{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0412435":{"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":"2022-03-16","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1936-09-07","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0412435\/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":" Vegetables and Fruits Selling\nfor Less on Local Market\n\u2014Pa_e Seven\nnc\nLIBRARY\nVICTOR IAJ3\niofc>a\n10 Clubs Tied at Top in the\nEnglish Football League\n\u2014Pa&e Five\n\u2014\u2014\nK, CAN\nVOLUME 35\nFIVE CENTS A COPY\nNELION. BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA-MONDAY MORNING. SEPTEMBER 7.1338\nNUMBIR 111\n10 DEAD IN\nFinest Highland Gaines in\nCity History Slated Today\nto\nFRANCE TO AID\nPOLISH ARMY\n43 Visiting Dancers, Pipers and Athletes\nVie With 17 of Nelson's Best; Parade\nOpens the Day at 9 A. M,\nForty-three visiting dancers, piper* and athletes ind\n17 of Nelson's belt in these competitive fields today will\nprovide one of the fineit Labor day Highland games thii\ncity hat yet teen. Calgary and Red Peer, Alta., are represented by some of the best dancing talent in th* west;\npiper* from Brandon, Trail, Balfour and Nelion will vie\nfor medals; and on track and field the belt athletes of the\nsouthern interior, together with a University of Minnesota\nrunner and a Halcyon Hot Springs distance man, will be\nout to fight for supremacy in their respective events.\nThe day will open with a parade from the Canadian\nLegion building to the Recreation grounds at 9 a. m., with\n> Mayor |. P. Morgan officially opening the games at 10.\nDancing and piping competitions are scheduled to start\nat  10:30, and track and\nfield at 1:30 p. m.\nGROWING IMPORTANCti\nIn both the dinting tnd piping,\nand In the trtcl   and field, the\ntalent offering It the finest lined\nup for competition m years, testifying to the growing importai.ee of\nthe day in the interior sports world.\nWith the competitors have come a\nnumber of spectators and supporters, and early Sunday evening most\nof the hotels in the city were taxed\nto capacity.\nThere are 36 track and field entries,   14   from   Wail,  four   from\nCranbrook, one each from Grand\nForks,   Minneapolis   and   Halcyon\nHot SprlngB, two from South Slocan and 13 from Nelson. The total\nentry for dancing and piping is 24,\nconsisting   of   10   Calgary,   seven\nTrail, four Nelson, one Red Deer,\none Balfour and one Brandon, Man.,\ndancers and pipers.\nOFFICIALS\nOfficials for the day ire:\nGeneral chalrmin\u2014jMbert Wil-\nlieh:*\nSecretary\u2014Gordon Fleet.\nDancing and piping-\nCommittee\u2014A. G. Ritchie, A. M.\nBanks, James Stout and Miss L.\nFleet.\nJudges \u2014 Walter Fife and Hugh\nMiddleton, Willow Point; Miss A.'\nCurrie, Kelowna.\nTrack and field-\nReferee\u2014Rex Whaley.\nRAMBOUILLET, France, Sept. 6\n(CP-Havas).\u2014France agreed today\nto lend Poland 2,250,000,000 francs\n(about $150,000,000) to modernize\nthe Polish army. The money will\nbe extended in five yearly credits\ntotalling 450,000,000 francs (about\n$30,000,000) each.\nThe loan was authorized in an\nagreement reached at a luncheon\ngiven at the summer palace here by\nPresident Albert Lebrun in honor\not General Edward Rydz-Smigly, inspector-general of the Polish army.\nFAIR WEATHER ON\nTAP FOR HOLIDAY\nSeptember in all ils glory greeted Nelson promenadora and motorists yesterday ior tb* ponth'i first\n\"WeWrM'iind ffbfflti'tttt vWath-\ner today ior countless district Labor Day programs and priv\u00bbte excursions.\nUnder clear skies and a warm sun\nthe mercury shot up to 78 degrees\nmaximum yesterday after having\nslipped to a low of 56 during the\nnight. Threatening rain clouds Saturday kept the temperature to a\nmaximum of 74 degrees, with the\nminimum for the period at 55.\nMcGeer Reveals He\nWas a Prospector\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 6 (CP). -\nSourdoughs of the Yukon and Alaska welcomed to their reunion sessions Saturday Gerald G. McGeer,\none-time boiler-maker, later barrister and now mayor of Vancouver\nand member of the house of commons, self-confessed gold prospector\nin his own right.\nTwenty-five years ago, the mayor\ntold the veterans of the northern\ngold rush, he discovered a gold deposit in the Great Central Lake district of Vancouver Island. He went\nback earlier this week and rediscovered his \"lost lode\" but doesn't hold\nmuch optimism about it.\nFRACTURES SKULL\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 6 (CP) -\nHerbert Balkwill, employee at the\nChampion and White gravel crushing plant on False creek, was in\nhospital in a critical condition with\na fractured skull tonight after falling from the company's wharf.\n(Continued on Page Five)\nGen. L. W. Shannon\nDies in East\nLONDON, Ont, Sept. 6 (CP).-\nGeneral Lewis William Shannon,\nC-M.G., former commander of military district No. 1 and one-time\npresident of The Canadian Press association, died here a the age of 76.\n(len. Shannon was president and\nmanaging director of the News\nPrinting company, Kingston; managing director of the Ottawa Citizen Company, Ottawa, and was president of The Canadian Press association in 1805. He was also city clerk\nof Kingston, 1900 to 1906.\nFREIGHT RATE8 HEARING\nPOSTPONED\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B.C., Sept.\n6 (CP)\u2014British Columbia's appeal\nfor lower domestic freight rates,\nscheduled to be heard in Ottawa\nSept. 15, has been postponed until\nNov. 4, it was revealed here Saturday by Tom Reid, M.P. for New\nWestminster.\nMrs. Anna M.M. Hamilton, One ol\nWindermere's Pioneers, Is Dead\nActive Church Worker and Writer Came to\nDistrict With Husband Over 26\nYears Ago; Graduate Nurse\nLAKE WINDERMERE, B.C., Spet.\n5.\u2014Anna Maud Mary Hamilton died\nFriday at her home, Kootenay\nLodge, Invermere.\nBorn in England at Lltherland,\nLancashire, daughter of the late\nCapt. Matthew Crowford and Mary\nMacWllllam Crowford, Mrs. Hamilton was a graduate of the Toronto\ngeneral hospital. She initiated the\nManitoba Association of Graduate\nNurses and was co-editor of the\nCanadian Nurse. She also started\nand superintended the hospital when\nit was first opened at Indian Head,\nSask.\nBefore her marriage she was at\none time associated with St. Hilda's\ncollege, Calgary. She was married\nin 1907 to Basil George Hamilton,\nwho predeceased her in December,\n1933. \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Hamilton were residents of Invermere for more than\n26 years, coming into the district\nwhen land was opened up for settlement. She wu president lor many\nyears of the Windermere District\nHospital Ladies' Aid and was a life\nmember of the Women's Auxiliary\nto the Church of England in Canada. She was a member of the Canadian Women's Press club since its\nsecond year. Mrs.: imilton for many\nyears had been locll correspondent\nfor various newspapers.\nShe was editor and Secretary\ntreasurer of the \"Living Message\",\nfc: the diocese of Kootenay and\npresident of the east Kootenay W. A.\nconference.\nShe \u00abnd her husband helped exceedingly In building up Christ\nChurch, Invermere. The lend on\nwhich the vicarage now stands was\ndonated to th* parish by Mr. and\nMrs. Hamilton.\nShe ls survived by one brother,\nCapt. Reginald Crawford of Waterloo, Lancashire, also two sisters,\nMrs. George D. Davidson of Calgary\nand Dr. Mary E. Crawford of Winnipeg.\nThe funeral will be held Mondiy.\nSebastion; L\no war d San\nin Victory\nJIM MIAN AND\nEDDIE MURPHY\nIN GOLF FINAL\nMiss Ellen Hughes to\nPlay Mrs. J. Cartmel\nfor Gosnell Cup\nLEIGH McBRIDE\nUPSETS STACK\nThen Bows Out Before\nAllan; Finals on\nTap Today\nCUP GOLF TODAY\nChtmplonthlp Flight Finals\nLeith Cup\nJim Allan vs. Eddla Murphy,\nboth ef Nelson.\nGosnell Cup\nMiss Ellen Hughtt, Ftrnlt, vt. Mrt.\nJohn Cartmtl, Nelton,\nNtlton Golf and Country club\ncoune todty will bt the scene of\ntwo title matches and of thi final*\nIn four flights of tht annual Leith\nand Gosnell trophy competitions,\nthe men't and ladlit' open tingles\nchampionships ef thl club. In addition  a two-ball  mixed foursome\nevent will be played todiy, and\nthe  annual  golf week-end  will\nwind up with a dance.\nTwo, Ilights of the men's singles,\nthl fourth and fifth, wire completed\nSunday, C. H. Hogarth winning the\nfourth flight when he defeated W.\nW. Ferguson and W. J. Waters the\nfifth by defeating Erie Sowerby.\nLeigh McBride provided tha up-\n\u2022et of tha tournament In the chtmplonthlp flight, eliminating Danny\nStack In tha first round. Stack,\none of tht leading golfers of Interior Brltlth Columbia and previously holder of several titles\nwhen ha resided In Winnipeg, was\nloading at tht turn. Leigh started\na great comehack at they went\nInto tha second nine, and by tha\ntime they reached the sixteenth\ntee ht wat two up.\nHe won the hola with \u2022 ptr\nfour and the game wat over, 3 up\nand 2 to go. The unexpected had\nbeen accomplished, and In doing\nIt McBride wat one under par\nwhen tht gamt finished. Stack\nplayed good golf, but It wasn't\nenough to stop Leigh.\nMcBRIDE ELIMINATED\nFollowing his victory over Stack,\nMcBride went through to the semifinals and there met his nemesis in\nJim Allan Sunday. A missed putt\non the last green defeated him. Although McBride was not playing as\ngood golf as on Saturday, when he\nbeat Stack, both were in excellent\nform, and put up a fine game.\n(Continued on Paga Eight)\nBaronet of Nova\nScotia at Coast\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 6 (CP).-A\nScottish nobleman with a baronetcy\nin Nova Scotia but no estates either\nin his ancestral country nor in the\nCanadian province was honeymooning in Vancouver today.\nLord Reay, chief of the Clan Mackay, and his bride of five months\narrived here near the end of their\nworld honeymoon.\nCurrent head of a family that has\nlong been prominent in Scottish history, Lord Resy explained his title\nof baronet of Nova Scotia was given\nto his ancestor, the first Lord Reay,\nby Charles I ln 1627. The Scottish\nestates passed from the family's\nhands about 100 years ago.\nMcGeer to Sail for\nEngland, Sept. 23\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 6 (CP). -\nTentative plans for a trip to England to consult British holders of\nVancouver bonds on interest reduc\ntion proposals and to make preliminary,arrangements for holding\na Brijlsh Empire fair in Vancouver\nin 1939, were announced by Mayor\nG. G. McGeer Saturday.\nThe mayor haa made tentative\nbookings to sail from New York\nSept. 23 aboard the R.M.S. Queen\nMary.\nCHILD KILLED AT COAST\nWHITE ROCK, B.C., Sept. \u00ab (CP)\n\u2014Struck by a southbound Great\nNorthern train as it neared White\nRock, eight-year-old Peter Rose,\nresident of this resort, was almost\ninstantly killed Saturday.\nBethrothal of Princess Alexandrine Louise of Denmark (above) to\nCount Lultpold in Caslell-Castell ot\nBavaria, has further narrowed thc\nfield ot eligible* in the search for a\nbride for King Edward VIII.\nNAZI CONVENTION\nSTARTS TUESDAY\nNURNBERG, Germany, Sept. I\niAfy.\u2014Htal QeraMnr movedhon lte\nNurnbcrg shrine tonight, officially\nunited in a glowing hatred of Communism, but with thousands of Jews\nand Catholics anxiously awaiting\nthe repercussions.\nNational Soclaliim's annual party\nconvention begins Tuesday. A million Nazis, and the sympathizers\nthey left at home, will hear the\nwords of Reichsfuehrer Hitler.\nScores of lesser lights will review\nthe past year of party power and\noutline the program for another 12\nmonths.\nKing Edward on Way\nto Vienna\n' ISTANBUL, Turkey, Sept. 6 (AP)\n\u2014King Edward concluded his cruising holiday and left for Vienna tonight on , President Kemal Ata-\nturk's personal train. His Majesty\nmay fly froi. Vienna to London by\nway of Paris, it was reported..\nSAN SEBASTION'S\nDEFENDERS SPLIT\nAS REBELS NEAR\nBoth Sides Claiming a\nVictory in Southwest\nKey Area\nROAD TO MADRID\nSAID TO BE OPEN\nDefenders Are Pushed\nBack Toward Fort,\nTrineherpe\nBy th* Auoclated Preta\nMilitiamen of Madrid smashed a\nsouthern Fsscist advance from the\nwest Sunday, recapturing the Ttla-\nvera De La Relna sector in what the\ngovernment hailed as a decisive turn\nln the civil war.\nSeizure of the key area, 70 miles\nsouthwest ot the capital, was declared by high staff officers of the\nSocialist \u2022 Communist - Republican\ngovernment to have dashed all rebel\nhopes of a march on Madrid.\nRebel headquarter! at Seville, on\nthe other hand, announced a loyalist\nforce at Talavera De L* Relna had\nbeen routed, while at Burgos the\nrebel junta declared a victory in\nthis lector had \"opened tbe road to\nMadrid.\" , .\n' The retail, however,, eontinued \u00bb\nsmashing offensive in the northwest,\nattacking defenders oh the Outskirts\not the Bay of Biscay, resort of San\nSebastian. Their red and gold flag\nflew over the burned citiee'of Irun\nand Fuenterrabla.\nWithin San Sebastian, the government defenders split. Basque nationalists among them urged surren.\nder; Communists arid Anarchists\nswore to fight to the death.\nA 19-year-old boy, the government announced, blew up a bridge\nnear Grande in the south, annihilating an intire column ot rebels. Reports trom Malaga said he had died\nof wounds received in the affair.\nMOVE ON SAN SEBASTIAN\nHENDAYE, France, Sept. 6 (AP)\n\u2014(By Robert B. Parker Jr.).\u2014Eager\nSpanish rebel armies, their red and\ngold flags flying from Irun and Fu-\nenterrabia, fought their way to San\n(Continued on Page Eight)\nThousands Cheer Mrs. Markham\nal Hew York After Ocean Flight\nEngine Failed 20 Minutes Before Airplane\nCrashed in a Nova Scotia Field\nNEW YORK, Sept 6 (AP)-(By\nSeth Moseley, Associated Press stall\nwriter)\u2014Mrs. Beryl *larkham, who\nflew the Atlantic alone from east\nto west, revealed tonight the engine\nof her tiny monoplane \"failed her\"\nover the ocean 20 minutes before\nshe crashed in a Nova Scotia field.\n\"I don't know what happened\u2014\nbut I took a drink of brandy, oh:\nso quickly,\" she said. \"I couldn't\nsee a thing\u2014moon nor water. But\nI knew I was over the ocean.\"\nShe said she believed a knock\nhad developed in her motor, but\nthat the plane picked up speed\nafter it slacked for about a minute.\nTHOUSANDS CHEER\nNEW YORK, Sept. 8 (AP) -\nThousands of New Yorkers cheered,\npolice motorcycle sirens shrieked,\nand Mrs. Beryl Markham said, \"America, it's jolly grand!\"\nThe English woman, first of her\nsex to fly the Atlsntic alone from\neast to west, landed at Floyd Bennet field today with another pilot\nhandling the \"stick\" but she was\nhappy and delighted over the reception ot MOO spectators and hundreds\nof others who waved to her during\nthe 28-minute automobile trip to\nManhattan.\nIt was her first trip to North America. It was made In bad storms\nand ended when the gasoline ot her\nlittle monoplane ran out over Nova\nScotia. The tiny plane, \"The Messenger.\" waa damaged badly In landing\nln a swamp near Loulsburg, but\nMrs. Markham today showed her\ninjuries only In a strip ot adhesive\nover her left eye and another strip\naround a finger ot her right hand.\nThe English sportswoman, who\nfollowed Uie westward solo trail\nblazed by her fellow countryman.\nCaptain James Mollison,. landed\nhere at 2:10 p.m. C.S.T. in a plane\nthat hid been sent to bring her from\nSydney, N.S.   .   .    .\nShe took off from Abingdon, England, Friday afternoon, fought headwinds and fog most of the way\nacross the ocean, and was forced by\nfuel exhaustion to come down in a\nmuddy field at Baleine Cove, N.S.\nSALVAGE OF PLANE\nTO BE DIFFICULT\nLOUISBURG, N.S, Sept. 8 <CP)-\nIts nose Jammed deep in a lonely\nbog, Mrs. Beryl Markham's tiny\nblue airplane rested tonight a few\nmiles from here at the end of her\ntransatlantic flight as the English\nmother received New York's plaudits.\nWhile two continents hailed her\nas the first of her sex to conquer\nthe Atlantic alone in a westward\nhop, Mrs. Markham today left her\ntiny blue machine in the Baleine\nCove swamp where she crashed Saturday and flew on to New York in\nanother plane.\n\"The Messenger\", In which she had\nhoped to be carried from England\nto New York, was embedded firmly in the ooze, its propeller smashed\nand a wing tip broken in the forced\nlanding that ended the 24-hour air\nvoyage yesterday afternoon. Three\nmiles of brush and swampland barred its removal to lhe nearest rotd.\nand engineers said getting it out\nwould be a problem.\nAfter hiking out from the crack-\nup spot with only a few scratches,\nMrs. Markham had spent the night\nit the home ot Capt. George Lewis.\nEarly today, she motored into Sydney,, about 40 miles away, and left\nin a plane sent here for her flight\nto New York.\nLABOR DAY HIGHLAND GAMES\nPROGRAM\n9 i.m.\u2014Parade, Canadian Legion building to Recreation grounds.\n10 a.m.\u2014Mayor J. P. Morgan officially opens the games.\n10:30 a.m.\u2014Highland dancing and piping.\nDANCING\u2014 Sailor's Hornpipe, under 13 years.\nHighland Fling, under 10 years. Highland Fling, open.\nSword Dance, under 10 years.      Sword Dance, open.\nSeann Trubhais, under 10 years. Seann Trubhals, open.\nSailor's Hornpipe, under 10 years. Sailor's Hornpipe, open.\nHighland Fling, under 18 years.  Irish Jig, open.\nSword Dance, under 18 years.       Highland Fling, open to Nelson\nSeann Trubhals, under 18 years. contestants only.\nSailor's Hornpipe, under 18 years.\nHighland Fling, under 13 years.  PIPING\u2014\nSword Dance, under 13 years.       Marches.\nSeann Trubhais, under 13 years.  Strathspreys and Reels.\n10.\n1:30 p.m.-TRACK  AND\n100 yards dash open, 1st heat.  11.\n100 yards dash, open, 2nd\nheat.\n1 mile, open.\n220 yards dash, open, 1st heat.\nHigh jump, open, men.\nHigh jump, open, girls.\n100 yards dash, final, men.\n880 yards, open.\n100 yards dash, open, girls,\n1st heat.\n100 yards dash, open, girls,\n2nd heat.\nPrizes will be given at the\nFIELD EVENTS\n5-mlle bicycle race.\nHop, step and jump.\nOld man's race, over 55 years.\n100 yards dash, final, girls.\n440 yards, open.\nBroad jump, girls.\nBroad jump, men,\nPole vault.\n1-mile relay, open, men.\nVi-mile relay, open, girls.\n1-mile bicycle.\n3-mile, open,\nclose ot each event.\nMISS P. GELINAS OF NELSON, MISS\nWRIGHT, TADANAC, AND TWO FROM\nKELOWNA IN TENNIS SEMI-FINALS\n..Koqitenay Title Play at..Trail Swings-rAte\nImportant Stages Today\nTRAIL, B. C, Sept. ft-With two\ndays' play completed in the annual\nchampionship tournament of the\nKootenay Tennis association and all\n10 competitions underway, every\nKootenay-Boundary center interested has still a representative in\nthe men's singles which,-except for\none match, are entirely in the quarter-finals. The ladies' singles are\nwholly and the men's doubles partly\nin the semi-finals. The mixed\ndoubles and the ladles' doubles are\nin the eights,\nOf the four stml-flnilliti In the\nladies' singlet Kelowna boattt two,\nMlu M. Stubbs, who hat to meet\nMiss P. Gelinas of Nelson, and\nMrs. M, Mathewson, who hat to\nmeet Mlts B, Wright of Tadanac.\nThe Nelson girl has won her way\nthrough tWo gruelling three-set\nmatches, beating Miss L. McDonell\not Rossland 2-6, T-5, 6-3 in the second round and Mrs. T. H. Weldon of\nTadanac 2-6, 7-5, 12-10 in the third.\nM. Major of Procter and G. Barwis of Harrop, last year's doubles\nchampions,, are in the semi-finals\nby a three-set victory over A. Hodgson and T. Romano of Nelson, 6-4,\n3-6,6-4.\nCLARK BEATS MURRAY\nOf the seven now in the quarterfinals ot the men's singles three required three sets to make the final\ngrade. B. Clark of Trail had a particularly hard time retiring G. Murray ot Tadanac, who pushed him\nto 7-5, 5-7, 6-4. J. Dowling of Grand\nForks had about the same kind of\nTime with P. Dewdney of Trail while\nW. O. Williams ot Trail after failing\nto take a game from L. Freeman of\nRossland in the first set cleaned up\nthe others.\nThe longest match of the tournament to date went to 62 games between F. Clark ot Nelson and R.\nHannay of Tadanac, the final score\nbeing 4-6, 8-6, 9-9, 11-9 in favor of\nClark. Darkness Saturday left the\nthird set a tie so they started a new\none Sunday morning, which also\nwas a 9-9 tie before Clark established the winning lead.\nAnother, long stager was that on\nSaturday afternoon in the mixed\ndoubles when W. O. Williams ol\nTrail and Mrs. T. H. Weldon of Tadanac paired to beat the Nelson team\nof T. Romano and Miss P. Gelinas\n12-10, 8-10, 6-3.\nBoth men's and ladies' consolations in the singles got underway\nSunday afternoon though not advancing far. In their case the two-\ngame is partly waived.\nVETERANS AND JUNIORS\ndeclared Ihey had never seen their\nequal.\nAmong visitors to TraU for the\ntournament is H. C. Gardner of Kel\nowna, Okanagan vice-president of\nthe British Columbia Tennis asso1\nelation.\nFollowing are the results to date\nMen's Singles\nFirst round\u2014L. Freeman, Rossland beat H. Ritchie, Cascade, 6-3,\n6-0; T. H. Weldon, Tadanac beat J\nPerine, Seatjle, 6-1, 6-1; J. McDonell, Rossland, beat N. Murray, Tad\nonac, 6-1, 6-2; C. W. Harrison. New\nDenver, beat A. Eldridge, Trail, 6-1\n6-1; F. Clark, Nelson, beat R. Hannay. Tadanac, 4-6, 8-6, 9-9, 11-9;\nP. Dewdney, Trail beat, L. Simpson,\nNelson, 6-3, 6-4; L. Williams, Trail,\nbeat D. Bell' Nelson, 6-2, 6-3; J.\nDowling, Grand Forks, beat T. Fraser, Vancouver, 7-5, 6-1; J. Salter,\nTadanac beat J. A. Stewart, Nelson,\n6-3, 6-2; E. Atwood, Grand Forks,\nwon from H. H. Shaw, Vancouver,\nby default; R. A. D. West, Castlegar, beat J. C. West, East Trail, 6-2,\n6-3; S. Angus, Tadanac, beat H. Min\nion, Rossland, 7-5, 6-0; G. Winter,\nGrand Forks, won from R. Webb,\nTrail ,by default; N. Rhodes, Trail,\nbeat S.'McCatty, Tadanac, 6-1, 6-2;\nF. Phillips, Nelson, won from A,\nAhrens, Nelson, by default; E. Haley.\nTrail, beat P. Tjebbes, Grand Forks,\nStuart, Trail, 6-8, 6-1, 6-1; A. M.\n6-4, 6-1; N. German, Nelson, beat R.\nChesser, Tadanac, beat W. Perine,\nSeattle, 6-4, 6-2.\nR. R. Horner, Nelson, beat H. Oxley, Trail, 10-8, 3-6, 6-0.\nSecond round\u2014T. Romano, Nelson, beat J. Campbell, Trail 6-0, 6-1;\nP. Jones, Trail won from B. Odman,\nSeattle, by default; W. O. Williams,\nTrail, beat F. Morris, Nelson, 6-2,6-1;\nL. Freeman, Rossland, beat T. H,\nWeldon, Tadanac, 6-4, 6-3; J. Dowllng, Grand Forks, beat J. Salter,\nTadanac, 6-3, 5-7, 6-1; A. M. Chesser, Tadanac, beat D. Williamson,\nTrail, 6-1, 6-0; A. Hodson, Nelson,\nbeat M. Major, Procter, 6-2, 6-1; B.\nClark, Trail, beat K. Plncott, Grand\nForks, 6-1, 6-0; G. Murray, Tadanac,\nbeat L. Evans, Trail, 6-1, 6-1.\n(Continued on Page Eight)\n17-YEAR-OLD IS\nSOU SURVIVOR\nIN U.S. TRAGEDY\nAll Bodies Are Burne'd\nBeyond Recognition;\nCrowd Helpless\nGIRL CRAWLS\nFROM FLAMES\nPlane Plunged Into\nWoods Soon After\nthe Takeoff\nPITTSBURGH, Stpt. 6 (AP)<-\nInvettlgatori dragged a charred\nbody from the wreckage of a tight'\nseeing airplane today and brought\nto 10 the dead from a crath Into\nwooded Buttermilk Hollow near\nhere Ittt night,\nThe big plane plungad Into th*\nwoodi only a moment or two after It took off from the Allegheny\ncounty airport with a gay party of\nsightseers promised \"a thrill or\nyour money back.\"\nLinda McDonald, 17-yetr-old\nMiami ichool girl, tola survivor\nof the crash, said;\n\"In the air we hit leveral air\npockets, but I didn't think muoh\nof It ... Then wi hit the land\nand the plane went up In flamei-\"\nAirport attaches listed the vie-.\nInn:, as;\nJohn A- Powers, of Miami, Fl\u00bb.|\nLinda McDonald's escort,\n(Continued on Paga Five)\nSIX KILLED BY\nRACING AUTO\nBELFAST, Sept, 8 (CP). \u2014 Six.\npersons were dead tonight and i.\nscore Injured after being mowed,\ndown by a racing car which got out-\nof control and ploughed into th*\nonlooking crowd.\nThe car, driven by J. Chamber*,\nwas competing in the annual international tourist race Saturday. The\ncourse was rain-drenched and illP\"\npery.\nSuddenly, the car hurtled from\nthe track at _ speed estimated at\n100-miles-per-hour, tore through a\nwire barricade into the spectator*\nand spread death and havoc,\nHeld for Passing\nWorthless Bill\nVANCOUVER,  Sept.  6   (CP). -e**l\nCaptured   atter   a   police   chas*,\nDwight Hurlburt of Vancouver is In\nthe city jail, charged with passing\na worthless $20 Mexican bill. -\nIn the early hours Saturday police\nsaw three men in an altercation with\na woman on a street corner. \u25a0 Th*\nwoman told them the men had come\ninto hcr establishment and, buying\nrefreshments, had tendered a $20\nbill which she later discovered to\nbe a Mexican bill. The altercation\nfollowed as she pursued them to the *\nstreet. Hurlburt's companions were'\nreleased by police after questioning.\n18 MONTH8 FOR THEFT     {\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 6 (CP) \u2014'\nWhen Allan J. Cameron was acquitted in county court Friday on *\ncharge of retaining stolen good*\nafter swearing he stole the article*\nin question, Crown Prosecutor W.,:\nS. Owen just changed the charge'\nto one of theft and Saturday Cameron stood sentenced to 18 monthi\nimprisonment. Judge J. C. Lennox\nwas forced to acquit the accused despite his assertion that he stole the\narticles in question, because ot a\nrecent court of appeal judgement\nunder which a thief cannot alio be\nthe receiver ot stolen goods,    --\u25a0\nHELD FOR MURDER  ,\nOTTAWA, Sept. 6 (CP)\u2014Michael .\nAugustino, 46-year-old father ot\nseven children, was charged with.\nmurder tonight following the pocket-\nknife slaying of his wife, Mary, ln ,\na local hotel last night. ,\nDISTRICT MINES WIN Al COAST;\nC. M. & S. GETS SPECIAL AWARD\nVANCOUVER. Sept. 6  (CP). -\nThe veterans' doubles Js goingto j Molly mine 0, _#__ Creek> Kelson,\nwon first prize for the molybdenite\nprove quite a competition. There\nore also Junior even's. It is going to\ntake all Monday forenoon to bring\nthe various competitions up to thc\nfinals. Monday afternoon will be devoted to the finals, which will be\nplayed on the Tadanac courts.\nThe weather has been perfect,\ncloudy Saturday and sunny but\nbreezy Sunday. A shower Sunday\nnight will not affect the fine clay\ncourts, which visitors have been\ncommenting on as without superior\nanywhere.  