{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0413324":{"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider":[{"value":"CONTENTdm","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf":[{"value":"BC Historical Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued":[{"value":"2022-04-27","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1937-09-17","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0413324\/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":" mw\u2014\nGiants Win as Cubs Lose to Go\n31-2 Games in the Lead\n\u2014Page Nine\nLIBRARY\nVICTORIA, B.C.\nWJfsww^pflr^f^'f1^\n14\n\u00bb*aw\u00bb*\n\"5SPpwr?l\u00bb'?'!W!PWI!^^\n\\a-oi\nToronto, Montreal, New York\nStock Markets Higher\n\u2014Page Eleven\nFIVE CENT8 PER COPY\n*fy. BRITI8H COLUMBIA, CANADA-FRIDAY MORNING, 8EPT. 17, 1937.\n  - . \u00b0*m ,y  ya zz - : : : ez ,\nVOLUME 38 FIVE CENT8 PER COPY ,    --^;'_fc\u00bb*_ Q       *Al BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA-FRIDAY MORNING, 8EPT. 17, 1937. NUMBfR 15J\n \u2014 '-:,;; \u25a0 < -!:I\u00bb , \u2022 V- \u2014\u2014\nGerman Stall Directing China Army?\n?\nTrades and Labor Congress to\nStay Out of Canadian Politics\nHerald's Minimum\nWage\nA minimum wage for male employees will be instituted in Alberta\nin the near future, according to\nHon. E. C. Manning, ABOVE, provincial minister of trade and industry. The wage scales will be based\non the number of working hours\nper week, already limited to 51\nhours under the Hours of Work\nact. Mr. Manning also announced\nthat while a minimum was to be\nset, companies able to pay and who\nhave been paying higher than the\nminimum will be asked to adopt a\nscale of wages and hours under the\nIndustrial Standards act.\n\u2022FERNIE CHINESE\nGIVE $1000 TO'\nWAR FUND\nFERNIE, B.C., Sept. 16 (CP)\n\u2014Chinese merchants of this\nEast Kootenay coal-mining town\nhave contributed $1000 to the\nChinese war fund, a merchant\nsaid here today.\nFernie's Chinese population\ndoes not exceed 30, but they will\ncontribute more to the fund,\nthe merchant said.\nFinds a Coal Vein\nin Own Basement\nNANAIMO, B. C., Sept. 16 (CP)\n\u2014J. G. Dakln didn't have to look\nfor coal when he Installed his new\nfurnace.\nWorkmen making further excavations after setting up the furnace uncovered a solid vein of\nhard coal which pitched steeply.\nEnough coal was taken from the\nvein to start tho first fire.\nDRAPER ADVISES\nMEMBERS TO BE\nACTIVE WORKERS\nIN LABOR PARTY\nCongress Would Block\nSale of Produce of\nFascist Lands\nCRITICIZE LIBERAL\nGOV'T. INACTIVITY\nBy GUY E. RHOADES\nCanadian   Press  Staff  Writer\nOTTAWA, Sept. 16 (CP)-The\ntrades and labor congress of Canada voted today to remain aloof\nfrom participation In politics,\nurged labor to discourage sale in\nCanada of goods produced In\nfascist countries and endorsed the\nstand of the International Federation of Trade Unions on the Spanish civil war.\nIn a long resolution, substituted\nby the resolutions committee for\nseveral others, some of them advocating direct action, the congress\nvoted to leave labor's political autonomy in the hands of established\nLabor parties.\n\"LEGISLATIVE\nMOUTHPIECE\"\nAt the same time the annual convention expressed opinion congress\nshould continue as the legislative\nmouthpiece of organized labor \"in-\n(Contlnued on Page Twelve)\nFreighter Is Still\nTied Up by Bonus\nDemand of Crew\nPORT ALBERNI, B. C, Sept. 16\n(CP)\u2014Under the watchful eyes of\nCanadian immigration authorities, 26\ncrewmen of the British freighter\nDalcroy wandered about this Vancouver Island port tonight while\ntheir vessel lay docked with a cargo\nof lumber for Manchoukuo.\nThe men, British and Malayan\nsailors, remained adamant in their\nrefusal to work the vessel through\nthe zone of Sino-Japanese hostilities to Dairen, Manchoukuo, unless granted $75 war bonuses.\nBARKING  DOGS ARE\nBANNED   IN  NANKING\nNANKING, Sept. 15 (AP) -Barking dogs were banned from the Chinese capital today lest their night\nhowling act as a signal for raiding\nJapanese planes.\nItaly Again Is Branded as\nBack of the 'Pirate' Subs\n23 Powers to Be Asked\nto Consider Chinese\nSituation\nGENEVA, 8ept. 16 (CP-Havas)\n\u2014The troubled patht of China and\nSpain crossed fleetingly today at\na League of Nations council session which heard Spanish Premier\nJuan Negrln brand Italy as the\n\"pirate\" whose submarines have\nattacked Mediterranean shipping.\nThe council a little while before\npassed on the Chinese question\nby referring China's appeal\nagainst Japanese aggression to\nthe 23-power consultative committee, created In February, 1933,\nwith the United States as a member, after Tokyo's Manchurlan\nconquest.\nThe council decided lo invile the\n23 nations of the original committee\nto reconvene. Hence the question of\nIhe United States' attitude toward\nfurther collaboration with the\nLeague on far eastern affairs became important to Geneva.\nJapanese spokesmen indicated\nJapan would not send representatives lo any meeting of the com-\nmitlee.\nThe council members were not rid\nso easily of the 15-month-old Spanish civil war, however. Ncgrin's\nspeech was so emphatic against Italy\nthat even the Soviet foreign commissar, Maxim Litvinoff, advised\nhe \"had nothing to add.\"\nNegrin, after criticizing \"limitations\" of the nine-power Nyon accord, took the League itself lo task\nfor closing its eyes to \"proof\" that\nthe \"anonymous state whose warships have sought to create terrorism in the Mediterranean is Italy.\"\nTo Count\nUnemployed\n^_T^^\n^H\nH_t\"\nft-;\n1     ^r\nSi  Mgl\n. \u2022emmWWB\nft\n\\\\V\nft,     \u25a0   '\"*-J\n\u2022 n\n\/L\n.-.- \/ \/m\\   \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\n\u25a0 H ^Hv-':;'-.\"-.-\nkmW\n\u25a0\nB\nY^'ft\nJohn D. Blggers, ABOVE, president of the Toledo Glass Company,\nwho has been asked by President\nRoosevelt to direct the work of taking a census of the United States'\nunemployed. President Roosevelt,\nunder congressional authority to\nact as he saw fit, has suggested that\nBiggers use a voluntary registration\nsystem rather than an attempt at a\ncensus of the entire population.\n(opeland Trailing\nin New York Vote\nNEW YORK, .Sept. 19 (AMP*\ngreat outpouring of votes In the\npopulous boroughs surrounding\nManhattan gave pro-new deal Jeremiah T. Mahoney a heavy lead late\ntonight over Tammany-backed Royal\nS. Copeland in New York's Democratic mayoralty primary.\nThe boroughs of Brooklyn, The\nBronx, Queens and Richmond\u2014all\nled by Democratic chieftains friendly to James A. Farley and President\nRoosevelt\u2014were going three to one\nfor Mahoney in these partial returns, while Manhattan, Tammany's\nancient home\u2014was turning out in\nthe ratio of about five to one for\nCopeland.\nGO INTO PUBLIC\nLIFE, BEATTY\nADVISES\nVERNON, B. C, Sept, 16 -\n\"Go into public lire, young man,\"\nwas Sir. Edward Beatty's exort-\nation to the new generation in\nthis country when he addressed\nthe Men's and Women's Canadian Clubs of Vernon at a luncheon meeting today. He urged\nnot only maintenance of Canada's present high standard of\ncitizenship, but elevation and\nenlargement of the ideals now\npursued.\nThat often maligned individual the \"politician\" found a\nchampion in Sir Edward. The\nword that means \"one versed in\npublic affairs had come too often into disrepute, used sometimes even as a term of opprobrium, he said. The standard of public service in this\ncountry had been extraordinarily high, Sir Edward thought,\nand too little credit has been\nRiven in the past to countless\nleaders with unselfish aims.\nWANTS LESS NOISE IN TORONTO\nTORONTO, Sept. 16 (CP)-In an\neffort to abolish objectionable noise\nin Toronto, Police Chief D. C. Draper\ntoday recommended to the police\ncommissioner that buses replace\nstreet cars after midnight and no\nmilk deliveries be made between\nmidnight and 6:30 o'clock in the\nmorning.\nGIRL VICTIM OF A\nDEATH PLUNGE\nIDENTIFIED\nQUEBEC, Sept. 16 (CP)-The\ngirl companion of Ovila Tur-\ncotte, 28, in a death plunge in\nan .automobile into Quebec harbor early today was identified\ntonight as Marguerite Fortier,\n22, of Quebec City.\nIdentification of the girl was\nestablished almost 24 hours after she and Turcotte died when\ntheir automobile shot off an\nembankment, climbed a stone\nparapet and droppd to the harbor mud in 35 feet of water.\nCHAMBERLAIN RETURNS\nTO LONDON 8ATURDAY\nLONDON, Sept. 16 (CP-Havas)-\nPrime Minister Neville Chamberlain will return to London Saturday from his vacation in Scotland\nbut No. 10 Downing street is undergoing alterations and he will continue temporary residence in No. 11,\nofficial home of the chancellor of\nthe exchequer.\nSECRET CONFAB\nAS PRICE OF SEPT.\nCORN AT CHICAGO\nGOES SKYWARD\n'Squeeze' Threatens as\nTraders Scramble\n\u2022    to Buy\nSOME 'SHORTS' DO\nNOT JOIN BUYING\nCHICAGO, Sept 16 (AP) \u2014\nBoard of trade officials conferred\nsecretly tonight on possible moves\nIn a tight situation in September\ncorn contracts which threatens a\nserious market \"squeeze.\"\nA scramble to buy corn to meet\nSeptember contracts sent the price\nup five cents a bushel late In the\ntrading session, but trading In other futures was not affected.\nThe board of trade's business\nconduct committee went Into session through the dinner hour, and\nwas recalled after recess.\nMeanwhile John H. MacMillan, Jr.,\nof Minneapolis, president of the Car-\ngill Grain company\u2014reportedly the\nlargest trader on the \"long\" side in\nSeptember futures\u2014came here for\nconferences.\nObservers said some of the principal \"shorts\"\u2014those traders who\nagree to deliver corn to the \"longs\"\nor holders of contracts for September deliveryr-did Hut Join In the\nday's buying rush, apparerltly in the\nbelief the situation would be eased\nIn some as yet unforeseen manner.\nBecause of the impending 'squeeze'\nSeptember corn was quoted 36 cents\nhigher than corn for October delivery, and 47 cents above the December delivery price.\nSeptember contracts, which must\nbe filled chiefly with corn grown in\n1936 and of which there was a decided shortage, finished the day at\n$1,10 to $1.10% a bushel, up five\ncents from Wednesday's closing\nprice.\nProvisional\nPresident\nW                    .,_\u00ab*__\u00bb!?'\u25a0\nmLWff...\nI1S_H_Hf.\n19H-HL\n%\nDr. Felix Paiva, ABOVE, who was\nnamed provisional president of\nParaguay when Colonel Rafael\nFranco, hero of the Chaco war, was\nousted recently. Franco, who fled\nto Argentina, returned to Asuncion,\nParaguay, to find that a revolt on\nhis behalf had failed, and that the\nPaiva gclernment was still firmly\nin the saddle.\nStates Lindbergh to\nBe a British Subject\nNEW YORK, Sept. 16 (AP)-A\nprofessional source associated with\nCol, Charles A. Lindbergh said\ntoday the famous filer Intended to\nrenounce his American citizenship and become a British subject.\nThe Informant declined to be\nquoted, or to permit use of his\nname, but his connection with\nLindbergh was an established one.\nThe manner In which the Information was obtained was not divulged, and confirmation or denial\ncould not be obtained elsewhere.\nCALLS  OFF  \"REVENGE\"  GAME\nBIARRITZ, France, Sept. 16 (AP)\n\u2014Gambler Amleto Battisti called off\nhis revenge baccarat game today\nbut announced he would try again\nnext year. Then, said the Uruguayan\nmathematician who lost $370,000 instead of winning back the $1,000,000\nhe lost eight years ago, amateurs\nwith less than five years' experience\nwill be barred.\nCHINA-BOUND WAR\nPLANES HALTED\nAT SAN PEDRO\nSAN PEDRO, Calif., Sept. 16\n(AP) \u2014 China-bound war planes\nand pistols were halted in Los\nAngeles harbor today in the first\nenforcement of this week's\nPresidential decree.\nNineteen military airplanes\nand two cases of revolvers consigned to Hong Kong, and two\ncases of cartridges consigned to\nSaigon, French Indo-Chlna, were\nremoved from the government-\nowned merchantman Wichita,\nwhich put in here today for fuel\nen route to Manila.\nEckstein to Appeal\nOLIVER, B. C., Sept. 16 (CP) \u2014\nBert Eckstein, Tacoma, Wash., flier,\nwhose plane was used for \"batman\"\nparachute jumps at the Labor day\nairshow here, today prepared to\nappeal a $25 fine and confiscation\nof his machine ordered after his conviction on charges of violating Canadian -aviation and customs regulations,\nCecil McKenzie, Vancouver \"batman\" who made delayed parachute\nleaps from Eckstein's plane, was\nacquitted on a charge of operating a\nplane without the necessary licence,\nbut his father, T. W. McKenzie, was\nfined $25 and costs for selling tickets\nfor rides in the plane. The ticket\nselling was found to be a breach of\nthe federal air regulations.\nTHREE YEARS FOR\nFERNIE HOLD-UP\nMike, Bossio' to Serve\nWith Hard Labor\nfor Robbery\nPleading guilty to a charge of rob-\nbery with violence, Mike Bossio of\nFernie, was sentenced to three years\nwith hard labor by Judge W. A. Nisbet this afternoon. It was alleged\nthat Bossio held up G. D. Fisher and\nfamily of Calgary, at a local tourist camp on the night of August 30,\ntaking about $17, a wallet and a\nwatch.\nSmart police work resulted in\nBossio's arrest within two hours.\nBossio had the watch and wallet in\nhis possession evidence indicated,\nThe sentence is to run concurrent\nwith two sentences of six months\nalready received on other charges.\nOne of the two charges on which\nBossio was found guilty and sentenced to six months was of theft of\na club bag and contents from a tourist camp cabin occupied by Edward\nW. Borgens of Calgary; and the other was of retaining in his possession stolen goods, the goods being\na watch, watch chains and fob belonging to A. B. King of Fernie.\nThese charges were laid when police\nsearched Bossio's residence after arresting him on the armed holdup\ncount. A rifle was used in the\nholdup.\nBOY BACK HOME\nFREED OF BLAME\nFOR KILLING HIS\nRANCHER FATHER\nFive Minutes for Jury\nto Find Metcalf Lad\nNot Guilty\nSHOT TO PROTECT\nMOTHER, SISTER\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 16 (CP)-\nSeventeen-year-old Desmond Metcalf went back tonight to the log-\ncabin among the stumps and goat-\npastures near Coquitlam where he\nshot his father to death with a .22-\ncalibre rifle.\nDesmond, held since his father\ndied of a bullet wound last July\n20, was free tonight. An assize\ncourt Jury, after deliberating only\nfive minutes, found him not guilty\nof a charge of manslaughter.\nForeman Andre Blygh delivered\nthe verdict the jury had reached\nafter considering the evidence of\na two-day trial and Mr. Justice\nH. B. Robertson's Instructions to\nfind the boy Innocent If they believed Desmond shot his father to\nprevent him from harming or\npossibly murdering his mother and\nsister.\nEVIDENCE OFTHREATS\nThe Judge had told the Jurymen\nthat there was evidence of continual\nthreats on the part of the father\nand that he had told the children he\nwould kill them.\nAfter the verdict was read, Mr,\nJustice Robertson told the second-\nyear-high school boy: \"go with courage and be a comfort to your mother\nand sister.\"    \",\nEarlier the boy had atood in the\nwitness stand and told the story pf\nevents leading up to the shooting.\nMr. Justice Robertson said in his\ninstructions to the jury, that, if the\nboy, to prevent his mother from being seriously injured or murdered,\nshot his father, the accused was entitled to acquittal.\nOf the father, Crown counsel Henry Castillou said: \"The actions of\nthis man are unexplainable and foreign to nature.\"\nTakes Exception\nto German\nStatements\nGEISHA GIRLS TO\nCALM DOWN\nTOKYO, Sept. 16 (AP) \u2014Executives of the Tokyo Geisha House association today ordered Japan's famed girl entertainers to eliminate frivolity as inappropriate during the\nChinese war. The girls were also\nordered to discard their liveliest\ncostumes and don more sombre garb.\nBRITISH SEAMAN KILLED\nVALENCIA, Spain, Sept. 16 (AP)\n\u2014An insurgent air bombardment of\nthe Valencia waterfront killed at\nleast 16 persons and wounded 40.\nBritish seaman was reported among\nthe dead. Bodies still were being\nextricated from the debris today.\nNew Electrical Device Makes the\nHeart Take X-Ray Picture of Self\n(By Steven J. McDonough)\n(Associated Press Science Writer)\nCHICAGO, Sept. 16 (AP)\u2014A new\nelectrical device which makes the\nheart automatically take X-ray pictures ol itself was shown today before the International Congress of\nRadiology ,\nWith it physicians for the first\ntime get accurate pictures of the\nsize and shape of the heart in health\nand disease instead of an approximate image, according to its inventors, Dr. I. Seth Hirsch and Dr. Myron\nSchwarzchild of New York City.\nIn operation It combines three\nof science's newest tools \u2014 the el-\nectrocardlograph, which picks up\nthe small electrical waves gener\nated by the heart; the cathode ray\ntube which makes electrons dance\nvisibly to show the electrical waves, the photo-electrlo cell or elec\ntrie eye, which transfers light\nrays Into electricity.\nThe electric waves from the heart\nare picked up from the surface of\nthe body, amplified about 10,000\ntimes, and passed into the cathode\nray tub where they are made visible.\nAs the heart reaches its maximum\nexpansion it produces a characteristic long wave which is picked up by\nthe photo-electric cell. The cell\ninstantaneously closes a circuit to\nthe X-ray tube which makes a quick\nsnapshot of the heart at that point.\nMore Witnesses Tell\nof Effects of Fumes\nOTTAWA, Sept. 16 (CP)\u2014Several\nwitnesses testified today before the\nTrail smelters arbitration tribunal in\nsupport of the Canadian contention\nthat fumes from the Consolidated\nMining k Smelting Company of\nCanada, Ltd., at Trail, B.C., have\nbeen harmless since January, 1932.\nDr. F. C. Wyatt, professor of soils\nat University of Alberta and T. H.\nMather, fertilizer sales executive of\nthe smelter company, described effect of sulphur dioxide fumigation\non soils and water.\nSeveral previous Canadian witnesses were recalled for re-examination\nbriefly on points that have arisen\nsince their testimony was given.\nMinneapolis One\nUp in Play-Offs\nCOLUMBUS, O., Sept. 16 (API-\nMinneapolis Millers made it one up\nin the American association playoff\nseries by defeating the champion\nColumbus Red Birds 3-2 in the third\ncontest here tonight before 1530\nspectators.\nMinneapolis   S   11-    0\nColumbus  2    7    0\nLanier, McGee and Grube; Henry,\nWagner and Peacock.\nSenator Borah, <R-Ida), last night\ntook exception to the statements\nemanating from Germany that emissaries from that country going to\nthe U.S. to preach their doctrine\n\"must be protected by\" the U.S.\ngovernment. He warned that they\nwill have freedom of speech but if\nthey break the law they will be put\non trial, \"not in the puppet courts\nof their homeland, but in independent courts.\"\nBorah Warns Ihe\nNazis in Ihe U. S.\nHave Speech Freedom\nbut If Break Law\nGo on Trial\nWASHINGTON, Sept. 16 (AP) -\nSenator Borah appealed tonight for\nthe maintenance of \"uncontrolled\ncourts\" as the only guarantee that\ntraditional American liberties will\nbe preserved.\nIn a speech commemorating the\n150th anniversary of the signing of\nthe constitution, he swung without\npreface into a discourse which carried his hearers back to the memorable battle of last winter over the\nadministration proposal to revamp\nthe Supreme Court.\nHe took exception to the recent\nstatements emanating from Germany concerning the rights of Nazis\nabroad.\nWithout referring to Germany by\nname, Borah referred to a \"high official of a foreign government\" and\ndeclared that official had said \"emi-\nsaries from his country coming here\nto teach their doctrine must be protected by our government, that they\nmust enjoy, as it were, immunity in\ntheir efforts to sow the seeds of religious intolerance, race hatred, and\narbitrary power among us.\"\nBorah declared these emissaries\nwill have liberty of expression\/but\nif they break the law they will be\nput on trial \"not in the puppet courts\nof their homeland, but in independ\nent courts.\"\nOBSERVERS SAY\nGREAT WAR VET\nIS GENERAL WITH\nSOME 60 OFFICERS\n100  New Cases of\nCholera in Shanghai\nOvernight\nJAPANESE MAKE\nRAPID ADVANCES\nBy MORRIS ). HARRIS\nAssociated Press Foreign Staff\nSHANGHAI, Sept. 16 (AP)\n\u2014Rapid Japanese advances in\nsweeping north China campaigns were outstanding developments today as conflict continued savagely over most of\nthe 2000-mile Chinese war\nfront.\nJapanese reported they\nplunged further into Shansi\nprovince, bombed its capital,\nbroke Chinese armies south of\nPeiping and threatened to\nsmash China's central Hopeh\ndefence lines on the Shanghai\nfront the Chinese asserted they\nrecaptured Lotien. Cholera be-\n(Continued on Page Twelve)\nNEGRO CLAIMS\nDEFRAUDED IN\nHATFIELD CASE\nOTTAWA) Sept lfl (CPl-toril- I\ncation *y Col. Warwick Beta-tit,\ncounsel for Captain Freeman Hatfield, that Senator Hance J. Logan,\nhad \"short-changed\" Alexander Allison, colored second mate of the\nGypsum Queen, to the extent of\n$279.80, was made at today's hearing\nof the Nova Scotian Shipmaster's\ntrial.\nHatfield is charged with obtaining $71,276.72 from the reparations\ncommission by false pretences.\nActing for Hatfield in the reparations claim was Senator Logan, of\nParrsboro,   N.S.\nBrought from Staten Island, N.Y.,\nwhere he is now employed as a\nrigger, the negro seaman told of\nthe transaction carried out in March,\n1931, on the ferryboat crossing New\nYork harbor.\nHe related how the senator and\nHatfield had encountered him on\nthe ferry on the way to Allison's\nhome. Logan had with him a check\nawarded to the negro by the reparations commission for the loss of effects when the Gypsum Queen was\nabandoned.\n\"I have $500 In my pocket for you,\"\nthe senator was quoted by Allison\nas saying. Logan then produced the\ncheck and, accoring to witness, presented him the reverse side, with\nthe request: \"Just sign this receipt.\"\nAllison swore he did not know it\nwas a check, and that it had been\nissued to him, for $779.80.\nEdmonton Hopes to Reopen\nSchools by Next Wednesday\n10 YOUTHS ARE BURNED\nTO DEATH\nKIRKINTILLOCH, Dumbartonshire, Scotland, Sept. 16 (CP Cable)\n\u2014Ten youths brought from Ireland\nto earn a few shillings during the\npotato-picking season Were burned\nto death early today when fire\ndestroyed the \"bothy\"\u2014a rude hut\nfor accommodating laborers\u2014 in\nwhich they were sleeping ,\nITALY STANDS FIRM\nON REFUSAL JOIN\nIN PATROL\nLONDON, Sept. 16 (AP) -\nItaly stood firm tonight on her\nrefusal to join the Mediterranean \"anti-piracy\" patrol on any\nbasis but full equality with\nBritain and France. Her spokesmen in Rome said any further\nmove to bring her into the nine-\npower Nyon accord to sweep\nsubmarine \"piracy\" from the\nMediterranean, must come from\nLondon or Paris.\nMeanwhile Britain and France\npushes their naval concentrations to protect merchant shipping in the Mediterranean.\nMin. Max..\nNELSON  50 78\nVictoria  _ 56 64\nNanaimo  56 74\nVancouver  56 72\nKamloops  56 84\nPrince George 42 84\nEstevan Point  56 64\nPrince Rupert  54 72\nLangara  54 62\nAtlin   54 64\nDawson  _ 46 52\nSeattle  60 70\nPortland   58 74\nSan Francisco  _ 54 60\nSpokane    58 86\nLos Angeles 68 94\nKelowna  50 80\nPenticton 52 \u2014\nGrand Forks  50 86\nKaslo   52 -\nCranbrook   42 84\nCalgary  42 82\nEdmonton 44 78\nSwift Current 38 74\nMoose Jaw 36 68\nPrince Albert  32 68\nSaskatoon  28 68\nQu'Appelle   26 62\nWinnipeg     34 54\nForecast, Okanagan and Kootenay\n\u2014Moderate southerly to westerly\nwinds, partly cloudy and warm.\n14 ScHools in Medicine\nHat Area Closed by\nParalysis\nBy The Canadian Press\nOntario health officials today\nstill faced a stern fight against\nInfantile paralysis which continued to tax the efforts of hospital\nstaffs throughout the province.\nFifteen new cases of Infantile\nparalysis were reported to Toronto\nhealth officials today.\nDr. Gordon Jackson, medical officer of health, urged continued\nvigilance for symptoms.\nEDMONTON 8CHOOL8 TO\nREOPEN NEXT WEDNE8DAY\nEDMONTON, Sept. 16 (CP) \u2014\nEdmonton's Junior and Intermediate schools will be re-opened for\nregular classes Wednesday provided no new developments In the\ncurrent Infantile paralysis epidemic are reported. 8chools were\nclosed over the Labor day weekend and have not been reopened\nsince.\nFourteen schools were closed in\nrural areas near Medicine Hat. The\ncase list stood at 37 with four dead.\n(Continued on Page Twelve)\n_M_H_-\ntm\n.\n  ,\t\n\u2022mpmtfmtWKrmmm^\nmw.m!mmvmmWfm-'9m^''' \u25a0\u25a0.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022'J \"\nsfpsB^es\/ammewf\n\u00abSps**^WSS5?t^r^w\u00bb<^w\u00bb\"^'\"- -\nI 'GOLDFIELDS, Sask. (CP) .-Steps\n'will be taken to incorporate Gold-\n, fields as a village; Hon. T. C. Davis,\n\"Saskatchewan attorney-general, said\n'on a visit to this northern mining\n'area.\nOld-Timer and\nSon Find Health\nBy Using Wondro\nPiles, Stomach\nTroubles and\nTwitching Disappear\nFor years this well-known Cal-\ngftry old-timer suffered from piles\nand stomach trouble with no relief\nuntil he was advised to take Harris'\nWondro, The results were so remarkable that Mr. Gordon writes\nto tell Mr. Harris that he has had\nno return of his former afflictions,\nHis son, too, was benefited to such\nan extent that he could take up\nheavy work again with no ill effects.\nRead Mr. Gordon's tribute to Harris'\nWondro in the following letter:\n* \"Dear Sir:\u2014I suffered for years\n\u2022with piles and only those who have\nthem know what it means. I also\nhad ulceration of the stomach and\nwould be in bed for days at a time\nand tried everything I could think\nof, but with no results whatever. I\nwas advised by my physician to\nhave an operation as I seemed to be\ngetting worse.\n'\"At last a friend advised me to\ntry Harris' Wondro, and I am thank-\nI lul to say that after I had given it\na. fair trial, my piles and ulcers\n'had gone completely. I found the\nremedial effect of the treatment to\nbe lasting as I have had no return\nof either complaint.\n\"My son suffered for seven years |\nwith frequent, periodic twitching j\nattacks which would upset his'\nwhole system. He received medical:\ntreatment including special medicine from the States but was no ,\nbetter. He decided lo try Harris'\nWondro and the results were beyond our expectations. He is now\nStronger and looks better than he\nhas for twenty .years and is doing\nheavy work-in the country with no\nill effects, in fact, he has not had\nan attack for over four years since\ntaking   Harris'   Wondro.   I   cannot\n(praise your medicine enough, for\nit has sure been a God-send in our\nhome.\u2014Yours truly, James A. Gordon, 323 Third avenue northeast.\n| Calgary, Phone H 3440\"\nWhat Harris' Wondro was able to\ndo for Mr. Gordon, a Calgary old-\ntimer of more than thirty 'years\nstanding, it is able to do for you,\ntoo, because Harris' Wondroi supplies needed elements to (every\npart of the body, building up the\nblood and system and strengthening the stomach and digestive organs. Order a treatment for yourself, today!\nHarris' Wondro Is for sale at all\ndrug stores and is obtainable also\nin boxed capsule form. A bottle of\nHarris' Laxico, a medicine for constipation, is included free with\nevery purchase of Harris' Wondro.\n'If your druggist cannot supply you,\n: order direct from George Harris\nand Son, Herbalists, Calgary. Advt.\nCorner Stone of New Trail Masonic\nTemple Laid by B.C. Grand Master\nSingles Bowlers\nTie Count So Will\nBowl Again Today\nTying their lawn bowling battle\n8-8 Thursday night J..\"Dad\" Graham and Norman B Bradley must\nmeet again tonight to conclude play,\noutside of the semi-finals, in B section of the men's singles competition of the C.P.R. '.Lawn Bowling\nclub.\nResults of the B section sin\nplay Thursday follow:\nGraham 8, Bradley 8.\nN. J. Lowes 10, Bradley 5.\nBradley  11, Graham 7.\nH. H. Sutherland 12, N. J. Lowes 3.\nBradley 11, Sutherland 3.\nGraham   10,   Sutherland  8\nFirst victory was rung up by C.\nP McHardy when he downed Fred\nDeacon 7-2.\nTrowel Used Made by\nTrail Artisans of\nTrail Silver\nLARGE CROWD OF\nCITIZENS ATTENDS\nTRAIL, B. C., Sept. 16 \u2014Corner\nstone of the new Masonic temple,\nto be occupied by Fidelity lodge\nNo. 32, A. F. & A. M. and Emula\nNEL80N DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C-FRIDAY MORNlMG, SEPT. 17, 1937.\nDISTRICT DRIVE\nFOR PUBLICITY\nTAW Of BOARD il\nDucks Fall as\nNelson .hols\nInvade \"Flats\"\nWith the opening of the hunting\nseason Wednesday morning, nimrods from all over the Kootenay and\nsome from United States points\narose, early in the morning, shouldered their guns, boarded cars,\nbuses, boats and any other means\nof transportation and went off to\nforest and lake.\nAt Kootenay Langing C. E. G.\nFisher bagged the limit of ducks as\ndid G. R. Drew. Some Americans\nwere also at the Landing but were\nnot so fortunate as the Nelson men.\nThe Nelson hunters report the\nducks were flying quite  high.\nFew grouse but plenty of bear\ntracks were found by hunters on\nEvening mountain  behind  Nelson,\nBlueberry Timber\nSold lo McCreight\nTwo timber sales have been recorded this week by the Nelson district office of the forest branch.\nlien McCreight of Nelson, operating a sawmill on Blueberry creek,\nobtained the right to cut timber,\ntics and poles on new ground on\nthat creek,\nA stand of cordwood north of\nWinlaw was obtained by Bill Pooh-\nachoff of Winlaw.\nAlexander Nisbet of\nTrail Weds Daughter\nof Fernie Residents\nTRAIL, B.C., Sept. lG-The marriage is announced of Eleanor W.t\ndaughter of Mr. and Mrs. J, W.\nBuchanan of Fernie, and Alexander\nW. Nisbet of Trail, at Colvillc,\nWash., on September 13.\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON FELICITATES\nTRAIL AND BLAYLOCK\nCongratulations to the Trail board\nof trade, on the honor paid it and\nthe Kootenay generally by the election of S. G. Blaylock, one of its\nmembers, to the presidency of the\nCanadian Chamber of Commerce,\nwere extended Thursday by the Nelson board of trade council, which\ninstructed W. G. C. Lanskail. secretary, to convey Nelson's felicitations to the Trail board, and through\nthe board, to Mr. Blaylock. The\nresolution was sponsored by L. H.\nChoquette and H. A. Pearson.\nNELSON, B.C., HOTELS\nHume Hotel..Nelson, b. c.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor..\nSAMPLE ROOMS    :    EXCELLENT DINING ROOM\nEuropean Plan, $1.50 up\nglcs i tion lodge No. 25, was laid today\n'by Rev. Dr. J. S- Henderson, grand\nmaster of the order of British Columbia. Assisting him were Dr. C.\nM. Kingston, deputy grand master,\nGrand Forks; W. R. Simpson, junior\ngrand warden, Vancouver; H.\nHughes, grand tyler, Vancouver, and\nW. ' F. Huffman, district deputy\ngrand master, Grand Forks. O. H\nNelson, Trail, was director of ceremonies. The visiting officers of the\ngrand lodge were assisted by local\ngrand lodge members.\nThe Masonic order was well represented. Several attending from\nRossland and Nelson lodges. Mayor\nBruno Lerose and members of the\ncity council, and Rev. F.' G. St.\nDenis, president of the Trail ministerial association also attended officially. A large crowd of citizens\nwitnessed the ceremony.\nHeaded by the Canadian Legion\nbrass band, the Masons paraded\nfrom the I. 0. O- F. hall to scene of\nthe ceremony.\n\"On behalf of the city council\nand the citizens of Trail, may I\ncongratulate the Masonic order on\nerecting such a grand building\nwhich is a credit to our city,\" said\nMayor Bruno Lerose. \"I extend to\nthe grand master of the grand lodge,\nDr. Henderson and party a hearty\nwelcome and hope their visit here\nwill be an enjoyable one,\"\n\"I feel may mission here an important one,\" replied Dr. Henderson, \"and that the work we are\nputting a blessing on here today\nwill be worth while to the city and\ncitizens.\"\nA. C. Williamson, Trail, past grand\nmaster, told his listeners that the\ntemple was the fulfillment of a\ndream of a few years ago. The property was acquired in 1930 at which\ntime a holding company was formed to provide ways and means to\nerect the temple. The temple, well\nunder construction was the result\nof hard work on the part of those\nmen appointed and by cooperation\nand faith in the city.\nMr. Henderson then received the\nsilver trowel made out of Trail silver and 'by Trail artisans.\nIt was an ornament he would\ntreasure and that would speak of\nwork well done by the Masonic\norder in Trail, Dr. Henderson said.\n\"I congratulate Trail on having such\nartists in its midst.\"\nHe then asked if a casket con\ntaining records and memorials of\nthe period had been prepared. J. L.\nWebster, Trail acting grand secretary then read the list of documents\nand articles that had been enclosed\nin the casket. They included constitution and bylaws of the order,\nofficers of the Trail lodge and grand\nlodges, names of the Trail mayor,\ncouncil, city clerk and treasurer,\nnames of the police commission, the\nchief of police, the school board, a\nphoto of the C. M- & S. company's\nTadanac plants, Canadian stamps\nand Canadian coins.\nThe corner stone was then laid\nand tested by the implements of\nmasonry. These were returned to\n0. H. Nelson, by Dr, Henderson,\nalong with the plans of the structure.\nDr. Henderson then delivered a\nbrief oration on the significance of\nthe implements of masonry and the\norder's purposes and objectives.\nCHARLES DALY\nTO HEAD TRAIL\nJUNIOR BOARD\nTRAIL, B. C, Sept. 16\u2014 Charles\nDaly was elected president of the\nTrail junior board of trade at general meeting held hero tonight, attended by 57 enthusiastic young\nbusiness men. Dr. T. J. Muir, one\nof the chief instigators in forming\nthe junior board here and who had\nbeen acting president until this\ntime was ineligible to stand for\nnomination.