daughter\nhave returned home after visiting\nDr. and Mrs. W. D. Smith at Christina Lake. . . . Mr. and Mrs. G. S.\nWalters have returned home from\nOttawa and other eastern points.\n. . . Mayor ond Mrs. A. J. Morrison\nNAKU8P, B. C.\u2014Little Mlu Margaret Olson celebrated her seventh\nbirthday anniversary this week\nwhen her mother, Mrs. J. Olson\nentertained several of her playmates at an afternoon party. The\nguests included Ivy Cann, Earl and\nBruce Motherwell and Linden Aalten. ... Mr. and Mrs. E. Woodman,\nMiss Woodman and Miss Wilson of\nChaplain, Ontario, were holiday visitors in town. . . . Bill Lane and R,\nShort of Ainsworth were in town\nSaturday. . . . F. Fowler of Salmo\nwas a week-end visitor in Nakusp.\n. . . Mrs. Ivor Johnson was in town\nfrom Burton on Saturday. . . . Miss\nAlice Humphris has been visiting\nfriends at Salmo. ... Mr. and Mrs.\nC. Jensen of Salmo were week-end\nvisitors in Nakusp. . . . Mr. and\nMrs. G. A. Stratton of Vancouver\nwere visitors in town. . . . Mr. and\nMrs. E. Neff of Kelowna are guests\nat thc home of Mr. and Mrs. A.\nMatheson. . . . Miss Mary Kershaw\nhas returned after attending Young\nPeoples camp at Koolaree and visiting friends in Nelson. . . . Mrs. E.\nOlson is visiting friends at Edge-\nwood. . . . Miss Beatrice Johnson\nleft on Saturday to visit at the home\nof her aunt and uncle Mr. and Mrs.\nMcKay of Ymir. ... Mr. and Mrs.\nPercy Young were week-end visitors to Nelson. ... Reg White returned on Friday from Salmo. . . .\nMiss Katie Robson ot Burton is\nvisiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs.\nN. A. Herridge. ... Mr. and Mrs,\nW. H. Stones of Burton were Nakusp visitors on Saturday. . . . H.\nJ. Clark.spent the week-end in Nelson visiting his parents Mr. and Mrs.\nGeorge Clark. . . . W. Barber, S.\nGeorge, F. Bruce and G. Dunaway\nof Trail were week-end visitors in\nNakusj. . . . Miss J. Yorick, matron\nof the Arrow Lakes hospital left on\nSaturday to spend a few days in\nVancouver. . , . Miss Joan Goodall\nwho has been a guest at the home of\nMr. and Mrs. R. Islip left on Friday for her home at Chilliwack. , . .\nRonald Somers and Georgo Latta of\nNelson were visitors in Nakusp on\nSaturday. . . . Miss Nancy Islip,\nnurse-in-training at St. Pauls hospital, Vancouver, who has spent a\nholiday at the home of her parents,\nMr. and Mrs. R. Islip left on Friday.\n. . . Mrs. J. Mcintosh was a visitor\nin Nakusp Saturday en route to Burton to visit her sister Mrs. I. Johnson. . . . Miss Bessie McWhirter,\nwho has spent the past six weeks\nvisiting at the home of her parents,\nMr. and Mrs. R. McWhirter left on\nSaturday for Vancouver. . . . W\nShipmaker and R. Hopp of Edge-\nwood were week-end visitors in\nNakusp. ... Mr. and Mrs. F. Coates\nof Glendevon were visitors in Nakusp on Saturday. . , . Miss Louise\nCusick of Trail was a week-end visitor at her home here, . . . Miss Lil-\nlias Kerr and Miss Molly Islip spent\nthe week-end in Vernon. ... Mr.\nand Mrs. Funk of Needles were week-end guests at the home of the\nlatter's brother-in-law and sister,\nMr. and Mrs. R. Beurge. . . . H. E.\nParkyn and son of Burton were\nmotor visitors to town on Saturday. . . . Mrs. D. Lyons of Arrow\nPark was among the shoppers in\ntown on Saturday. . . . Mrs. L. J.