The  Seattle  delegation\nmineral exhibit at the Pacific exhi\nbition here, it was revealed today\nby tlie exhibition association.\nThe Consolidated Mining te Smelting Company of Canada, Ltd., was\nawarded a special prize for its mineral display.\nWinners in other exhibits included:\nWhynot mlnersl claims of Tula-\nmeen, second prise in the lead or\nlead sliver ore display.       \t\nVelvet mine of Rowland, Unit ;\nprize in the gold copper or* ihow.\nYmlr Yankee Girl mines ol Ymlr,\nsecond prize in the gold, silver and\nlead ore display.\nSullivan mine of Kimberley flrit\nprize ln the lead-zinc ore exhibit.\nJA. J. Curia of Kaslo took fint\nprist In the mingmtit ore die-\nplay, w. R. Wllion of Princeton\nand Ftrnlt hid a tecond prize\nIn tht coil exhibit and Donald Y.\nBird ef Vernon wat awarded tecond prize In tha Mica, asbestos or\ntny other Important non-metallle\nmineral exhibit     -   -\nwmw i, .\nv.-\n ,\n__^__^_\n-\n MOI two\nBALL RINK IS\nTROPHY WINNER\nLAWN BOWLING\nDefeats Wheeler Four\n26-14 in Final\nMatch\nJames Ball'i rink won tht E. Y.\nBrake memorial trophy and the\nmixed rink championship of the\nNelson Lawn Bowling elub Sunday\nafternoon with a 28-14 victory over\nF. E. Wheeler's quartette-in the\n21-end final.\nThe score 11 recorded by Umpire\nJack Draper was:\nBall  222103022100103202003\u201426\nTHE LAZY COLON\nInactivity of the largo bowel, or\ncolon, leaves poisons In the system\nto cause serious and painful diseases.\nYou can prevent and thoroughly\nrelieve this chronic form of const*-\npation by using\nBl. CHASE'S\n*.vi\"\"i \u2022\u2022\u25a0   ooTOaoMiioisaaosio\u2014M\nBall's rink Included Mrs. Ball, C.\nI. Archibald and Miss B. Johnson,\nwhile Wheeler's aides were Mrs. A.\nLane, Bert Allan and Mrs. W. Calbick.\nTwo mixed doubles matches also\nwere played Mrs. E. Penwill and\nE. Penwill beating Mrs. Wesley Calbick and 3. Oraham 10-0, while Mrs.\nr. E. Wheeler and Mr. Wheeler beat\nMrs. 6. N. May and P. Coulter 11-9.\nMen's singles competition tor the\nDally News trophy is to be played\nthis afternoon, club officials hoping\nto run the elimination contest\nthrough to the final\n\/\/\nMan\" li Subject of\nLesson-Sermon\n\"Man\" was the subject of the\nLesson-Sermon in First Church of\nChrist, Scientist, ln Nelson Sunday.\nThe Golden Text was: \"Mark the\nperfect m\u00bbn, and behold the upright; for the end of that man is\npeace\" (Psalms 37: 37).\nAmong the citations which comprised the Lesson-Sermon was the\nfollowing from the Bible: \"And\nJesus, moved with compassion, put\nforth his hand, and touched him, and\nsaith unto him, I will; he thou clean.\nAnd as soon as he had spoken, Immediately the leprosy departed from\nhim, and he was cleansed\" (Mark 1:\n41, 42).\nThe Lesson-Sermon also Included\nthe following passage trom the\nChristian Science textbook, \"Science\nand Health with Key to the Scriptures\" by Msry Baker Eddy; \"Jesus\nbeheld ln Science the perfect man,\nwho appeared to him where sinning\nmortal man appears to mortals. In\nthis perfect man the Saviour saw\n|gM>tjY\u00abLlv\u00abr   Pills God's own likeness, and this correct\nmtmttmmmm^mttmttmmmma^mmmm, 'view of man healed the sick.\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON, B.C., HOTELS\np=s=\n\"Finest In ths Interior\"\nr\nHUME HOTEL\nFree Bus Service Geo. Benwell, Prop.\nBREAKFAST 30c snd UP\nLunehes40oto60o Dinner 40c to \u00ab8o\nROTARY AND GYRO HEADQUARTERS\nTELEPHONE 787 NELSON, B.C.        422 VERNON ST.\nPAY RESPECTS\nHENRY QUASI\nNEL-.ON DAILY NEWS. NELSON, B.C-MONDAY MORNINO, SEPTEMBER 7. IM*\n\"Please Drink Beer on the Street\"\nFriends Gather Qt His\nHome for Funeral\nServices\nImmediate friends of the Quasi\nfamily gathered at the family residence, 918 Kootenay street, Saturday afternoon to pay their last respects to tbe memory ot Henry\nGeorge Christian Quasi who passed\nSway suddenly at Kootenay Lake\nGeneral hospital Thursday. He had\nlived in Nelson five years after\nspending short periods on the prairie and at the cout following emigration trom Scotland. He wss a\nGreat War veteran, having served\nfour years.\nFuneral services at the home and\nat the graveside ln the city cemetery\nwere conducted by Rev. T. J. S.\nFerguson.\nPallbearerB were Horace Jay, H.\nRenwick, A. S. Gray and F. A. Whitfield.\nFloral offerings made up a beautiful dlsplsy.\nPrairie People\nBuy al Procter\nWill  Erect a Home;\nYouth Goes to\nJunior High\nBOXLA LEAGI\nBANSIHP0R\nFOR PLAYOFFS\n \u2014\nMay Use Them Finish\nthe Second Half\nHowever\nall Costume\nSEMI-FINAL TO\nOPEN IN TRAIL\nHUME\u2014 E. M. Drummond, E. A.\nLate, W. J. Cumming, E. C. Dohe-\ngene, G. Zoellner, A. C. Madden, H.\nMcDonald, J. Hongmore, Vancouver; Mrs. T. Bond, R. J. Houston,\nWinhipeg; H. Conesay, T. A. Burns,\nR. Steedman, Medicine Hat; C. W.\nSmith, J. Macdougall, Calgary; H. F.\nSnook, Mrs. Miller Mrs. Turnley,\n\u25a0Mrs. A. Meade, Mrs. S. Anderson,\nMiss Anderson, L. S. Van Zile, Miss\nI. Smith, J. Guiss, Spokane; A, &\nMonkhouse, Trsll; M. J. Fisher, Lad-\nner; R. S. Moffatt, Mrs. Summer,\nMiss Summer, M. Wheaton, E. Wood,\nM. Haley, Cranbrook; D. Halcrow,\nW. H. Percival, Penticton; W. F.\nPratt, **. Metcalfe, Rossland; L. H.\nYoung, Oceanslde; M. J. Barclay,\nKaslo.\nTHE SAVOY HOTEL\n\"Where the Guest is King\"\nMODERN SAMPLE ROOMS\nFully Licenced\n124 Baker St.       W. K. Clark, Prop.       Nelson, B. C.\n**s*r*\n-\u25a0 NEW GRAND HOTEL\nP. L. KAPAK, Proprietor\nCommercial, Tour!*** :.id Family Trade Solicited.\nFree Bus meets all Greyhound arrivals.\nFree Parking    ' NELSON, B.C. Phone 234\nOccidental Hotel\n70S Vernon St. Phone B87L\nH. WASSICK, Prop.\nSPECIAL MONTHLY RATES\nGood Comfortable Rooms\nFully Licenced\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcome Awaits You\nJA8. A. MADDEN, Prop.\nCompletely Remodelled\nHot and   Cold   Water\nIn the HEART of the City\nPHONE U 605 WARD ST,\nEDGEWOOD, B. C, HOTELS\nARROW LAKES HOTEL ^ffSS\nPlace on the\nE. NIEDERMAN,\nProprietor\nComfortable Rooms\nGood Meals\nRosd to Vernon\n1\nSPOKANE, WASH., HOTELS\nWhen in SPOKANE You Will Enjoy Staying it tht\n410\nRiverside Ave,\nHotel Volney\nSpokane,\nWashington\nOpposite the Paulsen Building\nEVERY COURTESY SHOWN OUR CANADIAN GUESTS\n1\nSTANFORD Hotel, Spokane\nit SPRACUE and MADISON\nNice Clean Rooms\nReasonable\u2014Free Parking\nTRANSPORTATION - Possenger and Freight\nHOLIDAY IN THE OKANAGAN\nVIA GREYHOUND LINES\nSpecial Circle Tour\u2014Nelson, Nakusp, Vernon, Penticton, Oliver,\nGrand Forks. Trail, and back to Nelson. Start at any point, completing the circle for only $14.40, good for 60 days, or $10,00, good\nior week-end.\nINTERIOR CREYHOUND LINES LTD.\u2014Penticton, B. C.\nSee Your Local Greyhound Agent\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE NELSON TWICE DAILY\n5 a.m. and 10:30 a.m. Except Sunday\nTrail-Phone l 35        Nelson-Phone 35\nTrail Livery Co.\n\u00bb M. H. MclVOR, Prop.\nPROCTER, B.C.-Jamei Bichan,\naccompanied by Mr, and Mrs. Har'\nold Merrlfield, left Sundsy tor\nTrail.\nMrs. W. 0. Rose of. ielson returned home Tuesday after three months\nholiday hire. Mr. and Mrs. W. R.\nJarvls and daughter, Mary, motored\nto Nelson with her.\nPaul Ritchie left Monday for Nelson to take Junior high.\nMr. and Mrs. A. J. -arter, owners\nof the Carter tourist cabins at Elko,\nbought two and a half acres of\nAlexander's land where they plan\non making a home.\nMrs. M. MacKinnon was among\nshoppers to Nelson Monday.\nMiss J. C. McLean of Nelson arrived Tuesday to visit Mrs. A. Gallup and Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Ward\nat the Outlet hotel.\nT, Roynon of Nelson recently\nmade his annual business visit in\nconnection with the sale of shrubs\nand fruit trees.\nMr. and Mr!\" Rex Jarvis of Nelson returned to their home Monday.\nColin Major visited Nelson on\nTuesday.\nSchool has again started bringing\nMiss Peggy Cooper and David\nPeachy from Balfour and Richard\nHolmes from Harrop as the only\noutsiders. Beginners in the junior\nroom are Herbert Donaldson, Ewen\nMcPhee, EH Popoff, Dolly Schwarok, Lily Joan Ferg, and Carrie\nClayton.\nForest Ranger Webber of Kaslo\nvisited Procter Monday in connection with a forest fire reported to\nbe burning near McDoncd's boat\nhouse.\nOn Thursday aftMnoon the Ladies'\nAid ot the United church held a\ntea and sale of work and home\ncooking at the home of Mrs. Oscar\nROBERT AMES (LEFT) AND JAMES WARNER\nYou've heard of many freak laws, especially south of the 49th. Well,\nhere's another one for you. Bottled beer must be drunk on the sidewalk\nor at the* curb, not ln stores ln Utah. And there's a $25 penalty on consuming bottled beer insle the premises wher bought. A special session of the\nUtah state legislature was called for Aug. 24, and the beer law may be\ngiven an airing. ABOVE, Robert Ames (LEFT), clerk ln an Ogden store,\nls telling James Warner, a customer, to drink his bottled beer outside.\nSynopsis of Land Act\nJoftnson. It was well attended and\nproved very successful. Mrs. H.\nClift and Mrs- N. McLeod were in\ncharge of the fancy work and home\ncooking. Those assisting Mrs, Johnson in serving were Mrs. J. McLeod, Mrs. M. MacKinnon, Mrs. J.\nSewell and Miss Annie MacKinnon.\nMr. and Mrs. Clayton Muirhead\nand daughter of Trail are visiting\nMr. Muirhead'6 parent* Mr. and\nMrs. W, Muirhead here.\nMrs. O. Johnson, Miss Annie MacKinnon and Henry Johnson motored to Nelson Thursday evening.\nSocial News\nof Rossland\nROSSLAND, B.C.-Mr. and Mrs.\nC. Christlanson and family have returned from a week's holiday at\nRock Creek.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nHarley Davidson is holidaying at\nthe coast.\n* *   \u2022\nJ. Palm of Kimberley is a guest\nof his daughter, Mrs. E. Atkinson.\no   .   .\nMrs. J. Grigg entertained with a\ndinner party in honor of the birthday of her daughter, Miss Winnie\nGrigg, cards being played after dinner. Prize for high score went to\nMrs. Oliver and the consolation to\nFreda Ogg. Refreshments were\nserved at a late hour. Miss Grigg\nwas the recipient of many lovely\ngifts. Those present were Miss Eun.\nice Cook (Trail), Miss Elinor Tomich, Miss Kate Tomich, Mrs. C. He,\nMrs. J. Bradley, Mrs. Alice King,\nMr. and Mrs. Oliver, Mr. and Mrs.\nGrigg and the guest of honor.\nMrs. S. Beckman and daughter,\nBarbara, left yesterday for Red\nDeer, Alta., where she will spend\nthe next month with her parents,\nMr. and Mrs. J. Wright. Mrs. Beckman will also visit at Edmonton,\n* \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. H. Hoyte is visiting with her\nparents at Rocky Mountain House,\nAlta.\n\u2022 \u00bb       \u2022\nMrs. W. A. Aiken and son. Arnold,\nleft for Vancouver where they will\ntake up residence.\nMrs. W. D. Wilson left Friday\nnoon for Vancouver, where she was\ncalled by the serious illness of hcr\nsister.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nJimmie LeBargc is visiting at thc\nhome of his grandmother, Mrs. J.\nWood, in Wynndel.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMiss Georglna Rowlings has returned to Trail after visiting with\nnUt-lMPtlONB -    ~~\nVACANT, unreserved, wirTeyrt Crown\nIrvndj msy tea pre-empltd by British\n\u2022ubjecti ovtr 18 years of age, and by\nsilent-, on deiltrlAs; Intention to beeomo\nBritish subjects, conditional upon residence, occupation aad unprortmenU\nFull information concerning rrr-rmp-\ntions Is given In Bulletin No. 1, Land\nSeries, \"How to Pre-empt Lfcnd,\" copies of\nwhich can ba obtained free of charge by\naddressing the Department of Lands, Victoria, B.C.; Bureau of Provincial information, Victoria, or any Government Agent\nRecords will ba granted covering only\nland suitable for agricultural purposes\nwithin reasonable distance of road, school\nand markc*i>ig facilities and which is not\ntimberland, I.e., carrying over 6.000 board\nfeet per acre east of the Coait Range and\n1,000 fett per acrt west of that Range.\nApplications for pre-emptions ara to be\naddressed to the Land Commissioner of\nthe hand Recording Division la which the\nland applied for ls situated, on printed\nforms obtained from the Commissioner.       ,\nm-wptkms mOt'S. cseeuplsd !6r (in I her \u00abunt ln th's <*\u25a0&\u2022\nyears and Improvements made to value of\n\u202210 per acre, Including clearing and cultivating at least fives acres, before a Crown\nGrant can be received.\nPre-emptions carrying part time rondl\u00ab\ntions of occupation are also granted.\nPURCHASE OR MEASE\nApplications ara received for purchase\nof vacant and unreserved Crown lands,\nnot being timberland. for agricultural\npurposes. Minimum prlre. Of first-elate\n(arable) land ta *S per acre, and soeond-\ncltfSi (erasing) land, $2.50 per acre.\nFurther Information Is given IA Bulletin\nNo. 10, Laad%erlis, \"Purchase and Lease\nof Crown Lands.\"\nAs a partial relief measure, reverted\nlands may be acquired by purchase ln ten\nequal iditaltaenM, with the first pkyment\nsuspended for two years, provided taxes\nare paid when du* and improvements are\nmade during tho first two years M not\nleas than 10ft ot th* appraised value.\nMill, factory or industrial situ on\ntimber land, not exeeedlng 40 acres, may\nb* purchased or leasU. the conditions\nincluding payment of stumpag*.\nUnhirvayad mis, not exceeding 30\nacres, may ba leased aa homesltes, conditional upon a dwelling being eractad in\nth* first year, title being obtained after\nrtsldene* and Improvement conditions ar*\n\u25a0fulfilled and land ba* ba\u00aba surveyed.\nFor trMlBf and industrial purposes\nareas   not   exceeding   0M   acres   may   ba\nleased by on* person or a company.\nTrader tho Orating Act tha Province I*\ndivided into ftrating districts and th*\nrang* administered under rasing regulations amended from time to time to meet.\nvarylag conditions. Annual grallng permits are issued based on oertaln monthly\nrates per head of atock. Priority la grating privileges Is given to resident stock\nowners, fitotlc-owaers may form assocla-\ntions for range management. Free or\npartially free permits available for settlers,\ncampers and travellers, up to ten head.\nMisses Florence and Dorothy\nCrerar, who have been guests of\nMr, and Mrs. M. Dally, have returned to their homo in this city,\n\u2022 \u2022    a\nMrs. M. M. Butorac was in Nelson\nThunday attending the meeting of\nthe jewellers of west Kootenay.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Mary Bell of the postoffice\nstaff h3s left for Nelson to take up\nresidence.\n\u2022 *   *\nMiss Oila Behtley, who hag been\na guest of her brother and sister-in-\nlaw, Mr. and Mrs. Norman Bentley,\nhas returned to her home in Kimberley.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMr. snd Mrs. William H. Reid left\nthis morning for a holiday at the\ncoast.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nGeorge Olobarwich left Thursday\nfor Nelson, where he will visit Indefinitely.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. It. J. Portman are\nvisiting in Kimberley.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00ab\nMrs. W. Johnson has returned to\nher home ln Trail after visiting with\nfriends in this city.\n\u2022 \u2666   \u2022\nMrs. Arthur Thomas left for a\nholiday at Vancouver.\nUse the Want Ads\u2014It Pays\nReturn lo Forks\nFrom (oast\nGRAND FORKS, B.C.-Mr. and\nMrs. W. S. McPherson and daughters Ellen and Louise have return*\ned after spending a week at New\nWestminster.\nMiss Annie Ronald, left Saturday\nfor Vancouver, where she will attend business college.\nMiss Alice Clark arrived Monday\nfrom Greenwood as a student at\nthe local high school.\nMiss Marie McDonnell arrived\nMonday from Greenwood to commence school at the local high\nschool.\nMaster Corry Wright returned to\nGreenwood Saturday after visiting Mr. and Mrs. Jack Kenyon.\nMiss Myrtle Johnson of Christina\nlake arrive Monday to continue here\nstudies at the high school.\nMiss Ella Phillips of Nelson ar-\ndived Saturday to continue her\nduties as teacher on the local school\nstaff, .\nRay Orser, teacher of the centra]\nschool staff, arrived Sunday from\nGreenwood.\nMr. and Mrs. F. Parsons returned\nMonday after spending the summer\nat Cascade, guests of the latter's\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. R. G. Ritchie.\nMr. and Mrs. J. C. Tonks, and\ndaughter Beth returned to town on\nMonday. They were accompaned\nby their sons, George and David,\nwho will visit here prior to leaving\nto attend university.\nMaurice Kllnkhamer and Miss\nBlanche Wagge arrived in town on\nMonday from the'Coast to resume\ntheir studies as teachers at the local\nhigh school.\nMaster Barrie Cleeton and Miss\nMary Cleeton arrived in town Tuesday to   attend local schools.\nMiss Ellen McPherson left Monday for Christina lake where she\nis a teacher at the school.\nMiss lone Klngsley and Irvin\nKingsley arrived Tuesday to attend high school.\nVal McDonald of Greenwood arrived Tueiday to continue his studies at high school.\nMiss Evelyn Hawkes of Midway\nhas arrived to attend high school.\nMr. and Mrs. R. C. Crowe and\ndaughters of Trail were visitors to\nMr. and Mrs. A. Crowe here Sunday.\nMr. and Mrs. M. Kubin and family returned Wednesday after\nseveral days in Vancouver.\nMiss Edith Swanlund of Boundary Falls arrived Monday to at\ntend high school.\nMrs. E. C. Henniger and children\nhave returned to town from their\nsummer cottage at Chrlstna lake.\nMrs. Stanley Hulll and family returned Tuesday from Christina\nLake.\nMrs. E. S. Reynolds, her daughter\nBetty and son Bim returned from\nChristina lake Monday.\nMrs. Norman McKay and sons,\nMaurice and Bob returned Monday\nfrom Vancouver.\nMiss Dolly Sutherland leaves tomorrow for Victoria where she\nwill attend normal school.\nReferees Are Assured\nBacking in Handling\nthe Players\nNo newly arrived playen are\nto be used In tha Kootenay box\nlacrosse playoffs.\nFirst game of the semi-finals will\nbe played In Trail September 18,\n\u2022nd tha second In Nelson September 21.\nReferees hava full backing of\nthe league executive and will be\nfully supported In any effort ta\nourb unnecessary roughness In\ngames.\nThe foregoing were among decisions handed down by the West\nKootenay Lacrosse league at a meeting in Trail, according to Nelson officials who attended the meeting.\nOwing to Rossland being crippled\nthe Miners will be permitted, when\nthey play in Nelson Wednesday, to\nuse two men recently arrived from\nthe coast, but must drop them in the\nplayoffs. Nor will Trail be permitted\nto use new players from the coast\nin the playoffs.\nRossland Is without the services\nof Davies, who has a knee injury,\nand Bailey, also injured, for Wednesday night and may also have\nto play a substitute for Esart.\nBrian Thompson of Trail, popu-\nlary regarded as one of the best boxla referees in this section, will be\nhandling the Trail-Nelson semi-final\nplayoff games with Jock Walmsley\nof Rossland as judge of play. Mr.\nThompson will also handle Wednesday night's game in Nelson, but his\njudge of play ls not yet appointed.\nThe league has informed referees\nthey have full backing in their handling of obstreperous players. In the\nBuy\nFINK'S fine\nFURNITURE\nOn the Deferred\"\nPayment Plan.\nHarrop People\nVisit in Trail\nHARROP, B- C.-Mr. and Mrs. E.\nHarrop and daughter, Miss Jessie\nHarrop are guesti over the weak-\nend with Mr. and Mrs. J. Thompson'\nat Trail.\nMr. and Mrs. Joseph Mackerelh\nleft Friday to visit a few days with\ntheir son and daughtjr-ln-law, Mr.\nand Mrs. Mackereth ot Broadwater,\nJ. Berry was a Nelson visitor on\nFriday.\nThe fingerprints of a living person can be distinguished from those\nof a dead person because of the\nchemicals given off by living skin.\nGold has been tried as a specific\nremedy for a variety of maladies.\nIt has been used ln the 'treatment of\ntuberculosis and lately in the treatment of disease of the joints.\nA smart little elbow-length cape\nof beige kasha\u2014a material that is\nstaging a comeback\u2014is the outstanding feature of this fall costume\nworn by Grade Allen, radio and\nfilm comedienne. It ls bordered with\nsable.\nThe dress ls of the same material,\nIs simply styled and has a pleated\nbodice. A saucy hat ot fluted faille\nin dark brown matches the bag and\nsandals which, with beige gloves,\ncomplete the costume.\ncase of players starting fights their\nfirst offence will draw a five-minute penalty, the second 10 minutes\nand the third the remained of the\ngame. When a player is banished for\nthe remainder ot the game substitution may be made by his team\nafter 10 minutes.\nHARROP PUPILS\nTAKE THE HIGH\nCOURSE, NELSON\nHARROP, B.C.-W. W. Brltton has\nrented his place to L. Peel, and Mrs.\nPeel and the children arrived from\nCranbrook a few days ago accompanied by Mrs. Peel's sister, Miss\nMurphy. Mr. and Mrs. Britton and\nthe latter's mother, Mrs. A. Flynn,\nwill spend the winter ln Nelson.\nRobert Kale and son, Bruce and\nEdward Logger of Divide, Sask.,\nstopped here a few days recently\nand visited Mr. and Mrs. Frank Andrews when en route to Kelowna to\ntheir winter homes.\nMr. and Mrs. H. Fairbank have\ntaken up residence In Nelson where\ntheir son and daughter will attend\nhigh school.\nAmong those attending high\nschool in Nelson this year are the\nMisses Joan Ashby, Ada Andrews,\nAnnie Kosma and Walter Fltchett.\nSchool opened here Tuesday\nmorning with Misa Ruby Whitfield\nof Nelson in charge.\nThe game of softball has revived\nInterest here again and a game was\nplayed on Sunday between Procter\nand Harrop teams, the locals winning over their visitors with 18\nruns as against 14 for Procter.\nPlayers were as follows:\nProcter\u2014Bud Mclvor, Colin Major, Albert Helghton, Hallam MacKinnon, John Bonacci, Lloyd Bullock, Angus MacKinnon, Louis Kosma. and Basil Pakenham.\nHarrop Outlaws\u2014Sam Klnakln.\nFred Podmoroff, V. Rowley, Cyril\nFltchett, Louis Andrews, David\nFairbank, William Howard, Walter\nFitchett and W. D. Ogllvie.\nScore keeper\u2014Isa MacKinnon.\nUmpire\u2014J. Parker. Base umpire\n\u2014Raymond Hong.\nYvonne Prepares Sister Emelie's Coiffure\nYvonne, taking time off from her \"work\" as\nan actress in filming of the Dionne quintuplets'\nlatest movie, goes about a bit of fancy hair-dressing, but sister Emelie, subject of the coiffure art\nist's attentions, seems a bit skeptical of the results.\nAfter all, says Emelie, I'm a prima donna too.\u2014\nCopyright, by Central Press Canadian. I\nAs a Matter of Value\nFrom the standpoint of value received, there is scarcely\nanything that approaches the Nelson Daily News. The\nNews offers the people of the Kootenays a value greater\nthan any other necessity of the household.\nA few cents per cdpy for something that is constructive,\nnew and appealing daily is a value that no progressive-\nspirited family can afford to overlook.\nMore than\nt+ie News.\n5000 families  recognize the VALUE of\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper^.,\n\u25a0\u2022' -it'1 i^i tAailKafc^-ii^ifBfi-frit^w^tii iirii nis.nl\n.i-^i^^ui.:\n   \t\n mmmmmmmmm\n\" m\n1*5\n\u2014     NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C-MONDAY MORNING. 8EPTEMBE1\", 7, 19:3\n- PAGE THRU\nPUT A NEW\nFRONT ON YOUR\nSUIT . . .\nNEW TAILORED\nBLOUSES\nShort  and  long sleeves\n5ATIN \u2014 SHEERES\nCREPES\nJERMAN\nHUNT'S\nFleady-to-Wear\nPhone 200\n- Dry   Goods\nBaker St.\nEIGHT ACTS TO     SOCIAL HAPPENINGS\nENTERTAIN THE      IN NELSON CITY\nE AID   FI ATDAUC \"\"\"\"' column '\u2022 conducted by Mrs. M. A. Vigneux. All news of a\nrillK   r AlKwIlJ      social nature including receptions, private eutertaiuinents, personal\n;    items, marriages, etc, will appear in this coluniu. Telephone Mn.\nVigneux at her home, 519 Silica street\nZerado's \"Varieties of\n1936\" Coming to\nNelson\nm tron of the Slocan Community\nhospital at New Denver, who will\nreturn home today.\nMr. and Mrs. C. W- Appley -d\nare spending the week-end and\nholiday at one of the Robertson\ncottages at Crescent ^ay. They heve\nas their guests Mrs. Appleyard't I jjr. and Mrs. E. 0. White of He-\nbrother-ln-law and sister, Mr. and lena, Mont., were m Nelson Friday\nMrs. David Grove and their daugh- j cn route home from New Denver,\nter and son, Jessie nd David, of where they had been guests at the\nSpokane. i i10rae of Mr. White's mother, Mn. j\n\u00bb   \u2022   \u2022 Oscar White.\nMrs. C. A. Larson and Miss Pris\nMiss Albertinc Choquette and her\nEight acts presented by Franl\nZerado as the \"Varieties of 1936\" 1\nwill provide first class entertainment for patrons of the Nelson fall\nfair. A platform 35 feet square and\nfive feet_ high is to_ be builtjn the;ciila Gelinas were among Lose from\n^^tt^ott^^jj damjwtt^\nINCORfORATtD  \u00ab\u00ab\u2022. MAY 1670.\n -I\n?,\u00b0\"l,7..\u00b0Lt.h}..sllf *!! f!!?i\"\u00b0or'\u201eand i NeTsoTWicipating \"i'n\u00b0 thc~ tennis\nFernie, Cranbrook, Salmo, Trail\nand Other District Points to Be\non Air Mail Route to Vancouver\nthe free acts will be staged on it.\nThe presentation will be a trapeze act featuring a spectacular\nswivel in which the lady is held by\nhcr partner's teeth, concluding with\na long breakaway to the ground\nafter a toe to toe swing.\nTwo clever dogs, Bimbo and Pop-\neye, give a performance that entrances youngsters and provides rich\nIntermediate Fields Also at Yahk, Kitchener.\nCreston, Midway, Rock Creek, Oliver and\nPrinceton; Tests Are Being Made\ntournament at Trail at thc weekend\nMiss Mary Barnet of Sproulc\ncreek is spending the holiday in j\nNelson with friends.\n\u201ea\u201e^\u201e j\u2122,.\u201e.v.\u00bb-.\u201er *     Mrs' Malcolm Thompson and her\nlaughter for\/ adults with Bimbo 'do-. young  daughter, Joan,  who  spent\ning thc routine and Popec buries-1 tw\u00b0 months in Nelson guests at the\nquing. Bimbo makes a 25-foot dive , _\\ome on High street of Mrs. Robert\nat the close.\nTUMBLING BY \"BOLO\"\nSkillful tumbling is toe forte of\n\"Bolo thc Clown,\" a young fellow\n' Thompson, have returned      Trail.\n\u2022       \u2022       0\nMrs. Douglas Cummins, Rosemont,\nf.uner, Gregoire Choquette, were\nweek-end visitors at Trail at the\nhome of tne latter's son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. and Mrs. George McKay.