\nOther officers elected follow;\nE. L. Groutage, honorary president; Dr. M. E. Krause, first vice-\npresident; Lyle Jestley, second vice-\npresident; H. D. Thain, secretary;\nAl Hall, treasurer; John Latta, Dr. J,\nS. Daly, William Ternan, William\nThompson, Oscar Lauener, Ivan H.\nR. Jeffery, Allan McLeod and Leo\nLevy, directors.\nThe next meeting will be held at\nthe call of the chair.\nM. P. Hynes, Los Antics; 1.. A.\nWilson, New York; W. C. Cowell, S\nH. Jacoby, G. Stanton, J. Lamb, W.\nR. Bucknall, C. F, Trump, E. Mart in,\nJ. Anderson, R. I.eiierman, D. IVk-\nGowan, Vancouver; Mrs. D. Fisher,\nPort Crauford; Mrs. A. J. Watson,\nKootenay Buy; W. Sat ton, Fdmon-\nton; M. Vigoda; Toronto; J. P. Burns,\nF. D. Tucker, Winnipeg; J. W. Bell,\nKimberley; J. D. Sutherland, Kelowna; Mr. and Mrs. W. J. McCann,\nTrail; P. Arlidge, R, P. Douglas, E.\nE. Johnson, Calgary.\nTHE SAVOY HOTEL\n\"Where the Guest is King\"\nMODERN   SAMPLE  ROOMS\nLicensed Premises\nW. K. Clark, Prop.\n124 Baker St.\nNelson, B. C.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nP. and L. KAPAK, Proprietors\nCommercial, Tourist and Family' Trade Solicited\nSir E. Beatty on\nTrail and Nelson\nVisits Tomorrow\nTRAIL, B.C., Sept. 16\u2014Sir Edward Beatty, president of the Canadian Pacific Railway company\nand party will arrive at Tadanac\nSaturday at 9:40 a.m. for a two-hour\nvisit before continuing on to Nelson,\nIncluded in Mr. Beatty's party are\nW. M. Neal, Winnipeg, vice-president of western lines; C. A. Cotter-\nell, Vancouver, assistant general\nmanager of the C.P.R. They are on\nan inspection tour of the company's\nrailway lines, which has taken them\nacms.s Canada.\nFollowing the Tadanac visit the\nparty will move on to Nelson, where\nthey will arrive about 1:45 p.m.\nGunsmen Add a\nNew Association\nlo City Sport List\nCorporal Lock Elected\nCaptain Rifle\nAssociation\nAn enthusiastic start in the organization of a Nelson Rifle association\nfor the purpose of promoting both\nrifle and pistol marksmanship competition, was made Thursday night\nby a meeting of target-shooting enthusiasts at the Nelson Armory.\nLOCK ELECTED CAPTAIN\nCorporal J. G. M. Lock was elected captain of the new organization,\nand Frank B. Wells was elected secretary.\nAbout 20 enthusiasts entered their\nnames on the club roster while many\nprospective members are in line for\nenrolment, it was stated.\nThe enrolment list is in the hands\nof secretary Wells and invitations\nto prospective members has been\nextended by the new organization.\nAll over 38 years of age can enter\nthe club, but those under 21 must\nhave a written authorization from\nparents or guardians.\nUnder government regulations a\nminimum membership of 30 is necessary before an organization of this\nsort may function as an association.\nThis minimum is expected to be attained easily it was said.\nUntil the spring at least an indoor\nrange will be used, this being set up\nin the lower floor of the Armory. At\npresent two guns for target practice;\nMeans of Organizing\nWill Be Probed by\nJunior Board\nProposals for a Kootenay-wide\npublicity campaign were placed before the Nelson junior board of\ntrade Thursday night in an informal discussion following the board's\ndinner meeting, and steps were taken toward investigating and outlining the best methods of launching such a campaign.\nThe discussion developed when\nE. J. Goos, president, called for\nsuggestions for a junior board of\ntrade objective. Another proposal\nwas that the board organize winter\nclasses on public speaking, particularly for the benefit of young men\nseeking information, experience and\ntraining in this direction. Keener\ninterest in civic affairs was also ad'\nvanced as a matter for the atten\ntion of all members.\nDuring the meeting the board\nheard Fred Leno, Nelson delegate,\nreport on the convention of the\nCanadian junior chamber of com\nmerce at Vancouver; indorsed the\ncampaign to collect fruit and vegetables for drought-stricken prairie\nareas and nominated Gordon Burns\nto represent it on the Kootenay\ncommittee likely to be organized;\naccepted the duty of staging .a monster dance in connection with the\nNelson fall fair; and indorsed the efforts of the Nelson Rod & Gun club\nand board of trade to retain the\nDominion fish hatchery here, a project which has been receiving district-wide backing.\nFootwear\nMiss Tomlinson\nWed al Erickson\nERICKSON, B. C\u2014Roses and cut\nflowers in profusion provided an\nattractive setting at the home of\nMr. and Mrs. Leonard T. Leveque\nfor the marriage of their niece, Miss\nEdith Dorothy Tomlinson, to Hugh\nGraham, at high noon Sunday, Sept.\n12. The bride entered the living room\nto the strains of the wedding march,\nplayed by Mrs. A. H. Walker, and\nRev. Andrew H. Walker was the\nofficiating clergyman.\nThe bride was given in marriage\nby her uncle and was attractively\ncostumed in a blue suit, with grey\naccessories. Tlie bridesmaid was\nMiss Esther Vasseur of Creston, who\nchose grey with navy blue. The\nbest man was Alfred Burg of Edmonton.\nDuring the signing of the register\nMrs. Harold Langston sang \"Because,\" with Mrs, Walker as accompanist. The newlywcds received the\ncongratulations of the guests at a\nbuffet luncheon and reception following the ceremony, and later in\nthe afternoon Mr. and Mrs. Graham left on a wedding trip to Nelson and points west. On their return they will reside in the new\nhome the groorn has erected on his\nranch at Erickson.\nSUEDES\u2014PREDOMINANT THIS SEASON\nBLACK - BROWN - GREEN - BLUE\nSEE THESE! A GRAND COLLECTION\nNew high riding glove fitting footwear\nSHOES\nBy the leading pattern\nstylist of America.\nStreet Shoes in step with the season's smartest. Just the Shoes to complete that new\nfall ensemble.\nShower at Kimberley\nHonors Miss Spinks\nKIMBERLEY, B.C.\u2014Miss Thelma\nand   Betty   Davies   entertained   at\navailablerbut more\"are expected | h?\u2122 FridTay. at\u201ea.s510wei,in hoh\u00b0r\nHope was expressed that an out'\ndoor range could be provided at\nspme future date.\nManslaughter Trial\nStarts at Vancouver\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 16 (CP) -\nThe manslaughter trial o*f Kenneth\nC. Campbell opened in assize court\nhere today before Mr. Justice H. B,\nRobertson nnd  a  12-man jury.\nCampbell is charged with having\nheen the driver of a ear which\nstruck and fatally injured Arthur\nAdams, 43-ycar-old watchman riding a bicycle, two months ago.\nof Miss Lois Spinks The guests\nwho were former school mates and\nfriends of the bride-elect, were Miss\nBessie McLennan, Miss Doris Wilkinson, Miss Katherine Mathews,\nMiss Minnie Swan, Miss Stella Patience, Miss Dorothy Nesbitt, Miss\nHazel Blezzard, Miss Edith Whebell,\nMiss Sarah While, Miss Marie Hansen and Miss Lois Spinks.\nTho room was beautifully decorated with flowers. There were threo\nbibles of whist. Edith Whebell won\nfirst prize and Katherine Mathews\nconsolation.\nAfter refreshments served by\nThelma and Betty the gifts were\npresented in a small wagon,\nTrail Band Presents\nConcert Thursday Eve\nTRAIL, B. C, Sept. 16\u2014Under the\ndirection of Tito Allega, Trail Maple  _ __ ^   o __ _,^ \u201e,\nLeaf band rendered their sixth band j Eagie h.|U Thul.sday night, jjr. and\nJoymakers Have\nPleasant Whist\nJoymakers made merry at.their\nbi-weekly whist drive and dance in\nFree Parking\nROOMS $1.00 AND  UP\nNELSON,  B.C,\nPhone 234\nOccidental Hotel\n705 Vernon  St. Phone 89?\nH. WASSICK, Prop.\nSPECIAL  MONTHLY  RATES\nGood Comfortable Rooms\nLicensed Premises\n| Madden Hotel\nA  Welcome Awaits  You\nJAS,   E.   MADDEN,   Prop,\nCompletely  Remodelled,\nHot and Cold Water.\nIn the HEART ot the City\nEDGEWOOD, B. C, HOTELS\nASTHMA\nThe wife of a prominent Montreal\nphysician suffered 16 years terribly with Asthma. She has gained 24 Ibs. in weight to afmost normal and her husband is so delighted that he has put many patients on \"DAVIS' ASTHMA\nREMEDY NO. 7895\", 64 doses at\nyour Druggist $3.50\nconcert of the season on Rossland\navenue here tonight.\nH. W. Wade, Trail,\nIs Seriously III\nTRAIL, R. C., Sept, 16 - H. W.\nWade, who met with an accident\nwhile motoring nearly three weeks\nagn is critically ill with pneumonia,\nHis condiiton was reported as unchanged today.\nGANANOQUE, Ont.. (CP). - It\ncost Arthur Munroe, who told polieu\nho was from Toronto, $53.50 for\noperating a gambling house at Crip-\npen Lake. His gaming equipment\nwas confiscated.\nTRANSPORTATION - Passenger and Freight\nARROW LAKES HOTEL\nE.    NIEDERMAN,\nDroprlctor\nComfortable   Rooms\nGood   Meals\nEDGEWOOD, P.C,\nLogical    Stopping\nPlace on thp\nRoad to Vernon\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\n\"YOUR  VANCOUVER  HOME\"     Newly Renovated Throughout\nPhones   \u25a0    Elevator\nA. PATERSON, late ot\n900 S\u00abymour St      Van;ouver. B.C.    Coleman. Alta,, Proprietor\nI I Duffer.!. Hotel\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE NELSON TWICE DAILY\n5 a.m. and 10:30 a.m. Except Sunday\nTrail Livery Co.\nTrail\u2014Phone 135        Nelson\u2014Phone 35\nM. H. MclVOR, Prop.\nMrs. John Looming, George Walton\nand Mrs. F. Foster repeated their\nfeat of the last, drive and defeated\na field of 12 tables. Their score was\n51.\nAt the 10 o'clock intermission the\nladies executive, consisting of Mrs.\nJoe Habegard, Mrs. P. J. Cote, Miss\nEvelyn Bate and Mrs. W. P. Kid\nwell served a supper. After refresh\nments, dancing was enjoyed. Music\nwas furnished by the Bentley brothers and Miss Winnie Norgrove. A. S.\nRead, president of the club, was\nchairman of the whist with Albert\nSmith floor manager for the evening.\nBecause you're always up to the minute in\ndress. This fall will find you wearing exclusive Shoes from Fink's.\nPatterns\nHi-tongues\nSide Straps\nSide Gores\nOxford Ties\nSizes 3 Va to 9.\nWidths AAA to D.\n$J.95\nReady - to - Wear and Footwear\nPHONE 73 BURNS BLOCK\n_V <M\nC. B. C. Bantams Win\nin Fast Clean Game\nLed by Prestley and Hunden in\na scoring spree C. B. C. bantams\ntumbled the F, A, C. squad 10-7\nin a bantam playoff fixture Thursday.\nThe pair scoring goal for goal ran\nup the C. B. C. count to eight, while\nVulcano doubled to make the 10.\nFairview'. Fleming twins, Art and\nWallace, again were the sparkplugs\nof the F. A. C, attacks and between\nthem ran up five Fairview markers,\nWallace snagging the extra honor\nwith three goals. loanin and Frank\nChristian singled to complete the\nFairview scoring parade.\nOnly three minor penalties were\ndished out.\nMolten gold appears green.\nRoad Questions\nlo Be Taken Up\nWilh Minister\nSpecial Committee to\nDelve Into Bill of\nTeachers\nIf Hon. F. M. MacPherson, minister of public works, accompanies\nPremier T. D. Pattullo on his trip\nto this district shortly, the Nelson\nboard of trade will take up with him,\nthrough its roads and bridges committee, numerous matters, large or\nsmall, affecting the highways. One\nof these is the matter of telephone\npoles on the widened highway near\nthe Harrop cutoff, raised by J. P.\nFink; another is the matter of equipment parked on the north shore in\na dangerous position, raised by Ven.\nArchdeacon Fred H. Graham.\nPresumably also the matter of the\nValentine corner, where the department is taking no action to widen\nthe roadway though residents are\nready to donate land, will be brought\nto the minister's notice. In this connection C. F. McHardy stated he had\nbeen incorrectly reported as saying the Valentine corner could be\nmade 2B feet wide, whereas the figure he had given was 20 feet.\nJohn Learmonth, chairman, said\nwhile he had not been in touch with\nO. G. Gallaher, engineer, department\nof public works, on the matter, ho\nbelieved the promise of Arthur\nDixon, chief engineer, at Victoria, to\ntake up the speeding up of the work\nat Apex, with the contractor, had\nhad results, as it was reported now\nthat now two or more crews were\nworking.\nCONTROL OF SCHOOL3\nArchdeacon Graham drew attention to the recent editorial in The\nNelson Daily News on the subject\nof tho bill said to be drafted by the\nTeachers federation, proposing to\nmake it imposible for teachers to\nbe employed in this province unless\nthey were members of the organization, and said there was apparently\na crisis facing the people of the province, on the point of whether the\nteachers, or their federation, or the\nprovincial government, should be\ncompletely in control of education.\nIf there was any possibility of education being taken out of the hands\nof ihe public and being put into'the\nhands of the teachers or of the government, the archdeacon declared,\nit would seem to be a strongly fascist proceeding. He asked whether\nthe board had any committee that\ncould investigate this question.\nJ. R, Hunter 'pointed out that tho\nboard used to have a legislative committee, but of late years one had\nnot been appointed.\nOn motion of Archdeacon Graham\nand It. D. Barnes, E. A. Mann, vice-\npresident, who was in the chair,\nwas requested by the council to appoint a committee to investigate the\npossibility of public control of the\nschools being lost, and report in due\ncourse. The chair appointed Archdeacon Graham, Dr. G. A. C. Walley, and H, H. Currie as the com-\nChildren's Wear\nSPECIALS\n$1.95\nSWEATER COATS\nHigh necks. Novel Knit. Red, navy,   (M CA     (PI CC\netc. Sizes 2 to 16 ,\u00abpl.D\"     $l.\\10\nNEW NOVEL PULLOVERS\nAll wool. Blue, green, brown, red. Sizes 6 to 14.\nPrice\t\nGIRLS' SCHOOL DRESSES\nNavy Wool Serge. White detachable collar and   fl|0 AC   I'\ncuffs. Sizes 6 to 14 $L.l0 I\nSTOCKINGS\nAll wool reinforced camel and white. OQ\nSizes 4V_ to 10. Up from LIZ\nBoys' All Wool Knitted\nTWO-PIECE SUITS\nTrimmed contrasting colors. Sizes\nUp from J$>J..UU\nTRAINING PANTIES\nCream and fleece lined double\npanel. Sizes 2-4-6. OQ\nBABIES' WEAR\nCorduroy Dresses with panties.\nRed or blue, Neatly tailored. Sizes\n1,2 and 3. fl\u00ab1 nC\nPrice  \u00abpl.\u00ab7J\nCORDUROY ROMPERS\nSmattly styled. White, lemon,     ftl  PQ\nblue. Pair iJll.jM\nSILK CREPE DRESSES\nSmocked\u2014Hand embroidered.     (M ftA\nWhite and pastels \u00abpl.UU\nPHONE 73\nrftHlI\niTMVTEP\nBURNS\nBLOCK\nReady-to'Wear\nChildren's Wear\nand Footwear\nmittee.\nIn this connection, Mr. Learmonth,\nwho resides at Willow Point, said\nthat for a number ol years consolidated schools had been agitated on\nthe West Arm and in other parts of\nthe Nelson district, and he predicted\nthat a consolidated school for the\ndistrict within a 25-mile radius of\nNelson would in a few years become\na reality.\nBEATTY VISIT\nSecretary W. G. C. Lanskail were\nappointed a committee to keep the\nmembers advised Saturday regarding the hour of arrival of the spec','\ntrain of E. W. Beatty, president of\nthe Canadian Pacific.\nAYR, Ont., (CP). \u2014 When Mrs.\nRobert Elliott, 77. made a hooked\nmat for her son slip had no idea it\nwas going on display. Entered in\nthe Canadian National exhibition, it\nE. S. McCracken, N. J. Lowes and'took first prize.\n 1 \"1 HI\"WMP|\n\u25a0^\u25a0^\u25a0mm\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NEL80N, B.C.\u2014FRIDAY MORNINQ, 8EPT. 17, mr.\nKimberley Parish\nGreets New Pastor\nRev. F. Monaghan\nKIMBERLEY, B.C.-Members of\nthe Sacred Heart church and many\nothers gathered in the Legion hall\nThursday evening to welcome\nFather F. Monaghan, the new pastor. In addition to words of welcome expressed by members of\nthe parish and Monsignor McKenzie of Cranbrook, Father Monaghan\nwas presented with a large number of articles for the furnishing of\nthe Rectory and a purse of money.\nBridge and whist were played during the evening with the following\nwinning the prizes: Whist, first,\nMrs. Canfield and Mrs. M. Eskra;\nsecond, Mrs. Popovich and Mrs. St,\nDenis of Cranbrook; consolation,\nMrs. A. Bond. Bridge, first, Mrs.\nH. H. Edmonds and Mrs. J. Byrne;\nsecond, Mrs. R. Armstrong and Mrs.\nW. C. Jacobs; consolation, Walter\nFredrech.\nMiss Sheila Hennesy of Cranbrook and Miss Helen Scanlan of\nNelson were present.\n14 BEARS SHOT IN\nCRAWFORD BAY AREA\nCRAWFORD BAY, B.C.-Bears\nhave done considerable damage to\nfruit trees in the district. Fourteen\nbears have been shot here recently\nHEALS ECZEMA\nHere is a surgeon's prescription\nnow dispensed by chemists at trifling cost.\nNot only does this great healing\nantiseptic oil promote rapid and\nhealthy healing in open sores and\nwounds but boils and simple ulcers\nare relieved and cleanly healed.\nIn skin diseases' the itching of\nEczema is instantly stopped. Pimples\u2014skin eruptions dry up and\nscale off in a very few days. The\nsame is true of Barber's Itch, Salt\nRheum and other inflammatory skin\ndisorders.\n\"You can obtain Moone's Emerald\nOil (full strength) in the original\nbottle at Mann, Rutherford Co., or\nany modern drug store. (Advt)\n\"Hoot Mon!\nA Bargain!\"\n(Station-to-Station)\nSUO\n(Person-to-Person)\nafter 7 p.m. weekdays or\nany time Sundays\nThe  above  rates  cover  a\nthree-minute conversation.\n(Government Tax Extra)\nB. C. TELEPHONE CO.\nMOVING\nPHONE\nAnd know that your moving problems will be\nhandled in a prompt and\nefficient manner.\nWEST\nTRANSFER CO.\nEstablished 1899\nGrower-Trucker\nCause of Complaint\nto Creston Agencies\nCRESTON, B. C.-The latest complaint of the prairie fruit wholesalers would indicate that the check\nup on truck shipments is lax in\nthe' matter of having the truck\ndriver produce a certificate of inspection before being allowed to\nclear B.C\nA Lethbridge wholesaler Saturday\nnotified Creston selling agencies that\ntrucked Wealthys had been sold a\nretailer at Taber, Alta., in boxes\nthat did not show the grower's or\npackage name. All that was marked\non the boxes was Wealthy No. 3\nand Duchess No. 3.\nThe grower-trucker appears to be\nmaintaining his price on these varieties as they had been sold at $1.20.\nwhich was the price on the shipment\ncomplained of at Cardston earlier\nin the month.\nThis price is too low for the jobber\nto meet and the firm registering the\ncomplaint advises that it was forced\nto bring into its Lethbridge warehouse part of a car that had been\nplaced at Taber.\nThomas Caldwell\nof Kimberley Is\nDead in California\nKIMBERLEY, B. C.-Word was received here last night of the death\nof Thomas Caldwell, 46, who passed\naway in Los Angeles, Calif., where\nhe had been taking medical treatments following an illness.\nHe is survived by his wife, who\nleft for the .south Saturday, one\ndaughter, Mrs. H. Stiffe of Cranbrook, and two sons, Alex and Tommy, of Kimberley.\nHe has been employed by the\nC. M. & S. company since 1917.\nOpen Air Concert\nIs Presented by\nCranbrook Band\nCRANBROOK, B. C-Cranbrook\nCity band presented a concert from\nthe band stand of the children's\nplayground Sunday afternoon. This\nwas the first concert of the fall\nseason, and the members of the\nband plan to present open air concerts from the park, while the weather remains favorable.\nThe program was \"Sunapee\" Edwin Franko Goldman; \"I'm an Old\nCow Hand\", J. Mercer; Modern\ndance suite\u2014\"Merriment\", J. Ord\nHume; \"Thirse\", Laques La Font\nand \"Asteria\", J. Ord Hume.\nCoronet duet by Bandsmen S.\nDeLuca and H. Ratledge \u2014 \"My\nPretty Jane\". Sir H. Bishop.\n\"Boo Hoo\" Arr. E. H. Breigel.\nOverture \u2014 \"Tournament\", A. H.\nHicks. Concert waltz \u2014 \"Reign of\nBeauty\", W. Rimmer.\nRegimental, March Past\u201423 Regiment Northern Pioneers; 31st Grey\nRegiment; 39th Regiment Royal\nRifles, Arr. John Slater.\nPopular song medley \u2014 Standard\nFavorites; Arr. G. Breigel. March\u2014\n\"Anchors Aweigh\", C. A. Zimmer-\nWHEAT MARKETINGS UP\nOTTAWA, Sept. 16 (CP) -Wheat\nmarketings in the prairie provinces\nin the week ended September 3\nwere 11,788,000 bushels, the Dominion bureau of statistics reported\ntoday. This was up more than 3,-\n000,000 bushels from 8,348,169 the\nprevious week, but was 8,000,000 bushels below 18,793,000 bushels the\ncorresponding week of 1936 .\nPRODUCTION INCREASING\nTORONTO, Sept. 16 (CP)- Reports to the executive council of the\nCanadian Manufacturers' association today showed production volume in most manufacturing lines\nwas increasing and employment\npointing upward. The upward\ntrend which began about four\nyears ago continued.\nPAGE THREE\nBoard Proposes\nMotor Excursion\nto Crawford Bay\nCommittee to Work on\nOne for Week After\nNelson Fair\nInstructions were given to (he entertainment committee of Lhe board\nof trade Thursday by the board\ncouncil, to consider the possibility\nof a motor excursion to the Crawford Bay-Gray Creek district tlie\nweek following the Nelson fall fair.\nFor seme future time, a grand excursion all around the main lake,\nprobably by chartered steamer, was\nalso talked, as a means of making\nfriendly contacts with Kaslo, Ainsworth, and all districts down to\nBoswell, but for immediate purposes\nmembers advocated visiting the communities on the east side of the Outlet. Such a visit was declared to be\ntimely, as the day when access will\nbe made easier by the Kootenay\nBay betterment is coming nearer,\nand the board has hot for some years\nlooked over the progressive communities on \"the Bay\".\nGiven fine weather, the excursion\nwas regarded as assured, and members of the entertainment committee interpreted the council's resolution as instructions to proceed to arrange an excursion.\nJUNIOR BOARD\nDELEGATION\nJ. J. McKay, representative of the\njunior board of trade on the council, said the junior board's two delegates' to the Canadian Chamber of\nCommerce convention at Vancouver found they could not carry out\ntheir hope of speaking for the board\nof trade, as the junior convention\nproved to be entirely separate, but\nthat the delegates, Gordon Burns and\nFred Leno, did good work for Nelson in digging up pictures and in\ntrying to induce some of the eastern business men to return east this\nway. He said the Nelson men found\nthat there was a general interest in\nthis district in connection with mining, but they were handicapped by\nNelson's lack of mining literature.\nVice-president E. A. Mann, who\nwas in the chair in the absence in\nWinnipeg of President W. B. Bamford, warmly thanked Mr. JVIcKay\nfor his report, as well as for the\ngood offices of the junior delegates.\nAs the late G. H. Ferguson was\na member of the council, the council\nsupplemented the action taken by\nthe board last week, by a further\nresolution proposed by Ven Archdeacon Fred H. Graham, paying a\ntribute to Mr. Ferguson's character\nand work.\nFEDERAL PRA1N  LTD.\nLOSS   IS   $84,610\nWINNIPEG, Sept. 16 (CP)-Fed-\neral Grain Ltd. reported a loss of\n$84,610 for the year ended July 31\ncompared with-a loss of $9457 for\nthe last fiscal year, in the annual\nreport released today. Depreciation\nreserve was increased by $110,113\nto make that account now total\n$2,227,694. Last year $217,136 was\nadded to the depreciation reserve.\nFRANCE  BUYING\nPOUNDS AND DOLLARS\nPARIS, Sept. 16 (AP)\u2014French\nstabilization funds were reported\nbuying pounds and dollars today\nbut profit-taking by speculators\nchecked the franc's fall. The franc\nstill was skidding when trading\nopened but its downward pace was\nslowed. It reached a new 10-year\nlow of 29 66 francs to the dollar\n(3.37 cents). It officially closed for\nthe day at 29.70 to the dollar (3.367\ncents).\nC. N. R. REVENUES INCREASE\nMONTREAL, Sept. 16 (CP)- Increase of $4,552 was shown today\nin Canadian National Railway's\ngross revenues of $4,149,716 for# the\nweek ended September 14, compared with $4,145,164 in the corresponding period last year.\nLONDON, Onf. (CP).-Only 13\ncases, the lightest docket in years\nare scheduled for the opening of the\nfall assizes here.\nTRAIL SOCIAL\nBy MRS. GLENN QUAYLE\nTRAIL, B. C. Sept. 16\u2014Rose and\ngold were the colors selected for a\nbeautiful decorative scheme when\nMrs, John Mclnnes and Mrs. William Easton entertained in honor of\nMiss Cathie McLeod, an early bride,\nthe event taking the form of a miscellaneous shower. The gifts were\nplaced in a large basket which was\ntrimmed with these shades and the\nrooms were made lovely with a profusion of flowers in rose tints. During the evening cards were played,\n[ Mrs.  George  Woods winning first.\n! prize, Miss Mary Jukich, second, and\nI the guest of honor, consolation\naward.   Dainty refreshments were\nI served by the hostesses at the conclusion of play. The guests included Mrs. Dave Smart, Mrs. William\nMcLeod, Mrs. John Shaw. Mrs. Wil-\nlian Easton, Mrs. George Woods, Mrs.\nAngus McLeod, Mrs. J. A. Mclnnes,\nMrs.   Thomas  Mathieson,  Mrs.  K.\niFairbairn, Miss Jessie Anderson.\nMiss A\u00bbnes Barr, Miss Goldie\nSchellenberg, Miss Mary Jukich,\nMiss Flora Shaw and the guest of\nhonor.\nMiss Eva Groitage, a September\nbride-elect, was honored guest Wednesday evening at a kitchen shower,\nMiss Mae Forrest and Miss Bern ice\nEasterbrook entertaining at the\nhome of Miss Forrest. Gold and\npink decorated the interesting treasure chest which contained the g'tts\nfor the guest of honor. A large cake\ntopped by a small bride and groom\ncentred the refreshment table and\nautumn flowers were effectively ar\nranged throughout the rooms. During the evening contests and games\nprovided the entertainment, Mrs. K.\nSammons and Mrs. J. Brennan being\nthe prizewinners. The guests were\nMrs. William Forrest, Mrs. George\nEasterbrook, Mrs. Arnold R. McCarthy, Mrs. K. Sammons, Mrs J,\nBrennan, Miss Nora Smith, Miss\nHelen Talbot, Miss Alice Houston,\nMiss Hilda Barnes, Miss Flora Shaw\nand Miss Frances Parker.\nOnce again Miss Tina Young,\npopular bride-elect, was honored\nguest when Miss Dixie Edwards\nand Miss Alda Almquist, entertaining at the home of Miss Edwards,\nwere hostesses at a miscellaneous\nshower. Mauve and white were employed in room decoration and the\ngift container was effectively trimmed in mauve and yellow. Mrs.\nW. J. Wilson won high score at whist,\nthe early evening entertainment.\nMiss Hazel Mawdsley securing Ihe\nconsolation. Mrs. A. Almquist assisted the hostesses in the serving\nof delicious refreshments. The invited guests included Mrs. Sarah\nYoung, Mrs. E. Coutore, Mrs. W-\nWilson, Mrs. Bruce Irvin, Miss Mat-\ntie Young, Miss Sadie Young. Miss\nHelen Mawdsley, Miss Hazel Mawdsley, Miss Alice Almquist, Miss Ellen Baillie. Miss Katherine Almquist, Miss Mildred Negus, Miss\nMary Minion, Miss Helen Verzuh.\nM;ss Marion Lightbody, Miss Eliza\nEdwards and Miss Edith Edwards.\nAt a quiet ceremony at the manse\nof Knox United church, Wednesday\nevening, September 15, Rev. Dr. M.\nAnother\nPopular\n.\nNo Phone, C. O. D. or\nMail Orders, PLEASE\nTODAY - Friday\nBROCADED RAYON\nSATIN,\nSLIPS\nFull length slips of good quality brocaded rayon. Bias cut for\nbetter fit under the new fall\ndresses. Tailored with fagot\ntrim or lace trimmed. In tea\nrose, white.-Siies 14-40. \/\u2022(_\u00ab\nEach       WC\nTWO WAY STRETCH\nGIRDLES\nAll-elastic, two-way stretch girdles that\nare so comfortable to wear, and neat fitting with four hose supporters. CQ\u00ab\nSmall, medium, large Vll\nPENMAN'S\nLISLE HOSE\nWomen's lisle hose tor\ndurability. Buy these and\nsave on your better hose.\nGood shades of light gun-\nmetal, durbar, vanity and\nmoondusk. Sizes 9Q\/\u00bb\n8'\/2 to 10y2. Pair . OlZ\nRUBBER APRONS\nStrong rubber aprons in smart mottled\neffects. A necessity for kitchen     OQ\nwear. Each LIZ\nLISLE % SOCKS\nThis is just the sock for early fall, a mercerized lisle sock with a \"lastex\" top in\n%-length. Sizes 6V2 to 8V2. Brown,\nblue, and grey mixtures. 9^_\u00bb\nPair   LOZ\nTOILETRIES\nTOOTH PASTE  9? VANISHING CREAM   9c*\nBRILLIANTINE   .... 91 COLD CREAM    fltf\nTOOTH BRUSHES  .. 9e) FACE POWDER  .... 9<*\nSHAVE CREAM .... 9t* GAUZE BANDAGES . 91\nSHAVE STICKS  9\u00a3 ADHESIVE TAPE ... 9?\nCASTOR OIL  9f; EYE BATHS     9$\nCASCARA     !)<> SEIDILITZ POWDERS de)\nHAND LOTION .... \u00bb<> SHAMPOO    ity\nHOUSEHOLD NEEDS\nSCISSORS    !)?\nBOBBY PINS, 2 cards i)ip\nTHUMB TACKS, box !)<\u25a0\nSOAP BOXES, each .. 9tf\nKNITTING WOOL-\nlinen THREAD .... 91\nSPONGES     9<S\nDRESS SHIELDS, pair   9<\u00bb\nBaby's Rubber Pants . ity\n-1 ox. skein 9c\nSTATIONERY\nWRITING PADS\u2014Note, Empress and Letter 9$\nENVELOPES    \u2022  9?\nPAPER DOILIES   9<\nPAPER SERVIETTES\u2014Packet  9^\nPAPER PLATES\u201412 for  9$\nSECOND SHEETS\u2014Packet  9\u00a3\nCHINAWARE\nA wide variety of Fancy China, especially bought for this\nbig event. Included are:\nCHILDREN'S MUCS . 9^\nFRUIT BOWLS, each   9<*    CUPS AND SAUCERS   {)<\u2022\nCOLD LINE SOUPS .. 9<    BONBONS     >.)?\nCOLD LINE DINNER TEA POTS, each .... 9?\nPLATES  9<t   VASES, each  9\u00abt\nRELISH DISHES, each   9c    |ARDINIERS\u2014Each  . 9<i\nSALTS AND PEPPERS, MARMALADES   .... M\nset     9>f    NOVELTY PIECES  .. 9<*\nEGG CUP SETS  9<>   JUGS, each   9tf\nMEN'S AND\nYOUNG MEN'S\nSUITS\nAll wool, tweed suits,\nneatly tailored, in the latest fashions, sport backs\nand regular cuts. Dark\ntweed patterns for fall.\nNow is the time to get\nfitted out whije the selection is at its' best. Sizes\n36 to 46. (PI OQC\nSuit  $lL.1o\nBUY ON OUR BUDGET PLAN\nOn orders of $15 or more pay 25% at\ntime of purchase, the balance in three\nequal monthly payments.\nWABASSO\nSHEETS\nPure bleached\nSheets that will\ngive good service.\nThey come in 70\nby 90 and usually\nsell at $1.29 each.\nEach ...\n$1.00\nIRISH LINEN TEA TOWELS\nLettered borders in red, green, gold or\nblue. Good size and fine quality. 99i\u00bb\nEach\nFELT BASE\nFLOOR COVERING\nEnglish Lancastroleum in new 1938 designs. 2 yards wide. A design suitable for\nany room. Bring your measure- A An\nments. Square yard  TttL\nMEN'S 9c BARGAINS\nMEN'S NECK TIES      9$\nMEN'S LARGE WHITE HANDKERCHIEFS  !)<;\nMEN'S WHITE STARCHED COLLARS  9<\u00bb\nCIGARETTE HOLDERS  9ti\nFLINTS\u20142 for  $t\nHOUSEWARES\nMOUSE TRAPS\u20143 for 9<? FORKS and SPOONS  9tp\nWEATHER STRIP\u2014Packet . 9e EGG CUPS\u20142 for  9\u00a3\nEGG WHIPS\u2014Each    9e* |ELLY MOULDS   9<*\nSCREW DRIVERS\u2014Each ... 9< ASSORTED BRUSHES  9p\nKNEELING PADS  \u00bb<? BARREL SPIGOTS  !W\n193\nPHONES\n194\nHBC PURE FOOD SPECIALS\nON SALE TODAY, SATURDAY AND MONDAY\nFree\nCity\nDelivery\nTOMATOES\u2014Sungrown, ZVi't, 2 tins . 23^\nSARDINES\u2014King Oscar, 2 tins  27tf\nMELOGRAIN CEREAL\u20144 Ib. pkgs. ... 32?\nSPACHETTI and CHEESE\u2014Libby's, l's,\nPer tin     9$\nCORNED BEEF\u2014Hereford, 12 oi. tins,\n2 for  25<\n3 pkgs. Kcllogg's Corn Flakes, 1 Glass 0*7.,\nBowl FREE \"'C\nMATCHES\u2014Maple Leaf, 3 box cartons,\nCarton     24*\nSAUSAGES\u2014York, l's, 2 tins   45tp\nPEAS\u2014No. 4 Broder's Best, 17 oz. tins,\n2 for  23<>\nPUMPKIN\u2014Aylmer, V\/i'%, per tin ... lltp\nPEANUT BUTTER\u2014MeColl's, 4 's,\nPer tin   ,   49<*\nBAKING POWDER\u2014Magic, IVi lb. tins 65*\nBUTTER\u2014Hudsonia, first grade, 3 Ibs. $1.05\nBISCUITS\u2014Christie's Nips, per Ib. ... 27*\nSULTANA BISCUITS\u2014Christie's, per Ib. 32*\nCOFFEE: HBC Country Club, fresh roasted\nand ground to order. QQ\nPer Ib OlZ\nTEA\u2014H B C, Broken Pekoe, per Ib. ... 49*\nCRAB MEAT\u2014Korean, '\/_'\u00bb, per tin .. 21*\nLINDEN PRIZE HONEY\u20142 Ib. tins,\nEach     32?\nLARD\u2014Swift's, Silverleaf, 1 Ib. cartons 18*\nBOLOGNA\u2014Swift's, sliced, per Ib. ... 18*\nPARA WAX\u20141 Ib. cartons, 2 for  25*\nTOMATO SOUP\u2014Campbells, 3 tins .. 25*\nSALAD DRESSING\u2014Kraft's, 32 ox. jar 49*\nSILVER POLISH\u2014Ideal, per jar  21*\nCORN\u2014Aylmer, Fancy Golden Bantam,\n2 tins   29*\nSHRIMP\u2014Wet pack, Black Label,     01\nl's, per tin -dlv\nFancy quality\u2014Excellent for Salads.\nCONCORD GRAPES\u2014Large baskets,\nEach    69*\nPEACHES\u2014For preserving, per crate   $ 1.49\nTOMATOES^ Ibs 23*\nCARROTS\u20142 bunches     9*\nINCORPORATED   2\"?  MAY 1670.\nW. Lees married Adeline Elizabeth\nBennetsen and Peter Hugh Patterson. Mr. and Mrs. L. P. Goetz were\nattendants. Mr. and Mrs. Patterson\nwill make their home on Columbia\navenue.\nAt a meeting Thursday afternoon\nof the Senior Women's Auxiliary to\nSt. Andrew's church, held in the\nAnglican parish hall, Mrs. C H.\nBurgess and Mrs. Elliott Crowe\nserved refreshments at the tea hour.\nAlex Fergus and son have left for\nKimberley, wher$ they will attend\nthe funeral of Mr. Fergus' brother-\nin-law.\nGeorge Tonks and David Tonks,\nwho have been employed in Trail\nduring the summer, left Thursday\nfor Grand Forks, where they will\nvisit with their parents, Mr. and\nMrs J. C. Tonks. Thence George\nwill proceed to Edmonton and David\nto Vancouver, where they will resume studies at the provincial universities.\nRiverside circle of the Catholic\nWomen's league was entertained on\nThursday afternon at the tea hour\nby Mrs. S. R. Walley. Here guests\nwere Mrs. William McDonald, Mrs.\nWilliam J. Sullivan, Mrs. F. Hurley,\nMrs R. H. Daoust, Mrs. E. Matthew*\nand Mrs. N. Wilmes. Hostess to\nNelson Avenue circle was Mrs.\nGeorge Bergeron, who included\namong her guests Mrs. White, Mrs\nJ. Hall, Mrs. James Devito, Mrs.\nErnest Levesque, Mrs. W Young,\nMrs. A. Lenarduzzi, Mrs. Bruno Lerose, Mrs. Charles Calalano, Mrs.\nW. Girard, Mrs. M. Demeo, Mrs. W\nAitkin and Mrs. W. Baril.\nMr. and Mrs, Ernest Clay have\nreturned home from a holiday tiip\nto the coast.\nCircle meetings of the Women's\nAssociation of Knox United church\nwere resumed Thursday afternoon\nMrs. Frank Wilby, hostess to members of Circle No. 1, entertained\nMrs. R. Cooper, Mrs. W. W. Dick,\nMrs. N. Kilpin, Mrs. Swankie, Mrs\nKalus Scheer, Mrs. Thomas Temple,\nMrs. G. A. Burton, Mrs. William\nSpooner, Mrs. Charles Fransen and\nMrs. Falconer Members of Circle\nNo. 2 met at the home of Mrs; W.\nRae who had as her co-hostess Mrs,\nJ. Deans. The guests were Mrs. David Chalmers, Mrs, W. Rodgers, Mrs\nM. W. vLees, Mrs. Thomas Brown,\nMrs. H. O. Hinch, Mrs. J. Clay, Mrs\nR. R. Burns, Mrs G. F Weir and\nMrs. John Forrest. Those attending\nthe meeting of Circle No 3, held at\nthe home of Mrs James Dwyer,\nwere Mrs. M. Michaely, Mrs. R. M.