\nEdwafds and her sister, Mrs. Ivor\nLewis of Crossfields, Alta., spent\nthe week-end in Nelson. ... Mr.\nand Mrs. A. Stanley left on Friday\nto spend a vacation at* Vancouver.\nThey will visit at the home of Mr.\nStanley's parents, Mr. and Mrs. A.\nB. S. Stanley. . . . Mrs, Brecken-\nridge and daughter of Lumby who\nhave been guests of Mr. and Mrs. E.\nOxenham left on Saturday. . . . Mrs,\nA. Dunn is visiting her parents. Mr.\nand Mrs. Colgrave, of Edgewood.\nHoward Beatty Is\nHonored by C.P.R.\nFellow Employees\nPromoted to Kamloops\nAfter Six Years\nin Nelson\nHoward Beatty, popular shop's\nclerk at the C.P.R. shops here, was\nhonored by the presentation of a\nwell-filled purse from his fellow-\nworkers at the shops Wednesday,\nthe day previous to his departure\nfor Kamloops, where he has been\npromoted.\nDave Heddle, In making the presentation, congratulated Mr. Beatty\non his promotion and extended on\nbehalf on his fellow employees their\nbest wishes for his future success.\nThe purse was presented in a\nlarge packing case labelled \"explosive\".\nMr. Beatty briefly thanked \"the\nboys\" for their gift and their good\nwishes.\nAfter six years in Nelson as B.B.\nmechanical clerk, Mr. Beatty has\nnow been promoted to timekeeper\nand mechanics clerk at Kamloops.\nMORE ABOUT\nKING-ABERHART\n(Continued From Pas\" One)\n\"The reference would be made under Section 55 of the supreme court\nact which provides for reference by\nthe governor of council of important\nquestions of law or fact touching\nthe powers of the provincial legislatures.\nIn view of urgency of matter\nwould appreciate immediate reply.\"\nHoifte.Runs\nJames S. McKenzie\n(By the Attoclated Press)\nYesterday'i homers:\nDiMaggio, Gehrig, Yankees; Mc-\nNair, Chapman, Red Sox; Larry,\nSullivan, Indians; Kuhel, Senators;\nGalan, Hartnett, Cubs; Kampouris,\nReds, one each.\nThe leaders; DiMaggio, Yankees,\n33; Foxx, Red Sox, 29; Gehrig, Yankees, 28; Medwick, Cardinals, 26;\nTrosky, Indians, 25; Greenberg,\nTigers, 25.\nLeague totals; American 547, National 458, total 1005.\nHambletonian Is\nPosloned a Day\nGOSHEN, N.Y., Aug. 11 (AP)\nThe hambletonian, rich stake lor\nthree-year-old trotters, was po:t-\nponed until tomorrow due to a rain\nstorm which left the track at Good\nTime park in no condition for a\nrace today\nBOXING\n( By the Associated Press)\nLos Angeles\u2014Hank Ankinson, 215,\nAkron, Ohio, stopped George Godfrey, 265, Leipcrville, Pa., (8).\nNew York \u2014 Johnny Horstman,\n147, New York, outpointed Pete Kol-\noff, 1381*4, New York (-8).\nof (. M. & 1 (o.\nAnnouncement Made\nat Head Office\nin Trail\nTRAIL, B. C, Aujust 11\u2014James\nStephen McKenzie, Trail High\nichool student, son of Mr. and Mrs.\nJames 8. McKenzie, won this year\nthe $2000 scholarship awarded annually by the Consolidated Mining A 8tneltlng Company of Canada Limited to the son of a Consolidated employee making the\nhighest marks In Junior matriculation. The marks In all cases\nmust average over 75 per cent.\nThe $2000 scholarship Is payable\nover a period of four years and\nmust be applied toward higher\nscholastic attainment by Its winner.  .\nThe scholarship Is open to employees of the company anywhere\nand the winner was announced\nfrom head office here today.\nWINLAW, B.C.