\n\u00bb       \u2022       \u00bb\nMrs. Duff of Cedar Point visited\nthe city at the wtek-end.\nMr. and Mrs. A- D. Emory, Vernon street, who spent the summer\nat their Willow Point home \"Lorna\nLada\" have returned.\n\u2022   >   \u2022\nI    Mr. and Mrs. James Robertson,\nspent the week-end at Spokane, j $m^ street had ^ thelr week.ent;\nShe was met there by Mr. Cum- j guesls the)r w an(t daugnter-in-\nmins who was en route honvt from , Mr> \u25a0 Mn, Archie Robfirt.\nMurray Bay, Que., where he it--^ and u\u00bbir two children of Salnio.\ntended a convention. \u2022   *   \u00bb\nLETHBRIDGE, Alta., Sept, (i tCPi. !\n\u2014Preparations for tests of the moun- -\nlain air mail service route to Van- j\ncouver, which may be established in ,\nthe summer of 1937, were being\ncompleted here today.\nAir Commodore Herbert Hollick-\nKenyon, famed flier witli Lincoln\nEllsworth in the Antarctic, and\nSquadron Lender J- H. Tudhope.\nOttawa, were here today preparing\nfor the hazardous mountain tests.\nA giant Lockheed-Electra monoplane, piloted by Hollick-Kenyon.\nlias been fitted out as an experimental radio laboratory and from it\ntests will be made with a mobile\nground unit of motor lorries, manned by a crew of 12 men.\nThe mobile units, expected shortly\nfrom Montreal, each containing its\nown radio broadcasting and receiving sets, will be driven through tlie\nmountains. Broadcasts will be carried on with the plane flying high\noverhead, By this method it will be\nascertained at which point reception\nis clearest and favorable for the\nestablishing of a radio direction\nstation.\nThc western air mail trail over\nthe Rockies, part of the proposed\ntrans-Canada service, will be dotted\nwith intermediate airdromes, with\nbeacon lights and field lamps, where,\nif necessary, .emergency landings\ncan be made.\nIn the British Columbia section,\nthe Intermediate fields will be, It\nIs expected, at Fernie and Cranbrook, where the municipal airdromes will be used; Yahk, Kitchener; Salmo, Creston, Archibald;\nTrail and Grand Forks, municipal\nairdromes; Midway, Rock Creek\nand  Oliver;  Princeton,  where  a\nbe established;\nradio station w\nBoston Bar.\nConstruction of the intermediate\nfields at several of the British Columbia points is now underway.\nScout Body Pays\nTribute Worker\nFairview Auxiliary to\nHold Dutch Tea\nShortly\nwhose work is said to be a sure\n\\ cure for the blues. His is a fast and\nI snappy comedy acrobatic act,\n!    The Palt sisters offer a stage and\n| cradle act, giving a thrilling novelty\n! performance with whirls and spins,\nj plunges and other tricks quite dif-\nI ferent from the usual run of novelty\nI acts.\n!    A performance sure to win the i\n| approval of spectators is the roller j    Mr. and Mrs.  A.  T-  Stephenson\n| skating   of   \"Patrick,\"   who   goes j and Mr. and Mrs. E. S. Planta spent\n' through fast dancing steps on roller ' the week-end at S' jkane,\nj skates on a small pedestal placed *   *   *\nI atop a barrel, as well as other skat-1    L. uorenouse of Trail Was a vising stunts and tricks. i itor in Nelson.\nSPANISH WEBB | \u2022   '   \u2022\n\"Dainty Vera,\" who works on the |    Mrs. L- M. Varner, Derrcll Varner,\nSpanish webb, presents a fine per-  Jack Buchanan. June Gamble and\nformance. One of her features is 100  Jean Bell were week-end  visitors\nrevolutions on a trapeze bar high in   to Spokane,\nthe air. *   \u2022   *\n\"Jardine and Raul\" arc two clev-1 Mrs. George Massey of Burnaby\ner dancers whose imitation of Fred \\$ spending a two-week vacation\nAstaire and Ginger Rogers will ap-1 at the home of Mr. and Mrs. w.\nSpecial Two-Day Sale\nof Women's and Misses'\nNew Fall Frocks\n$1.95\nGREAT\nBARGAINS\nTUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY\nIn printed and plain sheers and satin back crepes. An attractive range of styles featuring ail latest style trends. High\nRussian necklines, tunics, in plain shades and prints. Smart\nborder prints and sheers trimmed with brocaded velvet for\nthe larger figure. Be here early for this Fall Dress event.\nSizes 14 to 44.\nParents' Association auxiliary to\nthc Scout and Cub group of Fair-\nview directed at Us mec ing Thursday night at thc home ol Mrs. M,\nShardelow, president, that a letter\nof appreciation be forwarded to W.\nR. Buchanan for his services with\nthc group; and paid tribute to a\ncharter member of the association,\nMrs. N. Wesley, who died' during\nthe vacation.\nThe meeting marked the resumption  of  regular  gatherings  of the\nJ association. J. M. Dronsfield, Scout\n^strict commissioner, attended.\n|    Arrangements were made for n\nDutch   tea  in   the  near  future   to\nj raise funds.\npeal to the young people. Appear-!\ning several times during thc evc-\ning, they add considerable to the\nprogram.\nZerado's finale is a scries of tableaux, beautiful presentations of\nclassical art in which the performers are grouped about special scenery, and in which special lighting\nof thc offerings,\nBanded Pigeon Is\nKilled al Burton\nHeadquarters for\nQUALITY MEATS,\nFOODS, FRUITS\nand VEGETABLES\nPHONES 865\u2014866\nSAFEWAY   ST0RE8,   LIMITED\nPattullo to Speak\nOver Trail Radio\nTRAIL. B.C.\u2014On his forthcoming\nvisit to the interior. Premier T. D\nPattullo will reach Trail Friday\nevening, September 11, at 6 o'clock,\nit was announced Saturday by R. R.\nBurns. M.L.A. for Rossland-Trail.\nFrom 7 lo 7:30 o'clock that evening thc premier will broadcast an\naddress to residents of the district\nover radio station CJAT and following that from 8 to 9 o'clock he will\nmeet the public at an informal get-\nlogethcr in the council chamber of\nthe city hall at the invitation of\nMayor Bruno Lerose.\nThe gathering will be entirely\nnon-political and is being arranged\nto give thc maximum number of\ncitizens an opportunity of personally\nmeeting the premier.\nSpends Several Days\nWith the Hens at\nClaridge Farm\n..     -, . m 7,\" .7   .   .     . u        Mrs\" Hugh Middleton of Willow\nMri. T. J. Smith, Third street, has | polnt was    clt   shoppers Saturday.\nreturned from a visit to the Nugget | ,   \u2022   .\nmine  where  her  husband   is  cm- j    M\u201e R E A\u201een Tlurd Jtreet| has\nploye(1\" i returned from Vancouver where she\nspent two months. She was accompanied home by her son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Kelsey, and son ot Prince Rupert,\nMr. and Mrs. E. Gunnarson of the\nQueen mine were Nelson shoppers\nSaturday.\nMiss Tanis Coulter returned Saturday morning from Lethbridge.\nwhere she had spent about two\nmonths with relatives.\nDr. and Mrs. G. A. C. Walley, Oak\nstreet, have as their guests over\nthe week-end and holiday, their\nuncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. W. H.\nJackson and daughter, Beulah, Spokane.\nMr. and Mrs. T. W. Smith of Cres-\n1 cent Bay spent Saturday shopping\nin town.\nW. Leahy, who was visiting relatives at Edmonton, was in Nelson\nSunday en route to his home at\nSalmo.\nMrs. W. R. MacLean, Edgewood\navenue, had as her week-end guests\nher son-in-law and daughter. Mr.\nand Mrs. Dosenberger and young\ndaughter, Claudia.\nMr. and Mrs. W. R. Grubbe are\nreturning today from Cranbrook\nwhere they spent thc week-end.\nMiss Dorothy Wylie, M.A., of Vancouver, formerly of the staff of thc\n5 DOZEN\nNEW FALL HATS\njust Arrived for This Event!\nGood assortment of styles in Roller Felts and\nAll   Fall   shades.   No  approvals ft V    JO\nbrim styles\nplease! EACH\nVisit at Kaslo\nWilliams.\nMr. and Mrs. J. M- TIarrig of Sandon. who were Nelson visitors, have\nreturned.\nMiss Mary Walker, utanlcy street,\nreturned Saturday from Vancouver\nwhere   she   spent   two   months,   a\ni used lo bring on tthe sheer beauty  guest ot her grand parents, Mr. and\nKASLO, B.C.-Mr. and Mrs. Bob\nSherraden of Ainsworth were Wednesday visitors in town.\nMr. and Mrs. J. A. Fraser and\nyoung son have returned to their\nhome in Nelson after spending a\nholiday at Shutty Bench.\nDr. W. Green of Cranbrook is\nspending a few days at his summer\nhome at Mirror Lake.\nMurdock MacPherson has returned from visiting relatives at Trail.\nare meeting witli marked success\nthese days, fine catches of Dolly\nVarden trout and salmon being\nbrought by successful anglers\nevery day.\nMiss Margaret MacDonald has returned to hcr school leaching duties after spending a part of her\nholidays in Kaslo witli her parent.\nNEW BLOSSOMS\nON CHERRY TREE\nholidays in Kaslo with her parents, i A , f.\nMr. and Mrs. William MacDonald.  ASpOTOgUS   rem   <JIVeS\nBlossoms\nE. Berg has returned to Trail after a short visit in Kaslo.\nRev. Father Cheevers was a Kaslo\nvisitor  Thursday.\nJack Matthews, who spent 10 days\nat the home of his parents, Mr. and\nMrs. E. A. Matthews, has returned\nCarrier pigeon bearing a metal\nleg band numbered 574 and the letters \"N.R.C.*' and a rubber leg\nband with the number G35 inside and\nan almost obscurred 30.3 on the outside, spent several days with chickens on the W. J. Claridge farm at\nBurton this week, and was picked\nj up by Mr. Claridge on thc roadside\nI one morning, apparently having\n! been hit while in flight by a car.\n! The pigeon, according to a letter\nj from Mr. Claridge to J. B. Curran\nj of thc Nelson Daily News, stated thc\n[ \"pigeon stayed around with the hens\nj for days, feeding and generally mak-\ni ing itself quite at home. It was quite\n| tame and would let anyone ap*\n; proach within a foot or so, but\n! would not stand to be picked up,\nI I noticed the first day that it was\n! banded on one leg, and that on the\nI other was something that it appeared to be carrying.\" The bird was\npicked up bleeding about the head.\nMr. Claridge is anxious to learn its\nhistory. Owner may have band by\nwriting to the Editorial department,\nthis paper.\nMrs. W. 0- Miller.\n\u2022*-*\u25a0\u2022\nMr, and Mrs. Rex Jarvis and son,\nBilli-, were week-end visitors at\nProcter.\n\u2022      \u00bb       4\nSaturday shoppers in thc city included Mrs. John Patterson and her\ndaughter, Mrs. Edmondson, both of\nCrescent Bay.\nI\n! Mr, and Mrs. p. Kapak and Howard Bush have returned from a\n! motor trip to Spokane.\nI ...\nMrs. R. E. Witter of the Queen\ni mine visited Nelson Saturday.\n*   *   *\nMr.  and Mrs.  E.  Chapman  and\nfamily have returned from a visit\n; to Trail.\n| Miss Dorothy Jackson of Cedar\nPoint was among city shoppers on\nSaturday.\n... ***\nMrs.  H. McKcnna and children 1 t0 Trail,\nhave   returned  to  their   home   in !    Miss Katherine Gillis has retum-\nFtossland after visiting the former's   ^ to her school teaching duties in\nfather, John McPherson. ; Trail  after spending the  holidays\nMrs.    Marcus   Jesty   of   Shutty   in Kaslo with hcr parents, Mr. and\nBench is visiting relatives at Wil- | __rs. Hugh Gillis.\nlow Point. j    Jack    MacNichol   of   Johnson's\nLanding was a visitor in town.\nMiss  Louise  Denorez,  a  former\nKasloite   now   teaching   school   in\n[Riondel, was a visitor to Kaslo.\nA.   P.   Allsebrooke   of   Shutty\nBench is spending a few days in\nProcter.\n\"Kipper'' Hewat of Vancouver has\narrived in Kaslo to visit his par\nis visiting friends in Nelson.\n...\nMiss Ivy Walker, who teaches at\nBoswell, spent thc week-end at thc\nhome of her mother Mrs. W. H.\nWalker, Baker street.\nChief ot City Police Alex Stewart\nand Mrs. Stewart, Victoria street.\nEuphrates | have returned  from  a  few   days\nvisitor   in < trip to Spokane.\nI '   *   *\nI    Rev. and Mrs. E. W. Mackay of\nMr. and Mrs. T. H- Glover, Fair- j Vancouver have arrived in the city\nvjew, have returned from a week's | and are guests at the home of their\nEvan Jones of Johnson's Landing\nwas a Kaslo visitor.\nMrs. H. D. Dawson and daughter.\nMiss Isobel, have returned to their\nhome at Nelson after spending thc\nsummer at their old homc here.\nJudge   and   Mrs.   Thompson   of\nCranbrook have returned home after a short visit at Mirror Lake.\nif\u201e\u201et\u201e\u201e\u201e     t \u201ei     r-        ,   i      *.i       Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Seal  who\nf^fS IJl^.0ie.ne^;\u201e!:0Splta1': sP^t the summer at Balfour, have\nA sprig of blossoms picked from\na cherry tree m thc orohard of\nCharles Selinger. Rosemont, was\nbrought to the editorial department\nof the Nelson Daily News by Mrs.\nHarry Wassick. 908 Vernon street.\nBlossoming out several days ago\nfor thc. second time this scason,\nthe cherry tree is producing new\nblooms daily, Mrs. Wassick'said.\nMrs. Wassick also told the News\nan asparagus fern growing in her\nhome for seven years was displaying blossoms for the first lime. Six\nsmall round flowers are showing.\nAlthough Mrs. Wassick considered\nit unusual, other Nelson horticulturists state the fern tthe springeri)\nnaturally bloomed as it was a plant\nproduced by division or seeds. The\nPercy Yalcs of the\nmine was a week-end\ntown.\nTHE BODY BUILDER\nFor children and adults alike, there is no finer\nfood--Milk stimulates and refreshes besides\nsupplying every known type of nourishment\nthat your body needs\u2014Drink three galssrs of\nrich pasteurized\nCURLEW MILK\nEach day and enjoy real health\nPhone 900 Daily Delivery\nIPALM DAIRIES LTD.I\nvacation at Spokane.\n...\nMrs. A. D. Max..*cll was in the\ncity from Nakusp at the week-end.\n...\nMrs. Turner Lee of Bonnington\nvisited the city Saturday.\nj    JS. Stenson left Saturday for Her-\nschel, Sask.\n...\nMrs. E. H. H. Applewhaite o'\n| Willow Point was a visitor in the\ncity at the week-end. She was ac-\n] companied by her young grandson\n(and granddaughter, Denncy and\n| Judy Davis of Nanoose, Vancouver\nIsland.\nMr. and Mrs.  A.  Clyde  Emory,\nwho  spent   the  holidays  at  their\nTRAIL. B. C, Sept. 4. -- Arthu.'   Willow Point home, have returned\nPrince of Hollywood known as the j to their home on Victoria street,\nlap teacher of filmdom, accompan- j ...\nicd by Business Manager Van Bus- I Miss Annie Muraro, Granite road,\nkirk, is paying a visit lo Trail this, is spending the week-end and hoh-\nmonth, thc guest of Mr. and Mrs. j day at the home c: Miss Mary Mar-\nG. M. Ward. j tinilli in Trail.\nHOLLYWOOD TAP\nTEACHER VISITS\nWARDS IN TRAIL\nYmir Folk at Kaslo\nOUR\nSERVICE\n... it an exact tcience in\nwhich perfect equipment\nand experienced workmanship join to your complete satisfaction. Y e t\nthe cost is reasonable ...\noften lest than the price\nof inferior moving service.\nPHONE 33\nWest Transfer Co.\nESTABLISHED 1899\nYMIR, B.C.-Mr. and Mrs. Jim\nWallace  were  visitors at Kaslo.\nRoland Edwards was a Kaslo visitor.\nThe Misses Leaghy, who were\nguests of their brother-in-law and\nsister, Mr. and Mrs. Hunter Smith\nhave returned to their home in\nSalmo.\nMrs. D. R. Stevenson of Porcupine\nentertained at a house party. Guests\nwere Mis. Jack Sherman and children from Balfour, Mr. and Mrs,\nThurman, and Mrs. R. Porter and\ndaughter from Spokane,\nGiliett.\nMrs. C. J. Anderson and son Clarence were called to Spokane\nthrough the illness of two of the\nchildren, who, with their mother,\nare visiting Mrs. Forsloff.\nMrs. G. LeRoy motored to Kaslo\nfor the weekend.\nMiss   Rosie   Hansen   is   visiting\nfriends in Nelson,\ni    Don Aldin of Salmo was a visi-\ntor to Ymir Thursday.\nMrs. w. A. Hufty, Silica street, I\nhas returned from visiting in Trail i\nat the home of hcr : on-in-law and j\ndaughter, Mr. and M'\"s. Era! E. Fitz-\npatne. She was accompanied home\nby her young granddaughter, Barbara Fay.\nRonald Greyson of Upper Bonnington visited Nelson Saturday.\nShoppers in town Saturday in-\neluded Norman Denney of Willow\nPoint.\nMrs. Harry Dunk, Edgewood av-\nson-in-law and daughter, Mr. and\nMrs. J. Fred Weir, Kerr apartments.\n\u2022 w      \u2022\nMrs. William Rutherford entertained at a small tea Friday at hcr\nhome, \"Peep 6 Day\", on the north\nshore in honor of Mrs. Walter Ridley of London, Eng., who is a guest\nof her mother, Mrs. James Johnston.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMiss Esther Scott of Portland,\nOre. and her sister, Mrs. Charles\nMadden, have left for Calgary to\nvisit their parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nG. Scott, former residents of Nelson.\nGeorge Benwell and Mr. Greenwood were visitors to Spokane at\nthe week-end.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. S. H. Smythe, Fair- !\nview, have as their holiday guest\ntheir daughter, Miss Cora Smythe of I\ni Trail.\n\u2022 *   * 1\nThe Women's Benefit association j\nmet at the home on Baker street |\nof Mrs. J. J. Foote, when those pres-\nI ent were Mrs. David Laughton, thc\ni Misses Irene and Grace Laughton,\nI Mrs. J. E. Annable, Mrs. George\nI Fletcher, Mrs. W. H. Walker, Mrs.\n; W. E. Coles, Mrs. Middleton, Mrs.\n; Frank Phillips, Mrs. J. J. Foote,\nMrs. G. B. Matthew and Mrs. Keefe\nof Victoria.\n\u2022 *   *\nMr. and Mrs. Frank Baker, Fair-\nview, had as their week-end guest\ntheir son, Colin Baker, of Trail.\n\u2022 \u00ab   #\nMr. and Mrs. R. E. Crerar have returned from spending the week-end\nat Spokane, Mr, Crerar having just\nreturned   from   several   weeks   in\nand'Glen i cn\"c- vlslted sPokane al lhc weck\" I eastern Canada at a convention,\nend. +   .   \u2022\n\u201e ,,. \u201e,   .   *        ~, . \u25a0    Miss   Patricia    Campbell,    Miss\nK. W. Chalmers of Thrums visited ] Shella stewart) Misfl Ircne Kerr of\ntown Saturday^   ^   ^ | Longbeach and Mr. and Mrs. Barwis\ni of Sunshine Bay were among those\nI nomas   Homersnam   -spent   the I participating ln the tennis tourna-\nweek-end at Riondel. ,< ment al TraU over tnc week.end.\nCottons and linens arc the favorite materials for beach dresses.\nSmartly dressed women in France\nare wearing pinafore frocks in\nthese fabrics, the frocks inevitably\ncovering shorts.\nMrs. Ian Johnson of Sheep creek !\nwas among city visitors Saturday.\nMiss Mabel Latta has left to* spend\nher vacation at Calgary and Banff.\nMrs. H. Forsebcrg, Granite road,\nhas returned from a two-week noli- j\nday at Vancouver, Victoria and Se- [\nattic. Shevwas accompanied by her I\ndaughter,   Mis5   Blanche   Forsberg.\nMr. and Mrs. Leonard Ayer and\nson,   Gordon,   spent   Saturday   in\ntown.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nMr.  and  Mrs.  Norbert 0.  Cho\nreturned to Shutty Bench, where\nMr. Seal teaches school.\nMrs. J. Peachy was in Kaslo en\nroute to join here husband who\nteaches school at Retallack. Mr.\nand Mrs. Peachy spent a portion of\ntheir holiday in Balfour.\nFred Weycrgang of Retallack was\na Kaslo visitor Thursday.\nMrs. Brunei Murphy was a bridge\nhostess Thursday afternoon, her\nguests being Miss Doris Hawk, Mrs.\nFrank Wilson, Mrs. Fred Aydon.\nMrs. J. R. Tinkess, Miss Bertha\nBourget, Miss Edna Gilker, Miss\nTina Bourget and Miss Katherine\ni Streit. Prize for high score was\nwon by Mrs. Wilson and the consolation by Miss Gilker.\nLocal disciples of Isaak Walton\n!\nI left on a 10-day visit to Calgary.\nI She will be a guest of Mr. and Mrs.\ni Serry Shaptcr,\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nThe Misses May and Eleanor Haggart, Mill street, are spending thc\n1 week-end holiday at Trail at the\nhome of their brother and sister-\nin-law, Mr. and Mrs, Robert Haggart.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nRoy Sweet of the Relief Arlington mine visited town Saturday.\n\u2022 *   *\nMrs. A. E. Baker and daughter,\nBunty, and Mrs. Baker's niece and\nnephew, Pat and Billy Ferguson, all\nof Klamath Fa^lls, Ore., have returned after spending two months at\nthe home of Mrs. Baker's parents.\nMr. and Mrs, G. H. Fraser, Robson\nstreet,\n\u2022 *   *\nMrs.  John  Paterson  entertained\nSaturday at a delightful  birthday\nI surprise shower and tea honoring\n! Mrs.   John  Vallance,   Twenty   old\n; friends  and  neighbors  were  pre-\nI sent.   A   dainty   mauve   decorated\nbasket, laden with gifts and topped *\nwith a boquet of pastel shaded sweet\n; peas  and  maiden  hair  fern,  was\nI presented  to  thc  guest of  honcr.\n1 showing the esteem in which she is '\nheld. The reading of fortunes by the ]\nhostess, caused much merriment. A\nshort  dramatic   and  musical  program followed. Miss Marjory Spiers\nand   Mrs.  Garl   Hild   assisted   thc\nhostess in serving.\nGerald   S.   Rees   left   Saturday\nmorning by the Great Northern for\na short vacation to be spent at Cali-\nfornian points.\n\u2022   \u2022   *\nMrs. J. Paterson of Kaslo. passed\nthrough Nelson Saturday en route\nto Southern Illinois to visit friends.\nents, Government Agent Hewat \"and (springeri is a drooping variety use-\nMrs, Hewat. I ful for vases, boxes and baskets.\nMr. and Mrs. Frank Dumas   of ~ '       fir\nAinsworth were Thursday visitors |\nin town. j ,\nMr. and Mrs. Archie Greenlaw of i\nLardo were Kasio visitors.\nMr. and Mrs. J. P. Fink and fam-\nily have returned to Cranbrook af- j\nter spending thc past two months\nat their summer homc here.\nJoe Streit has returned to Salmo\nafter visiting his parents Mr. and\nMrs. J. J. Streit here. I\nMiss Clara Johnson, who spent thc\nsummer with her parents, Mr. and\nMrs. Eric Johnson, has\" returned to\nher school teaching duties at Shore-\nacres.\nMiss Mary Mucha, who spent thc\nsummer at her home at Lardo, has\nreturned to resume her high school\nduties here and is a guest of Mrs.\nJ. G. Fox.\nMr. and Mrs. Floyd Garrett have\nsecured the Dr. Calvert cottage on\nC. avenue and will take up residence there within the next few\ndays.\nMonday, October\n12, Thanksgiving\nTRAIL. B.C., Sept. 4-Thanksgiv-\ning day this year has been set for\nMonday October 12, according to\ninformation wired the Trail Times\ntoday in reply to a query.\nTRAIL   ELK8   ELECT\ni TRAIL, B.C.. Sept. 6. \u2014 Charles\n! Harvey  was elected exalted ruler\nwhen Trail Lodge No. 50 B.P.O.E.\nI tilled three vacancies in their slate\n1 of officers Thursday night. He suc-\nI coeds 0. H. Evans, who is leaving\n| thc city next week. R. Robichaud\nI was named esteemed leading knight\nand S. G. Biagioni was elected trus-\ni tec.\nUse the Want Ads\u2014It Pays!\nA recently developed drive screw\nnail for use with galvanized sheet\nsteel roofing has a lead collar under\nthc head and down the shank which\nplugs and seals the hole.\nRECIPES\nMENUS\nand\nHINTS\nBv\nMrs.\nMar-\/\nMorton\nGood\nHousekeeping\nMenu Hint\nRoast Chicken      Hot Biscuits\nBaked Potatoes Corn\nCabbage and Apple  Salad\nPeach Parfait      Tea or Cotlec\nOf course the chicken is stuffed\nwith well-seasoned dressing.   I like\nlo take toasted or very dry bread.\ninn through the food chopper, mix\nit with melted butter, an egg or two.\nchopped onion, sage, salt and pepper\nPeach pie may be served for dessert\nin place of the parfait, if you don't\nwish to bother with thc parfait. 1\nthink it gives a final touch to thc\nmeal, however.\nTODAY'S RECIPES\nPeach   Parfait\u2014One   cup\none-third cup water, two egg whites,\ndash salt, few drops almond extract,\none cup mashed fresh peaches, two\ntablespoons orange juice, two cups\ncream, whipped. Boil sugar and\nwater to the thread stage. Pour\nslowly onto beaten egg whites, beating constantly. Beat until cold, adding the flavoring while beating.\nMash peaches with orange juice.\nWhen the syrup and egg mixture are\ncool fold in peaches and whipped\ncream. Turn into thc frost drawers\no[ thc mechanical refrigerator or\npack in a mold and pack in equal\nparts ice and salt. Freeze and serve\nplain or accompanied by b sauce of\nsweetened crushed peaches.\nThe Misses It. Dcwhurst, Betty\nDavies and Ruth Taylor of Trail\nwere  in  Nelson  Saturday  on  the\n. Stanley street, bad as their i way to spend thc week-end at Bos-\nuuettc.\nweek-end   guest   Mrs.   Choquette's\n1 brother,    Gracien    Bourgeois    of\nCastlegar.\nO-i,\nMrs. George Fleury, Fairview, has\nwell.\n...\nMr. and Mrs, H. Renwick have\nreturned from a three-week motor\ntrip to California. *\n.-'. oafeyttiriaw .rM^^AjjjjiKU    net\nLAMB WEEK\nwill be observed in British Columbia\nSeptember 12th to 19th Inclusive\nHousewives are asked to cooperate with Producer;\nTrade in developing this important branch of the\nindustry.\nBRITISH COLUMBIA LAMB\nComes direct from the pastures and is of\nthe highest quality.\nEat More Lamb\nand the\nlivestock\n\u00ab\u00bb\u00ab!liaKi--\u00bb\u00abSr..Ul\/:'i-.'- '-\u25a0-::.\n.   \u201e rt.'^'M.i^.'\".'\u2014^'^.\n_.........\u2014  \u25a0  ,.  _\n_____^^^^^__\n^___^_^^_^^^__\n PAGE FOUR\nNELSON DAILY NIWS. NELSON, B.C-MONDAY MORNINO, SEPTEMBER 7, 1936\nJtorm latin \u00aem*\nEstablished April, 22, 1902.\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper\nALL THE NEWS WHILE IT IS NEWS\nPublished every morning except Sunday by\nIhe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n216   Baker   Street,   Nelson,   British Columbia.\nPhone 144, Private Exchange Connecting All Departments.\nMember   of   the   Audit   Bureau   of   Circulations   and\nThe    Canadian    Press    Leased    Wire    News    Service.\nMONDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1936\nTODAY IS LABOR DAY\nLabor day has arrived again! Today is a day of rest\nset aside for all those who toil. It iB a holiday not only in\nCanada but in the United States as well. Labor day weekend is usually the final big holiday before the Christmas\nseason.\nBack in the first Monday in September 1882, the\nKnights of Labor, headed by its president, T. V. Powderly,\nstaged a parade in New York city. Such was the success of\nthe parade and demonstration of the strength of labor that\nit was decided to mark the initial Monday in each September\na holiday and call it Labor day. Each year interest in the\nday spread until now it takes its place as one of the most\nimportant on the calendar.