\nWellwood, Mrs. E. L. Bice, Mrs. Arthur Coverdale, Mrs. Paul Phillips,\nMrs. Ashley, Mrs. C. B. Cooper, Mrs.\nJohn Balfour, Mrs. R. B. Dimock\nand Mrs. William H. Morton.\nClifford Apsie, who suffered a\nbroken leg in a motorcycle accident, has been removed to his home\nfrom the Trail-Tadanac hospital.\nMr, and Mrs. W. M, Archibald\nare visitors to Trail from Creston.\nMr. and Mrs. W. McCready returned home from a holiday spent at\ncoast cities.\nMr. and Mrs. Cecil Dawdey return this week from Calgary, where\nthey have been guests of Mr Daw-\ndey's parents.\nMrs. J. Chambers and Mrs. Samuel Lennox entertained at the tea\nhour when members of the Ladies'\nAid of East Trail United church met\nThursday afternoon in the church\nhall. Others in attendance were Mrs.\nT. F. Cullem, Mrs. W. E Benton,\nMrs. J. McNeill, Mrs. C. Howe, Mrs.\nE. G. Crispin and Mrs. E. Stanton.\nMrs, W. G. Williamson has been\nremoved to her home from the .\nTrail-Tadanac hospital.\nNELSON'S SOUND FINANCIAL POSITION\nEXPLAINED TO NANAIMO COUNCIL BY A\nDELEGATE TO THE MUNICIPAL MEETING\nNANAIMO, Sept. 15-The splendid financial condition of the city\nof Nelson, a city with no debts, owning its own utilities and a $275,000\ncivic centre, was the centre of interest in a brief speech by Aid. W.\nT. Grieves, during the report of delegates to the recent convention of\nthe Union of B. C. Municipalities\nhere last week, at Monday night's\nmeeting of the Nanaimo city council.\n\"Just think of our sister city\nstanding there in such a splendid\nposition,\" he said, \"and here we are\nso far in the hole that we don't\nknow where our next dollar is\ncoming from. I hope lo see the same\nthing here some year.\"\nELECTRIC LIGHT PROFIT8\nAid. Grieves told the councillors\nthat last year Nelson made $60,000\non its electric light plant, and this\nyear plans to be $100,000 ahead.\nHe closed his few remarks with\na plea that the council endeavor to\nadopt some plan to \"lessen the burden for our children to carry.\"\n feeseWT^memmjs\/e\nmmmmmmmjmmmMmmv.m\nmmmsimm\nPAOE POUR \u25a0\t\nBLACKHEADS\nBlackheads go quickly by a simple\nmethod that just dissolve's them. Get\ntwo ounces of peroxlne powder from\nyour druggist, rub this with a hot, wet\ncloth gently over the blackheads\u2014and\nyou will wonder where they have\ngone. Have a Hollywood complexion,\n(Advt.)\nW  ^rv!    B_?cir'\"^i\u00ab\nI \"\u25a0'\u25a0 .-_\u25a0-\u25a0\nI      SPHET HE\u00bb\n\u2014        NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.Cr-FRIDAY MORNINQ, SEPT. 1T, 1M_.\n, NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.Cr~fhiday Hgnmng, ocn. tt, iw>_. -\nPOOR READING VISION MAY GO WITH NORMAL EYES\nin\n<\nPoor Vision , . h\nEye-Strain May\nCause (hild lo\nBe Inattentive\nBy   LOGAN   CLENOENING,   M.D.\nGood vision does not necessarily\nmean healthy eyes. This is true in\nchildhood. In middle age the converse may be said to be true\u2014poor\nvision, at least for reading, goes\nwith perfectly normal eyes.\nThe child in school Is asked to\nread a chart and he reads the 20-20\nline, which is the accepted standard\nfor normal vision. Yet he may have\nto strain his eyes to achieve this\nnormal vision. Sooner or later with\nthe continual strain of achieving\nnormal vision in school, he will begin to have symptoms\u2014of headaches, or nervousness, or inattent-\ntion.\nThe three optical faults which\ninduce eyestrain are far-sightedness, near-sightedness and astigmatism.\nFar-sightedness does not mean\ngood vision in the distance. The\neyes have to strain even when looking at a distance. Normal eyes focus distant objects with complete\nrelaxation. Only when doing close\nfocusing In a normal eye Is not the\nsame as strain.\nRESULT IS STRAIN\nIn far-sighted eyes the image falls\ntoo far back even when the eyes\nare looking at a distanc, and the\nretina does not receive a clear-cut\nImage until the focusing muscle\nstarts working and brings the image\nupon the retina. That means the focusing muscle never gets a rest.\nThis results in constant strain and\nleads to nervous, symptoms of that\nstrain. Such a child was one aged\neight who at home was disobedient,\nirritable and nervous. At school he\nwas indifferent to his work, backward, and his teacher called him\nlazy. No one for a while suspected\nhis eyes might be the cause of the\ntrouble, because he could always\nread the smallest line on the test\nchart, until finally one doctor suggested a \"thorough\" examination.\nThis means a complete check of the\nphysical health of the eyes and a\ndetermination of the total optical\nerror.\nSTRAIN ON MUSCLE\nThese far-sighted children have\njust such a strain upon the focusing muscle that it Is hypertrophied\nand much stronger than normal, so\nit is generally agreed among competent oculists that it must be put\nat rest with medicine before the\nexact amount of optical error can\nbe measured.\nOne of the best text books on the\neye says, \"In every case of hyper-\napia (far-sightedness) occurring in\nrelaxation, uniy wn.u uums .i\u00ab*i\u00bbi...\t\nwork do they have to focus; but children and young adults, the ac-\nMarriage Not Failure , . .\nPersons Who Complain of Marriage\nProbably Be Ihe Same ii Unmarried\nBy VIRGINIA LEE\nAn attractive young woman once brother's troubles have,made him\n.-_._-_   \u201e_on(je- whether ne ever will marry\nSmooth and Firm . , .\nNeck Needs Care\nas Much as Face\nfor True Beauty\nBy GLADYS GLAD\nThere are a surprising number\nof women who neglect their necks.\nThey just seem automatically to\ncease operations when they hit the j\njawline. As a result, their necks'\nbecome sallow, wrinkled and old-\nlooking. Every woman should be\njust as lavish in the care of her\nneck as she is in the care of her\nface. The neck Is just as prone as\nthe face to lose its clearness and\nsmoothness of texture, when- exposed to heat, dirt and grime, unless given daily care.\nAlways give your neck a thorough cleansing when you cleanse\nyour face. And, whether you use\nsoap and water or a cold cream or\nboth, use only an upward stroke in\nthe cleansing process. The. muscles\nof the face and neck are continuous,\nyou know, and the beauty of your\nprofile and the contour of your jaw\ndepend upon the firmness of these\nmuscles. If you use a downward\nstroke, you may stretch these delicate elastic face and neck muscles.\nDONT FORGET NECK\nWhen bleaching your face be\nsure that you don't forget your neck,\ntoo. Generally, necks need bleaching\ntreatments more frequently than\nfaces, for the friction of collars and\nexposure to the elements tend to\ndarken and discolor the akin. The\ntruly well groomed woman does not\nforget her neck when using her\nAlways\nDependable,\nSafe, Pure and\nBody-Building\nWhen using \\\nWILSON'S    \\\nLY PADS\nREAD   DIRECTIONS\n\u25a0v-      CAREFULLY AND\/\n;     FOLLOW TH.fi\/\n,N     EXACTLY\/'\nj pad will kill flics nil day end\nevery day for three weeks.\nS pads In each packet.\n10 CENTS PER PACKET\nill Druggists, Crocert, General Stores.\nWHY PAY MORE?\nSHE WILSON FLY FAD CO., Hamilton, Out.\nSellltWitKaWantAd\nriTiT\u00a5T\u00a5Fi\u00a5i\ntold me that she knew of no hap\npily married couples. The fact that\nher married friends seemed so unhappy' and discontented was, she\ntold me, one reason why she had\nnot at that time married the man she\nloved.\nHowever, she has since married\nhim, and the last I heard she was\nradiantly happy.\nIt is the normal, human way to\nmarry and make a home. Few marriages are ideal, but the people who\ncomplain bitterly about their mates\nand life with them, probably would\ndo just as much complaining and\nbe quite as inconsolable if they had\nnot married.\nAnd I'm not so sure that marriage, in the main, is a failure. I\nwent on a boat trip, recently. Many\nof the passengers were people who\napparently had been married for\nquite some years. And I could not\nhelp remarking how happy they\nwere, and how fond of each other.\nWhen I said as much to other passengers, they said they had noticed the\nsame thing.\nWe all get discouraged with the\nnumber of divorces and with the fact\nthat so many married couples seem\nto be ill-mated, but the majority\nof people still stay together through\nlife and achieve a tried and true\ncompanionship, even though they\nmay not seem to be the ideal mates\nwho suggest a match made in\nheaven.\n\"Dear Virginia Lee: I have been\ngoing steady with a young man for\nabout a year and a half. He has\nrepeatedly told me he loves me\nand intends to marry me. He has\nnever said when, however, or asked\nrae to set the date. He begged me to\ngo with no one else, and I don't.\n\"Now his brother's marriage has\ngone on the rocks, and he says his\ncommodation should be paralyzed\nand the total error estimated so as\nalthough he says he loves me-very\nmuch. He is very undecided.\n\"I have chances of dating other\nboys, but as I think more of this\nyoung man than I do anyone else,\nI haven't as yet. I'm 21 now, and\nsometimes think I should make the\nmost of opportunities. Kindly tell\nme what you think best.\n\"PHYLIS ANNE.\"\nThat depends upon how you feel\nabout the boy, Phylis Anne. If this\nyoung man Is your idea of the type\nof husband you want, and you\ntruly love him, it Is up to you to\nshow him that you and he can\nmake a happy home together. Everyone has doubts sometimes about\nthe wisdom of getting married. This\nis particularly so after learning of\nthe troubles and failure of 'one who\nis near and dear to us. And when\nwe feel that way we are quite\nlikely to say so. We don't expect\nto be taken seriously, however, and\nI imagine neither does your boy\nfriend.\nIf you feel, however, that you\nwould like to go with other boys\nand have a little more experience\nbefore settling down, I think you\nshould stop going with him exclusively and date other boys. It is up\nto you, my dear.\n|,to serve as a prescription for\nWhen this was done to the child\nwhose case we have recounted, and\nproper glasses prescribed for him,\nhis improvement was remarkable.\nHe wasn't really lazy or indifferent,\nbut you can't expect a young fellow\nto be full of pep when some of his\nmuscles are always on a strain.\nSonnysayings\nASK YOUR GROCER FOR\nGOLD MEDAL\nMALT EXTRACT\nDARK, LIGHT, STOUtEX AND HOP FLAVOR\nHighest Quality\u2014The Best for Your Money\nB.ft Mstrlbutors: JAMES MARTIN & CO., VANCOUVER, B\nMagazines Too . , ,\nReference Books\nThat Aid Studies\nNeeded by Pupils\nB\/ GARRY C. MYER8, PH. D.\nUnfortunately, not nearly all par\nents can afford to provide all the\nreference materials and equipment\ntheir child should have at home In\norder to do his best In the modern\nschool. But thousands of parents\nwho do not make such provision\nfor their children easily could if\nthey tensed the value to these child\nren\u2014U these parent* really eared.\n(Continued on Page Ten)\nFinest Quality Always\nmii mm\nTEA\nROCHELLE HUDSON\nHer Throat a Perfect column\ncosmetics, either. If you wish to\nlook naturally well groomed and\nlovely, you must make up your neck\nas well as your face. A powder\nbase and a coating of powder should\nbe applied to the neck both In front\nand in back, and should be blended\n(Continued on Page Ten)\nFOR THE SERIAL\n\u201e8EE PAQE TENA .\nInstead oh eatin' it yerself, Baby,\nan' pretendin' Rae Anna dun it,\nwhy not let me gulp it down? It'cJ\nbe more realisticall\nMeatless\nhints for\nhousewives\nMenu Hint\nBaked Potatoes\nGreen Beans with Cheese Sauce\nPickled Beets Cabbage Salad\nGolden Cake        Tea or Coffee\nGreen beans topped with cheese\nsauce make a nourishing dish to\nserve for a meatless menu. The\npickled beets  give  the  necessary\nRY SHREDDED WHEAT-DAILY ENERGY FOOD\nCRISP, delicious, eolden-\nbrown Shredded Wheat,\nwith hot or cold milk, Is a\nwonderful stamina-builder and\nenergy-giver. It contains Nature's own balance of vital food\nelements In a most appetizing\nand digestible form. To help\nkeep well and to feel well, eat\nShredded Wheat every day\n\u2014served your favorite way.\nTHE CANADIAN SHREDDED WHEAT\nCOMPANY, LTD.\nNiagara Fill*        \u2022        Canada\ntang to the blandness of the other\nvegetables.\nIS\n111\nIB\nIU\n*\n-^s:.\nIN SHREDDED WHEAT THERE IS  EVERYTHING NEEDED  TO\nMAINTAIN   RESISTANCE   IN   COLD   WEATHER\/\/\/\/\n-HRE-Mb WHEAT\nHADE IN CANADA - OF  CANADIAN WHEAT\nToday's Recipes\nGreen beans with cheese sauce\u2014\nOne-half pound American cheese,\none cup irradiated evaporated milk,\none quart cooked or canned green\nbeans, paprika Melt cheese in the\nmilk over boiling water. Pour over\nhot beans and sprinkle with pap>\nrlka. Makes six servings.\nRosettes\nOne of the most fascinating\ngadgets and tools that make household cooking a lot of fun is the rosette iron. The iron comes with two\nshapes\u2014rosette, which is a fancy\nmedallion, and a heart-shaped shell.\nYou can fry a number pf each at\none time and have on hand the\nmakings of many interesting desserts, for the shells retain their flavor and crispness indefinitely. Dusted lightly with confectioners' sugar,\nrosettes are a delightful tea cake.\nBut for a really elegant dessert, try\na rosette topped with a scoop of\nvanilla ice cream and a few luscious berries or crushed fresh\npeaches.\nFollowing is the recipe: Rosettes\n-Two eggs, one and one-fourth\ncups irradiated evaporated milk,\none cup flour, one-fourth teaspoon\nsalt, one tablespoon sugar. Beat eggs\nslightly. Add milk. Sift flour, then\nmeasure. Resift with salt and sugar\ninto the egg and milk' mixture.\nStir until batter is smooth. It should\nbe about the consistency of heavy\ncream. Dip rosette iron in the hot\nfat to heat, then in the batter, and\nfry in hot fat (50 F.) until golden\nbrown. Drain on absorbent paper.\nSWEET CORN\nSweet corn is said to have been\nintroduced as \"papoon\" corn by\nGeneral Sullivan after his expedition against the Six Nations just\nafter the Revolutlno, says the New\nJersey department of agriculture.\nWhite spots on your furniture\nwhich are caused by heat may be\nremoved by applying wood alcohol\non a soft cloth and then rubbing\nthe spots with furniture polish.\nHowever, if such spots are deep the\nonly cure for them is refinishine.\ntai\u00abL\ni wii un.\nIliffiAUOlOli\n\"war*\nyoO-BBineW\" _-t_a^acko\u00a3tf9\u00b0MCNep_\nftlibbyofl\n, COM\nM\n[bmalo\n(atchuj\nLI\"\nfomato Soup\nUde in Cdiiad3\n\u25a0rSj-    -JsL_2ion.4niiriifi.th3\nr cannot sn,\nin, Ontario, m\nly you, please send his name to us\nprill see that you are supplied.\nUBBY, M'NEIUL &(fJBBY OF CANADA LIMITED, CHATHAM, ONTARIO   3 teewJotW that only Libby con o&t.\nTTBBY'S exclusive and patented \"Gentle\nJ__f Press\" method makes Libby's Tomato\nJuice, Tomato Soup and Catchup so\nstartlingly different, so much mote flavour-\nfill and zestful that appetites perk up as if\nby magic The luscious, plump tomatoes\nare so gently, so lightly pressed that.\nonly the pure, sweet juice is skilfully\nextracted. Libby's \"Gentle Press\" method\nbrings to your table that fresh-from-the-\ngatden, wholesome, healthful goodnesf\nand flavour you enjoy in a tomato you pick\nfrom the vine.\n... And, Libby's tomatoes on the vine ate as\nnear perfect as man and nature can nuke this\ndelectable fruit. The seeds from the most perfect\nspecimens ate selected from each succeeding crop\niviili the result that a tomato has been developed\nthat is super-rich in flavournil juices and vitamin\ncontent. Such is the magic of this combination\nof the work of natun and man that Libby's hove\nno hesitation in offering you double your money\nback if you don't find Libby's Tomato Products\nthe best you have eaten. Try them.\n1 Libby's \"Gentle Press\" Tomato Catchup\u2014addaiinrivalled\n* flavour to every meat dish.\nO Libby's \"Gentle Press\" Tomato Juice\u2014as a sparkling,'\n*\u25a0 tantalizing introduction to every meat\u2014nothing better. A\ngnat pick-me-up for in-between meals.\n3Ubby's \"Gentle Press\" Tomato Soup\u2014garden-fresh\ntomato flavour that only Libby can o0'cr.\nSP-78TB\n_____\n EDGEWOOD FAIR BOARD PLEASED\nWITH QUALITY OF EXHIBITS, THE\nCOMPETITION AHD THE VISITORS\nH,.li_..i-H\nIMORE CUPS\n'PER LB,\nJudges Had Trouble in\nAwarding Several\nAggregates\nTENNIS TOURNEY,\nSPORTS, DANCING\nEDGEWOOD, B. C. - The ninth\n.annual agricultural fair ot Edge-\nwood and the Inonoaklin valley last\nSensational\nValue\n1938 General Electric\n6-TUBE ALL-WAVE ^        -\nRADIO FOR 97**5\nWhen you've heard G-E Magic Tone you'll agree nothing\nelse will do! Compare the clear, true-to-life tone ot this new\nG-E set with your present radio. Having a tuning range ot\n530 to 1720 and irom 2100 to 22,000 Kilocycles, this set brings\nin standard broadcasts, foreign and domestic short-wave\nprograms, police, amateur and aviation calls. The illuminated\nIndex Dial with slow motion tuning and extra vernier\npointer makes dialing easy. The Tone Monitor balances\ntone at all volumes. The latest type of G-E metal tubes assures\nclearer reproduction. Automatic Volume Control reduces\nfading and blaring.\nIf you want a wise radio investment that will continue to give\nyou finest entertainment for years to come, you cannot make\na better choice than this.\n$10 DOWN puts this set in your home.\nLiberal allowance for your old radio.\nNELSON ELECTRIC Co.\nMcRORY & REDDEN\nPHONE 153 NELSON, B.C.\nNELSON   DAILY NEWS, NELSOK, ft (?,\u2014mlBAT   IWOISNINO, 8EIM. V, 158\/\nweek-end was held in the Edgewood\nhall as in former years.\nThere were 478 entries this year as\nagainst 564 last year; and, though\nthere was a falling off in the quantity of exhibits, the quality was well\nmaintained and in many cases improvements were noted upon by the\njudges. In' one case, the fruit section,\nthere were more exhibits this year\nand this notwithstanding the absence\nof Captain Forslund who has left the\ndistrict, and who was always the\nlargest exhibitor in this section in\npast years.\nCompetition was keen for the\nvarious challenge cups and other\npresentation trophies. The grand\nchallenge cup for scoring most points\nin field produce, garden produce\nand flowers was somewhat easily\nwon by H. Aalten of Nakusp, but\nthere was a tie for the Dr. Yeld\nchallenge cup, which is given for\nthe winner of most points in the\njunior farmers' club section. The tie\ntor this cup was between last year's\nwinner, J. Pender, and Corrie deGans. When the fair board found\nthat these two junior exhibitors had\nscored equal points they brought\nthe judges back to work again and\ncalled upon them to decide as to\nwhether the young man or the young\nlady should be awarded the cup\nThe cup is for most points in three\nclasses\u2014a beef calf handled according to calf club regulations, a pen\nof White Wyandottes, and a collection of vegetables. The judges made\na decision in favor of Corrie deGans on the grounds that she had\na slight lead when taking the three\nclasses ap one exhibit, instead of\nscoring the three classes separately.\nA TIE\nThere was also a tie for the prize\ndonated by J. Langille for most\npoints in the fruit section, between\nE. Kendrick of Fauquier and G\nBriggeman of Deer Park. The fair\nboard decided in this case to ask\nMr. Langille to divide the prize.\nThe Curlew silver trophy was won\nby L. J. deGans of the Inonoaklin\nValley. This trophy is given for the\nbest type of dairy cow in the fair.\nThe handsome Bank of Commerce\ntray for the exhibitor gaining the\nhighest number of points in the\ndomestic science section was deservedly won by Mrs. Alice Ford,\nwhose home is at Bales Landing,\nnorth of Applegrove, on the easi\nside of the lake.\nThe above mentioned cups and\ntrophies were presented during the\ndance held at night. J. B. Gray of\nNelson made the presentations.\nMr. and Mrs. Evans were judges.\nThe former for field and garden\nproduce and fruit. The latter the\nwomen's and children's sections.\nAlso judging were Mr. Middleton\nfor the Junior Calf club, and the\nBoard lo Quiz Enforcement of\nNeglected Payroll Regulation\nApplication of Semi-Monthly Payroll Rule to\nLogging Operations Is Injurious, Says    .\nRotter; Dead Letter Since 1924\nApparent intention of the minimum wage administration to enforce\nagainst logging operators the regulation for semi-monthly payment of\nwages, which has been a dead letter\nsince 1924, the year of Its enactment, as indicated by court action\nbeing taken against Frank Rotter,\nprominent Salmo operator, is to receive immediate study by the industrial committee ot the Nelson board\nof trade.\nA8K LEGISLATION ACTION?\nAmong suggestions made by members of the board of trade council\nafter hearing Mr. Rotter Thursday,\nwas a proposal to put the matter\nbefore Frank Putman, M.P.P. for\nNelson-Creston, when he will be\nhefe meeting Premier Pattullo, and\nurge the government to secure delay of this action until the legislature convenes next month.\nThat the practice in East Kootenay\nhas been for mills and plants to pay\nsemi-monthly, while. camps have\nbeen .allowed to continue on the\nold monthly basis, was pointed out\nby J. P. Fink.\nMr. Rotter, who stated an inspector told him he was laying charges\nagainst him \"after laying for him\nfor a year,\" and who on contacting\nthe other timber operators of the\ndistrict found he was the only one\nbeing proceeded against, declared\nthat there was a very good business ground for the camps being\nleft on the monthly plan, and that\nwas, the financing through the\nbanks.\nIn his case, he was shipping 400\ncars of pulpwood to Spokane, and\nhe financed his payroll at the bank\nthrough the invoices, but he was\nable to draw on the American consignees only monthly. He said this\nsystem of financing was general,\nand that if camp operators were\nrequired to pay semi-monthly, it\nwould mean some business disturbance, and probably in some cases\ndiminished operations. To indicate\nwhat the logging industry meant, he\nsaid hisvown payroll last year was\n$62,501.69, and this year since May\n1 to date it amounted to $31,606.91.\nIn connection with last year's operations $14,244 worth of merchandize was bought in Nelson. Mr.\nRotter said the other timber operators of the Nelson district, after\nhearing of the action taken against\nhim. were all of the opinion it\nmeant that general enforcement\nwould follow.\nIncidentally, he felt that the action\ntaken against him, without notice\nbeing given the industry of intention to enforce this regulation after\n13 years inaction, amounted to discrimination.\n\"DOGGED TO   DEATH\"\nC. F. McHardy, in urging effective action by the board, said if there\nwas one industry that had been\ndogged to death, it was the lumber\nindustry. If this industry needed\nroads, it built them without public\nassistance. Its compensation rate had\nbeen increased from 1 to 10 per cent,\nand it was being burdened in every\nway.\ncattle; W. Buchanan the poultry,\nand H. H. Jenne the butter and\nmilk. Messrs. Middleton, Evans and\nJenne cooperated in judging the\neggs, dairy collections and junior\npoultry and vegetables.\nThe fair board expressed their appreciation of the trouble taken by\nall these gentlemen, and, of course,\nMrs. Evans, in judging, which gave\nsuch general satisfaction, also lo the\ncreamery of Nelson for making the\nservices of Messrs. Buchanan and\nJenne available. They also thanked\nthe many people of Nelson who had\nsupported the Edgewood fair, both\nby their attendance and their donations, which in no small way contributed to the success of the fair.\nThe knitted sweater exhibit under the Women's institute section\ndrew favorable comment from Mrs.\nEvans, the judge.\nThere were many district visitors,\nseveral carloads driving, from Nelson. Included were C. F. McHardy,\nR. E. Allen;. J.-B. Gray. A., Baird,\nJohn Cartmel, Don Dallas of Trail,\nWilliam Waldie of Castlegar, etc.\nDuring the fair day there were\nmany amusements going on.\nA long sports program was carried\nout, included in which were races\nfor boys and girls of different ages.\nsack races for boys and girls and\nfor grown-ups; broad jump, high\njump,  hop,  skip and jump,  shoe\nSAFEWAY\nCustomers are requested to phone their orders\nearly Friday to insure prompt delivery. No telephone orders will be delivered Saturday.\nFLOUR\n24's\nKEYNOTE\nEvery Sack Guaranteed\n49's 98's\n$l.w $2-19 $4,a9\nBUTTER S^ade 3 Ibs. $1.05\nLARD\u2014Shamrock  Lb. 16c\nTEA\u2014Maximum _..__  Lb. 43c\nCOFFEE\u2014Airway  Lb. 29c\nSHOE POLISH\u2014Nugget... . Tin 10c\nMAZOLA OIL  Pint tin 30c\nStock your pantry shelves at these bargain\nprices\u2014Four days of excellent values, Friday,\nSaturday, Monday and Tuesday\u2014\n  Sept. 17-18-20-21\nCHEESE CHIPSO SOAP\nKraft Large Lifebuoy\nLb. 30c   Pkt 18c    Bar 6c\nSUGAR I001bs.sk. $6.19\nSALMON\nPink, Vi't\nTin.\nPEAS, 2's\nSieve 5\nBISCUITS\nRITZ\n7c   Tin ... 10c    Pkg. ..... 15c\nMUFFETS\u2014Quaker  Pkg.   9c\nPurexTISSUE3rollsl8c\nROLLED\nOATS\n6 lb. sack        36c\nCONCORD GRAPES\u2014Large basket             Each 69c\nGRAPES\nTHREE VARIETIES\n3 lbs. 28c\nThe SAFEWAY FOOD CENTRE offers you\nmany BARGAINS not listed in this advertisement. Look for the YELLOW BARGAIN TAGS.\nPEAIHES\nFancy\nQuality\nElberta\nPreserving\nPER GRATE\n$149\nBACON SQUARES\u2014About 6 Ibs. each,\nLb.       27c\nRUMP ROASTS, CHOICE BEEF or VEAL,\nLb.  18c\nBOILING BEEF or VEAL\u2014Lb   8c\nSHOULDERS LAMB\u2014Lb  16c\nPOT ROASTS, CHOICE BEEF or VEAL,\nCHOICE YOUNG PORK\u2014Lb 12c\nLEG ROASTS-Lb  ~~ 24c\nSHOULDER ROASTS\u2014Lb 20c\nLEGS LAMB-Lb  -27e\nSEE OUR.DISPLAY AND SAVE\nWE RESERVE THE RICHT TO LIMIT QUANTITY\nSAFEWAY STORES LTD.\nm\nNELSON Social..\n\u2022PAGE five\nBy MRS. M. J. VIGNEUX\nkicking, novelty nail driving for\nanyone 18 years to 80 years of age;\npie eating contest; costume race for\nmen; pillow fight; and many other\nevents too numerous to mention. In\naddition there was a teunis tournament organized by the Tennis club,\nin which the fair board assisted towards the prizes. This started at 10\no'clock in the morning and continued all day, and attracted many\nonlookers, especially before the\nsports began. The entries included\n11 members of tlie local club, and\nsix players from outside; there were\nalso two entries from outside who\nfailed lo arrive. The most exciting\nmatch of the day was a preliminary\nheat of the mixed doubles, in whicn\nH. Coates of Edgewood with Mrs.\nLeila Haines of Ewing'. Landing.\nOkanagan Lake, played against C.\nJ. Talbot of Edgewood with Miss\nCharity Naylor of Buntzan Lake,\nVancouver. The result was a win\nfor the latter, 5-6, 6-5, 6-3. This\ncouple eventually won the final\nagainst J.\u25a0__. Naylor and Miss Naomi\nNaylor, which had to be decided in\none set on account of the lateness\nof the hour and bad light and was\na close contest, seven games to five.\nJ. H. Naylor and Miss Naomi Naylor had also to play three sets in\none of the preliminary heats against\nJ. Burns and Miss M. Watson.\nIn the final of the men's doubles,\nW. Nesbitt and C. Talbot beat J.\nBurns and Jack McLeod. The final\nof Ihe ladies' doubles was won by\nMiss Charity Naylor and Miss Naomi\nNaylor beating Miss Jessie Watson\nand Miss Margaret Watson.\nThere was a very large attendance at a dance the same night, with\na seven-piece orchestra from Vernon.\nEdgewood and Inonaokiin Valley\nFair board\u2014W. K. Esling, MTV, honorary president; C. S. Leary, M.L.A.,\nhonorary vice president; J. B. Munro,\ndeputy minister of agriculture, honorary vice-president; William Boothby, president; L. J. deGans, vice-\npresident; Mrs. M. E. Daly, secretary-treasurer; executive \u2014 Mes-\ndames M. Donselaar, M. deGans,\nK. P. Coates and Messrs. W. J.\nLoughery, H. Hopp, F. Cooper and\nG. Cooper and W. Shipmaker.\nF. K. Littlewood was auditor and\ndecorator.\nAt. the home of Mrs. Notman\nC. Stibbs, Josephine street, Wednesday afternoon Mrs. Stibbs and Mrs.\nT. E. Higginbotham were \"at home\"\nto a large number of friends in compliment to the former's house guest,\nMrs. W. C. Mawhinney of Saskatoon,\nformerly of Nelson, who is visiting\nthe city. The living rooms were\ngraced with gladioli, sweet peas and\ncosmos while marigolds and coreot-\nsis made a dainty centre for the tea\ntable presided over by Mrs. J. Lun-\ndie and Mrs. Harold Emery. Others\nassisting were Mrs. C. W. Tyler,\nwho invited the guests to the tea\nroom, and Mrs. William Brown, Miss\nCharlotte Annable, Mrs. J. H. Lawrence, Mrs. A. A. Pagdin who served.\nAmong those calling were.Mrs. E.\nM. Fleury, Mrs. R. D. Hall, Mrs. J.\nH. Wallace, Mrs. George Schupe,\nMrs. David Kerr, Mrs. Thomas\nBrown, Mrs. Maurice Preece of Vancouver, Miss Enid Etter, Mrs. B.\nLowery, Miss Caroline DeWolf, Mrs.\nThomas German, Mrs. J. A. Irving,\nMrs. J. B. Stallwood, Mrs. Pagdin.\nMrs. G. A. C. Walley, Mrs. J. Lun-\ndie, Mrs. Tyler, Mrs. James Armstrong, Mrs. T. Dolphin, Mrs. Cloak-\ney, Mrs. A. Clyde Emory, Mrs.\nGeorge Lambert, Mrs. Herbert\nThorpe, Mrs. John Marquis, Mrs, C.\nC. Halleran, Mrs. T. F. Willitts, Mrs.\nH. D. Dawson, Mrs. J. R. McLennan,\nMrs. Ernest Marsden, Mrs. A. H. W.\nCrossley, Mrs. D. Maloney, Miss\nAmelia Hanna, Mrs. Robert Smillie,\nMrs. Thomas Camm, Mrs. J. M.\nArmstrong, Miss Ida Graham, Miss\nMary Turner of Wingham, Ont., Mrs.\nEmery, Mrs. J. J. French, Mrs.\nCharles F. Hunter, Mrs. H. A. Parker, Mrs. George Twist, Mrs. David\nProudfoot, Mrs. W. A. Weatherhead,\nMrs. J. Long, Mrs. Arthur Ten-ill,\nMiss Ivy Walker, Miss Ethel Smith,\nMiss Annie Smith, Mrs. J. J. Foote,\nMrs. R. L. McBride, Mrs. Wilfrid\nAllan, Mrs. M. J. Vigneux, Mrs.\nH. Saare, Mrs. George Horstead,\nMrs. .Charles. M. Young, Mrs. W. E.\nColes, Mrs. Arthur Foster, Mrs,\nGordon Allan, Mrs. Arthur M. Parker and Miss Charlotte Annable.\n\u2022 M. M. Sinclair of New Denver\nvisited town yesterday.\n\u2022 Eric P. Dawson and Leslie\nCraufurd are motoring to Victoria\nto attend the school trustees meet.\n\u2022 Mrs. Aurelio has returned from\nSpokane where she spent a few\ndays.\n\u2022 A. A. Perrier, who is attending a rotary meet at Walla Walla.\nWash., will proceed to Victoria to\nbe a delegate to the school trustees\nmeet.\n\u2022 Mrs, J. E. Gillis of Blairmore,\nAlta, who was a house guest of Mr.\nand Mrs. Harry Burns, for a few\nweeks, left last night for home.\n\u2022 Paul Hookings, son ot Mrs.\nCharles Hookings, Nelson avenue,\nFairview, left yesterday to take up\nhis studies at University of British\nColumbia at Vancouver.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. T. W. Ledingham\nleft yesterday by motor for Vancouver.\n\u2022 John Teague motored to New\nDenver Wednesday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Smith of\nBlairm.v, Alta., were in town yesterday en route home from Pennsylvania, where Mrs. Smith was on\nan extended visit.\nKELLOGG? HELP\nME\/AVE!\nHon. Basil Aylmer of. Queens\nBay visited town yesterday.\n\u2022 James Draper of New Denver\nspent yesterday In Nelson.\n\u2022 Fred Ewing, Silica street has\nreturned from the coast.\n\u2022 Charles Barber of Slocan City\nwas a shopper in Nelson Wednesday.\n\u2022 Mayor and Mrs. J. P. Morgan\nhave returned from Nanaimo where\nthe mayor attended the municipalities meeting.\n\u2022 G. W. Hicks of Kamloops visited town yesterday.\n\u2022 A. G. Gelinas has returned\nfrom a few days visit at Spokane.\n\u2022 David S. Rees will attend the\nschool trustees meet at Victoria.\n\u2022 Alderman T. W. Slader, Hall\nMines road, has returned from Nanaimo where he attended the municipalities meeting.\n\u2022 R. W. Haggen of Rossland visited town yesterday. '\n\u2022 Mrs. C. M. Cooper of Trail\nwas a guest of Mrs. S. Gillett and\nMrs. A. Hansen, Third street, Fair-\nview.\n\u2022 Mrs. Margaret Madden and\nMrs. Jack StDenls returned last\nnight from Deer Park.\n\u2022 Mrs. F. C. Chandler of Kaslo\nvisited town yesterday.\n\u2022 Shoppers in the city yesterday\nincluded Mrs. Nelson Peterson of\nYmir.\n\u2022 Fred L. Irvine and son, Floyd\nIrvine, visited New Denver, Wednesday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. R. B. (Jack) Morris, Second street, Fairview, have\nas their guest Mrs. Morris' cousin,\nMiss Helen Mcintosh of Hartell,\nAlta., who arrived in town yesterday.\n\u2022 Mr. Layton of Sandon visited\nthe city yesterday.\n\u2022 Miss Albertine Choquette, Latimer street, who was visiting Spokane, has returned.\n\u2022 Mrs. Arthur Baird plans to\nleave today for a few weeks visit\nlo Vancouver. She is accompanied\nby her aunt, Mrs. W. D. Harvie of\nVancouver, who was her guest for\na few weeks and whom she will visit\nat the coast.\n\u2022 Adam Scaia of Edgewood returned yesterday after a few days\nin Nelson.\n\u2022 Mrs. Harold Emery left yes-\nterday to spend a few weeks vaca-\ntion at Winnipeg.\n\u2022 W. E. Coles and Mrs. Coles\nhave left for .Victoria where the\nformer will attend the school trustees meeting.\n\u2022 J. Kerrigan of Cranbrook is a\ncity visitor.\n\u2022 Mrs. M. Sewell, Victoria street,\nhas returned from a visit to Spo\nkane.\n\u2022 B. Lowery, Fairview, motored\nto New Denver, Wednesday.\n\u2022 Miss Sheila Stewart, who was\nvisiting her father, J. A. Stewart,\nHume hotel, during the summer\nholidays, left last night for Edmonton to resume her studies at the University of Alberta.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Bean\nof Willow Point visited town yesterday.\n\u2022 Visitors in Nelson yesterday in\neluded Mr. and Mrs. T. A. Wheildon\nof South Slocan who plan to leave\nSaturday for Victoria to reside.\n\u2022 Hon. Basil Aylmer of Queen's\nBay was a visitor in town Thursday.\nC.W.L Sponsors\nGrocery Shower\nfor Ihe Conver\nDonations of canned goods, sackM\nof sugar md flour, fresh vegetableij\nbread, tea, coffee and canned bulla\nwere piled high on tables in the |\ndining room of St. Joseph's s<\nwhere a shower was held, Thursday\nfor the convent, under the ausplcatj\nof the Catholic Women's league.\nIn charge of arrangements was I\nthe president of the C.W.L. Mri|\nP. Rahal and Mrs. A. G. Gelinas, |\nMrs. M. Scally and Mrs. G. F. Stev^\nens. Acting as servlteurs in the din*\ning room were Miss Catherine Ra?