\u2014George Swanson\nwas a visitor to Trail. . . . Cecil\nMuirhead and Jim De Balinhaid\nhave returned to Trail after visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. P.\nDoherty. . . . Philip Doherty, who\nspent a week with his wife and two\nchildren here, has returned to Trail.\n. . . Barbara Harmston of Crescent\nValley is visiting her brother-in-law\nand sister, Mr. and Mrs. Lister. . .\nDonald Sutherland, who was hurt\nin a rock slide at Vallican, has returned home from the Kootenay\nLake General hospital, Nelson.\nBy Section 55 of the supreme\ncourt act the Dominion government\nmay refer any federal or provincial\nstatute to the courts for a consideration of its constitutional validity. All\nprovincial legislation, as a matter\nof routine, has to go before the\ngovernor-in-council in Ottawa for\nreview and the recent Alberta enactments are now under consideration by the minister of justice prior\nta coming before cabinet council as\na whole.\nThe three measures referred to In\nMr. King's message are the bill to\nrequire all bank managers and bank\nemployees in Alberta to take out\nlicences, thc bill closing the courts\nof the province to any bank employee who does not obtain a licence\nand an amendment to the judicature\nact to prohibit a constitutional test\nof any Alberta statute in the Alberta courts without permission\nfrom the provincial government.\nShould Mr. Aberhart comply with\nthe request for cooperation Mr. King\nsaid an effort would be made to get\nthe supreme court of Canada in\nsession as quickly as possible for\nthe hearing of the reference. He had\nnothing to say as to what measures\nmight be taken in the event of a\nrefusal, although there would be\nnothing to prevent the reference\ngoing ahead.\nBONNYVILLE, Alta., Aug. 11\n(CP)\u2014Premier William Aberhart\nsaid here tonight In an interview\nthat he would call a special meeting of the Alberta cabinet to consider a request by Prime Minister\nMackenzie King that Alberta facilitate a reference to the supreme\ncourt regarding validity to recent\nbills passed by the provincial legislature.\nPremier Aberhart said that In\nthe meantime he would make no\ncomment.\nA. Emmott Injured\nDuring Boxla Game;\nBlow on His Foot\nA blow on the foot, resulting in\nblood-poisoning during a junior\nboxla game here, has kept Allan\nEmmott, popular member of the\nHornet boxla squald and sub-goalie\nfor the Nelson senior team, out of\nthe game for the past week or so. It\nwas reported that Allan would be\nup and at it again today.\nOrigin of Kilts\nBrings Argument\nBELFAST, (CP).-Is a kilt an\nIrish costume? Suggestion that children wear kilts when the King or\nQueen visited Belfast at thc end of\nJuly led to an exchange in the correspondence columns of the Belfast\nTelegraph on this question.\n\"Common Sense\" opposed the idea,\nsuggesting it would be more appropriate if the children wore typically Irish costume. Next day came\nsupport for the kilt from \"Lody\nStudent,\" who replied the kilt is\n\"the national dress of Irish girls and\nboys\".- As if to clinch the argument. \"Lady Student\" added that\nthe kilt was a common sense costume for warm weather.\nTRAIL SOCIAL\nBy MRS. GLENN QUAYLE\nTRAIL, B. C, August 11 - Miss\nMilne, a bride-to-be, was honored at\na miscellaneous shower, when Mrs\nWilliam Milne and Mrs. C. McLean\nentertained at the home of .Mrs.