\nBETWEEN\nJLB.C\nCONTRACT\nBRIDGE\nBy E. V. SHEPARD\n\"Teacher of Teachers\"\ntHEY\nIT\nISOLATION TO AVOID CONSEQUENCES\nOF WAR\nMajor-Cicneral Smedley'D. Butler seems to live in the\nperpetual glow of the spotlight. His latest claim to fame\nas author of a method \"to guarantee everlasting peace to\nour nation,\" entitles him to rank as the J. S. Woodsworth,\nM.P., of tbe United Slates. The general's plan, which is\nrevealed in the current issue of the Woman's Home Companion, of New York, has the merit of simplicity. He\nwould gain the desired end by merely adding an amendment to the constitution of the United States to provide\nthat armed land forces should not leave the continental limits of that country that naval vessels, except on an errand\nof mercy, should be prohibited steaming more than 500\nmiles from the coast, and that air craft of the army, navy\nor marine corps should not be permitted to fly more than\n750 miles beyond the shores of the United States.\nSimple as this proposition is, it is capable of being\nreduced to even simpler terms. The United States, along\nwith the other nations of the world, has already outlawed\nand renounced war by the Kellogg-Briand pact. If this\nrenunciation of war were to be incorporated in the constitution of the United States, there would be an end to any\npossibility of the United States becoming entangled in foreign conflicts. The army, navy and air force could be disbanded ,a step which seems only logical since Major-General Butler points out that the United States is in no danger\nwhatever of military invasion.\nLacking a written constitution, Great Britain is denied this easy escape from the possibility of war. While\nother nations adhere to the belief that the path of their national destiny lies through battlefields, it is impossible\nfor her to adopt an attitude which encourages that belief.\nNor is isolation always possible to any nation which looks\nbeyond the immediate present into the future,\nSPAIN'S TROUBLES DUE TO LACK OF\nLEADERSHIP\nSpain may get some, compensation out of its civil\nwar if the armed struggle ends decisively, settles the\nquestion of who is to govern and finds someone strong\nenough to do the governing.   ,\nThe country has been in a state of turmoil for years,\nswinging from Right to Left, between monarchy and weak\ndictatorship, republicanism and socialism. No person, no\nparty, was able to give thc nation peace and settled government or to work out effectively any policy that held\nout hope of improved conditions for the people. From\nAlfonso down there has been a singular lack of compelling\nleadership.\nThe prevailing chaos of the civil war is but an extension of the chaos that existed in the troubled peace which\npreceded it. It is a long time since Spain as had cither\nreal peace or enjoyed any degree of progress. The only\nvigor displayed by its politicians has been in putting tin-\nboots to thc other fellow and tearing down what someone else was trying to build up. Anything resembling\nunited effort was'a stranger in the land.\nORIGIN OF IRISH NAMES\nMany Irish surnames with \"0\" and\n\"Mac\" prefixes are not of Irish origin. For example, O'Doylc, O'Har-\nold, O'Sughrue, O'Bryne and Mc-\nCotter were originally Norwegian\nnames. Burke, Barry, Lacey, Cogan,\nBlake and Fleming were Norman\nnames. So are all names with a\n\"Fits\" prefix. \"Fltz\" is a Norman\ncorruption of the Latin word \"Film\",\nmeaning \"son\"\u2014for example: Gerald\nFitzStephen means \"Gerald, son of\nStephen.\"\nMany of the Norman invaders of\nIreland were FitzGeralds, FitzSte-\nphens, FitzSimons, FitzWilliams, etc.\nThey seized much Irish territory,\nbut married into the kingly and\nprincely families, and became \"more\nj Irish than the Irish themselves,\" yet\nI their names were originally Norman.\n: The family \"DeBurgo\" in Nor-\n' mandy became \"Burke\" in Ireland.\nI *   \u2022   \u2022\nACCIDENT DEFINED\nI \"Did you ever meet with an accident?\" inquired the insurance agent\nof the farmer applicant.\n\"No,\" said the farmer; then, as an\nafterthought, \"a mule kicked in two\nof my ribs once, and a rattlesnake\nbit me on the leg a couple of years\nago.\"\n\"Great Scottl\" gasped the agent,\n\"don't you consider those accidents?\"\n! \"Naw,\" said the farmer, \"they done\nit on purpose.\"\n* <   \u2022\nNAIL BITER\nA girl in Newark, N.J., lost a finger through biting her nails, and\nnow she is at it again. Maybe somebody ought to tell her what happened to Venus de Milo.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nHOUSEHOLD HINTS\nThe taste of an onion can be\n\"\u2022really improved by adding a pound\nof steak to IL\nCanaries may be made to sing\nbass by feeding them chalk.\nA blow-torch is a convenient device for removing ants from old\nI wainscoting.\n;    Father's old felt hat would make\nan excellent hanging-basket, but he\nmay need it more than you need a\nj hanging-basket,    what    with    the\nI colder weather coming on.\n* *   *\nshush:\nIf you should find a grey hair in\nyour head, keep it dark.\ni '   '   *\nINTELLIGENCE TEST\nThey are still laughing down in\nI Iowa over the result of one of those\nintelligence tests that are supposed\nlo prove that 99 per cent of the\npeople are sub-normal. This particular test, designed by men apparently out to show that 100 per cent\nwere high-grade morons (no kidding, that's a genuine term used in\npsychology), had two trick questions,\n\"How long,\" read the first of these\nquestions, \"iB a piece of string?\"\nA University of Iowa student answered the question in the following\nmanner:\n\"A piece of string Is twice the\ndistance between the center and the\nend.\"\nThen the second trick question:\n\"How far can a dog run into the\nwoods?\"\n\"A dog,\" answered the Iowa student, \"can run only half-way Into\nthe woods. After that he Is running\nout of the woods.\"\nAnd science was more than satisfied.\nCOULDNT   BEAT\nI just talked with the dealer of\nthe holdings shown below. She\ncomplained because her partner bad\nbid a small slam when vulnerable,\ninstead of doubling the 5-Diamonds\nof her non-vulnerable opponents.\nRealty the lady was quite indignant\nat her partner's \"folly\". The hand\nis quite Interesting, well worth\nconsidering both sides of the question.\n4> A Q J 10\n*\u00bb q io S J\n4) None\nAUS742\nA764                       AK9!J\nKKJ9P\nA'.\n9*14\n2\n3   *\u25a0\n+ A 10 1 t\n\u2666 QJH\ni\n5\n9-\n+ 10 J\nA None\n\u2666 *2\n\u2022 AT\n4>K4J\n+ AQ J965\nBidding   went:    South,    1-Club;\nWest,    1-Heart;    North,    1-Spadc;\nEast, 2-Diamonds; South, 3-Clubs:\nWest, 4-Diamonds; North, 5-Clubs;\nEast. S-Dlamonds; North, 6-Clubs,\nf\u2014\nv, Today's\nGarden-Graph\nBt DEAN HALL1DAY\nCwrloht, UU.\nCentral Preu Aiiodollon, \/aa,\nTHE DOCTOR\nSAYS\nLOGAN  CLENDENING,   M.D.\nSeaside landlady (to newly-arrived \"barrister\"): \"Oh, Mr. Bartley-\nBeaumont. there was a telephone message for you from your office^ in\nLondon. They want to know where you put the key to thc stamp box.\"\u2014\nLondon Opinion.\nupon partner's opening bid and\nability to ruff diamonds.\nTlie opening lead waSs a diamond.\nDummy ruffed. Two rounds of\nwinning clubs were run, then declarer led a spade and lost to East's\nK. The return lead was a heart.\nAgain the finesse was taken and\nthe K of hearts took the setting\ntrick. Can you beat it? It never\ncrossed South's mind that all she\nhad to do to fulfill hcr double contract was to win with her Ace of\nhearts, then take dummy's three\nspade tricks. Discarding her last\nheart and one diamond upon the\nspades was so obvious that it seemed\nno player could miss such strategy.\nNo opening lead can defeat the\nsmall slam contract. It West leads\na heart, dummy's Q and declarer's\nAce must win two tricks. No club\ntricks can be lost. One spade trick\nonly must be lost. If a spade is the\nopening lead, whether declarer goes\nup with the Ace or takes the finesse,\nthe small slam is assured. Personally I would put up the Ace, then\ntake two rounds of winning clubs.\nThen I would give defenders a\nspade trick, to provide two established spades, upon which to discard\ndeclarer's single losing heart and\none of her diamonds. The other two\ndiamonds can be ruffed by dummy.\nProvided East plays the liand to\nbest; advantage, North and South\ncannot hope to win more than a\nsingle trick in each red suit, with\ntwo tricks in spades, defeating the\n5-Dlamonds only two tricks, and\nscoring 300 points. This certainly\nwould be a very poor substitute for\na small slam contract (240 points for\n6 tricks doubled, 700 points for a\nlove rubber and 750 points for a\nsmall slam when vulnerable).\nThe only possible point for consideration was whether North held\ncards justifying a Relief that 6-odd\ncould almost certainly be made.\n|   10 YEARS AGO   |\nI From Nelson Dally News Flits I\nst. _ -j\n(September 7, 1926)\nMr. and Mrs. J. H. Argyle left for\nSpokane by motor yesterday.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Nelson Ball have\ntaken   residence   at   1122   Stanley\nstreet.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00ab\nMrs. Richardson of Willow Point\nwon tlie, ladies' tennis championship\nfrom Mrs. Taylor also of Willow\nPoint. Mrs. Richardson will be presented with trophy donated by S.\nG. Blaylock.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nThe Trail baseball team won the\ninterior championship from local\nteam by score of 11 to 6.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMrs. Marquis of Fairview left for\na three-month visit to Ontario, yes'\nterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nG. F. Atkinson of New Westminster ls a guest at home of Mr. and\nMrs. J. B. Gray.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMiss Kathleen Brodie, Stanley\nstreet, left for Thrums to take over\nduties of school teacher.\nMr. and Mrs. W. T. Calbick of\nNelson left with their daughter,\nBeryl, for Spokane this morning.\n<K__ J,\n|   30 YEARS AGO   I\nI From Nelson Dally Newt Files J\n(Septembtr 7 ,1906)\nEarl Grey, governor-general, cancelled his Intended trip to Lardeau\nand Rossland in view of the strenuous program laid out for him at the\ncoast.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nW. M. Adams, Victoria street,\ndied yesterday at 1:30 p.m. from a\nhemorrhage caused from an attack\nof typhoid fever.\n\u00bb   *   \u2022\nRev. Wm. Giboney of Spokane, officiated at the wedding of Miss Lib-\nble Richie of Toronto, to Andrew\nWilly, superintendent of the Cascade Power and Light company,\nwho is well known in this city.\n* *   \u2022\nThe Cranbrook Herald payed a\nwell-deserved compliment to Joseph Carter the C.P.R. agent here,\nwhen it says, \"The more people\nthat deal with excursions and the\nlike have to do with Joe Carter, passenger agent at Nelson, the more\nthey think of the C.P.R.\" It is men\nlike Carter that bring the C.P.R.\nsurplus up to $22,000,000.\nTo   Keep  Rose  of   Sharon\nFrom  Wilting\nBecause the Rose of Sharon has\na large and rather delicate flower,\nit droops quickly when cut and\nplaced In water. It is possible, however to keep a Rose of Sharon bloom\nfrom wilting by scraping the bark\nof the stem in several places wilh a\nknife, as shown in the above Garden-Graph. This gives the stem\nextra opportunity for contact with\nthe water.\nAnother method ls to pound the\nends of the cut stems with a ham\nmer. By thus squashing the stem it\nenables it to absorb water more\nquickly, which helps to prevent\nwilting.\nCAME BACK FROM  DEAD\nLIVERPOOL, (CP) - Thought\ndrowned in the Mersey and a body\nburied as hers, Mrs. Isabella Connolly, missing since June, suprised\nhcr husband and sister by returning home from a job in another city.\n|   20 YEARS AGO   I\nI From Nelion Dally News Files I\ni   \u2022         *\n(September 7, 1918)\nRalph Farling of Trail is staying\nat the Hume hotel.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nA. B. Shannon of Willow Point is\nat the Grand Central.\n\u2022 \u2022   * \u2022\nThe Diamond Drill Contracting\nCompany, of Spokane, set up machinery on the Fog Horn mine property about 10 miles out of Ymir\nand it is thought drilling operations\nwill start shortly.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nA large crowd heard J. H. Schofield, Conservative candidate, speak\nat Salmo yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00ab\nG. S. McCreery of Cranbrook is\na guest at the Hume.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. C. H. Bean will leave\ntoday for the coast via the Kettle\nValley.\nWith mechanical wings strapped\nto his body. Istvan Kiraly of Budapest. Hungary, kept aloft for 50\nyards before falling.\nON THE AIR TONIGHT\nCANADIAN RADIO\nCOMMISSION NETWORK\nCKOV CJCJ CJCA CHWK CFQC\n630\n730\nCFJC\n780\n840\nGarber's orch.; 11:00 Dick Jurgen's\norchestra; 11:30 Gaylord Carter,\norganist.\nMost of the meteorites which\nstrike the earth In the daytime, arrive in the afternoon, while most\nof those landing in darkness arrive\nbefore midnight.\nADVANCE WEATHER BULLETIN\nA gangster among trees is thc\nstrangling-fig. says Dr. John K.\nSmall. New York botanist, for this\ni Ircc destroys its plant victims by\nenveloping   them,   and   sometimes\n| caps the climax by destroying it-\n! self.\nAUNT HET\nBv  HUBERT QUI1.LEN\nAn autogyro is being constructed that can travel on\nthe highway or in the air, rising vertically. We felt all\nalong that some day a means of escaping from the path of\nreckless drivers would be invented.\n\"You  can't  expect  to  keep\nfolks Interested In you if you tell\nall you know. Folks always get\nup and leave a cow when they've\nmilked her dry.\"\nFor western and central Canada,\nembracing British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba\nand Ontario.\nMonday, September 7, 1936\u2014Mild\ndisturbance about southwest of central provinces, with some clouds and\nlight rains, but most of country clear\nand warm.\nTuesday, September 8 \u2014 Some\ncloudy and showery conditions in\nwest and southwest, but in general\nfairly clear, quiet and In most sec-\nlions somewhat warmer weather.\nWednesday, September 9 \u2014 Tlie\nmildly disturbed and cloudy conditions, with very light rains, now\ndrifting to southeast of central provinces and temperatures stationary or\nslightly higher.\nThursday, September 10\u2014Except\na few clouds and very light rains\nabout the southeastern parts of the\ncountry conditions generally are\nfairly clear and warm for this time\nof year.\nFriday, September 11 \u2014 About\nsouthwest and in southern portions\nof central provinces light rains In a\nfew spots; temperatures rather below normal.\nSaturday, September 12\u2014Cloudy\nconditions carrying scattered rains\ndrift across southern sections to\ngreat lakes regions of Manitoba and\nto southeast; slightly cooler.\nSunday, September 13 \u2014 Cloudy\nand   unsettled   conditions  now   In\nsoutheastern sections, leaving most\nof country clear and temperatures\nslightly declining or remaining\nnearly stationary.\nWeek of September 7 to 13,1936, in\ncentral provincet begins fairly warm\nfor this time of the year and temperature changes seem to be slow\nand in unusually narrow range. The\nquietly moving clouds drift across\nthe country, carrying some scattering rains, mostly in spots and\nstreaks, yet very large patches of\nclear skies intervening. The rainfall in most sections should be rather less than normal, though about\nthe southwest parts of central provinces a close approach to normal\nmay be expected. Temperatures\nvery near or above normal.\nThis second week of September\nought to be fairly warm for the\nseason. It is soon after a mild cold\nspell and may be relied upon to\nbring on some of the last mild\nweather of the autumn, or late summer. It is then followed by a severely cold snap and it is therefore\nadvised that advantage should be\ntaken of this mild period to prepare\nfor frosty nights, and perhaps days,\nthat are almost certain to come on\nbefore the last of this month. Our\nlong-range forecast seems to indicate that not far from September 20\nquite wide spread and killing frosts\nwill end the growing scason in\nnearly all this country, though it is\nyet too early for permanent freezing.\nCJAT  CFAC   CJOC   CKY   CKCK\n910       930       960       960       1010\nCRCV\n1100\n5:00 The Fanfare orchestra, St.\nJohn; 5:30 Tribute to a Song, Toronto; 6:00 With Banners Flying,\ndir. Guiseppe Agostlni, Montreal\nto M. B. S.; 6:30 Louise Guen-\nette and his orchestra from Quebec; 6:45 CP News and Weather,\nTor.; 7:00 Jascha Galperln's orch.,\nLake Louise; 7:30 News, Vancouver\n(B.C. Net); Lullaby Lagoon, Toronto (B.C. 7:45); 8:00 Youngbloods of\nBeaver Bend, dramatic serial .Winnipeg; 8:30 Lakehead Melody, organ,\nvocal recital, Ft. William; 8:45 Book\nReview, James Stuart Wood, Prince\nAlbert; 9:00 Old Time Frolic, Saskatoon; 9:30 Knights of Gladness,\ndirection John Bowman, Edmonton (not'CRCV); 10:00 News, Vancouver (B.C. Net); 10:15 Jack Williamson's orch., Vancouver (B.C.\nNet).\nN.B.C.-KPO RED NETWORK\nKHQ KGW KPI KPO KOMO\n690      620    640    680      920\n5:00 Visiting with Captain Dobbs;\n5:30 Blue Prelude; 6:00 Lullaby\nLady, or., dir. Morgan L. Eastman:\n7:00 Amos 'n' Andy; 7:15 Lum and\nAbner; 1:30 Three Sopranos, W.\nDaly's orch.; 8:00 Fibber McGee\nand Molly, comedy; 8:30 Richard\nHiinbcr's orch.; 9:00 Drama; 9:30\nAlfred Barr's orchestra; 10:00 News\nFlashes, Sam Hayes; 10:15 Southern\nHarmony Four; 10:30 Xavier Cu-\ngat's orchestra; 11:00 Henry King's\norchestra; 11:30 Reveries, instru\nmenlalists.\n600 k CJOR 499.7 m\nVancouver 600 w\n5:00 News flashes, 5:15 Big Brother Bill: 6:15 News Report 7:00 Safety\nLeague; 7:30 Financial Talk; 7:45\nBernard Braden, songs: 8:00 Cariboo\nCowboys; 8:15 Ronnie Matthews;\n8:30 Sports broadcast: 10:30 Pete\nCowan's old timers; 11:00 Barney\nPott's orch.; 12:00 Slumber Hour;\n12:15 News Flashes.\n1030 k CFCN 293.1 m\nCalgary 10.000 w\n5:00 Cecil and Sally, E.T. 5:30\nTreasure Chest; 5:45 Words and Music, E.T.; 6:15 Rajput, E.T.; 6:30 Red\nHead Family; 7:00 Peacock Court\n7:15 The Rhythmic Age; 8:15 House\nof Peter McGregor; 8:30 Through\nHollywood Lens 9:00 News Flashes;\n9:15 Yodelling Ranger: 9:30 Serenades Other periods: Records.\nN.B.C.-KGO BLUE NETWORK\nKGO KJR KEX KECA KGA\n790 870 1180 1430 1470\n5:00 Beaux Arts trio, Instrumental;\n5:30 Carefree Carnival; 6:15 Communist party; 6:45 Jolly Coburn's\norch.; 7:00 King's Jesters; 7:15 Literary Digest poll; 7:30 All Donohue's\norch.; 8:00 Shandor, violinist; 8:08\nHenry Busse's orch.; 8:15 Watanabe\nand Williams; 8:30 Herman Middleman's orch.; 8:45 Kenneth Spencer,\nbasso; 9:00 Russian Rhapsody; 9:30\nYesterday's Music; 10:00 Ranny\nWilde's orch.; 10:30 Jimmy Grler's\norch.; 11:00 Paul Carson, organist.\nC.B.S.-DON LEE NETWORK\nKVI  KFRC  KOIN  K8L  KOL\n570     610      940     1130   1270\n5:00 Radio Theater, dir. Cecil De\nMille: 6:00 Wayne King's orch.; 6:30\nMarch of Time;7;15 Renfrew of the\nMounted,   serial;   7:30  One  Night\nStands with pick and Pat; 8:00 Jan\nGarber's orch.; 8:30 Hawaii Calls;\n9:00 Nocturn with Franklyn McCor-\nmack; 9:15 Austin Mack's orch.; 9:45\nMark   Fisher's   orch.,   KSL:   10:00\nGaylor Carter, organist;  10:30 Jan\nTILUE THE TOILER\nBy Rum Wcstovcr\n-HE STEPS THROUGH VNIWDCVJS\nANO POTS HIS PEST ON TABL.ES\nJul) KNOwl THIS IS TOOSHjSEWIM' WITH\nMAC MADd \"tHW FlW-BONE MESOLEf\n\"*\"\" MAOtl AMD HSVtP THREAT*., BUT l\nGOTTA KEEP THIS SUtT Tfl-\naETV-rer*. some\nA&fcT HE\ncould\n\u00ab1W(>1\nDE-VIC'S\nISLAND A\nMONTH\nvm-th\nM6THIN6\nBUT A\nBMWNfi-\nSJJlT AfJD\nAPOCKEl\nt^NlFE\nIT ISN'T A\nMONTH\nSHORT WAVE PROCRAMS\nPacific Standard Time\nBRITISH EMPIRE\nTransmission 6\nThe following frequencies will  be\nuted: GSF 15.14 Met (19.82 m.i;\nGSC 9.58 Met. (31.32 m.).\n6:00 pjn\u2014Big Ben. \"Down to thc\nSea in Ships\u2014Sea Harvests (7):\nSmoke on the Dogger.\" F. M. Davis.\n6:21 A program of new gramophone\nrecords; 6:51 Nat Gonella and his\nGeorgians in a program of dance\nmusic, and Claude Hulbert and Enid\nTrevor in \"some more nonsense.\"\n7:40 News and announcements.\nINTERNA-ICNAL\nPARIS-11:45 p.m. Concert from\nRadio-Paris. TPA-3, 25.2 m., 11.88\nmeg.\nLONDON\u20143 p.m. \"Empire Magazine,\" No. 4. A weekly review of\nthings at home. GSP. 19.8 m., 15.31\nmeg.; GSD, 25.5 m., 11.75 meg.; GSC,\n31.3 m., 9.58 meg.\nROME\u20143 p.m. News in English.\nOpera selections. 2RO's Mail Bag.\n2RO, 31.1 m., 9.63 meg.\nMOSCOW\u20144 p.m. News and reviews from Soviet capital. RNE, 31.5\nm\u201e 9.4 meg.\nBERLIN-5 p.m. Mozart: Variations on a theme by Gluck. DJD, 25.4\nm.. 11.77 meg.\nMADRID\u20145:30 p.m. Light Spanish\nmusic. EAQ, 30.5 m\u201e 9.87 meg.\nCARACAS\u20145:30 p.m. Male duet.\nYV2RC, 51.7 m\u201e 5.8 meg.\nBANANA IS TASTY\nAND HEALTHFUL\nUniversal custom, at least in this\ncountry makes some sort of fruit\nobligatory at breakfast In this\ncountry, but not so abroad. I wat\namused last year when in a fairly\nlarge sized French village, hut one\nthat is not used to American tourist\ntrade. At quite a large hotel I ordered breakfast of oranges, eggs, toast\nand coffee. I got the coffee and toast\nright away. That Is a regular com-\ni plete French breakfast. But thera\nj was a great deal ot jabbering and\nscurrying in the kitchen about tha\n| rest of the order. Then finally I got\n! the eggs. But I waited for the\noranges before beginning my mesi\nTime went on and on. Inquiry after\ninquiry was met with shrug after\nshrug. Finally I found that they\nhad had to send to the fruitstoro\nfor the oranges, and anyway they\nthought I wanted them for dessert,\nas they would serve them at any\nordinary meal.\nWell, custom sometimes makes\nour logic for us, but it does seem\nsensible to start out the day with\na cool, refreshing fruit.\nOranges, grapefruit, melons or\nberries, depending on the time ot\nyear, take first choice with most\nof us. But wc could well afford,\nconsidering their virtues as a food,\nto vary the monotony with bananas.\nFirst, because bananas and milk\ntogether are an almost completely\nbalanced ration. Children who can\nbe persuaded to drink milk alone\nwith the greatest difficulty have\nbeen found to take It willingly\nwhen served with bananas.\nCOMPLETELY DIGESTIBLE\nThe banana is thoroughly and\ncompletely digestible. It used to\nbe said that they were not digestible,\nbut this was only when they were\neaten before they were ripe. They\nhave, when matured, a.good quan*\ntlty of natural fruit sugars, vitamins\nand minerals.\nThey have an especial appeal to\nold people. As time goes on you\nwill find that you begin to like\nbetter and better foods thst do not\nrequire the use of teeth. Bananas\nneed little chewing, and they are\nnutritious.\nLike most fruits, bananas are put\nup by nature In a germ-proof package. They carry, their own cellophane. Unlike apples, peaches and\npears, this covering Is not easily\nbroken. The discoloratlons which\nso quickly form on the bananas\nafter it is sliced are not due tu\nbacterial action or decay, but are a\nchemical change and can be prevented from forming by cutting the\nbanana) directly into a solution of\ncream of tartar, corn syrup pud\nwater.\nThe formula for the solution is\none and one-half teaspoons cream\nof tartar and three cups of tap water; stir thoroughly, let settle and\npour off the clear solution, discarding the sediment. To the clear solution add two-thirds cup of corn\nsyrup (white) and three cups more\nof cold tap water. Slice the bananas\ndirectly into this and remove them\nimmediately with a perforated\nspoon. They will then keep two\nhours without discoloration.\nTO CRYSTAL\nGAZER\"\nEditor, Nelson Daily News.\nSir\u2014Please publish this reply to\nCrystal Gazer's poetry, published in\na recent issue of thc Daily News:\nOh, Crystal Gazer, gaze again;\nThe truth perhaps you'll find.\nThe C.C.F. has just one aim\u2014\nA plan to aid mankind.\nJust give the C.C.F. a chance;\nPerhaps they'll right the wrong\nOf-hunger, lost hope and despair^\nThat's been with us so long.\nThe children born since 1914\nHave seen but war and strife,    **\u2014\nAnd now they ask, \"What are good\ntimes?\nWill we see them In this life?\"\nOur daughters seek for work in\nvain,\nOur sons roam o'er the earth;\nThey ask but (ittle; they get naught\nFrom Canada, land of their birth.\nA faithful band are the C.C.F.;\nThey show the way to right;\nAnd more and more will join their\nranks,\nThat lead from dark to light.\n-SOMEBODY'S MOTHER.\nSchool\nOUT-OF-TOWN PEOPLE \u2014 Have you a home\ntown for your child yet? Read and use the\nCLASSIFIED COLUMN\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS\nCLASSIFIED\nhas a column to assist every one in need.\nDo you need a bike or books or have you something\nfor sale and need the cash?\nPHONE 144\nOut-of-town Readers\u2014Prompt attention given\nto Mail Orders. *&\n^^i\ni     ...   ^mjnmal\na MpjpjMBe\n *\u25a0*\u25a0*-\n^mm\nm\nm.    si iM^xy^-itttstU'wi s.^rm^msmtmrna,\nBACK S3 YEARS\nBill Terry, manager of the Gianti, poses with Jim Mutrie,\nfirst manager of the tetm, In 1888.\nDUCK HUNTING\nIS RESTRICTED\nUNITED STATES\nFederal Bird Officer\nOutlines Steps to\nConservation\nAmong interesting steps toward\nconservation of wild waterfowl are\nihe measures recently taken in the\nUnited States complementing Canadian restrictions. For the information of Canadian sportsmen J. A.\nMunro of Okanagan Landing, chief\nfederal migratory bird offioer in\nBritish Columbia, forwards the following regarding American conservation:\nIn the United States duck hunters\nwill have 30 days of hunting this\nfall under restrictions equally as\nrigid and drastic as those in force\nlast season. Last year also the hunters were allowed ons\/ 30 diys.\nRegulations for this season in the\nUnited States are summarized as\nfollows:\nThree zones\u2014Northern, Intermediate and southern\u2014have been approved for waterfowl hunting. Last\nyear there were two zones, the\nnorthern and southern.\nIn the northern zone the season\nthis year opens October 10 and\ncloses November 8, in the intermediate zone the season is November 1\nto 30, and in the southern zone, November 26 to December 25.\nThree important species of waterfowl, the Atlantic brant and red-\nheld and canvasback ducks, have\nbeen placed on the list of fully protected species this season which\nalso Includes wood duck, ruddy\nduck and buffle-head.