-\nhal, Miss Kathleen McDougall and 1\nMiss Aileen Rahal, Mrs. J. H. Vivians\nand Mrs. P. H. Long, the receptioa|\ncommittee, invited the guests t(ra\nsign the register and conducted theaw\nto the dining room where tea ws*f\nserved.\nOverwaitea\nLimited\nFREE DELIVERY\nPHONE 707\nSpecials\nFRIDAY and SATURDAY,\nSoups: Aylmer, veg.\nand torn. 3 tins for .\nChicken: Aylmer,\nboneless. Per tin ...\nJam: Red Plum,\n4 Ib. tin\t\nPeanut Butter: Mc-\nCbll's, 4's, Per tin ..\nPeanut Butter: Mc-\nColl's, 2's. Per tin .\nSpaghetti: Libby's,\nl's, 2 tins for\t\n25c!\n.2\n.3!\n.41\n25c\n19c\nBUTTER\nFirst grade, Al- (fl nr\nberta. 3 Ibs. for $lMO\n\"Real nourishment costs so\nlittle in Kcllogg's Corn Flakes\n\u2014and all my family love their\ncrispnes- and flavor!\"\nKellogg's Corn Flakes give\nyou many generous servings\nfor a few cents. And they're\nso convenient! So delicious!\nThe exclusive waxthe inner\nwrapper keeps them oven-\nfresh, ready to eat with milk\nor cream.\nServe Kellogg's often and\nsave money.\nAt all grocers.\nMade by Kellogg in London, Ontario.\ntfdiuftfi CORN FLAKES\nUade Better \u2022 Taste Batter\nPacked Better\n>\nFSiS!\n<\nClass cereal bowl\nwith 3 packages of Kellogg's\nCorn Flakes! Makes a\nhandsome set.\nTransient Found\nUnconscious by\nRoad, Cranbrook\nAn unidentified transient found\nlying unconscious beside the highway near Lumberton is under the\ncare of Dr. F. W. Green in Cranbrook hospital, state radio advices\nfrom Cranbrook to divisional headquarters at Nelson of. the provincial\npolice.\nThe man was found on the highway one mile west cf Lumberton\nand was taken to Cranbrook hospital by Constables J. L. Jeeves and\nJ. A. Henry of the provincial police.\nRadio report to the divisional\noffice stated that Dr. Green \"was of\ntlie opinion the man was suffering\nfrom nervous collapse. . . . There is\nno sign of injuries.\" At the time the\nmessage was sent he was still unconscious.\n\"The only lead to possible identification,\" stated the radiogram, was\n\"a letter found in his pack addressed to Fay des Lauriers, Hamel,\nMinn., from the'collector of customs\nat North Portal, Sask.\" Police are\ncontinuing to investigate in the hope\nof identifying him.\nJack Ludlow Is\nSeriously Hurl\nCrashes Into Auto on\nSilica Street While\nRiding Bicycle\nJack Ludlow, 14-ycar-old son of\nMr. and Mrs. J. E. Ludlow, 609 Cedar\nstreet, is in a serious condition in\nKootenay Lake General hospital as\na result of injuries sustained about\n8 o'clock Thursday morning when\nho, while riding his bicycle, struck\nan auto driven by Carl A. Larson at\nthe intersection of Ward and Silica\nstreets. He was proceeding down\nSilica street on to Ward when Mr.\nLarson was turning up Silica from\nWard, and the bicycle crashed into\nthe car. The Ludlow boy is suffer-\nI ing from a crushed chest, two deep\n| wounds in his back, one in each\nleg and severe bruises all .over.\nThe King and Queen may visit the\nHebrides.\nFour Months Term\nfor Watch Theft\nHarry Hoselton was sentenced to\nfour months' hard labor in the Nelson provincial jail Thursday afternoon by William Brown, police\nmagistrate, when he appeared in\ncity police court and was found\nguilty on a charge of theft of a\nwrist watch from D'Arcy Hughes,\nNelson assayer. Hoselton took the\nwatch from the office of Grenville\nH. Grimwood Monday morning and\nwas arrested by Constable Ralph\nRobinso not the cily police when he\nattempted to dispose of the watch in\na local jewellery store Monday afternoon.\nHAMILTON, Ont,, (CP).\u2014Tomato\npatches in the Troy district near\nhere are being ruined almost overnight by blight. Most of the plants\ndie soon after they are attacked\nby the disease.\n23c\n23c\n27c\n9c\nSalmon: Choice, pink, 1fl_,\n'A's. 2 tins for HZ\nSoap: Cal ay,\n5 cakes for\t\nSoap: Lifebuoy,\n3 fakes for\t\nCorned Beef:\nHelmet, 2 tins for\nChlorinated Lime:\nTin\t\n10 Ibs. Sugar, '\/_ Ib. Overwaitea Best Tea:        QQ\nBoth for OlZ\nLard: Swift's, Cn\n3 Ib tin for DlC\nCheese: Choice Ont., \u25a0)\u25a0).\nPer Ib LLZ\nAll Bran: Kellogg's,     Ol\nPer pkt LIZ\nSpratts Ovals:\nVh lb. sack\t\nWalnuts: Broken,\nfresh stock. Per Ib.\nFRUIT and VEGETABLES\nEating Peaches: OC _\nPer basket LoZ\nCrapes: Concord,        \"7E-\nOkanagan, large bskt. I uv\nCauliflower: Snow 9C_\u00bb\nwhite, 3 Ibs. for .... LoZ\nLettuce: Large heads, 1C_\n2 for  IOC\nPeaches:    For   preserving,\nbuy now\nPer crate ..\n32c\n26c\n.$1:49\nSF THERE'S ONETHINO I\nLIKE BETTERTHAN MY\nU   BATH  IT'S THAT\nJOSTLE'S MILK MOMS\n'CEN SERVING LATELV\nIi rt commended b:\nmmendi\nill* (he\nMIsTLEi MUtK\n\"ED\n.. ....  .\u25a0;-...\u25a0., .\u25a0.\u25a0..;_\u25a0,.,:-',.,.,,;.._:,:(;,. \u25a0\n\u2022   .   :    V.'..\n' -_iftiii ii^lfii._:-^ti-\u00ab-^-i^l\u00bb^M^^,\n\u25a0    \u25a0     '    ;\n'       \u25a0\n m\n\"J\u25a0 -WJ- \u2122\\\u2122\nHffiuviuiiiiwii\nPWPPP\niPpSfP\u00abPPfl\nPAOI BIX\n'  Established April 22, 1902.\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper\nPublished every morning, except Sunday by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED,\n210 Baker  Street,' Nelson,    British Columbia.\nPhone 144, Private Exchange Connecting All Departments.\nMembers of  the  Audit  Bureau  of  Circulations  and\nThe   Canadian   Press   Leased   Wire   News   Service.\nFRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 17,1937.\nLAUGHTER PROPOSED AS CURE\n. FOR CRISES\nLord Beaverbrook has decided to end international\ncrises by laughing at them. His editorial writer on the Daily\nExpress will ridicule the recurring fears, and his cartoonist,\nStrube, will create a new character\u2014\"Major Crisis\"\u2014to\nbe pictured as the moustached, blustering, ludicrous villain\nof world melodrama.\nReaders of the Express will get their laughter. Strube\nis one of the world's cleverest cartoonists and his chief\naim is to make mirth. The very lines of his drawings show\na genial mind, and his political cartoons, always pointed,\nnever leave a sting. In his hands Major Crisis will be a\nfigure of fun, to be looked for arid loved.\nHe will appear often enough, for crises cannot be\nlMghed away. The world began by laughing at Mussolini.\nHe, devoid of humor, let it laugh till it was time to give it\nthe shivers. Then it tried the trick on Hitler, with the same\nresult. These two have crises enough up their sleeves to\nkeep the cartoonist and statesmen busy for a long time,\nand crises, like their creators, lack a sense of humor. The\nbest to be said for Beaverbrook's idea is that, while the\nstatesmen try to end each crisis as it comes, Strube will\nmake it entertaining while it stays.\nThe editorial writer on the Express says: \"... as we\nno longer fear the villain of the movies, who bound the girl\nin the mountain shack, we no longer fear Major Crisis.\nOnly the city believes in him and goggles with fright at\nhim.\" Of this it may be said that there are still villains\nabroad on mountains and elsewhere, where we fear them\nor laugh at them. It may be added that the gibe at the\n\"city\" seems ungrateful coming from a paper owned by\none who is reputed to have made millions on the market.\nIt is possible, however, that the effort of recurring crises\non the market gave Beaverbrook his idea, and that his plan\nis intended to reassure the city and prevent future slumps.\nWhether even Strube can make the market laugh when war\nthreatens remains to be seen.  .\nBICYCLISTS TAKE MANY CHANCES\nEvery now and then one reads of a boy on a bicycle\n..ing killed or seriously injured on our highways. In many\ncases the accidents have occurred after dark when the\nbicyclist is travelling without lights. Bicycle riders are one\nof the main hazards of the road, particularly after dark.\nThe average bicycle light is so dim it can be seen by the\nmotorist at but a short distance.\nIn referring to bicycle riders we are not dealing with\nthose youths in distant cities. Right on the streets of Nelson motorists, every day, have a heart flutter when a young\nbicycle rider suddenly darts in front of the auto. Only this\nweek a Nelson motorist had to apply his brakes and swerve\nhis auto, just the other side of the hospital corner, to\nmiss a young lad on a bicycle. After the auto passed by\nihe lad nonchalantly zig-zagged across the pavement, hands\ngripping a hammer and handlebars untouched. Such lads\nare only looking for trouble.\nOn city streets it is in the day time that young cyclists,\nmost of whom have not developed traffic sense or consciousness of the dangers surrounding them, are the greatest worry. They dart in and out of motor traffic without\nregard to possible consequences. That more are not killed\nor injured is a matter of amazement. With increasing use\not\" bicycles, however, the nccident.rate is bound to multiply.\nThere seems no remedy for this condition except it be\na stricter parental supervision. A Halifax magistrate, after\nconducting an inquest on an 11-year-old girl cyclist who had\nbeen killed by an automobile, made the suggestion that\nthere should be an age limit of 14, adding that to expect\na young child on a bicycle to be safe in traffic was the\nequivalent to sending it out on the railway tracks and\ntelling it to keep clear of trains.\nIn these days of fast driving, with a 30-mile speed\nallowance in most cities, the streets are certainly not a safe\nplace for child cyclists. Even for adult riders, aware of the\nprecautions that, must be taken, there is a large element of\ndanger,\nNELSON DAILY NE\\*S, NELSON, B.C-FRIDAY MORNINQ, SEPT. 17, 1937,\n..Between You and Me\nONTARIO  ELECTIONS   .\nHubber worker has entered the\nelection as a candidate in North\nWaterloo, Ont. He may start slowly, but he should run well in the\nstretch.\nFriends cheered the rubber worker when he won the nomination.\nThey gathered around and bounced\nhim.\nFellow workers are organliing to\nhelp the Waterloo man. Already\nthey have formed several rubber\nbands.\nReport says the rubber worker is\nfighting for bis comrades. For instance, he favors an elastic currency\n.   .   .\nA WINNER\n\"I hear a lady from Inonoaklin\nvalley swept the prizes for goats at\nthe Edgewood fair.\"\n\"That's right.\"\n\"Where was her husband?\"\n\"He stayed at home on the goat\nfarm.\"\n\"Doing what?\"\n\"Looking after the kids.\"\n. *   \u2022   *.\nMEAN THIEF\nSearch for the meanest of thieves\nof the year has ended at Joliet, 111.\nMrs. Rose Smith reports to Joliet\npolice that robbers broke into her\nhome and stole two diamond rings\nas well as the leather collar off her\nwatchdog. So the total loss is Mrs.\nSmith's rings and the dog's reputation.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nAROUND THE TOWN\nHere and there\u2014\"Jiggs\" Carmichael trying to stop a lady from\nfalling down the stairs in a local\nblock\u2014Dr. L E. Borden still on the\nsick list\u2014J. A. MacDonald lighting\na cigar as he approached to talk\nwith his son Bill\u2014Gene Nadeau\nordering five gallons of ice cream\nand getting fast delivery\u2014R. W.\nDawson stepping out in some light\ntrousere\u2014Thomas McDonald dragging on his pipe as he wandered\nalong Baker street-C. E. G. Fisher\nstopping his auto to size up some\nBy   J. B.C.\ntelephone wires\u2014and reporting a\nsuccessful duck shooting trip on\nthe flats near Creston\u2014Jack Bell\nrolling a cigarette as he stood on\nthe corner\u2014E. W, Kope'cki of Rossland driving out Fairview way-\nAlex Carrie standing with his toot\nresting on the bumper of an automobile\u2014Jim' Dawson looking for a\nsergeant at midnight\u2014Ed Jackman\nsizing up a nine-cent sale\u2014Two\nyoung ladies in walking attire-\nbreeches and high boots\u2014which reminded me of a summer day at\nVancouver when so many of them,\nthusly dressed, hit for Grouse mountain\u2014Lionel Leask unloading rubbish and liking it\u2014Joseph Ramsden\ncomplaining of a cold\u2014which he\nsays he caught while tarring his\nroof\u2014Ross Riley unloading a roof\ntarring outfit after a day's work-\nBert Gridley sprinkling down the\nlawn and garden at the Kootenay\nLake General hospital\u2014That's all\nfor today.\n* \u00bb   \u2022\nTHAT RHYME  AGAIN\nThere was an old man of Nantucket\nWho kept all his cash in a bucket\n'Till, his daughter named Nan\nRam off with a man\nAnd as for the bucket, Nantucket.\n* *   \u2022\nF. J. TRAVELS\nF. J. Smyth, the genial colmunist\nof the Cranbrook Courier passed\nthrough Kingsgate-Eastport on his\nway for a short vacation in Spokane, says a correspondent. F. J.\nis no stranger in the Inland Empire\ncity for it was there as galley boy\non the Spokane Chronicle that the\nvirus of printer's ink first entered\nhis blood, that as he grew older,\nit grew only stronger. It was very\ndifferent for F. J. sitting comfortably reminiscing in the chair in the\nPullman from the olden days before\nthe railroad when he walked from\nKusanook into the then booming\nmining town of Moyie dragging his\nold press on a bob sleigh.\njLooking Backward \u2666..\nTWENTY YEARS AGO\n(September 17,1917).\nMonte San Gabrielle Crest has\nbeen won by the Italian troops.\u2014\nJames McDougall. Ainsworth, is a\nguest at the Hume.-H. H. Johnson,\nRossland, is a guest at the Strath-\ncona.-A. Campbell, Salmo, is a guest\nat the Grand Central\u2014George D.\nGarden, Moyie, is a guest at the Nelson\u2014High grade shipping ore is being mined at the True Fissure mine\nat Trout Lake.\u2014Mrs. A. J. Wills\nof Harrop is spending a week in\nNelson-Mrs. C. E. Jones of Trail\nis spending a few days in Rossland.\n-D. St. Denis has returned from a\nvisit to the Arrow lakes\u2014D. P.\nGraham expects to return from\nRevelstoke about the end of the\nmonth\u2014A. L. Purdy left yesterday\nfor a two-week visit to Vancouver.\n\u2014Fred E. West has been injured in\naction, according to a report received by his mother.\nTEN YEARS AGO\n(September'17, 1927).   .\nMembers of the British Columbia\nand Yukon Press association have\narrived in Nelson to hold their annual convention. \u2014 Mr. and Mrs,\nCharles Wright have returned to\nTrail from a holiday spent with\nfriends at Vancouver.\u2014Cecil Mathews of Riverside avenue, Trail,\nhas left for a short holiday at the\ncoast\u2014Women's institute of Cranbrook presented Miss Olive Nor-\ngrave with a high school emblem\nring in recognition of her winning\nthe governor's medal in the recent\nentrance examinations.\u2014Miss Jean\nWaldie, Stanley street, has as her\nhouse guest from Rossland Miss\nHelen McDonald\u2014Mr. and Mrs. A.\nHorswill have taken up residence on\nStanley street.\u2014Mr. and Mrs. A. J.\nCornish, who have been spending\nthe past few months at their summer place at Queen's Bay, have returned to their home on Latimer\nstreet\u2014Mrs. Charles Holt of Balfour was a recent visitor in .town.\nTHIRTY YEARS AGO\n(September 17, 1907).\nA new mill is to be erected by\nJohn Dewar for the Porto Rico\ncompany on the C. P. R. flats. \u2014\nStrathcona hotel has been sold to\nJ. C. Bonneau and associates of Vancouver by Reginald Webb\u2014Mrs. F.\nJ. Painton of Grand Forks is spending the week with Mrs. C. E. Miller\nof Silica street.\u2014W. J. Baird, formerly of the high school staff, whose\nplace has been taken by Mrs. W.\nPearcy, has entered the law office\nof Joseph Martin, K.C., at Vancouver, as an articled student at. law.\n\u2014Hon. F. E. Grosvenor has severed\nhis connection with the Hall Mining and Smelting company\u2014Mr. and\nMrs. R. Nicholls of Ymir are guests\nat the Hume.\u2014L, Kettler, Salmo, is\na guest at the Kootenay.\u2014Noble\nBinns is in the city from Trail.\u2014Mrs,\nR. M. McDonald and daughter have\nleft for a holiday in Ontario.\nTransport\nRecords  Regained\nENGLAND LEADS\nDuring recent years there has been an extraordinary\nhouse building boom in Great Britain. According to a statement published in \"Industrial Britain\" some twelve million people, or about 30 per c.'.it of the population of England and Wales, have moved into newly built houses since\nthe end of the Great War. The number of houses built since\nthat time is now approaching three and a half million.\nIn the year ending March 31 last, a record number of\n346,000 houses were built compared with 325,000 in 1935-36\nand 329,00*0 in 1934-35. More than four houses out of\nevery five were built by private enterprise and the remainder by local authorities. People report building enterprises all over England. Around London the city is extending in every direction.\nThe one industry in Canada which has lagged behind\nin recovery has been the building trade. This year the\nHome Improvement movement financed by the government\nand the banks has somewhat stimulated the industry, but\neven so rebuilding in this country seems to drag.\nIt is very apparent that we can take a lesson in home\nbnildine from the Old Land.\nOn land and water and in the air\nrecently were provided breath-taking thrills, new records.  While Britain slept, Flight-Lieutenant M. J.\nAdam, sharp-eyed, wavy-haired Scot\naged 29 pulled on a clumsy looking\noutfit much like a diver's suit, had\nt fitted over his head a vast glass-\n! faced helmet with tube attached to\nj an oxygen cylinder, and clambered\ninto \"Bristol 136\", the R. A. F.'s ex-\n! perur.ent.il high-altitude craft.\n]   From Farnborough, Hants, Pilot\nj Adam zoomed into  the sky. soon\nbecame a mere speck.   Flying in a\nsouth-westerly direction, he reached  7,000  feet   when   cloud  layers\nforced him to turn east.   There the\nsun, very low at that hour, completely blinded hjm, made i'. impossible for him to see his instruments.  Followed layer after layer of\nclouds.   At 30,000 feet Pilot Adam\ncaught his last glimpse of Rochester\nthrough a brief gap, says News Review.\nAt 35,000 feet Adam's motor was\nrunning smoothly. Soon the auxiliary supercharger cut in and at 38,-\n000 slight frosting of the cabin's interior occurred. At 50,000 he had\nnot seen the ground for half on\nhour and the rate of climb had de\ncreased practically nothing. When\nhe reached 53,000 feet there was a\nloud crack over his head. Pilot Adam peered up through his tall headgear, saw a split slowly widening in\nthe roof. The transparent covering\nover his cockpit had fractured with\nthe cold.\nSwitching off his engine. Flight-\nLieutenant Adam began to descend,\nfound the rate very slow, had to\nforce the machine's nose down. Not\nknowing where he was, but guessing the vicinity to be Bristol, he\nsuddenly discovered the Thames,\nmade a good landing at his starting\npoint.\nRushing to open Adam's cockpit,\ncolleagues found his instruments had\nregistered a height of 53,937 feet, 1137\nfeet more than ten miles. Pilot Adam had broken the world's altitude\nrecord, having risen 2575 feet higher than Italian aviator Mario Pezzi,\nthe previous holder, who achieved\nthat figure last month. Adam's\nflight was als*o 3993 feet belter than\nSquadron-Leader F. R. D. Swain's\nlast autumn's record-breaker.\nThis feat made Britain twice holder of the record.. France has gained it 21 times, the United States 11\ntimes,   Germany   once.   Said   ex-\nSPEAKING OF EXPLOSION SHOTS-!\n- \/MStfUt.\nV. Questions V.\nANSWERS\nThis column ol questions and\n\u25a0mswers Is open to any reader oi\nthe Nelson Daily News. In no\n:ase will the name of the person\nisking the question be published.\nA. B. C, Nelson-What is the French\nfor 'The Citadel'?\nLa Citadelle.\nH. M. C, Nelson\u2014Can you tell me\nwhat the Spanish word 'cocido'\nmeans? I believe it is some kind\nof food-\nCocido is the main food of the\nSpanish worker, and is something\nlike a stew. It is made with chick\npeas, meat, potato and cabbage and\nlard.\nM. B., Trail\u2014How much are the\nquintuplets worth financially?\nOn their third birthday, May 28,\n1937, they were worth $750,000.\nR. F. C, Salmo-What day of the\nweek did December 12, 1900 fall\non?\nWednesday.\nM. K., Nelson\u2014May a widow sign\nher maiden name when getting\nmarried a second time?\nShe should sign her legal name,\nwhich, in this case would not be her\noriginal maiden name.   In applying\nfor the licence, the facts should be\nstated about the first marriage.\nG- B., Nakusp\u2014On what day of the\nweek did January 23, 1930, fall?\nThursday.\nAUNT HET\nBy  ROBERT QUILLEN\n\"I think it's silly to waste\nmoney, for it's like wastin' your\nlife, but pinchin' pennies like\nAmy does, till you can't enjoy\n\u2022what you make, is plum simple-\nminded.\"\nChurch student Adam replying to a\nreporter's question: \"Like it? Its not\na question of liking it. If I'm told to,\nI shall do it again. That's all.\"\nFOUR RECORDS\nOne morning recently, housewives\nin backgardens along the L. M. S.\nEuston-Crewe line saw a blue-and-\nsilver bullet go shrieking along the\nmetals, disappear from sight in a\nsplit second. Crack Driver Tom\nClarke, 64, was out on a record-\nbreaking run with the new Coronation Scot. Newspapermen who,\nwith L. M. S. Directors made up\nthe passenger list declared that at\n85 Coronation Scot seemed to be\ncrawling. At 90 the kitchen staff\nsteadily poured out soup and coffee. At 100 there was no sensation\nof speed.\nCrowding out of their compartments delighted L. M. S. officials\nand newshawks found that Driver\nClarke had touched 114 m.p.h. on his\nfirst trial run. had altogether broken four records:\u2014 .\n(1) For the highest speed yet\nachieved by a British steam train;\n(2) For the world's longest\nstretch of sustained speed\u2014158 miles\nCrewe to Euston, in one hour 59\nminutes at an average of 80 m.p.h.\n(3) For the fastest journey from\nEuston to Crewe\u2014two hours, nine\nand three quarter minutes, at an\naverage of 73 m.p.h.\n(4) For the fastest journey from\nCrewe to Euston.\nRunning along the platform jubilant L. M. S. Vice-President Ernest\nCONTRACT   *\u25a0*\"\"\"\nBRIDGE      =\nWHEN A JUMP IS WEAK\nWhen either partner has made a\nbid which carries with it the implication of forcing the side to game,\na. jump in his own suit by either\none conveys the natural meaning\nthat the suit is splendid but the\nhand in general bad. It is a warning\nto the forcer not to go any farther\nexcept on his own responsibility.\nHe should reach out for slam only\nif his hand is much bigger than\nnecessary to have made the force\nhe did.\n\u25ba 73\n\u00bbAQ8\n+ AQ10\n+Q9868\n+ QJ52\n\u00bbK73\n\u2666 K J 4\n*K74\n\u2666 \u00ab\nV0542-\n^67632\nf 10 3 2\n4 A K 10 0-8-1\nf J 10 8\n485\n*AJ\n(Dealer: South. Both sides vulnerable).\nW. Howard Woolworth of Buffalo\nheld the South cards on this deal\nand opened the bidding with one\nSpade. After his partner's response\nof 3 Clubs, Mr. Woolworth jumped\nto 4 Spades. His partner, who did\nnot get the meaning of this bid,\njumped- to 6 Spades, which West\ndoubled.\nWest, with his double stopper in\ntrumps and the three kings of other-\nsuits, decided Ihe best king to lead\naway from was the Club K, as the\nbidding would indicate this one was\nhopeless. He therefore led the Club\n4, which was won in the South\nhand with the J. The Spade A and\nClub A were now cashed. The Heart\nJ was now finessed and followed\nby the 10, which West covered, the\nA winning. The Heart Q was cashed\nand a,Club ruffed. Mr. Woolworth\nnow had a very accurate picture\nof West's holdings. As East followed\nonce on trumps, West held four, and\nit was also evident, that West held\nthree Hearts and three Clubs, so\nthat he also held three Diamonds.\nAfter finessing the Diamond Q,\nensiling the Diamond A and ruffing\nthe Diamond 10, South led the Spade\n9 to West, who conceded the remaining tricks.\nTomorrow's Problem\n+ AQ75\n\u00bb75\n$10,7 0\n+ Q983\n4642\nVQ-863\n4Q51\n*K5\nA\/.\n4K88\nV.T10 2\n4K982\n*762\n4 J 10 8\n\u00bbAK1\n4AJ3.\n* A J 10 4\n(Dealer: South. East-West vulnerable).\nAfter the lead of the Heart 6,\nwhat play by South enables him to\nmake 3 No Trumps?\nJ. H. Lemon slapped Driver Clarke\nheartily on the back, exclaimed:\n\"Great work, Tom.\"\nModestly remarked grimy Driver\nClarke: \"She'll do more than that\nwhen she's run in.\"\nBritain's continental rivals in the\nmatter of train speeds are the steam-\nhauled, stream-lined trains between\nBerlin and Hamburg, the normal\nweight of which is slightly less than\nthat of the L. N. E. R.'s Silver Jubilee, which previously held the British record with 113 m.p.h. on a falling gradient. *\nWhile rail records were thus being\nshattered, on Loch Lomond Sir Malcolm Campbell, the world's speed\nking on land took to the water in his\nBluebird, raced up his prepared\ncourse and down again. Extricating\nhis long legs from Bluebird's small\nshell at Luss, Sir Malcolm commented:  \"The visibility  was appalling,\nbut I was doing 85 m.p.h. on each\nrun.\" Satisfied with these results\nthe racing knight packed up, went\nhome,\nBENEFACTIONS AND\nSUCCESSION  DUTIES\nThe University of Western Ontario will be exceedingly grateful for\nthe bequest of some $10,500 from the\nestate of Sir Charles Saunders, who\nwas also generous to the university in his native city during his\nlifetime.\nThe action of Sir Charles in donating $55,000, or almost half of his\nfortune to public institutions in the\nprovince is one which might well\nbe followed by weathier people.\nThere would be less agitation for\nhigh succession duties if more\nmoney was donated to public and\ncharitable causes. \u2014 London Free\nPress.\nS>-\nVERSE\nIMMORTALITY\nThe godless and the vicious man\nThe spendthrift and the rake\nWould fain lie down when life is\no'er\nTo sleep and never wake.\nThere is no God, the fool hath said,\nThere'll be no judgement day.\nNo trumpet call to wake the dead,\nJust dreamless sleep for aye.\nIf crawling worm, and loathsome\ngent,\nCan sleep a while and rise,\nTo float on ganzy wings above\nIt is our summer skies.\nWill man whose mind can compre-^\nhend\nThe wondrous works of God,\nJust step upon the threshold, but,\nTo rot beneath the sod!\nInspired he is to seek and ask\nThe how and why and when,\nBut he has just begun the task\nAt \"three score years and ten.\"\nA universe so vast,\nWill God forbid his soul to roam\nWhen earthly ties are past\nFor man another day will dawn,\nAnd fuller life will be,\nWhere   mortal  shall  be   \"clothec\nupon\"\nWith immortality.\n-F. W. NASH\nJesus said:\n\"I am come that they might have\nlife and that they might have it\nmore abundantly.\"      \u2014John X, 10.\nGOOD BYE\nGood bye and God bless you, till\nwe meet again\nMay good health caress you, and\nwith you remain\nMay sorrow and sadness from you\nfly away\nMay sun's brightest gladness shine\nall through your day.\nGood bye and God bless you, lt may\nbe for years,\nMay no thought of sadness, dim your\neye with tears\nMay fortune smile on you and\nbright your years be\nFrom all care and sorrow, your future be free.\nGood bye and God bless you, whatever betide\nOver every obstruction may you\nsafely ride.\nMay no cloud or shadow, e'er darken your way\nAnd like snow in summer, all ills\nmelt away.\nGood bye and God bless you, your\nwhole life long,\nMay life be a concert of gladnes3\nand song\nAnd  my prayer  daily  to  heaven\nascends,\nGood bye and God bless you, my\ndearest of friends.\nGood bye and God bless you, your\njoy be complete\nA lawn of green velvet to cool your\nhot feet,\nA garden of Eden, with heavenly\nshowers\nTo strew in your pathway, a garland of flowers.\nWILLIAM J. EVANS.\nRossland, B. C.\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nBy Geo. McManui\n^AR,JI6GS-VOURE\nAOREAT MAN-VVE\n8EEN A POOL ALL\nNAY LIFE-BUT NAY\nEYES ARE OPEN\nNOW-\nI COULD\nHAVE TOLD\nYOU THAT\nYEARS AGO-\nSHAKE \u2014\n^^^^^\n__\n*_-_d-_il_it_iri_iii\n ppjfpiplp^\n{iW\nNIL80N DAILY NEWS, NELSON, ft Cv-PRIDAY MORNINO, SBPT. 1T, 1987,\nPAdl MVM\nburisl Camp Receipts Increase;\nDecrease in Relief at Cranbrook\nCRANBROOK, B. C.-Cranhrook\ntjr council discussed renting of\nmgalows at the city tourist camp\nLEAN FALSE TEETH-\nET RID OF STAINS\nNew Eaiy Way-No Brushing\nBtan-Klctn, amaalnt M\u00bb jtlBOTwy, ft-\nml blackeit italni, taralib, tartar Ilka\nisle. Juit put falia teeth or _rld_e\u00ab In a\nisa of water and add Stera-Kl-en powder.\n) Delay bmehlne. Recomtnendad l.y den.\nta\u2014approved by Good Housekeeping. At\n. druggists. Money back If sot delighted.\n(Advtl\nPLANT LICE\nProtect Your Roses\nWhen your plants have Jest been\natercd or are still wet with dew, I\nirlnkle them with BUHACH if you'1\nis_ to free them from lice. BUHACH\nsure death to insect peats. So Save\n\u00bbur cherished plants this easy way\u2014\nmnot injure the most delicate foliage.\n1 Handy Sifter Cans 25c up at all\nrat, Grocery, Seed Stores, Pet Shops.\n(Advt.l\n\u2022Tox Kidney Flushers\nRemoves That Backache\nTo neglect the first symptom of\nUdney trouble might lead to very\nsrious results. Your kidneys con-\niln thousands of little filters, each\nne having special work to perform.\nt some of these filters become clog-\ned, poisons and Uric acid enters the\nlood stream. The result is a back-\nChe, a dead, heavy pain. The Uric\ncid deposits a fine granule in the\nolnts, causing a pain known as\nheumatism. Nox Kidney Flushers\neally flush the kidneys, placing\nhem In a healthy, sound condition.\nIo more getting up at night\u2014no\nlore backache. That sallow com-\nlexion is replaced by a natural clear\nkm. Your eyes become bright and\n\u25a0our headaches disappear. Each\nmckage of Nox Kidney Flushers\nontains a full month's treatment.\n?here Is only one Nox Kidney Flush-\na^-they improve your entire gen-\n:ral health. Your Kidneys and Liver\nvill function perfectly. Why not\nitsrt today on the road to good\ntealth, let Nox Kidney Flushers\n>ring you good health. Sold at Fleu-\ny's Pharmacy, Nelson, B.C. (Advt.)\nRELIEVE\nBUFFERING\nQUICKLY WITH\nKELLOGG'S\niSTW\nRELIEF\naorHayFeveraraQulcklyandsImply ;\nid by Kcllogg's Asthma Relief. This\na herbal preparation\u2014sold in Can.\na for 60 years\u2014has alreadybenefited\n. thousands.\nAtyournearestDrug\nSlore\u2014\n_Sc.aadS1.00\n| Also In cigarette\nform.\nNorthrop an.\nLyman Co_\n.      Limited.\nToronto\nOntario._\nI \"\u25a0*_\nafter the close up of the season\nand the application received to rent\none for an Indefinite period was\nrefused.\nMr. McLean addressed the council\nregarding a cesspool on his property and was advised the matter\nwould be given the consideration\nof the council.\nThe works committee reported\nthat they had authorized the city\nsuperintendent to purchase approximately 1200 feet of four inch'dipped\nand single wrapped pipe at $62.25\nper 100 feet and that in addition\nto the asphalting program previously authorized the superintendent had\nbeen instructed to proceed with the\nasphalting for three blocks on Fenwick to Lumsden avenue.\nThe finance committee presented accounts amounting to $11,516.95.\nThe fire department reported no\nfire alarms were received during the\nmonth, making it the third successive month without fires. Fire\nloss for the eight months of the\nyear is $287.50.\nThe police department reported\nthree criminal complaints were received during the month, all being\nthefts amounting to $21. There were\n20 prosecutions, $109.50 being collected in fines and costs.\nThe value of property lost or\nstolen was approximately $71 with\nno recoveries. Twenty-nine petty\ncomplaints were received and unlocked premises noted on patrols.\nNine bicycles were held at the\npolice station as children were careless or had not the proper lights,\nand a warning was given to tho\nparents before returning the bicycles.\nThere were two accidents in the\ncily: a motorcycle and a bicycle\ncollided, the bicycle being damaged\nand the owner injured; and an\nautomobile and a bicycle collided,\nthe bicycle being damaged and the\nrider injured. No serious injuries\nwere sustained.\nThe works' department reported\n29 persons with 79 dependents and\n13. single persons received relief\ntotalling $888.05 of which the city's\nshare is $177.61 against a total of\n$947.80 (city's share $178.56) for\nJuly. Four married persons with 15\ndependents and one single man were\nissued with provincial government\ndirect relief.\n, Nine service orders were attended\nto and four leaks repaired. One new\nservice connection was Installed.\nSupply conditions remain satisfactory, the surplus run-off at the\ncity reservoir being approximately\nIV. million gallons per day.\nNew asphalt and gravel surfacing\nhas been laid on Edwards, Kains,\nGarden and Armstrong.\nRepairs to asphalt pavements were\ncarried out at the intersections of\nBaker and . Garden and Edwards\nand Armstrong.\nDuring the month there were two\narrivals and departures from the\ncity airport. Eight building permits\nwere issued, the estimated value\nbeing $1600.\nTourist camp receipts to August\n30 were $2115.35 against $1935.85\nfor 1936. On a comparative basis\nreceipts for 1937 are lower than\n1936.\nThe electric department reported the consumption was 96,400 K.\nW. H., against 87,360 K. W. H. for\nAugust 1936. The consumption for\nthe year to date 716,240 K. W. H.\nagainst 655,800 K. W. H. for the\nsame period 1936.\nTwenty street lights were renewed. Three new sets of service leads\nwere Installed. Twenty-two services\nwere connected and 20 cut ott leaving a net gain of nine active services\nfor the year to date. Four dual services were changed over to single\nmeter services. Tho new extension\nto the Radio Beam station was completed during the month.\nOne hundred and eighty-three\nmeters were taken out for annual\ntest by government meter inspector; five meters were condemned\nas unserviceable. .Wiring has been\ncompleted in the new bungalows at\nthe tourist camp. Secondary leads\nat Slaterville and St. Eugene hospital were repaired. Two new poles\nwere erected.\nSilverton Bride\nIs Honor Guest\nPrior lo Wedding\nSILVERTON, B.C.