\nRobert Milne. The gifts, presented\nby Pauline Mi!ne and Lizzie Laurie,\nwere arranged in a basket decorated\nwith pink and white, topped by a\ndoll dressed in blue. Whist provided the entertainment, Mrs. Dave\nMilne winning high schore prize,\nMrs. A. Weir, second and Mrs. Mary\nKennedy, consolation. Delicious refreshments were served by the hostesses at the conclusion of play. The\nguests were Mrs. Robert Milne, Mrs.\nT. O'Sullivan, Mi's. J. Mayzes, Mrs.\nG- Thomson, Mrs, M. Stewarf, Mrs.\nWilliam Laurie, Miss Susan Aitken,\nMiss Margaret Goddard, Miss Alice\nGoddard, Miss Lizzie Laurie, Mrs.\nJames Goddard, Mrs. Dave Milne,\nMrs. Ralph Cook, Mrs. A. Weir, Mrs.\nM. Kennedy, Mrs. J. Devine, Mrs.\nR. R. Milne, Mrs. C. Kendall, Mrs.\nJ. Ferguson, Mrs. G. Morrison, Mrs.\nJames Weir, Mrs. W. Young, Mrs.\nA. Milne. Mrs. Roy Hayman, Mrs.\nJ. Kennedy, Mrs. William Milne,\nMrs. C. McLean, Miss Violet Andrews, Miss Sandra Aitken, Miss\nPauline Milne and Miss Grace Milne\n\u2022   Mrs. G. Ferguson, accompanied\nby her two sons, has returned to\nTrail from a two-week vacation\nspent at the coast,\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Ned Rhodes\nhave returned from a short holiday\nwith relatives at Nelson.\n\u2022 Mrs. George Appleton, who\nhas been residing at 1395, Second\navenue, has left for Medicine Hat,\nher former home, where she will\ntake up residence.\n\u2022 H. R. Lauriente left Wednesday\nby car for Spokane.\n\u2022 Francis McGuire, who has been\non holidays at Kamloops, has returned to Trail.\n\u2022 Mrs. Murdo Morrison and Miss\nNancy Morrison left Wednesday for\nKimberley, called there by the illness of Miss Morrison's mother.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. T. F. McLean,\nvisitors to Calgary during the past\ntwo weeks, have returned to their\nhome in Trail.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. J. Dolphin and\nbaby, who spent a vacation at Balfour, have returned to their home\nin East Trail.\n\u2022 A. L. Johannson, Tadanac, accompanied by Mrs. Johannson, has\nleft on a business trip to the coast.\nMrs. Johannson will visit there for\na few weeks.\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nFOR RENT- 5-ROOM MODERN\nBungalow, garage and furnace.\nPhone 657-R. (1935)\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nLadles' Golf club luncheon today\nAugust 12th. (1898)\nAdded Lacrosse\nGames Possible\nPresident Coates Has\nDates If Work in\nWith Playoffs\nWhether another round will be\nplayed in the Kootenay boxla league\ndepends upon the date of provincial\nplayoffs, it was stated Wednesday\nnight.\nA tentative schedule has been\ndrawn for another round, and Frank\nCoates, of Rossland, Kootenay president, has wired the coast asking for\nInformation on dates. Remaining\nKootenay league games, or playoff\ngames, will be scheduled on the basis\nof the reply he receives, it is understood.\nFashion-Craft\nFall\nSamples\nThe new fall samples ara\nhere. See the new patterns and styles in suits\nand topcoats for fall. Pick\nnow while the range Is\ncomplete.\nEMORY'S\nLimited\nSee A. F. Dodd for plastering Si\nstucco.   615 Mill St. (1928)\nCIVI-CON8CIOU8   meant   Patronizing your own CIVIC THEATRE.