\nLast year's regulations not permitting baiting or the use of live decoys\nand sink boxes or batteries have\nbeen strengthened and continued.\nWaterfowl and coot may be hunted In season from 7 a.m. to 4 p.m.\nstandard time.\nRegulations effective in British\nColumbia provide for three zones,\nan open season ot two months and a\nbag limit of 12 ducks and five geese\nper day. Baiting for wBterfowl and\nthe use of live decoys is prohibited.\nRugby League\nLONDON, SepL 6 (CP Cable).-\nEnglish rugby league games played\nSaturday resulted a* follows:\nBatley 14, Bramley 8.\nBradford Northern 18, Swinton 5.\nCastletord 21, Hull-Kingston 4.\nHalifax 0, Keighley 6.\nHull 19, Dewsbury 5.\nLeeds 14, York 12.\nLeigh 6, Wlgan 10.\nLiverpool Stanley 8, Barrow 2.\nNewcastle 12, Huddersfield 33.\nOldham 19, St. Helens Rees 0.\nSalford 21, Rochdale Homets 0.\nSt Helens 2, Widnes 0.\nStreatham and Mltoham 7, Broughton Rangers 18.\nWakefield  Trinity   39,   Feather-\ni stone 14.\nI   Warrington 26, Hunslet 12.\nIRISH SOCCER\nBELFAST, Sept. 6 (CP Cable) .\u2014\nIrish league football games played\nSaturday resulted as follows:\nBelfast Celtic 2, Glentoran 2.\nCllftonville 3, Coleraine 1.\nLame 3, Portadown 0.\nDerry City 6, Newry Town 1.\nGlenavon 1, Ards 2.\nDistillery 2, Ballymena 2.\nH6me_Ruife\nt\u2014   htA   . \u25a0\nBy The Auoclated Press\nYesterday's homers: Fozi, W. Ferrell, Red Sox; Lazzeri, Yankees;\nAverill, Indians; Thompson, Bees;\nGoodman, Herman, Reds, one each.\nThe leaders: Gehrig, Yankets, 42;\nFoxx, Red Sox, 37; Trosky, Indians,\n.16; Ott, Giants, 28; DiMaggio, Yankees, 25; Averill, Indians, 24.\nLeague totals: American 670, National 528, Total 1198.\nREMEMBER WHEN?\nBy Canadian Pren)\nThe Mann cup, emblematic of Canadian lacrosse supremacy returned\nto eastern Canada after a long sojourn In the west. It was 10 years\nago yesterday when thc team representing Weston, a Toronto suburb,\nwon the title by defeating Winnipeg\nTigers, 11 to 3, at Toronto in the\nsecond game of the best-two-out-of-\nthree series. Weston won the first\ngame by the same score.\nHave your car\nChecked NOW!\nFOR SUMMER DRIVING\n1. MOTOR\n(A thorough tune-up)\n2. TIRES\n(Goodrich.8llvertown)\n3. BRAKES\n(Tested)\n4. CAS\n(3 Star and Etie)\n5. OIL\n(Mlrvtlube)\nS. CREASE\n(A good Job)\nHendricks,\nWhaley w*\n\"SatlafaetlonltOur Aim\"\nSalcsgfB     t& Service\nPhen* 41 Josephine SL\nHELEN STEPHENS\nBREAKS RECORD\nTORONTO, Sept. 6 (CP)-A husky\nlass from the little town of Fulton,\nMo., who claims she learned to run\nby chasing rabbi's, was acclaimed\ntonight as the greatest girl sprinter\nto ever perform in Toronto. Not\none ot a crowd of 10,000 who watched her efforts Saturday begrudged\nher thc title of world's champion\nsprinter.\nThe girl\u2014.Helen Stephens \u2014who\ngained her title with a sensational\ndisplay as a member of the United\nStates Olympic teem at Berlin, sped\nthe 100-yard dash In 10 5-10 seconds\nat the Canadian National exhibition\ntrack meet here Saturday to clip\n3-10 second from her own world's\nrecord made last year. The six-foot\nmarvel also won an Invitation 220-\nyBrd run.\nThere was Just one drawback to\nthe dazzling performance\u2014the record may not be officially recognized\nbecause Miss Stephens wis running\nwith a light breeze behind her.\nFair Golfer From\nFernie Plays Here\nMiss Ellen Hughes Is\nChampion of Crow\nAssociation\nMiss Ellen Hughes of Fernie, who\ntoday will play Mrs. John Cartmel\nin the final of the Gosnel cup ladles'\nsingles at the Nelson Golf and Country club, has twice been champion\nof the Crow's Nest Golf association\nembracing clubs in southeastern\nBritish Columbia and southwestern\nAlberta. Her brother holds the\nmen's title of this association.\nMiss Hughes holds the ladies'\nsingles badminton championship in\nher home district and shares the\nladies' and mixed doubles titles.\nShe also has won numerous prizes\nfor swimming.\nA brother, Johnny, was a member\nof Trail's junior hockey champions\nlast winter and this summer has\nbeen playing soccer, along with another brother, in Trail.\nMORE ABOUT\nHIGHLAND\nGAMES\n(Continued From Page One)\nStarter \u2014 Chief ol Police Alex\nStewart.\nAnnouncer\u2014James B. Curran.\nTrack judges\u2014H. C. Pitts, C. D.\nPearson, James Kay.\nField judges \u2014 George Wallach,\nGeorge Bonwell, Nat Brooks, Will-\nlam Vance.\nChief timekeeper\u2014E. Collinson.\nClerks of course\u2014B. Sutherland,\nG. Rowling.\nMarshals \u2014 Jack StDenis, Allan\nMcLean.\nGates\u2014Jake Rothery, Jerry Whitfield, Gordon Fleet, William Byres,\nJack Dingwall.\nEVERYTHING   READY\nCommittee men and a large group\not volunteers prepared the ground\nSunday morning, and when they\nhad finished both track and ground\nwere reported to be ln 6plendid con-\ndi ton.\nPlatform for the dancers wtl built\nby the city, and a government grader\nwent over the trick early in the\nweek. Tents for firtt aid, tor thl\njudge* and tor officials were erected Sunday and lanes marked out\non the trick.\nRUGBY UNION\nLONDON, Sept. 6 (CP Clble).-\nEngllsh rugby union games played\nSaturday resulted li follows:\nCoventry 8, Bridgend 5.\nCardiff 22, London Welsh 3.\nLeicester 22, Bedford 18.\nNorthampton 5, Headingley 11.\nPlymouth 0, Bristol 6.\nTorquay Athletic 14, Redruth 3.\nWeston - Super - Mare 10, Cross\nKeysO.- \u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0*      -\"\".\u25a0    ....\nRowing - Tennis - Soccer - Baseball - Boxing - Wrestling\n\u2014\u2022\u2014\nCHAIN OF JUMPERS\nLacrosse - Golf - Track - Swimming - Horse Racing - Soft Ball\nPAGE FIVE-\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NILSON, S.C-MONPAY MORNING. SEPTEMBER 7.1936\n-PAOE FIVI\nYANKS SET BACK\nIN DOUBLE\n14-5 and 4-2 as Red\nSox of Boston on\nRampage\nBOSTON, Sept. 6 (AP). \u2014 The\nleague-leading Yankees suffered\ntheir tirst doubleheader drubbing* of\nthe season today before a crowd ot\n31,000, losing to Boston Red Sox 14-8\nand 4-2.\nJimmy Foxx smashed out his 37th\nhome run of the season against\nBroaca in the first Inning of the\nfirst game. Pitcher Wes Ferrell ot\nYawkey's gold platers smashed a\nhome run and two singles.\nThe Yankees' only score in the\nsecond game came when Tony Lazzeri lashed out his 14th home run of\nthe season with a man on base.\nFirst game:\nNew York    5 14  2\nBoston  14 17   3\nBroaca, Wicker and Dickey; W.\nFerrell and R. Ferrell.\nSecond game:\nNew York    2  4   1\nBoston     4 111\nBrown, Broaca and Gleen; Grove\nand Berg.\nCHICAGO AND TIGERS TIED\nCHICAGO, Sept.6 (AP).-Chicago\nWhite Sox moved Into a tie for second place with Detroit Tigers today\nby taking a double bill from Cleveland Indians, 15-1 and 6-3, for a\nsweep of the three-game series. The\ndouble defeat knocked the tribe out\nof second place In the American\nleague.\nThe Sox pounded Mel Harder,\nWillis Hudlln and George Uhle for\n19 hits to win the opener as Ted\nLyons held the visitors to eight hits.\nFirst game:\nCleveland    1  8 4\nChicago   15 19  0\nHarder, Hudlln, Uhle and Sullivan; Lyons and Sewell.\nSecond game:\nClevelmd    3 12  2\nChicago     8  7   0\nAllen and George; Stratton, C.\nBrown and Shea.\nATHLETICS LOSE TWO\nWASHINGTON, Sept. 6 <AP>-\nPhlladelphia Athletics dropped both\ngames ot a double bill with Washington today as a pair of old veterans, Earl Whitehlll and Monte\nWeaver, scored victories. Scores\nwere 7-1 and 7-5.\nIn the opener, Whltehill let the\nAthletics down with six hits, no two\nof which came in the same inning.\nFirst game:\nPhiladelphia    16   1\nWashington      7 10   1\nGumpert, Llsenbee and Hayes;\nWhltehill and Millies.\nSecond game:\nPhiladelphia    B  4  1\nWashington     7 11   1\nBullock, Flythe, Llsenbee and\nHayes; Phebtis, Weaver and Hogln,\nSt. Louis at Detroit, postponed,\nrain.\nMORE ABOUT\nPIANE (RASH\n(Continued From Page One)\nRuth Elllnger, 16, Pittsburgh.\nMarcia Dennison, 16, Pittsburgh.\nPhelan McShane, 19, Pittsburgh.\nWilliam Lehey, Pittsburgh.\nBradley Welter, Pittsburgh.\nAndrew Wibmer, Munhall, Pa.\nMrs. Andrew Wibmer, Munhall, pa.\nEric Beck ley, 35-year-old pilot,\nHazelwood, Pa.\nMrs. Ruth Slither, Utlca, N.Y.,\nsister-in-law of the puot.\nAll of the bodies were burned\nbeyond recognition.\nMiss McDonald said all of the\npassengers were \"sitting up in their\nseat!\" when she crawled from the\nflaming wreckage.\nThe girl adjusted her safety belt\nbefore the ship took off. Apparently most of the victims had not\ntaken this precaution.\nA short time after the ship struck\nit caught fire.\nAs it had fallen into a thickly\nwooded ravine fire apparatus hurriedly sent from the airport and\nfrom the fairgrounds could not\nreach It,\nHundreds of spectators watched\nthc ship burn, helpless to render\nassistance.\nSouth Africon\nCricketers May\nCome to Kootenay\n. ..\u25a0-.\nVAKCOUVSR, Sept 6 (CP).-An\ninvitation hu been extended to thl\nSouth African lawn bowling council\nto tend \u25a0 te*m to Canal* during the\nnext two summers, It was revealed\nhere ln word trom the cast. A team\ntrom the British Isles it alio expected.\nIt Is expecttd the Brltlth Columbia association will atk for\nfrom three to four weekt of the\nproposed tours and will allow for\nnames among thi clubt In the\nOkanagan md Kootenay districts\nat will at on Vancouver liland\nand the lower mainland.\nGOLF\nALEX MORRISON\n\u00bb*We>*H\u00bbl**t'lii|. Mfii'   . Ill  Ol^HiiJ\n, Makv\n\/\/ styles\ninTenTional\nSfe.\n__w.\nIt is hard to believe thit my golfer\nwould do anything that did not\nmeasure up as good sportsmanship,\nyet many do. Take stymies for example.\nWhen one player's ball stops on\nthe line between his opponent's ball\nand the hole it is supposed to do so\nby accident and not design. Many\ntimes a player over-anxioui to win\na match will see the advantage oi\nhaving his ball block the other player's approach to the cup. In putting\nhe will favor the stymie and very\noften do the exact thing he visualized.\nHe probably gave no thought to\nharming his opponent, end certainly\nhe would not go out of his way to\nhandicap his play, but the damage\nis done nevertheless.\nTlie stymie is intentional unless\nthe player does something about\nleaving his opponent's line clear. If\nthis makes the whole thing objectionable then it might serve as one\nmore argument for the abolition ot\nstymies.\nOLD COUNTRY\nSOCCER\nFIRST DIVISION\nBolton 1, Grimsby 2.\nCharlton 1, Liverpool 1.\nChelsea 1, Birmington 3.\nDerby 5, Manchester U. 4.\nEverton 3, Brentford 0.\nHuddersfield 0, Arsenal 0.\nManchester  C.  6,  West  Brom\nwich 2.\nPortsmouth 2, Middlesborough 1\nStoke 2, Leeds 1.\nSunderland 3, Preston 0.\nWolverhampton 4, Sheffield W. 13\nSECOND DIVISION\nAston 4, Southampton 0.\nBarnsley 2, Bradford 1.\nBlackburn 0, Leicester 0.\nBlackpool 1, Westham 0.\nBradford City 4, Swansea 0. '\nChesterfield 4, Burnley 1.\nCoventry 1, Bury 3.\nNotts Forest 5, Fulham 3.\nPlymouth 7, Doncaster 0.\nSheffield 2, Newcastle 1.\nTottenham 2, Norwich 3,\nTHIRD NORTHERN\nBarrow 2, Crewe 2.\nCarlisle 1, Halifax 2.\nDarlington 6, Rotherham 3.\nGateshead 0, Portvale 1.\nHartlepool 2, Tranmere 1.\nHull 2, Oldham 0.\nLincoln 4, Southport 1.\nBrighton 1, Accrington Stanley 1.\nRochdale 0, Chester 1.\nWrexham 0, Stockport 0.\nYork 1, Mansfield 1.\nTHIRD SOUTHERN\nBournemouth 5, Swindoh 2.\nBrighton 1, Aldershot 0.\nBristol Rovers 3, Bristol City 1.\nCardiff 3, Luton 0.\nCrystal 3, Walsall 1.\nExeter 0, Clapton 2.\nNorthampton 2, Millwall 2.\nQueens Park 3, Torquay 0.\nReading 4, Notts County 1.\nSouthend 9, Newport 2.\nWatford 6, Gilllngham 1.\n8COTTISH\nFIRST DIVISION\nArbroath 0, Rangers 0.\nCeltic 2, Kilmarnock 4.\nDundee 1, Albion 0.\nDunfermline 0, St. Johnstone 0.\nFalkirk 1, Queens Park 2.\nHibernians 5, Hamilton 4.\nMotherwell 4, Queen of South 1,\nPartick 0, Aberdeen 2.\nSt. Mirren 1, Clyde 3.\nLanark 3, Hearts 0.\nSECOND   DIVISION\nAirdrleonians 2, Stenhousemutr 1,\nAlloa 2, Leith 0.\nAyr 6, Forfar 1.\nBrechin 1, Montrose 1.\nDumbarton 3, Cowdenbeath 2.\nKingsptrk 3, Stirling 1.\nMorton 4, Dundee I.\nRtlth 2, Fife 2.\nSt. Bernards 4, Ediriburgh 1.\nDETROYAT WINS\nLOS ANGELES, Sept. 6 (AP)-\nLleut Michael Detroyat ot Frtnce\nwon a amaslilng victory in the $10,-\n000 Louis W. Greve trophy race at\nthe national air races her* today.\nThe Frenchman llaihed Into an\nimmediate lead over a field of six\nAmerican filers and hii supremacy\nnever was ln doubt during the 100-\nmile race.tflown over a 20-lap live-\nmile course. First place prize money\nwas $4500.    ,--\nGIANTS AND THE\n(ARDS BEATEN\nNEW YORK, SepL 6 (AP)-Tom-\nmy Thompson came through . In\n\"Frank Merrlwell\" style today with\na pinch homer in the ninth inning\nwith two mates on base, to give\nBoiton Beei * 3-2 victory over the\nGianti and their third straight win\nover the leigue leaders.\nUp to that point, Gabbo Gabler\nhad the Bees shutout with four\nhlta, and sported a two-run lead\non the strength ot a Giant run In\nthe fourth on successive singles by\nTravis Jackson, Gus Mancuso and\nDick Bartell, and another in the\ntilth on Mel Ott's two bagger and\nJackson's blse hlL\nBoston     3   7   1\nNew York   2 13  1\nLanning, R. Smith and Lopez;\nGabler and Mancuso.\nCARDS LOSE TWO\nCINCINNATI, Sept. 6 (AP)-Cln-\ncinnatl Reds put another crimp ln\nthe pennant hopes of SL Louis\nCardinals today, taking a double-\nheader 5-3 and 8-4 to drive the\nsecond placers three full games\nbehind the league-leading Giants,\nwho lost to Boston.\nBabe Herman led the Reds' 10-bit\nattack for the day with tour safeties and three walks ln eight tlmei\nat bat, Including a homer with a\nmate on base in the first inning of\nth* opener.\nFirst game:\nSt. Loull    3   7   0\nClncinniti    5  9  2\nSI Johnion, Ernshaw, Heusser and\nV. Davis; Hallaman, R. Davis and\nLombardi.\nSecond game:\nSt. Louis    4  9  0\nCincinnati   8 10   1\nPippen, Eamshaw and V. Davis;\nR. Davis and Campbell.\nPIRATES BEAT CUBS 6-4\nPITTSBURGH, Sept. 6 (API-\nHeavy hitting drove both starting pitchers\u2014Curt Davis and \u2014Jim\nWeaver\u2014from the mound today as\nPittsburgh Pirates beat Chicago\nCubs 5-4.\nChicago     4 13   0\nPittsburgh     5   9   1\nDavis, Bryant, Root and Hartnett,\nO'Dea; Weaver, Swift and Todd.\nBROOKLYN L08E8\nPHILADELPHIA, Sept. 6 (AP)-\nThe Phils defeated Brooklyn today\n7-5 in the final game of the season,\nfor the Dodgers at Baker bowl.\nBrooklyn    5 10   5\nPhiladelphia        7 10  2\nJeffcoat and Phelps; Slvess and\nAtwood.\nSaturday\nNATIONAL\nBoston 6-7, New York 2-3.\nSL Louis 3, Cincinnati 2.\nChicago 0, Pittsburgh 1.\nBrooklyn 3, Philadelphia 2.\nAMERICAN\nNew York 2-7, Boston 3-7.\nCleveland 0, Chicago 9.\nSt. Louis 2, Detroit 7.\nPhiladelphia 4, Washington 3.\nPACIFIC COA8T\nOakland 3, Missions 4.\nSacramento 3, San Diego 10.\nSunday\nINTERNATIONAL\nAlbany 11-1, Syracuse 8-8.\nRochester 6-2, Montreal 8-0.\nToronto 7, Buffalo 6.\nBaltimore 2, Newark 13.\nASSOCIATION\nSt.-Paul 5, Minneapolis 7.\nLouisville 13, 4, Indianapolis 5, 8.\nMilwaukee 1, 5, Kansas City 8, 3.\nColumbus 0, 13, Toledo 6, 11.\nPACIFIC COA8T\nOakland 8-12, Missions 3-1.\nSan Francisco 5-6, Seattle 7-3.\nSacramento 3-0, San Diego 15-1.\nLos Angeles 4-8, Portland 10-1.\nRuthlan Swing\nA regular Babe Ruth among the\nsoftball leaguers ls Rose Domagala.\nRose is pictured taking her cut during a Chicago tournament. Nice\nswing, eh? \u2014 Central Press Cana'\ndlan Photo.\n\"Cam\" Chisholm\nof Cuirli'\"\" Fame\nDies, Winnipeg\nWINNIPEG, Sept. 6 (CP)-A leading personality in curling circles\nand an architect of prominence,\nCampbell (Cam) Chisholm, 52, died\nhere Saturday following a lengthy\nillness.\nHe was the creator of the \"Chisholm draw\" adopted by western\ncurling associations as a standard\nof procedure at annual bonsplels,\nand a lbrmlr president of the Manitoba   Curling  association.\nWINTER WORKER WINS\n....mm. \u201e.  _       ...   I        1    I   |||'H|-gfcJ|\nMANCHIStBR.'Sept. 6 (CP)-\u00bb-E.\nHyslop Bell's Winter Worker Saturday won the Prince Edward hand l-\ncip by a comfortable margin ot six\nlengths over H. M. Martinelu'S\nApple Peel. Mrs. Cheater' Beatty's\nPlunger was third, three-quarters\not a length back ot Apple FeeL\nBANGOR   WINS\nBELFAST, Sept. 6 (CP Cable)-\nBangor, playing at home, were defeated by Linfield, 7-1, ln an Irish\nfootball league game played Saturday.   ,\n3&ttii\\A\njeaders\n Q\t\nBy the Auoclated Pritt\nA minor shikeup ln baseball's batting \"big six\" yesterday saw Bill\nDickey of the Yankees take over\nthird place in the American league\nfrom his teammate, Lou Gehrig, and\nErnie Lombardi of the Reds advance\nto a third-place tie with Frank Demaree of the Cubs in the National,\nDickey hit safely twice in five times\nat bat to hold his .363 average while\nGehrig managed only one hit in nine\nchances to slip to fourth. Lombardi\nbanged out two hits in four trips to\nthe plate to climb two percentage\npoints to .354 while Demaree, getting\nonly one hit in four chances, slipped\none point to the same figure.\nStanding   (first three places  ln\neach league):\nG AB R H Pet.\nAverill, Inds ... 132 537 112 200 .372\nAppling, WS .... 120 457 98 168 .368\nModwick, Cds .. 132 543   99 199 .366\nDickey, Yks  100 388   92 141 .363\nP. Waner, Pts.. 127 500  82 180 .360\nDemaree, C  133 528   80 187 .354\nLombardi, Reds 103 322  34 114 .354\nScore 27-27 and\nIt Isn't Cricket\nStaging a wild scoring rally in the\nfirst of the sixteenth inning to take\na 27-21 lead, the Hendrlcks-Whaley\nsoftball aggregation were forced to\nwitness their Nelson Transfer opponents send six runs across the\nplate and tie up the game, 27-27.\nDespite the tact that three electric\nlights had allowed the game to go so\nlong, the game was called when\n\"Schoolboy\" McEwan hit the ball\nso hard for the tying run that it\ncould not be found.\n\"Harder\" Horrigan was the big\nscorer for the Nelson Transfer team\nwith six runs ln as many times at\nbat. \"Violet\" Irwin, Appling,, Culley and \"Bunny\" Russell each scored\nthree runs. \"Foul Ball\" Whaley\nmade six hits tor the Hendricks-\nWhaley aggregation, including four\nfoul balls that cleared the fence in\nfront of the first base stands. \"Slugger\" Carr also collected six hits and\nas many runs. \"Casey-at-the-Bat\"\nGillot was sent in as pinch hitter\non four occasions but whiffed the\nair every time.\nSummary:\nHendrlcks-Whlley  27 16 23\nNelion Transfer 27 Jl 29\nThe teams were:\nNelson Tranifer-.\"Minusco\" Alm-\nItrom, \"Herder\" HoMgan, \"Coch-\nrlne\" Wilton, \"Schoolboy\" McEwan,\n\"Lefty Grove\" Scfibner, \"Medwick\"\nProudfoot, \"Hard Rock\" Stone.\n\"Bunny\" Russell, \"Violet\" Irwin,\n\"Lopez\" Milne. \"DeMingl\" Glrha-\nlime, \"Milling' Miller, \"Bullock\"\nFerguson, \"Ole\" Olson.\nHendrlcks-Whaley \u2014 \"Foul Ball\"\nWhaley, \"Slugger\" Carr, \"Sonny\"\nAllen, \"Errorless\" Grant. \"Annie\"\nSwensen, \"Casey-at-the-Bat\" Gillette, \"Plck-'em-Up\" Heathman,\n\"Sheik\" Morgan. \"Dizzy Dear*!' Gilker, \"Trosky\" Grummett, \"Daffy\"\nBlaney.  ^ \u25a0\nHorses ln * race at Rye, N.Y., form almost a perfect chain aa (hey clear\nthe barrier\nTORONTO MISS LONE CANADIAN IN\nU.S. TENNIS; FAVORITES ADVANCE\nBudge, Parker, Mangin, Perry, Alice Marble,\nHelen Perderson and Jean Burritt Win\nFOREST HILLS, N.Y, Sept 6\n(CP).\u2014Johnny McDiarmid, slender\nyoung political science instructor at\nPrinceton university, staged a lion-\nhearted five-set battle on the windswept grandstand court today to\ndefeat Frank J. Bowden ot New\nYork 8-10. 8-10, 6-2, 7-5, 6-2, In the\noutstanding match of the United\nStates tennis singles championships.\nAll other seeded players who went\nto the court* survived, though there\nwasn't a brilliant spot ln the entire\nprogram. Don Budge, the American\nfavorite from Oakland, Calif., muddled through a 6-3, 6-4, 9-7 victory\nover Joe Hunt ot Los Angeles;\nFrankie Parker tumbled Charlie\nHlrrii ot West Palm Beach, Fit.,\n6-4, 3-6, 6-1, 7-5, and Gregory Man-\ngin of New York and Bernard Des-\ntremau and Yvon Petra of France\nwon easy victories.\nIt was tlie same in the women's\ntournament with the three seeded\nplayers in the lower bracket Alice\nMarble, San Francisco, Gracyn\nWheeler, Santa Monica, Calif., and\nHelen Pedersen, Hartford, Conn., (11\nwinning without a struggle. The Canadian veteran, Jean Burritt of Toronto, was in fine form as lhe\ndefeated Anna Page, Pennsylvania\nstar, 7-5, 6-0. Miss Burritt'i hud\nand accurate stroking caught the\nAmerican girl flatfooted time and\nagain following the strenuous first\nset.\nThe Toronto miss wai thi only\nCanadian left in the tourney. Bob\nMurray of Montreal, last of the\nthree male contenders trom the dominion, went down Saturday before\nFrance's Pierre Pelizia. Scores w*r*\n6-3, 6-8, 6-3. In the previous round\nPelizza knocked out* Laird Watt,\nMontreal.\nFred Perry, English favorite for\nthe crown, enjoyed a day of leliur*\nafter reaching the fcurth round S*t-\nurday with a 6-3, 6-1, 4-6, 8-0 trl-.\numph over David Jones ot Brook*\nlyn. After I few shots, th* great\nEnglishman had Jones' booming\nservice solved md from there on\nthere wis no doubt of the outcome.\nABERDEEN AND MOTHERWELL OUT\nIN FRONT IN SCOTTISH LEAGUE\nRangers Are Held to a\nDraw; Celtic Is\nBeaten\nGLASGOW, Sept. 6 (CP Cable)-\nReversals ot form thit completely\nbaffled the side-line critics featured\nSaturday's Scottish football league\nschedule. Aberdeen and Motherwell\nemerged as joint leaders with good\nwins while Glasgow Rangers could\nnot do any better than split pointi\nPicked as the feature contest, the\nCeltlc-Kllmarnock joust was just\nthaL The champion Celts were called on short odds to win but a great\nOffensive by the KUlies turned what\nappeared to be a deadlocked affair\nInto a brilliant 4-2 win.\nWhile the mighty Rangers and\nto drop a notch in the table.\nLanark, another Glasgow team, was\ncoming to the front with a smashing 3-0 decision over the powerful\nHearts, to land ln a tie for sixth\nposition with Celtic.\nLong overdue, Hibernians, one of\nthe \"door-mita\" in th* H34-S5 cim-\npalgn .entertained Hamilton Academicals and came through with\nits tint win ot the season In six\nstarti in a free-scoring 8-4 match.\nThe Hibs weren't \"called\" to gain\nboth points but their vanguard hid\ntheir shooting boots on ind drew\nthe hearty cheers of home-town fuii.\nAberdeen'i recently - discovered\nSouth Afrlcin wing forward,\nStratus, continued to \"hit\" 100 per\ncent when he notched one of the\nDon's goals ln their 2-0 triumph over\nPartick Thistle. The South African\nhai scored once In each game to\ndate. Mills netted the second and\nfinal goal.\nMotherwell, a peg behind Aberdeen due to a lower goal average,\ncame through with the most convincing win of the day, smothering\nQueen of South 4-1 at home. The Fir\nPark team's first counter was a gift\nwhen the ball caromed oft an opposing back to land in the net. Cumming equalised in the second half\nbut the home team showed a marked\nsuperiority when MacFadyen shot\nin two quick goals. Stevenson mlde\nit 4-1 near the close.\n10 Clubs Tied al Top of Heap\nIn English; Two Teams Unbeaten\nHuddersfield and Charlton Athletic Have\nWon One and Drawn Two\nLONDON, Sept 6 (CP Ctble).-\nThe race for the championship of\nthe English football league promises\nto be a long drawn out struggle between several well-matched teams.\nAlthough only three games each\nhave been played 10 clubs are tied\nat the top of the league and ot these\nonly Huddersfield Town and Charlton Athletic are unbeaten.\nEight of the 10 have won two\ngames and lost one but Huddersfield\nand Charlton have each won one\nand drawn two. Behind the leaden\nare six clubs with three points each.\nIn contrast to the summer-like\nconditions prevailing for the opening of the league schedule a week\nago, rain fell during yesterday's\ngames. The day was notable for the\nnumber of decisive victories, only\ntwo matches being drawn in the\ntirst division.\nBowers, Derby County, and God-\ndard, Southend United, were the individual stars, both scoring four\ngoals. Derby edged out Manchester\nUnited 5-4 and Southend United\nswamped Newport County 9-2 in a\nthird division, southern section, feature.\nGREAT DAY FOR BOWERS\nIt was a great day for Bowers. Thc\nMancunians, promoted from the second division, led 4-1 shortly alter\nthe interval and then the Derby\nStar ran in four counters In 14 minutes to put his team ahead. Twenty-\nflve thousand saw the tussle on the\nCounty's ground.\nEight goals were tcorad it Milne\nRoad where Manchester City\ntrounced West Bromwlch Albion 6-1\nThe lively home forward! nn\naround the Albion defence before\nthe interval and all the -\"coring was\ndone ln the opening half. Herd and\nDoherty tallied two each tor th*\nCity, Brook and Neale getting the\nothers. West Bromwlch's mark*-\nmen were Boyei and W. G. Richard-\nson.\nBlrmlnghim exploited the third\nback game against Chelsea very\neffectively and won 3-1 at Stamford\nBridge. Mills drew first blood tor\nthe pensioner! but Morris and Harris put the visitors ahead at thl\ninterval. Dearson made victory\nsure after the change of ends.\nHuddersfield and Arsenal had an\nexciting encounter on the former*!\nenclosure but the game ended with\nboth goals intact. The home team\nemployed rushing tactlci but the\ngunners' defence proved impregnable. Dean scored two of the goals ln\nEverton's 3-0 win over Brentford,\nSeventy-Year-Old\nVeteran to Race\nat Monday Sports\nAlbert Wallach has opposition for\nthe old man's race at Monday*\nHighland gamei-D. Gillespie, war\nveteran who this week celebrated\nhis seventieth birthday, will get\ninto it with the boys.\n**nssi<\nPLAIN 0*\nCORK TIP\nrC0STL!E.r\n)BACC0Si\nBRITISH\nCONSOLS\nijJMfi^^^j^^^^lteigfi^tL^j^^^^^^^jM\n PAGE RIX\n!.C\u2014MONT V.\" \u2022*C!\",,!VC-. 3EPTEMBER 7, WA\nIkvuh a BARGAIN FOR YOU iff rtc ClASSIFiEDStJWftfcm\/\n*N4P>'\nftehum Oatli} Nrtus\nMember ot Uie Canadian Dally\nNewspapers Association\nTELEPHONE 144\nPrivate Exchange connecting to\nall  Departments      \t\nSubscription   Rates\nSingle copy 5   -05\nBv carrier  per week 2b\nBv carrier per vear 1300\nBy mail in Canada, to subscribers living outside regular\ncarrier areas per month. 60c;\nthree months Jl 80. six months.\n$3 00 one vear $6.00.