\u2014A misceluuv\neous shower was held recently hon\norlng Miss Annie Cooper, whose\nmarriage to Russell French of Nelson took place Monday. The bride-\nto-be, her mother and sisters were\nseated at tables on which three dolls\nwith large colored skirts covered\nthe gifts. To present the gifts a\nribbon connected to the ceiling raised the dolls from the tables. The\ngifts were then opened by Miss\nCooper assisted by her sisters, and\npassed around to all the guests present.\nCommunity singing and games\nfollowing by refreshments ended the\nevening. Refreshments we served\nby Mrs. F. Brennan, Mrs. J. Jakel,\nMrs. E. Erickson, Mrs. B. Marshall,\nMrs. R. Fairhurst and Miss S. Hunter. Guests included Mrs. A. Kynoch,\nMrs. A. Harding, Mrs. C. Berg, Mrs.\nA. Larson, Mrs. A. Erickson, Mrs.\nS. Wstson, Mrs. W. Hunter, Mrs. F.\nLiebscher, Mrs. M. Melby, Mrs. C.\nSchmidt, Mrs. H. Wilson, Mrs. J.\nMatheson, Mrs. A. Metcalfe, Mrs.\nJ. Johnson, Mrs. J. Scaia, Mrs, G.\nKirk, Mrs. T. Anderson, Mrs. B.\nFlynn, Mrs. T. Hodgson, Mrs. H.\nStavert, Mrs. H. Dewis, Mrs. E.\nErickson, Mrs. E. Marshall, Mrs. W.\nMarshall, Mrs. J. Jakel, Mrs. F. Brennan, Mrs. R. Fairhurst, Mrs. B. Fairhurst, Mrs. C. Holmer, Mrs. J. Kelly,\nMrs. H. Kelsall, Mrs. H. Elsmore,\nMrs. F. Kesler, Mrs. Barclay, Mrs. O.\nBergman, Mrs. B. Millar, Mrs. G.\nWaterman, Mrs. J. Ironside, Mrs.\nJ. Cooper, Mrs. McNaught, Mrs. W.\nRyans, Mrs. R. Hambly, Mrs. T. Dins-\ndale, Mrs. Linstein, Mrs. G. Norberg, Mrs. W. Morrison, Mrs. Emerson, Mrs. Livingstone, Mrs, T. Elsmore, Miss P. McKinnon, Miss E.\nMinus, Miss Mae Kelly, Miss Thelma\nJohnson, Miss Gertrude Kirk, Miss\nAudrey Watson, Miss Irene Mac\nAulay, Miss Hughena Matheson, Miss\nRachel Holmer, Miss Anne Bengert,\nMiss Shirley Hunter, Miss Forence\nMoss, Miss Viva Peachey, Miss Margaret Johnson, Miss Cora Cooper\nand Miss Elsie Kesler.\nMiss Doreen Peachey was a weekend visitor to her home here.\nMonster Transmission Towers for\nTranscanada Radio Beacons Being\nErected in Vicinity of Cranbrook\n\u25a0.I\nFour Towers Are Close to 150 Feet High and\nAre Held Without Guy Wires; Weight of\nTowers Between Five and Six Tons\nCRANBROOK, B.C.\u2014The erection of the four transmission towers\nnear Cranbrook for the Department of Transport in connection with the\nchain ot radio beacons across the continent, is nearing completion.\n* These towers have no guys, are\n14414 feet above the cement abutment, and are placed about 400 feet\napart. There are 20 feet bottom\ncolumns for each tower serving as a\nmetal base. The lapp insulators come\nnext, glass to prevent the signals\nsent out from the tower grounding.\nThe glass Is encased In a helmet cap\nto prevent damage from rain and\nweather. This carries the weight of\nthe tower, between five and six\ntons. The remaining 120 odd feet\nare of angles and diagonal supports\nwith a steel ladder from base to top.\nSix expert steeplejacks, trained by\nGeorge A. Dionne, contractor in\ncharge, are engaged in the work of\nputting up the towers.\nThe Department of Transport officials visited Cranbrook recently\nto inspect the progress of the work\nand to test the civic airport as an\nemergency landing field.\nNakusp Ladies Guild\nPlans a Whist Drive\nNAKUSP, B.C \u2014 Arrangements\nfor a whist drive to be held early In\nOctober were made at a meeting of\nSi Marks' Ladles' Guild held recently at the home ot Mrs, T. Harvey. Members present included Mrs.\nR. blip, Mrs. R. MeWhlrter, Mrs. T.\nHorrey, Mrs. J. Norris, Mrs. J. R.\nHumphris, Mrs. R. Jupp, Mrs. F.\nJohnson, Mrs. R. Shields, Mrs. M.\nBaird, Mrs. G. H. Gardner Jr., and\nMrs. Harvey..\na:\n1\n::''':V\nWj- \/\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\"'... '\"\". \"\"j\"\n1   :\n\u25a0__. _\u00ab_Mk\n\u25a0\" ..\u201e.-..,-.,-\n:>:\\\n\u25a0 :\ntt\u00a3-F\n\u25a0'\u25a0'    s\u00ab .\nCarrier System\nEffective Here\non November 1\nDistrict Increased to\nFive Manahan Is\nAdvised\nWith the probability that the civil\nservice commission will not have Its\nlist of qualified men from the recent carriers' examination in Nelson\nready till some time in October, the\npostal department at Ottawa has\nnow set back the date for the coming into force of carrier delivery in\nNelson from October 1 to November 1, Postmaster R. M. Manahan\nhas been advised.\nAs the box rentals are due October 1, box-holders will have an\nextra month to pay for before the\ntransfer. On that date the rental\nwill be advanced for those keeping\nlock-boxes, to the figure prevailing\nhere for many years, of $1 per quarter-\nIt has now been decided, Mr,\nManahan has been advised, that\nNelson will have five carrier districts, instead of four, the number\noriginally intended. This means that\nthere will be five regular carriers,\nT. Hawkesr Columbia Valley North,\nBig Winner at Windermere Fall Fair\nWINDERMERE, B.C. \u2014 Fruits,] Edgewater district won the Dis-\nflowers and vegetables, prize har- play Shield for flowers and fruit\nvest ot fruitful Windermere valley | again this year. Other cup winners\nwere viewed by nearly 400 persons\nat the twenty-sixth annual Windermere District Farmers' institute fair\nhere, Friday and Saturday.\nThere were (00 entries In ths different lections, averaging the same\nas the previous sesson. The Indian\nexhibit was not large, this year but\ntheir display of beadwork proved\nto be a great attraction.\nThere were fewer entries In the\nlivestock sections. Judges were G.\nL. Landon, district agriculturist of\nGrand Forks, R. G. Newton, superintendent of the Dominion Experimental farm and H. H. Peters ot\nAthalmer. May Palmer of Wilmer\ntook the cup for a heifer calf In\nthe Junior class. T. Hawkes, Columbia Valley north, won the cup for\nthe best pure bred dairy cow, the\nStanchions prize for the highest\nnumber of points in cattle classes\nand the Windermere District Farmers' institute cup,\nand one spare man as relief.\nBOXES ON STREET\nIn the case of persons living\nslightly outside the carrier area, as\nIn Rosemont, for Instance, where\nthe carrier route will be limited\nto the lower streets, locked mail\nboxes, marked with their street and\nnumber, may be placed on the last\nstreet served by the carrier. These\nmall boxes may be home-made, or\notherwise, but must be large enough\nto hold papers.\nTo qualify for carrier delivery, a\nhouse must be equipped either with\na slot in the front door, or with a\nmail box of some kind on the front\nof the house. \"No mail receptacle,\nno mail,\" is the department's rule,\nMr. Manahan stated Wednesday,\npointing out that with 300 calls to\nmake, or thereabout, a carrier could\nnot possibly wait for the door to be\nanswered.\nwere J. Davies ot the Hornby ranch,\nInvermere; In the swine class,\nDouglas Piggott, Columbia Valley\nnorth; and in the swine class for\nJuniors, Joan Lee of Invermere.\nTea and refreshments were served\nby a ladles' committee and Roy S.\nSeward of Golden, who started\nstunting In the barn at home eight\nor nine years sgo and though continued practice is a proficient tightrope walker, added to the entertainment of the crowd.\nHE WAS ALWAYS\nTIRED AND ILL\nThree Complaints Cave\nHim a Miserable Tims\nSuffering from three complaints\n\u2014disordered kidneys, sciatica, and\nrheumatism, how could this man b\u00bb\nanything else but always tired and\nill? This is what he writes:\u2014\n\"Up to a month or so ago, I had\nsuffered continually from kidney\ndisorder, sciatica, rheumatism, and\ngenerally felt off colour. I was\nconstantly tired, and under medical\nsupervision. I tried many remedies,\nbut without effect until I gave\nKruschen Salts a trial. In four\nweeks, Kruschen has brought about\na complete transformation. I, have\na healthy appetite and once more\nfeel that lt is good to be alive,\"\n-S.V.N.\nThe kidneys are the filters of the\nhuman machine. If they become\nsluggish, impurities find their way\ninto the blood-stream, and the seed\nof half-a-dozen common ailments Is\nsown.\nThe scientific comblnat-cn of\nsalts In Kruschen quickly coaxes\nthe kidneys back to healthy, normal action. Soon your ailments are\nrelieved and life becomes a joy\nagain. (Advt.)\nThe monster transmission tower\ngoing up at Cranbrook for radio\nbeacon service. Photo shows completed tower with ladder reaching\nto the top.\nSteeplejacks In precarious positions as they erect the radio tower\nwhich when completed Is almost 150\nfeet in the air.\nON THE AIR\nCANADIAN BROADCASTING.\nCORPORATION NETWORK\n5:00 Shadows on the grass, Hall-\nfax; 5:30 From a Viennese Garden, music ot old Vienna, Montreal;\n6:00 Backstage, variety, Winnipeg;\n6:30 Interview, Bob Davis; 6:45 News\nand weath, Toronto; 7:00 The Vagabonds, C.B.C; 8:00 Hawaiian Nights,\nfrom Winnipeg; 8:30 Moulders of\nNational Destiny, Professor Soward;\n8:45 Good Evening, news, from Vancouver; 9:00 Continental Varieties,\nfrom Vancouver; 9:30 At the Red\nGap social, from Regina, not CRCV;\n10:00 News, Vancouver; 10:15 Organ\nrecital, Vancouver; 10:45 Weather\nforecast, Vancouver.\nn LEADER becomes a leader only\nthrough the good-will of his following.\nPenmans Knitted Products have earned\nthe leadership they enjoy by their inherent value and good quality. It will\npay you to look for the Penmans label.\n...\nthe Fireside; 10:15 Stirling Young's\norch.; 10:45 Benny Goodman's orchestra; 11:00 Pasadena Civic auditorium; 11:30 Eddie Fitzpatrick's\norchestra.\n\u00ab00 k CJOR 499.7 m\nVancouver 600 w\n5:15 Uncle Mickey's Mystery club;\n6:20 Monitor Views the News; 6:45\nSports Resume; 7:00 Stock quotations; Real Life dr.; 7:30 Political;\n8:00 NBC Theaurus; 8:15 Joe Rocks,\ntenor; 8:30 Sports; 10:30 News;\n10:45 Dance Parade; 11:00 De Santis\norch.; 11:30 Slumber hour.\nN.B.C.-KPO RED NETWORK\nKHQ KGW  KFI  KPO KOMO\n690      620     640    680       920\n5:00 The Beaux Arts trio; 5:30\nKen Spencer, basso; 5:45 The Junior News, dramatizations; 6:00 First\nNighter. Don Ameche in drama;\n6:30 Jimmy Fldler. Hollywood gos<\nsip; 6:45 Talk, Dorothy Thomp'\nson; 7:00 Amos 'n' Andy, blackface\ncomedians; 7:15 Uncle Ezra's Radio\nStation E-Z-R-A; 7:30 Court of Hu\nman Relations, drama; 8:00 Carefree\nCarnival, Ned Tollinger, m.c; 8:30\nMike Riley and his orchestra; 9:00\nDon Fernando and orchestra; 9:15\nPaul Sabin and his orchestra; 9:45\nAl Vierra's orchestra; 10:00 News\nflashes; 10:15 Sports graphic; 10:30\nLeon Mojica's orchestra; 11:00 Hal\nKemp's orch.; 11:30 Jules Radinsky's\norchestra.\nN.B.C.-KGO BLUE NETWORK\nKGO  KJR  KEX  KECA  KGA\n790.   970     1180     1430    1470\n5:00 Musical Echoes; 5:30 American Institute of Banking; 6:00 Morton Bowe, Tommy Dorsey's orch.;\n7:00 Darrell Donnell, news; 7:15\nLum and Abner, comedy; 7:30\nPromenade concert; 8:00 Henry\nBu&se and orchestra; Dance Hour,\nKGO; 8:15 Chester Rowell; 8:30\nRobert \"Believe-It-or-Not\" Ripley;\n9:00 Rlcardo and his Cabeneros; 9:30\nCarlos Molina's orch.; 10:00 Frank\nCastle's orch.; 10:30 Jimmy Grier's\norchestra; 11:00 Charles Runyan,\norgan.\ntt*ST'\nRecent Bride Is\nHonored al Kaslo\nKASLO, B. C\u2014Canadian Legion\nWomen's auxiliary complimented\none of its members Thursday at the\nhome of Mrs. J. G. Fox when Mrs.\nW, H. Driver, a recent bride, was\nguest of honor at a delightful tea.\nOthers present were Mrs. Driver's\nmother, Mrs. Margaret McQueen,\nMrs. H. Driver of Mirror Lake, Mrs.\nWilliam Whittaker, Mrs. Fred McGibbon, Mrs. J, R. Tlnkess and Mrs.\nFox. During the afternoon the president of the auxiliary presented the\nhonor guest with a gift from her\nfellow members. Mrs. McGibbon assisted Mrs. Fox in serving refreshments.\n910 k CJAT 319.6 m\nTrail 1000 w\n7:00 Morning Vespers; 7:15 Musical Clock; 7:45 Comedy Capers; 8:00\nRequest program; 8:30 Nelson bulletin; 9:30 The Old Timer; 9:45\nBarn dance; 10:00 What's new?;\n10:15 Memory lane; 10:30 The Radio chef; 10:45 Melodio Pipes; 11:00\nBackstage Wife, E.T.; 11:15 Kootenay Echoes; 11:30 Monitor views\nthe news; 11:45 House of Peter McGregor; 12:00 Home Folks; 12:15\nSpokane Welcomes You; 12:30 The\nMusic Masters; 12:45 Colvllle Rangers; 1:15 Rhythm and Romance;\n1:30 Concert Time; 3:00 in the\nCrime-light; 3:15 Your Home; 4:15\nCub Reporters; 4:40 News Quirks;\n4:45 Cecil and Sally; 5:00 Theatre\nnews; 5:15 Happy Valley Folks, E.T.;\n5:30 Songs of the Stars; 5:45 Nonsense and Melody; 6:00 See C.B.C.\nnetwork except: 6:30 The Buccaneers; 8:30 Donald Novis; 10:45 Crazy\nMountaineers.\n1030 k CFCN 293.1. m\nCalgary 10,000 w\n6:00 Honor the Law; 6:15 The\"\nBuccaneers; 6:30 Red Head family;\n7:30 Cub Reporters; 0:00 Now and\nThen; 8:45 House of Peter McGregor; 9:00 News Flashes; 9:30 Peacock\ncourt; 9:45 Garden of Melody.\nCOLUMBIA  NETWORK\nKVI   KOIN   KNX   KSL   KOL\n570 940 1050 1130 1270\n5:00 Hollywood Hotel, dramatic\nmusical revue; 6:00 Kitty Carlysle\nand others, a Glee club orchestra;\n7:00 Scattergood Baines, dr.; 7:15\nBoake Carter, news; 7:30 Hal Kemp\nand orch.; 8:00 Herby Kay's orch.;\n8:30 Ted Fio-Rito's orch.; 9:00 Nocturne; Herbie King's orch.. KOL;\n9:15 Horace Henderson's orch.; 9:30\nPaul   Pendarvis'   orch.;   10:00   By\nINTERNATIONAL\nMoscow, 1 p.m.\u2014Who Studies at\nthe Moscow University? RNE, 25 m.\nTokyo, 1:45\u2014Vocal Selections by\nMiss Hideko Hirai. JZK, 19.7 m.,\n1516 mc; JZJ, 25.4 m., 11.80 mc.\nRome, 3:00 \u2014 American Hour;\nNews in English; Concert. 2RO, 25.4\nm., 11.81 mc.\nBerlin, 4:30\u2014\"The Man in the\nNet\", radio play. DJD, 25.4 m., 11.77\nmc\nBuenos Aires, 5:00\u2014Light Symphony Orchestra. LRX, 31.06 m.,\n9.66 mc.\nBerlin, 6:15 \u2014 Concert Arrangement of Immortal Waltzes. DJD,\n25.4 m., 11.77 mc\nPittsburgh, 8:30-DX Club. W8XK,\n48.8 m., 8.14 mc.\nTokyo, 9:45\u2014A Biwa Recitation,\nby Shisul Enomoto, JZK, 19.7 m\u201e\n15.16 mc.       t.\nKimberley Man Is\nMarried at (oast\nKIMBERLEY, B.C.\u2014Mrs. E. Taylor and two sons, Lance and Harley,\nhave returned from a trip to the\ncoast.\nHarley Taylor was married recently to Miss Lila Emery of West\nVancouver. The ceremony was performed by Rev. Mr. Easum of the\nAnglican church and witnesses were\nMiss M. Anderson and H. Collett.\nFollowing the ceremony a reception\nfor immediate relatives was held at\nthe Devon cafe. Mrs. Taylor, who\nhas not yet arrived In town, was a\nbusiness visitor here last summer.\nWHEN IMPROVING\nHowl tzrhwu,\nIn 1830 the town of Margate, Eng.,\nrose in arms against the inventor\nwho proposed to bring steam navigation to it.\nHE ATE ALL-BRAN\nAND IMPROVED\nWONDERFULLY\nRead this voluntary letter: \"In\nregard to your All-Bran, it is-\nmarked on the package 'best as a\ncereal, best for cooking,' and, as far\nas I am concerned, you might add\nbeet for health. Since I have begun\nto eat it, I have improved wonderfully.\"\u2014Mr. H. E. Poole (address\non request).\nAll-Bran corrects common constipation, due to meals low in\n\"bulk.\" Within the body, it absorbs\nwater, and forms a soft mass,\ngently sponging out the system.\nAll-Bran also supplies vitamin\nB to tone up the intestines, and\niron for the blood. Isn't thia food\nbetter than taking weakening pills\nand drugs?\nEat two tablespoonfuls daily,\neither as a cereal with milk or\ncream, or in recipes. In chronic\ncases, with each meal. Sold by all\ngrocers. Made and gauranteed by\nKellogg in London,\n(Advt.)\nHere Is a clever use for Congoleum ! For this kitchen, one\nof the newest and smartest\nCongoleum Gold Seal Rugs has\nbeen selected . . . and the same\npattern in yard goods has been\nchosen for the breakfast nook!\nYou'll be amazed how Congoleum will transform your home \u2014 and remember, it is with\nthe floors you should start any plan of home\nimprovement. Congoleum Gold Seal Rugs are\nsanitary, casy-lo-clean, and they are available\nin a wide range of gorgeous new patterns.\nVisit your dealer's and inspect them.\nBut\u2014beware of substitutes! Look for the Gold\nSeal shown below. It is affixed to the surface\nof all genuine Gold Seal Congoleum and is\nyouV only guarantee of complete satisfaction.\nCon&tam Gold Seal Rug No,\n411. lh-thc-ycird, it is Pattern\nJVo. 927.\nCongoleum Gold Seal Rug\u00bb\nrange from the email VA x S\nft. mats to the large 9119 ft.\nrugs, and are surpriimgly\ninexpensive. A 6 x 9 rug, for\nexample, costs only\nCongnleum is also awilfnMc\nIn yard goods when complete\nfloor* have to be covered.\nCoNGOLE UM W RUGS\nand Congoleum By-the-Yard\nCONGOLEUM   CANADA   LIMITED    -    MONTREAL\nCONGOLEUM GOLD SEAL RUGS SOLD IN NELSON BY\nFOR FINE mmWmlL** F0R FINE\nFURNITURE     g^^Mmm       FURNITURE\n409 BAKER ST. WSB80 NELSON, B.C.\n_____:\nCONGOLEUM GOLD SEAL RUGS SOLD IN NELSON BY\nFURNITURE DEPT.\n.mcoRPOfMfrtoaw m*y 1*70.1\nNELSON, B.C.\n\u00bb:&.\u25a0\n_____________\n \"--\"-\"\u2022-' \u25a0   .     .   _J__^__J_j_to.\n PAGE 1I0HT- \u2014\u2014\nTWO BEARS SHOT\nONT. JOHNSTONE\nFARM PROPERTY\nAttempt Made Lasso\nThird but Bear\nClimbs a Tree\nAnother chapter in the series of\nbear killings and amusing stories\nconcerning bears that have been\nhappening in the past few weeks\noccurred Monday nght at the res-\ndence of Thomas Johnstone across\nthe lake. Johnstone and Max Ewart,\ngame warden, had Mr. Ewart's two\nDobermann-Pinscher dogs at Johnstone's home to round up bears that\nhad been prowling around the orchard. Three bears were sighted,\ntwo of them were shot and the third\nhurriedly clambered into a tree,\nwhence the two men attempted to\nlasso him. With the dogs barking\nand darkness coming on, the best\nthat rewarded their efforts was the\ntangling up of the rope in the\nbranches. Bruin remained in his\nlofty perch until men and dogs had\nretired, then went off.\nB.C. Building Up\nOTTAWA, Sept. 16 (CP)- Building permits in the first eight\neight months of 1937 were higher\nthan comparative periods in any\nyear since 1931, the Dominion bureau of statistics reported today. The\ntotal of $37,671,000 was nearly 40\nper cent above $27,026,000 in 1936.\nAugust permits in 58 cities amounted to $4,216,000va decrease of 23\nper cent from July but an expansion\nof 14.8 per cent from August, 1936.\nCompared with August last year,\nPrince Edward Island, New Brunswick, Ontario, Manitoba, Alberta\nand British Columbia registered\ngains, the highest being 55.7 per cent\nIn British Columbia and 18.2 per\ncent in Ontario.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.-FRIDAY MORNINQ, SEPT. 17, 1937.\n$127,5-3 INCOME FOR\nCAN. INTER. INVEST. TRUSTS\nMONTREAL, Sept. 16 (CP).-Canadian International Investment\nTrusts, Limited, today reported gross\nIncome of $127,523 for the six months\nending Aug. 31, against $106,222 for\nthe corresponding 1937 period. After\ndeductions, the $55,407 balance was\nequal to $3.22 on the preferred shares\ncompared with requirements of $2.50\nfor the period.\nBERMUDA CLIPPER DAMAGED\nIN COLLISION\nHAMILTON, Bermuda, Sept. 16\n(CP Cable)\u2014Pan American Airway's Bermuda Clipper was damaged slightly today when she collided with a haulage tractor while\nbeing launched from her hangar\nhere. The plane will have to undergo repairs before she takes to\nthe air again.\nDOUGLAS FIRST TO\nFIND GOLD IN B.C.\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 16 (CP) -Dr.\nT.-A. Rickard of Victoria, former\neditor of mining publications in\nEngland and the United States, today told a luncheon meeting here\nhe had definitely determined that\nDavid Douglas, Scottish botanist,\nwas the first white man to discover\ngold in British Columbia.\nDr. Rickard, addressing delegates\nto the joint convention of the Canadian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy and the American Institute\nof Mining and Metallurgical Engineers, said the famed scientist after\nwhom the Pacific coast's Douglas\nfir tree was named, made his find\nat Lake Okanagan in the interior\nin 1833.\nMrs. Easlon\nof Fernie Is\nLaid al Rest\nFERNIE, B.C.\u2014The funeral of\nMrs. James Easton was held Saturday afternoon, and was largely attended. Mrs. Easton who was 38\nyears of age, died in the Fernie\nhospital late Wednesday night following an illness of several months.\nMrs. Easton who had been a resident of Fernie for the past 22 years,\nwas born in England. She is survived by her husband, two daughters, two sons, her father, and three\nsisters.\nJ. H. Matthews Co.,\nTrail, Incorporated\nVICTORIA, Sept 16 (CP)-An-\nother new company to carry on operations in the newly discovered\nVancouver Island gold field at Ze-\nballos river was incorporated this\nweek. It is the Spud Valley Gold\nMines Ltd. (N.P.L) with a capitalization of $1,000,000. It is the third\ncompany formed recently to undertake development in the' new field\nwhich has had sensational showings.\nOther firms incorporated during\nthe week follow:\nThe British Columbia Veterans'\nWorkshops Ltd., 50,000 shares, no\npar value, Vancouver.\nIndependent Supply Co., Ltd,\n$10,000, Vancouver.\nAnderson Bailiffs Ltd., $50,000,\nVancouver.\nJ. H. Matthews Co., Ltd., $10,000,\nTrail.\nEvergreen Forest Products Ltd.,\n$50,000, Vancouver\nTwo societies were granted statutes:\nThe Westbank Chamber of Commerce, Westbank.\nThe Nursery Craft Centre, Vancouver\nCANADIAN U. S. WIRE FLASHES\nChasing three boys who had escaped from a training school, a\npoliceman was drowned in the Severn.\nA CITY OF 250,000 WOULD RESULT IF\nAll CANADA'S MINES IN ONE PLACE\nMiners and Families Would Total 156,000;\nil 7,000 Tradesmen Needed; Thousands of\nOthers Needed for Various Work\n(By John Dauphlnee)\n(Canadian Press Staff Writer)\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 16 (CP) -\nThe Dominion bureau of statistics\ntoday grouped in fancy aH persons\ndirectly concerned with Canada's\nmining industry\u2014and made a city\nbigger -hap Vancouver1.\nThe bureau's imaginary city was\ndescribed in a paper read to the\njoint convention of the Canadian\nInstitute of Mining and Metallurgy\nand the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers by\nfr\nstiffness;\nPlenty of Mlntrd's veil\n*ubb*d in soon \u25a0\u25a0!\u25a0 you4\nij rich..    Batfa* iha sore part\nI]\nV   34\ni warm water btfot* yoiH\nYoufi fcon Ilmbar up I\nOEEiER\n_^f*'ff!f,tiw\n'IME\nDr. A. Wilson of the federal department of mines and resources.\n\"Minopolis\" was made by\nlifting all the mines of Canada\nto a single spot, and bringing to\nthat spot all workers In the business of mining and their depend-\nents,\n17,000 TRADESMEN NEEDED\nThe bureau said miners and their\nfamilies in the new city would number about 156,000, and 17,000 tradesmen would be needed to supply\nthem with food, clothing, shelter\nand amusement.\nPersonal service would include\n2000 men and 4000 women; and\nclerical and miscellaneous workers\nwould number 10,000.\nAnother 1400 men and women\nwould be needed to handle insurance and financial matters, and representatives in professional work\nwould lift the population to 236,000.\nWidows of miners, pensioners and\nother people not gainfully occupied\nwould bring the total population of\n\"Minopolis\" to 250,000, \"the third\nlargest city in Canada.\"\n\u25a0 (Vancouver's population at the\nlast civic census was roughly 246,-\n000.)\nDepositors'  5\nsavings\nProtection of depositors'\nsavings is a first principle\nin banking. The wisdom\nof this rule is taught by\ncenturies of banking\nhistory, and is more\nnecessary than ever today\n... We invite your savings.\nImperial Bank of Canada\nHEAD OFFICEt      -     TORONTO\nCanltal and Reserves i SI5.000.000\nCOW GIVES BIRTH TO\nSEXTUPLETS; ALL NORMAL\nCLARKSBURG, W. Va. (AP)-\nA Holsteln cow at Pieter Poth's\ndairy Is the mother of an entire\nherd of calves. She gave birth to\nsextuplett nine days ago and all\nare reported physically perfect.\nAnother Holsteln and a Guernsey\nare helping out with the feeding\nproblem.\nFISH FAIL TO BITE\nBUT HE GET8 FINE CATCH\nINDIANAPOLIS (AP)\u2014The fish\nfailed to bite, but Charles Hough,\n47, came home with a heavy \"catch\".\nHe said he dropped his line into\nWhite river and pulled out a blue\nflag, two hydraulic jacks, a box of\nbolts and crews, four sticks of tin\ngrease and a brass railroad bushing.\nWOMAN TO TEACH ON\nICE-BOUND ISLAND\nHANCOCK, Mich. (AP)\u2014Mrs\nGordon MacKenzle, 25-year.old\nblonde of Larlum, Mich., Is going\nto undertake what no man could\nbe found to do\u2014spend six winter\nmonths teaching two children on\nIcebound Isle Royale. She was\n'engaged by Keweenaw county to\nteach the two children of Holger\nJohnson, a fisherman, the only\nschool-age youngsters there She\nwill receive $50 a month.\n7I\/.-YEAR-OLD GIRL\nON WAY TO ENGLAND\nNANAIMO, B.C. (CP)\u2014Patricia\nCordell, seven-and-a-half-year-old\nglobe-trotter, is en route to her\nhome at London, Eng. Patricia, who\ncame here a year ago, will travel\nfrom Montreal to Southampton\nalone. Mr. and Mrs Oscar Dey of\nNanaimo will accompany here to\neastern Canada.\nSEIZE BOOTLEG\nPOTATOES AT COAST\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 British\nColumbia Coast Vegetable Marketing board Is holding 110 sasks\nof allegedly contraband potatoes,\nseized as they were beng \"bootlegged\" Into Vancouver without\nauthority from the marketing or\nganlzatlon.\nVANCOUVER MIS8\nASSAULTED BY MAN\nVANCOUVER (CP)-Miss Anne\nDoron is in hospital suffering a\npossible fractured jaw and other\nsevere face injuries sustained when\nshe was assaulted by an unidentified man,\u2014\nTRUCK DRIVER HELD ON\nMANSLAUGHTER CHARGE\nCHILLIWACK, B.C. (CP) \u2014\nJohn Russell Hill, alleged driver\nof a truck which struck and fatally Injured six-year-old Georgia Collins, Is held on a charge\nof manslaughter,\nGIRL COW-PUNCHER\nHURT AT RODEO\nARMSTRONG, B.C. (CP)-Patri-\ncia Robillard, Chase, B C, girl cow-\npuncher, is in hospital with head\ninjuries suffered when she was\nthrown from a bucking steer during\na rodeo here.\nLINER   PRESIDENT\nHOOVER  ARRIVES\nSAN FRANCISCO (AP)-The\nshrapnel-scarred liner President\nHoover is In port here. She arrived bearing the body of Lionel\nHaskell, steward's aide, killed In\nthe Shanghai bombing of the vessel August 30, and 300 passengers\nwho \"were glad to be home at\nlast.\"\nMRS. JOE  LOUIS\nAT VANCOUVER\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014Mrs. Trotter, usually known as Mrs. Joe\nLouis, arrived in Vancouver with\n814 members of the Negros' Colored\nBaptist convention with whom she\nmet recently in Los Angeles. Joe\nbeing in the public eye as much as\nhe is, Mrs. Louis said she was travelling incognito in order to avoid\nunnecessary publicity.\nBONUS FOR CREW IF\nSHIP IN WAR-ZONE\nSEATTL. (AP)\u2014Settlement of\nthe dispute between seafaring\nunions and the American Mail\nline over the payment of China\n\"war-zone bonuses\" to crew members, a compromise agreement,\npermitted the President Jefferson,\nwhich had been tied up here three\ndays, to get steam up and prepare\nto sail. By the agreement, line\nofficials said, the company agreed\nthat If the liner is sent to Shanghai or any part of the war-zone\nby the state department, the officials will assist the crew in obtaining a bonus from the government\nVERNON WOMAN DIE8\nAT VICTORIA\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 Mrs. Mary Alice Cox, 70-year-old resident of Vernon, B. C, died in hospital here following a short illness. She had\nbeen visiting a daughter here.\nBARKER AND COX TRIAL\nIN 8PRING\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014Mr. Justice H. B. Robertson traversed to\nthe spring assizes the trial of Rus-\nsel E. Barker and William Cox,\ncharged with conspiracy In connection with the \"salting\" of Hed-\nley Amalgamated Gold Mine.\n6-YEAR-OLD KILLED\nBY TRUCK\nCHILLIWACK, B. C. (CP)-Six-\nycar-old Georgina .Collins, just finished her second day at school, was\nfatally injured here when struck by\na truck driven by John Russell Hill,\nof Camp River, Chilliwack.\nTWO BURGLARS ESCAPE\nIN WILD CHASE\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014Two burglars who evaded capture after \u2022\nwild chase through south Vancouver, are being sought by police for theft of an automobile\nand breaking and entering a gasoline service station, Constables\nR. M. Booth and F. R. 8pencer\nchased the two men, who were\ndriving \u2022 stolen auto belonging to\nC. H. Fraser, until they abandoned the car and escaped on feet\nSTEAL 600-POUND ANCHOR\nVANCOUVER (CP) -Hard-working thieves are being sought by police tor the theft of a 600-pound\nanchor, 150-pound capstan, a manhole cover and a number of tools\nfrom the old north Vancouver ferry\nin False creek.\nONE KILLED\nNEAR ENDERBY\nENDERBY, B. C. (CP) \u2014 One\nman Is dead and two are In hospital here with undetermined In-\njuries following the plunge of an\nautomobile from the highway.\nThe dead: John Henry Hull, 24,\nof Grlndrod, B. C. The Injured:\nFritz Wolf, 30, of Grlndrod; Alex\nKohut, 20, of Grlndrod,\nVANCOUVER MAN DIES\nON HOLIDAY\nKAMLOOPS, B. C. (CP)- Death\nended the vacation of Robert John\nCeles, 37, of Vancouver, in hospital\nhere. Returning to Vancouver from\na holiday at McBride. B. C, Coles\nwas taken from the train here and\nrushed to hospital where he died a\nfew hours later.\nTO \"CLEAN UP\"\nCOAST CHINATOWN\nVANCOUVER, (CP) \u2014 Mayor\nG. C. Miller says he Is out \"to\nclean up Chinatown.\" Mayor Miller's statement followed cancellation by city licence Inspector H.\nA. Urquhart of three cafe licences held by establishments In that\npart of Vancouver populated predominantly by Chinese.\nCYCLI8T8 REACH\nVANCOUVER\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Two Winnipeg cyclists have reached here after pedalling and pushing their\nbicycles all the way from the prairie\ncity. Jack Cady, 20, and Ernest\nHeath, 21, arrived in Vancouver, just\n26 days after leaving Winnipeg.\nTHREE M0NTH8 FOR\nWORTHLESS CHECKS\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Pleading guilty to charges of passing\nfive worthless checks, Maurice G.\nGordeau was sentenced to three\nmonths In Jail on each charge In\npolice court\nARTHUR ELLI8 TO\n8TAY IN FIELD\nOTTAWA (CP) - Arthur Ellis,\nM. L. A., has announced he would\nrun as a \"straight Conservative\" in\nOttawa south in the October 6 Ontario election. Hon Earl Rowe, provincial Conservative leader, announced Controller George H. Dunbar would be official candidate, but\nEllis said he would remain.in the\nfield.\nOVER600NEW\nSTUDENTS AT U. B. C.\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014 President\nof University of British Columbia,\nL, S. Klinck, welcoming class of\narts '41, said, \"we are at a loss to\nknow how to accommodate all\nour students this year.\" More than\n600 new students will be attending University this year, It was\nstated by the registrar's office.\nAbsolute prohibition of Initiation\nfor Incoming freshmen Is now the\nrule,\nFORMER HIGH-WHEEL\nCHAMP CYCLIST DEAD\nVANCOUVER (CP)-James Milne\nHarper, onetime international champion high-wheel cyclist, is dead here,\naged 77. Harper won the international amateur and professional title\nin the 25-mile high-wheel cycling\ncompetition in Rochester', N. Y., in\n1884.\nELECTRIC PLANT FOR\nTHE CARIBOO\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014A 35,000\nhorse-power hydro-electric plant\nto furnish power for hydraulic\nmining operations In the Cariboo\ndistrict Is to be Installed next\nspring, C. F. Burns, consulting en\nglneer for the American Develop\nment company, said here,\nFruit Market on\nPrairie Steady\nCALGARY, Alta. \u2014The local fruit\nand vegetable market has been fairly steady during the week. There\nhas been a good demand for peaches of commercial size. Unfortunately\na large percentage of arrivals from\nB. C. are running 84's and 90's.\nPlums and prunes are slow sale.\nWealthy apples are showing fair\ncolor and moving fairly welL The\ntomato market is still unsettled\nwith wholesale price ranging from\n70c to 80c a crate. There is practically no wholesale movement of\npotatoes. A heavy crop is in prospect throughout central and southern Alberta. The onion crop in\nMedicine Hat and Lethbridge areas\nis now being harvested and shows\nexcellent quality and grade. There\nwill be between 25 and 30 cars to\nship from these districts.\nEDMONTON, Alta. \u2014 Business is\ngood and promises to be better. Apples, crabapples, pears and peaches\nare moving well. B. C Hale and El-\nberta peaches are arriving. The\nquality, pack and appearance is excellent. These are selling No. 1 at\n$1.40 to $1.45, No. 2, $1.35 to $1.40;\nassorted No. 1, $1.20 to $1.30 and No.\n2, $1.10 to $1.20 box.Apples. Gravenstein and Wealthy, C grade, $1.75\nto $1.85 box. Crabapples, Hyslop.\nfancy, $1.35 to $1.45, Transcendent\n$1.25 to $1.35 box. The movement\nof plums is only fair although quality and pack good. The quality of\ntomatoes now arriving is good and\nmovement being maintained; semis\n75c to 65c 4-basket crate and greens\n90c to $1.00 box. Cantaloup sales\nslow. Corn and cucumbers are abundant.\nMERCURY STAYS\nHIGH THURSDAY\nNelson's \"heat wave\" continued\nlt\u00ab march Thursday as the mercury\nagain soared to 78, the same as Wednesday. Old Sol beamed down from\na sky lightly sprinkled with white\nclouds for nine and one half hours.\nMinimum mark held the spotlight as much as the maximum, for\nagain it was one degree higher than\nthe previous day, at 50.\nWould Control\nCopper, Zinc and\nLead Marketing\nVANCOUVER, Sept 16 (CP) -\nNorth American producers of copper, zinc and lead should deny\nthemselves the privilege of large\n\"temporary profits\" from their\nmines and submit to a voluntary\nlong-term policy of marketing control, W. A Carrothers, chairman of\nthe British Columbia Economic\nCouncil, told a convention of Canadian and United States mining\nmen here today.\nDr. Carrothers was speaking to\ndelegates at morning business sessions of the joint annual meeting\nbeing held here this week by the\nCanadian Institute of Mining and\nMetallurgy and the American In-\nsitute of Mining and Metallurgical\nEngineers.\n\"It would appear that the non-\nferrous metals provide an admirable\nfield for intelligent market control,\"\nDr. Carrothers suggested.