\n(1882)\nCity Band Concert tonight,   at 8\no'clock at handstand, Vernon itreet,\n(1936)\nDance Friday, August 13 at Salmo\nIn the K, P. Hall. Don't rtilis a good\ntime. (1930)\nHave McKay 4 Stratton remodel\nyour floor lamp to a trl-llte for only $4.60. (1906)\nThe Library will re-open this\nmorning at Civic Centre. No fines\nfor this week. (1925)\nWanted \u2014Plums, Green Gages,\nHuckleberries, early apples. McDonald Jam. Co, (1924)\nDODGE    \u2014    DESOTO\nDEPENDABLE USED CARS\nERICS-PHONE 76\n(1796)\nDance Willow Point Athletic Club,\nAugust   14th.    Margaret   Graham's\nOrchestra. Refreshments. 75c couple,\n(1929)\nDon't be a SLAVE lo your cook-\nstove. Install an AETNA Oil Burner.   E. Gould, Nelson, Phone 946.\n(1830)\nNelson Women's Institute Rest\nroom no* located at Civic CentrJ\nnext to Library. Mrs. Jasper in attendance. (1918)\nNew fall samples are arriving.\nC^n't forget we absolutely guarantee\na perfect fit.\nJACK BOYCE 8TYLE SHOP\n(1795)\nPioneering radio Industry In Nelson and district hat given  us the\nchoice of the finest In radio value.\nKOOTENAY MUSIC  HOUSE\n(1799)\nIf you enjoy an informal chat\nwith your friends over a cup of delicious tea with some really marvelous pastry, or a cool refreshing drink\non a hot day; you will be sure to\nenjoy the\nGOLDEN   GATE    CAFE\n(1912)\nCARD OF THANKS\nMr. Charles Swan wishes to thank\nall friends for kindness and expressions of sympathy extended to him\nduring his sad bereavement in the\nloss of a loving wife. (1933)\nLOWEST  COST  FOR   FIR8T\nCLA88   TRAVEL\nBut that's only half the story.\nGreyhound comfort and frequent\nconvenient departures moke this\nthe ideal modern travel.\nGreyhound Lines\nNelson Depot - 205 Baker St.\nPHONE 800       .(1804)\nWhy Not a Want Ad?\nRepair Dredge\nfor Power Firm\nFormer Dominion government\ndredge, which has been purchased\nby the West Kootenay Power\nLight company, has been pulled up\non Hie ways at the C. P. R. shipyards in Fairview to be put into\nshape. It is at present devoid of\nmachinery. Machinery awaits on I\nsiding at the yards.\nIt ,is understood scows, Including\na dump scow, also will be repaired\nby the C. P. R. shipyard crew, and\nthat a Diesel-powered tug is enroute from thc coast to Nelson, tc\nbe unloaded and put into aervlce\nhere.\nJ. A. C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSuite 205 Medical Arts Bldg\nIT'S KOOLER AT\n\u2014 YOUR OWN\nCIVIC THCATRC\nNOW TILL SATURDAY 7C*ZM\nA Mad, Merry Measure of Nonsense!\nCarl Laemmle preeenn\nZASU PITTS\nHUGH\nO'CONNELL\nIn Univerial'i Laujh Riol,\nSHE GETS\n[HELEN TWELVETREES\nI'LUCIEN UTTLEFIELD\nPLU8 ANOTHER SINGING COWBOY PICTURE\n\"IT'LL TAKE MORE THAN BULLETS TO STOP ME!\nCALIFORNIA MAH\nFORaN\nLINDA PERRY \u25a0 MiLT KIBBEE\nTOM BROWER \u2022 JAMES FARLEY $\nED COBB \u2022 Directed hy NOEL SMITH\nHUMPHREY BOGART\nm mm \u25a0 mamsam \u2022 j\u00bb\nle\\Sa,seera-kmnma*'i**.kna\nFeature Starts at 2:16, 7:06 and 10:18\n  COMPANION FEATURE  \u2014\nSING! SWING! YOUTH HAS ITS FLING!\nFriday \"MOUNTAIN MUSIC\"\nSaturday and \"LAST TRAIN FOR MADRID\"\n!**S\u00ab*\u00ab-fc\u00bbS$$J\u00ab\u00bb-\u00bb^^\nmmmm\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. 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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"}]}}