\nUnited States and Great Britain, -ne month 75c; six months,\n$4 00  one vear $7.50.\nForeign countries, other than\nU S. same as above plus any\nextra postage.\nClassified\nAdvertising Rates\nlie \u00bb Line*\nMinimum 2 Lines\n2 lines, once \t\nLEGAL NOTICES\n$ 22\n. 3i\n. .41\n.   St\n3 lines, once\n4 lines, once\n2 lines. 6 times\n3 lines 6 times  132\n4 Unes. 6 times  1.76\n2 lines. 1 month 2.86\n3 Unes. 1 month  ; 4.29\n4 lines. 1 month   5.72\nAll above less 10% for prompt\npayment\n3s*S65555:$S5:5$$$S$SSS5$S3v5$53:S$$iWW55$$5$5S$SS'\nove isn't Importan\nOf Louise Jerrold\nComur.BT l n rjg t\n( ^f>AAW*\/VV^Ar\\\u00bb\"J\nCHAPTER 21\n\"Breck Carter's in with Mr. Adams\u2014sort of a partner or something, isn't lie*\"' Gay asked Marl-\nVance.\nThe artist nodded, munching a\nlanrfwlch.\n\"Righto. They've both invested\nevery cent they could get their\nhands on. Breck's always struck\nme as sort of a lightweight, but Ad\n\u25a0wears by him. Claims he's the most\nskillful pilot in the country, even\nthough he looks and acts like a\nkid.\" ,\n\"He's a wild Indian, that Carter\nboy,\" Charlotte Vance remarked, as\nshe refilled thc coffee cups. \"Listen\nMark. Did you hear what he did\nto , Peggy, the other day? Had an\nengagement to take her to lunch,\nand never showed up till next day.\nSaid he was flying, and forgot! Was\nihe furious!\"\n\"Peggy,\" observed lhe artist, \"is\na badly spoiled young lady. AH\nher- life people have been kowtowing before her on account of\nher money. Now she's in love with\na chap who has brains enough to\nkeep her guessing, and it's just what\nahe needs. Remember how I treated\nyou, Charlotte? The same thing, exactly!\" He winked at Gay. \"And\nhow you loved il! Thc more I shoved\nyou off. thc harder you came after\nme!\"\n\"Idiot!\" jeered Mrs. Vance affectionately. And then, to Gay,\n\"We're frightfully selfish, keeping\nyou here while we gossip about\npeople you're not the least bit interested in. Mark, pay the child\nher money, and let hcr go. We've\ngot lo be getting homo ourselves.\"\nFor two afternoons following, Gay\ncame lo tho studio and posed in tho\nbathing costume. Then she changed\nto day-duty at thc club, nnd telephoned Mark Vance to. tell him she\ncould nose only in the evening.\n.\"Let's call it off for tonight.\"\nMark suggested. \"Charlotte and I\narc going to thc theater. But be at\nthe studio at eight promptly, Fri-\nda\" evening.\"\nOn Friday, therefore, as soon as\nJean arrived to take charge of thc\ncoatroom. Gay hurriedly scrambled\nout of her uniform and into street\n.clothes.'and was on her way. As she\n\u2022came out into thc street from the\nemployees' entrance, she noticed a\nroadster parked close lo the curb,\nunder tlie arc light. She was about\nt owalk past, when a familiar, drawling voice hailed her.\n\"Why the rush? Don't you even\nspeak' to me. any more?\"\nShe stopped short. \"Hello Breck.\nI didn't recognize you,\"\nHe had stepped out, and was smiling at her. hand extended.\n\"I've waited half an hour to talk\nto you.   Get in the car.\"\n.   Gay    paused.    \"I'm    sorry    you\nwailed.    I   haven't   time  to  stop.\"\nBreck repeated. \"Get in thc car.\nI have a little bone to pick with\nyou. I'll drive you home, and wc\ncan talk on tlie way.\"\n\"But I'm not goin-; home.\"\n\"Where are you going'*\"\n\"To Mr. Vance's studio, up on\nRowena.   I'm posing for him.\"\nBreck hesitated fur only an instant. \"I'll drive you lliere . . .\nWhereabouts  on   Rowena?\"\nGay told him, nnd added that shi\nmust be there in 20 minutes.\n\"Come along,  then.  You  needn't\nbe afraid I'm going to kidnap you.\nI have a date with Peggy for nine\ni o'clock   and   I   intend   to   keep   it.\"\n' His   voice   wa;,   impatient.     \"Let's\ngo\nYielding. Gay climbed into thc\nroadster, and as it gathered speed,\nsaid demurely, \"I'm grateful for the\nlift' This is lots nicer than thc\nWoodward street cars. They bump\nso!\"\n\"Do liny-''' Brock was sardonic,\n\u25a0\"Well, liiey couldn't bump you half\nas hard as l'rl like to. Let's get down\nto cases. Gay. What's the big idea\nof tlie run-around you've been giving mc?\"\nGay slid down farther in the seat,\nrelaxing comfortably, \"I'm so tired,\nBreck. Tlease down't lie cross. And\nI don't know what vou mean by\n'run-around'.\"\nHe looked straight ahead, slowing down for tlie changing lights\n;Bt tlie intersection of Woodward\nSlid Forest avenues. \"Why don't you\nanswer tile letters I've written you?\nWhy haven't you phoned? Is all\n.this coy stuff just a come-on game.\nor' arc you really off me?\"\nTne traffic light flashed lo green,\nand tin' roadster darter] off again\nnarrowly escaping collision with t>\ncruising taxi. \"Maybe you think I\nenjoy saying sappy ihings like this:\nWhy, woman\u2014I've never groveled\nlo anyone in all my life! .lever had\nto! If someone had told me a month\nago. that I'd he chasing a girl this\nway. I'd have laughed mv head\noff!\"\n, hurry, or 1 II in- late for my appointment!\"\n'TBjpiii   \"our   appointments,\"   he\nAUCTION SALE\nTimber Sale X3S43\n(Advertisement)\nThere will be offered for sale at\nPublic  Auction,  at noon  on  the\nSecond day of November, 1936, in\nthe office of the District Forester,\nNelson, B.C., the Licence X3843 to\ncut 18,525,000 feet, board measure,\nof White Pine, Hemlock, Cedar, Fir,\nSpruce, Larch and Yellow pine and\n1.075,290 lineal feet of Cedar poles\nor piling on an area situated on Four\nMile  Creek,   Little  Slocan  River,\nKootenay Land District.\nTwenty (20) years will be allowed\nfor removal of timber. \u25a0\n\"Provided any one unable to\nattend the auction in person may\nsubmit tender to be opened at the\nhour of auction, and treated-as one\nbid.\"\nFurther particulars may be obtained from the Chief Forester, Victoria, B.C., or District Forester, Nelson, B.C. (2533)\nPERSONAL\nMEN! GET VIGOR AT ONCEl NEW\nOstrex Tonic Tablets contain raw\noyster invlgorators and other\nstimulants One dose peps up organs, glands. If not delighted,\nmaker refunds few cents paid\nCall, write, Mann-Rutherford Co\n(2421)\nHIGHEST QUALITY RUBBER\ngoods 25 latex assortment for $1.\nOrder direct and be sure of best.\nPacked plain. Free catalogue National Importer, 812-Centre St..\nCalgary. Alta. (2422)\nPARENTS' INFORMATION CLIN-\nic. Write Constance Smedley, 603\nW. Hastings, Vancouver, B.C.\n(2242)\nFOR SALE\n50,000 FT. 1 IN. USED RECONDI-\ntioned pipe. 5-cents per ft. Large\nstock ln all sizes up to 12 in. for\nimmediate shipment. New and\nused boilers, tubes, fittings, valves,\netc. Write Swartz Pipe Yard, 220\nEast 1st. Ave., Vancouver, B.C.\n(24241\nHe turned sharply off Woodward\n! avenue, and slowed up by the curb,\nJ The side street was dark and quiet.\nBreck turned \"off the ignition.\n\"I  can't  talk  and  drive.    Let's\nhave it out, right here and now.\ni Are you sore at me because I go\naround with Peggy?\"\n'    Gay smiled.   \"I don't care if you\n[see Peggy Pennell every night In\n[ thc week-.\"\n\"Then why are you peeved at\nj me?\"\n\"Do you want the truth?\"\n\"Shoot the works!\"\n\"All right, then.\" Gay faced him.\nHow good-looking he was, and how\nwell he knew it! \"I liked you a lot\nthe first time I met you, Breck. But\nthat other night\u2014when you took\nmc to the speakie! That was awful!\nI don't go in for wrestling matches.\nIt's no fun for a girl to go out with\na man, and be mauled to pieces.\"\nBreck muttered, \"I've told you\u2014\nI've written you\u2014that, I'm sorry.\nOther girls wouldn't raise such a\nyelp over nothing\u2014\"\n\"No, wait!\" Gay interrupted. \"The\nwhole thing is this, Breck. When\nthey told you I was a Miss Smith,\nthe daughter of a friend of Dr. Wilson's, you behaved pretty well. But\nafterward, when you found out I\nwas just a check girl, how you\nchanged! You thought you could do\nanything you wanted\u2014tear my\nclothes off. even, if that would\namuse you!\" As she recalled that\nrowdy struggle on thc chaise lounge,\nj Gay trembled with indignation.\n\"I did not tear your clothes off!\nj I mean\u2014I\u2014\" Breck grinned. \"Good\nLord above, did I really?\" he added,\nwith  unaffected  interest and  surprise.\n\"You tried to!\"\nAgqinst hcr will, Gay smiled, too.\nj You couldn't stay angry witli Breck;\n. there was something so boyish about\nthat shamefaced grin of his.\n\"But don't you sec how you hurt\n. my pride?\" she asked. \"I'm not a\ncheap little\u2014\"\n\"Just a minute honey.\" Breck\nlifted his hand. \"If I thought you\nwere cheap. I'd never have bothered dating you up. I didn't intend\nto get so rough\u2014but I had a drink\nor so more than I could handle, and\nthings happened. I don't even remember what I did, but whatever it\n1 was, I'm sorry. I apologized before,\nand 1 apologize again.\n\"Again I give you my word, Gay,\nwitli all my faults I'm not a snob.\nWhether a girl is Junior league,\nor a Follies graduate. I treat her\nexactly the same. You believe mc\nwhen I say that, don't you. sweetness?\"\nThere was a note of sincerity in\nCreek's voice, and Gay nodded\n\"I guess so.\"\n\"And you'll excuse mc for being\nsuch a roughneck that other night,\nif I swear it won't nappen again?\nYou'll go out with me. if I treat\nyou witli great respect, and sit\nway off from you. tike this?\" As\nBreck finished the question, he\nmoved far off, to the extreme edge\nt of the seat.\nGay couldn't help laughing.\n\"Don't be silly! You won't have\nto keep quite that far away from\nme!\"\n\"That's lhe way wo sit, and\nthat's the way wc dance, from now\non,\" he assured her. \"Honey, you're\ndynamite. When I get any closer.\nI go haywire Look!\" He drew\na trifle nearer. \"You can see for\nyourself: I quiver in every limb\nas they say in the movies. And\nwhen I put my arm around you. j\nlike this, I lose all control\u2014like ,\na 1017 DeHaviland in an air pocket!\"\n; Gay removed his arm. \"You're\nnice enough.' 'she remarked, \"when\n\u25a0 on want to be,\"\n)    \"Nice yourself.\" Breck responded.\nHe leaned toward her. \"Silly, don't\nyou   realize   I'm  completely  goofy!\nover you? That it's hard as the devil\nto make myself behave when I'm !\nnear you? If I had a brain in my\nhead. I'd run when I see you com- |\ning,   instead  of chasing after you! '\nI was all set with Peggy, until you\ncame along. Liked her line She's not\nsuch a bad kid. you know. But now\nI've got you on my mind. I can't see\nPeg for dust.\"\nHe looked into Gay's eyes. \"Girl,\nwhat is tliis strange power you have\nover men1!\"\n\"My fatal beauty!\" Gay mourned,\nand they laughed together.\nThen Gay noticed tbe clock on\nthe dashboard, and gave a cry of\ndismay.\n\"Three  minutes of eight!  Breck,\nCANADA IN SOUTH AFRICA\nJOHANNESBURG - iCP) - Value |\nof the Canadian building at thc\n; Empire exhibition opening here is\nin September, together with the\nCanadian exhibits, is placed al about\nM50.000.\nLECAL NOTICES\nIN THE SUPREME COURT OF\nBRITISH COLUMBIA IN THE\nMATTER OF THE NOTARIES ACT\nAND IN THE MATTER OF THE\nAPPLICATION OF VIVIAN MURCHISON VAN OF THE CITY OF\nROSSLAND, PROVINCE OF BRITISH COLUMBIA.\nTAKE NOTICE that the application of the above named Vivian Murchison Van for enrollment as Notary Public pursuant to Section 5\nof the Notaries Act will be heard at\nthe Court House. City of Nelson,\nProvince of British Columbia, on\nMonday, the 12th day of October,\nA.D. 1936 at the hour of 11 o'clock\nin thc forenoon or so soon thereafter\nas the application may be heard by\nthe presiding. Justice.\nAND FURTHER TAKE NOTICE\nthat any person intending to oppose\nsuch application must serve notice\nof such intention upon the applicant and file a copy of such notice\nin the office of the District Registrar\nof the Supreme Court, City of Nelson, Province of British Columbia.\nDATED AT NELSON. British Columbia, this 4th Day of September.\nA.D. 1936.\nSigned\nW. J. STURGEON.\nDistrict Registrar.\n(2524)\nj 1 PIPELESS FURNACE. 1 5 FOOT\nI show case, counter top, 1 small\n; cook stove, cast iron soil pipe and\nj fittings, 1 china wall basin, 1\nI 20x32 flat rim sink. W. G. Hunter.\n;   Pi\\453R._ (2449)\n! FIRST^UftrNG_ALFALFA~HAY,\n] second cut Alfalfa. Bran. Shorts.\nI Oat Chop, Oilcake Meal, Flax\nI Meal, Epsom Salts. The Brackman-\nj Ker Millg Co. Ltd. __ (2534)\n| RECONDITIONED\"COOK STOVE\nfrom $10 and up. Thc Ark Store.\n(2390)\nHELP WANTED\nLIVESTOCK FOR SALE\nWANTED - MAN TO WORK ON\ndairy farm. Must be good milker.\nState age and wages expected.\nBox 2532, Dally News. (2532)\nA COMPETENT MIDDLE AGED\nwoman for family of two. Apply\nBox 2536, Daily News. (25361\nWANTED-FARM HAND, EXPERI-\nenced'milker: Abey's Ranch, Mir-\nror Lake,*B.C. (2454)\nWOMAN OR GIRL FOR HOUSE-\nwork. Country home. Box 2400,\nDaily News, (2400)\nFARM BOY. GOOD MILKER. BOX\n2522, Daily News. (2522)\nPROPERTY FOR SALE\nBusiness and Professional\nDirectory\nAssaycrs\nFOR SALE-1N ONE OF THE BEST\ndistricts, 7 room modern house. 11\nlots. All out buildings. Water and\nJight. Ph. 364Y2. ' (2385)\n4 LOTsToTiooM hotseTbath\nApply 212 Anderson St.      (237B)\nFOR RENT. HOUSES,\nAPARTMENTS\/ETC.\nRABBITRY SELLING OUT ALL\nbreeding stock, Flemish Giants\nand Belgian Hares. P.O. Box 135.\nNelson. ^2497)\n6 HEAVY H6rSES\"FR6\"M 1400 TO\n1700. Ages 6-9. Priced for quick\nsale. Abey's Ranch. Mirror Lake\n 12453)\n2 YEAR OLD YORKSHIRE SOW\"\nFarrow in Oct. Also one year old\nboar. Box 2531. Daily' News'.\n_(2531)\nTEAM   3500   LBS.   CHEAP   FOR\nquick sale At Forch Ranch, Erie\n(2448)\nE W WIDDOWSON, PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst, Assayer. Chemist. Chemical and Metallurgical Engineer\nSampling agents at Trail and Tacoma smelters, 301-305 Josephine\nSt.. Nelson. B.C. (2455)\nCtRENVILLE H GRIMWOOD\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist. 618\nBaker street. Nelson. B.C. P.O.\nBox No. 276. Representing Shippers interest al Trail. B.C.   (2456)\nj Automobile Radiator Repairs\nI    NELSON RADIATOR WORKS\nfor expert repairs\n1   Phone 686 604i,i Baker St.\n! 123721\nInvestments\nLIVING PROTECTION\nINVESTORS SYNDICATE\nF A. STUART.  BOX 389\n(2472)\nMachinists\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nFor all Classes of Metal Work. Lathe\nWork. Drilling. Boring and Grinding.   Motor   Rewinding.   Acetylene\nWelding\nTelephone 593      324 Vernon Street\n(2473)\nChiropractors\nPIPE AND FITTINGS\nCANADIAN JUNK Company, Ltd\n250 Prior St.       Vancouver. B   C\n(2425)\nFOR SALE - BARRELS. KEGS\nsugar sacks, liners. McDonald Jan\nCo., Ltd.. Nelson, B.C. (2426)\nDRY SLAB WOOD FOFTSaTe\nPhone 434R1. (2492)\nGOOD COOK STOVETPHT150L2\nor P.O. Box 512, Nelson.        12402)\nFURN. SUITES, KERR\nApts. $30 and Up      (2427)\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms for rent  Annable  Block\n12428)\n7 ROOM^HOUSEAlTERSEPfril.\n706 Victoria. Telephone 296. (2436)\nTRRHACE APTS Beautiful modern\nfrigidaire equipped suites. (2429)\nFURNISHED SUITE\" FOR 6 MOS\nApply P. E. Poulin. (2382)\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms. Apply 524 Latimer.   (2439)\nYORKSHIRE PIGS. 0 WEEKS. $4.00\n1    cash with order f.o.b. J. Grigg.\nj    Nakusp.  (2537)\nYoTMc^cowrJUST FRESHENED^ j\nQuiet. Good milker. Russel. Salmo. !\n(2399>\n6~WEEKS OLD PIGS. $4 \u00a5ACH7m\nBachynski. Nelson. _J2529) i\nFARM LANDS\nHOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non easy terms in Alberta and\nSaskatchewan Write (or (ull information to 908 Dept of Natural\nResourres. C.P.R. Calgary Alia\n(2423)\nj. r. McMillan, d. c. palmer\ngraduate. McCulloch Blk,. Nelson\n(2457)\nMaternity Homes\nELIZABETH PEEL\nMATERNITY HOME\nStrictly Private. Confidential Physician in attendance Ph. Broad 3078.\nW-1324 Broadway, Spokane, Wash.\n(2474)\nI E. M. WARREN. D.C. Gilker Blk.,\nj    Nelson, B.C. Ph. 115-755L.     (2458)\nElectrical\nMysticism\nNEW AND REBUILT MOTORS\nGenerators, etc.. in all sizes.\nIMMEDIATE  DELIVERY.   WRITE\nriROSSMAN ELECTRICAL\nYfACHlNERY   QO.,   ] TD.\n61 Alexander St.    Vancouver. B. C |\n124591\nSCIENTIFIC INSTRUCTIONS IN\nHigh Spiritual Mastery. Clara\nStocker, Cascade, B.C. (2090)\nPatents\nDOCS\nFURNISHED ROOM. PHONE 377L\n309 Carbonate St. (2494)\nFOR RENT - ONE BEDROOM'IN\nprivate home Call 387R1.     (2396)\nUSED CARS\nLANDS FOR SALE\ncompjaincd disgustedly, but at Gay's\nInsistence he pressed the starter,\nand the car purred smoothly up the\n1 street again toward the bright haze\nI of lights that was Woodward avc-\n] r.ue.\nj \"Honey. I'd rather spend an evening with you. than with any other\ngirl in the world. You've got 'cm\nall stopped.\"-\nHis free hand met and held Gay's,\nbut nothing more was said till they\ndrew up before the studio building.\nThen, as he helped hcr out, \"I\nreckon I'll be seeing you tomorrow\nnight at Ad's party. But I won't be\nable to dance witli you often. Peggy\nwill be there; and when I say that\nchild's jealous. I mean! You understand how I'm placed, don't you\nprecious?\"\nGay nodded. \"That's quite all\nright.\" she assured him, coolly.\n\"It's not all right. I hate it. But\nbusiness is business, honey lamb,\nand I can't afford to get in wrong\nwith the Pennells.\"\nAs he spoke. Gay remembered\nwhat Mark Vance had said: \"Charlie\nPennell can't make up his mind,\nwhether or not lo conic in on thc\ndeal.\"\nOf course, Breck had lo play safe\nA breakup with Peggy at this time\nwould undoubtedly spoil everything\nShe couldn't exactly blame Breck\nfor the careful game he and Wayne\nAdams were playing. But still\u2014\nEXCELLENT 23 AC. 6 CULTIVAT-\ned. irrigated, fenced. 50 bearing\nfruit trees.  5  room  house, outbuildings. $2150. Also 5'i; ac. cultivated.  70  bearing   fruit  trees,   4\nroom  house,  outbuildings.   Price\n|    $800, easy terms. H. E. Dill. 508\nI    Wart St. (25]7)\nFOR SALE OR RENT\n2 CORNER LOTS AND 2 STORY\nbuilding, suitable boarding house\n20 rooms. Centrally located. $1400\nCan be had furnished. Also two\nstores, Procter. Will give Big Bargain to suitable buyer. Reply Bn::\n2414, Daily News. 12414)\n6 ROOM HOUSE.\"TbEDROOMS\nI    Furnace. Apply 702 Latimer St,\n(24011\nROOM AND BOARD\nROOMERS OR BOARDERS IN\ncomfortable home Apply 704 Baker. Phone mornings 392R.   (25041\nR06S\"f\"BO^RCriN~CO\u00a5FORT-\nablc home Ph. 702L. P.O. Box 374.\n(2397)\nFOR SALE\u2014$225. CHEV. 6-CYL. '29\nCoach. New paint job. new rubber, good condition. Would consider light delivery as part payment. Box No. 2365. Daily News.\"\n(2365)\nwanted. go\"od fRu\"cK~wifiT2\nor 3 yard hydraulic steel dump\nBox 2500. Daily News 12500)\nREGISTERED ENGLISH SPR1NG-\ner Spaniels. Champion Aristocrat\nof Avandale & Springbok of Ware\n!    breeding.   Also   registered   Aire-\n'    dales Champion Rockley King &\nOorang  Strain.  Whatsham  Kennels, Needles, EC. (2224)\nj BELGIAN   POLICE _ PUPS\"\" FOR\n!    sale.   $7   males.   $3.50   females.\nReady now. Box 2507, Daily News.\n(25071\nn\nJ. F. COATES, The Electric Store\nSupplies and Installations\nPhone 766. P.O. Box 1065\n(2460)\nEngineers and Surveyors\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nCAFE FOR SALE. GOOD Business. Well established. Cheap for\ncash. Sickness cause for sale. Box\n2519, Daily News. (25191\nWANTED\nUOOM WANTED BY ELDERLY\nlady. Write Mrs. I. Sparks. Gen\nDel.. Nelson. (25181\nLAUNCHES AND BOATS\nMOTOR LAUNCH. GOOD CONDI\ntion. Cheap for cash. Apply Capt\nF. L. Orr. P.O. Box 722. Nelson.\n124801\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nEXPERIENCED MINE SAMPLER,\nfirst aid man, bookkeeper with\nreferences, desires position. State\nwages. Box 2371, Daily News.\n(2371)\nEXPERIENCED'    HOUSEKEEPER\nwants work by hour, day or month\nState wages. Box 2506. Daily News\n(2506)\n'.'XPERIENCED GIRL \"WANTS\ngeneral housework by hour, day or\nmonth. State wages. Box 2505,\nDaHy News. (2505)\nALL- AROUND lOXPERIENCED\ncook. Mining camp or holel. Best\not references. Box 2408. Daily\nNews. (2408)\nWAlWED-ORbERl! FOR .SAWiNG\ncord wood. Ph. 606L2. (2332)\nPOULTRY AND ECCS\nLIVE HENS WANTED. E. J. COOK.\n'    Nelson. B.C. (2417)\nE L WARBURTON. AGENT, NEL-\nson. B.C   Ph. 53.  Res. 239   PO\nBox 668 Oils. etc.. Mine Machinery and Equipment. Steam Coals.\n(2461)\nH.'D DAWSON \"Nelson. B.C.\nMine Surveys and Reports\n(2462)\nBOYD C AFFLECK\/Fruitvale. B7c'.\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor\nReg. Professional Civil Engineer\n(2463)\nFlorists\nCARNATION FLOWER SHOP\nPhono 215. All kinds of cut flowers,\nwreaths, sprays & etc. Phone 215\nMrs. Hagarty. Box 29. (2464)\nInsurance and Real Estate\nCOAL\nMALE INSTRUCTION\nMEN TO TAKE UP AIR COND1-\ntioning and Electric Refrigeration\nand better themselves. Must be\nmechanically inclined, willing to\ntrain in spare tifhc to qualify\nWrite Box 2510. Daily News,\n(2510)\n\"We'll have a little private date\nnext week, just you and I.\" Breck\nwas saying, as lie got back into th'1\ncar. \"Good night. Beautiful!\" And\nbefore Gay could answer, he was\ngone\n(To Be Continued) I\nCOAL\nMcGillivray creek      peerless carbon\nfurnace coal       stove and furnace\nOrder Your Winter Supply Early!\nWilliams' Transfer\nPHONE 106\nROBERTSON REALTY CO.. LTD.\nReal Estate Insurance, Rentals.\nBaker St.  (2465)\nR. W. DAWSOTOual\"Estate.*'Insurance. Rentals. Next Hipperson\nHardware, Baker St. 12466)\ncTOlACKWOOD. Insurance of\nevery description. Real Est. Ph 99.\n_ J2J67)\nHE. DILLT AUTO AND FIRE IN-\nsurance Real Estate. 508 Ward St,\n (2468)\nJ   E. ANNABLE, \"REAL ESTATE,\nRentals, Insurance. Annable Blk\n(2469)\nUF\"E7FIRErAUT\"OM6BILE~INSUR\"\"\nance, P. E. Poulin. Ph. 70.     <2470)\nCHAS f\"\"McHARDY,\"INSURA\"NCE.\nReal Estate. Ph. 135. (2471)\nPhone\nJean Robertson\n144\nFor the NELSON DAILY\nNEWS CLASSIFIED\nSERVICE\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(2475)\nPhotography\nF1LMS DEVELOPED AND PRINT-\ncd, any size, 25c. Reprints, eight\nfor 25c. Deckled edge prints. Valuable coupon. \"Better prints at\nlower cost.\" KRYSTAL PHOTOS.\nWilkie. Sask. (2476)\nSanitariums\nCHRONIC DISEASES MIND AND\nbody. Dr. Aldrich, Spokane, E.\n4504 Frederick. 124771\nSash Factory\nLAWSON'S   SASH   FACTORY.\nHardwood merchant, 217 Baker st.\n(2478)\nSecond Hand Storei\nWE   BUY,   SELL   Ic   EXCHANGE\nfurniture, etc. Thc Ark Store.\n\u2022    . (2479)\nWatch Repairing\nII. E. L. HICKS. I.B.M.\nInterior Watchmakers, Nakusp, B.C.\nMainspring 75c\nMainspring & Cleaning .   $1.50\nCleaning Only            1.00\nRepairs lo Shell and Metal\nEyeglass Frames 50c up\nGUARANTEED 1 YEAR\n(2412)\nH. H. SUTHERLAND\nWatchmaker and Jeweller\nRutledge block. Baker St., Nelson.\n\"When    Sutherland   repairs   your\nwatch it is on time all the time.\"\n^(2481>\nSPECIALIST. REASONABLETWork\nguaranteed. P. Boyle, Vernon St.\n(2482)\nWigs and Toupeei\nLADIES* AND GENTLEMEN'S wigs\nand toupees, etc. Free Illustrated\nCatalogue. Over 20 years in B.C.\nWe buy cut hair. Hanson Hair\nGoods Co. P.O. Box 601, Vancouver. B.C. (2483)\nNELSON\nSHOPPINC AND AMUSEMENT CENTER\nOF THE INTERIOR\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nr \u201e       -\u25a0- \"\"\"''    ' \"y,-\ntVE GOT A JOB ON ME\nHANDS   PREVENTING\nMAGGIE   FROMTRYltS'\nto ha\/e our daughter\nmarry one of them\nBroken-down counts\nand dukes- but i'll\nDO IT-\nBy Geo. McManui\nTHE GUMPS\n'.I'M SICK OF HEARING ANDY MOAN\nABOUT THAT WATCHDOG BEING STOLEN\nFROM HIS BEDROOM -r-*~       IF THE\nDOGCATCHERS NOTICED WHAT WAS\nSLEEPING IN THE BED THEY COULD\nHAVE MADE A\nDOUBLE\nCAPTURE~\n^^^\u2014^\n p6\nPRUNES APPEAR\nBE PROFITABLE\nFRUIT TO GROW\nSales Improving and\nPrices Up 100\nPer Cent\nGROWERS MUST\nWATCH QUALITY\nFuture Depends on It;\nOkanagan Peaches\nGain Favor\nSince 1930 sales ot Italian prunes\nhave improved steadily and prices\nare 100 per cent higher, resulting in\nIncreased plantings in the Okanagan,\nstates a communication trom the\nBritish Columbia tree Irults board.\nIt should prove a profitable crop,\nthe communication^ comments, at\nthe present rate of selling and Increasing demand. However, the future lor Italian pruneB rests with\nthe grower and quality of fruit is\nthe first step ln securing markets.\nThe tree fruit board adds:\nNEAR MATURITY\nAt the present time prunes are\nreaching maturity and nearing the\nharvest. The present season gives\nevery indication that the crop will\nbe of as fine a quality as in 1934.\nHowever, there are many sick trees,\nand these should be picked and\nkept separate from trult ot normal\ntrees.\nTo supply the market with good\nprunes growers can greatly assist\nby selection of trees sufficiently Id-\nvtnced, and by picking only fruit\nfrom these trees thlt shows maturity\nIn size and color. Although ce)or\nis not always a guide alone, it ls\ngenerally * good indication ot maturity. As prunei miturt. the item\ncomes freely from th* flesh without tearing; the weight Increases:\nthe green flesh color chingei te yellow, and the pit separates readily\ntrom the flesh. Improved color and\ngreater sugar content provides sales\n\u2022ppeil ind eating quality.\nMUST AVOID DBLAY\nOnce maturity ls reached, there\nls no advantage ln leaving the fruit\nfor any length ot time. Cold nights\nretard sugar formation, and over\ndelay in picking may result In a flat\nflavor, and browning at the pit.\nSelection of trwi, ind two pick'\nIngs of the prune crop, for weight\n\u2022nd quality, will always pay.\nFor example, Okanagan peaches\nare getting a better reputation on\nthe prairies than heretofore. It Is\nlearned from a tellable source thit\nOkanagan peachea have beep used\nalmost exclusively for thl high class\nfruit stand trade, resulting In higher\nprices than American peaches due\nto quality alone.\nNEL80N DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B.C-MONDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 7.1136\nMarket and Mining News\nCHICAGO GAINS\nCHICAGO, Sept. 8 (AP)-Graln\nprice upturns that resulted from\nmoderate buying early In Saturday's session could not be tully\nmaintained in the face of increaaed\nprofit taking and evening up operations characteristic of pre-hollday\ntrade.\nWheat at times advanced as much\nas 1% cents in sympathy with foreign markets' strength, but fractions were pared from the gains\nbefore the close.