\n\"The likely use of. these metals\nover a period may be estimated\nwith reasonable accuracy but the\npossible supply of the metals is\na less calcuable iactor. Conaequetly\nit would appear that an intelligent\ncontrol of supply in relation to possible uses on these metals would be\ndesirable.\"\nN. W. T. RICH IN\nMINERALS, SAYS\nDR. (. CAMSELL\nUndiscovered Deposits\na Challenge to the\nAdventurous\nVANCOUVER, Sept 16 (CP) -\nThe Northwest Territories, covering\nmore than one-third of all Canada,\nhas undiscovered mineral deposits\nto challenge the adventurous spirit\nof the explorer and the prospector\nfor many years, Dr. Charles Camsell.\ndeputy minister of mines and resources for Canada, said here tonight.\nDr. Camsell was addressing the\njoint convention here of the Canadian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy and the American Institute of\nMining and Metallurgical Engineers.\nHe said the success of mining\ndevelopment already has to its credit in the area \"must make us regard the Northwest Territories not\nas invested with snow and ice but\nrather as a plant that is burgeoning\nin the spring.\"\nDr. Camsell who Is also commissioner of the Territories, said' the\nairplane had greatly extended both\nthe period and range of the mineral\nprospector's activities in the far\nnorth.\nTopographical and geological\nmapping was speeded up when the\n'plane broadened the prospector's\nfield of activity, but as yet hardly\nany intensive prospecting has been\ndone outside the western part of\nthe Territories, except here and\nthere along the Hudson's Bay coast\nand to some slight extent inland.\nDr. Camsell said, however, minerals\nwere known to occur.\nA live shell was found on waste\nground at Clapham.\nImprovement Loans\nin B.C.at$840,000\nOTTAWA, Sept. 16 (CP) -Nearly\n$10,000,000 has been lent under the\nHome Improvement Plan since it\nwas instituted last November. The\ntotal on September 15, Hon. Charles\nDunning, minister of finance said\ntoday, was $0,204,000, an increase of\n$954,000 from August 3.\nTotals by provinces to September\n15 are as follows: Prince Edward\nIsland $87,000; Nova Scotia $622,000;\nNew Brunswick $369,000; Quebec\n$1,837,000; Ontarh) $3,787,000; Manitoba $679,000; Saskatchewan $242,-\n000; Alberta $838,000 and British\nColumbia $840,000.\nNew Denver Man\nWill Be Buried\nCoast Cemetery\nBody of Clarence B. Smith, New\nDenver electrician, who was pinned\nalive under his overturned truck\nnear New Denver for 24 hours, and\nwho died shortly after being found,\nis en route for Vancouver, where\ninterment will take place Saturday,\nIt left Nelson Thursday on the morning train. Mrs. Smith accompanied\nthe body.\nMr. Smith was found beneath his\ntruck Tuesday morning' by a search\nparty, but died about half an hour\nlater in the New Denver hospital.\nHe left for Silverton about noon\nMonday to read light meters and\nnear the \"Bosun Line\" a well-known\nlandmark about two miles from New\nDenver, his truck plunged over a\nhigh embankment.\nBesides his wife, he is survived\nby his motrter and father, Major\nand Mrs. P. H. Smith, and a sister,\nMarjorie, all of Vancouver.\nFruit consumption in Britain is\nincreasing steadily.\nUNDRESS OKAY\nFORBATMUT\nNOTINPUBLII\nThree Transients Are\nSent to jail for\nIt, Creston\nThree transients who took the.\nbath too publicly at Creston htv\nsolved the problem of bed and boar\nat least for two weeks each.\nThe men\u2014John Kemp, Mike Hoi\nlyhow and Rudolph Myres\u2014arrive!\nat Creston from the east via th\nbox car pullman, and that njetho\nof travelling is not conductive to 1\npeaches and cream complexion. \u25a0?\nSo the travellers decided, to.\nobvious reasons, that a bath was (]\norder, and straightway proceede\nto take one. Their mistake lay 1\nchoosing the Creston swimming pot\nfor the ablutions, and in failing t\ntake their swim suits along. It wl\na serious oversight, inasmuch as th!\npool was in full view of two hoim\nand the public highway.\nInformed that three men wtt\nRoman bath tastes were using tt\npool, provincial police took thei\nunder their wing and guided thei\nbefore Col. E. Mallandaine, stlpei\ndiary magistrate at Creston, chari\ning them with vagrancy. They pleat\ned guilty and now are inmates (\nthe provincial jail at Nelson on tw<\nweek sentences.\nNOXACOR\nEtch package contains ipcd-1 feature;\ncertain you get the\nYELLOW TUBE AND PACKAC\nNoaacorn la acid only In tube*. Yoor I\nremoved or money refunded at druf r\"\n35c\u2014ant Nosacom today\nSold at: Mann, Rutherford Co.\nTwo Omagh boys saved a drowning fatality when they brought\nashore an unconscious friend.\nOfhe fyetitti\/ Id j^ett&L\nWEEK-END\nSPECIAL\nFRIDAY    SATURDAY\nSept. 17 Sept. 18\nA Beatty Wash Tub Full\nof Laundry Soap With\nthe Purchase of a\nNew Beatty\nAppliance\nA Complete Laundry Equipment\nSee\nThese\nItLBCSAlNEIl\nBasket\nCLOTHES RACK   HAMPER\nBeatty Washday Accessories bring extra comfort, save time and labor on washday\u2014A Beatty Tub Bench, and your choice of two extra\naccessories with every Washer Sold during this Special\nAPPROVED! ACCEPTED! DEMANDED!\nYour Family Wants You to Get One\nSALE OPENS 9 A.M. FRIDAY FOR TWO DAYS ONLY\nNELSON STORE\n321 BAKER ST., PHONE 91\nTRAIL STORE\n652 WEIR ST., PHONE 70S\n:..*.'.\u25a0,_\u25a0_____..\u25a0 ,_:..: \u00a5\u25a0.\u25a0;:.',__\u25a0;,_,';.\u25a0;.vs;. ,.;. ..;_\u25a0\n.   ._._.,-_,-_.'_.\u25a0 _\u25a0.:..!\u25a0\u25a0.'__..._\u25a0.___..___,.; .._   * ., \u25a0. \u25a0\u25a0 . ' ... :.\u25a0..,-.-.. i, _^_:.._.-\/'>. -..\n\u25a0 '_  Vr   \u25a0 -\n________\n\u25a0'\n mii.iJ.ii.M.\n^snsWSm,\nmm*wmwm\nwmmm%mw\u00aef*mmm$\nmi\nTeams Named for\nEngland-Scotland\nInternational Till\nGLASGOW, Sept. 16 (CP Cable)\n\u2014Already successful against Ireland, the Scottish Football league\nhas chosen a strong team for its\ntussle against the English league's\nrepresentatives at Ibox park, Sept.\n22. The Scots are out to avenge a\n2-0 defeat inflicted by the Englishmen.at Everton last year.\nThe teams:\nScottish League \u2014 Goal, Dawson\n(Hangers); Backs, Hogg (Celtic);\nCarabine (Third Lanark); Halfbacks, Robertson (Kilmarnock),\nDykes (Hearts), Brown (Rangers);\nForwards, Delaney (Celtic), Mc-\nKennan (Partick Tthistle), Stewart\n(Motherwell), Venters (Rangers),\nCaskle (St, Johnston).\nEnglish League \u2014 Goal, Woodley\n(Chelsea); Backs, Sproston (Leeds\nUnited), Barkas (Manchester City);\nHalf-backs, Willingham, Young\n(Huddersfield Town), Bray (Manchester City); Forwards, Matthews\n(Stoke City) Galley (Wolverhampton Wanderers), Steel (Stoke City),\n. Westwood (Bolton Wanderers),\nAshall (Wolverhampton Wanderers).\nMONTREAL WINS\n5-3, IN FIRST\nPLAYOFF\nMONTREAL, Sept. 16 (CP)-\nMontreal Royals ttviight clouted\nout a 5-3 victory over Baltimore\nOrioles in the first game of\ntheir International league semifinal series.\nHarry Smythe yielded Orioles only eight hits in the game,\nfirst of a best-of-seven series.\nScore:\nBaltimore .... 000 010 011\u20143 8 2\nMontreal ..... 110 000 03'\u20145 7 0\nFischer, Matuzak and Crouse;\nSmythe and Hargrave.\nOLD COUNTRY\nSOCCER\nLONDON, Sept. 16 (CP Cable)\u2014\nResults of English soccer and rugby games today follow:\nEnglish League\u2014Div. 1\nBrentford 2, Blackpool 4.\nDiv. II.\nNorwich City 1, Aston Villa 0.\nSheffield Wednesday 0, Totten-\n'ham Hotspurs 3.\nENGLISH RUGBY LEAGUE\nBarrow 2, Swinton 5.\nYorkshire cup\u2014First round replay:\nHalifax 7, Wakefield Trinity 6.\nNational\nW L Pet\nNew York  .32 52 .612\nChicago .'-   80 57 .584\nSt Louis  -    73 63 .537\nPittsburgh    -   72 65 .526\nBoston       69 68 .504\nBrooklyn          61 76 .445\nPhiladelphia       54 81 .400\nKlncinnati    53 82 .303\nAmerican\nW L Pet\nNew York  91 44 .674\nDetroit      80 56 .588\nChicago      79 57 .581\nBoston  71 61 .538\nCleveland  72 64 .529\nWashington  64 72 .471\nPhiladelphia   44 90 .328\nIt Louis    41 96 .299\nFIGHTS\nBy The Associated Press\nGlasgow, Len  Harvey, England.\nechnically   knocked   out   Manuel\n.brew, Scotland, (14), (light heavy-\n\u25a0eights). i\nCELTIC-HEARTS\nGAME FEATURE\nGLASGOW, Sept. 16 (CP Cable)\n\u2014Dundee's spectacular thrust in the\nScottish football was given an unexpected set-back this week when\nthe Forfarshire club went under\n3-2 against Clyde for its first defeat\nof the season in seven starts. Hangers now share leadership with the\ndoughty squad from the Firth of\nTay with 12 points, but the latter\nhas a game id hand.\nDundee should at least hold parity with the Light Blues after Saturday's games. Queen's Park are\nvisitors at Dundee and the amateurs\ncannot hope for much luck, while\nRangers go to Ayr where the United,\nup from tlie secon division, are playing well in senior company.\nThe feature match of the day Is\nlikely to be staged in Glasgow,\nwhere Hearts meet Celtic at Park-\nhead. The Edinburgh team jumped\ninto third place, one point ahead\nof the Celts, with a 4-0 victory over\nSt. Mlrren yesterday.\nBatting\nLeaders\nBy the Associated Press\nGabby Hartnett of the Cubs dropped out of baseball's batting Big Six\nyesterday, leaving Johnny Mize of\nthe Cardinals in sole possession of\nthird place in the National league.\nMize hit two-for-eight to slip two\npoints to .350, while Hartnett went\nhitless in three chances and fell to\n.349.\nThe leaders,  (top three in each\nleague):\nG AB R H Pet.\nGehringer, Ti 126 492 120 180 .384\nMedwick, Card 139 562 103 211 .375\nP. Waner, Pi.... 137 555 83 197 .355\nGehrig, Yanks.. 138 510 125 180 .353\nDiMaggio, Yank 132 547 135 192 .351\nMize, Cards   128 494   85 173 .350\nREMEMBER WHEN?\nBy The Canadian  Press\nVancouver's Jimmy McLarnin regained his world's welterweight\nboxing title after 15 slam-bang\nrounds with black-haired Barney\nRoss at New York three years ago\ntoday. Beaten four months previously by Ross, McLarnin gained\nthe nod on a split decision. They\nmet again in 1935, the Chicago Italian winning on points.\nSPORTS ROUNDUP...\nBy EDDIE BRIETZ\n(Associated Press Sports Writer)\nNEW YORK, Sept. 16 (AP). -\nHews: The Reds already have decid-\nsd on their 1938 manager, but will\nnot name him until after the world's\nleries. ... (Don't be surprised if\ncomes from the minors). . . .\nWcago's stadium may get a Tommy\n'arr-John Henry Lewis match this\nwinter . . . when the U.S.L.T.A.'s\n\u25a0anking committee sits itself down\nin December it likely will rate Don\nBudge, Bobby Riggs, Frankie Parker and Bryan Grant Jr., in that\norder, .. . Mrs. James J. Braddock\ndoesn't want her Jim to fight Max\nBaer October 29 because one of\nJim's ears, banked up in the Louis\nlight, isn't completely mended. . . .\nBelieve-It-or-Not Dept.: umpire Mart\nCleary of the New York-Penn league\nretains his amateur standing by\nworking for nothing.. . . Every salary check is passed on to charity.\nBut when he has an off day\nthe wolves give him the works just\nlike they do the pros.\nComic page: James J. Johnston,\nsoon to be aired at Madison Square\nGarden, will make his new fight\nclub the 30th Century Athletic club\n'because it will be a thousand years\nahead of the other crowd.\" ... He\ncould have called it the 21st Century Athletic club and still have\nbeen 100 years to the good. ... If\nthe Giants get into the world series,\nhighest paid player will be Ed Mad-\njeski, bull pen catcher, ... Ed has\ncaught only nine innings this season. . . . But on a basis of $5000 cut\nhe would collect about $555.55 for\neacli inning's work. . . . Joe McCarthy avers the Yanks are no better than even money in the world\nseries, no matter who they meet,\nand solemnly adds: \"\u2014if we make\nit.\"\nMore news: Looks like a couple\nof guys named Joe\u2014Medwick and\nDiMaggio\u2014have the most valuable\nplayer awards sewed up this year.\nBottom of the barrel: Tommy Farr,\noft on an exhibition tour of Canada,\nsaw his first wrestling match the\nother night and laughed his head\noff at the antics of the burpers. . . .\nFreddie Steele made the 13th defence of his title against Ken Overlin last week, but in Freddie's book\nit still is the 12th He thinks 13\nis unlucky. . . . Mike Jacobs can\nlook for competition from San Francisco, Seattle and mebbe Paris when\nhe tries to book Freddie with the\nFred Apostoli-Marcel Thil winner.\n... Mr. Referee, blow that whistle.\nOHN DEWAR a SONS LTD..\nPa,lh, Scotland .\nnct-oopi BAtiT nrm, meson, a. c\u2014rniDAY MOFimna, rnri, \u201e, --\u00ab\u25a0\nSPORTING NEWS\nRookie Lengthens\nGiants'Lead When\nDowns Pirates 3-0\nLeaders Up Three and\nHalf Games; Reds\nLick Chicago\nPITTSBURGH, Sept 16 (AP)\u2014\nThe New York Giants boosted their\nNational league lead to 3% games\ntoday by blanking their favorite\nstooges, the Pirates, 3-0, behind the\nsix-hit pitching of rookie Cliff Melton.\nThe lanky left-hander, chalking\nup his 17th victory of the season,\nbested another freshman .linger,\nJim Tobin, in a tight pitching\nduel, through the timely hitting efforts of his mates in their two scoring chances. It was Melton's first\nwhitewashing accomplishment.\nThe win, coupled with the Cubs'\ndefeat at the hands of the Boston\nBees, added a full game to the Giants' lead in the pennant parade,\nand made it tougher than ever for\nthe faltering Chicago outfit to catch\nup.\nThe game marked the end ,of the\nseason series between the Giants\nand the Pirates, with the New Yorkers walking off with the lopsided\nmargin of 16 victories to six.\nNow York    3   9   0\nPittsburgh       0   6   1\nMelton and Mancuso; Tobin and\nTodd.\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\n\u00a3 :\u2014~\nTURNER SHUT8 OUT\nCHICAGO CUBS 7-0\nCHICAGO, Sept. 16 (AP)-The\nrapidly fading Chicago Cubs fell\nto their lowest position in the Na>\ntional league since May today as\nJim Turner, one of Boston's young-\nold rookie stars, shut them out with\nspven hits while the Bees piled up\n14 for a 7-0 victory.\nThe decision gave Turner his 18th\nwin of the season, Boston the series,\nthree games to one, and as the pace-\nsetting New York Giants defeated\nPittsburgh, put Chicago three and\none-half games behind the league\nleaders with only 17 games to play.\nManager Charlie Grimm. trotted\nout five pitchers in an effort to\ncompensate for the Cubs' lack of\npunch in the pinches. The Bees\nscored on three of them\nThe Cubs stranded nine runners\nin the first six innings.\nThe victory Was the Bees' ninth\nin their 22 games with the Cubs this\nyear.\nBoston  \u00ab.--.  7 14   Q\nChicago    0   7   2\nTurner and Lope.; Lee, Logan,\nParmelee, Shoun and Hartnett.\nDODGER8 AND REDS\nSPLIT DOUBLE BILL\nCINCINNATI, Sept. 16 (AP) -\nThe Brooklyn Dodgers and Cincinnati Reds split their second straight\ndoubleheader today as they wound\nup their series.\nWaite Hoyt, staked to a five-run\nfirst inning, easily won the opener\nfor Broklyn, 8-5. Singing Joe Cas-\ncarella wound up strong after a\nshaky start and hurled the Reds to\na 5-1 decision in the nightcap.\nThe split today gave the Dodgers\nfour of the six games in the series.\nFirst game;\nBrooklyn       Ill  !\nCincinnati       5   0   5\nHoyt and Spencer; Hallahan,\nGehrman and Lombardi.\nSecond game:\nBrooklyn    1   7   1\nCincinnati    5   8   1\nFrankhouse and Phelps; Cascarel-\nla and Campbell.\nDOUBLE TRIUMPH  FOR\nCARDS;  DOWN  PHIL8 '\nST LOUIS, Sept. 16 (AP)\u2014Scoring five runs in a big second inning,\nthe Cardinals coasted to an 8-1\nvictory in the second game of a\ndoubleheader with the Phillies today behind the effective pitching\nof recruit Howard Krist from Rochester. Lefty Bob Weiland trimmed\nthe Phils in the opener, 6-2.\nFirst game:\nPhiladelphia     2  8  3\nSt. Louis     6   8   0\nMulcahy and Atwood; Weiland,\nRyba and Ogrodowski.\nSecond game:\nPhiladelphia      1   8   3\nSt.  Louis       8 11   0\nKelleher and Grace, Stephenson;\nKrist and Bremer.\nLast Minute Rally\nBrings Victory to\nNatal Nine, 12-10\nNATAL, B.C. \u2014Surging forward\nin the last few innings of an exhibition baseball fixture here Sunday, the Natal Miners drove the\nElk Valley Senators to defeat, 12-10.\nFeaturing the game was a fluke\nhome run by J. Kalrichak with two\non in the eighth Inning which proved to be the winning runs for the\nNatal Miners.\nThe game witnessed by a large\ngallery of spectators was umpired-\nby J. Josay. of Natal.\nFor the Miners J. Halko slow-ball\nartist lasted but three innings before being replaced by T. Krall\nafter ten runs were scored. Krall\nallowed but one hit for the remainder of the game. For the losers E.\nWildman pitched the first five innings leaving the game with a 10-3\nlead before being relieved by F.\nBrandies.\nThe linups:\nNatal Miners\u2014Katrichak, T. An-\ndrolick, White, P. Chala, T. Krall,\nA. Androlick, J. Krall, S. Chala,\nJ. Halko.\nElk Valley Senators\u2014Rothel, Ger-\ngel, Thompson, Sadlish, Little Meg-\nale, Ebcrts, Krause, Wildman and\nBrandies,\nR.   H.'E.\nNatal Miners   12   15   1\nElk Valley Senators 10   10  2\nFop Girl Softball Star\nThe Lauriente trophy to be presented to the girl attaining highest\nbatting average in the Trail girls' softball loop. Four young ladies are\nrunning a close race for the handsome bronze trophy to date. They\nare Sadie Jones and Eliza Edwards, Maroons; Hazel Mawdsley, Traders and Cora. Miller, Jimmies.\nGomez Drops Indians From Pennant\nParade as Gives Yanks 1-0 Triumph\nLefty Runs Up 19th\nWin; Browns Drop\nAnother Game\nNEW YORK, Sept. 16 (AP)\u2014Lefty\nGomez breezed in with his 19th victory of the year today, a three-hit\nshutout that gave the Yankees an\n8-0 victory over the Cleveland Indians and eliminated the tribe from\nthe pennant chase.\n\"El Goofo\" gave up a single to Hal\nTrosky in the second, another to\nBruce Campbell in the fifth and one\nto Frank Pytlak in the eighth. Outside of that, he was on top all the\nway. He fanned seven, gave up only one walk ond allowed only one\nman to reach third.\nHis mates, collecting 10 hits off\nWillis Hudlin and a couple of other\nIndian flingers, and aided by three\nCleveland errors, sewed up the\ngame early and made it a cinch for\nLefty after the first two frames.\nThe game ended the season series\nbetween the two clubs, with the\nYanks showing 15 victories te seven\ndefeats.\nCleveland    0    3  3\nNew York    8   10   1\nHudlin, Brown, Wyatt and Pytlak; Gomez and Dickey.\nKELLEY BACK IN FORM,\nWALLOPS BROWNS 4-3\nPHILADELPHIA, Sept. 16 (AP)\n\u2014Showing the form that enabled\nhim to win 15 games last year, Harry\nKelley pitched and batted the Athletics to a 4-3 victory over the St.\nLouis Browns today.\nKelley held the visitors to six hits\nand would have had a shutout but\nfor an eror by Newsome in the third\nthat paved the way for three unearned runs.\nSt. Louis   3  6  0\nPhiladelphia      4   7   3\nKnott and Guiliani; Kelley and\nHayes.\nCHUCKER'S CLOUTING\nHELP8 SENATORS WIN\nWASHINGTON, Sept. 16 (AP) -\nJimmy De Shong's hitting helped\nhim to hang up his 13th pitching\nvictory of the season today as the\nSenators defeated Detroit 7-6.\nDe Shong, who was blasted for 14\nhits, drove across two.of Washington's runs, tecludlng the winning\ntally in the seventh off Jake Wade,\nthird of the four Tiger twirlers. De\nShong's  single   off   Wade  scored\nrookie Jimmy Bloodworth.\nDetroit    6   14   0\nWashington    7   15   0\nLawson, Wade, Poffenberger, De\nShong and R. Ferrell.\nTOLEDO IS BEATEN\nTOLEDO, 0, Sept 16 (AP)-The\nMud Hens slipped a game behind\nMilwaukee Brewers in their playoff\nseries here tonight when the Brewers won the third game 11-4 before\n4168 fans.\nMilwaukee   001010 0 000-1111   0\nToledo   000 0 12 001- 4 15   2\nA. Johnson and Brenzel; Trout,\nCohen, Nelson, Nelson, Sorrell and\nFrankovitch.\nToday Deadline\nfor Qualifiers\nin Tourney Golf\nJust one day remains for Nelson\nball wallopers to qualify for the\nclub's singles championship tourneys and competition for the Apple-\nyard-Lowe and Ruth Armstrong\nrose bowl, for all cards must be in\nthe hands of the Nelson* Golf and\nCountry club match committee by\nseven tonight to enable the draws to\nbe made.\nOpening Saturday, the tourney\nwill, continue over ihe week-end, to\nbe followed by a week's layoff. Play\nwill be resumed on the following\nSunday, September 26.\nPlay in the ladies' event begins\nSaturday morning, but does not recommence until Sunday afternoon.\nThe men open competitive play\nSaturday afternon, continue Sunday and conclude on the following\nSunday,  September 26.\nWith the tournament golf nearlng\nits season's close, keen competition\nis anticipated in this double meet.\nTwo low handicap men, Gordon\nAllan and Walter (Ducky) Duckworth, who did not participate in\nthe Labor day tournament, are entered for the coming men's event.\nLADY GOLFER8\nLady golfers who have qualified\nto date follow: Mrs. B. Townshend,\n89; Mis. Harold Lakes, 90; Miss Peggy McLeod, Miss Connie Smith, and\nMrs. Robert Walton.\nMen qualifiers to date are: Bob\nWatson, 72; H. W. Seamon, 89; L. S.\nBradley, 77; R. E. Horton, 86; Roy\nPollard, 77; L. A. McPhail, 86; B,\nTownshend, 79; C. H. Stark, 84; F.\nG. Schroeder, 97; Harold Lakes, 75;\nOtto Gill of Ymir, 90; Dr. H. H.\nMacKenzie, 87; Harold Putnam, 96;\nB. Sutherland, 93; F. Weir, 95; J: G.\nAllan, 72; Ken McBride, 76; Carl\nCarlson, 79; John Fraser, 91; Paul\nLncoln, 86; Blan Marley, 89; Don\nClark, 86; Gordon Roynon, 88; G.\nAllan, 87; Vic Owen, 80; Walter\nDuckworth, 74; B. Lambert, 88; Jim\nCherrington, 88; A. M. Parker, 83;\nand Jim Nicholson of Sheep Creek.\nArmstrong Wins\nin Fourth Round\nNEW YORK, Sept. 16 (AP) -\nHenry Armstrong, Los Angeles negro featherweight, continued his\nsweep through the east tonight with\na four-round knockout of Johnny\nDefoe of New York, before 10,000\ncustomers in Madison Square garden. Armstrong weighed 132% and\nDefoe 127%.\nBilled as a 10-rounder, the fight\nwas stopped by Referee Johnny\nMcAvoy after 1:12 of the fourth as\na badly beaten Defoe staggered to\nhis feet after his sixth knockdown\nHoirvc Runs\n o-a\u2014\nBy the Associated Press\nYesterday's homers: Moses, Hayes,\nAthletics, 1; Wasdell, Senators, 1.\nThe leaders: DiMaggio, Yankees,\n42; Greenberg, Tigers, 35; Gehrig,\nYankees, 34; Foxx, Red Sox, 33; Ott,\nGiants, 31; York, Tigers, 31.\nLeague totals: American 730, National 582, total 1312.\nMIMICO DOWNS\nTERRIERS, 13-9\nMIMICO, Ont., Sept 16 (CP) -\nMimlco's Mountaineers were still\nin the hunt today for the Ontario\nAmateur Lacrosse association senior\ntitle but must take two straight\ngames from the champion Orillia\nTerriers to win the crown.\nMimico scored Its first win 13-9\nlast night in the best-of-five series after Orillia had won the two\nopening battles. The fourth game\n\u25a0will be played at Orillia Friday.\nShooting at the Babe's Crown\nBy BURNLEY\nTOP   *\nOvSSERS\nIn the Majors\nCLAY BRYANT\nBy WALTER JOHNS\nCentral Press Canadian Sports\nWriter\nThe \"Frank Merriwell' of the\nminors, Claiborne Henry Bryant, is\none of the big reasons the Chicago\nCubs are in first place in the National league. Bryant, right-handed\npitcher, is one of the league's leading slabmen, having tossed in seven\nvictories against one defeat.\nBryant, who came up in mid-\nseason two years ago, from New\nOrleans, not only did great work\non the mound in the minors, but\nalso at bat. In 1933 he pitched\n10 wins for Zanesville against nine\ndefeats, and played the outfield, batting a huge .378. One day against\nDayton he socked three homers and\ntwo singles.\nIn 1934, against Little Rock, he\npitched a scoreless duel for 11 innings and then poled a homer in the\n11th to win th game.\nBryant, who stands nearly six\nfeet three inches, and weighs 195\npounds, was born in Lynchburg,\nVa\u201e in ljll. He started his minor\nleague career with New (Jrleans,\nwas shifted to Zanesville and then\nback to the Pelicans.\nHe pitched in 12 games with the\nCubs last season and then was sent\nto Birmingham, where he participated in 22. He showed good form\nin the spring training session this\nseason, and has proved he was worth\nthe chance Charlie Grimm took.\nVictoria Results\nWILLOWS PARK, Victoria, Sept.\n16 (CP)\u2014Race results:\nFirst race, six furlongs, 30 yards:\nSilumo (Cox) 9.70 3.35 3.35\nLove Us (Wilbourn) 2.70 2,75\nSI Green (Duncal) 5.10\nTime  1.17  1-5.  Also ran: Black\nWhit, Mar Tee, Princess Sally, Nurse\nSimony. Ladyfier.\nSecond race, 5% furlongs:\nSocial (Craigyle) 7.55 3.50 2.60\nEvelyn May (Russell) 3.15 2.45\nKite (Sporri) 2.75\nTime 1.08 3-5. Also ran: Hillstream,\nCandid, Santa Anita, Lout March,\nGypsophila.\nThird race, 5V. furlongs:\nCerasus Lady (Wilbourn) 4.85 2.95\n2.50\nUmpire (Craig) 3.10 2.50\nBrown Bonnet (Holecko) 3.05\nTime 1.08 4-5. Also ran: Gertie C;\nLittle Boy Blue, San Anselmo, Thril-\nlowisp, Lumberman.\nDaily double paid $14.45.\nFourth race, six furlongs, 30 yards:\nWrackdale Kelly) 6.60 3.30 3.20\nEthel Star (Simpson) 3.20 3.20\nThe Miss (Cox) 6.90\nTime  1.18.  Also  ran:  Instigator,\nDistress Signal, Booster Twist, Thunder Hawk, Tomdil.\nFifth race, six furlongs, 30 yards:\nFlying Bud (Young) 17.30 9.70 5.00\nMac Phalaris (Sporri) 8.40 4.90\nSweden (Craigmyle) 3.25.\nTime 1.17. Also ran: Triassic, Si-\nmonette, Rex Regent, Sweet Pekoe,\nStorm Princess.\nOne-two bet paid $134.70.\nSixth race, 5V. furlongs:\nCommencer (Young) .3.60 6.15 3.85\nMayaro (Haller) 9.10 4.40\nSomeridge  (Sporri)  2,70.\nTime 1.09 3-5. Also ran: Nay Nay,\nAfriglen, Shawnigan, Dunholme, '\nAfriglen, Shawnigan, Dunholme\nRed Devil.\nSeventh race, one mile:\nMaize B. (Sporri) 3.75 2.45 2.20.\n' Louie Dear (Craigmyle) 2.85 2.30.\nMahukona (Baxter) 2.30.\nTime 1.42V.. Also ran: Blackmore,\nGolden Token.\nOne-two bet paid $5.80.\nWRESTLING\nBy The Associated Press\nNow York\u2014Steve Casey, 225, Ireland, threw Benny Feldman, 200,\nGeorgia, 10:56.\nLos Angeles\u2014Dean Detton, 205,\nSalt Lake City, defeated Vincent\nLopez, 220, Los Angeles, two out of\nthree falls.\nPortland, Ore\u2014 Sador Szabo, 215,\nGlendale, Calif., defeated Bob Kruse\n205, Oswego, Calif., straight falls.\nWithin reasonable limits, the muscles   work   mor     efficiently   with\nload th :. ' avy than with\none that feels light \"~*\n-,  ..   PAQB   NINE\nExpect Sunderland\nand Arsenal lo Put\nUp a Great Battle\n\u2022 LONDON, Sept U (CP Cabl*)-\nMid-week English football games\nhave left Bolton Wanderers, Charlton Athletic and Wolverhampton\nWanderers deadlocked for the\nleague leadership. Each team has\nnine points and while Bolton has\na superior goal average, Charlton\nhas the distinction of being the only\nunbeaten league club.\nA tough battle between old rivals\nis in prospect when Bolton plays\nhost to Everton at the week-end,\nodds favoring the home team. The\nAthletic go to Birmingham and will\nfinds the Midlanders hard to beat\non their own ground while Wolverhampton may snatch both points\nfrom Brentford in view of the\ntrouncing Blackpool gave the Bees\nin London today\nA great match is expected at\nHighbury, where Arsenal meets\nSunderland, the cup-holder, but the\nGunners can hardly be expected to\nrepeat last season's 4-1 victory over\nthe Wearsiders. Manchester City,\nleague champion, may defeat Derby\nCounty.\nMen Bowlers Will\nOpen a Tourney\nMen's double championship of the\nC. P. R. Lawn Bowling club Is the\ngoal for members in a new competition slated to open immediately.\nSingles competition is still under\nway, and will proceed unchanged\nby the new event.\nRinks have been divided into two\nsections, the winners of the section\nto play off In a final match.\nHinks in order of skips and leads\nfollow:\nSection A\u2014J. Ball and E. Stangherlin, J. Simons and Fred Deacon, N. B. Bradley and F. Long, B.\nW. Penwill and W. Woods, E L.\nWright and J. Graham, ad F., E.\nWheeler and A. T. Richards.\nSection B\u2014A. G. Lane and F. C.\nDavies, J. S. Goulding and David\nLaughton. H. H. Sutherland and C.\nI. Archibald, Jack Draper and Allan\nBennett, and N. J. Lowes and C. F.\nMcHardy.\n8INGLE8 WITHDRAWN\nCompetition in B section of the\nmen's singles bowling competition\nof the C. P. R. Lawn Bowling club\ndwindled slightly with the withdrawal of W. T. Calbick and F. Dood-\nson from competitive play. Their\nwithdrawal leaves five players remaining in the third's sub-section\nof section B and means ten less fewer games to be played.\nBy virtue of four straight triumphs J. S. Goulding heads the\nskips sub-section and will meet the\nwinners of the other seotions In the\nsemi-finals.\nMICHEL HUNTER\nBAGS SEASON'S\nFIRST GRIZZLY\nNATAL, B.C.\u2014First grizzly bear\nof the season to tumble before the\ngun of a Michel nimrod was brought\nin by W. Stevenson, who has returned from a hunt In the Flathead\ncountry with a party of three other\nmen. He also shot a goat, the third\nto be brought in this season.\nLONDON (CP).\u2014The Air Mini,\nstry announces that all aircraft,\nexcepting public transport planes,\nwill be exempted from official certification as airworthy when flying\nwithin Great Britain and northern\nIreland.\nTHEY\nHIT THE\nMARK!\nt\nrune\n* CIGAR\nscores 100%\nwhen particular\nsmokers meet\nPanetolas alio 10c\n ppppppp\nmpmmmmmmmigmmmmm^\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.\u2014FRIDAY MORNING, SEPT. 17, 1937.\nPAQ- TEN .\t\nThis Want Ad Page Is a Directory of Buy-Quick Bargains!\n _ :\t\nBoswell Growers\nShipping Through\n(reslon Exchange\nCRESTON, B.C.-With the coming in of Gravenstein apples at\nBoswell, fruit trucks are on the\nmove from that point to Creston. As\nin past years Boswell fruit growers\nare again selling through Creston\nCooperative Fruit exchange and\nGravensteins are coming in household pack for inclusion in exchange\ncars. A limited amount of this variety is being wrapped at the packing\nshed at Boswell.\nIn addition to apples Boswell has\na small supply of plums which are\nalso being trucked, and are moving\nas fast as they arrive. The Kootenay\nplum crop is short this year, and\nthe demand better than in past\nseasons.\nBoswell's big apple crop, however,\nis in Cox Orange and some Jonathans. Both of these are popular in\nthe old country and as England's\ncrop of late apples is smaller than\nusual, there is every reason \\o expect satisfactory prices on apples\nsold overseas.\nMember of the Canadian Daily\nNewspapers Association\n.   TELEPHONE   144\nPrivate Exchange Connecting to\nall Departments\nSubscription Rates\nSingle copy   $   .05\nBy carrier per week      .25\nBy carrier per year ._ 13.00\nBy mall In Canada, to subscribers living outside regular\ncarrier areas, per month 60c;\nthree mouths vl 80; six months\n$3.00, one year $6.00.\nUnited States and Great Britain, one mouth 75c; six months\n$4.00; one year $7.50.\nForeign countries, other than\nU.S., same as above plus any\nextra postage.\nBIRTHS\nAdvertising Rates\nHe a Line\n(Minimum 2 lines)\n2 lines, per insertion  $ .22\n2 lines, 6 consecutive\ninsertions    88\n(6 for the price of 4)\n3 lines, per insertion  33\n3 lines, 6 consecutive\ninsertions  1.32\n2 lines. 1 month  2.86\n3 lines, 1 month   4.29\nFor   advertisements   of   more\nthan three lines, calculate on\nthe above basis\nBox   numbers   lie  extra.  This\ncovers any number of insertions.\nALL ABOVE RATES LESS 10%\nFOR PROMPT PAYMENT\n' WATSON-To Mr. and Mrs. L. W.\nWatson of Castlegar, at the Trail-\nTadanac hospital, September 11, a\nson. Mrs. Watson nee Miss Sally\nDoerksen.\nAUTOMOTIVE\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS.\nETC.. FOR SALE\nBIRTHS E xx\nMURPHY\u2014At Slocan Community\nhospital. New Denver, September 10\nto Mr. and Mrs. Murphy of Slocan\nCity, a daughter. \t\nPERSONAL\nSerial Story . . .\nRustle of Silks\nBy MARIE BLIZARD\nMEN! GET VIGOR AT ONCE. NEW\nOstrex Tonic Tablets contain raw\noyster invigorators and othei\nstimulants. One dose peps up organs, glands. If not delighted,\nmaker refunds few cents paid\nCall, write, Mann-Rutherford Co\n(22331\nFRESH SANITARY RUBBER LA-\ntex special guaranteed 25 for $1.00\nWrite for free catalogue. National\nImporters, Box 244, Edmonton, Alberta. (2234)\nMEN'S SUPERFINE SANITARY\nRubbers. Send $1.00 for 15 guaranteed. Also LATEX at 25 for\n$1.00. Mention which. BURRARD\nSPECIALTY Co., 18 Hastings St.\nW. Vancouver. (2426)\nFORD\nNOW is the time to\npurchase a good reconditioned car.\nDon't forget we have\nthe finest R & G values in the interior.\nA FEW LEFT\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non easy terms in Alberta and\nSaskatchewan. Write for full information to 908 Dept of Natural\nResources. C.P.R- Calgary. Alta\n(2243)\nBLK. A. MAP 782A. Former JOHN\nSnow place, South Slocan. What\noffers?     Sarah   Hamilton,   1218\nIngraham St,, Los Angeles, Calif.\n(2468)\nSIX ROOM RESIDENCE, 204 VER-\nnon street. Excellent condition,\nfireplace, full cement basement\nand furnace. Phone 662.      (2333)\nPOULTRY. SUPPLIES, ETC.\nSNAP! SACRIFICE! SALE! 5 ROOM\nBungalow, $2000. in good location.\nBox 2447, Daily News.    U447)\nTRAIL   SHAVER    SUBWVTSToN\ncorner  lot,  $175.   Frank   Carter.\nNelson. (2450)\nPULLETS\nRaised from the\n\"Chicks Which\nGive Results\".\nLeghorns. 8 weeks   $65 per 100\n10 weeks     75 per 100\nBarred Rocks and\nLight Sussex 8 weeks 75 per 100\n10 weeks  85 per 100\nRUMP & SENDALL LTD.\nLangley Prairie, B.C.\n(22301\nGARDENER AND NURSERY\nPRODUCTS\nTIMOTHY SEED,   RED   CLOVER, I\nAlsike Clover, Grimm Alfalfa, Alfalfa Inoculation. Lawn Grass Seed\nCyclone Hand Seeders, Ceresan..\nThe Brackman-Ker Millg. Co., Ltd.'.\n(2499)\nLIVESTOCK FOR SALE\nFOUR   TEAMS   OF   FARM  AND;\nlogging horses.  Young and gentle\nworkers.   1400 to 1600 lbs. Thos.\nMillar. Burton. (2480)\nFRUIT ACENTS\nMORE ABOUT\nNeck Needs (are\n(Continued From Page Four)\nsmoothly into the makeup of the\nface.\nThe really beautiful neck must\nbe firm, slender and shapely as well\nas clear and smooth-skinned. No\nugly hollows or wads of fat must be\npermitted to mar its symmetry. And\nwhen you glimpse such a neck you\nmay be sure that its fair owner\nknows\u2014and practices\u2014her neck exercises.\nHEAD CARRIAGE\nIMPORTANT\nOf course, the carriage of the head\nis a very important factor in the\nformation of the neck countours,\ntoo. The head should be held in a\npoised and graceful manner, and\nnot allowed to droop disconsolately\non the chest. If you keep your head\nwell up and back you will discourage any underchin flabbiness or\nfatness.\nTo strengthen the supporting\nthroat and chin muscles, however,\nexercise is essential, and you will\nfind the following effective:\nClasp your hands behind your\nhead, and pull forward with them\nwhiie you force your head back, resisting the pull of your hands. This\nexercise will bring into play both\nyour neck and shoulder muscles.\nStand erect, hands at the sides.\nWithout turning your shoulders,\nlook back over your left shoulder,\nturning your head as far as possible. Return to first position and repeat, looking over your right\nshoulder,\nLie on your back on a bed, with\nyour .head extended over the edge\nof the bed. Drop your head backward as far as possible,, and then\nraise it forward up to your chest.\nRepeat this exercise for 15 counts.\nStand erect, hands at the sides.\nBend your head back as far as possible, and then exercise your jaws,\nmoving them in brisk chewing fashion. You will feel a decided pull on\nyour neck and throat muscles during this exercise.\nMORE ABOUT\nReference Books\n(Continued From Page Four)\nMany parents, indeed, could well\nafford to economize in other directions in order to provide the necessary tools for their children's best\neducation.\nThere are several good magazines\nsuited to children even before they\nenter school and up tht-ough the\nelementary grades. They are particularly good to stimulate the child\nto want to read and get practice at\nreading. Usually more interesting\nand more highly illustrated than\nthe average reading text book, these\nchildren's magazines do much to\nmake reading attractive to the young\nchild. Besides, they encourage creative drawing, painting and construction by the child; with pencil,\ncrayon, paints, paper, cardboard,\ncloth and wood. They nicely fit into the activity program of the modern school.\nParents need an encyclopedia to\nenable them to answer the questions\nof the young child as soon as he begins speech. After the child begins to read he likes to use a good\nchildren's encyclopeddia for browsing. Beyond the third or fourth\ngrade the child in the modern\nschool needs constantly to refer to\nan encyclopedia. There are available a, number of very good ones,\npeculiarly adapted to the child's\ninterest and vocabulary. Good public libraries have them.\nWork With Children\nParents who cannot afford to own\nan encyclopedia for their children\nshould take the trouble to go with\nthe young children to the library to\nuse an encyclopedia there, with the\nhope that these children later will\nuse the encyclopedias of the library\nfreely.\nEvery school child should have a\nschool edition dictionary. By the\ntime he enters the seventh grade\nhe will need an unabridged edition\nA typewriter is valuable equipment, even for the child entering\nschool; almost or entirely a necessity\nas he enters junior or senior high\nschool. How a college student can\nget along without a typewriter is\nhard to understand.\nCHAPTER 31\nMark Sutherland had put into full\noperation his plans for Mari Barat\nto live up to her new glamorous\nreputation. And Larry Hoik, the\npublicity man, was Mark's man on\nthe job, putting over this and that.\n\"So that's the way it's done.\" Mari\nBarat, the girl whose name was on\nthe lips of the dressmaking world\nif not known to the great buying\nfashion world, pushed a peanut\nacross her desk with her nose.\nMiss Letitia Higgins glanced at\nher employer with an incredulous\nexpression. She flipped back the\npage of her copybook and read her\nnotes;\n\"I owe my success to a playboy.\nHe didn't have anything to do, so\nhe thought he'd become a celebrity\nimpresario. The way you do that\nis to engage a high-priced press\nagent. He, in turn, engages a\nhouse in which you rattle around\nlike a single pea in a pod. He\nhires a butler who 'scares you to\ndeath, runs you ragged having your\npicture taken, tells you how to\nwalk, how to talk, and even what\nto think . . .\" she broke off into a\nmeaningful silence.\n\"Did I dictate that?\" Mari asked\napprovingly, well pleased with herself.\n'You did!\" Miss Higgins retorted\ndisapprovingly.\n\"Amusing, don't you think?\" |\n\"Well . . .\" Miss Higgins didn't\nknow what to do or say.\n\"No reticences, please.'' Mari gave\nher secretary an amused glance,\ndecided it was best not to carry a\njoke too far. \"Tear it up or cross it\noff, Miss Higgins. I was merely\nbeing light for a change. I'm having\nto be so many people other than\nmyself these days, I have to get a\nlittle relief. Now where were we before I got foolish?\"\nRelieved, Miss Higgins turned\nback her pages. \"You had got onto\nthe subject of your attitude about\nprints.\"\n\"Oh, yes, that was my 'first revolutionary move', Mr. Hoik says. Oh,\nLetitia, this is ridiculous! How can\nI write my history when I have no\nhietory? And what do people want\nto read about me for? I'm in the\nclothes business, not the glamor\ngame.\"\n\"Mr. Hoik is right,\" Miss Higgins said unexpectedly. \"Why it's\nonly three weeks and just look at\nthis scrapbook!\"\n\"You look at it, it frightens me,\"\nMari said and sighed. She picked\nup her appointment book. \"Heavens only knows what's going to\nhappen to my customers these days.\nMy program gives me about an\nhour a day to sketch. I don't find\ntime to do it any more when I have\npeople here. Did you okay the\nplans for the sewing rooms?\"\n\"They've been returned to the\narchitect, Miss Barat. Tlie plasterers will be in the new building\nnext week. The walls are almost\nready for them now. And about\nthe jade dressng room, did you\ndecide on rep or satin?\"\n\"Rep,\" Mari answered automatically, and marveled that she was\nable to keep so many details in her\nmind.\n\"Then I don't believe there are I\nany more questions to be answered\ntoday. This interview can't be let\ngo until tomorrow. M. Choiseul\nis waiting to fit you to the chartreuse gown.\"\n\"Miss Letitia Higgins, don't you\never believe that a shoemaker hasn't shoes. Imagine a dressmaker\nspending three hours a day having\nclothes fitted for her, I feel like\nan absolute idiot! I have three\nstreet gowns, three to wear at ihe\nshop, a couple of good evening\ndresses and that ought, to be enough.\nOh, dear, these people are winding\nme around their little fingers. But\nI'm going to rebel.\"\n\"You're going to be at home at\n5 o'clock. Mr. Hoik is bringing the\neditor of Cinema Art, an American\npublication, to meet you. He says\nyou are to wear the gray jersey\nand the large pearls.\"\n\"Are you sure that he didn't say\nwhat color I'm to have on my\nfingernails?\" she asked sarcastically.\n\"Now, Miss Barat\u2014Madame-\u2014you\nshouldn't take on  that way.'1\nMari sighed. \"I know, but . . .\nbut what . . . why must \u00bbI meet\nthe editor of a movie magazine\nfrom America?\"\n\"Because he will get movie\nactresses to be interested in posing\nin your clothes and everybody in\nAmerica wants to look like the\nactresses,\"\n\"And Larry Hoik will say that\nI can't agree to it and what good\nwill that do?\"\n\"Make 'em want you more,\" her\nsecretary said wisely.\n'Well, at least, it will be over\nshortly. As soon as the new shop\nis ready I can quit being a glamor\ngirl and go back to being a dressmaker.\"\n\"And you're going to have a\nnice vacation before it opens, And\nyou're going to visit a real viscountess. My, but it will be wonderful to be in England in April!\"\nEllen Verlaine's letter was in\nMari's purse.\nAt first when Mark said that he\nwanted her to run over to London\nto be the house guest of his viscountess sister, Mari had demurred.\nShe had been a little suspicious of\nMark's motives, pointed out that\nside trips were not yet part of her\nitinerary on the road to fame. But\nMark had laughed off her suspicions.\nAnd then Ellen's letter had arrived, written on the crested stationery in Ellen's firm stroke so\nunlike Mark's careless scrawl.\nWe'd like so much to have you\nfor the last week of April if , you\ncan favor us,\" Ellen had written,\nand added, \"Mark has made us\nfeel that we already know you.\"\nThat was pretty nice of Mark,\nMari decided. She was suffering\nfrom a combination of inferiority\ncomplex regarding her difference\nof social standing from Mark's,\nand some old-fashioned fear that,\nbecause Mark had made his intentions clear, he would think less of\nher. Mari was a girl who couldn't\nget used to the easy acceptance of\nchanged standards in a world for\nwhich she had never been prepared.\nIf Mark looked down upon her\nin any way. it was hardly likely\nthat he would have had his sister,\nthe socially prominent wife of one\nof England's peers, invite her to\nher home.\nShe anticipated her visit with\nmingled feelings. She hoped she\nknew the right things to do and\nsay, and added to her prayers the\nfervent petition that there would\nbe neither hunting nor shooting\noffered her. She had vague pictures of English house parties members being .constantly either in the\nsaddle or in the field. And while\nshe would have known how to sit\non a horse, she had her doubts\nabout guns.\n\"Mark,   what  will  it   really   be\nlike?\" she asked him after she had\nwritten a note to Ellen, as care-,\nfully casual as she could make it.\n\"It will be very soignee and\nyou'll be more so.\"\n\"How so?\" she asked* apprehensively.\n\"This, my dear, will mark the\nend of your careless girlhood, with\nyour introduction to London, to\nlords and ladies\u2014who, by the way,\nwill not act like them so be sure\nto get your names straight\u2014to a\nmaharajah, an actress or two, several Americans and all the rest of\nthem who'll think you're a novelty.\"\nMari sat back on her heels and\nher mouth set. \"I'm not going to\nshow off, Mark Sutherland. I'll\nbe myself and . , .\"\n\"If you've got the brains I think\nyou have, ex-Mary Barrett, you\nwill show off. You're a legend and\nj you're expected to act like one.\nj You won't talk about yourself,\nyou'll smile mysteriously. You'll\nwear the most dazzling things you\ncan design, beg or borrow. When\nthere's something proposed that you\ncan't do, riding for instance, you'll\nraise your eyes languidly and say\nyou have some cables or writing to\nattend to. This'is no pleasure jaunt!\nThis is business. And you'll check\nMary Barrett's personality at the\nairport.\"\nCuriously  enough, she  did\u2014for-'\nevermore.\n(To Be Continued)\nFOR SALE\nFINE BEAUTY\nSHOP\nIn best location In Nelson, doing\na splendid business. First class\nmodern equipment.\nThis Is a going concern with\neverything complete to step In\nand go to work.\nTerms reasonable. For further\ninformation write to\u2014\nP.O. BOX 1078\n(2458)\n1 (.Of*   Standard Ford Coupe\nl\"uO       Perfect Rubber\n1936\n1935\nDeLuxe Ford Coupe\nChevrolet DeLuxe\nCoupe\u2014Radio\n1930\nFord Light Delivery\nNew Rings\u2014A real buy\nFOR RENT, HOUSES, APTS.\nETC.\nFIVE ROOM BUNGALOW, FULL\ncement basement, furnace; fireplace. Close to high schools. Nearly new. Rent $27.50. H. Harding,\nPhone 110. (250G1\nFURN. HEATED 4, 2 AND 1 ROOM\ncabins. By week or month. Shard-\nelow's Motor Court. Phone 864.\n(24181\nWANTED\nWANTED-MILK IN LARGE AM-\nounts Write at once box 415 Nelson\n(2464)\nFRUIT GROWERS - SHIP US ALL j\nvarieties of tree fruits in straight\nor mixed cars.    Receive benefit 1\nof   the   highest   prairie   market j\nprjees. Returns made every Saturday.   The Royal Fruit Company,\nRegina, Sask. (2186)\nBusiness and Professional Directory\nAssayers\n~   PIPE   TUBES* FITTINGS\nNEW AND USED\nLarge stock for immediate shipment\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD\n1st Avenue and Main St.\nVancouver, B.C.\n (2237)\nPEACHES. FINEST ONLY. Express prepaid to your home in Nelson or Trail, in five box lots. Send\n$6.25 with order to Public Market,\nPenticton, B. C. (2483)\nSHINGLE MILL, 16,000 TO 1W00\ncut per day. plenty of timber, good\nmarket, going concern. $2,250.00. S\nT. Hull, Grand Forks, B. C. (2427)\nPIANO; A BRUNSWICK BALKE\nJunior Billiard and Pool Table.\n3 by 6; Shotgun, Fox, Sterling-\nworth. Phone 245Y. (2475)\nQueen City\nMotors. Ltd.\nFORD DEALERS\nNelson and District\nPhone 43 519 Josephine St.\n(2507)\n8 ROOMED HOUSE, NELSON AV-\neniie. Furnace, garage, lovely garden. 3 lot-.  Phone 607 L.      (2334)\nFURNISHEdTrOOM HOUSE, AP'-\nply 303 Observatory after 4 pm.\n(2310)\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst, Assayer, Metalldrgir-ul\nEngineer Sampling Agents at\nTrail Smelter. 301-305 Josephine\nSt.. Nelson, B. C. (2244)\ngrenvilleTT GRTMWOOD\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist 618\nBaker Street. Nelson. B C. P O\nBox No 726. Representing shipper's interest, Trail, B. C.     (2245)\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms for rent.    Annable  Rlnrk\n(2240)\nONE  SINGLE  HOUSE  KEEPING\nroom. Phone evenings 728X. (2476)\nAGENTS WANTED\nPIPE AND FITTINGS\nCANADIAN  JUNK Company  Ltd\n250 Prior St. Vancouver. BC\n (2238)\nFOR SALE - BARRELS, KEGS\nsugar sacks, liners. McDonald Jam\nCo.. LtaV, Nelson, B. C.        (2239)\nBUFFET, TABLE AND-CHAIRS\nIdeal for aparlmcnt. Good condition.   Phone 828L.     (2486)\nVALUABLE PIANO, GRAMO:\nphone, dresser, bed, 6-hole range.\n406 Richards St. (2505)\nWE SELL EVERYTHING AT BAR-\ngain prices. The Ark Store. (2348)\nDAVENPORT BED. APPLY 601\nLatimer St., or Ph. 455 R.    (2416)\nCHRISTMAS CARD AGENTS\nmake more money selling the\nPremier Art Guild line of personal Christmas cards and boxed\nassortments. We pay you 50%\ncommission on personal cards priced over one dollar per dozen, and\npractically 40% on our dollar-a-\ndozen Series. Agents should nol\nbe satisfied with less. Premier\nline is the smartest, largest and\nmost up-to-date and ready for you\nto begin making money with at\nonce. No experience necessary;\nno charge for sample book.- Prices\nare lower and commissions h'gh-\ner at Premier Art Guild. 576 Seymour St., Vancouver. Apply today. Agents in smaller towns\nshould write. (2173)\nTERRACE APTS Beautiful modern\nfrigidaire equipped suites.   (2241)\nVACANT\"ST0RE~0N'BAKER ST.\nApply Nelson Grocery. (2437)\nFURNISHED SUITES IN THE\nKerr apartments. (22421\nHIGHEST PRICES PAID FOR OR-\ndinary used Canadian and all other stamps. Send dime for buying\nprice list \"Stampco.\" Stn. B.,\nWinnipeg.  (2371)\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nSTAMPS\nAutomobile Radiator Repairs\nNELSON RADIATOR WORKS\nExpert Repairs\nNew Cores Installed\nCapitol Motors Building\n(2246)\nInsurance and Real Estate\n(Continued)\nUNDER NEW MANAGEMENT-}\nDistrict management of the Mutual Benefit Health and ace. assoc.1\nnow under supervision of Frank A.\"\nStuart and E. L. Warburton. Office; Aberdeen Block, 577 Baker j\nstreet, Nelson, P. O. Box 389.\n(2172)I\nMachinists\nChiropractors\nj. r. McMillan, d. c. neuro-\ncalometer and X-ray.    16   years\nexperience. McCullock Blk. (2247)\nCorsets\nSnencer corests.   Surgical Belts M\nW. Mitchell, 370 Baker St. Ph. 668.\n(2248)\nEngineers and Surveyors\nDOCS, PETS, FOR SALE\nRABBITS - APPROPRIATE PRI-\nces. Write R. Strachan, Kaslo. B. C\n(2502)\nELECTRICAL   MACHINERY\nFOR SALE\nCALGARY BEARING REVENUE\nhouses for general, hardware or\nhotel business or will manage I\nbusiness with privilege of buying.'\nBox 56, Spiritwood, Sask.   (2443)\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nHELP WANTED\nMAN OR LADY TO SELL SPORT\nsuits and dresses for the Logan\nGarment Ltd.. Lethbridge, Alta\nApply J. H. Bridge. Sales supervisor, Magrath, Alta. (2467)\nHOUSE KEEPER~AT~ONCE FOR\nfarmer. Box 2444, Daily News.\n.   (2444)\n(Continued in Next Column)\nAn Ad Here Is Your\nBest Agent\nCOOK, PAINTER, BAKER, GARD-\nener or clerk. Very good education. Different languages. Bookkeeping, shorthand in German.\nClean and honest. Box 2493, Daily\n_News. (2493)\nCDN7 WOMAN CLEANING, WASH-\ning, waxing, minding children. 25c\nhr. and crfre. Box 2472 Daily News\n(2472)\nYOUNG   MAN,   HANDY    WITH\ntools wishes position in garage or\nmach. shop. Box 2429, Daily News.\n(2429)\nWOMAN, EXPERIENCED COOK.\nClean, reliable. Prefer camp. Box\n2500, Daily News. (2500)\nLADY DESIRES\"HOUSEWORK BY\nHour or Day. 705 Vict, alley, Rm. 6\n(2448)\nFarm Lighting Plants\nand Machinery\nGuaranteed Rebuilt\n$495\n$395\n$125\n.$145\n$195\nH. D. DAWSON Nelson, B. C\nMine Surveys and Reports\nB. C. Land Surveyor.     (2249)\nBOYD C. AF^LECKTmitvaieTB CV.\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor\nReg. Professional Civil Engineer.\n(2250)\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nFor all Classes of Metal Work, Lath* j\nWork. Drilling, Boring and Grinding, Motor Rewiring. Acetylene\nWelding\nTelephone 503     324 Vernon Street I\n(2260) '\nH E. STEVENSON, Machinists,\nBlacksmiths, Electric and Acetylene\nWelders. Expert workmen. Satisfaction guaranteed. Mine Sc Mill work a\nspecialty. Fully equipped shop Ph.\n98, 708-12 Vernon St., Nelson. (2261)\nMine & Equipment Machinery\nE. L. WARBURTON. REPRESENT-\ning C. C. Snowdon, oils, greases,!\npaints, etc.   Agent mine machinery, rails, pipe steels, sheet iron,!\netc.     Steam   coals.    Office   5181\nWard street, Phone 53.        (2262)1\nNotaries\n3 K.W. 110-volt\nDelco \t\n3 K.W. 32-vo!t\nDelco   \t\n650 W. 32-voit Delco,\nwith battery\t\n850 W 32-volt Delco,\nwith battery\t\n1250 W, 32-volt Delco,\nwith battery \t\nNumerous other electric plants from\n$69.00 up\nArc welding generators from\n$149.00 up\nLEEDER'S LTD.\n1375 Portage Ave., Winnipeg, Man.\n(2495)\nFOR SALE OR EXCHANCE\nON ACCOUNT OF OLD AGE I\nhave several good mining claims\nfor sale, lease or bond or trade for\nsome good real estate in good\ntown. Ola Lofstad, Greenwood,\n(2442)\nFuneral Directors\nSOMERS' FUNERAL HOME\n702 Baker St. Phone 252\nCert   Mortician      Lady Attendant\nModern Ambulance Service\n(2251)\nDAVIS  FUNERAL  SERVICE-\nEmbalming & Plastic Work\nLady Mortician Assisting\nPhone 95. Nelson, B. C,\n(2252)\nInsurance and Real Estate\nROBERTSON  REALTY CO., LTD\nReal Estate.   Insurance.   Rentals\n_3U, Baker_St. Phone 68.       (2253)\nR. W. DAWSON, \"Real Estate, Insurance.   Rentals. Next Hippcrson\nHardware, Baker St. Phone 197.\n(2254)\nC. D. BLACKWOOD,   Insurance of\nevery description. Real Est. Ph 99\n (2255)\nH. E. DILL, AUTO AND FIRE IN\u2022\nsurance. Real Estate. 508, Ward SI\n(2256)\nJ. E. ANNABLE,   REAL ESTATE,\nRentals, Insurance.   Annable Blk\n(2257)\nSEE  D.  L.  KERR,  AGENT   FOR\nWawanesa Fire Ins. For better rates\n(2258i\nCHAS. F. McHARDY, INSURANCE\nReal Estate.  Phone, 135.       (2259)\nD.   J.    ROBERTSON,     NOTARYI\nPublic. Nelson. Phone 157L. (2263)|\nPatents\nAN OFFER TO EVERY INVENT-I\nor. list of wanted inventions and!\nfull information sent free. The!\nRamsay Company. World Patent!\nAttorneys. 273 Bank St., Ottawa.\n(2264)1\nPhotography\nOUR   BUSINESS   FOR   1936   ALB\nmost doubled that of 1935.   Therr\nmust be a reason.   A trial ordel\nwill convince YOU of the superiol\nPhoto Finishing done In pur plant\nYour films developed and printel\n25c Reprints, eight for 25c. KRYSr\nTAL  PHOTOS,  WILKIE, SASK\n(2269\nSanitariums\nDR. ALDRICH, SPOKANE. WASlS\nHeart, Stomach, Kidney. Bladde^\nDiseases treated.  X-ray work.\n(22661\nSash Factory\nLAWSON'S     SASH     FACTORY!\nHardwood merchant. 217 Baker Stl\n<2267)T\nSecond Hand Stores\nWE   BUY.  SELL  Sc   EXCHANGBf\nfurniture, etc.   The Ark Store.\n(2268)1\nTHE GUMPS\nBy Cus Edsonl\nI'tA SO EXCITED, SIM\/\nI JUST THINK\u2014 IN A\nISHORT TIME WE'LL\nj BE BACK* J AVSRICA-\nTHE LAND OF THE\nI FREE AND THE\nHOME OF THE\nI .BRAVE\nI'M SO SORRY VOUR FOLKS\nAREN'T GOING TO BEAT\nTHE PIER TO MEET\nUS- BUT WE'LL GET\nACQUAINTED LATER-\nI JUST KNOW I'M\nGOING TO LOVE\n\u2022^THEM-\nOH,NO~NO-ER.-YWJ\nI COULDN'T DO THAT\u2014\n'   REMEMBER YOU\nHAVE TO SEE YOUR\nLAWYERS ABOUT .\nYOUR LATE UNCLE'S\nESTATE\nTILLIE THE TOILER\nBy Russ Westover\n-   \u25a0\n\u2022 . ..:..,\u25a0\u201e\u25a0...\u25a0.. ,,.:\u25a0..\u25a0'\u25a0.-,.',!;\u25a0;\u25a0'\u2022\u25a0'.\u25a0-', .,-\u25a0: .'-.>.-.. -.-..'\u25a0 <.' .    \u25a0'     \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0...- j:....;.-......:'...   - - : -.\u25a0\u25a0...-_:_.:..,..::.\u2014.....^^^^^^^^k^^JL-^\nmtsssmmstssmmmmu\n mw\n^^.-\"^P^fWig^\n\u25a0\u25a0;_> \u25a0\n'\u2014\"\u2022\nPIUIIJWI\na-\\a\nAILS BOOST N.Y.\nraw YORK, Sept. 16 (AP) -The\nig dormant rails came to life in\nlay's stock market and steamed\ni a late rally of one to three points,\nlere were a few advances of five\n11.\nReports from Chicago said a meet-\n% of rail management and bro-\nerhood representatives with the\nderal mediator in Chicago might\nach a compromise on the wage\nntroversy or agree to arbitration.\nOn top of this, hopes were reviv\ned the interstate commerce commission will grant a boost in freight\nrates.\nThe carrier average of 15 stocks\nhad one of its best days of the year.\nTransfers totalled. 892,280 shares\ncompared with 1,-43,140 yesterday,\nMontreal Produce\nMONTREAL, Sept. 16 (CP)\u2014Butter 26\"\/*; Eggs A large 33-34.\nWheat, northern No. 1,1.39%; barley C. W. No. 3, 69; oats, C. W. No .2\n61%; No. 1 feed 56%; flour, 7.8\nbran 24.25; shorts 6.25.\nDow-Jones Averages\nHigh\nIndustrials   165.37\nRails     43.95\nUtilities    25.76\nBonds     \t\nLow Close Change\n162.29 164.75-up 1.90\n41.83 43.87\u2014up 2.42\n25.10 25.65\u2014up .29\n  98.66\u2014up   .25\nToronto Stock Quotations\nINES\n[ton Mines\t\nldermac Copper \t\nlexandria  Gold  \t\nnglo Huronian      4\nrgosy Gold  \t\nrntfield Gold \t\njtoria Rouyn \t\nitec Mining  \t\n-gatnac Rouyn \t\nbnkfield Gold   \t\nase Metals Mining\t\nKit-tie Gold     l\ngood Kirk \t\nMiss \t\npbjo Mines \t\nralorne Mines      7\nrett Trethewey \t\nirffalo Ankerite     9.\nunker Hill Ex\t\nan Malartic      1\nariboo Gold Q     1\nastle Treth\t\nentral Man \t\nentral Pat     2.\nhibougamau \t\nhromium M & S \t\nbast Copper      ..      3\npniagas Mines      1\nDniaurum Mines      1\nons Min & Smelt    73\narkwater \t\nom Mines     39.\nom Explorers     \t\norval Siscoe Gold \t\nitem Wai     1\nIdorado Gold         2.\nilconbridge Nickel      6\nid Kirkland \t\n\u2022ancoeur Gold \t\nHies Lake      \t\nid's Lake Gold\t\n)ld  Belt   \t\n\u2022anada Gold \t\n\u2022andoro Mines\t\nmnar Gold\nirdrock   Gold        1\nirker Gold\t\nlllinger      11\n>wey Gold   \t\nidson Bay M & S    26\nt Nickel      57.\nMCon\t\niCk Waite \t\ncpla Gold \t\nerr Addison      2\nirkland Lake     1\nike Shore Mine3     48.\nmarine Contact \t\nitch Gold   \t\nbel Oro Mines \t\ntie Long Lac      4\ncassa Mines      -r'\ncLeod Cockshutt     1\ndsen R L Gold \t\na Sc East \t\nldy       \t\nroblc Mines\t\nIntyre  Porcupine     35\n;Kenzie R L      1\nVlttie Graham \t\nffatters Gold  \t\nling Corp      2\nllo Gold \t\nneta Porcupine      1\n.02'_\n.87\nDl-1)\n.1)0\n.4(1\n.20\n.0(1'.\n08\n.2(1\n.07\n.21\n10\n.4(1\n45\n13'A\n50\n.(](>\n85\n13\n17\n47\n85\n06\n33\n41\n.70\n.25\n.75\n.22\n50\n59\n50\n.05\n.46\n.05\n30\n.65\n.08%\n.55\n.28 '.4\n54\n.21 i.\n.13\n0(1\n13\n.14\n25\n35\n60\n25\n36\n00\n33\n50\n04',4\n53\n17\n05\n00\n-15\n.(ill\n,03\n.22\n.01\n.50\n.19\n.22\n.40\n.72\n.10\n77\nynopsis of Land Act\nrRE-EMFTIONS\n'AOANT, unreserved, lurveye. Crown\nlands may be pre-empted by Brlt.sb\n>]ccti over 18 yeare of age, end by\nmi on declaring Intention to become\ntisb eubjccti, conditional upon reel-\nnee, occupation and Improvement.\nPull Information concerning Pre-emp-\nma la given In Bulletin No. 1. Land\nrlea, \"How to Pre-empt Land,\" copies ot\nItch can be obtained free of charge by\ndressing tHe Department of Lands, Vic\n'1&, B.C.: Bureau of Provincial Informa-\non, Victoria, or any dovcrnment Agent.\nRecords will be granted covering only\nid suitable for agricultural purposes\nthin reasonable distance of road, school\nid marketing facilities and which Is not\nntberland, I.e., carrying over 6,000 board\net per acre east of the Coast Rnn&c and\n000 feet per acre west of that Range.\nApplications for pre-emptions are to be\nWreseed to the Land Commissioner of\n10 Land Recording Division In which the\n,nd applied tor is situated, on printed\nffmi obtained from the Commissioner.\nPre-emptions must be occupied for five\nSara and improvementa made to value of\n10 per acre, including clearing and cultl-\natlng at least five acres, before a Crown\nIrant can be received.\nPre-emptlone carrying part time Condi-\nIons of occupation are also granted.\nFURCnASE OH LEASE\nApplications are received for purchase\nof vacant and unreserved Crown lands,\nnot being tlmberland, for agricultural\nyurposcs. Minimum price of first-class\nlarable) land Is 05 per acre, and seoond-\nelass (gm.tng) land, 02.30 per acre,\nrurther information is given in Bulletin\nSo. 10. Land Series, \"Purchase and Lease\n\" Crown Lands.\"\nAs \u2022 partial relief measure, reverted\namis may be acquired by purchase In ten\nqual instalments, with the first payment\nispended for two years, provided taxes\n_ paid when due end Improvements are\nado during the first two years of not\nai than 107, of the appraised value.\n1111), factory or Industrial sites on\nSober land, not exceeding 40 acres, may\n1 purchased or leased, the condition.\n.eluding payment tf stumpage.\nUniurveyed areas, not exceeding SO\nTls, may be leased as homesltes. condl-\nmi.l upon a dwelling being erected in\ne first yeor, .title being obtained after\nsklenca and Improvement conditions ait\ntlfllled and land has been surveyed.\nFor gracing and Industrial purposoa\neai not exceeding 640 acres may ba\nue. by one person or a company.\nUnder the Grazing Act the Province h\n.yided Into grazing districts and the\niifco administered under grazing rcgula-\nons amended from time to time to meet\ntrying conditions. Annual grazing per-\nIts are Issued based on certain monthly\n,vM per head of stoclc Priority in graz-\nf privileges Is  given to resident stock\nI.    Stock-owners may form nssocla-\ntor   rango   management.     Free   at\nirtially free permits available for scttleri,\n,perl and travellers, up to ten head.\nRoy\nMorris Kirk \t\nNipissing Mining\t\nNoranda \t\nNormetal    ....\nO'Brien   Gold   \t\nOmega Gold \t\nPamour   Porcupine   ....\nParhkill   Gold   \t\nPaulore M     \t\nPaymaster Cons \t\nPend  Oreille\t\nPerron  Gold  \t\nPickle Crow Gold\t\nPioneer Gold \t\nPremier Gold \t\nPorcupine Crown \t\nPowell Rouyn     \t\nPreston East Dome\t\nQuebec   Gold   \t\nRead Authier \t\nR L Gold Shore \t\nReeves MacD \t\nReno Gold   \t\nRitchie Gold \t\nRoche Long Lac\t\nSan Antonio Gold\t\nShawkey Gold       \t\nSheep Creek Gold \t\nSherritt Gordon \t\nSiscoe Gold      \t\nSmelters Gold \t\nSladen Mai     \t\nStadacona  Rouyn  \t\nSt. Anthony\nSudbury Basin\t\nSullivan Consolidated\nSylvanite\nTashota Goldfields  \t\nTeck-Hughes Gold     ....\nToburn Gold Mines ....\nTowagamac   \t\nVentures Limited\t\nWaite Amulet \t\nWhitewater \t\nWright Hargreaves\t\nYmir Yankee Girl \t\nOILS:\nAjax \t\nA P Consolidated\nBritish American Oil ..\nBritish Dominion\nBrown Oil \u25a0\nCalmont \t\nCalgary Sc Edmonton ..\nChem Research\nCommonwealth   \t\nDalhousie\t\nEastcrest   \t\nFoundation    \t\nFoothills ......\nHighwood   \t\nHome \t\nImperial .. \t\nInter Petroleum   \t\nLowery Pete        \t\nMcColl Frontenac \t\nMerland  \t\nModel    \t\nMonarch\nNordon\nOkalta   \t\nPacalta      \t\nPantepec    \t\nRoyalite \t\nTexas Canadian\t\nUnited\t\nVulcan \t\nINDUSTRIALS:\nAbitibi Power ..   \t\nBeatty Bros\t\nBell  Telephone\nBrazilian T L & P\t\nBrewers Sc Distillers ...\nBritish American Oil .\nBrewing Corp \t\nBrewing Corp Pfd\t\nB C Power A\t\nB C Power B      \t\nBuilding Products  .'.\nBurt  F  N Co     \t\nBan Bakeries A      \t\nCan Bakeries Pfd\t\nCanada Bread Co\t\nCan Bud Malting \t\nCan Car & Fdy \t\nCan  Cement      \t\nCan Cement Pfd \t\nCan Dredge \t\nCan  Malting\t\nCan Pacific Railway ...\nCan Ind Ale A \t\nCan Ind Ale B\t\nCan   Wineries   \t\nCarnation Pfd \t\nCons  Bakeries  \t\nCons Smelters  \t\nCosmos\nDominion Bridge\t\nDominion Stores \t\nDom Tar Sc Chem \t\nD Tar & Chem Pfd \t\nDistillers Seagrams  \t\nFanny Farmer \t\nFord of Canada A\t\nGen Steel Wares\t\nGoodyear tire \t\nGypsum L  &A \t\nHarding Carpet \t\nHamilton  Bridge \t\nHamilton Bridge Pfd ...\nHinde   Dauche   \t\nHiram  Walker  \t\nIntl   Metals   \t\nIntl   Milling  Pfd  \t\nImperial Oil  \t\nImperial Tobacco\t\nInternational Nickel ...\nInternational Petrol ...\nLoblaw   A\t\nLoblaw B \t\nKelvinator\t\nMaple Leaf Milling\t\nMassey Harris \t\nMcColl Frontenac\t\nMontreal  Power  \t\nMoore Corp\t\nNat  Steel Car  \t\nOnt Steel Prods\t\nOnt Silk Net \t\nPage Hersey \t\nPower Corp\t\nPressed Metals \t\nSteel   of  Can   \t\nStandard Paving \t\n.22\n2.10\n56.00\n1.35\n4.50\n.46\n2.72\n.13',.\n.13 V.\n.50\n320\n.87\n5.15\n3.65\n2.25\n.03\n1.15\n.98\n.35\n3 30\n.31\n.67\n.81\n.03*\/4\"\n.Wk\n1.40\n.45\n,85\n2,12\n3 20\n.01\n1.15\n.95\n.15\n3.50\n1.12\n2.99\n.051\/1\n5.00\n2.30\n.88\n6.50\n2.60\n.10\n6.50\n.20\n.22\n.23\n21.00\n.22\n.48\n.40\n1.05\n.55\n.21\n.55\n.15V.\n.21\n.75\n.151.\n1.39\n19 90\n33.00\n.25\n12,50\n.07\n.40\n.25\n.19\n1.10\n.18\n5.90\n37.00\n1.55\n.16V.\n1.05\n4%\n15\n1661.\n21%\n7\n2H.\n2Vi\n17%\n341,4\n4Vi\n57\n361.\n3\n50\n5\n7-U\n12*4\n12%\n103\n38\n35\n10 V.\n5%\n4>.\n2 Vi\n103\nI8V4\n72 Ii\n23\n38\n7\n9%\n87 Vi\n17%\n22\n2V\/,\n12\n86\n10'A\n33,i\nK,\n871\/i\n191\/4\n4214\n10\n9914\n19%\n13%\n57 Vi\n..   32%\n23\n22\n22\n3'i\n8V4\n12',4\n29\n39\n33'\/,\n12\n7\n9.1\n18\n30\n7514|\n3V4'\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NEL80N, B.C.-FRIDAY MORNING, SEPT. 17, 1937.\nMarket and Mining News\nWINNIPEG SUPS\nWINNIPEG, Sept. 16 (CP). -\nWheat futures on the Winnipeg\ngrain exchange traded at lower levels today in sympathy with declines\nat Liverpool. Sales of 300,000 bushels\nof Canadian wheat for export failed to rally prices and closing quotations y\u00ab\u2014Vi cent lower, October\nat $1.24% ( November $1.24V., December $1.22Vi\u2014% and May $1.23\n%-V4.\nPrices eased from the start ana\nthroughout the session traded one\nto two cents down. Trading was not\nbroad and it took little buying or\nselling to move prices.\nExporters offered support on recessions but the 300,000-bushel business reported worked since yesterday was insufficient to cope with\nliberal southern and hedging selling\norders.\nMONTREAL FIRM\nMONTREAL, Sept. 16 (CP) -\nStocks displayed a firm tone on\nMontreal stock exchange today with\nprices edging narrowly higher In\nmoderate turnover.\nPrice preferred stepped up a\npoint to 64 with St. Lawrence Paper\npreferred up the same amount at\n76 St. Lawrence Corporation preferred gained % at 25% and Price\ncommon % at 32%.\nNickel added Vi at 57 and Smelters a point at 73 with Noranda up\n% at 55%.\nCanadian Car preferred added a\npoint at 24V4. The common eased\n14 to 13 and C.P.R. tacked on Vi\nat 10 Vi.\nMont-real Metals\nMONTREAL, Sept. 16 (CP)\u2014Spot:\nelectrolytic, 15.00; tin 51; lead 5.65;\nzinc 5.90; antimony 17.50; per 100\npounds F. O. B. Montreal; five-ton\nlots.\nDividends\nInternational Milling, preferred,\nIVi per cent, payable Oct. 15 to\nshareholders of record Oct. 4.\nEIGHT ALBERTA OIL\nSTOCKS OFF MARKET\nCALGARY, Sept. 16 (CP).-Eight\nstocks of Alberta oil companies were\nremoved from the Calgary stock exchange board today. The stocks were\nthose of the Devenist, Ranchmen's,\nBaltac, Black Diamond, Lowery,\nRand, Associated and Sunshine company. Officials of the exchange said\nthe delisting was a routine consequence of the failure of the companies to supply information sought last\nJuly. At that time the companies\nwere -sked to supply financial statements.\nFRENCH  FRANC IS\nLOWER AT NEW YORK\nNEW YORK, Sept 16 (AP)-The\nFrench franc, lumbering along at\nthe lowest levels since 1926, eased\nanother .00% of a cent at 3.37. The\nBritish pound sterling was stronger,\nrising Vi of a cent at $4.95Vi. The\nCanadian dollar was down 1-64 of\na cent at .99 63-64.\nCALGARY MIXED\nCALGARY, Sept. 15 (CP)\u2014Prices\nshowed a mixed trend on the Calgary Stock Exchange today Trading\nwas light. Calmont was up 1 at 43;\nOkalta gained 3 at 1.08; Vulcan\ngain.d 5 at 1.05. Model lost 2 at\n40; Monarch 1 at 46. Foundation was\nunchanged at 22 and C. Sc E. held\nat 1.79. Most other stocks held\nsteady.\nBONDS SWING HIGHER\nNEW YORK, Sept. 16 (AP)-Led\nby substantial advances in the rail\nand U.S. government division, the\nbond market swung upward today,\nwith gains ranging to around three\npoints or more. In the foreign section French Ts jumped 4 points at\n114, following publication of a more\nfavorable weekly report by the\nBank of France.\nU.S. DOLLAR OFF ON LONDON\nMARKET\nLONDON, Sept. 16 (AP)-United\nStates Dollar lost % cent in the\nforeign exchange market today. The\nclose was $4.95 3-16 to the pound\ncompared with sterling at $4.95 in\nNew York overnight. French francs\neased further, ending 146.87 to the\npound against 145.87 yesterday.\n$2,147,098 REVENUE FOR\nGATINEAU POWER\nOTTAWA, Sept. 16 (CP)\u2014For\nthe second quarter of 1937, Gatineau\nPower Company and subsidiary\ncompanies report total consolidated\ngross revenue at $2,147,098, compared with $2,035,493 in the same\nperiod last year\nSILVER FUTURE8 FIRMER\nMONTREAL, Sept 16 (CP) -\nTrading picked up a little on Canadian commodity exchange, silver\nsection, today wilh silver futures\nfirmer, unchanged to 10 points higher. One contract, a September future, changed hands at 44,50. September closed at 44.45 bid.\nPOUND  ADVANCE8\nAT MONTREAL\nMONTREAL, Sept 16 (CP) \u2014\nPound sterling advanced 5-16 cent\non Montreal foreign exchanges today to $4.96 5-16. The French franc\ndeclined .01 cent to 3.37 cents while\nthe United States dollar was unchanged at par.\nBAR GOLD UP\nMONTREAL, Sept. 16 (CP)-Bar\ngold in London up one cent at $34.75\nan ounce in Canadian funds; 140s\n5d in British. The fixed $35 was\nWashington price amounted to the\nsame in Canadian.