\nAt the close wheat was Vt .to H\nhigher and corn was V, pit to 1V, up.\nOats were unchanged to % higher;\nrye gained 1% to %; barley, V, to 1,\nand provisions were unchanged to\n3 cents up.\nDow-Jones Averages\n30 industrials\n20 rails\t\n20 utilities\t\n40 bonds :...\nHigh Low\n167.97 167.21\n55.74 55.28\n35.22 35.00\nClose Change\n167.80-up .76\n55.66-up .50\n38.11-up .10\n104.49-up   .03\nMontreal Silver Quotations\nMONTREAL, Sept. 6 (CP)\u2014Silver futures closed steady Saturday, 12\npoints off. No sales. Bids: Sept. 44.60; Dec. 44.60; March 44.60; May 44.60.\nQuotations on Wall Street\nHigh\nAmer Can - 127\nAmMachi-F.. 24\nAm Smelt tc R \u2014\nAm .Telephone.. 177%\nAm Tobacco .... \u2014\nAnaconda   39V\u00ab\nAtchison   63%\nAviation Corp .. 5%\nBaldwin - \u2014\nBait te Ohio ..... 25%\nBend Aviation.. 29%\nBeth Steel  69%\nCanada Dry  15%\nCan Pacific  12%\nCerro De Pasco 54%\nChes & Ohio  01V,\nChrysler   115*4\nCorn Prod   68\nC Wright Pfd..- 6%\nDupont  158'\/.\nEl Pow & Light 15Vi\nErie .  18\nFord English .... \u2014\nFord ot Canada \u2014\nFirst Nat Stores \u2014\nFreeport Texas \u2014\nGen Electric .... 47%\nGen Foods   39\nGen Motors  68\nGold Dust  14%\nGoodrich _  24%\nGranby - 4%\nGreat Nor Pld .. 41%\nG W Sugar  \u2014\nHowe Sound ... \u2014\nHudson  Motors IV,4\nInt Nickel      55%\nInt Tel tc Tel.... 13\nJewel Tea  \u2014\nLow\n126%\n23%\n177\n39%\n82%\n3%\n24%\n29%\n68'4\n15%\n11%\n54%\n66%\n114%\n\u20227%\ntv,\n158%\n15%\n17%\n47%\n38%\n67%\n14\n24%\n3%\n41%\n17%\n55%\n12%\nClose\n127\n23%\n84\n177\n101\n39%\n83%\n5%\n3%\n25%\n29%\n69%\n15%\n12\n54%\n66%\n115%\n68\n6%\n158%\n15%\n18\n8%\n22\n48\n25%\n47%\n39\n68\n14%\n24%\n4\n41%\n35%\n51%\n17%\n55%\n12%\n87%\nKenn Copper . 47%\nKresge SS 28\nKroegger It Toll 21\nMack Truck   40%\nMontgWard     . 46%\nNash Motors 17%\nNat Dairy Prod 27%\nN Pow tc Light \u2014\nNY Central    .. 45\nPac Gas It El 38\nPackard Motors 12%\nPenn R R      40\nPhillips Pete ... -\nPure Oil   16%\nRadio Corp    .. 11\nRadio Keith Or 7%\nRem Rand     .. 20%\nSateway  Stores \u2014\nShell Union   -\nS Cal Edison ... \u2014\nSouth Pacilic . 43%\nStan Oil of Cal 35%\nStan Oil of Ind 37%\nStan Oil of N J -\nStew Warner . 20%\nStudebaker  14\nTexas Corp     -37%\nTexas Gulf Sul \u2014\nTimken Roller.. \u2014\nUnd Type . .. \u2014\nUnion Carbide 98%\nUnion Aircraft 26\nU S Pipe . 54%\nU S Rubber ... 31%\nU S Steel      71%\nVanad Steel   24\nWarner Bros .. 13%\nWestern   Union 90%\nWoolworth     .. 55%\nYellow Truck .. 20\n47% 47%\n27% 28\n20% 21\n40 40\n49% 49%\n16% 17%\n27% 27%\n- 12\n44% 43\n37% 38\n12% 12%\n39% 40\n41%\n16% 16%\n10% 11\n7% IV,\n20% 20%\n- 29%\n- 19\n- 31%\n43% 43%\n35% 35%\n37% 37%\n- 62\n20 20%\n13% 14\n36% 36%\n- 37%\n- 64\n- 78\n97 98\n25% 25%\n54%\n31\n54'i\n31\n70% 71%\n23% 23%\n13% 13%\n89% 90\n55% 85%\n19% 20\nToronto Stock Quotations\nBankfleld 70\nBarry Holllnger 06%\nBase'Metals       .27\nBear Exploration  59\nBig Missouri  65\nBob|o   -      .24%\nBralorne     8.10\nBRX Gold 12\nBut Ankerite     8.50\nCan Malartic      1.14\nCariboo Gold      1.87\nCastle Trethewey      1.40\nCentral Manitoba  30\nCentral Patricia     4.25\nChibougamou      1.65\nConarium     1.95\nCons M & S     54.50\nDome -  66.60\nDom Exploration  - -      .07\nEldorado  -    1.04\nFalconbridge _ ,    9.65\nGod's Lake -    108\nGold Belt -.      .21\nGranada       .28\nHardrock   -     3.09\nHolllnger     14.37\nHowey 87\nHudson Bay    23.87\nInt Nickel     55.50\nJ M Con  -      .63\nKlrkland Lake - -     .62\nYlke Maron       11%\nLake Shore  -   56.00\nLittle Long Lac _ -    6.10\nMacassa     4.45\nMaple Leal 28\nMalrobic  -     04%\nMcLeod Cockshutt _..     4.05\nMclntyre  -   41.75\nMcK. R L Gold -    1.90\nMcVittle Grahamme _ 22\nMcWatter Gold     1.50\nMining Corp     2.60\nNipissing      2.45\nNoranda     62.62\nParkhlll 24%\nPaymaster  -     102\nPend Oreille  84\nPickle Crow      7.00\nPionier ~-     7.85\nPremier Gold     3.15\nReno Gold  L22\n\u2014\t\nSan Antonio \t\nSheep Creek \t\nSherritt Gordon\nSiscoe \t\nSmelter Gold\t\nStadacona \t\nSt Anthony \t\nSudbury Basin ....\nSullivan \t\nSylvanite \t\nTeck Hughes \t\nToburn   \t\nTowagamac\t\nTreadwell \t\nVentures\t\nWaite Amulet\t\nWayside \t\nWhite   Eagle  \t\nWright Hargreaves\t\nOILS\nAjax ,.\nB A Oil \t\nC and E Corp -\t\nChemical Research\t\nDalhousie _..\nHomc Oil \t\nImperial Oil \t\nInt Pete \t\nNordon Oil  _\t\nRoyallte\t\nINDUSTRIALS\nBeatty Bros _ _\nBell Telephone _\t\nBrazilian \t\nBr\u00abw tc Di6t\t\nCan Bread \t\nCan Car and Foundry\nCan Cement\t\nCan Dredge \t\nCan Malting\t\nCPR _.\nCons Smelters \t\nDom Bridge \t\nDom Stores  \t\nDlst Seagrams\t\nFord Canada A\t\nGoodyear Tire\t\nHiram Walker  *..\nLoblaw A _\t\nMassey Harris \t\nSteel ot Cinada \t\nWalker Brew \t\n1.80\n.83\n1.57\n4.85\n.25\n4.75\n2.25\n3.22\n6.05\n2.00\n.93\n.40\n2.25\n1.62\n.10%\n.03%\n8.05\n.41\n23.87\n1.37\n\u202294%\n.51\n.90\n20.65\n34.00\n.11\n27.75\n149\n12\n1\n5%\n9%\n6%\n46\n33%\n11%\n54\n42%\n10%\n35%\n22*\n38%\n21 %\n4\n68%\nDIAMOND DRILL\nIS ENCOURAGING\nAT RENO MINE\nFive-Foot Vein Is Cut-\nCrosscut May Be\nStarted\nDiamond drilling at the Reno Gold\nMines, Limited property In the\nSheep Creek camp Is giving encouraging results, according to an A, E.\nJukes te Co., Ltd., report, which\nsays:\nW. A. Sutton, secretary-treasurer,\nadvises that five foot quartz vein ot\nwhich a 15-Inch width averaged 0.6\nounce, and the balance ot 0.1 ounce\nwai cut in a hole driven north from\nNo. J level. The new vein was cut\nabout 600 feet from the main vein\nand about halfway between it and\nthe Donnybrook, which was the objective of the hole.\nAnother hole is being driven from\na point further west on No. S level\nto tes tthe Middle and Donnybrook\nveins at another point.\n\"The Middle vein where cut in the\nhole from No. 5 level was Identified\nas a downward continuation of a\nvein cut two years ago in a hole\nfrom No. 4 level. The 300 feet greater depth has shown this vein to\nhave improved ln width. II the second hole confirms the first it is\nplanned to start a crosscut at once.\"\nMINES STEADY\nTORONTO, Sept 6 (CP)-Mlning\nshare prices recorded practically no\nchange ln the average In the Saturday session, spotty gains merely offsetting narrow loses elsewhere.\nEldorado closed a cent higher at\n1.04. Little Long Lac closed 10 cents\nup, Red Lake 8, Moneta 9 and\nShawkey 2. Bralorne was cheered\nby the earnings report, Just out, and\nit advanced 35 cents. Issues adding 3\nto 5 cents were Buffalo-Ankeritc,\nHardrock, O'Brien, Pickle Crow,\nRead-Authier, Sladen and Teck\nHughes.\nLooking Down on a Creston Wheat\nField Portly Cut\nNear Creston the highway runs high above the famous Creston flats\nwhere grain crops grow in abundance Photo shows a stretch ot grain\nland. The lines show where combines have been busy in the past week\ngetting the grain out\u2014Stall Photo.\nOnce Busy Spot at the Head of the\nMain Kootenay lake\nA view of the C.P.R. station at Sirdar snapped trom the highway.\nSirdar was once one of the busiest railway spots in the district before\nconstruction of the railway along Kootenay lake. At that time it waa\nthe terminus for all west-bound traffic which was there loaded onto boat\nor barges for transport to Procter. Likewise It was the reception point\ntor boa tand barge tralfice from Procter and the west.\u2014Staff Photo.\nMontreal Stock Prices\nAss'd Breweries    10\nBell Telephone  150\nBrailllan  -   12\nB C Power A  -    30%\nBruck Silk      8%\nBuilding Products     43\nCanada Bronze    37\nCanadian Car le Foundry     9%\nCanada Cement      6%\nCanada Cement Pfd     87%\nCanada Celanese     21%\nCan Industrial Al A     6%\nCan Ind Al B     6\nCPR    11%\nCan Steamers - -    1-55\nCockshutt  -     6%\nCon M & S -    54\nDom Bridge     42%\nDom Glass  110\nOgilvie .\nDominion Textile\nDryden Paper \t\nGen Steel Wares\nCharles Gurd -\t\nHamilton Bridge .\n  67\n - 7%\n -: 3%\n  5\n  4%\nImperial Oil  20%\nInt Nickel  55%\nMassey Harris  -  4\nMcColI Frontenac   - 14%\nMontreal Power  32\nNat Steel Car   15%\nNat Brewing  43\n  210\nPower Corp    15%\nQuebec    20%\nShawinigan     19%\nSherwin Williams    18%\nSouth Can Power    1H4\nSteel of Canada    68%\nCURBS\nB C Packing     9\nBrew & Dlst      1\nB A Oil    23%\nCan Dredge     46\nCan Malting    33\nCan Wineries      2\nDom Stores    10%\nFord Con A    22\nImperial Tob Can    13%\nInt Petrol     33%\nMitchell Robt     7%\nPrice Bros      4%\nPage Hersey     89\nBANKS\nCanada    57%\nCanadienne   138\nCommerce 158\nDominion  205\nImperial   204\nMontreal 200\nNova Scotia  280\nRoyal   179\nToronto   222\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nLISTED\nA P Con\t\nAmal Oil\t\nBig Miss\t\nBralorne \t\nBrew Ic Dist\t\nBrit Dom .    \t\nBridge R Con\t\nBRX Gold\t\nCariboo \t\nC & E Corp\t\nCoast Brew \t\nCoast Brew Rts ....\nCommonwealth ......\nDentonia \t\nGold Belt\t\nHargal\t\nInternational Coal\nIsl Mount\t\nKoot Belle \t\nMak Siccar \t\nMcDougall Segur -\nMcLeod Oil \t\nMinto \t\nModel \t\nMorning Star \t\nNat Silver\t\nPioneer Gold \t\nPremier Gold \t\nQuatsino \t\nReno \t\nSally Mines\t\nSalmon Gold\t\nSheep Creek \t\nTaylor Bridge\t\nVanalta\t\nVidette Gold\t\nWayside\t\nCURB\nAlex Gold \t\nAnaconda \t\nBaltac\t\nBayview\t\nBeaver Silver\t\nB. C. Nickel\t\nCanadian Rand .....\nCalmont\t\nCongress \t\nCotton Belt \t\nCrows Nest \t\nDalhousie Mines ...\nDalhousie Oils \t\nDevenlsh\t\nDictator\t\nDunwell \t\nFairview \t\nFawn\t\nBID\n' .13\n.13%\n.60\n7.85\n1.00\n.05\n.13%\n1.91\n1.38\n13.05\n7.50\n.06\n.16%\n.19\n.10%\n.20\n1.23\n.76\n.02%\n.08\n.27\n.30%\n.21\n.01%\n.03%\n7.70\n3.20\n.01%\n1.19\n.09%\n.11\n.82\n.10\n.05%\n1.37\n.10\n.04%\n.04%\n.00%\n.02\n.34\n.11%\n.11\n.13%\n.00%\n.53\n.02%\n.02%\n.03\n.04%\nASK\n.14\n.14%\n.63\n8.00\n.17\n.05%\n.14\n1.96\n1.40\n13.25\n8.00\n.08\n.18\n.21\n.11\n.26\n1.25\n.78\n.09\n.30\n.32\n.24\n.01%\n.03%\n7.80\n3.25\n.02\n1.20\n.10%\n.12\n.83\n.11\n.05%\n1.40\n.10%\n.05\n.05\n.03\n.oo?:,\n.03\n.35\n.08\n.13\n.12\n.02\n.15\n.55\n.02%\n.04\n.05\n[Federal Gold \t\nFreehold\nGeo Copper ....'\t\n! Golconda   \t\nGlacier C \t\nGold Mtn \t\nGeo Enter \t\nGeo  River   \t\nGrandview   \t\nGrange       \t\nGruU Wihksne ...\nHaida Gold \t\nHedley \t\nHighwood Sarcee\nHome Gold \t\nIndian \t\nInter Gold  \t\nIndependence \t\nKoot Flor \t\nLucky Jim  \t\nMadison   \t\nMar Jon\t\nMercury \t\nMeridian \t\nMerland\t\nMcGillivray Coal ..\nMorton Wol \t\nNicola \t\nNordon   \t\nOkalta Oils com ..\nPacalta   \t\nPend Oreille \t\nPilot Gold \t\nPorter IVho \t\nQuesnelle Q -.\t\nRanchmen's \t\nQuesnelle \t\nReliance   \t\nRelief Arl \t\nReward  \t\nRoyalite Oil \t\nRufus  Arg   \t\nSilvercrest\t\nSilbak Premier ....\nSilverado\t\nSilversmith     \t\nTaylor Wind\t\nUnited Empire ....\nU D L       \t\nUnited Oil \t\nViking \t\nVulcan \t\nWaterloo \t\nWaverley Tangier\nWellington *\t\nWesko \t\nYmlr Yankee \t\n.04%\n.07%\n.20\n.09\n.01\n.11%\n.01%\n.02%\n.01%\n.14%\n.19%\n.11\n.02%\n.01%\n.00%\n.01\n.01\n.17\n.11\n.08%\n.11\n.18\n.00%\n.14%\n.11\n.15\n\u202205%\n.80\n.06\n.04\n.06\n.42\n.06\n.05%\n.35%\n.06%\n27.00\n.01%\n2.60\n.02%\n.00%\n.14\n.02%\n.75\n.06\n.01%\n.50\n.02\n.00%\n.00%\n.23%\n.45\n.05\n.08\n.25\n.11\n.12\n.02%\n.01%\n.03\n.02\n.15\n.03\n.21\n.12%\n.03\n.02%\n.09%\n.00%\n.00%\n.02\n.01%\n.19\n.11%\n.09\n.13\n.20\n.00%\n.15\n.16%\n.06\n.85\n.07\n.04%\n.05%\n.36\n.06%\n.02\n.06\n.03\n.01%\n.03\n.06%\n.02\n.55\n.03\n.00%\n.01\n.26\n.50\nNew Dry House al\nKoolenay Belle\nDry house 30 feet wide and 46\nfeet long, equipped with up to date\nfixtures including showers, is being\nbuilt at the Kootena:- Belle camp\nwest ol the present mine buildings.\nConcrete is being poured for loun-\ndation and brick and lum. er is on\nthe ground.\nConstruction ol the new cyanide\nmill is making lair progress, most\nol the exterior work being completed, according to the South Kootenay News.\nVANCOUVER\nWHEAT\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 6 (CP). \u2014\nVancouver wheat cash prices:\nStraight Tough\nNo. 1 hard  97%      95%\nNo. 1 Nor - 97%      95%\nNo. 2 Nor .95%      93%\nNo. 3 Nor 92%      89%\nNo. 4 Nor  91%      88%\nNo. 5 wheat  85%      82%\nNo. 6 wheat  75%      72%\nFeed   68%      65%\nSmellers Lower\nMONTREAL, Sept. 6 (CP)-Buy-\ners got behind Saturday's stock\nmarket and pushed prices fractionally higher in good volume.\nSt. Lawrence Paper pfd. Jumped\ntwo points to 34, while Dryden, St.\nLawrence Corp common and the\npld gained lractionally.\nCanadian Car moved up to a new\npeak ol 10, closing up % at 9%. The\npreferred held steady lor a time\nbut later eased %, while C. P. R.\nfirmed that much.\nNickel closed % higher at 55%,\nwhile Smelters lost Vt at 53%.\nRegistered Office\nof Kootenay Chief\nMines Is at Coast\nHead office of Kootenay Chief\nMines Limited, newly incorporated,\nhas ils registered office at Room\n607, Metropolitan building. 837 Hastings street west, Vancouver.\nAuthorized capital Is $100,000\nshares, divided into 200,000 shares\not 50 cents each.\nVancouver Sales\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 6 (CP). -\nMining shares sola on the Vancouver\nstock exchange Saturday.\nListed: Big Miss 1400, Bralorne\n100, Br Con 500, B R X 3000, Cariboo\n50, Dentonia 3700, Gold Belt 1200,\nIsland Mount 900, Koot Belle 3100,\nMinto 11,500, Morning Star 1000,\nNational Sil 2500, Pioneer 270. Premier 2575. Reno 600, Sheep Creek\n1700, Vidette 5100, Wayside 1300.\nCurb: B C Nickel 1900, Confess\n500, Fawn 1500, Federal 2500, Gold\nMount 5400, Grull Wihk 25,100. Hedley Amal 2000, Home 5000, Nicola\n19,500, Pilot 8000, Reliance 3500,\nRelief Arl 2500, Reward 5000. Silvercrest 250. Toric 300, Waterloo 3500,\nWesko 500.\n_\"\nVEGETABLES AND\nFRUITS SELL FOR\nLESS AT MARKET\nBusy Day at Nelson;\nSecond Crop Green\nPeas Offered\nLower pricei for vegetables and\nfruits now ottering In quantity\nmarked Saturday's Vernon itreet\nmarket. Stalls were heeped with\nproduce ot the farm and vendors\ndid a lively business.\nAmong the new arrivals were\nparsnips, pumpkin, squash, citron,\ndried beans. Gravensteln apples,\nBradshaw plums and small pullet\neggs.\nSecond crop green peas were\nnoted on one stall. Radishes, becoming scarcer, doubles In price to\n10 cents a bunch. Potatoes were\nquoted higher at 10 pounds for a\nquarter at some stalls, while at\nothers they remained 12 pounds for\n25 cents.\nQuotations follow:\nFRUITS\nDuchess Apples, 8 lbs. 3&\nGravensteln apples, 8 lbs. _ is\nWealthy apples, 8 lbs  .25\nBradshaw plums, 6 lbs  3t\nRed Astrakhan apples, 7 lbs  .25\nLocal grapes, 3 lbs .25\nHuckleberries, 3 lbs _ .25\nPears, lb .05, box _.... 1.50\nPeaches ~ 3t\nCrabapples, 7 pounds _  3$\nWatermelon, pound  .04\nVEGETABLES\nGreen peppers, lb 05\nGreen peas, 3 lbs  3i\nTurnips, bunch     .05\nOnions, 3 bunches 10\nCarrots, 6 lbs _  3$\nLeeks, bunch        .05\nGreen beans, 4 lbs  .25\nScarlet runner beans, 4 lbs 25\nChinese beans, 4 lbs 3t\nWax beans, 4 lbs  3t\nBroad beans, lb  .05\nCorn,  down   _. 3t\nTomatoes, 8 lbs  .-...-.. .25\nSwiss chard, head .05\nCelery, bunch    10\nKohl rabbi, head   .05\nCucumbers, 3 for 10\nEgg plants, each .05 and .10\nGarlic, lb. 15\nRadishes, 3 bunches 10\nLettuce, 3 heads 10\nNew cabbage, head .05, .10 and .15\nSavoy cabbage, head . .05 and .10\nCauliflower, each     05 and .10\nParsley, bunch 05\nPotatoes, 10 and 12 lbs  .25\nRhubarb. 7 lbs 25\nBeets, 6 lbs  3S\nMarrow      ..    10 and 15\nPickling cucumbers, 3 doi.  3t\nDill, bunch .05\nSage, bunch' .05\nMint, bunch 05\nParsnips, 3 bunches 10\nGreen tomatoes, lb  .02\nPumpkins, each 10 and .15\nSquash, lb 03\nCitron, each _ .15 to .25\nDried beans, lb _ .10\nMEATS\nBeef, lb 05 to .20\nVeal, lb .06 to .20\nLamb, lb  .10 to 3i\nBacon, lb _ 3S to .30\nRabbit, lb.    .25\nSpring chicken, lb 30\nFowl, lb 30\nLiver, lb 12\nDripping, lb. .05\nSausage, lb 10 and 30\nBologna, lb 15\nEGGS\nSmall pullel eggs, doz  30\nGrade A large, dozen 40\nGrade A medium, dozen ..... .35\nDAIRY PRODUCTS\nButter, lb  3D\nCream, pint 30\nCurds, lb 10\nCottage cheese, lb 10\nPrime cheese, lb,  .35\nGoat cheese, lb .25\nNew cheese, lb 30\nCUT FLOWERS\nEverlasting flowers, bunch      .10\nGladioli,bunch .... .10and.15\nSnapdragons, bunch        10\nSweetpeas, 4 bunches 25\nAsters, doz. 10\nChrysanthemums, bunch 15\nZinnias, doz _ 10\nMetal Markets\nNEW YORK, Sept. 6 (API-Copper firm; electrolytic spot and future 9.75; export 9.77%, Other metals nominally unchanged.\nThis market will be closed Monday, Labor day.\nThe London stock exchange was\nclosed Saturday.\nLondon bar silver barely steady,\n1-16 lower at.10 9-16d.\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nMONTREAL, Sept. 5 (CP)-Im-\nprovement was shown In butter\nprices on Canadian commodity exchange section Saturday.\nButter spot\u2014Quebec, 24%b; sales,\n200 boxes Quebec 24%.\nEnds spot\u2014Ontario A-large, 29a.\nPotatoes\u2014Quebec No. 1 80's, 1.15-\n1.20; No. 2, 1-1.10.\nGOLD CAINS THREE\nMONTREAL, Sept. 6 (CP)-Bar\ngold in London up three cents at\n$34.79 an ounce In Canadian funds;\n136s l%d In British. The fixed $35\nWashington prime amounted to $35\nin Canadian.\nA harmless new anesthetic has\nbeen developed which ls said to\nhave no Ill-effects, is in the case of\nether and othen. The patient simply goes off into a dreamless sleep\nafter the drug has been Injected In\nthe blood.\nSheep Creek Output\nin August $58,374,\nHighest Value Yet\nVANCOUVER, SepL 6 <CP)-\nSheep Creek Oold Mines Ltd. Saturday reported production tor August was valued it $58,374, ap-\nproximately $1000 mer* thin the\nJuly production figure. The August production wis th* highest\nIn value since the mine started\nmilling operations.\nNew Bunkhouse\nand Dry House\nal Arlington\nEmployees at the .telief-. rllng-\nton mine, near Erie, have a new\nbunkhouse and dry house, the former well out from the hillside to be\ntree from danger of slides.\nThe two-story dry-house is \"one\nof the finest\" in the district, the\nSouth Kootenay News reports. The\nupper floor is designed for a change\nroom, containing benches and over-\nh si wire baskets ln which miners\nmay place their clothing. Showers,\nmodern plumbing >nd so on feature\nequipment on the lower floor.\nWinnipeg Higher\nWINNIPEG, Sept. 6 (CP)-Actlve\nexport trade provided the stop-gap\naa wheat tumbled from early advances on the Winnipeg grain exchange Saturday.\nOverseas sales cushioned the decline to safeguard gains ot % to %\ncent a bushel at the close. At the\nfinish October was quoted at 98%,\nDecember at 96% to % and May\nat 96% to % centa a bushel.\nIncentive for the advance in the\nearly stages came from Liverpool\nwhere futures forged ahead for the\nthird successive day. Firmness of\nshippers' offers and expectations of\nsubstantial flour shipments brought\ngains of 1% to l%d.\n(oasl Is Higher\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 6 (CP).-The\nmajority of leading issues closed\nfrom fractions to a few cents upward on the short Saturday session\nof the Vancouver stock exchange.\nTrading wss fairly active with transactions totalling 156,920 shares.\nVidette Gold advanced 7 at 1.37,\nPremier and Kootenay Belle were\neach up two cents at 3.20 and 76\nrespectively and Minto added 1% at\n30%. One cent rises were marked\nup in Island Mountain, Gold Belt,\nB.R.X., and Relief Arlington. Nicola\nat 14%, Wayside at 10 and GruU\nWihksne at 14% gained fractions.\nPioneer lost 15 at 7.70, Bralorne\ndropped 5 at 7.85 and Big Missouri\neased 1 at 60. Other major golds\nwere unchanged.\nNew High Prices\nTORONTO, SepL 6 (CP)-Galners\nin Saturday's short market were\nchiefly the heavy Industrial and\nthe construction stocks. Over the\nboard about 10 stocks sold at new\nhigh prices for 1936 or longer.\nKelvinator sold at 21, a new high\nan dthe close at 20% showed a net\ngain of 1%. Tlie Canadian Car tc\nFoundry stocks, Dominion Tar Pfd.,\nCanada Cement Pfd., Westons Common, Loblaw B, Burry Biscuit and\nInternational Metals all registered\nnew tops.\nKaslo Alluvials Is\nCapitalized $25,000\nKaslo Alluvials Limited, newly\nincorporated under the Companies\nact, has its head office in the Alexander building, Front and Fifth\nstreets, Kaslo. Authorized capital ot\nthe company is $25,000, divided into\n25,000 shares of $1 each.\nEastern Sales\nTORONTO, Sept. 6 (CP)-Sales\nof 100 or more shares on Toronto\nstock exchange Saturday: 605 Brazil;\n225 Br Ic Dis; 170 B A Oil; 140 C Ind\nAle; 629 CPR; 225 C Smelt; 315D C\nSeag; 217 Imp Tob; 2372 Int Nickel;\n125 Mc Front; 150 Pow Corp.\nMONTREAL, Sept. 6 (CP) .-Sales\not 100 or more shares on Montreal\nstock exchange Ssturday: 725 Brazil;\n22,600 Can Car; 560 Can Car Pfd:\n7608 Alcohol A; 315 CPR; 395\nSmelters; 245 Dlst Seag; 510 Imp\nTob; 610 Nickel; 115 Massey; 245\nMcColI; 1043 Monti Pow.\nExchanges\nMONTREAL. Sept. 6 (CP) .-British and foreign exchange closed\nsteady.\nArgentina, peso, .2818.\nAustralia, pound, 4.0210.\nFrance, franc, .0658.\nGreat Britain, pound, 5.0362.\nNew Zealand, pound, 4.0533.\nUnited States, dollar, par.\n(Compiled by the Royal Bank of\nCanada).\nMinneapolis Grain\nMINNEAPOLIS, Sept. 8 (API-\nWheat cash: No. 1 heavy dark northern spring, 60 lbs. 1*36%-1.43%; No.\n1 red durum 1.00. Flour, carload lots\nper barrel In 98 lb. cotton sacks;\nfamily patents unchanged 7.55-7.75:\nstandard patents unchanged 6.65-6.85.\nShipments 14.739.\nBran 24.50-25.00.\n- PAGE tlVIri\nIS HOSTESS AT\nNAKUSP\nNAKUSP, B.C.-Mn. C. Campe\nwu hostess at th* tea hour Monday, guests being members ot the\nPythian Sisters lodge.\nGladioli were used In effective\ndecoration. Assisting the hostess\nwere Miss M. H. Butlln tnd Mtn\nBeda Campe. Those preient Included Mrs. R. Humphris, Mrs. F.\nL. Benton, Mrs. H. Aalten, Mrs. C\nB. Hambling, Miss N. Harvey, Mn.\nF Johnion, Mrs. A. N. Herrldge,\nMrs. E. Olson, Mrs. L. Ott, Mrt. G.\nP. Horsley. Mrs. T. Hirvey, Mn. H.\nBradley. Mrs. 0. Salstrom, Mrs. T.\nSteenholf, Miss M. H. Butlln and\nMiss Beda Campe.\nMrs. R. Barlow had as her guest\nMiss M. Fisher, who had been vialtlng at Sldmouth and was en route\nto Trail.\nMr. and Mrs. C. Elliot of Calgary\nvisited in Nakusp.\nC. Lowe of New Denver wai a\nmotor visitor to Nakusp TueicUy.\nMr. and Mrs. C. A. Fell of Spokane were week-end visiton In\nNakusp.\nMrs. R. Barlow and daughter Mavis visited Robson.\nMr. and Mrs. I. J. Trembath ind\nMr. and Mra. W. T. Trimbeth of\nRossland were among guesti it Pine\nlodge.\nG. Clerihue of Trail spent several\ndays in Nakusp.\nMr. and Mrs. C. D. Butcher of\nVernon were motor visiton to Nakusp.\nH. C. Derrick of Nelson wu a\nvisitor ln town.\nMrs. M. Scobie of Sydney, Australia, was a week-end visitor in Nakusp, a guest at Pine lodge.\nNewlyweds oi\nNakusp Honored\nNAKUSP, B.C.-Mr. md Mrs. O.\nHunter Gardner Jr., who were recently married in Nelson, were surprised at their home Monday evening by a crowd of friends anxious\nto extend good wishes to the young\ncouple.\nC. Howarth proposed the tout to\nthe bride and groom and presented\nthem with two gifts.\nMusic and dancing provided entertainment for the guesti who were\nMrs. C. Short, Mra. R. Barlow, Miss\nM. Islip. Miss K. Fowler, Mn. 3.\nParent Jr., Miss H. Neubrand, Miss\nN. Johnson, Miss M. Alpien, Mill\nB. Gardner, Mr. and Mrs. A. Matheson, Mr. and Mrs. H. Hiltz, C. Howarth, F. Benton, B. Dickson, R. Jordan, R. Thrower, C. Campe, R. Islip,\nW. Maxwell F. Schroeder ot Nelson,\nS. Ward, R. Jones and J. Gardner.\nMr. and Mrs. A. James and family\nand Mr. James' mother, Mn. J.\nJames of Arrow Park, were among\nshoppen in town Wedneiday.\n0. Enockson of New Denver wu\na visitor in town Wednesday. He met\nhere his wife, who arrived on the\nsteamer Minto.\nGeorge Cresswell arrived from\nHalcyon Wednesday and ls spending a few days in Nakusp.\nH. Olson of New Denver wu a\nNakusp visitor en route to the Vidette mine.\nJ. N. Murphy of Kaslo wil *\nvisitor In town Monday.\nG. Wady of Nelson wai a visitor\nln town. i\nG. E. Lodge left Thursday tor hli\nhome at Robson after spending the\nsummer months ln Nakusp.\nNew York Active\nNEW YORK, Sept. 6 (API-Ignoring the usual pre-hollday Influences, stocks clicked off another\nbrisk recovery lap in brief market\nsession.\nLed by rails, many Issues breuted\nprofit-taking currents and emerged\nwith gains of fractions to 2 or more\npoints. There were a number of\nnew highs for the year or longer.\nThe Associated Press average of\n60 stocks held an advance of .4 ot a\npoint at 68.6, duplicating Friday's\nimprovement. Transfers totaled 715.-\n680 shares, the largest Saturday's\nturnover since August 8.\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG, Sept. 6 (CP)-rut*\nures close:\nOpen High  Low Close '\nWHEAT:\nOct    68% 69 97% 08%\nDec.     ...   97% 97% 86% 06%\nMay      M WH 98 88%\nOATS'\nOcL     ..\".   44% 44% 43% 48%\nDec. 42% 43 42% 42%\nMay  \"     43% 43% 43% 43%\nBARLEY:\nOct. 54% 54% 63% MVt\nDec.   '.    53% 54% 52% 53%\nMay    ....   53% 54 53% 84\nFLAX:\nOct    172 172% 170 170\nDec 168 169% 168 168\nMay      - -    ,- \"0\n_?_*\u25a0 _ _ - 67%\nDec. . 66 66% 85% 85%\nMay 67       67%    66       66%\nCASH WHEAT\".\nNo. 1 hrd 99%; No. 1 Nor. 98%;\nNo. 2 Nor. 96%; No. 3, 93%; NO. 4,\n90%; No. 5 wheat 87%; No. 6 wheat\n8\u00ab%. Feed wheat 73%; No. 1 Garnet 93%; No. 2 Garnet 92%. No. 1\nDurum 106%, No. 2 Durum 100%;\nNo. 3 Durum 97%; No. 4 Durum\n93%; No. 1 AH.W. 88%; No. 4 special\n82%; No. 5 special 78%; No. 6 special\n75%. Track 98%; screenings, $11.\nCURRENCIES UNCHANGED\nMONTREAL, Sept. 6 (CP)-Lead-\nIng currenlces were unchanged on\nMontreal foreign exchanges Saturday with pound sterling at $C.03\n21-32, the United States dollar tier\nand the French franc at 6.58 ceftta.\n*M*\n Pen and Pencil\nSets\n$2.50 to\n$10.00\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug Go.\nPay Last Tribute\nto Rosslander\nMrs. Fraser Laid to\nRest Sunnyside\nCemetery\nROSSLAND, B. C, Sept. 6-The\nfuneral of Mrs. Charles E. Fraser\nwat held from St. Andrew's United\nchurch Saturday afternoon, Rev. C.\nH. Daly officiating. Interment was\nin Sunnyside cemetery.\nThe active pallbearers were A. D.\nChristie, Edward Stephens, Donald\nMacDonald, Ernest Morrison, Fred\nS. Peters and John C. Urquhart; and\nhonorary pallbearers were Samuel\nPatterson, James Barnes, Dr. R. E.