\nTRY  A WANT  AB\nMontreal Silver Quotations\nMONTREAL, Sept. 16 (CP)\u2014Silver futures closed firmer, unchanged\nto 10 points higher. Sale, one September contract.\nOpen       High       Low       Close\nSeptember  ,    44.50T      44.50       44.50       44.45B\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nLI8TED:\nA P Con \t\nAmal Oil\t\nAztec Min Co\t\nBig Missouri   \t\nBrit Dom,Oil \t\nBralorne\t\nBrew St Dist \t\nBridge Riv Con\t\nC Sc E Corp \t\nCalmont  Oil  \t\nCariboo  Gold   \t\nCoast Breweries\t\nCommonwealth  Oil\nDentonia     \t\nGold Belt Mines ....\nHargal Oil \t\nHome Oil \t\nInter Coal   \t\nIsland Mount \t\nKoot Belle  .\"..\nMak Siccar    \t\nMcDoug Seg Ex\t\nMinto     \t\nModel Oil \t\nPioneer  Gold  \t\nPremier Gold \t\nPremier Border ....\nQuatsino   \t\nRel Arlington\t\nReno   Gold  \t\nReeves MacD \t\nSally    \t\nSalmon Gold\t\nSheep Creek \t\nSilbak-Premier  \t\nSpooner  Oil   -\nTaylor B River \t\nVanalta Ltd \t\nVldette   \t\nWesko\t\nYmir Yank Girl\t\nCURB\nAlexandria Gold ....\nAnaconda\t\nAssoc Oil \t\nBaltac Oil\t\nBeaver Silver\t\nBluebird  \t\nB C Nickel\t\nCongress \t\nCork Prov \t\nCrows Nest new\t\n.28%\n.06\n.08%\n.31\n.06%\n7.85\n7.00\n.02%\n2.01\n.42\n1.59\n12.50\n.22\n.13%\n.25\n.19\n1.40\n-.21%\n.80\n1.01\n.02\n.19\n.09=4\n.43\n3.85\n2.55\n.02\n.04\n.19\n.80\n.65\n.05\n.04\n.06%\n.14%\n.02\n.081\/4\n.01%\n.01%\n.12\n.01\n.05%\n.18\n8.00\n7.50\n.03%\n2.03\n.44\n1.60\n12.75\n.-14\n.25\n1.05\n.02%\n.19%\n.10\n.45\n4.00\n2.60\n.02%\n.04%\n.20\n.88\n.75\n.08\n.90\n2.10\n.25\n.07\n.30  \u2022\n.10\n.10\n.04%\n01%\n.12%\n,03\nDalhousie Oils  60\nDavies Pete  30%\nDunwell Mining 02'A\nEast Crest Oil 13\nFairview Amal  06\nFederal Gold '   .02\nFoundation Pete 21\nFreehold Oil     .06%\nGeo Copper 35\nGeo Enterprise      \u2014\nGeo River 01\nGolconda    06%\nGold Mount  03\nGrandview       16\nGrull Wihksne      \u2014\nHighwood Sarcee       .15\nHome Gold 01%\nIndian Mines  01%\nKoot Florence 01%\nLakeview Mine      .OlVi\nLowery Pete  10\nLucky Jim. 03%\nMadison Oil  06%\nMar Jon Oil 08\nMercury Oil 23%\nMerland Oil      08\nMcGillivray    19%\nMid-West Pete  19\nMill City Oil 13\nMonarch Rouyn 26\nNicola    05\nNoble Five  '. 05\nNordon Oil       19\nOkalta com    1.12\nPacalta   17%\nPend Oreille    3.25\nPorter Idaho      .04V4\nPilot Gold 02%\nQuesnelle Q     04\nReliance    02%\nReward Mining  08\nRoyalite Oil 36.00\nRufus Argenta      .02%\nRuth Hope  .01%\nSilver Crest     \u2014\nSilversmith 01%\nSouthwest Pete  40\nU D L     90\nUnited Oil  17%\nViking Gold     ' 007s\nVulcan Oil   1.02\nWaverly Tang new..    .00%\nWellington Mines ..    .03\nWhitewater 09%\n.75\n32\n.02%\n.16\n.07\n.02%\n25\n.07\n.40\n,03%\n.07\n.17\n.07%\n.17\n.021,4\n.02%\n.01%\n01%\n.12\n.03%\n.07\n.19%\n.27\n.05%\n.(15%\n,20\n1,14\n.19\n3.30\n.02%\n.06\n.021\/4\n.08%\n40.00\n.03\n04\n.02\n.45\n.18\n.01\n1.05\n.03%\n.10\nMontreal Stock Exchange\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlta Pac Grain  W*\nAssoc Brew of Can   13%\nAssoc Tel Sc Tel  6%\nBathurst P & P A  16%\nBell Telephone   167\nBra-Man T L & P - 21\nB C Power A  34%\nB C Power   6V.\nBuilding Products  57\nCanada  Cement    12%\nCan Cement Pfd   103%\nCan North Power  22\nCan Steamship  3%\nCan Steamship pfd   12%\nCanadian   Bronze    - 38%\nCan Car Sc Fdy   12%\nCan Car & Fdy pfd   24%\nCan Celanese   22\nCan Celanese pfd   117%\nCan Hydro-Electric P   82\nCan Ind Ale A  5%\nCan Ind Ale B  4%\nCan Pacific Railway   10\nCockshutt Plow   11%\nCon Min is Smelting  72%\nDistillers Seagrams  17%\nDominion Bridge   38%\nDominion Coal Pfd   19%\nDom Steel Sc Coal B  18%\nDominion Textile   80\nDryden Paper  12%\nFamous Players C C  30\nFoundation C of C   17%\nGen Steel Wares   Ws\nGurd Charles   ' 9%\nGyp Lime Sc Alab   10%\nHamilton Bridge  ,  10%\nHoward Smith Paper  23%\nH. Smith Paper pfd \u201e  100\nImp Tobacco of C   13%\nInter Nickel of Can   57\nLake of the Woods  23\nMassey Harris   8%\nMcColl Frontenac    12%\nMontreal L H Sc P  29%\nNational Brew Ltd   38\nNat Brew pfd   40\nNat Steel Car   34\nOgilvie Flour Mills ...\nOntario Steel Prods .\nPower Corp of Can\nQuebec Power \t\nSt Lawrence Corp ....\nSt Law Corp pfd \t\nSt Law Paper pfd ....\nSouth Can Power ....\nShawnigan W Sc P ....\nSteel of Can \t\nSteel of Can pfd \t\nWestern Grocers \t\nBANKS\nBank of Canada .\nCanadienne Nationale .....\nComerce  \t\nMontreal \t\nNova Scotia \t\nCURB\nAbitibi P Sc P Co\t\nAbitibi 6 pfd \t\nAcadia Sug Refin \t\nBeauharnois Corp\t\nBathurst P & P B \t\nBrew Sc Dist Van ....\nBrew Corp of Can\t\nBritish American Oil \t\nB C Packers\t\nCan Malting Ltd\t\nCan Dredge Sc Dock \t\nCan Vickers \t\nCan Wineries\t\nCons Paper Corp\t\nDominion Stores  .....\nDonnacona Paper A ....\nDonnacona Paper B \t\nFord Motor A \t\nFraser Co Ltd\t\nImperial Oil \t\nInter Petroleum \t\nInter Utilities A\t\nInter Utilities B \t\nMacLaren P Sc P\t\nMitchell Robt  .'.\nPage Hersey Tubes \t\nRoyalite Oil \t\nThrift Stores \t\nUnited Dist of Can \t\nWalker Good & W\t\nWalker Good pfd\t\n. 225\n. 17\n. 18%\n. 18\n. 9%\n. 25%\n. 75%\n. 13\n. 24%\n. 75\n, 68\n. 69\n. 58%\n. 160\n. 178\n. 205\n. 330\n. 4%\n. 44\n. 3%\n. 6%\n. 6%\n. 7\n. 2\n. 21\n. 12\n. 35\n. 37%\n. 6\n. 2\n. 14\n. 6%\n. 11%\n. 10%\n. 20-%\n. 31%\n. 19%\n. 32%\n. 16%\n1.10\n. 24\n. 16\n. 92%\n. 35\n. %\n.. .85\n. 42%\n. 19\nExchanges\nMONTREAL, Sept. 16 (CP) -\nBritish and foreign exchange closed\nsteady. Nominal rates for large\namounts:\nArgentina, peso, .3005.\nAustralia, pound, 3.9551\nDenmark, krone,  .2213.\nFinland, finmark, .0020.\nFrance, franc, .0337.\nGreat Britain, pound, 4.9531.\nHolland,  florin,  .5505.\nIndia, rupee, .3745.\nNew Zealand, pound, 3.9869.\nNorway, krone,  ,2490.\nSouth Africa, pound, 4,9290.\nSweden, krone, .2555.\nUnited States, dollar, par.\n(Compiled by the Royal Bank of\nCanada).\nMoney\n(By The Canadian Press)\nClosing exchange rates:\nAt Montreal\u2014Pound 4.95 5-16; the\nfranc 3.37; U. S. dollar par.\nAt New York\u2014Pound 4.95%; the\nfranc 3.37; Canadian dollar .99 63-64.\nAt Paris-Pound 146.87% fr.; U. S.\ndollar 29.70 fr.; Canadian dollar 26.68\n%fr.\nIn Gold\u2014Pound 12s Id; U. S. dollar 59.48 cents; Canadian dollar 59.46\ncents.\nVancouver Wheat\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 16 (CP) -\nVancouver wheat cash prices:\nStraight    Tough\nNo. 1 hard    122%      120%\nNo. 1 nor    122%      120%\nNo. 2 nor    117%      115%\nNo. 3 nor    111%      108%\nNo. 4 nor    105%      102%\nNo. 5 wheat      99%       96%\nNo. 6 wheat      86%        83%\nFeed        74%       72%\nQuotations on Wall Street\nHigh\nLow\nAl Chem\t\n206\n205\n99\n6%\n117%\nAm For Pow ....\n5\",\nAm Mac Sc Fdy\n18',4\n17%\nAm Smelt Sc Re\n81%\n79%\nAm Tel \t\n164%\n162%\n79\nV7%\nAnaco'nda \t\n50\n48%\nAtchison  \t\n64%\n59%\nAuburn   Motors\n15\n1414\n4%\n4%\nBait Sc Ohio\t\n20%\n18%\n17%\n16%\nBeth Steel\t\n83%\n80%\nBorden   \t\n22%\n22'\/,\nCan Dry'\t\n10%\n19\n10%\n9 \"a\nCerro de Pasco\n62%\n62\nChcs Sc Ohio ....\n46\n43%\nChrysler\t\n99%\n97%\nCon Gas N Y ....\n33%\n32%\nCorn Prods \t\n58%\n59%\nC Wright Pfd ..\n4%\n4%\n152%\n149\n180%\n179\nEl Pow Sc Lt ....\n18%\n171\/4\n11%\n10%\nFord English ....\n6%\n6%\nFord of Can \t\n21\n21\nFirst Nat Stores\n38%\n3IH\/4\nFree Texas \t\n26%\n26%\nGeneral Elec ....\n49\n47%\nGen Foods \t\n35%\n34%\nGen Motors \t\n52%\n50%\n30%\n29%\nGranby  ..A......\nGreat Nor ptd ..\n8%\n7%\n44\n40%\nGreat West Sug\n31%\n31%\nHecker Prods ..\n10%\n10V\u00bb\nHowe Sound :...\n68\n67%\nHudson  Motors\n12%\n12%\nInter Nickel \t\n57%\n50%\nInter Tel & Tel\nWs\n8%\nClose\n205\n99\n6'ii\n17%\n81\n164%\n77%\n49%\n65%\n14%\n4%\n19%\n17%\n82%\n22%\n19%\n10 Vs\n62%\n46\n99 Vi\n33%\n59%\n4%\n152%\n180\n18\n11%\n6%\n21\n38%\n26%\n49\n34%\n50%\n30%\n8%\n44\n31%\n10%\n68\n12V\u00bb\n57%\n9%\nKenn Cop \t\nKresge S S\t\nKroegger Sc Toll\nMack Truck\t\nMilwaukee   Pfd\nMont Ward\t\nNash Motors ....\nNat Dairy Prods\nN Power Sc Lt ..\nN Y Central\t\nPac Gas Sc El....\nPack Motors ....\nPenn R R\t\nPhillips Pete ....\nPure Oil \t\nRadio Corp \t\nRadio Keith Or\nRem Rand \t\nShell Un \t\nS Cal Edison ....\nSouth Pac \t\nSlan Oil of Cal\nStan Oil of Ind\nStan Oil of \u00ab J\nStew Warner ....\nStudebaker   \t\nTexas Corp \t\nTexas Gulf Sul\nTimken Roll ....\nUnder Type \t\nUn Carbide \t\nUn Oil of Cal....\nUn Aircraft\t\nUn Pac\t\nU S Pipe\t\nU S Rubber\t\nU S Steel \t\nVan Steel \t\nWarner Bros ....\nWest Elec \t\nWest  Union ....\nWoolworth \t\nWrigley\t\nYellow Truck ....\n56%     54%\n21%\n19V'4\n21\n191\/a\n35Vi 34%\n1%       1%\n52% 51%\n16 15%\n18% 17%\n9% 9%\n30 Vi 28\n29% 29%\n7%\n33%\n54\n171,4\n10%\n7\n20\n23\n22%\n7%\n31%\n53\n16%\n9%\n6%\n19%\n2214\n22%\n35%     32%\n40%     39%\n41%    40%\n60%     60\n15%     15\n\u2022 10%     10%\n54        52%\n34%     34\n58%     58\n81%     81%\n95%    93%\n22%     22%\n24'\n109\n42\n23%\n106\n41%\n45%     44\n97%    94%\n26\n25%\n12% 12%\n134% 131%\n35% 33\n43% 43\n64% 64%\n18% 17%\n55%\n21 Vi\n19%\n35%\n1%\n52\n15%\n17'\/,\n9',,\n301,4\n29%\n7%\n33'\/,\n53%\n17\n10%\n7\n20\n23\n22%\n35\n40%\n41\n60%\n151\/,\n10%\n53%\n34%\n58%\n81%\n95%\n22%\n23%\n109\n41%\n45%\n97\n25%\n12%\n134%\n35%\n43\n64%\n18%\nLB. GAINS SIX\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 16 (CP)-\nMajor gold and oil issues were\npushed higher on Vancouver stock\nexchange today in fairly active trading. Lower-priced base metals were\nactive and prices mixed as transactions totalled 202,512 shares.\nPremier Gold headed advances,\nup 45 cents at 2 55, followed by\nBralorne up 35 at 7.85 and Pioneer\n20 at 3.85. Island Mountain gained\n10 at 80, Cariboo Gold Quartz 9\nat 1.59 and Big Missouri 6 at 49.\nKootenay Belle added 6 at 1.01,\nSheep Creek 3 at 88 and Minto a\ncent at 9%.\nLucky Jim headed active base\nmetals, transacting 83,000 shares,\nbut eased a fraction at 3%. Nicola\nat 5 and N,oble Five at 5 both slipped\nfractions while Reeves MacDonald\nwas unchanged at 65 and Pend\nOreille firmed 5 at 3.25.\nMetal Markets\nNEW YORK, Sept. 18 (AP)- Copper steady: electrolytic spot and future 14.00; export 13.67%.\nTin easier; spot and nearby 59.37 Vs\nfuture 58.75.\nLead steady; New York spot 6.50-\n55; East St. Louis 6.35.\nZinz steady: East St. Louis spot\nand future 7.25.\nBar silver steady and unchanged\nat 44%.\nLONDON\u2014Copper, standard spot\n\u00a352 12s 6d, off 17s 6d; future \u00a352\n15s, off \u00a31 16s 3d; electrolytic spot\nbid \u00a358 10s, off \u00a32 10s; asked \u00a360\n10s, off \u00a31 10s.,\nTin spot \u00a3261 15s, off \u00a33, future\n\u00a3260 15s, off \u00a33 5s.\nBids: lead spot \u00a319 18s 9d, off\n\u00a31 Is 3d; future \u00a320 off \u00a31 Is 3d.\nZinc spot \u00a321, off 12s 6d; future\n\u00a321 5s, off lis 3d.\nBar silver steady, 1-16 higher at\n20d.\n-PAGE ELEVEN\nTORONTO GAINS\nTORONTO, Sept. 16 (CP)- The\nToronto stock market checked\nwith another advance today \u2014the\nthird in four sessions\u2014 but volume\nwas off to the smallest in two weeks\nwith an aggregate turnover of 537,000\nshares.\nNickel and Smelters were weak\nbut they came up late in the session\nto show gains of % to %. Noranda\nwas steady with a Vi point gain.\nThe late market was featured by\nheavy trading in Moneta on a rise of\n18 cents to 1.77. Gainers of 20 to\n30 cents were Macassa, O'Brien and\nPickle Crow. Dome, Hollinger and\nLake Shore were up fractions to a\npoint.\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG, Sept. 16 (CP)-Graln\nfutures quotations:\nOpen  High  Low  Close\nWHEAT:\nOct  124%   124%   123%   124%\nNov  124%   124%   123%   124%\nDec  121%   122%   120%   122%\nMay     123      123%   122%   123%\nOATS:\nOct    49%    49%     49%    49%\nDec    47%    47%     47%    47%\nMay* ...   47%    47%    47%    47%\nBARLEY:\nOct    58%    59%     58%    59%\nDec    57%    57%     56%    57%\nMay       57%    57%    56%    57%\nFLAX:\nOct.   ..... 175%   178      175%   175%\nDec  176       -       \u2014      179\nRYE:\nOct    86%    87%     86%    87%\nDec    86%    87%     85%    87%\nMay       87%    88%     86%    88%\nCASH WHEAT- No. 1 hard 130%;\nNO. 1 nor. 129%; No. 2 nor. 125%;\nNo. 3 nor. 118%; No. 4 nor. 112'\/,; No.\n6, 109%; No. 6, 94%; feed 85%; No. 1\nGarnet 118%; No. 2 Garnet 115%; No,\n1 durum 113%; No. 1 A. R. W. 114%;\nNo. 4 special. 107%: No. 5 special\n104%; No. 6 special 92%; track 128%;\nscreenings $35 per ton.\nCHICAGO CORN\nUP FIVE CENTS\nCHICAGO, Sept. 16 (AB).-Lata\nbulges in corn prices hoisted Sep.\ntember corn five cents a bushel\nmaximum today. ,.;\nExtreme scarcity of offerings was\nan outstanding feature of the September corn trade as the day drew\nto an end. Previous sellers were\ndisplaying increased anxiety to purchase.\nAt the close, September corn was\nat the topmost level reached, $1.10%,\nand the corn market as a whole was\nvarying from one' cent decline to\nfive cents advance, Sept. 1.10\u201410%,\nDec. 62%\u2014%, May 63%-%, wheat\nunchanged to 1% lower. Sept. 1.02,\nDec. 1.03%\u2014% and oats unchanged\nto % up.\nLondon Close\nLONDON, Sept. 16 (AP) \u2014Alter\nearly weakness, the stock exchange\nclosed on a steadier note today, although nervousness was still apparent in industrial and tobacco shares.\nTransatlantics were irregular. Distilling issues continued in demand\nand the gilt edge group was firm.\nClosing: Brazilian $21%; C. P. R.\n$10; International Nickel $57%; U. S.\nSteel $96%; Consol Gold Fields 73s\n9d; Crown \u00a312%? De Beers Dfd.\n\u00a316%; Ford 26s 4%d; H. B. C. 29s\n3d; Metal Box Ltd. 78s 9d; Rand \u00a37;\nRhodcsian Anglo American 29s;\nRhokana \u00a312%; Rio Tintos \u00a319%;\nSprings 29s 4%d.\nBonds: British 2% per cent Consols\n\u00a373 13-16; British 3% per cent War\nLoan \u00a3100%; British Funding 4s\n1960-90 \u00a3110%,\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY, Sept. 16 (CP)- Receipts, to noon, cattle 103; calves 51;\nno hogs; sheep 71.\nThe cattle market was slow with\nprices firm. Good butcher steers\n6.00-6.50; common to medium 2.50-\n5.50; good heifers 4.50; no choice\noffered; good cows. 3.00-3.50; good\nveal calves 5.50; common to medlum\n3.00-5.50.\nNo hog sales; yesterday's sales,\nselects 9.90-10.00; bacons 9.B0; butchers 8.90-9.00, off trucks.\n=S-3BT\nA. M. Webb\n& Co., Ltd.\nINVESTMENTS\n562 WARD ST.     NHJONi\nPhone 923\u20148 a.m. to Noon\nPOLAR STOPEITE\nALOW density, low velocity, ammonia dynamite especially made for underground\nwork. In the past It was chiefly confined\nto stoplng In the metaliferoui mines, It is now\nbeing used with success In tho blasting of burn\ncuts In drifts and cross-cuts and In some mines,\nfor the whole driftround. It Is well adapted for\nunderground gypsum mining. Where tho work\nIs dry, Polar Stopelte will be found to be one\nof the most economical explosives for underground work. The strength of Polar Stopelte\nranges from 20% to 60%.\nBehind every stick of C-l-L Explosive,\nthere are many years of constant chemical\nresearch and field .esti to Improve the product and enable the operator to secure maximum efficiency on all types of blasting operations.\nOver a period of years the price of C-l-L\nExplosives has been gradually reduced due to\ns'avlngs effected In manufacturing and operating costs.\nThere Is a type of C-l-L Explosive to meet\nevery mining need. Our Technical Department Is ready to offer advice regarding any\nproblem relating to  blasting operations.\nCANADIAN   INDUSTRIES   LIMITED\nEXPLOSIVES DIVISION\nHEAD OFFICE   \u2022  MONTREAL\nDISTRICT OFFlCESt HALIFAX TORONTO WINNIPEG VANCOUVER\nBRANCH OFFICES\nST, JOHN'S NFLD.        OTTAWA\nSUDBURY      KIRKLAND LAKE\nBOURLAMAQUE\nBRANCH OFFICES\nTIMMINS N.ORANDA\nHAILEYBURY EDMONTON\nPORT ARTHUR VICTORIA\nNELSON\n\"Everything for Blasting\n MMgMj^HH\n PAGE TWELVE\nNELSON DAILY KEWB, NBLBON, B.C.\u2014FRIDAY MORNING, SEPT. 17, 1937.\nDon't Worry About Your\nBreath\nZONITE\nTakes Cara of That\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug Go.\nFORMER CONVICT ARRE6TED,\nKELOWNA\nKELOWNA, B.C., Sept. 16 (CP)-\nffilliam Lane, who made an unsuccessful break from Oakalla prison\nfarm with the notorious William\nBagley early in 1932, was arrested\nlate today on charges of obtaining\nmoney and goods from George A.\n-Meikle Ltd., of Kelowna on false\npretences. Two companions were\nheld by police for investigation.\nKINGSTON, Ont., (CP).-The second conference on industrial relations sponsored by Queen's University is being held here. Hon.\nNorman Rogers, minister of labor,\nat the opening session read a paper\non the \"avoidance of industrial conflict.\"\nW. D. Armstrong\nPurchaseslhe\nCandy Box Store\nMr. W. D. Armstrong has purchased the business of Mr. A. Longman, known to Fairview residents\nas \"Lakeside Service\" or \"The\nCandy Box\" especially noted for its\nneatly kept gardens and lawn, a\nhobby of its former owner. Also its\nmusical programs broadcasted during the day. Mr. Armstrong came\nover a year ago to Nelson from\nPrince Albert, Saskatchewan, taking over the old Wm. Batchelor\nGrocery Store, in recent years owned by Mrs. Peake, situated on Water\nStreet. He sold this business a few\nweeks ago and was so impressed\nwith Nelson as a lovely place to\nlive decided to stay with his family\nand purchased Mr. Longman's popular store situated at the terminal\nof the car line in Fairview.\nIt is the intention of Mr. Armstrong to continue the policy of Mr.\nLongman in carrying a complete\nstock of English Candy, Ice Cream\nand general refreshments for the\nconvenience of Lakeside Park visitors and. Fairview residents. It is\nthe purpose also of Mr. Armstrong\nto add a well assorted stock of general groceries and supplies. Gasoline\nand car service will remain an important feature of the business.    \"*\nBoard Will Ask\nWismer Explain\non Jurisdiction\nAscertain   Hatchery\nResponsibility\nNext Step\nIn view of the disclaimer by the\nfederal minister of fisheries, of\nany Dominion responsibility for\nsport fishing In British Columbia\nthe board of trade council Thursday decided that the next step In\nthe campaign for reopening of the\nhatchery was to aceertaln whether\nthe province agreed with this view.\nW. G. C. Lanikall, secretary, was\nInstructed to write the attorney\ngeneral and ask him If In future\nthe game department had jurisdiction over the sport fishing.\nIf It Is found that the province\naccepts this responsibility, the\nboard will make Its future representations In that quarter,\nMembers, however, expressed\ndoubt as to whether the federal\nminister was speaking cf a policy\nmutually agreed on by the Dominion and the province, or only\ngiving the Dominion contention\non a point still at Issue.\nCONDITION  OF QUEEN OF\nDENMARK SATISFACTORY\nCOPENHAGEN, Sept. 18 (CP-\nHavas)\u2014The condition of Queen Alexandrine ot Denmark is satisfactory and no bulletin on her health\nwill be issued tomorrow, her physicians announced today. The Queen\nunderwent an operation earlier in\nthe week after a severe intestinal\nattack.\nFOR SALE\nProperty on finest central-location\nin the city. Lovely view, grocery\nstore t_ block, Public and High\nschools % Sc 4 blocks, 5 minutes from\nBaker St. Living room, dining room\nkitchen, 3 bed rooms, bath. All new\nwhite plumbing, Built in features\nPiped for gas, wired for electric\nrange, tank heater. Concrete founda\ntion, furnace in basement. Suite in\nbasement consists of living room,\nwall bed, kitchen, bath room. Inlaid\nlinoleum in kitchen and bath room.\nAlso light fixtures, modern wiring,\nwith switches and wall plugs everywhere. Basement suite wired separate. Coal and wood goes in basement direct from truck. Back and\nfront porches. Newly decorated and\nin first class condition throughout.\nHouse now rented at $30 month.\nCan rent suite at $20. Everything\ngoes for $2700. $1600 cash, balance\narranged. Box 2508 Daily News.\n(2508)\nA Recent Groom\nA fairly .recent bridegroom\nis smiling Frank Dickens of\nNelson, whose marriage to Miss\nDoris Johnson of Burton took\nplace July 5.\nFARR ILL AT EASE\nAS REFEREE IN\nMONTREAL\nMONTREAL, Sept. 16 (CP) -\nWhile Tommy Farr tolled a count\nover him for the third time, Eddie\nCoderre's seconds tossed in a towel\ntonight and Andre Lenglet, huge\nFrench heavyweight, won a seventh-\nround technical knockout over the\nambitious youngster.\nFarr, making his first ring appearance since his recent unsuccessful\nbid for Joe Louis' world title, was\nevidently ill at ease as referee. He\nhad to stop the fight twice to warn\nLenglet for hitting while holding\nand his white shirt-front was splattered by blood from cuts over Cod\nerre's eyes.\nWork on Roads in\nCreston Area Now\nIs Nearly Finished\nCRESTON, B. C.-Work of \"black-\ntopping\" the highway west of Yahk\nfrom the Cranbrook-Nelson-Creston\nconstituency boundary to just east\nof Mosquito creek should be completed in about two weeks. It is\nexpected the crew will then similarly treat a couple of blocks of the\nCanyon street business section, Creston.\nThe new flats highway between\nWynndel and Creston Is also near-\ning completion. The approach from\nthe Creston end was put in a year\nago, but there is still some surfacing\nto do on the road.\nA crew of twenty men commenced\nwork last week on improvements to\nthe Bayonne mine road. Clem Payette of Wynndel is in charge.\nTrail-Rossland\nBoxla Tonight\nTrail and Rossland will cross\nsticks tonight at Rossland in the\nsecond game of the West Kootenay\nboxla final.\nRedmen won the opening game\non the Trail floor earlier in the\nweek, 16-14 and are favorites to\ncop the series. The cash customers\nrecall, however, that Trail has several times turned the tables on the\nRedmen on the Rossland floor and\nare awaiting keenly the outcome\nof tonight's encounter.\nThe series is best of five, and a\nKootenay winner must be declared\nby September 24, for the provincial\nfinals.\nFRIDAY and SATURDAY STAR VALUES\nPINEAPPLE JUICE\u2014Doles', tall tin,\nPINEAPPLE\u2014Black Label, sliced or\nSARDINES\u2014Nabob, Fancy Norwegian,\nSALMON\u2014Nabob, Fancy Sockeye,\nVi's 2 tins  39^\nCOFFEE\u2014Maxwell House,         QQA\nLb. tin OlZ\nCRAB MEAT\u2014Korean, imported, Vi's,\nTin    25\u00abi\nSHRIMP\u2014Malkin's Best, tall tins,\n2 for  45<*\nCLOVERLEAF HERRING\u2014Tall tin,\nSTRAWBERRY JAM\u2014Sun-Line, special\nBAKING NEEDS\nSUGAR HOUSE MOLASSES\u2014     \"\nWALNUTS\u2014White  meat,  quarters,\nPASTRY FLOUR\u2014Sperry's, Snow\nSPICES\u2014All kinds, 2 tins            15\u00ab*\nYELLOW SUGAR\u20143 Ibs            19\u00ab*\nICING SUGAR\u20142 Ib. carton ..  lfty\nShirriff s Fancy Free Desserts, caramel,\nvanilla, butterscotch, 3 for 23^\nCOOKING CHOCOLATE\u2014Baker's,\nVi Ib. cake  19**\nTUNA FISH\u2014Solid white meat,\nHOMADE SWEET MIXED\nPICKLES\u2014Real value, 27 oz. jar . 25<i\nSIDE BACON\u2014Fresh cut, No. 1 quality,\nLb  39<;\nCOLUMBIA PEAS\u20142 tins              25r>\nRIPE OLIVES\u2014Lindsay, tall, 9 ox.,\n1 large package Oxydol and 2 cakes\nCalay Soap, 42c value,                OC\nNO-RUBBINC WAX\u2014Old English,\nPEARS\u2014Fancy Bartlett,\nbasket\t\nFRESH FRUITS and VEGETABLES\nPEACHES\u2014Freestone,\nbasket \t\nGOLDEN PLUMS-\nBaiket\t\nGRAPES\u2014Concord, Okanagan,\n7 Ib. basket\t\n25*\nm\n75*\nGRAPES-Red Malaga, White Malaga ->\u00ab*\/*\nBlack Riblers: 2 Ibs *3V\nGRAPE  FRUIT\u2014Sunklit, medium size, yts*\nORANGES\u2014Sunkist,  medium  size, TOl*\n2 doz sITfr\nORANGES\u2014Sunkist,  Large size, OO\/*\n2 doz yyy\n8WEET POTATOES-\nS  Ibs\t\n29*\nTURNIPS\n6 Ibs -\nAPPLES\u2014Gravenstein,\n8  Ibs\t\nRHUBARB-\n3 Ibs -\nCORN\u2014Golden Bantam,\ndozen  \t\n25*\n25*\n19*\n25*\nPEACHE8-At their best; Okanagan Elbertas for preserving: Crate\n$149\nCELERY\u2014Local,\n2 Ibs\t\nCARROTS  AND BEETS\u2014\n4  bunches  \t\nLETTUCE\u2014Large and solid,\n2 heads \t\nRADISHES, GREEN ONIONS, CAULIFLOWER,\nGREEN   APPLES,   RED   PEPPERS,\nCUCUMBERS\n19*\n19*\nDCROCERYf\nQuality\nand\nService\nMORE ABOUT\nSINO-JAPAK\n(Continued From Page One)\ncame a graver peril to Shanghai's millions.\nCONTINUE TO HARRY COASTS\nJapanese warships and planes\ncontinued to harry the south China\ncoasts, but the Chinese claimed\u2014\nwithout independent confirmation-\ntheir airforce struck back with punishing effect, sinking one enemy\ncruiser and damaging other vessels\nJapanese planes bombed Canton's\nairport.\nAccording to Japanese, General\nCount Ju Chi Terauchi's command\nextended its advance south and\nsouthwest of Peiping, where the\ncapture of Kuanhsien Wednesday\nsplit the Chinese lines.\nCavalry, tanks and infantry shared in the Japanese advance, 'which,\nwheeling westward from Kuanhsien, 30 miles south of Peiping, was\napproaching Chochow on the Peip\ning-Hankow railway, 40 miles be\nlow Peiping. Capture of Chochow\nwould make the railway useless to\nthe Chinese north of Paotingfu,\ntheir main base 80 miles southwest\nof Peiping and apparently the main\nobjective of this Japanese drive.\n60,000 JAPAN TR00P8\nSixty thousand Japanese were engaged in this operation against eight\nChinese divisions, about 100,000\nmen. Commanding the retreating\nChinese was General Wan Fu-Lin,\nwho has been fighting\u2014and retreating before\u2014the Japanese intermit-\nA Pair of Scottish Champs\nMiss Margaret MacDonald of Edmonton who won the grand\naggregate open dancing and Jack Stout of Nelson who was the best\n, dressed highlander and who was third in the strathspeys and reels piping. They took part in the Caledonian sports held in Nelson Labor day.\nMORE ABOUT     j\nLABOR CONGRESS\n(Continued From Page One)\ndependent of any political organization engaged in the effort to send\nrepresentatives of the people to\nparliament, the provincial legislatures or other elective bodies of the\ncountry.\"\nPresident P M. Draper ended the\ndebate when he declared there appeared to be a misunderstanding of\nthe congress stand regarding politics.\n\"Your executive council,\" he\nsaid, \"believes every member\nshould become an active member\nof the Labor party In his district\nand give It his active support.\nThis resolution Is patterned after\nwhat  the   British  trade   unions\ntently since '1931, when Japan's invasion of Manchuria found him one\not the chief Chinese warlords of\nthat region.\nCholera spread In and around\nShanghai. In the International settlement and French concession\nalone there were 740 cases, an Increase of more than 100 overnight.\nMilitary observers believe the\nGerman military training mission\nof some 60 officers under General\nBaron Alexander von Falkenhaus-\nen, Great War veteran, Is the real\ngeneral staff of the Chinese.\nNews of the Day\nASK YOUR LOCAL MERCHANT\nFOR A KEY TO THE TREASURE\nCHEST AT THE FAIR.    (2494)\nLETTER BOX PLATES FROM 60c\nto $1.50, 'HIPPERSON'S.   (2603)\nExcellent Service and Good Food\nat The GOLDEN GATE.        (2497)\nMAZDA LAMPS 6 for $1.00\nMcKAY A STRETTON\n(2481)\nA GREAT GUY AND A GOOD\nFIGHT AT THE CIVIC\n(2434)\nSOMETHING NEW\u2014AN OY8TER\nSANDWICH AT GRENFELL'8, 25c.\n(2440)\nLatest fiction at Walt's lending lib-\nrary, 616 Baker Street\n(2274)\nElectrical    Contracting.     F.    H\nSMITH, 313 Baker St. PHONE 666.\n(2176)\nBritish Consols \"CELLO TIPS\"\nLunch Counter, C. P. R. Station.\n(2504)\nThrough a misunderstanding last\nnight's band concert was unfortunately cancelled. (2509)\nH. M. Angus, Pianist, Atcompan-\nist, Teacher.  All grades. Advanced\nAcoustics. Expert Tuner. Ph. 544.\n(2501)\nRESERVE THE DATE, FRIDAY,\nSEPT. 24th. SILVERTONE 8EVEN\nDANCE, CIVIC CENTRE, SPONSORED BY NELSON FAIR. TICKETS 50c. (2494)\nOn and after this date I will not be\nresponsible for debts contracted by\nanyone in my name.  C. McCallum.\n(2491)\nThe QUAKER BURNOIL HEATERS are now here and are being\ndemonstrated  every  day.    8ee- E.\nGould. Vernon St., opp. New Grand.\n(2428)\nKITCHENER    Florists,   Wreaths\nand Sprays a specialty. Ph. 218-R.\n(2496)\nBINGO\nCASH PRIZES. TO-NIGHT.\n8ept. 17th at CATHEDRAL HALL.\n8:30 p.m. 15 games for 25c.\nTwo prizes for every game.\n(2466)\nCELLO FINGER WAVES\nDRY IN 15 MINUTES\nMILADY'S  BEAUTY  SHOPPE\nP. O. Box 182 Phone 244\n(2498\nHILLCLIMB\nAt\nTRAIL\nSUNDAY    AT   3:30\nNear Sandy Island\nDON'T MISS ITI\n(2482)\nENTRIES FOR THE FAIR CLOSE\nTOMORROW. SECRETARY'S OFFICE IN HIPPERSON BLOCK.\nOPEN UNTIL 10 P. M. SATURDAY\nTO RECEIVE ENTRIES.        (2494)\nLOW WEEK-END FARES\nFare and one quarter for the\nlound trip\nEffective  from  7:00 \u2022a.m.  each\nFriday until 12:00 midnight the\nfollowing Monday on all local\nroutes in the Interior.\nGreyhound Lines\nNelson Depot - 205 Baker St.\nPHONE 800       (2232)\nTOO LATE TO ClAsiFY\ncongress has done and Is doing. It\ngives the right to all members In\nthe provinces, In the cities and everywhere else to elect Independent Labor candidates.\"\nEXPLAIN8 STAND\nExplaining the slvmd against direct political action, he said \"This\ncongress mgiht endorse a certain\npolitical party and that party might\nafterwards say: 'Mind your own\nbusiness; we are going to run our\nown party.'\n\"This congress,\" he continued, \"if\nit Is going to serve the interests of\nthe workers of this country, never\ncould be a political party or a political machine.\"\nReport of the committee on legislative action censured the government for failing to produce substitute legislation for the Bennett Reform bills on social insurance, weekly day ot rest, minimum wages and\nlimitation of hours, bills found unconstitutional by the supreme %court\nof Canada and the privy council.\nMrs. Wheildon Is\nGuest of Honor at\nSouth Slocan Tea\nSOUTH SLOCAN \u2014 Mrs. Wilson\nWhiteley was a hostess Wednesday\nat her home \"The Craft\" when she\nentertained at a farewell tea In\n[\u25a0honor of Mrs. T. A. Wheildon, who\nwith her husband, is leaving to re-,\nside in Victoria. Yellow and white\nwas the decorative scheme used in\nthe room carried out in French\nmarigolds, white flocks and maiden\nhair fern. The tea table at which\nMrs. Turner Lee presided was centred with a tall vase of pastel shaded\ngladiolus.\nMrs. John Murray, Mrs. W. D.\nRidge and Mrs. Cecil G. Fenwick\nassisted in serving. Mrs. Stanley\nDawson cut the ices. Guests included the guest of honor, Mrs. T. A.\nWheildon, Mrs. Collingwood Gray,\nMrs. A. Willey, Mrs. E. Creed Johnson, Mrs. W. D. Ridge, Mrs. J. Gilker,\nMrs. G. N. Brown, Mrs. J. P. Cavell,\nMrs. R. G. Elliott, Mrs. O. W. Humphry, Mrs. F. H. Russell, Mrs. S.\nDawson, Mrs. D. J. Davis, Mrs. L.\nB. Cox, Mrs. E. Anderson, Mrs. E.\nJ. Bowkett, Mrs. J. D. Yeatman,\nMrs. W. T. Jones, Mrs. M. Downie,\nMrs. J. Murray, Mrs. C. G. Fenwick,\nMrs. Ivor Jones, Mrs. W. C. Motley,\nMrs. P. O. Bird, Mrs. W. J. Tindale,\nMrs. G. F. Chapman, Mrs. W. P.\nRogers, Mrs. W. A. MacCabe, Mrs\nW. W. Bennett and Mrs. W. Wade-\nson. ,\nC. G. Fenwick is visiting In Vancouver and Victoria.\nMr. and Mrs. John Strand and\nbaby have- returned to Kitchener\nafter visiting Mr. and Mrs. H. Strand\nand relatives at Winlaw.\nJMr. and Mrs. Strand and their\nguests attended the C. P. R. picnic\nat Castlegar Sunday.\nMORE ABOUT\nPARALYSIS\n(Continued From Page One)\nNEW BRUN3WICK\nSCHOOLS 8TAY CL08ED\nFREDERICTON, N.B., Sept. 16\n(CP)\u2014New Bunswick school will remain closed until Sept. 27 because\nof the infantile paralysis epidemic,\nHon. A. P. Paterson, minister of\neducation announced today.\nTORONTO AGAIN\nPOSTPONES 8CH00L\nTORONTO, 8ept. 16 (CP) \u2014\nBoard of health decided today to\na fourth postponement of Toronto\nschools reopening, this time to\nSept. 27, because of the preval\nIng Infantile paralysis epidemic.\nSchools originally were scheduled\nto open Sept. 1.\nRadio proves a powerful tool in\nshaping better public speech because it is an ideal indirect teacher.\n\u2014William Lyon Phelps.\nCIVIC\nTONIGHT and SATURDAY\nComplete at 7 & 9 p.m.\nIT'S FALL\nHATTIME\nSee these new Hats\u2014I\nHomburgs, Welts and I\nSnap brims in all the f\nshades for fall. There am\nnew browns, greys and I\ngreens to go with your]\nnew fall outfit.\n9    Biltmore\n\u2022 Brock ...\n\u2022 Borsalino\n$3.50\n$5.00\n$8.50\nPMORY'S\n*** Limited        '\nNEWARK NEEDS\nONLY ONE Wl*\nSYRACUSE, N.Y, Sept. 16 AP)^\nNewark Bears came within one gamfl\nof clinching an International leagufl\nfinal playoff berth tonight by trampB\ning Syracuse chiefs. 8-0 behind thof\nthree-hit pitching of Vito TamulM\ntheir third straight victory.\nNewark  ~ 8  15\nSyracuse _ O    3 \\\nTamulis   and   Hershberger;   XJ\nMoore, Gee, V. Brown, PomorslS\nand D. Moore.\nand Catholic high schools reopened!\ntoday after a nine-day extension ol\nthe summer vacation due to the in'g\nfantile paralysis outbreak.\nOfficials deferred a decision or |\nthe   opening   of  the   elemental:\nschools since 80 per cent of tho*\nstricken were between the ages o\nnine and 14.\nFour new cases and one new deatl\nwere reported for the latest J4-hou\nperiod, increasing the total numbe\nof cases to. 242 and the number e\nfatalities to 20. .\nCHICAGO PUBLIC AND\nCATHOLIC HIGH\nSCHOOLS REOPEN\nCHICAGO, Sept. 16 (AP)-Public\nJ. A. C. Laughton\n\u00ab*Sft\nLOST -BETWEEN LONGBEACH\nand Nelson ferry, a brown and\nwhite female springer spaniel\nPhone 809-L. (2510)\nAnd as a second major\nattraction\nTOMMY FARR\nVS.\nJOE LOUIS\nWorld's championship\nFight pictures\nFull 15 rounds\nFIGHT  AT 7:15\u20149:25 P.M.\nADMISSION\nEVENINGS\nAdults ...: 35^\nChildren  :l5<i\nADDED TREATS\nColor Cartoon\u2014HE WAS HER MAN\nMusical\u2014LITTLE PIONEER\nCOMMUNITY SING NO. 2\nWORLD EVENTS IN PARAMOUNT NEWS\n_-__-_-_-^\n_^^^^^\u2014\n^^^^\n.\n","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType":[{"value":"Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial":[{"value":"Nelson (B.C.)","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier":[{"value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1937_09_17","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0413324","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"}]}}