\nMcDonald, W. G. Ternan, William\nWadds and James Wright.\nSCHOONER AGROUND\nYARMOUTH, N. S\u201e Sept. 6(CP)-\nThe Tern schooner, Irene and Myrtle, loaded with lumber for Boston,\nwas reported hard aground tonight\nat Doucette's point on Nova Scotia's\nBay of Fundy coast.\nJ.A.C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSuit* 205 Medical Arts Bldg\n\"Sfc-L\"\nVIC GRAVES\nMA8TER PLUMBER\nFor all vour needt In olumb-\nIng repairs  alterations, and\nInstallations.\nPh. 81B     301 VICTO\u00b0IA  ST\nTENNIS\n(Continued From Page One)\nPREP\nA real ikin cream for removing\nSummer Tan and Freckles.\nAT SMYTHE'S\nThe Prescription Druggist where\nyour Prescription receives undivided attention.\nPhone 1\nEXPERT\nDYEING\nFor Ladies' Suiti\nand Coat*\nH. K. FOOT\nHigh Class Dyer and Cleaner\nFAIRVIEW,   NELSON,   B.C.\nJ. McDonell, Rouland, beat R. R.\nHorner, Nelson, 6-0, 7-5; C. W. Harrison, New Denver, beat F. Clark,\nNelson, 7-5, 6-3; P. Dewdney, Trail,\nbeat L. Williams, Trail, 6-2, 6-4; E.\nAtwood, Grand Forks, beat R. A. D.\nWesL Castlegar, 6-2,3-6,6-4; G. Winter, Grand Forks, beat S. Angus,\nTadanac, 6-3, 4-6, 7-5; N. Rhodes,\nTrail, beat F. Phillips, Nelson, 6-3,\n6-4; E. Haley, Trail, beat N. German,\nNelson, 6-2, 6-3.\nT. Romano, Nelson, beat P. Jones,\nTrail, 6-3,6-11; W. 0. Williams, Trail,\nbeat L. Freeman, Rossland, 0-6, 6-4,\n6-2; J. Dowling, Grand Forks, beat\nP. Dewdney, Trail, 4-6, 6-4, 6-4; G.\nWinter, Grand Forks, won from E.\nAtwood, Grand Forks, by delault;\nN. Rhodes, Trail, beat E. Haley,\nTrail, 6-4, 6-3; A. M. Chesser, Tadanac, beat A. Hodson, Nelson, 6-2, 7-5;\nB. Clark, Trail, beat G. Murray, Tad.\nanac, 7-5, 5-7, 6-4.\nLadies' Singles\nFirst round\u2014Miss B. Bingay, Vancouver, beat Mrs. W. Brown, Trail,\n6-4, 6-3.\nSecond round\u2014Mrs. T. H. Welon,\nTadanac, beat Miss C. Ringwoood,\nTrail, 6-4, 6-2; Miss D. Hannay,\nTadanac, won from Miss E. Tomlin,\nSummerland by default; Miss M.\nStubbs, Kelowna, beat Miss B. Bingay, Vancouver, 6-2, 6-2; Mrs. M.\nMatlhewson, Kelowna, beat Miss\nL. Blaylock, Tadanac, 6-1, 6-3; Miss\nK. Nisbet, Nelson, beat Mrs. A. M.\nChesser, Tadanac, 6-2, 6-2; Miss B.\nWright, Tadanac, beat Miss B. Diamond, Tadanac, 6-0, 6-0; Miss S.\nStewart, Nelson, beat Miss J. Diamond, Tadanac, 6-3, 7-5.\nMiss P. Gelinas, Nelson, beat Miss\nL. McDonell, Rossland, 2-6, 7-5, 6-3.\nMiss M. Stubbs. Kelowna, beat\nMiss D. Hannay, Tadanac, 6-4, 6-4;\nMrs. M. Mattewson, Kelowna, beat\nMiss K. Nisbet, Nelson, 6-4, 7-5; Miss\nB. Wright, Tadanac, beat Miss S.\nStewart, Nelson, 6-4, 6-3; Miss P.\nGelinas, Nelson, beat Mrs. T. H.\nWeldon, Tadanac, 6-4,6-8,12-10.\nMen's Doubles\nFirst round\u2014G. Murray, sr., and\nJ. Murray, both Tadanac, beat J.\nPerine and W. Perine, both SeatUe,\n9-7, 6-2; E. Atwood and P- Tjebbes,\nboth Grand Forks, beat G. Murray,\njr., and A. M. Chesser, both Tadanac, 6-3, 3-6, 6-4; J. Salter and\nS. Angus, both Tadanac, beat R. A.\nD. West and Dr. J. L. Gayton, both\nCastlegar, 4-6, 6-1, 6-0; T. H- Weldon and R. Hannay, both Tadanac,\nwon from A. Ritchie, Cascade, and\nA. Ahrens, Nelson, by default; L-\nEvans and P. Jones, both Trail, beat\nN. German and F. Phillips, both\nNelson, 8-6, 5-7, 8-6; E. Haley and\nN. Rhodes, both Trail, beat L. Simpson and J. A. Stewart, both Nelson, 6-2, 6-4; K. Pincott and G-\nWinter, both Grand Forks, beat J.\nC. West, East Trail, and H. Oxley,\nTrail, 6-3, 6-4; W. 0. Williams and\nG. Hamson, both Trail, beat J. Dowling, Grand Forks, and H. Minnion,\nRossland, 6-2, V-5; B. Clark, Trail,\nand F- Clark, Nelson, beat N. Murray, Tadanac, and T. Fraser, Vancouver, 6-4, 6-2.\nSecond round\u2014A. Hodson and T.\nRomano, both Nelson, beat G. Murray, sr-, and J. Murray, both Tadanac, 6-2, 6-0; B. Clark, Trail, and\nF. Clark, Nelson, beat W. O. Williams and G- Hamson, both Trail,\n6-4, 6-2; C. W. Harrison, New Denver, and J. McDonell, Rossland, beat\nA Eldridge, Trail, apd F. Morris,\nNelson, 6-2, 60-; P. Dewdney, Trail,\nand L- Freeman, Rossland, beat L.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C-MONDAY MORNING. SEPTEMBER 7,1936\nA RECENT TRAIL BRIDE\nAnne Patricia, youngest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. MacKinnon\nof Trail, whose marriage to Elliot George Player, younger son of Mr.\nand Mrs. G. P. Player of Victoria, took place, August 29, in Knox United\nchurch, Trail.\u2014Photo by Hughes Bros. Studio.\nSOCIAL AND PERSONAL\nNEWS OF TRAIL\nThis column Is In charge of Mrs. Glenn Quayle of Trail. All\nevents ot a social nature of interest in Trail and Tadanac will appear\nin this column. Mrs. Quayle will be glad to have any such news\ntelephoned to her at her home in TraiL\nRetail Lumber\nLATH-SHINGLES\nMOULDINGS\nW. W. Powell Co., Ltd.\n\"The Home of Cood Lumber\"\nTelephone 176 Foot of Stanley St.\nXeasy.\n^comfortable\nVOU ctn'e rest your body while you\nstrain your eyes.   Eyestrain from\ndim light tightens all your muscles tnd\ntires almost as much as heavy labor.\nIs your reading Itmp bright enough?\nDo you read in the \"second best\" light\n\u2014-or is your lighting spotty?\nCheck these points. It it rtally worth\nwhile. These Soles lamps will help\ncorrect inadequate lighting. They are\nmtde for easy, comfortable seeing. The\nlow prices permit you to light every\nroom adequately at slight cost\nTRAIL, B. C\u2014Glen Mason, son of |\nMr. and Mrs. Miller Mason, leaves\nin the near future lor Vancouver,\nwhere he will resume his sUdies at\nthe University of British Columbia.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. A. J. Randell have\nreturned to their home from a vacation spent at the coast.\nHendrlck Padberg, who was visiting relatives on the prairie has returned to Trail.\n\u2022 *      0\nMrs. Charles Beltner has left lor\nGraham Landing where she will be\nthe guest of her mother, Mrs. J.\nWilliams.\n\u2022 \u2022   t\nJames Hughes and John Hughes\nleft Trail Friday for Cranbrcok and\nFernie, at the latter point where\nthey .visit their mother.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. B. E. Smith arrive\nin Trail Saturday to take up residence, having resided during the\npast two years at Fruitvale.\n\u2022 0   0\nHarry Ward ot Rossland was a\nvisitor to Trail Friday evening, relating his experiences ot his trip\nto Vimy at a smoker in the Legion\nrooms Friday evening.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. C. V. Gagnon of Nelson is\nthe guest of her son, James Gagnon\nof Trail.\n\u2022 \u2022   .\nWilliam Kemp leaves Saturday\nmorning tor Salmo where he will\nmake his home during the winter\nmonths.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMrs. M. R. Basted and family havo\nreturned to Trail from Syringa\nCreek where they have been holidaying during the summer.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nJ. Norberg was a visitor to Fruitvale Friday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nFrank  McLeod  returned Friday\nevening to Thrums after spending\nthe day in Trail.\n.   .  *\nJack and Jerry Magee, who have\nbeen spending the summer with\ntheir grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.\nDave Magee of Robson, arrive Saturday in Trail to make their home\nwith their father, Ronald Magee.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. I. J. Trembath of\nRossland were Friday visitors to\nTrail.\n\u2022 \u2022   0\nMrs. T. A. Hobbs, accompanied\nby her son and dayghter, arrive\nthis week from the east where they\nspent the summer with Mrs. Hobb's\nparents, Rev. W. F. Price and Mrs.\nPrice.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. John McKendrlck\nhave as their guest, their son, Alex,\nwho during the past two years has\nbeen residing in Scotland.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. G. Martin and children, who\nduring the summer visited with\nrelatives in Calgary, have returned\nthis week to their home in Trail.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nLen Wilson has returned to Trail\ntrom a vacation spent at the coast.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Ted Chapman return to Nelson Saturday after visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs.\nNorberg of Trail.\n\u2022 \u2666   \u2022\nTo celebrate their third wedding\nanniversary Mr. and Mrs. Bert\nDante entertained at a beach party\nFriday evening at Beat* creek.\nGames and swimming were enjoyed alter which refreshments were\nenjoyed around the camp fire. Those\ninvited were, Miss Bobby Martin,\nMiss Peggy Stewart, Miss Rose Myers. Miss Pearl Simmons, Miss Alice\nLangridge, Miss Bishop, Miss Dorothy Dante, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Dobe,\nCharles Spittari, , Tom Carosello,\nCalvin McLeod, Art Murray, James\nCarig and A. E. Malacord.\nf^ljEX    LAMPS\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Ltd.\nWHOLESALE AND RETAIL HARDWARE\nPHONES 26 and 27\nWilliams and R- Stuart, both Trail,\n6-3, 6-3; M. Major, Procter, and G.\nBarwis, Harrop, won from B. Od-\nman and D. Odman, both of Seattle,\nby default.\nLadies' Doubles\nFirst round\u2014Miss L. Biaylock and\nMiss J. Diamond, both Tadanac, beat\nMrs. G. Hamson, Tadanac, and Miss\nM. Sandercock, Trail, 3-6, 6-1, 6-3;\nMiss D- Hannay and Miss B. Wright,\nboth Tadanac, beat Miss P. Campbell and Miss S. Stewart, both Nelson, 6-3, 6-0; Miss I. Kerr, Longbeach, and Miss K- Nisbet, Nelson,\noeat Mrs. A. M. Chesser and Miss\na Diamond, both Tadanac, 6-1, 7-5;\nMrs.  T.  H.  Weldon  and  Mrs.  H.\nlargraves, both Tadanac, beat Mrs.\n:. A. Larson and Miss P. Gelinas,\njoth Nelson, 6-4, 6-3; .\/Irs. H. G-\nlardner,   Kelowna,   and   Miss   E.\nomlin, Summerland, beat Miss B.\n'ingay,   Vancouver,   and   Miss   C.\n\"ingwood, Trail, 7-5, 4-6, 6-4.\nMen's Singles\nConsolation\nFirst round\u2014A. Eldridge, Trail,\n3at J. C. West, East Trail, 6-2, 6-3;\nj. Bell, Nelson, beat K. Pincott,\n_rand Forks, 4-6, 6-5, 6-2; T. Fraser,\nVancouver, beat H. Ritchie, Cascade, 6-4, 6-1; J. A. Stewart, Nelson, won from A. Ahrens, Nelson,\nby default; S. McCatty, Tadanac,\n.sal H. Minnion, Rossland, 6-5, 6-2;\nL. Evans, Trail, won from B. Odman, Seattle, by default; F. Morris,\nNelson, won from B, Odman, SeatUe, by default.\nSecond round\u2014R. Hannay, Tadanac, beat P- Tjebbes, Grand Forks,\nKASLO SCHOOLIS\nDRESSED UP\nKASLO, B.C.\u2014Kaslo school board\nmet Thursday evening when reports on the summer work at the\n-chool proved most satisfactory.\nThe interior of the building has\nbeen thoroughly renovated, much\npainting, kalsomining and varish-\ning being done. Washable paint\nwas used to advantage on the lower pr.rts of the walls. Much improvement has been made on grounds,\nwith underbrush, dead trees, wind-\ntails, etc., being removed and all\nbeing cleared of rubbish, making\nthe school grounds look very parklike and attractive.\nFive applications were In lor the\nposition of needle-work instructress, that ot Mrs. C. E. Wilson being accepted.\nThe board members decided to\nask the Kaslo city coune)' to enforce the curfew bylaw, at least\nduring the winter months.\n6-4, 0-6, 6-1; M. Major, Procter, beat\nR. Stuart, Trail, 6-0, 6-3.\nLadies' Singles\nConsolation\nFirst round \u2014 Miss L. Blaylock,\nTadanac, beat Mrs. W. Brown, Trail,\n7-5, 7-5.\nMORE ABOUT\nDOLE FINALS\n(Continued From Page Oh*)\nBob Watson and Eddie Murphy\nhad a close game ln the semi-finals\nof the championship flight Sunday\nafternoon. Watson held the lead\nmost of the way and was two up at\nthe seventeenth -tee. Murphy won\nthe seventeenth with a birdie and\nthe eighteenth was a par to take\nthe match to the nineteenth hole.\nMurphy came through with a par\nand Watson- missed. Murphy going\nInto the final against Allan.\nCL08E BATTLE\nIn the ladles' championship flight\nMiss Ellen Hughes ot Fernie, twice\nCrow's Nest champion, wu taken\nto the eighteenth green by Mrs. MacKay. Miss Hughes was leading three\nand. five at the fourth, but Mrs.\nMacKay came back strong and carried the game to the eighteenth before accepting defeat. ,\nMrs. John Cartmel won her semifinal match from Miss Margaret McLeod on the eighteenth after a lively\nbattle, and qualified to meet Miss\nHughes for the title.\nThe tournament was replete with\ngood golf. T. R. Wilson and Jim Allan had an exceptionally close game\nin the second round of the men's\nchampionship flight. Allan had Wil*\nson two down going to the sixth tee\nand the laat time, round, and Wil\nson proceeded to get two birdies\nin a row and square the match. They\nhalved the eighth. On the last hole\nAllan shared a par tour as compared\nwith Wilson's five and won the\nmatch.\nGO TO NINETEENTH\nH. W. Seamon and Roy Pollard\nstaged another battle to the end,\nPollard finally taking the verdict\non the nineteenth hole after Sea-\nmon's ball hung on the lip of the\ncup for a half which would have\ntaken the game to the twentieth\nhole.-\n-Still another nineteenth-hole game\nwas played when Vic Owen and R.\nL. McBride were all square on the\neighteenth in a second flight, first\nround engagement, Owen taking the\nverdlcL\nToday'l mixed foursome will be\na medal round, handicap affair, the\nplayen subtracting three-eighths of\ntheir combined handicap from their\ngrots score. This two-bill tournament will be completed todiy, the\nentry fee being turned beck in two\nprizes to the first and second low\nnet scores. Golfers must arrange\npartners and place their names on\nthe entry sheet at the club house.\nAn impromptu dance has been\narranged by the ladies for the evening to conclude the week-end with\nthe fair golfers supplying sandwiches and cake for the windup of tbe\nweek-end.\nResults of play Saturday and Sunday follow:\nLEITH CUP, MEN'S SINGLES\nChampionship flight:\nFirst round\u2014Leigh McBride beat\nDanny Stack; C. H. Stark beat L. A.\nMcPhail; T. R. Wilton beat E. E.\nGuille; Jim Allan beat B. Townshend; Harold Lake beat A. Baird;\nA. JE. Murphy beat J. D. Kerr; Dr.\nT. H. Bourque beat W. R. Dunwoody;\nRobert Watson beat L. S. Bradley.\nSecond round \u2014 McBride beat\nStark; Allan beat Wilson; Murphy\nbeat Lakes; Watson beat Bourque.\nSemi-finals\u2014Allan beat McBride;\nMurphy beat Watson.\nFirst flight:\nFirst round\u2014L. A. McPhail won\nfrom Danny Stack by default; R.\nTownshend beat E.' E, Hullle; J. D.\nKerr beat A. Baird; W. R Dunwoody\nbeat L. S. Bradley.\nSemi-finals\u2014Townshend beat McPhail; Dunwoody beat Kerr.\nSecond flight:\nFirst round\u2014Gordon Roynon beat\nJohn Fraser; L. Lubett beat E. G.\nChapman; Guy Davis beat C H.\nHamilton; Ken McBride beat John\nCartmel; Vic Owen beat R. L. McBride; B. Marley beat R. E. Horton;\nN. W. Seamon beat Dr. H. H MacKenzie; Roy Pollard beat D. L.\nThompson.\nSecond round\u2014Lubett beat Roynon; McBride beat Davis; Marley\nbeat Owen; Pollard beat Seamon.\nSemi-finals \u2014 McBride beat Lubett; Marley beat Pollard.\nThird fUght:\nFirst round\u2014John Fraser beat E.\nG. Chapman; John Cartmel beat C.\nH. Hamilton; R. E. Horton beat R. L.\nMcBride; D. L. Thompson beat Dr.\nH. H. MacKenzie.\nSemi-finals\u2014Cartmel beat Fraser;\nHorton beat Thompson.\nFourth flight:\nFirst round\u2014C. H. Hogarth won\nfrom 0. G. Gallaher by delault\nSemi-finals \u2014 Hogarth beat Eric\nSowerby; W. W. Ferguson beat W. J.\nWaters.\nFinal\u2014Hogarth beat Ferguson.\nGOSNEL CUP, LADIES' SINGLES\nChampionship flight:\nFirst round\u2014Miss Ellen Hughes.\nFernie, beat Mrs. W. W. Ferguson;\nMiss C. Smith beat Mrs. Robert\nWatson.\nSecond round\u2014Miss Hughes beat\nMiss Smith; Mrs. MacKay beat Mrs.\nR. L. McBride: Miss M. McLeod beat\nMrs. L. S. Bradley; Mrs. John Cartmel beat Miss Florence Rutledge.\nSemi-finals \u2014 Miss Hughes beat\nMrs. MacKay; Mrs. Cartmel beat\nMiss McLeod.\nFirst flight:\nFirst round\u2014Mrs. Robert Watson\nbeat Mrs. W. Vl. Ferguson.\nSemi-finals \u2014 Mrs. Watson beat\nMrs. R. L. McBride; Mrs. Bradley\nbeat Miss F. Rutledge.\nGreenwood Pioneer\nLaid to Rest\nGREENWOOD, B.C.\u2014 Greenwood\nlost another pioneer when John\nMyers, age 73, died August 29. The\nfuneral was held Saturday. Services were read in the United church\nby the Rev. Mr. Leslie.\nMORE ABOUT\nSPANISH\n(Continued From Page One)\nReturn From East\nto Greenwood\nMr. and Mrs. Walters\nVisited Mrs. J. D.\nMacLean\nSebastian today from the east and\nsouth.\nIn the Bay of Biscay resort, eight\nmiles west of smoking, fallen Irun,\nthe defenders split Basque nationalists among the government forces\nwere reported seeking to surrender\nthe city, practically encircled by Insurgent troops and under the guns\not rebel warships. Anarchists and\nCommunists declared they would\nfight to the death.\nThe battle on the San Sebastian\nfront began this morning with a\nfight for control of the highway at\nthe village of Ancho, near Pasajes.\nAdvancing rebel columns, with\nmachine guns mounted on armored\ncars, drove the government militiamen back toward Fort Trtncherpe,\nin the hills surrounding Pasajes.\u2014\n(Copyright, 1936, by The Associated\nPress).\nLOYALI8T8 TAKE TALAVERA\nDE LA REINA\nMADRID, Sept. 6 (AP) .-Spain's\ndefending armies, in a seemingly decisive turn ln the bloody civil war,\nannounced today the recapture of\nthe vitally Important Talavera de la\nReina sector\u2014key to the southern\ndoor to Madrid.\nTalavera is approximately 70 miles\nsouthwest of the capital and has\nbeen the scene for days of fierce\nfighting between government militiamen and rebels advancing from\nwestern Estremadura.\nWhile reports from farther south\ntold how a bridgeful ot rebels had\nbeen destroyed by dynamiters led\nby a 19-year-old boy, more than 4000\n'Militia Ironsides\" at Talavera hurled themselves against the Fascist\ninsurgents' finest army ot foreign\nlegionnaires and Moors. \u2014 (Copyright, 1936, By Associated Press).\nGREENWOOD, B. C\u2014 Mr. and\nMrs. G. S. Walters have returned\nhome after an extended trip in\nEastern Canada. In Ottawa they\nvisited Mrs. Walter's sister. Mrs.\nJ. S. D. MacLean, wife of Hon. Dr.\nMacLean. former premier ot British Columbia.\nMaster Corry Wright returned to\nGreenwood after spending several\nweeks visiting his aunt and uncle,\nMr. and Mrs. Jack Kenyon of Grand\nForks.\nDave Spooner of Vancouver, who\nwas visiting friends here, left Wednesday lor Trail.\nMr. and Mrs. Jenkins and family\nspent a lew days with Mrs. Ren-\ndell on their way home to Trail\nfrom Penticton, where they had\nbeen vacationing.\nMrs. W. M. Gowans and daughters\nhave returned to Grand Forks after\nspending several days with friends.\nMr. and Mrs. Setter and daughters were Sunday visitors to Beaverdell.\nMiss Louis Patton, who was visiting with friends, has left for Vancouver.\nMiss Marie McDonnell and Miss\nAlice Clark of Greenwood, have\nleft lor Grand Forks to attend high\nschool.\nMr. and Mrs. Homer McLean accompanied by Corinne and Corry\nWright were visitors to Jewel lake.\nMiss Beatrice McLaren has returned home alter holidaying in the\nKootenays.\nR. Forshaw has left for Vancouver accompaned by Tim Cudworth.\nMrs. A. Sater, Mrs. Broten, Mr.\nand Mrs. Jack Hannah and daughter\nAdelaine were guests of Mrs. Ole\nJohnson and Mrs. Gustafson Sunday\nat Christina lake.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Reid and family\nhave returned home after spending\nthe summer at Vancouver.\nMr. Edwards, who was relieving\nMr. McDonald of the Canadian\nBank of Commerce, has returned to\nhis home in Vancouver.\nSUIT AGAINST EXCHANGE ACT\nCHICAGO, Sept. 6 (AP)-A second suit challenging the constitutionality of the Commodity Exchange act of 1936 was on file todsy\nin United States district court.\nPlaintiffs were seven members of\nthe Chicago board of trade, who\nforccment of the act, which becomes\nsought an injunction to restrain en-\nfull effective Sept. 13.\nW. M. ROSS DIES\nOTTAWA. Sept. 6 (CP)-Walter\nM. Ross, former president ol the Canadian Lumberman's association\nand pioneer Ottawa district lumber'\nman, died Saturday in Liverpool,\nEng., according to word received\nhere tonight. He was 65 and a native\nof Ottawa.\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nLOST - PARCEL CONTAINING\ngroceries and children's clothing\nbetween Trail and Castlegar. Box\n2539, Daily News. (2539)\nFOR RENT, TWO OR FOUR ROOM\nfurnished cabins. Shardelow's Motor Court, Nelson avenue. (2528)\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nBUGLE BAND PARADES THIS\nMORNING, 8:30 A.M. (2541)\nElectrical   supplies   and   repairs\nF. tt Smith, 313 Baker St. Ph 666\n(2420)\nFor Rent\u2014Two room furnished\nsuite. Stirling Hotel. (2499)\nBig Labor Day Dance, Salmo, B.C.\nEveryone welcome. Under auspices\nof Pythian Sisters. (2508)\nSecond-hand Remington Standard\n14\" carriage. $25. Goos Stationery tc\nTypewriter. Phone 84. (2484)\nHarness   and   leather  goods  repaired. Holland's, opp, Tel. Otlice.\n(2487)\nMOB LYNCHES NEGRO\nDALTON, Ga., Sept. 6 (AP)-A\nmoh lynched a 21-year-old negro\naccused of an attempted attack on\na white woman near here early today after hustling the prisoner away\nfrom the Whitfield county jail. Sheriff J. T. Bryan said the crowd of\nabout 150 men stormed the Jell,\nforced Jailer John Pitt to hand over\nhis keys at the point of pistols and\nseized the prisoner booked as A. L.\nWhite houses may regain popularity since chemists have developed\npigments that collect dirt less readily than old style house paints.\nt\nTONIGHT    TONIGHT    TONIGHT\nImpromptu dance will be held at\nthe Golf Club, weather permitting.\n(2538)\nOur new Fall samples art sure to\nplease\u2014come In and look them over.\nJACK BOYCE        (2397)\nYoung man wishes transportation\nto coast soon. Share expenses. Can\ndrive. Box 2530, Daily News.   (2530)\nASK YOUR DEALER FOR MCDONALD'S SUN TIP MARMALADE.   A HOME PRODUCT.\n(2434)\nThe Kootenay Music House will\nhave within the next week a $2000\nmusical instrument display. Come in\nfor a free demonstration.        (2438)\nLABOR  DAY EXCURSION\nRound-trip,   fare  and  a  third,\nSept. 4th. Return limit Sept. 6th.\n(2415)\nCREYHOUND LINES\nPhono 800\nNelion  Depot 205 Baker St\nThe new mixtures for Fall\nare decidedly different-\ndarker shades, wider\nbrims.\nOther Haft $3.50 Up\nEMORY'S\nLimited\nSHOP THE CLASSIFIED WAY\nPrinceton Folk\nVisit Kimberley\nKIMBERLEY, B.C.-Mr. and Mrs.\nW. S. Garrison of Princeton are the\nguests of their daughter, Mrs. W.\nMcCulloch. They brought with them,\nMiss Zella McCulloch, who has spent\nher vacation in Princeton.\nGeorge Law returned on Sunday\nfrom Nelson. He was accompanied\nby Mrs. Law and son, who have been\nspending two months in Slocan and\nNew Denver.\nAlex. Caldwell, son of Mr. and\nMrs. T. Caldwell left on Monday for\nCranbrook where he will attend\nschool.\nMiss Marguerite Hotchkiss has returned home after spending her vacation in Trail with Miss Bessie\nLilley.\nMiss B. Bidder, who has spent\"the\npast month holidaying at the coast,\nreturned home on Sunday to take\nup her duties with the C. M.' &. S.\ncompany.\nMrs. J. R. Doran and sister, Miss\nThornton, have returned to Chapman Camp from their summer home\nat St. Mary's lake, where they spent\nthe summer vacation. Miss Thornton expects to leave for her home in\nIreland early in October.\nMiss Connie Hellier left on Friday to return to her nursing in Victoria hospital. Mrs. Hellier will\nshortly go there also to be near her\ndaughter.\nWilliam Halkett and Jack Fin-\nlayson of Victoria are the guests of\nMiss Jean and Marie Chatson.\nMrs. John Lilley and family of\nTrail are visiting with Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. McLaren at McDougall townsite.\nMrs. Harry Brpwn and Edna left\nthis week lor a visit to Michel.\nAnnouncement!\nTHE STANDARD\nELECTRIC\nHas procured the Exclusive\nAgency lor Stewart Warner Radios.\nSee our window lor the very\nlatest, most exclusive mantel or\nbedside radio on the market. First\nol its type to appear in Nelson\u2014\nIn all chromium linish\nPrice $47.50\nBadminton\nPlayers\nA special general meeting\nof all Nelson Badminton Players will be held in the New\nCivic Centre Badminton Hall,\nSeptember 15th at 8 pm.\nBusiness to discuss and organize Badminton tor the\nSeason ol 1936 and '37. It is\nespecially requested that\nevery one possible turn out\nand help boost tor a real organization.\nARROW\nSHIRTS\nin\nNew Fall Pattern*\n$2.00\nYour choice ot the AROSET\ncollar or smart, button down\nstyle.\nGODFREYS'\n%P   LIMITED\n\"CAMBRIDGE CLOTHES\"\n318 BAKER      PHONE 270\nComplete Show* it\n2:00, 7:00, 9:00\nHoliday Admission Pricei:\nAdults 40c; Children 15c\nSHE SPURNED\nONE MAN'S ARMS\n...TO EMBRACE\nALL HUMANITY!\n| The gallant itory of the\nimmortal war heroine\nwhose blood-stained\nuniform became the red\nbadge of courage of\nthe lied Cross nurte!\nTODAY\nand\nTUESDAY\nKAY FRANCIS\n,. I I n|!l \\l I    \\|l,ll I INt. \\l I   -I,\nWUIlitlKrlltpl\nAdded Attractions:\nPopeye\u2014\"What No Spinach\"\nMusical\u2014\"Radio Rhapsody\"\nNovelette\u2014\"Popular Science\"\ni'.l*i'.:ij-\".a*t'l..\n\u2014________________________\n","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType":[{"value":"Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial":[{"value":"Nelson (B.C.)","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier":[{"value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1936_09_07","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0412435","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language":[{"value":"English","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat":[{"value":"49.493333","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long":[{"value":"-117.295833","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider":[{"value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher":[{"value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights":[{"value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source":[{"value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title":[{"value":"The Daily News","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type":[{"value":"Text","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description":[{"value":"","type":"literal","lang":"en"}]}}